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.

February 15, 2019

Clergy abuse survivors group says Omaha Archdiocese left 4 names off list of accused priests

OMAHA (NE)
Omaha World-Herald

February 14, 2019

By Christopher Burbach

A national group of clergy abuse victims said Wednesday that the Archdiocese of Omaha left four Catholic priests off the list of priests accused of sexual misdeeds with minors that the archdiocese made public in November.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said the four had been publicly accused of sexually abusing minors and had spent time in the Omaha area. David Clohessy, the former national director of SNAP, said Wednesday in Omaha that Archbishop George Lucas should include the four on his list.

The archdiocese said the four do not belong on the list of priests that it made public and sent to the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office in November. The archdiocese had no personnel files on the four men whom Clohessy named and had received no allegations against them, said Deacon Tim McNeil, chancellor of the archdiocese.

Last year, Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson asked the state’s three Catholic dioceses to hand over any information on claims of sexual exploitation since Jan. 1, 1978.

Lucas made public a list of 38 priests and deacons against whom “substantiated allegations” had been made. He also gave the attorney general 100 more names of church personnel who had faced claims of sexual misconduct or impropriety since 1978.

Clohessy has raised similar issues in other dioceses, including in Kansas City last month. On Wednesday, he and SNAP supporter Gordon Peterson of Omaha said the Omaha Archdiocese should publicize the four priests’ names and assignment records to protect vulnerable people now and reach out to any unknown victims who might exist.

“Our position is that when it comes to the safety of kids, there should be no hairsplitting or ducking and dodging,” Clohessy said.

He said the four priests with Omaha ties are Thomas B. Laughlin, Alphonsus Ferguson, James E. Kelly and Michael Patrick Nash.

Laughlin admitted to sexually molesting dozens of boys for decades before he was convicted of molesting two boys and sent to prison in the 1980s, according to news reports. The newspaper the Oregonian reported that Laughlin was “one of Oregon’s most notorious pedophile priests.” Laughlin reportedly lived in Omaha for several years until his death in 2013.

In a 2014 lawsuit against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, a Minnesota man accused Ferguson of raping him when he was an altar boy in Hastings, Minnesota, in the 1950s. Ferguson died in 1973. He reportedly belonged to a religious order in Omaha.

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

El Atlético de Madrid rompe con Manuel Briñas y abre una investigación en su cantera

[Madrid football club breaks with Manuel Briñas, opens investigation]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

By Oriol Güell

February 14, 2019

Nuevos testimonios revelan que los abusos del religioso se prolongaron durante 24 años

El Atlético de Madrid ha decidido este jueves romper su relación con quien durante dos décadas fue responsable de su cantera, el fraile marianista Manuel Briñas, tras conocerse los casos de abusos sexuales a menores del religioso. Las cinco víctimas con las que hasta el momento ha hablado EL PAÍS sitúan los abusos entre 1972 y 1985, cuando tenían entre 10 y 14 años, en las dependencias del Colegio Marianista Hermanos Amorós de Madrid y en los campamentos de verano que Briñas organizaba en la Sierra de Gredos. Ninguno de estos casos se produjo en las instalaciones del club de fútbol.

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.

Cuatro nuevas víctimas acusan de abusos sexuales a Manuel Briñas

[Four new victims accuse Manuel Briñas of sexual abuse]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

By Oriol Güell

February 13, 2019

Dos de los afectados definen al exresponsable de la cantera del Atlético de Madrid como “un depredador”

El testimonio de cuatro nuevas víctimas, que ayer detallaron su experiencia a EL PAÍS, eleva ya a cinco el número de quienes aseguran haber sufrido abusos sexuales —cuando tenían entre 10 y 14 años— por parte de Manuel Briñas, el fraile marianista que dirigió dos décadas la escuela deportiva del Atlético de Madrid. Briñas, que hoy tiene 88 años, ha admitido un abuso, pero los nuevos casos contradicen su versión de que no hubo más.

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.

Leading Southern Baptist apologizes for supporting leader, church at center of sex abuse scandal

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

February 14, 2019

By Robert Downen

Al Mohler, a leading Southern Baptist figure, on Thursday apologized for supporting a religious leader who was accused of helping conceal sexual abuses at his former church.

A leading Southern Baptist figure on Thursday apologized for supporting a religious leader who was accused of helping conceal sexual abuses at his former church, and for making a joke that he said downplayed the severity of the allegations.

In an interview with the Houston Chronicle, Al Mohler said for the first time publicly that he regrets his embrace of C.J. Mahaney, the former leader of the non-Southern Baptist group Sovereign Grace Ministries, now known as Sovereign Grace Churches.

Mahaney and his former organization were sued in 2013 by 11 people alleging that their abuses were concealed by leaders, at least one of whom was later convicted.

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.

Harrisburg diocese holds listening session in Mechanicsburg

MECHANICSBURG (PA)
WHTM TV

February 14, 2019

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg held a listening session on clergy sex abuse in Mechanicsburg Wednesday night.

The session was held at Saint Joseph Parish at 410 East Simpson Street.

Bishop Ronald Gainer answered questions about Pennsylvania’s grand jury report that uncovered more than 300 predator priests across the state.

This was the fifth listening session. The diocese plans on holding nine sessions.

abc27 News cameras were not allowed inside the meeting.

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.

Child Victims Act Signed into Law, SNAP Responds

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

February 14, 2019

The much-needed and greatly anticipated Child Victims Act was signed into law today in New York.

We applaud all those involved in championing and passing this important piece of legislation. Any time survivors are given a chance to share their experience and expose their abusers and enablers, it helps protect children and prevent future cases of abuse. The best way to create these opportunities are by reforming the archaic and predator-friendly statutes of limitations and creating “look-back” windows. We are grateful to every person who had a hand in pushing this critical reform through.

Having the chance at their “day in court” can also be a key piece of the healing process for survivors and we are grateful that those who were abused in New York will have this opportunity.

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.

List Of Maryland Priests Accused Of Child Sexual Abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
Patch

February 15, 2019

By Deb Belt

A new wave of lists naming Catholic priests credibly accused of sexual abuse against children has been released in the past two months, including the Baltimore archdiocese. In late December the church posted a revised list of priests and religious brothers facing accusations over the years; it includes an initial list of 57 men posted in 2002, along with additions of those later accused, and priests named in a grand jury report released by the Pennsylvania Attorney General in August 2018, who either had an assignment in Maryland or were accused of engaging in sexual abuse of minors in Maryland.

“Many Catholics here in our own archdiocese, as well as many across the country, are rightly dismayed by what they perceive as a lack of decisive action to strengthen protocols of accountability for bishops accused of sexual abuse or misconduct,” Archbishop William E. Lori said in November after U.S. bishops met in Baltimore. “Understandably, there is a sense that this was a missed opportunity – and one unnecessarily so. … We must be held fully accountable – as are priests, deacons, lay employees and volunteers of the Church – in matters of moral and professional conduct.”

Priests of the Archdiocese of Baltimore have no parentheses after their names. Priests and brothers from religious orders or other dioceses have that noted in parentheses after their names. None of the men listed are in ministry in the Archdiocese of Baltimore; some have died and some have been laicized. All have had their faculties to function as a priest in the Archdiocese of Baltimore permanently removed.

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.

September trial set for former Fort priest

FT. ATKINSON (WI)
Jefferson County Daily Union

February 15, 2019

By Ryan Whisner

A week-long September trial has been set for a former Fort Atkinson priest charged with molesting an altar boy during his tenure at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church.

The Rev. William A. Nolan, 65, formerly of Madison, has pleaded not guilty to six felony counts of sexual assault of a child under the age of 16 that reportedly occurred while he was serving at the Fort Atkinson parish from 2002-07 and for some years beyond.

The alleged victim, now 26, alleges that the incidents of assault began in February 2006 and occurred over a five-year period when he was ages 13-17. He told authorities that the alleged contact between them occurred more than 100 times.

If convicted of the combined charges, Nolan is facing a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison for each of the six counts.

On Thursday, Nolan appeared before Jefferson County Circuit Court Judge William Hue for a motion hearing.

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

New lawsuit seeks court order forcing Catholic Church to disclose ‘secret’ lists of pedophile priests and brothers in New York

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Daily News

February 14, 2019

By Molly Crane-Newman and Nancy Dillon

A Manhattan native who says a priest repeatedly molested her – sometimes during games of strip poker – is among the plaintiffs in a new lawsuit demanding the names of all New York pedophile priests and brothers reported to the Catholic Church.

The lawsuit against the Catholic Conference of Major Superiors of Men was filed Thursday in Manhattan Supreme Court, the same day Gov. Cuomo signed into law the historic Child Victims Act.

The new law extends the criminal and civil statutes of limitations on sexual assault so victims, including victims of clergy sex abuse, have a new chance to seek justice and accountability decades later.

“For years I had hoped that something would change, so that I, and people like me, who have stayed silent, would finally see justice. Today, by filing this lawsuit, hopefully the truth about the perpetrators will come out,” plaintiff Bridget Lyons, 47, said as the lawsuit was announced.

Lyons was a 13-year-old girl living with her mom and 8-year-old brother in the East Village when Father Jack Kennington began molesting her in the 1980s, she says.

Kennington, who was a priest at Most Holy Redeemer in Manhattan, inappropriately touched her and her brother during massages and the secret card games, she and her family previously alleged.

“This abuse led to years of depression, PTSD, trust issues. …It also ruined my faith and trust in the Catholic Church,” she said Thursday at a press conference with her fellow plaintiffs and lawyer Jeff Anderson.

Lyons’ initial bid to sue Kennington in 1993 was rejected due to the statute of limitations, but her brother was allowed to file thanks to his younger age. The brother’s suit was settled for an undisclosed sum.

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.

Advocates expect increase in victims coming forward after Catholic sexual abuse allegations list

HAMPTON ROADS (VA)
WTKR TV

February 14, 2019

By Allison Mechanic

It has been one day since the Catholic Diocese of Richmond released a list of priests who have substantiated claims of sexual abuse against them. Area advocacy groups for survivors are already feeling the affects.

“We see an increase within the hotline because people are triggered,” explained Courtney Pierce with Samaritan House in Virginia Beach.

Samaritan House offers a wide variety of resources both on the phone and in person. While they are expecting to see an increase in calls to the hotline over the next few days, they say friends and family members should also be prepared.

“It’s really important to empower survivors to do whatever it is they want to do – if that’s to come forward and let their community know about their abuse or seek one-on-one counseling or speak to a friend,” said Pierce.

If a survivor does come to a friend, Pierce suggests listening and support.

“People say they don’t have the words or they’re not well-trained to handle the situation, but a listening ear is really important,” said Pierce. “Affirmation and confirmation of their victimization is also important.”

The state of Virginia is also prepared to handle cases of sexual abuse by a priest. Last year, Attorney General Mark Herring launched the Virginia Clergy Abuse Hotline. The number for the hotline is 1-833-454-9064.

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.

List of priests names who were accused of sexual abuse not enough, says survivors group

VIRGINIA BEACH (VA)
Southside Daily

February 15, 2019

On Wednesday, the Catholic Diocese of Richmond made waves when it published a list of 42 names of clergy with “credible and substantiated” allegations of sexual abuse involving minors.

Some of the names were priests who were assigned in Catholic churches in Virginia Beach and Norfolk.

The “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests,” or SNAP, claims on their website to be the largest, oldest, and most active support group for women and men wounded by religious and institutional authorities. SNAP has a Virginia Beach chapter, but its local coordinator, Wayne Dorough, was not immediately available for comment.

But SNAP’s executive director, Zach Hiner, made a public statement Wednesday both praising and criticizing the Richmond Diocese for releasing the names.

“It is always helpful for survivors when these lists are posted especially for those who may be suffering in silence. But what is not helpful is when lists are carefully curated to leave off names of priests who have been accused of abuse, but whose allegations haven’t been deemed by church officials to be ‘credible,’” Hiner said.

SNAP is calling on Catholic officials to go a step further.

“We urge Catholic officials in Virginia to not only go back to these lists and add any names that may have been omitted, but also to add work histories, information about current whereabouts and, critically, when the diocese first learned of the allegations and what their immediate response was,” Hiner said. “Only by including this information can we get a clearer picture of what went wrong in Virginia and what must be done now to protect children and prevent 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.

Lots of names are missing from the list of 188 N.J. priests accused of sexual abuse. Here’s why.

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

February 14, 2019

By Kelly Heyboer and Rebecca Everett

The lists of priests and deacons accused of child sexual abuse released by New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses earlier this week was startling.

They contained page after page of names — 188 in total — of clergy members accused of sexually abusing generations of children in every corner of the state over several decades.

But the list only told part of the story.

The list, released Wednesday by the Archdiocese of Newark and the Dioceses of Camden, Metuchen, Paterson and Trenton, did not include priests, monks, nuns or others who served in religious orders or order-run Catholic schools in New Jersey. It only included only the names of priests and deacons “credibly accused” while they worked within the dioceses.

