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.

November 13, 2018

Clergy Abuse Survivor Says Names To Be Released “Step In The Right Direction”

OGDENSBURG (NY)
WWNYTV

November 11, 2018

“It’s a step in the right direction.”

As the Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg plans to release the names of the remaining clergy members accused of being involved in its sex abuse scandal, it’s something Jim Cummings, a survivor of clergy abuse, has been waiting for.

“I’ve talked to quite a few of the survivors and that’s what they wanted also,” said Cummings. “It was very clear.”

Eight clergy members from the Diocese of Ogdensburg have already been named over the years. There are still at least 15 more who have yet to be revealed.

In a letter read at masses over the weekend, Bishop Terry LaValley writes that ‘recent controversies in the Church make it necessary to release the rest of the names.

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.

Greensburg, Pittsburgh Catholic dioceses to launch compensation fund for clergy abuse victims

PENNSYLVANIA
Trib Live

November 8, 2018

By Deb Erdley

In an apparent move to counter calls for new legislation to permit victims of clergy child sexual abuse to sue the Catholic church outside statute of limitations, diocesan officials across Pennsylvania announced they will create accounts to pay victims.

One by one, church leaders from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia on Thursday said each would establish its own victims’ compensation fund to be underwritten by resources of that diocese or archdiocese.

The announcements come in the wake of a bitter fight in the Pennsylvania General Assembly over legislation that would create a two-year window for adults who were sexually abused as children and can no longer seek recourse in the courts to file suit against their abusers and those involved in covering up such acts. The law is among four recommendations from a statewide grand jurythat found rampant clergy sexual abuse and cover-ups by church officials in dioceses across Pennsylvania over the last seven decades.

This fall, the state House approved the bill by a wide margin. But it stalled in the state Senate, where President Pro Tempore Joe Scarnati, R-Jefferson County, proposed victims compensation funds as an alternative plan. The alternative, supported by the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference and the insurance industry, would operate outside of the courts.

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

Diocese of Allentown and Bishops Sued by Victim Alleging Sexual Abuse by Former Priest

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
NBC 10

November 12, 2018

By Dan Stamm

A 29-year-old man is suing a former priest and the Diocese of Allentown, alleging the priest abused him as a child, according to a Philadelphia law firm that filed the lawsuit.

The alleged victim, who is not named, claims Bruno Tucci, a former priest, sexually assaulted him when he was an altar boy at Mount Carmel Church in Nesquehoning in the late 1990s and early 2000s, according to the lawsuit, a copy of which was provided to NBC10.

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

As bishops meet on sex abuse, Vienna priest placed on leave

VIENNA
Tribune Chronicle

November 13, 2018

By Bob Coupland

Diocese investigates new allegation of inappropriate behavior with a minor

A priest who serves a parish in Vienna has been placed on administrative leave while an investigation takes place on an allegation of inappropriate behavior with a minor.

The Rev. John Jerek, vicar for clergy with the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown, said in a news release Monday the Diocese received an allegation against the Rev. Denis G. Bouchard, pastor of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish.

Jerek said the Diocesan Review Board recommended to Youngstown Bishop George V. Murry that further investigation be done to determine its credibility and substantiation. The board includes a psychologist, representatives of the Trumbull and Mahoning County Children Services Board, attorneys, medical doctors, the dean of the college of health and human services at Youngstown State University, a Lutheran pastor, a Catholic priest and a parent.

Jerek said it is diocesan policy to place Bouchard on leave while the investigation takes place. The Rev. Carlos Casavantes has been appointed administrator of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish.

Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish is staffed by the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, which celebrates the liturgy in the “Extraordinary Form of the Roman Rite used before the reforms of the Second Vatican Council,” according to its website. The Vienna location also has a school, St. Joseph the Protector Learning Center.

Jerek said because this is an ongoing investigation, additional comments cannot be made at this time.

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

New allegations emerge against DC priest charged with abusing teen girl in 2015

WASHINGTON (DC)
WTOP

November 10, 2018

By Liz Anderson

A D.C. priest who was arrested and charged with sexually abusing a teenage girl in May of 2015 is also being accused of inappropriately touching two other girls during the same month and year, court documents say.

Urbano Vasquez, 46, was arrested on Wednesday on charges of second degree child sexual abuse.

According to court documents, a girl who is now 17 accused Vasquez of inappropriately touching her chest area after she and her family helped sell food and snow cones at a cookout at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart Catholic Church. She was 13 at the time.

The second victim, who was 16 at the time of the alleged abuse, said Vasquez kissed her on the mouth while they were in the rectory dining area. The girl’s mother had left the room to prepare food, but walked back into the dining room as it happened. The mom confronted him, and Vasquez apologized, saying he didn’t know what came over him.

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

Ignore the Vatican: Bishops can forge ahead on stopping abuse, cover-up

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

November 13, 2018

By David Clohessy

Speculation can be fun. But it’s not helpful, at least not in the short run. And few would dispute that the U.S. church can’t afford the luxury of “taking the long view” when it come to the safety of kids right about now.

So let’s stop guessing why Vatican officials nixed the nearly meaningless measures U.S. bishops had planned to discuss this week in Baltimore.

Instead, let’s get practical and ask: What should U.S. bishops do now to protect kids, expose wrongdoers and heal the wounded?

The answer is actually fairly straightforward. Bishops must use their already vast powers to help stop more abuse and cover-up.

Let’s start with two steps that are already being done across many U.S. dioceses sporadically but should be expanded, steps that do not require Vatican approval or new U.S. church 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.

President of U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Delivers Opening Address at Start of 2018 General Assembly in Baltimore, Nov. 12-14

BALTIMORE (MD)
USCCB

November 12, 2018

Baltimore—Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, President of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops addressed the body of bishops at the opening sessions today in Baltimore for the General Assembly taking place in Baltimore.

Cardinal DiNardo’s full address follows:

“Saint Augustine wrote, ‘In order that weakness might become strong, strength became weak.’ My dear brothers, in light of this morning’s news, the nature of my address changes. We remain committed to the specific program of greater episcopal accountability that we will discuss these days. Consultations will take place. Votes will not this week. But we will prepare ourselves to move forward.

Allow me to now address the survivors of abuse directly.

Where I have not been watchful or alert to your needs, wherever I have failed, I am deeply sorry. The command of our Lord and Savior was clear. ‘What I say to you, I say to all: watch!’ In our weakness, we fell asleep. Now, we must humbly beg God’s strength for the vigil ahead.

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.

About Those ‘Gay Clergy Networks’

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

November 12, 2018

By Jennifer Roback Morse

COMMENTARY: Church leadership won’t solve this current crisis unless it confronts homosexual practice among the clergy and especially the networks of homosexually oriented clergy operating to protect each other.

I hesitate to wade into areas in which I have no direct information. But I feel compelled to point out the illogic of continuing to claim that the current clergy sex abuse and cover-up scandal is unrelated to homosexual activity among Catholic priests.

At this late date, too much circumstantial evidence has emerged to ignore: This crisis would not exist, but for homosexual practice among the clergy and especially the networks of homosexually oriented clergy operating to protect each other.

The most recent denial of the obvious comes to us from longtime Vaticanista and editor of La Stampa, Andrea Tornielli. In an underreported article from Sept. 14, he asks: “Is the root, the origin of the problem of abuse really to be found in the homosexuality of priests?” He replies:

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 priest abuse in Shreveport Diocese since ’86, administrator says

SHREVEPORT (LA)
The Shreveport Times

November 9, 2018

The top administrator for the Catholic Diocese of Shreveport announced late Friday that the diocese had received no reports of clerical abuse of children since at least 1986.

The Rev. Peter B. Mangum, diocesan administrator, made the announcement in a prepared statement just before 5 p.m.

Mangum said the announcement was based on a review of the files of all priests, living and dead, who served the diocese since its creation in 1986. Before then, the diocese was constituted differently as the Diocese of Alexandria-Shreveport.

Mangum said the review included priests in the diocese and those in religious orders, whether native or foreign born. The review included priests, bishops and deacons, he said.

Mangum was named diocesan administrator in August following the departure of Bishop Michael Duca for the Diocese of Baton Rouge. A new bishop has not been appointed.

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.

Syracuse priest named as child sex abuser by Buffalo diocese

SYRACUSE (NY)
syracuse.com

November 12, 2018

By Julie McMahon

A Syracuse priest has been named by the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo as a clergyman with substantiated allegations of child sex abuse against him.

The Rev. James Smyka, 74, was in residence at Assumption of Blessed Virgin Mary Church on Syracuse’s North Side until recently.

He was listed on the Diocese of Syracuse website as a member of the clergy until today. He was also listed as a chaplain at St. Joseph’s Hospital. A spokesman for St. Joe’s said Smyka had not worked at the hospital since Oct. 8.

The Buffalo diocese identified Smyka one week ago as a priest with “substantiated claims of sexual abuse of a minor.”

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

Buffalo woman’s alleged abuser’s name added to Diocese list of clergy sex abuse

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB

November 8, 2018

By Marissa Perlman

We shared with you Evelyn Safe’s story in May.

She claimed Buffalo Priest, Father Robert D. Moss sexually abused her more than 25 years ago

She was an adult at the time, and never expected to see his name on that clergy sex abuse list, because the Buffalo Diocese was only revealing cases involving minors.

But all that changed on Monday. “Seeing him smoking outside the Church, he would kiss everybody on the lips.”

Evelyn Safe says something seemed off about Father Robert Moss, or “Father Bob.”

She first met him at age 12 at Queen of Heaven Church in West Seneca. He became friends with her family.

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.

Albany measure would compel clergy members to report child abuse

ALBANY (NY)
CNHI

November 8, 2018

By Joe Mahoney

ALBANY: Measure would compel clergy members to report child abuse.

With New York’s Catholic bishops grappling with a clergy sexual abuse crisis, an influential GOP state senator from Western New York is calling on fellow lawmakers to repeal the statute of limitations for offenses involving the sexual attack of children and offer whisteblower protections to those who report molestations.

“This legislation will ensure that those in positions of authority are held accountable and will give victims the ability to seek prosecution of their abuser,” Sen. Patrick Gallivan, R-Elma, said in a statement.

Gallivan said his bill would extend the statute of limitation under the civil practice law to recover damages for physical and psychological injuries caused by child molesters.

The bill, filed while lawmakers are scheduled to remain on recess until January, would also add clergy members to the list of those who are mandated to report suspected child abuse to law enforcement.

But Gallivan’s legislation is expected to face a hurdle, erected by the outcome of this week’s elections that concluded with Democrats winning enough Senate seats to take control of Albany’s upper chamber in less than eight weeks.

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 on EWTN: Church won’t link sex abuse crisis to homosexuality over fear of gay lobby

WASHINGTON (DC)
LifeSiteNews

November 12, 2018

By Lisa Bourne

The Catholic Church’s sex abuse crisis is about the culture of homosexuality in the priesthood, Mgsr. Charles Pope told EWTN’s Raymond Arroyo on the World Over program Thursday night (Nov. 8).

It’s also about the bishops’ failure to impart the Church’s moral teaching, he said, and is not rooted in clericalism.

“We have to be clear, I think, that this is about homosexuality,” Pope stated, adding that that is “a big culture of that in the priesthood.”

“It’s also about not preaching and teaching moral teachings of the Church, not insisting upon them, allowing for dissent to go unchecked,” Pope said. “I think again it comes back to teaching, governing and sanctifying.”

The blogger and priest of the Archdiocese of Washington had broached these three duties conferred upon bishops and priests in his recent National Catholic Register column in which he implored the bishops of the U.S. to restore order in the Church. Arroyo brought Pope on to the program to discuss the content of the column and to discuss the abuse crisis as the U.S. Bishops’ meeting approaches November 12-14.

