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.

October 10, 2016

Pédophilie : l’ancien évêque d’Orléans entendu comme témoin assisté

FRANCE
France Bleu

Par Anne Oger, France Bleu Orléans
Vendredi 7 octobre 2016

Dans l’enquête pour agression sexuelle sur mineur ouverte contre l’abbé de Castelet, ancien aumônier des scouts d’Europe et curé de Lorris jusqu’en mai dernier, trois victimes se sont constituées partie civile. Leur plainte contre Monseigneur André Fort pour non-dénonciation n’a pas été retenue

En 2008, 15 ans après ce camp dans les Pyrénées pendant lequel il dit avoir été agressé sexuellement par l’abbé de Castelet, Olivier Savignac entame des recherches sur internet. Il veut savoir si son agresseur a bien été puni par l’Eglise, comme on le lui avait assuré à l’époque. Il se rend compte très vite que ça n’est pas le cas. L’abbé en question est toujours aumônier des scouts d’Europe dans le Loiret, lui qui pourtant, selon Olivier Savignac, avait été pris sur le fait lors de ce camp du Mouvement Eucharistique des Jeunes en 1993. Pris sur le fait par une animatrice, qui avait immédiatement informé les instances nationales du mouvement.

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.

This Yom Kippur, Don’t Donate to Unsafe Synagogues and Schools

INITED STATES
Algemeiner

by Eric Aiken

Recently, 300 rabbis signed a statement condemning child sexual abuse in the Orthodox community and calling on their colleagues to make Orthodox institutions safe for children. Most of the individuals appear to be affiliated with either the Orthodox Union (OU), the National Council of Young Israel, the Rabbinical Council of America (RCA) or Yeshiva University (YU).

The statement condemns cover-ups protecting Orthodox child molesters; ignoring, shaming or punishing of victims who cry out for help; and the rabbinic demands that victims not report their abuser to the police. It calls for Orthodox institutions to implement child-safety procedures; allow victims to pursue justice; and demands that members of Orthodox communities be informed when a child sex predator moves in.

Yet, hypocritically, this statement is signed by many of the very same rabbis who cover up Orthodox child molesters, ignore victims’ reports of abuse and harass victims and their families who speak out — or demand that they remain silent about their abuse and abuser.

Although this statement wasn’t issued by the RCA, almost everything contained in it has been copied nearly verbatim from four previous RCA child-protection resolutions that date back 23 years. None of those resolutions have ever been implemented or enforced. Significantly, only 300 members of the RCA, which boasts more than 1,000 Rabbis, were willing to sign this latest statement.

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Archbishop removes board that accused Monsignor of misusing funds

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Steve Limtiaco , slimtiaco@guampdn.com October 11, 2016

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai has replaced the board of directors of the Catholic Cemeteries of Guam, which last month filed a police complaint against Monsignor James Benavente.

The Archdiocese of Agana, which already had exonerated Benavente of allegations that he misused cemetery funds, called the Sept. 30 police complaint, which was not authorized by the archdiocese, insubordinate and a misrepresentation.

The Vatican in June assigned Hon to serve as apostolic administrator for the archdiocese, pending a church investigation into sexual abuse allegations against Archbishop Anthony Apuron.

Hon had called for the immediate resignation of all Catholic Cemeteries board members involved in approving and filing the complaint. Board Secretary Jacqueline Terlaje, who signed the complaint, last week disputed claims by the archdiocese that the complaint was untrue and that the board never met to approve filing it. The complaint states Benavente misused $13,620 in cemetery funds for personal use — an anniversary dinner. The archdiocese stated the spending was authorized by the board at the time.

Terlaje was removed from the board Friday, as were all other Catholic Cemeteries board members, except for Wayne Santos, who had resigned, according to the archdiocese.

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Ousted board releases full report purporting misuse of cemetery funds

GUAM
Pacific News Center

Written by Janela Carrera

The report includes various credit card statements, family plots worth hundreds of thousands that were waived and checks written to repay loans.
Guam – Good riddance–that’s what the ousted board of the catholic cemeteries says to Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai, who just fired the board and administrator last Friday.

The former board held a press conference today and simultaneously released a contentious report they believe proves Msgr. James Benavente misused cemetery funds for personal use for a number of years.

Roland San Agustin, Attorney Jacqueline Terlaje, Dennis Santo Tomas and Lillian Perez-Posadas make up the board of directors of the Catholic Cemeteries of the Archdiocese of Agana, all of whom were just fired by temporary church administrator Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai.

But the four did not put up a fight to keep their positions. Instead, they said good riddance.

“This board, effectively and immediately, resigns their directorships due to the request of the delegate to turn a blind eye to the absolute misuse of funds. The board has been requested to disregard the laws and standards governing this non profit corporation and in good conscience to the church, to the truth and the laws of Guam. We decline to participate in this attempt to subvert justice for the dead and the families who’ve entrusted the cemeteries to utilize the funds paid for services for the cemeteries and not for any personal use,” announced Terlaje. …

About three hours after Terlaje’s press conference, the Archdiocese of Agana issued another statement saying they maintain their previous position regarding Benavente “as stated several times now in recent weeks.”

The full statement is below:

The Archdiocese of Agana maintains its position regarding Monsignor James Benavente as stated several times now in recent weeks. It disagrees with the former members of the board of directors of the Catholic Cemeteries of Guam, Inc. We have full confidence in our newly appointed board and interim administrator of Catholic Cemeteries. We are moving forward in this area and at all levels in our Catholic Church on Guam. It is crucial that we do so, given the challenges and tasks at hand.

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

Archdiocese of Agana announces new board for Catholic Cemeteries

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Oct 10, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

The Archdiocese of Agana announced new members of the Catholic Cemeteries board after removing their predecessors on Friday.

The new members are:

– Joseph T. Duenas (appointed as Interim Administrator, replaces Fr. Jose Alberto Rodriguez-Salamaca who was relieved of his duties)

– Wayne Santos (incumbent member. He was not terminated but instead resigned) He is Vice President and Marketing Manager of Bank of Guam

– Daniel J. Tydingco: Executive Vice President of Legal, Regulatory and External Affairs TeleGuam Holdings, LLC, dba GTA

– Gregory D. Perez: Project Manager Pacific Unlimited Inc.

– John A. Cruz: Hagatna Mayor

– Gerald A. Taitano: Director of Personnel Naval Facilities Marianas

The Archdiocese made it known that it would be removing the previous Catholic Cemeteries board because of a complaint it filed on September 30th with the police department and Attorney General’s office alleging misuse of cemetery funds for Monsignor James Benavente’s 20th year anniversary dinner held in 2014. We should note a week after that celebration; Archbishop Apuron suddenly removed Monsignor James as Rector of the Cathedral and Director of Catholic Cemeteries for alleged financial mismanagement.

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

Former board refused to be complicit in alleged cover-up

GUAM
KUAM

Updated: Oct 10, 2016

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

The previous board of directors of Catholic Cemeteries says not only does the temporary leadership of the Archdiocese of Agana have the authority to fire them, they resigned their positions because they refuse to be complicit with an alleged cover-up of the misuse of cemetery funds.

About an hour after the archdiocese issued a press release to announce the official termination of the Catholic Cemeteries board and their replacements, their predecessors held a press conference. Attorney Jacque Terlaje said, “This board effectively and immediately resigns their directorships due to the request of the delegate to turn a blind eye to the absolute misuse of funds. The board has been requested to disregard the laws and standards governing this non-profit corporation.

“In good conscience to the church the truth and the laws of Guam, we decline to participate in this attempt to subvert justice for the dead and the families that have entrusted the cemeteries to utilize the funds paid for services for the cemeteries and not for any personal use.”

Terlaje formerly the board secretary, led the press conference. Sitting beside her were former board members Dennis Santo Tomas, Lillian Posadas and Roland San Agustin. The archdiocese announced they were removed on Friday. Their termination follows a complaint the previous board filed involving Monsignor James Benavente for alleged misuse of cemetery funds for his 20th anniversary celebration in 2014.

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.

Two years after leaving Spokane, ‘renowned leader’ called to advise pope

WASHINGTON
Spokesman-Review

The appointment of Blase Cupich to cardinal in the Catholic Church follows a career path that rocketed ahead in the past six years – from leading a rural diocese in western South Dakota to fixing a bankrupted church in Spokane and to taking over the influential position as archbishop of Chicago.

And the pick by Pope Francis shouldn’t have surprised anyone.

“Archbishop Cupich is a very competent man and a renowned leader, and he’ll do a great job both for the church in the United States, but now really the church throughout the world, as a cardinal and a close adviser now to the Holy Father, to the Pope,” the Rev. Darrin Connall said in the moments before Sunday night Mass at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Lourdes. …

He moved quickly, reviewing what he saw as a flawed and controversial settlement with victims that left churches exposed to future litigation and parishioners disgusted by both the actions of church leaders and the roughly $50 million used to pay victims, lawyers and other bills.

Cupich arrived, retained new legal counsel and led changes that ultimately brought closure to the case. He sued the Paine Hamblen law firm for its handling of the bankruptcy, but the case was largely dropped with a confidential and reportedly insignificant settlement.

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Pervert teacher who abused boy at Derbyshire school is jailed

UNITED KINGDOM
Derby Telegraph

By Martin_Naylor | Posted: October 10, 2016

A perverted former teacher who sexually abused a boy at a school where he taught in the 1970s, has been jailed for more than six years.

John Thompson was sentenced to six years and six months behind bars at Derby Crown Court after he was found guilty of the historical sex offences. The 77-year-old former teacher, turned Baptist minister, had denied sexually touching the boy over a four-year period at Crich C of E Junior School 40 years ago.

The pensioner, of Tutbury Road, Burton, faced charges of six counts of indecent assault and two of gross indecency with the pupil.

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Archbishop Herft steps down amid child abuse inquiry

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

Sophie Morris – The West Australian on October 10, 2016

Roger Herft has stood aside as the Anglican Archbishop of Perth, after admitting he failed to act in a former role on repeated warnings about paedophile priests.

His decision to stand aside makes him one of the highest ranking casualties of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

He told the commission in August he had “let down” the community of Newcastle, when he served as Bishop there between 1993 and 2005.

The church described his sidelining as temporary but senior Anglicans were divided on whether he might return as Archbishop.

“I have decided to voluntarily stand aside from my role, function and duties as Archbishop of Perth and Metropolitan of Western Australia with immediate effect,” he wrote in a letter to the diocese today after returning from long service leave.

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Roger Herft stands aside as Anglican Archbishop of Perth to ‘focus’ on sex abuse royal commission

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Roger Herft has temporarily stood aside as Anglican Archbishop of Perth.

In a letter to parishioners, Archbishop Herft said he would stand aside with immediate effect, to “focus my attention on the royal commission’s ongoing inquiry into the Diocese of Newcastle”.

The Archbishop gave evidence at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in August.

He finished his testimony with an apology to the people of Newcastle, where he served as bishop between 1993 and 2005.

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Archbishop Roger Herft stands aside after failing to tell police of abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

October 10, 2016

ANDREW BURRELL
WA Chief ReporterPerth
@AndrewBurrell7

The Anglican Archbishop of Perth, Roger Herft, has stood aside after he admitted he was told priests in his former diocese of Newcastle were sexually abusing children but he failed to report this to police.

In a letter to parishioners today, Mr Herft said he had recently returned from leave and had decided to stand aside immediately to “focus my attention on the royal commission’s ongoing inquiry”.

“I have decided to voluntarily stand aside from my role, function and duties as Archbishop of Perth and Metropolitan of Western Australia with immediate effect,“ he said.

“This will include all duties including ordinations, pastoral visits, public functions, Synod, Diocesan Council, correspondence and other related engagements.

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October 9, 2016

Pennsylvania man sexually abused by priest joins fight to fix New York law to help victims seek justice against predators

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Father George Koharchik made Shaun Dougherty feel special.

The Roman Catholic priest let the boy sit on his lap and steer his car as they drove through the streets of Johnstown, Pa., where Koharchik was the pastor at St. Clement Church.

He took Dougherty to ballgames and treated him to meals at fast-food restaurants. He played soccer and racquet ball with the boy, a red-headed 10-year-old with a splash of freckles across his face when he met Koharchik in 1980.

Dougherty, now a 46-year-old Queens restaurateur, says Koharchik “groomed” him — methodically gained his trust and broke down his defenses — before he sexually abused him for three years.

Koharchik was one of at least 50 clergy members who abused hundreds of children in the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown during a 40-year period, according to a horrific grand jury report released by the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office in March. Police and prosecutors, the report says, worked with Church leaders to cover up the abuse and protect the predators.

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Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson dead at 50 after battling cancer

NEW YORK
PIX 11

OCTOBER 9, 2016, BY ALYSSA ZAUDERER

NEW YORK — Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson died Sunday after battling cancer.

“With a heavy heart, the family of Brooklyn District Attorney Ken Thompson announced that the District Attorney passed away today after a hard fought battle with cancer,” a statement read Sunday night.

Thompson announced just days prior that he had been diagnosed with cancer but would not be stepping down from his position.

“Recently, I was diagnosed with cancer. As a man of intense faith, I intend to fight and win the battle against this disease,” Thompson said in a statement on Oct. 4. “I humbly seek your sincere prayers as I confront this challenge and respectfully ask that you honor my family’s need and wish for privacy during this time.”

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Sexual abuse survivors’ group targets local Catholic church

TEXAS
Houston Chronicle

By Keri Blakinger Sunday, October 9, 2016

When Michael Norris was 11, he got a bad case of poison ivy at summer camp – a pretty normal childhood experience.

But that normal experience turned into lasting trauma when a Catholic priest working as a counselor at the all-boys camp invited the Kentucky pre-teen back to his cabin to “treat” the outbreak – and instead molested him, Norris alleges.

Now, more than 40 years later, Norris is trying to help today’s children avoid a similar fate by spearheading a local awareness campaign targeting Catholic congregations.

Sunday, Norris and other activists with the recently relaunched Houston chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests showed up at the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart Sunday to tell church-goers about their awareness campaign.

As mass ended just after noon, a trio of SNAP supporters handed out flyers to worshipers leaving the downtown church.

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Ex-B.C. priest resigns after financial investigation

MICHIGAN
Battle Creek Enquirer

Andy Fitzpatrick , Battle Creek Enquirer October 9, 2016

KALAMAZOO — A Catholic priest who worked at St. Philip Catholic Church in Battle Creek in the late 1970s has resigned after a financial investigation into two churches’ funds.

