ABUSE TRACKER

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

October 29, 2018

Enviaron a juicio al sacerdote Julián Ruiz, acusado del delito de “grooming”

SANTIAGO DEL ESTERO (ARGENTINA)
El Liberal [Santiago del Estero, Argentina]

October 29, 2018

Read original article

La Justicia de Monte Quemado, Copo, habría enviado a juicio al sacerdote Julián Ruiz, detenido el 12 de mayo del 2015 acusado de abusar de un menor de edad.

“Grooming” es el delito endilgado, que implica una serie de conductas y acciones deliberadamente emprendidas por un adulto contra un menor.

Vía internet, el fin es ganarse la amistad de un niño, niña o adolescente varón o mujer, creando una conexión emocional con el mismo, con neto sesgo sexual.

El delito es reprimido con penas de hasta cuatro años de prisión.

El escándalo tuvo de epicentro dos ciudades: Monte Quemado y Pampa de los Guanacos, departamento Copo.

Según la denuncia, Ruiz se vio con el menor a la vera de la ruta 16.

Imputaciones

Originalmente, la Fiscalía lo acusó por “abuso sexual con acceso carnal, corrupción de menores y grooming”.

Con el tiempo, la Cámara retiró los dos primeros cargos y Ruiz sólo fue procesado por “Grooming”.

Alejado de las iglesias, hoy el acusado reside en la ciudad capital y la Justicia de “Monte” clausuró el proceso.

Sin embargo, trascendió que pese a regir la falta de mérito para el sacerdote en los otros dos delitos, el fiscal Gabriel Gómez insistirá para que sea juzgado por “abuso sexual con acceso carnal, corrupción de menores y grooming”.

Sea cual fuere la decisión del tribunal que lo juzgará, se deduce que el debate oral será el primer semestre del 2019.

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.

60 Minutes’ findings challenge Bishop Malone’s statements

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB

October 29, 2018

By Jenn Schanz

60 Minutes aired a special report on the Buffalo Diocese Sunday night, interviewing the former executive assistant to Bishop Richard Malone turned whistleblower, Siobhan O’Connor.

The report cited several secret documents O’Connor had copied.

60 Minutes reports that according to those documents, under Bishop Malone the Diocese kept certain priests accused of child sexual abuse in ministry.

Days before the 60 Minutes piece aired, News 4 spoke exclusively to Malone, who declined an interview with 60 Minutes’ Bill Whitaker.

“When I arrived in the Diocese six years ago, one of the first questions I asked my senior team was, can I be certain that any priest with a substantiated allegation of abuse of a minor is off the job? Is out of ministry? And they said yes you can because they had been removed,” Malone told News 4 last week.

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.

Second Priest Removed from Archdiocese of Omaha in One Week

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

October 29, 2018

For the second time in a week, an Omaha priest has been accused of sexual misdeeds. Now, Nebraska Catholic officials should go further and actively seek out anyone who may have additional information concerning the allegations against these two clerics.

Yesterday, Archbishop George Lucas “permanently removed Fr. Donald Cleary from public ministry after the retired priest refused to contest an allegation that he sexually abused a minor in the mid-1980s.”

Last week, the Archdiocese of Omaha removed Father Francis Nigli after he had been accused of sexually assaulting a 21-year-old man in May. This was the second allegation against the priest.

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

Youngstown Diocese likely to release names of accused predator priests

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
WKBN TV

Oct 29, 2018

Bishop George Murry, of the Youngstown Catholic Diocese, will be holding a press conference Tuesday where he will likely release a list of priests who have been removed due to sexual abuse.

The diocese said the subject matter of the press conference will be “The Protection of Children and Young People” but would not specify exactly what would be talked about.

In September, Murry said he would release a list of names within the next two months.

He said the diocese won’t stand in the way if any prosecutors in the six-county diocese want to investigate priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse.

Murry said some accusers don’t want to prosecute and some of the cases are past the 20-year statute of limitations.

Copyright 2018 Nexstar Broadcasting, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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.

Erie Diocese Adds Woman to List Credibly Accused for First Time; Total of Five New Names Added

ERIE (PA)
Erie News Now

October 29, 2018

She is among five new names, which all include three laypersons who are all living and a deceased priest.

For the first time, the Diocese of Erie has added a woman to its list of those credibly accused of actions that it says disqualified them from working with children.

She is among five new names, which includes three laypersons who are all living and a deceased priest.

Four new names – two priests (one living, one deceased), one former priest (living) and one layperson (deceased) — have also been listed as under investigation.

The name of Msgr. Reszkowski, deceased, was moved from under investigation to among those credibly accused.

Father David Poulson, who pleaded guilty to corruption of minors and endangering the welfare of children Oct. 27, also has been moved to the list of those with credible allegations.

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.

Defrocked New Orleans deacon George Brignac sued, allegedly sexually assaulted another minor

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Advocate

October 29, 2018

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

An ex-Catholic deacon accused of raping an 8-year-old altar boy decades ago in a case that prompted the Archdiocese of New Orleans to pay out a hefty financial settlement is at the center of a new lawsuit containing similar allegations involving another altar boy.

The unidentified plaintiff alleges that George Brignac “engaged in prohibited and unpermitted sexual contact” with him countless times from 1977 to 1982, when the plaintiff was between eight and 13 years old and Brignac taught at Holy Rosary School.

That same time frame and school were at the heart of a suit filed against Brignac earlier this year that the Archdiocese deemed credible and settled for more than $500,000.

The archdiocese on Monday didn’t comment on the new plaintiff – who is now about 49 – and his claims in a 17-page lawsuit filed Monday in Orleans Parish Civil District Court. But the archdiocese did say in a statement, “Our prayers are with all victims of sexual abuse.”

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

Statement From Survivor Matt Golden Regarding Bishop Malone

ST. PAUL (MN)
AndersonAdvocates.com

October 29, 2018

60 Minutes exposes the dangerous practices and protocols still employed by the Diocese of Buffalo

(Buffalo, New York) – Sexual abuse survivor Matt Golden sued the Diocese of Buffalo in August, claiming the Diocese of Buffalo and Bishop Richard J. Malone created and exposed the public to dangerous predator priests and continue to do so through present day. Golden’s lawsuit claims that the Diocese of Buffalo continues to conspire and engage in efforts to conceal from the public and law enforcement, the identities of priests who have sexually abused minors and allow known child molesters, like Fr. Dennis Riter who abused Matthew when he was a child, to live freely in the community without informing the public. To-date more than 80 priests have been accused of child sexual abuse in the Diocese of Buffalo.

Last night, 60 Minutes exposed the dangerous practices and protocols that continue to be employed in the Diocese of Buffalo and Bishop Richard Malone in handling cases of child sexual abuse. Former executive assistant to Bp. Malone, Siobhan O’Connor, current Buffalo priest and clergy sexual abuse survivor, Fr. Robert Zilliox, and Deacon Paul Snyder were interviewed about the sexual abuse scandal in the Diocese of Buffalo. According to Fr. Robert Zilliox, at least 8 or 9 priests who should have been removed from the priesthood, remain in the priesthood in Buffalo right now.

Statement from Plaintiff Matt Golden

“Thank you to this brave young woman who stood up to the biggest institution in the world without even thinking twice,” said Golden. “I am not surprised by what I saw last night. Things will not change for the better in the Diocese of Buffalo unless all the Catholic Bishops in New York are forced to come clean and tell the truth. This is why I brought suit against the Diocese of Buffalo and Bishop Malone, because they are protecting Fr. Riter, and how many others?”

Contact: Mike Reck: Cell: (714)742-6593; Office: (646)759-2551
Jeff Anderson: Cell: (612)817-8665; Office: (651)964-3523

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.

Cadem arroja el momento más oscuro de la Iglesia católica: apoyo se desploma al 14%

[Cadem survey shows darkest moment for Catholic Church: support collapses to 14%]

CHILE
El Mostrador

October 29, 2018

Se trata del nivel más bajo de aprobación para la Iglesia católica chilena desde septiembre del 2015. Además, es 20 puntos menor que el respaldo que tenía durante la visita del Papa Francisco en enero pasado. De acuerdo al listado de Cadem, es la institución peor evaluada, incluso por debajo de los tribunales de justicia, el Congreso y la ex Nueva Mayoría (20%).

A un 14% se desplomó el apoyo en la opinión pública a la Iglesia católica chilena, de acuerdo a lo revelado por la encuesta Cadem difundida este lunes.

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.

Obispo castrense declara en Fiscalía de Rancagua por encubrimiento

[Military Bishop interviewed in Rancagua prosecutor’s office in cover-up case]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 29, 2018

By Angélica Baeza and Paola Moreno

“Vengo a aportar todo lo que se requiere para poder hacer verdad en esta situación de la Iglesia que tanto nos acompleja y que tanto mal hace”, dijo Santiago Silva.

En dependencias de la Fiscalía de O’Higgins se encuentra declarando el presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal, Santiago Silva, en calidad de imputado por encubrimiento de abusos sexuales al interior de la Iglesia.

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.

Cadem: Iglesia alcanza su peor nivel de aprobación y logra un 14%

[Survey: Church approval reaches new low of 14%]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 29, 2018

By F. Aste

Por otra parte, el Presidente Sebastián Piñera retrocedió cuatro puntos en su aprobación, impactado principalmente por el precio de los combustibles.

De acuerdo a la última encuesta Cadem, la aprobación de la Iglesia Católica logró su peor nivel desde que comenzó a medirse en septiembre de 2015. Según el sondeo, el mes de octubre la institución alcanzó solo un 14% de aprobación y un 81% de los encuestados la desaprueba.

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.

Blend faith, doctrine with activism, pope tells young at synod’s end

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

October 28, 2018

By Philip Pullella

Pope Francis, ending a month-long meeting on the theme of Catholic youth, told young people Sunday that in order to be good members of the Church they should not be obsessed with “doctrinal formulae” but blend its rules with social activism to help those in need.

Francis said a Mass for about 10,000 people in St. Peter’s Basilica to ceremoniously close the Synod of Bishops, officially titled “Young People, Faith and Discernment of Vocation” and attended by some 300 bishops, priests, nuns and lay participants.

The gathering’s final document, issued late on Saturday night, called for women to play a greater role in Church decision-making as a “duty of justice”, but appeared to water down language that would have been more welcoming to gays. [L8N1X70OS]

“I would like to say to the young people, in the name of all of us adults: forgive us if often we have not listened to you, if, instead of opening our hearts, we have filled your ears,” Francis said in a lighter part of the homily of the Mass, which he co-celebrated with dozens of the bishops who took part in the synod.

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

Catholic Church fails to get on youth wavelength

VATICAN CITY
Agence-France Presse

October 27, 2018

By Catherine Marciano and Ella Ide

Hailed as a chance for the Catholic Church to reconnect with today’s young, a month-long meeting at the Vatican ended with a whimper Saturday as bishops from across continents fail to see eye to eye.

The 267 prelates attending the meet had been tasked with finding a way to breathe fresh life into a centuries-old institution suffering from both a damaging global sex abuse crisis and widespread secularity in the West.

Pope Francis appeared to acknowledged the difficulties of presenting an attractive front, saying the church was being “persecuted” and “dirtied” by “continuous accusations” — a possible reference to his conservative critics.

He said the concluding document from the meeting, or synod, was “for all of us, me included”, and “must work in our hearts”.

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

Catholic church split over abuse scandal gravity

VATICAN CITY
Agence France-Presse

October 29, 2018

By Catherine Marciano, Ella Ide

Pope Francis has vowed to end clerical sexual abuse, but bishops from Asia and Africa have shown a mixed response to a scandal some have termed a “Western problem”.

Church leaders from around the world attended the closing mass yesterday of a month-long meeting, or synod, which many had hoped would take the global struggle against paedophile priests up a notch.

As the talks began, Francis warned again that abuse and cover ups would not be tolerated.

But as US Cardinal Blase Joseph Cupich told the press, priestly sexual abuse was “not on the front burner of all countries”.

“The resistance of some bishops” to discuss a crisis which has hit countries from Germany to America and Chile limited talk time at the synod, US Archbishop of Philadelphia Charles Chaput told the Catholic News Service agency.

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.

Papst schließt Synode: Kirche wird «beschmutzt»

[Pope closes synod: Church becomes “polluted”]

GERMANY
Frankfurter Allgemeine (AP)

October 27, 2018

Papst Franziskus sieht derzeit eine Art Verfolgung der katholischen Kirche. «Im Moment klagt man uns sehr heftig an», sagte der Pontifex zum Abschluss der Bischofssynode im Vatikan. Diese Anklage werde auch zur Verfolgung. Die Kirche werde kontinuierlich angeprangert, um sie zu beschmutzen. Derzeit steht die katholische Kirche weltweit vor allem wegen Missbrauchsskandalen in der Kritik. Franziskus wurde von Erzbischof Carlo Maria Viganò beschuldigt, selbst Missbrauch zu vertuschen. Seitdem tobt ein Richtungsstreit in der katholischen Kirche.

