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.

June 2, 2018

Vatican at crossroads in handling clergy sexual abuse cases

ROME
Los Angeles Times

June 1, 2018

By Tom Kington

Pope Francis did an about-face last month and denounced the widespread cover-up of sexual abuse by priests in Chile, prompting all 34 of the country’s bishops to offer their resignations.

He has said he was not receiving “truthful and balanced” information from the bishops, and on Thursday he released a letter to all Chileans declaring the Roman Catholic Church would “never again” tolerate “the culture of abuse and the system of cover-up that allows it to perpetuate.”

The Vatican also announced the pope was sending a team of prelates to Chile to “advance the process of reparation and healing of abuse victims.”

But Francis has not revealed his plans for the church officials who ignored or actively covered up the 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.

Bingo anyone? Victims of clergy sex abuse make light of matters with a board game

PENNSYLVANIA
Penn Live

May 31, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

Comedy comes from the darkest places.

Turns out that somewhere between the enduring trauma of having been sexually abused as a child by a priest and their fight for legislative reform to laws that would permit them legal recourse, victims of clergy sex abuse can make some light of their experience.

Just weeks away from the release of the findings of a grand jury investigation into child sex abuse across Pennsylvania’s Catholic communities, three survivors of clergy sex abuse have collaborated to produce a game that takes a light-hearted approach to the topic.

The game is called Bishop’s Response Bingo, and, as the name suggests, the game is built around the concept of the bingo strategy: Each of the slots in the 25-square grid offers a possible response from a church bishop to the findings of the investigation.

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

Erie priest waives hearing on sex abuse charges

ERIE (PA)
Trib Live

May 31, 2018

Debra Erdley

A former Catholic priest from the Erie Diocese is headed to trial on charges that he sexually abused two boys over a period of years.

The Rev. David Poulson, 64, of Oil City, is one of two priests– one each from the Greensburg and Erie dioceses– facing charges stemming from a statewide grand jury probe of allegations of sexual abuse in six Catholic dioceses across the state.

A spokesman for the Pennsylvania Attorney General’s office said Poulson, formerly a priest in the Erie Diocese, waived his right to a preliminary hearing in Brookville on Thursday on charges that he repeatedly sexually abused two boys in a remote Jefferson County cabin.

Bail remained at 10 percent of $300,000 for the former priest who has been held in the Jefferson County Jail since his arrest last month.

Poulson was a Catholic priest in the Erie diocese for four decades until earlier this year. He was charged with indecent assault, endangering the welfare of children and corruption of minors. Three of those counts are felonies. The charges were recommended by a statewide investigating grand jury.

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.

Read the Mormon church’s presentation on when clergy should report child abuse

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
The Salt Lake Tribune

June 1, 2018

By Nate Carlisle

Full statement on behalf of the Utah-based faith is included.

A prosecutor in Mohave County, Ariz., has filed a bar complaint against a lawyer representing The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The complaint accuses the attorney of practicing in Arizona without a license by telling an LDS bishop he did not need to report child sexual abuse.

The following is an excerpt from the complaint and its exhibits, including slides from a presentation from the Salt Lake City-based law firm of Kirton McConkie on when LDS clergy should report child abuse in Arizona. Also below is a full statement from a Phoenix attorney representing the LDS Church and Kirton McConkie.

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.

More secular oversight needed to curtail sexual abuse by priests: Letter

POUGHKEEPSIE (NY)
Poughkeepsie Journal

June 2, 2018

This letter is in response to the April 7 Poughkeepsie Journal story, “Report: NY Archdiocese ‘secretive’ on priest abuse.”

The non-profit watchdog group BishopAccountability.Org said New York’s Archdiocese is one of the “most secretive” bishoprics in the nation when it comes to exposing sexual abuse by priest.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese called the statement “unreliable and scurrilous.”

Yet sexual abuse allegations involving clergy continue to make headlines and critics say the Archdiocese is often parochial and unwilling to reveal the identity of faithless priests fearing widespread clergy agitation, humiliation and exposure to hostile litigation.

Ecclesiastical misconduct, which doesn’t rise to criminality, is even more secretive and rarely defrocking or loss of the clerical state, commonly called laicization, for consensual sexual indiscretions or financial improprieties 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.

Sacred Heart has history of sex abuse

NASHUA (NH)
Nashua Telegraph

June 1, 2018

By Damien Fisher

A review of Associated Press articles by The Telegraph indicates the Roman Catholic religious order behind Bishop Guertin High School, named in a recently filed sexual abuse lawsuit, is linked to a long history of sexual abuse victims in New Hampshire.

“They did a lot of work and a lot of damage in New Hampshire,” said Terry McKiernan with the nonprofit Bishop-Accountability.org, which tracks cases of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

A former Bishop Guertin student, Larissa Troy, filed a lawsuit against the order earlier this month, accusing a former teacher, Shawn McEnany, of sexually assaulting her in the 1990s. According to the lawsuit filed in the Hillsborough County Superior Court in Nashua, the school hired McEnany as a teacher despite knowing he was already a convicted sexual offender in Maine.

Several brothers with Sacred Heart involved with Bishop Guertin were accused of abuse on the early 2000s, including former headmaster Leo Labbe. A class-action lawsuit resulted in numerous settlements with purported victims. McKiernan said religious orders such as Sacred Heart are often overlooked.

“Religious orders in general, an the Brothers of the Sacred Heart in particular, succeed in being under the radar,” he said.

According to information from Bishop-Accountability.org, every Sacred Heart school in New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island was staffed at times by alleged or admitted sexual abusers.

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

Sexual abuse victims call for bishops’ resignations, criminal investigation of Buffalo diocese

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

June 1, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Cite reporting by 7 Eyewitness News I-Team

Summoning outrage at the results of a recent 7 Eyewitness News investigation into the covering up of sexual abuse in the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, abuse victims Friday called for the resignation of two bishops and urged law enforcement to begin a criminal investigation of the church hierarchy in Buffalo.

“Bishop Malone promised us that he was thoroughly reviewing the files of the Diocese of Buffalo,” said Robert Hoatson, a former priest and advocate of sexual abuse victims. “Well, we now know that that’s not true. The ones who have been thoroughly analyzing the files are you folks, the media.”

In calling for the immediate resignations of Bishop Richard J. Malone and Auxiliary Bishop Edward Grosz, Hoatson and other victims pointed to two a three-part investigative series by 7 Eyewitness News that revealed secret documents spelling out the covering up of sexual abuse by priests by multiple bishops in the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo.

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.

June 1, 2018

14 minutos de fama, 14 minutos de silencio

DURANGO (MEXICO)
kioSco [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

June 1, 2018

By Miriam Canales

Read original article

En mi breve ejercicio periodístico he tenido oportunidad de conocer a una gran cantidad de profesionistas en la materia y de todos tengo un registro minucioso de sus encuentros, de sus caras, sus palabras y gestos, el de José Antonio Jáquez Enríquez fue especial, a quien conocía de antemano por su trabajo periodístico en la revista Proceso y que murió el viernes 9 de mayo, víctima de un derrame cerebral en el Hospital Medical Sur del Distrito Federal a las 12:37pm.

El lunes siguiente, leyendo uno de los últimos números de esta publicación,  reparé en un recuadro donde rezaba «A la memoria de Antonio Jáquez», un reportero al cual siempre profesé admiración. De inmediato, las imágenes de la tarde del 26 de enero de 2007, fecha en que lo conocí, saltaron de mi baúl de recuerdos.

Jáquez había nacido en San Juan de Guadalupe, Durango en 1952, pero forjó su exitosa carrera en Torreón Coahuila donde estudió la secundaria y preparatoria en la Carlos Pereyra y la carrera de contador público en la ECA de la Universidad Autónoma de Coahuila.

Sin embargo, los números los mantendría al margen de su vocación, su vida estaría regida por la palabra escrita: echó raíces profesionales en La Laguna en el periódico La Opinión y trabajó como corresponsal en esta entidad y en Monterrey para la revista Proceso donde consolidó su  meritorio trabajo.

La trayectoria de Jáquez lo llevó a conseguir «sus 14 minutos de fama», como lo denominaría él,  tras haber destapado el caso de las corruptelas de Raúl Salinas de Gortari en La Laguna con las importaciones de leche en polvo bajo la cobertura de Conasupo y Liconsa, los empresarios lecheros le acusaban de «competencia desleal» y le sugerían al reportero que investigara sobre el tema, todo a finales de la década de los 80.

Según cuenta en el número del 30 aniversario de Proceso, Scherer le encomendó formalmente la tarea de investigar al «hermano incómodo» minuciosamente antes de que concluyera el sexenio. Recordenmos la presencia de los Salinas en Monclova, La Laguna, Monterrey y el ejido Batopilas donde conservaban una casa en la que se dejaban ver de vez en cuando. Impulsaron la imagen de este sitio como un ejemplo de bonanza, mientras que el resto del sistema campesino se derrumbaba en un afán desmedido por la industria lechera.  El resultado del trabajo de Jáquez no sólo fue el mote del «hermano incómodo» para Raúl, sino evidencia de sus malos manejos que lo llevarían a pisar los penales de Almoloya y Santiaguito

El trabajo de Jáquez no concluiría ahí, sus pistas lo conducirían por otros senderos espinosos como el caso del sacerdote Javier Díaz Rivera, acusado de abusar sexualmente de niños de la Casa Hogar que tenía bajo su cobijo. A la diócesis le tembló la mano para aceptar, ya no digamos castigar, a un clérigo miembro de una acaudalda familia y amigo cercano a la entonces primera dama Amalia García de Cepeda (esposa de Carlos Román Cepeda). No obstante, un grupo de valientes mujeres como Alicia Pons y Ana María Ibarra, que trabajaban en esa instancia, decidieron denunciar el hecho a costa de su trabajo. Una historia más a las páginas de Proceso que pondría en entredicho la reputación del clero torreonense.

Otros trabajos alusivos en años siguientes tendrían que ver con el Fobaproa y la impunidad de empresarios y políticos de La Laguna, y las corruptelas de personajes de Vicente Fox y su cuadrilla. Sus méritos lo llevaron a trabajar estrechamente con Rafael Rodríguez Castañeda cuando fue asignado director y con Salvador Corro.

La salud del periodista se había tambaleado desde finales de los 90, donde incluso en alguna ocasión le aplicaron los santos oleos, su persistencia le otorgó vivir unos años más hasta la afección hepática que le aquejó y lo condujo a la muerte.

Tuve la oportunidad de conocer a Antonio Jáquez en la Ciudad de México más por una petición personal y un deseo ansioso por saber quien había escrito semejantes historias periodísticas.

En mi caso, por motivos profesionales y personales decidí emigrar al Distrito Federal, una ciudad temible, azarosa y fantástica, para buscarme la vida en pos de mejores oportunidades laborales. LIamé a todos mis contactos y amigos como Antonio Helguera, caricaturista de La Jornada Proceso, a quien había conocido un mes antes en Guadalajara, para pedirles apoyo. Le solicité que me llevara a la revista y me presentara con algunos de sus colaboradores, en especial a Jáquez y a Rodrigo Vera, cuyos reportajes habían fungido como referencia para otros elaborados por mí en la Revista de Coahuila, en la que colaboré por casi tres años.

El sexto día de mi estancia, un viernes por la tarde, Helguera pasó a mi nueva casa de la capital para llevarme a la calle Fresas en la Colonia del Valle. Las instalaciones de la revista que nunca visité en mi etapa de estudiante en esos viajes escolares (que suelen organizar los institutos para que los jóvenes «se codeen con el medio»), resultaron ser más austeras de lo que imaginaba: su mobiliario no mostraba el menor sentido de opulencia, contaba con un limitado equipo de computo exprofeso para un exclusivo grupo de reporteros y sus ventanales eran lo suficientemente amplios para que irradiara abiertamente la luz del sol. Eso sí, había mucha limpieza y pulcritud.

Ahí estaba Rodrigo Vera quien me observó con aire serio, platicamos un poco acerca de Peñoles y Alberto Bailleres tras haber publicado un reportaje alusivo en la Revista de Coahuila de la cual le obsequié un ejemplar. Para mi sorpresa encontré ni más ni menos que al mismísimo Julio Scherer, muy entrado en años, avejentado pero cordial, vestido con prendas oscuras. Tantos años de investigación y trabajo lo habían dejado en la ruina física. Me tendió la mano para saludarme, la que sujeté con gesto diplomático. «¿Cómo está don Julio?», le saludamos Helguera y yo.

El monero me condujo hacia unas escaleras alfombradas, a medida que avanzábamos la luz se volvía más exigua, pero una oficina bien iluminada del segundo piso rompía con esa incipiente oscuridad… y ahí se encontraba su homólogo Jáquez con una sonrisa que nunca olvidaré.

Su gesto era amable y extrovertido. Le dije mi nombre, donde trabajaba y de donde provenía, sintió gusto al escuchar la palabra «Torreón». «Ah, ahí me inicié yo»-me dijo. Tuvimos una amena charla  donde nunca perdió su amabilidad para conmigo; hablamos de periodismo, de nuestros respectivos trabajos y de La Laguna, evidentemente. Helguera tuvo que irse, razones ajenas a su voluntad le impidieron quedarse con nosotros, preferí permanecer en esa oficina y regresar por mi propio pie a casa aunque desconociera a fondo el camino de regreso.