According to a Diocese of Kalamazoo news release Sunday, the Rev. Richard Fritz, 69, resigned Thursday, a day after Bishop Paul Bradley received an audit report of financial records at Colon’s St. Barbara Mission and St. Mary of the Assumption in Bronson.

Fritz worked at St. Philip from 1978 to 1980, the release said. He worked at the Colon mission from 1996 to July 2016, and worked at the Bronson church from 1990 until Thursday.

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Kalamazoo diocese priest suspected of mismanaging funds suspended

MICHIGAN
Fox 17

KALAMAZOO, Mich. — The Catholic Diocese of Kalamazoo announced Sunday afternoon that a priest had been suspended after an audit uncovered “questionable financial transactions” and practices for the past six years.

This weekend at all the Masses, those attending St. Mary Assumption, Bronson, and St. Barbara Parish, Colon, were informed that an independent accounting firm, at the request of the Diocese of Kalamazoo, had completed a forensic audit of both St. Mary’s Assumption, Bronson, and St. Barbara, Colon, that detailed questionable financial transactions and practices from 2010-2016.

A day after receiving the audit report, Bishop Paul Bradley accepted the resignation of the Rev. Richard Fritz, 69, as pastor on Thursday and temporarily suspended his priestly faculties (his ability to exercise public ministry).

Fritz no longer resides at the rectory.

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Diocese releases statement regarding financial investigation

MICHIGAN
Roman Catholic Diocese of Kalamazoo

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 9, 2016
Contact:
Vicki Cessna, Executive Director of Communications & Public Affairs; vcessna@diokzoo.org;
269-903-0163 (office); 269-929-8298 (mobile)

This weekend at all the Masses, the Parish communities of St. Mary Assumption, Bronson and St. Barbara Parish, Colon, were informed of the following situation: An independent accounting firm, at the request of the Diocese of Kalamazoo, completed a forensic audit of both St. Mary’s Assumption, Bronson, and St. Barbara, Colon, which details questionable financial transactions and practices from 2010-2016, A day after receiving the audit report, Bishop Paul J. Bradley accepted the resignation of Rev. Richard Fritz, 69, as pastor on Thursday, October 6, 2016 and temporarily suspended his priestly faculties (i.e. his ability to exercise public ministry). Fr. Fritz will no longer reside at the rectory.

Very Reverend Mark Vyverman, Dean of the Eastern Deanery and pastor of St. Charles Borromeo Parish, Coldwater and Our Lady of Fatima, Union City, assumes the role of pastor of St. Mary’s Assumption Parish (which is part of the Parish Collaborative effective this past July 1, 2016).

The Diocese began its internal review of the matter after suspected irregularities were reported in the spring of 2016. In June of 2016, immediately after establishing that there were irregularities, Fr. Fritz’s access to parish funds was removed. The alleged financial mismanagement of the parish funds of St. Mary Assumption, Bronson and St. Barbara, Colon, relates to suspected inappropriate checks distributed between 2010-2016. The Diocese is currently reviewing financial records of both parishes prior to 2010 to identify additional potential
losses.

The Michigan State Police Department is currently conducting its own investigation. The Diocese has fully cooperated with civil authorities in this case and will continue to do so.

Rev. Richard Fritz
Priestly Assignments: Diocese of Kalamazoo, Mich.

1990-October 6, 2016
Pastor St. Mary Parish, Bronson

1996-July 1, 2016
Pastor St. Barbara Mission, Colon

1988-1990
Pastor St. Basil Parish, South Haven

1983-1988
Pastor Our Lady Queen of Peace Parish, Brigman

1980-1983
Associate Pastor St. Charles Borromeo Parish, Coldwater

1978-1980
Associate Pastor St. Philip Parish, Battle Creek

Ordination to priesthood:
May 23, 1975, in Lakeport, Mich., for the Pontifical Institute for
Mission Extension (P.I.M.E). Incardinated to the Diocese of Kalamazoo on November 24, 1981.

Priestly Assignments: P.I.M.E.

1976-1977
Vocation Director P.I.M.E. High School Seminary, Newark, Ohio

1977-1978
Associate Pastor St. Edward, Port Huron, Mich.

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Priest being investigated for suspected embezzlement from 2 parishes

MICHIGAN
WWMT

by Andrew Minegar

BRONSON, Mich. (NEWSCHANNEL 3) – Michigan State Police are investigating a Catholic priest suspected of embezzlement from parishes in Branch and Saint Joseph County.

According to a spokesperson from the Kalamazoo Catholic Diocese, the Reverend Richard Fritz, 69, turned in his resignation to Bishop Paul Bradley on Thursday, Oct. 6 after information from an internal audit into the finances of St. Mary’s Assumption in Bronson and St. Barbara in Colon was turned over to Michigan State Police.

The Michigan State Police are investigating embezzlement that stems from several financial transactions from alleged mismanagement of parish funds and inappropriate checks between 2010 and June 2016.

Vicki Cessna, the spokesperson with the Kalamazoo Catholic Diocese, said it is, “A significant amount, into the six figures.”

The Kalamazoo Diocese is investigating several other parishes where Fritz was a pastor, including St. Basil Parish in South Haven and Our Lady Queen of Peace Parish in Brigman.
The suspected activity was reported in the spring of 2016 and in June, 2016 Fritz lost access to the parish funds.

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MN–Victims blast MN prosecutor about accused priest

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 7, 2016

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

Our hearts ache for the five kids and their families who have helped police and prosecutors pursue an accused child molesting cleric, Fr. Brian Lederer. They must be terribly distraught that he’s escaped prosecution on all charges.

For the safety of kids, we call on local police and prosecutors to use their ‘bully pulpits’ to prod others with information or suspicions about Fr. Lederer’s crimes to speak up now.

[Duluth News Tribune]

We’re disappointed that the prosecutor hasn’t been more aggressive and creative. If he thinks somehow that Minnesota law is deficient, he should be pushing lawmakers hard to remedy any deficiencies. But we suspect the real problem here is a lack of courage, not a lack of appropriate statues.

We hope more who were victimized by Fr. Lederer come forward so that he might face more charges and eventually be kept away from kids.

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Former Derby clergyman Derek Buckley accused of abusing children

UNITED KINGDOM
Derby Telegraph

By ICrowsonDT | Posted: October 09

A former Derby clergyman and wartime code breaker has been accused of historical sex abuse against children.

Derek Buckley, a former honorary Canon of Derby Cathedral, allegedly abused two children in the late 1980s. The shock claims against Rev Buckley, who died at his home in Ashbourne in 1999 aged 82, have been raised with Derbyshire police and the Derby Diocese.

The allegations against him are forming part of a national police investigation into historical child sex abuse. Richard Scorer, a specialist abuse lawyer at legal firm Slater and Gordon, is representing the two alleged victims of Rev Buckley.

He said: “Very serious allegations have been made against the Derby Diocese. It is now important, not just for the survivors of abuse but society in general, that the independent inquiry into child sexual abuse, examines these cases and broader failings of the Anglican Church and law enforcement agencies to protect children.”

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Pope Francis names three new U.S. cardinals, passes on Chaput

VATICAN CITY
PhillyVoice

BY NICOLE WINFIELD
Associated Press

VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis named 17 new cardinals Sunday — three of them American moderates, including Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich and Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin — in a clear signal to the conservative U.S. church hierarchy that he values pastors focused more on mercy than morals.

Tobin’s nomination also carries a political message ahead of the U.S. election next month, given that he openly opposed a request from Indiana Gov. Michael Pence, now the running mate of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, to not settle Syrian refugees in the state.

“I am shocked beyond words by the decision of the Holy Father,” Tobin tweeted. “Please pray for me.”

Thirteen of the new cardinals, including all the Americans, are under age 80 and thus eligible to vote in a future conclave to elect Francis’ successor, the key job of a cardinal.

Francis has made it a point to no longer automatically name cardinals from big dioceses as had been the practice for centuries. The Italian cities of Venice and Turin, for example, have been without cardinals for several years.

The same goes for the United States, where such staunchly Catholic archdioceses as Philadelphia, which hosted Francis last year at the Catholic Church’s big family rally, was passed over again. Philadelphia is headed by the conservative Archbishop Charles Chaput, who has insisted on traditional church doctrine on issues such as whether civilly remarried couples can receive Communion — areas where Francis has sought greater flexibility.

“It’s a clear message to the United States Catholic bishops about the kind of church Francis has in mind,” Faggioli said.

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Priest unhappy with parish shift

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio , Pacific Daily News October 9, 2016

Archbishop Savio Hon Tai Fai’s decision to reassign priests to new positions within the villages and within the Archdiocese of Agana leadership doesn’t sit well with at least one priest.

Father Adrian Cristobal, who was reassigned as pastor of San Dionisio Church in Umatac after years of being pastor of San Vicente Ferrer Catholic Church in Barrigada, wrote an Oct. 4 letter to parishioners, stating Hon’s announcement came as a shock and surprise to him.

“Canon law grants to pastors the right to due process with regards to their transfer or removal from office. Archbishop Hon did not afford me the right to due process. Therefore, I am in communication with him and have respectfully requested that this matter be resolved in a conciliatory and judicious manner,” Cristobal said.

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Pope Francis to Create 17 New Cardinals at November Consistory

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

BY EDWARD PENTIN 10/09/2016

At the end of today’s Angelus, Pope Francis announced he will hold a consistory on Nov. 19 to create 17 new cardinals.

Among those to be elevated to the College of Cardinals include three Americans: Archbishop Blase Cupich of Chicago, Bishop Kevin Joseph Farrell, prefect of the new dicastery for the Laity, the Family and Life, and Archbishop Joseph William Tobin of Indianapolis.

Other recipients of the red hat will be the current apostolic nuncio to Syria, Italian Archbishop Mario Zenari, and nine archbishops and bishops from the southern hemisphere. Thirteen will be eligible to vote in the next conclave (under 80 years of age), taking the total number of cardinal electors to 121. …

Notable eligible prelates omitted at the upcoming consistory include those from a number of sees that have traditionally been cardinalatial. In the U.S. these include Los Angeles and Philadelphia, headed respectively by Archbishops Jose Gomez and Charles Chaput. Instead, Pope Francis has chosen prelates whose views are closer to his, and in particular those who have been publicly and clearly supportive of his interpretation of his post-synodal apostolic exhortation, Amoris Laetitia.

In Italy, the patriarchate of Venice and the archdioceses of Turin and Bologna are among traditional cardinalatial sees that continue to be without a cardinal, part of the reason being the Pope’s preference to choose new cardinals from the southern hemisphere where the faith is growing fastest, and those serving on the peripheries.

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In New Cardinal Picks, Pope Francis Sidelines Conservatives, Promotes Progressives

UNITED STATES
Breitbart

Pope Francis announced his choices for new Catholic cardinals Sunday, promoting a number of well-known progressives while snubbing conservatives who were up for the job.
In all, the Pope named 17 new cardinals, including 13 who are under 80 years old and therefore eligible to participate in the conclave electing the next pope.

Notably, in his selection for cardinals from among the United States bishops, Francis named the recently appointed archbishop of Chicago, Blaise Cupich, a man with impeccable liberal credentials. He also broke with protocol by choosing Archbishop William Tobin of Indianapolis, a relatively small archdiocese never before considered important enough to have a cardinal at its helm.

On the other hand, the Pope passed over the conservative archbishops of Philadelphia, Detroit and Los Angeles—Charles Chaput, Allen Vigneron and José Gómez, respectively—despite the fact that their three important archdioceses have in recent memory always been considered “cardinalatial sees.”

Archbishop Chaput was responsible for bringing Pope Francis to the United States in September 2015, hosting the pontiff for the World Meeting of Families.

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Chicago archbishop Cupich elevated to rank of cardinal

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune staff

Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich was awarded one of the Roman Catholic Church’s most prestigious titles next to the papacy when Pope Francis announced Sunday in St. Peter’s Square that he will elevate Chicago’s church leader to the rank of cardinal.

Cupich will receive his red hat in Rome on Nov. 19, the day before the church’s Year of Mercy ends. The elevation means he will have a vote in future papal elections.

Pope Francis elevated Cupich and 16 other churchmen to the rank of cardinal, including two others from the U.S. — Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph W. Tobin and Dallas Bishop Kevin Farrell.

Though this is the first time Francis has named American cardinals, it was no surprise to some that Cupich’s name was on the list unveiled Sunday. Chicago’s last six archbishops were named cardinals, and Cupich’s star has been on the rise since he leaped to the third-largest U.S. archdiocese from the diocese of Spokane, Wash., two years ago.

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Chaput Not Among New Cardinals Selected by Pope Francis, Notable Indianapolis Archbishop Chosen

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

[with video]

Pope Francis on Sunday named more than a dozen new cardinals, and although Philadelphia Archbishop Charles Chaput was believed to be on the short list, he was not among those named.

Three Americans were among those named. Pope Francis looked to the American Midwest when picking his first, choosing Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich and Indianapolis, Indiana Archbishop Joseph Tobin. Both will become cardinals at a Nov. 19 ceremony in Rome. …

The Archdiocese of Philadelphia released a short statement Sunday after learning Chaput would not become a cardinal.

“The Archdiocese of Philadelphia sends congratulations and prayerful best wishes to all those whom Pope Francis has named for elevation to the Cardinalate,” the statement read. “May God grant them strength and wisdom as they prepare to accept this new role in service to the Universal Church.”

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Pope elevates Chicago’s archbishop to cardinal

CHICAGO (IL)
Daily Herald

AP

CHICAGO — Roman Catholic Archbishop Blase Cupich says his elevation to cardinal of Chicago’s archdiocese is both humbling and encouraging.

Pope Francis named 17 new cardinals Sunday, including Cupich and Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin.

In a statement, Cupich said when he was appointed archbishop two years ago, he committed wholeheartedly to serve the people of Chicago.

Cupich says the role of cardinal brings new responsibilities, but he will continue to work on renewing the church and “preparing it to thrive in the decades ahead.”

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Former Dallas Bishop among 17 cardinals appointed by Pope Francis

DALLAS (TX)
WFAA

Landon Haaf, WFAA October 09, 2016

DALLAS – Three days after departing for Rome from his position with the Catholic Diocese of Dallas, Archbishop Kevin Farrell has been designated for one of the most prestigious titles next to the papacy — cardinal.

Farrell, who served as the Bishop of the Diocese of Dallas from 2007 until Oct. 6 of this year, will be one of 17 new cardinals appointed by Pope Francis.