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.

Feds to all U.S. dioceses: Preserve your records

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

October 26, 2018

By Peter Smith

U.S. Attorney William McSwain of Philadelphia has asked all of the nation’s Catholic dioceses and similar institutions to preserve any records related to personnel and the sexual abuse of children.

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops confirmed Friday receiving the Oct. 9 letter from Mr. McSwain, who heads the Department of Justice’s Eastern District of Pennsylvania, based in Philadelphia.

The letter asks the conference to preserve abuse-related documents and to ask all of the nation’s dioceses to do the same.

“We have transmitted the U.S. Attorney’s letter at his request and in the spirit of cooperation with law enforcement,” said a statement from the bishops conference Friday morning.

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.

Bericht: Nach Missbrauchsstudie prüfen fünf Behörden Ermittlung

[Report: After abuse study, five authorities investigate investigation]

GERMANY
RWM

October 27, 2018

Nach der Veröffentlichung der Missbrauchsstudie für die katholische Kirche prüfen nach einem Bericht des „Spiegel“ (Samstag) fünf Staatsanwaltschaften Ermittlungen. Das habe eine Umfrage des Magazins bei Staatsanwaltschaften in allen 27 Bistümern ergeben. Dabei gehe es um den Verdacht von teils schwerem sexuellen Missbrauch, bisweilen bis ins Jahr 2016.

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.

Spiegel: Nach Missbrauchsstudie ermitteln fünf Behörden

[Spiegel: According to abuse study, five authorities investigate]

HAMBURG (GERMANY)
Katholisch.de

October 27, 2018

Die Missbrauchsstudie sorgt für den Anfangsverdacht: Deshalb hat eine Gruppe Strafrechtler bei Staatsanwaltschaften im Bezirk jeder Diözese Anzeige gegen unbekannt erstattet. Als Reaktion ermitteln nur wenige Behörden. Dabei handelt es sich zum Teil um aktuelle Fälle.

Nach der Veröffentlichung der Missbrauchsstudie für die katholische Kirche prüfen nach einem Bericht des “Spiegel” (Samstag) fünf Staatsanwaltschaften Ermittlungen. Das habe eine Umfrage des Magazins bei Staatsanwaltschaften in allen 27 Bistümern ergeben. Dabei gehe es um den Verdacht von teils schwerem sexuellen Missbrauch, bisweilen bis ins Jahr 2016.

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.

Deutschlandweite Strafanzeigen gegen Sexualstraftäter der katholischen Kirche

[Germany-wide criminal charges against sex offenders of the Catholic Church]

GERMANY
ifw

October 28, 2018

Sechs renommierte Juraprofessoren haben am 26. Oktober 2018 in Verbindung mit dem Institut für Weltanschauungsrecht (ifw) Strafanzeigen bei jenen Staatsanwaltschaften eingereicht, die für die 27 Diözesen in Deutschland zuständig sind. Anlass ist die Studie “Sexueller Missbrauch an Minderjährigen durch katholische Priester, Diakone und männliche Ordensangehörige im Bereich der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz”. In ihrer elfseitigen Begründung legen die Rechtsexperten dar, dass im Fall des katholischen Missbrauchsskandals ein zwingender Anlass zur Einleitung von “Ermittlungsmaßnahmen zur Überführung der Täter” besteht, “etwa für eine Durchsuchung von Archiven und die Beschlagnahme der vollständigen, nicht anonymisierten Akten.”

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.

Bistum Regensburg zwischen „Lug und Trug“ und staatsanwaltschaftlichen Ermittlungen

[Diocese of Regensburg between “lies and deceit” and prosecutorial investigations]

GERMANY
Regensburg Digital

October 29, 2018

By Robert Werner

Eines hat die Ende September veröffentlichte MHG-Studie deutlich gemacht: Sexueller Missbrauch durch katholische Geistliche ist nicht mit sündig gewordenen Einzelnen zu erklären. Die katholische Kirche sieht sich vielmehr mit grundsätzlichen Fragen zu ihren missbrauchsbegünstigenden und –vertuschenden Strukturen konfrontiert. Während in Regensburg die Staatsanwaltschaft in der Folge der Studie Vorermittlungen aufgenommen hat, soll ein Vertreter des Bischofs von „Lug und Trug“ gesprochen haben.

Betroffen und irgendwie einsichtig – so waren die ersten Reaktionen der deutschen Bischöfe auf die von ihnen in Auftrag gegebene MHG-Studie zu sexuellem Missbrauch durch Geistliche (die aus 38.156 Diözesenakten 1.670 Beschuldigte und 3.677 Betroffene ermittelte). In einer entsprechenden Presseerklärung etwa war die Rede von „schockierenden Ergebnissen“, einer „Verantwortung zu verstärktem Handeln“ und der „Pflicht, den Betroffenen Gerechtigkeit zuteil werden zu lassen.“ Angesichts des von der Studie auch aufgezeigten „institutionellen Versagens“ hieß es weiter: „Wir Bischöfe stellen uns dem Ernst der Stunde.“

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.

Punishing the Guilty Is Justice, Not a Witch Hunt

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

October 29, 2018

By Jennifer Roback Morse

In the fallout from the revelations of former-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s serial sexual predation, some have worried about an “anti-gay witch hunt.”

Recently, a headline in America magazine all but shouted, “Homosexuality is not a risk factor for sexual abuse of children.” Yet, the Pennsylvania grand jury report that came out in August found about 80% of the teenage victims of clerical sexual abuse were male, just as the John Jay Report found more than 10 years ago. This fact cries out for explanation. But many in the media and in the Church seem reluctant to focus on this obvious connection. We must come up with an explanation that is true to the known facts, without harming any innocent person.

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

Three Fresno-area priests — including former Merced priest — under investigation

MERCED (CA)
Merced Sun Star

October 29, 2018

By Yesenia Amara

Three priests, including one with a troubled history of allegedly seeking sex partners online and another accused of inappropriate behavior with a minor, are being investigated following complaints submitted to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno.

The priests are on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of their probes — although at least in one case the priest has been on leave for over two years, and the investigation hasn’t been completed.

Father Jean-Michael Lastiri and Father Ricardo Magdaleno were placed on paid administrative leave on Sept. 13 and Sept. 28, respectively, said Teresa Dominguez, chancellor for the Diocese of Fresno. A request to interview Bishop Armando X. Ochoa was declined.

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.

Buffalo Catholic whistleblower came forward because of victims, ‘allegiance to the common good’

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

October 28, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Without Siobhan O’Connor, the Diocese of Buffalo may have pulled off one of the greatest cover-ups in the history of the Catholic Church.

“I am a very ordinary person and I found myself in rather extraordinary circumstances and the way I look at it is, I was the right person in the right place at the right time, and God gave me the strength to do the right thing,” she said.

O’Connor served for three years as Buffalo Bishop Richard J. Malone’s personal secretary. She’s deeply religious and once studied to become a Catholic nun. But while working at Malone’s side, she began to see the ugly underbelly of how the diocese handled sexual abuse.

She went public earlier today as the key whistleblower and source in 7 Eyewitness News’ three-part investigation into Malone’s handling of sexual abuse, telling the legendary news program “60 Minutes” that she felt morally compelled to provide key documents describing a cover-up of allegations under Malone’s watch.

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.

Omaha Archdiocese permanently removes priest over sexual misconduct allegations

OMAHA (NB)
KMTV

October 28, 2018

A priest has been permanently removed from public ministry in the Omaha Archdiocese.

The move was announced Sunday.

Archbishop George Lucas removed Reverend Donald Cleary after the priest refused to contest allegations of sexual abuse. The allegations state Rev. Cleary abused a minor in the mid-1980s.

The complaint says the abuse happened in Wayne, Nebraska where Cleary served from 1986 to 1998.

Last week, the archdiocese was in an uproar when news of another priest, Father Francis Nigli, had been accused of sexually assaulting a 21-year-old man in May.

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The MeToo of the Catholic Church – time to speak is now

NEW YORK (NY)
Irish Central

October 29, 2018

By Tom Deignan

According to Google Maps, St. Joseph-St. Thomas parish is a five-minute drive, via Amboy Road, from Our Lady Star of the Sea, where all four of my children were baptized.

Tack on three minutes if you want to travel via Father Drumgoole Road, named for the Longford-born priest best known for housing and educating thousands of destitute Irish and other immigrant children on the once-rural South Shore of Staten Island.

It was another Irish-born, Staten Island priest who was in the news last week, Monsignor Charles Coen, who served as pastor of St. Joseph-St. Thomas in the 1970s and 1980s. Numerous media outlets reported Coen, now 85 and ill, had been accused of sexual assault by church investigators.

Coen has vehemently denied the charges.

“I am not only denying the charge, but it couldn’t possibly have happened,” Coen, now 85, told the Irish Voice last week. “One thousand percent, I didn’t do this. I never got a proper chance to defend myself from the Archdiocese.”

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 Buffalo, a deacon’s quest to hold his bishop accountable

NEW YORK (NY)
America

October 27, 2018

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

A deacon at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Swormville, N.Y., for 15 years, Paul Snyder felt “complete shock” one night earlier this year when he learned from a local newscast that his longtime pastor was the subject of sexual harassment allegations made by three young adults.

The pastor, Rev. Robert Yetter, had been accused of making unwanted sexual advances toward at least two young men who had reached out to him for counsel and support.

A series of investigations by Buffalo television station WKBW showed that Bishop Richard Malone and other diocesan officials knew about the complaints but decided to allow the priest to retire without making the allegations public. For his part, Father Yetter had implied in an email that the diocese’s fundraising efforts would be harmed if the allegations were made public.

Mr. Snyder, a local businessman who formerly served on the boards of the local Catholic Charities agency and Christ the King Seminary, said his parish community had been told that Father Yetter had chosen to retire, with no mention that the priest had been accused of misconduct.

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.

US bishops face most critical meeting since Dallas in 2002

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

By Michael Sean Winters

October 29, 2018

Two weeks from today, the bishops of the United States will gather in Baltimore for their most consequential meeting since Dallas in the summer of 2002, when the clergy sex abuse crisis at that time produced the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People and its zero tolerance approach to the sexual abuse of children. Are the bishops today, with the leadership they have, up to the task? And, what are those tasks?

The biggest difference between 2002 and today, and the first issue the bishops must confront, is whether or not they wish to remain Roman Catholics or if they will become Protestants. In 2002, it was unthinkable that a former apostolic nuncio, the personal representative of the pope to this country, would publish a long screed that ended by calling for the pope to resign. In 2002, it was unthinkable that a substantial number of bishops would issue statements attesting to their belief in that ex-nuncio’s integrity while not mentioning the pope at all or affirming their loyalty to the pope in the most meager of terms. In our Catholic ecclesiology, it is Christ who is the head of the church, but the pope is the visible sign of our unity as Catholics. Apart from Peter, there is no Catholic unity.

Some bishops were more fulsome in their support for Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò than others. “I can attest that [Viganò] is a man who served his mission with selfless dedication, who fulfilled well the Petrine mission entrusted to him by the Holy Father to ‘strengthen his brothers in the faith’,” enthused San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone. “Although I have no knowledge of the information that he reveals in his written testimony of August 22, 2018, so I cannot personally verify its truthfulness, I have always known and respected him as a man of truthfulness, faith and integrity,” gushed Bishop Thomas Olmsted of Phoenix, Arizona. Bishop Daniel Thomas of Toledo, Ohio was more weasely, stating, “Personally, this situation is made all the more gut-wrenching as I struggle to reconcile my knowledge of Archbishop Viganó, for whom I have a high regard, with my deepest love and respect for the office of the Holy Father.” The bishop loves the office, but not the pope himself? That is a level of dualism we haven’t seen since the 1950s.

Bishop Joseph Strickland had a letter ready to be read at all Masses in his diocese within hours of Viganò’s first attack on the pope, in which the bishop of Tyler, Texas said he found Viganò’s allegations “credible.” Was he part of the cabal that hatched and planned the dissemination of the Viganò statement, a cabal that we know included LifeSiteNews, Edward Pentin of the National Catholic Register, conservative Catholic blogger Marco Tosatti, and conservative Catholic plutocrat Tim Busch?

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Dublin Archbishop shocked by the lack of understanding in Rome

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
La Croix International

October 29,2018

Catholic Archbishop Diarmuid Martin of Dublin says he is surprised by the lack of understanding in Rome that the basis of the current clergy sex abuse crisis lies within its religious culture.

Speaking at the National Child Safeguarding Conference in Kilkenny Oct. 28 the archbishop also warned against “slippage into false confidence,” reported independent.ie.He pointed out that church leaders were too slow to open up to victims and survivors, or understand the role they could play in addressing abuse.

