ABUSE TRACKER

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

September 16, 2018

Editorial: Year of Repentance is not enough

PENNSYLVANIA
The Tribune-Review

September 16, 2018

Sorry, Your Excellency.

On Tuesday, Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik announced a Year of Repentance, a way for the clergy to give back to the communities wounded by decades of molestation, rape, intimidation and lies disclosed by Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s grand jury report.

Let’s forget for a moment that the year is retroactive to last month, so it’s really just 11 months of atonement.

Let’s forget for a moment that some of the victims are dead, as are many of the priests who did the perpetrating and most of the bishops who were behind the covering up.

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.

An Open Letter to Franciscan: Say You’re Sorry

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
Pop Feminist, Patheos (blog)

September 15, 2018

By Emily C. A. Snyder

Elizabeth Vermilyea, PhD is a nationally recognized Traumatic Stress Specialist. As an alumna of Franciscan University of Steubenville (FUS), and in light of the continuing and unfolding fall out from the Catholic priest scandals including universities knowingly harboring priest abusers, she offers her words of counsel in the following open letter.

The following was originally addressed to FUS, regarding their acknowledgement of allowing Fr. Samuel Tiesi, TOR, to continue to work and be housed on campus, despite knowing about credible allegations of his sexual misconduct towards young college women. Allegations which FUS President, Father Sean O. Sheridan, TOR, addressed in an alumni email sent on Sept. 10, 2018. It should be noted that in answer to their own failings, FUS has made a gesture towards instituting better Title IX safety measures. Whether these measures are sufficient, remains to be seen.

Below, Dr. Vermilyea offers her advice about how universities and institutions can better handle these cases, with an eye to walking with victims through their trauma, rather than subjecting them to further silencing and misinformation. Please read.

Hello,

I want to be clear about how the University is coming across with the very recent (and all too late) Title IX review and the even more recent disclosures about Sam Teisi. Sam was a known offender from as far back as the 80s. He was Michael Scanlan’s best friend, lionized on the campus, feted and adored, and Scanlan knew he was an offender, knew he was assaulting women. He did what the church has always done, He moved 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.

New Jersey Hotline For Clergy Sex Abuse Claims Flooded With Calls, Officials Say

NEWARK (NJ)
Channel 2 (CBS affiliate in NYC)

September 15, 2018

By Lisa Rozner

[VIDEO]

A hotline created to document reports of clergy sex abuse in New Jersey is receiving so many calls that some can’t even get through. The round-the-clock call center opened last week as part of a new investigation by Attorney General Gurbir Grewal.

Fred Marigliano says it took him more than 50 years to speak out about being abused by his priest when he was 11-years-old.

“All I wanted to do was not be raped again,” he told CBS2. “Sometimes I still have nightmares.”

His sobering story was told to a crowd that included William Cardinal Tobin at Newark’s Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart on Friday. On Saturday, he called it in to Grewal’s office via the hotline that’s been slammed virtually nonstop with calls from other survivors.

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.

Morrisey wants review of Bransfield sexual harassment allegations

WHEELING (WV)
The Intelligencer via the Weirton (WV) Daily Times

September 16, 2018

By Linda Comins

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey wants to review allegations of sexual harassment levied against the Most Rev. Michael J. Bransfield, former bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston.

Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori, the newly-named apostolic administrator of the diocese, “is emphasizing the importance of this investigation being lay-led,” diocesan spokesman Tim Bishop said today.

“The archbishop is very adamant that this investigation be lay-led. I think he is committed that this investigation gets to the truth and as expeditiously as possible,” Bishop said, adding that Lori will oversee the work.

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.

Where There is Light: Speaking truth to power

RACINE (WI)
The Journal Times

September 16, 2018

By Linda Flashinski

As the sex abuse scandal in the Catholic church continues to make headlines, I think back to a radio program I recorded with two victims of sexual abuse and their painful stories.

“While he was raping me,” Monica said, “he kept telling me that I was no good, that I wasn’t listening, that I was no good, over and over again, he kept saying it.” The “he” she was referring to was a Wisconsin priest, and the “I” was the quiet, shy 8-year-old girl she was many years ago. When the assault was over, the priest assigned her penance to do for her sins and told her that if she ever told anyone about what had happened, her parents would burn in hell for all eternity. It was a mighty load of guilt for a little girl to carry, and a mighty threat that kept her quiet for over 20 years. It was only when she was 31 and saw a TV news report of that same priest being arrested for sexual assault of children that was she able to tell of her own abuse at his hands. It was the beginning of a healing journey that will never completely end.

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.

Coping with the clergy abuse crisis in the church: Don’t run, rebuild

RIVERHEAD (NY)
Riverhead Local

September 16, 2018

By Eileen Benthal

I remember sitting outside the church, in the middle of the discarded tree. The cold wind blew around me and the swirling snow formed interesting patterns in the air. But I was warm as the tree branches enveloped me.

I was attending a youth retreat and the retreat director gave us some time for individual reflection and journaling. The Christmas tree, cleared of all remnants of paper decorations and lights, was tossed off to the side of the parish hall on the border of the woods surrounding the church property. It was the perfect place to sit and reflect on that Saturday morning in the middle of January.

When I was a teenager, I made a deeper and more personal commitment to Christ and to my Catholic faith. I was a cradle Catholic, brought to church to be baptized by my faith-filled parents whose individual lives and marriage was founded on principles they had learned growing up in the Catholic church.

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.

What She Hasn’t Got: An Apology for Sinéad O’Connor

IRELAND
Refinery 29 (blog)

September 16, 2018

By Tara Murtha

Every song is a prayer pulled from her throat.

Sinéad O’Connor’s breakthrough record I Do Not Want What I Haven’t Got opens with a recitation of the Serenity Prayer, and ends with the titular poem, performed like a chant:

“I’m walking through the desert / And I am not frightened although it’s hot / I have all that I requested / And I do not want what I haven’t got.”

**
Two years after the concert in Santiago, O’Connor was the musical guest on a now-notorious episode of Saturday Night Live. She sang an a capella version of Bob Marley’s “War,” updating lyrics referencing apartheid and colonialism in Africa to address child abuse, ye-AH. O’Connor ends the chant: “We know we will win. We have confidence in the victory of good over evil.”

While chanting the word “evil,” O’Connor holds up a photograph of Pope John Paul II and rips it in half, then into pieces, then tosses the pieces at the camera and says, “Fight the real enemy!”

[Includes link to SNL clip]

The backlash was swift and brutal. Frank Sinatra called her a “stupid broad” said he’d kick her ass if she was a guy. Actor Joe Pesci, who hosted SNL the following week, made a joke about smacking O’Connor in the face, and the audience laughed and clapped. A Catholic cardinal was pretty sure it was “voodoo.” Even Madonna was aghast, or pretended to be.

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.

Updated list of accused priests

SAN DIEGO (CA)
Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego

September 14, 2018

In 2007, as part of its bankruptcy proceeding, the diocese published a list of priests who had been credibly accused of abusing minors. The list was split into two parts—one listing priests from the San Diego and San Bernardino dioceses and another listing visiting priests from other dioceses and religious orders. In 1978, the Diocese of San Bernardino separated from the Diocese of San Diego. Until then, they were one diocese.

Recently, as part of an effort to respond to questions from parishioners and the public, the diocese began a review of its records to see if additional names should be added to that list.

Below is a list of 51 priests where the diocese has received a credible allegation involving sexual abuse of a minor.

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

Priest active in Bay Area faced previously undisclosed sex abuse charge

SAN JOSE (CA)
Bay Area News Group via the Mercury News

September 16, 2018

By John Woolfolk

In what many consider a long-overdue confessional, Catholic church leaders from San Jose to San Diego have taken the extraordinary step of promising to bare some of their darkest secrets by revealing previously undisclosed names of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse.

And names now being disclosed reveal a disturbing fact — at least one of those priests remains active. An itinerant Roman Catholic priest who holds Bay Area retreats is among eight clergymen the Diocese of San Diego just identified as having been the subject of previously undisclosed accusations of sexual abuse.

The Rev. J. Patrick Foley, who held retreats in Soquel and Danville this year costing participants more than $200 a person, faced a church tribunal after a couple in the Sacramento area accused him in 2010 of sexually molesting their boys, said San Diego diocese spokesman Kevin C. Eckery. The tribunal was inconclusive, he said, and although church officials also alerted local police, nothing ever came of it. But the diocese in 2015 stripped him of his priestly faculties.

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

Pope Francis expels Chilean priest over child sex abuse

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Santiago Times

September 16, 2018

A Chilean priest, convicted of pedophilia, has been stripped of his priestly duties by Pope Francis amid a growing global abuse scandal that has shaken the Roman Catholic Church.

The Archdiocese of Santiago said the Pope had decided to defrock Reverend Cristian Precht, El Mercurio reported on Saturday.

The information, confirmed on the website of the Archbishopric of Santiago, indicates that it was the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Luis F. Ladaria, who notified the Chilean Church of the decision of Pope Francis’ decision.

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.

As Pope ponders Chile, criminal prosecutors charge full steam ahead

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

September 16, 2018

By Inés San Martín

As Pope Francis continues to ponder his response to the Chilean sexual abuse crisis, having accepted the resignations of only five bishops after all of them offered to step down in May, the local criminal justice system is marching full steam ahead, with four dioceses raided on Thursday as part of an ongoing investigation into abuse and cover-ups by bishops.

The raids, conducted simultaneously and requested by general prosecutor Emiliano Arias, hit the dioceses of Valparaiso, Chillan, Osorno and Concepcion. Images published by local media showed authorities walking out of buildings after seizing documents.

Until June, when Francis accepted his resignation, Valparaiso was headed by Bishop Gonzalo Duarte, who’s been accused by victims of not only cover-up but abuse himself.

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.

Children behind bars put face on opportunity cost of abuse scandal

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

September 16, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

A scandal’s impact can be measured multiple ways, with the most obvious being the toll it takes in terms of bad press, litigation and settlements, declining attendance or market share, as well as disillusionment and outrage among the rank and file.

What’s often harder to assess is the opportunity cost – what else might an institution have done, had its energies not been focused on putting out its own fires?

That seems an especially pressing question in the United States right now with regard to the Catholic Church, which seems largely to be sitting out two important political fights in which it otherwise might have been a protagonist.

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.

Editorial: Election is crucial for sex abuse victims

NEW YORK
Times Herald-Record

September 16, 2018

Here are three things to keep in mind as the New York attorney general begins an investigation into sexual abuse by clergy in the Roman Catholic Church in the state.

First, we should expect a report similar to the one that came out following a grand jury inquiry in Pennsylvania, one that found more than 1,000 victims abused by more than 300 priests over 70 years. From what we know already in New York from church settlements and occasional court cases, the magnitude of the findings is likely to be the same.

Second, we should expect that most of those cases will not result in prosecutions because of the statute of limitations. New York has very strict limitations preventing most victims from pursuing cases in court. And more than 300 people who settled privately with the church have waived their right to sue.

Third, we should expect the outcome of this investigation to lend more support to efforts in Albany to help those victims seek the kind of justice denied them for so long. The way to do that is to pass the Child Victims Act, a series of bills providing future victims with more opportunity to go to court, that would penalize those responsible for these crimes and, most important, open up a one-year window in that restrictive statue of limitations.

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

The man behind the Pa. grand jury report on Catholic clergy abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
Philly.com

September 16, 2018

By Angela Couloumbis

Like in the Batman reruns he grew up watching as a kid, there is something about the battle between good and evil that, even as an adult, Daniel Dye can’t seem to shake from his conscience.

Maybe it’s because in those stories, someone shows up, flaws and all, when duty calls. Or maybe it’s because those people are unafraid and unabashed at feeling righteousness.

Dye, 38, muses openly about such things. On social media, where his posts often cite famous men in history or discuss the fight for justice. In a coffeehouse on an overcast weekday afternoon. And in a grand jury room, where as a senior prosecutor for state Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s office, he’s spent the last five years building the cases that led to the damning report on Catholic clergy sexual abuse in Pennsylvania — once even quoting Scripture to a defrocked priest he was questioning.

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.

Vaticano hace caso omiso a cuestionamientos y ratifica permanencia de cardenal Errázuriz en consejo asesor del Papa Francisco

[Vatican ignores questions and ratifies permanence of Cardinal Errázuriz in Pope’s advisory council]

CHILE
El Mostrador

September 13, 2018

El pasado 16 de agosto, el sitio web español eldiario.es. publicó que el Papa Francisco expulsó al arzobispo emérito de Santiago, Francisco Javier Errázuriz, del Consejo de Cardenales (C-9), grupo asesor creado por Bergoglio en 2013. Dicha información fue reiterada por el periódico italiano Corriere della Sera, para explicar la ausencia del purpurado chileno de la reunión sostenida desde el lunes y hasta ayer por el Francisco y el cuerpo de asesores en Roma.
Pero, ¿cuál es la versión del Vaticano? La respuesta de la Oficina de Prensa fue: “No ha habido ningún cambio en la composición del C-9. Es decir, todos sus miembros tienen ya en agenda la convocatoria del próximo encuentro, los días 10-11-12 de diciembre”, consigna El Mercurio.

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.

“Deja de ser cura como castigo” y “El primero de varios”: Las reacciones a la expulsión de Precht

[Reactions to the Vatican’s expulsion of Cristián Precht]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

September 15, 2018

By Camila Gálvez

El Papa Francisco comunicó su decisión este sábado a través del prefecto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, cardenal Luis F. Ladaria, S.J.

Cristián Precht Bañados dejó de ser sacerdote tras la decisión de expulsión tomada por el Papa Francisco. Información que fue dada a conocer por el Arzobispado de Santiago a través de un comunicado en el que afirmaba que el prefecto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, cardenal Luis F. Ladaria, S.J. les notificó de la salida del religioso indagado en el 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.

