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.

August 14, 2018

Australia archbishop gets house detention for abuse cover-up

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Associated Press

August 14, 2018

The most senior Catholic cleric convicted of covering up child sex abuse was ordered by an Australian court Tuesday to serve his 1-year sentence in home detention rather than jail.

Newcastle Magistrate Robert Stone on Tuesday ordered former Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson to be detained at his sister’s house for at least 6 months before he is eligible for parole. He will be under strict supervision including having to wear a tracking device that would alert authorities if he left the house.

Wilson, 67, has denied the accusations and had refused to resign pending an appeal. But Pope Francis accepted Wilson’s resignation last month after mounting pressure including from the Australian prime minister for him to be fired.

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

Larry Nassar’s attempt to disqualify sentencing judge denied

LANSING (MI)
MLive

August 14, 2018

By Amy Biolchini

A judge has struck down ex-Michigan State University doctor Larry Nassar’s attempt to disqualify the judge that sentenced him to decades in prison for sexually assaulting hundreds of girls and women under the guise of medical treatment.

Nassar’s lawyers alleged Ingham County Circuit Judge Judge Rosemarie Aquilina was biased against him by allowing 169 people to give victim impact statements during his sentencing and cheering them along. Nassar is asking to be re-sentenced, and was attempting to seek a different judge to do so.

Tuesday, Ingham County Circuit Court Chief Judge Richard J. Garcia denied Nassar’s motion to disqualify Aquilina.

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.

Judge Aquilina ‘uniquely situated’ to keep Larry Nassar case, chief judge rules

LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal

August 14, 2018

By Matt Mencarini,

Judge Rosemarie Aquilina will remain on the Larry Nassar case, despite an effort by his attorneys to remove her.

Ingham County Circuit Court Chief Judge Richard Garcia issued that ruling today, strongly defending Aquilina while criticizing Nassar and the attempt to remove her from hearing his motion requesting a new sentence.

“The die was cast in the courtroom and Defendant’s sentence was forged by his own words and deeds,” Garcia wrote in his seven-page opinion. “Consideration of whether he should be resentenced can be fairly reviewed by the judge uniquely situated to provide justice in this case.

“The judge who heard these survivors is the only one who should properly render any re-sentence.”

The matter went to Garcia after Aquilina refused to remove herself from the case on Aug. 3, and Nassar’s court-appointed appellate attorneys appealed to him.

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.

Hundreds of accused priests will be listed in Pennsylvania report on Catholic Church sex abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Washington Post

August 14, 2018

By Michelle Boorstein

Catholics on Tuesday were awaiting the release of one of the most sweeping investigations ever on U.S. clerical sex abuse of minors — an 800-page-plus grand jury report detailing 70 years of misconduct and church response across Pennsylvania.

The release is the culmination of an 18-month probe, led by state Attorney General Josh Shapiro, on six of the state’s eight dioceses — Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, Allentown, Scranton, Erie and Greensburg — and follows other state grand jury reports that revealed abuse and coverups in two other dioceses.

Legal challenges by some of the approximately 300 clergy named in the report have delayed it, after some said it is a violation of their constitutional rights. Pennsylvania’s Supreme Court ruled last month that the report must be released but with some redaction. That ruling came after at least 10 news organizations, including The Washington Post, urged its release.

The report has helped renew a crisis many in the church thought and hoped had ended nearly 20 years ago after the scandal erupted in Boston. But recent abuse-related scandals, from Chile to Australia, have reopened wounding questions about accountability and whether church officials are still covering up crimes at the highest levels.

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.

O.C. Fugitive Accused of Sexually Assaulting Choir Boy for Years Extradited to U.S., Held on $60 Million Bail

ORANGE COUNTY (CA)
KTLA5

August 13, 2018

By Tracy Bloom, Chip Yost, and Mary Beth McDade

An Orange County man who authorities say fled the country more than a decade ago after being charged with sexually assaulting a choir boy over a four-year period has been extradited back to the U.S., authorities said Monday.

The announcement came the same day that the accused child molester, 43-year-old Roger Alan Giese, made his first court appearance in Santa Ana since returning to California.

He was scheduled to be arraigned on the bench warrant for his arrest, but the arraignment was continued until later this month.

Giese is being held on $60 million bail, jail records showed.

“The return of Mr. Giese to the United States after more than a decade is an example of the FBI’s commitment to returning fugitives accused of state crimes to local jurisdictions where they face prosecution regardless of how much time has passed,” Paul Delacourt, the assistant director of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office, said in a news release.

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.

Judge dismisses lawsuit against former LDS mission president for alleged sexual abuse

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
KUTV

August 13, 2018

By McKenzie Stauffer

UPDATE: The LDS Church released the following statement about the judge’s decision to dismiss a lawsuit against a former LDS mission president.

Judge Kimball has dismissed three of the four claims involving the Church. He allowed one claim to remain so the parties can investigate its merits. We remain confident in the legal system to evaluate these claims and determine the truth. As the Church has repeatedly stated, there can be no tolerance for abuse.

A federal judge has formally dismissed a lawsuit against a former LDS mission president Joseph L. Bishop.

The lawsuit against the LDS Church for fraud, however, has been upheld.

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.

Philip Wilson: Ex-archbishop in cover-up to be detained at home

AUSTRALIA
BBC News

August 14, 2018

A former Catholic archbishop will serve a maximum 12-month sentence in home detention for concealing child sexual abuse, an Australian court has ruled.

The decision means Philip Wilson, who resigned as archbishop of Adelaide after his conviction, will avoid jail.

Wilson, 67, is the world’s most senior Catholic cleric to be convicted of covering up sexual abuse.

His lawyers said they would lodge an appeal on Tuesday.

A magistrate said Wilson would commence his sentence immediately at a relative’s home, where he would be monitored by a tracking device. He will be eligible for parole after six months.

As he left court on Tuesday, Wilson did not respond to an abuse survivor who confronted him to demand an apology.

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.

Woman appointed to head battle against sexual abuse in Chilean Church

CHILE
La Croix

August 13, 2018

By Anne-Bénédicte Hoffner

The appointment of Ana Maria Celis Brunet, a lawyer specializing in church law, illustrates Pope Francis’ commitment to ending clericalism

Chile’s Catholic bishops have appointed Ana Maria Celis Brunet, an experienced lawyer and theologian, to lead the fight against clerical sexual abuse in her new role as president of the National Council of the Chilean Church for the Prevention of Sexual Abuse and Accompaniment of Victims.

Pope Francis received Brunet, a specialist in canon law and the law of religions, in an audience at St. Martha House in the Vatican on Aug. 10, just a few days after her appointment.“

The objective of the meeting was to inform and exchange opinions on the measures taken in Chile to deal with cases of abuse and to stop them from re-occurring,” a Holy See Press Office statement read.

“A significant part of the conversation dealt with the suffering of victims and their need for comfort and compensation,” the statement said.

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

PDI allana oficinas de la Conferencia Episcopal

[Breaking news: PDI raids offices of the Episcopal Conference]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
La Tercera

August 14, 2018

By Carlos Reyes and Leyla Zapata

[This in the framework of the investigation that the South Prosecutor’s Office carries out in the case of abuses in the Marist Congregation. The regional prosecutor Raúl Guzmán leads the diligence.]

Esto en el marco de la indagatoria que la Fiscalía Sur lleva adelante por el caso de abusos en la Congregación Marista. El fiscal regional Raúl Guzmán lidera la diligencia.

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.

Cancillería entregó al Vaticano los requerimientos de información por casos de abuso en la Iglesia

[Chancellery handed the Vatican information requests for cases of abuse in the Church]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
La Tercera

August 14, 2018

By C. Reyes

[The purpose of the petition is to be able to access the Scicluna report and canonical files of those investigated in cases of alleged sexual abuse against minors.]

El objetivo de la petición es poder acceder al informe Scicluna y a expedientes canónicos de investigados en casos de presunto abuso sexual contra menores.

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.

Fiscalía y PDI allanan la Conferencia Episcopal en Santiago por caso Maristas

[Prosecutor and PDI raid the Episcopal Conference in Santiago in regards to Marist case]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Biobio.cl

August 14, 2018

La mañana de este martes personal de la Brigada de Delitos Sexuales de la PDI llegó hasta la sede de la Conferencia Episcopal en el centro de Santiago.

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.

Fiscalía allana sede de la Conferencia Episcopal por caso maristas

[Breaking news: Prosecutor’s office raids headquarters of the Episcopal Conference for Marist cases]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Cooperativa.cl

August 14, 2018

Diligencia es encabezada por el fiscal Raúl Guzmán.

La Fiscalía Metropolitana Sur llegó la mañana de este martes hasta la sede de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile para allanar sus instalaciones por orden del fiscal regional Raúl Guzmán, en el marco del caso maristas.

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.

Amid Pa. priest abuse scandal, Vigneron says clergy must be accountable

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit Free Press

August 14, 2018

By Ann Zaniewski

Archbishop of Detroit Allen H. Vigneron on Monday stressed that all clergy — including bishops like himself — need to be held accountable for their behavior, and said priests who have impure relations with others need to repent or give up the priesthood.

His remarks came in two similar letters — one geared toward clergy, the other to the faithful at large — issued ahead of the expected release of a report detailing widespread sexual abuse allegations against clergy in Pennsylvania.

Vigneron told the faithful he shares their pain in facing the news of abuse allegations in the Church. He also said he prays for the victims.

“Even with our renewed prayers and support for our dedicated priests and deacons, I note a temptation to despair among some over whether things can change,” he wrote. “However, we know that reform can only happen when hope lives.”We must move forward with the conviction that God will not abandon his Church. He wants her purified, cleansed of these sins and brought to new life.”

A damning report into allegations of decades of child sexual abuse by clergy members and efforts to cover it up in six of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses is expected to be released in the coming days, the result of an almost two-year grand jury investigation.

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

Ex-Australian archbishop avoids jail for concealing child abuse

AUSTRALIA
AFP

August 13, 2018

A former Australian archbishop convicted of concealing abuse by a notorious paedophile priest in the 1970s was confronted by enraged victims outside a courthouse Tuesday after a judge spared him jail and ordered he serve his sentence at home.

Philip Wilson became one of the highest-ranked church officials convicted of covering up child sex abuse when he was found guilty in May of concealing crimes by priest Jim Fletcher in the Hunter region of New South Wales state.

The Newcastle Local Court sentenced the 67-year-old to 12 months’ imprisonment, with a non-parole period of six months, but also ordered that he be assessed to serve it in home detention.

Wilson had since been on bail and on Tuesday magistrate Robert Stone decided he will not need to spend time behind bars, with his age and prior good record taken into account.

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 Catholic archbishop Philip Wilson to serve sentence at home; sex abuse survivor called ‘rubbish’

AUSTRALIA
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

August 14, 2018

By Nancy Notzon

An abuse survivor has been called “rubbish” by a member of Adelaide’s former Catholic archbishop Philip Wilson’s entourage, in an exchange played out in front of a media scrum.

Wilson had just been told by a Newcastle magistrate he could serve his sentence for concealing historical child sex abuse in home detention as opposed to prison.

As he left the court, Peter Gogarty — who was a victim of paedophile priest Jim Fletcher — asked Wilson to apologise but the clergyman stayed silent.