More work needs to be done to “bring healing to those who have suffered” he said.”The church all too slowly began to open up to them, not just as victims and survivors, but also with the realization without their participation and protagonism we would never understand and address the challenge,” he said.

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Activists push US bishops on lay role in recovery from abuse scandals

ROME(ITALY)
Crux

October 29, 2018

By Christopher White

Ahead of next month’s high-stakes meeting of U.S. bishops, a number of Catholic women and men are petitioning for greater involvement of the laity in the Church’s response to the ongoing clerical sex abuse crisis.

In response to this summer’s wave of sex abuse revelations – from the downfall of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick to the Pennsylvania grand jury report and subsequently announced state and federal investigations – many Catholic prelates have said that the laity must be given a primary role in ensuring greater protection of minors and vulnerable adults.

Now, as the U.S. bishops prepare to meet in Baltimore from November 12-15, a number of groups are accepting that invitation.

One group, The Women Who Stayed, are channeling the tactics of the reformer Martin Luther and preparing “Five Theses” in order to offer their “two cents” to the conversation.

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Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests Calls on Neronha to Launch Investigation into Diocese

PROVIDENCE (RI)
GoLocalProv

October 29, 2018

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, a national non-profit, has called on Democratic candidate for Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha to commit to investigating the Diocese of Providence.

Alliance for Safe Communities, a Rhode Island-based organization advocating for the victims of diocesan sexual abuse, says it has reached out to former U.S. Attorney Neronha regarding his unwillingness to commit to an investigation of the Catholic Diocese sex abuse scandal.

Now, in more than one dozen states across the country, attorney generals have launched investigations into the role of the respective dioceses and cover-up of abuse.

On Sunday night, CBS News magazine 60 Minutes unveiled how the clerical assistant to the Bishop of Buffalo in New York leaked thousands of documents unveiling a diocese cover-up.

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October 28, 2018

A Step Toward Accountability

NEW YORK (NY)
Commonweal

October 26, 2018

By David Castaldi, Joseph Finn, and Margaret Roylance

Attendees at the annual meeting of the Diocesan Fiscal Management Conference in Atlanta in 2015 (CNS photo/Michael Alexander, Georgia Bulletin)
Reports of sexual abuse and cover-ups within the church hierarchy have led to increased attention to the church’s secrecy around its finances. Until only recent decades, U.S. diocesan financial affairs were kept confidential and knowledge was compartmentalized; even some very highly placed diocesan officials were unaware of the settlements used to keep clerical sexual abuse under wraps. It was generally assumed that once contributions hit the collection basket, parishioners had no business knowing how the bishops used that money. What they would have learned is that the U.S. Catholic Church has spent $3.99 billion related to clerical-abuse settlements.

Before the Boston Globe’s 2002 “Spotlight” report, most Catholics in the pews thought that clerical abuse was rare. But presiding bishops knew differently: both from their personal experiences, and from the work of Fr. Thomas Doyle and others, who reported in the 1980s on the prevalence of abuse in the church. When Rev. Gilbert Gauthe admitted to abusing more than three hundred children in the Diocese of Lafayette, Louisiana, in 1986, or in 1993 when Rev. James Porter was sentenced to between eighteen and twenty years in prison for sexual abuse of children in Fall River, Massachusetts, there was minimal discussion of the role that church funds might have played in keeping those stories quiet.

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Reflections on Archbishop Viganò’s Courageous Third Letter

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

October 22, 2018

By Msgr. Charles Pope

As I finished reading Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò’s third letter, I had an immediate sense that I had just read something that is destined to be one of the great pastoral and literary moments of the Church’s history. There was an air of greatness about it that I cannot fully describe. I was stunned at its soteriological quality — at its stirring and yet stark reminder of our own judgment day. In effect he reminded us that this is more than a quibble over terminology or who wins on this or that point, or who is respectful enough of whom. This is about the salvation of souls, including our own. We almost never hear bishops or priests speak like this today!

Others will write adequately on the canonical, ecclesial and political aspects of Archbishop Viganò latest and very concise summary of the case. As most of you know, I have fully affirmed elsewhere that I find his allegations credible and that they should be fully investigated. But in this post I want to explore further the priestly qualities manifest in this third letter, qualities that are too often missing in action today.

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The Catholic Church reaches a turning point: ANALYSIS

NEW YORK (NY)
ABC News

October 28, 2018

By David Wright

Even for an institution that measures its milestones by the millennium, the Roman Catholic Church is now wrestling with an urgent, some would say epochal, moment of truth.

It’s an existential crisis brought on by two threats from within: the worldwide sexual abuse scandal and deep internal divisions over the core message of the faith. The last time the Vatican faced a crisis this big, according to some respected church scholars, was 500 years ago during the Protestant Reformation.

The battle lines in the church mirror the divisions of Trump’s America. The partisan infighting, just as bitter. And what makes it more than just the standard squabbling among the curia is the larger sexual abuse scandal looming in the background. This is what reformation looks like in the #MeToo era.

The Martin Luther of the new rebellion is the archbishop who dared to call on the pope to resign for turning a blind eye to the sexual misconduct of an American cardinal. Archbishop Carlo Vigano, former papal nuncio to the U.S., has faced serious pushback from the pope’s defenders for calling out Francis over his handling of disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. Vigano is in hiding, saying he fears for his life. But he’s not backing down.

Vigano’s new letter denounces what he calls the “scourge of homosexuality” in the clergy which he now flat-out claims is to blame for the broader sexual abuse scandal rocking the church Vigano urges his fellow bishops to back him up.

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Preventing Sexual Abuse in Churches

NEW YORK (NY)
WNET

October 27, 2018
,
Robert Hoatson, Ph.D, President & Co-Founder, Road to Recovery, and Steve Adubato speak about the unethical actions taking place in the churches, including sexual abuse, and what needs to be done to prevent this from continuing. Hoatson also shares his thoughts on how these incidents may impact the churches and people’s beliefs.

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Ex-Catholic priest who pleaded guilty to abusing minors is hit with lawsuit alleging he molested two brothers

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

October 28, 2018

By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

A former Catholic priest who was convicted of sexually abusing minors is the subject of a lawsuit filed by two brothers who say he molested them in the early 1990s while he ministered at a church in Riverside.

Carlos Rene Rodriguez was able to abuse the then 7- and 12-year-old boys because the Catholic Church protected the priest and allowed him to continue serving in the church despite knowing his troubled history, according to the lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court on Thursday.

Rodriguez, 62, pleaded guilty in 2004 and was sentenced to eight years in prison for molesting two brothers in Santa Paula a decade earlier. He was released after four years. He now lives in Bakersfield, according to the Megan’s Law website that lists the whereabouts of registered sex offenders.

The lawsuit accuses the Archdiocese of Los Angeles of allowing Rodriguez to continue to minister to families despite admitting to a church official that he molested a boy in 1987. Church officials from the Los Angeles Archdiocese and San Bernardino Diocese failed to keep him away from children, according to the suit.

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Why Bishop Malone’s assistant became a whistleblower

NEW YORK (NY)
CBS News

Oct 28, 2018

By Brit McCandless

Siobhan O’Connor was working for the Diocese of Buffalo when she had a revelation.

For three years, she had worked as the executive assistant to Bishop Richard Malone. She maintained his calendar, took care of his correspondence, answered his phone lines and emails. They had such a close working relationship that the southpaw assistant joked she was his “left-hand woman.”

But what she saw in that role infuriated her — and she realized she had to speak up about it.

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Un exsacerdote católico declarado culpable de abusar menores es demandado nuevamente por molestar a dos hermanos

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
LA Times [Los Angeles CA]

October 28, 2018

By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde

Read original article

Un exsacerdote católico que fue declarado culpable de abusar sexualmente de menores, es objeto de una demanda presentada por dos hermanos, quienes alegan haber sido molestados por éste a principios de la década de 1990, mientras ministraba en una iglesia de Riverside.

Carlos René Rodríguez pudo abusar de los niños, de siete y 12 años de edad, porque la Iglesia católica lo protegió y le permitió continuar con sus actividades eclesiásticas a pesar de conocer su problemático historial, según la demanda presentada en la Corte Superior del condado de Los Ángeles, el 25 de octubre.

Rodríguez, de 62 años, se declaró culpable en 2004 y fue condenado a ocho años de prisión por abusar sexualmente de dos hermanos, en Santa Paula, una década antes. Fue liberado después de cuatro años y ahora vive en Bakersfield, según el sitio web de la Ley Megan, que lista el paradero de los delincuentes sexuales registrados.ADVERTISING

La demanda acusa a la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles de permitir que Rodríguez continúe ministrando a las familias a pesar de admitir a un funcionario de la Iglesia que había acosado a un menor en 1987. Los funcionarios eclesiásticos de la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles y la Diócesis de San Bernardino no lo alejaron de los niños, conforme la querella.

Las acusaciones son particularmente alarmantes porque la Diócesis de San Bernardino, que también está mencionada en la demanda, publicó recientemente una lista de sacerdotes acusados de agresión sexual que no incluyó a Rodríguez, detalló el abogado Anthony DeMarco, quien representa a los dos hermanos en la demanda y resolvió casos similares por dos presuntas víctimas de Rodríguez en 2015.

Los demandantes continúan sufriendo trastornos mentales y emocionales, y solicitan una indemnización compensatoria por daños.

“¿La Diócesis de San Bernardino, cuando estaba creando su lista, hizo realmente un trabajo minucioso para determinar qué sacerdotes pedófilos habían ministrado allí?”, se preguntó. “No se está haciendo ninguna diligencia y, por lo tanto, cualquier sacerdote con un problema puede entrar en contacto con familias con niños. [El tema] da miedo y necesita cesar”.

La Diócesis de San Bernardino aseveró que no tiene registro de Rodríguez. “No podemos encontrar a nadie con ese nombre en nuestros archivos”, indicó John Andrews, portavoz de la diócesis. “Tampoco tenemos constancia de que alguien haya denunciado el abuso sexual de un menor por parte de un sacerdote llamado Carlos René Rodríguez.

“Por esas razones, el nombre del [padre] Rodríguez no se incluyó en nuestra lista de curas con alegatos creíbles de abuso sexual de un menor en nuestra diócesis [desde 1978 hasta el presente]. Simplemente, nunca hemos recibido ninguna información de las víctimas o de la policía sobre esta denuncia que nos permita investigar si es creíble o no”, agregó Andrews.

La Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles indicó que no haría comentarios sobre la demanda porque aún no había sido notificada oficialmente. Pero la portavoz Itzel Magaña declaró que la última asignación de Rodríguez en la arquidiócesis fue en 1990, y que fue destituido del sacerdocio en mayo de 1998.

Cuando la arquidiócesis supo, en 2016, que Rodríguez estaba ministrando en una iglesia no afiliada bajo el nombre de ‘padre Carlos Ramírez’, los funcionarios eclesiásticos informaron a las autoridades y enviaron alertas a todas las parroquias informándoles que el hombre no estaba autorizado para actuar como sacerdote católico romano, detalló la vocera.

Magaña también señaló que la arquidiócesis tiene un protocolo para responder a los informes de abuso desde 2002. “La Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles reafirma el compromiso con la sanación de víctimas y sobrevivientes del abuso y la protección contra el abuso y la mala conducta”, expresó.

La Congregación de Mission Western Province, que también se menciona en la demanda, no respondió de inmediato a una solicitud de comentarios.

Los demandantes en la querella actual presentaron su caso después de que uno de los hombres vio un segmento de noticias de 2016 acerca del trabajo de Rodríguez en una parroquia local. Ello incitó al hombre a discutir el abuso por primera vez con su hermano, quien reveló que también había sido molestado por Rodríguez, señala la demanda.

Los dos individuos acusan a Rodríguez de haber abusado de ellos varias veces en sus hogares y en el Santuario de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe en Riverside, donde Rodríguez ministró a principios de los años 1990, explicó DeMarco.

La demanda no dio más detalles sobre las acusaciones de los hermanos, pero afirma que ambos reprimieron los recuerdos de los abusos durante décadas, lo cual les causó daños psicológicos y les provocó problemas con la bebida.

Según DeMarco, la demanda subraya la falta de diligencia debida de la Iglesia en la selección de Rodríguez, dado su pasado bien documentado. “¿Qué tan difícil sería crear una política [que requiera] que antes de que cualquier sacerdote pueda ministrar en una parroquia, haya algún tipo de verificación de antecedentes?”, cuestionó. “Carlos Rodríguez es un peligro para los niños y la única forma de que no lo sea es que esté tras las rejas”.

Cuando Rodríguez fue ordenado sacerdote en la Congregación de Mission, en 1986, varios de sus colegas se preocuparon por su comportamiento hacia los menores porque a menudo pasaba tiempo a solas con ellos en su residencia, según la demanda. Pero estas preocupaciones nunca fueron reportadas a la policía, señala la demanda.