Cristián Precht expulsado de la Iglesia Católica: El historial de acusaciones que antecedieron a su salida

[Cristián Precht expelled from the Catholic Church: The history of accusations that preceded his departure]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

September 16, 2018

By Carla Fernández

El Papa Francisco determinó la desvinculación del icónico defensor de los derechos humanos, quien actualmente es investigado en el marco del caso Maristas.

La tarde del sábado 15 de septiembre, el Arzobispado de Santiago informó que Cristián Precht dejaba de ser sacerdote luego de que el Papa Francisco tomara la decisión de expulsarlo. La noticia fue dada a conocer en medio de un controversial escenario para el emblemático ex vicario de la solidaridad, quien actualmente es investigado por denuncias de abusos sexuales a menores 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.

Nuevas denuncias de abusos sexuales acumula la Iglesia Católica en Puerto Montt

[New allegations of clergy sexual abuse uncovered in Puerto Montt]

CHILE
BioBioChile

September 14, 2018

By Nicole Briones and Robinson Cardenas

Nuevas denuncias por presuntos abusos sexuales quedaron al descubierto este viernes en Puerto Montt, región de Los Lagos. Fue el administrador apostólico, Ricardo Morales, quien confirmó denuncias contra dos presbíteros de la capital regional.

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.

Reformalizan a excanciller del Arzobispado de Santiago por violación

[Court keeps the former Chancellor of the Archdiocese of Santiago in jail]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 14, 2018

By Leyla Zapata

Tribunal de Rancagua mantuvo en prisión al sacerdote Óscar Muñoz, quien ofreció una caución de $ 5 millones para garantizar su participación en el proceso.

La defensa del suspendido excanciller del Arzobispado de Santiago, Óscar Muñoz, solicitó este viernes rebajar la prisión preventiva que pesa sobre el sacerdote desde hace más de 60 días, cuando se le imputaron cargos como eventual autor de abusos a menores y un estupro.

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.

Vaticano expulsa del sacerdocio a Cristián Precht

[Vatican bans Cristián Precht from the priesthood]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 15, 2018

By S. Rodríguez, MJ Navarrete, and L. Leiva

La Iglesia de Santiago comunicó que la decisión que adoptó el Papa Francisco es inapelable. Antecedentes por eventuales abusos habían sido remitidos a Roma.

Cristián Precht, el emblemático exvicario de la solidaridad que jugó un importante papel en Chile en materia de derechos humanos, perdió hoy su calidad de sacerdote, recibiendo así la sanción más grave que contempla el ordenamiento canónica. Así lo estableció el Vaticano, que a través de un comunicado público difundido este sábado, aseguró que la decisión adoptada por Roma es inapelable.

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

Pope Francis Expels Chilean Priest Accused of Child Sex Abuse

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Reuters via the New York Times

September 15, 2018

Pope Francis on Saturday expelled a Chilean priest under investigation in a case involving the sexual abuse of children, according to a report by local media on Saturday, amid a growing global abuse scandal that has shaken the Roman Catholic Church.

The Archdiocese of Santiago said the Pope had decided to defrock the Reverend Cristian Precht, local daily El Mercurio reported.

Precht was a former head of the Church’s Vicariate of Solidarity human rights group that in the 1980s had challenged ex-dictator Augusto Pinochet to end the practice of torture in Chile.

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

Diocese of San Diego Releases Names of 8 Priests with Credible Abuse Allegations

SAN DIEGO (CA)
Channel 7 (NBC affiliate)

September 14, 2018

By Artie Ojeda, Alex Presha, Rafael Avitabile and NBC Staff

The addition of the names brings the total number of abusive priests connected to the diocese to 56.

The Catholic Diocese of San Diego released the names of eight priests who at one time worked in San Diego County and have credible reports of child abuse against them.

The eight names: The Reverends Jose Chavarin, Raymond Etienne, J. Patrick Foley, Michael French, Richard Houck, George Lally and Paolino Montagna, and Monsignor Mark Medaer.

The cases against them date as far back as the 60s and 70s, and not all of the alleged abuse incidents happened in San Diego, the diocese said. Five of the eight priests are now dead and the diocese was only able to provide photographs of three.

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.

Victim: Diocese ‘short-changing’ victims in abuse settlements

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Long Island News 12

September 14, 2018

The Diocese of Rockville Centre offered settlements to hundreds of victims of clergy abuse, but some say the settlement doesn’t cover all victims.

Harold Siering says he was sexually abused in the 1970s at a Catholic school on Long Island by a Franciscan brother. He says the abuse started when he was about 10 years old, and lasted into his teens.

“I kept it hidden, because the abusers, they tell you, ‘If you tell anybody, no one is going to believe you,’” Siering told News 12.

The Diocese of Rockville Centre started a compensation program for victims who were sexually abused at the hands of priests. The diocese has received almost 300 claims since the program opened up last year – awarding victims sums of $25,000 to $500,000.

But the program doesn’t compensate victims like Siering who were abused by church officials who weren’t priests.

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.

Parishes hold listening sessions on abuse; ‘people need to be heard’

ALBANY (NY)
Catholic News Service via National Catholic Reporter

September 14, 2018

By Kate Blain

A pastor from the Albany Diocese said the reaction from local Catholics to the clergy abuse scandal is a combination of concern for the church and its future along with anger and confusion about the church that they love.

The priest, Fr. Robert Longobucco, pastor of St. Kateri Tekakwitha Parish in Schenectady and diocesan vicar for Catholic faith formation and education, has heard individual comments from parishioners, but he planned to hear from them as a group during a Sept. 13 listening session.

Since Albany Bishop Edward Scharfenberger is “anxious to have” feedback from diocesan Catholics on moving through the crisis, the priest said the goal for the session at St. Kateri’s was “to have people voice their feelings and give input to the bishop.”

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.

Sex abuse claims rock Dutch Catholic Church

THE HAGUE (NETHERLANDS)
Channel NewsAsia

September 15, 2018

More than half of the Netherlands’ senior clerics were involved in covering up sexual assault of children between 1945 and 2010, a press report claimed Saturday (Sep 15), further engulfing the Catholic Church in a global abuse scandal.

Over the course of 65 years, 20 of 39 Dutch cardinals, bishops and their auxiliaries “covered up sexual abuse, allowing the perpetrators to cause many more victims”, the daily NRC reported.

“Four abused children and 16 others allowed the transfer of paedophile priests who could have caused new victims in other parishes,” the Dutch newspaper added.

Church spokeswoman Daphne van Roosendaal told AFP the church could “confirm a part” of 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.

Why so many accused priests never faced trial

NEW YORK (NY)
Fox 5 TV

September 14, 2018

By Sharon Crowley

[VIDEO]

As the Catholic Church grapples with an on-going worldwide scandal of clergy-child sex abuse, Fox 5 took a closer look at why accused priests were so often able to avoid criminal prosecution. We found that the church is often reluctant to move forward on these cases but sometimes the accused priests have law enforcement in their corner as well.

“My basketball coach and priest began sexually assaulting me and some of my classmates,” said Shaun Dougherty, who lives and works in Long Island City now. But when he 10 and living in Pennsylvania, a Catholic priest repeatedly sexually abused him, he said.

“He worked his way up my thigh and began fondling my genitals,” Dougherty said. “When it first happened, you think, ‘What was that?'”

Dougherty did not report what he says happened to him until he was an adult, long after Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations had expired. The priest he accused was never prosecuted. He moved to another parish and retired.

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

September 15, 2018

In rare move, San Diego diocese names eight priests as alleged sexual predators

PAPANTLA (MEXICO)
LA Times [Los Angeles CA]

September 15, 2018

By Peter Rowe and Kristina Davis

Read original article

Reporting from San Diego —  

The clerical sexual abuse scandal rocking the Roman Catholic Church hit home Thursday, as the Diocese of San Diego added eight priests to the list of those believed to have molested children.

“This is a response to the terrible moment we are in,” said Bishop Robert McElroy, citing a recent Pennsylvania grand jury report that found 1,000 children there had been molested by Pittsburgh-area priests, and the resignation of Theodore McCarrick, who is accused of sexually assaulting altar boys, seminarians and priests.

“The cascade of emotions that this causes the survivors of the abuse, as well as other people in the pews, has caused a tumult of anger, grief, upset, incomprehension, disillusionment,” McElroy said.

The new names — the Revs. Jose Chavarin, Raymond Etienne, J. Patrick Foley, Michael French, Richard Houck, George Lally and Paolino Montagna, plus Msgr. Mark Medaer — were released in piecemeal fashion, with critical details missing.

This list extends the roster of alleged predator priests established by a landmark legal case that was concluded 11 years ago. On Sept. 7, 2007, the diocese settled 144 claims of child sexual abuse by 48 priests and one lay employee. The payments totaled $198.1 million, the second-largest settlement by a Catholic diocese in the United States.

Thursday’s announcement was prompted by the Pennsylvania grand jury report, the McCarrick case and other recent revelations that have called into question the church’s moral authority and its willingness to honestly address this scandal.

“There is a broad call for transparency,” McElroy said. “When we looked at it, we wanted to meet that as best we could.”

The newly listed priests were accused of abuse since the 2007 settlement, or reported to the diocese earlier in files that had been tucked away or mislaid. They were overlooked until, the bishop said, a recent review of records.

“They never kept good records on this stuff until recently,” McElroy said. “They kept records, but not in a very systematic way.”

The move came the same day the Diocese of San Jose announced that it, too, would release the names of priests “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors by mid-October. San Jose Bishop Patrick J. McGrath also said the diocese had retained a consulting firm to review its sexual abuse records.

Advocates for victims said that revealing the identities of accused predators is a valuable step.

“It makes them more accountable,” said Dr. Marianne Benkert, a La Jolla-based psychiatrist who, with her husband, the late Richard Sipe, studied clerical sexual abuse. “And there are still some victims of these priests here in San Diego. It will give those victims some comfort to see their abusers exposed.”

“Some dioceses are trying to do proactive disclosures, which is great — disclosures are super important,” said Tim Lennon, president of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “But it’s not because of the goodness of their hearts. They want to protect themselves as much as they can.”

This crisis is worldwide, a fact underscored Thursday, when Pope Francis and several top American bishops conferred on McCarrick’s case. The day before, the Vatican announced that the pontiff will convene the world’s bishops for a February 2019 meeting on the protection of minors.

In San Diego, McElroy will embark on a “listening tour” of the diocese, stopping at eight parishes between Oct. 1 and Nov. 5.

“I’ve met with a number of victims,” McElroy said. “They are looking for — they are really looking for the perpetrator to say it to them, but often the perpetrator is dead — so they are looking for the church to say we are truly sorry for this.”

This week, the diocese and other sources issued some details on the eight clerics added to the roster:

The Rev. Jose Chavarin. A native of Mexico, he served at Mary Star of the Sea in La Jolla from 1986 through 1991, while also working as associate pastor at Our Lady of Guadelupe in Calexico (1989-1990) and associate pastor at Lemon Grove’s St. John of the Cross (1990-1991).

On June 20 and 23, 2008, the diocese received reports that Chavarin — then working in San Francisco — had sexually abused three boys while in San Diego. The incidents involved two brothers in 1986 or ’87, and an unrelated boy who was abused between 1985 and 1988.

Confronted with these accusations, Chavarin denied any wrongdoing, then fled to Mexico.

Chavarin’s current whereabouts are unknown.

The Rev. Raymond Etienne. A priest of the Society of the Divine Word, Etienne was an associate pastor at San Bernardino’s St. Anthony parish from 1980 through 1988. He also worked at the Society of the Divine Word seminary in Riverside in the 1960s, where he allegedly sexually assaulted seminarians.

Etienne is deceased, the diocese reports, although officials there could not confirm when or where he died.

The Rev. J. Patrick Foley. Although attached to the San Diego diocese, Foley has been living in Northern California since 1991. In 2010, he was suspended from ministry pending a church trial on charges that he had abused two Sacramento-area boys, whose parents had been friends of the priest.

The canonical trial ended in January 2011 without a clear verdict. “He wasn’t guilty,” said Rodrigo Valdivia, the San Diego diocese’s vice-moderator of the curia, “but that’s not to say he was innocent.” His priestly faculties were restored until McElroy removed them in August 2015.

That hasn’t stopped Foley from advertising on his website as an “Itinerant Papist Preacher,” offering retreats and spiritual counsel. His most recent posting, dated May 18, 2017, is a personal reflection under the heading “Love — and then do as you will.”

This July, he led a “cluster mission” at St. Joseph the Worker in Dubuque, Iowa.

Foley did not return a reporter’s phone call Thursday.

The Rev. Michael French. In 2003, the diocese was alerted that French had abused a boy in 1980. French, who died in 1995, came to San Diego in 1973 to pursue doctoral studies at the California School of Professional Psychology.

In 1975, he was a chaplain at the Benedictine Convent for Perpetual Adoration in San Diego.

A director of Catholic Community Services and diocesan director for Worldwide Marriage Encourage, French met his alleged victim at a social occasion in his parent’s home. There were several reported instances of abuse. The diocese paid a settlement to the alleged victim, who did not press charges in court.

The Rev. Richard Houck. In his long career, Houck served as an assistant priest, an associate pastor, pastor and priest in residence at a series of local parishes — St. Vincent de Paul, St, Charles Borromeo, Our Lady of Angels, St. Charles, St. Didacus and Immaculate Conception, all in San Diego; Most Precious Blood in Chula Vista; and Our Lady of Light in Descanso.

In 1968, he assisted at St. Vincent de Paul, serving alongside another priest whom the diocese would list as a sexual predator in 2008, the Rev. Hugh John Sutton.

While at Most Precious Blood in 1977, he molested a 10-year-old altar boy, according to the diocese. When the victim reported this abuse in 2004, the diocese paid a settlement and the victim did not pursue the matter in court.