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

Pope taps sex abuse reformer for key Vatican role

DENVER (CO)
Crux

November 13, 2018

By Inés San Martín

Amidst a growing global concern over the Church’s handling of abuse cases and cover-up, Pope Francis has appointed the Vatican’s former top prosecutor on cases of clerical sexual abuse, Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna, back in his former office, though the prelate will continue heading the Church in Malta.

The decision to name Scicluna adjunct secretary, meaning the third most important official, of the Vatican’s Congregation of the Faith (CDF) was announced on Tuesday, and it follows a year in which the prelate was tapped by Francis to lead a thorough investigation of the situation of the Church in Chile.

Among other things, the CDF handles accusations of abuse against clergy, and Scicluna also serves as president of a board of review for abuse cases in the office. He had been a full-time member of the CDF until 2014, when Pope Benedict XVI appointed him to Malta.

At the CDF Scicluna worked under then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, and the two are credited with the sentencing of thousands of abuser priests, including the late Mexican Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionaries of Christ, in 2006.

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.

Vatican cancels U.S. bishops’ vote on sex abuse reform measures

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Associated Press

November 12, 2018

At the Vatican’s insistence, U.S. Catholic bishops abruptly postponed plans Monday to vote on proposed new steps to address the clergy sex abuse crisis roiling the church.

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said he was told on the eve of the bishop’s national meeting to delay action until after a Vatican-convened global meeting on sex abuse in February.

“We are not ourselves happy about this,” DiNardo told reporters in an unusual public display of frustration at a Vatican pronouncement.

“We are working very hard to move to action — and we’ll do it,” he said. “I think people in the church have a right to be skeptical. I think they also have a right to be hopeful.”

The bishops are meeting through Wednesday in Baltimore and had been expected to consider several steps to combat abuse, including a new code of conduct for themselves and the creation of a special commission, including lay experts, to review complaints against the bishops.

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.

WDSU Editorial: The Archdiocese of New Orleans clergy sex abuse list released, more must be done

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WDSU

November 10, 2018

WDSU President and General Manager Joel Vilmenay issues an editorial after the release of the Archdiocese of New Orleans clergy sex abuse list.

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.

Pittsburgh diocese announces another priest accused of sex abuse

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Trib Live

November 12, 2018

By Chuck Biedka

Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh announced Monday that another priest accused of sex abuse was placed on administrative leave in September.

Bishop David Zubik said the Rev. Richard M. Lelonis, 73, was placed on leave pending further investigation into two allegations of sexual abuse of minors.

Diocesan officials said they “spoke with two individuals in early September. One alleged abuse by Father Lelonis in the early 1970’s. The second individual alleged that Father Lelonis attempted abuse around 1980,” according to a statement from diocese spokesman the Rev. Ronald Lengwin.

Following that meeting, the diocese immediately reported the allegations to the District Attorney of Allegheny County.

At the same time, Lelonis was removed from his assignment in the diocesan tribunal, where he had served full-time since 1995. According to the statement, Lelonis denied both allegations.

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

Pope gives Vatican’s sex abuse expert new role amid crisis

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

November 13, 2018

By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis is giving a prominent new role to the Vatican’s most trusted sex crimes investigator as he seeks to improve the Holy See’s response to abuse at a time when the church and papacy are facing a credibility crisis.

Francis on Tuesday named Archbishop Charles Scicluna as a deputy, or adjunct secretary, at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican office that processes sex abuse cases globally.

Scicluna had been the congregation’s chief prosecutor for a decade and was credited with pushing through measures making it easier to defrock pedophiles. But Pope Benedict XVI sent him to his native Malta in 2012 as bishop after Scicluna’s tough line ruffled too many feathers in the Vatican.

Scicluna’s new appointment is symbolically significant and will also give him greater say in the day-to-day running of the congregation, even though he technically retains his post in Malta.

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

On Vatican order, U.S. bishops halt plans to vote on reforms in wake of sex abuse scandal

BALTIMORE (MD)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

November 12, 2018

By Peter Smith

A much-anticipated gathering of Roman Catholic bishops began with a sudden, anticlimactic announcement that they would not be voting on proposals responding to the crisis of sexual abuse in the church.

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said Monday morning that the Vatican Congregation for Bishops insisted the bishops wait until after Pope Francis convenes a February Vatican summit of top bishops on the worldwide crisis before adopting any policies. Cardinal DiNardo said he did not know what role Pope Francis had personally in the directive.

“At the insistence of the Holy See, we will not be voting on the two action items in our docket regarding the abuse crisis,” said Cardinal DiNardo, archbishop of Galveston-Houston. One was a set of “standards of accountability for bishops,” the other the establishment of a special commission for handling complaints against bishops.

“The Holy See has asked that we delay voting on these so that our deliberations can inform and be informed by the global meeting,” said Cardinal DiNardo.

Cardinal DiNardo apologized for the late announcement, saying the Vatican conveyed its message only late Sunday.

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At Vatican’s behest, bishops postpone votes on clergy abuse measures

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Buffalo News

November 12, 2018

By Jay Tokasz

U.S. bishops meeting here this week were directed by the Vatican not to vote on two measures aimed at disciplining themselves in sexual misconduct cases.

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston said Monday that he received word from the Vatican telling the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to delay their votes until the measures could be considered by all bishops worldwide at a special council planned for February.

“Consultations will take place; votes will not take place this week,” said DiNardo, president of the USCCB, in his opening address to more than 250 colleague bishops.

DiNardo said at a news conference later that the bishops were disappointed about the Vatican directive. But he called it a bump in the road to reforms, as the bishops seek to address a sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Buffalo Diocese and many others across the country.

“We have not lessened any of our resolve for actions,” he said.

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The 2018 Catholic clergy sex abuse crisis brings new energy — and anti-gay activists — into the survivors’ movement

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Washington Post

November 13, 2018

By Michelle Boorstein

For nearly two decades, to be an advocate for survivors of Catholic clergy sex abuse was often to be a lonely protester, frequently ignored or sometimes even maligned as disrespectful by some Catholics and clergy.

That has changed dramatically since June, when clergy abuse scandals surfaced again in the American church. Enormous energy has been pumped into the movement, with parishes around the country holding crowded listening sessions on the topic, bishops making abuse the focus of their annual fall meeting this week and legislators finding new support for measures to expand statutes of limitation for child sexual abuse.

But the victims’ advocacy movement is also being transformed by bitter ideological divides among Catholics. That chasm is on display at the meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Baltimore.

Monday’s two public events were dominated by the older groups — research site BishopAccountability and SNAP — whose leaders focus on oversight and justice and participate less in the controversial debates over the perceived roles of celibacy and homosexuality in the crisis. Tuesday promised the first mainstream prominent appearance of Church Militant, a right-wing advocacy group and news site that routinely blames the scandals on homosexual priests and, since the crisis blew up this summer, has hammered Pope Francis and more liberal bishops, accusing them of being part of an elaborate coverup to shield gay clergy.

“I feel like they’re using victims for a political agenda and I’m concerned about that. They’re using this to kind of get to where they want to be,” SNAP’s regional director, Becky Ianni, said of Church Militant. “And I hate when someone uses victims. Victims aren’t conservative or liberal. We’re victims. And that’s what people need to focus on.”

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

Erie’s Persico ‘disappointed’ with delay on abuse votes

ERIE (PA)
GoErie.com

November 13, 2018

By Ed Palattella

Bishop is at national meeting of U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which planned to vote on new measures until the Vatican said to wait.

Erie Catholic Bishop Lawrence Persico said he was ready to act on the clergy abuse crisis when he met with his colleagues at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ national meeting in Baltimore this week.

On Monday, those efforts slowed — the result of action from the Vatican rather than from Persico and his American counterparts.

“I was disappointed when we were told this morning that we are not to vote on several items we had on our agenda,” Persico said in a statement that the Catholic Diocese of Erie released.

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

The Vatican Prevents US Bishops from Voting on Measures Designed to Prevent Clergy Abuse

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

November 12 2018

Today, the US Conference of Catholic Bishops met to discuss, among other things, their response to the clergy sex abuse crisis. Instead, the Vatican kicked the can down the road.

The measures that Cardinal Daniel DiNardo had put on the agenda for the American bishops to discuss and vote on were, at best, half-measures. Yet they still were steps forward and were especially symbolic in representing that the USCCB was taking seriously the issue of bishop accountability. Given the waves of recent reports of bishops hiding files, protecting serially abusive priests, and releasing incomplete lists, how could they not?

We are disappointed that the Vatican has forced the USCCB to delay their vote. We hope that this means that, at the meeting between the pope and presidents of bishops’ conferences in February, concrete steps will be taken to ensure accountability for bishops who cover-up abuse. It is clear that a real response is needed in order to prevent future abuse, deter more cover-ups, and ensure accountability for bishops who fail to protect children and vulnerable adults. Today’s action by the Vatican makes us wary that such a real response will be taken.

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.

U.S. bishops delay action on sex abuse at Vatican request

WASHINGTON (DC)
Think Progress

November 12, 2018

By Joshua Eaton

The Vatican has delayed a vote by U.S. Catholic bishops this week that would have held church leaders accountable for clergy sex abuse.

At a meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, on Monday, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, told the heads of all 196 U.S. dioceses and archdioceses that Pope Francis wanted them to hold off on a vote until after a meeting of worldwide church leaders in Rome in February.

The bishops had planned to vote Wednesday on a code of conduct for bishops and a lay commission to investigate violations.

“At the insistence of the Holy See, we will not be voting on the two action items,” DiNardo, who is archbishop of Galveston-Houston, in Texas, told his fellow bishops, according to The Washington Post.

Advocates for survivors of clergy sexual abuse, who have long accused the church of being unwilling to hold senior leaders accountable, were quick to criticize the move.

“We’re dealing with the crisis, right here, right now,” Becky Ianni, D.C. regional head of the victims’ group SNAP, told The Washington Post. “Yes, it’s a global problem, and they need to discuss it there [in Rome], but the U.S. needs to come up with something right now.”

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.

Malone among several U.S. bishops under fire for abuse complaints

BALTIMORE (MD)
Buffalo News

November 13, 2018

By Jay Tokasz

Buffalo Bishop Richard J. Malone is among several Catholic bishops gathered here this week who are under fire in their home dioceses or former dioceses over how they handled sexual misconduct complaints.

That list even includes Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, the current president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, and Archbishop William E. Lori, the head of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, which is hosting the USCCB’s fall assembly.

“The evidence is abundant. Some of the men at this meeting this week, themselves, while speaking about transparency have failed to be transparent, have failed to rescue victims,” said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-founder of BishopAccountability.org, an advocacy group that since 2002 has chronicled cases of clergy sex abuse around the world.

Doyle specifically named Malone, who has resisted calls to resign by prominent Western New York Catholics.

The Buffalo Diocese has been roiling since late February with revelations of alleged sex abuse and cover-up that escalated in August with the leak of internal diocesan documents to a television station and again in October, when “60 Minutes” aired an episode that was highly critical of Malone’s handling of abuse claims.

But Doyle also said Malone has plenty of company among his brother bishops, and it’s one of the reasons bishops are reticent to criticize each other on their records of handling abuse cases.

She mentioned current Syracuse Bishop Robert J. Cunningham, who served as chancellor and vicar general in the Buffalo Diocese prior to being appointed as a bishop in Ogdensburg.

“In Buffalo, he controlled the management of accused clergy for many, many years. He was the point man for former Bishop Henry Mansell, and he did nothing to take those abusers out of ministry, as we now know,” said Doyle.