En 1987, mientras se desempeñaba en la iglesia católica St. Vincent De Paul, en el sur de Los Ángeles, Rodríguez llevó a dos chicos a un viaje al Gran Cañón y, a su regreso, admitió ante un funcionario eclesiástico haber abusado de al menos uno de ellos, alega la demanda.

Los funcionarios clericales instaron a los padres de los menores a no presentar una denuncia policial, según la querella. Pero cuando se enteraron de que lo harían, enviaron a Rodríguez a un centro de tratamiento para sacerdotes abusivos, en Maryland, antes de que los investigadores pudieran entrevistarlo, según la demanda.

La Congregación de Mission notificó a la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles sobre el tratamiento de Rodríguez después de las acusaciones de abuso, y las dos organizaciones trabajaron juntas para colocarlo en la Oficina de Vida Familiar de la Arquidiócesis en Santa Bárbara cuando regresó a California, en 1988, según la querella. Allí ministró a familias inmigrantes de habla hispana en los condados de Ventura, Los Ángeles, San Bernardino y Riverside.

Durante este tiempo, varios pastores expresaron su preocupación porque Rodríguez violó las condiciones de su restricción al contacto cercano con los niños, de acuerdo con la demanda. Se le otorgó entonces un permiso de ausencia temporal, pero la Iglesia no lo retiró del sacerdocio, afirma la demanda.

A pesar de su ausencia, Rodríguez continuó ministrando en las comunidades para la Oficina de Vida Familiar, incluido el Santuario de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe en Riverside, al cual asistía la familia de los demandantes. En ese momento, la Iglesia no tomó ninguna medida para informar a las parroquias ni a los feligreses que Rodríguez ya no tenía permiso para ministrar.

No fue sino hasta 1996, cuando la Iglesia católica se enteró de que Rodríguez residía con una familia de Santa Bárbara con cinco hijos, que comenzó el proceso de expulsarlo del sacerdocio, según la demanda, del cual fue apartado dos años después.

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Jesuita Marcelo Gidi: “Ezzati tiene que aclarar su participación en todo lo que se le imputa”

[Jesuit Marcelo Gidi: “Ezzati has to clarify his participation in all accusations against him]

CHILE
El Mostrador

October 27, 2018

El sacerdote, una de las voces más influyentes dentro del clero chileno y quien estuvo a cargo de investigar casos de abusos de sacerdotes, como los de Cristián Precht y John O’Really, analizó la situación de la iglesia católica chilena y, en especial, de su cara más visible, Ricardo Ezzati. Para Gidi, es clave que él haga un mea culpa para “salvaguardar efectivamente la institución”, aunque cree que esta versión de la iglesia “debe morir”.

El sacerdote jesuita Marcelo Gidi es una de las voces más influyentes dentro del clero chileno. El religioso, que hasta hace poco estuvo a cargo de investigar casos de abusos de sacerdotes, como los de Cristián Precht y John O’Really, es palabra autorizada para analizar la situación de la iglesia católica del país.

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La responsabilidad del Arzobispado

[The Archdiocese’s responsibility]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 26, 2018

By Carlos Gajardo

Se trata en síntesis de un caso de ceguera voluntaria o “willful blindness” tan desarrollado en el derecho anglosajón. El Arzobispado no quiso ver. Tras detener la investigación por varios años, el hecho propio del Arzobispado cesó el 16 de agosto de 2010 cuando los antecedentes fueron enviados a la Congregación de la Doctrina de la Fe.

José Andrés Aguirre Ovalle, más conocido como “el Cura Tato” ejerció su ministerio en diversas comunidades y como director espiritual en colegios de la zona oriente de Santiago. Cuando comenzaron las primeras denuncias de posibles abusos sexuales, la Iglesia lo envío a Honduras. A su regreso a Chile se hizo cargo de la Vicaría Pastoral de Quilicura donde entre 1998 y 2002 abusó de nueve menores de edad según la sentencia que lo condenó. Mientras se iniciaban las investigaciones fue enviado nuevamente a Honduras, desde donde debió volver para ser detenido en el Aeropuerto.

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Joaquín García-Huidobro, sobre crisis de la Iglesia católica: “Tuvimos figuritas que nos hicieron pagar caro su protagonismo”

[Joaquín García-Huidobro on Catholic Church crisis: “We had figures that made us pay dearly for their prominence”]

CHILE
The Clinic

October 25, 2018

By Joaquín Castillo

El filósofo y académico de la Universidad de los Andes analiza la situación de la Iglesia católica en Chile, a propósito de los abusos sexuales cometidos por sacerdotes. El remezón fue tal que llevó al Papa Francisco a expulsar del estado clerical a Fernando Karadima, Francisco José Cox, Antonio Órdenes y a remover a varios obispos. El subdirector del IES, Joaquín Castillo, conversó con el intelectual, quien sitúa el origen del problema en el “endiosamiento” de los curas.

Hay varias interpretaciones sobre cuál es el origen de la crisis de la Iglesia. ¿Dónde lo sitúas tú?

Tiene muchas causas, pero una es el clericalismo. El sacerdocio es central para la Iglesia católica, pero eso no significa que un cura sea más importante que el resto: al revés, está para servir. Entender el poder como servicio es esencial en el cristianismo. En Chile y en la Iglesia universal algunos se transformaron en señores intocables, que estaban por sobre el bien y el mal. La mentalidad clerical no solo afectó a los sacerdotes; los laicos se acostumbraron a ser menores de edad, sin capacidad reflexiva. Que un sacerdote sea endiosado y que su conducta o palabra puedan derogar los mandamientos significa que algo no se entendió bien.

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Sacerdote Felipe Berríos pide que el Estado intervenga la Iglesia: “Su jerarquía no tiene ninguna credibilidad”

[Priest Felipe Berríos asks the government to intervene in the Church, saying “Its hierarchy has no credibility”]

CHILE
The Clinic

October 22, 2018

By Lorena Penjean

La capilla de la Chimba, pintada con murales de la Brigada Ramona Parra, es el escenario desde donde el sacerdote Felipe Berríos llama al Estado a intervenir la Iglesia, sacudida por los casos de abusos sexuales que le han valido su peor crisis en Chile.

“Durante años he alegado que la justicia militar no debe ser la misma que juzgue a los militares. Bueno, eso mismo lo aplico a la Iglesia. Así como se formó una Comisión Rettig o Valech, (pido) que se haga una comisión y que el estado de Chile intervenga, porque la Iglesia jerárquica no tiene ninguna credibilidad y tiene a cargo parroquias y colegios”, sostuvo en exclusiva para The Clinic el cura Felipe Berríos.

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Ignacio Sánchez, rector de la PUC: “La Iglesia y su jerarquía han confundido lo que es un delito con lo que es un pecado”

[Ignacio Sánchez, Rector of the PUC says “The Church and its hierarchy have confused what is a crime with what is a sin”]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 26, 2018

By Michel Nahas Bordón

Como parte de la Iglesia Católica, la máxima autoridad de la universidad hace una profunda revisión a las razones de la crisis que se activó tras la visita del Papa.

“No somos propiedad de la Iglesia, pero somos parte”. La precisión de Ignacio Sánchez ubica de alguna manera a la Universidad Católica en el mapa de la crisis que desde hace unos años golpea a la Iglesia chilena. El rector decide abordar por primera vez esta materia a través de una entrevista, convencido de que desde la universidad tienen la misión de contribuir a encontrar los cambios que permitan erradicar para siempre la “cultura de abusos” que ejercieron algunos religiosos.

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Después de la expulsión de Cox, Karadima y Precht, ¿qué?

[After the expulsion of Cox, Karadima and Precht, now what?]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 27, 2018

En un mes, el Papa Francisco ha expulsado a cuatro sacerdotes, tres de ellos han estado en el centro de la polémica. Nunca más podrán celebrar una misa. Y nunca más podrán recibir apoyo económico de sus diócesis, en teoría.

En silencio y con la mirada perpleja. Así recibió la noticia Francisco José Cox el 13 de octubre. Hasta entonces era arzobispo emérito de La Serena, pero la decisión del Papa era inapelable: lo había dimitido del estado clerical.

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Has Anything Changed?

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Catholic Key

October 26, 2018

By Bishop James V. Johnston

Over the past weeks, I have received many letters from concerned Catholics over the renewed scandal surrounding child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy. I am grateful for the time and effort that goes into writing one’s bishop, and grateful for the passion expressed in the desire that our Church be purified and restored, so that it can be that “city on a hill” and the “light of the world” which Jesus intends it to be.

One of the things I also became aware within the letters and of so many local and national comments that many of our members are not aware of the remarkable changes that have occurred in our Church, and specifically our diocese, over the recent years. The latest news events can give the impression that nothing has changed. The Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report which was the catalyst for the latest scandal was a historical review of behavior in several of the Pennsylvania dioceses going back 70 years, with the majority of the abuse in the seventies and eighties. What was somewhat new in the report was a more detailed description of how some bishops responded to those incidents with a lack of transparency and accountability. One can easily get the impression that nothing has changed in any diocese from the 1940s onward.

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Pope Decries ‘Persecution’ of Catholic Church Through Accusations

ROME
Wall Street Journal

October 27, 2018

By Francis X. Rocca

Pope Francis told a gathering of bishops from around the world that the Catholic Church is being persecuted through accusations—an apparent allusion to clerical sex-abuse scandals that have undermined the credibility of the papacy and church hierarchy over the course of this year.

Addressing the closing session of a synod of bishops at the Vatican on Saturday, the pope repeated warnings he has made in recent weeks against the “Great Accuser,” or the devil, who “in this moment is accusing us strongly, and this accusation becomes persecution,” and who seeks to “soil the church.”

“This is the moment to defend our mother” the church, said the pope, in remarks unlikely to mollify critics who say he has failed to recognize the hierarchy’s responsibility for the abuse crisis. “The accuser is attacking our mother through us, and no one touches our mother.”

The gathering of more than 250 bishops was dedicated to the topic of youth, exploring how the church can better engage young Catholics and help them find roles in the church, whether as priests, nuns or lay members.

In a twist on the usual protocol at such gatherings, more than 30 lay Catholics below the age of 30 years attended the sessions, where they enlivened the atmosphere by clapping and cheering during some of the speeches.

A published agenda for the meeting made only passing reference to sex abuse, but after months of scandals in the U.S., Latin America and Australia—and the claim by a former Vatican diplomat that Pope Francis himself had ignored sexual misconduct by a U.S. cardinal—the subject inevitably loomed over the proceedings.

Bishops frequently addressed clerical sex abuse during the first week of the monthlong synod, Archbishop Eamon Martin of Ireland told reporters on Friday.

The 60-page final document, released late Saturday, devoted two paragraphs to the subject of abuse, calling for “rigorous measures of prevention,” starting with the selection and education of clergy and other church employees. Quoting Pope Francis, the document lays much of the blame for sex abuse on “clericalism,” or an excessive deference to the church’s hierarchy.

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Group will seek legislation to allow state investigation of Catholic church

NEW LONDON (CT)
The Day

October 27, 2018

By Joe Wojtas

The Connecticut chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests plans to push the General Assembly to enact legislation in the upcoming session that would not only eliminate the statute of limitations for sexual assault victims to bring criminal charges and file lawsuits but empower state officials to undertake an investigation of how the Catholic Church has handled sexual abuse allegations in Connecticut dioceses.

The state chapter of SNAP, which has chapters in all 50 states and 10 foreign countries, plans to stage a rally in front of Diocese of Norwich’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral at 1 p.m. Nov. 3 to discuss its initiatives which also call for the Norwich diocese to list all priests credibly accused of sexual assault on the diocesan website. The rally will be held in conjunction with the group’s first annual All Survivors Day.

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Youth Synod Final Report Addresses Gender, Sexuality

ROME (ITALY)
CNA/EWTN News

October. 27, 2018

By Hannah Brockhaus

The final report of the fifteenth general session of the Synod of Bishops, held on the topics of young people, faith, and vocational discernment, was released Saturday. The document says the Church must find new ways of presenting its teaching on sexuality and continue to “accompany” and “listen to” people with same-sex attraction.

The final draft of the synod report was presented to members Oct. 27 for voting, which took place in two sessions that day. The draft was passed in its entirety. During the voting process, each paragraph of the document was voted on, requiring 166 or more “yes” votes — a two-thirds majority — to pass and be included in the final report.

Each paragraph passed by a comfortable margin.

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Bishops in Rome say youth can help heal a wounded Church

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

By Elise Harris

October 27, 2018

Prelates from around the world gathered in Rome for this month’s Synod of Bishops said young people can be agents of positive change and can help to heal ecclesial wounds with their zeal for the faith.