Houck died in February 2002.

The Rev. George Lally. As associate pastor at St. Mary in El Centro between September 1970 and February 1972, Lally allegedly molested a boy. A 2002 diocesan report refers to a 1971 agreement to pay college costs for the victim.

“As compensation for having been victimized,” said Valdivia.

The Union-Tribune reported that a man identified as “Ralph S.” sued the diocese, alleging that Lally had abused him when he was an altar boy at St. Mary. “Ralph S.” told reporters that he had reported the crime to St. Mary’s pastor, and Lally was then transferred.

Lally, who left the priesthood in 1979, is married and living in San Clemente.

His wife, a former nun and longtime Catholic administrator and educator, was hired in 1983 as principal of Holy Family School. Within a month, she was terminated. She sued the diocese.

That case was dismissed in 1990.

Msgr. Mark Medaer. While pastor of Our Lady of Guadelupe in Calexico, Medaer allegedly molested a boy in 1982. Roughly 20 years later, the victim reported this abuse to the diocese, which agreed to pay for his counseling.

Diocesan records show the counseling began in March 2002 and continued at least through November 2002.

Medaer died in June 1993.

The Rev. Paolino Montagna. Attached to the diocese for less than three years, Montagna was the associate pastor at El Centro’s Our Lady of Guadalupe (August 1972-October 1973) and then held the same position at a parish in Calexico with the same name, Our Lady of Guadalupe (October 1973-January 1975).

He was accused of molesting two girls. The diocese was unable to say when or where.

Montagna, who left the diocese in January 1975, is believed to be dead.

The new revelations were dismissed by SNAP’s Southern California liaison, Esther Miller, as “so much smoke and mirrors.” Benkert, the La Jolla psychiatrist and a former nun, said the scandal “seems to be kind of unending.”

“People can understand to what lengths the church has gone to try to protect itself as an institution,” she said.

McElroy, though, argued that new measures taken by the diocese — including a civilian review board for sexual abuse complaints, and a prevention program in Catholic school curriculum — have been effective, to a point.

“I’ve been here as bishop three and a half years and in that time we have not had a live case of a priest abusing minors,” he said.

“But at the same time, we’ve had four cases involving lay persons.”

Yet others are sure that more reports of clerical abuse will be forthcoming.

“They’re telling me that there are now 56 priests who are credibly accused of sexual abuse in San Diego?” asked Patrick Wall, a former priest who now investigates clerical sexual misconduct for a Minnesota law firm, Jeff Anderson and Associates. “I believe that number to be extremely short.”

Times staff writer Christine Mai-Duc contributed to this report.


UPDATES:

5:25 p.m., Sept. 15: This article was updated with plans by the San Jose diocese to release names.

This article was originally published at 6:25 a.m. on Sept. 14.

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.

El cura Julián Ruiz será enjuiciado por ciberacoso contra un menor

SANTIAGO DEL ESTERO (ARGENTINA)
Nuevo Diario Web [Santiago del Estero, Argentina]

September 15, 2018

Read original article

El fiscal Dr. Gabriel Gómez planteará la calificativa de abuso sexual con acceso.

El cura párroco de la localidad de Pampa de los Guanacos —departamento Copo—, Julián Ruiz, será enjuiciado las próximas semanas por el supuesto delito de grooming, tras haber sido denunciado por un adolescente por un supuesto abuso sexual. 

El caso que fue instruido desde el año 2015, por el fiscal Dr. Gabriel Gómez, se inició a partir de una denuncia que realizó la familiar de un jovencito de 17 años, quien residía en Monte Quemado (departamento Copo). El menor habría manifestado que mantenía una relación con el cura. 

El cura Ruiz fue detenido en cercanías de la terminal de Pampa de los Guanacos y fue imputado, en primera instancia, de los delitos de “abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante con acceso carnal calificado y agravado por la guarda y condición de sacerdote” contra cuatro menores. La causa dio inicio el 14 de mayo de ese año. 

Tras haber permanecido detenido durante 15 meses, en agosto de 2016, la Cámara de Apelaciones y de Control en lo Penal decidió disminuir la cantidad y gravedad del delito y confirmó únicamente el procesamiento del religioso con la calificativa de grooming o acoso virtual a menores. De inmediato, ante el fallo judicial a favor de Ruiz, el sacerdote quedó en libertad. 

Ayer, mientras la sociedad de Pampa de los Guanacos aún se encuentra conmocionada por el aberrante hecho que se le adjudicaría al cura Ruiz, se conoció que el fiscal Dr. Gómez realizó la requisitoria fiscal de elevación a juicio de la causa. Tras la audiencia efectuada por el fiscal, la causa está lista para ser llevada a un juicio, que se realizará las próximas semanas.

Habrían tenido un romance

La causa judicial, en primera instancia, por abuso sexual con acceso carnal en contra del cura Julián Ruiz, se inició el 14 de mayo de 2015. Una mujer de Monte Quemado se presentó en la Comisaría 22ª y denunció que su sobrino habría sido sometido sexualmente por el religioso. 

El adolescente que tenía 17 años habría iniciado una relación sentimental con el cura, luego de que se conocieran a través de Facebook e intercambiaran sus números de celular. 

A través de mensajes de textos, habrían mantenido una relación afectiva que, posteriormente, se habría concretado con el encuentro sexual. La víctima que en la actualidad tiene 20 años indicó que habría otros menores que mantenían una relación con Ruiz.

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

In rare move, San Diego diocese names eight priests as alleged sexual predators

CHIHUAHUA (MEXICO)
LA Times [Los Angeles CA]

September 15, 2018

By Peter Rowe and Kristina Davis

Read original article

Reporting from San Diego —  

The clerical sexual abuse scandal rocking the Roman Catholic Church hit home Thursday, as the Diocese of San Diego added eight priests to the list of those believed to have molested children.

“This is a response to the terrible moment we are in,” said Bishop Robert McElroy, citing a recent Pennsylvania grand jury report that found 1,000 children there had been molested by Pittsburgh-area priests, and the resignation of Theodore McCarrick, who is accused of sexually assaulting altar boys, seminarians and priests.

“The cascade of emotions that this causes the survivors of the abuse, as well as other people in the pews, has caused a tumult of anger, grief, upset, incomprehension, disillusionment,” McElroy said.

The new names — the Revs. Jose Chavarin, Raymond Etienne, J. Patrick Foley, Michael French, Richard Houck, George Lally and Paolino Montagna, plus Msgr. Mark Medaer — were released in piecemeal fashion, with critical details missing.

This list extends the roster of alleged predator priests established by a landmark legal case that was concluded 11 years ago. On Sept. 7, 2007, the diocese settled 144 claims of child sexual abuse by 48 priests and one lay employee. The payments totaled $198.1 million, the second-largest settlement by a Catholic diocese in the United States.

Thursday’s announcement was prompted by the Pennsylvania grand jury report, the McCarrick case and other recent revelations that have called into question the church’s moral authority and its willingness to honestly address this scandal.

“There is a broad call for transparency,” McElroy said. “When we looked at it, we wanted to meet that as best we could.”

The newly listed priests were accused of abuse since the 2007 settlement, or reported to the diocese earlier in files that had been tucked away or mislaid. They were overlooked until, the bishop said, a recent review of records.

“They never kept good records on this stuff until recently,” McElroy said. “They kept records, but not in a very systematic way.”

The move came the same day the Diocese of San Jose announced that it, too, would release the names of priests “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors by mid-October. San Jose Bishop Patrick J. McGrath also said the diocese had retained a consulting firm to review its sexual abuse records.

Advocates for victims said that revealing the identities of accused predators is a valuable step.

“It makes them more accountable,” said Dr. Marianne Benkert, a La Jolla-based psychiatrist who, with her husband, the late Richard Sipe, studied clerical sexual abuse. “And there are still some victims of these priests here in San Diego. It will give those victims some comfort to see their abusers exposed.”

“Some dioceses are trying to do proactive disclosures, which is great — disclosures are super important,” said Tim Lennon, president of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “But it’s not because of the goodness of their hearts. They want to protect themselves as much as they can.”

This crisis is worldwide, a fact underscored Thursday, when Pope Francis and several top American bishops conferred on McCarrick’s case. The day before, the Vatican announced that the pontiff will convene the world’s bishops for a February 2019 meeting on the protection of minors.

In San Diego, McElroy will embark on a “listening tour” of the diocese, stopping at eight parishes between Oct. 1 and Nov. 5.

“I’ve met with a number of victims,” McElroy said. “They are looking for — they are really looking for the perpetrator to say it to them, but often the perpetrator is dead — so they are looking for the church to say we are truly sorry for this.”

This week, the diocese and other sources issued some details on the eight clerics added to the roster:

The Rev. Jose Chavarin. A native of Mexico, he served at Mary Star of the Sea in La Jolla from 1986 through 1991, while also working as associate pastor at Our Lady of Guadelupe in Calexico (1989-1990) and associate pastor at Lemon Grove’s St. John of the Cross (1990-1991).

On June 20 and 23, 2008, the diocese received reports that Chavarin — then working in San Francisco — had sexually abused three boys while in San Diego. The incidents involved two brothers in 1986 or ’87, and an unrelated boy who was abused between 1985 and 1988.

Confronted with these accusations, Chavarin denied any wrongdoing, then fled to Mexico.

Chavarin’s current whereabouts are unknown.

The Rev. Raymond Etienne. A priest of the Society of the Divine Word, Etienne was an associate pastor at San Bernardino’s St. Anthony parish from 1980 through 1988. He also worked at the Society of the Divine Word seminary in Riverside in the 1960s, where he allegedly sexually assaulted seminarians.

Etienne is deceased, the diocese reports, although officials there could not confirm when or where he died.

The Rev. J. Patrick Foley. Although attached to the San Diego diocese, Foley has been living in Northern California since 1991. In 2010, he was suspended from ministry pending a church trial on charges that he had abused two Sacramento-area boys, whose parents had been friends of the priest.

The canonical trial ended in January 2011 without a clear verdict. “He wasn’t guilty,” said Rodrigo Valdivia, the San Diego diocese’s vice-moderator of the curia, “but that’s not to say he was innocent.” His priestly faculties were restored until McElroy removed them in August 2015.

That hasn’t stopped Foley from advertising on his website as an “Itinerant Papist Preacher,” offering retreats and spiritual counsel. His most recent posting, dated May 18, 2017, is a personal reflection under the heading “Love — and then do as you will.”

This July, he led a “cluster mission” at St. Joseph the Worker in Dubuque, Iowa.

Foley did not return a reporter’s phone call Thursday.

The Rev. Michael French. In 2003, the diocese was alerted that French had abused a boy in 1980. French, who died in 1995, came to San Diego in 1973 to pursue doctoral studies at the California School of Professional Psychology.

In 1975, he was a chaplain at the Benedictine Convent for Perpetual Adoration in San Diego.

A director of Catholic Community Services and diocesan director for Worldwide Marriage Encourage, French met his alleged victim at a social occasion in his parent’s home. There were several reported instances of abuse. The diocese paid a settlement to the alleged victim, who did not press charges in court.

The Rev. Richard Houck. In his long career, Houck served as an assistant priest, an associate pastor, pastor and priest in residence at a series of local parishes — St. Vincent de Paul, St, Charles Borromeo, Our Lady of Angels, St. Charles, St. Didacus and Immaculate Conception, all in San Diego; Most Precious Blood in Chula Vista; and Our Lady of Light in Descanso.

In 1968, he assisted at St. Vincent de Paul, serving alongside another priest whom the diocese would list as a sexual predator in 2008, the Rev. Hugh John Sutton.

While at Most Precious Blood in 1977, he molested a 10-year-old altar boy, according to the diocese. When the victim reported this abuse in 2004, the diocese paid a settlement and the victim did not pursue the matter in court.

Houck died in February 2002.

The Rev. George Lally. As associate pastor at St. Mary in El Centro between September 1970 and February 1972, Lally allegedly molested a boy. A 2002 diocesan report refers to a 1971 agreement to pay college costs for the victim.

“As compensation for having been victimized,” said Valdivia.

The Union-Tribune reported that a man identified as “Ralph S.” sued the diocese, alleging that Lally had abused him when he was an altar boy at St. Mary. “Ralph S.” told reporters that he had reported the crime to St. Mary’s pastor, and Lally was then transferred.

Lally, who left the priesthood in 1979, is married and living in San Clemente.

His wife, a former nun and longtime Catholic administrator and educator, was hired in 1983 as principal of Holy Family School. Within a month, she was terminated. She sued the diocese.

That case was dismissed in 1990.

Msgr. Mark Medaer. While pastor of Our Lady of Guadelupe in Calexico, Medaer allegedly molested a boy in 1982. Roughly 20 years later, the victim reported this abuse to the diocese, which agreed to pay for his counseling.

Diocesan records show the counseling began in March 2002 and continued at least through November 2002.

Medaer died in June 1993.

The Rev. Paolino Montagna. Attached to the diocese for less than three years, Montagna was the associate pastor at El Centro’s Our Lady of Guadalupe (August 1972-October 1973) and then held the same position at a parish in Calexico with the same name, Our Lady of Guadalupe (October 1973-January 1975).

He was accused of molesting two girls. The diocese was unable to say when or where.

Montagna, who left the diocese in January 1975, is believed to be dead.

The new revelations were dismissed by SNAP’s Southern California liaison, Esther Miller, as “so much smoke and mirrors.” Benkert, the La Jolla psychiatrist and a former nun, said the scandal “seems to be kind of unending.”

“People can understand to what lengths the church has gone to try to protect itself as an institution,” she said.

McElroy, though, argued that new measures taken by the diocese — including a civilian review board for sexual abuse complaints, and a prevention program in Catholic school curriculum — have been effective, to a point.