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.

Deadline looms for release of Catholic church abuse report

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 14, 2018

By Mark Scolforo and Marc Levy

Time is ticking down to a court-ordered deadline Tuesday afternoon to decide what information to black out in a forthcoming grand jury report investigating child sexual abuse in six of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses.

A state Supreme Court order issued last month set a timetable to publicly release a redacted version of the grand jury’s roughly 900-page report, and justices appointed a county judge to help state prosecutors and lawyers for clergy members named in it to decide what portions to release.

Court records in a monthslong legal fight over the report say it identifies more than 300 “predator priests” and that grand jurors accuse church leaders of brushing aside victims to protect abusers and church institutions.

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.

Judge Won’t Toss Claim Against Mormon Church in Rape Case

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
The Associated Press

August 13, 2018

By Lindsay Whitehurst

A judge is refusing to dismiss a lawsuit by a woman claiming she was raped by a Mormon church leader who was allowed oversee young missionaries despite a history of sexual misconduct.

A woman’s lawsuit claiming she was raped by a Mormon church leader who was allowed to oversee young missionaries despite a history of sexual misconduct will go forward, a judge decided Monday.

The decision will allow McKenna Denson’s lawyers to investigate whether there are others who claim to be victims of Joseph L. Bishop, who oversaw hundreds of young people as president of the Missionary Training Center in the 1980s, or others in leadership positions, attorney Craig Vernon said.

“The church represented to McKenna and everybody else that he was good guy, he was safe and he was trustworthy, he was not a sexual predator, he was not a sexual addict,” Vernon said. “We believe there is evidence the church in fact knew that was not true.”

The Associated Press doesn’t usually name people who say they are victims of sexual assault, but Denson has said she wants her story to be public.

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

Cardinal defends handling of abuse claims ahead of Pa. grand jury report [Video]

HARRISBURG (PA)
CBS News Videos

August 14, 2018

A highly anticipated grand jury report detailing alleged abuses by hundreds of Catholic priests across Pennsylvania is set to be released today. The first statewide report will reveal accusations against more than 300 so-called “predator priests” and reported efforts by church leaders to cover them up.The former bishop of Pittsburgh, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, is expected to come under intense scrutiny for how he handled more than two dozen abuse cases. Nikki Battiste reports.

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.

USA Gymnastics, enveloped by scandal and its sport on fire, reckons with its future

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

August 13, 2018

The eyes of the gymnastics world are turning to Boston, where the US championships begin Thursday at TD Garden. And while those eyes will be delighted by the sights of high-flying bar routines, elegant balance beam moves, daring vaults, and gravity-defying tumbling passes, the backdrop of the event writes a more difficult story for the competition’s overseer, USA Gymnastics. Enveloped by scandal, its sport is under fire. When years of systemic oversight problems culminated in the criminal sentencing of former national team doctor Larry Nassar as a serial sexual abuser, a long, heartbreaking shadow was cast over the sport, fomenting concern about the safety and well-being of the athletes involved.

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.

Seminary investigation to begin in wake of sexual misconduct allegations

BOSTON (MA)
Religion News Service

August 13, 2018

By Eric Berger

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, has placed the rector of St. John’s Seminary in Boston on leave and launched an investigation of the seminary’s culture following allegations of sexual misconduct at the school.

O’Malley said Friday (Aug. 10) he was responding to recent social media posts by former seminarians, adding that he could neither verify nor disprove the allegations.

According to what was claimed in the posts, “they witnessed and experienced activities which are directly contrary to the moral standards and requirements of formation for the Catholic priesthood,” O’Malley’s statement said. He also said he is “committed to immediate action to address these serious matters.”

The allegations, which were not specified in the archbishop’s statement, come two weeks after Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, resigned from the College of Cardinals following allegations that he had sexually abused minors and adult seminarians for decades.

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 Canberra Anglican priest jailed for historic rapes

CANBERRA (AUSTRALIA)
The Canberra Times

August 13, 2018

By Michael Inman

A former Anglican priest who raped a young girl on the pew of a Canberra church had a long-history of molesting children.

Justice Michael Elkaim on Monday sentenced John Philip Aitchison, 67, to nine years jail on five charges of sexual intercourse with a young person and seven counts of acts of indecency on a young person.

The ACT Supreme Court heard he had been convicted of offences against children in the United Kingdom, NSW, Victoria, and the ACT.

However, he had only served two years behind bars.

Justice Elkaim said the offender had been “dealt with leniently” in the past, on one occasion a NSW court found he had pyschological issues.

“[This] was incorrect. He is unquestionably a paedophile,” Justice Elkaim said.

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

Anglican Priest sentenced to nine years’ jail for raping Canberra teenager

AUSTRALIA
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

August 13, 2018

By Bianca Gurra

A woman who was raped by a former Anglican priest 30 years ago has detailed the extensive and long-lasting impact of the abuse in court.

John Philip Aitchison was today sentenced to nine years behind bars for the historical rape.

Earlier this year, a Supreme Court jury found Aitchison guilty of seven acts of indecency and five counts of rape against the woman, then a 13-year-old Canberra girl, which took place over two years in the 1980s.

Aitchison pleaded not guilty to all charges.

He has previously been convicted of other offences involving children in the ACT, Victoria, New South Wales and the United Kingdom, and he served roughly two years at the Junee Correctional Centre in the late 1990s.

The first assault on the Canberra teenager took place at the All Saints’ Anglican Church in Ainslie, after the she finished violin practice.

During the trial, the woman told the court Aitchison had told her to look into the corner while he abused her, and pray that she might see her pet dog that had died.

At the same time, Aitchison — then a deacon — prayed to God for forgiveness.

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.

August 13, 2018

Grand jury report on clergy sex abuse: What you need to know ahead of its release

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 13, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

The long-awaited grand jury report into clergy sex abuse in Pennsylvania is poised to be released on Tuesday . PennLive will provide complete coverage of its release.

By order from the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, the Commonwealth has until 2 p.m. tomorrow to release the report.

The report is widely expected to be one of the most scathing and comprehensive investigations into the worldwide scandal embroiling the 1.2-billion strong church.

Here is a quick primer on what we know so far about the report:

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.

Chile Debates Legalizing Euthanasia

CHILE
Bloomberg

August 10, 2018

By Eduardo Thomson

– Latin American nation approved abortion in some cases in 2017
– Catholic Church reeling from series of sexual abuse scandals

Chile is fast ditching its reputation as South America’s most conservative and Catholic country, with lawmakers now discussing whether to make it the second nation in the region to legalize euthanasia.

Less than a year after allowing abortion in some cases, a commission of the Chamber of Deputies approved a bill that would permit euthanasia for the terminally ill or in cases of extreme suffering, enabling doctors to prescribe lethal medication.

“In the past, this subject was a big taboo,” Vlado Mirosevic, a lawmaker from the Liberal Party who originally presented the bill to Congress, said in an interview Thursday. “This discussion about euthanasia is putting Chile at the forefront in civil liberties.”

Chile has come a long way since emerging from the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet in 1990. Back then, divorce was illegal, illegitimate children had less rights than legitimate children and abortion was illegal, even if the mother was likely to die because of the pregnancy. That has now all changed. Divorce was legalized in 2004 and an abortion bill passed in 2017.

The euthanasia bill will now be analyzed article by article and probably will be voted on by the lower house next month, where it already has the votes required for approval, according to Mirosevic. It will then move on to the Senate.

“That will be the test of fire,” Mirosevic said.

Catholic Church

The Catholic Church, which railed against the euthanasia bill when it was first presented in 2014, may take a lower profile this year. Chile has been rocked for more than a year by a series of sexual abuse scandals in the Church that have slashed its once untouchable social status.

“It’s one of the factors,” said Anne Barrett-Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, a research center that tracks clergy sexual abuse cases globally and has built a database of more than 100 cases of abuse in Chile. The disillusion with the church “plays into the willingness of people to think independently and not follow doctrine.”

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.

Hermano de Cristián Precht y abusos en la iglesia católica: “Hay una máquina de apetitos para lograr indemnizaciones”

[Brother of accused priest Cristián Precht: “There is a machine of appetites for compensation”]

CHILE
El Mostrador

August 12, 2018

“Junto con víctimas que pueden ser reales, hay víctimas que pueden ser supuestas, que pueden magnificar lo ocurrido o sencillamente que ingresan a la cola del negocio
por venir”, agregó, asegurando que las verdaderas intenciones de los denunciantes es obtener
algún tipo de indemnización.

Héctor Precht, hermano del sacerdote Cristián Precht, quien es acusado de abuso sexual a menores, salió a defender a su hermano, asegurando que las verdaderas intenciones de los afectados son en materia económica.

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 O’Malley ousts seminary rector amid sex abuse allegations

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

August 11, 2018

By Jordan Frias

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley has ordered the ouster of the Archdiocese of Boston St. John’s Seminary rector for the fall semester and is demanding an investigation into alleged abuse following social media posts by two former seminarians.

Msgr. James P. Moroney has been placed on sabbatical leave and the Rev. Stephen E. Salocks, a professor of sacred scripture, will serve as interim rector while a team appointed by O’Malley investigates any wrongdoing at the seminary.

The team appointed is being led by Assumption College president Dr. Francisco Cesareo, Auxiliary Bishop Most Rev. Mark O’Connell and Athena Legal Strategies Group CEO Kimberly Jones.

“I have directed this group to proceed with due seriousness of their assignment,” O’Malley said, “and as soon as possible to submit to me the findings of the inquiry and a set of recommendations to assure appropriate standards of professional behavior in compliance with church teaching at all levels of seminary life.”

O’Malley said he learned of the allegations of wrongdoing through social media sites, including posts made to the Archdiocese’s Facebook page.

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.

UI report recommends efforts to address sexual misconduct

URBANA (IL)
The Associated Press

August 12, 2018

A University of Illinois report is recommending new efforts to support students in the first weeks of school when sexual assaults are most common, especially among freshman.

The university’s second systematic survey of sexual misconduct on campus recommends targeting resources at specific groups who have a higher risk of sexual assault, including the Greek system, LGBTQ community and those with disabilities, The News-Gazette reported.

The survey is also recommending doubling down on efforts to reduce alcohol abuse.

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Church abuse report, 2 years in works, may soon be released

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 12, 2018

By Mark Scolforo

A damning report into allegations of decades of child sexual abuse at the hands of clergy members and efforts to cover it up in six of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses is expected to be released in the coming days.

The public disclosure of the findings, the result of an almost two-year grand jury investigation, has been delayed while some of the people named in the report have launched legal challenges, arguing the report is inaccurate and releasing it in its current form would violate their constitutional rights to their reputations and to due process of law.

The state Supreme Court has agreed to consider those claims and scheduled the matter for oral argument in September. In the meantime, the court has ordered identifying information regarding those challenges to be redacted and the nearly 900-page report to be released.

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.

On the immoral cover-up of abuse in Catholic Church

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Daily News

August 9, 2018

By John Baer

In anticipation of findings, however redacted, of a statewide grand jury investigation into sex abuse in six Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses, I revisited a 2005 grand jury report on the same topic in Philadelphia.

Thirteen years later, it’s as horrific as it was back then.

