ABUSE TRACKER

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

August 5, 2018

He’s a Superstar Pastor. She Worked for Him and Says He Groped Her Repeatedly.

SOUTH BARRINGTON (IL)
The New York Times

August 5, 2018

By Laurie Goodstein

Bill Hybels built an iconic evangelical church outside Chicago. A former assistant says that in the 1980s, he sexually harassed her.

After the pain of watching her marriage fall apart, Pat Baranowski felt that God was suddenly showering her with blessings.

She had a new job at her Chicago-area megachurch, led by a dynamic young pastor named the Rev. Bill Hybels, who in the 1980s was becoming one of the most influential evangelical leaders in the country.

The pay at Willow Creek Community Church was much lower than at her old job, but Ms. Baranowski, then 32, admired Mr. Hybels and the church’s mission so much that it seemed worth it. She felt even more blessed when in 1985 Mr. Hybels and his wife invited her to move into their home, where she shared family dinners and vacations.

Once, while Mr. Hybels’s wife, Lynne, and their children were away, the pastor took Ms. Baranowski out for dinner. When they got home, Mr. Hybels offered her a back rub in front of the fireplace and told her to lie face down.

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.

Clerical abuse scandals entering disturbing phase, says McAleese

IRELAND
The Irish Times

August 3, 2018

By Patsy McGarry

Former president urges pope to make Ireland point at which ‘hope and history rhyme’

The abuse scandals in the Catholic Church were now entering “an even more disrupting chapter,” former president Mary McAleese has said.

She quoted veteran Vatican correspondent Robert Mickens as saying that, in order to solve the underlying problem, Pope Francis will “have to devote the rest of his pontificate almost exclusively to this gargantuan endeavour.”

The former editor of UK magazine The Tablet claimed the abuse issue now theatened “to engulf his papacy and do lasting damage to Francis’s own reputation”, Mrs McAleese recalled.

She continued that “the recent and ongoing scandals and the McAreavey, McCarrick and Wilson resignations are signalling that this issue is now entering an even more disturbing and disruptive chapter”.

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.

Mangueshi priest missing as court rejects pre-arrest bails

PONDA, GOA (INDIA)
The Times of India

August 5, 2018

The additional district and sessions court, Ponda, on Saturday rejected the anticipatory bail pleas filed by Mangueshi temple priest Dhananjay Bhave in two cases. After the development, police said the priest was not traceable and launched a search for 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.

Goa court rejects anticipatory bail application of temple priest accused of molestation

GOA (INDIA)
Press Trust of India via Business Standard

August 4, 2018

A local court today rejected the anticipatory bail application of a temple priest accused of molesting two women.

The two women, hailing from Mumbai, had filed a police complaint alleging that they were molested by Dhananjay Bhave, a priest of the famous Mangueshi Temple in Ponda, about 20 kilometres from here, during a visit in June.

Additional District and Sessions Court in Ponda rejected Bhave’s application after it was informed by the police that the priest was absconding since the case was registered against 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.

La Moneda recibió a víctimas de abusos sexuales en la Iglesia

[La Moneda (Government) receives victims of sexual abuse in the Church]

CHILE
Cooperativa.cl

– Representantes de la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Chile entregaron formalmente su solicitud para crear una comisión de verdad.

– La ministra Cecilia Pérez se comprometió a una evaluación del tema junto al Presidente Piñera.

[- Representatives of the Network of Survivors of Ecclesiastical Abuse in Chile formally submitted their request to create a real commission.

[- Minister Cecilia Pérez undertook to evaluate the issue with President Piñera.]

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

Laicos criticaron conclusiones de la Conferencia Episcopal: “Era una condición mínima”

[Laymen criticize conclusions of the Episcopal Conference: “It was a minimum condition”]

CHILE
Cooperativa.cl

August 3, 2018

– “¿Por qué nos presentan como la gran novedad decisiones y compromisos que no aportan sustantivamente a la solución de la crisis?”, cuestionaron.

– En tanto, para Juan Carlos Cruz no son los obispos “los que deben hacerse cargo de solución”.

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.

Conferencia Episcopal entregará antecedentes a la Fiscalía y pide perdón a las víctimas

[Episcopal Conference will provide background information to the Prosecutor’s Office and apologize to the victims]

CHILE
Cooperativa.cl

August 3, 2018

“Hemos fallado a nuestro deber de pastores”, reconocieron los obispos al cierre de la Asamblea Extraordinaria.

Recalcaron que darán “a conocer públicamente toda investigación previa sobre presunto abuso sexual de menores de edad”.

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.

Sebastián Piñera valoró bajada de Ezzati del Te Deum Ecuménico

[Chilean president Sebastián Piñera praises Ezzati’s stepping down from the Ecumenical Te Deum]

CHILE
Cooperative.cl

August 4, 2018

“El gesto del arzobispo, que si bien doloroso en lo personal, contribuye a la paz de los espíritus en nuestra Patria”, afirmó el Mandatario.

Si desde el mundo político se agradeció el gesto del religioso, los laicos afirmaron que este no es más que un signo mediático.

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.

Mónica Rincón y los insuficientes gestos de obispos: “Falta reconocer que ha habido encubrimiento”

[Mónica Rincón and the insufficient gestures of bishops: “It is necessary to recognize that there has been a cover-up”]

CHILE
CNN Chile

August 3, 2018

“A veces la justicia tarda tanto que ya no es justicia”, dijo la conductora de MR.

Ezzati renunció a presidir el Te Deum y las víctimas tienen asiento reservado en primera fila. Se estableció ya la obligación de denunciar a la Justicia Civil todo antecedente de abusos sexuales cometidos por sacerdotes. José Andrés Murillo fue llamado a presidir el Consejo para Prevención de Abusos en la Iglesia Católica.

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.

Bishop David Zubik Shares Letter Anticipating the Release of the Grand Jury Report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Diocese of Pittsburgh

August 4, 2018

A letter from Bishop David Zubik is being read at all Masses this weekend in all parishes of the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh in order to prepare the faithful for the impending public release of the interim Grand Jury report. A copy of the letter can be found here.

In his letter, Bishop Zubik shares his continued concern for the victims of sexual abuse and sorrow for the harms they suffered at hands of members of the clergy. In addition, Bishop Zubik promises to continue to provide assistance to victims of abuse.

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

Pittsburgh bishop says he’d release names of accused clergy

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Associated Press

August 4, 2018

[See also: August 4, 2018 letter from Bishop Zubik; and Grand jury report could name 90 offenders in Pittsburgh diocese alone, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, July 13, 2018]

The bishop of Pittsburgh’s Roman Catholic diocese said on Saturday he will release the names of any members of his clergy who are accused in a state grand jury report of sexual misconduct with a minor.

In a letter being read at all Masses this weekend, Bishop David Zubik said he will go public with the names once the grand jury report has been released. His announcement came days after the Harrisburg Diocese identified 71 priests and other members of the church who had been accused of child sex abuse.

The state Supreme Court disclosed recently that the grand jury had identified more than 300 “predator priests” in the six dioceses that were investigated: Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton. Together, those dioceses minister to more than 1.7 million Catholics.

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.

Bishops to reveal abuse inquiry response

AUSTRALIA
AAP (Australian Associated Press) via Yarrawonga Chronicle

August 3, 2018

Australia’s Catholic bishops will reveal their response to the child abuse royal commission later this month after reaching a “common position” on the inquiry’s calls for reforms.

The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference on Friday committed to releasing its formal response to the five-year inquiry by the end of August.

While it will be up to the Pope and his advisers to accept many of the royal commission’s far-reaching recommendations, the Australian bishops have already rejected its controversial call to break the seal of confession to reveal child sexual abuse.

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

Breda O’Brien: Church must embrace accountability on sex abuse

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
The Irish Times

August 4, 2018

By Breda O’Brien

Church and aid bodies wield corruptible power over vulnerable adults and youth

The UK House of Commons International Development Committee published an important and troubling report this week, Sexual Abuse and Exploitation in the Aid Sector. The evil that humans are capable of inflicting on the most vulnerable is truly sickening.

Although this investigation was prompted by revelations about Oxfam personnel exploiting vulnerable people in Haiti, it is clear this was a problem for decades in many aid organisations in all areas of the world.

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 Pope and Sex Abuse: Back to Business as Usual When the U.S. Media Isn’t Looking

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle

August 5, 2018

By Betty Clermont

Just this past week, the U.S. media treated Pope Francis as the world’s leading “moral authority.” The New York Times even posted the pope’s declaration that the death penalty is “inadmissible” on its online front page for two days. Yet they, and the rest of the U.S. media, ignored what else happened the past month.

– As of July 24, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati, head of the Church in Chile, is under investigation by civil authorities. He covered up clerical sex abuse for decades even before Pope Francis elevated him to cardinal in 2014.

– Letters dated July 12 urged Pope Francis to remove an Indian bishop accused of raping a nun. On July 24, an Indian official called the allegation “true.”

– Pope Francis accepted the resignation of Honduran Bishop Juan José Pineda Fasquelle on July 20. A resignation means that the prelate retains his title, honors, income and benefits. The pope has known that Pineda was accused of sex abuse and financial malfeasance since June 2017. Pineda said he handed the pope his resignation “several months ago.”

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.

York Catholic HS acknowledges former teacher left school following allegations of abuse

YORK (PA)
CBS 21 News

August 4, 2018

York Catholic High School is acknowledging that a former teacher was a part of a list of accusations provided by the Diocese of Harrisburg earlier this week.

According to the school district Father William Cawley taught at York Catholic from 1988 until 2012. Cawley was included on the list of priest who’s abuse was alleged to have happened at a different diocese.