“I’ve been here as bishop three and a half years and in that time we have not had a live case of a priest abusing minors,” he said.

“But at the same time, we’ve had four cases involving lay persons.”

Yet others are sure that more reports of clerical abuse will be forthcoming.

“They’re telling me that there are now 56 priests who are credibly accused of sexual abuse in San Diego?” asked Patrick Wall, a former priest who now investigates clerical sexual misconduct for a Minnesota law firm, Jeff Anderson and Associates. “I believe that number to be extremely short.”

Times staff writer Christine Mai-Duc contributed to this report.


UPDATES:

5:25 p.m., Sept. 15: This article was updated with plans by the San Jose diocese to release names.

This article was originally published at 6:25 a.m. on Sept. 14.

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.

Day before Cupich talks, Catholics weigh in on the latest on sex-abuse scandal

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

September 14, 2018

By Almudena Rincon

A day before Cardinal Blase Cupich is expected to address the latest in the Catholic Church’s sex-abuse scandal, local Catholics and those visiting Chicago shared their thoughts about how Pope Francis and others in leadership have responded to the ongoing crisis.

Here’s what some of them shared Friday as they stood outside Holy Name Cathedral:

Adriana Ramos, 24, Chicago: “I think they should’ve stepped up to the plate and really been true pillars of the community and (said), ‘Hey, you know what? This is what’s going on. This should not be going on at all. This is what we can do to prevent from situations like these from happening again.’ … But at the end of the day, we’re all humans, we all make human errors.”

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One of the first whistleblowers on sex abuse in Catholic Church

IRELAND
Irish Times

September 14, 2018

Psychotherapist and former Benedictine monk who knew that ‘all trails led to Rome’

His major book, A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy, concluded that 6 per cent of priests (later revised to 9 per cent) had had sexual contact with minors and that at least a third of clergy were homosexuals.

For years his research work was called into question by the American hierarchy, but he has been posthumously vindicated with the removal from ministry and resignation of retired US cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Archbishop of Washington DC, followed by the shocking findings of more than 301 children being raped over 70 years by clergy in six dioceses in Pennsylvania. Sipe was critical of how Pope Benedict XVI, in his 2010 apostolic letter to the Catholics of Ireland in the wake of the Murphy report, ignored Rome’s culpability and attributed failures by bishops in the Dublin archdiocese to their ignoring canon law.

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Catholic Church’s sex-abuse crisis a lingering cloud in Providence

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

September 14, 2018

By Tom Mooney

Tremors from the escalating clergy sex-abuse crisis now shaking the Catholic Church’s Vatican hierarchy were evident Friday in a Providence cathedral, in a diocese where leaders confronted a wave of sex-abuse cases almost 20 years ago and yearn to move beyond what they say is the past.

Yet as more allegations emerge elsewhere — the pope ignoring warnings about a prominent cardinal; a Pennsylvania grand jury report that 300 priests had abused more than 1,000 children over decades — escaping Rhode Island’s own dark history is proving difficult, local church officials concede.

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Cardinal Wuerl says he’s ready to ‘step aside’ so the Catholic Church can heal

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

September 14, 2018

By Natasha Lindstrom

Cardinal Donald Wuerl told parishioners Friday that he is repenting for the “wounds that were caused by my bad judgments or failures” as he prepares to discuss his resignation with Pope Francis.

Wuerl — the archbishop of Washington and former Pittsburgh bishop entangled in two far-reaching child sex abuse scandals — introduced a six-week “Season of Healing” during a special Mass at the Cathedral of Saint Matthew the Apostle in Washington, D.C.

During the homily portion of the service, Wuerl said that he hopes that all church leaders will demonstrate transparency as the Roman Catholic Church moves away “from the darkness of sin and failure — abuse and shame

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Va. Catholics gather in prayer, share thoughts on abuse allegations after Mass of Atonement

RICHMOND (VA)
Channel 8 (ABC affiliate)

September 14, 2018

By Sierra Fox

[VIDEO]

Richmond bishop organizes Mass in wake of Pennsylvania grand jury report

The bishop of Richmond’s Catholic Diocese held a “Mass of Atonement” on Friday at the Catholic Church of Sacred Heart to pray for victims of sex abuse.

In the most recent church sex scandal in Pennsylvania, decades of abuse and cover-ups were uncovered.

Catholics from across Virginia gathered in Richmond for an opportunity to pray for victims of abuse and to pray for church leaders seeking forgiveness for their sins and failures.

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Pope Francis meets with U.S. Catholic leaders in Rome amid ongoing sex abuse scandal

ROME (ITALY)
CBS News

September 13, 2018

By Seth Doane

Some of the highest ranking Catholic leaders from the U.S. met with Pope Francis to discuss the priest sex abuse crisis that has rocked the church. The U.S. bishops said Pope Francis “listened deeply from the heart” in their discussions but they offered few details and no “next steps.”

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the head of all U.S. bishops, pushed for this meeting and wants a Vatican investigation into how disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick rose to the highest levels of the church despite allegations of sexual misconduct. But now DiNardo himself is accused of allowing a predator priest to remain in his own archdiocese in Texas.

In a statement, the archdiocese explained that one of the cases against the accused priest was dropped years ago by the minor’s family, and a second case brought last month was taken “seriously” and reported to authorities.

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The evil of clericalism

UNITED STATES
Global Sisters Report in National Catholic Reporter

August 31, 2018

By Nicole Trahan

Since I was in high school, praying with Scripture has been one of my favorite ways to pray. I read and meditate on the readings of the day and draw from them challenge, edification, questions, and/or calls to conversion. Sometimes the fruit of my meditation is obscure. Other times, the message is clear as a cloudless sky.

On Wednesday, Aug. 22, the message of the first reading, from Ezekiel 34, hit me hard. Not because of its challenging words for my life, but because of the forceful message for our church at this time:

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The clerical church in search of its soul

UNITED STATES
Global Sisters Report in National Catholic Reporter

August 27, 2018

By Nancy Sylvester

It is difficult to find the words to capture what I feel as the report of the 18-month investigation of sexual abuse by Catholic priests in Pennsylvania is revealed. The number of priests — more than 300 — and the number of children abused — over 1,000 — is staggering.

In the victims’ testimonies, one feels the pain and the shame even these many years later. The magnitude of the violation is hard to imagine when the victim sees the abuser as a representative of God.

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Cardinal Dolan says it’s not about Viganò v. Francis but right v. wrong

NEW YORK (NY)
Crux

September 13, 2018

Christopher White

Recent revelations and accusations related to clerical sexual abuse have been “a disaster, one crisis after another” for the Catholic Church, according to Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, and have jeopardized its moral authority to speak on other issues such as the sanctity of human life, immigration and the environment.

In an interview on Thursday with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour, the archbishop of New York said the latest rounds of abuse scandals have been “nauseating” and “diabolical,” although he hopes they can ultimately be a “cause for healing.”

In June, former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick was credibly accused of abusing an altar boy while serving as a priest in the archdiocese of New York, prompting a wave of new allegations spanning several decades from seminarians who said they were abused by the former archbishop of Newark and Washington.

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For survivors of priest child sex abuse, what would real justice look like?

NEW YORK (NY)
Christian Science Monitor

September 14, 2018

By Harry Bruinius

WHY WE WROTE THIS
The question overlays every detailing of the sexual abuse of children by trusted spiritual figures: How can there be justice for such a crime? We asked several of those now-grown children what, exactly, ‘justice’ would mean for them.

There are crimes for which justice can seem like a remote concept.

There are crimes, like the sexual abuse of children, from which many turn away – using language like “unspeakable,” “unimaginable,” or even “inhuman.” Even survivors create their mental shields from the crimes they endured.

“This form of abuse is really completely and utterly spiritually annihilating,” says Christa Brown, a survivor of abuse at the hands of a Baptist minister decades ago, and an author who now lives in Colorado. “It’s been called ‘soul murder,’ and I think that’s a very apt word for it.”

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New director named, former leader returns to SNAP after legal threats, leadership upheaval

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

September 15, 2018

By Nassim Benchaabane

The St. Louis-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests named a new executive director Friday following a turbulent year that saw a serious legal threat and resignations of longtime leaders.

Zach Hiner, who began his eight-year career in child abuse and neglect prevention as an assistant to SNAP founder Barbara Blaine and longtime executive director David Clohessy, will take the reins Sept. 24 as head of the nation’s oldest and largest self-help group for survivors of clergy sexual abuse.

In a statement sent to SNAP members, Hiner said he was returning to the group at a “critical time.”

“Every day, more and more people are becoming aware of the realities of just how common abuse becomes when we put institutions over people, whether that institution is a church, a university, or a Hollywood studio,” said Hiner, former communications director with Prevent Child Abuse America.

“For years SNAP has led the way in providing a voice to the voiceless and I am looking forward to increasing our reach, updating our messaging and helping SNAP reach more people than we ever thought would be possible.”

Meanwhile, Clohessy, the longtime public face of SNAP, has returned as the group’s spokesman in St. Louis. He had stepped down in December 2016 after 29 years as executive director.

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Former priest named in grand jury report found working at counseling center

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Channel 4

September 10, 2018

By Paul Van Osdol

Action News Investigates has learned a former priest accused of molesting boys found a job as a social worker at a counseling center, working near children.

William B. Yockey was a priest at several parishes in the Pittsburgh area before leaving the priesthood in the wake of child sex abuse allegations.

Yockey did not answer questions when Action News Investigates found him at the Community Counseling Center in Ashtabula, Ohio, where he was working as a therapist.

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Catholic Diocese of Erie’s abuse probe cost $4 million

ERIE (PA)
GoErie.com

September 15, 2018

Funds paid for law firm to conduct investigation that led to list of accused priests and laypeople.

Firm also updated child-protection policy. No parish funds used, bishop says.

The Catholic Diocese of Erie’s unprecedented internal investigation of clergy sexual abuse has come at a large cost: $4 million.

Erie Catholic Bishop Lawrence Persico said that is how much the 13-county diocese has spent to have a law firm investigate the claims of abuse, going back to the 1940s, as well as revise the diocese’s child-protection policy and represent the diocese during the two-year statewide grand jury probe that ended with the release of the sweeping 884-page report on Aug. 14.

The $4 million is separate from the $750,000 the diocese said it has given to abuse victims over the past several decades.

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September 14, 2018

Caso Quiroz: Fiscalía Sur toma declaración en calidad de imputado al ex obispo castrense, Pablo Lizama

[Monsignor testifies in case of former military bishop Quiroz]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

By Tamara Cerna

El antecesor en el cargo del obispo emérito de Osorno, Juan Barros, está siendo interrogado por un presunto encubrimiento respecto a los abusos que habría cometido el ex capellán de la FACh.

En 14 días, la Fiscalía Metropolitana Sur ha concretado en tres oportunidades una diligencia que apunta a investigar los presuntos abusos sexuales que habría cometido el ex capellán de la FACh de Iquique, Pedro Quiroz Fernández. A fines de agosto, el sacerdote Cristián Precht Bañados llegó hasta la Brigada de Delitos Sexuales y de Menores de la Policía de Investigaciones (PDI) para declarar en calidad de imputado por un presunto encubrimiento en el caso. El 6 de septiembre lo hizo bajo el mismo contexto, el obispo emérito de Osorno, Juan Barros; y hoy, el monseñor Pablo Lizama Riquelme.

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Fiscalía recogió evidencia por acusaciones a Ezzati durante allanamiento en Concepción

[Prosecutor’s office collected evidence for accusations against Ezzati during raid in Concepción]

CHILE
BioBioChile

September 13, 2018

By Yerko Roa and Óscar Valenzuela

La Fiscalía recogió evidencia por las acusaciones de encubrimiento contra el arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati, este jueves durante el allanamiento del Arzobispado de Concepción. “Parte de las indagatorias que hemos realizado acá dicen relación con dichos cargos”, expresó el persecutor a cargo del procedimiento, Sergio Moya.

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Denunciante de obispo de San Felipe asegura que laicos forman parte de “red de protección”

[San Felipe whistleblower says lay people are part of “the network of concealment”]

CHILE
El Mostrador

September 14, 2018

En tanto, el ex seminarista, también denunciante del presbítero Humberto Enríquez ante el obispado de Valparaíso, acusó que la diócesis de San Felipe es el lugar ideal para esconder este tipo de delincuentes porque “es como el patio trasero de la diócesis de Valparaíso.

En el marco de la investigación, en manos de la Fiscalía, en contra del obispo de San Felipe, Cristián Contreras Molina, por delitos “contra el orden de las familias, la moralidad pública y contra la integridad sexual” , el denunciante y ex seminarista Mauricio Pulgar, se refirió al caso y dijo, con respecto a lo que está pasando, que “lamentablemente la iglesia Católica perdió la oportunidad de haber reconocido los abusos, porque hasta el día de hoy habla de víctimas en
general. Ahora, lo que nos queda, es que la iglesia asuma los delitos y las consecuencias”.

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Administrador apostólico pide que se respete el principio de confidencialidad por allanamiento de obispados

[After raids on church offices, Catholic administrator asks that confidentiality be respected]

CHILE
Publimetro

September 13, 2018

By Daniela Pinto

Pedro Ossandón, administrador de la diócesis de Valparaíso, estuvo presente durante el procedimiento.

“Lo que cabe aquí es recordar dos principios fundamentales. Uno es el principio de colaboración con la justicia. Estamos comprometidos con la verdad y la justicia, y lo que más nos interesa es avanzar en esa materia. Y lo segundo es el principio de confidencialidad, o sea que hay una confianza que han hecho muchas personas, como testigos, como denunciantes y, si es el caso, como víctima, en los tribunales eclesiásticos. Entonces, la mayoría de esas personas piden confidencialidad”.