Cunningham continues to refuse to identify the names of accused Syracuse Diocese priests, she 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.

‘Geographic solution’ for predators? Hide bad priests in parishes with lots of immigrants

GET RELIGION

November 12, 2018

By Terry Mattingly

Back in my Denver days in the late 1980s, I started work on a large project that, at first, was viewed with great favor by my editors at The Rocky Mountain News (RIP).

The starting point: The city included several growing Protestant churches, evangelical and Pentecostal, that were attracting many, many Hispanic believers. As you would expect, it didn’t take long to realize that most of them were former Roman Catholics or were the children of former Roman Catholics.

The goal was to report (a) why this was happening and (b) how this affected life inside large, extended families of Hispanics who now worshipped in radically different sanctuaries.

After a week or two of work, we dropped that first goal — because one of the most common answers was raising lots of questions that made editors uncomfortable.

Yes, many people were leaving the Catholic church for predictable reasons, from their point of view. They thought the preaching in evangelical/Pentecostal churches was stronger and “more biblical.” They liked the thriving Sunday schools for their children and youth programs for teens. They liked the contemporary church music, blending folk, pop and Latino themes.

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.

National Catholic Reporter is simply right

NEW YORK (NY)
Patheos

November 13, 2018

By Mark Shea

So when the Right Wing Noise Machine (Catholic edition) has been so wrong about so much so many times for so long that only a fool would continue to unquestioningly trust their judgment, it is prudent to consider the possibility that the people who saw and reported accurately on the problem of priestly abuse nearly 30 year ago might, despite the denunciations of the Lie Machine, have something to say worth listening to. The National Catholic Reporter is exactly such a paper and, despite the reflexive booing and hissing from the Francis-hating, Trump adoring Cult of Wrong about Everything, I believe in prudence. Here is their recent, devastating, and spot on editorial to the bishops:

Dear brothers in Christ, shepherds, fellow pilgrims,

We address you as you approach this year’s national meeting in Baltimore because we know there is nowhere left to hide.

It’s over.

All the manipulations and contortions of the past 33 years, all the attempts to deflect and equivocate — all of it has brought the church, but especially you, to this moment.

It’s over.

Even the feds are now on the trail. They’ve ordered that you not destroy any documents. The Department of Justice is conducting a national criminal investigation of how you’ve handled the clergy sex abuse scandal. It is a point in our history without precedent. We want you to know that you aren’t alone in this moment, you’ve not been abandoned. But this time it must be different. This time it won’t be easy.

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Charlotte diocese to delay releasing names of priests accused of sexual abuse

CHARLOTTE (NC)
WCNC TV

November 12, 2018

The Diocese of Charlotte is now expected to wait several more months before deciding whether to release the names of priests accused of past sex abuse.

The delay comes as Pope Francis intervened during a meeting of the most powerful Catholics in the country.

The nation’s Catholic bishops started a week-long conference today in Baltimore with plans of voting on two sex abuse response proposals, but at the urging of the pope, the bishops postponed those votes.

Diocese of Charlotte Communications Director David Hains said the impact will be felt here as the diocese considers whether to publish the names of accused priests.

“We’re waiting for input from the bishops as to the best way to go about this,” Hains said. “It’s a little disappointing. We had hoped to get that input this week and get to work making that decision.”

Pope Francis’ requested last-minute delay means the nation’s bishops will hold off on any decisions until he and the world’s bishops hold a special meeting to discuss clergy abuse in February.

“The American bishops will probably meet in March to act on whatever is decided at the February meeting,” Hains said. “We will be using input from the March meeting on our decision on posting the list…So, it looks like it is going to take a bit longer but I have no doubt that the end result will be a policy that complements the steps we have already put in place to protect children.”

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Boston Archdiocese, Clerical Sex Abuse Advocates React To U.S. Bishops’ Policy Change Delay

BOSTON (MA)
WBUR Radio

November 12, 2018

The Archdiocese of Boston said in a statement today that Cardinal Sean O’Malley will keep advocating for new steps to hold bishops accountable, and greater transparency when it comes to clerical sex abuse.

That reaction came after the Pope requested today that U.S. Bishops delay any votes on policy changes in the church until a global meeting of church leaders in February. Bishops including O’Malley are meeting this week in Maryland and had planned to consider a series of measures including a new code of conduct for bishops.

The Archdiocese says the delay was “unexpected.”

“Cardinal O’Malley will continue to vigorously advocate for revising the Dallas Charter to hold bishops accountable, greater transparency including the release of names of clergy accused of abuse and increased lay involvement and leadership,” it said in the statement.

But advocates for sexual abuse victims say the delay by the Pope shows a lack of concern on behalf of the Catholic Church, including Boston-based attorney for clergy sex abuse victims Mitchell Garabedian.

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Catholic bishops’ missed opportunity on clergy sex abuse scandal

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

November 12, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

Heading into this week’s fall meeting of the Catholic bishops of the United States in Baltimore, the forecast was for dramatic action on the clerical sexual abuse scandals that have rocked the Church for the last six months, during what some dubbed its “summer of shame.”

All that changed on Monday, when the president of the conference, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, announced that late Sunday the bishops were asked to stand down by the Vatican, awaiting a three-day summit in February in Rome convened by Pope Francis for the presidents of all the bishops’ conferences in the world to discuss the abuse crisis.

Some bishops are still pressing for non-binding votes on some of the action items, such as a new code of conduct subjecting themselves to the same “zero tolerance” policy as everyone else, as a way of sending a signal to Rome ahead of that February gathering. For right now, it remains to be seen what may result.

So, what gives? Could the Vatican actually be this tone-deaf, or is there some other explanation for the request for a delay?

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The Catholic Church proves incapable of exorcising clergy sex abuse — again

WASHINGTON (DC)
]Washington Post

November 12, 2018

By Editorial Board

IT IS EVIDENT that the Catholic Church is incapable on its own of exorcising the scourge of clergy sex abuse. The scandal raged unchecked for decades and, even after it was exposed in 2002 by the Boston Globe , has been met by the church hierarchy with denial, temporizing, stone walling and half-measures.

Even as the bishops of America’s 196 Catholic dioceses and archdioceses gathered in Baltimore Monday to grapple with the latest major revelations — a Pennsylvania grand jury’s report from August detailing decades of abuse involving more than 1,000 victims and at least 300 priests — they were stopped in their tracks by an abrupt message from the Vatican, which asked them to hold off. That intercession arrived along with a warning from Pope Francis’s ambassador in the United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre, who seemed to scoff at the proposal, which the bishops had been set to vote on, to establish a lay commission that would assess bishops’ misconduct — “as if we were no longer capable of reforming or trusting ourselves,” as he put it.

That remark crystallized the arrogance that has often characterized the church’s stance even as countless exposés have laid bare the culpability of its leaders. From high and low, the church has broadcast its conviction that its own transgressions are no worse than that of other institutions; that state statutes of limitations that shield dioceses from lawsuits should be preserved; that no foothold may be allowed for mechanisms to discipline bishops who have enabled abuse by transferring pedophile priests from parish to parish.

Voices of moral clarity have been heard from within the church, urging genuine change. “Brother bishops, to exempt ourselves from this high standard of accountability is unacceptable and cannot stand,” Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in a speech to the gathered bishops Monday following that of Mr. Pierre. “Whether we will be regarded as guardians of the abused or the abuser will be determined by our actions.”

Yet, more often than not, those voices have been ignored.

The pontiff has summoned bishops from around the world to the Vatican for a meeting to address the scandal in February; this summit, we are urged to believe, will once and for all set the church on a path toward surmounting the blight of abuse. The fact of that pending event was the proffered pretext for the church’s request that the U.S. bishops put off two items on their agenda this week in Baltimore: establishing the lay commission to review complaints against bishops, and adopting a code of conduct for themselves — the first such codified ethical guidelines.

The agenda was modest, and Rome’s intervention is telling. Again and again, the Vatican pays lip service to the suffering of victims. Again and again, it undercuts its own assertions of contrition.

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Advocacy groups blast Vatican delay of U.S. Catholic bishops’ vote on sexual abuse scandal

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Tribune Review

November 12, 2018

By Stephen Huba

Catholics who were hoping for a substantive response from the U.S. bishops this week to the clergy sexual abuse crisis will have to wait a little longer.

The bishops, meeting in the 2018 General Assembly in Baltimore, learned Monday the Vatican had asked them to postpone a vote on a series of proposals addressing their part in the crisis. Pope Francis first wants to hold a summit on the scandal in February.

The two measures that were on the agenda were a code of conduct for bishops and the creation of a lay commission to review violations of the code.

Advocacy groups reacted angrily to the Vatican’s delay of the vote.

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Survivors Call Vatican Telling US Bishops To Wait On Abuse ‘Totally Unacceptable’

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Tablet

November 12, 2018

By Christopher White

Following Monday’s shock announcement that the Vatican has requested the U.S. Catholic Bishops to delay voting on new standards for bishop accountability, survivors of sexual abuse and bishop accountability activists decried the move as a “totally unacceptable.”

Terence McKiernan, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, called the move a “preemptive strike” by the Vatican against U.S. bishops as they seek to respond to the current crisis of sexual abuse and its cover-up “in a modest way.”

Peter Isley, a survivor of clerical sexual abuse who now works with the organization Ending Clergy Abuse, said the decision from the Vatican effectively means, “We care more about our organization and our princely titles and positions” than enacting measures of accountability.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) is gathered in Baltimore this week for its General Assembly, in which they were expected to enact new standards of conduct and accountability for bishops engaged in sexual abuse or its cover-up. At the start on Monday’s meeting, however, USCCB president, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, announced that he had received a request on Sunday afternoon to postpone the vote until after a global summit on the crisis at the Vatican in February.

According to DiNardo, the request came from Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops.

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Diocese probes another claim of sexual abuse

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
The Vindicator

November 12, 2018

By Justin Dennis

A month before the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown named 34 clergymen associated with the diocese who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing a minor, it received one new allegation that is now under investigation.

The diocese last week also amended that list of accused to include one more name: One of the former friar’s accusers, who traveled with him as an altar boy in the mid-1980s, said the man forced himself on him when he was a pre-teen in St. Aloysius Parish in East Liverpool.

Simultaneously, a former Youngstown diocese priest, John F. Warner of Louisville, said he has worked to clear his name after the diocese’s Oct. 30 release, which exposed another disgraced priest with the exact same name.

The diocese announced Monday it placed the Rev. Denis G. Bouchard, pastor of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish in Vienna, on administrative leave while it investigates a sex-abuse allegation made against the priest.

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Vatican tells U.S. bishops to delay votes on new sex abuse protocols

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

November 12, 2018

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

Catholic bishops from the United States gathered in Baltimore this week for their annual fall meeting had planned to discuss and vote on new protocols aimed at holding bishops accountable for sexual abuse. But in a surprise announcement at the start of the meeting, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo told bishops that the Vatican has asked them to delay the vote until after a February meeting in Rome with the heads of bishops conferences from around the world to discuss sexual abuse.

“Although I am disappointed that we will not be taking these actions tomorrow,” said Cardinal DiNardo, the head of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, “I remain hopeful this additional consultation will ultimately improve our response to the crisis we face.”

Bishops had been scheduled to vote on three “action items” related to abuse: approving new “Standards of Episcopal Conduct” for bishops, the creation of a new commission to handle allegations of abuse against bishops, and new protocols for bishops who are removed or who resign from office due to sexual misconduct with adults or minors.