Findings included “how dozens of priests (at least 63) sexually abused hundreds of children” and “how Philadelphia Archdiocese officials — including Cardinal (Anthony) Bevilacqua and Cardinal (John) Krol — excused and enabled the abuse.”

Details were sickening.

“We mean rape. Boys who were raped orally, boys who were raped anally, girls who were raped vaginally.”

Specifics were worse.

An 11-year-old girl whose priest raped her, and when she became pregnant took her for an abortion.

A boy who woke intoxicated in a priest’s bed to find a priest performing oral sex on him while three other clerics watched.

There was much more.

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Clergy abuse case reflects simmering scrutiny of Pa. grand jury system

HARRISBURG (PA)
Pittsburgh Post Gazette

August 5, 2018

By Angela Couloumbis and Liz Navratil

In the spring of 2017, a lawyer representing two Catholic dioceses targeted in a statewide investigation of clergy sex abuse leveled a legal challenge to the grand jury process in Pennsylvania.

The lawyer, Matt Haverstick, questioned a grand jury procedure that prevented attorneys for witnesses from discussing testimony with each other and coordinating strategy. The judge supervising the grand jury in the case rejected the request, noting the rule was designed to preserve evidence and prevent witness tampering.

Weeks later, the state Supreme Court empaneled a new task force to review the scope and powers of Pennsylvania grand juries. The panel members and court officials won’t discuss details of its meetings or progress, but two of its areas of focus — examining gag orders and swearing attorneys to secrecy – paralleled Mr. Haverstick’s arguments.

And in October, a veteran state senator from Montgomery County began pushing for legislation to address “the secrecy of grand juries, the role of the supervising judge, the rights of witnesses, and the rights of the person being investigated.”

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

Supreme Court says grand jury judge refused to comply with order

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 2, 2018

By Peter Smith

The supervising judge of the grand jury investigating sexual abuse by Catholic clergy erred when he “declined to comply” with an order of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to review documents to make sure they didn’t violate secrecy provisions, the top court ruled Thursday.

The order, and its criticisms of Judge Norman A. Krumenacker III, shed light on why the court last week appointed a special master, Senior Judge John M. Cleland, to supervise future redactions in public documents filed in an ongoing battle over the sealed grand jury report

The three-page ruling said the judge “was in error.”

At issue are challenges by about two dozen current and former clergy who say the roughly 900-page report violates their constitutional right to their good reputations by naming them critically in a report on decades of sexual abuse and cover-up in six Catholic dioceses.

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Sex abuse scandals continue plaguing Catholic Church

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Washington Post

August 12, 2018

By Chico Harlan (with Stefano Pitrelli contributing)

With revelation after revelation, a new wave of sexual abuse scandals is rocking the Roman Catholic Church and presenting Pope Francis with the greatest crisis of his papacy.

In Chile, prosecutors have raided church offices, seized documents and accused leaders of a coverup. In Australia, top church figures are facing detention and trials. And in the United States, after the resignation of a cardinal, questions are swirling about a hierarchy that looked the other way and protected him for years.

The church has had more than three decades – since notable abuse cases first became public – to safeguard victims, and itself, against such system failures. And, in the past five years, many Catholics have looked to Francis as a figure who could modernize the church and help it regain its credibility.

But Francis’ track record in handling abuse is mixed, something some outsiders attribute to his learning curve or shortcomings and others chalk up to resistance from a notoriously change-averse institution.

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 PLEA

IRELAND
The Irish Sun

August 12, 2018

By Stephen Breen

Brave victim of evil paedo priest Tony ‘Fr Filth’ Walsh demands apology from Pope Francis ahead of Pontiff’s Irish visit

Darren McGavin, 44, has urged the head of the Catholic Church — who is coming to Ireland in a couple of weeks’ time — to acknowledge the trauma of Walsh’s 200 victims during the monster’s reign of terror in the 1970s and 80s

A BRAVE victim of evil paedophile priest Tony ‘Fr Filth’ Walsh last night demanded an apology from Pope Francis.

Darren McGavin, 44, has urged the head of the Catholic Church — who is coming to Ireland in a couple of weeks’ time — to acknowledge the trauma of Walsh’s 200 victims during the monster’s reign of terror in the 1970s and 80s.

In an exclusive interview with the Irish Sun on Sunday, the courageous dad waived his right to anonymity to urge the Pontiff — whose visit to Ireland will cost the State €5m — to meet with the victims of clerical abuse.

And Darren, who was raped by Ireland’s worst paedophile priest over a four-year period — told how he has urged the Catholic Church in Ireland to facilitate a meeting between Pope Francis and other victims.

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When faith fades: can the pope still connect with a changed Ireland?

IRELAND
The Guardian

August 12, 2018

By Harriet Sherwood

In the four decades since the last papal visit, Ireland has embraced divorce, contraception, same-sex marriage and abortion – and the Catholic church appears to be losing its hold on the people. How will Pope Francis deal with these issues when he arrives on 25 August?

In the past four decades Ireland has become a different country, but you wouldn’t know it in Knock. In the small west of Ireland town that is home to the huge Marian shrine complex, it was hard to find a space on the tightly packed pews at 11am mass last week. The rows of the faithful – some women’s heads draped with lace – offered responses to the priest in confident voices.

Outside the chapel, built on the spot where 15 people believed they witnessed an apparition of the Virgin Mary in 1879, pilgrims filled bottles with holy water at a line of fonts or queued to complete mass cards for loved ones. Priests were available to hear confession. An office across Main Street offered a marriage introduction service – “all applications treated in strictest confidence”.

The facade of the Fairfield restaurant was being repainted in Vatican yellow, and finishing touches being put to a gleaming new piazza opposite the shrine. Souvenir shops were already stocked with “Pope Francis 2018” fridge magnets, alongside rosaries and figurines. “The excitement is palpable,” said Father Richard Gibbons, Knock’s parish priest for the past six years.

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Zubik: Claims against some priests not substantiated

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 10, 2018

By Peter Smith

A few of the priests in the Diocese of Pittsburgh being named in a soon-to-be-released grand jury report are still in ministry, Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik said Friday, because the diocese determined allegations against them were unsubstantiated.

Bishop Zubik reiterated that “there is no priest or deacon in an assignment today against whom there was a substantiated allegation of child sexual abuse.”

But he said he would be busy in the days after the release of the grand jury report, meeting with parishioners whose priest may have been named in it, to explain why the diocese’s own review did not substantiate the allegation.

“We’re ready for that,” Bishop Zubik said. “It’s imperative to be responsible.”

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Why the Vatican continues to struggle with sex abuse scandals

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

August 12, 2018

By Chico Harlan

Vatican City – With revelation after revelation, a new wave of sexual abuse scandals is rocking the Roman Catholic Church and presenting Pope Francis with the greatest crisis of his papacy.

In Chile, prosecutors have raided church offices, seized documents and accused leaders of a coverup. In Australia, top church figures are facing detention and trials. And in the United States, after the resignation of a cardinal, questions are swirling about a hierarchy that looked the other way and protected him for years.

The church has had more than three decades — since notable abuse cases first became public — to safeguard victims, and itself, against such system failures. And, in the past five years, many Catholics have looked to Francis as a figure who could modernize the church and help it regain its credibility.

But Francis’s track record in handling abuse is mixed, something some outsiders attribute to his learning curve or shortcomings and others chalk up to resistance from a notoriously change-averse institution.

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.

‘We can’t sit back anymore’ — Lincoln diocese named in allegations

LINCOLN (NE)
Lincoln Journal Star

August 11, 2018

By Peter Salter

It’s been a turbulent month so far for Lincoln’s Catholic leaders, who are facing fire for their mishandling of three priests accused of sexual assault, moral misconduct and an inappropriate relationship with an altar server.

The allegations span two decades, but they only recently surfaced broadly and publicly in a wave of online articles and Facebook posts.

The fallout has been swift. The allegations led to a police investigation. They prompted the bishop to remove a priest, apologize for a lack of transparency, convene a review board and address a church full of parishioners in a closed meeting.

And they’ve brought uncomfortable scrutiny to a diocese often considered the nation’s most orthodox.

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Sexual abuse of parishioner: two priests surrender before police

KERALA (INDIA)
Manorama Online

August 13, 2018

Even though five priests are accused of having abused the woman, the names of only four figure in the harge

Kottayam – Two priests, accused of blackmailing and raping a woman parishioner in Kottayam for years, have surrendered before the police after their bail pleas were dismissed by the Supreme Court. First accused Fr Abraham Varghese, alias Sony, and fourth accused Fr Jaise K George had earlier expressed their willingness to surrender before the investigating agencies as the apex court ruled that the trial court must hear their bail pleas immediately.

The duo is among the five priests accused of sexually abusing and blackmailing a woman parishioner for over a decade after threatening to disclose her church confessions.

Even though five priests are accused of having abused the woman, the names of only four figure in the charge sheet. The last name was omitted for want of evidence. Earlier in July, second accused Fr Job Mathew and third accused Fr Johnson V Mathew had surrendered before the cops after their bail pleas were rejected.

The woman had told the investigating agencies that she was ‘systematically abused’ by the accused, all closely known to her family. She had made a confession to one of the priests that she was sexually abused by a member of the church fraternity.

According to her statement, the priest who took her confession blackmailed her, threatening to release the information to the public.

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What we know so far about the grand jury report investigating six of Pa.’s Catholic dioceses

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Inquirer

August 13, 2018

By Peter Smith & Liz Navratil

For two years, the 23 members of the grand jury investigating Catholic dioceses heard devastating stories of sexual abuse from victims.

They heard from perpetrators. And they heard testimony and saw documents of how bishops often failed to protect children, even putting them in harm’s way from known abusers.

Then in April, in one of the last sessions of their two-year term in downtown Pittsburgh, they heard from a bishop directly. And they were angry.

“When you sit there for two years listening to victims and also to abusers … that is very difficult on the jurors,” Erie Bishop Lawrence Persico said Friday.

He said it was important for him to face the truth, both for the sake of the victims and the sake of the church. “There are two victims, the victims who are actually sexually abused, but there are also victims in the people of God,” he said. “Everything they believed in, it makes it so difficult for them. Because if you can’t trust your bishops and priests, who can you trust? And we certainly haven’t lived up to that trust.”

The state Supreme Court has set a Tuesday deadline for the release, in redacted form, of the grand jury’s long-anticipated report. It delves into seven decades of sexual abuse and cover-ups in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania.

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Priest abused him as boy, man says

GENEVA (NY)
Finger Lakes Times

August 12, 2018

By Steve Buchiere

Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary of Lochland Road was a place where young men considered life as a Capuchin friar.

But for Peter Saracino, it was a place where he said he lost his soul.

Saracino, a retired Marcus Whitman teacher who grew up in Seneca Falls and now lives in Phelps, claims a Capuchin priest abused him when he was 8 or 9 at the former Catholic seminary, which is now the upscale resort Geneva On the Lake.

Meeting with a small group of reporters this past week, Saracino named the alleged abuser for the first time, but the Finger Lakes Times is not divulging the name.

There has been no official acknowledgement by the order of the abuse.

The former Geneva seminary was run by the Capuchin Friars of the Province of the Sacred Stigmata of Union City, N.J.

Saracino, a vocal advocate for clergy abuse victims, said he approached the Capuchins about his allegations, and they concluded “it was my word against his,” and the priest was allowed to continue in the ministry.