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Leaked German study documents thousands of sexual abuse cases

BERLIN (GERMANY)
Catholic News Agency via Catholic World

September 12, 2018

A study commissioned by the German bishops’ conference reports the sexual abuse of thousands of children in that country over a period of 70 years. The report was scheduled to be released later this month, but was leaked Wednesday to German media.

The report was commissioned by the German bishops’ conference and scheduled to be presented on Sept. 25 at the autumn plenary session of the German bishops, as CNA Deutsch reported.

Its methodology is substantially different from that of the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report.

The study documents sexual offenses against “3677 predominantly male minors” between 1946 and 2014, Der Spiegel reported

“1670 clerics are accused of the deeds,” the German magazine reported, saying researchers had “examined and evaluated more than 38,000 personnel and other files from 27 German dioceses.”

Der Spiegel reported that in many cases evidence was found by researchers to have have been “destroyed or manipulated.”

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Chilean prosecutors raid four dioceses in ongoing abuse investigation

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service via National Catholic Reporter

September 14, 2018

By Junno Arocho Esteves

Chilean prosecutors raided four dioceses in the country as they continue a nationwide investigation into cases of clerical sexual abuse.

Lead prosecutor Emiliano Arias ordered search-and-seizure operations Sept. 13 of the diocesan offices of Osorno, Valparaiso, Concepcion and Chillan. This was the third raid authorized by Arias.

After the raid, a spokesman for Arias told the Reuters news agency that information collected from previous raids conducted in Santiago and Rancagua in June led to the search operations in the other dioceses.

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Priests who abuse kids will suffer wrath of God

FAIRBANKS (AL)
Daily News-Miner

September 14, 2018

By Robin Barrett

I recently heard a hauntingly beautiful song that I hadn’t heard in years. It was the song “Africa,” by the group Toto, recorded in the early 1980s. As some songs do, it kept playing in my mind long after I listened to it. Coincidentally, the night after I heard it, I saw several references to the song on Twitter. This made me more interested in the song, so I watched the group sing it in a 35th anniversary live concert on YouTube. It is really a magnificent song, and has been meaningful to later generations from all over the world who weren’t even born when it was first recorded.

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Policía ha allanado 16 edificios de la Iglesia Católica durante 2018

[Police have raided 16 Catholic Church buildings during 2018]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 13, 2018

By K. Hillmann and B. Velásquez

Fiscal Emiliano Arias ordenó este jueves incautaciones simultáneas, por casos de eventuales abusos, en diócesis de Valparaíso, Concepción, Osorno y Chillán.

Pasadas las 11 horas de este jueves, el fiscal Sergio Moya junto a personal de OS-9 de Carabineros llegaron hasta el Arzobispado de Concepción, en la Región del Biobío, para allanar las dependencias gracias a una orden de entrada y registro dispuesta por el Tribunal de Garantía de Rancagua, en marco de la investigación que lleva el Ministerio Público en contra de sacerdotes producto de delitos de presuntos abusos.

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Obispo de San Felipe por investigación en su contra: “Cualquiera puede decir lo que quiera”

[Bishop of San Felipe on investigation against him: “Anybody can say what he wants”]

CHILE
La Tercera

By J. Matus and S. Rodríguez

Cristián Contreras Molina es uno de los siete prelados indagados por hechos ligados a supuestos abusos. Sería parte de la tercera aceptación de renuncias del Papa.

“Lo primero que debo decir es que la información que tengo es por el diario La Tercera. Punto dos, no tengo ninguna noticia de parte de la Fiscalía de San Felipe ni de Rancagua”. Así se refirió el obispo de San Felipe, Cristián Contreras Molina, a la investigación que el Ministerio Público lleva en su contra, luego de que L.A.C.C., de 56 años, lo acusara de un eventual delito de connotación sexual.

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Tribunal mantiene prisión preventiva para excanciller del Arzobispado de Santiago

[Tribunal upholds preventive detention for former chancellor of the Archdiocese of Santiago]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 14, 2018

By C. Soto and L. Zapata

El Tribunal de Rancagua se encuentra revisando la prisión preventiva de Óscar Muñoz, quien está siendo investigado por los delitos de abuso sexual reiterado y estupro.

A las 9.00 de esta mañana, el Juzgado de Garantía de Rancagua comenzó a revisar las medidas cautelares en contra del sacerdote Oscar Muñoz, ex canciller del arzobispado, que se encuentra imputado por haber cometido presuntos delitos sexuales en contra de menores de edad.

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Obispado de Puerto Montt abre investigación previa contra dos sacerdotes

[Two priests in Puerto Montt are the focus of sex abuse investigations]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 14, 2018

By Carlos Reyes

Se dispuso, en ambos casos, la suspensión de todas las tareas pastorales, así como la celebración pública de oficios religiosos. Uno de los denunciados actualmente está fuera de Chile por “motivos familiares”.

El obispado de Puerto Montt informó esta jornada el inicio de dos investigaciones previas contra religiosos de la diócesis. El primer caso se trata de una denuncia recibida el 31 de agosto contra el presbítero Darío Nicolás Serrano por presuntos abusos sexuales contra menores de edad. “Se ha iniciado una investigación previa para determinar la verosimilitud de los hechos denunciados, que habrían ocurrido en la década de los 90”, dijeron mediante un comunicado.

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Suma y sigue la crisis de la iglesia católica: dos sacerdotes de Puerto Montt denunciados por abuso sexual

[Two priests of Puerto Montt accused of sexual abuse]

CHILE
Publimetro

September 14, 2018

By Aton (news agency)

El propio arzobispado informó de las investigaciones.

El administrador apostólico de la Arquidiócesis de Puerto Montt, Ricardo Morales Galindo, informó a través de una declaración pública del inicio de dos investigaciones previas, a raíz de denuncias por presunto abuso sexual a menores de edad, por parte de religiosos de la capital regional de Los Lagos.

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Iglesia: Nuevo choque de competencia entre fiscales Arias y Guzmán por investigaciones de abusos sexuales en obispado castrense

[The clash of dual investigations into clergy sex abuse in the military]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 14, 2018

By Ivonne Toro

La duplicación de funciones y el enfrentamiento entre Guzmán y Arias –que es reconocido como tal por cercanos a los dos persecutores- podría, afirman fuentes consultadas por La Tercera PM, perjudicar el curso de las investigaciones. El problema es que ambos consideran que han sido mandatados directamente por Abbott para indagar en los archivos militares.

El lunes los fiscales regionales de la zona metropolitana Sur, Raúl Guzmán, y de O’Higgins, Emiliano Arias, entregaron a la Fiscalía Nacional el informe que debían elaborar acerca de sus respectivas investigaciones eclesiásticas luego de que ambos chocaran en pesquisas al exobispo Juan Barros, quien es indagado por Arias en cuanto a su responsabilidad como eventual encubridor de delitos sexuales ocurridos en el obispado castrense y en Osorno cuando se desempeñó en esta región. Y por Guzmán, por razones similares. Este último lo interrogó hace una semana.

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Obispo Pablo Lizama declara ante fiscales Guzmán y Adasme por caso del excapellán Pedro Quiroz

[Bishop Pablo Lizama testifies in case of Pedro Quiroz, former military chaplain]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 13, 2018

By Carlos Reyes

La citación fue realizada en calidad de imputado, por su presunta responsabilidad en el encubrimiento de los abusos sexuales que habrían sido cometidos por el ex capellán castrense, Pedro Quiroz.

Hasta dependencias de la Brigada Investigadora de Delitos Sexuales (Brisexme) de la PDI llegó esta tarde el obispo emérito de Antofagasta Pablo Lizama, para declarar en calidad de imputado, por su presunta responsabilidad en el encubrimiento de los abusos sexuales que habrían sido cometidos por el ex capellán castrense, Pedro Quiroz.

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Los pecados del cardenal: se le estrecha el cerco a Errázuriz

[The sins of the cardinal: focus on Errázuriz intensifies]

CHILE
El Mostrador

September 14, 2018

By Alejandra Carmona López

Después de casi dos meses de investigación, el Arzobispado de Santiago debería enviar en los próximos días a Roma el resultado de su indagatoria sobre la denuncia en contra del presbítero Jorge Laplagne Aguirre, que –según fuentes de El Mostrador– ya fue calificada como verosímil. De ser así, no solo el sacerdote acusado tendrá que enfrentarse a la justicia eclesiástica, además de la civil, sino también el círculo que ignoró sus denuncias, donde está lo más alto de la jerarquía católica chilena.

El 13 de julio pasado, el Arzobispado de Santiago instruyó una investigación previa en contra del presbítero Jorge Laplagne Aguirre. La solicitud venía de una esperanza antigua de justicia. Javier Molina Huerta, quien antes de cumplir 18años fue cercano a Laplagne e incluso se convirtió en su acólito, había denunciado por segunda vez los abusos que sufrió.

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Pelosi calls for ‘complete change’ in Catholic Church after widespread abuse

WASHINGTON, D.C. (U.S.)
The Hill

September 14, 2018

By Mike Lillis

Pelosi calls for ‘complete change’ in Catholic Church after widespread abuse

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) on Friday called for a complete overhaul in the way the Catholic Church confronts sexual abuse.

Pelosi became the latest prominent Catholic lawmaker to condemn the Vatican’s response amid reports of rampant sexual misconduct by clergy in the United States and beyond.

But Pelosi, who like Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) is a devout Catholic, said she’s hopeful that Pope Francis and other church leaders will fix the problems from within, deflecting the notion that Congress should play any kind of oversight role.

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Admitted abuser still serves as professor, priestly status unknown

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

September 12, 2018

For Michael Bland, as for many victims of clerical sexual misconduct, this summer’s relentless news of abuse and cover-up in the U.S. church has reopened painful wounds.

And while many Catholics are demanding to know “who knew what and when” about retired Washington archbishop Theodore McCarrick, Bland says church officials do know this: His abuser continues to teach canon law at a pontifical university.

John Huels has maintained his position as a full professor at Saint Paul University in Ottawa, Canada, even after reports in 2002 that he had — at least temporarily — left his position and would seek laicization.

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China and Vatican to Sign Landmark Deal Over Bishops

ROME (ITALY)
The Wall Street Journal

September 14, 2018

Under agreement, Beijing would recognize pope as head of China’s Catholics in return for Vatican recognition of excommunicated Chinese bishops

China and the Vatican are set to sign a landmark agreement later this month ending a long struggle between Beijing’s Communist rulers and the pope over who controls Catholicism in the world’s most populous country, according to two people familiar with the matter.

Reactions to the deal, which gives both sides a say in appointing the church’s bishops in China, are likely to be sharply divided, with some hailing a diplomatic coup by the Vatican that draws China closer to the West and others warning of an important defeat for the principle of religious freedom.

The controversial deal would include the first official recognition by Beijing that the pope is the head of the Catholic Church in China. In return, Pope Francis would formally recognize seven excommunicated Chinese bishops who were appointed by the Communist government without Vatican approval.

“It is a baby step by China toward recognizing some of the framework of the Western world,” said Francesco Sisci, an Italian who teaches international relations at China Renmin University in Beijing. “It doesn’t go as far as recognizing what we in the West call religious freedom but it is a degree of religious autonomy.”

Others, including some U.S. diplomats, are concerned the pope is conceding a strong influence over church leadership to an avowedly atheist authoritarian regime.

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Catholic Church abuse scandal: Paul Ryan urges ‘total transparency’ as Pope Francis probes allegations

WASHINGTON D.C.
USA TODAY

September 13, 2018

By Nicole Gaudiano

House Speaker Paul Ryan, a prominent Catholic, on Thursday called for transparency and accountability as the church examines a wave of clergy sex scandals and cover-up allegations.

“This needs to be elevated to truth and justice,” the Wisconsin Republican said, responding to a reporter’s question. “That means cleanse the problem with total transparency and total accountability so that the healing can begin, and so that the church can renew itself.”

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Rules Are for Schmucks: Unshackle RICO

UNITED STATES
TheHumanist.com

September 13, 2018

By Luis Granados

Hardly a day has gone by the past month without some major new development in the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal. First it was the demise of Cardinal McCarrick, followed by the stunning revelations of the Pennsylvania grand jury report and some at least moderately plausible allegations against the pope himself, including while he served as an archbishop in Argentina. (The pope is blaming Satan for his troubles.) Now law enforcement officials in seven other states are at different stages of launching Pennsylvania-style investigations into the organized criminal activity and cover-up perpetrated by the Catholic Church.

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Cardinal O’Malley, U.S. Catholic Officials Meet With Pope Francis

BOSTON (MA)
Radio Boston, WBUR Radio

September 13, 2018

By Eve Zuckoff, Jill Kaufman and Chris Citork

[AUDIO]

Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley and other U.S. Catholic officials met with Pope Francis in Rome Thursday to address growing public pressure on the Church to deal more proactively with its continuing sexual abuse scandal.

U.S. bishops requested the meeting after allegations surfaced against former Archbishop Theodore McCarrick. The accusations against McCarrick, who has since resigned, are tied to his time as a bishop in New York.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, former Vatican ambassador to the U.S., has accused church leadership, including Pope Francis, of being aware of the allegations against McCarrick, but helping him to climb the ranks of the church anyway.

The controversy has engulfed Cardinal O’Malley, who apologized for how his office mishandled a 2015 letter from a priest with concerns about McCarrick.

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The Latest: West Virginia AG plans review of allegations

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

September 13, 2018

The latest on the sex abuse and cover-up scandal rocking the Vatican (all times local):

11:45 p.m.

West Virginia’s attorney general says allegations that a U.S. Roman Catholic bishop sexually harassed adults warrant “a close review” by the state.

Attorney General Patrick Morrisey issued a statement Thursday after Pope Francis accepted Bishop Michael Bransfield’s resignation and authorized Baltimore Archbishop William Lori to conduct an investigation into allegations against Bransfield.

