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 15, 2018

Priest put on leave after allegation of sexual abuse of a minor, Pittsburgh diocese says

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

October 14, 2018

By Sam Ruland

A Diocese of Pittsburgh priest has been put on leave after allegations of sexual abuse of a minor were presented to Bishop David Zubik, the diocese announced Saturday.

Father Joseph Reschick, 67, who was serving as pastor of St. Rosalia Parish in Greenfield, is accused of sexually abusing a minor in the 1980s, according to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Father Reschick denies the allegation, but has been placed on administrative leave.

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.

Sexual abuse bill should include civil window, victims’ fund: Sen. Dan Laughlin

ERIE (PA)
Go Erie

October 15, 2018

For many pundits and critics, the legacy of the 2017-18 legislative session will be determined by the final outcome of Senate Bill 261, a measure that addresses the criminal and civil statutes of limitations in cases of childhood sexual assault.

I want to stress that as the Senate again takes up this bill, the welfare and redress of victims remains the focus of this legislation. That has been the case ever since we unanimously approved and sent the bill to the House of Representatives on Feb. 1, 2017.

Unfortunately, it languished there for 20 months. We could have held public hearings to determine the best path forward if the House had sent it back in a more timely fashion. Instead, we were given a handful of days to consider the many ramifications of the amendments made by the House.

Anyone who has taken the time, as I have, to read through the grand jury report detailing the horrendous crimes that occurred in the Catholic Church over several decades knows that this has to be made right.

I have met with Sen. Joseph Scarnati, the president pro-tempore of the Senate and prime sponsor of Senate Bill 261, on several occasions over the past month and I’ve talked to many constituents and legislators. To be sure, there is a wide spectrum of thoughts about how to “make this right” for victims.

I strongly believe the final version of Senate Bill 261 that is sent to the governor must include the four provisions detailed in the grand jury report:

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

Letter From the Editor: Clock is ticking for victims of childhood sexual abuse in Pa.

SWARTHMORE (PA)
Delaware County Daily Times

October 15, 2018

By Phil Heron

Victims of domestic abuse in Pennsylvania are a little safer today.

They received justice.

Now it’s time for another group of victims to get their day in court.

But the jury remains out on whether they will ever get that opportunity.

Let me try to explain.

On Friday Gov. Tom Wolf signed legislation that would go a long way toward safeguarding victims of domestic abuse. And the legislation has Delaware County’s fingerprints all over it.

Not just from victims crying out for protection. But by senators and representatives doing the right thing.

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

The Rundown: Sexual abuse demonstration coming to Senate offices in Harrisburg

READING (PA)
Reading Eagle

October 15, 2018

Also coming up: A debate Sunday between U.S. Sen. Bob Casey and Lou Barletta; and a hearing on election security.

ABUSE VICTIMS WILL BE HEARD IN CAPITOL

Advocates and victims of childhood sexual abuse will be seen and heard in the hallways of the state Capitol in Harrisburg today.

They will be calling for the opening of a window in Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations on civil lawsuits.

They will be reading aloud, all day, the grand jury report detailing how more than 300 Catholic priests across Pennsylvania allegedly sexually abused children over 70 years. This way, senators who haven’t read it themselves, will hear it all day long, according to a news release promoting the action.

In addition, victims and advocates will stand outside senators’ offices seeking support for the bill.

Senate Bill 612 was amended by state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Muhlenberg Township Democrat, to open a two-year window for adult victims of childhood sexual abuse to bring suit; Pennsylvania law now requires them to file before they reach the age of 30.

The bill could get a vote in the Senate early this 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.

Priest with ties to Mishawaka among two added to ‘credibly accused’ list by local diocese

SOUTH BEND (IN)
South Bend Tribune

October 10, 2018

By Caleb Bauer

The Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend has added two more priests to its list of clergy credibly accused of sexually abusing children, bringing the previously released list’s tally to 20.

Bruce Schutt and Michael Paquet were announced as additions to the list in a news release Tuesday, a result of additional research into their backgrounds.

Schutt began his career in Mishawaka at St. Monica, where he was assigned from his ordination in 1965 until he was transferred to St. John the Baptist in Fort Wayne in 1968.

Two credible allegations were levied against Schutt according to Tuesday’s release. He lost his clerical state in 1975, after a few-month stint in the Diocese of LaCrosse, Wis.

The other priest, Paquet, was a member of the Crosiers and spent most of his tenure outside of the diocese on assignments. From 1979 to 1985, he was the director of the diocesan Ministry Center Retreat and also spent time as a youth minister in Fort Wayne.

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.

Episcopal Church confronts past role in sexual exploitation

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

October 15, 2018

By David Crary

With striking displays of candor, the Episcopal Church is acknowledging the potency of the #MeToo movement by officially lamenting its past role in sexual exploitation and pledging steps to combat it.

The Protestant denomination’s national convention this summer included an emotional session at which first-person accounts of abuse by clergy and other church personnel were read aloud by bishops of the same gender as the victims — six men, six women. Dioceses nationwide are now seeking to gather and share similar stories from victims in their local church communities.

That process of story sharing has been particularly dramatic in the Diocese of New York, where Bishop Andrew Dietsche released a blunt pastoral letter on Sept. 11. It described the most famous of his predecessors, the late Paul Moore Jr., as a “serial predator” who engaged in “long-time patterns” of sexual exploitation and abuse.

Moore, as charismatic bishop of the diocese from 1972 to 1989, became one of the nation’s foremost liberal Christian activists. He supported the ordination of women and gays while assailing racism, corporate avarice and various U.S. military policies.

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.

Past Catholic Church probes may answer present questions

BURLINGTON (VT)
VT Digger

October 14, 2018

By Kevin O’Connor

Unlike most Vermonters, Jerry O’Neill wasn’t shocked by recent headlines reporting the horrific extent of past child abuse by Catholic Church personnel. From the first talk in the 1990s of nuns abusing orphans decades earlier to the final settlement in 2013 of a string of lawsuits involving priests molesting altar boys a half-century ago, the Burlington lawyer has litigated the most such cases in the state.

“Any time you have news,” O’Neill says in the present MeToo moment, “it stirs memories in survivors and they come forward to people like me.”

The attorney has the stories — and some 500 photocopied pages of nearly every clergy misconduct record in the files of the statewide Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington — to prove it.

“We had to fight, but ultimately we got them,” O’Neill says. “All of a sudden, we had the inside facts.”

Local and state authorities, responding to public questions sparked by a recent BuzzFeed story titled “We Saw Nuns Kill Children: The Ghosts of St. Joseph’s Catholic Orphanage” are working together to receive and review allegations involving the now-closed Burlington facility, which operated from 1854 to 1974.

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.

Polish Film ‘The Clergy’ Breaks Box Office Record, Prompts Abuse Allegations

HOLLYWOOD (CA)
The Hollywood Reporter

October 15, 2018

By Vladimir Kozlov

Wojciech Smarzowski’s drama, which deals with sexual abuse and corruption inside the Catholic Church in Poland, has struck a chord in the country.

Polish film Kler (The Clergy), which paints a damaging picture of the local priesthood, has broken local box office records and caused controversy in the largely Catholic country.

Directed by Wojciech Smarzowski, the film was released in Poland on Sept. 28 and immediately broke the local opening weekend box office record with 935,000 admissions. Poland’s box office charts track admissions rather than revenue.

Since opening, The Clergy has had over 3 million admissions according to the distributor Kino Swiat. Local observers say the film has a chance of breaking Poland’s all-time attendance record, which James Cameron’s Avatar currently holds with 3.68 million admissions.

The producers of The Clergy claim it is based on real events. The film includes testimonies of abuse survivors, and features, among other things, a priest abusing a young boy. Also in the film, an alcoholic priest forces his lover to have an abortion and a senior cleric is involved in blackmail and corruption.

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.

‘I don’t think it’s enough.’ Local Catholics react to list of priests accused of sexual abuse

PALM SPRINGS (CA)
Palm Springs Desert Sun

October 14, 2018

By Corinne S Kennedy

The first Sunday after church officials in Riverside and San Bernardino counties published a list of priests accused of sexually abusing children, Catholics across the Coachella Valley attended Mass and heard from their spiritual leaders about the church’s response to the abuse and how the faith community should move forward.

At Sacred Heart Church in Palm Desert, Monsignor Howard Lincoln told churchgoers that one of the priests credibly accused of sexual abuse, Peter McCormick, had served at the desert parish. Lincoln said the Diocese of San Bernardino, which consists of the two counties, had published the names of the priests — and what action was taken after the accusations — to be more “open,” “honest” and transparent.

He said Bishop Gerald Richard Barnes wanted to encourage anyone who had been abused by a priest to alert authorities.

“It is our hope, that for people who experienced this, even in another state, even 50 years ago, if you are still suffering, please come forward,” Lincoln said.

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

What does ‘credibly accused’ mean? 6 things to know about Texas Catholic dioceses’ sex abuse inquiry

DALLAS (TX)
Dallas Morning News

October 14, 2018

By David Tarrant and Julieta Chiquillo

With a stated goal of restoring trust, all Catholic dioceses in Texas announced plans last week to release names of clergy who have been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of children since 1950.

But the announcement, billed as a unique transparency measure, raised further questions about the possible legal implications, the independence of the investigation and the meaning of the phrase “credibly accused.”

Victims’ advocates say they’ve heard it all before. Catholic dioceses in Texas, including Dallas, have been rocked for years by allegations of sexual misconduct and cover-ups. And the advocates don’t have faith that the dioceses will come completely clean.

“It’s pretty much obvious that the Catholic Church cannot be trusted to police themselves,” said Tahira Khan Merritt, a Dallas-based lawyer who has represented plaintiffs in lawsuits against the church in Texas for more than 20 years.

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.

Exclusive: Cupich says bishops must cede authority, allow lay oversight of accusations

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Reporter

October 15, 2018

by Joshua J. McElwee and Heidi Schlumpf

Individual Catholic bishops across the United States must renounce some of the supreme authority they have over their dioceses to allow for the creation of a new national body to investigate misconduct allegations, Chicago Cardinal Cupich said.

When the U.S. bishops meet in November to consider the continuing clergy sexual abuse crisis, Cupich said the prelates “have to be very clear about an accountability procedure for accusations about bishops.”

“Bishops have to, as a group, say, ‘We cede our rights as bishops to have somebody else come in and investigate us,’ ” the cardinal told NCR. “Every bishop has to be willing to say, ‘I will allow myself to be investigated by an independent group if there is an accusation against me.’ ”

In an exclusive Oct. 13 interview, Cupich spoke about what the U.S. bishops should do during their annual meeting — to be held in Baltimore Nov. 12-14 — to address concerns raised after the revelations about now ex-cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s abuse of seminarians.

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.

Los archivos secretos Cox

[The hidden history of ex-bishop Cox]

CHILE
The Clinic

October 4, 2018

By Alejandra Matus

La historia escondida del obispo Francisco José Cox y cómo algunos miembros de la jerarquía católica se resistieron a tomar medidas ante las denuncias de abusos sexuales que existían en su contra. Este reportaje fue publicado originalmente en PrimerLinea.cl el 3 de Noviembre del año 2002.

El sacerdote Manuel Hervia denunció hace diez años ante el obispo Alejandro Goic y ante el ex presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal, Carlos González, que sorprendió al arzobispo de La Serena, Francisco José Cox, en actitudes sexuales con un joven. Tres años más tarde, como no veía avances, se lo comunicó al entonces arzobispo Carlos Oviedo Cavada.

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.

Schoenstatt y posible regreso de Cox para enfrentar la justicia: “Si los médicos lo permiten, lo traemos a Chile”

[Schoenstatt spokesman: “If the doctors allow it, we bring Cox to Chile” to face justice]

CHILE
The Clinic

October 14, 2018

El viceprovincial de la congregación, Patricio Moore, también calificó como “esperable” la expulsión del estado clerical de quien fuera arzobispo de La Serena entre 1990 y 1997.

Durante el día de ayer, se informó que por decisión del Papa Francisco, el exarzobispo de La Serena (1990-1997), Francisco José Cox, fue expulsado de su estado clerical “como consecuencia de actos manifestos de abusos a menores”.

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

Laicos y víctimas del Caso Maristas señalan que expulsión de Cox y Órdenes no sería suficiente

[Laity and victims of the Marist Case say expulsion of Cox and Órdenes is not enough]

CHILE
BioBioChile

October 15, 2018

By Manuel Stuardo and Estefanía Bustamante

Luego que el papa Francisco decretara la expulsión del exobispo emérito de La Serena, Francisco José Cox y el exobispo emérito de Iquique, Marco Antonio Órdenes, ambos por abusos sexuales a menores, diversas han sido las reacciones.