According to the school district Father Cawley left the Diocese of Harrisburg in 2012 following a lawsuit from Montana accusing him of sexual abuse of a child prior to him joining the diocese of Harrisburg.

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

August 4, 2018

A Message for the York Catholic Family about the Diocese of Harrisburg Press Conference

YORK (PA)
York Catholic High School

August 3, 2018

As you may have already read, Father William Cawley, who taught at York Catholic from 1988 until 2012, was included on the list of priests with allegations released by the Diocese of Harrisburg on August 1, 2018. The Diocese was clear that this was a list of accusations and they did not make assessments of credibility or guilt in creating the list.

Father Cawley was listed under the section including cases where abuse was alleged to have occurred in another Diocese. In 2012, the Diocese of Harrisburg received a report from a 2012 lawsuit in the state of Montana that Father Cawley was accused of sexual abuse of a child prior to his tenure working in the Diocese of Harrisburg. Father Cawley left the Diocese of Harrisburg in 2012 as a result of these allegations. According to Diocesan and York Catholic records, there were no known allegations before the lawsuit in 2012.

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.

York Catholic: Priest left Harrisburg diocese after abuse allegations surfaced in 2012

YORK (PA)
The York Daily Record

August 4, 2018

By Geoff Morrow

York Catholic High School acknowledged a former teacher’s inclusion in last week’s Diocese of Harrisburg list of clergy who’ve been accused of sexual abuse.

In a statement released on its website and labeled Friday night as “A message for the York Catholic family,” the school confirmed Father William Cawley taught there from 1988 until 2012.

Reactions to the statement were mixed on the York Catholic Facebook page.

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

Pittsburgh diocese also plans to name priests and deacons accused of sexually abusing children

PITTSBURGH (PA)
PennLive.com

August 4, 2018

By Teresa Bonner

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh says it too will be releasing the names of clergy against whom allegations of child sexual abuse of a minor have been made.

The announcement was made in a letter to from Bishop David Zubik that was distributed this weekend to be read in all parishes.

Zubik said the names will be made public when the report of a grand jury that has been investigation child sexual abuse in six Pennsylvania dioceses is made public.

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

Honduran Seminarians Allege Widespread Homosexual Misconduct

TEGUCIGALPA (HONDURAS)
National Catholic Register

July 25, 2018

By Edward Pentin

But to date, Cardinal Maradiaga has not responded publicly to the allegations regarding his archdiocesan seminary.

Nearly 50 seminarians in Honduras have protested against what they say is a widespread and entrenched pattern of homosexual practice in Tegucigalpa’s major seminary.

In a letter written to the seminary’s formators that was subsequently circulated in June to the country’s Catholic bishops, the seminarians asserted “irrefutable evidence” exists that a homosexual network pervades the institution and is being protected by its rector.

“Heterosexual seminarians are scandalized and really depressed,” one of the seminarians who drafted the letter told the Register.

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.

Kerala Catholic priest rape case: Was minor victim coerced to say sex was consensual?

KERALA (INDIA)
The News Minute

August 3, 2018

By Dhanya Rajendran

The girl had delivered a baby and DNA tests proved that the priest is the father. Efforts are now on to prove that she was not a minor during the time of the crime.

It was a case that had rocked Kerala. A 48-year-old Catholic priest was arrested for raping and impregnating a 16-year-old girl. The arrest came despite much resistance from the Church and its allied networks. Now, more than a year after Father Robin Vadakumchery of the Mananthavady diocese was arrested, the survivor and the prime witness in the case told the POCSO court at Thalassery in Kannur district that she had consensual sex with the priest.

What has come as a bigger shock for the prosecution is that the survivor claimed that she had attained the age of consent when she had sex with the accused in 2016. The statement by the survivor, who is now an adult, has made the court declare her as hostile. The survivor has also told the court that she was ready to marry Father Robin Vadakkumchery and lead a life with him and their child.

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.

Fort Worth Diocese pastor resigns after hostile, explicit letter threatening to report Dallas-area priest’s alleged affair

FORT WORTH (TX)
Dallas Morning News

August 3, 2018

By Marc Ramirez

A pastor has resigned from the Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth after sending a hostile and graphically detailed letter to a Dallas-area priest threatening to disclose an alleged affair the priest was having with a woman in his parish.

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.

Two Chilean priests present their resignation amid sex ring allegations

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

August 3, 2018

By Inés San Martín

Two priests from a troubled Chilean diocese, part of the 14 local priests suspended after they were accused of being part of a ring of sexual misconduct that included gay prostitution and sexting with minors, have requested to be removed from the priesthood.

Fathers Hector Fuentes and Freddy Gorigoitia are currently suspended from ministry because of the ongoing investigation against them and other priests who were part of the group calling itself “The Family.” The two requested to be laicized on July 28.

The information was confirmed by Bishop Luis Fernando Ramos Perez, auxiliary of Santiago, the country’s capital, who’s currently serving as apostolic administrator in the diocese.

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 sex abuse cases put Pennsylvania grand jury rules to test

ALLENTOWN (PA)
The Morning Call

August 3, 2018

By Tim Darragh

The long-awaited grand jury report on sex abuse of children by priests in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania is testing a balance of rights and raising questions about the fairness of secretive grand juries.

On the one hand, sex abuse victims say the release of the report naming more than 300 “predator” priests is a key step in healing and gaining justice.

On the other, people named in the report but not charged with crimes say in court records that the grand jury process failed to give them a fair opportunity to rebut the allegations against them. The two-year investigation covered the dioceses of Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton, and ended in April.

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.

Survivor opens up about priest abuse as a child, accused priest responds

YORK (PA)
WPMT-TV, Fox43

August 1, 2018

By Jack Eble

A Carlisle native, a Pennsylvania university graduate, 30 years of business experience.

One man, who is choosing to stay anonymous, says he is a survivor who wants his story to be told.

“This is not an easy story to tell.”

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 Harrisburg’s statement to comments made by former priest Herbert Shank that aired on FOX43

HARRISBURG (PA)
WPMT-TV, Fox43

August 3, 2018

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg issued a statement Friday in response to a story that ran earlier this week on FOX43.

On Wednesday, FOX43 aired a story by Jack Eble with a survivor who said he was abused by a priest when he was 12 years old — the alleged abuse continued for a year and a half.

The accused, former priest Herbert Shank, spoke to FOX43 at his home.

Read the Diocese’s statement to Shank’s comments below:

“As we disclosed in our list earlier this week, Herbert Shank, who was removed from ministry in 1994, was the subject of multiple accusations of child sexual abuse. We watched his recent interview with shock and great sadness as he attempted to rationalize clearly inappropriate behavior with children. We have a zero-tolerance policy as it relates to child sexual abuse. Anyone who is accused of this type of behavior is immediately referred to law enforcement and removed from active duties, employment or volunteering. …

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

What is known about each of the 71 accused Harrisburg Diocese clergy

HARRISBURG (PA)
The York Daily Record

August 3, 2018

The Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg released a list of 71 names of clergy members accused of sexually abusing children in cases dating back decades.

The list includes priests, deacons, seminarians and clergy affiliated with an order. The list also includes clergy members from other dioceses and Archdioceses from across the nation.

In the release, the diocese said the list includes those who were accused of abuse of a child since the 1940s, and does not include assessments of credibility or guilt. The church said it was releasing a list of every allegation made in recent decades against clergy in the diocese that had not been proven false.

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.

Bishop asks DFW priest to resign after he wrote intimidating, sex-fueled letter

FORT WORTH (TX)
The Fort Worth Star-Telegram

August 3, 2018

By Nichole Manna

A priest in the Fort Worth Catholic Diocese has resigned after a letter he wrote to another priest in Dallas was deemed intimidating, manipulative and inappropriate by Bishop Michael Olson.

The Rev. Richard Kirkham, former pastor of St. Martin de Porres in Prosper, is also accused of failing to report knowledge he had of alleged sexual misconduct and predatory sexual harassment in the workplace regarding the Dallas-area priest.

Kirkham submitted his resignation letter on June 4, but later tried to rescind it. Olson said he declined Kirkham’s request.

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.

Accused priest in Mangueshi temple molestation cases absconding, say Goa Police

PONDA (INDIA)
The Hindu

August 4, 2018

By Prakash Kamat

The Ponda police are on the lookout for Dhananjay Bhave, the accused booked in Mangueshi temple molestation cases of two girls after Additional District and Sessions Court in Ponda on Saturday rejected two anticipatory bail applications filed by the priest.

He was booked for allegedly molesting two women inside the temple in June this year.

A senior police official in South Goa District headquarters told The Hindu on request of anonymity that the accused Dhananjay Bhave could not be traced, after the court in Ponda, located in South Goa district, cancelled both his applications for anticipatory bail. “He is absconding.”

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.

Fr. Gerald Sheehan, former priest in Southtowns, accused of abuse

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW-TV – 7 Eyewitness News

August 3, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Alleged victim speaks with 7 Eyewitness News

Fr. Gerald P. Sheehan, a deceased priest who served throughout Western New York over a career that spanned 40 years, has been accused of sexually abusing a young girl.

The allegation was recently reported to the diocese by a woman who said she was between 7 and 14 years old and a member of Nativity of Our Lord Church in Orchard Park when she suffered sexual abuse at the hands of the priest in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Sheehan died in 2006.

“This has affected everything in my life,” the woman told 7 Eyewitness News in a phone interview. “It’s really hard to understand why I wasn’t protected and why he was allowed to function.”

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.