He said former Rochester Diocese Bishop Mathew Clark believed him and would not allow the priest to serve the diocese.

Saracino and Robert Hoatson, co-founder and president of Road to Recovery, a charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families, believe the priest is still alive and somewhere in the New York-New Jersey area.

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Richard Sipe helped uncover pattern of clergy sex abuse

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

August 13, 2018

By Michael Rezendes

When the Globe Spotlight team began its investigation of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, Richard Sipe was our guide, our teacher, our chief cheerleader.

A gentle man with an easy laugh, he was also a former monk and priest, a psychotherapist, a scholar, and ideally suited to explain that the horrors we were discovering in Boston were not unusual — and quite probably part of a pattern throughout the church.

Sipe, who was 85, died Wednesday in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego.

His groundbreaking work began in 1990 with the publication of “A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy.” Based on interviews with 1,500 priests and others with firsthand knowledge of celibacy violations, Sipe estimated that 6 percent of all priests were having sex with children and young people — at the time a shocking claim that he famously repeated in the movie, “Spotlight.”

My first encounter with Sipe’s work came in the summer of 2001, when I read his expert testimony in the case of the Rev. Rudy Kos, a Dallas priest convicted of sex crimes in the late 1990s.

This was a 75-page document so complete in its understanding of clergy sexual abuse that I immediately called the author, A.W. Richard Sipe, eager to learn more.

Days passed without a reply until my cellphone rang on a warm September afternoon as I was racing down the Mass Pike, trying to get to a Red Sox game after covering a court hearing.

For more than an hour, Sipe patiently explained that, as hard as it was to believe, the appalling sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests was a systemic problem within the church fostered by the culture of celibacy, the promise that every priest makes to live without sex or marriage.

Even though the sun was shining, I had the sensation that all the lights were coming on. I told Sipe that the Globe was going to fly him and his wife from their home in California to Boston so the entire Spotlight Team could hear what they had to say.

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August 12, 2018

A Public Voice for Private Grief

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Review of Books

August 10, 2018

By Arthur McCaffrey

THE LATE, GREAT Barbara Blaine founded the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) in the late 1980s as an advocacy forum and support group for victims of sexual abuse like herself. A priest in her Catholic parish in Ohio began molesting her when she was 13, and continued until she graduated from high school five years later. Like so many young victims of powerful, prestigious predators, the experience left her feeling confused — in her own words, “very guilty, ashamed, dirty and embarrassed.”

She was traumatized into silence, and another decade would pass before she could confront what had happened to her. After reading a story about another abusive priest that triggered repressed memories and made her physically ill, she began to address her own need for healing, and “learned to care for the wounded child still living in my soul.”

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Statement on priest standing aside

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Archdiocese of Dublin

August 12, 2018

In line with Church Policy on Safeguarding Children a parish priest of Dublin has voluntarily stood aside from his position because of concerns brought to the Diocese and reported to the Gardai. The information received relates to several decades ago and is not connected to the parish.

Standing aside does not imply the truth or falsehood of what is being investigated. It allows an appropriate investigation by relevant Church and State authorities to take place.

Anyone who, at any time, may have concerns or information regarding the safety of children should contact the Child Safeguarding and Protection Service of the Diocese. 01 8360314

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Defrocked priest in Chile blames bishop, military diocese raided by police

ROME
Crux

August 11, 2018

By Inés San Martín

A former Chilean Catholic priest is denying charges of sexual abuse despite a ruling from the Vatican, insisting that it was his bishop, not him, who had the problem.

Bishop Gonzalo Duarte is trying to “clean his image” at the expense of former priest Jaime da Fonseca, says the defrocked man who was removed from priestly ministry by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Clergy earlier this year.

According to a statement from the Diocese of Valparaiso, the congregation received an investigation in May presented by Duarte, who’s been accused not only of covering up for priests such as Da Fonseca, but also of having himself committed abuse.

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A Priest Responds to the Catholic Church’s ‘Summer of Shame’

UNITED STATES
National Review

By Benedict Kiely

August 11, 2018

The ongoing scandals are the bitter fruit of a corrupt clerical culture, marked by a widespread failure to accept traditional teaching on sexual morality.

A few weeks before I was ordained a Catholic priest in the late autumn of 1994, my superior in the seminary told me that, in his opinion, it was probably the most difficult time in a century to become a priest. Yet, he went on, it was also the most exciting time. I really did not take much notice of what he said. In fact, in my overconfidence, I thought he was talking nonsense.

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[News Advisory] Global survivors to Martin: Three cardinals should step down from WMOF

DUBLIN
ECAGlobal.org

August 10, 2018

– Global clergy abuse survivors and activists to Dublin archbishop: ask Pope to remove three cardinals linked to cover-up of clergy sex abuse from the WMOF.

– ECA joins public demands that these Cardinals be investigated, not honored

– Irish survivors deserve more respect from Papal visit, organization says

– Organization appreciates Martin’s efforts to get clergy abuse on the Papal agenda

See: Open letter to Archbishop Martin available in:

Open Letter to Archbishop Martin of Dublin

Prominent clergy abuse survivors and human rights activists are delivering an open letter to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin today from a global organization focused on holding the Vatican accountable for ending clergy abuse. The activists are urging Martin to ask the Pope to take three decisive actions, including removing from the World Meeting of Families (WMOF) three cardinals facing serious questions about protecting brother bishops who have committed sexual abuse. The cardinals should be investigated, not honored, group says.

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Priest stands aside in south Dublin parish pending investigation

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

August 12, 2018

By Patsy McGarry

Concerns brought to the diocese and reported to the gardaí, statement says

Dublin Archdiocese statement said standing aside “does not imply the truth or falsehood”

A parish priest in Dublin has voluntarily stood down from his duties due to child safeguarding concerns elsewhere a number of decades ago.

In a brief statement this afternoon the Dublin Archdiocese said that “in line with Church Policy on Safeguarding Children, a parish priest of Dublin has voluntarily stood aside from his position because of concerns brought to the diocese and reported to the gardaí. The information received relates to several decades ago and is not connected to the parish.”

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Can a papal visit heal the church’s reputation?

IRELAND
The Sunday Times

August 12, 2018

By Justine McCarthy

The pontiff heads to Ireland just after politicians reveal a key Vatican official sought protection for the church over abuse claims

Cardinal Angelo Sodano, while the Vatican’s secretary of state in 2004, had reason to be optimistic when he proposed to the Irish president Mary McAleese and Dermot Ahern, the foreign affairs minister, that Ireland bury incriminating Vatican documents and indemnify the church against legal claims for child sexual abuse.

Ireland was, historically, one of the world’s bastions of Catholicism and its political establishment was generally devout. Though Bertie Ahern had separated from his wife and was in a new relationship, the taoiseach was a mass-goer who annually displayed Lenten ashes on his forehead.

In May 2004, six months before Sodano made his proposition, the taoiseach, McAleese and Royston Brady, lord mayor of Dublin, received Catholic knighthoods from the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of St George, presented by Mario Pompedda, a Vatican cardinal.

The highest honour was bestowed on McAleese at a ceremony in Aras an Uachtarain in recognition of her work for Irish peace and her “commitment to interchurch and interfaith dialogue”. She had met Sodano the previous year during a state visit to Italy when, McAleese revealed last week, he asked whether Ireland would agree not to seek to obtain the church’s files on child abuse.

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Megachurch leadership resigns to protest their church’s handling of sexual misconduct allegations

SOUTH BARRINGTON (IL)
Vox

August 9, 2018

By Tara Isabella Burton

Months after Bill Hybels stepped down in disgrace from Willow Creek Community Church, his successors have resigned.

The full leadership team of the Chicago-area megachurch Willow Creek has resigned months after megachurch pastor Bill Hybels stepped down in disgrace due to a series of sexual misconduct allegations. Calling past internal investigations into Hybels’ behavior “flawed,” the committee of church elders said in a Wednesday statement that “Willow needs and deserves a fresh start, and the entire board will step down to create room for a new board.” Heather Larson, one of two co-lead pastors at Willow Creek, also stepped down, saying, “Trust has been broken by leadership, and it doesn’t return quickly….it is the job of a leader to put the team and the organization first, and I am committed to doing that.”

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Clearwater pastor resigns after admitting inappropriate sexual behavior with woman

CLEARWATER (MN)
Saint Cloud Times

August 11, 2018

By Stephanie Dickrell

A Clearwater pastor has admitted to inappropriate sexual behavior with a woman and resigned, according to the Southwest Minnesota Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.

The Rev. Steve Timm resigned as pastor of Rejoice Lutheran Church on July 7, Bishop Jon Anderson said in a statement issued by the synod.

Timm confirmed to the Times Saturday the reason for his resignation:

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The #ChurchToo Movement Just Scored a Major Victory for Victims of Sexual Abuse

SOUTH BARRINGTON (IL)
Mother Jones

August 10, 2018

By Becca Andrews

Willow Creek Community Church and Bill Hybels were untouchable. Now the entire leadership team at the iconic megachurch has stepped down, setting a significant precedent.

Earlier this week, in what is the most significant response to sexual abuse allegations in an evangelical church since the start of the #ChurchToo movement—or, arguably, ever—the lead pastor and the entire board of elders of Willow Creek Community Church, a deeply influential nondenominational megachurch in the Chicago suburbs, resigned in front of their congregation.

The moves, which happened in a special congregational meeting Wednesday night, were in response to allegations of sexual abuse and harassment against the church’s founding pastor, Bill Hybels, and to the ways the church had essentially turned a blind eye for nearly five years. In the meeting this week, lead pastor Heather Larson announced to thousands of congregants—Willow Creek is home to some 25,000 members, making it the fifth-largest megachurch in the country—that she would resign immediately, and Missy Rasmussen, an elder, announced that she and eight of her peers were stepping down because, she said, “Willow needs and deserves a fresh start.” Rasmussen apologized to each of the women who reported misconduct.

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[VIDEO] La Cofradía: Dos sacerdotes renuncian

[VIDEO The Brotherhood: Two priests resign]

CHILE
T13

August 2, 2018

Dos párrocos, presuntos integrantes de la llamada Cofradía de Rancagua, no tuvieron otra opción que renunciar al sacerdocio, tras ser encarados por el nuevo obispo de la diócesis, Fernando Ramos, quien les hizo escuchar una comprometedora grabación de audio. Otro capítulo más de la investigación “El fin del Silencio”.

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Ricardo Ezzati es dado de alta tras evaluación a su estado cardiovascular

[Ezzati leaves hospital after cardiac evaluation]

CHILE
BioBioChile

August 11, 2018

By Gonzalo Cifuentes and Nicole Martínez

El mediodía de este sábado recibió el alta médica al arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati, quien había sido ingresado el jueves pasado al Hospital Clínico de la Red de Salud UC CHRISTUS para realizarle un control de rutina de marcapaso.

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Abogado de Cristián Precht acusa vulneración de las normas del “debido proceso” y omisión de diligencias

[Cristián Precht’s lawyer claims there are serious flaws in Church investigation against priest]

CHILE
La Tercera

August 11, 2018

El defensor del religioso se refirió a la decisión del Arzobispado de Santiago de enviar al Vaticano los antecedentes de presuntos abusos contra menores detectados en el marco de la indagatoria del denominado “caso Maristas”.