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Pittsburgh diocese places another priest on leave following abuse accusations

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

November 12, 2018

By Kevin Flowers

Bishop David Zubik placed a 73-year-old priest on administrative leave Sept. 12 pending investigation of two allegations of sexual abuse of minors, the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh said Monday.

The diocese said in a news release that two people had spoken to diocesan officials in early September about alleged incidents involving the Rev. Richard M. Lelonis. One incident allegedly occurred in the early 1970s, and the second is alleged to have occurred about 1980.

The allegations subsequently were reported to the Allegheny County District Attorney’s office, the diocese said. Father Lelonis, who has denied the allegations, according to the diocese, was removed from the diocesan tribunal, which he had served full time since 1995.

His suspension is at least the fifth the diocese has announced since the release in August of a statewide grand jury report on accusations of sexual abuse by priests over several decades.

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Making sense of Vatican’s no-fly order to US bishops on abuse crisis

DENVER (CO)
Crux

November 13, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

In the run-up to the U.S. bishop’s fall meeting this week in Baltimore, the expectation – to be clear, the expectation of the bishops themselves – was that they’d be making some important decisions on the clerical sexual abuse crisis that’s rocked the Church for the last six months.

Instead, what unfolded Monday morning basically sucked all the oxygen out of the room, when Cardinal Daniel Dinardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the conference, announced that the Vatican has asked the bishops to delay doing anything until February, when Pope Francis plans to convene a summit of presidents of bishops’ conferences around the world to discuss child protection.

It’s worth noting that the action communicated to the U.S. bishops late Sunday came after Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet, Prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops, and French Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the Vatican’s ambassador to the U.S., met Pope Francis in Rome on Saturday.

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Priest Still Not Listed As Abuser Despite Old & New Allegations

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA TV

November 12, 2018

By Andy Sheehan

Since the release of the grand jury report on clergy sex abuse, Bishop David Zubik has been steadfast that he has never protected predator priests or covered for their actions.

“I think I’ve done an awful lot of good and I can say honestly, absolutely I did not do anything that would be part of a cover-up,” Zubik said in August.

But KDKA-TV News has learned that more than two months ago, two people reported that they had been sexually abused by Fr. Richard Lelonis and that as of Monday, Lelonis was still not listed on the diocesan website as having a credible allegation against him.

A man who did not wish to be identified confirmed to KDKA-TV’s Andy Sheehan that both his uncle and cousin reported to the diocesan clergy abuse line that Lelonis abused them while a pastor at Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish in the late 1990s, but despite its own policies, the diocese has taken no action.

Sheehan: “The diocese says now when they have a credible allegation, they report it to the District Attorney, they remove the priest from ministry and they make that name public. Have those things happened?”
Victim’s relative: “They have to make it known publicly and then also treat the victims or the accusers pastorally as well and reach out to them and neither of those things have been done.”

KDKA has also learned that Lelonis is one of several dozen priests accused in the past of sexually abusing a minor but who have successfully had their names redacted from the grand jury report.

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November 12, 2018

Grand Jury Fallout: Lawsuit Filed Against Catholic Church

PENNSYLVANIA
WBRE/WYOU-TV

November 12, 2018

More fallout from the “Pennsylvania Grand Jury Investigation”.. into sexual misconduct in the Catholic Church. During a news conference in Philadelphia — lawyers announced a new lawsuit aimed at a former priest with ties to our area. The Allentown Morning Call” is reporting “Father Bruno Tucci” — formerly of Nesquehoning in Carbon County — was charged with molesting a boy in 1981. Investigators say it happened in Ocean City, Maryland.

The reports goes on to say Tucci was first investigated here in 2002 — and was later de-frocked and removed from service.

No charges were ever brought in Pennsylvania.. because the statute of limitations had expired.

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Hot Seat: Church sex abuse and unanimous jury verdicts

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WDSU News

November 12, 2018

By Travers Mackel

The WDSU Hot Seat focuses on two big topics in the area.

The first revolving around the Catholic Church sex abuse. A list of 57 priests and clergy members accused of sexual abuse was released by the New Orleans Archdiocese.

The second topic is the unanimous jury verdict that is now state law.

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Widened inquiry ‘may not go far enough’

NEW ZEALAND
Otago Daily News

November 13, 2018

By Chris Morris

The Roman Catholic Bishop of Dunedin says an expanded royal commission into the abuse of children may not go far enough.

Bishop Michael Dooley said yesterday he was “relieved” to hear children abused while in the care of faith-based institutions would now be included.

The decision was announced by Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and Internal Affairs Minister Tracey Martin yesterday.

But the terms of reference specifically excluded private settings for abuse involving faith-based institutions, and it remained unclear whether others – like a church presbytery or a priest’s car – were included.

That meant the victims of a paedophile priest like Fr Magnus Murray, convicted of abusing four Dunedin boys in family homes, the presbytery and on trips, could yet miss out. Bishop Dooley said if that was so, the inquiry needed to go further.

All parishioners were in the pastoral care of their priest, so any abused by clergy needed to be heard, he believed.

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Let’s Talk Accountability and Healing In The NM Catholic Church

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
KUNM

November 12, 2018

By Hannah Colton

Let’s Talk New Mexico 11/15 8a: Survivors of clergy sexual abuse continue to come forward in New Mexico, and many people are calling for the Catholic Church to come clean about what they knew and when. On the show, we’ll explore what accountability could look like for crimes that happened years or decades ago. What are the effects of Church secrecy around clergy abuse? And how can communities heal from these kinds of trauma?

We’d like to hear from you. Email LetsTalk@KUNM.org or call in live during the show, Thursday morning at 8 here on 89.9 KUNM.

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Lawsuit: 2 priests raped same altar boy in Asan

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

November 8, 2018

By Haidee V. Eugenio

Two priests raped and molested the same Asan altar boy during different times in the 1970s, according to a $10 million clergy sex abuse lawsuit filed on Thursday.

Monsignor Jose Ada Leon Guerrero and Father Raymond Techaira, now both deceased, allegedly sexually abused, molested and raped plaintiff M.C.A. when he was an altar boy at the Nino Perdido y Sagrada Familia Parish in Asan.

M.C.A., in his lawsuit, said Leon Guerrero abused him when he was around 8 years old, on several occasions throughout 1974 in the priest’s upstairs bathroom.

“Guerrero would remind MCA not to tell anybody since MCA was a chosen child,” the lawsuit says. Leon Guerrero was transferred to another parish in 1974.

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Inclusion of churches in state abuse inquiry welcomed

NEW ZEALAND
Newstalk ZB

November 13, 2018

A victims advocate says including religious organisations in the inquiry into abuse in state care is a good start.

Following an outpouring of requests, the Government has decided to expand its inquiry to include faith-based institutions, and those who were victims of physical abuse.

Male Survivors Aotearoa chair, Phillip Chapman told Kate Hawkesby they’re just one of the organisations which asked for the inquiry to be expanded.

“We did put in a submission, like many others, and asked for it to be expanded. The Prime Minister said they had heard, so I would be interested how many of those submissions must have said the same thing.”

While the scope of the inquiry has been expanded, Chapman said it’s still not as extensive as he would like.

“Abuse in this country happens in lots of places as we know. This is widespread in this country.”

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Schuylkill County man sues former Allentown Diocese priest for sexual abuse

READING (PA)
Reading Eagle

November 12, 2018

By Beth Brelje

The 29-year-old claims the priest, who had ties to Berks County churches, abused him at a Carbon County church between 1999 and 2001.

A 29-year-old Schuylkill County man is accusing a former Allentown Diocese priest with ties to six Berks County churches of sexually abusing him at a Carbon County church between 1999 and 2001.

The man, identified in the lawsuit as “John Doe,” claims that when he was 10 to 12 years old, he was abused by the Rev. Bruno M. Tucci at Our Lady of Mount Carmel parish in Nesquehoning.

Tucci served in Berks County between 1971 and 1981.

The July state grand jury report detailing hundreds of abuse cases within the church mentions a victim reporting abuse by Tucci in 1977-78 but does not identify the location.

The suit was filed electronically Monday in Lehigh County Court, attorney Gerald J. Williams said.

The courthouse was closed Monday for Veterans Day, so the filing will not appear docketed until Tuesday.

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Jehovah’s Witness child sex abuse survivor urges examination of NZ church

NEW ZEALAND
Stuff

November 11, 2018

By Tom Hunt

It started with movies and bowls, but soon Luke Hollis was a young boy performing sexual acts on a Jehovah’s Witness man four-times his age.

To hear Hollis, now 28 and living in Wellington, talk of the ordeal that tormented him for years during his childhood in England, it is remarkable how matter-of-fact he is.

But he is the first to admit he has a vendetta against his former church.

He wants to see Jehovah’s Witnesses held accountable and he wants the church to apologise. But mostly, he wants it to fully shed its “two witness” rule – a policy he argues makes the church a beacon for child sexual predators.

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Government expands state care abuse inquiry to include church abuse

NEW ZEALAND
NewsHub

November 12, 2018

By Megan Sutherland and Tova O’Brien

A proposed inquiry into the historical abuse of children in state care has been extended to include abuse within faith-based institutions.

The Royal Commission into state care abuse has been in a preliminary process since February, and on Monday Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern stated Cabinet agreed to expand the inquiry.

The newly named inquiry will now be known as the Royal Commission into Historical Abuse in State Care and in the Care of Faith-Based Institutions, which reflects the wide scope of the inquiry.

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Britain’s most senior Catholic faces questions over church’s handling of child sex abuse claims

ENGLAND
The Telegraph

November 11, 2018

By Patrick Sawer

England’s most senior Catholic clergyman faces embarrassment this week when he appears before an inquiry to answer claims he ignored child sex abuse allegations against his priests, including the son of JRR Tolkien.

Cardinal Vincent Nichols, the Archbishop of Westminster, is to give evidence in person to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse, which is investigating how a number of key institutions in Britain handled sex abuse claims.

The hearing will examine the Cardinal’s former Archdiocese of Birmingham, where he served as Archbishop from 2000 to 2009.

It will look into the handling of allegations against Father John Tolkien, the son of JRR Tolkien, author of The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, who was questioned by police in 2002 over an abuse allegation, but was never charged.

Cardinal Nichols faces claims that senior church officials allowed Fr Tolkien, who died in 2003, to carry on working until around the time Cardinal Nichols took over at the Archdiocese, despite senior officials promising an alleged victim years earlier that he would be forced to retire.

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Lawsuit: Church Allowed Pedophile Priest to Return to Ministry

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily Beast

November 12, 2018

A 29-year-old man is suing former Pennsylvania priest Bruno Tucci, along with current and former Catholic Church officials, for alleged sexual abuse he endured between 1999 and 2001. Tucci is among the 301 priests named in a recent Pennsylvania grand-jury report that claims more than 1,000 victims were abused by priests over the past several decades. Unlike the vast majority of these cases, the alleged victim’s case falls within the statute of limitations for prosecution in Pennsylvania. The lawsuit—which also names the Allentown Diocese Bishop Alfred Schlert, former Bishop Edward Cullen, and a treatment center for priests—alleges that Tucci groped the man, identified as “John Doe,” when he was between the ages of 10 and 12 and an altar boy at Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Nesquehoning.

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Church abuse victim: “He would talk with my parents, then come up to my room and touch me”

SPAIN
El Pais

November 12, 2018

By Oriol Guell

Manuel Vilar Herrero recounts the assaults he suffered as a child at the hands of a priest who was “worshiped” by his mother and father. The following testimony is one of several making up an EL PAÍS series exposing decades of offenses by the clergy

Artana in the province of Castellón is a deeply religious parish of 2,000 people, but for years it has been hiding a dark secret, one that Manuel Vilar Herrero decided to expose. “I was victimized by the priest,” says Manuel, 50, referring to Antonio Gil Gargallo. “It started with fondling and kisses on the neck. Then he went on to touch my behind and my genitals. You could see him getting excited. He would end up rubbing himself against me, fully dressed, until he came in small convulsions.”