In their concluding document for the Oct. 3-28 synod, dedicated to young people, faith and vocational discernment, participants said young people must be protagonists in the Church and that as ecclesial leaders, “we don’t just want to do something ‘for them,’ but to live in communion ‘with them.’”

Participation of young people “is not optional” but “an indispensable element for the life of every community,” the document said, adding that the fatigues and fragilities of young people “help us to be better.”

“Their questions challenge us, their doubts challenge us on the quality of our faith. Even their criticisms are needed, because not infrequently through these we hear the voice of the Lord who asks us for conversion of heart and the renewal of structures,” the text reads.

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Synod urges ‘rigorous measures’ on abuse but stops short of ‘zero tolerance’

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

October 27, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

Meeting against the backdrop of massive clerical sexual abuse scandals in various parts of the world, a month-long summit of Catholic bishops wrapped up Saturday affirming that sexual abuse by Church personnel inflicts “suffering that can last a lifetime” but pulled back from an explicit endorsement of a “zero tolerance” policy.

“Different types of abuse committed by some bishops, priests, religious and laity provoke in those who are victims, including many young people, suffering that can last a lifetime to which no repentance can bring remedy,” the bishops said in a final document adopted Saturday night.

“The synod reaffirms the firm commitment to the adoption of rigorous prevention measures that prevent [abuses] from being repeated, starting from the selection and training of those who will be entrusted with tasks of responsibility and education,” the document says.

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Pols stand with victims in push for 2-year window for suits

MEDIA (PA)
Delaware County News Network

By Kathleen E. Carey

October 26, 2018

State Sens. Tom McGarrigle, R-26, of Springfield, Tom Killion, R-9, of Middletown and John Rafferty, R-44, Thursday called on their colleagues to reconvene in Harrisburg to vote on a two-year window to allow childhood sexual abuse survivors to file civil suits against their abusers.

Standing before the Delaware County Courthouse, McGarrigle and Rafferty joined state Reps. Alex Charlton, R-165 of Springfield, Chris Quinn R-168, of Middletown and Marguerite Quinn, R-143, of Bucks County, in voicing their support for the measure while a group of survivors stood across the street, shouting, saying the vote should’ve been taken last week before the Senate recessed.

“I’m here today on behalf of the victims,” McGarrigle said, “and to tell the Senate Dems don’t use these victims as political pawns … We’re going to reach out to Sen. (President Pro Tempore Joe) Scarnati, R-25 of Jefferson County, to demand that he call back the Senate … to come and let’s vote on this. Let’s take the vote, send it back and get it signed by the governor and move on. We are demanding a vote.”

Last week, the Senate failed to vote on S.B. 261 after Scarnati removed a provision from the bill so that institutions would not be held liable civilly. The House had passed the measure at the end of September. In addition to the two-year window for older cases, it would also eliminate criminal statutes of limitation for future child sexual abuse cases and extend the deadline for victims to file civil actions to age 50. Under current law victims must file by age 30. Many experts and advocates say it takes much longer for many victims to come to grips with their assaults as children.

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Catholic bishops put on notice: Don’t destroy abuse records

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

October 27, 2018

By Tom Kertscher and Annysa Johnson

Every Catholic diocese in the country has been asked by a federal prosecutor not to destroy documents related to the handling of child sexual abuse, fueling the hopes of survivors and advocates that a sweeping investigation of the church by the U.S. government may be coming.

“We are extremely encouraged,” said Peter Isely, a survivor and founding member of the advocacy group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “This is something we have been requesting and arguing and pushing for many years.”

The Rev. James Connell, a canon lawyer and former vice chancellor for the 10-county Archdiocese of Milwaukee, also welcomed the news, saying Catholics in the pews have become increasingly disillusioned with the actions of their bishops.

“It’s become clearer and clearer that the church has not told the whole truth, and that’s a great disservice to society,” he said.

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SC sex abuse victim of ex-priest: ‘He put a gun to my head and threatened to kill me’

CHARLESTON (SC)
WCIV TV

October 25, 2018

By Anne Emerson

It’s a story we brought you earlier this week, a former Catholic priest from Savannah pleaded guilty to nine counts of criminal sexual conduct with a minor in a South Carolina courthouse.

The minors were just 9 and 13 years old at the time.

In an exclusive interview, ABC News4 spoke one on one with one of those victims.

After his abuser went to prison, locked up for 20 years, Allan Ranta decided to speak.

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Virginia opens investigation into child sexual abuse by clergy

HAGERSTOWN (VA)
Local DMV.com

October 26, 2018

By Kiona Dyches

Virginia’s Attorney General has announced that the state is joining Maryland and Washington D.C. by opening an investigation into child sexual abuse by clergy within the two Catholic Dioceses in Virginia.

Within the last month, both Maryland and D.C. have opened investigations into clergy abuse. As part of the investigation, Attorney General Mark Herring also launched the Virginia Clergy Hotline, a confidential resource for people to report abuse by clergy.

Bishop Michael Burbidge from the Diocese of Arlington and Bishop Barry Knestout from the Diocese of Richmond released a joint statement that said, “any instance of child sexual abuse is intolerable and gravely immoral. We hope that this process will bring healing for all victims and confirm our commitment to accountability and justice.”

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Pope wraps up synod on youth claiming persecution over abuse

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

October 27, 2018

By Nicole Winfield and Luca Mazzanti

Pope Francis wrapped up a monthlong meeting of bishops dedicated to young people by saying Saturday the Catholic Church was being “persecuted” and “dirtied” by accusations from the devil — an apparent reference to claims that he covered up for a sexual predator that have thrown his papacy into turmoil.

The Argentine pope made the comments to about 250 bishops, 30 young people and a handful of nuns who had just approved a 60-page final document at the close of a synod on how the church can better minister to today’s youth.

The sex abuse scandal, as well welcoming gays into the church and giving women a greater say in decision-making, were major topics of debate during the synod and featured in the final document. Those issues were also the ones that received the most contested votes as bishops voted “placet” or “non placet” — yay or nay — on each of the 167 paragraphs.

While every paragraph passed with far more than the two-thirds vote necessary, one referencing “sexual inclinations” and the need to accompany gays received the most no votes, at 65. One calling for women to have a greater recognition and say in the church — and lamenting the “absence” of the female perspective — received 30 no votes.

No woman was allowed to cast a ballot at the meeting.

On abuse, the bishops stopped short of issuing a straight-forward communal apology for the decades of sex abuse and cover-up committed by priests and their superiors. While that section was entitled “Seek Pardon,” the text voted on by bishops said merely that no amount of repentance can heal the trauma caused to victims. Thirty bishops voted against it.

Delegates have said that many bishops, particularly from Africa, rejected the emphasis placed on the abuse issue during the meeting, which unfolded as the Catholic hierarchy in the U.S., Chile and elsewhere is once again under fire for its botched handling of the scandal.

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The Vatican: Corrupt at its Core

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle (blog)

October 28, 2018

By Betty Clermont

The institution as we know it today began with a 1929 treaty. Italy created the Vatican as an independent state, meaning the pope and his men are not subject to any regulation or law enforcement except their own. At the same time, it was decided that the financial windfall from the treaty would be handled without moral or ethical restraint. The greatest atrocity of the Church is the centuries-long, world-wide sexual torture of children. However, the corruption resulting from the combination of no legal oversight and amoral finances – evidenced by monetary crimes and malfeasance – were known long before the extent of the cruelties of sex abuse.

Until the middle of the 19th century, the Vatican obtained much of its income from its feudal territories known as the Papal States, a broad swath of land across central Italy. As part of the movement to unify the Italian peninsular into one nation, King Victor Emmanuel’s army seized the Papal States in 1860 and captured Rome in 1870 including the Vatican. Italy was unified a year later.

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Bishops Urge Greater Inclusion of Women in Church Decisions

VATICAN CITY
The New York Times

October 27, 2018

By Elisabetta Povoledo

After a nearly monthlong global assembly dedicated to youths, Roman Catholic bishops called Saturday for a more inclusive role for women in church decision-making and greater participation of young people.

The appeal was part of a new document that urged bishops to help renew the church through a more participatory approach, making greater use of the energies and capabilities of young lay Catholics.

The document given to Pope Francis for his consideration also called for urgent changes so that women could play a bigger role in church decisions at all levels.

“It is a duty of justice,” it said, adding, “The absence of women’s voices and viewpoint impoverishes discussion and the path of the church.”

The document also acknowledged the church’s shortcomings amid new revelations on clerics’ sexual abuse of minors, a continuing global scandal that has damaged the church’s credibility in recent years and that risks undermining attempts to engage younger generations.

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The Irish Times view on Tuam Mother and Baby Home: dignity in death

IRELAND
The Irish Times

October 27, 2018

By Patsy McGarry

The decision to carry out a forensic examination has already brought comfort to survivors of the institution

The Government’s decision to undertake a forensic examination of the site at the former mother-and-baby home in Tuam, Co Galway, is significant. The intention is to recover the children’s remains in so far as this is possible, their identification, and their respectful reburial. The decision has already brought comfort to survivors of the institution and to relatives of children believed buried there. It is also an acknowledgment by this State of the inherent right to dignity of those children and to a respect for them in death which it appears was altogether absent in their sad, brief lives.

Some are uneasy with the seemingly open-ended estimate of costs involved, ranging from between €6 million to over double that at €13 million. That can be put into some perspective when it is realised that €17 million has been set aside for a necessary refurbishment of the roof at Pearse railway station in Dublin. One would expect those buried children, their identification, reburial and preservation in memory, is a more worthy aspiration than restoration of a railway station roof.

Less acceptable is the €2.5 million fixed sum committed this week to the Tuam excavation costs by the Bon Secours sisters who ran the home. It was not spontaneous, but followed correspondence from Minister for Children Katherine Zappone. The amount has about it none of the State’s generosity of spirit towards these excavations and it is less than what Zappone sought. This may fit with a business approach that comes of being the largest provider of private healthcare in Ireland, as are the Bon Secours sisters. But it is hardly compatible with their mission of “care for the sick, the dying and their families within a Catholic ethos”.

Such a business approach would also appear less than consistent with a Catholic ethos which emphasises respect for the person from conception to natural death, and in death. It is striking that this would appear so with November on the horizon, a month when people traditionally remember the dead.

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October 27, 2018

50 Years Later, a Victim of Ireland’s ‘Laundries’ Fights for Answers

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
The New York Times

October 26, 2018

By Ed O’Loughlin

For 30 years, she struggled with secret memories of beatings and other abuses, as well as most of the classic symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder: chronic anxiety, social isolation, compulsive behavior, depression, flashbacks, nightmares and suicidal thoughts.

Finally, 20 years ago, convinced the pain would never subside unless she acted, Elizabeth Coppin, now 69, walked into a police station in her native County Kerry, Ireland. She filed a complaint relating to the 12 years she had spent in an Irish “industrial school,” one of a now-defunct network of state-funded orphanages and reformatories run by religious orders on behalf of the state.

Her statement, which the on-duty police officer typed up and signed, was accompanied by two letters that Mrs. Coppin had written in support of her case.

“I need answers,” one of them pleads, adding: “The emotional scars I carry with me today are still very real. Please check out everything, please don’t be put off by the nuns. Check everything, dig deep, especially records.”

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Will the Synod on the Youth Set the Stage for Zero Tolerance on Abuse?

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Register

October 27, 2018
By Peter Jesserer Smith

For Catholics looking for the Synod on the Youth to provide answers to the Church’s sex-abuse crisis and the scandalous cover-ups emerging all over the globe, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, the foremost and most-trusted Vatican investigator of clerical sex-abuse, provided a dose of reality.

He told reporters Oct. 8 the global synod of bishops would discuss how sex abuse affects youth, but the solutions would likely come later. The Maltese archbishop said the upcoming meeting between Pope Francis and the heads of bishops’ conferences in February will be the “the best forum for this question.”

“That is the moment where we need to put on the agenda not only the issue of prevention but also of accountability,” Archbishop Scicluna said.

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Statement from Bishop Richard J. Malone to ’60 Minutes’

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Catholic Diocese

Oct 27, 2018

The following is the statement Bishop Richard J. Malone of Buffalo released to “60 Minutes” in advance of their upcoming story on the Diocese of Buffalo. We are also releasing it to the public.

I appreciate the invitation to interview with 60 Minutes. Regrettably, I must decline for two reasons.

First, the Church is in the eye of a storm largely as a result of wrong decisions made decades ago and even some made recently, as I have acknowledged. But, our efforts and our focus have always remained steadfast: protect the children and reconcile with the victims.

To that end, we have strengthened our policies and protections against abuse and we plan to extend those protections for adults as well.

We have instituted an Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program to bring some measure of justice to those who have been abused.

We have hired a former Special Agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation to monitor our professional responsibilities and obligations.

We continue to reach out to victims, remove clergy with substantiated allegations from ministry and cooperate with Federal and State investigations.