Al término de la conversación me despedí de Jáquez y bajé de nuevo las escaleras para conocer al último personaje de la tarde: Jenaro Villamil, quien al igual que Jáquez mostró una sonrisa afable. De  igual modo le hablé brevemente de mis orígenes y para mi sorpresa me hizo un comentario inesperado: «Ah, he leído tu nombre en alguna parte».

 Nunca volví a ver a Jáquez, pero conservé siempre el buen recuerdo de ese encuentro. Descanse en paz.

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.

Clergy abuse survivors to receive $210 million from Catholic Minneapolis Archdiocese

ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
Good Morning America

June 1, 2018

By Courtney Han

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has reached a $210 million settlement to be dispersed among 450 survivors of alleged clergy abuse as part of its bankruptcy reorganization, an archbishop said.

The archdiocese filed for bankruptcy in 2015, two years after the Minnesota Legislature opened a three-year window that allowed people who said they had been sexually abused in the past to sue for damages, according to The Associated Press. That resulted in hundreds of claims being filed against the archdiocese.

“I recognize that the abuse stole so much from you. Your childhood, your safety, your ability to trust and in many cases your faith. Relationships with family and friend relationships in your parishes and communities were harmed. Lives were forever changed. The church let you down. I am very sorry,” Archbishop Bernard Hebda said in a news conference Thursday outside archdiocese offices.

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.

Arizona case shows why Mormon bishops are not reporting sex abuse to police every time. That has a prosecutor complaining about the church’s lawyers.

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
The Salt Lake Tribune

May 31, 2018

By Nate Carlisle

An Arizona prosecutor, who says a lawyer for the LDS Church told a bishop he didn’t need to inform police that a child was being sexually abused, has filed a bar complaint against that attorney and his law firm.

An indictment against the child’s parents suggests the abuse went on for a decade. The Mormon bishop in Kingman may face a criminal charge, too, for not notifying police, though Arizona law doesn’t always require clergy to report abuse and, documents say, the bishop encouraged the now-teenager to speak to law enforcement.

Meanwhile, both a prosecutor and a victims’ advocate in northwest Arizona are expressing concern about the advice the LDS Church’s law firm, Salt Lake City-based Kirton McConkie, is giving to the faith’s lay leaders.

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

Pope promises ‘never again’ to sex abuse in Chile, re-opens investigation

VATICAN CITY/SANTIAGO
Reuters

May 31, 2018

By Philip Pullella and Dave Sherwood

Pope Francis on Thursday promised Chilean Catholics scarred by a culture of clergy sexual abuse that “never again” would the Church ignore them or the cover-up of abuse in their country, where a widespread scandal has devastated its credibility.

The pope issued the comments in a letter to all Chilean Catholics as the Vatican announced that Francis was sending his two top sexual abuse investigators back to the country to gather more information about the crisis there.

The Vatican’s most experienced sexual abuse investigator, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, and Father Jordi Bertomeu, a Spaniard, had visited Chile earlier this year.

In the letter released by Chilean bishops, Francis also praised the victims of sexual abuse in the country for persevering in bringing the truth to light despite attempts by Church officials to discredit them.

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

Pope sends abuse investigators back to Chile, ‘ashamed’ church didn’t listen

CHILE
CNN

May 31, 2018

By James Griffiths

Pope Francis is sending investigators back to Chile to look into historical child abuse and accusations a bishop covered up crimes against minors, the Vatican said Thursday.

Francis said the church should be ashamed of its treatment of victims, and must move past the historical culture of abuse and secrecy.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna, one of the Vatican’s top prosecutors for sex abuse, and Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu will carry out investigations in Osorno over abuse by Chilean priest Father Fernando Karadima and his followers.

Karadima was found guilty of child sex abuse by the Vatican in 2011. Victims said Osorno Bishop Juan Barros, who Francis appointed in 2015 over local residents’ objections, covered up Karadima’s crimes.

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

Pope sends clergy sexual abuse inspectors back to Chile

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

May 31, 2018

by Philip Pullella

Pope Francis is sending his two top sexual abuse investigators back to Chile to gather more information about the crisis that has hit the Catholic Church there, the Vatican said on Thursday.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and Father Jordi Bertomeu, a Vatican official, will concentrate on the diocese of Osorno in southern Chile, seat of a bishop who has been most caught up in the scandal.

A statement said the purpose of the trip, due to start in the next few days, was to “move forward in the process of reparation, and healing for victims of abuse”.

The two prepared a 2,300-page report for the pope after speaking to victims, witnesses and other Church members earlier this year.

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 sin of silence

UNITED STATES
The Washington Post

May 31, 2018

By Joshua Pease

The epidemic of denial about sexual abuse in the evangelical church

Rachael Denhollander’s college-aged abuser began grooming her when she was 7. Each week, as Denhollander left Sunday school at Westwood Baptist Church in Kalamazoo, Mich., he was there to walk her to her parents’ Bible-study classroom on the other side of the building. He brought Denhollander gifts and asked her parents for her clothing size so he could buy her dresses. He was always a little too eager with a hug. The Denhollanders led one of the church’s ministries out of their home, which meant the man would visit their house regularly, often encouraging Rachael to sit on his lap, they recalled.

The man’s behavior caught the attention of a fellow congregant, who informed Sandy Burdick, a licensed counselor who led the church’s sexual-abuse support group. Burdick says she warned Denhollander’s parents that the man was showing classic signs of grooming behavior. They were worried, but they also feared misreading the situation and falsely accusing an innocent student, according to Camille Moxon, Denhollander’s mom. So they turned to their closest friends, their Bible-study group, for support.

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

Sex cult or a female empowerment group? Allison Mack said Nxivm sorority was ‘about women coming together’

NEW YORK (NY)
Yahoo Celebrity

May 31, 2018

By Taryn Ryder

As Allison Mack awaits trial — or a plea deal — for her involvement in an alleged sex cult, federal prosecutors are likely interested in reading her new interview.

The Smallville actress, 35, spoke with the New York Times Magazine this winter as part of the publication’s deep dive into the self-help group Nxivm. The article, which was released on Wednesday, features interviews with many high-ranking Nxivm members — including its founder, Keith Raniere. It’s the first time in 14 years the group has granted access to a journalist.

Female members freely discuss a group within the group called DOS (short for a Latin phrase that roughly translates as “Master Over Slave Women”), which they describe as a “sorority.” Mack said DOS was “about women coming together and pledging to one another a full-time commitment to become our most powerful and embodied selves by pushing on our greatest fears, by exposing our greatest vulnerabilities, by knowing that we would stand with each other no matter what, by holding our word, by overcoming pain.”

It’s a group, she declared, that’s all about female empowerment. “I found my spine, and I just kept solidifying my spine every time I would do something hard,” Mack passionately declared.

Mack was so passionate about DOS, she said, that it was her idea to brand members with a cauterized pen. “I was like: ‘Y’all, a tattoo? People get drunk and tattooed on their ankle ‘BFF,’ or a tramp stamp. I have two tattoos and they mean nothing,’” she boasted, explaining she wanted to do something more meaningful and that took guts. (Members were held down and branded with a symbol that featured Raniere’s and Mack’s initials.)

The actress broke down how joining the sorority worked. The woman who invited you to the group was your master or the “representation of your conscience, your higher self, your most ideal.”

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 ‘Sex Cult’ That Preached Empowerment

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Times

May 30, 2018

By Vanessa Grigoriadis

Why did female members of Nxivm follow a guru named Keith Raniere, who now stands accused of sex trafficking? He made them feel like they were in control.

One winter morning in a conventional suburb outside Albany, N.Y., Nancy Salzman, the 63-year-old president of a self-improvement company named Nxivm, sat on a mahogany-colored stool in her kitchen. Her tasteful home was surrounded by other Nxivm members’ modest townhouses or capacious stone mansions that seemed to spring up out of nowhere, like mushrooms, on the suburban streets. In Salzman’s den, a photo of her with her two adult daughters hung on a wall, the three of them wearing smiles as wide as ancient Greek masks of comedy; the same happy photo served as the wallpaper on Salzman’s laptop. A hairless Sphynx cat prowled the lovely buffet of croissants and fruit on her kitchen island.

Salzman, an extremely fit woman wearing the type of thin athleisure sweatshirt that’s all the rage with the middle-aged bourgeoisie these days, turned her attention to a woman sitting at the island: Jacqueline, a 27-year-old with long dark hair, who was a psychology student in college, told me that she hadn’t experienced anything as effective as Nxivm (pronounced “nexium,” like the heartburn medication). Like Scientology’s L. Ron Hubbard, whose 1950 handbook “Dianetics” was billed as the “modern science of mental health” and whose pseudoscientific methods were, in his view, world-changing, Keith Raniere, Nxivm’s 57-year-old founder, believed his organization could heal individuals and transform the world. The way Nxivm did this was through techniques, or “technology,” meant to rewire your emotional self.

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.

CNN stands by its reporting on Morgan Freeman accusing him of sexual harassment

UNITED STATES
ABC News/GMA

May 31, 2018

By Luchina Fisher

CNN stands by its reporting on Morgan Freeman in which eight women accused the actor of sexual harassment and inappropriate conduct.

The cable news network responded today to a 10-page letter from Freeman’s attorney Robert Schwartz earlier this week demanding a retraction of the story and an apology.

In its five-page response, CNN wrote that it “stands by its reporting and is prepared to fight aggressively any attempt to intimidate it into silence.”

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.

Another Buffalo priest placed on leave after abuse allegations

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB

May 31, 2018

By Evan Anstey and Jenn Schanz

Another priest within the Diocese of Buffalo has been placed on administrative leave.

Bishop Richard Malone placed Rev. Mark J. Wolski on leave after receiving a complaint of sexual abuse against him.

The complaint is under investigation.

Earlier this month, the Diocese announced it was re-opening an investigation into an abuse complaint against Father Fabian Maryanski.

In March, a list was released naming more than 40 local priests who had credible allegations of child sexual abuse against them.

Father Wolski most recently served at Saints Peter and Paul Parish in Hamburg according to a spokesperson for the Buffalo Diocese.

Wolski retired in 2012, but still led Mass as need by the Buffalo 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.

Former priest to face preliminary hearing

ERIE (PA)
Your Erie

May 31, 2018

By Ryan Emerson

A former priest in the Erie Catholic Diocese is expected to appear in court today.

David Poulson, 64, is due in court for his preliminary hearing.

On May 8th, Poulson was arraigned in Jefferson county on felony counts of indecent assault, endangering the welfare of children and the corruption of minors. At the time of his resignation, he was pastor of Saint Anthony of Padua Church in Cambridge springs.

When Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro announced the charges, he said it was unconscionable that the Diocese of Erie knew of Poulson’s alleged actions and allowed him to stay in ministry.

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

I-Team: Suspended Buffalo priest served on child abuse review board

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

May 31, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Rev. Mark Wolski accused of child sex abuse

He was the chaplain at Children’s Hospital.

He was a prominent priest.

He was even a member of the child abuse review board for the Diocese of Buffalo.

But now, the Rev. Mark J. Wolski is just the latest cleric to be suspended by the diocese over an allegation of child sexual abuse.

“After receiving an abuse complaint against Rev. Mark J. Wolski, Bishop Richard J. Malone has placed Father Wolski on administrative leave as an investigation continues,” the diocese said in a statement Thursday morning. “Please note that this administrative leave is for the purpose of investigation and does not imply any determination as to the truth or falsity of the complaint.”v

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.

How to Talk About #MeToo Without Shutting Down the Conversation

UNITED STATES
GQ

May 31, 2018

By Sophia Benoit

The good news is that we’ve started to have more healthy and productive conversations about sexual assault and harassment, in and out of the workplace. The bad news is that these discussions can turn awkward and uncomfortable for people who are grappling with these problems for the first time. Don’t worry, we’re here to help. We have some advice on how to be supportive and inoffensive in your discussions about assault and harassment. And yes, you really need to have these conversations.

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.

Largest Settlement Ever Reached in a Catholic Bankruptcy Case

ST. PAUL (MN)
Jeff Anderson & Associates

May 31, 2018

Video of press conference in which Jeff Anderson announced the $210,290,724 settlement plan with the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and discussed the 10 points of the plan and its context. Also speaking were survivor-members of the creditor’s committee Jamie Heutmaker, Jim Keenan, and Marie Mielke.

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Archdiocese reaches $210 million settlement with sex abuse survivors

ST. PAUL (MN)
Pioneer Press

May 31, 2018

By Sarah Horner

On a hot summer’s day in 1969, Heutmaker, then 14, and one of his peers were sexual abused by a priest from the Church of St. Mark in St. Paul.

Although the Rev. Jerome Kern’s conduct was reported to Catholic Church staff by his parents, it wasn’t until now, Heutmaker said, that he felt some measure of justice.

“It feels really good to be here today,” Heutmaker, now 62, said tearfully amid a crowd of survivors of clergy sexual abuse gathered in a downtown St. Paul law office Thursday afternoon. “Never in my life did I think it would come to this, 49 years later. … I am extremely grateful.”

Led by their attorneys, including Jeff Anderson, the group gathered to announce a historic $210 million settlement in the bankruptcy battle between 450 survivors of clergy sexual abuse and the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

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Archdiocese in Minnesota Plans to Settle With Abuse Victims for $210 Million

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

May 31, 2018

By Jacey Fortin

In one of the biggest settlements of its kind, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis plans to establish a $210 million trust fund for hundreds of victims of clergy sexual abuse, the archbishop announced on Thursday.

The plan is the result of a yearslong battle and arduous negotiations in one of the country’s most high-profile cases involving abuse in the Roman Catholic Church.