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.

No sólo en la iglesia católica: condenan a 7 años de cárcel a pastor evangélico que abusó a 3 menores

[It’s not only in the Catholic Church: evangelical pastor who abused 3 minors sentenced to 7 years]

CHILE
El Mostrador

October 14, 2018

El pastor Luis Navarrete Cartes aprovechó su condición de asesor espiritual para ganarse la confianza de los jóvenes, para así efectuar tocaciones de connotación sexual a las menores de edad. La defensa del acusado logró bajar la condena de 12 años a 7, pero la Corte Suprema rechazó el recurso de nulidad presentado posteriormente.

La Corte Suprema ratificó la sanción de siete años de cárcel efectiva para el pastor evangélico Luis Navarrete Cartes, acusado de abusar a tres menores de edad en la comuna de Hualqui.

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.

Padres de la víctima de Marco Órdenes expresaron sentirse más tranquilos con la decisión del Papa Francisco

[Parents of the clergy abuse victim feel calmer after Pope Francis expels Marco Órdenes]

CHILE
Soy Chile

October 14, 2018

By Yubisay Mosqueda

Manuel Pino recordó que luego de la confesión de su hijo, increparon al exobispo de Iquique a decir la verdad, pero los evadió.

Luego de la decisión adoptada por el Papa Francisco de dimitir del estado clerical al obispo emérito de Iquique, Marcos Antonio Órdenes Fernández, como consecuencia de actos manifiesto de abusos a menores, padres de la víctima de Órdenes, expresaron “sentirse tranquilos con la decisión comunicada por el Papa Francisco”.

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.

Hasbún ofrece “perdón judicial” a denunciante de Laplagne si se retracta de sus dichos formalmente

[Hasbún offers “judicial pardon” to Laplagne’s accuser if he formally retracts his statements]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

October 15, 2018

By Pía Larrondo

El presbítero respondió a las declaraciones de Javier Molina el pasado domingo en “El Informante”, señalando que en la entrevista se habló de él con “obscenidades” y “mentiras

Mediante una declaración, el presbítero Raúl Hasbún Zaror expresó que los dichos del denunciante del sacerdote Jorge Laplagne por abusos sexuales, Javier Molina, el pasado domingo en el programa “El Informante”, fueron “mentiras” vertidas contra su honra personal y sacerdotal. En dicho programa, este domingo se leyó la declaración enviada y firmada por Hasbún al director de TVN el pasado 13 de octubre tras haber sido aludido en una entrevista a Molina donde él lo implicaba en un supuesto encubrimiento en el caso Laplagne.

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.

Ezzati dice que Papa tenía “elementos suficientes” para expulsar a obispos

[Ezzati says that Pope had “enough elements” to expel bishops]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 14, 2018

By Paula Yévenes, Carla Pía Ruiz, and Juan Castellón

Tras la decisión de la Santa Sede se conoció una nueva denuncia contra el exsacerdote Francisco Cox. La víctima, ya fallecida, era un menor acólito de 11 años.

“El Papa ha tenido los elementos suficientes, más que suficientes, para decretar lo que decretó, y estamos totalmente de acuerdo con él”. Con esas palabras, el arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati, se refirió hoy a la decisión del Papa Francisco de expulsar del estado clerical a los ahora exobispos eméritos Francisco Cox y Marco Antonio Órdenes.

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.

October 14, 2018

Acusan al cura Balbi de haber abusado de varios adolescentes

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
El Tribuno Salta [Salta, Argentina]

October 14, 2018

By Silvia Noviasky

Read original article

Ya se dio aviso al Tribunal Eclesiástico, que pidió que “lo denuncien”. Testimonios recogidos en J. V. González y en Salta coinciden en sus relatos.

A las denuncias por filiación iniciadas contra el sacerdote Abel Eduardo Balbi que recientemente publicó este medio, ahora se suman denuncias por abuso. 

El alcance que tuvieron los últimos casos, que por un lado evidenciaron los manejos de la Iglesia y por otro despertaron expedientes judiciales que estaban dormidos, además de la cobertura mediática; empujaron a hablar a testigos que callaron durante años. 

El paso del sacerdote Eduardo Balbi por Joaquín V. González en la década del 80 y por Villa Primavera en los 90, en la capital salteña, se entrecruza en puntos en los que las historias coinciden, más allá del tiempo y las distancias: supuestos abusos de adolescentes, su poder influyente y el miedo o la vergüenza de hablar.

“Mi mamá hasta el día de hoy me dice que una vez estaba cuerpo a tierra atrás de un ligustro, mirando si yo no salía de la casa parroquial. Todos sabían”, aseguró Matías (nombre ficticio) un vecino de Joaquín V . González que afirma que nunca olvidó, y que siempre reprochó el silencio que guardaron los adultos de aquella época. Un silencio que está dispuesto a romper si la Justicia lo requiere, porque “ahora yo soy padre de familia, y esto es un mínimo aporte. Siempre me pregunto de lo que podría haber sido y no fue”. Con su denuncia, Matías siente que de alguna manera paga la “deuda de nuestros padres, que sabían pero nunca hicieron nada”. 

El vecino pidió reservar su identidad para “proteger” a su familia. Al mismo motivo apela todo aquel que se dispone a hablar de aquellas épocas en el pueblo anteño. “Él me daba consejos que me sirvieron, pero lo que Balbi hacía por otro lado, y lo que significaba para el pueblo como sacerdote me causaba controversia. Al ser más grande fui entendiendo muchas cosas, no sé qué contactos habrá tenido para que eso no se sepa”, afirmó un maestro del pueblo que accedió a hablar con El Tribuno.
 
Un sacerdote “influyente”

Cuando los testigos vuelven a los tiempos de Balbi en la parroquia del pueblo la influencia de la que gozaba el sacerdote se destaca insistentemente. “Él siempre gozó de cierta inmunidad e impunidad”, señaló Matías desde Joaquín V. González. Mientras que, en Villa Primavera, el barrio al que llegó luego, también se resalta aquella “protección”, con la que habría contado el religioso. Al punto que incluso habría salido ileso de un juicio canónico.

“Una chica de la Acción Católica, María Pilar, lo denunció ante la Iglesia, hubo chicos que fueron a testificar. Mi hermano era delegado de la Acción Católica, él se mantuvo al margen y cuando vio que la cosa estaba jodida y que no se podía con él, se hizo a un lado”, contó Néstor, que aún vive en el barrio. 

En Joaquín V. González cambian los rostros de quienes “se animan”, pero el relato se une incluso por los detalles: invitaciones a la casa parroquial, regalos, dinero, campanadas en plena madrugada, y panfletos anónimos que denunciaban lo que todos habrían sabido pero callaban. 

Matías hoy tiene 51 años, cuando era adolescente asistía a las actividades de la iglesia por mandato de su madre, que pertenecía a la Legión de María. Fue testigo de dos situaciones que lo llevaron a alejarse de la Iglesia hasta la actualidad. “Yo era terrible”, reconoció, por lo que accedió al pedido de su madre de ir a hablar con Balbi para que lo “aconseje“. “Eran como las 16 , y apenas me subí a la camioneta, una Ford Ranchera 0 km, no anduvo con rodeos. Me manoteó apenas subí. Evaluando su comportamiento ahora, me doy cuenta que estaba cebado. Me dijo que lo excité apenas me vio, yo en esa época usaba pantalones ajustados. Quería que lo acceda carnalmente. Yo era bandolero, así que le quise pegar. Aunque yo ya sabía, pero ahí se le terminó de salir la capucha. Después me quiso seducir con algo de dinero”, contó. 

La denuncia por paternidad en contra del sacerdote le despertó a Matías los recuerdos de su juventud, como el retiro espiritual al que asistió en El Quebrachal.

Polémicos “concursos”

“Éramos entre 35 y 30 changos, nos alojamos en una escuelita de ahí. Estuvimos dos días, era mixto, pero los varones estábamos por un lado y las mujeres por otro. El tipo (Balbi) propiciaba un tipo de concurso de quién la tenía más grande, la tenías que tener parada, y él era el juez” , relató Matías. Luego de eso aseguró que “comenzó el éxodo“ de adolescentes para “hacerle el favor al cura a cambio de una dádiva, comercializaba con algunos, como prostitución”, señaló.

“Yo tenía entre 15 y 16 años, era monaguillo . Una vez me dijeron que el padre nos había invitado a comer, fuimos y comencé a ver cosas raras, películas porno en la casa parroquial. No es que a todos los que iban les hacía algo, el que aceptaba las reglas del juego se iba a la habitación con él. Muchas veces elegía a gente de menos recursos que uno y les daba plata o regalos”, aseguró el maestro.

Los diferentes testigos afirman que no mediaba la violencia, pero que los “regalos” y dinero actuaban como señuelos para obtener lo que el cura quería. “Les prestaba el Torino marrón que tenía, y les daba plata para tomar. Él manipulaba con esas cosas”, agregó el docente.

“Usó el templo de la iglesia para sus orgías, los chicos andaban por el pueblo tomando el mistela o jugando con las hostias”, recordó Matías molesto.

Los hechos habrían comenzado a ser inmanejables, al punto de sobrepasar los muros de la parroquia. Ciertos episodios tomaron estado público intentando dar indicios, o incluso denuncias directas de lo que habría estado sucediendo. “Cuando sonaban las campanas era porque él estaba con otras personas y no quería abrir. Los chicos querían plata y se vengaban colgándose de las campanas”, continuó con su relato el maestro.

Matías aseguró haber sido testigo de aquel suceso que señaló el docente, y sumó otros detalles de aquella noche: “Una noche volvimos de un acto político, alrededor de la cinco de la mañana. Me acuerdo de tres que querían seguir tomando pero estaban secos, y estaban a metros del ‘banco’, la casa parroquial de Balbi. Así que fueron a buscarlo al cura, que los atendió por la ventana diciéndole que estaba ocupado.

Los changos, calientes, como ya conocían todo el movimiento, entraron y tocaron las campanas”, recordó.

Esa no habría sido la única situación que irrumpió en la rutina del pueblo. “Una vez, salieron unos panfletos”, dijo Matías. Y agregó: “En realidad salieron dos, con nombres de los que estaban con Balbi, y hasta con nombres de los padres”.

Con el paso del tiempo, el malestar entre los jóvenes habría comenzado a escalar hasta llegar a escraches y destrozos: “Una vez, de la bronca le rompimos todo en la iglesia y en su casa, hasta sus fotos de sus viajes a Europa y Chile. Le escribimos insultos por todos lados con el dentífrico”, confesó Matías. Años después de aquel episodio, interpreta el silencio del sacerdote como aval de su testimonio, “Balbi no denunció nada, sabía quiénes éramos y por qué lo hacíamos”, subrayó.

La historia de los supuestos abusos en el pueblo tiene dos caminos: callarla o tomarla como “anecdótica”, apuntó..

Luis nació en los 90 y fue bautizado por Balbi. Si bien casi no lo conoció, hoy es amigo de aquellos que si tuvieron contactaron el cura. “Tengo amigos más grandes que yo. Ellos siempre lo cuentan como una hazaña. No sé si abusó, bueno, pasa que ellos eran menores en aquella época, es discutible”, interpretó. 

“No era en el marco de algo violento, había regalos, cigarrillos, alcohol, ellos estaban comenzando a tomar. Ahora que me pongo a pensar. Suena horrible. Los chicos lo toman como una gracia, como que ellos lo agarraban al cura. Como hombre es un mecanismo de autodefensa, si no quedás como la víctima. Imaginate la condena social que puede ser para un tipo. Acá te apuntan, vas a ir al café y los vagos se matan de risa. Es muy difícil que en un pueblo vengan y te cuenten sobre ese tipo de cosas”, explicó Luis. “Pero son un montón de casos”, aseguró.

“Pueblo chico, infierno grande”, resume el docente al referirse al silencio que se guardó por tantos años. “Aquí hay un montón de changos que ahora son profesionales: abogados, contadores, empresarios y hasta periodistas”, lanzó.

Matías aseguró que Balbi “no estaba solo, eran un par de tipos. Incluso hay uno que hace poco fue condenado por un delito sexual”, lanzó.

Según la versión de diferentes vecinos, los sacerdotes que sucedieron a Balbi habrían sido puestos en aviso. Incluso, fuentes eclesiásticas que trabajan actualmente en el pueblo aseguraron que Balbi se fue haciendo “mucho lío” y que por eso monseñor Cargnello le negó que regresara a Salta.

También indicó haber sido testigo de personas que dijeron que Balbi “les arruinó la vida”. 

