ABUSE TRACKER

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

September 21, 2014

Pope Sets Tone in U.S. by Naming Inclusive Prelate as Chicago Archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
SEPT. 20, 2014

In his first major appointment in the United States, Pope Francis named Bishop Blase J. Cupich of Spokane, Wash., on Saturday to be the next archbishop of Chicago, replacing a combative conservative with a prelate whose pastoral approach to upholding church doctrine is more in keeping with the pope’s inclusive tone.

Bishop Cupich, 65, will be installed on Nov. 18 as the ninth archbishop of Chicago, succeeding Cardinal Francis George, 77, who is ill with cancer. Two years ago, at 75, Cardinal George offered his resignation, as is the church tradition at that age.

Pope Francis’ choice of prelate for Chicago was highly anticipated as a sign of the direction he intends to set for the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. Chicago is the nation’s third-largest Roman Catholic diocese, with 2.3 million members, and its archbishops have often taken leading roles in the American hierarchy.

Bishop Cupich appeared at ease in a news conference on Saturday morning in Chicago, deftly handling questions about whether he would call himself a “moderate” and what message Francis may be trying to send with the selection.

“His priority is not to send a message but a bishop, and that’s what he’s sending you, someone to serve the needs of people,” Bishop Cupich said. “I think he sent a pastor, not a messenger.” …

He said the Spokane Diocese bankruptcy, which was initiated by his predecessor, had left “some issues that need to be resolved.” The diocese has filed a malpractice suit against the law firm that handled the bankruptcy, accusing the firm of failing to use a strategy that would have prevented more sexual abuse claims from being filed. So far, about 230 claims have been filed, according to The Spokesman-Review newspaper.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests said it had been disappointed by Bishop Cupich’s record on sexual abuse in Spokane and his role as chairman of the bishops’ committee on child 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.

Group calls on Bishop to retract comments

AUSTRALIA
Bendigo Advertiser

By ADAM HOLMES Sept. 19, 2014

A GROUP of parishioners from within the Sandhurst Diocese will hold a protest at Sacred Heart Cathedral on Sunday, angry at comments made by Bishop of Sandhurst Leslie Tomlinson.

The group will set up after Mass and look for signatures on a petition calling for the resignation of Cardinal George Pell.

The decision to protest in Bendigo came after Bishop Tomlinson described the Melbourne Response into child sex abuse as “groundbreaking” in a statement to the media earlier this month.

St Mary’s of Mooroopna parishioner Catherine Dooley said it was a “completely inappropriate” comment and the Melbourne Response had not provided adequate comfort to victims.

“We have been very conscious of Cardinal Pell’s lack of compassion and justice in dealing with victims and their families,” she said.

“So please Bishop Tomlinson stop the back slapping and stop the clerical propaganda.”

Mrs Dooley said the response was not “groundbreaking”, as similar support programs had been set up elsewhere in the world. She said the process had proved “intimidating” and “cold” for a number of people who raised concerns over child sex abuse.

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.

‘Sack Pell’ group holds protest outside Bendigo Sacred Heart Cathedral

AUSTRALIA
Bendigo Advertiser

By RENEE THOMPSON Sept. 21, 2014

PARISHIONERS at Bendigo’s Sacred Heart Cathedral were greeted with a confronting scene when departing Mass on Sunday.

Banners and petitions were wielded by fellow Sandhurst Diocese parishioners calling for Cardinal George Pell’s sacking over the Catholic church’s handling of child sex abuse claims.

The small group, who have taken part in wider protests against Cardinal Pell in the past, decided to hold the protest in the Sandhurst Diocese following recent comments made by its Bishop Leslie Tomlinson, who they say used language to defend Cardinal Pell in a letter he distributed last week.

St Mary’s of Mooroopna parishioner Catherine Dooley said Cardinal Pell’s response to the church’s handling of child sex abuse claims reflected a church more interested in protecting its reputation than children.

She said Bishop Tomlinson’s recent comments in particular had served to make it clear “more energy” was given to protecting clergy than protecting victims.

“It is very affronting they continue to put out this clerical propaganda,” she said.

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.

Prosecutor: summon dictatorship-era priest

ARGENTINA
Buenos Aires Herald

By Luciana Bertoia
Herald Staff

Monsignor Emilio Grasselli is requested to appear in court

An iconic priest linked to repression during the last military dictatorship could be summoned to sit in the dock to give explanations of his role during the 1976-1983 de facto government.

Almost seven years after chaplain Christian Von Wernich was convicted to life for being involved in seven murders and more than 40 abductions, it seems that it will be Monsignor Emilio Teodoro Grasselli’s turn to appear before court.

Federal prosecutor Federico Delgado requested Federal Judge Julián Ercolini to summon Grasselli, who is still a member of the Archdiocese of Buenos Aires headed by Mario Poli. The request was filed on September 16. Court sources explained to the Herald that the magistrate has three working days to make a decision. If Ercolini follows the procedural code, Grasselli could be receiving a subpoena this week.

However, times are flexible for judges and Ercolini has been frequently criticized by the Kirchnerite administration for not moving forward with the case of the irregular sale of Papel Prensa newsprint company during the last military dictatorship, which ended up benefiting newspapers La Razón, La Nación and Clarín, the government’s media foe.

“It’s been 30 years since the return to democracy and it is unbelievable that nobody summoned Grasselli as a suspect,” a court source told the Herald.

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.

Letter asks Pope Francis to investigate Bishop Dewane

FLORIDA
News-Press

[with copy of the letter]

Mary Wozniak, mwozniak@news-press.com September 20, 2014

A letter and petition with nearly 1,300 signatures will soon be on its way to Rome, asking Pope Francis to investigate Bishop Frank Dewane of the Diocese of Venice.

The letter, dated Aug. 28, was written by the Southwest Florida chapter of Call to Action and supported by the local chapter of Voice of the Faithful, two liberal Catholic groups pushing for church reform, including allowing priests to marry and more laity input in decision-making.

The letter claims bullying, intimidation, shaming behaviors and outbursts of anger by Dewane, instilling fear in the faithful.

Other claims are that the bishop dismissed several pastors and unfairly fired more than 20 workers without reason or hearing.

Benedict Nguyen, chief spokesman for the diocese, responded Friday with a two-page statement defending the bishop and discrediting Call to Action.

“The Diocese of Venice is greatly saddened to learn of the repeated attempt to smear publicly the reputation and good name of Bishop Frank J. Dewane and the Diocese of Venice, while also misleading the faithful, by ‘Call to Action,’ a group that has been deemed ‘totally incompatible with the Catholic faith’ by the Vatican and countless Catholic faithful,” the statement said.

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.

NT abuse inquiry into Retta Dixon home

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP

NEDA VANOVAC
September 21, 2014

From her birthplace at Banka Banka Station in central Australia in 1938 to Darwin’s Supreme Court on Monday morning, it has been a long walk to justice for Lorna Cubillo.

Ms Cubillo, 76, will be the first Northern Territory witness to give evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which will focus for the next fortnight on the Retta Dixon home, where Ms Cubillo lived from 1947 to 1956.

The Territory government commissioned the Aborigines Inland Mission (AIM) to operate the home from 1946 to 1980 inside a building reclaimed from the Army occupation during the Second World War.

Wedged between the Bagot Aboriginal Hospital and the Bagot Aboriginal Reserve, about eight kilometres from Darwin’s CBD, the home’s residents were primarily part-Aboriginal children and some unmarried mothers and women.

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.

Stolen Generation children in Darwin to detail ‘sexual abuse…

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Stolen Generation children in Darwin to detail ‘sexual abuse, emotional deprivation’ at royal commission

ABC

BY RUBY JONES
September 21, 2014

Stolen Generation children who say they were sexually abused at a Darwin boarding school will recall their experiences before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Eighteen witnesses are expected to testify over two weeks of public hearings in the Northern Territory, including nine former residents of the Retta Dixon Home.

The details of their abuse will shock many, according to former resident of the home Barbara Cummings.

“You know this is our home town and people never really, I don’t think, realised the horrors that some of these children endured,” she said.

“It was all part of that White Australia policy. It was a case of collect all illegitimate part-Aboriginal children, and remove them for the purpose of education.

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.

Pastor sent to judicial remand for alleged child trafficking

INDIA
E-Pao

Source: The Sangai Express / Agencies

Kohima, September 20 2014 : A local court sent a pastor to 15 days in judicial remand in connection with an alleged child trafficking case in Jaipur.

Dimapur district session court judge sent Pastor Jacob John to judicial remand when he was produced before it for trial in the case yesterday.

The public prosecutor and the defence counsel examined John and six witnesses.

Remaining five witnesses, including the investigating officer would be examined on a later date.

Jacob was arrested in March 2013 by the Rajasthan police after it was detected that he was running illegal homes in Jaipur for children trafficked from the northeast.

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.

Are we looking at the American Pope Francis in Chicago?

CHICAGO (IL)
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor September 20, 2014

In American Catholic terms, Chicago always has been a land of giants. There have been nine Catholic archbishops in the Windy City, and for better or worse, they’ve all been larger-than-life figures.

In the early 20th century, Cardinal George Mundelein was an FDR enthusiast who mobilized the resources of the Catholic Church to respond to the Great Depression, and frequently sparred with the infamous “radio priest,” that Rev. Charles Coughlin, over his anti-Semitic and quasi-fascist demagoguery. The archdiocesan seminary in Chicago today bears Mundelein’s name.

To take another example, Cardinal John Cody, who ruled Chicago with an iron first during the 1960s and ’70s, was a lightning rod described by the priest-novelist Andrew Greeley as a “madcap tyrant.” Cody’s notoriety was also flavored with scandal He is alleged to have funneled large sums of church money to support a woman believed by many to have been his mistress.

Love ‘em or hate ‘em, the prelates who have ruled Chicago have been impossible to ignore.

More recently, the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin embodied the progressive reform energies unleashed by the Second Vatican Council in the mid-1960s. During the 1970s and ’80s, Bernardin played a key behind-the-scenes role from Chicago as a power-broker in the national bishops’ conference, leading it to oppose the Reagan administration over military policy and to embrace the cause of the poor.

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.

Theologians’ letter & Nienstedt’s reply: Opus Dei Beast double PR Stunts – to imitate Rites of Reconciliation modeled after Saint John Paul II. WTF

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

There is a new Opus Dei Beast double PR stunts strategy today wherein they are using a group of theology professors’ letter to save [face] Archbishop Nienstedt from resigning and to calm public opinion and uproar against him, and to save the archdiocese from “bankruptcy” (LOL with all the church’s hundreds of billions of dollars stashed in American companies and secret Vatican secret Swiss Banks). The theologians’ open letter is actually a rebuff to all recent calls especially from the media for Nienstedt to resign.

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.

La turbia historia del obispo Berlié

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Contralínea [Mexico City, Mexico]

September 21, 2014

By Edgar González Ruiz

Read original article

Al igual que Onésimo Cepeda, Juan Sandoval Íñiguez y Norberto Rivera, el prelado de Yucatán Emilio Carlos Berlié Belaunzarán se cuenta entre los obispos que cobraron protagonismo y poder en la década de1990, luego de que Carlos Salinas de Gortari reformara la relación entre el Estado y la Iglesia Católica para congraciarse con ésta.

Nacido en Aguascalientes en 1939, en el seno de una familia acaudalada, Berlié fue obispo de Tijuana de 1982 a 1995, antes de ser nombrado arzobispo de Yucatán, y a lo largo de su gestión lo han acusado, entre otras irregularidades, de encubrir a pederastas y a defraudadores, además de que, desde su estancia en Tijuana, lo persigue la sospecha de haber recibido apoyos de conocidos narcotraficantes.

El PRI y sus obispos

En su libro El PRI y sus obispos. El caso Berlié (Libros de la Araucaria, Buenos Aires, 2009), el doctor Iván Franco Cáceres analiza la trayectoria de ese obispo y lo describe como un prelado afín a gobernantes priístas y dispuesto a congraciarse con el poder en general.

Las cuatro partes de su obra abordan, respectivamente, la relación de Berlié con los gobiernos priístas, con el Partido Acción Nacional (PAN), con su grey católica y con los evangélicos.

El autor, antropólogo con estudios de posgrado en historia y en ciencias políticas, menciona que Berlié estableció buenas relaciones con el exgobernador priísta Víctor Cervera Pacheco (1995-2001), a pesar de las tendencias liberales que en épocas anteriores exhibía este último.

Muy buenas fueron también las relaciones del obispo con la exgobernadora Ivonne Ortega (2007-2012), sobrina de Víctor Cervera Pacheco, al grado de que, mientras que el poder priísta promovió la penalización del aborto para complacer al clero, el arzobispado se abstuvo de incomodar al gobierno del estado y en lo posible le procuró su apoyo (El PRI y sus obispos. El caso Berlié, página 43).

Por ejemplo, en octubre de 2009, cuando Ortega autorizó la compra de siete camionetas para legisladores yucatecos con representación del estado en la capital, Berlié elogió la decisión, alegando que con ello se permite que las grandes fábricas proporcionen empleo a la población (el episodio lo relata Iván Franco en otro de sus libros: Política y autores religiosos en Yucatán, México, 2013).

Curiosamente, según el autor, la relación de Berlié no fue tan cordial con el panista Patricio Patrón Laviada (a pesar de la natural afinidad del PAN con el clero) debido, señala, a factores como el hecho de que tanto el gobernador como el obispo fueron acusados, por distintas razones, de mantener vínculos con el narcotráfico, además de que Berlié tenía “aspiraciones ascendentes”, mientras que el gobierno del panista iba en declive en cuanto a su popularidad.

Lo anterior no es tan extraño si tenemos en cuenta que muchos jerarcas católicos aman el poder y sus privilegios, por lo que algunos obispos no han desdeñado acercarse a cualquier gobierno en turno, como fue en su tiempo Luis María Martínez (arzobispo de México de 1937 a 1956), quien promovió la influencia católica con la estrategia de cultivar buenas relaciones con presidentes como Lázaro Cárdenas y Manuel Ávila Camacho.

En cuanto a su relación con la feligresía, sugiere Franco que ha estado marcada por un estilo jerárquico, autoritario, y por su interés en mejorar las relaciones entre el Estado y la Iglesia Católica en la entidad.

“Berlié Belaunzarán es un preclaro defensor de las relaciones de colaboración entre el poder temporal…” (Franco, El PRI y sus obispos. El caso Berlié, página 92).

Por otro lado, el obispo tejió algunas de sus mejores relaciones políticas con el apoyo que le brindaron grupos poderosos del clero, como los Legionarios de Cristo y el Opus Dei, a la vez que ha tenido una actitud represiva hacia corrientes progresistas del clero.

En lo referente a las iglesias evangélicas y protestantes, han sufrido el favoritismo que los gobernantes dispensan al clero católico, a la vez que la falta de interés de Berlié por cultivar un ecumenismo acorde con el espíritu del Concilio Vaticano II.

“El llamado conciliar al diálogo entre las iglesias hermanadas en Cristo no es algo que se practique en la actual situación yucateca […] en donde públicamente o en privado se da el mensaje, tanto desde el poder religiosos como desde el poder civil, que lo política y religiosamente correcto es actuar como católico, apostólico y romano” (obra citada, página 128).