If approved, the settlement will be the largest ever for a sex abuse case involving an archdiocese that has filed for bankruptcy protection and the second largest over all, said Terry McKiernan, co-director and president of BishopAccountability.org, which tracks clergy sex abuse cases. (According to the website, the largest settlement, $660 million, was reached by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and 508 survivors in 2007.)

“Survivors are getting, on average, substantial settlements for what they suffered, and that’s really important,” Mr. McKiernan said of the Minnesota case.

The settlement is pending approval from a judge and 450 survivors. Their lawyer, Jeff Anderson, said he expected them to vote in its favor.

He said the case could be a model for other clergy sex abuse cases because it forced the church to be more transparent than usual. “That heat and that light has been put on them through the courage of the many, many survivors who found their voice and took action,” he added.

Jim Keenan, one of the abuse survivors, told reporters on Thursday that others should not be afraid to speak up.

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$210 million settlement announced in St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese bankruptcy case

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

May 31, 2018

By Brian Roewe

A $210 million settlement has been reached in the bankruptcy of the St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese, what attorneys for more than 400 survivors of clergy sexual abuse are calling the “largest settlement ever reached in a Catholic bankruptcy case.”

At a press conference in his St. Paul office May 31, Jeff Anderson, attorney for abuse victims, announced that a consensual agreement was reached late Wednesday night, essentially concluding an often contentious process begun nearly three and half years ago.

Anderson used a red Sharpie marker to write the final sum on a white easel pad of paper: $210,290,724.

That total represents more than triple the archdiocese’s initial proposed plan of $65 million, and $50 million more than its most recent proposal. The settlement, pending approval by U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Robert Kressel, will resolve all litigation against the archdiocese and its parishes and other entities related to the clergy sexual abuse scandal. A trust fund, headed by an independent trustee, would be responsible for distributing payments among 450 abuse survivors.

“This has been a long day coming,” said Jim Keenan, an abuse survivor and chair of the creditors’ committee. “It’s a triumph … an absolute triumph.”

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St. Paul archdiocese to pay $210M to clergy abuse victims

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
Associated Press via Chicago Tribune

May 31, 2018

By Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has agreed to a $210 million settlement with 450 victims of clergy sexual abuse as part of its plan for bankruptcy reorganization, making it the second-largest U.S. payout in the scandal that rocked the nation’s Roman Catholic Church.

Victims’ attorney Jeff Anderson said the settlement was reached with the victims and the archdiocese and includes accountability measures. The money, a total of $210,290,724, will go into a pot to pay survivors, with the amount for each survivor to be determined.

Anderson said a formal reorganization plan will now be submitted to a bankruptcy judge for approval, and then it will be sent to the victims for a vote. Anderson expected they will readily approve it.

“We changed the playing field,” said Jim Keenan, who was sexually abused as a child by a Twin Cities-area priest. “They have to listen to victims now, and that is huge.”

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$210 million settlement with the archdiocese was a long time coming for victims

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
Star-Tribune

May 31, 2018

By Rochelle Olson and Mary Lynn Smith

For many, the announcement was closure as they continue to heal their scars of emotional trauma.

Marie Mielke held her arms out as far as she could reach, her hands open and her fingers spread.

That’s how expansive and open to the world she felt as she stood before the bright media cameras in her lawyer’s office Thursday among fellow survivors of childhood sex abuse by Minnesota priests.

“Father Michael Keating didn’t take anything from me,” she said staunchly. “I’m standing here now fighting for my babies.”

Mielke was the third victim to speak after attorney Jeff Anderson announced the $210 million settlement for nearly 450 Minnesota victims. Several victims stood alongside lawyers and media in the darkly paneled conference room.

The victims, now adults, were preyed upon, sexually assaulted and raped by priests as children at church and school.

Those who ended up in Anderson’s conference room described pain-filled decades of post-traumatic stress as the archdiocese both covered up for predator priests and denied their bad behavior.

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May 31, 2018

In letter to Chileans, Francis decries church’s ‘culture of abuse and cover-up’

ROME
National Catholic Reporter

May 31, 2018

By Joshua J. McElwee

Pope Francis has become the first leader of the Catholic Church to publicly decry a “culture of abuse and cover-up” in the global institution, admitting in a strikingly blunt letter to the people of Chile that clergy sexual abuse has continued because church leaders have not taken victims seriously.

In an eight-page May 31 message addressed to “the Pilgrim people of God in Chile,” the pope also says Catholic leaders must work to better respect the voices and opinions of non-clerics “to promote communities capable of fighting against abusive situations, communities where exchange, discussion, confrontation are welcome.”

One of the church’s “main faults and omissions,” Francis writes, was “not knowing how to listen to the victims.”

“With shame, I must say that we did not hear and react in time,” he adds in the letter, which was sent to the Chilean bishops’ conference and made public by it.

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Never again: Pope denounces ‘culture of abuse, cover-up’

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

May 31, 2018

By Nicole Winfield and Eva Vergara

Pope Francis became the first pope to publicly denounce a “culture of abuse and cover-up” in the Catholic Church, saying Thursday he was ashamed that neither he nor Chile’s Catholic leaders truly ever listened to victims as the country’s abuse scandal spiraled.

“Never again,” Francis said in a pastoral letter to the Chilean faithful on the eve of another weekend he will spend listening to victims of Chile’s most notorious predator priest. The letter was issued on the same day the Vatican announced its top abuse investigators were returning to Chile on a new mission.

In the eight-page letter, Francis once again thanked victims for their “valiant perseverance” in denouncing abuse and searching for the truth “even against all hopes or attempts to discredit them.”

He included himself among the guilty in failing to actually accompany victims, saying, “With shame I must say that we didn’t know how to listen or respond in time.”

And he spoke repeatedly of a “culture of abuse and cover-up.”

“The ‘never again’ to the culture of abuse and the system of cover-up that allows it to perpetuate requires us to work together to generate a culture of care,” in the way we relate to one another, power and money, he said.

No other pope has publicly spoken of a culture of cover-up in the church. The Vatican has focused for the past decade on punishing abusers themselves rather than the bishops and religious superiors who moved pedophiles from parish to parish rather than reporting them to police or removing them from ministry.

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Archbishop to return to Chile in connection with child abuse cases

CHILE
Times of Malta

May 31, 2018

Archbishop Charles Scicluna will be returning to Chile at the behest of the Pope, in a trip meant to heal the wounds of abuse victims.

He would be accompanied by Mgr Jordi Bertomeu, the Vatican said on Thursday.

Sources said Mgr Scicluna would probably go to the Osorno Diocese in June while the Pope is planning to meet a group of priests from Chile at the end of this week.

Archbishop Scicluna was first sent to Chile at the end of January by Pope Francis to look into allegations against a bishop accused of covering up clergy crimes against minors there.

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Vatican Chile abuse investigators return on pastoral mission

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

May 31, 2018

By Nicole Winfield and Eva Vergara

The Vatican team of investigators who exposed wide-scale priestly sexual abuse and a cover-up in Chile’s Catholic Church is going back to the country on a pastoral mission to the divided diocese of Osorno.

Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said Thursday the visit to Osorno by Archbishop Charles Scicluna and Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu wasn’t investigative in nature but pastoral, part of Pope Francis’ effort to help Chile heal from the scandal.

Osorno has been badly divided ever since Francis in 2015 tapped Bishop Juan Barros to lead the diocese over the objections of some of Chile’s other bishops. Barros had been a top lieutenant of Chile’s most notorious predator priest, the Rev. Fernando Karadima, and had been accused by Karadima’s victims of having witnessed and ignored their abuse.

Barros denied the charge, but he was one of the 30-plus Chilean bishops who recently submitted their resignations to the pope after Scicluna and Bertomeu issued a 2,300-page report detailing decades of abuse and cover-up in the Chilean church.

Francis had initially sent the pair to Chile in February to take testimony from victims and witnesses, after drawing widespread public condemnation for having defended Barros during a trip to Chile. Among the 64 people Scicluna and Bertomeu interviewed were members of a delegation from Osorno, which is some 900 kilometers (560 miles) from Santiago.

Among other complaints, Osorno’s lay Catholics have argued that Barros can’t be trusted to protect children from pedophiles in Osorno today if he claims to have never seen any abuse when it was all around him in Karadima’s community.

Barros’ March 2015 installation Mass in Osorno’s cathedral was marred by violent protests by some of the hundreds of local Catholics who have continued to reject him as their bishop, staging regular protests that have divided friends and even families.

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Una decena de acusaciones de abuso sexual en una iglesia católica de Guayaquil sigue sin resolverse

ECUADOR
GK

May 2018

A dozen accusations of sexual abuse in a Catholic church in Guayaquil remains unresolved

Durante más de diez años, el reverendo Luis Fernando Intriago —hoy suspendido del sacerdocio— dirigió grupos juveniles. Al menos diez de los adolescentes que asistieron a ellos pasaron por un ritual físico que no es reconocido por la Iglesia Católica. Ni la justicia ordinaria —que lo investiga por abuso sexual— ni la eclesiástica han resuelto definitivamente el caso.

1.
“Te hacía desnudar. Yo me quedaba desnudo, amarrado, porque te amarraba las piernas y las manos. La idea era hacerte sufrir porque si aguantabas, estabas haciendo una ofrenda. Cuando veía que se le estaba pasando la mano, paraba. En mi caso, me arrastró por una alfombra con los ojos vendados, las piernas amarradas, luego me llevó a la cama vendado. Esto es lo más asqueroso que me ha pasado, me da vergüenza… me trepó encima de él, como en una relación sexual. Nunca me penetró, no me tocó mis partes íntimas, por más que estuve desnudo. Pero me trepó encima de él, y con su barba como que me rozaba el pecho, el abdomen.” Quien habla es Gino P., hoy de 25 años, estudiante de Psicología. De quien habla es el reverendo Luis Fernando Intriago Páez, quien llamaba a estas prácticas la dinámica del pecado.

Por denuncias como esta, la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe del Vaticano ratificó la expulsión del sacerdocio del “Rev. Luis Fernando INTRIAGO PÁEZ, acusado de abuso sexual de diversos menores”. En el decreto en que lo decide, la Congregación dice que este delito debe entenderse —según la Ley de la Iglesia— como el acto cometido por un clérigo contra el sexto mandamiento con un menor que no ha cumplido 16 años. Para la legislación ecuatoriana es el acto de naturaleza sexual —excluyendo la penetración— que se hace contra la voluntad de otra persona, y que si la víctima es menor de 18 años, el que haya consentimiento es irrelevante. En la Fiscalía General del Estado hay dos investigaciones en contra de Intriago: una por abuso sexual y otra por tortura.

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Iglesia Católica apoya investigación de casos de abuso sexual en Ecuador

ECUADOR
Andes.info.ec

May 28, 2018

Catholic Church supports investigation of sexual abuse cases in Ecuador

Según cifras del Fondo de las Naciones Unidas para la Infancia (Unicef), apenas el 15% de los casos de abuso sexual contra menores es denunciado en el país.

Las noticias sobre casos de abuso sexual contra niños, niñas o adolescentes por parte de miembros de la Iglesia Católica han movilizado a varios sectores del país que exigen procedimientos más rigurosos y expeditos para la investigación de estos hechos, así como el endurecimiento de las sanciones aplicables.

En las ciudades de Cuenca y Guayaquil salieron a la luz relatos de algunas víctimas de dos sacerdotes que, aprovechando su calidad de ministros de la Iglesia Católica, abusaron de niños y adolescentes, defraudando la confianza que las víctimas y sus familias habían depositado en ellos.

“No creo en la justicia, ni en la justicia divina. El padre violador está vivo, yo sí quisiera verle la cara. Le diría que me arruinó mi vida, en nombre de Dios”. Es la frase de uno de los denunciantes de supuestos abusos sexuales del padre César C. M., rector vitalicio de una universidad en Cuenca.

Su testimonio se difundió por medio de la radio “La voz del Tomebamba”, luego de que en el canal Teleamazonas salieron las declaraciones de Jorge P., presunta víctima, y otro individuo que prefirió mantener el anonimato. Los tres eran compañeros en la Escuela Miguel Ortiz, de esa ciudad.

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SAGINAW CLERIC’S ORDINATION CALLED OFF OVER SEX ABUSE ALLEGATION

SAGINAW (MI)
Church Militant

May 24, 2018

by Christine Niles, M.St. (Oxon.), J.D.

Deacon Jerome Green’s faculties removed

A Michigan cleric’s ordination to the priesthood is being called off over a sex abuse allegation.

Bishop Joseph Cistone of the Saginaw diocese sent an internal email Thursday announcing he is canceling the ordination of Deacon Jerome Green, pastoral administrator at St. Vincent de Paul parish. Green’s faculties have been suspended, and he is being relieved of his duties at the parish.

“Deacon Green has been relieved of his duties as Pastoral Administrator of St. Vincent DePaul Parish, Shepherd; and his faculties to minister as a deacon have been suspended while the matter is pursued,” the letter reads.

The letter refers to “some unresolved issues dealing with a time before his coming to the Diocese of Saginaw.” Reliable inside sources say this refers to a sex abuse allegation from Detroit. Further details remain unknown.

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Harvey Weinstein indicted on charges of rape, criminal sexual act

NEW YORK (NY)
CNN

May 31, 2018

By Darran Simon

A New York City grand jury on Wednesday indicted movie producer Harvey Weinstein on charges of rape in the first and third degrees and first-degree criminal sexual act, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office said.