Durante la audiencia por supuesta paternidad convocada por el Tribunal Eclesiástico hace algunos días, uno de los testigos le advirtió al juez Loyola Pintos y de Sancristóval sobre los “rumores de abuso contra Balbi”. El sacerdote pidió que se denuncien formalmente aquellos casos. 

Su paso por Villa Primavera

Luego de su paso por Joaquín V. González, Villa Primavera, en la capital salteña, fue el siguiente destino de Balbi. Allí los vecinos también señalan invitaciones a los chicos a ver películas pornográficas y manipulaciones, con “regalos” y dinero de por medio. “No quiero dar mi nombre, porque en aquella época no le hicieron nada, menos ahora”, aseguró Raúl. Dijo que era un asiduo concurrente de la iglesia de la villa. Entre los 12 y 15 años, contó, él y su primo recibieron una invitación de Balbi para ir a ver películas y comer hamburguesas. “Balbi nos preguntó si queríamos tomar algo. Le dijimos que gaseosa, y nos preguntó si no queríamos algo más fuerte. Tenía la heladera llena, te ponía la bebida, la comida y luego te tocaba para ver cómo estabas. Después salía y se paseaba en ropa interior”, contó. “Al momento de irnos, tocó a mi primo. Nosotros no llegamos a ver la mitad de la película y dijimos que se nos hizo tarde y nos fuimos. No puedo hacerle denuncia por algo que no hizo conmigo”, aseveró. 

El vecino, que hoy tiene 40 años y aún vive en aquel barrio, indicó que la mayoría de los adolescentes que llegaban a esta situación tenían entre 12 a 15 años. Aunque destacó que la mayoría se fue cuando “estalló todo”. 

“Hay un montón de chicos que se fueron y se cambiaron de casa cuando salió todo el problema”, señaló.

“Mi hermano se enfermó por los abusos que sufrió y se suicidó”

L.J.N. son las iniciales de un joven de Joaquín V. González que en el 2012 se suicidó. “Es aún muy doloroso para mi familia, por eso les pido solo dar a conocer las iniciales de mi hermano“, pidió Hernán desde Buenos Aires. La drástica decisión que tomó el joven destrozó a su familia, que quiso olvidar “todo esto”. Pero la denuncia por filiación dada a conocer por El Tribuno recientemente volvió a calar hondo en la tragedia familiar. “Cuando supe que investigaban a Balbi, empecé a recordar”, comenzó su relato el hombre. Su hermano fue monaguillo de la parroquia del pueblo. “El decía que quería contar cosas graves que le habían pasado, pero que le daba vergüenza”, recordó Hernán. Tanto él como su familia desestimaron sus dichos y creyeron que “eran pavadas”.

“A los 26 años empezó con una enfermedad mental, y comenzó a contar todo, incluso escribió un cuaderno“, aseveró Hernán. Para L.J.N. fue cada vez más difícil superar el drama, y preocupado para que “otros no sufrieran como él”, intentó hacer una denuncia. “Hace unos siete u ocho años fue al Arzobispado de Salta y lo echaron. Le dijeron que dejara de inventar estas cosas”, relató Hernán. Contó que su hermano habría llegado hasta una comisaría, pero en la Justicia no figuran denuncias contra el sacerdote. Desesperado por no ser escuchado, el joven se descargó a través de las redes sociales acusando a Balbi de haberlo abusado. Hernán sostiene que la enfermedad mental del joven se debió a los episodios de abusos que habría sufrido. “Todo esto que pasó lo llevó a que se enferme. Se bañaba muchas veces al día, porque decía que se sentía sucio”, recordó.

Incluso -afirmó- fue tratado en el hospital Ragone, donde lo tildaron de mentiroso. “Como profesional de la salud puedo asegurar que no mentía, todo lo que le pasó era verdad”, aseguró Hernán. La familia se divide entre los que quieren denunciar y los que prefieren olvidar. “Para mi familia fue devastador, siempre estuvo esa cosa que a él le pasó algo, pero nunca se habló”, concluyó. 

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Editorial: Catholic Church must expose all abusive priests

BEAUMONT (TX)
Beaumont Enterprise

October 14, 2018

Catholic Church officials in Texas are finally taking the right approach to the horrendous scandal of priests who sexually abused children. The only way to deal with this outrage is to fully expose it and make every effort to ensure it never happens again.

To do that, however, Catholic officials in the Beaumont diocese and others in Texas need to completely follow through on this pledge so that all Texans can be confident in their findings.

All dioceses should do what the San Antonio diocese is doing to guarantee the fullest accounting — appoint an outside group headed by a respected judge to go through church files and assist this process. That will counteract any internal tendency to cover up something that should be disclosed. As with any financial audit, there is no substitute for unbiased review from a neutral observer.

For example, four priests from the Beaumont diocese have already been named over the years for varying levels of abuse. If those are the only priests identified in the final report from the Beaumont diocese, some Southeast Texans will suspect, fairly or unfairly, that other priests are still being protected.

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Dettelbach calls for crackdown on clergy abuse; DeWine, Yost question his approach

OHIO
The Columbus Dispatch

October 13, 2018

By Marty Schladen

The clergy-abuse scandals that have ravaged many states have landed squarely in the middle of the Ohio attorney general campaign.

Steve Dettelbach, the Democratic former U.S. attorney who is seeking the seat, used the controversial issue to bash his Republican opponent, state Auditor Dave Yost, and current Attorney General Mike DeWine, the Republican nominee for governor.

“Both their failure to act and their insistence that they’re rendered unable to act are not surprising, of course,” Dettelbach said in a written statement. “It’s what Ohioans have come to expect from the duo.”

Yost criticized his opponent for seeking to make political hay from the issue.

“It is shockingly inappropriate for Steve to politicize this long-simmering and painful issue for his selfish political gain,” Yost spokesman Carlo LoParo said. “He could’ve impaneled a federal grand jury when he was U.S. attorney. He didn’t do it, and his silence then betrays his opportunist speech now.”

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Priest placed on leave following sex abuse allegation

TOLEDO (OH)
Norwalk (OH) Reflector

October 13, 2018

A Catholic priest, who served at a Norwalk parish for 10 years, has been accused of sexually abusing a child.

The Rev. Nelson Beaver has been placed on administrative leave, effective immediately, Bishop Daniel E. Thomas announced Saturday.

This action was taken as the result of a recently made allegation of sexual abuse dating back more than 25 years ago, according to a statement issued by the Diocese of Toledo.

Beaver is the pastor of Resurrection Parish in Lexington and St. Mary of the Snows Parish in Mansfield. The allegation was not made in relation to these parish assignments.

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I-Team: Priest On List Of Clergy Credibly Accused Of Sex Abuse Changed His Name

BOSTON (MA)
WBZ-TV (Boston CBS affiliate)

October 12, 2018

By Cheryl Fiandaca

The pain of the sexual abuse that Mark Powell says he suffered while studying at a religious order in Iowa 41 years ago, deepened after learning his abuser later became a Catholic priest.

“Even when I was being abused I was praying the Hail Mary, I’d be praying the Our Father that it would stop,” he told the I-Team.

Powell says the man who abused him in 1977 is now a priest at the Glastonbury Abbey in Hingham and is called Father Andrew. But Powell says in Iowa he was Brother Mark.

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Archdiocese removes Wicker Park priest charged with sexually abusing 2 women, attacking teen

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

October 13, 2018

By Hannah Leone and Ese Olumhense

Two days after police charged a priest at a Wicker Park church with sexually abusing two women and attacking a 17-year-old girl, that priest has had his permission to minister within the Archdiocese of Chicago withdrawn “effective immediately,” said a spokeswoman for the archdiocese on Saturday.

Rigoberto Gámez Alfonso, 52, of the 2300 block of West Le Moyne Avenue in Wicker Park, is charged with two felony counts of criminal sexual abuse involving force and one misdemeanor count of battery, according to Chicago police.

Gámez Alfonso is the associate vicar for canonical services for the Archdiocese of Chicago, the archdiocese confirmed Saturday. Most recently, he had also served as a resident priest at St. Aloysius Parish and had previously been appointed pastor of Our Lady of Tepeyac Church in Little Village in 2009.

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For archdiocese, releasing names of Louisiana clergy accused of sex abuse can have financial toll

NEW ORLEANS
New Orleans Advocate

October 13, 2018

By Jerry DiColo

Archbishop Gregory Aymond, clad in purple vestments symbolizing atonement, lay prostrate on the altar of St. Joseph Church during a special Mass of healing in August, a demonstration of contrition for the horrific acts of rape and abuse suffered by children at the hands of priests.

His homily called for reflection on the sins of the Catholic Church. Standing before the faithful, he said, “As leaders of the church, it is time for us to repent.”

So far, that confession has translated into weeks of public apology, but not the release of a full accounting of priests and other church leaders accused of sexual misconduct that many victims have demanded.

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Analyse der MGH-Studie zu sexuellem Missbrauch: Wie das Bistum die Spitze des Eisbergs schönt

[Analysis of the MGH study on sexual abuse: How the bishopric beautifies the tip of the iceberg]

REGENSBURG (GERMANY)
Regensburg Digital

October 13, 2018

By Robert Werner

Mit der sogenannten MHG-Studie sollte auf breiter Basis der sexuelle Missbrauch von Minderjährigen durch Kleriker und Diakone in katholischen Diözesen sozialwissenschaftlich untersucht werden. Die Diözese Regensburg tut sich wieder einmal damit hervor, entsprechende Zahlen zu verbergen oder kleinzureden. Einer der Hauptverantwortlichen für die jahrelange Verschleppung von Aufklärung – Kardinal Gerhard L. Müller – flankiert das Ganze mit einem homophoben Erklärungsmuster.

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McAleese accuses Pope John Paul II of ‘offensive’ misogyny in new book

BELFAST (NORTHERN IRELAND)
Belfast Telegraph

October 13 2018

By Philip Ryan

Former Irish President Mary McAleese accuses Pope John Paul II of “highly offensive” misogyny in a sensational new book.

Ms McAleese says she was seriously offended by the pontiff purposely ignoring her when they were first introduced ahead of their much publicised meeting during her presidency.

Instead of greeting Ms McAleese, the Pope reached across to her husband Martin and said: “Would you not prefer to be the President of Ireland instead of your wife?”

In the book Madam Politician: The Women At The Table of Irish Political Power by RTE political correspondent Martina Fitzgerald, Mrs McAleese says “nobody else thought it was funny” and her husband was “mortified” by the Pope’s comment.

“He knew by my face that I didn’t think it was funny. I did say to him: ‘You would never have done that to a male president,'” she adds.

The Pope said he did not have fluent English and the comment was intended to be a joke.

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Editorial: Vote out lawmakers who oppose abuse window

JOHNSTOWN (PA)
The Tribune-Democrat

October 14, 2018

Given all that has transpired in recent years here in our region and across Pennsylvania, we cannot imagine our state lawmakers doing anything less than voting unanimously to give victims of child sexual assault some justice for their suffering – even decades ago.

And yet here we are, watching the Pennsylvania Senate wrestle with the responsibility of providing a window of opportunity for adults who were abused as teens or children – a break from the statute of limitations on this offense to seek recompense.

The Republican leadership – including Majority Leader Jake Corman of Centre County and President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati of Jefferson County – has the power to get this measure passed.

We urge them to find the courage, the compassion, the anger – whatever it takes – to do so.

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Clergy abuse survivors urge PA Senate to pass reforms

SCRANTON (PA)
WBRE/WYOU via PAHomepage.com

October 12, 2018

By Eric Deabill

Lawmakers return to Harrisburg Monday

Eight weeks after a scathing grand jury report on the Catholic church, clergy abuse survivors are urging state lawmakers to act.

With just a handful of voting days left in the Pennsylvania Senate Session, victims are going across the commonwealth sharing their stories and advocating for reform.

The president of the national group “Stop Child Predators” which is based in Washington, D.C. and two clergy abuse survivors visited Scranton Friday morning.

While the PA House has overwhelming passed reforms recommended by grand jurors, the Pennsylvania Senate has not yet taken a vote.

“If I were a state senator in Pennsylvania I would be embarrassed of my inaction. For decades, survivors have come forward in this state and lawmakers have turned their back on them,” Stacie Rumenap, president of Stop Child Predators said.

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Ryan O’Connor: For priest abuse victims, church — and law — must change

PITTSBURGH (PA)
TribLive.com

October 12, 2018

By Ryan O’Connor

I am a practicing Catholic, which means I attend church regularly. I accept Holy Communion. I pray with my fellow parishioners and our parish priests. In addition, my wife and I made the decision to send our two children to our local Catholic school.