These activities occupy most of my days, but as St. Francis of Assisi instructed us: start by doing what is necessary; then do what is possible; and suddenly you’re doing the impossible.

Second, while 60 Minutes is free to interview whomever they wish for this story, it is clear to me and my staff that your roster of interviews did not include those who are aware of the full extent of the efforts of our Diocese to combat child abuse. Nor does it include those who urge me every day to stay the course and restore the confidence of our faithful.

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Wave of state attorneys general take on Catholic Church sex abuse

UNITED STATES
Axios

October 27, 2018

The Attorney General of Virginia Mark Herring announced Wednesday that his office was launching an “ongoing investigation” into possible sexual abuse and coverups by the Catholic dioceses in the state, the Washington Post reports.

The big picture: Herring is not alone. Since the Pennsylvania grand jury’s bombshell August report of egregious child sex abuse at the hands of Catholic priests, several other allegations of sexual abuse and ignorance on behalf of the Church have come to light. As a result, several other state investigations have followed.

The states investigating
Maryland: Attorney General Brian Frosh informed Archbishop William Lori that his office is conducting “an investigation and thorough review” of records relating to child sex abuse from the Church. (Baltimore Sun)
Vermont: Attorney General T.J. Donovan has appointed a task force to investigate abuses from a Catholic orphanage detailed by a major BuzzFeed News investigation. (CNN)
Michigan: An “independent, thorough, transparent, and prompt” statewide investigation was launched by the Attorney General’s Office. (Detroit Free Press)
New Jersey: A task force was created by Attorney General Gurbir Grewal to investigate allegations of abuse in the dioceses of New Jersey. (NJ.com)

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Another priest in Lansing Diocese accused of sexual harassment

LANSING (MI)
FOX 47 News

October 26, 2018

Another priest in the Catholic Diocese of Lansing is accused of sexual harassment.

Father Mathew Joseph- who served for one month at St. John the Evangelist Parish in Fenton- was removed and sent back to his order in India back in august.

The diocese says it received several complaints about his ministry, including an allegation of sexual harassment made by an adult female.

East Lansing pastor Mark Inglot resigned earlier this month after he was accused of sexual harassment by an adult co-worker.

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Santa Rosa Bishop to disclose accused priests’ names

SANTA ROSA (CA)
Press Democrat

October 26, 2018

By Mary Callahan

Santa Rosa Bishop Robert F. Vasa has pledged to release the names of Catholic priests with ties to the diocese who have been accused of sexually abusing children, but said he wants to wait until after the holidays to join other California bishops making similar disclosures.

Vasa, bishop in the sprawling Santa Rosa Diocese for the past seven years, said he expects to reveal about 23 names, many already known to the public because of lawsuits, settlements and other disclosures dating back more than 20 years and costing the diocese more than $29 million.

“I want to say ultimately as I stand before Almighty God, that I protected the names of people presumed to be innocent, and that I was as transparent as I could be for the support of the victims,” he said.

A handful of those clergymen expected to be included will not be familiar to local parishioners, most likely because the priests were accused long after their local service ended or even years after their deaths, Vasa said. The list will include priests whose alleged misconduct occurred outside the Santa Rosa Diocese, he said.

Following others

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San Antonio Archdiocese priest accused of sexual abuse of a child, removed from ministry

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
KENS 5

October 26, 2018

Reverend Edward Pavlicek had served as pastor at St. Thomas the Apostle Church in Canyon Lake since July 1. Allegations surfaced in August that he’d sexually assaulted a child in the 1980s.

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Diocese asks government to do autopsy on dead priest in India bishop rape case

MUMBAI (INDIA)
Crux

October 27, 2018

By Nirmala Carvalho

After the death of a witness against an Indian bishop accused of raping a nun, the diocese has called on the government to conduct an autopsy.

Father Kuriakose Kattuthara, 67, was found dead inside his room in Jalandhar Oct. 22, a week after Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jalandhar was granted bail by the state court in Kerala and went back to his diocese.

A 43-year-old nun made a formal police complaint against the bishop in June, claiming he raped her 13 times between 2014 and 2016. The nun is a member of the Punjab-based Missionaries of Jesus congregation, but said the attacks happened at one of the order’s convents in the southern state of Kerala.

Mulakkal vehemently denies the charges, and claims the nun is retaliating because he initiated an investigation against her for an affair she allegedly had with a married man.

Kattuthara gave testimony against Mulakkal, and his family said they believe he was murdered for his actions, adding that “he was under tremendous pressure” to retract his statements against the bishop.

On Oct. 26, Bishop Agnelo Gracias, whom Pope Francis appointed apostolic administrator of Jalandhar on Sept. 20, issued a statement noting Kattuthara “suffered from a number of health problems such as high blood pressure, diabetes and heart ailments.”

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Legislature should pass Child Victims Act

GARDEN CITY (NY)
L.I. Herald

October 25, 2018

More and more survivors of sexual abuse are sharing their horror stories, often decades after they were molested or raped, or both. In the past, their stories were often covered up. Today, however, their pain and suffering are increasingly being recognized, including by the institutions responsible for the abuse.

The Democratic-led State Assembly has drafted and passed legislation, known as the Child Victims Act, which would make it easier for abuse victims to file lawsuits and seek criminal charges against perpetrators. The Republican-led State Senate, though, is yet to pass a companion bill. It should.

Current law gives abuse victims the option to file civil cases or seek criminal charges until age 23. Under the act, victims could file civil suits up to age 50 and seek criminal charges until they are 28. The bill would also allow a one-year window for older victims to file suits for alleged abuse now blocked by the state’s statute of limitations.

The issue has been thrown into the spotlight in recent months, with new cases of sexual abuse by members of the clergy surfacing with increased regularity. The Boston Globe’s series of stories in 2002 detailing the allegations against hundreds of predator priests no longer stands alone as a chronicle of widespread abuse.

The Pennsylvania attorney general released a grand jury report in August that identified more than 300 priests in six Pennsylvania dioceses accused of molesting a thousand children, and detailed a subsequent alleged cover-up by other clergy members.

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Vic ex-priest admits abusing more boys

AUSTRALIA
Infosurhoy

October 27, 2018

By Marta Subat

A notorious pedophile and defrocked Catholic priest has admitted sexually abusing more boys in Victoria during the 1970s and 80s.

Frank Gerard Klep, 75, appeared via video link in the County Court of Victoria on Friday, when he pleaded guilty to indecently assaulting three boys under 16 between 1976 and 1982.

He is serving a 10-and-a-half-year prison sentence for molesting 15 schoolboys, many of whom were sleeping when he attacked them.

Klep, who was a priest and teacher at Salesian College Rupertswood at Sunbury between 1972 and 1979 and its principal between 1982 to 1986, was convicted in 1994 of sex offences in the 1970s against a student at the school.

In 1998, he was sent to Samoa on a missionary trip while facing further sex charges, but was deported after failing

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Motion filed to keep punishment for accused pedophile priest under wraps

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
KRQE

October 26, 2018

Prosecutors are fighting to keep an accused pedophile priest’s potential punishment under wraps during trail.

Eighty-year-old Arthur Perrault was brought back to the United States last week to face rape charges connected to one of his alleged victims from the 1990s.

He had been on the run for decades and was found hiding in Morocco.

According to a recently filed motion, the prosecution is asking the court to prohibit the defendant from informing the jury of the punishment he faces.

The motion says providing sentencing distracts the jury from their fact-finding responsibility.

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Our View: The change agents

ATTLEBORO (MA)
The Sun Chronicle

October 27, 2019

It started with an ad in this newspaper.

“Do you remember Father Porter?” the ad asked, inviting those who did to a meeting.

Seven people showed up. They not only remembered Father James R. Porter, they were haunted by him.

Porter had been a young priest in the early 1960s at St. Mary’s Church in North Attleboro, He was popular among some children because of his youthful vigor and athletic talents — but others knew a dark secret.

Father Porter was a pedophile.

Among those at the meeting was Frank Fitzpatrick, a private investigator who was tortured by the memories of the sexual abuse he had suffered from Porter.

Using his detective skills, he tracked Porter down in Minnesota and even recorded a vague confession from the former priest over the phone.

Fitzpatrick and other victims went public with their accusations in 1992, setting off a media maelstrom.

Twenty-five years ago this month, Porter pleaded guilty to molesting 28 children and was sentenced to up to 20 years in prison. The Diocese of Fall River settled civil lawsuits with scores of other victims.

Many thought Porter was simply a rogue priest and the coverup by the church — Porter was transferred from parish to parish before finally being quietly defrocked — a case of poor judgment.

In reality, it was the tip of the iceberg.

As today’s front-page story by Staff Writer George W. Rhodes explains, studies estimate that more than 4,000 clergy members abused nearly 20,000 people in the United States alone. And coverups, like Porter’s, were not isolated but systemic as church hierarchy chose to protect their institution rather than innocent children.

The scandal has had a seismic impact on Catholicism. Today, only 39 percent of those people who identify themselves as Catholic attended a service in the past seven days; a half century ago, it was nearly twice that number.

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Called to serve: Despite challenges facing the Catholic church, two local priests say they couldn’t ignore their vocation

ATTLEBORO (MA)
The Sun Chronicle

October 27, 2018

By Mark Stockwell

Matthew Gill was born into a devout Catholic family in January 1990.

It was the dawn of a new life, a new decade and the eve of a very dark time for the faith held by his devout family.

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Nineteen-ninety was another in a long string of years that marked a continuing decline in church attendance.

And the number of men entering the priesthood had fallen off sharply.

Ironically, however, it was the year that recorded the greatest number of parishes nationwide, before or after.

That number was 19,620, according to statistics compiled by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate (CARA) at Georgetown University.

There were 34,114 diocesan priests to serve those parishes, in purely mathematical terms, 1.7 priests per parish.

In 1970 there were slightly more than two priests per parish, again in purely mathematical terms, 2.05.

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Former altar boy sexually abused by priest tells why he’s raising his kids in the Catholic Church

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

October 26, 2018

By Lauren Chval

Michael Hoffman is what some call a “cradle Catholic.” Born and raised into the faith, he and his family were extremely involved in their Lake Forest parish throughout his childhood. As a kid, he was an altar server. As an adult, he considers the Catholic community the “fabric” of his life.

From 12 to 16, it was also the source of his sexual abuse.

Hoffman, now 53, kept that to himself for a long time. It wasn’t until 2006 — a decade into his marriage — that he decided to tell his wife. The second person he told? His pastor at St. Mary of the Woods Parish in Chicago.

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October 26, 2018

APNewsBreak: US religious orders asked to ID priest abusers

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

October 26, 2018

By Nicole Winfield

The umbrella organization of Catholic religious orders in the U.S. is suggesting that its members consider voluntarily identifying priests accused of sexual abuse, opening up what could be a major new chapter in the Catholic Church’s long-running abuse and cover-up saga, The Associated Press has learned.

The invitation to transparency by the Conference of Major Superiors of Men, which represents about a third of the 37,000 Catholic priests in the U.S., is significant because religious orders such as the Franciscans and Benedictines have largely flown under the radar over two decades of a scandal in the U.S. that has focused on abuse by diocesan priests and cover-up by their bishops.

Anticipating that the spotlight will shift amid new investigations in a dozen U.S. states, the conference will formally invite its 120 member orders to consider voluntarily publishing the names of men with an “established allegation” against them, said the Rev. Gerard McGlone, who is responsible for child protection at the conference.

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US DOJ orders all US bishops not to destroy abuse documents, but in previous post Pennsylvania bishop did just that

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

October 26, 2018

By Peter Isely

Today it was learned that the U.S. Department of Justice has put every US diocese under notice to “not destroy, discard, dispose of, delete, or alter any” documents related to the sexual abuse of children as they investigate “possible violations of federal law.” The letter, addressed to Daniel Cardinal DiNardo, President of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, is significant because it covers not only the state of Pennsylvania, where the D.O.J. has officially launched a federal probe, but across the entire U.S.

One Pennsylvania bishop likely at the center of the current federal investigation is Bishop David Zubik of Pittsburgh. Zubik has a long history in Pittsburgh. According to the Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report, as Auxiliary Bishop and Vicar of Clergy under Archbishop Daniel Wuerl, Zubik was involved in covering up child sex abuse.

Zubik was promoted to bishop of the Green Bay diocese in 2003. While in Wisconsin, court records show that Zubik systematically destroyed nearly all criminal evidence of abuse and cover up from that diocese relating to at least 51 known sex offenders. In fact, Zubik’s reissued the order for the shredding the day before the Vatican announced he would leave Green Bay and return to run the Pittsburgh diocese in 2007. At the time SNAP issued a letter for a federal investigation of the document destruction.