Weinstein, 66, was arraigned last week on the same charges, seven months after women began to come forward with stories alleging sexual misconduct by the famous Hollywood producer.
Weinstein, who intends to plead not guilty, remains free after posting a $1 million cash bail, according to his attorney.
The charges stemmed from incidents with two women in 2013 and 2004 and were the result of a joint investigation between police and prosecutors, according to the Manhattan district attorney.

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Harvey Weinstein Will Not Testify to Manhattan Grand Jury

NEW YORK (NY)
Variety

May 30, 2018

By Gene Maddaus

Harvey Weinstein has elected not to testify to a grand jury convened by the Manhattan District Attorney’s office, his attorney announced Wednesday.

Weinstein was charged in a criminal complaint on Friday with two counts of rape and one count of a criminal sexual act. He is free on a $1 million bail, and restricted from traveling outside New York and Connecticut. A grand jury is convening to determine whether to issue an indictment on the same allegations. Weinstein’s decision not to testify is not a surprise, as it would be unusual to offer his version of events at this stage of the proceedings.

Weinstein’s attorney, Benjamin Brafman, did offer a glimpse of his defense, saying that one of the cases is 14 years old and the second involves a victim with whom he had a consensual relationship. In the statement, Brafman also objected to being denied access to “critical information about this case” that would have aided in his defense before the grand jury.

“Not having access to these materials is particularly troubling in this case, where one of the unsupported allegations is more than 14 years old and the rape allegation involves a woman with whom Mr. Weinstein shared a 10-year consensual sexual relationship that continued for years after the alleged incident in 2013,” Brafman said.

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9 women who allege assaults by Uber drivers want the right to unite in court

UNITED STATES
CNN

May 30, 2018

by Sara Ashley O’Brien

Nine women who allege they’ve been sexually assaulted by Uber drivers are pushing back against the ridesharing company for trying to force their proposed class action lawsuit into arbitration.

Two weeks ago, Uber said it would allow survivors of sexual assault and harassment by its drivers to seek justice however they choose, whether that’s arbitration, mediation or open court. The updated policy came in the wake of a CNN investigation into sexual assaults and abuse by ridesharing drivers.

But the company said, per its terms of service, it will not allow victims of sexual assault and harassment to join together in a class action lawsuit. Uber’s lawyers tried to compel the women to carry out two of the lawsuit claims through arbitration. The claims are related to unfair business practices and consumer legal remedies. Uber said assault related claims need to be handled individually.

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Inmate says prison counselor sexually assaulted her after reporting guard for rape

MISSOURI
New York Post

May 30, 2018

By Joshua Rhett Miller

A former inmate in Missouri was repeatedly raped by a prison guard before reporting the attacks to a mental health counselor — who also sexually assaulted her, according to a federal lawsuit.

Karen Backues Keil was released from the Chillicothe Correctional Center in February 2017 after a six-year prison stint for forgery and theft, but she still battles the stress and sorrow associated with “the hell” of being raped more than 20 times by prison guard Edward Bearden, her lawsuit alleges.

“I can’t get over it,” Keil told the Kansas City Star. “It’s there every second of the day. I have to think about it and I have to fight those thoughts in my head that I deserved this. And I didn’t. Nobody deserves what I went through.”

Keil’s lawsuit, which was filed earlier this week, claims Bearden — who still works at the 1,640-inmate, mixed-custody women’s facility — began touching her inappropriately during pat-downs by groping her breasts and backside. That later escalated to repeated rapes between 2012 and 2015, according to her lawsuit.

Keil then sought help from a prison counselor following the alleged sexual assaults, but less than a month after she started therapy sessions with counselor John Thomas Dunn, he too began sexually assaulting her, the lawsuit claims.

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Ex-MSU president Simon subpoenaed while on vacation in Traverse City

WASHINGTON (DC)
Detroit Free Press

May 30, 2018

By Todd Spangler

Former Michigan State University President Lou Anna Simon was served a congressional subpoena on Wednesday morning to force her attendance at a subcommittee hearing on the Larry Nassar scandal next week.

Both the Senate Commerce Committee and Simon’s attorney, Mayer Morganroth, acknowledged to the Free Press that federal marshals served the subpoena on Simon in Traverse City, where she is on vacation.

Morganroth said she will appear at the hearing, even though he said, “There is not much she can say. … They know that. She didn’t have any direct contact at all with Nassar.”

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Vatican team investigating abuse cover-ups to return to Chile

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholic News Service via CatholicPhilly.com

By Junno Arocho Esteves

Vatican City – To promote healing after reports of sexual abuse and cover-ups, Pope Francis will send Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and Father Jordi Bertomeu Farnos back to Chile.

Both will visit the Diocese of Osorno “with the aim of advancing the process of reparation and healing of abuse victims,” the Vatican said in a statement May 31.

Abuse survivors have alleged that Bishop Juan Barros of Osorno — then a priest — had witnessed their abuse by his mentor, Father Fernando Karadima. In 2011, Father Karadima was sentenced to a life of prayer and penance by the Vatican after he was found guilty of sexually abusing boys.

Archbishop Scicluna, who is president of a board of review handling abuse cases within the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and Father Bertomeu, an official of the doctrinal congregation, will depart “in the next few days,” the Vatican said.

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Former resident at Catholic orphanage was raped by a priest and repeatedly abused by a nun because ‘she had the devil inside’ her

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Daily Mail

May 30, 2018

By Sebastian Murphy-Bates

Helen Holland says she was raped by the priest to whom she had turned for help
The 59-year-old told inquiry nun held her hands down while the priest raped her
Nun also punched, kicked and hit children with a bamboo cane, inquiry was told

AA former resident at a Catholic-run orphanage has told an inquiry she was raped by a priest after confiding in him about being abused by a nun.

Helen Holland, 59, has waived her right to anonymity to describe years of ‘sadistic’ treatment at the Nazareth House home in Kilmarnock during the 1960s and 1970s.

She said the abuse began when she was just eight years old as she addressed the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry today.

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Young girl ‘raped by priest’ and ‘sexually abused by nun’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

May 31, 2018

Abuse is alleged to have taken place at Nazareth House

A former resident at a Catholic children’s home has told an inquiry that she was raped by a priest.

Helen Holland said she was eight years old when the priest and a nun began to sexually abuse her at Nazareth House in Kilmarnock, East Ayrshire.

She told the Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry the nun held her down during the abuse.

Ms Holland, who has waived her right to anonymity, said she suffered years of physical and emotional cruelty.

She lived at the children’s home in the 1960s and 1970s.

She said the nun repeatedly told her “the devil was inside her”.

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Bishop Cantú breaks silence on Hobbs priest accused of sexual abuse

LAS CRUCES (NM)
Sun News

May 30, 2018

By Carlos Andres López

Las Cruces Bishop Oscar Cantú on Wednesday disputed allegations that the diocese conspired to cover up an investigation involving a Hobbs priest who has been charged with sexually assaulting a man. The bishop also maintained that diocesan officials did not receive complaints from Las Cruces parishioners over an eight-year period when the accused priest was at St. Genevieve Catholic Church.

Cantú spoke candidly about what he did — and didn’t do — when he learned about sexual abuse allegations involving Father Ricardo Bauza last year.

In October 2017, Hobbs police charged Bauza, 51, the former pastor at St. Genevieve who was relocated to Hobbs in 2014 to serve as the pastor of St. Helena Catholic Church, with one misdemeanor count of criminal sexual contact following an investigation into allegations that Bauza sexually assaulted an adult male in the rectory shower at St. Helena in 2016.

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Longtime priest suspended over child sex abuse allegation

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

May 31, 2018

A longtime priest in the Buffalo Diocese has been suspended over an allegation of child sex abuse.

The Rev. Mark Wolski most recently served at SS. Peter and Paul Church in Hamburg. He was also a longtime priest at St. John the Evangelist in South Buffalo.

“After receiving an abuse complaint against Rev. Mark J. Wolski, Bishop Richard J. Malone has placed Father Wolski on administrative leave as an investigation continues,” the diocese said in a statement this morning. “Please note that this administrative leave is for the purpose of investigation and does not imply any determination as to the truth or falsity of the complaint.”

Rev. Wolski is the 68th former or current clergy member in the Buffalo Diocese to face credible allegations of sexual misconduct.

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Auxilary Bishop Edward Grosz

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

May 30, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Matt Golden and Nick Caetano are alleged victims of Father Dennis Riter, who allegedly abused them while they were altar boys at a Buffalo parish 20 years ago.

Two months ago, when the boys’ stories first came to light, the diocese suspended Father Riter from the Dunkirk parish where he serves as pastor.

But 7 Eyewitness News has now found a third victim — this one from a church in Lackawanna — and a secret document that suggests two bishops may have been warned of Father Riter’s abuse more than 25 years ago — and failed to act.

One of those men is Edward Grosz — the current auxiliary bishop of Buffalo who now plays a key role in the diocese’s response to the sexual abuse crisis. Golden, a former altar boy, had harsh words for the bishop who once presided at his confirmation into the Catholic faith.

“You knew about this…and you did nothing,” Golden said. “Where’s the accountability?”

The secret letter — obtained exclusively by 7 Eyewitness News — was written and signed by a student at Christ the King Seminary in 1992. The seminarian says he walked in on Father Riter abusing a six-year-old boy at the rectory of Queen of All Saints Church in Lackawanna. But when he alerted diocesan authorities about what he saw, he said he was given the message to keep quiet.

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May 30, 2018

Priest’s assignment to St. Louis parish rescinded over parent concerns about past allegations

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

May 30, 2018

By Erin Heffernan

A Roman Catholic priest twice accused of misconduct involving children will no longer be assigned to a new St. Louis parish following an outpouring of concern from parents, officials with the Archdiocese of St. Louis announced Wednesday.

The Rev. Xiu Hui “Joseph” Jiang had recently been appointed associate pastor of St. Gabriel the Archangel Parish, which is in the St. Louis Hills neighborhood and includes a K-8 school.

The priest was previously charged with statutory sodomy in St. Louis and child endangerment in a Lincoln County case, but charges in both were dropped several years ago. Jiang denied the allegations, and a jury sided with him last year in a civil suit tied to the Lincoln County case.

Still, parents voiced concerns to church leaders about the appointment, including speaking out in the Post-Dispatch and other media. Parents were told Archbishop Robert Carlson and St. Gabriel’s pastor Msgr. John Shamleffer would take questions about the appointment at a parish meeting Thursday.

But on Wednesday, Shamleffer and Carlson both issued letters on the St. Gabriel’s website announcing that the meeting was cancelled and Jiang was no longer assigned to the parish.

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Michigan State spent more than $53,000 in legal fees to respond to NCAA

EAST LANSING (MI)
MLive

May 29, 2018

By Matt Wenzel

Michigan State has spent more than $53,000 in legal fees to defend its claim that no NCAA violations occurred from its handling of former sports medicine doctor Larry Nassar.

The university paid a total of $53,250.54 to the law firm Bond, Schoeneck & King for work in February and March to craft a response to the NCAA, according to documents obtained by MLive via a Freedom of Information Act request.

Mike Glazier, an attorney at Bond, Schoeneck & King, sent Michigan State a letter on Feb. 7 confirming the law firm would represent the university in responding to a Jan. 23 letter from the NCAA seeking information about potential violations related to Nassar. It noted his rate is $475 an hour and he will serve as the primary attorney but, if agreed upon, will assign other work to an attorney whose rate is lower to save money.

From Feb. 1 through March 30, Michigan State was billed for a total of 127 hours of work by the firm. Glazier’s initials were marked for 75.5 hours while another attorney logged 51.5 hours at an average rate of $295 per hour. There was also a total of $2,195.54 billed in other expenses, including flights, a rental car and travel meals.

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Legal hurdles loom for prosecutors in USC gynecologist case

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Associated Press

May 30, 2018

By Brian Melley

The University of Southern California has received hundreds of complaints about a former school gynecologist suspected of conducting inappropriate exams for decades, prompting the resignation of the school president and a police investigation.

More than a dozen lawsuits have been filed and police are talking to more than 50 women who complained, so far.

Whether Dr. George Tyndall faces charges, though, depends on if complaints about creepy comments, improper photos in the exam room and uncomfortable probing went beyond dubious doctoring and into the criminal realm.

The university has come under fire since the Los Angeles Times reported earlier this month that complaints and comments about Tyndall’s care went unheeded by the school for decades and that USC failed to report him to the medical board even after the school quietly forced him into retirement last year.

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What Is Sexual Harassment? A Glossary of the #MeToo Movement

UNITED STATES
Glamour

May 30, 2018

By Elizabeth Kiefer

Your most-searched questions, answered.

We partnered with GQ on an exclusive survey of more than 1,000 men about #MeToo, and the results were eye-opening—particularly this one: 47 percent of men said they hadn’t discussed the movement. At all. With anyone. Let’s change that, because to keep this conversation going, we need everyone talking. See the full Glamour x GQ survey here, and read all of the thoughtful pieces it sparked—from personal essays to a glossary of key terms—here.

Whether at work, at school, or in some other setting, chances are at some point in your life you’ve sat through a seminar or training session on sexual harassment and assault. Maybe it was one of those in-depth, eye-opening lectures that reconfigured the way you think about those subjects, maybe it was a bare minimum presentation that only reaffirmed things you already know.

Either way, the #MeToo era has given these training sessions an added urgency, especially when it comes to a full understanding of the movement’s key terms (and how to use them correctly). While the fact that we’re having more transparent, nuanced conversations about assault and abuses of power than ever before in history is inarguably a good thing, it’s also a dialogue that will ultimately prove more productive if we—men and women alike—are all on the same page about what we’re actually talking about. If our shared goal is more open and consistent conversation about #MeToo and all it entails, it’s crucial to get on the same page with terminology.