Los pecados de Berlié

Berlié, quien está por cumplir 75 años de edad y en la que por regla los obispos piden su retiro, ha sido fuertemente criticado a lo largo de su trayectoria, que quedó marcada por las acusaciones de que recibió recursos provenientes del narco para grandes construcciones de la Iglesia, cuando fue obispo de Tijuana.

Nos remontamos a 1993, cuando fue tema de coyuntura en los medios de comunicación el papel que jugó el sacerdote Jorge Montaño, “bajo conocimiento de Berlié”, de presentar a los Arellano Félix con el entonces nuncio Girolamo Prigione, para exculparlos del asesinato del cardenal Posadas Ocampo (otro prelado del salinismo sospechoso de haber mantenido relaciones con el narco).

Al año siguiente, el 23 de marzo de 1994, fue asesinado el entonces candidato presidencial Luis Donaldo Colosio, precisamente en Tijuana, y en marzo de 1995 Berlié fue designado arzobispo de Yucatán.

Ya en esa entidad, Berlié guardó silencio con respecto del caso del cura de la parroquia de Conkal, Jesús Alberto Ceballos, denunciado en 2008 por haber mostrado actitudes homofóbicas hacia los enfermos de sida.

En contraste, el sacerdote Raúl Lugo Rodríguez, considerado como exponente de la teología de la liberación, ha enfrentado marginación y acoso luego de la publicación Iglesia católica y homosexualidad (editorial Nueva Utopía, Madrid, 2006), donde relata sus experiencias en la asistencia espiritual a grupos homosexuales, además de que condenaba supuestos métodos terapéuticos contra esa preferencia sexual.

El religioso perdió su espacio editorial en el conservador Diario de Yucatán y fue reprendido por Berlié Belaunzarán y por el obispo auxiliar Rafael Palma Capetillo, para obligarlo a modificar sus planteamientos sobre ese tema (http://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ra%C3%BAl_Lugo_Rodr%C3%ADguez).

La oleada de denuncias contra curas pederastas ha afectado también la imagen de Berlié, pues fue sólo hasta abril de 2010 cuando el prelado decidió suspender “temporalmente” al sacerdote Teodoro Baquedano Pech, sobre quien desde hace tiempo pesaban acusaciones de abuso sexual contra menores en Estados Unidos.

La decisión se anunció luego de que el diario estadunidense The Washington Post publicara que durante 12 años Sylvia Chávez, una de sus víctimas, de la que abusó cuando era niña, estuvo tratando de denunciar el hecho ante las autoridades de la Iglesia, tanto en Estados Unidos como en México (www.proceso.com.mx/?p=107839).

A pesar de ello, Baquedano continuó ejerciendo como sacerdote en Yucatán hasta que se produjo el escándalo periodístico que forzó a Berlié a tomar medidas.

Otra fuente de críticas para Berlié han sido los negocios de algunos religiosos de la Arquidiócesis.

En 2008 se dio a conocer un “fraude escandaloso” en el Sistema Coopera, “la llamada caja financiera por excelencia de la Iglesia local”, sin que la autoridad civil “expresara un mínimo apoyo a los ciudadanos afectados por los manejos financieros en esa cooperativa de ahorro” (obra citada, página 44).

Esa instancia financiera, que contaba con recursos económicos de la Iglesia local, era administrada por “seglares muy cercanos tanto a la clase política del PAN como al poder católico”.

“El arzobispo, al parecer con intereses financieros en la ?caja’, pretendió pasar inadvertido y hasta cometió el error de mandar ocultar la información más comprometida del caso” (obra citada, página 95).

Sin embargo, el obispo no pudo evitar que se diera a conocer que el autor intelectual del desfalco era una persona muy cercana a Patricio Patrón Laviada.

Luego de hacer notar la visible voracidad financiera de la facción del panismo local encabezada por Patrón Laviada, el autor menciona esta razonable hipótesis: “Es probable que mediante la intervención de autoridades federales del gobierno de Felipe Calderón se haya montado una operación financiera y una cortina de humo para proteger a los políticos beneficiados de esas operaciones, por lo que, de paso, también se protegió al jerarca católico” (obra citada, página 95).

En 2009 salió a la luz pública otro fraude, esta vez por parte de una empresa de asesoría financiera, y con motivo de ese escándalo se supo que de cinco a ocho sacerdotes católicos estaban entre los inversionistas defraudados, y por lo tanto habían usado los recursos provenientes de las limosnas de los fieles para invertirlos en el mercado bursátil.

“Una vez más […] el arzobispo Berlié se hizo a un lado y no dio la cara hasta que evaluaron qué decir a la opinión pública”, y la versión que dieron fue alegar que las inversiones de los curas provenían de sus propios recursos personales, de donaciones privadas o de su patrimonio familiar” (obra citada, página 102).

Edgar González Ruiz*

*Maestro en filosofía; especialista en estudios acerca de la derecha política en México

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.

September 20, 2014

SA archbishop applauds Pope’s appointment to Chicago diocese

TEXAS
KSAT

SAN ANTONIO – San Antonio Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller is calling the Pope’s nominee for the diocese of Chicago a blessing to the Catholic Church.

Bishop Blase Joseph Cupich was announced Saturday to succeed Cardinal Francis George, who is battling cancer.

“It is with great joy and gratitude I thank Pope Francis for this inspired choice. I am confident Archbishop-designate Cupich will enrich the faith of the people of the Archdiocese of Chicago, for whom I will always feel warm affection,” said Garcia-Siller in a statement.

Archbishop Gustavo served in the Chicago Archdiocese before coming to San Antonio, and was considered among the candidates for the job.

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.

IL–Victims to leaflet outside Cathedral

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims to leaflet outside Cathedral
SNAP asks for help from lay Catholics on abuse
They urge “tangible safety steps” for new prelate

WHAT

As parishioners leave mass, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will hand out leaflets on the sidewalk about Chicago’s new archbishop. The fliers urge Catholics to

–educate themselves about the new archbishop’s record on children’s safety.
–prod him to be forthcoming about abuse in his prior diocese,
–judge him by his deeds, not his words, and
–remain vigilant and skeptical about him, rather than trusting and complacent,

The leaflets also urge the new archbishop to

– put several suspended &/or credibly accused Chicago priests in treatment centers,
– oust one of them from his parish, and
– break with his predecessor and post ALL names of predator priests on the archdiocesan website, whether they belong to religious orders (like the Jesuits or the Marianists) or to the archdiocese itself.

WHEN
Sunday, Sept. 21, 11:45 a.m.

WHERE
Outside Holy Name Cathedral, corner of State and Superior. (south of
Chicago Ave.) in Chicago

WHO
Four-six victims of clergy sex crimes who belong to an international support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, including the organization’s long time president

WHY
SNAP has concerns about Archbishop Blase Cupich and the church’s continuing clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis. Both his words and his deeds are disturbing, the group says.

In Chicago, SNAP wants Cupich to

–Put three suspended and credibly accused predator priests (Fr. Robert Stepek, Fr. Walter Turlo and Fr. Thomas Swade) in treatment centers, and
–Suspend an accused predator priest, Fr. Micheal O’Connell, from his post at St. Alphonsus Catholic parish (1429 W. Wellington Ave., 773 525 0709) in Lakeview. OConnell was accused of molesting a boy, was suspended him, but later put back on the job this spring, even though a second man came forward saying he witnessed Fr. O’Connell molesting a boy.

[BishopAccountability.org]

CUPICH’S DEEDS (in just about two recent Spokane cases)

–Cupich apparently did nothing, SNAP says, to oust a credibly accused predator priest, Fr. Brad Reynolds, who was still on the job just a few months ago despite 1) two civil abuse suits against him, 2) being suspended by his church supervisors, and 3) allegedly being monitored 24/7 by church staff.

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

POPE FRANCIS APPOINTS BISHOP BLASE J. CUPICH ARCHBISHOP OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF CHICAGO

CHICAGO (IL)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago

Chicago, IL (September 20, 2014) – His Holiness Pope Francis has appointed the Bishop of Spokane, Washington, Most Reverend Blase J. Cupich, as the ninth Archbishop of Chicago, the Vatican announced today. Archbishop Cupich will be installed as Archbishop of Chicago on November 18, 2014, at Holy Name Cathedral.

Francis Cardinal George, OMI, retains the office of Archbishop until November 18, until Archbishop Cupich is installed.

Archbishop Cupich said, “The Holy Father’s appointment of me to Chicago humbles but also encourages me. I am grateful to God for giving me this blessed opportunity to be his servant in this great city and this great local Church. As Pope Francis began his new pastoral ministry in Rome by asking the people to pray for him, so too now I bow my head in the hope that everyone in Chicago will pray for me in the days ahead.”

Cardinal George remarked, “I am deeply grateful to our Holy Father, Pope Francis, for appointing Bishop Blase Cupich as the ninth Archbishop of Chicago. Bishop Cupich is well prepared for his new responsibilities and brings to them a deep faith, a quick intelligence, personal commitment and varied pastoral experiences.”

Archbishop Cupich was born on March 19, 1949, in Omaha, Nebraska, to Blase and Mary (Mayhan) Cupich. He is one of nine children, five sisters and three brothers.

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.

BISHOP BLASE CUPICHBORN: March 19, 1949, in Omaha, Nebraska.EDUCATION: Cupich…

CHICAGO (IL)
MyNextFone

A look at Chicago’s incoming, outgoing archbishops.

BISHOP BLASE CUPICH

BORN: March 19, 1949, in Omaha, Nebraska.

EDUCATION: Cupich holds degrees in philosophy and theology and is a graduate of The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.

PASTORAL ASSIGNMENTS: Cupich was ordained a priest in 1975 in Omaha, where he served as an associate pastor, a high school instructor and director of the Office for Divine Worship at the archdiocese. In the 1980s, he worked on the staff of the Vatican embassy in Washington. He was appointed bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota, in 1998, and served there until 2010, when he was appointed to Spokane, Washington.

Cupich also served as chairman of the U.S. bishops’ child protection committee at the height of the clergy sex abuse crisis and as church leaders were putting in place a toughened policy on disciplining guilty priests.

PRIORITIES: When he takes over as head of Chicago’s more than 2.2 million Catholics on Nov. 18, Cupich says his priority is simply to be attentive to what’s already happening in the diocese, noting that “God is already at work in the lives of people” here. He’s described as a moderate and has called for civility in the culture wars. But he says it’s wrong to think of his appointment as a strong signal from Pope Francis about the direction he wants to steer American church leaders. “I think he sent a pastor, not a message,” Cupich says.

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.

In Chicago, management challenges await new archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
Crux

By Michael O’Loughlin
National reporter September 20, 2014

When Bishop Blase Cupich takes the reins of the Archdiocese of Chicago on Nov. 17, he will be vaulted from a relatively quiet spot in northern Washington State into a hub of American Catholicism, where he instantly becomes a leading figure in the American church.

A moderate among Catholic bishops, Cupich (pronounced SOU-pitch) was reportedly tapped after Pope Francis consulted personally with several American bishops, rather than relying solely on recommendations from the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops.

But navigating the tricky waters of leading a polarized church will be just one part of Cupich’s job. He will also lead what is effectively a billion-dollar company that employs more than 15,000 people and serves millions through ministry, social services, and education.

Cupich’s executive experience so far has been in much smaller dioceses. In Spokane, where he is currently bishop, there are 17 Catholic schools and 80 parishes (Chicago has 244 schools and 356 parishes). The budget there, $2.6 million, is a fraction of Chicago’s. Cupich was credited with effectively managing the Diocese of Spokane’s bankruptcy upon his arrival in 2010.

“While he represents an interest and strongly defended the church, nevertheless he didn’t defend inappropriate activity. And he was a tremendous partner in finding resolution of these matters.” said US District Judge Michael Hogan of Oregon who oversaw Spokane’s bankruptcy.

He is currently in the midst of a malpractice suit brought by the diocese against the law firm that represented the diocese before he arrived, charging that the firm did not properly handle settlements with sex abuse victims, putting the diocese at risk for another bankruptcy. With the trial slated to begin in February, Cupich’s predecessor will be left to handle the proceedings.

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Editorial: Bishop a good fit for Chicago

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

Can you get a good vibe from a press conference?

We believe we did Saturday morning when Bishop Blase Cupich, the next archbishop of Chicago, was introduced to our city and region.

At least three times Bishop Cupich invoked the name and spirit of Pope Francis, saying the pope “cares a lot about people” and wants an archbishop for Chicago who “serve the needs of people.”

That is exactly right. That is Pope Francis. And that is just what an archbishop should do.

Cupich wasted no time in reaching out to Hispanics, who make up about 44 percent of Catholics in the Chicago Diocese. Three minutes into the press conference, he turned to the TV cameras and spoke at length in Spanish, expressing his commitment to them.

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Chicago’s New Archbishop Blase Cupich

UNITED STATES
Wall Street Journal

Pope Francis on Saturday named Bishop Blase Cupich, a moderate who has called for civility in the culture wars, as the next archbishop of Chicago. Bishop Cupich will succeed 77-year-old Cardinal Francis George, who has been battling cancer and has said he believes the disease will end his life, in November. The Archdiocese of Chicago serves 2.3 million parishioners and is the third-largest diocese in the country.

–The Associated Press contributed to this article.

Experience

Bishop Cupich was ordained to priesthood in 1975 for the Archdiocese of Omaha, Neb., and was installed to his current post of Bishop of Spokane in 2010. He also served as Bishop of Rapid City, S.D. In the 1980s, he worked on the staff of the Vatican embassy in Washington.

Gay Marriage

He has repeatedly underscored the church’s stance that marriage should be between a man and a woman. But he has also condemned violence and bullying that has led some gay teens to suicide.

Sex-Abuse Scandal

He served as chairman of the U.S. Bishops’ child protection committee and in 2010 wrote about lessons bishops had learned from sex-abuse scandal in the Catholic weekly magazine America. “Catholics have been hurt by the moral failings of some priests, but they have been hurt and angered even more by bishops who failed to put children first,” he wrote.

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Survivors Network of Those Abused By Priests Protests Pick For Cardinal George’s Successor

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

Bob Roberts

CHICAGO (CBS) — Not everyone is giving Chicago’s next Roman Catholic archbishop high marks.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) staged a small protest outside the news conference at which Archbishop-designate Blase Cupich was presented to the media and issued a statement in which they said they are not optimistic that Cupich will do more to prevent abuse by priests and other church workers.

SNAP quotes the Spokane (Wash.) Spokesman Review, which reported that more than 200 victims have come forward in Spokane, a diocese that is already reeling from bankruptcy caused by abuse suits.

“Pope Francis has delivered Chicago Catholics new wine skins but the same old wine,” said Kate Bochte, a SNAP leader.

Bochte said that in 2010, Cupich told reporters that the clergy sex abuse scandal was over.
“Clearly, it was not,” said Bochte, who called the statements “ignorant, very offensive and dangerous.”

At the news conference, Bishop Cupich credited Francis Cardinal George for prodding the Roman Catholic Church into adopting a worldwide “zero tolerance” position on abuse.
“We have made progress. We have done a great deal,” Bishop Cupich said.