I am also a survivor of child sexual abuse. When I was 10 years old, I was repeatedly molested by a priest at Our Mother of Sorrows Church in Johnstown. For years, I was broken from the abuse. I turned to drugs and alcohol.

But I never gave up my faith in God. And I never gave up my faith in what my church can be — and should be. So, yes, I continue to be a Roman Catholic.

My downward spiral ended in 2005 when I met my wife. I prayed for help and for support and for someone to help me deal with these demons. I believe those prayers were answered by God in the form of my wife.

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Priest at parish in Pittsburgh’s Greenfield neighborhood put on leave after sex abuse accusation

PITTSBURGH (PA)
TribLive.com

October 13, 2018

By Brian C. Rittmeyer

The priest at a church in Pittsburgh’s Greenfield neighborhood has been accused of sexually abusing a child in the mid-1980s.

Bishop David Zubik has placed Joseph Reschick, 67, on administrative leave, the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh announced Saturday. That action was taken earlier this week, the Rev. Nicholas Vaskov, diocesan spokesman, said.

Reschick could not be reached for comment.

Reschick has been serving as pastor of St. Rosalia Parish. The diocese said in a statement that Reschick denies the allegation, which Vaskov said was reported to the Allegheny County District Attorney’s Office.

Mike Manko, a spokesman for District Attorney Stephen A. Zappala Jr., said he could not confirm that until Monday.

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“El delincuente cardenal Errázuriz al descubierto con su encubrimiento” Juan Carlos Cruz habla tras expulsión de sacerdotes

[Juan Carlos Cruz speaks after expulsion of priests, calls Ezzati a “thug” and “delinquent”]

CHILE
Publimetro

October 13, 2018

By Francisca Herrera

El chileno también calificó de “matones” y “encubridores” al arzobispo Ricardo Ezzati y los obispos Silva, Ramos y González

Juan Carlos Cruz, una de las víctimas de Fernando Karadima, calificó de “delincuente” al cardenal Francisco Errázuriz luego que se conociera la decisión del Papa Francisco de expulsar a los sacerdotes Francisco Cox y Marco Órdenes. “Que maravilla despertar así. Dos obispos pedófilos menos, expulsados del sacerdocio, el delincuente cardenal Errázuriz al descubierto con su encubrimiento”, escribió en su cuenta de Twitter junto con emplazar a la justicia chilena.

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La denuncia que habría sido clave para la destitución de Francisco Cox del sacerdocio

[The accusation that would have been key to removing Francisco Cox from the priesthood]

CHILE
Publimetro

October 14, 2018

Los hechos habrían ocurrido cuando Cox fue obispo de Chillán, entre 1975 y 1981

El ex obispo de Chillán, Carlos Pellegrin reveló el sábado una nueva denuncia contra el ahora ex arzobispo emérito de La Serena, Francisco Cox Huneeus, expulsado del sacerdocio por papa Francisco junto al también ex obispo emérito de Iquique, Marco Órdenes Fernández, por abusos sexuales a menores.

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Laicos de La Serena consideran “insuficientes” las acciones anunciadas por los Padres de Schoenstatt tras expulsión de Cox

[Laity of La Serena not satisfied with Schoenstatt’s inaction after Cox’s expulsion]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

October 13, 2018

By Carla Fernández

El vocero de esta agrupación, Juan Rojas, puso en duda las intenciones de la congregación de traer a Chile al ex religioso para que sea procesado por la justicia local.

Este sábado se anunció la expulsión del sacerdocio del ex arzobispo de La Serena, Francisco José Cox, y el obispo emérito de Iquique, Marco Antonio Órdenes; decisión que fue tomada por el Papa Francisco a raíz de las denuncias de abuso sexual a menores que pesan en contra de ambos.

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Denunciantes y laicos celebran expulsiones de obispos eméritos por abusos sexuales a menores

[Whistleblowers and laymen celebrate expulsions of bishops emeriti for sexual abuse of minors]

CHILE
BioBioChile

October 13, 2018

By Gonzalo Cifuentes and Nicole Martínez

La mañana de este sábado se conocieron las expulsiones de los obispos eméritos Francisco José Cox y Marco Antonio Órdenes, de La Serena e Iquique, respectivamente. Ambos por abusos sexuales a menores, bajo el artículo que sanciona los delitos más graves por la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe.

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Un joven se suicidó tras ser abusado sexualmente por un cura

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
El Liberal [Santiago del Estero, Argentina]

October 14, 2018

Read original article

El sacerdote Abel Eduardo Balbi se encuentra acusado de haber abusado sexualmente de varios adolescentes en la provincia de Salta y en las últimas horas se conoció que una de sus víctimas se habría quitado la vida como consecuencia del trauma sufrido.

“Mi hermano se enfermó por los abusos que sufrió y se suicidó”, contó un hombre a El Tribuno de Salta. Y agregó: “Cuando supe que investigaban a Balbi, empecé a recordar. él decía que quería contar cosas graves que le habían pasado, pero que le daba vergüenza“.

El hermano de la víctima asegura que cuando éste último tenía 26 años empezó “con una enfermedad mental” y que empezó a escribir lo sufrido en un cuaderno. “Hace unos siete u ocho años fue al Arzobispado de Salta y lo echaron. Le dijeron que dejara de inventar estas cosas”, aseguró.

Debido a que nadie le dio el apoyo necesario, se descargó a través de las redes sociales y acusó directamente al padre Balbi. “Se bañaba muchas veces al día, porque decía que se sentía sucio”, declaró el hermano, quien narró que su hermano se mató en 2012.

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Vaticano expulsa a obispos Cox y Órdenes por delitos contra menores

[Vatican expelled bishops Cox and Órdenes for crimes against minors]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 14, 2018

By Carla Pía Ruiz, Paula Yévenes, and C. Said

Inédita decisión del Papa Francisco determinó la remoción de dos obispos eméritos -de La Serena e Iquique- chilenos. La medida no tiene apelación. La salida de Cox se habría sellado tras una nueva denuncia por abusos en Chillán. El caso fue enviado en agosto a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe.

“En la diócesis no había antecedentes previos (de Cox), pero ante una denuncia que recibí entregué dicha información a la Santa Sede”, dice el exobispo de Chillán, Carlos Pellegrín, para referirse a la denuncia contra el ahora exobispo emérito de La Serena Francisco Cox Huneeus que envió en agosto pasado a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe.

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Iglesia chilena pide perdón a víctimas por casos de abuso sexual tras nueva expulsión de obispos

[Chilean church apologizes to abuse victims after expulsion of two bishops]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 13, 2018

By Claudia Soto

A través de un comunicado, el comité permanente de la Conferencia Episcopal se refirió a la expulsión del estado clerical de Francisco Cox y Marco Antonio Órdenes.

A través de una declaración pública, firmada entre ellos por Ricardo Ezzati, la Conferencia Episcopal pidió perdón “en nombre de los obispos y de la Iglesia” a las víctimas de violencia sexual por parte de religiosos, a sus familias y comunidades.

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El prelado de Iquique sobreseído por la justicia civil

[Former bishop of Iquique, expelled by Vatican, had been acquitted by appeals court]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 14, 2018

By Alejandra Lobo and Paula Yévenes

En enero de este año, la Corte de Apelaciones de Iquique absolvió a Marco Antonio Órdenes del delito de abuso sexual.

Tras darse a conocer la decisión del Papa Francisco de dimitir de su estado clerical a dos nuevos miembros de la Iglesia Católica, los nombres de los ahora exsacerdotes Francisco Cox y Marco Antonio Órdenes fueron rápidamente quitados de la lista de obispos eméritos del sitio web de la Conferencia Episcopal Chilena.

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Expulsiones de Cox y Órdenes lo último: Cronología de los ocho años de crisis de la Iglesia Católica en Chile

[Chronology of eight years of crisis in Chile’s Catholic Church]

CHILE
Emol

October 14, 2018

By Leonardo Vallejos

El Papa Francisco puso hoy fin a la carrera sacerdotal del ex arzobispo emérito de La Serena y del ex obispo emérito de Iquique.

[This article is a timeline of events in the clergy sex abuse investigations from 2010 to the present]

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Diocese of Toledo priest on leave, accused of sexually abusing a minor

TOLEDO (OH)
WTOL-TV

October 13, 2018

Father Nelson Beaver has been put on administrative leave following an allegation of abuse dating back 25 years

A priest of the Diocese of Toledo has been accused sexually abusing a minor over 25 years ago.

Father Nelson Beaver has been put on administrative leave by Bishop Daniel E. Thomas, effective immediately.

Father Beaver is the pastor of Resurrection Parish in Lexington and St. Mary of the Snows Parish in Mansfield.

The allegation was not made in relation to these parishes, and Father Beaver will not be staying at those parishes while he is on leave.

Father Beaver has denied the allegation and so far, this is the only accusation against him.

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Pittsburgh priest accused of sexually abusing a minor

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WPXI-TV

October 13, 2018

[VIDEO]

A Pittsburgh priest is on administrative leave after someone accused him of sexually abusing a minor, the diocese announced Saturday.

The Rev. Joseph Reschick, 67, is the pastor of Saint Rosalia Parish in Greenfield. The allegation, the first ever filed against Reschick, dates to the 1980s, the diocese said.

Reschick denied the allegation, which was reported to police, the diocese said.

The move does not imply guilt, Bishop David Zubik reportedly wrote in a letter to parishes where Reschick has served.

“It is intended to safeguard the course of justice while preserving the rights of everyone involved, including both the person who made the allegation and the person against whom the allegation has been made,” Zubik wrote.

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Note in Parish Bulletin about Msgr. John Meehan

HARLEM (NY)
Parish St. Charles Borromeo,Resurrection and All Saints

September 30, 2018

By Fr. Gregory C. Chisholm, S.J.

Two weeks ago in the statement from the Archdiocese of New York concerning accusations against Msgr. Meehan was placed in our bulletin. The statement was written by the Office of the Vicar General, Msgr. Gregory Mustaciuolo. The Vicar General has the dual responsibility of helping those who are victims of sexual abuse in Archdiocesan institutions like churches or schools and he also is responsible for assessing the case against clergy or lay employees in the Church who are accused of sexual abuse. The statement from the Vicar General which was given out last week was a summary of his decision regarding accusations against Msgr. Meehan, but the statement does not reflect or acknowledge the continuing effort on the part of Msgr. Meehan to appeal the Vicar General’s decision and restore his reputation.

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Church panel substantiates sex-abuse allegations against former Blessed Sacrament pastor

STATEN ISLAND (NY)
Staten Island Advance

October 8, 2018

By Maura Grunlund

Monsignor Francis Boyle, the former longtime pastor at Blessed Sacrament R.C. Church in West Brighton, “will never serve as a priest again” after a church panel substantiated sex-abuse allegations against him, according to the Archdiocese of New York.

The fall from grace is a stunning turn of events for the man who served crucial leadership roles on the Island and throughout the archdiocese during more than 60 years in the priesthood.

He was an administrator at seminaries and held sway on archdiocesan organizations that determined the job assignments for priests and finances for parishes.

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Alleged child sex-abuse ‘substantiated’ against 2nd S.I. pastor

STATEN ISLAND (NY)
Staten Island Advance

October 13, 2018

By Maura Grunlund

“Credible” child sex-abuse allegations have been made against a second monsignor who was a pastor and Irish musician on Staten Island, according to the Archdiocese of New York.

Monsignor Charles Coen is one of four monsignors and a priest “who had an allegation of sexual abuse of minors brought against them in the Archdiocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program [IRCP],” according to Catholic New York.

A native of Dublin, Ireland, Coen was assigned to St. Joseph-St. Thomas R.C. Parish in Pleasant Plains for about 10 years beginning in 1975. Previously, he served at St. Paul’s R.C. Church in New Brighton, according to Advance records.

Monsignor Coen taught and conducted Irish music for children during his time on the Island, according to Advance records.

The Advance previously reported the substantiated allegation against Monsignor Francis Boyle, who headed Blessed Sacrament R.C. Church in West Brighton for about 13 years.

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Priest accused of child sex-abuse based on Staten Island

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Post

October 13, 2018

By Eileen AJ Connelly

A former Staten Island pastor and celebrated Irish musician is the latest priest with a “credible” child sex-abuse allegation levied, according to a report.

Monsignor Charles Coen, who led St. Joseph-St. Thomas R.C. Parish on Staten Island for about 10 years beginning in 1975, was among four monsignors and a priest named as having “an allegation of sexual abuse of minors brought against them in the Archdiocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program,” the Staten Island Advance reported, citing Catholic New York, the archdiocese’s newspaper.

Coen, who served at St. Paul’s R.C. Church on Staten Island prior to leading St. Joseph-St. Thomas, is a native of County Galway who came to the U.S. in 1955.