The abuses began in 1982 when Manuel was 14. “We had finished EGB [primary school] and we had to leave the village for BUP [secondary school] in Nules. At that time, the priest chose a number of us to come to his home to speak about morality. They were informal meetings and we would watch a film, and we could smoke and drink a bit of alcohol. It was at these meetings that the abuse started,” he says.

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Lawsuit: 2 priests raped same altar boy in Asan

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Pacific Daily News

November 8, 2018

By Haidee V. Eugenio

A Philadelphia-based law firm announced Monday that it will file a lawsuit against the Diocese of Allentown.

The law firm Williams Cedar will file a civil suit in Lehigh County against the diocese stemming from the alleged sexual abuse by a Catholic priest named in the Pennsylvania grand jury report released this summer, according to a news release.

The defendants will include former priest Bruno Tucci, the Diocese of Allentown, its current and immediate past bishops and the religious order the Congregation of the Servants of the Paraclete. The lawsuit alleges that Tucci abused a minor and alleges negligence on behalf of the diocese that allegedly failed to screen priests properly and properly investigate complaints, according to a news release.

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Former Altar Boy Sues Church Over Alleged Sexual Abuse

WATERBURY (CT)
The Associated Press

November 8, 2018

A former Connecticut altar boy who says he was sexually abused by a now deceased Roman Catholic priest has sued the Archdiocese of Hartford.

A former Connecticut altar boy who says he was sexually abused by a now deceased Roman Catholic priest has sued the Archdiocese of Hartford.

The Republican American reports that the lawsuit filed Wednesday by 46-year-old Kevin Distasio alleges negligence and reckless and wanton conduct by the archdiocese.

Distasio says in the suit he was abused in 1980 by the Rev. Walter Vichas while an altar boy at Blessed Sacrament Church in Waterbury. Vichas died in 2008.

The suit says the archdiocese failed to supervise Vichas or remove him from his duties. It also says the archdiocese failed to investigate Vichas’ suspicious conduct and failed to develop a policy for reporting clergy sexual abuse.

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Nashville Diocese releases list of 13 former priests accused of sex abuse

NASHVILLE (TN)
Catholic News Service

November 9, 2018

The Diocese of Nashville, as part of its ongoing commitment to transparency, accountability and pastoral care, has published the names of the 13 former priests who served in the diocese who have been accused of sexually abusing a minor.

Of the 13, nine are dead and two are in prison. None are in active ministry.

The Tennessee Register, Nashville’s diocesan newspaper, said the names were being released after consultation with the priests’ council and Diocesan Review Board, which is made up almost entirely of laypeople not employed by the diocese.

The list is posted on the diocese’s website and includes the priests’ assignments based on official diocesan records.

Files on abuse cases were shared with the Davidson County district attorney general’s office nearly 20 years ago.

The names are those of priests against whom an allegation of abuse was made either while an active priest or following his death. Following the report, an investigation was begun, followed by a review of the facts and information obtained.

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Archdiocese of Santa Fe faces 5 new sex abuse suits

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican

November 9, 2018

By Phaedra Haywood

Five new lawsuits were filed against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe this week by people who say they suffered lifelong problems after being sexually assaulted as children by Catholic clergy in Central and Northern New Mexico.

Three of the suits involve people who allege they were assaulted by priests in Albuquerque, one involves allegations against an Abiquiú priest and one involves allegations against a priest formerly serving in Ranchos de Taos.

The archdiocese did not respond to a phone message and email seeking comment for this story.

“These men and women in our communities carried the secret of their sexual abuse by the priests around all their lives, having been shamed and warned about telling anyone, living with various levels of inexplicable anxiety or depression, and now for the first time are coming forward and getting professional help,” said Levi Monagle, an attorney in the Law Offices of Brad D. Hall, which filed the complaints Thursday in state District Court in Albuquerque.

The lawsuits allege abuses occurred as long ago as 1950 and as recently as the late 1980s.

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Lawsuit accuses former Waterbury priest of sexual abuse

WATERBURY (CT)
Republican-American

November 7, 2018

By Jonathan Shugarts

The Archdiocese of Hartford was sued Wednesday by a former city man who is accusing a deceased priest of sexually abusing him when he was an altar boy in 1980.

Rev. Walter Vichas, who died in 2008 at the age of 83, is named in the suit as the abuser of Kevin Distasio who is now 46.

The suit was filed in Waterbury Superior Court and accuses the archdiocese of negligence and reckless and wanton conduct in connection to Vichas’ alleged sexual exploitation of the boy while Vichas served as a priest at Blessed Sacrament Church on Robbins Street.

The suit claims that Distasio’s parents were devout Catholics who enrolled their son at the Blessed Sacrament School, which was part of the church. Distasio placed “his faith and trust in his church, its clergy, and its priests, which included Rev. Walter A. Vichas, and placed his trust in the same for his moral and spiritual welfare,” the suit alleges.

Vichas heard Distasio’s confessions, according to the filing. Distasio was raised to believe that priests were to be “obeyed without question” and that priests “represented God and that priests were a form of Jesus Christ,” the suit alleges.

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East Cobb Catholic priests respond to sexual abuse allegations

MARIETTA (GA)
East Cobb News

November 9, 2018

By Wendy Parker

A Catholic Church of St. Ann priest has responded to his parish’s membership this week after the Archdiocese of Atlanta published a list priests, deacons, seminarians and other religious workers it says have been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of minors over many decade.

Two of those named in the report were a pastoral aide who was convicted of molesting two boys while working at St. Ann in 1999-2000, and a priest at a Canton parish who may have been at the East Cobb church on occasion in the early 1990s.

Rev. Wilton Gregory, the Atlanta Archbishop, said he was publicly identifying those on the list “in a spirit of transparency and the hope of continued healing for the survivors of abuse.”

On Friday, the Rev. Raymond Cadran, the St. Ann pastor, sent a letter to members of the Roswell Road parish, expressing “my deepest sorrow and anger and hurt over the actions of any LaSalette or anyone associated with our name who has caused hurt and pain to any of God’s precious children, young people and their families.”

He said that “all credible claims were handled in an appropriate and timely manner.”

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Dioceses’ compensation funds shouldn’t end Pa. victims’ right to sue, advocates say

PENNSYLVANIA
WITF

November 9, 2018

By Katie Meyer

Seven of Pennsylvania’s eight Catholic dioceses have announced plans to create funds to compensate those abused by priests as children, for whom the statute of limitations has expired.

Some victim advocates said the funds are welcome; others said they give churches an easy out. But both camps agree, this shouldn’t be the end of the reforms.

The announcement of the funds came a few months after a landmark grand jury report documented decades of alleged child sexual abuse by clergy. It included a number of recommendations for dioceses and state lawmakers to fix longstanding problems that led to abuse going unreported.

One of those recommendations was a two-year window for retroactive lawsuits on old, statute-limited abuse cases against negligent institutions. In a bitter legislative battle, top lawmakers balked at passing a bill to create such a window.

They floated compensation funds as part of a replacement proposal. But the whole effort ultimately crashed.

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Philadelphia archdiocese sets up victims’ reparation fund

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic News Service

November 2018

By Matthew Gambino

Acting on his promise to find new ways to support survivors of clerical sexual abuse, Archbishop Charles J. Chaput announced Nov. 8 that the Archdiocese of Philadelphia is creating a new reparations program open to anyone abused by clergy in the archdiocese.

Philadelphia’s archbishop made the announcement in his column on CatholicPhilly.com, explaining the archdiocese will fund the program and “pay the amounts that independent claims administrators deem appropriate.”

The Independent Reconciliation and Reparations Program seeks to compensate all victims but especially those whose claims are currently barred from civil lawsuits under Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations.

An effort in the state Legislature to allow a limited-time window on the statute for retroactive lawsuits against the Catholic dioceses in the state failed to come up for a vote in the Senate in October. The issue is thought to be dead because the current legislative session ends in mid-November.

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Lawsuit: Priest abused ‘chosen child’

GUAM
The Guam Daily Post

November 9, 2018

By Mindy Aguon

While the Archdiocese of Agana intends to file bankruptcy to resolve more than 180 sexual abuse lawsuits, another civil suit was filed in the Superior Court of Guam against the archdiocese seeking $10 million in damages.

Attorney David Lujan filed a lawsuit on behalf of his client M.C.A., who used initials to protect his identity.

The suit alleges M.C.A. was sexually abused by two priests when he served as an altar boy at the Niño Perdido y Sagrada Familia Catholic Church in Asan in the 1970s.

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Francis put the brakes on Baltimore. Now what?

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Worthy Adversary

November 12, 2018

By Joelle Casteix

There is a lot to be said for being lazy.

I was going to write about the proposed Baltimore bishops’ meeting agenda yesterday, but put this blog post off until this morning. Good thing—because our pal Pope Francis made the whole meeting moot.

From the Washington Post:

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Lawsuit filed against Archdiocese of Hartford over alleged sexual abuse

WATERBURY (CT)
WTNH

November 9, 2018

By Mario Boone

A lawsuit has been filed against the Archdiocese of Hartford over allegations of sexual abuse by a priest at a Waterbury church.

According to the lawsuit filed by Attorney Thomas McNamara Friday, the late Reverend Walter Vichas sexually assaulted then 10-year-old altar boy Kevin Distasio in 1980 at the Blessed Sacrament Church on Robbins Street in Waterbury.

“The sexual abuse was at the hands of Reverend Walter Vichas,” McNamara told News 8 Friday.

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Archdiocese: Sex abuse claim against late priest credible

DETROIT (MI)
The Detroit News

November 11, 2018

By Jennifer Chambers

The Detroit Archdiocese said Sunday it has determined that an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by a monsignor to be credible and is asking anyone who has been abused to contact police.

Detroit Archdiocese spokesman Ned McGrath issued a statement saying an allegation involving Monsignor Thadddeus Ozog was brought to the archdiocesan review board and “has been deemed credible.”

“The Detroit Archdiocese — as is its practice — shared the complaint against him with civil authorities,” McGrath said in the statement dated Saturday. “The Review Board also commissioned an independent investigation of the allegation. When presented to the Review Board, the findings from that investigation were found to be credible, that is, having a ‘semblance of truth.’ ”

McGrath declined to provide the age of the victim at the time of the alleged abuse, the year it is alleged to have happened, details or the current age of the person, other than to say he now is an adult.

The victim approached the archdiocese three years ago to report the abuse, McGrath said, but was unable to assist in an investigation at the time. The victim again contacted the archdiocese this summer and was able to assist the review board in its investigation, McGrath said.

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Baton Rouge list of priests credibly accused of abuse to come within ‘next few months’

BATON ROUGE (LA)
The Advocate

November 9, 2018

By Andrea Gallo

A list of Roman Catholic clergy credibly accused of sexual abuse within his diocese should be released within the next few months, Bishop of Baton Rouge Michael Duca said Friday in offering the greatest details yet of how he’ll disclose information about problem priests.

Duca released his first column Friday for the diocese’s Catholic Commentator newspaper and wrote that “this moment in our lives” demanded reflection on the sexual abuse crisis that has pummeled the church for decades. He will head next week to Baltimore for an assembly of U.S. bishops, in which he and others will vote on a series of reforms to investigate abuse accusations against bishops.