Bransfield was the bishop for the West Virginia diocese of Wheeling-Charleston. He has consistently denied any wrongdoing.

Morrisey calls the allegations “disturbing.” He says a review is warranted “to determine how best we can protect West Virginians who might have been victims.”

The Republican Morrisey is seeking to unseat incumbent Democratic U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin in November’s election.

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Alleged victims say officials ignored complaints about ex-Conroe priest

CONROE (TX)
San Antonio Express-News

September 13, 2018

By Massarah Mikati and Robert Downen

Two people who say they were sexually abused by a former Conroe priest nearly two decades ago say the Houston region’s highest-ranking Catholic official failed to properly investigate their alleged assaults.

The accusations against Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, who has led the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston since 2006, come just weeks after DiNardo called for more transparency into the church’s handling of sexual abuse allegations and as he prepares to meet with Pope Francis and two other prelates on Thursday to discuss the controversy.

But a man and a woman who allege they were abused by the priest, Father Manuel La Rosa-Lopez, said in interviews that their claims were not taken seriously by DiNardo.

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Did Pope Francis Say ‘Exposing Pedophile Priests Is Satan’s Work’?

UNITED STATES
Snopes.com

September 14, 2018

A disreputable web site chose to over-simplify and sensationalize a real homily delivered by the pope in September 2018.

CLAIM
In September 2018, Pope Francis said, in effect, that exposing pedophile priests is Satan’s work.

WHAT’S TRUE
In September 2018, Pope Francis said in a homily that “the Great Accuser” (a Biblical name for Satan) was working to “attack bishops” and “uncover their sins” so as to “scandalize the people.” Francis delivered the homily at a time when the Vatican hierarchy (including he himself) is facing multiple allegations of covering up sexual abuse.

WHAT’S FALSE
Pope Francis did not make a general pronouncement about efforts to expose child sexual abuse, but rather a much more ambiguous and enigmatic statement which left itself open to multiple interpretations.

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The Catholic Church Is Breaking Apart. Here’s Why.

UNITED STATES
The Weekly Standard

September 14, 2018

By Jonathan V. Last

Consider what we know, and what has been alleged, about Pope Francis, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, and disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick.

For several decades, Father, Bishop, Archbishop, and eventually Cardinal McCarrick preyed sexually on the priests and seminarians serving under his authority. There are credible allegations he abused boys as young as 11. To the extent that this behavior was a secret within the American church, it was very badly kept. Between 2005 and 2007, three dioceses in New Jersey paid out large cash settlements to keep allegations of abuse by McCarrick quiet. As Bishop Steven Lopes told First Things, “I was a seminarian when Theodore McCarrick was named archbishop of Newark. And he would visit the seminary often, and we all knew.”

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Another priest accused of sexual abuse

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB.com

September 13, 2018

By Daniel Telvock

Diocese of Buffalo says it plans to release more names of priests

The Diocese of Buffalo has placed a retired priest on administrative leave for an allegation of sexually abusing a 12-year-old girl.

Mitchell Garabedian, the Boston-based attorney for the accuser, told News 4 Investigates that his client was abused in the late 1960s, while The Rev. John J. Sardina served at the Coronation of Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Buffalo.

Sardina, 86, now lives at the Msgr. Coniff Residence in Depew with other retired priests. He has been a priest for 68 years.

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Will the Catholic Church Have A Day Of Reckoning?

BOSTON (MA)
Greater Boston, WGBH-TV

September 13, 2018

[See video]

Earlier today, Pope Francis met in Rome with leaders of the American Catholic Church on the issue of sexual abuse among their own ranks. Speaking after the meeting, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo said the church leaders “prayed together for God’s mercy and strength” and that they “look forward to actively continuing [their] discernment together identifying the most effective next steps.”

Unfortunately, the Catholic Church has been trying to identify those next steps for years now — and it seems like every day, disturbing new information comes out. Just today, the Pope authorized an investigation into claims that a West Virginia bishop — whose retirement Pope Francis just happened to accept today as well — sexually harassed adults.This comes in the wake of a Pennsylvania grand jury report documenting the sexual abuse and assaults of more than 1,000 children by hundreds of Catholic priests.

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Montreal’s Archbishop Lépine promises ‘decisive action’ to deal with sex abuse

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Catholic Register

September 12, 2018

In response to the sexual abuse crisis embroiling the universal Church, Montreal’s archbishop has pledged that crimes committed in his diocese will never be covered up.

Writing in the Montreal Gazette on Sept. 8, Archbishop Christian Lépine promised that, in addition to accompanying victims, “we must unequivocally send out a clear message that we will never accept that such crimes could be committed and remain concealed.”

He promised to always “get to the bottom of things in search for the truth” and to ensure that sexual predators never use the Church to “operate secretly.”

Lépine referred to Pope Francis’ “Letter to the People of God” in which he called for all clergy and laypersons to made every effort to prevent abuse and also ensure abuse is not covered up.

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U.S. Leaders of ‘Lacerated’ Catholic Church Meet Pope to Discuss Sex Abuse Crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
NPR

September 13, 2018

By Amy Held

As Pope Francis sat down at the Vatican Thursday with a delegation of U.S. bishops and cardinals to discuss how to gain ground in the sexual abuse crisis engulfing the Catholic Church, fresh scandals emerged on both sides of the Atlantic.

In Germany, a first-of-its kind study leaked to German news outlets found that over the past seven decades, at least 3,677 children have been sexually abused by clergy members there.

Researchers who spent four years studying records and conducting new interviews found that 1,670 priests and other religious leaders were suspected of engaging in abuse — 4.4 percent of the total number of clergy in the country.

And yet researchers repeatedly emphasized throughout the 350-page report that the actual numbers are likely “significantly higher,” German newspaper Die Zeit reports.

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Chilean police raid more offices in church sex abuse investigation

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Reuters

September 13, 2018

Chilean prosecutors and police launched raids on the offices of four bishoprics on Thursday as they continued an investigation into cases of sexual abuse of minors by members of the Roman Catholic Church, the lead prosecutor’s spokesman said.

Chilean prosecutor Emiliano Arias ordered the simultaneous raids in the coastal city of Valparaiso and the southern cities of Concepcion, Chillan and Osorno.

The raids were prompted by information law enforcement officials uncovered in previous searches, said Diego Alcaino, a spokesman for Arias, by text message. He said the information relates to Oscar Munoz, a top aide to Santiago’s archbishop, who faces charges over accusations of sexual abuse of at least five minors.

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Editorial: The Catholic Church’s Unholy Stain

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

September 13, 2018

It’s long past time for penitence and promises on clerical pedophilia. Pope Francis must act.

Pope Francis has summoned senior bishops from around the world for the first global gathering of Roman Catholic leaders to address the crisis of clerical pedophilia. The action is long overdue, and the outcome cannot be yet more apologies and pledges of better behavior. The unending revelations of clerical sexual abuse and cover-ups demand radical, public, convincing systemic change.

The latest barrage of revelations and developments — including a gut-wrenching report by a grand jury in Pennsylvania detailing seven decades of sexual abuse of at least 1,000 children, and probably thousands more, by more than 300 Catholic priests — has left no question that Pope Francis’ legacy will be decided by how he confronts this crisis. It is devouring the Roman church — erasing trust in its hierarchs, dismaying the faithful and blackening its image. To be meaningful, any further response must include openly addressing allegations that the pope was himself party to a cover-up.

The president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, met with the pope on Thursday to demand a full investigation into how the former archbishop of Washington, Theodore McCarrick, rose to high rank despite a long and apparently well-known history of sexual predation. As if to underscore the importance of the meeting, it coincided with an announcement that Pope Francis had accepted the resignation of a bishop in West Virginia, Michael Bransfield, and ordered an investigation into allegations that he had sexually harassed adults.

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Cardinal Who Met With Pope About Sex Abuse Scandal Accused of Mismanaging Priest

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

September 14, 2018

By Matt Stevens

A leading American cardinal who met with Pope Francis on Thursday to discuss the sex abuse crisis that has engulfed the Roman Catholic Church is facing criticism over his management of a priest who was arrested this week on charges of indecency with children.

The cardinal, Daniel N. DiNardo, of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, has been accused of knowing about at least two episodes of sexual abuse by a priest, who was allowed to remain in ministry for years.

During the course of more than a decade as pastor of a Texas church, the priest, Manuel La Rosa-Lopez, was also appointed by Cardinal DiNardo to a leadership role in the archdiocese as episcopal vicar for Hispanics.

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Cupich hears Chicago priests’ concerns ahead of meeting with Pope Francis about preventing sex abuse

CHCIAGO (IL)
WLS 7 ABC

September 12, 2018

By John Garcia, Stacey Baca and Megan Hickey

The Catholic Church is under fire over the handling of sex abuse scandals involving priests. Cardinal Blase Cupich met privately Wednesday with all priests of the Archdiocese of Chicago.

The closed-door meeting was held at 7 p.m. at Mundelein Seminary. Cardinal Cupich wanted to hear concerns from priests discuss the sex abuse scandal that is rocking the Roman Catholic Church worldwide.

It comes one day before the Pope meets with top church leaders about the crisis.

Mundelein Police guarded the seminary as Cardinal Cupich met with priests Wednesday night.

“He’s not inviting the public or the media in. He’s keeping it secret, which is exactly what the problem has been for the last five to six decades,” said Marc Pearlman, who represents abuse survivors.

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Buffalo priest tells congregation he was sexually abused by a priest

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

September 12, 2018

By Jay Tokasz

A Buffalo Diocese priest who serves as the bishop’s secretary told parishioners at a Mass this past weekend that he was a victim of sexual abuse by a priest, according to one worshiper.

The Rev. Ryszard S. Biernat confirmed to The Buffalo News that he revealed to the congregation of St. John the Baptist Church in the Town of Tonawanda that he had been abused.

But he declined to comment further about what happened to him.

Biernat, 37, has told other people in the diocese that a veteran Buffalo priest sexually harassed and abused him when Biernat was in seminary studying for the priesthood.

Biernat did not name the priest in his remarks at St. John the Baptist Church. The News has learned that the priest was suspended from ministry and is not active in a parish.

Biernat gave his brief remarks at the end of the Mass after the Rev. Michael J. Parker, pastor of St. John the Baptist parish, read a statement to the congregation from Bishop Richard J. Malone that apologized for the bishop’s failures in adequately addressing the clergy sexual abuse crisis in the Buffalo Diocese.

Biernat, expressing empathy for victims of clergy sex abuse, encouraged victims of abuse to talk with him.

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San Diego’s Catholic diocese adds eight priests to list of sexual predators

SAN DIEGO (CA)
San Diego Union-Tribune

September 13, 2018

By Peter Rowe and Kristina Davis

The clerical sexual abuse scandal rocking the Roman Catholic Church hit home Thursday, as the Diocese of San Diego added eight priests to the list of those believed to have molested children.

“This is a response to the terrible moment we are in,” said Bishop Robert McElroy, citing a recent Pennsylvania grand jury report that found 1,000 children had been molested by Pittsburgh area priests there, and the resignation of Theodore McCarrick, who is accused of sexually assaulting altar boys, seminarians and priests.

“The cascade of emotions that this causes the survivors of the abuse as well as other people in the pews, has caused a tumult of anger, grief, upset, incomprehension, disillusionment,” McElroy said.

The new names — the Revs. Jose Chavarin, Raymond Etienne, J. Patrick Foley, Michael French, Richard Houck, George Lally and Paolino Montagna, plus Monsignor Mark Medaer — were released in piecemeal fashion, with critical details missing.

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San Jose diocese to investigate handling of priest abuse, name names

SAN JOSE (CA)
Mercury News

September 13, 2018

By John Woofolk

The Diocese of San Jose said Thursday it will launch an independent investigation into clergy sexual abuse and name priests credibly accused of abusing children as part of a diocesan effort to confront a scandal that has rocked the Roman Catholic church around the world.

The extraordinary announcement — the first pledge to go public from a Bay Area diocese — came in a statement to parishioners from Bishop Patrick J. McGrath, who also said the diocese had hired a former FBI official to review how church leaders have handled past abuse complaints.

“Recent revelations of the horrific and heartbreaking crime of the sexual abuse of minors by priests — and the systematic cover-up by bishops – have fueled a crisis, unprecedented in modern times, in the Catholic Church,” McGrath said in the statement. “There is a need for reform; there is a need for transparency in the way the Church responds to allegations of the sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable adults, even as we continue our efforts of preventing abuse and fostering a safe environment for all.”

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Utah’s Catholic Diocese has received ‘credible allegations’ of sexual abuse against 16 priests since 1990 — two of them this year

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Salt Lake Tribune

September 13, 2018

By Jessica Miller

[Includes a link to Bishop Solis’s report. See also Bishop Niederaurer’s 2004 report of 13 accused. The BishopAccountability.org database contains 5 publicly known accused priests in the Diocese of Salt Lake City.]

In the past three decades, the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City has received “credible allegations” of sexual abuse involving 16 priests.

Two of those allegations were received just this year — with one case revealed publicly for the first time Thursday in a letter to Catholics from Bishop Oscar A. Solis.

The letter, called “Report to the People of God of the Diocese of Salt Lake City,” is likely the first time Utah Catholics have received this type of accounting of sex abuse allegations against priests, said diocese spokeswoman Jean Hill.

It also marks the first time the diocese acknowledged outside the parishes where he served that a second priest has been put on leave this year in connection to a sexual abuse allegation.

That allegation involved Father Jorge Martinez-Gomez, who was put on leave in early July after an “allegation of misconduct” involving a man. Parishioners at St. Francis of Assisi in Orem were told about the allegations involving the parochial vicar that month.

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Retired Buffalo priest Sardina suspended after abuse allegation: Served as chaplain of Brothers of Mercy

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW 7 ABC

September 13, 2018

By Charlie Specht

A retired Buffalo priest has been suspended pending an abuse complaint.