SNAP contends that the attitude by the Archdiocese toward accusations and accusers is hostile, that those making complaints find themselves being investigated and that secrecy remains the norm.

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Pope Names A Moderate To Be Chicago’s New Archbishop

UNITED STATES
NPR

by BILL CHAPPELL
September 20, 2014

One of America’s largest Catholic dioceses is getting a new leader, as Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Wash., to be the next archbishop of Chicago. Cupich will replace Cardinal Francis George, 77, a conservative who has spoken out on many social issues in his 17 years in the post.

Update at 10: 40 a.m. ET: Cardinal George Introduces Cupich

After being presented at a news conference at the Chicago archdiocese, Cupich thanked those present, and described how his seatmate on the flight into the city Friday had asked him if he was heading home.

“Yeah, I guess I am,” Cupich said.

He then read a lengthy statement in Spanish, and then in English, in which he described his feelings on being appointed to the post. When Cupich later bowed his head in prayer, a journalist waited a quick beat before asking the first question.

Cupich told reporters he had been surprised when a representative of the Vatican called to tell him of his appointment, about 10 days ago. When asked whether the import of his new post had sunk in yet, he answered, “It’s still sinking.”

To questions about his reputation as being more moderate than George, Cupich said it’s normal for different leaders to have “different emphases and different approaches.”

He then nodded to his predecessor, noting that when George was introduced in 1997, he was asked about his own views and how they might differ from his predecessor. Cupich said that George answered that those differences could be another reason the church is against cloning.

Our original post continues:

The choice of Cupich is taking some experts by surprise.

“Sources believe the pope bypassed the Congregation of Bishops and worked the telephones on his own, calling Catholic leaders throughout the country to get a read on who would be best for Chicago,” local NBC 5 TV reports. “Cupich had appeared on many lists of favorites for the position, but most agreed Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin was the front-runner.”

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Survivors group challenges next Chicago archbishop on clergy misconduct, protecting children

CHICAGO (IL)
The Republic

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
September 20, 2014

CHICAGO — A group concerned about how the Catholic church has handled clergy sexual misconduct called Saturday for the next archbishop of Chicago to aggressively seek out victims and urge them to come forward.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests held a news conference in Chicago after Bishop Blase (BLAYZ’) Cupich (SOO’-pihch), of Spokane, Washington, was introduced as the successor to the retiring Cardinal Francis George.

Leaders of SNAP said Cupich should show his commitment to protecting children by saying Mass at a parish where now-defrocked priest and convicted child molester Daniel McCormack had worked.

“We beg Cupich to prod his flock to aggressively seek out others McCormack may have assaulted and who may still be suffering in silence, shame and self-blame,” said Kate Bochte of SNAP in a statement.

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Chicago meets its new archbishop as the ‘Pope Francis effect’ sets in

CHICAGO (IL)
Religion News Service

David Gibson | September 20, 2014

(RNS) When Spokane Bishop Blase Cupich got a call 10 days ago with the news that Pope Francis had chosen him to be the next archbishop of Chicago — the pontiff’s most important U.S. appointment to date — he was so taken aback that he couldn’t speak for a few moments.

Asked by reporters how long it took for the reality of his appointment to sink in, Cupich smiled and said, “It’s still sinking in.”

A lot of other Catholics are trying to absorb the news as well, just as surprised that Francis picked the 65-year-old Cupich, who had been considered a long shot by many Vatican handicappers. They were also pleased, or concerned, that the pope had evidently chosen a bishop who shared his own emphasis on listening to the flock and caring for the poor.

“I think that he” — Francis — “sent a pastor, not a message,” Cupich told reporters.

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Meet Bishop Blase Cupich, Chicago’s incoming archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
WBEZ

[with audio]

September 20, 2014
By Lynette Kalsnes

Bishop Blase Cupich will be installed as the next archbishop of the Archdiocese of Chicago on Nov. 18. He’s currently the bishop of Spokane, Wash., and previously served as bishop of Rapid City, S.D.

He began a press conference Saturday by asking the people of Chicago to pray for him, as Pope Francis did right after he became pontiff.

Cupich’s appointment came as something of a surprise to many who have been closely watching the succession process. The bishop comes from a smaller diocese, and hadn’t been on most of the short lists. But he’s known as a moderate who observers expect will follow the pastoral approach of Pope Francis. …

The bishop — who headed the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Committee for the Protection of Children and Young People from 2008-2011 — said the church must continue to work to protect children from priest sexual abuse and to help heal victims, adding he’ll try hard to make that an important part of the ministry.

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+Cupich to Chicago: What Does This Mean?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Sep. 20, 2014

Perhaps it was a coincidence. Last night, watching the fifth installment of Ken Burns’ “The Roosevelts,” Jon Meachem was explaining that, as happens at key moments in history, in FDR and Churchill, the moment had found the men it needed. Also last night, my cell phone and emails were on fire as the news broke that Bishop Blase Cupich was to be named the ninth Archbishop of Chicago. Again, the moment found the man.

Let’s start with the moment. In a little more than a year, Pope Francis has completely changed the public face of the Catholic Church. Instead of Vatileaks, we have people, including many non-Catholics, who feel good about the Church, who love the pope, and who demonstrate time and again their responsiveness to the Gospel call to be with the poor and the marginalized. Instead of a Church closed in on itself, fighting over the liturgy, and more interested in ferreting out heretics than in seeking converts, we have a Church that is urged, repeatedly, by Pope Francis to go to the peripheries and encounter Christ by encountering the poor. Instead of a culture war style, we have a Pope who is calling the Church to engage the culture, accompany people, not uncritically as his comments on socio-economic realities make clear – “This economy kills” – but with love. Just last Sunday, we heard in the Gospels that God so loved the world He sent His only Son. We did not hear that God was so appalled by the secularization in the world that He filed a lawsuit. Pope Francis has brought the joy of the Gospel back.

Not everyone in the United States has been thrilled with Pope Francis. How many times in these past eighteen months have we heard his conservative critics undertake their “What Pope Francis meant to say” routine. We have seen prelates adopt a grudging tone, that Francis is the pope we need even if he is not the pope we want. (And, thank you very much, Francis is very much the pope some of us want!) We have heard the sneer that Francis is blinded by his parochial, Argentine experience. The divisions within the American episcopate, already obvious, have become more pronounced, not less, by Francis’ revolution.

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Cardinal George says he plans to continue in public life

CHICAGO (IL)
Daily Herald

Associated Press

CHICAGO — Cardinal Francis George said Saturday he intends to continue to contribute to the public life of the church after his successor takes over as head of the Archdiocese of Chicago in November as long as his health allows him.

The 77-year-old leader of Chicago’s more than 2.2 million Catholics is battling cancer and has undergone chemotherapy.

At a news conference to introduce his successor, Bishop Blase (BLAYZ’) Cupich (SOO’-pihch), of Spokane, Washington, George was asked about his health and whether he would try to make a delayed trip to Rome to meet with Pope Francis in November.

“I hope to have the strength,” George said, adding that he also wanted to make the trip to take part in meetings of the various conferences he is a part of. George explained that cardinals continue until they are 80 years old to serve as advisers to the pope through their work in those conferences.

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Blase Cupich Introduced as New Archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tonight

Paris Schutz | September 20, 2014

Saying that he was “well-prepared” for the responsibilities of leading a church of 2.2 million people, Cardinal Francis George introduced his successor, Blase Cupich, who will formally take over as head of the Archdiocese of Chicago on Nov. 18. Cupich said he was quite overwhelmed at his selection by Pope Francis.

“Surprise doesn’t come close to the word to describe it,” he said. “I’m no saint, but I hope I can live up to the responsibility.”

Cupich, 65, comes from Spokane, Wash., where he has led a diocese of 100,000 for four years. He was bishop of Rapid City, S.D. for 12 years before that. He has been described by various Catholic media as a “moderate” on many issues, choosing to focus less on social issues like contraception and abortion, and more on social justice issues. It’s a contrast to outgoing Archbishop Francis George, who has been seen as more of a conservative.

“Everyone brings their own talents and experiences,” Cupich said. “It’s not my agenda, it’s not what I feel. I’m going to be attentive to what the lord wants. If there’s moderation in that, maybe I’m a moderate.” …

George, who will continue as a cardinal when he retires as archbishop, said Cupich will be fully briefed in the next two months on the legal issues facing the church, most notably a group of child sex abuse cases that are still in the process of being settled. George has taken criticism from groups like the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests for what they say is a failure to remove child predators from the ministry, and for enabling them to continue to prey on children. But Cupich praised his predecessor for his role in influencing the church to tackle the issue.

“We would not have zero tolerance with the issue of child protection if not for this man here. He’s the one that pressed for it more than anybody in the face of opposition,” Cupich said.

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Bishop Blase Cupich “Surprised” To Be Picked As Cardinal George’s Successor

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

(CBS) – Bishop Blase Cupich said he was “surprised” and “overwhelmed” at being selected to succeed Francis Cardinal George as Archbishop of Chicago at a press conference Saturday morning.

Bishop Blase Cupich will continue to serve as the Bishop of Spokane until he is installed as Archbishop of Chicago on Nov. 18 in a ceremony at Holy Name Cathedral.

“Archbishop Cupich is prepared for his new responsibilities and brings to them a deep faith, quick intelligence, personal commitment and varied pastoral experience,” said Cardinal George.

Cupich said he was, “quite overwhelmed and very surprised,” when he got the news 10 days ago that he would be the new Archbishop of Chicago.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched. It is his first major U.S. appointment and the clearest sign yet of the direction he hopes to steer American church leaders. Cupich said not to think about his appointment as a message. …

The Survivors Network Of Those Abused By Priests or “SNAP” is speaking out against the selection. They released a statement saying in part: “We hope that Chicago’s next Catholic Archbishop will do more to prevent future clergy sex crimes and cover-ups. But we’re not optimistic.”

Friday, the Spokesman Review reported that more than 200 victims have come forward in Spokane.

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Spokane Bishop Blase Cupich To Succeed Cardinal Francis George

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicagoist

When the Archdiocese of Chicago sent out a notice to media late Friday announcing a new conference Saturday morning, we suspected a major announcement was in the works.

And this is huge news. Blase Cupich, the current bishop of Spokane, Washington, has been elected to succeed Cardinal Francis George as Archbishop of Chicago’s Catholic Church. It’s the first time in the history of the archdiocese a successor has been named while the current archbishop is currently living.

George, 77, actively pressured the Vatican to find his successor since his cancer returned in August 2012. George has a history of battling cancer; he previously underwent radical surgery in 2006 to have a cancerous bladder and prostate removed. His current treatments, which include taking part in a trial program at the University of Chicago, forced him to cancel a trip to Rome for the canonizations of Popes John XXIII and John Paul II. He succeeded the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin as Chicago’s archbishop in 1998.

Cupich, 61, a native of Omaha, Nebraska, holds degrees from Pontifical Gregorian University and The Catholic University of America.

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Next Chicago archbishop aims to nourish faith

CHICAGO (IL)
Catholic World Report

Chicago, Ill., Sep 20, 2014 / 10:35 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Chicago’s Archbishop-designate Blase Cupich introduced himself to his new city on Saturday, downplaying political interpretations of his appointment and stressing the need to be attentive to God’s voice.

“My priority as a priest and now as a bishop is to recognize that God is already at work in the lives of people,” the archbishop-designate told a Sept. 20 press conference in Chicago. “People come to us as priests, as ministers of the Church, because they have already experienced God, and what they want us to do is to confirm, support and nourish people in that call.”

“My first priority is just to be attentive to all that God is doing here already,” he said.

Pope Francis has named Cupich, the current Bishop of Spokane, Washington, as the ninth Archbishop of Chicago. He will be installed on Nov. 18 at the city’s Holy Name Cathedral.

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IL–Detailed SNAP statement re Cupich’s abuse track record

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

More from SNAP re new Chicago archbishop

For immediate release: Saturday, Sept. 20

Statement by Kate Bochte, SNAP leader, 630-768-1860, keight@sbcglobal.net

Many commentators are stressing that Cupich is perceived as a “moderate” in terms of his theology, philosophy or behavior. It’s important to remember, however, that Catholic officials of all stripes have concealed – and often are still concealing – awful crimes against children. “Left wing,” “right wing” and “centrist” bishops deal with clergy sex crimes and cover ups in remarkably similar ways. On this continuing crisis in the church, it’s irresponsible to assume that Cupich will be any better than George. Prudent people will remain skeptical and let Cupich hopefully prove, through his deeds (not his words) that he is committed to the safety of children.

Before we talk about Cupich’s past, let’s focus on what he could and should do, right now, to safeguard innocent kids and vulnerable predators in the church and help suffering Chicago abuse victims and betrayed Chicago Catholics feel reassured.

–Historically, incoming prelates first say mass at the diocesan Cathedral. We urge Cupich to break this tradition. We beg him to go first to one of the parishes where Chicago’s most notorious predator priest, the now defrocked Daniel McCormack, molested kids. We beg Cupich to prod his flock to aggressively seek out others McCormack may have assaulted and who may still be suffering in silence, shame and self-blame. (That kind of outreach is effective, but we have rarely seen a bishop do it.)

–He should put Fr. Robert Stepek in a remote, secure, independent treatment center so children will be safer.

[SNAP]

– At least 39 Spokane priests have been publicly accused of child sexual abuse. That’s a very high number for a relatively small diocese. Cupich should explain, in detail, what he has done that goes “above and beyond” the bare minimum of paying settlements and suspending predators.

– He and his top aides in Spokane acknowledge that 27 of these 39 clerics have molested children. He should explain that discrepancy.

– He should tell parishioners and the public precisely what he has done to warn parents about and protect kids from Patrick G. O’Connell, the most prolific and notorious child molesting cleric in the Northwest.

[BishopAccountability.org]

Here’s what we know about Cupich’s past:

1) Earlier this year, a priest was still on the job at a Catholic college in Cupich’s Spokane diocese even though

–-eight years earlier, the priest was sued for molesting two boys in Alaska,

– was removed from his duties by his Jesuit supervisors, and

— was allegedly put under 24 hour surveillance at a Jesuit institution.

We urged Cupich to warn the public and their parishioners about the priest, Fr. Brad Reynolds, and insist that Jesuits suspend him and aggressively reach out to others he may have hurt.”

[SNAP]

As best we can tell, Cupich ignored our request.

2) In 2010, we urged Cupich to reach out to others who may have been hurt by a priest who exploited and impregnated a Catholic parishioner. As best we can tell.

[SNAP]

3) In 2007, we backed Cupich in the election for head of the US bishops’ sex abuse committee chairmanship. At that time, we admitted that we knew little about Cupich but endorse his candidacy simply because his competitors have poorer track records on abuse cases. (Because of the Spokane bankruptcy, much of his abuse track record was sealed or hidden.)

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Pod people: Covering both sides of what Pope Francis is saying and doing

UNITED STATES
Get Religion

Terry Mattingly

So, Catholic GetReligion readers, is the Pope Francis glass half full today or half empty?

Well, some might say, that depends on whether the person answering is a liberal Catholic or from the conservative side of the church aisle. Is it really that simple? I don’t think so.