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MSU officials were warned about Strampel years ago

EAST LANSING (MI)
The Detroit News

May 28, 2018

By Kim Kozlowski

At least three times since 2004, colleagues of Larry Nassar’s ex-boss alerted Michigan State University’s administration about multiple reports of inappropriate sexual comments he made toward students and others, according to documents obtained by The Detroit News.

The most recent occurrence was in 2015, when a committee evaluating the performance of William Strampel, then dean of the MSU osteopathic medical school, discussed multiple allegations made by students, faculty and staff about unprofessional conduct that Strampel allegedly directed mostly at women.

“Since these are allegations from anonymous individuals, which the committee cannot verify, nor has the power to investigate if there is any substance, we bring it to the attention of the University Administration,” the committee wrote in 2015.

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Nassar scandal clogs FOIA office at Michigan State, impeding access to public information

EAST LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal

May 30, 2018

By Sarah Lehr

The case of Larry Nassar, a serial sexual abuser and a former physician with Michigan State University, has attracted scrutiny about what MSU officials knew and when.

At the same time, it has become more onerous for journalists and concerned citizens to access public records from the university.

The Michigan Freedom of Information Act allows access to documents from public institutions like Michigan State.

Since news of the allegations against Nassar broke, FOIA requests to MSU have increased exponentially. But, staffing levels have not kept pace with the demand, leading to longer wait times for public information.

And, on average, the university is requesting higher fees to fulfill FOIA requests, although amounts vary based on complexity of the request.

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Ex-Michigan State University head to testify to Congress on abuse of athletes

WASHINGTON (DC)
Reuters

May 29, 2018

By David Shepardson

A former Michigan State University President and a former USA Gymnastics President will testify June 5 to a U.S. Senate committee about efforts to protect athletes from abuse following the scandal of the gymnastics team doctor’s sexual assault of gymnasts, the panel said on Tuesday.

Lou Anna Simon resigned from Michigan State in January and Steve Perry from USA Gymnastics in March 2017. Both were criticized for not doing enough to halt abuse by doctor Larry Nassar, who was convicted of molesting gymnasts in 2017 and was sentenced to an effective life term in prison.

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Prospect and Pariah

OREGON
Sports Illustrated

May 16, 2018

By S.L. Price

He’s one of the best college pitchers, a first-round draft talent—and an admitted juvenile sex offender whose crime, if not for a legal glitch, may have stayed secret forever. Watching Luke Heimlich pitch stirs wonder and outrage—and questions about guilt, forgiveness and second chances.

The first thing to understand about a baseball game involving Luke Heimlich—the Oregon State pitcher who in 2012 pleaded guilty to one felony charge of molesting, at 15, his six-year-old niece, who nevertheless claims innocence, who this season leads the nation in wins—is just how normal it can feel. Nestled mid-campus in Corvallis, Goss Stadium hews to game-day rituals seen forever in ballparks big or small, coast to coast: No matter the paycheck or persona or police record, each player comes packaged the same old way. It is one of the sport’s charms.

So it was late in the afternoon of April 19, when winter broke, the sun baked the ground and archrival Oregon made its first appearance of the year. The sound of batting practice, lovely even when—kank!—metallic, blended with rock standards blaring from stadium speakers. Heimlich, owner of a nation’s-best 0.76 ERA in 2017 and once a lock for early-round money, aired out his left arm, long-tossing on the warning track. Two dozen windbreakered scouts, even those told by their teams not to bother, eyed him. One spoke of Heimlich’s command of four pitches, his ability to hit spots at will—despite orders not to discuss him at all.

Of course the sound of scouts parsing talent, muttering under their breath with a crowd—3,692 tonight, a regular-season record—filing in, is a ballyard staple. Soon, too, came the P.A. man announcing the starting lineups; a local braving the national anthem; the ceremonial first pitch. As the Oregon players returned to their dugout, a middle-aged man greeted them from the stands with a resounding, “Go, Beavs! Ducks Suck! Hate Ducks! Ducks Suck!”

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Sports Media Still Don’t Know How To Deal With Sexual Assault

OREGON
The Huffington Post

May 29, 2018

By Jessica Luther

This month, within two weeks of each other, both Sports Illustrated and The New York Times ran long pieces about Oregon State pitcher Luke Heimlich. Sports Illustrated even went so far as to feature Heimlich, an athlete most people have probably never heard of, on its cover.

The reason these outlets are interested in him is that as a teenager, Heimlich pleaded guilty to a felony charge, admitting to sexually molesting his then-6-year-old niece. He did everything the plea required, including probation, taking classes, writing an apology letter to his niece and registering as a sex offender. After The Oregonian broke the news in 2017 about his past, Heimlich, a star at OSU, voluntarily left the team. But he returned this season, and now he and his family are talking to the press as he prepares to go pro.

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AI inspired by the film Spotlight could track down child abusers

LONDON (ENGLAND)
New Scientist

May 30, 2018

By Timothy Revell

Journalists at The Boston Globe searched for patterns in public records to uncover priests in the Catholic church who had sexually abused children. Now, researchers think artificial intelligence could do the same job faster, more accurately and on a much wider scale.

The Boston Globe investigation, depicted in the film Spotlight, involved looking for clues like priests suddenly going on sick leave or moving around a lot. Joelle Casteix at the Zero Abuse Project, a non-profit that aims to help institutions prevent child abuse, and her team have created an AI that looks for similar patterns in thousands of documents from large organisations.

Casteix unveiled the project at the AI for Good Global Summit in Geneva, Switzerland, last week. “I am a survivor of sexual abuse from a teacher, which was followed by a lot of cover-up,” says Casteix. “This is the first time there is a proactive way to stop the cycle.”

The new initiative, called Project G, can study both digital documents or turn paper scans into machine-readable files for the AI to scour. Depending on the organisation, the documents can include those detailing where different people are based and their roles over time, and news clippings in which they are mentioned.

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India Says Boy Victims of Sex Crimes Not Compensated, Ignored

NEW DELHI (INDIA)
Reuters via New York Times

May 30, 2018

Indian states are ignoring boys in compensating child victims of sexual abuse, the federal government said on Wednesday, weeks after the government itself was criticised for overlooking males in a new law mandating tougher punishment for rapes of girls.

“The male child, who is the most neglected victim of child sexual abuse, is being ignored for the award of compensation and needs to be included,” the Ministry of Women and Child Development said in a statement, citing letters sent to states on the issue.

States run centrally monitored programmes to compensate victims of crimes including rape and human trafficking, but sexually abused boys were not getting any financial help, the ministry said.

The statement comes at a time when there is a debate around the treatment meted out to boy victims of sexual crimes in a country where, according to activists and police, many cases of abuse of boys go unreported because of the stigma attached to homosexuality.

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Perjury Conviction Against Ex-Pennsylvania AG Upheld

HARRISBURG (PA)
Courthouse News Service

May 29, 2018

By Gina Carrano

The Pennsylvania Superior Court upheld the conviction Friday of former Attorney General Kathleen Kane, a Democrat who lied to a grand jury that was investigating her leak of information meant to embarrass a political rival.

Daily News reporter Chris Brennan broke the article that had relied on secret grand jury information in June 2014, about three months after the Philadelphia Inquirer published an article that tarnished Kane’s reputation.

As former aides of Kane’s testified at trial, the attorney general believed that the Inquirer’s article relied on information leaked to it by Frank Fina, a former deputy attorney general from the last administration.

Just two years earlier on the campaign trail, Fina had been a frequent target of Kane’s as she focused on the state’s delay prosecuting the decades of child sex abuse committed by Jerry Sandusky, the former Penn State assistant football coach.

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Will risk of abuse turn the tide on ‘vagabond priests’?

DENVER (CO)
Crux

May 30, 2018

By John L. Allen Jr.

Back in 2001, the Congregation for the Evangelization of Peoples – by the way, everybody in Rome still calls it by its old name, “Propaganda Fidei” – put out a document which, by Vatican standards anyway, was remarkably on-point and practical.

Propaganda Fidei oversees the life of the Church in so-called “mission territories,” mostly in the developing world, and the text was called, “Instruction on the Sending Abroad and Sojourn of Diocesan Priests from Mission Territories.”

Its main concern was the growing phenomenon of priests from places such as Africa and Asia going to Europe or North America, often allegedly to “study,” and then basically never going home – floating around here or there, usually without any specific assignment or supervision, normally because they’ve become accustomed to first world standards of living and don’t want to go back.

Cardinal Josef Tomko, a tell-it-like-it-is Slovakian, was running Propaganda Fidei at the time, and he described these rootless priests as the leading edge of a bigger problem, one also including priests whose service abroad is completely legitimate.

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The Equestrian Coach Who Minted Olympians, and Left a Trail of Child Molestation

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

May 29, 2018

By Sarah Maslin Nir

La Cañada Flintridge, Calif. — There’s no trace of Jimmy A. Williams, the Show Jumping Hall of Fame trainer, at the equestrian club where he was an instructor for nearly four decades, cultivating young riders, some of whom went on to Olympic fame.

The pictures and paintings of Mr. Williams, who died in 1993, and the sterling trophies he won all vanished without a word recently from the clubhouse where he had spent many afternoons tipping back Champagne with some of Los Angeles County’s biggest and richest names: the parents of his young charges. Last month, the club removed his name from the grand show jumping stadium at the heart of the sprawling property at the foot of the San Gabriel Mountains, once the Jimmy A. Williams Oval. Today it is just Ring 1.

But his former riders cannot forget Mr. Williams. Across the country, in her New Jersey barn adorned with her Olympic medals, Anne Kursinski, one of the country’s most decorated show jumpers, remembered her former coach.

How he tasted of alcohol whenever he pinned her in a horse stall and crammed his tongue into her mouth. And far more. “He penetrated me when I was 11,” Ms. Kursinski said, revealing publicly for the first time the details of what she said became six years of continual rape and molestation. “I was a little kid,” she said. “And he was God.”

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Retired priest faces sex abuse allegation, denies claim

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
Herald-Star

May 29, 2018

By Matt Saxton

Bridgeport – A retired Belmont County Catholic priest and former schoolteacher has been relieved of active ministry duties after the Roman Catholic Diocese of Steubenville received what it says is a credible sexual abuse allegation against him.

Diocese spokesman Dino Orsatti said Monday that Monsignor Mark Froelich, 75, of Belmont, will no longer be able to participate in church-related activities. Although Froelich retired in 2014, he was still helping some churches with activities such as Masses, confessions and church functions.

As of Monday night, Froelich was not facing criminal charges. But Bishop Jeffrey M. Monforton decided that the allegation was serious enough to remove him from those duties, Orsatti said.

“Our attorneys felt that the accusations are credible enough that the retired priest should be removed from active ministry,” he said.

“We take every allegation extremely seriously,” said Orsatti who also said the Roman Catholic Church issued a zero-tolerance policy regarding sexual abuse allegations in 2002. “We’re just following that decree and taking extra precautions.”

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Sex abuse – there has been a shift in power

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
The Herald

May 30, 2018

By Tarnya Davis

My first job as a psychologist was with the Lower Hunter Sexual Assault Service. It was the 1990s and the public perception of the prevalence of sexual abuse was vastly out of step with the reality. A visiting politician asked how two sexual assault counsellors managed to keep themselves busy, while the fact was we were overwhelmed.

We carried pagers at night and weekends and too often would find ourselves at the John Hunter Hospital, supporting someone who had just been sexually assaulted. It was an exhausting but incredibly fulfilling role.

In the early 2000s many of the people I saw in my private practice were the adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse perpetrated by those from the church. I sat with brave men and women as they told their devastating stories, made statements to the police and as they waited years until they could give evidence in court. The legal process was harrowing and mostly disappointing. At that time experts estimated only one in 10 people would report abuse to the police and of those only one in 10 would progress to charges and a trial. Only a third of those would see a conviction.

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Accused priest had been blackmail victim

MARTINS FERRY (OH)
Times-Leader

May 30, 2018

By Matt Saxton

Bridgeport – A retired priest who lost his ministry privileges late last week and previously was the victim of a blackmail scheme also is the subject of an ongoing criminal investigation.

Msgr. Mark Froehlich, 75, of Belmont, is facing a Belmont County Sheriff’s Office inquiry into an allegation that the retired Roman Catholic priest sexually abused a minor several years ago. Chief Deputy James Zusack said Tuesday that detective Doug Cruse was leading the investigation but also said he could not make any additional comments because the case is still open.

Church officials also said Tuesday they were aware of that investigation when Roman Catholic Diocese of Steubenville Bishop Jeffrey M. Monforton relieved Froehlich of active ministry duties. The current priests of several churches where Froehlich had once served as a priest read statements to their parishioners during Saturday and Sunday Masses. Although Froehlich retired in 2014, he was still helping with Masses, confessions and church functions in Belmont County.

“We do our (investigation), they will do theirs,” said diocese spokesman Dino Orsatti. “We will work together from there.”

Froehlich has faced a sexual misconduct allegation in the past. Two people served prison time for extorting money from Froehlich when they said they would accuse him of sexual abuse if he didn’t pay.

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Gananoque man sentenced to three years in prison for sex abuse

KINGSTON (ONTARIO, CANADA)
the Kingston Whig-Standard

May 29, 2018

By Wayne Lowrie

A former church organist and youth leader, who used his position of authority in the Catholic Church to sexually abuse a 15-year-old boy, was sentenced to three years in prison on Monday.