So, that means Jesuit priests, Franciscan priests, Benedictine monks and others who served in religious orders that operate under separate leadership structures than the five New Jersey dioceses were likely not included on any of the lists.

It is unknown how many additional clergy members from New Jersey might be on those lists if they are ever all released. Critics said the Catholic community in New Jersey deserves to know the full number of accused priests.

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 Evansville Diocese priest accused of sexual abuse

EVANSVILLE (IN)
Evansville Courier & Press

February 15, 2019

By Jon Webb

An Indiana man has publicly accused a former Evansville Diocese priest of sexual abuse.

Testifying in front of the Indiana Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday, Christopher Compton, 42, said the Rev. Raymond Kuper sexually abused him multiple times when Compton was 9 years old.

He accused of Kuper of “borderline brainwashing” him.

Kuper died in 2012.

The Courier & Press doesn’t usually name accusers of sex crimes, but Compton has testified in a public meeting and has been named in other publications as well. Video of the hearing is available on the state website.

Compton and several others testified in favor of Senate Bill 219, which would give accusers more time to pursue civil cases in incidents that have long exceeded the statute of limitations.

Deeper look at abuse history: Evansville Catholic diocese has history of abusive priests| Webb

Recent report of abuse: Evansville Diocese places priest on administrative leave after sexual misconduct report

Compton told legislators the reported abuse occurred when he was a student at Christ the King School. According to his obituary, Kuper was pastor at Christ the King from 1977 to 1987.

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Richmond Diocese adds another priest to list of members accused of sexual assault

RICHMOND (VA)
News Channel 6

February 15, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Richmond has released the name of another priest with a “a credible and substantiated allegation of sexual abuse” against a child.

The group announced Thursday they they received information from the order of Saint Benedict about an allegation of abuse that occurred outside the Richmond Diocese.

An sexual assault allegation against Rev. Donald Scales, O.S.B. was found credible by the Diocese of Charlotte Review Board.

Fr. Scales served in the Diocese of Richmond.

While the Richmond Diocese claims they were unaware of any allegations of abuse against Fr. Scales, Bishop Knestout has added his name to the list previously published on February 13.

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.

Retired Police Lt. recalls investigating Richmond priest convicted of child sex abuse

RICHMOND (VA)
News Channel 6

February 15, 2019

By Brendan King

Retired Prince George Police Lieutenant Bill King remembers the early 2000’s well – the time he helped convict a priest for sex crimes against a child.

The suspect was Rev. John P. Blankenship who was the chaplain at Petersburg Federal Correctional Center at the time he was indicted.

In February of 2003, he pleaded guilty to four separate counts of sodomizing a minor in Prince George County.

Rev. John Blankenship is a registered sex offender residing in the city of Richmond.

The abuse took place in 1982 at the Church of the Sacred Heart. The victim was 14 at the time.

Investigators said that Blankenship took advantage of the young teen while his mother cleaned the church.

King said Blankenship turned himself in alongside his lawyer at the police station.

“He was basically stoic because I’m sure his attorney had told him to be limited in what he said,” King recalled. “There we arrested and booked him.”

King said he was surprised that church officials claimed they did not know police were investigating Blankenship prior to his indictment.

“I had already been [to the Richmond Diocese] and told them who I was looking for. They gave me the information I needed on him to indict him,” he explained. “When I went there to get the information and was met by Father Apuzzo, he wasn’t surprised.”

In 2002, the Daily Press reported “diocesan officials say they were surprised to learn of the priest’s indictment or the county’s interest in the case.”

“We didn’t know that there was an investigation going on until this morning,” the Rev. Pasquale Apuzzo, spokesman for the diocese, told reporters at the time.

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

Deal reached to expand statute of limitations for sexual abuse lawsuits

WASHINGTON (DC)
Politico

February 14, 2019

By Matt Friedman

New Jersey victims of sexual abuse may soon have more time to file lawsuits against their alleged abusers.

State Sen. Joe Vitale and Assemblywoman Annette Quijano (D-Union) said Thursday that state lawmakers have reached a deal after an effort to remove the statute of limitations entirely on civil sexual abuse cases spent years in legislative limbo.

“I want to thank all of the advocates, many of them victims and survivors themselves, who have worked tirelessly to see this bill heard in front of the Judiciary,” Vitale (D-Middlesex) said in a statement. “Steadfast in their fight, and with great resolve, they recognize all victims deserve the same corridor to justice. They have had an immense amount of patience with me and my staff as we have grasped the weight of this issue over the last decade, and I will forever be in awe of their courage and bravery.”

The bill also has the support of Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, making its passage into law guaranteed if lawmakers can muster the voters to pass it in the Assembly and Senate.

“Victims of sexual abuse, especially those victimized in childhood, deserve to find doors held open for them as they seek justice against their abusers,” Murphy said.

Currently, sexual abuse victims who are 18 or older have two years from the point when they realize the abuse has damaged them to file a lawsuit against their abusers or the institutions that harbored them. Under Vitale’s compromise proposal, which he said will have a hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 7 followed by a vote in the full Senate on March 13, the window for victims to file lawsuits would expand to seven years as long as they’re under the age of 55.

The compromise deal was first reported by NJ Advance Media.

New Jersey’s statute of limitations for criminal sexual abuse was removed long ago. Vitale has long worked to repeal it for civil cases as well, but was unable to wrangle enough votes for passage, while the Church enlisted the help of one of Trenton’s top lobbying firms.

“There wasn’t enough support to eliminate it entirely. That wasn’t because my colleagues didn’t think victims shouldn’t have access to justice, just that some of them thought there should be a level of predictability,” Vitale said in a phone interview, adding that the bill would get a hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 7, followed by a vote in the full Senate on March 11.

Vitale said he believes he has the votes necessary to pass the bill.

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.

SNAP advocate believes more cases of sexual abuse by priests have happened but not been reported

RICHMOND (VA)
News Channel 6

February 14, 2019

By Matthew Fultz

As victims, church members and the general public look through the list of names of men the Catholic Diocese of Richmond says has hurt children, they still have many questions – like where are the names of the other priests who were accused and have there been no reports of abuse since 1993?

CBS 6 talked to a victims advocate, Dottie Klamer, with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priest (SNAP) to get answers.

“Everything that`s going on in the Catholic church right now has been brewing for a long long time,” said Klammer.

Decades and decades of sexual abuse have been slowly coming to light. After Virginia’s attorney general opened an investigation into clergy abuse last year, Wednesday, the Dioceses of Arlington and Richmond released a list of names of catholic priests who abused minors.

“We tell them first of all that they need to file a police report, that they need to go on record,” said Klammer.

Dottie Klammer, Richmond Coordinator for SNAP, tells victims each day who say their abuser not on the list, to file first.
She said the investigation starts internally at an accused priest’s church.

“What I understand is that they have panel and boards at the different parishes in the state of Virginia,” said Klammer. “And people are deciding on some level who`s guilty and who isn`t.”

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Special Report Part 2: “The Sound of Silence,” experts explain the how and why of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church

PEORIA (IL)
WEEK TV Channel 25

February 14, 2019

Jeff Jones says he was just 9 years old when the beloved Priest he first met at St. Joseph’s in Pekin started sexually abusing him.

“Every day,” he begins with a long pause, “…since I was nine or 10, I think about this.”

And he’s not alone in his claims. The attorney who represented him and 11 others in a lawsuit later settled with the Peoria Diocese said these cases are still happening today.

Frederick W. Nessler, Attorney: ” Well we’ve handled between 200 and 300 cases, and I think it’s north of 250, now. I think we have 40 cases in house, presently, we’re working on,” explained Attorney Frederick W. Nessler of The Law Offices of Frederick W. Nessler & Associates, Ltd.. Admittedly, he has multiple law offices in several states including Illinois, and some of those cases involved sexual abuse in other denominations and institutions, but he reiterated the majority of them involved the Catholic Church.

For Jones, he says the sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of Father Walter Breuning lasted 6 years, but took him decades to reveal.

“I think it boils down to shame and humiliation,” Jones shares.

It’s something Illinois State University Professor Shelly Clevinger, PhD says is common among victims of sexual abuse.

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NJ measure to ease sex abuse statute of limitations shows signs of progress

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 15, 2019

By Philip DeVencentis and Deena Yellin

After nearly 20 years of failed efforts, proposed legislation that would ease the civil statute of limitations for sex abuse survivors is showing signs of progress in New Jersey.

State Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Middlesex, sponsor of S-477, said Thursday that the Senate Judiciary Committee will vote on the measure March 7 and that he was “extraordinarily hopeful” about its prospects. Also on Thursday, Gov. Phil Murphy announced his support.

The bill would allow child victims of sexual abuse to sue until age 55, or from seven years of their realization that the abuse occurred. It would give adult victims seven years to bring a civil case, or seven years from the time they discover their abuse, whichever is later.

The bill would also give a two-year window to those victims who were previously time-barred so that they have the opportunity to pursue their cases. It would allow victims to hold both the individual and any liable institution accountable.

Current laws demand that civil action be filed within two years after a victim turns 18.

Assemblywoman Annette Quijano, the prime sponsor of the bill in the Assembly, said, “If we put short, arbitrary legal limits on their time to process, we limit their ability to pursue justice and we, ourselves, become perpetrators in their injustice.”

“The language in the current bill has the approval of all the survivor groups, and that has helped to bring along some of my colleagues,” Vitale said. “Now we’re at a point that it seems as though the vast majority of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle support the bill. I’m extraordinarily hopeful.”

The measure has also gained the backing of the New Jersey Catholic Conference. On Thursday, Executive Director Patrick Branigan said: “We fully support the elimination of the statute of limitations prospectively for both perpetrators and institutions. We support the elimination of the statute of limitations retroactively for perpetrators, which would address Sen. Joseph Vitale’s frequent comment about the need to hold accountable the 95% of perpetrators who are not clergy.”

Vitale’s announcement comes on the heels of five dioceses in New Jersey releasing lists of priests credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

Murphy said, “Victims of sexual abuse, especially those victimized in childhood, deserve to find doors held open for them as they seek justice against their abusers. I commend Senator Vitale and Assemblywoman Quijano for their pursuit of legislation to extend the statute of limitations.”

Similar measures have been passed in New York and other states.

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Prominent nun says Polish priests must stop abusing women religious

WASINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 15, 2019

One of Poland’s most senior nuns said priests must stop sexually molesting religious women, in line with efforts to improve treatment of women in the traditionally Catholic country.

“Sexual abuse of nuns by clergy has long been a problem in Poland — and it’s a very painful matter,” Ursuline Sister Jolanta Olech, secretary-general of the Warsaw-based Conference of Higher Superiors of Female Religious Orders, told Poland’s Catholic Information Agency, KAI.

Sister Olech told KAI on 14 February that no data had been collected on the abuse of nuns in her country. However, she added that she had been informed of “very painful” cases during 12 years as conference president and secretary-general, and she welcomed Pope Francis’ 5 February call for action against offending clergy.

“This isn’t the first time the issue has been raised, and we don’t know if it will change much — but it should show some people at least that the time for concealing this problem is over,” she said. “The cases I dealt with were reported to the superiors of the priests and monks concerned. But I don’t know what the results were, and the cases were never made public.”

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Put a period on the list of abuser priests

JERSEY CITY (NJ)
Jersey Journal

February 14, 2019

By Rev. Alexander Santora

Growing up in Catholic Jersey City – Holy Rosary Grammar School, its church, St. Joseph’s up the hill, St. Peter’s Prep and College – I knew many priests.

Never once did I suspect that one of them, or any, would ever be involved in abusing a minor. I would never even link the words “priest” and “abuse” in the same sentence.

Not until I was assigned to St. Aloysius Church did I gradually learn about a priest – Carmen Sita, whom I replaced. He had been removed and sent to a rehab for his abusive behavior and was then assigned to a parish in Missouri under a pseudonym, Gerald Howard.

His name appeared on the list released yesterday of 188 priests in New Jersey with credible accusations of a sexual abuse of minors against them. From the list, I also learned of priests I had crossed paths with in ministry, though I’d never lived with them in a rectory. And priests I knew as fellow seminarians at Darlington. Probably about three dozen in all.

I was particularly shocked that a Trenton priest who has worked in a Vatican office in Rome for 30 years was on the list. I knew him and his family from a Toms River parish I assisted on weekends for 12 years.

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Abuse Victim Who Chained Himself to Vatican Finds Closure in Meeting

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

February 15, 2019

By Claire Giangravè

Since the Church’s sex abuse scandals first erupted, victims have tried different methods to be heard by Church authorities. Some have protested, others have marched, others still have appealed to friends and connections in order to bring their case to the Vatican.

But for one Italian survivor, the key was not so much storming the gate as being chained to it.