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Federal Government Tells Catholic Bishops Not to Destroy Sex Abuse Documents

WASHINGTON D.C.
The New York Times

October 26, 2018

By Laurie Goodstein

The Department of Justice has sent a sweeping request to every Roman Catholic diocese in the United States not to destroy documents related to the handling of child sexual abuse, a sign that the federal investigation into the church could grow far more extensive.

Catholic bishops have been asked by the federal government to retain their files on a broad array of internal matters, including sexual abuse investigations, and the transfer of priests across state or international borders, or to treatment centers. The request includes documents contained in “secret archives” — the confidential files that are kept by each diocese.

News reports last week revealed that the Justice Department had opened an investigation into all eight Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania, and the diocese of Buffalo in New York. This marked the first time the federal government had undertaken an investigation of the church’s handling of abusive priests, a scandal that surfaced in the United States in the mid-1980s.

But this request to preserve files, first disclosed by Whispers in the Loggia, a site that closely follows the Catholic hierarchy, suggests that federal investigators are throwing a very wide net. The abuse scandal, long fueled by the shocking details in the church’s own personnel documents, may now grow like an uncontrolled wildfire.

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Feds put Catholic church across the nation on notice: Don’t destroy any evidence of abuse

UNITED STATES
York Daily Record

October 26, 2018

By Candy Woodall and Brandie Kessler

The federal investigation into Catholic priest abuse now includes every diocese in the nation.

U.S. Attorney William McSwain has put every archdiocese, diocese and Catholic entity on notice to preserve and not destroy evidence of priest abuse or a cover-up.

An attorney for the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops told the York Daily Record Friday the organization is complying with a request from the U.S. Department of Justice.

In a letter sent earlier this month, McSwain directed conference President Daniel DiNardo to notify all Catholic institutions to preserve documents in their current form and condition, “and not be destroyed, discarded, disposed of, deleted, or altered in any way.”

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Charlotte diocese considering publishing names of priests with sexual abuse allegations

CHARLOTTE (NC)
WSOC-TV

October 26, 2018

By Allison Latos

Charlotte diocese considering publishing names of priests with sexual abuse allegations

The Catholic Church is where parishioners practice their faith.

However, it’s a place of pain for victims sexually abused by priests.

After the Pennsylvania attorney general’s grand jury investigation revealed allegations against more than 300 priests, prosecutors in several states opened their own investigations.

A man who claims he was abused in the Charlotte diocese in the 1970s sent a letter to North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, urging him to open an investigation.

“I was repeatedly sexually assaulted by a priest,” the letter said. “I’m urging your office to open an investigation.”

Stein told Channel 9 that North Carolina law limits what he can do.

Prosecutors in North Carolina do not have the same investigative grand jury authority they have in Pennsylvania.

Stein said it’s up to local district attorneys to prosecute cases unless they refer them to his office.

He thinks lawmakers should broaden prosecutors’ powers.

“We also need to close a loophole in our law that requires people to report suspected child abuse,” Stein said. “Right now, it is only limited to parents and caregivers. It does not cover people in positions of trust.”

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‘My life was ruined’: A Catholic Church sexual abuse protest that has lasted 20 years

WASHINGTON D.C.
Washington Post

October 25, 2018

By Petula Dvorak

There’s a honk. And then a thumbs-up.

A wave, another thumbs-up. A flash-flash of headlights. Honk! Honk!

“This is a good day,” declared protester John Wojnowski, who has been a fixture outside the Vatican’s U.S. mission in Northwest Washington for more than two decades.

When he began trying to tell the world about sex abuse in the Catholic Church — and about what he says a priest did to him when he was 15 — there were a lot of bad days. There was silence. And stares.

“And they give me the finger,” said Wojnowski, who is now 75. And many years ago in his 20-year pilgrimage toward redemption, someone walked out of the Holy See’s diplomatic outpost on Massachusetts Avenue and spit in Wojnowski’s face, he said.

Since 1997, Wojnowski has stood outside the Apostolic Nunciature during rush hour explaining his lifetime of pain, depression, anger in a series of giant signs:

“VATICAN hides PEDOPHILES”

“CATHOLICS COWARDS”

“MY LIFE WAS RUINED BY A CATHOLIC PEDOPHILE PRIEST”

He flips and turns the signs for hours so they face incoming and outgoing traffic, delivering his message to the thousands of motorists, joggers and cyclists streaming past. He stares people down to make eye contact. To read the sign. To know his story. He demands they know.

“How many people look away,” he said to the drivers of oncoming cars who looked away, “from the ignorance, the stupidity, the malevolence of the Catholic Church?”

There are plenty of people like him around Washington — the seemingly lost-cause protesters — though few have his stamina. He lives in Maryland and takes a train, Metro and bus to his post, a three-hour journey, almost every day. In the sun, the rain and the cold.

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Charlotte diocese considering publishing names of priests with sexual abuse allegations

CHARLOTTE (NC)
WSOC TV

October 26, 2018

By Allison Latos

The Catholic Church is where parishioners practice their faith.

However, it’s a place of pain for victims sexually abused by priests.

After the Pennsylvania attorney general’s grand jury investigation revealed allegations against more than 300 priests, prosecutors in several states opened their own investigations.

Content Continues Below

A man who claims he was abused in the Charlotte diocese in the 1970s sent a letter to North Carolina Attorney General Josh Stein, urging him to open an investigation.

“I was repeatedly sexually assaulted by a priest,” the letter said. “I’m urging your office to open an investigation.”

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Big unknown: Scope of federal investigation of Pa. Catholic Church

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

October 26, 2018

By Carol Zimmerman

In mid-October when seven Pennsylvania dioceses announced they had been served subpoenas to release confidential files and testimony about allegations of sexual abuse by clergy and other church workers to the federal government, the announcement was big news.

But it was never clear what exactly the government would do with its findings.

On Oct. 23, the eighth diocese, Altoona-Johnstown, also confirmed it had received federal subpoenas, and, like the other Pennsylvania dioceses, said it would cooperate fully with the investigation.

But questions about what this will mean for the Pennsylvania dioceses or if this type of investigation will move to other states remain unanswered since neither the Justice Department nor the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, which issued the subpoenas, have spoken about it.

This leaves plenty of room for speculation.

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Dem ad targets McGarrigle for Senate failure to vote on abuse bill

SWARTHMORE (PA)
Daily Times

October 25, 2018

By Kathleen E. Carey

As a Democrat-funded TV ad released criticized state Sen. Tom McGarrigle, R-26 of Springfield, he is expected to appear today with abuse survivors to continue his support of passing legislation that would allow childhood sexual abuse survivors to pursue criminal and civil justice.

In a 30-second commercial paid for and authorized by the Senate Democratic Campaign Committee, McGarrigle’s picture appears alongside eight state senators under the banner, “GOP Senators Too Cowardly to Vote.”

The ad, called “Window,” refers to the state Senate’s inability to pass SB 261 that would create a two-year window for victims of childhood sexual abuse to file a civil suit against their abuser or institutions that covered it up, like the Catholic Church. It would also enable future victims to sue until they were 50 years old. Current law caps that at the age of 30.

The measure passed the state House of Representatives at the end of September by a 173-21 vote. However, despite support from McGarrigle and other senators, it never got a vote after state Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-25 of Jefferson County, crafted legislation that would eliminate institutions from being sued in the two-year window.

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The best of times, the worst of times

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Catholic

October 26, 2018

It’s that famous Charles Dickens’ opening line to “A Tale of Two Cities,” his novel of the French Revolution: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times …” We’re there right now, right in the middle of both.

The “worst of times” is what gets all the news and what we hear and read about every day. The clergy sexual abuse crisis can’t be hidden, can’t be avoided, can’t be ignored. It needs to be addressed, it needs to be answered, it needs to be overcome.

Always, first and foremost, are the needs of the victims. Healing and hope for those hurt in this tragedy have to be our priority. Whether locally, nationally or internationally, we have to do all in our power to help victims deal with their pain and help them to be whole again.

Let me say once more: if you are a victim of sexual abuse by anyone representing the church — whether here in Pittsburgh or anywhere else — please contact us at 1-888-808-1235.

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Exclusive interview with Bishop Richard Malone on clergy sex abuse scandal

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB TV

October 26, 2018

The clergy sex abuse scandal that is rocking the Roman Catholic Church around the world is sending shockwaves through the Diocese of Buffalo.

Bishop Richard Malone has been the leader of Western New York’s 600,000 Catholics for the past years.

Malone has come under fire after the Diocese released a list of 42 names of accused priests. A new list which includes more names will be released soon.

In an exclusive interview with News 4, Bishop Malone talked to Don Postles about the message he has for all Western New York residents- and the action he’s taking to end the abuse.

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Little Rock Diocese reveals 26 more abuse cases

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Arkansas Online

October 25, 2018

By Kat Stromquist

The Diocese of Little Rock said it has received 26 more allegations of abuse by priests within the diocese after its September release of a list of clergy members who were “credibly accused” of sexual abuse against minors.

In a letter to church members Tuesday, Bishop Anthony B. Taylor provided an update after the diocese’s initial posting of the list that identified 12 priests accused of abuse who served in Arkansas. Taylor said the church had received more than two dozen additional complaints in recent weeks.

“I had hoped that the release of the names of those priests known to have abused minors might enable any as-yet unknown victims to come forward to share their story and receive help, and this has in fact occurred,” Taylor wrote. “Since Sept. 10 we have received 26 additional allegations, most of which were against priests already listed in last month’s letter, and none of which were against priests who are currently in active ministry in Arkansas.”

All of the new reports concern events that occurred before 2002, he wrote. Taylor said that although the church has “not had the time” to investigate “thoroughly,” those who made allegations have been offered assistance.

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Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston Plans To Identify Priests Accused of Abuse

WHEELING (WV)
The Intelligencer

October 25, 2018

By Matt Saxton

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston is following the trend of neighboring dioceses and releasing the list of names of who it said are priests, deacons and others with “credible” child sexual abuse allegations against them.

Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore, who is currently serving as apostolic administrator for the diocese, made the announcement Wednesday. In a statement released from his office, the archbishop said the diocese will release the list going back to 1950. Lori said none of the people listed are currently in active ministry.

Lori appointed Bryan Minor, delegate of administrative affairs for the diocese, to oversee the process of reviewing files. Diocese spokesman Tim Bishop said that process, which is in the hands of the Diocesan Sexual Abuse Review Board, could take several weeks.

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French priest takes his own life in church after abuse claims

FRANCE
BBC News

October 22, 2018

A French priest has taken his own life in his church after being accused of sexual misconduct, officials say.

Pierre-Yves Fumery hanged himself in his presbytery in the central town of Gien, Catholic authorities said.

Last week he was questioned by police, but not charged, following allegations of sexual assault involving a child under 15, news agency AFP said.

Father Fumery, 38, was the second French priest in a month to take his own life after similar abuse claims.

“It is a moment of suffering and a tragic ordeal,” Orléans Bishop Jacques Blaquart told the media.

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Tauranga architect specialising in childcare centres found in possession of hundreds of child sexual abuse images

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff.co.nz

October 26 2018

By Tara Shaskey

An accomplished architect who specialises in designing childcare centres has been caught with hundreds of sexual abuse images of young children.

In an international police sting, computers and storage devices owned by Neville Kingsley Saunders were found to have 559 media files and images, mostly depicting young boys who were either naked and posing suggestively, or engaged in sexual activity with another child or adult.

Two videos taken with Saunders’ phone were also found and deemed objectionable.

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A New Catholic Moment: Why Prosecutors Are Taking Bold Steps on Sex-Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Commonweal

October 24, 2018

By Paul Moses

As the Justice Department launches an investigation of clergy sexual abuse of minors in Pennsylvania’s Catholic dioceses, it is worth noting that victims have called for such a probe for at least fifteen years. Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, told Attorney General John Ashcroft in a November 2003 letter that the Justice Department was in a “unique position” to plumb the secrets within the church’s organizational structure.

“We believe that senior management within the Church…have not been held institutionally accountable for these practices, and as a non-profit corporation continue to selectively circumvent our Nation’s laws,” their letter said.

SNAP and the Center for Constitutional Rights renewed the long-ignored call for a federal probe in a letter to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein dated August 15, one day after the release of the state grand-jury report alleging a long-term coverup of credible abuse allegations in Pennsylvania. The letter calls for criminal or civil charges, “where appropriate,” against the Catholic hierarchy.

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Archdiocese removes Father Francis Nigli from St. Wenceslaus

OMAHA (NE)
KMTV

October 25, 2018

By Shawnte Passmore and Maya Saenz

Thursday night, parishioners at one of Omaha’s largest Catholic churches, St. Wenceslaus, met with Archbishop George Lucas to learn more about the dismissal of Father Francis Nigli.

They wanted to know what took so long for the church to go public and acknowledge that a 21-year-old accused Father Nigli of kissing and groping him on church grounds in May. Hundreds of parishioners packed the room for an emotional meeting.