The new cardinals will be created in the next consistory on Nov. 19.

“I am humbled by the news this morning that our Holy Father Pope Francis has named me to the College of Cardinals,” Farrell said from Rome, according to a release from the Diocese of Dallas. “I ask all in the Diocese of Dallas to please pray for me that I may to the best of my ability fulfill this sacred duty to our Church.”

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Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin named cardinal by Pope Francis

UNITED STATES
Indianapolis Business Journal

October 9, 2016
Associated Press

Pope Francis looked to the American Midwest when picking his first U.S. cardinals.

The Vatican announced Sunday that Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin and Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich will become cardinals in a Rome ceremony Nov. 19. …

Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett issued a statement Sunday congratulating Tobin.

“Our city has been blessed by both his spiritual and civic leadership, and I look forward to working with Cardinal Tobin and the Catholic Church as we seek to end poverty and inequality here in Indianapolis,” Hogsett said.

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Pope Francis Names 17 New Cardinals, Including Three from the United States

VATICAN CITY
America

Gerard O’Connell | Oct 9 2016

Pope Francis will create 17 cardinals from 14 countries on Nov 19, including 13 electors from 11 countries. Three of the electors are from the United States: Blase Cupich (Chicago), Kevin Farrell (formerly of Dallas and now prefect of the Dicastery for the Laity, Family and Life) and Joseph Tobin (Indianapolis).

In a surprise move, expressing again his concern for the people in “the beloved and martyred Syria,” Francis will give the red hat to the Italian born nuncio to that country, Archbishop Mario Zenari, whom he said will remain at his post there. He is the only new Italian added to the college of electors with a right to vote in a conclave.

Five of the new cardinals are from Europe but only three are electors (that is under the age of 80 with the right to vote in a conclave): Carlos Osoro Sierra, the archbishop of Madrid (Spain), Jozef De Kesel, archbishop of Malines-Bruxelles (Belgium), and Archbishop Zenari, the nuncio in Syria. The other two are not electors as they are over the age of 80: Msgr. Renato Corti, archbishop emeritus of Novara (Italy) and Father Ernest Simoni, a priest of the archdiocese of Shkodrë-Pult in Albania, who spoke during the pope’s visit to Tirana.

Three are Latin Americans (including Mexico): Sérgio da Rocha, archbishop of Brasilia (Brasil), Baltazar Enrique Porras Cardozo, archbishop of Mérida (Venezuela), Carlos Aguiar Retes, archbishop of Tlalnepantla (Mexico).

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Pope Francis names 17 new cardinals, including 3 Americans

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Sarah Pulliam Bailey October 9

Pope Francis has named new members of the Catholic Church’s elite College of Cardinals, the group of church leaders who elect a new pope and tend to be his closest advisers.

Of Francis’s 17 new cardinals, the highest-ranking officials in the Catholic Church after the pope, three are Americans: Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich, Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin and Kevin Farrell, the outgoing bishop of Dallas.

Tobin made headlines last year when he openly defied Indiana Gov. Mike Pence’s decision to try to block Syrian refugees from the state. After the 2015 attacks in Paris, Pence joined dozens of governors in objecting to the federal government’s program to resettle refugees from Syria in the Unites States, citing security risks. The governors were met with open challenges from bishops, including Tobin.

Francis’s choice of cardinals reflects his emphasis on the global church. The bulk of the new cardinals come from outside Europe, with Francis choosing cardinals from Africa, Asia, South America and Oceania. The one Italian elector was named is Francis’s ambassador to Syria, Cardinal-elect Mario Zenari.

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Three Americans are among the 17 new cardinals appointed by Pope Francis as Vatican continues its efforts to present more moderate face

VATICAN CITY
Daily Mail (UK)

By ARIEL ZILBER FOR DAILYMAIL.COM and ASSOCIATED PRESS

Three Americans are among the crop of 17 new cardinals appointed by Pope Francis on Sunday.

The Vatican announced the latest round of appointments to the College of Cardinals, the most noteworthy of whom are Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich, Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin, and Dallas’ outgoing bishop, Kevin Farrell.

Thirteen of the 17 cardinals named by Francis on Sunday are under the age of 80, meaning that they are eligible to vote for the next pope, according to the Associated Press.

Cupich’s elevation makes this the seventh time that a Chicago archbishop has been named to the College of Cardinals, according to the Chicago Tribune.

The Omaha, Nebraska, native, who came to Chicago just two years ago after he headed the diocese of Spokane, Washington, is widely perceived as a moderate cleric in the same vein as Francis.

The pope has struck a more conciliatory tone toward groups that have long been marginalized by the Catholic Church, including homosexuals and the poor.

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Bishop Kevin Farrell to be made Cardinal

DALLAS (TX)
Roman Catholic Diocese of Dallas

Pope Francis at the end of his Angelus on Sunday announced the creation of 17 new Cardinals. A consistory will be held on the 19 of November, the eve of the closing of the Jubilee of Mercy.

13 of the new Cardinals will be under 80 years and will be eligible to vote in a conclave.

The Holy Father said that the those chosen come from five continents. They include three American Archbishops and Archbishops from Mauritius and Bangladesh.

Below find the list of new Cardinals

Archbishop Mario Zenari, Italy
Archbishop Dieudonné Nzapalainga, Central African Republic
Archbishop Carlos Osoro Sierra, Spain
Archbishop Sérgio da Rocha, Brazil
Archbishop Blase J. Cupich, U.S.A.
Archbishop Patrick D’Rozario, Bangladesh
Archbishop Baltazar Enrique Porras Cardozo, Venezuela
Archbishop Jozef De Kesel, Belgium
Archbishop Maurice Piat, Mauritius
Archbishop Kevin Joseph Farrell, U.S.A.
Archbishop Carlos Aguiar Retes, Mexico
Archbishop John Ribat, Papua Nuova Guinea
Archbishop Mons. Joseph William Tobin U.S.A.
Archbishop Anthony Soter Fernandez, Archbishop Emeritus of Kuala Lumpur Malaysia
Archbishop Renato Corti, Archbishop Emeritus of Novara Italy
Archbishop Sebastian Koto Khoarai, Bishop Emeritus of Mohale’s Hoek Lesotho
Father Ernest Simoni, presbytery of the Archdiocese of Shkodrë-Pult, Scutari – Albania.

—————————————————-

El Papa anuncia un Consistorio para la creación de nuevos Cardenales

El domingo 9 de octubre, al finalizar la celebración de la Eucaristía, y después de la oración del Ángelus en el marco del Jubileo Mariano en Roma, el Sucesor de Pedro anunció un Consistorio para la creación de nuevos Cardenales provenientes de los cinco continentes, el próximo 19 de noviembre, en la vigilia del cierre de la Puerta Santa de la Misericordia. El domingo 20 de noviembre, en la Solemnidad de Jesucristo Rey del Universo y conclusión del Año Santo Extraordinario de la Misericordia, el Papa Francisco concelebrará la Santa con los nuevos Cardenales, el Colegio de Cardenales, Arzobispos, Obispos y Presbíteros.

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Former Dallas Bishop Kevin Farrell named cardinal by Pope Francis

DALLAS (TX)
Dallas Morning News

Caleb Downs, Breaking News reporter

Pope Francis named former Dallas Bishop Kevin Farrell a cardinal Sunday at the end of his Angelus prayer on Sunday at the Vatican.

Farrell and 16 other newly-chosen cardinals–including American archbishops Blaise Cupich of Chicago and Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis–will be elevated at a consistory on Nov. 19, the eve of the close to Pope Francis’ Holy Year of Mercy.

Farrell, 69, will be eligible to vote in a conclave to elect Pope Francis’ successor because he is under 80-years-old.

Farrell was recently chosen by Pope Francis to lead the Dicastery for Laity, the Family and Life, a new Vatican department focused on the lives of ordinary Catholics around the world. It is part of the Roman Curia, an administrative body that advises and helps the pope carry out the church’s affairs worldwide.

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Pesch: Will the church on Guam go bankrupt?

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Bill Pesch October 9, 2016

The question circulating around the island is “Will the Archdiocese of Agana go bankrupt?” This inquiry is in reaction to the recent passage of Public Law 33-187. The new law completely eliminates the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse. Prior to the law’s passage, several people accused Guam priests of molesting them or their relatives.

Everyone is now wondering, how many more accusers will come forward? If the experiences of other cities and states are any indication, we can expect those numbers to increase significantly. For example, when an investigation in Boston began, up to 20 priests were suspected of molesting children. By the time the investigation concluded, 249 priests stood accused.

Assuming that the Guam accusers make it past some initial legal hurdles, the potential damages could be substantial. Boston paid out $85 million to the 552 victims. The 508 victims in Los Angeles, California shared $660 million, while San Diego paid out $198 million to 144 plaintiffs.

What can Guam expect?

In his Sept. 15, 2016, letter to all Guam Catholic parishioners, Archbishop Hon speculated that “the result will very likely be to drive the Archdiocese into bankruptcy. Bankruptcy will mean the forced sale of Church properties that currently house our schools and social services …” My research indicates that this probably won’t occur.

First, let’s get the terminology straight. “Bankruptcy” is a legal process controlled exclusively by the federal courts. Either an individual or business may apply for bankruptcy. A diocese is considered a business. There are two types of business bankruptcy procedures — Chapter 7 and Chapter 11. A Chapter 7 filing is used by a business with no hope of staying in operation. A trustee is appointed by the court to take possession of all assets and to distribute them among the creditors. The business then shuts down forever. None of the 13 U.S. dioceses that have filed for bankruptcy has filed under Chapter 7.

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Francis names 17 new cardinals, including Chicago’s Cupich and Indianapolis’ Tobin

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Oct. 9, 2016

ROME
Pope Francis has again chosen to diversify representation in the most select body of Roman Catholic prelates, announcing Sunday that he will be creating 17 new cardinals from 11 different countries — with many coming from places never before included in the elite group.

Among those Francis has chosen for the role are also three U.S. bishops: Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich, Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin, and the newly appointed Vatican official Bishop Kevin Farrell.

Francis made the announcement of the new cardinals, expected in recent weeks, during his weekly Sunday address following the noon-time Angelus prayer in St. Peter’s Square.

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

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Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich Elevated to Cardinal By Pope Francis

CHICAGO (IL)
NBC Chicago

By Mary Ann Ahern

Pope Francis has named Archbishop Blase Cupich a cardinal, one of three Americans and 17 new cardinals in all.

Cupich has led the Chicago Archdiocese, the third largest in the United States, since September 2014. He will be the 7th Cardinal from Chicago.

The 67-year-old native of Omaha is leading the Chicago Archdiocese through a current reorganization. In July he was chosen as a member of the Congregation of Bishops, an important bishop-making panel.

Forty percent of the population is believed to be Catholic. The Chicago Archdiocese is in the midst of a radical overhaul, with the number of priests dwindling and as many as 100 churches potentially closing over the next 14 years.

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Statement on the Naming of Archbishop Blase J. Cupich to the College of Cardinals

CHICAGO (IL)
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago

October 9,2016

His Holiness, Pope Francis, announced today at the Vatican that Archbishop Blase J. Cupich is a cardinal-designate and will be among the 17 new cardinals to be created at the consistory November 19, 2016, at the Basilica of St. Peter in Vatican City. Archbishop Cupich was appointed to head the Chicago archdiocese, the nation’s third largest, by Pope Francis on September 20, 2014.

“The news this morning that Pope Francis has named me to the College of Cardinals is both humbling and encouraging,” said Blase J. Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago. “I offer my best wishes to the other Cardinals-elect, especially Kevin Farrell and Joseph Tobin, and I look forward to joining with them and the other cardinals as we work together with the Holy Father for the good of the Church.”

“When Pope Francis appointed me Archbishop of Chicago more than two years ago, the people of the archdiocese welcomed me as a friend and brother and I committed wholeheartedly to serve them,” said Archbishop Cupich. “The role of Cardinal brings new responsibilities, but with your prayers and help, we will continue the task we have begun of renewing the Church in the archdiocese and preparing it to thrive in the decades ahead.”

About Archbishop Cupich:

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

Archbishop Cupich was ordained to the priesthood for the Archdiocese of Omaha on August 16, 1975. He was pastor of two large suburban parishes in Omaha. He was appointed Bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota, on July 7, 1998, and was ordained and installed on September 21, 1998. He was appointed the sixth Bishop of Spokane, Washington, on June 30, 2010, and officially installed on September 3, 2010. Archbishop Cupich was appointed Archbishop of Chicago on September 20, 2014, and was installed as the ninth Archbishop of Chicago on Tuesday, November 18, 2014.

Archbishop Cupich obtained his B.A. in Philosophy from the College of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1971. He attended seminary at the North American College and Gregorian University in Rome, where he received his Baccalaureate in Sacred Theology in 1974, and his M.A. in Theology in 1975. Archbishop Cupich is a graduate of the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., where, in 1979, he received his Licentiate of Sacred Theology degree in Sacramental Theology. He also holds a Doctor of Sacred Theology degree as well as in Sacramental Theology, from the Catholic University of America, awarded in 1987, with his dissertation entitled: “Advent in the Roman Tradition: An Examination and Comparison of the Lectionary Readings as Hermeneutical Units in Three Periods.”

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POPE FRANCIS TO ELEVATE ARCHBISHOP BLASE CUPICH TO CARDINAL

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS

By Alan Krashesky

CHICAGO (WLS) — Archbishop Blase Cupich will be elevated to cardinal in a ceremony in Rome next month. Sunday morning, Pope Francis announced that he’ll name 17 new cardinals as part of a consistory on Nov. 19.

Archbishop Cupich will be the city’s seventh Roman Catholic cardinal and has long been seen as a lock for a red hat. From the moment Pope Francis personally chose him to lead Chicago’s archdiocese, Archbishop Cupich faced questions about when he’d be named cardinal. When he drove across Washington State with Alan Krashesky, he said he wasn’t thinking about it.

Krashesky: There’s a likelihood you’ll become a cardinal, do you think about it?
Cupich: I really don’t. First of all, this pope is full of surprises.

In a statement released Sunday morning, Cupich said being elevated to cardinal is “both humbling and encouraging.”

“The role of cardinal brings new responsibilities, but with your prayers and help, we will continue the task we have begun of renewing the Church in the archdiocese and preparing it to thrive in the decades ahead,” Cupich said in the statement.