Arturo Borrelli, 40, claims to have been sexually abused about thirty years ago on the peripheries of Naples, Italy, by his religion teacher Father Silverio Mura. On Feb. 4, he shackled himself to the Sant’Anna entrance of the Vatican in a desperate attempt to be heard.

Police officers arrested him and took him in for questioning, but the unlikely result was that Borrelli was invited to meet officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), which handles matters of clerical abuse, at the Vatican ten days later.

In an email sent to the survivor’s lawyer, Italian Cardinal Angelo Becciu, prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints and former Substitute in the Secretariat of State, voiced the “full availability” of the CDF for such a meeting.

Borrelli was finally able to enter the Sant’Anna gate Thursday at 10:00 a.m., where he was greeted by Father Paolo, a priest delegated by Pope Francis to follow his case. (The priest did not give his last name.) At the same time, his lawyer met with CDF officials to present legal documentation.

“I am pleased,” Borrelli told Crux in an interview following his meeting. “Finally, I was welcomed the way I wanted. Since 2010 I have asked for the love of the Church and finally Father Paolo gave it to me.”

Borrelli met Francis in July 2018, when he said he had the chance to tell the pontiff about his abuse. On the same day, Borelli’s eighteen-year-old son died in a car accident leaving him “emotionally wrecked.”

During the meeting on Thursday, Borrelli said he was moved by the opportunity to pray in a chapel for his son with Father Paolo. He was later offered refreshments and spoke of his experience.

The priest promised that a legal decision will be made as soon as May regarding his abuser, Mura, who might be defrocked. While the exact date of the verdict remains unclear, Borrelli said that the CDF is “moving quickly, since they know that my case is a delicate one and I am suffering a lot.”

Chaining oneself to the Vatican is an unorthodox way to gain access, and an impossible prospect for many clerical abuse victims who can’t make it to Rome but still wish to denounce the injustice they suffered. But Father Paolo, Borrelli said, claimed that while “in the past there was another mentality” regarding victims, today “everything has changed.”

For Borrelli, it was perseverance and determination that allowed him to find the closure he long awaited, qualities that he encourages for every victim wishing to be heard to have.

“Whoever has been a victim of abuse must not be afraid to denounce it! Denounce it! Denounce it! Because at the end the truth always emerges,” he said. “There must be no shame. You have to fight!”

The activist and survivor will be in Rome for the upcoming Feb. 21-24 summit of heads of bishops’ conferences on the topic of clerical sexual abuse. He said that he plans to encourage the bishops to adopt legislation that emphasizes the protection of minors and get behind Francis on this issue.

“I trust the pope blindly, because in my case he contributed many times,” Borrelli said. “I hope that those close to him allow him to work. Because if people close to the pope let him do his job surely this battle, that is not easy to fight, can be won.”

Emerging satisfied from the Vatican was also Carlo Grezio, Borrelli’s lawyer for the past four years, who met with two officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – a disciplinary section head Father John Kennedy, and undersecretary Father Matteo Visioli.

“I had their reassurance regarding the timing of the sentence of Father Silvio Mura and a total, definitive, reassurance on the fact that Monsignor Mura is no longer in contact with children or anyone else,” he told Crux in an interview.

Grezio described the meeting as “a victory from one point of view, because we began to obtain what we should have obtained ten years ago when the curia in Naples failed us.”

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‘Onslaught’ of allegations against priests predicted under Child Victims Act

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 14, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

Six Catholic dioceses in New York so far have identified 249 Catholic priests who have been credibly accused of molesting children.

But the names of potentially hundreds more priests could surface publicly now that Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has signed the Child Victims Act.

Cuomo’s signature on the legislation Thursday means that childhood victims of sexual abuse who previously were time-barred from suing now will have an opportunity to file lawsuits.

Victims of childhood sex abuse had until age 23 to sue under New York’s statute of limitations. The age now changes to 55. In addition, the new law opens a one-year “look back” window for victims to file claims, even in sex abuse cases from decades ago. The look-back period starts in six months.

“We are anticipating a lot of people will come forward,” said attorney Jayne Conroy, who represents sex abuse victims across the country, including in the Buffalo Diocese. “I think in New York state it will be an onslaught.”

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El arzobispo de San José de Costa Rica, acusado de encubrir a un cura denunciado por abusos a menores

[Archbishop of San José, Costa Rica, drops out of papal summit, accused of covering up clergy abuse]

SAN JOSE (COSTA RICA)
El País

February 15, 2019

By Álvaro Murillo

El superior de la Iglesia católica en el país centroamericano, José Rafael Quirós, se ha visto forzado a cancelar su participación en la cumbre sobre pedofilia convocada por el Papa

Cuando todavía era menor de edad, el joven Anthony Venegas fue a la Curia Metropolitana de Costa Rica para contar que el sacerdote de su parroquia, un cura mediático y venerado, abusaba sexualmente de él y de otros adolescentes. Era 2003 y la delación la escuchó el vicario José Rafael Quirós, que una década más tarde fue nombrado arzobispo de San José —la capital tica— y ahora enfrenta denuncias ante el Vaticano por encubrir los casos, en su mayoría prescritos. “Ese asunto se me pasó”, se justificó el año pasado ante dos denunciantes. Esta semana, Quirós se vio forzado a cancelar su participación en la cumbre sobre pedofilia convocada para el próximo día 21 por el papa Francisco en Roma.

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After the Fall: The legacies of Grand Rapids’ two most notorious priests

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
WOOD TV

February 14, 2019

By Ken Kolker

No matter how many years pass, the memories will not.

The bad ones burn deepest: like what happened more than once in the small log cabin on the Grand Rapids-Walker city line to a 12-year-old girl who thought she was Father John Sullivan’s one and only.

Or what she saw through the small second-floor window on the south side of her family’s home, the window on the left, as her abuser walked away with his arm around her little sister.

“I knew what he was going to be doing,” Fran Heinemann said.

There’s the pew in a small country church near Grand Haven where the priest first approached a 14-year-old girl who wanted to be a nun, his latest prey.

The broom closet at Holy Spirit in Grand Rapids.

There’s the spot on Campau Lake near Caledonia, about 100 yards out, where a 12-year-old altar boy went swimming with a priest he idolized.

And there’s the confessional where the abused went to their abuser for forgiveness of sins they thought were their own.

“I knew it was him because you’d see him walk in there to do confessions,” Heinemann said.

The Roman Catholic dioceses in Grand Rapids and across Michigan are bracing for the worst from a state attorney general’s investigation into decades of priest abuse: the possibility that it could uncover more abusive priests, more cover-ups and more survivors than ever before revealed.

The AG started investigating after a grand jury in Pennsylvania revealed that 300 priests had molested 1,000 children since the 1940s. That prompted Target 8 to investigate the legacy of abuse in the Grand Rapids diocese.

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Gay Priests To Pope: Don’t Blame Us For Child Sex Abuse

ROME (ITALY)
Daily Beast

February 15, 2019

By Barbie Latza Nadeau

The letter couldn’t have come at a better time. Just a week before Pope Francis convenes a crisis summit in Rome on systematic clerical sex abuse in the global Catholic Church, a group of gay priests from the Netherlands have written a letter trying to restore some perspective. In it, they ask the pontiff not to validate persistent gossip that a so-called “gay mafia” inside the Catholic Church is responsible for systematic clerical sex abuse of children.

In fact, orientation should not matter at all in the celibate world of the Catholic clergy. Priests and nuns take a vow of celibacy at ordination that prohibits them from engaging in any sexual act — including masturbation — no matter what their sexual orientation. But if the endemic clerical sexual abuse of minors, the majority of them boys, is confounded with homosexuality, that’s a convenient excuse for the church. The last three popes have pretended the pedophile scandal can be “solved” by getting rid of gay priests.

“We have the distinct impression,” the Dutch group wrote to Francis, “that the Vatican and the Congregation for the Clergy and perhaps even you yourself tend to suggest that those priests who are openly gay are the ones responsible for the sexual abuse of children and minors.”

In point of fact there is no link between the two, and that there is even ample evidence of widespread healthy, consensual gay relationships between gay priests living in communal situations. The more plausible answer regarding pedophiles is that they are attracted to the priesthood simply because of the well known access to and power over little kids.

The Dutch group clearly disagrees with the premise that gay priests are the problem, and instead says it believes unhealthy sexual repression is the key to the crisis. When young men enter the seminary, often as adolescents, they are told that sexual urges are sinful and that they must repent for being normal. The only way to talk about sex for a seminarian is in the context of the confessional.

“We believe that the current major crisis with respect to this context is primarily the result of the disapproval, suppression, denial and the poor integration of sexuality, and especially homosexuality, on the part of many individual priests and within our Church as a whole,” the gay priest group writes, noting that if young men entering seminaries were actually screened for sexually deviant behavior such as pedophilic tendencies, that would also help a lot.

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SBTS President Albert Mohler Apologizes for Supporting C.J. Mahaney

OREGON

February 14, 2019

By Julie Anne

This is a big story – one we’ve been waiting for over 7 years. C.J. Mahaney, former President of Sovereign Grace Ministries churches has been best buds with leaders in the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) despite the fact that there were huge sex abuse scandals (including reports of a pedophile ring) under Mahaney’s watch.

Most of the survivors have never had justice served because of a technicality which disallowed their case from being heard: the Statute of Limitations. (Don’t get me going on that topic.)

But despite having had no independent investigations, C.J. Mahaney’s pals from Together for the Gospel, The Gospel Coalition, and the Southern Baptist Convention have stood by him, even publicly defending him, and inviting him to speak at their conferences! #mindblown

Today, the Houston Chronicle interviewed Albert Mohler, President of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, in which he apologized for not speaking out earlier.

Interestingly, today I was tweeting about Albert Mohler’s relationship with C.J. Mahaney, even tagging Albert Mohler and asking about their relationship in light of the SBC sex abuse cases uncovered by journalists at the Houston Chronicle.

Here is Mohler’s apology:

“I believe in retrospect I erred in being part of a statement supportive of (Mahaney) and rather dismissive of the charges,” Mohler said. “And I regret that action, which I think was taken without due regard to the claims made by the victims and survivors at the time, and frankly without an adequate knowledge on my part, for which I’m responsible.”

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Five disturbing things we learned from the Catholic Church’s list of 188 alleged sexual abusers in N.J.

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

February 14, 2019

By Stephen Stirling

The list spans nearly a century. It reaches across every corner of the state. And it reveals a tangled web of abuse allegedly carried out by scores of priests, some of whom were apparently shuffled from parish to parish.

The five Catholic Dioceses’ release of 188 priests and deacons who were credibly accused of sexually abusing children reverberates across generations of Catholics both in New Jersey and across the country, once again confronted with disheartening allegations against church leaders amid an ever-deepening scandal.

Even as details remain scant, an analysis of the information released by the Catholic Church Wednesday reveals what many expected — that in New Jersey, and, as has been shown elsewhere, allegations of sexual abuse date back decades and come out of every diocese and dozens of parishes.

Here are some of the key takeaways from our reporting, thus far.

Hundreds of victims
While very few details have been released about how many people came forward with abuse allegations, data shows 57 of the clergymen named by the church Wednesday have multiple accusers.

Taken with others that have a single accuser and the nearly half for whom no information was released, there are at least 245 alleged victims. The actual number is likely far higher.

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Sacerdote docente envió videos sexuales a alumnos: su colegio no lo denunció y pudo cambiar de país

[El Salvador teacher-priest sent sexual videos to students: his school did not denounce him and he may have moved to Guatemala]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 13, 2019

By Paola Alemán and Francis López

En noviembre pasado, un grupo de padres de familia del Colegio Salesiano San José, de Santa Ana, al occidente de El Salvador, elevó su queja contra las autoridades de esta institución de estudios, tras descubrir un video de alto contenido sexual cuyo protagonista era el padre Melvin Pérez. El religioso envió el material erótico a un alumno menor de edad, de tercer año de bachillerato (4º medio en Chile) con quien, según testigos, tenía una “relación consentida”.

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‘RULE’ OF VATICAN ‘CLOSET’ Top Catholic bishops who attack homosexuality are MORE likely to be gay, explosive new book claims

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Sun

February 14, 2019

By Neal Baker

SENIOR Catholic bishops who attack homosexuality are MORE likely to be gay, an explosive new book claims.

Among its most startling claims is an alleged “rule” about top figures in the church who condemn homosexuality, Catholic news site The Tablet reports.

According to sources close to the book, author Frederic Martel suggests that senior clerics who are more vocal in their criticism of homosexuality are more likely to be gay themselves.

The French journalist and sociologist is said to have spent four years carrying out 1,500 interviews with dozens of clergy and other Vatican sources.

His landmark book – which will send shock-waves through the Catholic church – is due to be published next week.

Many priests maintain discreet long-term relationships – while some live double lives having casual sex with gay partners and using male prostitutes, the book allegedly finds.