Montana plaintiffs vote on $20m sexual abuse settlement

BILLINGS (MT)
Catholic News Agency

August 2, 2018

The Diocese of Great Falls-Billings is awaiting the result of a vote by plaintiffs on whether to accept a $20 million settlement offered to 86 people who say they were sexually abused by 27 priests in the diocese. As a condition of the settlement, the names of those priests would be posted on the diocese’s website for at least ten years.

Litigation began six years ago, and in 2017 the diocese filed for bankruptcy protection as it began negotiating the settlement. If the plaintiffs accept the settlement, funds will come from insurance coverage, parishioner contributions, and the sale of diocesan property, the Billings Gazette reported.

The plaintiffs in the case say there were abused by priests between 1943 and 1993.

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.

Is there a sexual abuse reckoning coming for the Latino church?

UNITED STATES
America Magazine

August 3, 2018

By J.D. Long-García

When he was 12, Dominic told his parents he did not want to be an altar server anymore. He had been serving at a parish in Southern California run by the ex-priest Michael Baker, who would later be convicted of molesting children.

“We need to learn to listen to our children,” Dominic’s mother, Virginia Zamora, told America. “They do have symptoms…. My son didn’t want to go to church again. He hated God.”

Her son was abused for years, she said. The ex-priest would tell her son: “No one is going to believe you. Who’s going to believe you over me?” Ms. Zamora said the revelations about Theodore McCarrick should be a wake-up call for Latinos, whom she described as reluctant to speak against the clergy.

“Hispanics believe it’s their cross to bear, that’s how they live with it,” said Ms. Zamora, who works with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP. “But it’s not our cross. We need to speak up.”

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

Iglesia chilena ante casos de abusos: “Hemos fallado como pastores”

[Chilean Church in cases of abuse: “We have failed as pastors”]

PUNTA DE TRALCA (CHILE)
La Tercera

August 3, 2018

By María José Blanco

Al cierre de la 116ª Asamblea Plenaria de la Conferencia Episcopal, los obispos emitieron una declaración en la cual reconocen que “a veces no reaccionamos a tiempo”.

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.

Sentencias ejecutoriadas condenatorias en ámbito civil y canónico por delitos contra menores de edad cometidos por personas que eran clérigos al momento de la comisión del delito

[Sentences enforceable in civil and canonical cases for crimes against minors committed by people who were clerics at the time of the commission of the crime]

CHILE
Conferencia Episcopal de Chile
[Bishops’ Conference of Chile]

August 3, 2018

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

El listado de religiosos sentenciados por delitos sexuales contra menores publicado por la Iglesia Católica Chilena

[The list of religious sentenced for sexual crimes against minors published by the Chilean Catholic Church]

CHILE
La Tercera

August 3, 2018

Esta tarde, la Conferencia Episcopal subió a su página web un documento en el que aparecen los clérigos que han sido condenados tanto civil como canónicamente. La publicación fue una de las medidas tomadas en la 116° Asamblea Plenaria Episcopal que se realizó en Punta de Tralca.

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.

Carta del Arzobispo a la Arquidiócesis de Santiago

[Letter from Archbishop to the Archdiocese of Santiago]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Archdiocese of Santiago

August 4, 2018

From Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati

[The Archbishop of Santiago, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, sends a message to the diocese expressing: “I consider it prudent not to head our traditional Te Deum for the Homeland of September 18”.]

El Arzobispo de Santiago, cardenal Ricardo Ezzati Andrello, envía un mensaje a la diócesis expresando: “considero prudente no encabezar nuestro tradicional Te Deum por la Patria del 18 de septiembre”.

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

Ezzati se baja del Te Deum

[Ezzati gets off the Te Deum]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
La Tercera

August 4, 2018

By Carla Pía Ruiz

A través de una carta publicada hace solo minutos en la página web del Arzobispado de Santiago, el arzobispo y cardenal Ricardo Ezzati comunicó su decisión de no presidir el tradicional Te Deum, una de las celebraciones más importantes, a la que asisten las mayores autoridades del país.

[Through a letter published just minutes ago on the website of the Archdiocese of Santiago, the archbishop and cardinal Ricardo Ezzati announced his decision not to preside over the traditional Te Deum, one of the most important celebrations, attended by the highest authorities of the country.]

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. sisters demand action on sexual abuse crisis

UNITED STATES
America Magazine

August 1, 2018

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

A group representing 80 percent of Catholic sisters in the United States is adding its support to other sisters around the world who are calling for an end to sexual abuse and harassment of women religious, an issue brought to light most recently by a story written by The Associated Press.

“We join with all those demanding the end of a culture that ignores or tolerates sexual abuse of Catholic sisters or any other adult or minor perpetrated by those in positions of trust in the church community,” the Leadership Conference of Women Religious said in a statement. “Church authorities must take action to end a culture of silence, hold abusers accountable and provide support to those abused. We thank all those Catholic sisters throughout the world who, at great risk, have spoken publicly about their abuse.”

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Letter to the editor: No forgiving an unrepentant church

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Herald

August 3, 2018

By Cyndi MacKenzie (formally Yerrick)

The Vatican seems to choose power over children.

This year marks 25 years since my repressed memories of sexual abuse by Fr. Robert E. Kelley surfaced. With the ongoing news of sexual abusive in many professions at all levels, it seems the awareness of these crimes is front and center. I am never shocked by the news because I know it is possible, and it is not about sex.

The years I spent in therapy, court, sitting across from Mr. Kelley and church lawyers in depositions served their purpose. My perpetrator was held accountable, my discovery led to his re-arrest and ultimate jail time for other brave women he had raped and, above all, I had my voice back, which had been taken from me at age 5.

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Erie Diocese bishop emeritus will no longer challenge release of grand jury report into allegations of sexual abuse by clergy

ERIE (PA)
The Sharon Herald

August 4, 2018

By Melissa Klaric

Bishop Emeritus Donald Trautman has withdrawn his petition to the state Supreme Court redacting his name from the grand jury report chronicling alleged sexual misconduct within six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses.

Trautman said in a statement released Friday evening that he made the decision to retract his petition for the sake of the victims.

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Former Erie Diocese Bishop Trautman Withdraws Appeal to Block Grand Jury Report on Clergy Sex Abuse

ERIE (PA)
WENY-TV

August 3, 2018

[VIDEO]

Former Erie Catholic Diocese Bishop Emeritus Donald Trautman has withdrawn his appeal to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to block the grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse, according to a statement Friday.

Trautman initially filed the appeal because the grand jury report did not give a fair, accurate portrayal of his conduct and actions as bishop of the diocese for 22 years, the statement said.

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Statement of Bishop Emeritus Donald Trautman

ERIE (PA)

August 3, 2018

[See also the court document appended to the statement: Joint Stipulation to Dismiss Appeal]

As he has done his entire career, Bishop Trautman sends his prayerful support to all victims of clergy sexual abuse. Bishop Trautman shares the Grand Jury’s and Attorney General’s disgust with clergy sexual abuse and extends a sincere apology to all who have been harmed by clergy abuse. Bishop Trautman has always endeavored to put the needs and concerns of victims of abuse first and his complete record while in office proves this. Today he did that again, even though doing so required him to sacrifice his own personal rights.

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Erie’s retired Bishop Trautman drops objections to report

ERIE (PA)
GoErie.com

August 4, 2018

By Ed Palattella

He explains why he filed for a stay of grand jury report under initials D.T., and why he withdrew the challenge. Attorney General Shapiro praises decision; his office agreed to clarify parts of the report that pertain to Trautman.

Bishop Donald W. Trautman, the retired leader of the Catholic Diocese of Erie, said a push for accuracy led him to pursue challenges to the grand jury report on clergy sex abuse in the Erie diocese and five other Catholic dioceses statewide.

After the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office agreed to address some of those concerns, Trautman said, he decided to withdraw his objections to the report.

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Bishop Trautman withdraws challenge to grand-jury report

ERIE (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 3, 2018

By Peter Smith

Erie Bishop Emeritus Donald Trautman has ended an effort to block references to him in a forthcoming grand jury report on sexual abuse in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania.

The agreement came after the office of Attorney General Josh Shapiro agreed to stipulate that several of the blistering criticisms in the report — into how the Catholic hierarchy handled predator priests in general — didn’t apply to Bishop Trautman specifically.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court on Friday granted the bishop’s request to withdraw his petition.

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Report: Catholic Church leaders pressured victims, cops over clergy abuse scandal

PENNSYLVANIA
Associated Press via York Daily Record

August 3, 2018

By Mark Scolforo

A court filing made public on Friday included excerpts from the grand jury’s findings on the role of church leaders in the clergy abuse scandal.

A grand jury investigating clergy sex abuse in six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses found that church leaders were more interested in preventing scandal than protecting children, in some cases discouraging victims from going to police or pressuring law enforcement officials to end or avoid investigations, according to a court filing.

The grand jury’s full, nearly 900-page, report is expected to be released in the next two weeks.

But a court filing made public Friday, resolving one of many legal disputes over the report, included excerpts from the grand jury’s findings on the role of church leaders in the clergy abuse scandal.

According to the document, the grand jury concluded that victims were “brushed aside, in every part of the state, by church leaders who preferred to protect the abusers and their institutions above all.”

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Advocates commend, criticize release of sexual abuse allegations in Harrisburg Diocese

PENNSYLVANIA
Sunbury Daily Item

August 2, 2018

By Rick Dandes

Individuals and child advocacy groups on Wednesday reacted sharply to the release of a list of priests and other church officials alleged to have sexually abused minors in the Harrisburg Diocese for decades.

The list of 71, including 37 priests, was made public by diocese Bishop Ronald Gainer on Wednesday ahead of next week’s deadline to redact names from a grand jury report into sex abuse in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania, including Harrisburg.