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Pope to create 13 new cardinals, including 3 Americans

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Pope Francis announced a consistory for the creation of new cardinals on Nov. 19, and this time around there are three Americans: Blase Cupich of Chicago, Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis, and Kevin Farrell of Dallas, who was just named to head the pope’s new department on Family, Laity and Life.

After not having named any new American cardinals during his first two consistories in 2014 and 2015, Pope Francis has more than made up for it this time around, announcing a consistory for Nov. 19 and including Archbishops Blase Cupich of Chicago and Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis, as well as former Dallas Bishop Kevin Farrell.

Farrell was recently named by Francis as the first-ever head of his department for Family, Laity and Life.

The choices will be seen in the United States as significantly strengthening the moderate wing of the country’s hierarchy, as all three figures have at times been at odds with more conservative elements of the Church.

Cupich, 67, was appointed by Francis to Chicago in September 2014, in what many saw as a surprise move by the pontiff. He was also appointed by the pope to be a special delegate at his Synod of Bishops on the family, where Cupich appeared to align himself with the more progressive camp on issues such as pastoral care of the LGBT community and also divorced and remarried Catholics.

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Pope Francis Names 17 Cardinals, 3 from USA

VATICAN CITY
NBC Los Angeles

By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis named 17 new cardinals Sunday — 13 of them under age 80 and thus eligible to vote in a conclave to elect his successor. Three of the new cardinals are Americans, including leading U.S. moderate Chicago Archbishop Blaise Cupich and Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin.

As is Francis’ tradition, the new cardinals hail from some of the most far-away and peripheral corners of the globe, with Africa, Asia, South America and Oceania getting far more representation than Europe, which has long dominated the College of Cardinals.

New to the club of the “princes” of the church are bishops from Bangui, Central African Republic; Port Louis, Mauritius and Tlalnepantla, Mexico.

Significantly only one Italian elector was named: Francis’ ambassador to “the beloved and martyred Syria,” Cardinal-elect Mario Zenari.

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Pope Francis announces new consistory to coincide with close of Jubilee

VATICAN CITY
Headlines from the Catholic World

Vatican City, Oct 9, 2016 / 04:39 am (CNA/EWTN News).- On Sunday Pope Francis announced that he will hold a consistory of cardinals on the Nov. 19 vigil of the close of the Jubilee of Mercy, during which he will elevate 13 bishops to the cardinalate – including three Americans.

“Dear brothers and sisters I am happy to announce that Saturday, Nov. 19 at the vigil for the closing of the Holy Door of mercy, a consistory will take place for the nomination of 13 cardinals from 5 continents,” the Pope said Oct. 9.

“The fact that they come from 11 nations expresses the universality of the Church, which announces and bears witness to the good news of the mercy of God in every corner of the earth.”
Opened Dec. 8, 2015 – the Solemnity of the Immaculate Conception – the Jubilee is set to close Nov. 20, with the Solemnity of Our Lord Jesus Christ, King of the Universe.

Among the 13 new cardinal-elects are three Americans: Archbishop Blasé Cupich of Chicago, Archbishop Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis and Bishop Kevin Farrell, prefect of the new Congregation for Laity, Family and Life.

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Cardinal elect Piat reacts to nomination

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Just after the Pope’s announcement on Sunday of a consistory to create 17 new Cardinals, Vatican Radio spoke to Archbishop Maurice Piat of Port-Louis on the island of Mauritius to get his reaction.

Archbishop Piat said that he was, “very thankful to Pope Francis for having called me to such a responsibility. I am very touched by the trust he puts in me which is far from being deserved. I am at his disposal for whatever service he will ask of me…”

The consistory for the creation of 17 new Cardinals will take place on the 19th of November.

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With Pope’s cardinal picks, Bernardin’s ‘seamless garment’ is back

VATICAN CITY
Crux

John L. Allen Jr. October 9, 2016
EDITOR

By naming Blase Cupich of Chicago, Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis and Kevin Farrell, formerly of Dallas, as cardinals, Pope Francis has moved the senior leadership of the American Catholic Church to a centrist, non-cultural warrior stance reminiscent of the late Cardinal Joseph Bernardin’s “seamless garment.”

Pope Francis on Sunday engineered what may prove to be a seismic shift in the Catholic hierarchy in the United States, elevating not one or two, but a full three new American cardinals seen as belonging to the centrist, non-cultural warrior wing of the country’s hierarchy.

The pontiff announced a consistory, the event in which new members are inducted into the Church’s most exclusive club, for Nov. 19, coinciding with the end of his special jubilee Holy Year of Mercy.

The list includes 13 new cardinal-electors, meaning those under 80 and eligible to vote for the next pope, and features three Americans after Francis bypassed the U.S. in both 2014 and 2015.
The three Americans are Archbishops Blase Cupich of Chicago and Joseph Tobin of Indianapolis, as well as Bishop Kevin Farrell of Dallas, recently chosen by Francis to head his new “dicastery,” meaning a Vatican department, on Family, Laity and Life.

Of the three, Cupich and Farrell were quasi-expected, although one never knows with the unpredictable Francis. Chicago is an archdiocese that’s long been held by a cardinal, and Farrell’s new Vatican post seemed to beckon a cardinal at the top.

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Cupich among 17 named cardinals by pope

VATICAN CITY
Chicago Sun-Times

VATICAN CITY — Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich was among 17 new cardinals named Sunday by Pope Francis.

Thirteen of the new cardinals are under age 80 and thus eligible to vote in a conclave to elect his successor. Three of the new cardinals are Americans, including leading U.S. moderate Cupich and Indianapolis Archbishop Joseph Tobin.

As is Francis’ tradition, the new cardinals hail from some of the most far-away and peripheral corners of the globe, with Africa, Asia, South America and Oceania getting far more representation than Europe, which has long dominated the College of Cardinals.

New to the club of the “princes” of the church are bishops from Bangui, Central African Republic; Port Louis, Mauritius and Tlalnepantla, Mexico.

Significantly only one Italian elector was named: Francis’ ambassador to “the beloved and martyred Syria,” Cardinal-elect Mario Zenari.

Francis said the 17 would be elevated at a consistory on Nov. 19, on the eve of the close to his Holy Year of Mercy.

Of the new cardinals, Cupich is very much a pastor in Francis’ likeness, emphasizing the merciful and welcoming side of the church — somewhat to the dismay of U.S. conservative Catholics. His nomination as Chicago archbishop was Francis’ first major U.S. appointment and he was a papal appointee at the pope’s big family synod last year.

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Pope Francis to Create 17 New Cardinals

VATICAN CITY
Wall Street Journal

By FRANCIS X. ROCCA
Updated Oct. 9, 2016

Pope Francis will create 17 new cardinals next month, including three from the U.S. and a number from the developing world, a move that reflects his goal of rebalancing the college of cardinals toward regions where Catholicism is growing fastest, as well as his preference for liberals over conservatives.

The new U.S. cardinals include the archbishops of Chicago and Indianapolis and a former bishop of Dallas. The pope will also elevate to cardinal the Vatican’s envoy to Syria.

With this batch of cardinals, Pope Francis will have nominated more than a third of the men whose most important task is the election of a new pope. Of the 17 new cardinals named, 13 will qualify as electors.

Pope Francis made the announcement Sunday to a crowd in St. Peter’s Square, saying he would elevate the men to the rank of cardinal at a ceremony on Nov. 19.

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Pope announces 17 new Cardinals in consistory

VATICAN CITY
news.va

2016-10-09 Vatican Radio

(Vatican Radio) Pope Francis at the end of his Angelus on Sunday announced the creation of 17 new Cardinals. A consistory will be held on the 19 of November, the eve of the closing of the Jubilee of Mercy.

13 of the new Cardinals will be under 80 years and will be eligible to vote in a conclave.

The Holy Father said that the those chosen come from five continents. They include three American Archbishops and Archbishops from Mauritius and Bangladesh.

Below find the list of new Cardinals

Archbishop Mario Zenari, Italy
Archbishop Dieudonné Nzapalainga, Central African Republic
Archbishop Carlos Osoro Sierra, Spain
Archbishop Sérgio da Rocha, Brazil
Archbishop Blase J. Cupich, U.S.A.
Archbishop Patrick D’Rozario, Bangladesh
Archbishop Baltazar Enrique Porras Cardozo, Venezuela
Archbishop Jozef De Kesel, Belgium
Archbishop Maurice Piat, Mauritius
Archbishop Kevin Joseph Farrell, U.S.A.
Archbishop Carlos Aguiar Retes, Mexico
Archbishop John Ribat, Papua Nuova Guinea
Archbishop Mons. Joseph William Tobin U.S.A.
Archbishop Anthony Soter Fernandez, Archbishop Emeritus of Kuala Lumpur Malaysia
Archbishop Renato Corti, Archbishop Emeritus of Novara Italy
Archbishop Sebastian Koto Khoarai, Bishop Emeritus of Mohale’s Hoek Lesotho
Father Ernest Simoni, presbytery of the Archdiocese of Shkodrë-Pult, Scutari – Albania.

(from Vatican Radio)

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Pope announces new group of Roman Catholic cardinals

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

Pope Francis said on Sunday he would elevate 17 Roman Catholic prelates to the high rank of cardinal, including 13 who are under 80 years old and thus eligible to enter a conclave that will one day choose his successor.

Cardinals are the most senior members of the Roman Catholic hierarchy after the pope. Each time a pope names new cardinals he puts his stamp on the future of the 1.2-billion-member global church.

Francis, making the surprise announcement during his weekly Sunday address, said the men came from five continents and that the ceremony to elevate them, known as a consistory, would be held on Nov. 19.

It is the third time Francis has appointed new cardinals since his election in 2013 as the first non-European pontiff in 1,300 years.

The new cardinal-electors, those under 80, come from Italy, the Central African Republic, Spain, the United States, Brazil, Bangladesh, Venezuela, Belgium, Mauritius, Mexico and Papua New Guinea.

Three are from the United States: Archbishop Blase Cupich of Chicago, Archbishop William Tobin of Indianapolis and Bishop Kevin Farrell of Dallas, who was recently appointed to head a new Vatican department on family and life issues.

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.

Apuron’s canonical trial: What we know so far

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Haidee V Eugenio, Pacific Daily News October 9, 2016

Guam Archbishop Anthony Sablan Apuron, 70, is one of 84 bishops worldwide who have been accused publicly of sexual wrongdoing, according to BishopAccountability.org, a group tracking public records involving bishops.

Apuron has been publicly accused of raping two altar boys and sexually abusing two others in the 1970s when he was the parish priest at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church in Agat.

To date, just four accused bishops worldwide have been laicized, according to the website. Laicization, in the canon law of the Catholic Church, is the removal of a bishop, priest or deacon from the status of being a member of the clergy. The term corresponds closely in meaning to defrocking, which the Concerned Catholics of Guam wants to happen to Apuron.

The Vatican is preparing for the canonical trial of Apuron, said Rev. Jeff San Nicolas, delegate of the Archdiocese of Agana’s temporary apostolic administrator.

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.

New Primer for Rabbis about Sexual Abuse

ISRAEL
Magen Protects

Posted on September 27, 2016

Magen is proud to introduce a primer for Rabbis, in Hebrew and English, intended to share with them the current research-based understanding of sexual abuse.

This primer was inspired by Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach ztz”l, who had an ongoing relationship with Professor Zev Lev, who earned his PhD in physics at Columbia University. Professor Lev describes that the he taught the fundamentals of electricity to Rav Auerbach and Rav Auerbach taught him Gemara and halacha. The Rav’s extensive formulation of Halachic aspects of electricity was based on a solid understanding that he learned from an expert.

While this primer is NOT a substitute for a consultation with a professional, Rabbis should have the benefit of the tremendous amount of research-based knowledge that exists regarding sexual abuse when making decisions. The information is divided into four sections: general information about child sexual abuse, information about perpetrators, information about victims, and recommendations. It should be considered a brief summary of some salient points- to be used as a starting point when seeking professional guidance from a mental health professional and/or law enforcement.

Please feel free to print the primer or send this link to your Rabbi! We would love to hear feedback about which Rabbis have received the primer. Shana Tova!

For English Primer For Rabbis on Child Sexual Abuse

בעברית סיכום לרבנים בנושא התעללות מינית בילדים

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’ Diplomatic Reach Exceeds His Grasp of History

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on October 9, 2016 by Betty Clermont

Pope Francis formed an alliance with Vladimir Putin, an accommodation with Raul Castro and capitulated to Xi Jinping.

On Aug. 26, the pope announced his intentions for the 50th World Day of Peace to be celebrated on Jan. 1, 2017. He included “recognition of the primacy of diplomacy,” acting “within what is possible,” and having “a realistic political method.”

Two days earlier, the pontiff’s chosen Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, “remarked that it is ‘the simplicity and courage with which the pope proposes the primacy of dialogue and understanding’ that has sparked in many religious and political leaders ‘the desire to communicate with him and to get to know the actions of the Holy See and the Catholic Church worldwide better.’” Parolin is so confident that other world leaders admire Pope Francis’ “negotiations and dialogue rather than affirming truth” that he is considering creating an Office for Papal Mediation.

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.

Youth pastor charged with statutory sexual assault

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

[with video]

New Paris, Bedford County, Pa.

The 35 year old youth pastor at Faith Brethren Bible Church has been arrested and charged with statutory sexual assault.

Wesley Blackburn was turned in by the senior pastor at the church, Jim Espenshade, after receiving a call from Blackburn’s wife. After Espenshade found out about the alleged relations, he knew what he had to do. He said, “I was going to protect this young lady, I was going to protect the rest of the youth group. I was going to help this family pick up its pieces. There was no other course I was going to take.”

The investigation is ongoing and Bedford County District Attorney Bill Higgins said the church handled this correctly. Higgins said, “Everybody acted appropriately as soon as the information was found out. The church acted appropriately and has been cooperative with the investigation. There is no indication that anybody knew about it other that the two people involved. As soon as it was discovered it was immediately reported to the authorities who took prompt action.”

On why he acted quickly he explained, “Listen, I have a 14-year-old granddaughter. I didn’t need any other information at that point.”

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.

Laicos protestaron contra obispo de Osorno durante ceremonia de confirmación

CHILE
Bio Bio

[Laity of Osorno protested against Bishop Juan Barros at a confirmation ceremony.]

Publicado por
Maximiliano Ortiz

La Información es de
Paulo Díaz

Durante la tarde de este viernes nuevamente se registró una manifestación por parte de integrantes de la Organización de Laicos y Laicas de Osorno en contra del actual obispo de la Diócesis de la ciudad, Juan Barros, en el contexto de su participación en la confirmación de estudiantes de un destacado establecimiento educacional de la ciudad.