Also among the most incendiary claims is the suggestion that up to four in five priests working in the Vatican are gay – although they may not be sexually active.

Bloomsbury, the British publisher, describes In The Closet Of The Vatican as a “startling account of corruption and hypocrisy at the heart of the Vatican.”

The book will be published in eight languages across 20 countries next Wednesday – to coincide with the opening of a Vatican conference on sexual abuse.

Martel, a former adviser to the French government, alleges that Colombian cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo was among the most vociferous defenders of church teaching on homosexuality – while also being gay.

Trujillo – a senior Vatican figure – regularly used male prostitutes, the book claims.

Critics of the book said “it is not always easy to tell when Martel is trafficking in fact, rumour, eyewitness accounts or hearsay,” according to the Tablet.

The book does not make links between the allegedly widespread homosexuality among priests and child sex abuse in the church, sources say.

Although In The Closet Of The Vatican does reportedly claim that gay priests felt compelled to keep quiet about reports of abuse to avoid their sexuality being exposed.

Martel is a non-believer and is gay.

Among his interviewees were 41 cardinals, 52 bishops and monsignors, 45 papal ambassadors or diplomatic officials, 11 Swiss guards and more than 200 priests and seminarians, The Tablet reported.

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Great expectations: Vatican abuse summit has key, realistic goals

MASSACHUSETTS

February 15, 2019

By the Bishops of Massachusetts

We write as your pastors; we write also at a critical moment for the Catholic Church in Massachusetts, in the nation and throughout the world. The issue which confronts us all, but especially confronts us as bishops, is the sexual abuse crisis that has again enveloped the life of the Church.

Catholics throughout the United States and the world have struggled with the deepest questions of reason and faith as the multiple issues of sexual abuse by priests and bishops have become public over the last sixteen years. The past year has been especially traumatic, and we again apologize to survivors and their families for all they have endured. We also apologize to the Catholic community for the seemingly unending nature of this scandal and the many questions it raises regarding Church leadership.

The attention of the Church and the wider society will be focused in an extraordinary way on the upcoming Summit Meeting in Rome, convoked by Pope Francis to address the crisis globally. Our purpose in this message is to provide perspective on the meeting considering what has occurred in the Church in the United States and throughout the world.

The Past: The clergy abuse crisis exploded in the United States early in 2002 when the unprecedented dimensions of the crisis became clear, leading the U.S. Bishops Conference to adopt “The Dallas Charter” later that year. The Charter promised a policy of zero-tolerance of sexual abuse of minors, meaning that accused priests determined to have abused a minor would be removed from ministry; all cases would be referred to appropriate civil authorities and each case would then be investigated within the Church. Beyond the provisions in the Charter, individual dioceses have adopted policies to provide care and counseling for survivors and education and prevention training in our parishes, schools and religious education programs. Reviewing the past, we acknowledge the record includes gaps and failures as well as successful implementation of these policies. At the same time, the Church in the rest of the world has experienced the abuse crisis in different ways at different times.

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February 14, 2019

Vatican envoy to France under investigation for sexual assault

PARIS (FRANCE)
CNN

February 15, 2019

By Saskya Vandoorne

The Vatican’s envoy to France, Archbishop Luigi Ventura, is under investigation for sexual assault, a French judicial source told CNN Friday.

The Paris prosecutor’s office opened an investigation on January 24, the source said.
Ventura, 74, has been based in Paris since 2009, serving as a diplomat for Pope Francis, as reported by Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The Vatican said in a statement that the Holy See was aware of the investigation and that it “awaits the results.” While the Vatican’s embassy in Paris said it would not comment on the investigation.

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French archbishop’s proposals for fighting sexual abuse

PARIS (FRANCE)
LaCroix International

February 14, 2019

By Céline Hoyeau and Gauthier Vaillant

Archbishop Georges Pontier of Marseille, president of the Bishops’ Conference of France will take two ideas to Rome. One is the creation of a Specialized Ecclesiastic Court. The other is about reforming the management of diocesan archives.

On Feb. 12, he met for two hours with four victims of sexual abuse, three of whom had had a discussion session with French bishops at their assembly in Lourdes past November. Pope Francis himself had asked the presidents of all conferences of bishops to hold such a meeting ahead of the global summit on sexual abuse in the Church at the Vatican he called Feb. 21-24.

Archbishop Pontier met the press on Feb. 13 to brief them on summit. The Archbishop of Marseille, representing France, will attend the summit, together with 114 other chairs of episcopal conferences worldwide.

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French Senate questions Catholic official on abuse by clergy

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press

February 14, 2019

By Thomas Adamson

The spokesman for France’s Catholic bishops’ conference told lawmakers Tuesday the French church is working with authorities to uncover and eradicate child sex abuse after allegations made in recent years revealed the scope of the country’s problem with pedophile priests.

Senators questioned the Rev. Olivier Ribadeau Dumas of the Conference of Bishops of France for a Senate commission that is preparing a report on pedophilia across French institutions.

It is being compiled as senior churchmen from every bishops’ conference around the world are preparing to attend a Feb. 21-24 Vatican summit convened by Pope Francis to try to develop a universal response to the problem.

The commission’s work also takes place as the trial of a prominent French cardinal accused of protecting a pedophile priest nears its end next month.

The Rev. Bernard Preynat confessed to abusing French Boy Scouts in the 1980s and 1990s, and his victims allege clergy in positions of authority covered up for him for years. One of the church leaders they accused of allowing Preynat to continue working with children until his 2015 retirement is Cardinal Philippe Barbarin.

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Clergy abuse survivor sues Syracuse Catholic Diocese hours after new law takes effect

SYRACUSE (NY)
Post-Standard

February 14, 2019

By Julie McMahon

A survivor of clergy sexual abuse in Central New York filed a lawsuit against the Syracuse Roman Catholic Diocese, this afternoon after a new law lifted restrictions on such suits.

The Child Victims Act, passed in New York in January and signed by the governor today, gives victims until their 55th birthday to file civil suits against their abusers and institutions.

Kevin Braney, 46, filed his lawsuit hours after Cuomo at 11:25 a.m. signed the bill, which went into effect immediately. By 3 p.m., Braney had filed accusations against three priests who he says raped and molested him over about two years beginning in 1988. As a teenager, he served as an altar boy at St. Ann’s Church in Manlius.

The lawsuit is the first reported in the Syracuse diocese. It is likely one of the first filed in New York state under the new Child Victims Act.

The spokeswoman and chancellor for the Syracuse diocese did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Braney last year rejected a $300,000 settlement offer from the diocese through a compensation program set up for victims. Braney said his goal is not a financial settlement but to expose abuses by individual priests and cover-ups by the Catholic church. He said he’s committed to having a jury hear his claims.

“Every day I get a step closer to justice, the further I get from the horrors of the past,” he said.

Two priests Braney accuses in the lawsuit were named to the Syracuse diocese’s list of clergy members with credible claims against them last year. Both are deceased.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse has released a list of priests who faced credible allegations of abuse.

A third priest, who is active, was previously cleared by diocesan officials and Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick of allegations brought forward by Braney.

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Child Victims Act signed into law

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union

Thursday, February 14, 2019

By Rachel Silberstein

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo signed New York’s Child Victims Act into law on Thursday, extending the statute of limitation for victims of childhood sex abuse who pursue civil and criminal charges against their perpetrators.

The bill signing took place in the New York Daily News’ Manhattan newsroom. The New York City tabloid had crusaded for child victims and their advocates for years, shaming lawmakers and opponents of the bill on its front cover and in editorial pages as the bill stalled in the Senate.

“This is society’s way of saying we are sorry,” Cuomo said. “We are sorry for what happened to you. We are sorry that it took so long for us to recognize what happened to you.”

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Massachusetts Church Officials Announce 15 New Cases

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

February 14, 2019

Catholic officials from the Diocese of Springfield, MA have announced that they received 15 new reports of child sexual abuse last year.

We are grateful that victims are stepping forward and making reports of their abuse and we applaud the bravery of those who are speaking up today. By coming forward about what happened to them, victims help protect children and prevent future cases of abuse. When these survivors do come forward, we hope they will first seek independent sources of help like police, therapists and support groups, before contacting church officials.

Based on revelations from recent investigations into clergy sexual abuse, we are not confident of the claim that ‘all new cases have been referred to the relevant district attorney.’ While we hope this is the case, we believe that victims, witnesses and whistleblowers should play it safe and call law enforcement authorities directly.

Nor are we confident that ‘Only eight incidents are listed as having happened in this century,’ as the diocese claims. Church officials have long and troubling track records of being dishonest or disingenuous about this continuing crisis.

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Man sexually assaulted by priest he met in Troy to sue clerics group

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union

February 14, 2019

Mark Lyman, a local man who was sexually assault by a Catholic priest when he was a boy, will be among a group of people filing a lawsuit against an organization of priests and religious brothers, alleging the group concealed the “histories and identities” of clerics who abused children.

The filing of the lawsuit against the Catholic Conference of Major Superiors of Men on Thursday coincides with Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signing of the Crime Victims Act.

The legislation passed last month sets a one-year period for alleged victims of sexual assault to file a lawsuit against their abusers or any organization or individuals that may have facilitated the abuse.

Thursday afternoon, Lyman and three other plaintiffs are expected to talk about their lawsuit against the conference and the opportunities for justice that the Child Victims Act will offer victims. The plaintiffs are also expected to demand the histories of each priest and brother who sexually abused children in New York.

The lawsuit is not being filed under the victims act but as a separate legal action.

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Bishop Sullivan’s statement on releasing the names of credibly accused clerics

CAMDEN (NJ)
Catholic Star Herald

February 14, 2019

By Bishop Dennis J. Sullivan

In keeping with a promise made by the Roman Catholic Bishops of New Jersey, I am today releasing the names of 56 priests and one deacon of the Diocese of Camden who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors (see page 4). The other bishops from New Jersey are simultaneously releasing the names of priests from their dioceses.

In the Diocese of Camden, these 56 priests are a small percentage of the more than 800 priests who have faithfully served the people of South Jersey since the diocese was founded in 1937.

As to the names on the attached list, it includes those who admitted to the abuse, those who were found guilty after a trial in the church courts or the civil courts, and others against whom the evidence was so overwhelming as to be virtually unquestionable. Most of these incidents occurred in the 1970s and the 1980s and involved male teenagers. It should also be noted that the majority of these priests, all of whose names have been provided to local law enforcement authorities, are dead.

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Why Does the Catholic Church Keep Failing on Sexual Abuse?

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Atlantic

February 14, 2019

By Emma Green

Cardinal Seán O’Malley has spent decades cleaning up after pedophile priests. Now he’s once again found himself in the middle of a crisis.

A few years after seán o’malley took over the Archdiocese of Boston in 2003, at the peak of the clergy sexual-abuse crisis in America, he led novenas of penance at nine of the city’s most affected parishes. At each church he visited, he lay facedown on the floor before the altar, begging for forgiveness. This is how O’Malley has spent his life in ministry: cleaning up after pedophile priests and their apologists, and serving as the Catholic Church’s public face of repentance and reform.

Possibly more than any other cleric on Earth, O’Malley understands how deeply the Church’s errors on sexual abuse have damaged its mission and reputation. Today, he is one of Pope Francis’s closest advisers, the only American on a small committee of cardinals who meet regularly at the Vatican. He runs the pope’s special commission on the protection of minors. And he is a member of the influential Vatican office responsible for preserving and defending Catholic doctrine. He believes that the Church has changed, can change, and will change. But as the world’s top bishops prepare to meet later this month for an unprecedented summit on sexual abuse at the Vatican, O’Malley has found himself frustrated, unable to push reforms through at the top.

In an interview on a recent cold morning in Boston, the cardinal spoke about the progress he believes the Church, and Pope Francis, have made in recent years, and what’s still lacking. He detailed his proposal to establish Vatican tribunals to deal with bishops accused of wrongdoing—one of the major problems the Church has yet to address. The pope “was convinced to do it another way,” O’Malley said. “We’re still waiting for the procedures to be clearly articulated.” He often described problems in the Church passively, without directly assigning agency or fault. For example: American bishops have asked the Vatican for an investigation into Theodore McCarrick, the former cardinal who was consistently elevated despite widely acknowledged rumors of sexual misconduct, until he was removed from ministry last summer. After months of requests, an investigation appears to be under way. “Certainly, many of us have personally expressed to the Holy Father and the secretary of state the need to do something quickly,” O’Malley said. “I keep getting assurances. But we’re waiting for the documents to be produced.”

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Catholic dioceses in New Jersey release names of accused priests

NEW JERSEY
Reuters

February 13, 2019

By Brendan O’Brien

Five Roman Catholic dioceses in New Jersey on Wednesday released the names of 188 clergy members who have been accused of sexually abusing children dating back decades, including a former cardinal facing defrocking by the Vatican.