Consider the stunning news out of Chicago, with the announcement that Pope Francis has selected a bishop admired by the left (which in media reports makes him a “moderate”) to take the place of Cardinal Francis George, a hero of the doctrinal right. Is Catholic conservative Thomas Peters right when he claims, while discussing the moral theology of Bishop Blase Cupich:

Pope Francis’ choice of Bishop Cupich should actually pour cold water on liberal hopes of a leftward turn in the American episcopacy.

Yes, Bishop Cupich talks in a way that makes liberals feel comfortable, but the substance of what he says is almost always sound and orthodox. He told the New York Times “Pope Francis doesn’t want cultural warriors, he doesn’t want ideologues”, but do liberals ever stop and realize that cuts both ways?

Peters goes on to note that Cupich has, while speaking with a consistently progressive tone, has acted (with the exception of his decision to discourage priests from praying outside Planned Parenthood facilities) in ways consistent with Catholic teachings – even when defending marriage. And religious liberty? Yes.

And speaking of the Catholic left, Religious News Service columnist David Gibson has perfectly stated the opinions of those who are dancing with joy after the news from Chicago. Here are the talking points on the other side, right down to the editorial blast claiming that efforts to defend church doctrines on sexuality consistently clash with efforts to promote teachings on social justice.

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ARCHBISHOP-ELECT BLASE CUPICH INTRODUCED BY CARDINAL GEORGE

CHICAGO (IL)
ABC 7

CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago’s Francis Cardinal George introduced Archbishop-Elect Blase Cupich on Saturday. Cupich will succeed George, becoming the 9th archbishop at the Chicago Archdiocese.

“I was quite overwhelmed, very surprised. . . My breath was taken away,” Archbishop-Elect Cupich said of learning he’d been chose by Pope Francis. “I said, ‘I’ve never said no to the church. Yes, I’ll do it.'”

When asked how long it took for the appointment to set in, he said, “It’s still sinking.”

Chosen by Pope Francis, the Vatican made the official announcement earlier from Rome . Cupich will be installed as archbishop during a special Mass on November 18. Until then, George remains cardinal, though without administrative power.

This will be the first time in the history of the Chicago Archdiocese that a new leader is appointed while the former is still alive. George, 77, and Cupich, 65, have worked together in the past, and will get a chance to do that again.

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Cupich says his appointment to lead Chicago Catholics not intended to signal new direction

CHICAGO (IL)
TribTown

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: September 20, 2014

CHICAGO — The bishop chosen by Pope Francis to be the new head of the Archdiocese of Chicago said Saturday that people should not read too much into the decision about the Catholic Church’s future direction.

Bishop Blase (BLAHZ’) Cupich (SOO’-pihch), of Spokane, Washington, has been described as a moderate and has called for civility in the culture wars.

During a news conference in Chicago, Cupich was asked several times about whether he would shift direction as a successor to Cardinal Francis George, who is particularly admired in the church’s conservative wing.

He responded simply that he would be himself and it was up to others to decide whether that constituted a change.

Cupich also said it was wrong to think of his appointment as a strong signal from Pope Francis about the direction he wants to steer American church leaders.

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The ‘Francis Era’ in America starts today in Chicago

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor September 20, 2014

With the appointment of Blase Cupich today as the new Archbishop of Chicago, one can say that the Francis revolution in Catholicism has finally arrived in the United States.

Up to this point, one could have made the argument that the change triggered by Francis is largely a matter of a new tone and style in Rome, but one that had not yet reached down and begun to alter the culture of the church on these shores.

With the appointment of the 65-year-old Cupich, however, the American landscape has shifted.

This is the fourth appointment Francis has made to a major archdiocese since July, following earlier choices for Cologne, Germany; Madrid, Spain; and Sydney, Australia. Each pointed a direction for the church in those countries.

By now, the profile of a “Francis bishop” has come into focus: Ideologically, moderates rather than hardliners; pastorally, men who place special emphasis on concern for the poor and those at the margins; and personally, leaders who aren’t flashy personality types, with a reputation for being accessible and hands-on.

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Pope Francis establishes Commission to reform marriage annulment process

VATICAN CITY
news.va

(Vatican Radio) The Holy See Press Office on Saturday announced Pope Francis has decided to establish a Special Commission for the study of the reform of the matrimonial processes in canon law. The decision was made on August 2, 2014.

This Committee will be chaired by Msgr. Pio Vito Pinto, Dean of the Roman Rota. The other members are: and will be composed of the following members: Cardinal Francesco Coccopalmerio, President of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts; Archbishop Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer, SJ, secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith; Bishop Dimitri Salachas, Apostolic Exarch of the Greek Byzantine Catholic Church; Msgrs. Maurice Monier, Leo Xavier Michael Arokiaraj and Alejandro W. Bunge, Prelate Auditors of the Tribunal of the Roman Rota; the Rev. Fr. Nikolaus Schöch, O.F.M., Substitute Promotor of Justice of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura; Fr. Konštanc Miroslav Adam, O.P., Rector of the Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum); Fr. Jorge Horta Espinoza, O.F.M., Dean of the Faculty of Canon Law of the Pontifical University Antoniamum; and Prof. Paolo Moneta, formerly professor of Canon Law at the University of Pisa.

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Blase Cupich, A Man of Great Kindness

UNITED STATES
America Magazine

Jim McDermott | Sep 20 2014

While in my Jesuit training, I spent three years teaching high school at Red Cloud Indian School on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in southwest South Dakota. You’ve probably heard of Pine Ridge; the New York Times and Washington Post love to send reporters out for week-long jaunts after which they write about how sad and desperate it is out there. They’re not completely wrong, but they miss an awful lot.

When I started at Red Cloud, there was a great young Jesuit at the helm, Father Bill McKenney. He was from Michigan, he looked like Fred Flintstone (the kids at our school there actually called him that when he used to teach there) and he had endless energy and passion for the people there and our work. A great joy to live with.

Four months into my stay there, Bill died suddenly, age 38, of a massive coronary. No warning, no priors, just dropped dead.

And, if you can believe it, the same thing had happend three years earlier; Assistant Principal Brother Denny Ryan, a Jesuit from Omaha with a wicked sense of humor and an uncanny ability to connect with even the angriest of student, died of a sudden heart attack at age 38, just after Easter.

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Steinberg: Cardinal George has steered church, self through strife

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

By NEIL STEINBERG September 20, 2014

When the Rev. Francis George, archbishop of Portland, Oregon, learned that Pope John Paul II had named him as the successor to Chicago’s much-beloved Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, the unassuming priest asked in surprise, “Are you sure the Holy Father has considered all the options?”

He had.

The former Northwest Sider became Cardinal Francis George, the city’s sixth cardinal and the first priest born within the Chicago Archdiocese to be called upon to lead it, which he has done with seriousness and a firm hand. On Saturday, Pope Francis namedBishop Blase Cupich, of Spokane, Washington, as George’s successor, according to the Associated Press.

Considered conservative at the time of his appointment — he was named head of the Chicago Archdiocese in April 1997 and elevated to cardinal in January 1998 — George tried to set an accepting tone for the archdiocese’s 2.3 million Catholics.

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Cupich appointment could upend conservative dominance of US hierarchy

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

David Gibson | Sep. 20, 2014 NCR Today

The appointment of Bishop Blase Cupich, a prelate closely identified with the Catholic Church’s progressive wing, to succeed Cardinal Francis George could upend decades of conservative dominance of the American hierarchy.

Cupich, 65, will succeed Cardinal Francis George, a doctrinal and cultural conservative who has headed one of the American church’s pre-eminent dioceses since 1997. In that time he became a vocal leader among the bishops and earned a reputation as a feisty culture warrior in line with the Vatican of the late St. John Paul II and retired Pope Benedict XVI.

That track record won him fans on the Catholic right, but George was seen as out of step with Francis’ desire for more pastoral bishops who are less focused on picking fights over sex and more involved in promoting the church’s social justice teachings and sticking close to the poor.

Cupich, who will now be in line to get a cardinal’s red hat, would seem to fit that bill.

Named by Pope Benedict XVI to head the Diocese of Spokane in September 2010, Cupich (pronounced “SOUP-itch”) has steadily staked out positions that align him with Catholics who want the church to engage the world rather than rail against the forces of secularism.

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Sneed: Cupich cut from same cloth as Pope Francis

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY MICHAEL SNEED September 20, 2014

The pope’s pick . . .

The new leader of Chicago’s Roman Catholic flock, Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, is being likened to the man who chose him.

“ln a pastoral sense, Cupich is like Pope Francis,” said Mark Rowlands, a former Roman Catholic seminarian from Columbus, Ohio, where Cupich had been president-rector of the Pontifical Josephinum College years ago.

“He is a humble man. Spiritual. Not pompous,” Rowlands said. “You never got the feeling you were watching a play about a guy getting dressed up in clerical frippery.

“He was approachable, a good listener . . . not an episcopal thinker who wore French cufflinks and thought himself a prince of the church . . . and certainly not into the trappings of office,” added Rowlands, who described the selection of Cupich as a “left-field choice.”

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George led flock through tough times

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Manya Brachear Pashman,
Tribune reporter

The appointment of Cardinal Francis George’s successor represents an unprecedented transition in the city’s Roman Catholic Church, where no other leader has lived long enough to meet the man taking his place.

George’s more than 17 years at the helm of the nation’s third-largest archdiocese ended Saturday with the Vatican’s announcement of Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Wash., as archbishop of Chicago.

During George’s tenure, he shepherded the church through a recession, political battles over gay marriage and immigration, and a clergy sex abuse scandal.

George also emerged as the point man between the U.S. and Vatican on matters including the liturgy of the Mass, a zero-tolerance policy for clergy sexual abuse and the selection of two popes. In fact, throughout his tenure, he fended off occasional rumors that he would be called away from Chicago to serve in Rome. …

After his years in Rome, George moved back to the U.S. in 1987 to become the coordinator of the Circle of Fellows at the Cambridge Center for the Study of Faith and Culture in Massachusetts. The Catholic think tank was established by Cardinal Bernard Law, then archbishop of Boston, to study the relationship between the Catholic faith and American culture. Law would later become one of the principal promoters of George’s candidacy for archbishop of Chicago.

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BISHOP BLASE CUPICH TO SUCCEED CARDINAL GEORGE AT CHICAGO ARCHDIOCESE, VATICAN OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

[with video]

CHICAGO (WLS) — Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will be the next archbishop of Chicago. The Vatican officially announced Saturday Cupich will succeed Cardinal George.

Chosen by Pope Francis, Cupich is now archbishop-elect in Chicago. He will be installed as archbishop during a special Mass on November 18. Until then, George remains cardinal, though without administrative power.

The Chicago Archdiocese scheduled a rare weekend announcement for Saturday morning. ABC7 will carry the announcement LIVE Saturday at 9:30 a.m.

This will be the first time in the history of the Chicago Archdiocese that a new leader is appointed while the former is still alive. All those before George died while serving.

George and Cupich have worked together in the past. Cupich is considered a moderate within the Catholic Church.

“I’ve been privileged to know the Cardinal upfront from the work I’ve that I’ve done from the Catholic Extension Society. He invited me some years ago to be a member of the board. So I could see that he is a man who cares deeply about the church and has the ability to care about the real needs of people,” Cupich said in an earlier interview with ABC7 Chicago.

Father John I. Jenkins, president of the University of Notre Dame released a statement Saturday morning.

“Having first met Bishop Blase Cupich when I was an 18-year-old backpacker in Europe and he was a seminarian in Rome, I can say with confidence that, as Archbishop of Chicago, he will be a pastorally dedicated, theologically astute and visionary leader in line with Francis’s transformative Papacy. We thank Cardinal George for his dedicated service, and we welcome Bishop Cupich to the great Archdiocese of Chicago,” Father Jenkins wrote.

In June at the Vatican, Pope Francis will grant the new Chicago archbishop his pallium, which is the scarf symbolizing his pastoral authority.

Cupich called “White Thunder” while working in South Dakota

Cupich, 65, has been bishop of Spokane for the past four years. Born in Omaha, he speaks Spanish and was given the nickname “White Thunder” by Native Americans when he served in South Dakota. At one point, he led the U.S. bishops’ committee handling the sexual abuse crisis.

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Pope names new archbishop of Chicago

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis has named Bishop Blase J. Cupich to succeed Cardinal Francis E. George as the archbishop of Chicago.

The Pope accepted the resignation of Cardinal George, in conformity with canon 401 of the Code of Canon Law. At the time of his nomination, Bishop Cupich was heading the Diocese of Spokane in Washington.

Bishop Cupich was born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1949. He earned his bachelor’s in philosophy from the College of Saint Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1971. For the next four years, he was a seminarian at the Pontifical North American College in Rome, where he studied theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University. He was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Omaha in 1975, later earning a licentiate (1979) and a doctorate (1987) in sacramental theology from the Catholic University of America.

Among his pastoral assignments, he served as vicar at Saint Margaret Mary Parish and taught at Paul VI High School in Omaha (1975-1978). Subsequently, he served as director of the archdiocese’s Liturgy Office (1978-1981) and worked at the Apostolic Nunciature in Washington, D.C. (1981-1987). He was pastor at Saint Mary Parish in Bellevue (1987-1989) before returning to the world of education as president and rector of the Pontifical College Josephinum in Columbus, Ohio (1989-1997). He then served as pastor at Saint Robert Bellarmine Parish in Omaha for one year, before being named bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota, in 1998. In 2010, he was named bishop of Spokane.

The 65-year-old bishop is currently a member of various committees of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, including the Subcommittee on the Church in Central and Eastern Europe, the National Collections Committee and the Subcommittee on the Translation of Scripture Text.

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For Chicago, The “Thunder” Is In

UNITED STATES
Whispers in the Loggia

At Roman Noon, the report became reality: the Pope accepted the resignation of Cardinal Francis George for reasons of age, naming Blase Cupich the Ninth Archbishop of Chicago.

As previously relayed, the archbishop-elect will be introduced at a 9.30am Central press conference at the Archbishop Quigley Center, now the Chancery of the nation’s third-largest diocese. Livestreams, etc. will follow here then.

Cupich’s installation in Holy Name Cathedral has been set for Tuesday, November 18th. On a wider level, meanwhile, the last 48 hours have now brought what could well end up being Francis’ two most consequential appointments of his entire pontificate in the English-speaking church.

* * *
As reaction goes, suffice it to say, the phone didn’t stop ringing from around 2pm yesterday ’til well past midnight. And while the Stateside bench’s centrist-progressive bloc was greatly cheered and the more conservative wing is deeply concerned, the one thing everyone had in common was being utterly stunned, both at the choice and its arrival on a timeline far quicker than anybody expected.

Putting one key question to rest, asked about Cupich’s proficiency in Spanish for a 2.3 million-member archdiocese now in range of a Hispanic majority, a longtime friend said “He doesn’t have it.” Here, it’s worth reminding that Chicago is home to what’s become American Catholicism’s largest annual event – the 36-hour Guadalupe feast at the shrine in suburban Des Plaines, which has drawn as many as 250,000 people over recent December 12ths.

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Pope Appoints New Archbishop for Chicago

CHICAGO (IL)
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
SEPT. 20, 2014

In his first major appointment in the United States, Pope Francis has named Bishop Blase J. Cupich of Spokane to be the next archbishop of Chicago, replacing a combative conservative with a prelate whose pastoral approach to upholding church doctrine is more in keeping with the pope’s inclusive new tone.