Luciano Fouillioux, abogado del sacerdote Cristián Precht, se refirió a la decisión del Arzobispado de Santiago de enviar al Vaticano los antecedentes sobre presuntos abusos contra menores en los cuales el presbítero habría tenido responsabilidad, esto por antecedentes aparecidos en el contexto del denominado caso Maristas.

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Some priests named in clergy sex abuse report remain in ministry, says Pittsburgh bishop

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Associated Press via York Daily Record

August 11, 2018

The bishop of Pittsburgh’s Roman Catholic diocese said a few priests named in a soon-to-be-released grand jury report on clergy sex abuse are still in ministry because the diocese determined allegations against them were unsubstantiated.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reported that Bishop David Zubik reiterated to reporters Friday that “there is no priest or deacon in an assignment today against whom there was a substantiated allegation of child sexual abuse.”

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On Cardinal Sodano and the meaning of ‘accountability’

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

August 12, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

In the mounting conversation about accountability amid the Church’s sexual abuse scandals, one question that often doesn’t get as much attention as it should is what, exactly, people need to be held accountable for – that is, which sorts of actions on the abuse scandals are worthy of sanction, and what proof higher authority needs before consequences ought to be imposed.

To begin with the clearest case, “zero tolerance” obviously implies that the direct commission of sexual abuse requires swift and stern discipline, and we now know that standard holds even for Princes of the Church due to the example of ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick.

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Richard Sipe — We lost a giant

UNITED STATES
snapnetwork.org

August 11, 2018

By David G. Clohessy

Our movement has lost a giant.

Precious few current and former church insiders have broken ranks, crossed sides, and actively helped abuse survivors. And virtually none who have bring as much experience and wisdom to the struggle as Richard. He’s done so with a huge and generous heart and at great personal cost as well.

He has been a beacon of hope and source of support to thousands of wounded victims and betrayed Catholics, through his advocacy and his compassion. Richard’s brilliance – in writings, depositions and court testimony – has helped many a prosecutor and civil attorney expose clerics who commit or conceal heinous child sex crimes, and has enabled many a juror better understand the byzantine structure of the church and the secretive self-dealing of Catholic officials. Richard spend decades doing research and interviews to better understand this on-going crisis and has used his impressive knowledge to help countless others focus on the root causes of abuses and cover ups.

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Critic of clergy abuse compensation program: ‘It’s a virtual black hole’

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

By Jay Tokasz

August 12, 2018

Administrators of a Diocese of Buffalo program to compensate childhood victims of clergy sex abuse will consider whether the diocese had “prior notice” of an alleged abuser’s conduct as they determine how much money the victims should get.

But it’s unclear if diocesan officials are under any obligation to hand over personnel files that show whether the diocese knew a priest was prone to abuse.

That’s one of the compensation program’s major shortcomings, according to lawyers for some of the victims.

People who make claims of abuse with the diocese aren’t told what information, if any, the diocese provides to program administrators.

“It’s a virtual black hole of a protocol,” said J. Michael Reck, an attorney who represents more than 30 clients who filed claims with the Buffalo compensation program.

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Church abuse scandal: Man campaigns for statute of limitation reform

BUCKS COUNTY (PA)
The Times Herald

August 12, 2018

By Dutch Godshalk for Digital First Media

Mike McDonnell is on a “personal vendetta” against the Catholic church.

It’s a battle he’s been fighting his entire life. He waged it in 2007, when he was 38 years old, but the fight truly started when he was a sixth grader at St. Titus Parish in East Norriton Township. That’s when McDonnell alleges he was sexually abused by two parish priests, Francis X. Trauger and John P. Schmeer. He said the abuse lasted two years – from 1981 to 1983.

(Trauger was defrocked by the Catholic Church and removed from ministry in 2003. Schmeer was removed from ministry in 2012.)

McDonnell said the abuse took place in hotel rooms and rectories and sacristies. It took place during golf trips and fishing trips. It involved situations that, to an outside observer, may have seemed innocent, even enriching. But no matter the venue or the wholesome pretense, these situations often devolved into “sick and twisted” acts of sexual and psychological torture, McDonnell said.

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August 11, 2018

Reflections on the abuse saga: It’s not just about McCarrick

ROME
Crux

By Inés San Martín

August 8, 2018

In recent days, I’ve found myself diving deeply into the drama that the Catholic Church is living in Chile amid one of the most colossal clerical sexual abuse crises ever to erupt.

It’s disgusting. It’s criminal. It’s unforgivable. It has the capacity to undermine one’s faith.

Yet time and time again, when I shared what I’ve written about it, including a 4,000-word report on a ring of homosexual predators that make the misdeeds of ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick seem mild in comparison, I get messages on social media and in my email with Americans demanding I look into the fallen U.S. cardinal.

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Report: Cardinal close to Pope is protecting cadre of gay seminarians in Honduras

ROME
LifeSiteNews (blog)

August 8, 2018

Disturbing new details have emerged regarding Honduran Cardinal Oscar Rodriguez Maradiaga’s potential mishandling of a crisis involving widespread homosexual activity at the major seminary in his archdiocese.

Cardinal Maradiaga is an influential confidant of Pope Francis and a member of the C9 Group of cardinals advising him on Church and curial reform.

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Vatican newspaper: ‘pitiless’ media coverage of abuse scandals is one-sided but helpful

ROME
CatholicCulture.org

August 10, 2018

L’Osservatore Romano has published a front-page column on media coverage of clerical abuse scandals.

Italian historian Lucetta Scaraffia, a frequent contributor to the Vatican newspaper, said that media coverage typically ignores the Church’s “innumerable” actions to assist sexual abuse victims.

The “implacable and pitiless” nature of the coverage, she continued, is “born from disappointment.” In societies affected by the sexual revolution, this disappointment stems not so much from the discovery of “the sexual infraction or human weakness,” but from the discovery of the abuse of power, cover-ups, and inaction against perpetrators.

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Statement of Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley, OFM Cap Archbishop of Boston

BRIGHTON (MA)
Archdiocese of Boston

August 10, 2018

By Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley, OFM Cap

“Earlier this week I was informed that two former seminarians of St. John’s Seminary in the Archdiocese of Boston had posted allegations on social media sites including the Archdiocese’s Facebook page that during their time at the seminary they witnessed and experienced activities which are directly contrary to the moral standards and requirements of formation for the Catholic priesthood.

At this time I am not able to verify or disprove these allegations. As Archbishop of Boston, with responsibility for the integrity of the seminary and its compliance with the Church’s Program for Priestly Formation, I am committed to immediate action to address these serious matters and have made the following decisions regarding St. John’s Seminary.

First, I have asked Msgr. James P. Moroney, Rector of St. John’s, to go on sabbatical leave for the Fall Semester, beginning immediately, in order that there can be a fully independent inquiry regarding these matter

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After McCarrick: An Ex-Seminarian Comes Forward

UNITED STATES
OnePeterFive.com (blog)

August 3, 2018

By John A. Monaco

Ever since I was a child, I wanted to become a priest. My mother, a devout Catholic, was the one who taught me about the faith, the sacraments, and the Church. She brought me to daily Mass since I was an infant, and my earliest memories are of being held in her arms as she knelt on the communion rail to worthily receive the Eucharist. The image of the priest at prayer, offering the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, hearing confessions, visiting the sick, preaching from the pulpit, proclaiming the Gospel – I admired the priesthood and prayed to God that He would call me to serve Him as a priest.

My family was close with various priests in our home city. All of them knew I had a desire within me to become a priest. Given my solid Catholic upbringing, my participation in our parish life, and my zeal to bring others closer to God, it was a natural conclusion – after high school, I would enter seminary.

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Archdiocese of Boston Investigating Allegations of Abuse at St. John’s Seminary

MASSACHUSETTS
NECN

August 10, 2018

By Michael Rosenfield and Marc Fortier

An inquiry has been launched into allegations of “sexual deviancy and improper conduct” at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton

Cardinal Sean O’Malley, archbishop of Boston, said he is launching an inquiry into allegations former seminarians made this week about their time at St. John’s Seminary in Brighton.

An article posted online by ex-seminarian John Monaco led to an inquiry into allegations of “sexual deviancy and improper conduct” at the seminary, including excessive drinking.

”Some priests on the faculty would get drunk with a select group of seminarians and invite them into their rooms late at night,” Monaco wrote. “One night, a priest on the formation faculty got so drunk during a seminary party that he fell out of his chair.”

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Can Pope Francis’ Council of Cardinals still deliver on reform?

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

August 7, 2018

By Ed Condon

By most accounts, Pope Francis was elected with a mandate to reform the Roman Curia- the complex network of dicasteries, commissions, and councils charged with the central administrative work of the Catholic Church- a network that, even to insiders and experts, more often resembles a rabbit warren than a well-defined system of governable offices with clear responsibilities.

From the beginning, there were high expectations for Francis, and widespread belief that he could succeed in reforming the Curia. His informality and disdain for protocol -his ability to think ‘outside the box’- led many to believe that under his leadership, the Curial wilds could be tamed.

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Groups want complete report released detailing alleged Catholic sex abuse in Pennsylvania

PENNSYLVANIA
The Tribune-Revew

By Deb Erdley

August 10, 2018

Just as an edited grand jury report is set to be released that details decades of alleged sexual abuse in six Catholic dioceses across Southwestern Pennsylvania and the state, two advocacy groups have petitioned the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to release the complete document.

On the other side of the aisle, the Pennsylvania Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers joined about two dozen members of the clergy who are identified in the report but not charged with crimes who oppose having their names included. They say that would violate their rights of reputation and due process of law to defend themselves.

University of Pennsylvania law professor Marci Hamilton, founder of Child USA, and Terry McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org, however, argued the public safety interests of children trump the rights of the clergy wanting their names stricken.

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‘Irish survivors deserve more respect’ – global clergy abuse group calls for removal of three cardinals at World Meeting of Families

IRELAND
Irish Independent

August 10, 2018

By Rachel Farrell

The group has written an open letter to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin to request three things from Pope Francis, including the removal of the cardinals

A group of global clergy abuse survivors has called on the removal of three cardinals from speaking at the World Meeting of Families (WMOF) at the end of the month.

A vast line up of speakers are scheduled to speak at the event in Knock and Dublin on August 25 and 26.

The abuse survivors have delivered a letter to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin in the hopes of removing Cardinal Oscar Maradiaga, Cardinal Kevin Farrell and Cardinal Donald Wuerl from the WMOF speaker line up.

The Ending Clergy Abuse Global Justice Project (ECA) believe the cardinals should be investigated for “protecting brother bishops who have committed sexual abus

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Call for three cardinals to be removed from World Meeting of Families line-up

IRELAND
Irish Times

August 10, 2018

By Patsy McGarry

Survivors claim each has questions to answer about known clerical child abusers

A group representing clerical child sex survivors worldwide has written an open letter to Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Diarmuid Martin seeking the removal of three cardinals from World Meeting of Families (WMOF) events in Dublin later this month.

Archbishop Martin is chairing the WMOF board.

Ending Clergy Abuse (ECA) represents survivors in 15 countries and aims to hold the Vatican to account over clerical abuse of minors.