The disclosure was the result of an internal investigation of archdiocese records and all of the priests and deacons listed have previously been reported to law enforcement and none remain in the ministry, Newark Archbishop Cardinal Joseph Tobin said in a statement.

“It is our sincerest hope that this disclosure will help bring healing to those whose lives have been so deeply violated,” he said, noting some of the abuse dates back to 1940.

New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal formed a task force in September to investigate allegations of sexual abuse by members of the clergy in his state, along with any efforts to cover up such abuse.

“I am pleased to see that our task force’s grand jury investigation has prompted the dioceses to finally take some measures to hold predator priests accountable,” Grewal said in a statement on Wednesday.

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What Hollywood Can Teach the Catholic Church About Confronting Longtime Sexual Abuse (Guest Blog)

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Wrap

February 13, 2019

By Johnathon Schaech

Pope Francis has called an unprecedented “summit” of bishops to the Vatican to discuss for the umpteenth time the problem of sexual abuse by priests — this one is focused on the abuse of children. The summit starts Feb. 21 and ends on the night of the Academy Awards, Feb. 24.

I cannot help but see the significance between the revelations about abuse and power in the Roman Catholic Church mirroring the revelations of abuse and power in our community out here in Hollywood. Clergy sex-abuse survivors have been coming together and speaking out since 1988 through SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. In 2002, the group helped the Boston Globe investigative team expose the Boston diocese’s practice of covering up for predators and moving them to new, unsuspecting parishes. Hollywood immortalized that moment in the 2016 Oscar-winning movie “Spotlight.”

In Hollywood, the silence breakers of 2017 had their own “Spotlight” moment. They gave a new and different focus to the issue covering up and ignoring sexual abuse in our society, and the #MeToo movement gained serious momentum.

Whether simply a coincidence or the result of the burgeoning #MeToo movement, this past year a Pennsylvania grand jury exposed more than 300 “predator priests” in just six dioceses in that state and found more than a 1,000 victims. Since the report was released, more survivors have come forward and more clergy have been exposed.

Investigative reporters in Boston and Philadelphia determined that as many as one in three American bishops have failed to respond appropriately to cases of sexual abuse. The attorney general of Illinois revealed that close to 75 percent of allegations reported to the Catholic Church in that state were either minimized or never even investigated in the first place. The FBI observed in the Pennsylvania report that the Church had what was akin to “a playbook” for concealing and covering up the truth.

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Heading to Rome for Clergy Sex Abuse Conference

ERIE (PA)
Erie News Now

February 11, 2019

By Paul Wagner

Local Men Prepare to Attend Papal Sexual Abuse Conference in Rome

Two men who say they were abused years ago by Erie Catholic Diocese priests will travel to Rome next week for a conference on clergy sexual abuse.

Pope Francis is holding the meeting with key bishops from around the world.

We spoke by face time today with both Jim Vansickle and James Faluszczak.

Both men testified before the Pennsylvania grand jury that named 301 so-called predator priests and about 1,000 victims.

They say the church must do more, including taking a zero tolerance stance against covering up abuse.

They hope their presence in Rome will give strength to victims.

Faluszczak said, “If that gives victims in Pennsylvania and throughout the world greater courage in going to law enforcement as I did then, mission accomplished.”

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Proposed bill could lead to prosecution of priests, lawsuits against dioceses

NEW LONDON (CT)
The Day

February 12. 2019

By Joe Wojtas

Over the past several years, bills introduced by state legislators to extend or eliminate the state’s rather short statute of limitations for filing charges in sexual assault cases were not approved.

But this year, supporters of the measure hope the recent release by the Archdiocese of Hartford and the Diocese of Norwich of the names of 91 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually assaulting children and teens will not only result in one of the bills becoming law but also eliminating the statute of limitations for filing civil lawsuits.

If both occur, living priests could face criminal charges and the dioceses likely would face a large number of new lawsuits by alleged victims who currently are prohibited from filing lawsuits after their 48th birthday.

One of the new bills has been filed by state Rep. Devin Carney, R-23rd District, who represents Lyme, Old Lyme, Old Saybrook and Westbrook.

“I just think it’s the right thing to do,” Carney said Tuesday. “This issue crosses party lines. I know Republicans who are proposing it and I know Democrats who are proposing it. It has bipartisan support.”

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Here’s List Of NJ Priests Accused Of Child Sexual Abuse (UPDATED)

NEWARK (NJ)
Patch

February 13, 2019

By Tom Davis

More names have been released. Leaders of the Catholic Church in NJ said they revealed the nearly 200 names to provide “healing.”

Leaders of the Catholic Church in New Jersey revealed the names of priests “credibly accused” of child sex abuse Wednesday to help victims heal as more revelations have been made in recent months.

The list shows nearly 200 members of the clergy with ties to New Jersey who have faced allegations of child sex abuse. Nearly all of them were either sanctioned by the church, charged with a crime or both.

Patch has the list of priests and deacons provided by each New Jersey archdiocese – Metuchen, Newark, Trenton, Camden and Paterson – below. All five New Jersey dioceses released names; not all provided details on church affiliations.

Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin, the archbishop of Newark, said the list includes all those from New Jersey who were credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors dating back to 1940.

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THE PRIEST RESTORING TRUST IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH — BY EXPOSING ITS SINS

MOUNTAIN VIEW (CA)
OZY/The Daily Dose

February 13, 2019

By Nick Fouriezos

As the son of a Baptist preacher in Wisconsin, it was a huge scandal in Ronald Lemmert’s family when he converted to Catholicism and later joined the priesthood. His journey had started when he was drafted during the Vietnam War and sent to West Point, where the Catholic chapel needed an organist. “I had a very powerful conversion experience,” Lemmert says, one built around his love for the Eucharist, which Catholics believe is the body of Christ.

But soon after becoming a New York diocesan priest in 1979, Lemmert realized the church was ailing from within. On one of his first assignments, he spent a year with an alcoholic priest who stayed up all night and slept all day. After Lemmert reported him, the priest was reassigned without receiving treatment and continued to work in another parish for years. Later, Lemmert’s fellow pastor at Holy Name of Mary church in Westchester County, Gennaro “Jerry” Gentile, took altar boys to his lake house on the weekends and on overnight trips to Disney World and Italy. Eventually, two families came to Lemmert to voice their concerns that children were being sexually abused. But when Lemmert told the archdiocese, it responded by banning him from the parish, blaming the accusers and sending its vice-chancellor to defend Gentile with the archbishop’s approval.

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Kerala Nuns Allege Rape Accused Bishop’s Hand In Transfer Orders

KOTTAYAM, KERALA (INDIA)
NDTV

February 10, 2019

“We believe that Bishop Angelo is the apostolic administrator of Jalandhar diocese. But when we see the kind of letters we doubt whether Bishop Franco still wields power in the diocese,” the representative of the protesting nuns told reporters at Kuravilangad near Kottayam.

Rape-accused Bishop Franco Mulakkal, who was relieved of his pastoral responsibilities by Pope Francis, still interferes with the administrative matters of Jalandhar diocese of the Roman Catholic Church, nuns protesting against him alleged in Kerala today.
“We believe that Bishop Angelo is the apostolic administrator of Jalandhar diocese. But when we see the kind of letters (being issued by the diocese PRO and Missionaries of Jesus congregation head), we doubt whether Bishop Franco still wields power in the diocese,” the representative of the protesting nuns told reporters at Kuravilangad near Kottayam.

Their statement comes a day after Jalandhar diocese PRO Father Peter Kavumpuram, who is allegedly close to Bishop Mulakkal, issued a clarification statement countering an e-mail issued to nuns by its apostolic administrator Bishop Angelo Ruffino Gracias.

In his e-mail, Bishop Angelo had assured the five nuns, who are staying with the rape survivor nun, that “there will be no move from the diocese of Jalandhar to oust” them from the Kuravilangad convent in Kottayam district as long as they are needed for the court case.

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Indian nun who accused bishop of raping her 13 times says church tried to silence her

KERALA (INDIA)
Independent

February 12, 2019

By Maria Abi-Habib

Women at Kerala monastery say victim’s accusations acknowledged only after public protests

An Indian nun who says a bishop raped her 13 times and was urged by church officials to keep silent about it has been told the case is going to trial.

Bishop Franco Mulakkal, who maintains his innocence, will be charged and face trial by a special prosecutor on accusations of rape and intimidation, police said.

He was arrested on 21 September in the southern state of Kerala on suspicion of raping the nun 13 times between 2014 and 2016.

She first spoke out in June but police started formal questioning only in September as fury over the case mounted.

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Monsignor Otto Garcia was tasked with handling pedophile priests in the Brooklyn Diocese — but now a man is accusing him of abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Daily News

February 14, 2019

By Linda Stasi and Dan Gold

A Queens man claims he endured sexual abuse by a priest who would later be accused of concealing the sins of pedophile priests in the Brooklyn Diocese.

For over four decades, Tommy Davis says, he carried the secret that he’d been repeatedly sexually abused as a teen by Monsignor Otto Garcia, one of the most powerful figures in the diocese — a figure alleged in a bombshell 2003 lawsuit of being “part of the concerted effort” to cover up diocese sex abuse.

And Davis says his shame caused him to fall into drugs, alcoholism and ruined relationships before getting sober. It took him decades to tell his story, only to be ignored by the law and rebuffed by the church after the diocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP) found that there was “insufficient support” to find his claim eligible for compensation.

Garcia denies all of Davis’ accusations.

With the passage of the Child Victims Act in New York State — which was signed into law by Gov. Cuomo Thursday — Davis and other alleged sex abuse victims are hoping for another chance at finally getting divine justice.

But it was a long time coming.

Davis told The News in painful, wrenching interviews and emails over the course of six months that his sexual abuse began when he was a teenage altar boy at St. Michael’s Church in Flushing, Queens. He remembers how happy his parents, devoted parishioners, were when they got the news that he had secured a job answering phones in the rectory after the secretaries left at 5 p.m.

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Springfield Catholic Diocese received 15 clergy sex abuse reports in 2018

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Republican

February 14, 2019

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

Fifteen reported cases of clergy sexual abuse were made to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield in 2018, according to a two-page report in the latest issue of the diocesan magazine, The Catholic Mirror.

It is the highest number reported since 52 claims were made in 2004, according to the report on how the Springfield diocese handles allegations.

All new cases have been referred to the relevant district attorney, diocesan spokesperson Mark Dupont said.

The published data lists the number of abuse reports made by year back to 1986 and also lists the decades going back to 1930s when the incidents reportedly occurred, something Dupont stressed when asked to comment on the report.

The 1970s is shown as the decade with the highest number of occurrences with 80, followed by 74 in the 1960s and 33 in the 1980s.

Only eight incidents are listed as having happened in this century.

The published report, which can also be read on the diocesan website, notes that most occurrences were reported beginning in 1993 — the diocese set up an independent review board in 1994 — and later. (The list dates to 1986 because that was when the diocese, through Bishop Joseph Maguire, first began a more formal process of handling abuse reports, Dupont said.)

Some 43 are shown as having been reported in 2002 and 42 in 2003.

“First it is important to note the difference between when abuse reports are made and when the abuse actually occurred. In almost all cases the time spam goes back decades. This is part of the difficult path many victims follow in coming to terms with their abuse,” Dupont said.

“But regardless of how long ago the abuse occurred, we offer each victim full outreach and assistance. Included in this is the commitment to report all cases to the appropriate district attorneys’ offices which we have done.”

He added, “The spikes in reporting generally have to do with external factors, mostly major news coverage.”

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Irish experience of abuse should inform worldwide Church

BELFAST (NORTHERN IRELAND)
Irish News

February 14, 2019

By William Scholes

WHEN the Irish News spoke to Archbishop Eamon Martin at Christmas about the clerical sexual abuse conference which takes place in Rome next week, he said he intended to draw on the Irish experience to “encourage others to come out of denial”.

“Ireland will be able to bring our bitter, sad experience of what it has been like, how the story of abuse has destroyed lives, how it has damaged people’s faith and trust in the Church,” he said, adding that clerical abuse “has even shattered people’s relationship with God in some cases”.

The summit, which was announced in September, is the first global gathering of bishops to discuss the abuse scandal.

Pope Francis called the meeting following a request from the group of cardinals who advise him.

Dr Martin said he hoped the meeting would also bring “some clearer sense within the Church on issues of accountability”.

“In Ireland, our fundamental accountability is to the law,” he said.

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Editorial: Southern Baptist scandal shows need to act

COLUMBUS (OH)
Columbus Dispatch

February 14, 2019

It seems that nearly every day there is a fresh story of children being sexually abused. This time it’s evidence of such abuse going on inside the Southern Baptist Convention.

The temptation is to hope there is an easy fix that involves setting up training or some other measure against all future abuse. The truth is that this is a complex problem that crops up in so many places because it stems from an evil embedded in human nature. To guard against it, we need our institutions to act proactively, to create a culture of speaking up and acting on evidence rather than ignoring it.