“The Church could have and should have done this five, 10, 15 years ago,” said Tim Lennon, president of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, a support group of survivors of sexual abuse. Lennon said the release of that many names left him “speechless.

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August 3, 2018

Declaración, Decisiones y Compromisos de los Obispos de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile Conclusiones de la 116ª Asamblea Plenaria Extraordinaria de la CECh.

[Declaration, Decisions and Commitments of the Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Chile]

PUNTA DE TRALCA (CHILE)
Los Obispos de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile
[The Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Chile}

August 3, 2018

“Señor, ¿a quién iremos? Tú tienes palabras de Vida eterna” (Jn 6,68)

Nos hemos reunido los obispos de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile y administradores apostólicos en una asamblea plenaria extraordinaria, para abordar la situación que vive la Iglesia Católica en el país, particularmente a raíz de los graves casos de abuso cometidos por personal consagrado.

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Grand jury report for Pennsylvania abuse cases ordered released by Aug. 14

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter

August 3, 2018

By Mark Dent

Details about sexual abuse by 300-plus priests are expected

After a court challenge from clergy members that has lasted more than a month, the long-awaited grand jury report on child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church throughout Pennsylvania is finally slated to be released.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in a 31-page ruling, stated the report must be made public by Aug. 14 and could become available as early as Aug. 7. It is supposed to detail sexual abuse and cover-ups perpetrated by more than 300 priests.

The report was disseminated three months ago to the six dioceses under investigation —Allentown, Altoona-Johnstown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton — and was expected to be released to the public in late June. But more than a dozen people, mostly clergy members, according to the Supreme Court, had challenged its release. They argued the report would harm their reputations and that they had not been given an adequate opportunity to respond to accusations. Most of the challengers were not permitted to provide testimony to the grand jury.

The challenge from clergy came after officials from the Pennsylvania dioceses said they would not oppose the report’s public release. Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro wrote Pope Francis a letter in late June, indicating two Pennsylvania church leaders, whom he did not name, had orchestrated the challenge.

“Please call on them to ‘follow the path of truth’ you laid out,” Shapiro wrote to Francis, “and permit the healing process to begin.”

Erie Bishop Lawrence Persico, who in April released a list of former Erie clergy implicated in sexual assault allegations, has maintained he did not challenge the report.

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Wuerl presses bishops to greater accountability on abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
Crux

August 3, 2018

By Elise Harris

With much of the US church still reeling from the abuse scandals involving ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, Archbishop of Washington, has said that while he believes the church has made progress, bishops must strive for “greater accountability at the level of the episcopacy” in both addressing and reporting abuse allegations.

“Everyone recognizes that words, good intentions, and new policies, while important, are not enough,” Wuerl said in a pastoral letter, published Aug. 3. “We must not only denounce abuse and take steps to stop abusers. We must remove even the appearance of cover-ups as we investigate and address allegations.”

A practical way to do this, Wuerl said, is to cooperate with the pope and his representatives to ensure that bishops are held accountable. Quoting a recent statement from the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB), Cardinal Daniel Di Nardo, Wuerl said spiritual conversion is needed in order to “restore the right relationship among us and with our Lord.”

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Chile’s national prosecutor requesting Vatican sex abuse files

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Reuters

August 1, 2018

By Aislinn Laing

Chile’s national prosecuting authority said on Wednesday that it had asked the government to submit a formal request to the Vatican for information about nine clergymen and lay workers who have been accused of sexual abuse of children.

The prosecuting authority said in a statement that national prosecutor Jorge Abbott had asked the foreign minister to enact three International Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters requests in relation to cases from the capital Santiago, the city of Valparaiso and the southern region of Araucania.

It said it could submit additional requests in the future.

“The document was sent confidentially through the Unit of International Cooperation and Extraditions of the National Prosecutor’s Office to Chile’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs so that it can send the referral to the Vatican through diplomatic channels,” the prosecutor’s office said.

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Pope will meet abuse survivors as part of his visit to Ireland

IRELAND
The Irish Times

August 2, 2018

By Patsy McGarry

Abuse survivors to gather at Garden of Remembrance during Pope’s visit

The Pope will meet abuse survivors as part of his visit to Ireland later this month, it is understood, though details of when and whom he will meet will not be released in advance to protect the anonymity of survivors.

Sources indicated the meeting would take place a day after the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Dr Diarmuid Martin said “time is very tight” for Pope Francis to meet survivors of church abuse during his visit.

Dr Martin had said he was pushing the Vatican to have the pope meet a cross-section of survivors of industrial schools, Magdalene laundries, mother and baby homes and those who suffered from clerical sex abuse. However, he said Pope Francis will spend only 36 hours in Ireland.

Separately, people abused or hurt by the Catholic Church and those who wish to support them have been invited to take part in a solidarity event at Dublin’s Garden of Remembrance during the visit of Pope Francis.

In a tweet abuse survivor Colm O’Gorman invited people to attend the event as the papal Mass in the Phoenix Park begins at 3pm on Sunday August 26th.

Mr O’Gorman was founder of the One in Four group, which assists abuse survivors.

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Modesto’s CrossPoint Church named in sexual abuse lawsuit

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
The Modesto Bee

August 2, 2018

By Garth Stapley

Modesto’s CrossPoint Community Church is formally sued by a woman who was sexually abused by a youth pastor when she was a teen 30 years ago.

Jennifer Roach, now 47, alleged sexual battery, negligence, failure to supervise the youth pastor, and infliction of emotional distress when she initially sued nine weeks ago. But CrossPoint, formerly First Baptist, was not specifically named because of a legal technicality requiring that a judge sign off on the analysis of a mental health expert.

The analysis remains sealed from public view, but Judge Harold Kahn of San Francisco Superior Court signed the “finding of reasonable and meritorious cause for filing of action” on July 26, granting Roach “leave to designate (defendants) by their true names.”

Roach’s Sacramento attorney, Joseph George, refiled Wednesday using CrossPoint’s current and former names, and including as a defendant former youth pastor Brad Tebbutt. Roach seeks unspecified damages.

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Church music minister accused of sexually abusing teen arrested

BATON ROUGE (LA)
WBRZ

August 3, 2018

A music minister has been accused of abusing a young girl at an area church.

According to the arrest report, Santo Alvarado is accused of repeatedly sexually assaulting the victim between February 1, 2015, and February 25, 2018. Authorities say, Alvarado touched the girl’s chest and private area over her clothing.

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Opinion: The Catholic Church has obliterated its ability to inspire trust

UNITED STATES
The Washington Post

July 31, 2018

By Elizabeth Bruenig

We live in an era of diminished trust and heightened cynicism. It is hard, now, to imagine someone expressing unqualified faith in government, the media, business — or even, for that matter, religious institutions. And the implication of this development is not simply the erosion of trust. It is the increasing difficulty of learning about the world around us, as we lose belief in those who might teach us.

Learning requires risk-taking. It forces us to face what we don’t know with the hope of advancing toward some grasp of it. The smaller the undertaking, the lower the emotional gamble — learning tomorrow’s weather forecast doesn’t entail an interior journey. But learning about the true and important things in life does require trust and dedication and vulnerability — usually under a teacher’s guidance. It is no surprise so many of us come to love the ones who teach us.

Neither is it a surprise, any longer, that some people charged with these roles of profound responsibility abuse them in the cruelest ways. The latest revelation concerns the former archbishop of Washington, Theodore McCarrick, who resigned Saturday from the College of Cardinals. Over several decades, McCarrick is alleged to have sexually abused at least one child and several adult seminarians or young priests, all of whom looked to the charismatic prelate for guidance — moral, vocational, spiritual. Into his den, he drew them.

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Bishops to reveal abuse inquiry response

AUSTRALIA
Australian Associated Press

August 3, 2018

By Megan Neil

Australia’s Catholic bishops will release their response to the child abuse royal commission’s recommendations by the end of August.

Australia’s Catholic bishops will reveal their response to the child abuse royal commission later this month after reaching a “common position” on the inquiry’s calls for reforms.

The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference on Friday committed to releasing its formal response to the five-year inquiry by the end of August.

While it will be up to the Pope and his advisers to accept many of the royal commission’s far-reaching recommendations, the Australian bishops have already rejected its controversial call to break the seal of confession to reveal child sexual abuse.

The bishops held a special meeting in Melbourne on Thursday and Friday to discuss issues raised by the royal commission.

“After two productive days of meetings, the bishops have reached a common position on the royal commission’s recommendations relating to the Catholic Church and its various ministries,” ACBC president Archbishop Mark Coleridge said in a statement.

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Any decision by Pope Francis not to address Church abuse would be “shocking” – Marie Collins

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

August 2, 2018

Abuse survivor and campaigner Marie Collins has suggested that any decision by the Pope not to address those impacted by Church abuse would be “shocking … and completely untenable.”

The former member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors in the Vatican was speaking to Miriam O’Callaghan on RTE radio this morning.

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Msgr Kalin & #MeToo Conservatives

UNITED STATES
The American Conservative

August 1, 2018

By Rod Dreher

[Note: Below is an extraordinary opinion essay sent to me by its author, Peter Mitchell, a conservative Catholic and former priest. Mitchell was ordained in 1999 and laicized in 2017. He says that he “is grateful to be a baptized and practicing Catholic.” — RD]

We Catholics ought to thank God that the abuse committed by former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick against young men under his authority is finally coming to light. As a former priest, however, I fear that the bishops may be tempted to allow McCarrick to become a scapegoat for abusive patterns – sexual and otherwise – running deep within the hierarchical power structure of the institutional Church. My own experiences and those of others in seminary and priesthood lead me to conclude that there have been and continue to be numerous other such instances – and not only on the “liberal” side of the Church but, astonishingly for some, on the “conservative” side as well.