Además de expresar su descontento por la presencia de Barros, dirigentes de la agrupación reiteraron sus acusaciones en contra de Cancillería y el embajador de Chile en el Vaticano, lo cual se da tras las especulaciones de una posible visita del Papa a Chile.

Mario Vargas, vocero de la agrupación, aseguró que hace más de un año y medio que no han recibido un pronunciamiento oficial por parte de la Conferencia episcopal, así como del comité permanente respecto a la situación y ambiente del que es victima la comunidad Laica en Osorno.

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Mexico: Pastor accused of raping 8-year-old girl ordered to buy her father beer as compensation

MEXICO
International Business Times

By William Watkinson
October 8, 2016

A pastor accused of raping an eight-year-old girl was ordered to buy her father two crates of beer as compensation in a remote village in Mexico. The perpetrator, a 55-year-old former clergyman, was arrested in the village of Santiago Quetzalapa, which has no road access or phone signal, and is situated around 300 miles south-east of Mexico City.

The girl’s parents complained to the municipal government and the attacker was later arrested, on Friday 7 October, after local media coverage and outrage from human rights groups. In a statement released to the Guardian, the Oaxaca State attorney general’s office said that police arrested on charges of aggravated rape.

Oaxaca State, where many indigenous communities live in mountainous regions, is ruled by an idiosyncratic system popularly known as usos y costumbres (traditions and customs). Abuse is often handled locally in this unique form of government which is designed to allow local leaders to settle disputes according to their own beliefs rather than the Mexican law.

Helder Palacios, editorial director of the Ruta 135 website which initially reported the case, told the newspaper: “There are cases in which there was impunity, there’s no investigation and local prosecutors never receive a criminal complaint.

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October 8, 2016

San Diego parishioners kept in the dark about sexual assault

CALIFORNIA/MINNESOTA
The Worthy Adversary

October 8, 2016 Joelle Casteix

For the second time in four years, a San Diego priest credibly accused (and later criminally charged) with sexual assault was allowed to stay in a parish while parishioners were kept in the dark.

Apparently, Bishop Robert McElroy doesn’t think that’s a big deal. He’s wrong.

Priest charged under Minnesota Law
Fr. Jacob Andrew Bertrand is facing sexual assault charges in Minnesota.

From NBC San Diego:

A San Diego priest is facing charges for having sex with a woman in Minnesota while religiously advising her, allegedly paying her to keep quiet about their relationship.

Jacob Andrew Bertrand, 32, a priest at the Diocese of San Diego, was charged with two counts of criminal sexual conduct in the 3rd degree for having sex with the woman in 2010, according to a complaint filed in the County of Dakota in Minnesota.

In Minnesota, it’s a felony for a member of the clergy to have sex with anyone who is “not their spouse, during the course of a meeting in which religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort is given, or while ongoing religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort is occurring.”

Now here’s the rub: the alleged victim reported the 2010 assault to church officials in 2012 and 2014. But a spokesperson for the Diocese of San Diego said that Bertrand asked for a leave of absence in 2016 when he learned that criminal charges were going to be filed.

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.

Imam divorces eighth wife after she catches him red-handed with minor inside mosque

PAKISTAN
Daily Pakistan

LAHORE – An imam from Punjab has divorced his eighth wife after she caught him red-handed somomizing a minor inside the mosque in Burewala city of Punjab.

Mussarat Bibi, who hails from neighboring Habib Colony, was married to Qari Muhammad Aslam some 15 years ago.

Aslam is an imam at Gulshan Raza Town mosque and an Arabic teacher at the city’s Govt. MC Model High School.

Mussarat told the media that she was his fifth wife, but Aslam “who can’t overcome his lust for sex” married two more women without her consent under the pretext of “giving them shelter”.

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San Diego Priest Facing Charges Related to Sexual Encounter With Woman in Minnesota

CALIFORNIA/MINNESOTA
NBC San Diego

By Jaspreet Kaur

A San Diego priest is facing charges for having sex with a woman in Minnesota while religiously advising her.

Jacob Andrew Bertrand, 32, a priest at the Diocese of San Diego, was charged with two counts of criminal sexual conduct in the 3rd degree for having sex with the victim in 2010, according to the complaint filed in the County of Dakota in Minnesota.

The compaint alleges that Bertrand and the victim had met while they were both studying in Rome, Italy in 2009. He engaged in sex with the victim while she was seeking religious advice from him after they had moved back to the U.S.

According to Aida Bustos, spokesperson for the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego, Bertrand had filed for a leave of absence when he learned of a possibility of charges being filed. The leave of absence was granted.

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.

Cardinal Pell associate banned from preaching in Ireland over abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA/IRELAND
Sydney Morning Herald

Timna Jacks and Chris Vedelago

A controversial Melbourne priest and close associate of Cardinal George Pell has been banned from ministering in Ireland for committing an act of sexual abuse that senior Australian church figures have dismissed as simply a “breach of his vow of celibacy”.

The decision by an Irish bishop and the country’s Catholic child protection authority comes despite Father John Thomas Walshe receiving an official endorsement of his good character and reputation by Archbishop of Melbourne Denis Hart.

Father Walshe came to national prominence after he testified on behalf of Cardinal Pell at the sexual abuse royal commission late last year, which was investigating claims then Bishop Pell tried to buy the silence of a victim of notorious paedophile Gerald Ridsdale in 1993.

The controversial appearance led a former student priest, John Roach, to publicly reveal that Father Walshe himself had been found by church authorities to have committed an act of sexual abuse in 1982.

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.

Gov. Cuomo says New York Archdiocese’s cash settlements for child sex abuse victims is just first step toward justice

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
MICHAEL O’KEEFFE
GLENN BLAIN
LARRY MCSHANE

A New York Archdiocese plan offering cash settlements to sex abuse victims with no statue of limitations is a positive step — but hardly the last one, Gov. Cuomo says.

A Cuomo spokesman, one day after Timothy Cardinal Dolan unveiled his Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, said new laws were needed to provide compensation to all targets of sexual abuse.

“We must continue to work to ensure all victims have the opportunity to get the justice they deserve and this means a global legislative solution,” said gubernatorial spokesman Rich Azzopardi.

Cuomo has promised to make the issue of statue of limitations in child abuse cases a priority in 2017 after the Child Victims Act failed again this year in the state Legislature.

Currently in New York, victims must bring civil suits before their 23rd birthday against their attackers.

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Here’s what PennLive’s editorial missed in the Statute of Limitations debate: Cathleen Palm

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

By Cathleen Palm

The Center for Children’s Justice had a mixed reaction to PennLive’s Oct. 3 editorial

We can’t help but compare the outcry in Libre’s case to the stalled legislation that would give the victims of child abuse a better chance of confronting their abusers and winning some measure of redress in the civil court system.

PennLive’s editorial successfully called upon Pennsylvania lawmakers to end the injustice caused by statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse.

The statute of limitation laws in Pennsylvania have always miscalculated the complex dynamics of childhood sexual abuse.

While there is no time limit on the wounds from such an assault on the child’s body and soul and research underscores that it can take decades for the child victim to come forward.

State law imposes arbitrary deadlines that cut off a victim’s access to justice.

These statutes of limitation have expired too quickly and have let perpetrators off-the-hook never facing the victim, a judge or jury in a civil or criminal courtroom.

Your editorial argued that the state Senate has refused to address this injustice experienced by adults previously sexually abused as children.

State senators voted for a bill that does not restart the civil clock permitting adult survivors of past childhood abuse access to a – once denied – civil courtroom.

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Imam Hafiz Rahman guilty of sex attacks at Cradley Heath mosque

UNITED KINGDOM
Dudley News

A RELIGIOUS leader is facing time behind bars after being convicted by a jury of carrying out sex attacks on two young girls at his Cradley Heath mosque.

Hafiz Rahman was the Imam at the place of worship and he sexually assaulted the girls in a string of attacks between March 1986 and August 1987.

The girls who had gone to the Queens Cross mosque for religious studies had described to the jury how they were touched sexually by Rahman.

The 58-year-old of Ballard Road, Netherton, had denied seven charges involving indecent assault at Wolverhampton Crown Court.

But at the end of his five day trial the eight man- four woman reached unanimous guilty verdicts on five of the charges.

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Dudley Imam Guilty Of Sexual Assaults Against Pupils

UNITED KINGDOM
Heart

8th October 2016

A religious teacher, who practised as an Imam at a Dudley mosque has been convicted of sexually abusing two pupils more than 30 years ago.

Hifiz Rahman, aged 57, from Ballard Road, Netherton, was found guilty at Wolverhampton Crown Court of sexually assaulting two girls at Queens Cross Mosque in the 1980s.

Rahman was arrested and charged after one of the girls, now aged 40, bravely reported to police in 2012 that she had been sexually assaulted as child by the Imam at the mosque, when she was aged between seven and eight.

She told officers that the Imam used to abuse her as she read from the ‘Holy Book’ but was too scared to tell anyone at the time.

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

Priest Accused of Sexual Contact with Woman During Private Mass in Mendota Heights Home

MINNESOTA
KSTP

October 07, 2016

WARNING: Some of the details from the criminal complaint are graphic descriptions.

Prosecutors have charged a 33-year-old priest from San Diego with two counts of criminal sexual conduct after they say he had sexual contact with a woman in Mendota Heights while providing spiritual guidance.

The Dakota County Attorney’s Office charged Jacob Andrew Bertrand by summons Thursday. He’s facing two counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct in connection to events that allegedly happened in 2010, according to the criminal complaint made public Friday.

Bertrand is currently assigned to the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego, California.

The 30-year-old woman reported the sexual contact with Bertrand to Mendota Heights Police on April 28 of this year.

In a statement, Dakota County Attorney James Backstrom said, “It’s a felony under Minnesota law for any member of the clergy to have sexual relations with an individual who is not their spouse, during the course of a meeting in which religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort is given, or while ongoing religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort is occurring.”

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.

San Diego priest charged with sexual assault of Minnesota woman during private mass

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

[with video]

MENDOTA HEIGHTS, Minn. (KMSP) – A Catholic priest from San Diego has been charged with criminal sexual conduct for an incident during a private mass for the victim in her parents’ Mendota Heights, Minnesota home back in 2010. Jacob Bertrand, 33, was charged by summons with two counts of third-degree criminal sexual conduct by clergy.

According to the charges, a 30-year-old woman contacted Mendota Heights police on April 28, 2016 to report sexual contact between her and Bertrand. The victim told police she met Bertrand in 2009 while studying spirituality at a university in Rome, Italy. Bertrand was also a student and a deacon at a Catholic church at that time. The victim asked Bertrand to be her spiritual guide, and the two began to meet every Wednesday for “holy conversation.”

A ‘mystical’ proposal’

San Diego priest charged with sexual assault of Minnesota woman during private mass
In the fall of 2009, Bertrand told the victim “the Holy Spirit was compelling him to tell her about his sexual past.” Bertrand gave the victim two of his personal journals, and she provided him with her own journals, in which she wrote about wanting to find a husband in Rome. After reading her journals, Bertrand told the victim that he was the man she was sent to Rome to meet. While at a church, he held her hand and “mystically proposed” to her.

In June of 2010, the victim and Bertrand flew to San Diego, where he was ordained as a Catholic priest. During their time in San Diego, they kissed on multiple occasions.

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San Diego priest facing sex charges in Minnesota

CALIFORNIA/MINNESOTA
CBS 8

By Brandon Lewis, Reporter

SAN DIEGO (CBS 8) – A San Diego Catholic priest is facing sex charges in Minnesota and on Friday his lawyer spoke with CBS News 8 on behalf of the priest.

The diocese in San Diego said the charges against Father Jacob Bertrand are related to a sexual encounter he had with a woman in 2010.

The 33-year-old priest took a leave of absence in August as an investigation began into allegations of sexual misconduct.

The victim said she first met Father Bertrand while the two were studying spirituality at an university in Italy in 2009.

The two became friends and court documents allege a year later he visited her and her family in Minnesota.

According to prosecutors, Father Bertrand herd their confession then held a private mass with the victim.

Bertrand is accused of twice having sexual conduct during the ceremony. He is now facing two felony charges of criminal sexual conduct as a member of clergy.

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Priest had sex with woman during ‘private Mass’ in Mendota Heights basement, charges say

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By TAD VEZNER | tvezner@pioneerpress.com
PUBLISHED: October 7, 2016

A San Diego priest has been charged with having sex with a woman he was spiritually advising.

Jacob A. Bertrand, 34, of San Diego was charged with two counts of criminal sexual conduct Friday in Dakota County District Court.

The offense allegedly took place in 2010 while Bertrand was visiting the woman’s family in Mendota Heights.

Under Minnesota law, a member of the clergy who has sex with a person they’re not married to “during the course of a meeting in which the complainant sought or received religious spiritual advice” is guilty of third-degree criminal sexual conduct, even if the sex is consensual.

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.

Calif. priest charged with sexual misconduct with Twin Cities woman

CALIFORNIA/MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Karen Zamora Star Tribune OCTOBER 7, 2016

A priest from California was charged Friday in the Twin Cities with engaging in sexual activity with a woman for whom he was conducting mass in Mendota Heights, authorities said.

Jacob Andrew Bertrand, 33, of San Diego, was charged in Dakota County District Court with third-degree criminal sexual conduct during a religious advice meeting and third-degree criminal sexual conduct during ongoing meeting for advice.

“Any time you have someone in a position of trust and responsibility that is taking advantage of that, you have a tragic situation,” County Attorney James Backstrom said Friday. “And that is what we are alleging that happened here.”

According to the criminal complaint, in July 2010, Bertrand, an ordained priest from San Diego, visited a Mendota Heights woman he had met in 2009 in Rome while they were studying spirituality and he was a deacon. In June 2010, the woman and Bertrand had flown to San Diego for his ordination as a priest.

At one point during his trip to Minnesota, Bertrand and the woman engaged in a private mass in the basement of her Mendota Heights home, where they also had sexual contact.

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The Catholic Church fails abuse victims: Cardinal Dolan still opposes the one bill that would make a real difference

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
GARY GREENBERG
ANDREW WILLIS
MELANIE BLOW
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Saturday, October 8, 2016

Timothy Cardinal Dolan says he is on the side of children and an ally of survivors fighting for the passage of the Omnibus Child Victims Act, which would finally fix New York’s shameful failure to let victims of sexual abuse pursue justice in state courts. He says he supports an even stricter bill — one introduced by Sen. Andrew Lanza and Assemblyman Michael Cusick.