It says the three cardinals – Cardinal Kevin Farrell, prefect at the Vatican’s Dicastery for Laity, Family and Life which has overall responsibility for the World Meeting of Families, Cardinal Óscar Maradiaga of Honduras and a member of Pope Francis’s Council of Cardinals, and Archbishop of Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl should be “investigated, not honoured”.

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OpEd: Catholic Church should lead the charge against sex abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Sharon Herald

August 11, 2018

By Lynn Saternow

As a former altar boy at Notre Dame Parish in Hermitage, I await the release of the church scandal report with great anticipation.

My brother Paul and I were part of the first altar-boy class at the parish, when church services were conducted in the recently built school gym. It was the Catholic policy to build the parochial schools first, then the church.

Those were the days of the Latin masses. So we didn’t have it as easy as many kids do today; and the late Msgr. Robert Schriefer was a stern taskmaster in the early days of his long tenure.

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Editorial: Church Needs to Take Swift Action on Sexual Abuse

REVERE (MA)
Revere Journal

August 11, 2018

By Journal Staff

For the past several days, articles in the national media have reported accusations of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s sexual improprieties with several adults and his criminal violations of the sexual abuse of minors. These alleged actions, when committed by any person, are morally unacceptable and incompatible with the role of a priest, bishop or cardinal.

I am deeply troubled by these reports that have traumatized many Catholics and members of the wider community. In one case involving a minor the Archdiocese of New York, after investigation, has found the accusation to be credible and substantiated. While another accusation concerning a minor is yet to be investigated, the reports are devastating for the victims, their families and for the Church itself. Each new report of clerical abuse at any level creates doubt in the minds of many that we are effectively addressing this catastrophe in the Church.

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Richard Sipe, pioneering expert in clergy sexual abuse, dies at 85

LA JOLLA (CA)
National Catholic Reporter

August 10, 2018

By Peter Feuerherd and James Dearie

Richard Sipe, a psychotherapist and former Benedictine priest who warned about the sex abuse crisis enveloping the Catholic Church, died Aug. 8 in La Jolla, California. He was 85.

According to the New York Times, the cause was multiple organ failure.

Sipe’s full name was Aquinas Walter Richard Sipe (the Aquinas was added during his years as a Benedictine). He became alarmed at the sex abuse crisis after hearing stories of both abusive priests and their victims in his role as a psychotherapist.

Beginning in the 1960s, he wrote and spoke to bishops and the general public on the topic. The author of scores of articles and books on celibacy and sexuality, Sipe concluded that only about half of priests in the United States were at any one time practicing celibacy, and that about six percent sexually abused children, a number he later raised to nine percent.

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A.W. Richard Sipe, expert on celibacy and clerical sex abuse, dies at 85 in his La Jolla home

LA JOLLA (CA)
San Diego Union-Tribune

August 10, 2018

A.W. Richard Sipe, a priest and psychotherapist whose research on celibacy and the Roman Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal earned him popular renown and official scorn, died Wednesday in his Mount Soledad home. He was 85.

His son, Dr. Walter Sipe, attributed the cause of death to multiple organ failure.

Sipe’s work was instrumental in the 2002 Boston Globe’s “Spotlight” reports, which led to a worldwide revolt against Catholic clergy who had sexually assaulted children. After initial denials, church leaders slowly agreed to reforms.

In 2017, though, Sipe argued that the problem persisted, fueled in part by the secret sex lives of Catholic clergy.

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Diocese awaits report on clergy abuse

INDIANA
Indiana Gazette

August 10, 2018

By Patrick Cloonan

As it awaits release, possibly in the next few days, of the report by a statewide grand jury investigating allegations of sexual abuse by priests in six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses, the Diocese of Greensburg is posting a “Progress Update on Protection of Children” in Indiana, Westmoreland, Armstrong and Fayette counties on its dioceseofgreensburg.org website.

The update touts “Higher Standards of Today’s Catholic Church” as the diocese offered “a sincere and open apology to the survivors of sexual abuse and to all those impacted by the grievous failures of the Catholic Church,” and an update of steps taken over the last 30 years to protect the children, youth and “vulnerable adults” in its care.

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Crisis de la iglesia católica parece no tener fondo: Diócesis de Talca da a conocer nueva denuncia en contra de un sacerdote

[Crisis of the Catholic Church seems to have no bottom: Diocese of Talca announces new complaint against a priest]

CHILE
Publimetro

August 10, 2018

Se investigan actos de connotación sexual en contra de un menor de edad.

La Diócesis de Talca dio a conocer una nueva denuncia en contra de un sacerdote por actos de connotación sexual en contra de un menor de edad, lo que motivó el inicio de una indagatoria para aclarar la veracidad de los hechos.

Por medio de una declaración pública, la iglesia talquina señaló que “con dolor y preocupación informamos que hemos recibido una denuncia en contra del presbítero Luciano Arriagada Vergara”.

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Crisis de la Iglesia Católica: 266 serían las víctimas de los casos de abuso sexual hasta ahora

[Crisis of the Catholic Church by the numbers: 266 victims of sexual abuse so far]

CHILE
Publimetro

August 7, 2018

By Consuelo Rehbein

Cifras de la Fiscalía Nacional señalan que hay 144 investigaciones de abuso sexual al interior de la Iglesia Católica que consideran casos con data desde 1960 en adelante.

El día viernes la Conferencia Episcopal pidió perdón una vez más por los casos de abuso sexual al interior de la Iglesia. Pero en la oportunidad, también se comprometieron a facilitar el trabajo de la Fiscalía Nacional con los casos. La iniciativa, fue de hecho aplaudida por el Papa Francisco quien señaló quedar “impresionado por el trabajo de reflexión, discernimiento y decisiones que han hecho”.

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Iglesia investiga nueva denuncia de abusos y anuncia medidas contra Precht

[Church investigates new abuse complaint and announces measures against Precht]

CHILE
BioBioChile

August 10, 2018

By Alberto González

La Iglesia Católica informó este viernes el inicio de una investigación en contra del párroco de Apóstol Santiago, por una denuncia de abusos sexuales en contra de un menor.

Según indicó la entidad religiosa en un comunicado, el pasado lunes se inició una investigación previa por presunto abuso sexual de un menor, en contra del presbítero David Vera Andrade, por hechos ocurridos antes de 2012.

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Víctima de Maristas y próxima declaración de Ezzati: Veo difícil que preste colaboración

[Victim in Marist case doubts Ezzati’s denials]

CHILE
BioBioChile

August 10, 2018

By María José Villarroel

De acuerdo a nuevos antecedente de la investigación que está realizando el fiscal Emiliano Arías, el cardenal Ricardo Ezzati habría recibido denuncias contra el sacerdote de la Congregación de los Hermanos Maristas, Jorge Laplagne. Estas denuncias se habrían realizado entre 2011 y 2015, pero Ezzati no habría realizado las sanciones correspondientes.

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Vaticano investigará por segunda vez a sacerdote Precht

[Vatican will investigate priest Precht for the second time]

CHILE
La Tercera

August 10, 2018

By Leyla Zapata and Sergio Rodríguez

El religioso fue indagado por eventuales abusos a menores, detectado en el contexto del denominado caso Maristas, causa seguida por el Ministerio Público.

La Iglesia de Santiago dio a conocer un nuevo y complejo capítulo respecto del sacerdote Cristián Precht, al informar que esta semana se enviaron al Vaticano los antecedentes de presuntos abusos contra menores en los cuales el presbítero habría tenido responsabilidad.

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O’Malley orders probe of alleged misconduct at seminary

BOSTON (MA)
The Boston Globe

August 10, 2018

By Travis Andersen and Danny McDonald

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley said Friday that he was placing the rector of a Brighton seminary on leave while an outside legal consultant investigates allegations of unspecified misconduct at the educational facility.

In a statement, O’Malley did not provide details of the alleged wrongdoing at St. John’s Seminary but said the accusations came from two seminarians who were enrolled at the theological school, which trains priests for ordination.

O’Malley said he was informed earlier this week that two former St. John’s seminarians posted allegations on social media that during their time at the seminary “they witnessed and experienced activities which are directly contrary to the moral standards and requirements of formation for the Catholic priesthood.”

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Dear Pope Francis: ‘A year after John Paul II came, I was raped by a priest’

IRELAND
Irish Times

August 11, 2018

By Colm O’Gorman
Executive director, Amnesty International Ireland

We invite a range of people to write the Pope an open letter in advance of his Irish visit
about 5 hours ago

Dear Francis,

I won’t lie. It has been a tough few months. I hadn’t imagined that your visit to Ireland would cause me any upset, but to my surprise it has.

It started when the media here began to recall the iconic moments of John Paul II’s visit back in 1979. I was 13 years old then and, like most children of my generation, heavily involved in the church. I had been an altar server; I sang at Mass every Sunday.

I went to a Christian Brothers School and the youth group I attended every week was a Catholic group that met in a convent. The church was a massive influence in my life back then, and central to every part of it.

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Wildomar’s Faith Baptist Church perpetuated culture of secrecy allowing sex abuse for decades, alleged victims claim

WILDOMAR (CA)
The Press-Enterprise

August 10, 2018

April Avila said she was 14 when her youth pastor at Faith Baptist Church in Wildomar began grooming her for sexual abuse.

It started out as horseplay with Malo “Victor” Monteiro, who was twice the girl’s age. He would throw a playful jab to her arm, teasingly touch or tug at her hair, call her pet names, and often ask her to help with special projects and work.

Then, things got intimate.

“What was once a friendly punch to the shoulder became a caressing touch. He would often wrestle me to the ground in response to teasing, his hands ending up in the wrong places. He would splash water on my shirt or push me into a pool or the ocean and then stand and watch as I walked out, laughing and ogling the entire time,” Avila, 32, said in an “open letter” she recently posted on Facebook.

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Pope meets with Chilean bishop and victims’ advocate over Church sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

August 10, 2018

By Cassandra Garrison

Pope Francis met in Rome on Friday with a Chilean bishop and a victims’ advocate to discuss the Church sex abuse scandal in Chile and measures being taken to prevent it in the future.

Bishop Juan Ignacio Gonzalez of San Bernardo and Ana Maria Celis Brunet, president of the Chilean National Council for the Prevention of Abuse and Accompaniment of Victims, met with the pope at the Vatican, it said in a statement.

The scandal has rocked the Church in Chile. In June, the country’s 34 bishops were summoned to Rome by the pope after Vatican investigators produced a 2,300-page report alleging that senior Church officials in Chile had failed to act on abuse claims and in some cases hid them.

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August 10, 2018

Obispo de Chillán contra la pared: fiscal confirma denuncia por delitos sexuales

[Bishop of Chillán against the wall: prosecutor confirms new complaint for sexual crimes]

CHILE
El Mostrador

August 10, 2018

La fiscal regional de Bío Bío, Marcela Cartagena, confirmó una denuncia en contra del obispo de Chillán, Carlos Pellegrín, respecto a nuevas indagatorias por delitos de abusos sexuales.

El anuncio marca todo un precedente, considerando que -de confirmarse la denuncia- Pellegrín sería el primer obispo que se encuentra en ejercicio en ser acusado directamente por abusos sexuales. Esto, considerando que el arzobispo de Santiago, cardenal Ricardo Ezzati, por su parte, es indagado por encubrimiento y deberá prestar declaración el próximo 21 de agosto en la investigación que lleva en sus manos el fiscal Emiliano Arias.