“After receiving an abuse complaint against Father John J. Sardina, Bishop Richard J. Malone has placed Father Sardina on administrative leave as an investigation continues,” the Diocese of Buffalo said in a statement on its website. “This administrative leave is for the purpose of investigation and does not imply any determination as to the truth or falsity of the complaint.”

Sardina was ordained in 1960, diocesan directories show, and served in the following assignments: Unknown (1961), Nativity in Buffalo (1962-64), Our Lady of Pompeii in Lancaster (1965-67), Holy Cross in Buffalo (1968), Coronation in Buffalo (1969-77), Holy Cross in Buffalo (1978-80) and St. Anthony in Fredonia (1981-86).

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Buffalo bishop suspends elderly priest after abuse complaint

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

September 13, 2018

By Jay Tokasz

Buffalo Diocese Bishop Richard J. Malone has suspended another retired priest from ministry due to a sexual abuse complaint.

The diocese announced Thursday on its website that the Rev. John J. Sardina, 86, has been placed on administrative leave as the complaint is investigated.

Sardina lives in a residence for retired priests in Depew. He could not be reached Thursday afternoon to comment.

The diocese provided no details about when the abuse was alleged to have happened or where Sardina was assigned at the time.

The diocese statement said that the leave was “for the purpose of investigation and does not imply any determination as to the truth or falsity of the complaint.”

Sardina was ordained to the priesthood in 1960, and early in his vocation served at St. Jude missionary apostolate parish in Sardinia; Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Buffalo; Our Lady of Pompeii Church in Lancaster; and Holy Cross Church in Buffalo.

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Father Sardina placed on administrative leave

BUFFALO (NY)
Diocese of Buffalo

September 13, 2018

After receiving an abuse complaint against Father John J. Sardina, Bishop Richard J. Malone has placed Father Sardina on administrative leave as an investigation continues. This administrative leave is for the purpose of investigation and does not imply any determination as to the truth or falsity of the complaint.

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September 13, 2018

Chile Church scandal: ‘How I escaped the priest who abused me for decades’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC World Service

September 13, 2018

By Linda Pressly

Santiago – In Chile, more than 100 Catholic clergy are being investigated over alleged sex crimes and attempts to cover them up. It’s a scandal that haunts the reign of Pope Francis and has tipped the Chilean church into crisis. But it began decades ago with one man – Father Fernando Karadima, a parish priest in Santiago, who became Chile’s most notorious sexual predator.

“He offered you the vision of being called by the Lord. He showed you a very wonderful world,” remembers Dr James Hamilton, a gastric surgeon now in his 50s.

“He always told us he had a special gift – a kind of miracle gift – that he could see in every young person, if they had been called by God. He was almost a kind of saint.”

Father Fernando Karadima offered the adolescent James Hamilton refuge in the early 1980s. Chile had been under the dictatorship of Gen Augusto Pinochet for a decade. And in those troubled years of killings and disappearances, the church community created by this charismatic priest in the upmarket Santiago parish of El Bosque provided welcome reassurance.

“For a young person, it was like the bee and the honey – it was sweet in a world of difficulties, when you were struggling with your family,” says James Hamilton.

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Pope Orders Investigation of West Virginia Bishop Over Sex Allegations

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

September 13, 2018

By Laurie Goodstein

Pope Francis has ordered an investigation into allegations that West Virginia’s bishop, Michael J. Bransfield, sexually harassed adults, and has accepted the bishop’s immediate resignation.

The pope has assigned the Archbishop of Baltimore, William E. Lori, to handle the investigation and to take temporary charge of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, the church’s only diocese in West Virginia. The diocese is a small one, with about 75,000 Catholics.

In an announcement posted on the diocese’s website, Archbishop Lori said he would meet with clergy and lay leaders on Thursday and Friday, and that he had opened a hotline for tips.

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Pope meets with leaders of US Catholic Church ‘lacerated’ by abuse scandal

ATLANTA (GA)
CNN

September 13, 2018

By Daniel Burke and Delia Gallagher, CNN

Rome – Struggling to contain one of the most serious crises of his papacy, Pope Francis met Thursday in Rome with leaders of the American Catholic Church, the epicenter of a rapidly escalating clergy sex abuse scandal.

“We shared with Pope Francis our situation in the United States — how the Body of Christ is lacerated by the evil of sexual abuse. He listened very deeply from the heart. It was a lengthy, fruitful, and good exchange,” said Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.

“As we departed the audience, we prayed the Angelus together for God’s mercy and strength as we work to heal the wounds. We look forward to actively continuing our discernment together identifying the most effective next steps.”

Also attending the meeting were Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston, president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors; Archbishop Jose Gomez, vice president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops; and Monsignor Brian Bransfield, the conference’s general secretary.

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Allanan simultáneamente oficinas de la Iglesia en Concepción, Valparaíso, Osorno y Chillán

[Simultaneous raids on church offices in Concepción, Valparaíso, Osorno and Chillán]

CHILE
BioBioChile

September 13, 2018

By Yerko Roa, Eduardo Macias, and Tania Lavado

Fiscalía y Carabineros allanaron simultáneamente las oficinas de la Iglesia de Católica en Concepción, Valparaíso, Chillán y Osorno, por las investigaciones de delitos sexuales contra menores de edad. Los procedimientos comenzaron cerca de las 11:15 horas de este jueves en los obispados de Valparaíso, Chillán y Osorno, y también en el Arzobispado de Concepción. Los funcionarios del OS9 de la policía uniformada llegaron hasta las distintas sedes liderados por el Ministerio Público.

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Iglesia: Las acusaciones que pesan sobre los siete obispos que están siendo imputados por el fiscal Emiliano Arias

[Church abuse case include accusations against seven bishops and a ‘culture of concealment’]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 13, 2018

By Ivonne Toro

En calidad de imputados se investiga a los obispos Ricardo Ezzati, Juan Barros y Gonzalo Duarte, entre otros. La tesis en la Fiscalía es que sus acciones u omisiones acreditan la existencia de una cultura de encubrimiento por parte de altos dignatarios de la iglesia.

Modificó la fecha de su declaración, fijada inicialmente para el 21 de agosto, y canceló su participación en el Tedeum Ecuménico este 18 de septiembre, pero el arzobispo de Santiago Ricardo Ezzati, aún no sale del radar del fiscal regional de Rancagua, Emiliano Arias. Ni lo hará.

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Vaticano confirma permanencia de cardenal Errázuriz en consejo asesor del Papa

[Vatican says Cardinal Errázuriz will stay on Pope’s advisory council]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

September 13, 2018

“No ha habido ningún cambio en la composición del C-9”, aseguró la Santa Sede, añadiendo que “todos sus miembros tienen ya en agenda la convocatoria del próximo encuentro, los días 10-11-12 de diciembre”.

La versión ronda hace meses en torno al Vaticano: el Papa Francisco expulsó al arzobispo emérito de Santiago, Francisco Javier Errázuriz, del Consejo de Cardenales (C-9), grupo asesor creado por el Sumo Pontífice en 2013. Así lo publicó -el pasado 16 de agosto- el sitio web español eldiario.es. Así lo reiteró el martes el periódico italiano Corriere della Sera para explicar la ausencia del purpurado chileno de la reunión sostenida desde el lunes y hasta ayer por el Santo Padre y el cuerpo de asesores en Roma.

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Los detalles de los allanamientos simultáneos de los obispados de Valparaíso, Chillán, Concepción y Osorno

[Details of the simultaneous raids in the Archdiocese of Valparaíso, Chillán, Concepción and Osorno]

CHILE
La Tercera

September 13, 2018

By Belén Velásquez, Karin Hillmann and Carlos Reyes

Pasadas las 11.00 el fiscal Emiliano Arias dio inició en Chillán a un allanamiento simultáneo de los obispados de Valparaíso, Chillán, Concepción y Osorno. Para ello dispuso que el grupo de fiscales que trabajan junto con él en las indagatorias por presunto abuso sexual contra menores en la iglesia se movilizaran a dichas ciudades para concretar las diligencias.

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Fiscalía indaga a obispo de San Felipe por delito de connotación sexual

[Prosecutor’s office investigates Bishop of San Felipe for sex crimes]

By J. Matus and L. Zapata

Sacerdote Cristián Contreras es uno de los siete prelados investigados por el Ministerio Público. El caso se reasignó hace una semana al fiscal regional de Rancagua, Emiliano Arias

En el último catastro de la Fiscalía Nacional sobre casos de presuntos delitos referidos a abuso sexual en la Iglesia Católica, del 31 de agosto pasado, se informó que eran siete los obispos investigados por casos vinculados a este ilícito. Uno de ellos es el arzobispo de Santiago, cardenal Ricardo Ezzati, imputado por supuesto encubrimiento en el marco de la investigación contra el excanciller del Arzobispado de Santiago, Óscar Muñoz, formalizado por abuso sexual de menores.

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Abusos sexuales en Chile: “Cómo escapé de Fernando Karadima, el cura que abusó de mí durante décadas”

[Sexual abuse in Chile: “How I escaped from Fernando Karadima, the priest who abused me for decades”]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
BBC World via Publimetro

September 13, 2018

By Linda Pressly

La crisis que vive hoy la iglesia católica chilena se inició gracias a la denuncia de un hombre: James Hamilton, a quien después se le sumaron otras víctimas de abusos sexuales. Este es el testimonio del hombre que desenmascaró a Fernando Karadima. ¿Y qué piensa de la respuesta de la iglesia y el papa Francisco?

En Chile, más de 100 clérigos católicos están siendo investigados por presuntos delitos sexuales y por intentar encubrirlos, en un escándalo que atormenta el reinado del papa Francisco y tiene en crisis a la iglesia chilena. Pero todo comenzó hace décadas con un hombre: el padre Fernando Karadima, párroco de Santiago, quien se convirtió en el depredador sexual más famoso de Chile.

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Fiscalía investiga a obispos de San Felipe y Aysén por delitos de carácter sexual

[Prosecutor investigates bishops of San Felipe and Aysén for crimes of sexual nature]

CHILE
El Mostrador

September 13, 2018

Cabe destacar que la investigación se le asignó al fiscal de San Felipe, Alejandro Bustos, para luego, el 6 de septiembre, ser remitido el caso al fiscal regional de Rancagua, Emiliano Arias, facultado para indagar casos contra sacerdotes que no necesariamente sean de su región.

En el marco de las investigaciones que lleva adelante el Ministerio Público, son siete los obispos indagados por delitos referidos a abuso sexual en la Iglesia Católica. Entre ellos se encuentra el obispo de San Felipe, Cristián Enrique Contreras Molina.

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San Diego’s Catholic diocese adds eight priests to list of sexual predators

PAPANTLA (MEXICO)
Union-Tribune [San Diego CA]

September 13, 2018

By Peter Rowe, Kristina Davis

Read original article

The clerical sexual abuse scandal rocking the Roman Catholic Church hit home Thursday, as the Diocese of San Diego added eight priests to the list of those believed to have molested children.

“This is a response to the terrible moment we are in,” said Bishop Robert McElroy, citing a recent Pennsylvania grand jury report that found 1,000 children had been molested by Pittsburgh area priests there, and the resignation of Theodore McCarrick, who is accused of sexually assaulting altar boys, seminarians and priests.

“The cascade of emotions that this causes the survivors of the abuse as well as other people in the pews, has caused a tumult of anger, grief, upset, incomprehension, disillusionment,” McElroy said.

The new names — the Revs. Jose Chavarin, Raymond Etienne, J. Patrick Foley, Michael French, Richard Houck, George Lally and Paolino Montagna, plus Monsignor Mark Medaer — were released in piecemeal fashion, with critical details missing.

This list extends the roster of predator priests established by a landmark legal case that was concluded 11 years ago. On Sept. 7, 2007, the diocese settled 144 claims of child sexual abuse by 48 priests and one lay employee. The payments totaled $198.1 million, the second-largest settlement by a Catholic diocese in the United States.

Thursday’s announcement was prompted by the Pennsylvania grand jury report, the McCarrick case and other recent revelations that have called into question the church’s moral authority and its willingness to honestly address this scandal.

“There is a broad call for transparency,” McElroy said. “When we looked at it, we wanted to meet that as best we could.”

The newly listed priests were accused of abuse since the 2007 settlement, or reported to the diocese earlier in files that had been tucked away or mislaid. They were overlooked until, the bishop said, a recent review of records.

“They never kept good records on this stuff until recently,” McElroy said. “They kept records, but not in a very systematic way.”

Advocates for victims said that revealing the identities of accused predators is a valuable step.

“It makes them more accountable,” said Dr. Marianne Benkert, a La Jolla-based psychiatrist who, with her husband, the late Richard Sipe, studied clerical sexual abuse. “And there are still some victims of these priests here in San Diego. It will give those victims some comfort to see their abusers exposed.”

“Some dioceses are trying to do pro-active disclosures, which is great — disclosures are super important.” said Tim Lennon, president of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “But it’s not because of the goodness of their hearts. They want to protect themselves as much as they can.”

This crisis is worldwide, a fact underscored this week. On Thursday, Pope Francis and several top American bishops conferred on McCarrick’s case. The day before, the Vatican announced that the pontiff will convene the world’s bishops for a February 2019 meeting on the protection of minors.

In San Diego, McElroy will embark on a “listening tour” of the diocese, stopping at eight parishes between Oct. 1 and Nov. 5.

“I’ve met with a number of victims,” McElroy said. “They are looking for — they are really looking for the perpetrator to say it to them, but often the perpetrator is dead — so they are looking for the church to say we are truly sorry for this.”