In other words, McCarrick’s unspeakable behavior and the conspiracy of silence that protects and enables it is sadly not some bizarre anomaly or rare exception but actually much closer to the norm than the Catholic faithful may at first be inclined to believe.

The revelations about McCarrick, as well as reports coming from Honduras of an entrenched homosexual network throughout the seminary system there raise some significant further questions. Given that we know that many other people in positions of ecclesiastical power have been aware of McCarrick’s behavior and yet said and did nothing about it, the question must be asked: How many other bishops, vocation directors and seminary formators have engaged or are engaging in similar behavior with young adult men considering vocations to the priesthood, and how many other bishops and priests have agreed to remain silent about it “for the good of the Church”? My own experience as a seminarian and priest indicates that there may be many.

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Popular Minneapolis Rabbi Charged In Underage Sex Sting

Minnesota (MN)
Forward

August 1, 2018

By Ari Feldman

A popular Minneapolis rabbi known for his student outreach work is facing charges stemming from a child sex sting conducted by Minnesota law enforcement in January and early February.

Rabbi Aryeh Cohen was arrested February 1, after exchanging messages with a federal agent posing as a 15-year-old for over a week, according to the criminal complaint filed Tuesday. The complaint alleges that Cohen discussed a sexual liaison with the agent on Grindr, a popular hookup site for men. He was arrested outside the North St. Paul apartment the agent had invited him to as part of the sting. He was charged with two felonies relating to electronic communication about sex with a minor.

Cohen is one of 17 men who have been charged through the sting in recent days.

“I sort of deserve it,” Cohen said unprompted while being taken to the local police department and before being informed of his Miranda rights, according to the complaint.

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GROOMED BY A PREDATOR PRIEST

SAGINAW (MI)
Church Militant

July 31, 2018

Fr. James Bessert of Saginaw accused of preying on vulnerable teen

As part of the #CatholicMeToo campaign, Church Militant has asked adult victims of clerical sexual harassment to write in and share their stories. This is one of the stories.

********

In the early 1980s, when I was 18–19 years old, I lived in the diocece of Saginaw, Michigan and was discerning a vocation to the priesthood. The vocations director (who had a foul mouth, using words like Godd**n and F- bombs, etc. in normal conversation with me) put me in contact with a Fr. James Bessert, whom you have featured in one of your recent stories regarding the diocese of Saginaw and the troubles they have had and are having there.

Father Jim had recently graduated from the seminary, less than a year prior to my being introduced to him. He took me under his wing and showered me with attention, making me feel special. I had come from a troubled background, growing up in a toxic home environment, so the attention from this priest flattered me and I was thrilled to be counted among his friends. We would meet about once a month, eating out, where he would offer me alcohol. He had no problem getting me drunk during our visits.

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Job added for judge overseeing priest abuse report redaction

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 2, 2018

The Supreme Court is adding another job for the special master it appointed to help black out names and other identifying information from a grand jury report into child sexual abuse in six of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses.

The justices said Thursday Judge John Cleland will also determine what material should be redacted from a sealed brief filed by the attorney general’s office.

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How much did the Vatican know about abusive Pa. priests? What the grand jury report could show

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 3, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

Patterns of cover-up and criminality by pedophile priests and their supervisors have been documented in scores of Catholic dioceses worldwide.

Now, ahead of a long-awaited grand jury report into clergy sex abuse across Pennsylvania, a major question remains: Is the 900-page report likely to contain new information about the scope of the problem pervading the church?

Most definitely yes, say some expert observers.

“The shock and surprise of what is revealed is never new, unfortunately,” said Mitchell Garabedian, an attorney who represented hundreds of victims in lawsuits against the Archdiocese of Boston. “Is Rome going to be connected to this in any way shape or form, other than defrock papers, which speak to Rome’s role?”

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‘A year after the 1979 papal visit I was raped by a priest’ – why abuse survivors are gathering during Pope Francis’ visit this month

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Independent

August 2, 2018

By Rachel Farrell

https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/news/a-year-after-the-1979-papal-visit-i-was-raped-by-a-priest-why-abuse-survivors-are-gathering-during-pope-francis-visit-this-month-37179560.html

Colm O’Gorman, Executive Director of Amnesty Ireland, calls on survivors of clerical abuse to gather in solidarity during Pope Francis’ visit at the end of the month

“Over the weekend I was reading an article that asked readers where they were in 1979 when Pope John Paul visited Ireland. I do remember – I was 13. I went to a Christian Brother’s School. I went to Mass in Wexford every Sunday. I went to a Catholic youth group. Everything I did revolved around the church at that time.

“My brother and sister went to see the pope, but I didn’t get to go. At the time, I remember being disappointed that I wasn’t going. It was a huge, huge moment.

“A year later when I was 14, I was raped by a Catholic priest for the first time.”

These are the words of Colm O’Gorman, Executive Director of human rights organisation Amnesty Ireland, and a survivor of clerical abuse.

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Sex abuse claim sparks lawsuit against Catholic diocese in Nova Scotia

HALIFAX (NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA)
CBC

August 2, 2018

By Jack Julian

Legal action against Halifax-Yarmouth diocese could uncover other allegations, lawyer says

A man who says he was sexually abused by a priest as a boy in Halifax in the 1960s has filed notice that he is planning a lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Halifax-Yarmouth.

His lawyer believes if certified by the Nova Scotia Supreme Court, the class-action lawsuit could eventually involve many more sex abuse claimants.

“It seems likely to me that there are hundreds, perhaps many hundreds, of potential victims out there,” lawyer John McKiggan, of the Halifax law firm McKiggan Hebert, said Thursday.

The lead plaintiff in the case is Douglas Champagne, who in court documents claims he was abused by priest George G. Epoch while he was an altar boy at Canadian Martyr’s Church on Inglis Street.

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These 11 clergy named in Harrisburg Diocese report had Lebanon County connections

LEBANON (PA)
Lebanon Daily New

August 2, 2018

By Daniel Walmer

The Diocese of Harrisburg released a long-anticipated list of clergy members accused of sexual crimes on Wednesday, and at least 11 have connections to Lebanon County.

One was principal of Lebanon Catholic High School for a decade. Five served at Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Lebanon, one pastored Holy Spirit Church in Palmyra, and one served as a deacon at St. Paul the Apostle Church in Annville. At least two face accusations stemming from activity that occurred in Lebanon County.

More: What we know about priests, clergy listed by Harrisburg diocese and accused of abuse

Bishop Ronald W. Gainer wrote that he hopes the list will “salve some of these historic wounds with the healing touch of transparency.” However, one survivor’s attorney told the York Daily Record that it is too late for the church to get credit for transparency.

Gainer emphasized that the list is based on allegations, not proof of guilt.

Information about church officials with a connection to Lebanon County, listed below, was gathered from either information released by the diocese or a recent PennLive report, unless otherwise noted.

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What Matt Flynn did to help cover up priest abuse: The Milwaukee Archdiocese’s own files document his involvement

MADISON (WI)
Isthmus

August 1, 2018

By Peter Isely

As survivors of childhood sexual abuse by clergy of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, we are responding to Dave Cieslewicz’s recent Citizen Dave post, “Flynn should stay in the race.” A number of us were sexually assaulted by priests within the Milwaukee Archdiocese during the time Matt Flynn was chief legal counsel to the Archdiocese of Milwaukee, from 1989-2004.

We have suffered together. We have sought healing together. And we have fought for the truth together. Our community includes three generations of survivors. Our oldest survivor is 94; the youngest is 16. Both were raped or assaulted between the ages of 5 and 7. In both cases, the priests had multiple, documented notifications or warnings to the archdiocese about their conduct, extending from 1936 to 2014.

Cieslewicz’s column in support of Matt Flynn remaining in the governor’s race has forced on us again the burden of having to speak the truth about the terrible things that happened to us and how it was covered up by church officials with Flynn’s now well-documented help.

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A huge clergy abuse probe is about to go public. Could Pa.’s attorney general be on the verge of slaying Goliath?

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Inquirer

August 2, 2018

By Maria Panaritis

http://www.philly.com/philly/columnists/maria-panaritis/pennsylvania-grand-jury-report-clergy-abuse-catholic-church-attorney-general-josh-shapiro-maria-panaritis-20180801.html

Photo caption: The Reverend John T. Sweeney, center, pleaded guilty Tuesday in Westmoreland County to sexually abusing a fourth grader. The state attorney general is days away from releasing an investigative report about 300 alleged Catholic clergy abusers just like him across Pennsylvania. And yet, only a few have ever faced criminal charges through the years in this state.

Josh Shapiro is delivering a few lessons this week on the power of the people vs. the power of people with deep pockets.

They’re more like jabs, and they are coming from Pennsylvania’s attorney general ahead of the release of a criminal investigative report, days away, that will disclose clergy abuse by more than 300 predator priests at six of Pennsylvania’s eight Catholic dioceses.

Shapiro’s office over the last year has taken a beating behind closed doors from church-affiliated lawyers who have sought to kill or neuter the report. Shapiro seems willing now, as the finish line approaches, to slap back at them.

It’s about time.

It began on Tuesday, when Shapiro held a news conference to announce a conviction against creep-in-a-collar John T. Sweeney. The priest from Westmoreland County pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a 10-year-old boy who, now in his 30s, serves in the U.S. Coast Guard.