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Editorial: The Pope Ignores the Damage as Another Prelate Falls

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Times

October 12, 2018

By The Editorial Board

Others were more complicit in covering up priestly abuse, but Cardinal Donald Wuerl still committed serious mistakes.

In his letter on Friday accepting the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the Catholic archbishop of Washington, Pope Francis praised the departing prelate for his “nobility” in not trying to defend “mistakes” in his handling of sexual-abuse allegations.

The pope misses the point.

The archbishop may not be as culpable as other bishops who more systematically covered up sexual predation, and in at least one case he took action that was initially thwarted by the Vatican.

But a devastatingly detailed grand jury report on widespread child sex abuse in Pennsylvania churches showed that Cardinal Wuerl, as bishop of Pittsburgh, was immersed in a clerical culture that hid pedophilic crimes behind euphemisms, conducted unprofessional investigations and evaluations of accused priests, kept acknowledged cases of sex abuse secret from parish communities and avoided reporting the abuse to police.

In an anguished letter to his archdiocese, Cardinal Wuerl accepted responsibility for actions described in the grand jury report. “I wish that I could redo some decisions I have made in my three decades as a bishop and each time get it right,” he wrote.

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Pope Defrocks 2 Retired Chilean Bishops Over Sexual Abuse of Minors

ROME (ITALY)
The New York Times

October 13, 2018

By Jason Horowitz

Pope Francis on Saturday expelled from the priesthood two retired Chilean bishops accused of abusing minors, and made it clear they had no possibility of appeal.

“The decision was adopted by the pope last Thursday, Oct. 11,” the Vatican said in a statement, “as a consequence of overt acts of abuse against minors.” The decision “does not allow for recourse,” the statement added.

One of the bishops, Francisco Cox, 84, is the archbishop emeritus of the city of La Serena and is in poor health. He has a record of sexually abusing children dating to before his arrival as the bishop of the Chilean diocese of Chillan in 1974. The other is Marco Antonio Ordenes Fernandez, 53, and he has not been seen publicly for years.

The pope’s sentence, the harshest available in church canon law, comes amid a sprawling sexual abuse scandal and growing doubts about whether Francis will hold bishops accountable for covering up abuse.

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Archbishop Óscar Romero and Pope Paul VI Are Made Saints

ROME (ITALY)
The New York Times

October 14, 2018

By Elisabetta Povoledo

Thirty-eight years after being gunned down in a hospital church in El Salvador, Archbishop Óscar Romero was named a saint on Sunday to cheers in St. Peter’s Square, while thousands watched the ceremony on video monitors in the Salvadoran capital.

Pope Francis also canonized Pope Paul VI, who is credited with continuing begun by Pope John XXIII and bringing the church into the modern era with a series of reforms wrought from the Second Vatican Council in the 1960s.

In his homily, Francis said Archbishop Romero “left the security of the world, even his own safety, in order to give his life according to the Gospel, close to the poor and to his people.” Of the pope, he said, “Even in the midst of tiredness and misunderstanding, Paul VI bore witness in a passionate way to the beauty and the joy of following Christ totally.”

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Editorial: Cardinal Wuerl had to go. But not like this.

WASHINGTON D.C.
The Washington Post

October 12, 2018

By Editorial Board

In wrestling with the scourge of pedophile priests, Pope Francis has attacked clericalism — the deference accorded to the Catholic Church’s hierarchy at the expense of the faithful — while leaving himself vulnerable to the very same charge. So it was on Friday regarding Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, who was implicated in covering up clergy sex abuse when he was the bishop of Pittsburgh. The pope accepted the cardinal’s resignation but at the same time lauded his “nobility” and protected much of his standing and influence within the church.

That mixed message on sexual abuse of minors has been a hallmark of Francis’s papacy. With practically each move he makes to contain the erosion of the church’s authority, he subverts his own purpose, and by extension the institution itself, by his ambivalence.

No doubt, Mr. Wuerl’s eventual departure — he will remain in a caretaker’s role in Washington until a new archbishop is named — is a watershed. It follows close on the heels of an equally stunning event: the resignation from the College of Cardinals of his predecessor in Washington, Theodore McCarrick, in July, following allegations that he molested a minor and pressured seminary students to share his bed decades ago. Gradually, the impunity of the church’s most senior clerics is crumbling under the weight of public opprobrium and the scrutiny of civil authorities.

In Mr. Wuerl’s case, the blow was inflicted by a grand jury investigation led by Pennsylvania’s attorney general, whose bombshell report, issued in August, named more than 300 priests in the abuse of 1,000 children over seven decades. Mr. Wuerl, who was bishop in Pittsburgh for 18 years, was implicated in returning several accused priests to ministry.

As his defenders pointed out, Mr. Wuerl was hardly the worst offender; in some instances, he pressed to remove pedophile priests from positions where they could prey on minors. But as Josh Shapiro, the Pennsylvania attorney general, told us: “This isn’t a balancing act . . . you don’t get a mulligan when it comes to passing predator priests around.”

As the Vatican drags its feet — Mr. Wuerl will retain his influence as a member of the body that chooses bishops — the ground is shifting under the church across the United States. Since the Pennsylvania report was issued, the attorney general’s hotline has received nearly 1,300 calls from people saying they were victimized by priests. Similar hotlines are being flooded with calls in New York and New Jersey. A dozen states have launched their own investigations.

Much of the impulse for reform is coming from the laity, who are demanding the accountability that is coming too slowly from Rome. Meanwhile, the church’s own lobbyists continue to resist; in Pennsylvania, they are battling legislation that would allow childhood victims of sex abuse to sue their abusers, and the church, years later.

Pope Francis is summoning top bishops from all over the world to the Vatican in February to discuss the “protection of minors.” That may be his last chance to clarify his murky record on the issue.

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Archbishop of Washington resigns over sexual abuse scandal

NEW YORK (NY)
The Guardian

October 13, 2018

By Harriet Sherwood

Pope accepts resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl following claims of cover-up

The archbishop of Washington has become the most senior figure in the Catholic church to quit in the sexual abuse scandal that has engulfed the Vatican and embroiled Pope Francis.

Cardinal Donald Wuerl’s resignation was accepted by the Vatican on Friday after months of mounting pressure, following revelations of systematic abuse by priests in the state of Pennsylvania, and a cover-up by bishops. Wuerl was bishop of Pittsburgh from 1988 to 2006.

The state’s attorney general, Josh Shapiro, said Wuerl “oversaw and participated in the cover-up”.

Wuerl offered his resignation when he turned 75 almost three years ago, as required under canon law, but Pope Francis kept him in post. He resubmitted his resignation last month.

In a statement, he said his departure “permits this local church to move forward”, adding: “Once again, for any past errors in judgment, I apologise and ask for pardon.”

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October 13, 2018

Interview With Vinnie Nauheimer: Advocate For Survivors Of Clergy Abuse

NEW JERSEY
BlogTalkRadio

October 13, 2018

Vinnie Nauheimer was born in the Bronx, attended Catholic schools through high school and served in four years in the Navy during the Viet Nam war. After the Navy, he attended Iona College where he was a member of the Cornelian Honor Society and received his degree in Business Administration. He left the business world to become a teacher and earned a Master’s Degree in Education from Mercy College as well as a post graduate certificate in Autism and Severe Multiple Disabilities from Pace University.

Vinnie and his family had the unfortunate experience of running across a predator priest and for the last twenty years has dedicated a significant amount of time advocating for survivors of clergy abuse and fighting for change within the Roman Catholic Church to bring abusers to justice and prevent further abuse. He has dedicated all his talents to this effort and has written two books, Epistles on Clergy Abuse and God Damn Bishops and Priests. The former contains actual copies of letters he wrote to bishops, priests, editors and survivors on the subject of clergy abuse. The latter is a compilation of selected essays that he has written on clergy abuse over the years. In addition, Vinnie curates a FB page called The Clergy Abuse Collection where he showcases both his clergy abuse artwork and relevant articles.

https://www.facebook.com/clergyabuseartcollection/

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Erie’s Laughlin wants compromise in abuse law

ERIE (PA)
GoErie.com

October 13, 2018

By Ed Palattella

State senator wants legislation over grand jury report to include both a church-created compensation fund and a two-year window for victims to sue.

State Sen. Dan Laughlin is proposing a compromise over what is expected to be the main topic of debate when the Senate reconvenes in Harrisburg on Monday: legislation to create a two-year window for child sexual abuse victims to sue, no matter what the statute of limitations.

Laughlin, of Millcreek Township, R-49th Dist., said he supports the creation of the window, which is one of the four recommendations included in the Aug. 14 grand jury report on child sexual abuse in six Roman Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania, including the Catholic Diocese of Erie.

But Laughlin said he also supports the creation of a church-controlled victims’ compensation fund, which church leaders are backing rather than the two-year window.

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Diocese leaders knew of former Palm Desert priest’s membership in group for troubled clergy

PALM SPRINGS (CA)
Palm Springs Desert Sun

October 12, 2018

By Christopher Damien

Peter McCormick was already a member of a special religious order that treats clergy who engaged in “deviant” behavior, including but not limited to sexual misconduct, when he was assigned to the Palm Desert’s Sacred Heart Church in 1984, and diocese leaders knew. McCormick has admitted to sexual acts with an adolescent boy for years while he was a priest at the prominent local church.

McCormick began sexually abusing a 13-year-old boy in Hollywood in 1990, which continued until the victim was an adult, according to the diocese. It is unclear if the victim was a member of the Palm Desert church. McCormick was a priest at the church until the victim made the allegation in 2000.

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Priest accused by hundreds of sex abuse on Guam dies

GUAM
Radio New Zealand

October 13, 2018

The Catholic priest accused in more than 130 child sex abuse lawsuits on Guam has died in the United States.

97-year-old Louis Brouillard’s death was confirmed by the Archdiocese of Agana.

He had admitted to abusing young boys while a priest on Guam between 1948 and 1981.

He said church authorities knew and did nothing about it before eventually relocating him to the US mainland.

The Catholic Church on Guam faces more than 150 child sex abuse lawsuits, accusing several priests and the church itself of decades of abuse.

Father Brouillard is the only member to admit to paedophilia, although he has never been tried.

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Problem Priests Were Moved Around, Including to the Bay Area

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
KQED-TV

October 13, 2018

By Polly Stryker

At least three Catholic priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors are residing in the Bay Area and Northern California, an investigation by KQED has found.

Two of the three priests — Stephen Kain and Joseph Prochnow — were named in civil lawsuits against the Franciscan Order in Santa Barbara, which was settled in 2006 for more than $28 million.

The California Catholic Conference of Bishops, which oversees the state’s 12 dioceses, said in a statement that it began implementing reforms “to protect children and young people from abuse” in 2003.

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Cardinal Wuerl resignation doesn’t go far enough, say critics of the Vatican

WASHINGTON D.C.
NBC News

October 13, 2018

By Linda Givetash and Phil McCausland

“He is now able to retire seemingly with no consequences for his actions,” said Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro.

The Vatican is facing mounting criticism for not taking a more heavy-handed approach to sexual abuse allegations after accepting the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl but allowing him to remain influential in the church.

Pope Francis issued a letter Friday saying he would accept the resignation of the archbishop of Washington, D.C.,in response to accusations that he did nothing to stop abuse by senior clerics in Pennsylvania where he served as a bishop from 1988 to 2006.

While some church leaders and parishioners have called for Wuerl’s resignation in recent weeks, critics point to the fact that Francis asked Wuerl to remain the apostolic administrator of the archdiocese. He will also attend the annual American bishops meeting slated for November and holds an influential role on the Congregation of Bishops, which chooses who will take roles of church leadership.

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Francis defrocks two retired Chilean bishops ‘for demonstrated abuse of minors’

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

By Joshua J. McElwee

October 13, 2018

Pope Francis has laicized two retired Chilean bishops, in what an Oct. 13 Vatican announcement said was “a consequence for demonstrated abuse of minors.”

The statement said that both former Archbishop Francisco José Cox Huneeus and former Bishop Marco Antonio Órdenes Fernández will have no possibility for appeal.

News of the defrocking of the former prelates came hours after Francis had met at the apostolic palace with Chilean President Sebastián Piñera. In a brief statement summarizing their conversation, the Vatican said the two had discussed “the painful scourge of abuse of minors.”

Cox, 84, is a former Vatican official and member of the Schonstatt Fathers who led the archdiocese of La Serena from 1990-1997. His institute had announced earlier this month that he had been accused of sexually abusing someone in 2004.

Órdenes, 53, led the diocese of Iquique from 2006-13, when he resigned after being accused of having a sexual relationship with at least one minor.