This week, the diocese and other sources issued some details on the eight clerics added to that roster:

The Rev. Jose Chavarin. A native of Mexico, he served at Mary Star of the Sea in La Jolla from 1986 through 1991, while also working as associate pastor at Our Lady of Guadelupe in Calexico (1989-1990) and associate pastor at Lemon Grove’s St. John of the Cross (1990-1991).

On June 20 and 23, 2008, the diocese received reports that Chavarin — then working in San Francisco — had sexually abused three boys while in San Diego. The incidents involved two brothers in 1986 or ‘87, and an unrelated boy who was abused between 1985 and 1988.

Confronted with these accusations, Chavarin denied any wrongdoing, then fled to Mexico.

Chavarin’s current whereabouts are unknown.

The Rev. Raymond Etienne. A priest of the Society of the Divine Word, Etienne was an associate pastor at San Bernardino’s St. Anthony parish from 1980 through 1988. He also worked at the Society of the Divine Word seminary in Riverside in the 1960s, where he allegedly sexually assaulted seminarians.

Etienne is deceased, the diocese reports, although officials there could not confirm when or where he died.

The Rev. J. Patrick Foley. While attached to the San Diego diocese, Foley has been living in Northern California since 1991. In 2010, he was suspended from ministry pending a church trial on charges that he had abused two Sacramento-area boys, whose parents had been friends of the priest.

The canonical trial ended in January 2011 without a clear verdict. “He wasn’t guilty,” said Rodrigo Valdivia, the San Diego diocese’s vice-moderator of the curia, “but that’s not to say he was innocent.” His priestly faculties were restored until McElroy removed them in August 2015.

That hasn’t stopped Foley from advertising on his web site as an “Itinerant Papist Preacher,” offering retreats and spiritual counsel. His most recent posting, dated May 18, 2017, is a personal reflection under the heading “Love — and then do as you will.”

This July, he led a “cluster mission” at St. Joseph the Worker in Dubuque, Iowa.

Foley did not return a reporter’s phone call Thursday.

The Rev. Michael French. In 2003, the diocese was alerted that French had abused a boy in 1980. French, who died in 1995, came to San Diego in 1973 to pursue doctoral studies at the California School of Professional Psychology.

In 1975, he was a chaplain at the Benedictine Convent for Perpetual Adoration in San Diego.

A director of Catholic Community Services and diocesan director for Worldwide Marriage Encourage, French met his victim at a social occasion in his parent’s home. There were several instances of abuse. The diocese paid a settlement to the victim, who did not press charges in court.

The Rev. Richard Houck. In his long career, Houck served as an assistant priest, an associate pastor, pastor and priest in residence at a series of local parishes — St. Vincent de Paul, St, Charles Borromeo, Our Lady of Angels, St. Charles, St. Didacus and Immaculate Conception, all in San Diego; Most Precious Blood in Chula Vista; and Our Lady of Light in Descanso.

In 1968, he assisted at St. Vincent de Paul, serving alongside the Rev. Hugh John Sutton. (In 2014, the Diocese of Fort Worth received reports of Sutton sexually abusing minors while working there as a teacher and chaplain between 1984 and 1992. Sutton died in 2004.)

While at Most Precious Blood in 1977, Houck molested a 10-year-old altar boy, according to the diocese. When the victim reported this abuse in 2004, the diocese paid a settlement and the victim did not pursue the matter in court.

Houck died in February 2002.

The Rev. George Lally. As associate pastor at St. Mary in El Centro between September 1970 and February 1972, Lally allegedly molested a boy. A 2002 diocesan report refers to a 1971 agreement to pay college costs for the victim.

“As compensation for having been victimized,” said Valdivia.

The Union-Tribune reported that a man identified as “Ralph S.” sued the diocese, alleging that Lally had abused him when he was an altar boy at St. Mary. “Ralph S.” told reporters that he had reported the crime to St. Mary’s pastor, and Lally was then transferred.

Lally, who left the priesthood in 1979, is married and living in San Clemente.

His wife, a former nun and longtime Catholic administrator and educator, was hired in 1983 as principal of Holy Family School. Within a month, she was terminated. She sued the diocese.

That case was dismissed in 1990.

Msgr. Mark Medaer. While pastor of Our Lady of Guadelupe in Calexico, Medaer allegedly molested a boy in 1982. Roughly 20 years later, the victim reported this abuse to the diocese, which agreed to pay for his counseling.

Diocesan records show the counseling began in March 2002 and continued at least through November 2002.

Medaer died in June 1993.

The Rev. Paolino Montagna. Attached to the diocese for less than three years, Montagna was the associate pastor at El Centro’s Our Lady of Guadalupe (August 1972-October 1973) and then held the same position at a parish in Calexico with the same name, Our Lady of Guadalupe (October 1973-January 1975).

He was accused of molesting two girls. The diocese was unable to say when or where.

Montagna, who left the diocese in January 1975, is believed to be dead.

The new revelations were dismissed by SNAP’s Southern California liaison, Esther Miller, as “so much smoke and mirrors.” Benkert, the La Jolla psychiatrist and a former nun, said the scandal “seems to be kind of unending.

“People can understand to what lengths the church has gone to try to protect itself as an institution,” she said.

McElroy, though, argued that new measures taken by the diocese — including a civilian review board for sexual abuse complaints, and a prevention program in Catholic school curriculum — have been effective, to a point.

“I’ve been here as bishop three and a half years and in that time we have not had a live case of a priest abusing minors,” he said.

“But at the same time, we’ve had four cases involving lay persons.”

Yet others are sure that more reports of clerical abuse will be forthcoming.

“They’re telling me that there are now 56 priests who are credibly accused of sexual abuse in San Diego?” asked Patrick Wall, a former priest who now investigates clerical sexual misconduct for a Minnesota law firm, Jeff Anderson and Associates. “I believe that number to be extremely short.”

Reporter Pauline Repard and research manager Merrie Monteagudo contributed to this report.

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Abuse scandal hits diocese of cardinal set to meet with pope

HOUSTON (TX)
Associated Press

September 12, 2018

By Nomaan Merchant

As U.S. Catholic leaders head to the Vatican to meet with Pope Francis about a growing church abuse crisis, the cardinal leading the delegation has been accused by two people of not doing enough to stop a priest who was arrested this week on sexual abuse charges.

The two people told The Associated Press that they reported the priest and met with Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. One of them says she was promised in a meeting with DiNardo, several years after she first reported abuse, that the priest would be removed from any contact with children, only to discover that the priest remained in active ministry at another parish 70 miles away.

The priest, Manuel LaRosa-Lopez, was arrested Tuesday by police in Conroe, Texas. Both people who spoke to the AP are cooperating with police.

The priest’s arrest and allegations that DiNardo kept an abusive priest around children cast a shadow over a Thursday summit at the Vatican between Pope Francis and American bishops and cardinals. DiNardo is leading the delegation, putting him in the position of having to fend off abuse allegations in his own diocese while at the same time calling on the pope to get tougher on clergy abuse.

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False accusation made against Allentown Diocese priest, Berks County District Attorney says

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Morning Call

September 12, 2018

By Tim Darragh

Asexual abuse allegation against the Rev. David C. Gillis, a Catholic priest who was suspended from ministry last month, is false, Berks County District Attorney John T. Adams said Wednesday.

The Allentown Diocese said Gillis’ suspension was lifted and that he is being returned as a priest in good standing.

Gillis, an Allentown diocesan priest serving in Cocoa Beach, Fla., had been suspended for what the Rev. John Giel, chancellor for canonical affairs for the Orlando Diocese, referred to as an allegation with “at least a semblance of truth.”

It was made Aug. 24 through ChildLine, Pennsylvania’s child abuse hotline, by the father of a woman who said she was sexually abused as a child.

The woman later told investigators she was not abused by Gillis and detectives could find no evidence to substantiate the allegation, Adams said in a news release.

“The father did not have any basis to name Rev. David C. Gillis, but mentioned him because he was a priest at St. John the Baptist de La Salle School in Shillington, Berks County,” Adams said.

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September 12, 2018

Priest accused of sexually abusing 2 children; DiNardo accused of ignoring abuse

CONROE (TX)
Click2Houston

September 12, 2018

A Catholic priest turned himself in to police Tuesday after accusations that he abused at least two children while assigned to a Conroe church, police said.

According to Conroe police, Manuel La Rosa-Lopez was charged with four counts of indecency with a child in connection with an investigation that was launched last month.

“They did make outcrys to church officials at that time, and that information was not relayed, it’s our understanding at this time, that information was not relayed to law enforcement in any capacity,” Assistant Montgomery County District Attorney Tyler Dunman said Wednesday.

Police said the allegations of abuse span from the late ’90s to the early 2000s and accuse La Rosa-Lopez of abusing a girl and a boy while he was assigned to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church.

Investigators said La Rosa-Lopez surrendered to authorities at the Montgomery County Jail on Tuesday.

La Rosa-Lopez, 60, is currently a priest at St. John Fisher Catholic Church in Richmond.

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What changing statutes of limitations could mean for child sex abuse survivors

PITTSBURGH (PA)
The Incline

September 11, 2018

Victims would have a choice, one advocate said.

By MJ Slaby

When people first come to the Center for Victims in the South Side to seek counseling or therapy, they usually aren’t there because of the legal system, Clinical Director Cindy Snyder said. They’re there because they’re struggling with what happened to them.

For people who were sexually abused by priests as children, that means physical, emotional and spiritual violations of trust, she said.

“Child victims have no idea that these [statutes of limitations] are even out there. It’s not until adulthood that they say, ‘I should report this,’” said Kristen Houser, chief public affairs officer for Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape. Victims of child sexual abuse in Pennsylvania can file criminal charges against their abuser until they are 50 years old, or they have until they are 30 to pursue a civil case.

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Fighting Against Sexual Abuse In The Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Center for Inquiry

September 11, 2018

By Leslie C. Griffin

The stories of sexual abuse are seemingly unending. A Pennsylvania grand jury gave us horrible details of seventy years of sexual abuse in six Roman Catholic dioceses. The report revealed that over 1,000 children were harmed by over 300 clergy. The grand jury tells us, for example, that

One of these priests ejaculated in the mouth of a seven-year-old. Some were manipulated with alcohol or pornography. Some were made to masturbate their assailants, or were groped by them. Some were raped orally, some vaginally, some anally. But all of them were brushed aside, in every part of the state, by church leaders who preferred to protect the abusers and their institution above all.

Their bishops covered the abuse up instead of doing anything to help children. There are probably thousands more victims, unreported or dead.

Some people named in the report argued in court that the report shouldn’t even be published. As usual, they were focused on the perpetrators’ needs instead of the victims’ rights. To date, their names are blocked out in the released report.

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Francis has a lot of buffers.

UNITED STATES
SimchaFisher.com (blog)

August 11, 2018

The Catholic sex abuse scandal has two parts. The first part is the abuse itself. The second part is the institutional efforts to cover it up.

And now we are in the process of slowly, painfully uncovering these decades and centuries of crime.

This process is not part of the scandal.

The uncovering is dreadful. It is agonizing. It is, to use one of Francis’ favored words, messy. It’s always horrifying to witness the uncovering of hidden sin. But the uncovering is not part of the scandal. It is the remedy for the scandal, if there can be a remedy.

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Pope Francis at Mass: Bishops must pray to overcome ‘Great Accuser’

VATICAN CITY
Vatican News

September 11, 2018

At Mass in the Casa Santa Marta on Tuesday, Pope Francis invites bishops to overcome the “Great Accuser”, who seeks to create scandal, through prayer, humility, and nearness to God’s people.

In his homily at Mass on Tuesday morning, Pope Francis said it seems the “Great Accuser” is attacking the bishops of the Catholic Church to create scandal.

The Pope invited the bishops to remember three things in these troubled times: their strength lies in being men of prayer; they should have the humility to remember they are chosen by God; and they need to remain close to the people.

He reflected on the day’s Gospel (Lk 6:12-19), in which Jesus spends the night in prayer before choosing the Twelve Apostles, whom the Pope called “the first bishops”.

Men of prayer

Pope Francis said bishops must first of all be men of prayer. Prayer, he said, “is a bishop’s consolation in difficult times,” since they know that “Jesus is praying for me and for all bishops.”

The Pope said this will bring consolation and strength to bishops, who are then called to pray for themselves and the people of God. This, the Holy Father said, is a bishop’s first duty.

Humility of being chosen by God

Next, Pope Francis invited bishops to be humble, because they are chosen by God.

“The bishop who loves Jesus is not trying to climb a ladder, advancing his vocation as if it were a mere task or seeking a better placement or promotion. No. A bishop feels chosen, and has the certainty of being chosen. This drives him to speak with the Lord: ‘You chose me, of little importance, a sinner.’ He is humble, because he feels chosen and feels Jesus’ gaze upon his whole being. This gives him strength.”

Remain close to the people

Lastly, Pope Francis said bishops are called to be close to the people of God, and not shut up in an ivory tower.

“The bishop cannot remain distant from the people; he cannot have attitudes that take him away from them… He doesn’t try to find refuge with the powerful or elite. No. The ‘elites’ criticize bishops, while the people has an attitude of love towards the bishop. This is almost a special unction that confirms the bishop in his vocation.”

‘Great Accuser’ seeks to scandalize

Finally, Pope Francis said bishops need these three attitudes to face the scandal whipped up by the “Great Accuser”.

“In these times, it seems like the ‘Great Accuser’ has been unchained and is attacking bishops. True, we are all sinners, we bishops. He tries to uncover the sins, so they are visible in order to scandalize the people. The ‘Great Accuser’, as he himself says to God in the first chapter of the Book of Job, ‘roams the earth looking for someone to accuse’. A bishop’s strength against the ‘Great Accuser’ is prayer, that of Jesus and his own, and the humility of being chosen and remaining close to the people of God, without seeking an aristocratic life that removes this unction. Let us pray, today, for our bishops: for me, for those who are here, and for all the bishops throughout the world.”

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