The cardinal is being economical with the truth.

The truth is that the Roman Catholic Church opposes legislation that ensures those who rape and molest our children will be held accountable. The bill the church is championing instead would ensure that New York’s sex offenders stay on our streets, protected by the laws.

An honest comparison of the two bills in question reveals that there is not one area where the bill the church supports is tougher than the Omnibus Child Victims Act.

Both bills apply to public and private institutions.

Both the Child Victims Act and the Lanza-Cusick bill eliminate criminal statutes of limitations for future sexual abuse against children.

The Child Victims Act eliminates civil statutes of limitations too, whereas the Lanza-Cusick bill extends them by five to 10 years. The problem here is that research shows it takes the average survivor 21 years to disclose their abuse.

Another vital difference: The Child Victims Act establishes a one-year window allowing survivors of past abuse previously denied justice to identify their perpetrators by bringing forward civil claims. The Lanza-Cusick bill has no such window.

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.

New Brunswick lawsuit alleges abuse by former chaplain, Roman Catholic priests

CANADA
Metro

MONCTON, N.B. — New Brunswick’s Roman Catholic church is facing new accusations that several of its priests were involved in the sexual abuse of youth, including a lawsuit alleging the former chaplain at the University of Moncton assaulted a boy in the 1980s.

Notices of action have been filed before the Court of Queen’s Bench in Moncton against Rev. Paul Breau, the former university chaplain, Rev. Yvon Arsenault and the Moncton Diocese.

The documents say the person making the allegations was a young offender who had been ordered to do community work on church grounds belonging to St. Joseph parish in Shediac, a coastal town 27 kilometres east of Moncton where Breau and Arsenault were working.

The two priests were responsible for supervising the young boy, and the abuse is alleged to have occurred over a two-year-period in the 1980s in the priests’ residence.

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Detroit Catholics pray to be forgiven for sins of the church

MICHIGAN
Michigan Radio

By TYLER SCOTT

Members of the Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit held a unique service on Friday called “Mass for Pardon.”

Leaders at the Archdiocese said it’s important to ask forgiveness for sins the Catholic Church has committed as an institution.

The sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests has been the most visible controversy in the church in recent years.

“And we responded very strongly,” said Bishop Michael Byrnes. “It has really changed a lot of our protocols, and (we) have been very proactive at creating a safe environment for children.”

But parishioners and clergy were also gathered to ask forgiveness for racism and the neglect of the poor, which are two issues Byrnes said are particularly significant in Detroit.

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New York Archdiocese Will Compensate Church Sex Abuse Victims

NEW YORK
Gothamist

BY EMMA WHITFORD IN NEWS ON OCT 7, 2016

The Archdiocese of New York, one of the country’s largest Roman Catholic diocese, this week announced that it will compensate victims of sexual abuse who have not already settled claims with the church. People abused by New York clergy as minors can apply for monetary compensation through the new Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program.

“I wish I would have done this quite a while ago,” Cardinal Timothy Dolan told the NY Times in an interview. “I just finally thought: ‘Darn it, let’s do it. I’m tired of putting it off.'”

At a Thursday press conference, Cardinal Dolan told reporters that sexual abuse was “one sin, one crime, one scandal that has gravely wounded us in the church.” …

“We’ve seen the pattern time and time again across the country,” David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, told the Times. “Whenever statute of limitations reform is making real progress, bishops take these steps, in essence, to say to lawmakers, ‘Hey, back off, we’re handling this ourselves.'”

Cardinal Dolan also has a history of alleged attempts to protect the church from the costly fallout of sexual abuse cases. Back in 2013, documents released by the Milwaukee archdiocese—where Dolan served as Archbishop —showed that he had moved $57 million in church funds into a private trust, allegedly to protect it from lawsuits by alleged sex abuse victims. The files also revealed the archdiocese had reassigned priests who were accused of sexual molestation. An attorney representing alleged victims said at the time that the transferred funds were meant to “pay off some of the offenders to quietly go away.”

Dolan dismissed those allegations as “groundless and scurrilous.”

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Diocese of Bathurst loses $3.3M lawsuit against Aviva Insurance

CANADA
CBC News

The Diocese of Bathurst has lost its bid to recoup $3.3 million in compensation that was paid to victims of sexual abuse from its former insurer.

Its request for punitive damages from Aviva Insurance for wrongful denial of insurance coverage was also denied in the Court of Queen’s Bench decision released late Friday afternoon.

​”The Diocese was unsuccessful in establishing coverage for the compensatory damages it paid to the victims through the conciliation process and the expenses and costs related to it,” Justice Stephen McNally states in his 56-page decision.

“The Diocese’s claims for damages with respect to that aspect of the action must fail and is therefore dismissed,” he wrote.

“The portion of the Diocese’s claims related to its expenses incurred in defending, resolving and/or paying judgments in relation to claims brought against it outside the conciliation process are yet to be determined.”

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When the Anglican church can’t follow its own code

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

Elizabeth Farrelly

Most Australians are as unsurprised by skullduggery in the church as by double-dealing in government. It’s almost like they expect it. Yet even that low bar has stumped the church of late.

Screws in tyres? Disappearing pets? Trolls? Threats? Cover-ups? To those who despise Christianity but claim to live by its values, I say, terrific. Never have we needed truth and compassion more. But what if the church itself forsakes those values? Can a moral code survive without its core players? What if the Pharisees are back in charge?

The Pharisees, you recall, were a bunch of domineering, hypocritical and intensely tribal priests who prioritised appearance over truth, corporate advantage over noble deeds and stifled all dissent. “Blind guides,” Jesus called them, polishing the cup’s exterior while ignoring its putrid contents. In short, they pretty much epitomise the Australian view of authority.

It’s not just the ongoing nightmare of institutionalised child-sex abuse and the decades-long connivance that implies. Nor even the antediluvian opposition to women preachers and same-sex marriage. Exacerbating all that is an increasingly aggressive stamping out of dissent.

You might think an institution of diminishing influence would engage its internal questioners in eager debate. You might expect the church, having been built around a rocker-of-boats and tipper-of-apple carts, to know that comfortable words pattered out over tea are not the only ones to hear.

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

Former Christian school headmaster’s son charged with sexual assault

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

ERIC ANDREW-GEE
The Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Oct. 07, 2016

The son of a former headmaster of an Ontario Christian school that was closed in 2007 amid accusations of abuse and cult-like practices has been charged with sexual assault for alleged offences dating back 30 years.

Robert Farnsworth, 49, was charged on Wednesday with sexual assault and gross indecency in connection with incidents between 1986 and 1987. The alleged victim was male and under 18 years old. Mr. Farnsworth appeared in a Brockville, Ont., court on Thursday and was granted bail.

He is the son of Charles Farnsworth, the late headmaster of Grenville Christian College, an elite private school near Brockville that was affiliated with the Community of Jesus, a controversial U.S. religious sect often described as a cult. Grenville closed in 2007 after 38 years in operation, citing declining enrolment and rising operating costs.

The closing coincided with a growing chorus of alumni accusing the school of chronic abuse and bizarre religious rites. A $225-million class action lawsuit filed in 2008 alleges former students were “sexually, physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually traumatized” by their time at the school. The suit is ongoing.

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Archdiocese faces new lawsuit over McCormack abuses

ILLINOIS
Chicago Sun-Times

Mitchell Armentrout
@mitchtrout | email

The Archdiocese of Chicago was hit with another lawsuit Friday over alleged abuses committed by convicted child molester and defrocked priest Daniel McCormack.

The plaintiff, identified as John JW Doe, says he was about 10 when McCormack began sexually abusing him in 2002 at the West Side St. Agatha parish, according to the suit filed in Cook County Circuit Court. The abuse continued through 2005, the suit claims.

“The Archdiocese has not seen this lawsuit and does not comment on ongoing litigation, however, Daniel J. McCormack is no longer a priest,” an archdiocese spokeswoman said in an email Friday night. “He was removed from public ministry in February of 2006 and laicized (removed from the priesthood) in November 2007. No priest with even one substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor serves in ministry in the Archdiocese of Chicago today.”

McCormack pleaded guilty in 2007 to abusing five other children at St. Agatha’s. He was sentenced to five years in prison and has been staying at a state-run mental health facility since his release from prison in 2009. A new set of criminal charges was filed against him in 2014.

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DISMISSAL OF PORN CHARGE AGAINST HIBBING PRIEST DISAPPOINTS VICTIMS

MINNESOTA
Hibbing Daily Tribune

By Kelly Grinsteinner Editor kgrinsteinner@hibbingdailytribune.net

HIBBING — Families involved in the criminal charges against a Hibbing priest, who was found not guilty this summer of inappropriately touching four girls, are likely feeling victimized once again, according to SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

The reaction comes just days after the prosecutor filed a dismissal letter dropping the remaining child pornography charge against Brian Michael Lederer.

“Our hearts ache for the five kids and their families who have helped police and prosecutors pursue an accused child molesting cleric, Fr. Brian Lederer,” stated David Clohessy, director of SNAP, in a media release. “They must be terribly distraught that he’s escaped prosecution on all charges.”

Lederer, 31, had been a priest at Blessed Sacrament Parish and Assumption Catholic School in Hibbing until he was placed on leave in May 2015 when he was arrested and charged with four counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct and two counts of fourth-degree criminal sexual conduct.

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October 7, 2016

Son of late Grenville headmaster arrested for sex assault

CANADA
Toronto Star

By ALEX BALLINGALL
Fri., Oct. 7, 2016

The son of the late headmaster of a now-defunct private Christian school in eastern Ontario, which is subject to a $225-million abuse lawsuit, has been charged with sexual assault and indecent exposure.

Ontario Provincial Police allege the offences occurred against a single victim in 1986 and 1987. To protect the anonymity of the alleged victim, OPP Sgt. Angie Atkinson would not confirm or deny any connection to the school, which was called Grenville Christian College. She would only say that police believe the crimes took place in Grenville County, northeast of Kingston.

Robert Farnsworth, 49, was arrested on Wednesday and appeared in a Brockville courtroom the following day. Donald Farnsworth, one of the long-time headmaster’s other sons and a former teacher at the school, confirmed to the Star on Thursday that the man arrested is his brother.

“I can’t really talk any more about it. We’ll let the legal system take care of it,” he said.

From 1973 to its closure in 2007, Grenville Christian College billed itself as a prestigious boarding school for girls and boys, with a scenic campus near the shoreline of the St. Lawrence River, just east of Brockville. The class action lawsuit, which was certified in 2014, features more than 180 plaintiffs who attended the school between 1973 and 1997. Their statement of claim alleges that, as Grenville students, they were subject to arbitrary discipline, bizarre religious practices and systemic abuse that left them “sexually, physically, mentally, emotionally and spiritually traumatized.”

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NY ARCHDIOCESE ABUSE PLAN BEING DISTORTED

NEW YORK
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on a new initiative by the New York Archdiocese that addresses clergy sexual abuse:

Timothy Cardinal Dolan has shown great courage in establishing the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, a new initiative designed to deal fairly with clergy sexual abuse. While he has won applause from many quarters, some are already distorting the program.

New York State Senator Brad Hoylman, who has sponsored a bill on this issue, calls the archdiocesan program a “canny legal strategy” to reduce the archdiocese’s liability. So what was his initial bill last year, namely the one that gave a pass to the public schools? Canny is too kind a word to describe it. After many pressed him to revise his bill, he did so, thanking the Catholic League for its input.

State Senator Hoylman distorts the new program when he says it is “initially limited to survivors who have previously notified the Archdiocese that they have been abused.” Apparently, he did not read what the archdiocese has posted on its website: “New applicants can also come forward during this time and register.” In other words, the program’s first phase deals with those who have already come forward, but it is not limited to them.

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4 New Brunswick priests caught in sexual abuse allegations

CANADA
CBC News

In the latest series of pedophilia scandals plaguing New Brunswick’s Catholic churches, four priests have been accused of sexual assault, including the former chaplain of the University of Moncton and Dorchester Penitentiary.

Two of the priests practised at St-Joseph Church in Shediac when the alleged abuse took place.

A lawsuit was filed against Rev. Paul Breau, the former chaplain, Rev. Yvon Arsenault and the Moncton Diocese, alleging the priests used their position of authority to engage in repeated sexual intercourse with a 13-year-old boy.

The boy was a young offender who had been ordered to do community work on church grounds, including raking leaves in the yard surrounding the St-Joseph parish. The two priests were responsible for supervising the young boy.

The abuse is alleged to have occurred over a two-year-period in the 1980s, in the residence of the priests.

The complainant, now 45, said he suffered severe damage as a result of the abuse, including depression and anxiety.

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NY–More on Dolan’s pay off plan: Dollars, not disclosure

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by David Clohessy of SNAP (314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

The Bible says the truth shall set you free. Dolan’s scheme, however, conceals truth. No one will learn anything about any clerics who are concealing or have committed heinous child sex crimes. Even worse: no cleric who might commit or conceal child sex crimes will be deterred from doing so. Because Dolan’s scheme is about dollars not disclosure. And disclosure is what protects kids, exposes criminals, deters wrongdoing and truly brings healing.

It’s inherently wrong for those causing harm to continue causing harm and determine their own ‘penalty,’ while pretending to be generous.

It’s inherently wrong for the powerful to unilaterally exploit desperate, wounded victims with a “my way or the highway” process.

Survivors deserve real choices, not fake ones. This payoff plan is a fake choice, a coercive choice.

A few of the questions that merit asking:

Why a top-down process, instead of a collaborative one?

Why yet another rigid arbitrary deadline?

And, most of all, why a quid pro quo? Why must survivors give away all their legal options just to get some healing, decades later, from the institution that recruited, educated, trained, ordained and supervised pedophile priests while almost always hiding them, transferring them and protecting them?

Of course litigation is not for everyone. Every survivor is different. But many survivors are desperately suffering with addictions, agoraphobia, anorexia, depression and suicidal thoughts. Many are unemployed, underemployed or unemployable. Many face staggering needs for therapy and bills for medical treatment. In the short run, some of them will be helped by a check from the Archdiocese. But in the long run, our experience tells us, many who trust this process will end up with buyer’s remorse, feeling duped and trapped.

My own case may be instructive. A few years ago, I sought and got a $40,000 settlement from my diocese. A quarter-century ago, I filed an unsuccessful lawsuit against my diocese.