Bishop Cupich, 65, will succeed Cardinal Francis George, 77, who is ill with cancer. Two years ago, at 75, Cardinal George offered his resignation, as is traditional at that age.

Francis’ choice of prelate for Chicago was highly anticipated as a sign of the direction he intends to set for the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. Chicago is the nation’s third largest diocese, with 2.3 million members, and its archbishops have often taken leading roles in the American hierarchy.

Bishop Cupich has been chairman of the bishops’ committee responding to the sexual abuse crisis, and has at times been unusually forthright in criticizing the church’s record on abuse. He took over the Spokane diocese after it was sued by abuse victims and declared bankruptcy, and is still embroiled in a legal case over how the bankruptcy was handled.

He spoke out against a referendum on same-sex marriage in Washington state in 2012. But even before Francis became pope, Bishop Cupich and he sounded much alike. Bishop Cupich emphasized care for the poor and dispossessed, and on hot-button moral issues employed a tone that emphasized respect and dignity for gays and dialogue with those who disagreed with church teaching. “In stating our position,” Bishop Cupich wrote in a pastoral letter before the same-sex marriage vote, “the Catholic Church has no tolerance for the misuse of this moment to incite hostility toward homosexual persons or promote an agenda that is hateful and disrespectful of their human dignity.”

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Blase Cupich to be next archbishop of Chicago.

CHICAGO (IL)
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho

Updated.

Atlanta — Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will succeed Cardinal Francis George as archbishop of Chicago. His installation Mass will be held on November 18. The Associated Press broke the story Friday night, and was quickly followed by other outlets. Vatican Radio confirmed the appointment early Saturday morning. On Friday evening, the Archdiocese of Chicago announced it would hold a press conference on Saturday at 9:30 a.m. Central. (A spokesperson for the archdiocese would not confirm the purpose of the event, and Cupich did not respond to a request for comment.) The AP cited an anonymous source, which supported rumors that began circulating Friday among several journalists who had gathered here this weekend for the Religion Newswriters Association conference.

The appointment of George’s successor was widely considered to be Pope Francis’s most significant decision for the church in the United States. If true, the decision to tap Cupich to lead Chicago–the third largest U.S. diocese–signals a major change for the American church.

In 1997, Pope John Paul II selected George to be the eighth archbishop of Chicago. He was the first Windy City native to serve as archbishop, and he followed Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, a leading liberal churchman beloved of his people. Before long, Chicago Catholics would learn just how different George was from his predecessor. Highly regarded for his intellect, George never shied away from taking sides in the culture wars, most recently as a vocal opponent of the Affordable Care Act over its abortion-funding mechanism and the contraception mandate.

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Cupich named new Chicago archbishop; seen as ‘moderate’ towards LGBT

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Phoenix

Gerald Farinason
September 20, 2014

The Catholic Bishop of Spokane, Wash. will be installed as the new archbishop of Chicago, the Vatican confirmed at 5 a.m. Saturday morning. Most Rev. Blase Joseph Cupich (pronounced sooh-pitch), 65, will become the 14th ordinary, ninth archbishop of Chicago, and leader of 2.2

The choice is a surprise to most Catholics. He is a bishop, not a metropolitan archbishop. All those indicated as favorites for the job were archbishops. A long shot, Cupich’s name only appeared as a possibility in the last couple days.

Cardinal Francis George, 77, is retiring as he battles cancer—which he expects will take his life. All previous archbishops died in office.

Cupich is the first major U.S. appointment by Pope Francis. The decision was seen by church-watchers as indicative of the direction the pontiff hopes to shepherd America’s Catholics.

According to Religion News Service writer David Gibson, the appointment dashes the hopes of conservatives as Cupich comes from a progressive wing of the church.

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Reports: Spokane Archbishop to replace George

CHICAGO (IL)
Windy City Media Group

by Matt Simonette
2014-09-20

Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will reportedly be the successor to Cardinal Francis George in leading the Archdiocese of Chicago.

An official announcement was expected for the morning of Sept. 20.

This is the first major appointment by Pope Francis, one that will be closely watched by Catholic insiders. Cupich purportedly shares the Pope’s stated commitment to fighting poverty and economic injustice, but nevertheless took stands, albeit measured ones, against the referendum that ultimately led to gay marriage in Washington State.

George has been taking a less-active role in the day-to-day affairs of the Archdiocese since early this year, when he announced that he was battling cancer. He submitted a letter of resignation in January of 2012, but that was a formality expected of all cardinals upon their turning age 75, and it was up to the discretion of the Pope whether to accept it or not.

Cupich has been in Spokane since 2010, and spent a great deal of time cleaning up a large-scale child abuse scandal in the Church there. Ultimately, the Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in the wake of that scandal.

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War of words heats up as Vatican counts down to synod

VATICAN CITY
John Thavis

Journalists often exaggerate conflict at the Vatican. But it’s no exaggeration to say that sharp battle lines are being drawn for the October Synod of Bishops, in particular on the issue of Communion for divorced and remarried Catholics.

This week saw several leading cardinals and Vatican officials weigh in on the “No” side, with the imminent publication of two new books on the topic. Among them were two leading Roman Curia officials – German Cardinal Gerhard Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and Australian Cardinal George Pell, head of the Vatican’s new Secretariat for the Economy.

Specifically, they took issue with Cardinal Walter Kasper, who was selected by Pope Francis to address the world’s cardinals last February. Kasper proposed that the church find ways to allow divorced and civilly remarried Catholics to receive Communion, arguing that the Eucharist should be a spiritual “life raft” for those who need it most.

There are two ways of looking at these developments. For some, it’s part of the open and lively debate that Pope Francis desired when he chose the synod’s theme (the family) and called for a more merciful and pastoral approach on the issue of divorced Catholics.

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Pope gives Chicago a Pastor committed to the culture of encounter and the poor

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

In his most important decision to-date in the United States, Pope Francis has chosen Bishop Blase Cupich, a talented leader with vision, who is committed to the culture of encounter and to the poor, as the new archbishop of Chicago

GERARD O’CONNELL
ROME

Pope Francis has given a new direction to the American Church by appointing the bishop of Spokane, Blase Joseph Cupich, 65, as the ninth archbishop of Chicago.

The archbishop-elect is a highly-talented leader, a pastor with vision, together with long, varied and successful pastoral and administrative experience in two dioceses and a college. He is totally committed to the culture of encounter, does not engage in confrontation, has a zero-tolerance line on child abuse, and is deeply committed to the poor and marginalized.

He succeeds Cardinal Francis George who has governed the archdiocese – the third largest in the country with 2.3 million Catholics and the largest Catholic charities, health care and school systems – for the past 17 years. Earlier this year, the cardinal who is combatting cancer asked the Holy See to appoint his successor.

The Vatican confirmed the news of Bishop Cupich’s appointment at midday (Rome time) Saturday, seven hours ahead of the Chicago press conference called for the same purpose.

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CUPICH TO CHICAGO: WHAT IT ACTUALLY MEANS

UNITED STATES
Catholic Vote

BY THOMAS PETERS

Pope Francis just issued his own ice bucket challenge to liberal Catholics, even if they don’t know it yet.

For months upon months, liberal Catholics have been salivating over Pope Francis choice to succeed Cardinal George. Back in February, I warned that liberal Catholics would try to make as much as they could of Pope Francis’s appointment to this critical American see.

Liberal writers like David Gibson are already publishing articles now claiming Bishop Blase Cupich’s appointment is “dashing conservative hopes”.

But you when you read Gibson’s article, you realize it’s mostly fluff. Liberals are trying so hard to spin this but it reminds me of cotton candy: sweet, but all air.

I’m going to make the argument that Pope Francis’ choice of Bishop Cupich should actually pour cold water on liberal hopes of a leftward turn in the American episcopacy.

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Progressive Cupich to be Next Chicago Archbishop

UNITED STATES
Utah People’s Post

September 20, 2014 By David Jackson

Since Pope Francis was appointed the new Pope, the Catholic world has seen a massive change in Vatican politics. In one and a half years, the Argentinian Pope signaled a turn from the conservative political discourse of Pope Benedict XVI to a more socially progressive stance. Francis’s message was that the Catholic Church must focus on the social and economic inequalities. In such a short time, Francis became one of the most popular Popes in history, with poor people everywhere finding a new ally in him and the Catholic Church as politicians failed to raise up to their expectations.

The U.S. may soon by more influenced by Francis’ actions as well, as the new Pope plans to appoint a new Chicago Archbishop. Cardinal Francis George is now 77 years old and battles a recurring bladder cancer. The archidiocese will hold a press conference on Saturday morning. According to Associated Press, Blase Cupich of Spokane will soon be named the new Chicago Bishop. Cupich, 65, is widely known as a progressive member of the American Catholic Church, thus closer to Pope Francis’ views.

Cardinal George was more in line with the two former popes John Paul II and Benedict XVI. The present Chicago bishop, who was favored by the Catholic right wing, due to his strong cultural messages on sex politics, was appointed by Benedict XVI in 2010.

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Blase Cupich named Chicago archbishop

WASHINGTON
The Spokesman-Review

Catholic Bishop of Spokane Blase Cupich will be the next archbishop of Chicago, the Associated Press is reporting.

It’s a major step for the 65-year-old Cupich, who came to Spokane four years ago to rebuild a diocese struggling in the aftermath of bankruptcy.

Chicago has 2.2 million Catholics – making it the third-largest archdiocese in the country. The Spokane diocese has about 90,000 parishioners.

Cupich will succeed Cardinal Francis George, according to a person with knowledge of the selection, who spoke to the Associated Press Friday on condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. George, 77, has been battling cancer. He was bishop of Yakima before being named to the Chicago post.

The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference for this morning. A spokeswoman for the archdiocese would not comment. Cupich did not return a phone message left Friday evening.

Cupich has taken bold steps since his arrival in Spokane, including filing a major malpractice lawsuit against the diocese’s own bankruptcy lawyers. That case is bound for trial in February. He is considered a tough leader related to the Catholic Church’s response to sex abuse scandal as an early advocate for zero tolerance. When he was installed as bishop in Spokane, he spoke of the need for the church to address the disgust and anger over the abuse scandal.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched as his first major appointment in the U.S., and the clearest indication yet of the direction he will steer American church leaders. Cupich is considered a pragmatist and a moderate leader who is not among U.S. Roman Catholic bishops who have taken a harder line on hot-button topics. Francis has called the church’s focus on abortion, marriage and contraception narrow and said it was driving people away.

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Vatican confirms: Cupich new Chicago archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Sep. 20, 2014 NCR Today

ROME The Vatican announced Saturday that Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Wash., as the new archbishop of Chicago, confirming Friday’s early reports of the appointment.

While the Vatican press release only states the basic facts of the appointment — for example, giving Cupich’s academic background and ecclesiastical history — selection of the new Midwestern archbishop may give clearer view into what the pontiff is looking for in selecting prelates.

Cupich, a 65-year-old Omaha, Neb., native who served as a pastor and director of worship for that diocese before being appointed bishop of Rapid City, S.D., and then Spokane, will replace Chicago Cardinal Francis George, who is 77 and has been fighting cancer.

Known for a certain moderate stance amongst the U.S. episcopate, Cupich sought to tamp down fears during the U.S. bishops’ fight against a federal mandate requiring coverage of contraceptive services in healthcare plans that Catholic ministries might shut down over the issue.

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Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane chosen to replace Francis Cardinal George

CHICAGO (IL)
WGN

[with video]

Pope Francis has named Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane as the next Archbishop of Chicago.

The Vatican released the announcement early Saturday morning.

Bishop Cupich was born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1949.

He earned his bachelor’s in philosophy from the College of Saint Thomas in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1971.

For the next four years, he was a seminarian at the Pontifical North American College in Rome, where he studied theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University. He was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Omaha in 1975, later earning a licentiate (1979) and a doctorate (1987) in sacramental theology from the Catholic University of America.

The Archdiocese of Chicago is scheduled to make the formal announcement about Francis Cardinal George’s successor at a Saturday morning news conference at the Archbishop Quigley Center in downtown Chicago.

The 9:30 a.m. press conference will air live on WGN-TV, CLTV and WGNTV.com.

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Pope names moderate as Chicago archbishop, key role in US Church

VATICAN CITY
Daily Mail (UK)

VATICAN CITY, Sept 20 (Reuters) – Pope Francis, in his first major appointment in the hierarchy of the Catholic Church in the United States, on Saturday named Bishop Blase Cupich as the new archbishop of Chicago.

Cupich, 65, who is seen as a moderate and is currently the bishop of Spokane, Washington, succeeds the more conservative Cardinal Francis George, 77, who is retiring.

Chicago, with more than 2.2 million parishioners, is the third-largest diocese in the United States by population and its archbishop has traditionally played a major role in the American Church hierarchy and in relations with national political leaders.

The city’s archbishops are traditionally elevated to the rank of cardinal, meaning Cupich would be able to enter a conclave to elect a pope after Francis’s death or resignation.

A native of Omaha, Nebraska, Cupich studied at Catholic universities in the United States and the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

Crux, a major U.S. Catholic website associated with the Boston Globe, said Cupich is “widely viewed as a moderate voice among Catholic bishops (and he) often eschews cultural battles in favour of dialogue and engagement”.

In this sense, he is in line with Francis’ call for compassion rather than condemnation or confrontation on issues such as abortion and same-sex couples.

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Pope Francis Chooses Cupich to Lead Chicago Archdiocese

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

[with video]

By Mary Ann Ahern

Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington the next Chicago Archbishop, The Associated Press reported.

The announcment was made Saturday morning by the Chicago Archdiocese.

Cupich will succeed Cardinal Francis George, 77, who announced several months ago that he wanted to begin the process of finding his replacement after he was diagnosed with kidney cancer.

According to the Catholic Diocese of Spokane, Cupich, 65, was ordained to the priesthood for the Archdiocese of Omaha in 1975. He was named Bishop of the Rapid City, South Dakota Archdiocese in 1998 before taking over the Spokane position in 2010.

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Pope Francis taps Blase Cupich to lead Chicago archdiocese

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

Vatican City, Sep 20, 2014 / 05:09 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Pope Francis has appointed Spokane, Wash. Bishop Blase Cupich as the new shepherd of the Archdiocese of Chicago, replacing retiring Cardinal Francis George.

The 65-year-old prelate was named Chicago’s new archbishop on Sept. 20.

He sits on numerous committees at the U.S. bishop’s conference including the Subcommittee on the Church in Central and Eastern Europe.

Born in Omaha, Neb. In 1949, he was ordained a priest in 1975 and studied at the College of St. Thomas in Minnesota as well as the Pontifical College of North America in Rome. In 1998, he was named bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota, and in 2010, he was named bishop of Spokane.

He will replace Cardinal George, who submitted his resignation two years ago, when he turned 75, as is required by Canon Law.

The 77-year-old cardinal has struggled with his health, facing cancer three times. After being diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2006, he underwent a five-hour operation to remove his bladder, prostate gland and sections of his ureters, the tubes which connect the kidneys to the bladder. In August 2012, cancerous cells were discovered in his kidney and in a nodule that was removed from his liver. He underwent chemotherapy, and the cancer cells in his kidney became dormant.