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Cordero de Dios: las huellas de Ezzati que persigue la Fiscalía

[Lamb of God: Ezzati at the center of church abuse investigation]

CHILE
El Mostrador

August 10, 2018

By Alejandro Carmona Lopez

“Lo dejaron caer. A Ezzati ya lo dejaron caer”, comenta un sacerdote, intentando explicar la situación actual del arzobispo de Santiago que ya no celebrará el Te Deum. Pocos lo quieren tener cerca y, además, deberá declarar como imputado por encubrimiento el próximo 21 de agosto, ante el fiscal de la Región de O’Higgins, Emiliano Arias. Ezzati está solo, profundamente golpeado por su citación a declarar, pero también porque entendió –desde la visita de los enviados papales Charles Scicluna y Jordi Bertomeu– que Francisco aún lo mantiene en el cargo solamente porque no encuentra a quien lo reemplace. También sabe que las declaraciones de los mensajeros de Roma solo ayudaron a acelerar las denuncias e investigaciones judiciales, que ahora lo tienen en el vórtice del huracán. “Es decir, lo entregaron”, comenta una fuente que conoce el caso.

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Incautación en Obispado Castrense apunta a los cuatro últimos prelados

[Sources say seizure of documents focuses investigation on last four military bishops]

CHILE
La Tercera

August 9, 2018

By L. Zapata, S. Rodríguez, I. Toro, and F. Díaz

El presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal, Santiago Silva, es el actual titular de esta repartición eclesial. Su antecesor, Juan Barros, ocupó el cargo durante 11 años. La Fiscalía de O’Higgins busca antecedentes de posibles casos de abusos recibidos en esta sede y si los jefes, en su calidad de funcionarios públicos, los denunciaron. A las 12.30 de hoy, un equipo del OS-9 de Carabineros y de la Fiscalía de O’Higgins ingresó al Obispado Castrense, en la comuna de Providencia. Así, se concretó la tercera jornada de allanamientos que han realizado estos investigadores a una sede eclesiástica, en el marco de las diligencias en que se indagan presuntos abusos sexuales a menores por parte de miembros de la Iglesia Católica en Santiago y Rancagua.

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Fiscalía del Biobío abre investigación contra obispo de Chillán tras denuncia de índole sexual

[Biobío prosecutor investigating sex complaint against Bishop of Chillán]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
BioBioChile

August 10, 2018

By Tomás Molina J.

La acusación en contra de Carlos Pellegrin llegó a manos del Ministerio Público el pasado 2 de agosto. La fiscal Marcia Venegas encabeza la investigación.

La fiscalía regional del Biobío confirmó este viernes que abrió una investigación en contra del obispo de Chillán, Carlos Pellegrin, producto de una denuncia en su contra por un presunto delito de índole sexual. Según confirmaron desde el Ministerio Público a Emol, la acusación llegó a manos del Ministerio Público el 2 de agosto pasado.

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Papa pide que se “aclaren todas las interrogantes” de abusos tras reunirse con obispo González y Ana María Celis

[Pope meets with Bishop González and Ana María Celis and encourages them to “continue to clarify all the questions” about abuse in Chilean Church]

VATICAN CITY
Emol

August 10, 2018

Francisco señaló a las dos autoridades eclesiásticas que “sigue con interés cada avance” de las investigaciones.

El Papa Francisco recibió este viernes en el Vaticano a dos miembros de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile y les animó a que “se sigan aclarando todos los interrogantes” sobre los abusos por parte del clero en el país. El Pontífice recibió en su residencia al obispo de San Bernardo, Juan Ignacio González, y a Ana María Celis Brunet, presidenta del Consejo Nacional de Prevención de Abusos y Acompañamiento de Víctimas, organismo perteneciente al episcopado.

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Social media plays role in breaking Church sex abuse stories

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

August 10, 2018

Magazines and newspapers have long been sources to break big news stories. Now, too, social media is taking its turn.

In a series of tweets, a onetime seminarian who goes by the handle “inflammateomnia” – Latin for “Go set the world on fire,” a quote ascribed to St. Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuits – detailed on Twitter sexually abusive behavior he said was directed at him and which he witnessed, as well as the lack of urgency given his complaints by one seminary official.

Inflammateomnia, who does not reveal his name on Twitter, describes himself as a Boston-based graduate student in theology, “seeking the true, good and beautiful.” “Guess this is my Catholic #MeToo moment,” he began, echoing the Twitter hashtag women have used since last fall to reveal their own tales of abuse and harassment.

Even in the expanded Twitterverse of 280 characters per tweet, it took inflammateomnia more than 20 tweets to tell his story.

Due to his anonymity, and his not naming the seminary and the people involved, his story cannot be independently verified. If it is true, though, it paints a disturbing picture of seminary life.

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CHURCH ABUSE VICTIMS TO VOTE SOON ON REORGANIZATION PLAN

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
The Associated Press

August 10, 2018

Hundreds of victims of clergy sexual abuse will likely vote this month on a reorganization plan for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis that will compensate them for the abuse.

According to a timetable laid out Thursday at a federal bankruptcy court hearing, some 450 victims will begin to vote Aug. 21, pending judicial approval. Reports say if the plan is endorsed it would go to the judge overseeing the bankruptcy in late September. Then it would be determined how much money each victim gets.

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The #ChurchToo Movement Just Scored a Major Victory for Victims of Sexual Abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
Mother Jones

August 10, 2018

By Becca Andrews

Willow Creek Community Church and Bill Hybels were untouchable. Now the entire leadership team at the iconic megachurch has stepped down, setting a significant precedent.

Earlier this week, in what is the most significant response to sexual abuse allegations in an evangelical church since the start of the #ChurchToo movement—or, arguably, ever—the lead pastor and the entire board of elders of Willow Creek Community Church, a deeply influential nondenominational megachurch in the Chicago suburbs, resigned in front of their congregation.

The moves, which happened in a special congregational meeting Wednesday night, were in response to allegations of sexual abuse and harassment against the church’s founding pastor, Bill Hybels, and to the ways the church had essentially turned a blind eye for nearly five years. In the meeting this week, lead pastor Heather Larson announced to thousands of congregants—Willow Creek is home to some 25,000 members, making it the fifth-largest megachurch in the country—that she would resign immediately, and Missy Rasmussen, an elder, announced that she and eight of her peers were stepping down because, she said, “Willow needs and deserves a fresh start.” Rasmussen apologized to each of the women who reported misconduct.

“To all the women who have come forward, we are sorry that we added to your pain,” Rasmusssen said. “We are sorry that our initial statements were so insensitive, defensive, and reflexively protective of Bill. We exhort Bill to acknowledge his sin and publicly apologize.”

Hybels has been publicly accused by multiple women of sexual abuse and harassment over the past several months, with some sharing their stories in the Chicago Tribune and Christianity Today. But still, after the stories were published in March, Hybels’ position as something of an evangelical superstar—he’s written several books about Christian leadership, was a spiritual adviser to President Bill Clinton, and created the high-profile two-day Christian confab, the Global Leadership Conference—largely continued without serious challenge from church leadership. And this was not the first time allegations were brought against Hybels; internal inquiries into his behavior actually began about four years ago.

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Office of Military’s Catholic bishop raided as Chile digs deeper into sex abuse scandal

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
The Santiago Times

August 9, 2018

Authorities raided the office of the bishop to the armed services on Thursday as part of investigations into accusations that senior Roman Catholic Church officials covered up claims of sexual abuse by clergymen in Chile.

The raid on the office of Santiago Silva had been conducted by court order and authorized by the defense minister and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces, according to a provincial prosecutor leading the investigations.

Silva is also president of the Chilean bishops’ conference.

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Matt Flynn heavily involved in priest abuse cases, but was he part of transferring accused priests?

MILWAUKEE (WI)
PolitiFact

August 10, 2018

By Tom Kertscher

At a debate for the Democratic candidates for governor, the first question posed to attorney Matt Flynn was about his work defending the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in pedophile priest cases.

“I was not part of transferring anybody,” Flynn told the audience in Madison on Aug. 8, 2018, six days before the primary election.

Eight Democrats are competing for the right to take on GOP Gov. Scott Walker in the fall. Citing the priest cases, Walker has called on Flynn to drop out of the race.

For years, accused Catholic priests were routinely transferred from one parish or school to another, and many of them continued molesting children. Certainly, transfers were actually ordered by the archdiocese, not by lawyers such as Flynn who were retained by the archdiocese.

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A.W. Richard Sipe, a Leading Voice on Clergy Sex Abuse, Dies at 85

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Times

August 9, 2018

By Sharon Otterman

A. W. Richard Sipe, a researcher, psychotherapist and former priest who spent his life studying the roots of sex abuse within the Roman Catholic Church, becoming one of the subject’s leading experts, died on Wednesday in the La Jolla neighborhood of San Diego. He was 85.

His wife, Marianne Benkert Sipe, said the cause was multiple organ failure.

Mr. Sipe’s research into celibacy and sexuality within the clergy helped establish a foundation for those studying, investigating and responding to the sexual abuse crisis of the 2000s. Along with describing how celibacy was lived, his work resulted in several striking estimates arrived at in the 1980s.

One was that fully 6 percent of all priests were sexual abusers of children and minors. Another was that at any given time, only 50 percent of priests were celibate — an estimate that the church said was overblown.

But Mr. Sipe’s most far-reaching conclusion was that those two phenomena were linked. Failures of celibacy among church leaders, he argued, even if they happened with adults, created a system of hypocrisy and secrecy in which the abuse of minors could take place.

That link is one that the church is still wrestling with, as suggested by recent disclosures that Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, who resigned in July, rose to the highest levels of the church despite warnings that he had been inappropriately touching adult seminarians.

“Sooner or later it will become broadly obvious that there is a systemic connection between the sexual activity by, among and between clerics in positions of authority and control, and the abuse of children,” Mr. Sipe wrote in a letter to Bishop Robert W. McElroy of San Diego in 2016.

“When men in authority — cardinals, bishops, rectors, abbots, confessors, professors — are having or have had an unacknowledged-secret-active-sex life under the guise of celibacy, an atmosphere of tolerance of behaviors within the system is made operative.”

In 1986, Mr. Sipe presented his findings to the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, but nothing was done, Dr. Benkert Sipe said. So Mr. Sipe began working on the problem in other ways, becoming active in the early days of clergy-victim advocacy, writing books, consulting or testifying in some 250 trials on clergy abuse as an expert witness, and never backing down from his initial assertions.

“He had such an effect on so many different people in that he was a truth teller, and when people found him, they found a sense of being,” said Paul Livingston, a clergy abuse victim and friend. “He is irreplaceable.”

Walter Richard Sipe was born on Dec. 11, 1932, in Robbinsdale, Minn, as the fourth of 10 children of Walter C. Sipe, who owned several gas stations, and Elizabeth (Altendorf) Sipe, a homemaker.

His family were observant Catholics, and from an early age he was entranced by the church. He attended a high school and a college run by Benedictine monks at St. John’s Abbey in nearby Collegeville and became a monk himself. In 1959 he was ordained a priest. (He added the name Aquinas, after the theologian St. Thomas Aquinas, when he became a brother and then used the initial A. in his name.)