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Baton Rouge Catholic Diocese hires auditors to review clergy abuse files, list to come in 2019

BATON ROUGE (LA)
The Advocate

November 10, 2018

By Andrea Gallo

Baton Rouge Bishop Michael Duca has hired a law firm and an auditing firm to scrutinize clergy files and to help the Catholic Diocese complete a list of clerics who were credibly accused of sexual abuse, which should become public by the end of January 2019.

Catholic bishops across the state have announced intentions to release names of credibly accused clergy members, but Duca is the only one thus far who has announced a third-party review of files. Duca said in an interview Saturday that he wants the Diocese of Baton Rouge to receive the equivalent of a clean audit once all records have been inspected.

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Catholic Diocese names 2 Carlsbad priests involved in sex abuse scandal

CARLSBAD (NM)
Carlsbad Current-Argus

November 9, 2018

By Jessica Onsurez

The alleged abuse occurred in the 1950s and 1970s.

Two Carlsbad Catholic priests were among the names of 28 clergy “credibly accused” of sexual misconduct with a minor.

Kerry Guillory and Casilda Pudei served as clergymen in Carlsbad in the 1970s and 1950s, respectively.

The names were released by the Catholic Diocese of Las Cruces Thursday, in response to Attorney General Hector Balderas who sought personnel files of priests accused of child abuse.

“By publishing this list, the Diocese of Las Cruces is seeking to be transparent and accountable, and we invite anyone who may have been abused by church personnel to come forward and report that abuse to the proper authorities,” said Bishop Gerald Kicanas, the Apostolic Administrator of the Las Cruces diocese in a news release.

Pudei was noted by the diocese as deceased.

The diocese said Pudei was assigned to St. Edward School from 1956 to 1957.

The abuse allegedly occurred in 1957 and was reported to the diocese in 1993.

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Philadelphia Archdiocese Opens Victims’ Compensation Fund, but What About Lawsuits?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Legal Examiner

November 10, 2018

By Eric T. Chaffin

The Philadelphia Archdiocese recently announced the establishment of a new victims’ compensation fund for victims of child sexual abuse. Overseeing the fund is a team of former government officials, including a former Philadelphia district attorney, former Philadelphia judge, and former Senate majority leader. These officials are to make sure the compensation fund runs independently of the Catholic Church.

The fund’s purpose is to help compensate victims who cannot pursue financial compensation through the courts because their claims lay outside the statute of limitations.

So far there has been no indication as to what the maximum potential individual payouts will be, or the total dollar amount available in the fund for distribution. Seven other Roman Catholic dioceses in the state are also taking steps to establish similar funds.

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Lawsuit alleges Diocese returned pedophile Carbon County priest to service

ALLENTOWN (PA)
69 News

November 12, 2018

Priest sent to New Mexico facility for ‘treatment’

A Lehigh County man alleges he was sexually abused by a Carbon County priest years after the priest was sent to a New Mexico facility, where he was to receive treatment for allegedly assaulting at least one other child.

The Philadelphia-based law firm Williams Cedar on Monday announced that it filed a lawsuit in Lehigh County Court against retired priest Bruno M. Tucci and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Allentown. The victim alleges the abuse occurred between 1999 and 2001 while he served as an altar boy at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel parish in Nesquehoning, Carbon County.

The suit also names former Bishop Edward Cullen, curent Bishop Alfred Schlert and the Congregation of the Servants of the Paraclete.

Tucci, who now lives in Maryland, was a priest in the Allentown Diocese from April 1971 through March 2002 and served at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel from 1986 until his retirement in 2002. The Diocese includes Berks, Carbon, Lehigh, Northampton and Schulykill counties.

The lawsuit alleges that Diocese officials were notified in 1991 that Tucci allegedly sexually abused a 14-year-old boy years earlier. During a meeting with a Diocese official, Tucci allegeldy admitted that he had indeed molested the victim as reported, according to court papers. The lawsuit alleges that victim wasn’t Tucci’s only victim.

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Vatican orders US bishops to delay taking action on sexual abuse crisis

BALTIMORE (MD)
CNN

November 12, 2018

By Daniel Burke

The Vatican has told the US Conference of Catholic Bishops to delay voting on measures to hold bishops accountable for failing to protect children from sexual abuse, the president of the conference said in a surprise announcement Monday morning.

In his announcement, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo said he was “disappointed” by the Vatican’s decision, which he said he learned of on Sunday afternoon. Pope Francis met with his ambassador to the United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre, on Saturday, according to the pope’s public schedule.

Pierre is in Baltimore and addressed the body of bishops on Monday morning, though he did not mention the Vatican’s insistence that the US bishops delay their vote. The US Conference of Catholic Bishops gathers about 200 bishops from around the country twice a year to debate and adopt new policies.

A Vatican spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment. Pope Francis will convene a meeting of bishops from around the world in February to address the sexual abuse crisis, which has roiled the church on several continents, including North America, South America and Australia.

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Diocese investigating Vienna pastor after accusation of inappropriate behavior with minor

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
WYTV

November 12, 2018

The Diocese of Youngstown is investigating an accusation against Rev. Bouchard

A Vienna pastor has been accused of inappropriate behavior with a minor.

The Diocese of Youngstown is investigating an accusation against Rev. Denis Bouchard, pastor of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish.

The Diocesan Review Board will determine the allegation’s credibility and substantiation.

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Priest on leave as Y’town diocese investigates another claim

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
The Vindicator

November 12, 2018

A priest at a Vienna church has been placed on administrative leave by the Catholic Diocese of Youngstown pending an investigation into a claim that he engaged in inappropriate contact with a minor.

Rev. Denis G. Bouchard, Pastor of Queen of the Holy Rosary Parish will be on leave as the diocese investigates the allegation, a news release said.

The leave comes after the Diocesan Review Board met and made a recommendation to Bishop George V. Murry, that further investigation take place.

The diocese said they will not comment any further because of the ongoing nature of the investigation.

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Los focos de la tercera asamblea de la Conferencia Episcopal en un año

[Third Episcopal Conference to focus on abuse crisis]

SANTIAGO, CHILE
La Tercera

November 12, 2018

By Tomás Molina J.

El debut de los administradores apostólicos y la situación del obispo Silva, imputado por encubrimiento, marcarán la reunión que se realizará en Santiago y se prolongará hasta el viernes.

Generalmente son dos las asambleas plenarias que organiza la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile año a año, pero en medio de la crisis que afecta a la Iglesia católica chilena por los abusos de sexuales y de poder perpetrados por clérigos, hoy inicia el tercer encuentro entre los obispos nacionales durante este 2018.

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La gestión de los abusos de la Iglesia española preocupa en el Vaticano

[Management of abuse crisis in Spanish Church worries the Vatican]

SPAIN
El País

November 11, 2018

By Daniel Verdú

Autoridades eclesiales en Roma y España critican el diseño de la comisión creada por la Conferencia Episcopal al considerarla un mero lavado de imagen

La Santa Sede mira desde hace tiempo de reojo hacia España. Los escándalos de abusos surgidos en Alemania, Irlanda o, incluso Francia no han tenido correspondencia hasta ahora en un país donde la Iglesia ha estado involucrada en todos los estamentos educativos desde hace décadas. Han pasado ocho años ya desde que el Vaticano, entonces bajo el mandato de Benedicto XVI, publicó las líneas guía para la prevención y tratamiento de los abusos en España (como en tantos países). Entre otras cosas, se emplazaba a trasladar los casos a la justicia civil, pero en España algunas denuncias no han llegado ni siquiera de mano de los obispos que las conocían. La realidad constatada en Roma es que casi ninguna diócesis española ha hecho nada para aplicar esas normas con seriedad y la comisión creada recientemente no cuenta con elementos para ser tomada en consideración.

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“El cura que me violó era un depredador, un cazador de niños”

[“The priest who raped me was a predator, a child hunter”]

MADRID, SPAIN
El País

November 12, 2018

By Joaquín Gil

Los claretianos mantuvieron a un sacerdote tras conocer sus agresiones sexuales en una escuela de Madrid entre 1975 y 1978. El religioso pasó por un colegio mayor

El guía turístico Fernando García-Salmones y el profesor Enrique Sacristán arrastran el mismo pasado. Ambos estudiaban en 1975 en el colegio Claret de Madrid. Y ambos fueron violados —según revelan a EL PAÍS— por el mismo sacerdote, J. P. V., un carismático cura que frisaba entonces la cincuentena y que falleció en octubre de 2009 tras recibir un homenaje de sus antiguos alumnos.

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Archbishop’s view of accountability wanders far afield from US law

BOSTON (MA)
The Boston Globe

November 11, 2018

If the article “In abuse scandal, spotlight squarely on bishops” (Page A1, Nov. 4) had been published in a Catholic publication, it would be an authentic sign that there has been an institutional conversion of bishops’ accountability. For now, Catholics must rely on the secular media for in-depth investigative journalism of its church’s conduct.

Critics of Catholicism in the United States have charged that the Roman Catholic Church’s highest allegiance is to a foreign power: the pope and the state of Vatican City. This is substantiated in the article when Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore reveals, “I thought if I committed a crime against a young person or in any serious way violated my responsibilities that the Holy See would step in and take me out of office.”

It’s incredible that he would defer to the Holy See to determine whether he had violated any US law. In one sense, he abdicates personal responsibility for his actions. He reveals a deeper mind-set that doesn’t take seriously adherence to the laws of this country.

Critics of Sharia law, fearful of its practice here, are oblivious that the Roman Catholic Church’s canon law has trumped adherence to the American legal system by American Catholic bishops.

The Rev. Emmett Coyne

Ocala, Fla.

The writer is a retired priest with the Diocese of Manchester in New Hampshire.

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Looking at Child Sexual Abuse Through a Two-Year Window

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Legal Intelligencer

November 10, 2018

By Christopher Munley

On Aug. 14, the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office released a grand jury report (report) on Catholic clergy sexual abuse after a two-year investigation that revealed that more than 300 priests sexually abused more than 1,000 children over seven decades in six of the state’s eight Roman Catholic dioceses.

The report, which included Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton (Pennsylvania’s two other dioceses, Philadelphia and Altoona-Johnstown had been the subjects of earlier grand jury reports that found similarly damaging information about clergy and bishops in those dioceses), painted a blistering picture of church officials routinely covering up crimes until the perpetrators were too old to prosecute or litigate.
This report has now reignited a debate about whether to eliminate the statute of limitations for future civil and criminal cases involving child sexual abuse as well as how to address the problem for older victims of past crimes. The issue for these sexual abuse victims is how do they seek justice?

Among other policy recommendations in the report, jurors specifically recommended that the state eliminate the criminal statute of limitations for child sexual abuse and give otherwise time-barred victims a “two-year window” to file civil lawsuits. The grand jury said that “no piece of legislation can predict the point at which a victim of child sexual abuse will find the strength to come forward.”

The grand jurors called for the suspension of the statute of limitations for civil suits to allow victims to seek justice because: “We saw victims; they are marked for life, and many of them wind up addicted, or impaired, or dead. Our proposal would open a limited window, offering them a chance, finally, to be heard in court.”

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Religious institutions to be included in state abuse inquiry

NEW ZEALAND
Radio NZ

November 12, 2018

By Chris Bramwell

The Government’s inquiry into the abuse of children in state care will be expanded to include the abuse of children in the care of religious institutions.

The Inquiry is to be called the Royal Commission into Historical Abuse in State Care and in the Care of Faith-Based Institutions, to reflect its expanded scope.

The Royal Commission was formally established in February to be chaired by the former Govenor-General Sir Anand Satyanand, with the terms of reference, budget and additional inquiry members to be announced after consultation and Cabinet approval.