Brian Joseph Lucy, 70, of Gananoque, started abusing the altar boy and member of the Junior Knights youth group while organist of St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church and leader of the youth group, the court heard.

Starting in the early 1990s, the abuse, which included oral, anal and group sex, occurred more than 100 times before the victim turned 18, often two or three times a week and sometimes lasting four to five hours, according to a statement of facts read into the record by Crown Attorney Jacqueline Masse. The encounters continued until the victim was in his early 20s.

In an impact statement to the court, the victim, who can’t be identified because of a court order, called Lucy a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” who used his friendship with his family and his position with the church to cause the boy to trust him. The youth, in Grade 9 when it started, was a troubled teen when Lucy began taking him to his house, plying him with alcohol and persuading him to engage in the sex acts, the victim said.

The victim said the encounters have emotionally scarred him for life and “hurt me more than anyone will ever know.”

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Catholic Church in Australia joins national abuse redress scheme

MONTROUGE (FRANCE)
La Croix International

May 30, 2018

The Catholic Church is bringing all its religious congregations and dioceses under one company to make it easier to make payouts

The Australian Catholic Bishops Conference and Catholic Religious Australia confirmed on Wednesday that the Catholic Church would join a national redress scheme for child sexual abuse survivors and share in compensation, reports 9 News.

“We support the royal commission’s recommendation for a national redress scheme, administered by the Commonwealth, and we are keen to participate in it,” said Archbishop Mark Coleridge, the Australian Catholic bishops president.

The Catholic Church had called for the national redress scheme since 2013, the archbishop said.Social Services Minister Dan Tehan said the scheme, if passed by the Senate, is to begin on July 1.

“The Catholic Church obviously had institutions, churches under its control where terrible, terrible, shocking abuse took place,” 9 News reported him telling media people in Canberra.

The Catholic Church was bringing all its religious congregations and dioceses under one company to make it easier to make payouts, he said.”We’re talking tens of millions of dollars,” Tehan reportedly said.

While Sister Ruth Durick, Catholic Religious Australia president said “We are committed to providing redress to survivors who were abused within the Catholic Church,” Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney said “We’re determined to bring justice and full redress – healing, if we can – to the victims of this terrible crime.

“Archbishop Fisher, without specifying an estimated amount, said the church expected to be paying out survivors for “many years to come,” the report said.

Legislation to enable the $3.8 billion opt-in scheme passed federal parliament’s lower house on May 29.

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Australian Catholic Church to enter into redress scheme for sex abuse survivors

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Reuters

May 30, 2018

The Australian Catholic Church has committed to taking part in a new national redress scheme for survivors of institutional child sexual abuse, two top religious groups said on Wednesday.

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said if all states and institutions across Australia opt in the scheme could provide support to around 60,000 people.

The scheme will target people sexually abused as children while in the care of a Commonwealth institution and follows a nationwide inquiry that found widespread institutionalized child sexual abuse in Australia.

Redress is offered as an alternative to taking compensation through the courts. It can include access to psychological counseling, a direct personal response such as an apology from the responsible institution for people who want it, and a monetary payment. Payments are capped at A$150,000.

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Catholic Church will sign up to national sexual abuse redress scheme

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

May 30, 2018

By Miki Perkins

The Catholic Church has confirmed it will sign up to the national redress scheme for survivors of child sexual abuse once the laws are passed by the Senate.

More than 60 per cent of all survivors of sex abuse in religious settings who gave evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse – more than 2500 people – came from Catholic-managed institutions.

The Catholic Church is the first national non-government institution to officially announce it will join the scheme, which has been criticised because institutions have to opt in and because it does not cover physical abuse.

Federal Social Services Minister Dan Tehan described the church’s announcement as significant, saying it showed the church was remorseful and willing to take responsibility.

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Boost for redress scheme as Catholic Church opts in

SURRY HILLS (NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA)
The Australian

May 30, 2018

By John Ferguson

The Catholic Church will formally opt in to the $4 billion child abuse redress scheme in the first major declaration from the faith’s new head of bishops.

Catholic Church leaders have written to Social Services Minister Dan Tehan declaring the move, which is a significant fillip for the national scheme.

Once all states and territories have opted into the scheme and federal law is enacted, the church will establish an agency to enable all church bodies to interact with the scheme’s national operator.

It is possible that, with so many different branches of the church, the church entities will sign up at various different times during the next two years.

The new Australian Catholic Bishops Conference president Archbishop Mark Coleridge was a joint signatory of the letter to Mr Tehan with Catholic Religious Australia president Sister Ruth Durick.

“We support the Royal Commission’s recommendation for a national redress scheme, administered by the commonwealth, and we are keen to participate in it,’’ they said.

“We recognise that redress will not take away a survivor’s pain, but hope that it can provide some practical assistance in the journey towards recovery from abuse.

“Once the scheme is initiated, we are committed to providing redress to survivors who were abused within the Catholic Church.

“Given the diverse structure of the Catholic Church, Catholic officials have been working with the commonwealth government to enable church authorities to work effectively with the independent National Redress Scheme Operator.

“We are grateful for the commonwealth’s support in helping create the best possible solution to simplify the process for survivors who will seek redress from a Catholic institution.’’

Archbishop Coleridge was recently appointed president of the bishops’ conference as his predecessor Denis Hart from Melbourne is due to retire as an archbishop.

The scheme will provide up to $150,000 in redress to proven victims but with a lower burden of proof compared with the courts.

The scheme will require participants to release offending institutions from civil liability for the abuse but in turn will enable them to receive a one-off payment or an additional top-up payment if any original redress were deemed inadequate.

Labor backed a $200,000 cap, in line with the royal commission recommendation, but the federal government and major states believe $150,000 will be as high as the scheme can go.

The key number will be the average cost of each claim, which is likely to be about $75,000.

The scheme bears significant similarities with the original Catholic systems set up in the 1990s and has not been embraced by some victim groups.

The key difference is a greater level of independence and higher payouts, coupled with relatively low standards of proof that abuse occurred.

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Catholic church signs up to redress scheme for child abuse victims

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Guardian

May 30, 2018

By Melissa Davey

‘Survivors deserve justice and healing’, says spokesman

Catholic church opts in to national redress scheme for survivors of child sexual abuse, following the Anglican church which signed up on Sunday.

The Catholic Church has signed up to the federal government’s national redress scheme for survivors of child sexual abuse.

The scheme will take effect from July and requires the states and territories as well as non-government organisations such as churches and charities to opt into the scheme and agree to pay victims abused within their organisations up to $150,000 compensation.

Australia’s royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse found 7% of Australia’s Catholic priests were accused of abusing children in the six decades since 1950. Up to 15% of priests in some dioceses were alleged perpetrators between 1950 and 2015, the commission found.

Almost 2,500 survivors told the commission about sexual abuse in an institution managed by the Catholic church, representing 61.8% of all survivors who reported sexual abuse in a religious institution.

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Catholic Church joins sex abuse compensation scheme

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

May 30, 2018

An inquiry into sexual abuse in Australia found institutions had “seriously failed” to protect children

The Catholic Church has confirmed it will be part of a national redress scheme for victims of child sexual abuse in Australia.

The nation recently held a five-year inquiry into sexual abuse in the country’s institutions.

Among harrowing stories, it heard that 7% of Australia’s Catholic priests abused children between 1950 and 2010.

Governments and institutions have faced intense pressure to join a compensation programme for victims.

The Church said it was “keen to participate” in the scheme, to be co-ordinated by the Australian government.

“Survivors deserve justice and healing and many have bravely come forward to tell their stories,” said Archbishop Mark Coleridge, president of the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference.

The Church is the first non-government organisation to join the scheme, which is scheduled to begin in July.

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May 29, 2018

Assignment History– Rev. Samuel B. Slocum

ERIE (PA)
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Samuel B. Slocum was ordained for the Diocese of Erie in 1980. He was a faculty member until 1997 at high schools in DuBois, St. Mary’s, Erie and Bradford while residing and ministering in area parishes. From 1990 on he was the sole priest at parishes in Eldred, Shinglehouse, Bradford, then Lewis Run.

In April 2011 Slocum was arrested on charges related to a recent inappropriate relationship with a 15-year-old Lewis Run boy. Slocum had been giving the boy expensive gifts and taking photos of him and other boys. The boy’s parents forbade the priest from contacting their son, but Slocum did not stop; he lied to the mother and encouraged the boy to be secretive. The mother reported him to the police. Slocum admitted to engaging in inappropriate behavior with the boys. He was placed on leave by the diocese.

Slocum was convicted in 2012 and given two years’ probation. His laicization was announced in November 2016.

Ordained: 1980
Laicized: 2016

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“THIS IS BIGGER THAN MYSELF”: HOW THE WOMEN OF THE U.S. GYMNASTICS TEAM FOUND THEIR VOICE

UNITED STATES
Vanity Fair

SUMMER 2018

By Vanessa Grigoriadis

As new accusers continue to emerge in the wake of Larry Nassar’s abhorrent crimes, gymnastics—and the idea of girlhood that the sport perpetuates—is undergoing a revolution.

Few icons of American girlhood are as symbolically complex as elite gymnasts. They appear on the mat as tiny shining birds: gems sewn into their leotards sparkling under bright competition lights, and colorful bows plopped on their French-braided hairdos like feathered crowns. Scouts looking for young gymnasts with the potential to reach the Olympics sometimes spot girls as young as seven. Their careers usually peak before they can vote and end before they can legally order a glass of wine in a restaurant. Yet they are athletes of extraordinary accomplishment and fortitude. They’re strong women, or girls becoming women, who fly through the air seemingly by sheer force of will. As a child glued to the television during the Summer Olympics in the 1980s, I thought of them as real-life versions of Superwoman. Women of steel, lighter than air.

In the past few months, these girls have also become bellwethers for our evolving views on femininity, agency, and sexual abuse. Until recently the story they told about their lives in gymnastics was one of unique powerlessness. As top gymnasts, they were supposed to be silent, sexless, obedient little girls. They had one purpose and one purpose only: to perform fearsome acrobatics. They were never supposed to complain about ragged palms, stress fractures, and excruciating back pain. They didn’t question the sport’s rigid attitudes toward diet, which often veered suspiciously close to starvation. And they certainly never would have told an authority figure that Larry Nassar, the respected osteopathic doctor who was the physician for the U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team and other club and university-level teams, was inappropriately penetrating their vaginas and rectums with his fingers while they lay on his massage table to receive treatment for injuries. Good girls, and good gymnasts, didn’t create waves.

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After scandal, head of Chilean Church’s anti-abuse panel resigns

ROME
CRUX

May 27, 2018

By Inés San Martín

A Chilean bishop who’s acknowledged he was slow in investigating allegations of abuse and misconduct in his diocese resigned as president of the Chilean Church’s National Commission for the Prevention of Abuses.

The announcement was made by the Chilean bishops’ conference, which said on Saturday that it had accepted the resignation of Bishop Alejando Goic of Rancagua from the commission. At this point, he continues as the head of his diocese.

Together with most of Chile’s active bishops, Goic presented his resignation to Pope Francis mid-May. The prelates were summoned by the pontiff to Rome to discuss a crisis in the local Church, a product of decades of abuses and cover-ups and which began detonating in early 2015, when the pontiff appointed Bishop Juan Barros, accused of covering up for the country’s most notorious pedophile priest, to the southern diocese of Osorno.

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Judge in Brock Turner rape case defends his controversial sentencing ahead of recall vote

CALIFORNIA
CBS NEWS

May 29, 2018

Aaron Persky is speaking out one week before voters decide if he should be removed over his handling of a sexual assault trial. The California judge gave former Stanford University swimmer Brock Turner a short jail term after Turner was found guilty of sexually assaulting an unconscious woman. The sentence generated global outrage and raised questions about judicial independence and politics in the courtroom.

Persky has remained largely silent as the campaign to remove him from the bench has built over nearly two years. But now, in his only television interview, he defended the sentence that has been so widely condemned.

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Letter from Rome

VATICAN CITY
UCA News

May 29, 2018

By Robert Mickens

Can Pope Francis fix the clergy sex abuse crisis?

The deeply disturbing scandal of clergy sex abuse in Chile and its cover-up by church leaders in the country continues to go from bad to worse.

After a Vatican-led investigation in February, which prompted Pope Francis to call an emergency summit in Rome of the entire Chilean hierarchy, there has been a seemingly non-stop flow of newly revealed cases of sexual crimes against young people.

First, there was a news report of an organized pedophilia (or at least ephebophilia) ring in a diocese north of the capital Santiago where priests have been involved in exchanging pornographic images of minors and information on how to sexually engage with these adolescents.

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Retired priest William Nolan, accused of sexual assault, was a witness in fellow priest’s case

FORT ATKINSON (WI)
FOX6 Now

May 27, 2018

By Suzanne Spencer

There is a twist in a sexual misconduct case against a Diocese of Madison retired priest.

Police say Fr. William Nolan sexually assaulted a former student and altar boy at St. Joseph’s Catholic School in Fort Atkinson.

“Is there any prior information the diocese had about him?” asked Peter Isely of SNAP — the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests.

Isely works with a network devoted to victims of abuse and remembers Nolan’s name — when the retired priest was a witness in a fellow priest’s case in 2005 involving Rev. Gerald Vosen. At the time, Vosen was trying to prove the man who accused him of sexual assault defamed him.