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In Pennsylvania, Shadow of Secrecy Lifting from Decades of Abuse by Priests

WASHINGTON (DC)
NPR

August 2, 2018

By Camila Domonoske

For decades, the Catholic Church has grappled with sexual abuse of children by priests — through quiet reassignments and headline-grabbing scandals, internal investigations and public criminal charges, simmering controversies and settlements with survivors.

Now, some parishes in Pennsylvania are reckoning with the problem through an unusual dose of transparency.

In 2016, Pennsylvania’s attorney general launched a grand jury investigation, into allegations of sexual abuse in six of the state’s eight dioceses.

The investigation was conducted under “the umbrella of secrecy,” court documents note. It came closely after a 2016 grand jury investigation that found evidence that two bishops in the Altoona-Johnstown diocese covered up sexual abuse by dozens of church leaders.

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‘Suddenly I don’t feel like I’m going to Hell’: Priest abuse victim reacts to diocese report

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 2, 2018

By Brandie Kessler

https://www.ydr.com/story/news/2018/08/02/harrisburg-catholic-diocese-clergy-priest-abuse-victim-learns-others-also-accused-priest-guy-marsico/885015002/

He thought perhaps he was the priest’s only victim. Now the York, Pa., man knows others also accused Father Guy Marsico.

For decades, Todd Frey wondered if he was the only child to suffer sexual abuse at the hands of his priest.

“Is there by chance another one? One of my classmates?” Frey asked himself and others over the years. “I’ve really battled with this in ways you can’t imagine.”

On Wednesday, when Frey learned that the Diocese of Harrisburg had released the names of 71 priests and other clergy, he finally got an answer.

On the list, was the name of the priest Frey says abused him in York in the early 1980s:

Guy Marsico.

Next to Marsico’s name, a brief description of the allegations against him:

Multiple.

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Catholic sex abuse scandal stretches to South Bend, drawing in Bishop Rhoades, Notre Dame

SOUTH BEND (IN)
South Bend Tribune

August 3, 2018

By Caleb Bauer

The University of Notre Dame announced Thursday that it will not immediately revoke the honorary degree conferred to Catholic Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who recently resigned his position in the College of Cardinals after allegations surfaced that he sexually abused children and adults.

In late June, McCarrick was removed from public ministry, and last week Pope Francis ordered McCarrick to “observe a life of prayer and penance in seclusion,” after a New York archdiocese review board found allegations against him to be “credible and substantiated.” McCarrick is still yet to be tried in a canonical trial in Rome, but is accused of sexually abusing a teenage altar boy 47 years ago while serving as a priest in New York, abusing another 11-year-old boy and continuing the abuse for 20 years and sexually harassing and touching men seeking to become priests.

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Pope Francis urged to address failures to reform abuse policy

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
RTÉ

August 2, 2018

A prominent survivor of clerical child sexual abuse, Marie Collins, has reacted strongly to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin’s statement that Pope Francis may not get time to meet victims during his visit here later this month.

The former Vatican adviser urged the pontiff not simply to meet vicitms’ representatives but also address his failures to reform Church policy in the area.

Pope Francis is to visit Ireland on 25 and 26 August to attend the Catholic World Meeting of Families in Dublin and to visit Knock Shrine in Co Mayo.

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Pope Francis urged to address failures to reform abuse policy

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
RTÉ

August 2, 2018

A prominent survivor of clerical child sexual abuse, Marie Collins, has reacted strongly to Archbishop Diarmuid Martin’s statement that Pope Francis may not get time to meet victims during his visit here later this month.

The former Vatican adviser urged the pontiff not simply to meet vicitms’ representatives but also address his failures to reform Church policy in the area.

Pope Francis is to visit Ireland on 25 and 26 August to attend the Catholic World Meeting of Families in Dublin and to visit Knock Shrine in Co Mayo.

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Even before recent revelations, U.S. Catholics gave Pope Francis declining ratings on sex abuse scandal

UNITED STATES
Pew Research Center

August 2, 2018

By Michael Lipka

The long-simmering Catholic Church sex abuse scandal has been back in the headlines following new allegations against Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, D.C., who resigned from the College of Cardinals last weekend. Pope Francis accepted the resignation — reportedly making McCarrick the first cardinal in church history to resign over allegations of sexual abuse. In addition, some church officials have been accused of having long known about at least some of the allegations against McCarrick.

Even before news stories about McCarrick came to light in recent weeks, U.S. Catholics were increasingly unhappy with the church’s handling of the sex abuse scandal. A January 2018 Pew Research Center survey found that just 45% of U.S. Catholics said Pope Francis is doing an “excellent” (13%) or “good” (33%) job addressing the crisis, down from 55% who said this in 2015, the last time the question was asked. The same recent survey also found that 46% of American Catholics said he is doing only a “fair” (27%) or “poor” (19%) job handling the sex abuse scandal, up from 34% three years prior.

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In wake of McCarrick sex scandal, NJ woman recounts alleged abuse by another former Metuchen Diocese priest

BRIDGEWATER (NJ)
Bridgewater Courier News / mycentraljersey.com

August 1, 2018

By Nick Muscavage

https://www.mycentraljersey.com/story/news/local/faith/2018/08/01/cardinal-theodore-mccarrick-sexual-abuse-scandal-mark-dolak/830121002/

Susan Bisaha Says She Was Molested by a Former Priest in the Diocese of Metuchen While Theodore McCarrick Was Bishop

When Susan Bisaha heard Cardinal Theodore McCarrick was suspended for sexual abuse allegations, she knew what she had to do: Share her story.

Bisaha, a former Fords resident and Diocese of Metuchen congregant, said she was sexually abused by a priest in Central Jersey for nearly a decade.

Some of the instances of alleged abuse, which she said numbered more than 100, occurred in a room down the hall from McCarrick in the rectory of St. Francis of Assisi in Metuchen, where he was serving as bishop at the time.

“My story dates back to 1979,” Bisaha said. “From 1979 to 1987 I was molested by Rev. Mark Dolak.”

Bisaha, born in 1966, was 13 when the alleged abuse began. It wouldn’t come to an end until she was in her early 20s, she said.

“At the time McCarrick was the Bishop of Metuchen, he was in the same residence as Dolak,” Bisaha said. “There were many, many times where we would walk right past the bishop’s room and get snuck in.”

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August 2, 2018

Martín Paz, ex cura salteño separado de la Iglesia por embarazar a una adolescente, se pronunció en contra del aborto

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Cuarto [Salta, Argentina]

August 2, 2018

Read original article

Ayer posó con una funcionaria municipal para condenar la legalización. Su nombre aparece en la lista de miembros de la Iglesia denunciados por abusos desde 2002.

Un nuevo escándalo podría sumar otro dolor de cabeza a la Iglesia. Se trata del caso del ex sacerdote Martín Paz, quien en 2003 se desempeñaba en la parroquia de La Merced y fue separado de su cargodespués de embarazar a una adolescente catamarqueña. Ayer, Paz, actual vicepresidente de la Fundación Padre Ernesto Martearena y periodista en Radio 10 de nuestra ciudad, posó junto a otras integrantes de distintas ONG que firmaron una solicitada en contra de la legalización del aborto.

Ayer, en la Fundación HOPE, Paz participó de una reunión de representantes de once organizaciones que se proclamaron en contra del aborto legal. Entre ellas se encontraba Guadalupe Colque, secretaria de Acción Social de la Municipalidad de Salta.

CUARTO se comunicó este jueves con Paz, quien admitió ser el religioso separado. Aseguró que la adolescente «no era una menor, tenía 18 años» y se negó a brindar muchos detalles. «La joven sufrió un aborto espontaneo pero yo me iba a hacer cargo de todo», aclaró.

«No voy a hablar al respecto porque siempre me mantuve en silencio. Me sometí a las reglas de la Iglesia y acepté mi retiro de ella», agregó.

Paz figura en la lista que publicó Télam el año pasado como uno de los 62 integrantes de la Iglesia argentina denunciados por abuso sexual desde 2002. Allí se asegura que el ex cura fue separado «por abusar en Catamarca de una chica de 17 años» y que «hubo denuncia penal pero no fue investigado».

En 2003, la misma agencia nacional de noticias aseguraba que cuando se desató el escándalo un grupo de vecinos rodeó el templo y la casa parroquial de La Merced «e intentó tomar justicia a mano propia por la actitud del sacerdote, que ya tenía antecedentes negativos por cuestiones económicas y mercantilistas«.

«Es de dominio público, incluso a través de los medios, que el padre Martín Paz tuvo dos problemas anteriores en La Merced, pero por temas económicos. Oportunamente el arzobispo habló con él, pero lo que está pasando ahora, ya pasa de castaño oscuro, como se dice«, aseguraba por entonces el vicario general de la Arquidiócesis de Salta, monseñor Dante Bernacki, quien agregaba: «Sé que hay una denuncia penal interpuesta por el padre de la joven pero no sé muy bien en qué términos se realizó».

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Sex abuse survivors react to release of list of accused priests

HARRISBURG (PA)
WGAL News 8

August 1, 2018

Survivors of sex abuse in the Catholic Church are reacting to the Harrisburg diocese’s decision to release a list of names of priests and others who have been accused of sexual abuse.

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Harrisburg Diocese releases list of accused priests, lifts confidentiality agreements

HARRISBURG (PA)
WGAL News 8

August 2, 2018

Harrisburg Diocese Bishop Ronald Gainer announced the release of vast amounts of information, previously withheld from the public, having to do with the sexual abuse of children by priests.

Among the information being released are the names of 71 priests, deacons and others within the church who were accused of abuse since the 1940s. Gainer said he thought it was appropriate to release the names, but emphasized that these are just accusations. The list has been posted on a new website just launched by the diocese on Wednesday.