Its initial scope was to cover circumstances where the state directly ran institutions like child welfare institutions, borstals or psychiatric hospitals, and where the government contracted services out to other institutions, but as of today that will be expanded to include children in the care of faith-based institutions

Religious groups and church abuse survivors have been lobbying to be included in the inquiry since it was announced.

It will begin hearing evidence from January next year with the first interim report, which will be focussed on state care, to be reported back by the end of 2020.

A final report containing the Royal Commission’s findings and recommendations will be submitted to the Governor-General in January 2023.

The Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, said it was critical the Government got the Royal Commission right and the scope and purpose of the Inquiry has been carefully considered.

“Today paves the way for us to confront a dark chapter of our national history by acknowledging what happened to people in state care, and in the care of faith-based institutions, and to learn the lessons for the future.”

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Lawyers surprised by numbers still lodging civil claims in historical sexual abuse cases

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

November 9, 2018

By Leanne Younes

A lawyer, who was one of the first to represent historical sexual abuse victims, has noticed a rise in civil law suits since the National Apology on 22 October 2018 and the start of the Commonwealth Redress Scheme in July.

Angela Sdrinis, of Angela Sdrinis Legal, who was one of the first legal practices to represent historical child sexual abuse clients said her firm and many legal practices had experienced a significant increase in claims.

“We have noticed an increase, and frankly we are all surprised,” she said. “We didn’t really expect it, given the Royal Commission ran for five years … I mean where have these people been?”

“We do know that one of the significant obstacles to coming forward for survivors is the guilt and shame they feel, so perhaps it has taken all of this for these people to finally feel they can.”

“Perhaps with the apology at that level and the establishment of a national redress scheme, they finally feel as if they have permission to come forward.”

Ms Sdrinis said her firm was receiving about 20 new clients a month and the civil law claims were producing results, with the “most common range for civil historical abuse settlements between $200,000 and $500,000.”

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The Women Who Took Down Larry Nassar on Life After the Ruling

UNITED STATES
Glamour

November 11, 2018

At the 2018 Women of the Year Summit, a group of women who helped take down former USA Gymnastics doctor Larry Nassar—accused of years of sexual abuse—came together on stage to discuss the extensive challenges they faced, before the trial and after his sentencing. As Glamour executive editor Wendy Naugle, who moderated the conversation, said in her introduction, “They’ve changed the way we talk about sexual assault and abuse in this country.”

Rachael Denhollander, the first woman to publicly accuse Nassar of assault, joined Andrea Munford, the detective who led the investigation, and Angela Povilaitis, the assistant Attorney General who led the prosecution. These women reflect but a fraction of the army that came together to bring justice against Nassar: More than 140 people came forward to file civil lawsuits against the disgraced doctor, including Olympic gymnast Aly Raisman, alleging sexual abuse under the guise of treatment for injuries. Judge Rosemarie Aquilina, who presided over the case, came up after Denhollander, Munford, and Povilaitis left the stage. (Because Nassar has asked permission to repeal his sentencing, Judge Aquilina cannot speak to Denhollander, Munford, or the survivors, hence why they appeared separately.)

After hearing over 150 statements ranging two decades, Judge Aquilina sentenced Nassar to up to 175 years in prison. The response to the ruling was instantly huge, which surprised her at the time: “After it was over, I took a break and went and did four probation violations. I had no idea that the world was exploding,” the judge told Glamour in her WOTY profile. “I just did what I always do.”

In the panel titled The Collective Power of the Sister Army, Denhollander, Munford, and Povilaitis discussed how they banded together, prepared for a historic trial, and support survivors of sexual abuse. Then, Judge Aquilina spoke about why she allowed survivors to speak out in the courtroom. Below, the biggest moments of the panel.

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The CA Attorney General potential investigation is picking up steam

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

November 7, 2018

By Joelle Casteix

While there has been no formal announcement of an investigation into clergy sex abuse and cover-up statewide, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra sent this shot across the Twitter bow earlier today:

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Spokane bishop on Catholic Church abuse crisis: ‘How much more can the people of God put up with?’

SPOKANE (WA)
The Spokesman- Review

November 11, 2018

By Chad Sokol

Light streamed into Bishop Thomas Daly’s office one recent afternoon as he spoke, in sometimes blunt terms, about the widening scandal of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in the United States.

“It’s a moral crisis,” Daly said. “We have degenerate behavior, hypocrisy and now cover-up. My thought is, ‘How much more can the people of God put up with?’ ”

As the leader of the Spokane diocese since 2015, Daly has the final say on some investigations into abuse by clergy. He talked to The Spokesman-Review in late October following a wave of headlines about sexual abuse in all ranks of the Roman Catholic Church.

It began anew in June, when allegations emerged that Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, D.C., had sexually abused minors and adult seminarians over the course of decades. Pope Francis accepted McCarrick’s resignation in July. And then in August, the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office released a grand jury report finding that church leaders had covered up the abuse of more than 1,000 people over a 70-year period, prompting investigations in several other states.

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Survivors group wants independent investigation into Catholic clergy abuse in Tennessee

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Knoxville News Sentinel

November 9, 2018

By Amy McRary

Tennessee or federal authorities should investigate allegations of Catholic “pedophile priests” in the state, a leader of a survivors organization said Friday.

Susan Vance, a former nun with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), also called on Catholic authorities to support abolishing statutes of limitations on child sex abuse crimes.

Vance held a short news conference Friday in drizzling rain on the sidewalk outside the Roman Catholic Diocese of Knoxville offices on Northshore Drive. A similar news conference was held an hour later in Nashville.

“We would ask the state attorney general to impanel a grand jury or the district attorneys to ask the State Bureau of Investigation to investigate the church files,” Vance said. “An independent investigation is needed, whatever that may be.”

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Some thoughts on this week’s Baltimore Bishops’ Meeting

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary

November 11, 2018

By Joelle Casteix

Spoiler warning: The US Conference of Catholic Bishops is taking us for a bunch of rubes.

The bishops are relying upon two things: 1) the public’s lack of institutional memory; and 2) Catholics’ reliance upon the bishop’s artificial moral authority.

#1 Lack of Institutional Memory

Let’s start with #1. The best way to do this is to compare compare scandals: 2002 and 2018.

The 2002 Catholic clergy sex abuse and cover-up scandal was prompted by the Boston Globe Spotlight exposé and subsequent cover-up scandals nationwide. The 2018 meeting is prompted by the Pennsylvania AG report and subsequent AG investigation announcements across the country.

The bishops are in crisis, pure and simple.

Your average 30-year-old reporter was fourteen in 2002. And unless they had a family member who was abused, chances are that the story was nowhere near their radar screen. This is all new to them.

So let’s compare stories.

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Three former Catholic clergy who served in Cobb face sexual abuse allegations

MARIETTA (GA)
Marietta Daily Journal

November 7, 2018

By Jon Gargis

Three clergy members who served in Catholic churches in Cobb County in years past have been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of a minor, according to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Atlanta.

The three were among 15 priests, deacons, seminarians and other religious staff named Tuesday in a release by the diocese who are accused of sexual abuse within the archdiocese or elsewhere “in a spirit of transparency and the hope of continued healing for the survivors of abuse,” Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory wrote in a statement accompanying the list.

Tuesday’s release did not go into specific allegations against any of the named clergy, such as the number of incidents alleged, where they occurred or when, but says that the list covers the period from the establishment of the Diocese of Atlanta in 1956 — it became an archdiocese six years later — to the present.

Among the seven named priests was John Douglas Edwards, whose last listed place of service was St. Catherine of Siena Catholic Church in Kennesaw from 1987 to 1989. Edwards also served in 13 other churches following his 1961 ordination, according to the archdiocese, which lists his year of death as 1997.

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Parishioners Gather to Support Bronx Bishop Accused of Sexual Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Times

November 11, 2018

By Emily Palmer

On Friday evening, inside Our Lady of Refuge church in the Bronx, a man tapped on his phone and then raised it high, so each of the approximately 250 people in attendance could see the screen.

Rushing toward the man with the phone, the crowd shouted out the name of John Jenik, an auxiliary bishop who was barred from the church on Oct. 29, following a recent allegation that he had an inappropriate relationship with a teenage boy in the 1980s.

Bishop Jenik has denied the accusation, but after an investigation by the Archdiocese of New York, Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan called the allegation “credible and substantiated.” An independent commission affiliated with the archdiocese is considering the claim for a cash settlement, and the case has moved to the Vatican for a review process that could take years.

Since his banishment, Bishop Jenik, 74, has been living at a rehabilitation center without access to his parish.

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U.S. bishops delay action on sex abuse at Vatican request

WASHINGTON (DC)
Think Progress

November 12, 2018

By Joshua Eaton

The Vatican has delayed a vote by U.S. Catholic bishops this week that would have held church leaders accountable for clergy sex abuse.

At a meeting in Baltimore, Maryland, on Monday, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, told the heads of all 196 U.S. dioceses and archdioceses that Pope Francis wanted them to hold off on a vote until after a meeting of worldwide church leaders in Rome in February.

The bishops had planned to vote Wednesday on a code of conduct for bishops and a lay commission to investigate violations.

“At the insistence of the Holy See, we will not be voting on the two action items,” DiNardo, who is archbishop of Galveston-Houston, in Texas, told his fellow bishops, according to The Washington Post.

Advocates for survivors of clergy sexual abuse, who have long accused the church of being unwilling to hold senior leaders accountable, were quick to criticize the move.

“We’re dealing with the crisis, right here, right now,” Becky Ianni, D.C. regional head of the victims’ group SNAP, told The Washington Post. “Yes, it’s a global problem, and they need to discuss it there [in Rome], but the U.S. needs to come up with something right now.”

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Parents object to possible release of accused priest

PIEDMONT (SD)
Associated Press

November 12, 2018

Some parents in Piedmont are objecting to the possible release of a Rapid City priest accused of sexually abusing a 13-year-old child.

A defense attorney for John Praveen has asked a judge to release the defendant to the supervision of Catholic diocese at Casa Maria, a property in Piedmont for retired priests.

KOTA-TV reports parents of children who attend Stagebarn Middle School and two day care centers across from Casa Maria say church officials are overlooking the location in the release plan.

Prosecutors last week objected to the release and asked the judge to continue John Praveen’s $100,000 bond. Seventh Circuit Judge Robert Mandel did not immediately rule on the defense request.

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Clergy Sex Abuse Crisis Tops Agenda as US Catholic Bishops Convene

BALTIMORE (MD)
Associated Press

November 12, 2018

By David Crary

As U.S. Catholic bishops gather for their national assembly this week, the clergy sex abuse crisis dominates their agenda amid calls from critics that church leaders finally bring about meaningful reforms to root out misbehaving priests.

The three-day assembly that starts Monday in Baltimore comes after a series of abuse scandals this year that have been stunning in their magnitude and number.

Bishops have several reforms under consideration to craft a stronger response to the scandals, but some Catholic activists are demanding further steps, including releasing the names of all clergy accused of abuse and giving a greater voice to abuse victims. One coalition of concerned Catholics, the 5 Theses movement, planned to post its proposals for reform on church doors in Baltimore and elsewhere on Sunday.

The abuse crisis is foremost among several challenges confronting Catholic leaders, who face conflicting pressures on the role of women and LGBT people in the church. And even though the Catholic population in the U.S. has been growing, most Catholics attend Mass rarely, and the number of active priests and nuns continues to decline.

Setting the tone for the national assembly, the president of the bishops’ conference, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, asked his fellow bishops to spend the preceding seven days in “intensified” prayer, fasting and reparation.

The bishops will consider new steps to police their own ranks during abuse cases, and will likely approve an investigation by lay law enforcement experts of the handling of the scandal surrounding the former cardinal in Washington, D.C.