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#MeToo, earlier scandals mean pending clergy sex abuse report can’t be ‘a small problem’

PENNSYLVANIA
Penn Live

May 29, 2018

By Ivey DeJesus

In the mid-2000s, when then-Philadelphia District Attorney Lynne Abraham launched an investigation into clergy sex abuse and cover-up in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, she was assailed for waging a campaign against the Roman Catholic Church.

It was a virtual repeat of what had played out just a few years prior in 2002 in Boston. That year, officials at the Archdiocese of Boston accused The Boston Globe of mounting an anti-Catholic agenda after the paper published a series of scathing reports detailing decades of molestation of thousands of children by priests and its systemic cover up by church officials.

At times, both in Philadelphia and Boston, Catholics rallied behind the church and defended their faith as legions came to terms with revelations of the assaults.

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Retired Diocese of Steubenville Priest Faces Sex Abuse Allegation

BRIDGEPORT (WV)
The Intelligencer

May 29, 2018

By Matt Saxton

A retired Belmont County Catholic priest and former schoolteacher has been relieved of active ministry duties after the Roman Catholic Diocese of Steubenville received what it says is a credible sexual abuse allegation against him.

Diocese spokesman Dino Orsatti said Monday that Msgr. Mark Froehlich, 75, of Belmont will no longer be able to participate in church-related activities.

Although Froehlich retired in 2014, he was still helping some churches with activities such as Masses, confessions and church functions.

As of Monday night, Froehlich was not facing criminal charges. But Bishop Jeffrey M. Monforton decided that the allegation was serious enough to remove him from active ministry, Orsatti said.

“We take every allegation extremely seriously,” said Orsatti, who also said the Roman Catholic Church issued a zero-tolerance policy regarding sexual abuse allegations in 2002. “We’re just following that decree and taking extra precautions.”

However, Froehlich said Monday night that he disputes the allegation.

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Ozanam Lecture Part 1: Introduction

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Outlook

May 29, 2018

“How does the Catholic welfare sector continue with ‘good works’ post the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse?”

PART 1: INTRODUCTION

Dear friends,

I would like to pay my respect and acknowledge the traditional custodians of the land on which this meeting takes place, and also pay respect to Elders both past and present.

Thank you for the invitation to speak at this forum and to have the opportunity to share the podium with a very distinguished Catholic woman. Two months ago, I was in Rome for a conference on migrants and refugees. It took place at the same time as the Voices of Faith International Women’s Day Conference at which Mary McAleese, former President of Ireland gave a powerful speech on women and the Catholic Church. I was particularly struck by the image she uses to describe the state of the church. She said – practically within the Pope’s earshot – that the exclusion of women from decision-making roles “has left the church flapping about awkwardly on one wing”. And if that wasn’t enough, she went on to say that “the church has long been the primary global carrier of the virus of misogyny.” Whoa! Talk about pulling no punches. I hope Geraldine Doogue is going to be a bit gentler to me than Mary McAleese was to Pope Francis.

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Sex abuser gets three years

CANADA
Recorder and Times

May 28, 2018

By Wayne Lowrie

A former church organist and youth leader, who used his position of authority in the Catholic Church to sexually abuse a 15-year-old boy, was sentenced to three years in prison on Monday.

Brian Joseph Lucy, 70, of Gananoque, started abusing the altar boy and member of the Junior Knights youth group while organist of St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church and leader of the youth group, the court heard.

Starting in the early 1990s, the abuse, which included oral, anal and group sex, occurred more than 100 times before the victim turned 18, often two or three times a week and sometimes lasting four to five hours, according to a statement of facts read into the record by Crown Attorney Jacqueline Masse. The encounters continued until the victim was in his early 20s.

In an impact statement to the court, the victim, who can’t be identified because of a court order, called Lucy a “wolf in sheep’s clothing,” who used his friendship with his family and his position with the church to cause the boy to trust him. The youth, in Grade 9 when it started, was a troubled teen when Lucy began taking him to his house, plying him with alcohol and persuading him to engage in the sex acts, the victim said.

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The wrath of God poured out

CARY (NC)
The Biblical Recorder

May 29, 2018

By Albert Mohler Jr.

The last few weeks have been excruciating for the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) and for the larger evangelical movement. It is as if bombs are dropping and God alone knows how many will fall and where they will land.

America’s largest evangelical denomination has been in the headlines day after day. The SBC is in the midst of its own horrifying #MeToo moment.

At one of our seminaries, controversy has centered on a president (now former president) whose sermon illustration from years ago included advice that a battered wife remain in the home and the marriage in hope of the conversion of her abusive husband. Other comments represented the objectification of a teenage girl. The issues only grew more urgent with the sense that the dated statements represented ongoing advice and counsel.

But the issues are far deeper and wider.

Sexual misconduct is as old as sin, but the avalanche of sexual misconduct that has come to light in recent weeks is almost too much to bear. These grievous revelations of sin have occurred in churches, in denominational ministries and even in our seminaries.

We thought this was a Roman Catholic problem. The unbiblical requirement of priestly celibacy and the organized conspiracy of silence within the hierarchy helped to explain the cesspool of child sex abuse that has robbed the Roman Catholic Church of so much of its moral authority. When people said that Evangelicals had a similar crisis coming, it didn’t seem plausible – even to me. I have been president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary for [25] years. I did not see this coming.

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‘More can be done’ for sex abuse victims, says Cathy McGowan

AUSTRALIA
The Border Mail

May 29, 2018

By Shana Morgan

Cathy McGowan has called on churches to show more “humility” to help improve the situation for survivors of child sexual abuse.

The Indi MP spoke in parliament yesterday in support of a national redress scheme for institutional child sex abuse, which will give survivors access of up to $150,000 in compensation.

She said religious institutions needed to improve their culture, so this never happens again, and be transparent in their responses.

“It can’t just be done in private. We need public recognition from our institutions that serious hurt has been caused, that they are going to make appropriate changes to the way they do things and then work with survivors to actually improve the situation,” Ms McGowan said.

“While I understand some institutions have gone some way in this regard, I think there is more that can be done in terms of humility, in practical signs of sorrow.”

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COUNTERPOINT: Fearful Catholic Church still won’t face the music

HALIFAX (NOVA SCOTIA, CANADA)
The Chronicle Herald

May 28, 2018

By Maryanne McNeil

Since the April 7 publication of my opinion piece about why I was walking away from the Roman Catholic Church, I have read with great interest the many responses it generated.

The great majority of these were unwaveringly supportive; however, there were some critical voices. For the most part, the ensuing debate has been healthy, prompting interested individuals to examine their own beliefs and, sometimes, to state them publicly.

Only a tiny portion of the responses went beyond the bounds of civil discussion into the realm of rather personal attacks. One small example is that, for decrying the lack of opportunity for women to serve in leadership roles in the Roman Catholic Church, I was called “an obvious radical feminist.” That one made me smile; I’m still trying to decide if I should take it as an insult.

I do understand that when criticism is levelled at a cherished institution, emotions will flare and reaction will sometimes be intense. It takes restraint to refrain from hurling personal barbs and it seems that our present social climate has taken enthusiastically to modelling the opposite tactics: maligning, denying and dismissing. It’s far easier to do that than to examine issues through as honest and objective a lens as possible.

I had decided that it was better for me to allow this debate that I’d initiated to play itself out without wading into it again. After all, other opinions, both supportive and in opposition, are as valid as my own.

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NCR Podcast: Clergy sex abuse fallout in Chile

CHILE
National Catholic Reporter

May 25, 2018

Under increasing scrutiny about the handling of clergy sexual abuse cases over decades, Chile’s Catholic bishops said that Pope Francis’ emotional meetings at the Vatican with three abuse victims “shows us the path that the Chilean Church is called to follow.” Shortly after releasing this statement, the Chilean bishops in Rome announced they have submitted their resignations to Francis en masse and will await his decision for which of their dismissals he will accept.

On the show today:

– Joshua J. McElwee, Vatican correspondent
– Fr. James Connell, a retired priest in the Milwaukee Archdiocese, canon lawyer, and a founding member of Catholic Whistleblowers

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Kottiyoor rape: Kerala court to begin trial in Catholic priest raping minor case

INDIA
The News Minute

May 26, 2018

By Megha Varier

A court in Thalassery reportedly refused to entertain the plea by three of the accused to quash charges against them.

More than a year since a Catholic priest allegedly raped and impregnated a minor girl in Kottiyoor in Kannur district, the trial proceedings in the case is set to begin.

The police had, in February last year, arrested and booked ten people including the priest Father Robin Vadakkumchery.

According to a report published by Mathrubhumi News, a court in Thalassery refused to entertain the plea filed by three of the accused seeking to drop the charges against them.

With this, the Additional Sessions Court in Thalassery ordered for the chargesheet to be read out to all the accused.

Although the third, fourth and fifth accused in the case, Sr Dr. Tesi Thomas, Dr Hyderali, and Sister Ancy Mathew, had previously approached the Supreme Court with a plea to quash charges against them, the apex court had refused to do so.

The apex court had also dismissed their plea to put a stay on the trial.

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Despite warnings, past Buffalo bishops returned abusive clergy to parishes

BUFFALO (NY)
The Buffalo News

May 27, 2018

By Jay Tokasz

When a mother complained that the Rev. Norbert F. Orsolits propositioned her teenage son in a bar, the Diocese of Buffalo quietly sent him away for mental health therapy and listed him as “on leave” in its official 1979 directory.

Then, within months, the diocese reassigned him to a new parish, where he later was accused of molesting at least two boys.

Orsolits isn’t the only Buffalo priest accused of sexual abusing children who had been marked as “on leave” and then put back into a parish.

The Buffalo News found that from 1973 to 2000 the diocese assigned 11 priests to work in a parish or other ministry after they were marked as “absent on leave” or “awaiting assignment” in official directories. The diocese this year identified nine of those priests as having been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors. The two other priests were publicly accused but not part of the diocesan list.

At least three of the 11 priests – while on leave from a parish or otherwise unassigned – were treated at Southdown Institute, a mental health facility near Toronto, for sexual transgressions with minors and then reassigned to parishes.

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… and then there’s the archbishop who won’t resign

AUSTRALIA
Catholic Culture

May 28, 2018

By Phil Lawler

While thirty Chilean bishops have submitted their resignation after being accused of covering up sexual abuse, Archbishop Philip Wilson of Adelaide, Australia, has not resigned after being convicted in a court of law of the same offense.

Following his conviction, Archbishop Wilson said that he would step down from his position, leaving his vicar general in charge of the archdiocese, but would not resign. “He’s standing aside until process has run its course,” said an archdiocesan spokesman, whereas a resignation would be “forever.” The “process” in this case could mean either an appeal of the verdict or a prison sentence of up to two years.

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Government to set up Commission of Investigation into response to complaints against Bill Kenneally

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
NewsTalk

May 29, 2018

By Jack Quann

The commission will take up to one year to report

The Cabinet has approved a proposal to establish a Commission of Investigation into the response to complaints or allegations of child sexual abuse made against Bill Kenneally.

The Government also approved the appointment of retired Circuit Court Judge Barry Hickson as sole member of the commission.

The Houses of the Oireachtas will now be required to pass motions so that the commission can be formally established.

This is expected to take place in the coming weeks.

Kenneally, a former basketball coach, is currently serving a 14 year prison sentence in relation to 10 sample counts of indecent assault against minors – which took place in the 1980s.

A number of survivors of that abuse have claimed that the State and other bodies failed to intervene sufficiently in order to prevent him continuing to abuse children.

They allege there was collusion between An Garda Síochána, the Catholic Church authorities and elements within the political system, which prevented Kenneally from being arrested and charged at a much earlier stage.

As a result of these concerns, the Government agreed in principle on May 30th 2017 to establish a Commission of Investigation.

The commission will be called the ‘Commission of Investigation (Response to complaints or allegations of child sexual abuse made against Bill Kenneally, and related matters’.

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Abortion vote is backlash for sex abuse scandals, say Irish Catholics

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
The Associated Press

May 27, 2018

Irish Catholics attending Sunday Mass were disappointed with the result of a referendum in which voters opted to legalize abortion and think it reflects the weakening of the Church — a situation that was unthinkable in Ireland a generation ago.

There was no mention of the referendum during the sermon at St. Mary’s Pro Cathedral, but it was weighing heavily on the minds of some worshippers as they left the Mass in central Dublin.

Ireland voted by a roughly two-to-one margin Friday to end a constitutional ban on abortion, and parliament is expected to approve a more liberal set of laws governing the termination of pregnancies.

Some worshippers said the overwhelming victory of abortion rights activists seeking the repeal of the Eighth Amendment of the constitution reflects a weakening of the Catholic Church’s historic influence and fills them with dread for Ireland’s future.

“I think the ‘yes’ vote was an anti-Church vote,” said Annemarie McCarrick, referring to the “yes” vote in favor of ending the constitutional ban.

The 52-year-old lecturer said on the cathedral steps that a series of sex abuse scandals had undermined the influence of the Church in Ireland. She said the Church had in recent weeks taken a “quiet” stand against repeal, but hadn’t been able to sway people.

“I am religious but the Church has definitely lost influence here because of the scandals,” she said. “The people will not take direction from the Church anymore. It’s hard for the Church to have credibility.”

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Keep eyes on the ball

SCRANTON (PA)
The Times-Tribune

May 29, 2018

Two events last week related to former state Attorney General Kathleen Kane’s tempestuous and truncated term of office offer a lesson for all public officials who have a difficult time separating governance from politics.