The settlement was helpful. The lawsuit was incredibly healing. I was able to protect innocent kids, expose a predator, regain my power and disclose hidden secrets.

So in light of all this, I would beg victims to seek Independent help from unbiased professionals before contacting church officials. I would beg victims to report first to law enforcement no matter how long ago the crime happened. I would beg victims to talk to their own attorneys, not lawyers recommended to them by church officials. And I would take victims to be very careful and slow if they do consider calling church officials. We have been hurt enough. We do not need or deserve to be re-victimized by a self-serving, top down, largely arbitrary church scheme that perpetuates unhealthy secrecy

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The Devil is in the Details

NEW YORK
The Worthy Adverary

October 7, 2016 Joelle Casteix

Yesterday, NY Cardinal Timothy Dolan announced the The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, a plan to compensate victims of child sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of New York.

There are great articles discussing the neutral and negative aspects of the plan, but before any survivor begins the process of working with the committee, there are a few details that I want to point out.

Many Archdiocese victims excluded

According to the FAQ:

A claim may be made only against a priest or deacon of the Archdiocese of New York and no other diocese or religious order.

So, if you were sexually abused by a teacher in the employ of the Archdiocese of NY – like the teacher at Loyola School who molested seven girls – you’re out of luck.

If you were abused by a member of a religious order (like the Christian Brothers) who are only allowed to work in the Archdiocese if they have the explicit permission of the Archbishop – you’re out of luck, too.

Archdiocese allowed to hide “proof” that victims need for healing

The FAQ goes on to state

[Y]ou will be required to submit documentation to show evidence of the nature, frequency, location and time of the alleged sexual abuse.

Why do you think that victims use civil law to seek justice? Because the proof LIVES IN THE SECRET FILES.

For example, in my own case, I received more than 200 pages of secret personnel files—including the signed confession of my abuser. The Diocese of Orange (where my abuse occurred) had the proof all along.

Most children who are sexually abused don’t have the wherewithal to collect signed affidavits to prove their abuse. That’s why they use the courts later on—to find out what the church knew and when they knew it.

The Archdiocese has decades of proof and evidence of abuse. And church officials don’t have to reveal any of it.

Victims must have come forward previously

The FAQ states:

In this initial phase, you must have previously notified the Archdiocese of an allegation of such abuse.

So even if the Archdiocese knows full well that you are a victim, they can shut you out because you did not follow their exact protocol before yesterday.

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NY archdiocese offers compensation to abuse victims

NEW YORK
Star Tribune

By KAREN MATTHEWS Associated Press OCTOBER 6, 2016

NEW YORK — Victims of clergy sex abuse willing to forego lawsuits against New York’s Roman Catholic archdiocese can seek compensation through a new church fund announced Thursday, but any records of such abuse and what the church did about problem priests will remain private.

The program will be led by Kenneth Feinberg, who managed the federal compensation fund for Sept. 11 victims, with oversight by former New York Police Department Commissioner Ray Kelly, among others.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan, the New York archbishop, said he created the fund because victims have said they need “a tangible sign of the church’s outreach and sense of reparation.” …

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, a Massachusetts-based advocacy group that maintains records of clergy abuse, called the New York fund “another tactic designed to fend off disclosure.”

The inner workings of the fund will be private, although victims can decide whether to reveal their involvement.

Marci Hamilton, a legal expert who has advised victims, said the fund doesn’t eliminate the need for a change in the statute of limitations, but does provide “another pathway for justice.”

“It is a smart way to increase access to some kind of compensation for victims who probably wouldn’t be able to handle the rigors of the legal system,” said Hamilton, chief executive of CHILD USA, a think tank on preventing child abuse and neglect.

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Public hearing into the response to children with problematic or harmful sexual behaviours in schools

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

7 October, 2016

The Royal Commission will hold a public hearing to inquire into the response to children with problematic or harmful sexual behaviours in schools.

The public hearing will commence on 20 October 2016 at the Royal Commission’s hearing rooms in Sydney.

The scope and purpose of the public hearing is to inquire into:

1. The response of three public primary schools in New South Wales to allegations of problematic or harmful sexual behaviours by students at those schools.

2. The response of The King’s School, Parramatta in New South Wales to allegations of problematic or harmful sexual behaviours by students at that school.

3. The response of Trinity Grammar School, Summer Hill in New South Wales to allegations of problematic or harmful sexual behaviours by students at that school.

4. The response of Shalom Christian College in Queensland to allegations of problematic or harmful sexual behaviours by students at that school.

5. The response of St Ignatius’ College Riverview to a student who is alleged to have been sexually abused at another school.

6. The systems, policies, procedures and practices for responding to allegations of problematic or harmful sexual behaviours of children within educational institutions promoted and implemented by:

a. Department of Education NSW

b. Association of Independent Schools NSW

c. Department of Family and Community Services NSW

d. The King’s School, Parramatta

e. Trinity Grammar School, Summer Hill

f. Shalom Christian College, Townsville

g. St Ignatius’ College, Riverview

7. Any related matters.

Any person or institution who believes that they have a direct and substantial interest in the scope and purpose of the public hearing is invited to lodge a written application for leave to appear at the public hearing by 17 October 2016.

Applications for leave to appear should be made using the form available here.

Leave to appear will generally be granted when an applicant:

* has been summoned to give evidence
* is an institution, or is a representative of an institution, that is subject to the inquiry to be undertaken
* may be the subject of an adverse allegation.

It is not essential for a person who will appear as a witness in a hearing to apply for leave to appear – witnesses may appear and give evidence without applying for leave.

The form should be lodged with the Royal Commission via:
Email: solicitor@childabuseroyalcommission.gov.au; or Mail: GPO Box 5283, Sydney NSW 2001.

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Cardinal Dolan: We hope compensation program will help victims, Church heal from cases of abuse

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
TIMOTHY DOLAN
SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, October 6, 2016

When Pope Francis was in New York a year ago, he spoke eloquently of mercy, compassion, reconciliation, and invited all of us to be ambassadors of those touching virtues. Our Holy Father has also christened 2016 a Year of Mercy, and encouraged us bishops to reach out in a new, daring way to people who are hurting or feel cut off from the Church.

Inspired by his example, I decided, after a lot of consultation, to take the grace and challenge of this moment and establish an Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program to, please God, promote healing for one group of members in the Church’s family who continue to suffer: the victim-survivors of abuse by clergy.

This one sin, one crime, one scandal has gravely wounded us in the Church. I continue to hear it wherever I go.

It is true that over the last two decades, the Catholic Church in the United States has made documented progress in dealing with this nauseating crime of sexual abuse, especially since the implementation of the landmark Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People nearly 15 years ago: zero tolerance for guilty clergy with removal from all ministry; full cooperation with law enforcement; public announcement of offenders; comprehensive child safety education, with ongoing monitoring of compliance of safe environment; background checks . . . on and on, leading Dr. Paul McHugh, a recognized expert at Johns Hopkins University in the abuse of children, to comment that the Church is today a leader and model in responding to a scourge that afflicts all our society and culture: the abuse of minors.

We have also engaged in pastoral and practical outreach to the victims.

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Letter Encouraging Bishop Kelley Alumni To Report Any Abuse

OKLAHOMA
News on 6

[with copy of the letter]

[with video]

BY: MARTY KASPER, NEWS ON 6

TULSA, Oklahoma – Bishop Kelley alumni have been getting a letter from the school, and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Tulsa, encouraging them to come forward if they were ever abused or know someone who was abused.

The letter is specifically concerned about abuse by a worker for the school or someone within the Catholic Church.

“What prompted us to do this was the change in policy and making sure that everyone actually knows that we have a victim-centered approach,” said Diocese of Tulsa Chancellor, Harrison Garlick.

Garlick said, in June, the newly appointed Bishop of Tulsa, David Konderla, started new policies.

“This type of approach is probably more proactive than we see in other places,” Garlick said.

The new policies are in line with national Catholic Church guidelines.

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Anchorage’s incoming archbishop addresses concerns raised by victims group

ALASKA
KTUU

By Paula Dobbyn | Oct 06, 2016

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) The newly appointed archbishop of Anchorage says he’s looking forward to his installation on Nov. 9.

Incoming Archbishop Paul D. Etienne, 57, has headed Wyoming’s statewide Diocese of Cheyenne since December 2009.

Etienne told KTUU that the move will be bittersweet because he’s come to love his staff and the people of Wyoming. But during his visit to Anchorage this week Etienne said he has met many wonderful staff and parishioners and he’s be prepared to take on his Alaska assignment. …

Not surprisingly, the Vatican’s selection of Etienne did not come without critics. An organization that helps victims of clergy sex abuse issued a statement this week raising concerns about Etienne.

“Our concern is the bishop’s track record is not good,” said Barbara Dorris, victims’ outreach director for SNAP, or Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“When he was in Wyoming he allowed a predatory bishop, Joseph Hart, who has at least six child sex lawsuits about him settled, he allowed him to continue to work, to continue to take honors, to have a children’s home in Wyoming named after him. We think this sends an incredibly dangerous message that says to children everywhere that the powerful people, the ‘good’ people, are going to side with predators, rather than protect children,” said Dorris, a former teacher who says she was abused by a priest from age 6 to 13.

SNAP also says Etienne ignored pleas to personally visit parishes where Father Charles J. Gormly, which the organization describes as a “serial predator priest,” allegedly molested children. Gormly, who died in 1968, was born in Ireland and ordained for the Diocese of Cheyenne, according to the Brainerd Dispatch newspaper in Minnesota.

He was twice sent to treatment facilities to try to cure him of pedophilia, according to the Crookston Times.

Etienne strongly defended his track record on handling clergy sex abuse. Anytime there is an allegation of child sex abuse against a priest or any member of the clergy, local law enforcement is immediately notified, the incoming archbishop said. Etienne also said he makes time to meet with victims and hear their stories.

“I have met with people who have been abused personally. And anyone who reports accusations of abuse we always make an extension of an invitation to them to come visit with me personally, that I might hear their story, and give them the opportunity for that personal conversation and care and concern. We always offer counseling and that approach is very personal. And we take all the accusation that have come up in the time that I have been there very seriously,” he said.

Regarding the Father Gormly case, there is ongoing litigation in Minnesota so Etienne was reluctant to discuss it.

“I don’t want to say too much about that because it’s litigation that is presently under way. But when we were notified of this, the Diocese of Cheyenne did notify the parishes in Wyoming where Father Gormly served. He only served in the Diocese of Cheyenne during the late 30s and early 1940s so there are probably not too many people around that would have been in those parishes that would have even known the name. But we have notified parishes and asked people not only if they have been abused by him but by anyone to please notify us,” Etienne said.

“The diocese posts that information in all of its parishes and institutions and that if anyone has acted inappropriately to please contact us. So we are following all of the guidelines. We’re doing everything that is required of us and more,” he said.

Alaska has had “at least 56 confirmed cases of predatory priests,” involving hundreds of victims, said Patrick Walls, a former priest and expert on clergy sex abuse.

In 2007, the Jesuits agreed to pay $50 million to settle a lawsuit brought by more than 100 Alaska Native plaintiffs who said they had been abused by clergy.

In March 2008, the Diocese of Fairbanks filed for bankruptcy protection stemming from lawsuits filed by people who said they had been abused by priests. In January 2010, the diocese agreed to pay victims $10 million, according to Frontline.

Last year, Michael Hornick, a former priest with the Archdiocese of Anchorage, was defrocked by the Vatican after several women made allegations that he sexually abused them. Two were minors at the time of the abuse.

Etienne said one of his first orders of business in Alaska will be to meet the diocese’s safe environment director to see “if there are any areas that they believe we need to tighten up or do better. So that would be my first thing that I will do in the early months that I am archbishop here.”

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New Archdiocese program to pay child sexual abuse victims won’t stop advocates of legal change, they say

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY KENNETH LOVETT
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ALBANY BUREAU CHIEF
Updated: Thursday, October 6, 2016

ALBANY — Timothy Cardinal Dolan on Thursday announced a new program to compensate child sex abuse victims attacked by clergy, but some lawmakers and advocates say it doesn’t go nearly far enough.

It’s a good first step, they say, but its shortcomings will only galvanize the push for the passage of a law that makes it easier for New York survivors of abuse to sue their predators.

State Sen. Brad Hoylman, a Manhattan Democrat and prime sponsor of the Child Victims Act, called Dolan’s program “a canny legal strategy to help reduce the archdiocese’s liability for decades of crimes and coverups.”

“By setting up its own sexual abuse compensation fund, I’m glad the archdiocese is taking responsibility for the untold number of crimes against New York kids committed by its clergy,” Hoylman said.

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Feinberg Brings Experience to Archdiocese’s Compensation Program

NEW YORK
Wall Street Journal

By JOSH BARBANEL
Oct. 6, 2016

In the face of tragic loss, governments, corporations and now the Archdiocese of New York have turned to Kenneth Feinberg for help translating a bit of that loss into cash payments to victims and their families.

The 70-year-old Mr. Feinberg, a lawyer and mediator in Washington, D.C., has been at the work for more than three decades.

Mr. Feinberg has helped settle claims and dole out compensation to veterans exposed to the chemical defoliant Agent Orange during the Vietnam War and to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010.

In perhaps his most high-profile assignment, Mr. Feinberg was appointed to administer the September 11th Victim Compensation Fund. The fund distributed $7.1 billion in taxpayer money.

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Archdiocese’s new program is better than filing lawsuits for some abuse victims

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
MARCI HAMILTON
SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, October 6, 2016

The Archdiocese of New York’s reconciliation and compensation program for survivors of clergy sexual abuse creates a pathway for victims and is modeled on the Penn State approach that paid more than $90 million to settle more than 30 civil claims.

But it is not an argument against the Child Victims Act, the New York State bill that would eliminate the statute of limitations in sexual abuse cases.

Timothy Cardinal Dolan can only provide this alternative path to victims of his archdiocese. And survivors should be able to choose between this path and the legal system. This is a good alternative, not a final solution.

There are many other survivors in New York who will not be helped by this. There are many who would prefer the legal system. But not all victims can weather litigation. For them, this is an option now.

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Timothy Dolan Implements the Penn State Playbook for Child Sex Abuse Victims: The Best Argument Yet for SOL Reform

NEW YORK
Verdict

7 OCT 2016

MARCI A. HAMILTON

Admitting that the clergy sex abuse crisis still dogs the New York City Archdiocese, Timothy Cardinal Dolan has announced an Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Commission. This move is right out of Penn State’s playbook for dealing with the Jerry Sandusky victims, and it is a good one for some. But it cannot be the final word on justice for the sex abuse victims in New York state.