The Catholic Church is grappling with evidence of priests who abused children for decades. This has prompted calls to allow priests to marry and to give laypeople broader authority in the church.

But the experience of the Southern Baptist Convention suggests making such changes won’t solve the problem. A Houston Chronicle investigation showed sexual abuse at the hands of hundreds of pastors and volunteers in a denomination in which pastors are allowed to marry and laypeople historically take on large roles in their churches.

And consider the problem of predators in our schools and universities, where the environment is different from church, and yet, sexual abuse continues to happen. The data on child sexual assault show a widespread problem. According to a 2013 study by researchers at the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, the rate of lifetime sexual abuse or assault at the hands of adults is 1 in 9 girls and 1 in 53 boys. If you were not sexually abused as a child, you almost certainly have a friend or relative who was.

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First the Catholics and Now the Baptists

Patheos blog

February 14, 2019

Bt Gene Veith

The Roman Catholic Church has been shaken by revelations of rampant sexual abuse among its clergy. Now the Southern Baptist Church is being shaken by a similar scandal.

The Houston Chronicle has uncovered 380 church workers–pastors, but also youth ministers, Sunday School teachers, and other volunteers–who have been charged with sexual misconduct over the last 20 years. That list includes 250 who were charged with sex crimes, including rape, sexual assault, and child molestation.

The investigation found some 700 victims. Some were children as young as three. The cases seem to be mostly heterosexual assaults, but some were homosexual. Some of the girls got pregnant and were pressured into getting abortions.

As with the Catholic scandal, another dimension is the cover-up and failure to take action on the part of church officials.

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Lack of Central Authority Poses Challenges for Southern Baptists Amid Abuse Scandal

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

February 14, 2019

In the wake of months of sexual-abuse reports and allegations within the Catholic Church, and just before a Vatican summit on the problem, two Texas newspapers published a three-part investigation into the Southern Baptist Convention, uncovering at least 700 cases of child sexual abuse at the hands of church leaders and volunteers.

The joint investigation by the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News revealed that, since 1998, around 380 Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) leaders and volunteers have been accused of sexual misconduct — some resulting in lawsuits and convictions and others in personal confessions and resignations.

“They left behind more than 700 victims, many of them shunned by their churches, left to themselves to rebuild their lives. Some were urged to forgive their abusers or to get abortions,” the Houston Chronicle reported. “About 220 offenders have been convicted or took plea deals, and dozens of cases are pending. They were pastors. Ministers. Youth pastors. Sunday school teachers. Deacons. Church volunteers.”

In many ways, the scandal resembles that of the Catholic Church abuse scandals: children robbed of innocence, pastors abusing their positions of trust and authority, negligence and lack of appropriate, timely action on the part of some leadership once they were informed of abuse, and the shuffling of accused pastors from church to church.

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Our view: SBC must act in aftermath of abuse scandal

LUBBOCK (TX)
Avalanche-Journal

February 13, 2019

A church is expected to be a place of sanctuary and hope, populated with leaders who represent God, but sadly a recent joint investigation by the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News found a number of disturbing instances where this was not the case.

The newspapers discovered hundreds of Southern Baptist church leaders and workers had been accused of sexual misconduct over the past two decades, leaving a trail of human brokenness in the wake of another church scandal. In all, per an Associated Press story, more than 700 victims, some as young as 3, have had their lives forever impacted by 380 people in positions of trust at SBC-affiliated churches.

First, one abuse victim in any setting is one too many. One abuser in any position of trust is one too many. Instances where other church officials either ignored what was going on, refused to respond to victims’ cries for help or who enabled this reprehensible behavior to continue are a sad commentary and injure the credibility and mission of the church in the world. That, in some cases, victims and their families were also shunned by churches when they needed compassion is an unimaginably painful scenario.

There are a number of theories as to why churches can be especially susceptible to scandals such as this. Church leaders should be above reproach and often are seen that way by the people they serve, creating an aura of absolute trust, but, as is obvious from this investigation, church leaders are human and fallible. All churches should see these scandals as a call to tighten background checks, accountability standards and measures to protect the vulnerable from anyone entrusted with leadership responsibilities in a church.

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Harvest Bible Chapel moves quickly to fire founder MacDonald after recordings air

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Daily Herald

February 13, 2019

By Susan Sarkauskas

Thirty-one years after he founded it, Pastor James MacDonald has been fired as the leader of megachurch Harvest Bible Chapel.

The church announced the move Tuesday on its website.

The announcement said the elders had previously determined they were going to remove MacDonald but that they moved quickly after “highly inappropriate recorded comments made by Pastor MacDonald were given to media and reported.”

The elders fired him Monday, according to the announcement. MacDonald founded the church in Rolling Meadows, and it now has seven Chicago-area locations and one in Florida.

“This decision was made with heavy hearts and much time spent in earnest prayer, followed by input from various trusted outside advisers,” the elders’ statement said.

The comments attributed to MacDonald were broadcast by WLS-AM radio show host Mancow Muller, a former member of the church who said he was baptized by MacDonald in the River Jordan in Israel.

The clips purportedly are of MacDonald talking of a plan to put child pornography on the computer of Christianity Today magazine’s chief executive officer and about whether writer Julie Roys, one of the critics the church sued in October, was having an affair with Mark Galli, editor-in-chief of the publication.

The audio clips include an insult of Galli and an accusation that Roys had approached the houses of people who were victims in a DCFS investigation of a church worker and harassed them. There were also comments about MacDonald being able to raise $100,000 “in a minute.”

Roys, of Carol Stream, wrote on her blog that “Galli and I have never had anything but a professional relationship, and it’s repulsive that anyone — a pastor, no less — would make a joke about that.”

Christianity Today magazine, based in Carol Stream and founded in 1956 by the Rev. Billy Graham, published a story when Harvest filed the defamation suit last year against Roys, Ryan Mahoney of Wheaton, Scott Bryant of Geneva and the two men’s wives. Mahoney and Bryant write The Elephant’s Debt blog critical of the church.

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The Pope’s Upcoming Summit Needs To Do a Full Accounting Of the Cover-up Of Sexual Abuse

Patheos blog

February 13, 2019

by Timothy D. Lytton, Georgia State University

Pope Francis is gathering 200 bishops and heads of religious orders from around the world for a global summit in Rome to discuss the crisis facing the Catholic Church over sexual abuse scandals.

The meeting begins on Feb. 21 and will last four days. It is likely to produce a new round of public apologies, expressions of concern for victims and pledges of reform.

But recent statements by leading bishops and the pope suggest that church officials are not ready to take what I believe is an essential step in ending the scandal: providing a full and detailed accounting of their own role in concealing credible allegations of sexual abuse.

I’m a legal scholar who has written a book on clergy sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, and it appears to me that the church’s latest response, so far, is part of a familiar pattern that has persisted for nearly three decades.

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African Church leaders express concern about clerical abuse

DUBLN (IRELAND)
Irish Catholic

February 14, 2019

When child sexual abuse scandals involving Catholic priests emerge in Africa, they do not draw a frenzied reaction similar to that witnessed in developed countries, but the continent’s Church is affected, Catholic leaders have said.

While there is a general view that the scandals are a challenge of the Church in Europe and America, African officials confirm the incidents, amid reports of some provinces expelling or defrocking priests.

In Africa, clerics view the issue as too delicate and sensitive for the public, and many remained tight-lipped on the subject. At the same time, the Church leaders said they were concerned about the abuses and closely follow any such reports, both locally and globally.

“Africa is also affected like any other continent, but to what extent, I am not sure,” said Precious Blood Sr Hermenegild Makoro, general secretary of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference.

In October, the South African Church defrocked three priests over sexual abuse of children in the parishes. Since 2003, 35 cases of abuse involving priests have been reported to the Church in South Africa.

Sr Makoro said out of the 35 cases, only seven were being investigated by the police, and one has led to a life sentence.

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Lack of women in Catholic clergy challenged Irish minister says the Church is being hurt by the continuing exclusion

PARIS (FRANCE)
La Croix International

February 14, 2019

The Catholic Church should overcome its unwillingness to embrace woman and the marginalized, according to Ireland’s Minister for Culture, Heritage and Gaeltacht Irish speaking regions, Josepha Madigan.

“For many, the revelations of sexual and physical abuse scandals, and the denigration of marginalized people within the Church has shaken their faith and sense of belonging to its core,” she said, The Irish Times reported.

The minister, at a Feb. 13 Dublin meeting on why all ministries should be open to women, added that Catholics had a responsibility to speak up for values they expect the church to uphold.The Irish Times reported that Madigan noted that Protestant churches in Ireland have more than 400 women as ordained members of the clergy.”Nobody finds this unusual because in those church communities it is considered quite the norm,” she said.

“Why can’t the Catholic Church be the same? More often than not, it is women who are holding parishes together, doing the lion’s share of the work.”

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Details Emerge Regarding the Diocese of Harrisburg’s Victim Assistance Fund

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

February 13, 2019

Last November, the Diocese of Harrisburg announced that they were creating a victims compensation fund to aid survivors of clergy abuse in their diocese. Today we have learned the details of that fund.

The plan from the Diocese of Harrisburg is as milquetoast as is it ineffectual. The details – giving survivors a mere 90 days to come forward while also precluding their ability to sue in the future – are intended to sound good and mollify an angry public. The fact is, if Church officials cared about protecting children and supporting survivors, they would have devised a very different plan.

We believe that the more information that is known about abusers the better parents, parishioners, and the public are equipped to prevent future cases of abuse. We notice that the Diocese is not offering to make public the information that they receive from victims. Removing a survivor’s right to sue will not prevent cases of abuse, but will prevent survivors from using legal tools that can compel dioceses to release information or correct misinformation.

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Four publicly accused clerics who are not on Omaha”s list of those with “substantiated allegations”

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

February 13, 2019

Four publicly accused clerics who are not on Omaha”s list of those with “substantiated allegations”

–Fr. Thomas B. Laughlin, who “admitted to molesting dozens of boys over decades,” was described by a newspaper as “one of Oregon’s most notorious pedophile priests,” and who spent “his last years living a quiet existence near family in Omaha.” A Nebraska native, Fr. Laughlin was ordained in Lincoln. He faced numerous civil suits, most of which settled, and was convicted at least once and sentenced to one year in jail. “Laughlin was known as an exceptionally charismatic priest and tremendous church fundraiser who hobnobbed with Portland’s Catholic business and political elite,” wrote the Oregonian.

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New Jersey Dioceses Release Lists of Accused Clerics

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

February 13, 2019

Today, dioceses across the state of New Jersey have released their lists of clerics who have been “credibly” accused of abuse. We applaud this move but push for further action.

Between the dioceses of Camden, Metuchen, Newark, Paterson, and Trenton, 188 names of clergy who have been found to have abused children were released. These lists are critical for the prevention of abuse, the protection of children, and healing for survivors. We hope that seeing these names in print will bring solace to survivors and let victims who may still be suffering in silence find the strength to come forward and make a report of their abuse to law enforcement officials.

Yet we also know that there are more names of clerics who have hurt people in New Jersey that were not disclosed today. None of the lists released include the names of religious order or “extern” priests. While bishops often claim that they do not have authority over these clerics, the fact that they worked in New Jersey – regardless of whether they were brought there by a religious order leader or on loan from another diocese – behooves the inclusion of their names on these lists. If New Jersey bishops want to live up to their 2002 promise to be open and transparent, we believe that all those who hurt children while working in one of their dioceses should be listed.

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Virginia Dioceses Release Lists of Accused Clerics

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

February 13, 2019

Two dioceses in Virginia have released their lists of clergy who have been “credibly” accused of abuse. We are grateful for this move but urge further action.

The Diocese of Richmond, VA has released a list of 42 names of clerics who have been accused of sexually abusing children or vulnerable adults. Similarly, the Diocese of Arlington has announced a list of 16 accused clergy.

It is always helpful for survivors when these lists are posted, especially for those who may be suffering in silence. Seeing that they are not alone helps victims heal and could also compel others who were abused – whether by the same person or in the same place – to come forward.

But what is not helpful is when lists are carefully curated to leave off names of priests who have been accused of abuse but whose allegations haven’t been deemed by church officials to be “credible.” We have seen previous cases where accusations have been deemed not credible only for those determinations to have been disastrously wrong.

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Church in Oceania still shaken by pedophilia scandals Local bishops are trying to repair their damaged credibility

PARIS (FRANCE)
LaCroix International

February 14, 2019

By Claire Lesegretain

This is the second in a five-part series on steps taken by Catholic bishops on the various continents. Australia, which has a 25 percent baptized Catholic population, has experienced a series of crises over the Church pedophilia scandal since the first accusations became public during the 1980s.

In 1996, after a rising number of revelations, the Australian Catholic Bishops Conference (ACBC) published its plans in a document entitled “Towards Healing” while the Archdiocese of Melbourne developed a plan of its own entitled “The Melbourne Response.”The two protocols set out the procedures to be followed in cases of suspicion and reporting of abuse allegations involving a member of Church personnel.