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Pope Francis praises resigning US Cardinal amid sexual abuse cover-up allegations

VATICAN CITY
AP/Reuters via Australian Broadcasting Corporation

October 12, 2018

The archbishop of Washington DC stepped down over the handling of sex abuse cases but received praise from the Pope, drawing criticism from campaigners who said it showed the Catholic Church cared more for its leaders than abuse victims.

He becomes one of the highest-ranking Catholic leaders to step aside over global accusations that the church harboured sex abusers.

His resignation also further exposes a rift between Pope Francis and members of the church’s conservative wing, some of whom say the Pope himself should quit over the sex abuse crisis.

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Catholic Church identifies priests accused of child molesting

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
WTHR-TV

October 13, 2018

[Video]

A report released by the Archdiocese of Indianapolis documents disturbing allegations of child abuse committed by priests over a period of 50 years.

It names 23 priests and counts 97 victims.

Eyewitness News found the attorney who sounded the alarm over predatory priests more than a decade ago.

Patrick Noaker represented 13 victims in two lawsuits against the Archdiocese and won both cases.

“It’s about time they have acknowledged what happened,” he said from his office in Minneapolis.

Nearly 100 children allegedly molested by priests over 50 years until now have suffered mostly in silence.

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Pennsylvania Republican Leadership Spits in the Eyes of Child Sex Abuse Victims with Faux Justice in New Proposal

PENNSYLVANIA
Verdict

October 13, 2018

By Marci A. Hamilton

The 2018 Pennsylvania Attorney General’s grand jury report on the six Pennsylvania dioceses not yet investigated for clergy sex abuse looked like it could move mountains at first. The account of over 300 priests and over 1000 victims certainly has garnered worldwide attention and empathy for the victims and their families. Republican leadership, however, with few days left in the legislative calendar has proved incapable of such empathy. Instead, Senators Scarnati and Corman have produced a cynical “tribunal” that gives bishops and insurance companies what they love most: immunity from discovery. This is faux justice is an insult to every survivor in the state. It is also every child-molesting cleric’s best friend as it keeps their wrongdoing secret and every enabling institution’s best friend as it keeps their wrongdoing secret.

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Pope Francis Is Still Equivocating on the Sex-Abuse Crisis

VATICAN CITY
The Atlantic

He stands by those to whom he’s loyal but, when faced with new evidence, is also willing to change his mind.

October 13, 2018

By Rachel Donadio

When the sex-abuse crisis in the Catholic Church flared up in 2002, in the waning days of Pope John Paul II, with allegations of a pattern of abuse by priests and cover-ups in the archdiocese of Boston, it was often dismissed at the Vatican as “a Boston problem.” When it flared up again in 2010 under Pope Benedict XVI, the atmosphere at the Vatican was a mix of stonewalling and open hostility. Back then, there were new allegations in the United States, as well as new questions about how Benedict had handled some cases of predator priests in his previous roles as head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office and as a cardinal and bishop in his native Germany. Some officials decried calumnious attacks against the Holy Father. The issue was seen in terms of sin and forgiveness more than crime and punishment.

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El padre Aramayo abusó de una menor, sin embargo volverá a dar misa dentro de poco

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Que Pasa Salta [Salta, Argentina]

October 13, 2018

Read original article

El cura de la Ucasal fue condenado por el Vaticano a dos años fuera de la vida eclesiástica, castigo que está por finalizar. 

Condenado en el 2016 por abusar de una menor, Nestor Aramayo, quien aparte de sacerdote era profesor de la Universidad Católica de Salta, apeló la sentencia llevando la causa al propio Vaticano. Un año más tarde perdió la apelación y fue condenado definitivamente a 2 años sin ejercer el sacerdocio. Hoy está cerca de volver a dar misas. 

Aunque luego de varias etapas de apelaciones y dilataciones, la sentencia quedó firme en marzo del año pasado, Aramayo podrá volver a ejercer el sacerdocio dentro de 5 meses. 

“Está cumpliendo la pena de dos años de suspensión del ejercicio del ministerio y la docencia, y haciendo tratamiento psicológico”, explicó el juez del Tribunal Loyola Pintos y de Sancristóval, en una nota publicada en El Tribuno. 

El caso 

El aberrante hecho fue denunciado varios años atrás, y ocurrió mientras la víctima tenía 14 años. Las agresiones físicas y psicológicas se extendieron durante 4 años. Tras superar el miedo y la incertidumbre, la menor se acercó a la iglesia a concretar su denuncia.

El receptor de la fuerte acusación fue el monseñor Dante Bernacki“Intenté denunciar muchos años antes, pero Bernacki no quiso tomar mi declaración. Me pedía que consiguiera a otras dos personas a las que les hubiera pasado lo mismo porque sino no podía denunciar”contó la víctima en dialogo con FM Noticias.

Asimismo señaló “con el nuevo Papa parecía haber una apertura con estos temas que yo no había encontrado nunca. Antes, nadie me apoyaba”, mientras explicó que recién en 2014 fue recibida por el arzobispo Mario Antonio Cargnello.

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Pope expels two Chilean bishops from priesthood over sexual abuse

ROME
Crux

October 13, 2018

By Inés San Martín

In an extremely unusual, if not unprecedented, move, Pope Francis on Saturday imposed what’s tantamount to the Church’s version of capital punishment on two retired Chilean bishops accused of sexual abuse of minors, expelling them from the priesthood.

In the case of Archbishop Francisco Cox, it’s a day some of his earliest victims have been awaiting for more than 40 years. The pope also removed from the clerical state the bishop emeritus of Iquique, Marco Antonio Ordenes Fernandez, who retired from his position in 2012 at the age of 47.

According to a Vatican statement released on Saturday, “the decision was adopted by the pope last Thursday, Oct. 11, and does not allow for recourse,” meaning there’s no possibility of appeal.

The Vatican statement also indicated that the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith has notified both men of the penalties through their respective superiors in their current residences. It also noted that Cox, though no longer a priest, remains a part of the institute of the Schönstatt Fathers.

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Pope defrocks two Chilean bishops over sexual abuse allegations

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

October 13, 2018

Pope Francis has defrocked two Chilean bishops who have been caught up in the country’s widening sexual abuse crisis, the Vatican said on Saturday.

The Vatican named the two men as Francisco José Cox Huneeus, 84, who was archbishop emeritus of the city of La Serena, and Marco Antonio Órdenes Fernández, 53, who was archbishop emeritus of Iquique.

A Vatican statement in Spanish said the pope’s decision was definitive and not open to appeal. It referred to a part of Canon (Church) law related to the crime of sexual abuse of minors.

Defrocking, officially called “reduced to the lay state”, means they have been expelled from the priesthood. It is the harshest punishment the Church can inflict on a member of the clergy and such action has rarely been taken against bishops.

Last month Francis defrocked Father Fernando Karadima, an 88-year-old Chilean priest who was accused of sexually abusing teenage boys over a period of many years.

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Iglesia investiga en secreto nuevas denuncias contra sacerdotes de Linares por “conductas incorrectas”

[Church investigates new accusations against priests of Linares for “incorrect behavior”]

CHILE
BioBioChile

October 12, 2018

By Emilio Lara

El Obispado de Linares anunció a través de un comunicado de la recepción de dos denuncias en contra de dos sacerdotes diocesanos por presuntas conductas incorrectas con adultos, actuar contrario a su condición religiosa. La Iglesia, además, confirmó que dio inicio a la investigación de ambas acusaciones y que éstas fueron presentadas por un tercero, al que declinaron identificar.

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Nuevas expulsiones: Papa quita calidad de sacerdotes a Francisco José Cox y a Marco Antonio Órdenes

[New expulsions: Pope removes Francisco José Cox and Marco Antonio Órdenes from the priesthood]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
Emol

October 13, 2018

By Tomás Molina J.

Con esto, se suman a Cristián Precht y Fernando Karadima, apartados del estado clerical por perpetrar abusos sexuales y de conciencia a menores.

Desde la Santa Sede informaron este sábado que el Papa Francisco decidió extremar las medidas contra el ex arzobispo de La Serena Francisco José Cox y de Marco Antonio Órdenes Fernández, obispo emérito de Iquique. Ambos fueron expulsados del sacerdocio, luego de que se conocieran nuevas denuncias por abusos sexuales y de conciencia a menores supuestamente perpetrados por los presbíteros.

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Papa aborda crisis de la Iglesia en Chile con Piñera y Vaticano expresa interés por fallo de la CIJ

[Pope discusses Chile’s clergy abuse crisis, migration, and environmental issues with Piñera at Vatican]

CHILE
Emol

October 13, 2018

By María Cristina Romero

Tras la reunión que sostuvo con el Pontífice, el Mandatario destacó su interés en como se ha seguido el tema migratorio y medioambiental en Chile.

“Tuvimos una muy cercana y muy franca reunión con el Papa Francisco”. Así describió el Presidente Sebastián Piñera, la reunión que sostuvo este sábado con el Sumo Pontífice en el Vaticano, en el marco de su gira de diez días por Europa. Tras el encuentro, el jefe es Estado explicó que en la cita “conversamos sobre la situación difícil que vive la Iglesia en Chile y sobre todo compartimos la esperanza de que la Iglesia pueda vivir un verdadero renacimiento y recuperar el cariño y la cercanía del pueblo de Dios”.

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Vaticano remueve del sacerdocio a obispos Cox y Órdenes por casos de abuso sexual

[Vatican removes former bishop Cox from the priesthood after sex abuse allegations]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 13, 2018

By Claudia Soto

La decisión adoptada por el Papa el pasado jueves 11 de octubre de 2018, no admite recurso. Según el comunicado, la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe ya notificó a los involucrados.

Esta mañana, el Vaticano anunció a través de un comunicado, que el Papa Francisco decidió remover el estado clerical al arzobispo emérito de La Serena, Francisco José Cox, miembro del Instituto de los Padres de Schoenstatt, quien se encontraba enfrentando denuncias de abuso sexual a menores.

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Schoensttat dice que expulsión de Cox del sacerdocio “se veía venir” y esperan traerlo de vuelta a Chile

[Schoensttat says that Cox’s expulsion from the priesthood “was seen coming” and they hope to bring him back to Chile]

CHILE
La Tercera

October 13, 2018

By Claudia Soto

El ex obispo de La Serena, miembro de la Congregación de los Padres de Schoenstatt, será sometido la próxima semana a exámenes médicos, para ver si está en condiciones de viajar desde Alemania. Esta mañana el Vaticano dio a conocer su expulsión del estado clerical.

El ex obispo de La Serena, miembro de la Congregación de los Padres de Schoenstatt, será sometido la próxima semana a exámenes médicos, para ver si está en condiciones de viajar desde Alemania. Esta mañana el Vaticano dio a conocer su expulsión del estado clerical.
Dentro de los próximos días el ahora ex sacerdote Francisco José Cox podría ser sometido a exámenes médicos, según lo anticipó el viceprovincial Patricio Moore, vocero del Instituto Padres de Schoenstatt. El objetivo es que pueda regresar al país desde Alemania, para enfrentar las denuncias de abuso sexual que hay en su contra.

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Pope Accepts Cardinal Wuerl’s Resignation Amid Sex Abuse Cover-Up Scandal

VATICAN CITY
KDKA-TV (Pittsburgh CBS afffiliate)

October 12, 2018

KDKA-TV and Associated Press

[Video]

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl after he became entangled in two major sexual abuse and cover-up scandals and lost the support of many in his flock.

Wuerl, who turns 78 in November, becomes the most prominent head to roll in the scandal roiling the Catholic Church after his predecessor as Washington archbishop, Theodore McCarrick, was forced to resign as cardinal over allegations he sexually abused at least two minors and adult seminarians.

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Children emotionally, physically and sexually abused at Catholic-run homes, Scottish abuse inquiry finds

UNITED KINGDOM
The Tablet

October 12, 2018

By Rose Gamble

The inquiry found that children were starved of love, dignity and compassion

Children at two Catholic residential homes in Scotland were subjected to emotional, physical and sexual abuse for decades, the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry (SCAI) has found.

In its interim report published on 11 October the Scottish child abuse inquiry (SCAI) found that the young boys and girls housed in two homes run by the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul (DoC) were subjected to excessive discipline, sexual abuse and were starved of love, dignity and compassion.

Lady Smith, Chair of the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry, said: “For many children who were in Smyllum and Bellevue, the homes were places of fear, coercive control, threat, excessive discipline and emotional, physical and sexual abuse, where they found no love, no compassion, no dignity and no comfort.”