But it was not long before he realized to his shock that just below the surface of the church lay secrets that its hierarchy protected.

In his first posting, to Cold Spring, Minn., to work as a high school counselor, he heard in the confessional about priests who were sexually involved with other priests, priests who had girlfriends, and even priests who were involved with minors, he said in an interview in 2008 for a documentary film, “Sipe: Sex, Lies, and the Priesthood,” which is to be released this year.

He also learned that his predecessor had abused girls. Yet these men remained in good standing with the church, he said.

“So I asked myself, What is this celibacy, and how is it practiced by those people who claim to be celibate?” he said in the interview, giving voice to the research question that would animate his career.

In 1967, he became the director of family services at the Seton Psychiatric Institute in Baltimore, a treatment center where bishops sent problem priests. As he got to know the troubled men, he said, some revealed that they had been abused by clergymen themselves. He also heard stories about how church leaders had been dismissive of reports of abuse.

He began formally collecting data, seeking patterns. Leaving the priesthood in 1970, he married Marianne Benkert, a former nun who was doing her residency in psychiatry at the institute. In addition to her, Mr. Sipe is survived by a son, Walter, who is also a psychiatrist, and six siblings, Thomas, John, Bernadette, Michael, Elizabeth and Rosie.

With Dr. Benkert Sipe’s help, Mr. Sipe published his research in 1990 in a landmark ethnographic study of celibacy and abuse within the Catholic Church.

The book, “A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy,” drew on case files and 25 years of interviews with hundreds of sexually active priests and victims of clergy sex abuse.

Mr. Sipe had naïvely assumed that his study would be welcomed by bishops, Dr. Benkert Sipe said. Instead, he was blackballed in some dioceses.

“When he wasn’t listened to, and wasn’t believed, it was really hurtful to him, because he cared about the church,” she said.

But there were also triumphs. One was the investigation into clergy sex abuse by The Boston Globe in 2002. It exposed widespread abuse and a cover-up in the Archdiocese of Boston and spawned a nationwide reckoning. Mr. Sipe’s finding that the problem was systemic guided the Globe’s Spotlight investigative team of reporters, whose work was portrayed in the Academy Award-winning 2015 film “Spotlight.”

In the movie, the reporters listen to Mr. Sipe, played by Richard Jenkins, as he explains by speaker phone his finding that 6 percent of priests abuse minors. The reporters quickly calculate that that would mean 90 priests in Boston.

“Is that possible?” one reporter asks.

“Yes, that would certainly be in line with my findings,” the Sipe character says.

Since then more studies have come out showing that the 6 percent estimate may be conservative. In 2017, an investigation by the Australian Royal Commission found that 7 percent of priests in the Australian Catholic Church had been accused of sexually abusing children from 1950 to 2010. A study commissioned by the American bishops in 2004 put the percentage at 4 percent.

“He lived long enough to see many of his predictions come true,” said Phil Saviano, a clergy-abuse activist and friend.

Still, accountability for bishops continued to elude Mr. Sipe, frustrating him.

“I defy you to find where the system has changed,” he said in 2008. “Bishops are not accountable, they can — and do — do what they want.”

In recent weeks, a wider swath of the church appeared to be coming around to accepting that statement. Mr. Sipe had been warning on his website about the sexual activities of Cardinal McCarrick since 2008. After a substantiated report of abuse was revealed in June, followed by more allegations, some of the nation’s leading bishops began calling for reforms in how allegations against bishops are investigated.

Though Mr. Sipe had devoted his life to understanding the issues of celibacy and abuse, the deeper question of why the problem could persist unaddressed for so long still eluded him, said the Rev. Tom Doyle, a friend and longtime advocate for abuse victims.

On Tuesday, at Mr. Sipe’s bedside, the two men pondered the moral mystery of how so many clerics could look the other way, putting ecclesiastical ambition above doing the right thing by children.

“ ‘Will we ever find the answer?’ ” Mr. Sipe asked, Father Doyle said. “And I said, ‘You will know it, sooner than I will.’ ”

A version of this article appears in print on Aug. 10, 2018, on Page B13 of the New York edition with the headline: A.W. Richard Sipe, Leading Researcher on Sex Abuse by Clergy, Dies at 85.

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Pope Francis under pressure to meet abuse victims in Ireland

IRELAND
Church Times

August 10, 2018

By Gregg Ryan

POPE FRANCIS faces growing demands from individuals and organisations, including the former President Mary McAleese and Amnesty International, to acknowledge publicly the victims of child abuse by Roman Catholic clergy, before his visit to Ireland later this month.

The Pope, who is travelling to Dublin for the World Meeting of Families on 25 and 26 August, will spend only two days in Ireland, and is not expected to visit Northern Ireland.

He is scheduled to hold a rally at Croke Park, Dublin; visit the Marian shrine at Knock, Co. Mayo; and say a papal mass in Phoenix Park, the site of a similar Mass said by St John Paul II in 1979.

Pope Francis is also understood to be paying a visit to the Capuchin centre in Dublin which, under Brother Kevin Crowley, feeds hundreds of the city’s poor daily.

There are conflicting reports on whether the Pope will meet victims of clerical abuse. The RC Archbishop of Dublin, Dr Diarmuid Martin, expressed hopes that such a meeting would happen; but Ireland’s Executive Director of Amnesty International, Colm O’Gorman, himself a victim, has said that nothing short of the Pope, acknowledging the truth of Ireland’s abuse scandals at the hands of churchmen and women, and the Vatican’s cover-up of the same scandals, would suffice.

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Report on Catholic Church abuse delayed (again) by objections from clergy

HARRISBURG (PA)
WITF

August 8, 2018

By Katie Meyer

The release of a long-awaited grand jury report on sexual abuse by Pennsylvania’s Catholic clergy has been delayed once again.

A redacted version of the more than two-year investigation could have been released Tuesday. But clergy named in the report have problems with how the attorney general’s office made redactions to it.

The state Supreme Court decided late last month that an interim version of the sweeping report could be released as long as names and identifying information of those who objected were blacked out. That concession came after a series of protests by nearly two dozen anonymous clergy, who say being implicated without being charged with a crime violated their constitutional rights.

In allowing a redacted release, the court added the caveat that concerned parties could file objections to the redactions the attorney general’s office proposed. They’ve now done so, though the specific objections are under seal.

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Chilean Prosecutor Raids Office of the Military’s Catholic Bishop

CHILE
Reuters

August 9, 2018

By Aislinn Laing

A Chilean prosecutor said on Thursday that the office of the bishop to the armed services had been raided as part of investigations into accusations that senior Roman Catholic Church officials covered up claims of sexual abuse by clergymen in Chile.

Emiliano Arias, a provincial prosecutor leading the investigations, told Reuters that the raid on the office of Santiago Silva had been conducted by court order and authorized by the defense minister and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces. Silva is also president of the Chilean bishops’ conference.

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Alleged sexual abuse victim files lawsuit against former Valley priest, diocese

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Daily Item

August 9, 2018

By Rick Dandes

A former altar boy, alleging sexual abuse by a priest over a three-year period beginning in 1999, filed a lawsuit on Wednesday against John G. Allen, a defrocked priest who formerly served in the Valley, and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg.

The altar boy, now a 29-year-old Maryland man identified only as “John Doe,” contends in the lawsuit that former Bishop of the Harrisburg Diocese, William Keeler, “failed to take any meaningful action to prevent Allen from having access to children. … and was allowed to remain a priest in the Harrisburg Diocese where he continued to sexually assault children over the course of several years.”

The lawsuit, filed in Dauphin County Court, comes in advance of a soon-to-be released Pennsylvania grand jury report on sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. Allen is one of 72 priests and church personnel — some of whom are now dead — already publicly reported by the Harrisburg diocese as having been accused of sexually abusing children.

Asked to comment on the lawsuit, Mike Barley, spokesman for the Diocese of Harrisburg said on Thursday, “We are still reviewing a copy of the lawsuit, so it would not be appropriate for us to comment on it at this time. With that being said, John Allen was included on our list of Clergy & Seminarians Accused of Sexual Assault of a Child released last week. The Diocese of Harrisburg would again pass on our most sincere apologies to the survivors of child sexual abuse, the Catholic faithful, and the general public for any abuses that occurred.”

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Chestnut Hill priest removed from ministry pending investigation of child sex abuse claim

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly Voice

August 10, 2018

The Rev. Mark F. Plaushin faces an allegation in Monroe County dating to 1985, before he was ordained

A priest in residence at a Chestnut Hill parish has been removed from ministry after an allegation surfaced that he sexually abused a minor in 1985 before he was ordained.

The Rev. Mark F. Plaushin, a member of the Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales, had lived and celebrated Mass at Our Mother of Consolation parish since the summer of 2013. He has not lived at the parish rectory since the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province of the Oblates learned of the allegation on July 16.

Our Mother of Consolation Roman Catholic Church on East Chestnut Hill Avenue in the Chestnut Hill section of Philadelphia.
A priest in residence at a Chestnut Hill parish has been removed from ministry after an allegation surfaced that he sexually abused a minor in 1985 before he was ordained.

The Rev. Mark F. Plaushin, a member of the Oblates of Saint Francis de Sales, had lived and celebrated Mass at Our Mother of Consolation parish since the summer of 2013. He has not lived at the parish rectory since the Wilmington-Philadelphia Province of the Oblates learned of the allegation on July 16.

MORE NEWS: Priests take the ‘good news’ to their flock – on social media
The allegation was shared with parishioners by the Rev. Michael Murray, the assistant provincial for the Oblates, in an announcement at Masses the following weekend. In addition, letters were sent by the parish pastor, the Rev. Bob Bazzoli, to all registered parishioners as well as school and PREP religious education families.

A scouting group which Plaushin had served as chaplain also was notified, according to a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Plaushin, who is in his early 60s, is accused of sexually abusing a minor in Monroe County, Pennsylvania, in 1985, four years before he was ordained to the priesthood, according to Murray’s announcement.

Plaushin has denied the allegation, according to Murray.

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Befriending her on Facebook, Kerala priest under arrest for raping 15-year-old inside temple

CHENNAI (INDIA)
Mirror Now Digital

August 10, 2018

The accused, a priest at Dhanawanthari temple in Kerala’s Vaikkom befriended the class 10 student on Facebook. He lured her to the temple where he raped her. A similar case was lodged against him a while back.

Based on a complaint by the victim’s parents, Kottayam police on Tuesday arrested a 21-year-old priest for abducting and raping a minor girl inside a temple in Vaikkom. A resident of Alacott Illam near Parassala, Krishna Prasad was serving as a priest at the Dhanawanthari temple in Vaikkom.

According to police statements, Prasad befriended the 15-year-old girl on social networking website Facebook. He then lured the class 10 student into meeting him at his room inside the temple premises in Vaikkom. Reports suggest that once he took the minor, a resident of Ayarkunnam to his room located near the temple’s auditorium, Prasad forced himself on her.

The matter came to light after parents of the girl reported her missing which led Ayarkunnam police to Prasad. The temple priest has been booked under relevant sections of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) corresponding to kidnapping, criminal intimidation and rape. He has also been slapped with sections of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act owing to the age of the victim in this case.

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