Friday, a three-judge panel of the state Superior Court unanimously upheld Kane’s Aug. 15, 2016, conviction in Montgomery County Court for perjury, false swearing, obstructing the administration of law, official oppression and criminal conspiracy. She was sentenced Oct. 24, 2016, to 10 to 23 months in prison, but has remained free pending appeal. And she still can petition the state Supreme Court to hear an appeal of the Superior Court decision.

Earlier in the week, state Attorney General Josh Shapiro announced that bishops of six Catholic dioceses, including Bishop Joseph Bambera of Scranton, had agreed not to contest the public release of an impending grand jury report on sexual abuse by clergy and the dioceses’ handling of those cases.

Kane, who had handled child sexual abuse cases as an assistant district attorney in Lackawanna County, launched that important investigation in 2016.

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May 28, 2018

Where Did Ireland Go? Abortion Vote Stuns Those on Both Sides

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

May 27, 2018

By Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura

Dublin – Some were joyous. Others were devastated. But most of all, in the hours after Irish voters swept away a ban on abortion, many were simply astonished.

However they felt about the result of the referendum, they were witnessing, they knew, the culmination of a fundamental shift in Irish society — and one that has come about with stunning speed.

In a remarkably compact span of time, the country has gone from being a bastion of social conservatism in the West to a place that wholeheartedly embraces positions that would have been unthinkable just a generation ago.

The culture of silence and deference to religious authority that long dominated Ireland is gone. The country that has emerged is an unlikely leader of liberal values.

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Ireland Votes to End Abortion Ban, in Rebuke to Catholic Conservatism

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

May 26, 2018

By Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura

Dublin – Ireland voted decisively to repeal one of the world’s more restrictive abortion bans, sweeping aside generations of conservative patriarchy and dealing the latest in a series of stinging rebukes to the Roman Catholic Church.

The surprising landslide, reflected in the results announced on Saturday, cemented the nation’s liberal shift at a time when right-wing populism is on the rise in Europe and the Trump administration is imposing curbs on abortion rights in the United States. In the past three years alone, Ireland has installed a gay man as prime minister and has voted in another referendum to allow same-sex marriage.

But this was a particularly wrenching issue for Irish voters, even for supporters of the measure. And it was not clear until the end that the momentum toward socially liberal policies would be powerful enough to sweep away deeply ingrained opposition to abortion.

* * *
The church lost much of its credibility in the wake of scandals involving pedophile priests and thousands of unwed mothers who were placed into servitude in so-called Magdalene laundries or mental asylums as recently as the mid-1990s.

The church was, in fact, largely absent from the referendum campaign. Anti-abortion campaigners actively discouraged its participation, preferring to emphasize moral values and human rights rather than religion, possibly to avoid being tarnished by the church-related scandals.

During the campaign, the Association of Catholic Priests urged its members not to preach politics from the pulpit. The guidance came after some priests had threatened their congregations that they would not be able to receive Communion if they voted “yes,” according to people who attended the Masses.

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As Ireland Joins Europe’s Sprint From Catholic Fold, Francis Looks South

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

May 27, 2018

By Jason Horowitz

Vatican City – When nearly one-third of Ireland’s Catholic population came to see Pope John Paul II celebrate a papal Mass in Dublin in 1979, divorce, homosexual acts and abortion were all illegal in the country. Ireland, like much of Europe, toed the line on Roman Catholic Church teaching.

In August, Pope Francis will return to Ireland for a World Meeting of Families event attended by the church’s most committed anti-abortion activists. But they will find themselves, after Saturday’s historic repeal of an abortion ban in a landslide vote, in a country that is clearly part of Europe’s secular sprint out of the Roman Catholic fold.

Across Western Europe, the church’s once mighty footprint has faded, in no small measure because of self-inflicted clerical sex abuse scandals and an inability to keep up with and reach contemporary Catholics. Church attendance has plummeted, parishes are merging, and new priests and nuns are in short supply. Gay marriage is on the rise, and abortion is widely legal.

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Retired, local priest accused of sexual abuse

WHEELING (WV)
WTRF

May 28, 2018

[See a bio of Msgr. Mark Froelich.]

The Diocese of Steubenville has received what it considers to be credible allegations of sexual abuse against retired diocesan priest Msgr. Mark J. Froehlich.

Due to the allegations, he has been removed from active ministry.

The “Chapter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” which are special laws approved by the Holy Father to deal with child abuse, are handling the case.

Any victim or victims harmed by a priest or anyone serving on behalf of the Catholic Church in the Diocese of Steubenville can contact the Diocese or authorities.

In the Diocese victims can call Thomas S. Wilson at (740) 282-3631 or email twilson@diosteub.org.

On Sunday night, SNAP, the Suvivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests responded to the allegations:

“Church officials wrongly tell us that incidents such as this case can be reported to Diocesan officials or authorities. All incidents of child sex abuse must be reported to the police or child protective services. The church officials are not the proper officials to be investigating child sex crimes as we have seen a history of church authorities covering up clergy who abuse children. If you have been abused or have a reasonable suspicion of abuse, please report to the police.”

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May 27, 2018

Víctimas de Karadima critican designación de obispo de San Bernardo en Consejo de Prevención de Abusos

CHILE
La Tercera

May 27, 2018

[Karadima victims criticize appointment of Bishop of San Bernardo in Abuse Prevention Council]

By Alejandra Jara

Esta noticia fue criticada por José Andrés Murillo, y Juan Carlos Cruz, denunciantes del ex párroco de El Bosque, Fernando Karadima quienes sostuvieron que González “no tiene empatía”.

La Conferencia Episcopal designó ayer sábado al obispo Juan Ignacio González como presidente del Consejo Nacional de Prevención Abusos de la Iglesia Católica, tras la renuncia del religioso Alejandro Goic a la instancia.

Esta noticia fue criticada por José Andrés Murillo, Juan Carlos Cruz, denunciantes del ex párroco de El Bosque, Fernando Karadima, quienes mostraron su rechazo a la desginación de González.

“Un tipo con la empatía de una piedra, prepotente, despectivo y con una historia turbia durante la dictadura”, escribió Murillo en su cuenta de Twitter.

[Google Translation: This news was criticized by José Andrés Murillo, and Juan Carlos Cruz, denouncers of the former pastor of El Bosque, Fernando Karadima, who maintained that González “has no empathy.”

The Episcopal Conference appointed Bishop Juan Ignacio González on Saturday as president of the National Council for the Prevention of Abuses of the Catholic Church, following the resignation of the religious Alejandro Goic at the instance.

This news was criticized by José Andrés Murillo, Juan Carlos Cruz, denouncers of the former pastor of El Bosque, Fernando Karadima, who showed their rejection of González’s desegination.

“A guy with the empathy of a stone, arrogant, derogatory and with a turbulent history during the dictatorship,” Murillo wrote in his Twitter account.]

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Fiscalía de O’Higgins investigará a excanciller de la Iglesia de Santiago

CHILE
La Tercera

May 27, 2018

[O’Higgins prosecutor will investigate ex-chancellor of the Church of Santiago]

By Leyla Zapata

Ministerio Público abrirá causa de oficio tras la autodenuncia por abuso del sacerdote Óscar Muñoz.

Tras conocerse la autodenuncia por eventual abuso sexual que hizo en el Arzobispado de Santiago el ahora excanciller de la entidad, Óscar Muñoz Toledo (56), el Ministerio Público de O’Higgins abrirá una investigación de oficio para indagar posibles delitos cometidos por el sacerdote, quien también se desempeñaba como párroco de la Iglesia Jesús de Nazareth, ubicada en la comuna de Estación Central.

Esto, porque los hechos en cuestión se habrían cometido en el ámbito familiar del presbítero, en la Región de O’Higgins, hace cerca de 10 años, según trascendió.

La fiscalía, además, agruparía este caso a la indagatoria que inició en marzo pasado contra la llamada “cofradía” de sacerdotes de la zona, que está siendo indagada por la Unidad de Alta Complejidad del Ministerio Público, por eventuales delitos contra menores.

Por este caso, el obispo de Rancagua, Alejandro Goic, suspendió de sus funciones eclesiales a 14 párrocos de la Región de O’Higgins.

[Google Translation: The Public Ministry will open an ex officio case after the self-denunciation for abuse of priest Óscar Muñoz.

After knowing the self-denunciation by eventual sexual abuse that did in the Archbishopric of Santiago the now ex-chancellor of the entity, Óscar Muñoz Toledo (56), the Public Ministry of O’Higgins will open an investigation ex officio to investigate possible crimes committed by the priest, who also served as parish priest of the Jesus of Nazareth Church, located in the commune of Central Station.

This, because the facts in question had been committed in the family of the priest, in the O’Higgins Region, about 10 years ago, according to reports.

The prosecution, in addition, would group this case to the investigation that began last March against the so-called “brotherhood” of priests of the area, which is being investigated by the High Complexity Unit of the Public Prosecutor’s Office, for possible crimes against minors.

In this case, the bishop of Rancagua, Alejandro Goic, suspended 14 priests of the O’Higgins Region from their ecclesiastical functions.]

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Martin says church cannot compromise its position on abortion

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
RTÉ

May 26, 2018

By Joe Little

Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Dr Diarmuid Martin has expressed surprise at the outcome of the referendum, and reiterated that his church cannot compromise on its opposition to abortion.

It follows the declaration of the official result this evening, one which campaigners for a No vote described as a “tragedy of historic proportions”.

Dr Martin said that compassion is a Christian concept and that the Catholic Church has to show, in the way it lives and witnesses to the gospel, that it is genuinely compassionate.

“We have to speak with compassion even if what we speak is not acceptable,” he said.

He added that above all, the Catholic Church had to revamp all that it does to be pro-life.

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Donegal man’s Twitter thread explaining county’s No vote is garnering a lot of praise

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
The Independent

May 27 2018

By Aoife Kelly

While the Yes side saw a landslide victory on Saturday with two-thirds of the country voting to repeal the Eighth Amendment, one county stood alone in producing a majority No vote.

Donegal was the only constituency in the country to return a majority No with 51.9 per cent of people voting No compared to 48.1 per cent voting Yes.

There was a 57 per cent turnout.

With many people questioning why the result was different in Donegal to the rest of the country, one Donegal man took to Twitter to offer his take on the result.

Noel Sharkey’s thread is garnering praise from people all over the country.

Here it is in full:

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Referendum shows us there is no Middle Ireland, just Ireland

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

May 26, 2018

By Una Mullally

‘The fiction of Ireland as a conservative, dogmatically Catholic country has been shattered’

The handover period is over. The fiction of Ireland as a conservative, dogmatically Catholic country has been shattered. The past is left back there, and a new legacy is being created. A legacy of compassion, empathy, and maturity – a country taking responsibility for the care and health of women and girls. What happened in the referendum vote was seismic, but more seismic still was the realisation that this vote was reflecting change, not just instigating it. “They listened to us. They actually listened to us,” a young woman said to me, crying, in the RDS on Saturday morning.

Together For Yes ran an excellent campaign, from start to finish. As the No campaign scraped the barrel, the Yes campaign always acted with dignity, with facts to the fore, and never once stooped. Together For Yes built an army around the country. An army of Us. In the RDS, people burst into tears when the Together For Yes bosses came into the room.

For many, Ailbhe Smyth’s determination and calmness has been a source of great inspiration for decades. During the campaign she wore herself down so much that she struggled to walk in the final days. Meanwhile, female journalists from competing newspapers hugged each other when they spotted one another. Mary Lou McDonald was cheered by Labour party members, Simon Harris was cheered by people from Sinn Féin. This was a feminist movement; non-partisan, grassroots, non-hierarchical where possible. We were all Together For Yes.

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Ireland votes to remove constitutional ban on abortion by resounding two-thirds majority

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

May 26, 2018

By Sarah Bardon

Thirty-five years after its introduction, Eighth Amendment repealed after bitter campaign

The country has voted to remove the constitutional ban on abortion by a two-thirds majority.

Thirty-five years after it was placed into the Constitution, the electorate voted for the Eighth Amendment to be repealed and for provision be made for the regulation of termination of pregnancy. See here for liveblog updates on Saturday on developments as count results on the resounding result became clear across the State.

Every constituency except Donegal, which voted in favour of retaining the Eighth Amendment by 51. 87 to 48.13, passed the referendum by a clear mandate.

There were joyous and tearful scenes in Dublin Castle as the results were announced just after 6pm, showing 66 per cent of the electorate had supported the proposition.

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Scouting Ireland faces Pandora’s box of historic abuse cases

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

April 21, 2018

By Jack Power

[Note: This important article was not included in Tracker at the time it was published.]

Audit of hundreds of files not yet begun despite safeguarding expert’s recommendation

Locked away in Scouting Ireland’s national office in Larch Hill, Tibradden, south county Dublin, sit hundreds of past child-protection case files in an alarmed room under lock and key, some dating back decades.

Most staff working in the organisation’s headquarters go about each day without a thought about the ageing folders gathering dust in the organisation’s national office near the Co Wicklow border, which is sheltered by woods and is set amid surrounding campsite fields.

The potential revelations within those safeguarding files about how past cases were handled, which range from minor incidents to more serious allegations of abuse, remain undisturbed.

But an initial look at a small number of serious sexual abuse allegations among the historic files showed they “haven’t been handled well”, according to one senior source.

A full audit of all historic cases of alleged abuse, which five months ago safeguarding expert Ian Elliott recommended should take place, has not started. In January he told Scouting Ireland’s board again the historic review should be a “priority”, given that “past practice has been shown to be suspect regarding alleged abuse” cases.

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