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New archbishop of Chicago named

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS News

Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will be named the next archbishop of Chicago, The Associated Press has learned.

Cupich will succeed Cardinal Francis George, according to a person with knowledge of the selection, who spoke Friday on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. George, 77, has been battling cancer and has said he believes the disease will end his life.

The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference for Saturday morning. A spokeswoman for the archdiocese would not comment.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched as his first major appointment in the U.S., and the clearest indication yet of the direction he will steer American church leaders. Cupich is a moderate, and is not among U.S. Roman Catholic bishops who have taken a harder line on hot-button topics. Francis has called the church’s focus on abortion, marriage and contraception narrow and said it was driving people away.

An official from the Diocese of Spokane said he could not comment.

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Reports: Cupich to be named next archbishop of Chicago

CHICAGO (IL)
USA Today

David Gibson, Religion News Service

Pope Francis on Saturday will name Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Wash., a prelate closely identified with the Catholic Church’s progressive wing, to be the next archbishop of Chicago, according to news reports.

Cupich will succeed Cardinal Francis George, according to a person with knowledge of the selection, who spoke to the Associated Press Friday on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. George, 77, has been battling cancer and has said he believes the disease will end his life.

It is the pontiff’s most important U.S. appointment to date and one that could upend decades of conservative dominance of the American hierarchy.

George is a doctrinal and cultural conservative who has headed one of the American church’s pre-eminent dioceses since 1997. In that time he became a vocal leader among the bishops and earned a reputation as a feisty culture warrior in line with the Vatican of the late St. John Paul II and retired Pope Benedict XVI.

That track record won him fans on the Catholic right, but George was seen as out of step with Francis’ desire for more pastoral bishops who are less focused on picking fights over sex and more involved in promoting the church’s social justice teachings and sticking close to the poor.

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Spokane’s Cupich to Be Next Chicago Archbishop

UNITED STATES
ABC News

Sep 20, 2014, 5:04 AM ET
By RACHEL ZOLL AP Religion Writer

Bishop Blase Cupich, a moderate who has called for civility in the culture wars and has embraced Pope Francis’ focus on fighting poverty, will be named the next archbishop of Chicago, The Associated Press has learned.

Cupich of Spokane, Washington will succeed Cardinal Francis George, according to a person with knowledge of the selection, who spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly.

The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference for Saturday morning. A spokeswoman for the archdiocese would not comment. George, 77, has been battling cancer and has said he believes the disease will end his life.

The pope’s choice for Chicago has been closely watched as his first major appointment in the U.S., and the clearest indication yet of the direction he will steer American church leaders. Cupich is a moderate and is not among U.S. Roman Catholic bishops who have taken a harder line on hot-button issues. Francis has called for a greater focus on mercy and compassion instead of divisive social issues.

The Archdiocese of Chicago serves 2.2 million parishioners and is the third-largest diocese in the country. Chicago archbishops are usually elevated to cardinal and are therefore eligible to vote for the next pope.

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Former Sunday school teacher, coach gets 6-23 months for possessing child porn

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Times

By Alex Rose, Delaware County Daily Times
POSTED: 09/19/14

MEDIA COURTHOUSE — A former Parkside Sunday school teacher and youth basketball coach who pleaded guilty in June to possessing child pornography and criminal use of a communication facility was sentenced to serve 6-23 months at the county prison in Concord Friday.

Steven Daniel Almond, 55, of the first block of West Forestview Road, will serve three months at the prison followed by three months of electronic home monitoring, under the sentence handed down by Judge Gregory Mallon. He will report to the prison Oct. 3 at 6 p.m.

Almond, who served as a deacon at the Middletown Presbyterian Church, turned himself over to authorities in June 2013 on two counts of disseminating photos or films of child sex acts, 25 counts of sexual abuse of children for possession of child pornography and 27 counts of criminal use of a communication facility.

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Brothers, a former teacher, pastor, sentenced to 20 years to life for child molestation

COLORADO
Steamboat Today

By Matt Stensland

Steamboat Springs — A former Christian school teacher and pastor convicted of repeatedly molesting a boy was sentenced Friday at the Routt County Justice Center to 20 years to life.

Near the end of the sentencing hearing, Judge Shelley Hill told John Brothers Jr., 45, there were only two ways he could ever be released from prison.

“You need to find it in yourself to decide what you are going to do with the rest of your life,” Hill said.

She said Brothers could seek to win an appeal and have his conviction overturned at a new trial, or he could admit what he had done, get treatment and convince a parole board he should be released.

“I know that you continue to deny that these events happened,” Hill said. “I understand that, and I understand that you will be seeking relief in the appellate courts.”

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Former pastor indicted for a second time on sexual battery charges

MISSISSIPPI
WREG

[with video]

SEPTEMBER 19, 2014, BY MIKE SURIANI

ALCORN COUNTY, Miss. — The Grand Jury in Alcorn County, Missi., has indicted former pastor Timothy Nall for a second time on allegations stemming from a sexual battery case involving a young girl.

Nall, who is no longer the pastor of Farmington Baptist Church near Corinth, is accused of sexually abusing the young girl when the child was 6 and 7 years old.

The alleged abuse happened while Nall was still pastor at Farmington Baptist.

Nall’s trial in August ended in a mistrial after jurors couldn’t agree on a verdict.

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Ex-Henderson youth minister sentenced in Colorado; denies guilt

COLORADO
Courier & Press

Beth Smith
5:20 PM, Sep 19, 2014

A Colorado court on Friday sentenced a former Henderson youth minister to 20 years to life on sexual abuse charges.

John H. Brothers Jr., who also faces sexual abuse charges in Henderson, was convicted in Routt County, Colorado, in June on 16 counts of sexual assault on a child.

Routt County District Attorney Brett Barkey told The Gleaner Friday that prosecutors were disappointed in the sentence.

“Chief Deputy District Attorney Matt Karzen argued for a total sentence of 80 years to life in prison,” Barkey said. “He noted that the evidence at trial demonstrated that Mr. Brothers was a serial child predator who relentlessly manipulated children to satisfy his sexual desires.”

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BISHOP BLASE CUPICH TO SUCCEED CARDINAL GEORGE AT CHICAGO ARCHDIOCESE, VATICAN OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCES

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

CHICAGO (WLS) — Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will be the next archbishop of Chicago. The Vatican officially announced Saturday Cupich will succeed Cardinal George.

Chosen by Pope Francis, Cupich is now archbishop-elect in Chicago. He will be installed as archbishop during a special Mass on November 18. Until then, George remains cardinal, though without administrative power.

The Chicago Archdiocese scheduled a rare weekend announcement for Saturday morning. ABC7 will carry the announcement LIVE Saturday at 9:30 a.m.

This will be the first time in the history of the Chicago Archdiocese that a new leader is appointed while the former is still alive. All those before George died while serving.

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Catholic Church Tries to Stave Off Priest Abuse Lawsuits

CONNECTICUT
The Connecticut Law Tribune

Christian Nolan, The Connecticut Law Tribune
September 19, 2014

After what seemed like a never-ending series of child sexual abuse scandals involving the Roman Catholic Church, lawmakers both nationally and in Connecticut sought ways to protect victims’ rights.

Initially in Connecticut, people claiming they were sexually abused as children or teens by anyone had to file lawsuits within two years of turning 18. In 1991, state lawmakers extended the statute of limitations to allow alleged victims to bring civil sexual abuse claims until they were 35. Then in 2002, after a rash of claims were made against clergy in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport, lawmakers again extended the age limit, giving potential plaintiffs until age 48 to file claims.

Since then, Connecticut plaintiffs lawyers have brought countless claims against priests and church officials, and have netted tens of millions of dollars in settlements and jury verdicts, damages that would not have been available if not for the extension of the statute of limitations. Now, in a case before the state Supreme Court that has captured the attention of trial lawyers, the Archdiocese of Hartford is trying to change the legal landscape.

Specifically, the church is challenging the constitutionality of the retroactive application of the state’s civil sexual abuse statute. Both the 1991 and 2002 statutory changes gave alleged victims who were too old to file suit under the previous law the right to bring claims under the amended one.

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REPORT: Spokane’s Catholic bishop to be named new archbishop of Chicago

WASHINGTON
Fox Q13

SEATTLE — The Vatican will announce Saturday the appointment of Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane as the new archbishop of Chicago, one of the top Roman Catholic posts in the United States, it was reported Friday.

The National Catholic Reporter said Cupich, 65, will succeed Cardinal Francis George, 77, who has been archbishop of Chicago since May 1997 and who is now battling cancer.

Cupich has been bishop of Spokane since September 2003. He served as bishop of Rapid City, S.D., from 1998 to 2003, and before that he was a priest with the Omaha, Neb., archdiocese.

Chicago is the third most populous Catholic diocese in the U.S. and is historically one of the most important, the National Catholic Reporter said.

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IL — Victims Worry about New Head of Chicago Archdiocese

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Sept. 19

Statement by Kate Bochte, SNAP leader, 630-768-1860, keight@sbcglobal.net

Victims worry about new head of Chicago Archdiocese

We hope that Chicago’s next Catholic Archbishop will do more to prevent future clergy sex crimes and cover-ups. But we’re not optimistic. Pope Francis, like his predecessors, keeps promoting bishops who have concealed or are concealing heinous sexual violence against kids. Cupich is another prelate like this.

Earlier today, the Spokesman Review reported that more than 200 victims have come forward in Spokane.

[SNAP]

Cupich acted irresponsibly by exploiting bankruptcy law to avoid embarrassing disclosures about the complicity of the Spokane church hierarchy in dreadful crimes against kids.

In a 2010 interview with a Washington newspaper, Cupich made some startling comments about the church’s child sex abuse and cover up crisis. Cupich’s remarks endanger kids, hurt victims and mislead Catholics by mischaracterizing and minimizing the horrific scandal.

In the interview, Cupich makes three stunning and patently ridiculous claims.

1) “Sexual abuse of children is not happening in the church today.”
2) “The scandal is that, 30 years ago, the world of psychology, criminal law and the church didn’t handle the situation well. Society didn’t handle the situation well.”
3) “Various institutions that work with kids that don’t have in place codes of conduct and training that we have in place.”

Let’s look at all three of these claims.

First, on the very day Cupich’s interview appeared, Illinois newspapers were reporting on the new guilty plea by a Chicago area predator priest, Fr. Alejandro Flores. He was ordained in 2009. He molested a boy in 2010. Ancient history? Hardly!

Even worse, the local bishop’s top staff knew this predator had problems even before he was ordained. According to one newspaper: “Prosecutors say Catholic officials had some warning signs about Flores” because he “was caught with gay porn on his computer” and “some of the images appeared to be those of young boys.”

So what did the Illinois bishop do? He warned no parishioners about this incident and went ahead and ordained Flores anyway.

The day before Cupich’s interview appeared in print, Fr. Joseph Fiala was arrested in Kansas for child sex crimes he allegedly committed in 2007 and 2008.

(And I write this within hours of reading that a California priest has been suspended from active duty because of allegations that he molested two brothers “within the last two years.”

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10:15 a.m. SNAP News Conference Concerning New Chicago Archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims News Conference re New Chicago Archbishop

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will
— respond to Pope Francis’ choice to head the Chicago archdiocese,
— make recommendations to him on what he should do first, and
– urge Chicago citizens and Catholics to remain vigilant and avoid complacency regarding the safety of kids.

WHEN
Saturday, Sept. 20 at 10:15 a.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the Chicago archdiocesan headquarters, 835 N. Rush Street (at E. Chestnut St.) in downtown Chicago

WHO
Two-four adults who belong to a self-help group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org). Some were molested as kids; others are concerned Catholics.

WHY
The group will offer perspective on Chicago’s new archbishop and recommend some “first steps” he should take as he assumes his new office.

FYI – Lawyers who have dealt with Spokane clergy sex abuse and cover up cases include John Allison of Spokane, Michael Pfau (206.462.4334, mike@pcvalaw.com), Tim Kosnoff (425-837-9690, tim@kosnoff.com),Lee James (208-667-0683, ljames@jvwlaw.net), Blaine Tamaki (509) 248-8338, Erin Olson 503-546-3150, Lee James of Idaho and bankruptcy attorney Jim Stang310.2,77.6910 jstang@pszjlaw.com).

CONTACT
David Clohessy 314 566 9790 cell, 314 645 5915 home, SNAPclohessy@aol.com, Barbara Dorris 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com, Barbara Blaine 312 399 4747, SNAPblaine@gmail.com, Kate Bochte 630 768 1860 (cell), keight@sbcglobal.net

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New Chicago archbishop Blase Cupich: A moderate voice

UNITED STATES
Crux

By Michael O’Loughlin
National reporter September 19, 2014

When Archbishop Joseph Kurtz was elected president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops in 2012, Spokane’s Bishop Blase Cupich said that the decision reflected the pope’s desire for pastoral leaders. “Pope Francis doesn’t want cultural warriors, he doesn’t want ideologues,” he said.

With reports that Cupich (pronounced “SOUP-itch”), 65, has been tapped as Chicago’s next archbishop, many believe he embodies the pope’s vision for a bishop. Widely viewed as a moderate voice among Catholic bishops, he often eschews cultural battles in favor of dialogue and engagement.

As Catholic bishops fought the Obama Administration’s mandate that employers, including Catholic hospitals, schools, and nonprofits, offer insurance for contraception, Cupich offered a conciliatory approach, supporting the cause but calling for dialogue and compromise.

He lamented policies that gave government the power to “decide what it means for any church to be church and what defines the permissible exercise of religion,” but chastised those church leaders who threatened to shutter social services rather than comply with the mandate.

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George led flock through tough times

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

By Manya Brachear Pashman,
Tribune reporter

George led flock through tough times

Reports that Cardinal Francis George’s successor will be announced this weekend could set the stage for the retirement for Chicago’s longtime archbishop and would mean an unprecedented transition in the city’s Roman Catholic Church, where no leader has lived long enough to meet the man taking his place.

George’s planned news conference for Saturday, during which reports from The Associated Press and National Catholic Reporter say that he will confirm he is being replaced by Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Wash., would cap George’s more than 17 years at the helm of the nation’s third-largest archdiocese. During that time, he has shepherded the church through a recession, political battles over gay marriage and immigration, as well as a clergy sex abuse scandal.

He also has emerged as the point man between the U.S. and Vatican on matters including the liturgy of the Mass, a zero-tolerance policy for clergy sexual abuse and the selection of two popes. In fact, throughout his tenure, he has fended off occasional rumors that he would be called away from Chicago to serve in Rome.

“I hope to die in Chicago,” he said in a 2001 Tribune interview. “Much to the chagrin of a few folks.”

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Rinuncia dell’Arcivescovo Metropolita di Chicago (U.S.A.) e nomina del nuovo Arcivescovo Metropolita

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Bolletino

Il Santo Padre Francesco ha accettato la rinuncia al governo pastorale dell’arcidiocesi metropolitana di Chicago (U.S.A.), presentata dall’Em.mo Card. Francis E. George, O.M.I., in conformità al can. 401 § 1 del Codice di Diritto Canonico.

Il Papa ha nominato Arcivescovo Metropolita di Chicago (U.S.A.) S.E. Mons. Blase J. Cupich, finora Vescovo di Spokane (U.S.A.).