“Bishops are under intense scrutiny and pressure to deliver on both of these items,” said the Rev. Thomas Berg, admissions director at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers, New York.

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What’s left of bishops’ moral authority is on the line this week

BALTIMORE (MD)
National Catholic Reporter

November 12, 2018

By Michael Sean Winters

Greetings from Baltimore! This morning, we are waiting for the address by the papal nuncio, Archbishop Christophe Pierre, as well as the presidential address of Cardinal Daniel DiNardo. After that, the bishops will be engaged in spiritual discernment for the rest of the day.

One of the main issues the bishops will be discerning is how to respond to the clergy sex abuse mess, which requires diagnosing how they got to this point. While there is general agreement on many aspects of what caused the crisis, there are two meta-narratives about causation that are not complementary. Some argue that the core problem is the spread of homosexuality among the clergy, which has been made possible because of lousy moral theology and weak episcopal leadership.

Proponents of this meta-narrative ignore both expert and common opinion. The 2011 John Jay study indicated homosexuality is not a risk factor. Common sense would tell you that priests had access to the boys’ room and not the girls’ room and that in many of the years surveyed, there were not yet even altar girls. Interestingly, if you consult the news articles published at the time the John Jay study was published in 2011 (for example, this article by Carol Zimmerman published by the bishops’ own news service, CNS), even conservative bishops like Archbishops Robert Carlson, Timothy Dolan and Allen Vigneron affirmed the findings and did not question them. The people complaining about the report were SNAP and other victims’ advocacy groups, and their complaint was not that the report let gays off the hook.

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COLUMN: Stop blaming victims; hold sexual perpetrators accountable

MEADVILLE (PA)
Meadville Tribune

November 12, 2018

By Bruce Harlan

We live in tough times. Whether you’re watching TV, reading the newspaper or looking at your smart phone, the news is all around us and it’s usually the same thing: more examples of mass shootings and acts of terrorism, more reports of destructive weather, more divisive stories involving politics and more allegations of sexual violence.

In the last 12 months, consider all of the stories about sexual violence making headlines: Bill Cosby’s trial and conviction for three counts of sexual assault; Dr. Larry Nassar’s guilty plea for abusing hundreds of young women who attended sports camps at Michigan State University; the Pennsylvania grand jury’s report on six Catholic dioceses where more than 300 members of the clergy were named in connection to sex crimes against children; and, of course, the #MeToo movement that spread virally on social media to help demonstrate the widespread prevalence of sexual assault and harassment.

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Catholics paid $200,000 to upgrade Bishop Malone’s new home — and he wants it mostly to himself

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

November 12, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Those payouts will likely cost the diocese millions, and the bishop has since moved to a former convent at St. Stanislaus Church on Buffalo’s East Side.

But internal documents obtained by the 7 Eyewitness News I-Team show parishioners are already footing the bill for costly renovations to the bishop’s new home on Buffalo’s East Side, leading some to question how much of a sacrifice it will really be for the shepherd of Buffalo’s Catholics — and whether he actually plans to live among his flock.

“He’s moving from a very large home to an even larger home that’s being set up to his specific tastes,” said Siobhan O’Connor, the bishop’s former secretary.

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November 11, 2018

Some thoughts on this week’s Baltimore Bishops’ Meeting

UNITED STATES
The Worthy Adversary (blog)

November 11, 2018

By Joelle Casteix

Spoiler warning: The US Conference of Catholic Bishops is taking us for a bunch of rubes.

The bishops are relying upon two things: 1) the public’s lack of institutional memory; and 2) Catholics’ reliance upon the bishop’s artificial moral authority.

#1 Lack of Institutional Memory

Let’s start with #1. The best way to do this is to compare compare scandals: 2002 and 2018.

The 2002 Catholic clergy sex abuse and cover-up scandal was prompted by the Boston Globe Spotlight exposé and subsequent cover-up scandals nationwide. The 2018 meeting is prompted by the Pennsylvania AG report and subsequent AG investigation announcements across the country.

The bishops are in crisis, pure and simple.

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.

A Letter from Cardinal Seán O’Malley and the Bishops of the Archdiocese of Boston

BOSTON (MA)
Archdiocese of Boston

November 10-11, 2018

My Dear Friends,

The annual meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), which takes place from November 12-15 in Baltimore, will be of particularly great importance. The revelations of this past summer concerning Archbishop McCarrick and the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report make clear that the Catholic Church in the United States, at every level, must do all that is possible to prevent the abuse of children, young people and vulnerable adults in the Church and work to restore the trust lost through this scandal.

Since arriving in Boston in 2003, addressing the sexual abuse crisis has been my highest
priority. Our policies and programs seek to guarantee victim/survivors the means to report
claims of abuse and seek settlement, programs to provide professional care and support, and
our full cooperation with law enforcement in the Commonwealth. In June of 2002 the USCCB
embraced the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, which commits all
archdioceses to reporting any allegations of abuse of a minor to civil authorities, zero tolerance for the exercise of ministry by any member of the clergy against whom there is a credible allegation of abuse of a minor, and screenings and trainings for all Church personnel, clergy, lay employees and volunteers, who could have any ministry with a child or young person. Where the Charter has been enforced there have been dramatic improvements in safeguarding. Any bishop or religious superior who does not comply with the Charter should be removed.

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Child Victims Act top priority for new state Senate majority

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

November 8, 2018

By Jay Tokasz

A new Democratic majority in the state Senate means childhood victims of sex abuse might soon be able to sue the Catholic Church in clergy molestation cases that date back decades.

Senate Democrats said Wednesday that passing the Child Victims Act will be a top priority when they assume control in 2019. Democrats on Tuesday won at least 37 seats in the Senate, winning control of the 63-seat chamber for the first time in a decade.

“We’re looking forward to finally getting it passed with this new Democratic majority,” said Sen. Timothy M. Kennedy, D-Buffalo. “We have been calling for passage of the Child Victims Act for years. It has languished under the Republican majority. It is one of several initiatives we’re looking to fast-track.”

New York is among the most restrictive states in the nation when it comes to allowing victims of sexual abuse from years ago to file lawsuits against their alleged perpetrators.

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La Iglesia se resiste a revisar su pasado

[The Spanish Church is reluctant to review its past]

MADRID, SPAIN
El País

November 11, 2018

By José Manuel Romero and Julio Núñez

La cúpula eclesiástica rechaza clarificar los abusos como ha hecho Alemania y anuncia Francia. Los jesuitas aseguran que investigarán sus casos de las últimas décadas

La Iglesia en España se resiste a revisar los casos de abusos sexuales del pasado. A diferencia de lo que está ocurriendo en otros países, como Alemania o Francia, la cúpula de la Iglesia española no ha encargado ni ha elaborado ningún informe ni creado ninguna comisión para investigar los abusos sexuales de sacerdotes a menores en las últimas décadas. El papa Francisco ha convocado en febrero a las conferencias episcopales de todo el mundo para tratar el caso de los abusos sexuales a menores en la Iglesia.

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Turning points on abuse crisis loom in US, Italy

DENVER (CO)
Crux

November 11, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

Two potential turning points loom this week in the Catholic Church’s fight against clerical sexual abuse, one in the “gets it” part of the world and another in the “jury’s still out” zone.

One should come from the fall meeting of the U.S. bishops in Baltimore opening Monday, and the other with the release of a long-awaited new set of anti-abuse guidelines from the powerful Episcopal Conference of Italy, known by its Italian acronym CEI.

In the U.S., the bishops are expected to vote to amend norms adopted at the 2002 meeting in Dallas to place bishops under the same protocols as other clergy when it comes to the “zero tolerance” standard, meaning automatic removal from ministry after a credible charge of abuse.

Though the bishops have already announced their intention to do that in some form, they’ll need to work out exactly how. Under canon law the only superior of a bishop is the pope, not the bishops’ conference, so they’ll have to decide if they want to appeal to Rome to amend their norms, voluntarily submit themselves to a lay review group, or some other mechanism.

The bishops are also expected to take up the thornier matter of how to get to the bottom of the scandals surrounding ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, including who facilitated his rise up the ladder despite concerns over sexual misconduct stretching back at least to the 1990s.

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El contraataque de la “Cofradía”

[The counterattack of the “Brotherhood:” two priests resume their parish duties]

CHILE
La Tercera

November 10, 2018

By Leyla Zapata

Dos sacerdotes sobreseídos por la justicia retomaron sus funciones en las parroquias de La Compañía y Pumanque. La Defensoría Penal Pública solicitará la misma acción en favor de otros dos presbíteros imputados.

“Bien, bien, gracias, pero no doy entrevistas!”. Eso fue lo único que dijo el sacerdote Aquiles Correa, antes de cerrar la puerta de la sala en la que lo esperaban los feligreses de La Compañía, en la Región de O’Higgins, para iniciar la reunión de coordinación pastoral.

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Catholic Diocese of Shreveport issues statement on sexual abuse of juveniles

SHREVEPORT (LA)
ArkLaTex.com

November 10, 2018

By Nancy Cook

In a statement issued Friday, the Very Rev. Peter Mangum, administrator of the Catholic Diocese of Shreveport, said no allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by a clergy member has been received since the diocese was formed in 1986.

In the statement, Mangum stressed that is consistent with the findings of many dioceses, as most of the accusations nationwide are from incidents that occurred decades ago.

That’s not to say there weren’t area priests accused of sexual misconduct, only that if there were, the accusations came prior to Shreveport becoming a stand-alone diocese.

Prior to 1986, Shreveport and Monroe were part of the Alexandria-Shreveport Catholic Diocese, meaning any local allegations would have been submitted to the bishop in Alexandria.

After the diocese split, many of the priests serving in churches that became part of the Shreveport Diocese became a part of the new diocese.

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More work needed in healing process

ASHTABULA (OH)
Ashtabula Star Beacon

November 11, 2018

Years into the sexual abuse scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church, we still see signs that some in the Church’s institutional leadership still don’t get it.

Earlier this month, Bishop George V. Murry of the Youngstown Catholic Diocese released a list of about two dozen priests who have been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of a minor in the Youngstown Diocese. Of those, almost one third spent time in Ashtabula County. But that fact was not known until several days after the names were released, which is an unfortunate microcosm for how the Church as an organization has handled the entire scandal.

Murry seems a genuine, sincere leader. Multiple times during the news conference on the subject he talked about how angry and embarrassed he was this issue had not been resolved. He had harsh words for some of his fellow bishops, saying any who helped in the cover up should be removed and calling out those who still fail to understand the damage sexual assault does to children.

But Church lawyers did him no favors with how they advised Murry and the diocese to handle the release of the names. The news conference took place on a Tuesday and only after a barrage of media members, including the Star Beacon, requested the priest’s assignments did Murry overrule the Church lawyers — who had told Murry to release only the names, whether they were alive or dead and whether they were alive or dead at the time accusations were made against them — and promise to release a full career background for each priest.

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Aumentan en 15 los casos de abuso sexual por parte de miembros de la Iglesia: Víctimas suman 245

[Church of Chile: 15 new cases of clergy sexual abuse, victims total 245]

CHILE
La Tercera

November 11, 2018

Este lunes comienza una asamblea plenaria de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile (CECh) que reunirá a sus obispos para analizar las políticas de reparación y prevención que anunciaron hace dos meses ante la oleada de escándalos en los que está inmersa la Iglesia católica del país.

Las causas abiertas por abusos sexuales en el seno de la Iglesia de Chile alcanzan ya las 139, que implican a 245 víctimas y 190 personas son investigadas, según informaron hoy a Efe fuentes fiscales.

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