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Government inquiry documents abuse at Catholic orphanages in Scotland

LEICESTER (UNITED KINGDOM)
Crux

October 12, 2018

By Charles Collins

A new report published Thursday in Scotland shows that children suffered abuse at two children’s care homes run by a Catholic religious order, both of which have been closed for decades.

The Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry (SCAI) said that the two children’s facilities run by the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul – Smyllum Park in Lanark and Bellevue House in Rutherglen – were “places of fear, coercive control, threat, excessive discipline and emotional, physical and sexual abuse, where they found no love, no compassion, no dignity and no comfort.”

The interim report said that the children at the homes were “systematically starved of love, dignity and compassion.”

In August, Police arrested around a dozen former members of the staff at Smyllum Park, which closed in 1981, on charges of historic abuse. All those arrested were over 60.

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Wuerl hounded from office for becoming face of abuse crisis

WASHINGTON D.C.
National Catholic Reporter

October 12, 2018

by Michael Sean Winters

“Antistite nostro Donaldo.” For more than 10 years, from the time of his installation as Archbishop of Washington in 2006, until my moving out of the archdiocese in 2017, every Sunday at Mass, I softly repeated these words as the priest said them in the Roman Canon. “For our bishop Donald,” I prayed them on the days I could not borrow a car to get to the 10 a.m. Latin Mass at St. Matthew’s and I had to walk to the suburban church near my house. Over that time, those words went from something rote and obligatory to something personal and powerful, though still obligatory. We Catholics pray for our pope and our bishop at every Mass. The Communion at the altar is intrinsically related to the communion of persons that is the church, indeed they are two faces of the same reality, the Body of Christ.

Today, the Body of Christ in the United States is bruised and bloodied. The depredations of former-cardinal Theodore McCarrick and the grim and gruesome details of clergy sex abuse revealed in the Pennsylvania grand jury report both conspired to place the abuse of children by clergy back at the center of the church’s consciousness and public image. Cardinal Donald Wuerl was a link between the two scandals, having succeeded McCarrick in Washington in 2006 and been a bishop in Pennsylvania for 18 years.

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The Catholic Sex-Abuse Scandal Takes Down a Cardinal

UNITED STATES
The Atlantic

October 12, 2018

By Emma Green

The pope has accepted the resignation of the leader of the Archdiocese of Washington. What happens next?

On Friday, Pope Francis accepted the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the head of the Archdiocese of Washington. Wuerl submitted his letter of resignation three years ago, when he turned 75, as is customary for bishops. But in September, Wuerl traveled to Rome to urge the pope to finally accept it because of growing accusations over his role in handling sexual-abuse allegations in the Church.

It’s the first major American resignation to result from this round of the Church’s sex-abuse crisis. In certain ways, it is a hollow result: Wuerl was already in line to resign, and other, younger Church leaders have also been potentially implicated for their conduct. The end of Wuerl’s tenure in Washington is a symbolic step for the reeling American Catholic hierarchy, a sign that they are taking the crisis seriously. But much more will be needed to repair the image of the Catholic Church and the immense mistrust that has developed among believers.

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Hope among victims of child sex abuse dashed amid Senate GOP proposals

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive.com

October 12, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

With time running out on the legislative clock, victims and advocates of child sexual abuse are ramping up efforts to pressure state Senate Republicans to approve a measure that would give adults who were abused as children an opportunity at justice.

A few weeks ago, a tide of optimism buoyed survivors and advocates with expectations that reforms would finally see the light of day. Late this week, those hopes may have been dealt a lethal blow.

Rep. Mark Rozzi, the Berks County Democrat who has emerged as the leader of reform in the Legislature, on Thursday received a copy of the proposals being pushed in the Senate that, for the most part, run counter to the broader reforms being pushed by victims and advocates.

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Chicago pastor charged with sex abuse involving force, battery

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS-TV (Chicago ABC affiliate)

October 12, 2018

By Evelyn Holmes

A pastor who has been assigned to at least three churches in Chicago is accused of sexually abusing two women and attacking a teen girl, police said Friday.

Rigoberto Gamez, 52, was charged with two felony counts of criminal sexual abuse involving force and misdemeanor battery in connection with attacks on a 18-year-old woman, a 27-year-old woman and a 17-year-old girl, police said.

The attacks began in November 2016. Prosecutors said Gamez fondled a 27-year-old office manager after a luncheon in the church rectory.

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Here’s what we know about the priests accused of abuse in Indianapolis archdiocese’s list

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Indianapolis Star

October 12, 2018

By Holly V. Hays and Crystal Hill

The Archdiocese of Indianapolis on Thursday released the names of nearly 30 priests accused of abusing more than 100 children or young people.

Here’s what we know:

Why release the list?

Archbishop Charles C. Thompson announced his intentions to compile and release the list at the end of August, weeks after a Pennsylvania grand jury released a report identifying 300 priests accused of abuse and more than 1,000 victims.

In an open letter published Aug. 29, Thompson apologized to all victims of clergy abuse and called for increased transparency.

“We must do everything necessary to make sure neither abuse nor cover-up ever happens again,” he wrote.

Who decides if an accusation is “credible?”

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October 12, 2018

Louis Brouillard dies at 97

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 12, 2018

By Dana M. Williams and Haidee V. Eugenio

Louis Brouillard, the retired priest accused in more than 130 sexual abuse lawsuits who admitted to molesting children on Guam, died in Minnesota Oct. 10, according to the Archdiocese of Agana.

He was 97.

Brouillard, a native of Minnesota, was ordained on Guam in 1948. He served here until 1981 as a parish priest in Mangilao, Chalan Pago, Barrigada, Malojloj and Tumon, and as a teacher at Father Duenas Memorial School.

He also served as a longtime Boy Scouts of America scoutmaster on the island.

More than 130 civil cases, filed in local and federal courts since 2016, accused Brouillard of rape, sexual abuse and sexual molestation. The most recent lawsuit filed against him was Oct. 4.

In a statement released Friday, the archdiocese said Brouillard’s health had been declining in recent months.

“The archdiocese continues to pray for all victims and survivors of child abuse in our Church. We continue to work diligently to bring resolution and reparation to each person,” the statement said. “The archdiocese has extended prayers and condolences to the late priest’s family in the U.S. mainland. We pray for the soul of Father Brouillard.”

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Paul Muschick: Cardinal Wuerl’s resignation doesn’t mean Catholic church is changing its ways

ALLENTOWN (PA)
The Morning Call

October 12, 2018

By Paul Muschick

I’m still not sure the Catholic church gets it.

The pope’s acceptance of the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl on Friday probably was viewed by many as a sign that the church is taking steps to change its ways and rebuild itself amid the fallout of the child sex abuse scandal exposed by the Pennsylvania grand jury investigation.

Here’s why I’m not so sure that’s the case.

Wuerl’s name came up often in the grand jury report. He wasn’t accused of abuse, but at times of helping to protect abusers in his role as the long-time bishop of the Diocese of Pittsburgh. The report also notes steps he took to try to rid the church of abusers.

About a month after the report was released, Wuerl wrote a blog post in which he said he wished he “could redo some decisions I have made in my three decades as a bishop and each time get it right.” In a statement Friday, he apologized “for any past errors in judgment.”

Regardless of how you feel about Wuerl, it’s clear that his continued presence as a cardinal in Washington, D.C., was becoming divisive. Pope Francis on Friday accepted the resignation that Wuerl first offered nearly three years ago when he turned 75 and offered again last month.

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Pope accepts Washington cardinal’s resignation amid scandal

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

October 12, 2018

By David Crary and Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis accepted the resignation Friday of the archbishop of Washington, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, after he became entangled in two major sexual abuse and cover-up scandals and lost the support of many in his flock.

But in a letter released by Wuerl’s office, Francis asked Wuerl to stay on temporarily until a replacement is found and suggested he had unfairly become a scapegoat and victim of the mounting outrage among rank-and-file Catholics over the abuse scandal.

The pope’s apparent reluctance to remove Wuerl was evidence of the fraught personnel decisions he has been forced to make as he grapples with the burgeoning global scandal that has implicated some of his closest advisers and allies, including top churchmen in the U.S., Belgium, Honduras, Chile and Australia.

With the resignation, Wuerl becomes the most prominent head to roll after his predecessor as Washington archbishop, Theodore McCarrick, was forced to resign as cardinal over allegations he sexually abused at least two minors and adult seminarians.

A grand jury report issued in August on rampant sex abuse in six Pennsylvania dioceses accused Wuerl of helping to protect some child-molesting priests while he was bishop of Pittsburgh from 1988 to 2006. Simultaneously, Wuerl faced widespread skepticism over his insistence that he knew nothing about years of alleged sexual misconduct by McCarrick.

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Alleged sexual abuse survivors lean on Pa. Senate to reform statute of limitations

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
KYW Newsradio

October 12, 2018

By Steve Tawa

“We just kept hearing the same excuses to cover up still for the Catholic Church.”

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the embattled arch bishop of Washington, D.C. It comes after he was named in a Pennsylvania grand jury report on priest sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church released in August.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said it’s unacceptable that Wuerl participated in and oversaw systematic clergy abuse when he was bishop overseeing the Pittsburgh Diocese. Shapiro said the cardinal is able to retire seemingly with no consequences for actions documented in the grand jury report and in the church’s own secret archives.

Included in that grand jury report are four key recommended reforms, one of which is the elimination of the criminal statute of limitations for abusing children. Already 39 states have done so.

Shapiro, two suburban district attorneys, and survivors of clergy sexual abuse all gathered in Montgomery County on Friday to put pressure on the state Senate to act on statute of limitations reforms next week.

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2-year window for child sex abuse suits divides negotiators in Pennsylvania

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

October 12, 2018

By Mark Scolforo

A Pennsylvania House Democrat negotiating legislation to help victims of child sexual abuse on Friday rejected an approach recently circulated by the top-ranking Senate Republican.

Rep. Mark Rozzi said he had several problems with a document he received Thursday from the office of Senate President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati.

“As far as I’m concerned, negotiations are over. My three words for the Senate are simply this: prepare for war,” Rozzi said in his Capitol office. “We’re coming.”

The House last month voted for a two-year window for abuse victims to file civil lawsuits over claims that would otherwise be barred by time limits in state law.

Scarnati has argued that a two-year retroactive window would violate the state constitution. His outline does not include such a window, and the Senate could vote on the matter next week, as the current legislative session nears its end.

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On the Society of St. John: Sometimes reporters (like me) just can’t see the story

NEW YORK (NY)
Get Religion

October 12, 2018

By Julia Duin

Although I’ve been blogging all summer about various scandals in the Catholic Church, I’d like to include a story in the past that was staring me in the face — yet I absolutely missed it.

It’s a news story about a religious order in northeastern Pennsylvania. Things sounded good in all their fundraising brochures, so I showed up in isolated Shohola, Pa., one day in the summer of 2000, to write them up.

I had no idea there was a ton of sexual abuse going on in their boys’ boarding school in Elmhurst, which was near Scranton. I believed everything told me about this order’s dreams of building a medieval village-style society in the foothills of the Poconos.

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EDITORIAL:Victims deserve closure, accountability

SUNBURY (PA)
The Daily Item

October 12, 2018

Individuals silenced for decades by shame and confusion of sex abuse must be heard. The State House has done it’s part. The focus now shifts to the Senate and the ever-ticking clock to revise Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations regarding sex abuse crimes.

This should be simple. Victims of criminal sexual abuse — including those whose courage is outlined in more than 1,000 pages of a state grand jury report on 300 “predator” Catholic priests across the commonwealth — deserve nothing less.

When it reconvenes next week for its final three scheduled legislative days before November’s election, the Senate seems more likely to move a new piece of legislation than amend a version that passed the House last month. The House version was praised by victims and advocates.

The House reform raises the age to file lawsuits from 30 to 50 years of age and eliminates the statute of limitation entirely for criminal prosecutions. Additionally, there would be a two-year window to allow sex abuse survivors — whose trauma occurred decades ago — to file a civil lawsuit.

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Pope accepts resignation of American cardinal in sex abuse scandal

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

October 12, 2018

Pope Francis accepted the resignation Friday of Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl after he became entangled in two major sexual abuse and cover-up scandals and lost the support of many in his flock.

But in a letter released by Wuerl’s office, Francis praised his longtime ally and suggested Wuerl had unfairly become a scapegoat, having made some “mistakes” in handling sex abuse cases, but not having covered them up.

With the resignation, Wuerl becomes the most prominent head to roll in the scandal roiling the Catholic Church after his predecessor as Washington archbishop, Theodore McCarrick, was forced to resign as cardinal over allegations he sexually abused at least two minors and adult seminarians.