They included preventive measures as well as a process of accompaniment and compensation for victims.Despite these efforts by the Church, the devastating report of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, which was made public in February 2017, once again shone a torchlight on the scandals in the Church.

Prepared over a period of five years and covering more than 4,000 youth institutions – both religious- and government-run, the report showed that “between 1950 and 2010, 7 percent of priests had been accused of sexual abuse of children.”

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Therapist, Exorcists Comment on Satanic Catholic Priest

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

February 14, 2019

By Patti Armstrong

In December, a Boise, Idaho, priest of 45 years, who lived in world of Satanism and child pornography, was sentenced to 25 years in prison. I came across the story, glossed over it, and turned away, finding it too disturbing.

Then an editor asked if I wanted to write about it. Well, not really. But after talking about it with a Catholic therapist and two exorcists, I discovered some worthwhile points to ponder. First, brace yourself for a summary and go here if you can stomach it all.

Thomas Faucher, 73, was caught with thousands of heinous images and satanic pronouncements on his phone and computer. There were 24 charges against him — including possession of LSD, marijuana, and Ecstasy — of which he pleaded guilty to five, claiming he could not remember much due to depression and dementia. Faucher’s interests on chat rooms are testimony to the hideous face of evil: actively seeking interests with gay men, satanic interests, violent and torturous images including rape, torture, and killing children, and fantasies including altar boys and babies.

Faucher’s defense pointed out that he never actually sexually abused a child and that he was a wonderful person who helped many people. Going from a position of power to nothing through retirement led to loneliness, alcoholism and drug abuse, which were blamed for his fall into darkness.

The diocese evicted Faucher while he was being held in the county jail and they had the house exorcised before selling it. Faucher apologized at his sentencing. “I was one really sick puppy. I screwed up big time… I feel so much remorse and anger.”

How Can This Happen?

How could a priest plunge so deep into depravity? I asked Paul Peloquin, a Catholic clinical psychologist in Albuquerque, New Mexico, who was abused as an 11-year-old. He returned to the Church after a thirty-year absence and now helps others to heal spiritually and emotionally.

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SNAP calls for state to set up hotline to report abuse by priests

NORWICH (CT)
The Day

February 13. 2019

By Joe Wojtas

The Connecticut chapter of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests on Wednesday called on Chief State’s Attorney Kevin Kane to set up a hotline to receive complaints from people who say they were abused by Catholic priests in the state.

In addition, Gail Howard said her organization has identified three priests, in addition to the six priests and brothers identified by The Day, who were not included on the list of 43 substantively accused of sexually assaulting minors that was released by the Diocese of Norwich on Sunday.

Howard, who made the comments during a Wednesday afternoon news conference in front of the Cathedral of St. Patrick, which is just yards from Bishop Michael Cote’s office, also called on the diocese to release more information about those on the list, such as what parishes and schools they served at.

“We need to know where these offenders worked and what parishes allowed them to have access to children,” said Howard, who was accompanied by John “Tim” McGuire of New London, who alleged last summer that, when he was 8 and an altar boy at St. Joseph’s Church in Noank, the late James Curry molested him.

The diocese’s list also did not say what the priests were accused of doing and whether the diocese reported them to police or the state Department of Children and Families, which clergy have been required to do under the state’s mandatory reporter law since 1971.

While all but 10 of the priests on the list are deceased, Howard said SNAP wants to know where the ones who are alive are now living.

“These are people who are a danger to children now. They need to be watched carefully,” she said.

According to the diocese’s list, diocesan priests such as Richard Buongirno and R. Thomas McConaghy still are alive.

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Ex-Pope John HS Priest Named On Church Sex Abuse List

SPARTA (NJ)
Patch

February 14, 2019

By Katie Kausch

A former priest who worked at Pope John High School faced a credible sexual abuse allegation, the Diocese of Paterson said.

James Scott, who was on the faculty at Pope John High School, was named on a newly released Diocese list of credibly accused priests. He served at other North Jersey churches and schools during his career (you can find a full list of churches at the bottom of this article).

The priest was included on a list of 28 from the Diocese of Paterson who face credible abuse allegations. All the priests are either deceased, removed from the ministry, or laicized.

“Such misconduct by those ordained as ministers of our faith can never be tolerated. The faithful of our diocese have a right to know that the diocese is doing everything it can to ensure the safety of our children and to report perpetrators to law enforcement authorities,” Bishop Arthur Serratelli said in a letter.

Scott faces one accusation; more information on the details of the allegation was not immediately available. He was removed from the ministry in 1995.

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Editorial: A list of names, and a long-needed reckoning for the church

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 14, 2019

How much of a stain does a priest’s garment carry? How much of a stench of shame?

Certainly not much for most priests, not for “good priests,” not for those who go about their daily walk ministering, first and foremost, to humankind and to the faithful who look to them for spiritual and emotional guidance.

And yet not all priests are good, and we are staggered by the sheer number of priests in New Jersey, past and present, who allegedly abused the trust, sexually abused children under their watch, and, shamefully, were protected by the Roman Catholic Church.

On Wednesday came a long-awaited reckoning for Catholic priests in New Jersey, some of the “bad ones,” believed to have abused young boys and girls, priests who too often were allowed to keep their cassocks and to keep performing Mass — even after their terrible secrets were known to the church hierarchy.

Cardinal Joseph William Tobin greets parishioners at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark before he is installed as head of the Archdiocese of Newark on Friday, Jan. 6, 2017.
Cardinal Joseph William Tobin greets parishioners at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark before he is installed as head of the Archdiocese of Newark on Friday, Jan. 6, 2017. (Photo: Michael Karas/Northjersey.com)

On Wednesday we at last saw the names, 188 of them, from New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses, who the church said had been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing children. The Newark Archdiocese posted its list shortly after 9:15 a.m. — a total of 63 names that included 33 priests who are deceased. Some of the priests had one alleged victim, but 33 had multiple victims. The Paterson Diocese list includes 28 clerics.

The release of the lists came after Cardinal Joseph Tobin announced last year that the dioceses were in the process of reviewing clergy sex abuse cases. The lists, he said, were compiled during an “extensive review” of records dating to 1940.

The length of the lists and the length of years covered by the lists speak directly to the depth and breadth of the abuse, but it cannot speak to the horror of it.

It cannot speak for long-ago victims who were subjected to abuse by men of God, men who were supposed to be their protectors — not their predators.

It cannot speak for all those who were abused, who had no lifeline to which to turn, save the church, and who had, in the end, neither the strength nor the wherewithal to speak up or cry out for justice.

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Independent investigator issues report on abuse in Louisville Archdiocese

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 14, 2019

By Marnie McAllister

A report by an independent investigator into the Archdiocese of Louisville’s handling of clergy sexual abuse in the course of 80-plus years begins as a story of failure followed by what the report calls “a sea change” in the past 17 years.

Attorney Mark Miller penned the report — that includes a list of 34 credibly accused priests of the Archdiocese of Louisville — after spending three months poring over 400 files and thousands of pages of documents.

He described his process and findings during a news conference Feb. 8 at the Archdiocese of Louisville Pastoral Center, formally presenting his report to the media and John Laun, chair of the archdiocese’s Sexual Abuse Review Board.

The board had requested the third-party investigation last fall, according to Archbishop Joseph Kurtz of Louisville.

Miller is a former U.S. attorney, former commissioner of the Kentucky State Police and retired judge advocate general.

During the news conference, Kurtz repeatedly indicated that the report is meant to be preliminary — a beginning, not an end, of a larger effort to bring healing to victims and transparency to the archdiocese’s handling of sexual abuse by clergy.

“Our primary purpose today is healing — healing of people who are victim survivors, many of whom I’ve spoken directly to and who have told me that having a report and a list of credibly accused priests will provide validation for something that has been part of their life, often for many decades.

“And secondly,” he said. “There is the thought that it will inspire others who have not come forward to come forward now for the healing that they truly deserve.”

He urged people who want to report abuse to contact police and the archdiocese, adding, “Do not delay in that.”

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Woman says brother was sexually abused by priest in the Catholic Diocese of Richmond

RICHMOND (VA)
WRIC TV

February 13, 2019

By Sierra Fox

The names of 42 Catholic clergy members with ties to the diocese of Richmond were released on Wednesday after “credible and substantiated” allegations of sexual abuse involving minors were made against them.

8News spoke with a woman who said her brother was abused by a priest on the list of 42 clergy members. The woman asked not to be on camera but said her name was Kathleen.

“Sadly, my brother was molested by a priest,” Kathleen said.

She said her brother was sexually abused by Father George George from the age of 13 to 16.
“When I saw the name of the priest,” she explained to 8News. “It really brought back some terrible memories and the terrible time my family went through.”

Kathleen said her brother stopped going to church and started using drugs to cope.

“I’m not gonna let this one monster change the way I feel and celebrate God,” she said.

Some survivors told 8News that what happened to them did change the way they feel and celebrate god. ​​​​​​​

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SPECIAL REPORT: “The Sound of Silence,” a look at allegations of abuse within the Peoria Diocese

PEORIA (IL)
Channel 25 News

February 13, 2019

(Warning: This story contains graphic material and is not suitable for a younger audience.)

Although he now lives in Rockford, Jeff Jones was born into a devout Catholic family in Pekin. Growing up in Central Illinois in the 1950’s and 60’s his mother often volunteered at St. Joseph’s. It was during that time he first met Father Walter Breuning.

“He would bring gifts. He bought my mom and dad an air-conditioning unit, he bought them new carpet. And I’m a little boy right and I’m seeing all the stuff thinking, ‘gosh, this guy is tremendous,’” recalls Jones.

At a young age Jones says he quickly grew attached to the Priest. So, when Father Breuning was transferred from his Parrish in Pekin to St. Anthony’s in Atkinson, Jones says he jumped at the invitation to come stay with the Priest on various breaks from school, including his summer vacation. He recalls working odd jobs around the rectory for money by day, sleeping on a couch in the living room by night.

But then, one day, he says the relationship changed.

“He said to me, ‘You know, why don’t you go in here? The air conditioner is better in my room. Why don’t you come on in there and sleep in there?’ And I said, ‘OK,” Jones begin, with a long pause as he looks down and stares at his clenched hands. “He started rubbing my back and I’m thinking, ‘OK, this is OK, and then he started dipping his hand down in my underwear. He took my underwear off and he began to, you know, massage me down there.”

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Victims sexually abused by priests would be able to sue decades later under new deal

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

February 14, 2019

By Susan K. Livio

State lawmakers will announce on Thursday they have reached an agreement that will repeal New Jersey’s narrow two-year statute of limitations that childhood victims of sexual assault say have prevented them from suing churches and other nonprofits, NJ Advance Media has learned.

The new legislation, which has not yet been made public, will allow a victim of childhood sexual abuse to bring a civil suit up until the age of 55 or seven years after they make “the discovery that they connect the injury to the abuse,” said Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Middlesex, the bill’s prime sponsor.

“They may have known they were abused but don’t connect the psychological damage to it,” Vitale said. “Two years is a ridiculously short time” to have to come to grips with what happened, and tell their families, he said.

The legislation also allows adult victims of sexual assault seven years to file a civil lawsuit, instead of the current two-year time limit, Vitale said.

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New Jersey dioceses just named 188 priests accused of child sex abuse. Will more priests go to jail?

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

February 14, 2019

By S.P. Sullivan

After decades of relative silence, New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses on Wednesday identified 188 priests credibly accused of sexual abuse against children. The disclosures come amid an ongoing state grand jury investigation expected to identify pedophile clergy and reveal whether there were any efforts to cover up their abuse.

Among the priests identified, 110 are dead. More than 75 had been removed from ministry as a result of their behavior, including some of the deceased. Two were listed as “whereabouts unknown. The records date back to the 1940′s and it is not known how many clergy were ever charged criminally.

But even with the release of the list, legal experts say it is unlikely many be prosecuted even though the state attorney general in New Jersey has launched its own sweeping investigation into allegations of sexual abuse. If similar efforts in other states are any indication, the inquiry could more likely prompt a hard look at systemic failures to stop abuse than put large numbers of priests in prison.

Former law enforcement officials and advocates for sexual assault survivors say clergy abuse cases are among the most difficult to prosecute for several reasons.

It was not unusual decades ago for victims to decide not to report abuse because they were skeptical that there would be consequences. And when victims did come forward in decades past, their complaints were frequently not turned over to authorities by church officials. Also, the lack of witnesses or corroborating evidence complicates criminal convictions further.

Even in Pennsylvania, where Attorney General Josh Shapiro last year published an unprecedented report naming more than 300 priests accused of abusing more than 1,000 children, just three clerics have been criminally charged.