The list says in part:

“The following list does not contain those cases where the accusation was deemed not substantiated, meaning it was an accusation after which, after review by law enforcement or Diocesan reviewers, was not supported by sufficient evidence to establish the probability that the accused cleric or seminarian committed sexual abuse of a child.”

Gainer also announced that the diocese will waive any confidentiality rights that were reached as part of civil settlements. He said they were being waived because many victims felt constrained by those agreements.

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Harrisburg Diocese identifies 71 alleged sex abusers, cites failure of bishops

HARRISBURG (PA)
CBS/AP

August 1, 2018

The Roman Catholic diocese of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, has put out a list of 71 priests and others in the church accused of sexually abusing children in cases going back decades. Bishop Ron Gainer issued a public apology Wednesday for the abuse and said the church’s bishops shared the blame, having responded inadequately to all the allegations.

As a result, the name of every bishop since 1947 will be removed from church facilities in the diocese.

The Harrisburg Diocese issued its findings just days after the state Supreme Court said a nearly 900-page grand jury report on sex abuse in six dioceses, including Harrisburg, can be made public later this month.

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Harrisburg Diocese releases names of priests accused of child sex abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Morning Call

August 1, 2018

By Steve Esack

Harrisburg Diocese Bishop Ronald Gainer on Wednesday made public the names of 71 priests and other Catholic officials accused of child sex abuse.

The Allentown Diocese plans to soon follow suit.

Gainer stressed that Harrisburg’s list represents only accusations — by making the names public, the diocese is not claiming anyone to be guilty.

The list includes 37 priests, three deacons, six seminarians, nine clergy of other dioceses and 16 from other Catholic religious orders. It excludes cases the diocese found unsubstantiated and does not provide an estimated number of abuse victims.

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Diocese outlines two-step process for reporting child sexual abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By Hope Stephan

In a lengthy statement released in conjunction with a news conference this morning, Bishop Ronald Gainer said that after reviewing its historic files, the Harrisburg diocese is releasing those child sexual abuse survivors who entered into settlement agreements with the diocese that contained confidentiality clauses from that legal commitment.

Gainer on Wednesday also released the names of 71 people who have been accused of allegations of child sex crimes, just weeks ahead of a grand jury report into clergy sex abuse in the Catholic Church in Pennsylvania.

“I take this step about confidentiality so that the survivors can feel free to tell their stories to whomever and whenever they wish,” Gainer said. “I hope that this step will further aid those survivors, and perhaps others, in their path to healing.”

The church’s new website, www.youthprotectionhbg.com, also contains information on how to report child sexual abuse, contact information for the Victim Assistance Office and detailed information on how the church has confronted this issue.

There are two steps to making a complaint, Gainer emphasized:

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Clergy abuse victim-turned-lawmaker calls for reforms in and out of Catholic Church

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By Wallace McKelvey

The Diocese of Harrisburg’s decision to release a list of 71 priests accused of child sex crimes, which may be a partial accounting, was a good start but further reforms are needed within the Catholic Church and the state at large, state Rep. Mark Rozzi said Wednesday.

“One thing I know about predators is they don’t stop abusing children–they look for their next victim,” said Rozzi, a Berks County Democrat who was raped by a Catholic priest at 13 years old. “Those predator priests are still out there and they could still be abusing your child.”

Rozzi has fought to reform the state’s child sex crimes statutes. He’s introduced legislation that would expand the statute of limitations in order to give past and future victims greater legal recourse against predators.

“We want the parents of our community to know that, for full transparency, the church needs to release the full list of names,” he said, during an interview in the Capitol Rotunda.

Of the 71 names released on Wednesday, 37 were priests of the Diocese of Harrisburg, three were deacons of the diocese, six were seminarians, nine were priests from other dioceses, and 16 were from religious communities. None of the individuals on the list are currently in ministry or in service in the diocese.

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Bishop says Catholic Church suffers from ‘crisis of sexual morality’

UNITED STATES
CNN

August 1, 2018

By Daniel Burke

The sexual abuse accusations against a prominent American archbishop reveal a “grievous moral failure” within the Catholic Church, the president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops said on Tuesday.

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the Catholic bishops conference, also said the conference “will pursue the many questions” about the accusations against Archbishop Theodore McCarrick “to the full extent of its authority.”

“Our Church is suffering from a crisis of sexual morality,” DiNardo said. “The way forward must involve learning from past sins.”

DiNardo’s statement comes as the Catholic Church, including Pope Francis, is facing a quickly escalating sexual abuse scandal that has ensnared top church leaders on several continents.

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Pennsylvania Catholic diocese names former Memphis priest in sexual abuse list

HARRISBURG (PA)
York Daily Record

August 1, 2018

By Brandie Kessler and Ed Mahon

The Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, has released a list of more than 70 of its clergy members, one a former Memphis priest, accused of sexually abusing or having inappropriate contact with children in cases dating back decades.

Walter Emala, who died in 2008 in Baltimore, is cited on the list for allegations of inappropriate behavior, such as kissing.

Church files in the Memphis Catholic Diocese indicate decades of sexual abuse allegations against Emala dating to the 1960s in Nashville-Memphis and Baltimore dioceses. Memphis was part of the Nashville diocese prior to 1970.

Emala in 1967 was accused of taking boys on trips and sleeping with them in the nude, and at other times taking boys to adult movies. He was also accused of child abuse in the Baltimore Archdiocese.

In 2004, Emala was accused of sexual misconduct with minors at his parish near his then-Pennsylvania diocese in Harrisburg. He was reported to the district attorney’s office and was warned to stay out of the Harrisburg diocese.

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Child abuse prevention expert calls on Catholics for ‘zero tolerance’ of sexual abuse in the church

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By Stephanie Sadowski

The Diocese of Harrisburg’s decision to name 71 priests and personnel accused of child sexual abuse since 1940 goes a long way toward reconciling the actions and statements on treatment of both clergy and victims, according to a state leader in child abuse prevention.

“Despite the cost, the Church now must focus on being an example of zero tolerance for the maltreatment of children and that requires a level of honesty and transparency not before demonstrated by this institution,” Angela M. Liddle, president and CEO of Pennsylvania Family Support Alliance, said in a statement Wednesday.

The group also called for other Pennsylvania dioceses to take steps toward transparency.

“PFSA views the release of names today, along with a public apology to those who were sexually abused as children, and those who have been faithful to the Catholic Church, as one step in realigning the Church’s behavior with their verbal commitment of care and concern for children and families.

“PFSA calls upon each diocese in Pennsylvania to be vigilant with obtaining child abuse clearance on staff and volunteers, establishing strong child protection policies that limit one adult with one child, and comprehensive training for leadership, staff, and volunteers on child abuse identification and reporting,” Liddle said.

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‘Catholics embrace the need to make this right for survivors,’ Pa. Catholic Conference says

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By Stephanie Sadowski

The spokeswoman of the Pennsylvania Catholic Conference called the Diocese of Harrisburg’s decision to name the 71 priests and personnel accused of child sexual abuse “another sobering moment” and encouraged victims to report abuse immediately.

It also shows a commitment to “make this right,” said Amy Hill.

The Pennsylvania Catholic Conference is the public affairs arm of the Catholic bishops and the Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania.

“Today is another sobering moment that further reveals the tragedy that has occurred. It also shows that Catholics embrace the need to make this right for survivors,” Ms. Hill said in a statement on Wednesday.

“Every diocese in Pennsylvania has resources available to help survivors and their families pay for counselors and treatment programs of their choice or other support necessary for healing. We encourage anyone who has been abused to report it immediately and seek help by calling the toll-free Pennsylvania ChildLine number at 800-932-0313 or their local law enforcement.”

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Harrisburg Catholic diocese names 71 priests, clergy accused of abuse. See the list here

Harrisburg (PA)
York Daily Record

August 1, 2018

By Anthony J. Machcinski and Ed Mahon

The Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg released a list of 71 names of clergy members accused of sexually abusing children in cases dating back decades.

The list includes priests, deacons, seminarians and clergy affiliated with an order. The list also includes clergy members from other dioceses and Archdioceses from across the nation.

In the release, the diocese said the list includes those who were accused of abuse of a child since the 1940s, and does not include assessments of credibility or guilt. The church said it was releasing a list of every allegation made in recent decades against clergy in the diocese that had not been proven false.

Of the 71 names, 37 were priests in the Diocese of Harrisburg, three were deacons of the diocese, six were seminarians of the diocese, nine were clergy of other dioceses and 16 were from religious communities.

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Harrisburg Catholic diocese names priests who have been accused of sexual abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
York Daily Record

August 1, 2018

By Brandie Kessler

A Roman Catholic diocese in Pennsylvania released a list Wednesday of more than 70 of its clergy members accused of sexually abusing children in cases dating back decades.

Bishop Ronald Gainer, of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg, also announced sweeping changes to confidentiality policies and said the names of any men accused of such crimes would be removed from any place of honor in the diocese.

These changes pertain only to the Harrisburg diocese, which covers much of central Pennsylvania.

Gainer apologized profusely for abuses that occurred over many years. He said the church was releasing a list of every allegation made in recent decades against clergy in the diocese that had not been proven false.

Gainer said that when he became bishop in 2014, the diocese began working to verify the status of priests going back to the 1940s. He said the diocese wanted to release this list before, but the Pennsylvania attorney general’s office asked them not to, so as not to interfere with its investigation of Catholic clergy abuses across the state.

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Unprecedented’ removal of bishops’ names signals ‘they have all been culpable’

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

Over the past decade, the Cardinal Keeler Conference Center, named after the seventh bishop of the Diocese of Harrisburg, has been the site of youth council dinners, seminarian family picnics, World Youth Day events, even funerals.