S.E. Mons. Blase J. Cupich

S.E. Mons. Blase J. Cupich è nato a Omaha (Nebraska) il 19 marzo 1949. Dopo aver frequentato le consuete scuole primaria e secondaria, ha frequentato il “College of Saint Thomas” a Saint Paul (Minnesota), dove ha ottenuto il Baccalaureato in filosofia nel 1971. Dal 1971 al 1975 è stato alunno del Pontificio Collegio Americano del Nord a Roma ed ha studiato teologia presso la Pontificia Università Gregoriana. Più tardi ha ottenuto la Licenza (1979) e il Dottorato (1987) in Teologia Sacramentale presso l’Università Cattolica d’America a Washington, D.C. È stato ordinato sacerdote il 16 agosto 1975 per l’arcidiocesi di Omaha.

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September 19, 2014

Spokane Catholic Bishop Blase Cupich promoted to Chicago archbishop

WASHINGTON
The Spokesman-Review

Catholic Bishop of Spokane Blase Cupich is being appointed the Archbishop of Chicago, the Associated Press is reporting tonight.

It’s a major step for the 65-year-old Cupich, who came to Spokane four years ago to rebuild a diocese struggling in the aftermath of bankruptcy.

He has taken bold steps since his arrival, including filing a major malpractice lawsuit against the diocese’s own bankruptcy lawyers. That case is bound for trial in February.

Cupich is considered a thought leader in regards to the Catholic church’s response to sex abuse scandal, an early advocate for zero tolerance.

His appointment to Chicago is the first major appointment in the United States by Pope Francis.

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AP NewsAlert

CHICAGO (IL)
East Oregonian

ATLANTA (AP) — Associated Press learns Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane will be the next Chicago archbishop.

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An open letter for Chicago’s new archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Patrick T. Reardon | Sep. 19, 2014

Dear Archbishop-elect Cupich:

Eat at Burger King. By yourself. In street clothes.

If you want to get to know Chicago and those of us who live here, go to the Burger King on Lawrence Avenue, just west of Western Avenue. And, as you’re eating your Whopper, watch the Mexican-American family that is likely to be eating there.

The father is just off work, and you can see the weariness drip off of him. He’s got some menial job — in a factory, or as a bus boy, or perhaps in the kitchen at another Burger King. Those are jobs without much dignity in our American culture, but, with his family, he holds his head high, and his kids chatter with him with great love and respect.

Listen to the two gray-haired, gray-bearded Serbian guys. Unless you’re a polyglot, you’re not going to be able to guess what they’re saying, but you can tell they’ve got strong opinions.

Look at the elderly man in a tie, white shirt and dark suit. He always sits alone at one of those small tables along a wall and does a crossword puzzle.

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AP: New Chicago Archbishop Selected

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

[with video]

(CBS) — The Associated Press has learned Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Wash. will be the next Chicago archbishop, replacing Francis Cardinal George, the news agency reported Friday.

A person with knowledge of the selection spoke on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference Saturday, but will not comment.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched. It is his first major U.S. appointment and the clearest sign yet of the direction he hopes to steer American church leaders.

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Omaha man named next archbishop of Chicago

NEBRASKA
JRN

By Jennifer Griswold.

OMAHA, Neb. – Bishop Blase Cupich will be the next archbishop of Chicago according to the Associated Press.

He was installed as the Bishop of Spokane in 2010. According to the Spokane Diocese website, Cupich is from Omaha and was ordained here in 1975.

He will succeed Cardinal Francis George. The person giving the information spoke on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference Saturday, but will not comment.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched. It is his first major U.S. appointment and the clearest sign yet of the direction he hopes to steer American church leaders.

Cupich is considered a moderate.

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Reports: Chicago Imminent

CHICAGO (IL)
Whispers in the Loggia

After a sudden afternoon flurry of buzz, at 5pm Central the archdiocese of Chicago called a press conference for 9.30 tomorrow morning for an unspecified purpose.

Slated to be held at the Archbishop Quigley Center – the former high-school seminary turned headquarters of the 2.3 million-member local church – ops have begun to anticipate that the event will introduce the city’s ninth archbishop on the retirement of Cardinal Francis George, 77. Named to succeed Cardinal Joseph Bernardin on 8 April 1997, George – widely hailed as the American hierarchy’s leading intellect for nearly two decades – recently entered an experimental treatment program amid a third round of the bladder cancer he’s battled over recent years.

The appointment to the US’ third-largest diocese – for almost a century, the nation’s largest local church – is likely to be the most significant choice for the Stateside bench Pope Francis makes during his entire pontificate. Accordingly, over recent weeks the Pope has reportedly phoned the American cardinals and other senior prelates to consult on his options for the choice facing him, even to the point of floating names he heard elsewhere past others. Given the timetable, it is unclear if the appointment has been processed through the Congregation for Bishops, which points to the surreal possibility that Francis circumvented the traditional final step to reserve the deliberations to himself.

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Report: Spokane’s Blase Cupich is new Catholic archbishop of Chicago

WASHINGTON
Seattle PI

Posted on September 19, 2014 | By Joel Connelly

Spokane Bishop Blase Cupich has been tapped to succeed Cardinal Francis George as archbishop of Chicago in the most important ecclesiastical appointment facing Pope Francis, according to the Associated Press.

Cupich, 65, would succeed the cancer-stricken, 77-year-old George, a conservative disciplinarian in the U.S. Catholic hierarchy. A Saturday morning news conference is scheduled in Chicago.

Cupich will be heading his third diocese, having served as bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota — Lakota Indians gave him the nickname “White Thunder” — and since 2010 as bishop of the troubled Spokane diocese. In 2004, Spokane was one of the first American dioceses to file for bankruptcy due to lawsuits over sexual abuse by its clergy.

The authoritative website “Whispers in the Loggia” has described Cupich as “one of the most competent and effective (and, indeed tech savvy) members of the Stateside bench.” It described his role as “lead man” in dealing with fallout from the sex abuse scandal that hit America’s Catholic Church in the last decade.

But Cupich was a strong opponent of Washington’s marriage equality referendum in 2012. He will be going to Illinois, which recently legalized same-sex marriage.

In a 2012 letter to parishoners, called “Some Reflections on Referendum 74,” Cupich argued:

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Reports: Blase Cupich to be next archbishop of Chicago.

CHICAGO (IL)
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho September 19, 2014

Atlanta — Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will succeed Cardinal Francis George as archbishop of Chicago, according to an Associated Press report. Earlier this evening the Archdiocese of Chicago announced it would hold a press conference for tomorrow morning at 9:30 Central. A spokesperson for the archdiocese would not confirm the purpose of the event, and Cupich did not respond to a request for comment. The AP report cites one anonymous source, which confirms rumors that began circulating this evening among several journalists who have gathered here this weekend for the Religion Newswriters Association conference. It’s not clear whether these rumors stem from the same source.

The appointment of George’s successor was widely considered to be Pope Francis’s most significant decision for the church in the United States. If true, the decision to tap Cupich to lead Chicago–the third largest U.S. diocese–signals a major change for the American church.

In 1997, Pope John Paul II selected George to be the eighth archbishop of Chicago. He was the first Windy City native to serve as archbishop, and he followed Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, a leading liberal churchman beloved of his people. Before long, Chicago Catholics would learn just how different George was from his predecessor. Highly regarded for his intellect, George never shied away from taking sides in the culture wars, most recently as a vocal opponent of the Affordable Care Act over its abortion-funding mechanism and the contraception mandate.

By contrast, Cupich is widely considered a moderate who has not always been in step with his more conservative colleagues in the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. For example, he has expressed skepticism about the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops strategy of opposing Obamacare, and urged bishops to . And when the bishops were considering a draft of a statement on the economy, Cupich criticized it with vigor: “I don’t see that I would share this with anybody, or that it would make any difference.” He has expressed great enthusiasm for Pope Francis, praising the pontiff’s preferance for episcopal governance. He wrote:

Rather than limiting our consultation to those with financial and legal abilities, we also need to listen to those who work side by side with the poor each day, and who are on the frontlines in health care, education and other fields of ministry. We diminish our effectiveness when we do not call on these brothers and sisters to gain insight before making decisions in these areas. But, even more importantly, we pass up the chance to see how God is working through them and to more fully know God’s will.

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APNewsBreak: Cupich to Be Next Chicago Archbishop

CHICAGO (IL)
ABC News

Sep 19, 2014
By RACHEL ZOLL AP Religion Writer

Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will be named the next archbishop of Chicago, The Associated Press has learned.

Cupich will succeed Cardinal Francis George, according to a person with knowledge of the selection, who spoke Friday on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. George, 77, has been battling cancer and has said he believes the disease will end his life.

The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference for Saturday morning. A spokeswoman for the archdiocese would not comment.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched as his first major appointment in the U.S., and the clearest indication yet of the direction he will steer American church leaders. Cupich is a moderate, and is not among U.S. Roman Catholic bishops who have taken a harder line on hot-button topics. Francis has called the church’s focus on abortion, marriage and contraception narrow and said it was driving people away.

An official from the Diocese of Spokane said he could not comment.

The Archdiocese of Chicago serves 2.2 million parishioners and is the third-largest diocese in the country. Chicago archbishops are usually elevated to cardinal and are therefore eligible to vote for the next pope.

The Chicago church has long been considered a flagship of American Catholicism, sparking lay movements of national influence and producing archbishops who shape national debate. Before George, the head of the archdiocese was Cardinal Joseph Bernardin, a hero to Catholics who place equal importance on issues such as abortion and poverty.

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BISHOP BLASE CUPICH OF SPOKANE WILL BE THE NEXT CHICAGO ARCHBISHOP: AP

CHICAGO (IL)
ABC 7

Friday, September 19, 2014

CHICAGO (WLS) — The Associated Press has learned that Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane, Washington, will be the next archbishop of Chicago.

A person with knowledge of the selection says Cupich will succeed Cardinal Francis George. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because the person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly. The Archdiocese of Chicago has scheduled a news conference Saturday, but will not comment.

Cupich is a moderate and is not among the U.S. Roman Catholic bishops who take a culture warrior approach on hot-button topics. Francis says the church should emphasize mercy over divisive social issues.

Pope Francis’ choice for Chicago has been closely watched. It is his first major U.S. appointment and the clearest sign yet of the direction he hopes to steer American church leaders.

The Chicago Archdiocese will hold a rare press conference over the weekend. No details have been released, but the search for Cardinal George’s successor began earlier this year and was expected to take through the fall.

ABC7 will carry that announcement LIVE Saturday at 9:30 a.m.

Cardinal George submitted a request for retirement quite some time ago, and the process to find a successor had begun in May 2014. At that time, the archdiocese said it could take until fall.

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Cupich of Spokane to be named archbishop of Chicago

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Dennis Coday | Sep. 19, 2014

The Vatican is to announced Saturday the appointment of Bishop Blase Cupich of Spokane as the new archbishop of Chicago, NCR has learned. He will succeed Cardinal Francis George, who has been archbishop of Chicago since May 1997.

Cupich, 65, has been bishop of Spokane, Wash., since September 2003. He served as Bishop of Rapid City, S.D., from 1998 to 2003, and before that he was a priest with the Omaha, Nebr., archdiocese.

At 77, George is two years past the usual retirement age of bishops. He has also been battling cancer. In May, the archdiocese announced that the Vatican’s representative to the U.S. had begun the vetting process to find a replacement and suggested the announcement would be made this fall.

Chicago is the third most populous Catholic diocese in the U.S. and is historically one of the most important. Since the election of Pope Francis in 2013, church watchers have been saying the replacement for George would be the popes most important U.S. appointment because it would be interpreted as sign of the direction Francis wants the American church to take.

Patrick T. Reardon, a life-long Chicago Catholic and a member of the Archdiocesan Pastoral Council in Chicago, told NCR in an interview that the greatest challenge facing the next archbishop of Chicago “is how to serve a modern American society that isn’t much interested and doesn’t want to listen to a religious and moral leader.”

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Pell’s successor vows to improve Church’s record on abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Tablet (UK)

19 September 2014 by Abigail Frymann Rouch

A successor to Cardinal George Pell, one of Pope Francis’ group of nine cardinal-advisers, has been announced to run the archdiocese of Sydney.

The Bishop of Parramatta, Anthony Fisher, 54, takes over the reins after Pope Francis appointed Cardinal Pell to lead the newly created Secretariat for the Economy in Rome.

A Sydney native, Archbishop-elect Anthony has degrees in history and law and after ordination completed a PhD in bioethics at Oxford University and is Professor of Moral Theology and Bioethics at the John Paul II Institute for Marriage and the Family in Melbourne. He has also lectured at the Australian Catholic University.

Speaking of next month’s Synod for the Family in Rome, he said: “I think one of the things the Synod can – and I really hope will – do for us is help restore some confidence in the beauty of marriage. In the way it reveals to all of us very important things about the human person and human condition such as self-sacrifice, commitment and reconciliation … I think the world needs desperately to learn how to love again.”

As Australia’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse continues, the archbishop-elect immediately committed the Church to “doing better” in its response to victims of sexual abuse by clergy, the Sydney Morning Herald reported.

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Former Santa Paula priest accused of molesting two girls

CALIFORNIA
Ventura County Star

Tom Kisken
2:51 PM, Sep 19, 2014

A lawsuit filed Thursday accuses a former Santa Paula priest of molestation and alleges the Archdiocese of Los Angeles used Our Lady Of Guadalupe Church in Santa Paula as a dumping ground for clergy accused of sexual acts involving children.

The lawsuit also alleges the archdiocese and the Franciscan Friars conspired to hide the Rev. Robert Peguero Hernandez in Mexico, where he is still in ministry.

Contacted at the Holy Trinidad Parish in Zapotlanejo, Mexico, Hernandez said he was unaware of the lawsuit and denied the allegations.

“Absolutely nothing happened,” he said.

The lawsuit alleges Hernandez — also referred to as Roberto Peguero — was a member of the Franciscan Friars of the Saint Barbara Province assigned to Our Lady of Guadalupe, where he lived from 1978 to 1992. The lawsuit is filed by two women — identified as Jane DM Doe and Jane LF Doe — who allege they were repeatedly molested by the priest as girls.

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LaGrange Park man conquers Ironman, continues fundraising in 2 marathons

ILLINOIS
The Doings LaGrange

Jane Michaels
jmichaels@pioneerlocal.com | @janemichaels22

Conquering an Ironman Triathlon would leave most challengers exhilarated, but ready for a rest.

But LaGrange Park’s Ken Kaczmarz isn’t putting his feet up just yet. After successfully completing the Ford Ironman Sept. 7 in Madison, Wis., he has his sights set on finishing two more marathons by Nov. 2.

Kaczmarz also is extending his efforts to raise funds for World Vision’s Child Protection programs to combat child trafficking. He set a goal of $10,000 in June and exceeded it before the triathlon. With the generosity of more than 150 donors, he has raised $17,800, including $2,500 from an event Aug. 3 at Brixie’s in Brookfield. …

“One of the reasons I became involved was because as a kid, I was molested by a priest,” he said. “I was extremely active in the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests from 2002 to 2006.”