A Vatican statement Friday said Francis had accepted Wuerl’s resignation, but named no replacement; Wuerl’s office provided the letter in which the pope asked him to stay on in a temporary capacity until a new archbishop is found.

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Retired priest, accused in more than 130 sex abuse cases, dies at 97

HAGÅTÑA (GUAM)
Pacific Daily News

October 11, 2018

By Dana M. Williams and Haidee V. Eugenio

Priest accused in 130+ sex abuse cases dies

Louis Brouillard, the retired priest who was the subject of more than 130 sexual abuse lawsuits on Guam, died in Minnesota on Oct. 10, according to the Archdiocese of Agana.

He was 97.

Brouillard, a native of Minnesota, was ordained on Guam in 1948. He served here until 1981, as a parish priest in Mangilao, Chalan Pago, Barrigada and Malojloj and as a teacher at Father Duenas Memorial School.

He also served as a longtime scoutmaster on the island.

More than 130 civil cases filed in local and federal courts since 2016 accused Brouillard of rape, sexual abuse and sexual molestation. The most recent lawsuit filed against him was on Oct. 4.

In a 2016 interview with a Pacific Daily News reporter, Brouillard stated “it’s possible” he sexually abused boys while serving on Guam. He later signed an affidavit admitting to abusing 20 or more boys on the island.

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Here’s what we know about the priests accused of abuse in Indianapolis archdiocese’s list

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Indianapolis Star

October 12, 2018

By Holly V. Hays and Crystal Hill

The Archdiocese of Indianapolis on Thursday released the names of nearly 30 priests accused of abusing more than 100 children or young people.

Here’s what we know:

Why release the list?
Archbishop Charles C. Thompson announced his intentions to compile and release the list at the end of August, weeks after a Pennsylvania grand jury released a report identifying 300 priests accused of abuse and more than 1,000 victims.

In an open letter published Aug. 29, Thompson apologized to all victims of clergy abuse and called for increased transparency.

“We must do everything necessary to make sure neither abuse nor cover-up ever happens again,” he wrote.

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Pope accepts resignation of Cardinal Wuerl over clergy sex abuse scandal

WASHINGTON (DC)
Penn Live

October 12, 2018

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl after he became entangled in two major sexual abuse and cover-up scandals and lost the support of many in his flock.

Wuerl, who turns 78 in November, becomes the most prominent head to roll in the scandal roiling the Catholic Church after his predecessor as Washington archbishop, Theodore McCarrick, was forced to resign as cardinal over allegations he sexually abused at least two minors and adult seminarians.

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Pa.’s Attorney General Calls for No Statute of Limitations in Wake of Clergy Abuse Report

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC10 Staff

October 12, 2018

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro pushes for legal change after clergy abuse report

After the release of a grand jury report detailing some of the alleged sexual abuse of children by members of Pennsylvania’s Catholic clergy, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro joined advocates for victims of clergy abuse and other elected officials to call change for an end to the statute of limitations for child sex abuse.

“I want to be clear, we unearthed an organized criminal enterprise here in Pennsylvania, for now, they got away with some of it,” Shapiro said while calling for action now.

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Allentown Diocese asks court to throw out abuse victim’s lawsuit

ALLENTOWN (PA)
The Morning Call

October 10, 2018

By Peter Hall

The Allentown Diocese has asked a Lehigh County Court to throw out a lawsuit by a woman — described as a victim in Pennsylvania’s grand jury report on sexual abuse by clergy — who claimed the diocese engaged in a defamatory smear campaign after she reported being abused by a priest.

Juliann Bortz sued the diocese last month after the grand jury report revealed that diocesan officials, including Bishop Alfred Schlert, engaged in an effort to gather “irrelevant, unrelated [or] false ‘dirt,’” on Bortz to discredit her reports of abuse by the Rev. Francis Fromholzer in the 1960s.

The suit alleges defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress by the diocese. Bortz is seeking an apology and a waiver of attorney-client privilege by the diocese to allow its former attorney to testify about who directed the effort to discredit her. She will pursue monetary damages only if the church refuses her request, attorney Benjamin Andreozzi said last month.

The diocese filed papers Wednesday asking a judge to dismiss the lawsuit, raising objections about the legal sufficiency of Bortz’s claims.

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Suspended Lansing priest once served in Kalamazoo

LANSING (MI)
WKZO AM/FM

October 11, 2018

A Lansing priest who once served in Kalamazoo has been stripped of his priestly faculties for an alleged sexual assault that took place 35 years ago.

The Lansing State Journal reports that Father Robert Gerl, who is 67, is on Senior Priest Status and hasn’t had an assignment for some time.

The original allegation involved an adult male. The incident which is being called “credible” by the Lansing Diocese allegedly took place 3-years before he moved to the Kalamazoo Area in 1986.

Vickie Cessna, spokesperson for the Kalamazoo Diocese says he came to Kalamazoo from Lansing where he was originally ordained.

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Priest removed from Lansing due to sexual assault claim worked in Kalamazoo, Portage

LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal

October 11, 2018

By Kara Berg and Ken Palmer

The Diocese identified the priest as the Rev. Robert Gerl. A spokesman said Gerl was on “senior priest status” and has not had an assignment for years.

A senior priest in the Diocese of Lansing has had his priestly permissions revoked due to a “credible allegation” of sexual assault by an adult male from decades ago, according to the Diocese of Lansing.

The Diocese identified the priest as the Rev. Robert Gerl. A spokesman said Gerl was on “senior priest status” and has not had an assignment for years.

As of 2014, the 10-county diocese of Lansing had about 196,000 parishioners.

With his permissions revoked, Gerl is no longer able to publicly minister as a priest.

The Diocese of Lansing said last month that it would release the names of priests and other religious leaders who sexually abused children.

The diocese also said it plans to invite an external agency to review how sexual abuse allegations were handled. The report from the external agency will be made public on the Diocese’s website, Bishop Earl Boyea said.

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Priest suspended after sexual assault allegation had worked in Kalamazoo

KALAMAZOO (MI)
MLive

October 11, 2018

By Emily Monacelli

A Catholic priest suspended after a “credible allegation” of sexual assault previously worked in Kalamazoo.

The Rev. Robert Gerl, a senior priest in the Catholic Diocese of Lansing, was barred from public ministry due to the allegation which alleges the assault of a male several decades ago, the diocese announced Oct. 5.

Gerl served in the Diocese of Kalamazoo at Nazareth College from 1986 to 1991, at St. Thomas More Parish in Kalamazoo from 1997 to 2000 and at St. Catherine of Siena Parish in Portage from 2000 to 2009. Gerl regularly celebrated Masses at a number of other parishes on a temporary weekend basis.

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Priest removed from Lansing for alleged sexual assault served in Kalamazoo, Portage

KALAMAZOO (MI)
Fox 17

October 11, 2018

By Bob Brenzing

The Diocese of Lansing says a priest who formerly served in Kalamazoo and Portage has been removed from his duties due to a “credible allegation of sexual assault of an adult male”.

The assault allegedly took place “decades ago.”

The Diocese of Kalamazoo says that Rev. Robert Gerl served in ministry at Nazareth College from 1986 to 1991, St. Thomas More Parish in Kalamazoo from 1997 to 2000, and St. Catherine of Siena Parish in Portage from 2000 to 2009. Diocese officials say he also celebrated Mass at a number of other churches in the area on a temporary weekend basis. He currently does not have any duties in Kalamazoo.

Officials say that anyone who may have been harmed, or knows anyone who was harmed by Rev. Gerl, or anyone else from the church, should contact local law enforcement. They can also contact the Diocesan Victim Coordinator at 877-802-0115.

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Lansing priest accused of sexual abuse had worked in Kalamazoo Diocese

LANSING (MI)
Newschannel 3

October 11, 2018

A priest in Lansing who was suspended due to what the diocese called a credible allegation of sexual abuse had served about 20 years in pastoral ministries in the Diocese of Kalamazoo.

The Diocese of Lansing officially revoked priestly faculties for the Rev. Robert Gerl on Oct. 5, 2018. Gerl was accused of sexual assault involving an adult male in an incident that occurred decades ago, the Catholic Church in Lansing said. Gerl was not assigned to a parish because he’s on senior status. Some of his previous duties as a senior priest included officiating mass, listening to confessions, baptisms and anointing the sick or dying.

Lansing Diocesan spokesman Michael Diebold said Michigan State Police have seized Gerl’s file as part of Attorney General Bill Schuette’s investigation into possible sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Michigan.

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The Battle Over Brett Kavanaugh Has Ended. But the Pain His Hearing Triggered Has Not

UNITED STATES
TIME

October 11, 2018

By Eliana Dockterman

Eliana Dockterman is a culture writer for TIME in New York City.

Since #MeToo went viral, survivors have been inundated with stories of sexual assault and harassment on a weekly — and for some stretches, daily — basis. But nothing had evoked memories and pains of past traumas in some survivors, and particularly women, as much as the respective testimonies of Dr. Christine Blasey Ford and Judge Brett Kavanaugh. Senators, television personalities and people across the country heard stories from loved ones that they had never been told before. The Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN) saw a 388% increase in traffic on its hotline from the Thursday of the hearing to the following Sunday. That Friday was the busiest day in the organization’s 24-year history. No other single #MeToo moment appeared to precipitate that sort of deluge.

Survivors with histories of sexual abuse are at higher risk of exhibiting PTSD symptoms whenever a #MeToo story hits the news, according to Freyd. But such allegations are often blips in the 24-hour news cycle. The Kavanaugh story dragged on, with an apparent strain on many survivors that the Harvey Weinstein and Bill Cosby allegations did not inspire — and it will continue to do so as he takes his seat on the Supreme Court. Experts say that all that has happened could have lasting effects on the psychology of many victims of sexual assault.

“When there’s a national disaster, there’s a period of aftermath,” says Dr. Jennifer Freyd, a psychology professor at the University of Oregon who specializes in studying trauma among survivors of sexual violence. “I think it’s going to be like that. I think we’re talking about a big national health crisis.”

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Pope accepts resignation of US cardinal over abuse cover-up claim

VATICAN CITY
AFP

October 12, 2018

Pope Francis on Friday accepted the resignation of Washington DC archbishop Donald Wuerl, who has been blamed for not doing enough to deal with paedophile priests.

Cardinal Wuerl, 77, had offered to resign on September 21 after facing strong criticism over a report detailing mass sexual abuse cases when he was a bishop in Pennsylvania.

Francis finally accepted his resignation on Friday in a letter in which he praised Wuerl’s “nobility” and said the cardinal would stay on until his successor is appointed.

Wuerl said in a statement that he was “deeply touched” by the pope’s letter and that his replacement would “allow all of the faithful, clergy, religious and lay, to focus on healing and the future”.

He also apologised for “any past errors in judgement”.

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Sexual misconduct allegations against metro Detroit priest made by more than one person

DETROIT (MI)
WXYZ

October 11, 2018

7 Action News is learning more about sexual misconduct allegations against a longtime Metro Detroit Catholic Priest, Father Robert Witkowski.

Archdiocese Spokesman Ned McGrath says these are new allegations that came into the church earlier this year by more than one person. He says the church deemed them credible and have turned them over to the Wayne County Prosecutor.

He would not discuss any specifics about the allegations or when and where they allegedly happened except to say they go back to the early career of Witkowski.

But by turning them over to the Wayne County prosecutor, this is a clear indication the allegations are centered when Witkowski was in a Wayne County church. His work record released by the Archdiocese also shows he worked in Macomb County.

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

The Catholic Church’s Biggest Crisis Since the Reformation

NEW YORK (NY)
Foreign Affairs

October 11, 2018

By Massimo Faggioli

Why a New Wave of Sexual Abuse Revelations Has Deepened Preexisting Divisions

The Catholic Church is facing its most serious crisis in 500 years. In these last few months, a new wave of clerical sexual abuse revelations left the world in shock. From Australia to Chile to Germany to the United States, horrifying reports revealed thousands of cases of child molestation by members of the clergy. One U.S. grand jury report documented 1,000 children abused by 300 priests in the state of Pennsylvania alone over seven decades.

The new wave of revelations in 2018 was disturbing not only because it exposed the persistence of abuse but also because it implicated high level church officials in the abuse and its cover-up. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, resigned from the College of Cardinals in July when credible accusations came to light that he had sexually abused a minor and harassed seminarians he supervised. The McCarrick revelations were particularly troubling because the former archbishop had played a leadership role in the Catholic Church’s response to the last U.S. clerical sexual abuse scandal in 2002. In late August, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, a former papal diplomat, published a letter accusing Pope Francis of knowing about McCarrick’s sexual abuses for years and helping to cover them up. Viganò concluded by calling on the pope to resign.

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