Now the legacy of Cardinal William H. Keeler, who went on to become Archbishop of Baltimore, is coming to an abrupt end.

On Wednesday, Harrisburg Bishop Ronald Gainer ordered the names of all bishops who preceeded him since 1947 be removed from all diocesan properties, saying they had failed to protect children from sexual predators.

“That is a gutsy move,” said Charles Zech, director of Villanova University’s Center for Church Management and Business Ethics. “I commend him for stepping forward and showing that the responsibility, the real problem lies with church leadership.

“This is unprecedented. You hear it here and there when someone has been found to not have lived the perfect life, but to remove all of the names is is unprecedented. I applaud him for recognizing that they all have been culpable.”

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Harrisburg diocese withdrawal of priest honors fails to impress accusers

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By David Wenner

The leader of the Harrisburg Diocese considers it a significant action, and one he expects some will view as going too far. But it doesn’t go far enough for Shaun Dougherty, who was sexually abused by a priest as a child.

“Removing the names of priests from buildings is not going to remove the memories from my mind,” Dougherty said on Wednesday.

Dougherty was reacting to the announcement by Bishop Ronald Gainer that names of all bishops dating back to 1947 will be removed from buildings, halls and rooms within the diocese. While many of those bishops haven’t been accused of a crime, the move is intended as an acknowledgment of their failure to protect children from sexual abuse.

Rather than remove names from buildings, Dougherty said, Gainer should withdraw lobbyists working against a proposed Pennsylvania bill that would lift the statue of limitations for criminal and civil charges against priests accused of sexual assaults.

Also on Wednesday, Gainer released names of 71 Harrisburg Diocese priests and other clergy who have been accused of child abuse.

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71 names of clergy accused of child sex abuse in Harrisburg diocese released

HARRISBURG (PA)
Penn Live

August 1, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

In an unprecedented and stunning move, the head of the Diocese of Harrisburg on Wednesday ordered the removal from diocesan property the names of all former diocesan bishops who over the decades failed to protect children from sexually predatory priests.

Just weeks ahead of a bombshell report into clergy sex abuse in the Catholic Church in Pennsylvania, Bishop Ronald Gainer on Wednesday said that all names of bishops dating back to 1947 will be removed from buildings, halls and rooms.

Gainer said “anyone accused of sexual misconduct will have his name removed from any place of honor” throughout the diocese.

“The decision to remove names of bishops and clerics may prove to be controversial, but as bishops, I strongly believe that leaders of the diocese must hold themselves to a higher standard and must yield honorary symbols in the interest of healing.”

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Pennsylvania Diocese Orders Removal of Former Bishops’ Names From Church Buildings

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

August 1, 2018

By Laurie Goodstein

[See the front page.]

Anticipating the release of a Pennsylvania grand jury report exposing decades of mishandled sexual abuse cases in the Roman Catholic Church, the bishop of Harrisburg on Wednesday ordered that the names of former bishops dating to the 1940s be stripped from church buildings.

This was the first time a bishop has conducted such a sweeping purge of his predecessors’ legacies, although the names of individual bishops and priests involved in sexual abuse scandals have been excised from church buildings in other dioceses.

Harrisburg is among six dioceses in a heavily Catholic region of Pennsylvania that are bracing for the release of what is expected to be a devastating grand jury report exposing more than 300 priests accused of sexual abuse over seven decades, as well as the bishops who failed to remove them from the ministry. The Harrisburg and Greensburg dioceses had tried last year to end the grand jury’s investigation, according to court records reported by The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

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A Message from Bishop Ronald W. Gainer

HARRISBURG (PA)
Diocese of Harrisburg

August 1, 2018

By Bishop Ronald W. Gainer

[Includes a link to the list.]

The fact that the evil of child sex abuse has occurred in our Church causes all of us great sadness, for once again we come face-to-face with the horror that innocent children were the victims of egregious crimes committed against them. Many of those victimized as children continue, as survivors, to suffer from the harm they experienced. In my own name, and in the name of the Church of Harrisburg, I ask for forgiveness for the sinfulness of those who have committed these crimes and helped create an environment that tolerated or accepted this behavior.

As we willingly acknowledge our sinfulness, as we humbly seek the forgiveness of those who have been wronged, the healing will come to the entire Church when we renew our commitment each day to respond to the call to holiness we all share and to the mission of our Church entrusted to us by the Lord Jesus himself.

While we seek forgiveness in the name of our Church, we encourage survivors to come forward so that their healing may begin.

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Statement from Bishop Gainer on Child Sexual Abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
Diocese of Harrisburg

August 1, 2018

By Bishop Ronald W. Gainer

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg released information from their own internal investigation on child sex abuse. Bishop Ronald W. Gainer released the following statement:

“With the Grand Jury investigation concluded and the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ordering a stay of the Grand Jury’s full report pending further review, the Diocese of Harrisburg chose to release our own list of clergy and seminarians who were accused of sexual abuse of minors as we felt it was critical to get this information out to the public and our parishioners as soon as possible. The information we are releasing today is the result of a great deal of work by outside counsel and professional investigators. I wish to emphasize that this list is a list of accusations; we did not make assessments of credibility or guilt in creating this list.

“I read the information used to create this list with great sadness, for once again we come face-to-face with the horror that innocent children were the victims of egregious acts committed against them. I am saddened because I know that behind every story is the face of a child precious in God’s sight; a child who has been wounded by the sins of those who should have known better.

“I acknowledge the sinfulness of those who have harmed these survivors, as well as the action and inaction of those in church leadership who failed to respond to you
appropriately and justly.

“In my own name, and in the name of the Diocesan Church of Harrisburg, I express our profound sorrow and apologize to the survivors of child sex abuse, the Catholic faithful and the general public for the abuses that took place and for those Church officials who failed to protect children.

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Suspenden a sacerdote y a un capellán de colegio en Chillán por presuntos abusos sexuales

CHILE
BioBioChile

July 31, 2018

[Priest and school chaplain suspended over sex abuse allegations]

By Manuel Cabrera and Wilson Ponce

El sacerdote Renato Toro Medina y al capellán de un colegio de Chillán, Héctor Bravo, fueron suspendidos por acusaciones de presuntos abusos sexuales.

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Fiscal Nacional oficia al Vaticano para que entregue información por casos de abuso sexual cometidos por religiosos

CHILE
La Tercera

August 1, 2018

[National prosecutor requests information from Vatican related to sexual abuse in Church]

By Claudia Soto

El fiscal nacional, Jorge Abbott, envió hoy un oficio al Vaticano para solicitar la información contenida en los expedientes canónicos que se han realizado en el marco de la investigación por casos de abuso sexual cometidos por religiosos y miembros de la Iglesia Católica chilena.

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Obispos chilenos dicen desconocer destrucción de documentos sobre abusos a menores

CHILE
La Tercera

August 1, 2018

[Chilean bishops say they do not know about document destruction in sex abuse scandal]

By EFE [news agency]

Los obispos chilenos reunidos en una asamblea extraordinaria de la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile en la localidad costera de Punta de Tralca, aseguraron hoy desconocer una eventual destrucción de documentos sobre abusos sexuales cometidos por sacerdotes a menores.

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Gobierno recibirá a sobrevivientes de abusos sexuales por parte de la Iglesia

CHILE
La Tercera

August 1, 2018

[Government representative will meet with survivors of Church sexual abuse]

By Fiorella Aste

La ministra vocera de gobierno, Cecilia Pérez, tendrá un encuentro en La Moneda con la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Sexual Eclesiástico de Chile. Representantes de la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Chile, serán recibidos este viernes a las 11.00 horas por la ministra Secretaria General de Gobierno, Cecilia Pérez.

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Nacional Defensoría Penal Pública representará a nueve sacerdotes de “La Cofradía”

CHILE
La Tercera

August 1, 2018

[Public Criminal Defense Office will represent nine priests of “La Cofradía”]

By L. Zapata and MJ Blanco

Asimismo, aseguró que el objetivo de la Iglesia es ayudar a que las víctimas tengan acceso a apoyo jurídico. Vocero de la Conferencia Episcopal dijo que defensa de la mayoría de los presbíteros indagados es pagada por sus familiares. Una vez que se hizo público el llamado caso de “La Familia” o “Cofradía” de Rancagua en mayo pasado, dando cuenta de un grupo de 14 sacerdotes de la Región de O’Higgins que estarían presuntamente vinculados a abusos sexuales, la fiscalía ha realizado una serie de pasos para aclarar estos hechos.

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August 1, 2018

Diócesis de Temuco opta por estrategia a la transparencia: da a conocer los casos de sacerdotes involucrados en abusos sexuales

CHILE
El Mostrador

June 18, 2018

[Diocese of Temuco opts for transparency strategy: reveals cases of priests involved in sexual abuse]

A través de un comunicado, la Diócesis de Temuco hizo públicos los tres casos más bullados de sacerdotes involucrados en casos de abuso sexual contra menores.

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Confirman nuevas denuncias por abuso sexual en contra de sacerdotes de Puerto Montt

CHILE
BioBio Chile

July 31, 2018

[Confirmed new allegations of sexual abuse against priests of Puerto Montt]

By Nicole Briones and Robinson Cardenas

Confirman nuevas denuncias por presuntos abusos sexuales que involucran a sacerdotes de la región de Los Lagos. El fiscal Marcelo Sambucetti manifestó que hay nuevos antecedentes entregados a la Fiscalía respecto de los hechos constitutivos de delitos y que involucrarían a personas pertenecientes a la Iglesia Católica.

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