Cardinal Dolan’s Record on Justice for Sex Abuse Victims Is Mixed

Cardinal Dolan has a mixed record on justice for sex abuse victims, to put it mildly. He is the only bishop I know of who personally testified against statute of limitation (SOL) reform, which he did while he was Archbishop of Milwaukee. I know because I was there. With a straight face he told lawmakers that the diocese would become “bankrupt” if the SOLs were revived for victims from the past. In the thrall of his presence and his earnest manner, the legislative panel abandoned its previous plans and shelved reform. Unlike Dolan, most bishops have handed over the responsibility of lobbying against access to justice for the victims to their paid lobbyists.

Dolan was not kidding about the Milwaukee diocese going into bankruptcy, though he didn’t mean that the diocese would have no assets; in fact the diocese did not wait for SOL reform. He just meant it would take advantage of federal bankruptcy law to avoid paying victims. With fewer than a dozen lawsuits filed, the diocese filed a federal bankruptcy action.

He was the mastermind in Milwaukee of the attempt to move over $50 million from general funds to a so-called “cemetery trust” that the diocese hoped could not be touched by the victims. The victims, who were transformed under federal bankruptcy jargon into “creditors,” objected to the cemetery trust on the ground it was a fraudulent trust. Therefore, the funds should have been available to compensate them. Dolan’s cynical cemetery trust move resulted ultimately in lengthy judicial proceedings in which the Seventh Circuit ultimately held that there was no right to religious liberty in such a trust and, even more, that fraud should not be eligible for a religious liberty theory. This was a great ruling, but did little for the victims.

The victims paid the price for Dolan’s maneuver against them and the ensuing lengthy litigation.

They were dragged through years of litigation during the diocese’s voluntary federal bankruptcy, only to receive little in compensation at the end. Many to this day have every right to condemn the legal system that made this scenario possible.

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Sex abuse victims need truth and not cash from archdiocese

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

BY
MITCHELL GARABEDIAN
SPECIAL TO THE NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, October 6, 2016

The Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program announced Thursday by Timothy Cardinal Dolan does not help clergy sexual abuse victims truly heal and gain closure.

It fails to fulfill the emotional and spiritual needs of clergy sexual abuse victims to get to the truth found in the secret documents and files of the Archdiocese of New York. Those documents will tell us the crimes committed by pedophile priests and the supervisors who knowingly let innocent children be sexually abused for decades upon decades. By avoiding the process of discovery in legal proceedings, the archdiocese will also avoid making public documents and witness testimony that details what church officials knew about sexual abuse and when they knew it.

Money may provide partial validation for clergy sexual abuse victims, but money is no substitute for good old-fashioned honesty. Clergy sexual abuse victims deserve and need the truth now.

Clergy sexual abuse victims have been left out in the wilderness much too long by the Archdiocese of New York and the failure of Cardinal Dolan to provide the documentation in the secret files revictimizes many clergy sexual abuse victims.

It is time for the Archdiocese of New York to come clean, publicly reveal the documents, admit guilt by stating the truth and end all opposition to much-needed legislation allowing clergy sexual abuse victims to obtain justice in the courts of New York.

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Politics of baby bishops’ school: ‘It’s the universality, stupid!’

VATICAN CITY
Crux

John L. Allen Jr. October 7, 2016
EDITOR

Not only are there plenty of politics in the Catholic Church, but for those with eyes to see, there’s often a political dimension to a great deal of ecclesiastical life which, on the surface, might seem fairly neutral and benign.

Take, for instance, the Vatican’s “baby bishops’” school, an intense eight-day training program offered by the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops to newly appointed Catholic prelates from around the world since 2001.

At one level, offering such a course may just seem good business management. Why wouldn’t you want new bishops to be exposed, for instance, to best practices in financial management and the fight against clerical sexual abuse, two chronic sources of headaches?

For once, perhaps, the Church can defuse a few bombs before they go off.

It may also seem like a basic service by the Vatican to local churches – and since, in theory, that’s the primary role the Vatican is supposed to play, why not?

Both of those things may be fully true, but as St. Thomas Aquinas famously put it, grace builds on nature rather than cancelling it out – meaning that other, perfectly valid explanations don’t preclude the idea of there also being a political dimension to the choice to hold such a course.

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Of mercy and justice in Cardinal Dolan’s compensation plan for church sex abuse victims

NEW YORK
New York Daily News

Editorial

No doubt, Timothy Cardinal Dolan would reject the idea that he showed remarkable moral courage in offering compensation to child sex abuse victims who have long been shut out of the courts.

For a priest such as he, love for those who suffer far precedes bravery, always, but with greater conscious dedication in this, Pope Francis’ Year of Mercy.

Regardless, in a temporal realm where cynicism often reads self-interest into generosity, Dolan offered an inspiring example of fortitude as he set a milestone in the search for justice long denied.

Dolan’s pledge that the Archdiocese of New York will pay fair awards to childhood victims whose claims are barred by New York’s cramped statute of limitations implicitly challenges others to follow suit — both in the church and in society at large.

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Paedophile priest known as the ‘tickle monster’ jailed for 18 years after he groomed children and ‘treated them as objects’

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail (UK)

By JOSH HANRAHAN FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA and AAP

A priest known as the ‘tickle monster’ will spend the next 18 years in jail after he was convicted of sexually assaulting dozens of children from the 1960s to early 1990s.

Robert Patrick Claffey, a former priest of the Ballarat diocese in Victoria’s west, used his position of power as a religious figure to abuse children over the three decades.

But the 73-year-old’s sustained abuse came to an end this week when he was jailed for 18 years and four months – with a minimum of 13 years and four months – one of the harshest penalties handed down to a paedophile.

Judge Felicity Hampel called Claffey’s abuse ‘shameful’ and said the fact he could act with impunity for such a long period spoke volumes of the power he exerted over his victims.

Claffey’s nickname was created firstly because he was always ‘tickling’ and touching children, while the ‘monster’ was what came next.

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Australia’s worst Paedophile Priests:

Gerald Francis Ridsdale: Australia’s worst paedophile is believed to have abused 1000 children and will be in prison until he is 87.

Frank Klep: A priest and school principal, Klep was 70 when he was jailed for 10 and a half years for abusing 28 schoolboys in the 1970s and 1980s.

David Edwin Rapson: Will be 73 when his sentence expires if he serves the full 12 and a half years he was given.

Robert Charles Best: Was 70 when he was jailed for 15 years for 27 vile crimes against 11 boys.

John Joseph Farrell: A NSW priest, was jailed for 29 years for 79 offences against 12 children.

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Pardon mass asks God to forgive sins of Catholic Church

MICHIGAN
Detroit Free Press

Niraj Warikoo , Detroit Free Press October 7, 2016

In a unique religious service today, the Catholic Church in metro Detroit is seeking to atone for sins it says it has committed over the years — racism, neglecting the poor, abuse of children by clergy and not spreading the faith.

Called Mass for Pardon, the service will talk about the various sins committed by the Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit, which has about 1.3 million Catholics in southeastern Michigan. It’s modeled after a public expression of repentance in 2000 by Pope John Paul II, who asked for God’s forgiveness for the sins of the Catholic Church as it marked the new millennium. Also, Pope Francis has declared 2016 to be the Jubilee Year of Mercy.

The Mass for Pardon comes six weeks before the Archdiocese of Detroit has a gathering called Synod 2016 — the first of its kind in Detroit since 1969 — where leaders will chart the future of the church in the six-county region.

Speaking to the Free Press, Archbishop of Detroit Allen Vigneron said that racism was an important topic, given that the city of Detroit is 79% African-American, the highest percentage of African Americans among big cities in the U.S., and because of the history of racism toward them.

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October 6, 2016

Archdiocese announces program for victims of sexual abuse

NEW YORK
Staten Island Advance

By Susan Lunny Keag | skeag@siadvance.com
on October 06, 2016

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — The Archdiocese of New York announced on Thursday plans to establish a voluntary Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP) that will seek to promote healing and closure to victims-survivors of abuse by priests or deacons of the Archdiocese.

The program, another step in the Archdiocese’s continual effort to respond to the past sexual abuse of minors by clergy, is being implemented by Timothy Cardinal Dolan, the archbishop of New York, and will provide compensation to victims and survivors of abuse.

“While the Church in general, and particularly here in this Archdiocese, has made great strides in dealing vigorously with clergy accused of abuse, and in preventing acts of abuse through out Safe Environment programs, we continue to hear from victim-survivors that more needs to be done to reach out to those who have been harmed in the past,” said Cardinal Dolan, in a statement.

Rev. Monsignor Peter Finn, vicar of Staten Island, supported Cardinal Dolan’s efforts to reach out to all victims. …

Mary Caplan, former director of the New York chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said she was skeptical of Cardinal Dolan’s proposal.

“I’d encourage victims to think long and hard before approaching church officials or their representatives. I’d urge victims to talk with their own attorneys first,” Caplan said.

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Archdiocese discusses reconstituting of Archdiocesan Finance Council

GUAM
KUAM

The Archdiocese of Agana held a press conference this afternoon to provide an update on its effort to reconstitute the Archdiocesan Finance Council. The AFC was disbanded in 2014 by Archbishop Anthony Apuron following allegations of financial mismanagement against Monsignor James Benavente. The Archdiocese however recently cleared him of any wrongdoing.

During the press conference Fr. Jeff San Nicolas announced the following individuals will serve on the newly reconstituted Archdiocesan Finance Council:

– Peter “Sonny” Ada (incumbent)

– Attorney John Weisenberger (incumbent and retired attorney at AG’s office)

– Eduardo “Champ” Calvo (partner, Calvo Fisher Law firm)

– Ricardo Duenas (Chief Financial Officer for Western Sales Trading)

– Art Ilagan (Banking and Insurance Commissioner for DRT)

– Mary Okada (President and CEO of Guam Community College)

– Antonette “Toni” Sanford (president of Sanford Technology Group)

– Joseph Rivera (former AFC member)

– Richard Untalan (former AFC member)

– Edward Terlaje (appointed to act as legal counsel)

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Is Cardinal Dolan Taking a Page from His Milwaukee Play Book When Creating Fund for Sexual Abuse Survivors?

NEW YORK
Noaker Law Firm

Posted on October 6, 2016

By Patrick Noaker

After years of playing hardball with survivors of clergy sexual abuse by using the antiquated New York statute of limitations to have cases dismissed, today, Cardinal Timothy Dolan announced a plan by the Archdiocese of New York to handle claims of sexual abuse by its clergy. The timing of the Cardinal’s and the Archdiocese’s sudden interest in sexual abuse survivors is suspicious.

According to NBC – New York, the Archdiocese of New York will create a compensation program for people who were abused by Catholic clergymen in the past. This program will be administered by Kenneth Feinberg, who served as a mediator of the federal September 11th Victim Compensation Fund. There will be no cap on compensation or a statue of limitations on the claims, the archdiocese said. The compensation fund will be paid for with a long-term loan, the archdiocese said.

It is appropriate to approach this sudden interest in sexual abuse survivors given Dolan’s history of manipulating abuse survivors using a similar “plan” when he was the Archbishop of Milwaukee. Will this New York “plan” be similar to the plan in Milwaukee? That plan required survivors of sexual abuse to participate in a process that excluded their attorneys, provided very small payments to those survivors and involved hardball tactics by the Archdiocese to coerce survivors to give up their rights. Ultimately, then, Archbishop Dolan’s plan proved to be a way to exclude as many sexual abuse survivors as possible from bringing claims in the Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy.

This last year, the New York legislature came very close to passing sincere statute of limitations reform for sexual abuse claims. This is where sexual abuse claims should be resolved. When someone files a case with a court, the community has the benefit of knowing the identity of the perpetrator. When someone files a case with a court, the survivor has the benefit of the civil discovery process to force institutions to divulge documents and testimony regarding the abuse. When someone files a case, there is a judge overseeing the case to insure that one side is not abusing the process or the survivor. When someone files a case, the amount of money recovered is directly related to the amount of damage suffered, without the use of guilt or other religious manipulation.

Without question, the best solution for providing real assistance to sexual abuse survivors is to pass a meaningful statute of limitation reform that would open the courts to these claims. This is the best way to provide support to survivors of sexual abuse.

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EXCLUSIVE: Pervert Catholic priest with ‘foot fetish’ is accused of sexting and groping his own housekeeper – despite already having been treated for ‘deviancy’

CALIFORNIA
Daily Mail (UK)

By RYAN PARRY WEST COAST CORRESPONDENT FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

A perverted Catholic priest with a track record of sexual harassment has been accused of molesting a housekeeper and sending her sexually-explicit photos – despite having completed a Church-ordered course of therapy for ‘sexual deviancy’.

Fr Ramon Palomera is accused of forcing the housekeeper to give him massages, fondling her legs, exposing his genitals to her and bombarding her with explicit pictures of his penis, according to a lawsuit seen by DailyMail.com.

The alleged sexual harassment took place at St Francis Xavier church in Los Angeles between 2014 to 2015 – just four years after he was removed from neighboring St Augustine’s church for sexual harassing another female employee over a seven-year period.

The suit, filed in Los Angeles Superior Court on Wednesday by leading civil rights attorney Mark Geragos states that between 2003 and 2010 Palomera sexually harassed a female employee at St Augustine Church, in the Culver City area of Los Angeles.

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NY archdiocese offers compensation for abuse victims, but critics protest

NEW YORK
Christian Science Monitor

By Steven Porter, Staff OCTOBER 6, 2016

A compensation program unveiled Thursday by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York will offer money to victims of sexual abuse if they agree by Jan. 31 to forgo lawsuits and work with an independent mediator instead.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan announced the plan, calling the abuse perpetrated by priests and deacons a “nauseating” sin that has “gravely wounded the church.” But critics denounced the program as a ploy to limit the church’s liability before state legislators can vote on a proposal to make it easier for victims to sue.

“Dolan’s plan does nothing to expose those who have committed or concealed devastating crimes against kids. His goal here is to forestall real legislative reform that would enable deeply wounded victims from using courts to reveal clergy wrongdoers,” Barbara Dorris, the outreach director for the support and advocacy group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said in a statement.

Over the past 15 years, the Catholic Church has been dogged by sex abuse scandals involving priests who were transferred from one community to the next, instead of being defrocked. As cases have come to light, the organization has faced heavy public criticism and paid tens of millions of dollars in settlements in the United States.

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