They told 3 News Now that they shared concerns about lack of transparency and communication to the community.

The Archdiocese of Omaha said the priest was removed from ministering this past summer after it received a report that Nigli had kissed and fondled a man in May. A police investigation “determined the elements of sexual assault were not met.”

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Indischer Kardinal nimmt vertuschende Bischöfe in Schutz

[Indian Cardinal protects cover-up bishops]

GERMANY
katholisch.de

October 26, 2018

Gracias: Missbrauch soll in Synoden-Dokument nur am Rand vorkommen

Hat ein Bischof vor 20 Jahren sexuellen Missbrauch vertuscht, könne man ihn heute nicht dafür beschuldigen, meint Mumbais Kardinal Oswald Gracias. Immerhin habe man früher nicht gewusst, welche Spätfolgen das für die Opfer haben könne.

Der indische Kardinal Oswald Gracias (73) hat sich besorgt darüber gezeigt, dass das Problem des sexuellen Missbrauchs in der katholischen Kirche zu viel Platz im Abschlussdokument der Jugendsynode einnehmen könnte. Vor allem Bischöfe aus westlichen Ländern machten bei der Synode “viel Aufhebens” um den Missbrauch, sagte Gracias am Freitag dem US-amerikanischen Internetportal “Crux”. Um der Synode gerecht zu werden, könne man jedoch nicht sagen, dass dies das wichtigste Thema sei.

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Missbrauch? Diözese Würzburg beurlaubt Priester

[Abuse? Diocese of Würzburg leaves a priest]

GERMANY
Main Post

October 19, 2018

By Jürgen Haug-Peichl

Wegen „des Verdachts einer sexuellen Grenzverletzung“ wurde ein Pfarrvikar der Diözese Würzburg mit sofortiger Wirkung vorübergehend von seinen priesterlichen Aufgaben beurlaubt. Das teilte das Bistum am Freitagnachmittag mit. Die Entscheidung sei nach Rücksprache mit Bischof Franz Jung gefallen.

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“Zölibat ist kein Tabu” Vatikan will über Ehe für Priester reden

[“Celibacy is not a taboo”: Vatican wants to talk about marriage for priests]

GERMANY
ntv

October 26, 2018

Wie geht die katholische Kirche in Deutschland mit der Pflicht zur sexuellen Enthaltsamkeit für Priester um? Der Botschafter des Papstes in Deutschland deutet einen möglichen Kurswechsel an. Der Vatikan, sagt er, sei zu Gesprächen bereit.

Der akute Priestermangel und die Serie an Missbrauchsskandalen zwingen die katholische Kirche zum Umdenken: Der Vertreter des Vatikans in Deutschland fordert angesichts des bisherigen Umgangs mit Sexualität im Priesterstand eine Debatte um die umstrittene Verpflichtung zur Ehelosigkeit. “Der Zölibat ist kein Tabu”, sagte Erzbischof Nikola Eterovic der Monatszeitschrift “Herder Korrespondenz”. Die Worte des Kirchenvertreters haben Gewicht: Eterovic vertritt als Apostolischer Nuntius den Vatikan in Deutschland.

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“Gebet im fortdauernden Zustand der Sünde ist leeres Blabla”

[“Prayer in the continuing state of sin is empty blah”]

GERMANY
Die Tagespost

October 26, 2018

Bernhard Meuser nimmt zu den spirituellen Ursache des Missbrauchsskandals Stellung.

In einem Gastbeitrag für die katholische Wochenzeitung „Die Tagespost“ geht Bernhard Meuser, Initiator der globalen Jugendkatechismus-Initiative „Youcat“ und Mitinitiator von „Mission Manifest“, auf eine spirituelle Ursache des Missbrauchsskandal ein – die Vernachlässigung des Beichtsakraments.

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Android creator Andy Rubin says the ‘wild’ allegations about his sexual misconduct and $90 million exit deal are a ‘smear campaign’

NEW YORK (NY)
Business Insider

October 26, 2018

By Isobel Asher Hamilton

– Android creator Andy Rubin has said The New York Times report about his alleged sexual misconduct at Google is part of a “smear campaign.”
– The Times reported that Rubin coerced a woman, with whom he was having an extramarital affair, into giving him oral sex in a hotel room in 2014.
– The newspaper said Rubin was handed an exit package of $90 million after he was asked to hand in his resignation.
– Rubin said the report contained “numerous inaccuracies” and was designed to “disparage” him during a divorce and custody battle.

Andy Rubin, the man who created Android for Google, has rubbished a New York Times report about his alleged sexual misconduct at the company and his $90 million exit deal.

The Times said Rubin was asked to resign from Google in 2014 after an internal investigation found that he had had an extramarital affair with an employee, and coerced her into performing oral sex in a hotel room in 2013.

The Times also reported that Rubin was given a “hero’s farewell” and an exit package worth $90 million, which was paid in instalments of about $2 million over four years.

Rubin strongly denied the claims in two tweets on Thursday evening. He said they were a smear campaign designed to damage his name as part of a divorce and custody battle with his ex-wife Rie Rubin.

“The New York Times story contains numerous inaccuracies about my employment at Google and wild exaggerations about my compensation. Specifically, I never coerced a woman to have sex in a hotel room,” he wrote.

“These false allegations are part of a smear campaign to disparage me during a divorce and custody battle. Also, I am deeply troubled that anonymous Google executives are commenting about my personnel file and misrepresenting the facts.”

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‘Google covers up harassment and passes the trash’: A Google engineer gave her employer both barrels after an explosive sexual misconduct report

NEW YORK (NY)
Business Insider

October 26, 2018

By Isobel Asher Hamilton

– An explosive New York Times report has delved into allegations of sexual misconduct at Google.
– Engineer Liz Fong-Jones told the newspaper that Google “covers up harassment,” and tweet stormed more details after the piece was published.
– Fong-Jones said that one of the executives named by the Times was the director she referred to in a #MeToo blog about sexual assault last year.

A Google engineer has savaged the company’s culture of sexual misconduct and harassment following an explosive report in The New York Times.

In a series of tweets, Liz Fong-Jones slammed Google senior managers for their “abuse of power relationships” after Android creator Rubin was accused of resigning with a $90 million exit package after a woman came forward saying he coerced her into oral sex in a hotel room.

“It is not okay to assault people. It is not okay to cheat. It is not okay to sexually harass. What’s salacious about the NYT article is *not* the BDSM or the polyamory,” Fong-Jones tweeted following the publication of the Times report. “It’s the abuse of power relationships in situations where there was no consent, or consent was impossible.”

It built on comments Fong-Jones made to the New York Times as part of its report.

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Irish prelate says some nations don’t grasp ‘severity’ of abuse crisis

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

October 26, 2018

Speaking ahead of the close of a summit of Catholic bishops held against the backdrop of a new wave of the Church’s clerical abuse crisis, Archbishop Eamon Martin of Armagh, Ireland, said some areas of the world and the ecclesial sphere still haven’t grasped the severity of the issue.

“Sometimes I feel that there are still areas of life in the Church where this has not yet come to the fore, come to the light,” Martin said Oct. 26.

“I think that there are perhaps still some areas in which this area is denied and not given its proper place,” he said, voicing hope that a highly-anticipated February summit of presidents of bishops’ conferences from around the world convoked by Pope Francis on the theme of child protection would help address the issue on a local level.

Martin voiced hope that the February gathering “will help to ensure that more countries will take this issue seriously, and I pray that they do.”

Attending an Oct. 26 press briefing during the final week of the Oct. 3-28 Synod of Bishops on young people, faith and vocational discernment, Martin responded to a question on rumors there was a dispute over how much emphasis to give the abuse crisis in the gathering’s final document, with prelates from Asia and Africa wanting to downplay the issue, arguing that it is only a major issue in Western nations.

Martin admitted that the abuse issue started out as a major topic, drawing ovations for prelates who touched on the issue during their brief speeches. As the month-long meeting went on, discussion turned to other topics, though the abuse crisis was always an underlying theme, he said.

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Bishop out on bail, priest’s death unnerve Indian nuns who protested publicly

KOCHI (INDIA)
National Catholic Reporter

October 25, 2018

by Saji Thomas

Five Catholic nuns whose public protest in September led to the judicial custody of an Indian bishop accused of rape now fear for their lives after he recently was released on bail.

Their fear intensified after a priest who testified against the accused, Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jalandhar, died Oct. 22 under mysterious circumstances.

“We do not know whether we will be on the face of the earth tomorrow. The bishop can do anything to us,” says Sister Anupama, one of the Missionaries of Jesus nuns who staged a sit-in at a busy intersection in Kochi, the commercial hub of the southern Indian state of Kerala.

After 14 days, they ended their indefinite protest on Sept. 22, a day after the Kerala police arrested Mulakkal. The bishop was accused of repeatedly raping Anupama’s former superior general between 2014 and 2016. The former superior general filed the police complaint in Kerala on June 28.

The bishop has denied the charges, calling them a vendetta by the nun for his disciplinary action against her. The Missionaries of Jesus is a diocesan congregation under the Jalandhar bishop.

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Despite a history of sexual abuse, here’s why some Catholic parents choose to stay with the church

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

October 26, 2018

By Lauren Chval

Michael Hoffman is what some call a “cradle Catholic.” Born and raised into the faith, he and his family were extremely involved in their Forest Park parish throughout his childhood. As a kid, he was an altar server. As an adult, he considers the Catholic community the “fabric” of his life.
Hoffman, now 53, kept that to himself for a long time. It wasn’t until 2006 — a decade into his marriage — that he decided to tell his wife. The second person he told? His pastor at St. Mary of the Woods Parish in Chicago.
Catholic community the “fabric” of his life.

From 12 to 16, it was also the source of his sexual abuse.

Hoffman, now 53, kept that to himself for a long time. It wasn’t until 2006 — a decade into his marriage — that he decided to tell his wife. The second person he told? His pastor at St. Mary of the Woods Parish in Chicago.

“I was that active at our parish that I felt compelled to tell him. My kids were going to school there. I was on the athletic board,” Hoffman said. “If that experience went poorly — and there’s a 50-50 chance that it could go either way — he might have thought that I was attacking his ministry or attacking his character, which I wasn’t doing. If he didn’t handle it the way he handled it, which was a very good and gracious way, that could have changed my path. But he didn’t. I was just at a moment in my life where I was really wanting help.”

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La confesión del obispo Duarte: “En la iglesia y en muchas otras instituciones” hay una cultura del encubrimiento

[Bishop Duarte confesses to culture of concealment “in the church and in many other institutions”]

CHILE
El Mostrador

October 22, 2018

El obispo emérito de Valparaíso, quien aparece mencionado por varias víctimas como parte de una maquinaria de encubrimiento en la Quinta Región, se presentó ante la Fiscalía de Rancagua pero su declaración será reagendada para que pueda estar en conocimiento de la carpeta investigativa. Defendió su inocencia, señalando que “hice todo lo que había que hacer”.

Hasta la Fiscalía de Rancagua llegó el obispo emérito de Valparaíso, Gonzalo Duarte, para prestar declaración en condición de imputado. El religioso –cuya renuncia como jefe de la iglesia de Valparaíso fue aceptada en junio pasado por el Papa Francisco estuvo cerca de una hora en dependencias del Ministerio Público, sin embargo trascendió que no prestó declaración argumentando no conocer la carpeta, por lo que se reagendó la fecha de la citación.

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Víctimas de Karadima se querellan contra el cardenal Errázuriz por perjurio y falso testimonio

[Victims of Karadima file complaint accusing Cardinal Errázuriz of perjury and false testimony]

CHILE
Emol

October 25, 2018

By Juan Peña

La acción judicial fue presentada por James Hamilton, José Andrés Murillo y Juan Carlos Cruz. “¡Basta de mentiras y delincuentes!”, señalaron.

Las víctimas del ex sacerdote Fernando Karadima presentaron este jueves una querella por el delito de perjurio y falso testimonio en grado de consumado contra el cardenal Francisco Javier Errázuriz. En la acción judicial, James Hamilton, José Andrés Murillo y Juan Carlos Cruz apuntan al obispo emérito de Santiago como “autor del delito de falso testimonio, en grado de consumado, previsto y sancionado en el artículo 209 del Código Penal”.

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Municipio de Iquique despoja del título de “hijo ilustre” a exobispo expulsado por abusos sexuales

[Municipality of Iquique strips “illustrious son” title from ex-bishop expelled for sexual abuse]

CHILE
BioBioChile

October 25, 2018

By Sebastián Asencio and Cristián Núñez

Este jueves, la Municipalidad de Iquique determinó quitar la calidad de “hijo ilustre” a Marco Antonio Órdenes; exobispo que fue acusado por abusos sexuales. Lo anterior, luego que el concejo municipal aprobara la solicitud elevada por el concejal Matías Ramírez, quien había pedido quitar este título que poseía el sacerdote.

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