As one of the leaders of the group in Chicago for years, Kaczmarz said he later decided to channel his efforts in another direction.

“I had to get out of it. It was absorbing my life,” he said. “I’ve helped hundreds of survivors, so I saw what sexual abuse does and how it destroys lives.”

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Joliet Diocese faces another sex abuse lawsuit

ILLINOIS
My Fox Chicago

JOLIET, Ill. (Sun-Times Media Wire) –
The Diocese of Joliet is facing another lawsuit claiming a now-deceased Catholic priest from a west suburban parish sexually abused three boys more than 30 years ago.

The three alleged victims were between 6 and 11 when they were abused by the Rev. Leonardo Mateo starting in about 1980, according to the suit filed Thursday in Cook County Circuit Court.

Mateo never faced criminal charges, and died in 2004, the Sun-Times previously reported. The Joliet Diocese deemed allegations of abuse against him credible, according to documents released in April.

The boys—two of whom are brothers—and their parents were parishioners at Immaculate Conception Parish at 134 Arthur St. in Elmhurst when Mateo started inviting the children out for ice cream and fast food, the suit said. He also would take the boys to swim at the YMCA in Elmhurst, where he allegedly molested them in the pool or locker room. …

SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, issued a statement about the lawsuit Friday morning.

“To local Catholics in every place Mateo worked, we plead: Ask your loved ones if they might have heard about or seen sexual misconduct by Mateo,” the statement read. “If so, urge them to call police right away. Even though Mateo is dead, it is possible his victims are still suffering in silence and self blame, and that church officials who concealed his crimes might still be prosecuted.”

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Merrimack College Professor Arrested For Child Porn

MASSACHUSETTS
CBS Boston

BOSTON (CBS) – A Merrimack College professor was arrested Friday for possession of child pornography. Gary S. Spring, 61, of Danvers, is the chairman of the college’s Civil Engineering Department.

According to the criminal complaint, Merrimack College, in North Andover, uncovered suspicious activity on one of the school’s loaner computers in June.

An internal investigation determined that the computer had been loaned out to Spring, and that Spring had been logged on when virus threat detection alerts were triggered. Further investigation determined that the computer was used to access child pornography.

Search warrants were executed at Spring’s office at Merrimack and his Danvers home. Spring was arrested after it was confirmed that he possessed child pornography.

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Merrimack professor arrested for child pornography

MASSACHUSETTS
WHDH

Reported by Anthony Miller

NORTH ANDOVER, Mass. (WHDH) –
A Merrimack College civil engineering professor was arrested on Friday for possession of child pornography.

Gary Spring, 61, of Danvers was the chairman of the college’s civil engineering department and was the administrator of the residential summer camp for middle and high school students.

According to the U.S. Attorney, Merrimack uncovered suspicious activity associated with one of the college’s loaner computers back in June. An investigation revealed that the computer, which triggered virus threat detection alerts, was used to access child pornography and that Spring had signed out the computer around that time.

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Merrimack College department chairman charged with possessing child pornography

MASSACHUSETTS
WCVB

NORTH ANDOVER, Mass. —A college administrator has been arrested and charged with possession of child pornography.

Gary Spring, 61, of Danvers had his initial appearance in court Friday according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Spring is the administrator of Merrimack College’s residential summer camp for middle- and high school-aged students.

He also serves as the chairman of the civil engineering department.

According to the criminal complaint, college officials discovered suspicious activity associated with one of the college’s loaner computers that had been assigned to Spring.

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Mexico- Runaway priest sued for abuse, victims respond

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by priests

For immediate release: Friday, September 19, 2014

Statement by Joelle Casteix of Newport Beach, CA, SNAP Western Regional Director, ( jcasteix@gmail.com, 949.322.7434 cell )

It is shocking and upsetting to learn that credibly accused child predator Roberto Peguero Hernandez is still living and working as a priest in Mexico. Not only has he been named as an abuser by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, but he was allowed to escape the country when police in Santa Paula learned about the allegations.

And all along, Peguero Hernandez has been protected by the Franciscan Friars of Santa Barbara.

We fear that there may be hundreds of children in Jalisco who are in danger of abuse. We beg Guadalajara Archbishop Francisco Robles Ortega to immediately remove Peguero Hernandez from ministry and send him back to the United States.

We also urge law enforcement to vigorously investigate these cases in the hopes of putting Peguero Hernandez behind bars and finding more victims in need of help and justice.

Finally, we salute the bravery of the victims in this case, who were abused when they were young, vulnerable children. Their fight for justice will keep children in Mexico and California safer from abuse.

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Orthodox Must Fight Sexual Abuse

NEW JERSEY
The Jewish Week

09/16/14
Gary Rosenblatt
Editor and Publisher

David Cheifetz, describing himself as the name and face of countless nameless and faceless victims of sexual abuse as a child, told a hushed audience of about 200 people on Sunday night that “we [the Orthodox community] need to change our culture” from denial and avoidance to recognition of the dangers of molestation and “show support for victims and their families.”

Cheifetz was instrumental in organizing the evening’s program at his Orthodox synagogue (and this reporter’s), Rinat Yisrael, in Teaneck, N.J. Sponsored by Rinat and three other local Orthodox synagogues, the event sought to raise communal and parental awareness of the scope and nature of child sexual abuse and offer practical advice on how to deal with it.

Experts in the field say such efforts by Orthodox congregations to publicly acknowledge and address the problem are all too rare.

Rabbi Yosef Adler, spiritual leader of Rinat Yisrael, noted that sexual abuse is prohibited in the Torah, and he praised his congregants for initiating the program.

Cheifetz first went public a year and a half ago with an Opinion essay in The Jewish Week, headlined “Sharing The Secret That’s Haunted My Soul.” He told the story of being sexually abused more than 30 years ago as a 13-year-old camper at the hands of a rabbi at Camp Dora Golding, an Orthodox sleep-away camp for boys. When camp officials learned of what transpired they sent Cheifetz home, with no explanation to him or his parents, and took no direct action against the young rabbi, who went on to teach in boys’ yeshivas for decades.

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Policies are the best policy

NEW JERSEY
New Jersey Jewish Standard

Larry Yudelson • Local
Published: 19 September 2014

Does your synagogue have policies in place to protect children from sexual abuse? Do your children’s schools and camps?

Such policies, Dr. Shira Berkovits told a meeting in Teaneck on Sunday night, can make a difference to children’s safety.

Dr. Berkovits is a consultant for the Department of Synagogue Services at the Orthodox Union, and she is developing a guide to preventing child sexual abuse in synagogues. She was speaking at Teaneck’s Congregation Rinat Yisrael, as part of a panel on preventing child sexual abuse co-sponsored by three other Teaneck Orthodox congregations: Netivot Shalom, Keter Torah, and Lubavitch of Bergen County.

A written policy brought up in the hiring process “serves as a very good deterrent” to would-be molesters seeking to work for the organization, she said, because it would prod them to look for a less-aware organization. She said: “There’s an oft- cited belief molesters can’t control their urges. If that were the case they would molest when walking down the street, in the mall, on the bima. That doesn’t happen.” Instead, she said, they wait for the right opportunity, “when there are fewer chances of getting caught.”

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Dozens Of Hasidic Kids Not Enrolled In School …

NEW YORK
Failed Messiah

Dozens Of Hasidic Kids Not Enrolled In School Because Rabbis Are Blocking Yeshiva Placements To Hurt Parents, Activist Alleges

There are allegedly at least 40 hasidic kids between the ages of six and 12 living in Williamsburg and Borough Park, Brooklyn who don’t have a yeshiva to go to because rabbis are using yeshiva placement as a club to punish the kids’ families – sometimes allegedly because a family complained about child sexual abuse or reported abuse to police.

There are allegedly at least 40 hasidic kids between the ages of six and 12 living in Williamsburg and Borough Park, Brooklyn who don’t have a yeshiva to go to because rabbis are using yeshiva placement as a club to punish the kids’ families.

Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg told me tonight that he personally knows of 40 such kids and that there are likely many more.

According to what I’ve heard, the city knows this. (It may not know the exact numbers, but it knows it is happening.) And likely the state knows, as well. But they allegedly aren’t willing to cross the large hasidic bloc vote, and these kids are simply not being educated.

A parent I was told about enrolled her child in a public school after the yeshiva the child had previously attended would not take him back. The public school was shocked to see that an 8-year-old didn’t even know the letters of the alphabet because he hadn’t really been taught them in yeshiva. The child had no mental illness, no learning disabilities and doesn’t have ADHD. When the yeshivas realized how dangerous this situation could be for them, the child suddenly got a yeshiva placement.

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Jewish Watchdog Group Challenges Child Sex Abuse Taboo

NEW YORK
Arutz Sheva (Israel)

By Tova Dvorin
First Publish: 9/18/2014

One thousand Orthodox Jews crowded into a Crown Heights, Brooklyn, NY hall Monday evening for a noble purpose: to raise awareness of, and educate themselves about, child sexual abuse – an issue all too often avoided as taboo within some circles.

The highly charged event served as an opportunity to show support to victims of abuse, to educate the public about the dangers of abuse and to present the relaunch of Jewish Community Watch (JCW), a watchdog group monitoring abuse in the global Jewish community.

Survivors (JCW makes a point of rejecting the term “victim”), Rabbis, politicians, mental health professionals and others repeated a dual message: that the Orthodox Jewish community will no longer sweep abuse under the rug, and that survivors who step forward will be embraced. Campaigners lament that all too often victims of abuse are urged not to turn to the police but to allow rabbis to deal with the crimes “within the community” – but a growing number of leading rabbis and communal figures are publicly rejecting such an approach and calling on victims to report such crimes immediately to the relevant authorities. JCW’s work has certainly contributed towards that change in attitudes.

Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Tompson as well as Deputy District Attorney Benny Forer, founder of Lamplighters Yeshiva, Yocheved Sidoff, marriage and family therapist Chaim Drizin and abuse survivor Meira Bookman also addressed the crowd.

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Church To Seek Reversal Of Law That Extended Time Abuse Accusers Can Sue

CONNECTICUT
Hartford Courant

By Dave Altimari

The Archdiocese of Hartford is seeking to have the state Supreme Court overturn a $1 million verdict in a priest sex abuse case while at the same time reversing a state law that extended the amount of time accusers can file a lawsuit against it.

In Feb. 2012 a jury in Waterbury awarded a former altar boy $1 million following a trial in which the victim, identified as Jacob Doe in court papers, testified that he and another friend were repeatedly molested and sexually assaulted by the Rev. Ivan Ferguson and a friend of the priest.

The diocese is asking the Supreme Court to overturn that verdict based on a variety of claims – including that the trial judge erred by not allowing an expert witnesses to testify for the church and by allowing testimony from a deposition of Ferguson to be heard by the jury.

But the most controversial argument is the claim that a state law last updated in 2002 that bumped the statute of limitations when a victim of sexual abuse could file lawsuit to 30 years is unconstitutional and should be stricken.

The court will hear arguments on Monday, but it will likely be months before a ruling is issued.

In 2002, the state legislature voted to extend the statute of limitation for civil cases on sex assault claims to 30 years from when a complainant reaches 18. It had previously been 17 years. The law was retroactive.

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New sex abuse lawsuit against Baker Diocese, Capuchin Order

OREGON
Anthony Demarco and Kristian Roggendorf law offices

Pendleton, OR — A man in his mid-30s brought a lawsuit today in Federal District Court alleging sexual abuse by a Capuchin priest who had been accused of child abuse before being transferred to Hermiston, Oregon, and claiming an effort by church officials to silence the family, allowing the then-admitted pedophile cleric to escape the country to avoid criminal prosecution.

The complaint alleges that the victim was abused by Capuchin Franciscan priest Fr. Luis Jaramillo (har-a-ME-o), who was born and ordained in Colombia, South America. The abuse took place from 1988 to 1989 at Our Lady of Angels Parish in Hermiston, Oregon, located in the Diocese of Baker. At the time, the victim was between the ages of nine and ten. Before the Capuchins transferred him to Oregon, Fr. Jaramillo had been accused of abusing boys in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

According to personnel files obtained from the Los Angeles Archdiocese and the Capuchin Franciscan Order, Capuchin officials sent the priest to remote Hermiston in 1987. Consistent with the Diocese of Baker’s practice at the time, Jaramillo, then known to be an accused child molester, was accepted by the Diocese of Baker to work at Our Lady of Angels Parish. Within a few weeks or months of his arrival, the lawsuit says, Jaramillo began abusing the victim and threatened to kill him if he resisted.

The boy eventually told his mother, who reported the abuse to Capuchin officials in 1989. The complaint states that a Capuchin supervisor immediately interviewed Father Jaramillo, who admitted to the abuse. Despite the priest’s admission, the provincial—or “chief executive” of the Capuchin order—allegedly told the boy’s mother that if she attempted to have Father Jaramillo prosecuted, it would be her son’s word against the priest, and she would cause her family and son to be shamed and scorned. The complaint states that he also told her that she would have to
“answer to her Maker” for any souls lost to God if she reported the abuse.

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Catholic Diocese of Spokane sues its lawyers in sex abuse cases

WASHINGTON
TribTown

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: September 19, 2014

SPOKANE, Washington — A lawsuit filed by the Catholic Diocese of Spokane against the lawyers who led it through a 2004 bankruptcy related to sex abuse lawsuits is set for a February trial.

Bishop Blase Cupich (SU-pitch) quit using the legal team at the Paine Hamblen law firm after he arrived in 2010.

He has since pursued a malpractice complaint that accuses the firm of failing to use a strategy that could have saved the diocese millions of dollars and prevented a new round of priest sex-abuse claims.

The Spokesman-Review (http://bit.ly/1v0haeV) reported Friday that those claims reached 230 in the past year. However, more than 150 of the 230 people who filed future claims had their cases rejected by a former federal judge tasked with reviewing the claims and awarding payouts.

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WA- Hundreds more clergy sex victims come forward; SNAP responds

WASHINGTON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Sept. 19, 2014

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

We are shocked to learn that more than 150 adults who say they were molested by Spokane diocese priests have “had their cases rejected by a former federal judge” over the past several months. And since the Spokane Diocese bankruptcy settled in 2004, a total of 230 people have filed such claims, according to a new story in the Spokesman-Review newspaper.

We applaud these brave men and women who are coming forward hoping to expose predators, protect kids, achieve justice and start healing.

And we again denounce selfish Spokane Catholic officials who exploited and are still exploiting secular bankruptcy laws to hide widespread clergy sex crimes and horrific cover ups of those crimes.

We reject the notion that somehow, more clergy sex abuse and cover up cases somehow “threaten Eastern Washington parishes.” Catholic officials desperately want to avoid embarrassing abuse and cover up trials at which their recent and often continuing complicity is publicly exposed. So they often make this claim that abuse victims coming forward may result in parish closures. That’s an obscene and unsupported claim that’s often intended to scare victims.

The Catholic hierarchy has massive wealth and many options to take loans if need be. Disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston borrowed $25 million from a Catholic men’s group to help settle clergy sex abuse and cover up cases. So no one should be fooled by claims that somehow any Catholic diocese may have to shutter churches because bishops have acted so recklessly, callously and deceitfully about the safety of kids. That claim is a self-serving ploy.

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