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SNAP leader recognizes abuser after Diocese of Arlington release names of priests accused of child sex abuse

RICHMOND (VA)
CBS 6 News

February 13, 2019

By Matthew Fultz

Becky Ianni tells CBS 6 that although her abuse happened more than five decades ago, Wednesday’s list of priests that sexually abused minors brought back all of those horrible memories.

“I think I flashback back to the abuse and what he did to me and how it changed my life,” said Ianni. “My first reaction was to check the list here and check the list in Arlington to make sure he was on there and he was,” Ianni said.

That name was William Reinecke, a man who Ianni said abused her for several years as a child.

Today shes the Virginia State Leader for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). Although she is glad a list was published, she said its information is incomplete.

“There`s information missing. They don`t have listed how many people have accused each of these priests,” said Ianni. “It could be one, it could be dozens of victims. It doesn`t list the perishes they were at. It does`t say when they found out and what they knew.”

The Diocese of Arlington released 16 priests names today.

‘I think there is probably people who aren’t on that list because they didn’t make the cut for whatever reason and we don`t even know what that reason is,” Ianni added.

While the Diocese of Richmond had 42 names of priests who abused minors. CBS 6 took to the streets of Richmond to hear what catholic members had to say.

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The list of Catholic priests accused of abuse in NJ is out. What’s next?

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 14, 2019

By Sarah Nolan and Deena Yellin

NorthJersey.com’s Ed Forbes discusses the release of names by NJ dioceses of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse. Paul Wood Jr. and Michael V. Pettigano and Ed Forbes, North Jersey Record

The names of 188 priests and deacons who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children over several decades were released by New Jersey Roman Catholic dioceses on Wednesday.

The public release of the names was the result of an internal review spurred by law enforcement officials launching their own investigation and “an effort to do what is right and just,” according to Cardinal Joseph Tobin, head of the Newark Archdiocese.

The Newark Archdiocese alone released 63 names, 33 of whom are now dead. Of all the accused priests, 109 are dead and 79 living.

Will the priests go to jail?
In most cases these charges are from decades ago, and the statute of limitations has expired, so it’s unlikely. While there is no longer a statute of limitations on reporting sexual abuse of a minor, in years past there were limits on how much time could elapse between when a crime was committed and when charges could be filed.

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The Catholic Church’s US seminaries need reform

WASHINGTON (DC)
Religion News Service

February 12, 2019

By Thomas Reese

No one has a greater impact on a Catholic parish than its pastor, which is why diocesan seminaries are key to the future of the church in America. Diocesan seminaries evaluate and then form those men who want to be parish priests. Sadly, in recent decades, too many of the priests coming out of these seminaries have been trained to be authoritarians with few pastoral skills.

Some of them come to seminary with an authoritarian mindset, but faculty at today’s seminaries often do little to change that. Some faculty members even foster it, teaching their students that they have all the answers and that their job is to kick the laity into shape. In these cases, seminarians are not taught to listen, to delegate, to work with committees or to empower the laity, especially women.

This is not true of all seminaries and seminarians. Chicago’s Mundelein Seminary has improved under the leadership of Cardinal Blase Cupich. Some are mixed bags. Others are disaster areas.

In the worst programs, students are told not to ask questions but to consult “The Catechism of the Catholic Church,” the book-length presentation of the teachings of the church prepared under the papacy of John Paul II. The documents of the Second Vatican Council are either downplayed or interpreted through a conservative lens. In too many places by too many faculty, moral theology is presented in a legalistic framework in which everything is black or white.

This has been going on in American seminaries since at least the mid-1990s, after conservative bishops had consolidated their control of seminaries. The result is that many parishioners are unhappy with their pastors.

Seminaries were one of the great reforms that came out of the Council of Trent, the long meeting of the church in the mid-1500s spurred by the Protestant Reformation. Until that time, many clergymen were ignorant and sometimes even illiterate. Trent insisted that the clergy be educated and urged bishops to set up seminaries to prepare men for the priesthood.

Seminaries also were a way of segregating seminarians from the world in order to protect and foster their vocations. Seminaries were often built in the countryside, where the seminarians could be easily protected from temptation. If they don’t interact with women, they will not fall in love and leave.

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What Hollywood Can Teach the Catholic Church About Confronting Longtime Sexual Abuse

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Wrap

February 13, 2019

By Johnathon Schaech

Pope Francis has called an unprecedented “summit” of bishops to the Vatican to discuss for the umpteenth time the problem of sexual abuse by priests — this one is focused on the abuse of children.

The summit starts Feb. 21 and ends on the night of the Academy Awards, Feb. 24. I cannot help but see the significance between the revelations about abuse and power in the Roman Catholic Church mirroring the revelations of abuse and power in our community out here in Hollywood.

Clergy sex-abuse survivors have been coming together and speaking out since 1988 through SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. In 2002, the group helped the Boston Globe investigative team expose the Boston diocese’s practice of covering up for predators and moving them to new, unsuspecting parishes. Hollywood immortalized that moment in the 2016 Oscar-winning movie “Spotlight.”

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The Pope’s Top Reformer on Sexual Abuse Can’t Fix the Catholic Church

BOSTON (MA)
The Atlantic

February 14, 2019

By Emma Green

Cardinal Seán O’Malley has spent decades cleaning up after pedophile priests. Now he’s once again found himself in the middle of a crisis.

A few years after Seán O’malley took over the Archdiocese of Boston in 2003, at the peak of the clergy sexual-abuse crisis in America, he led novenas of penance at nine of the city’s most affected parishes. At each church he visited, he lay facedown on the floor before the altar, begging for forgiveness. This is how O’Malley has spent his life in ministry: cleaning up after pedophile priests and their apologists, and serving as the Catholic Church’s public face of repentance and reform.

Possibly more than any other cleric on Earth, O’Malley understands how deeply the Church’s errors on sexual abuse have damaged its mission and reputation. Today, he is one of Pope Francis’s closest advisers, the only American on a small committee of cardinals who meet regularly at the Vatican. He runs the pope’s special commission on the protection of minors. And he is a member of the influential Vatican office responsible for preserving and defending Catholic doctrine. He believes that the Church has changed, can change, and will change. But as the world’s top bishops prepare to meet later this month for an unprecedented summit on sexual abuse at the Vatican, O’Malley has found himself frustrated, unable to push reforms through at the top.

In an interview on a recent cold morning in Boston, the cardinal spoke about the progress he believes the Church, and Pope Francis, have made in recent years, and what’s still lacking. He detailed his proposal to establish Vatican tribunals to deal with bishops accused of wrongdoing—one of the major problems the Church has yet to address. The pope “was convinced to do it another way,” O’Malley said. “We’re still waiting for the procedures to be clearly articulated.” He often described problems in the Church passively, without directly assigning agency or fault. For example: American bishops have asked the Vatican for an investigation into Theodore McCarrick, the former cardinal who was consistently elevated despite widely acknowledged rumors of sexual misconduct, until he was removed from ministry last summer. After months of requests, an investigation appears to be under way. “Certainly, many of us have personally expressed to the Holy Father and the secretary of state the need to do something quickly,” O’Malley said. “I keep getting assurances. But we’re waiting for the documents to be produced.”

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February 13, 2019

‘The Safety of Victims Matters More than the Reputation of Southern Baptists’

VIRGINIA BEACH (VA)
Christian Broadcasting Network

February 12, 2019

A multi-month Houston Chronicle investigation into sexual abuse in Southern Baptist churches has rocked the denomination and prompted calls for immediate, aggressive action.

Southern Baptist president J.D. Greear called for the denomination to mourn and repent. He promised to put the Southern Baptist Convention’s spiritual, financial and organizational resources behind an effort to stop predators in churches and other Southern Baptist institutions.

He also called for the care of victims saying “the safety of victims matters more than the reputation of Southern Baptists.”

Dr. Russell Moore, the president of the convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, called on churches to report all child abuse cases to the civil authorities.

Moore also addressed church governance issues which historically have been used by denominational leaders to reject calls for abuse protection measures such as a registry of offenders to track predators who move from church to church.

“Church autonomy is no excuse for a lack of accountability,” said Moore. He called on churches that use issues like sexual immorality or opposing missions to deem another church “out of fellowship” to do the same for churches that cover up rape or sexual abuse.

Last year the denomination created a Sexual Abuse Presidential Study Group, largely in response to the #MeToo and #ChurchToo movements. One of the key goals is to train churches to recognize sexual predators and how to respond to charges of abuse.

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Release of abusive priests’ names only a beginning

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
Express-News

February 13, 2019

There is much work to be done by the U.S. Catholic Church as it moves forward with restoring the public trust, shattered by decades of failing to properly address allegations of sexual abuse of children by clergy.

The release last month of the names of close to 300 Texas-based priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse, including 54 in the Archdiocese of San Antonio, will go a long way toward starting the healing process for many victims and their families. But it’s only a beginning.

The scars are deep.

The cases on the Bexar County list date back as far as 1941 and include 150 separate allegations of misconduct. Most of the allegations were under the radar of most Bexar County residents because only a few ever surfaced in court. A review of Express-News archives indicates the archdiocese had paid at least $6.63 million as of 2011 to victims of sexual abuse by priests in Bexar County.

As painful as these types of cases are, there needs to be continued honesty and transparency going forward. Needed: strong policies that ensure allegations of misconduct are reported to law enforcement in a timely manner and suspects are sidelined from their jobs while investigations are conducted.

Those who participate in cover-ups and allow suspected child molesters to be reassigned must also be held accountable. Pretending the problem does not exist won’t make it go away. Decades of trying to resolve the problem internally have proven futile.

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Lawsuit against St. Edward School alleges former priest raped boy in 1970s

CARLSBAD (NM)
Carlsbad Current-Argus

February 13, 2019

By Michael Smith

A lawsuit filed in New Mexico’s Fifth Judicial District Court Monday alleged a priest sexually abused a 7-year-old boy more than 40 years ago while the clergyman was assigned to St. Edward School in Carlsbad.

The boy, listed in the lawsuit as John Doe, was allegedly raped by Kerry Guillory, per the suit, on the campus of the school on multiple occasions.

Between 1972 and 1974, the 7-years-old boy was allegedly sexually assault by Guillory.

“The suit was prompted by our client struggling through the failure of what scientists call ‘child coping skills.’ When really bad things happen to children, especially (by a person) in a position of trust and authority over the child, they survive by utilizing whatever coping mechanisms work to block out bad things,” said Albuquerque attorney Brad Hall, who filed the lawsuit.

Defendants in the case are the Catholic Diocese of El Paso, Conventual Franciscan Friars, Province of Our Lady of Consolation, Inc., St. Edward Parish, Inc. and St. Edward School, Inc., read the complaint.

“We have no comment on pending litigation,” said Fernie Ceniceros, interim communications director for the El Paso Catholic Diocese.

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As more abuse surfaces, reaction remains: ‘How could they?’

GARDENCITY (KS)
Garden City Telegram

February 13, 2019

My first reaction upon hearing that hundreds of leaders in the Southern Baptist church had sexually abused as many as 700 people in 400 churches, including victims as young as 3, was “how could they?” It was the same reaction I had when news of predatory priests in the Roman Catholic Church, and the cover-up that followed the sexual abuse allegations, surfaced.

I have belonged to Southern Baptist churches in the past, so I know something about their proud “independent” status. Some critics have said it is the lack of a central authority in these churches that contributed to failed oversight. The Catholic Church has a central authority. How do you explain its oversight structure?

The reporting by the Houston Chronicle, San Antonio Express-News and The Washington Post should turn any stomach. Most Baptists have had children in their Sunday school programs. What must they be thinking as they ponder whether to ask their child, who by now might be a teen or an adult, if they had ever been abused by a teacher, pastor or counselor?

The Washington Post reports: ”…instead of ensuring that sexual predators were kept at bay, the Southern Baptist Convention, resisted policy changes. …Victims accused church leaders of mishandling their complaints, even hiding them from the public.”

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Release of abusive priests’ names only a beginning

GUADALAJARA (MEXICO)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 13, 2019

By Express-News Editorial Board

Read original article

There is much work to be done by the U.S. Catholic Church as it moves forward with restoring the public trust, shattered by decades of failing to properly address allegations of sexual abuse of children by clergy.

The release last month of the names of close to 300 Texas-based priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse, including 54 in the Archdiocese of San Antonio, will go a long way toward starting the healing process for many victims and their families. But it’s only a beginning.

The scars are deep.

The cases on the Bexar County list date back as far as 1941 and include 150 separate allegations of misconduct. Most of the allegations were under the radar of most Bexar County residents because only a few ever surfaced in court. A review of Express-News archives indicates the archdiocese had paid at least $6.63 million as of 2011 to victims of sexual abuse by priests in Bexar County.

As painful as these types of cases are, there needs to be continued honesty and transparency going forward. Needed: strong policies that ensure allegations of misconduct are reported to law enforcement in a timely manner and suspects are sidelined from their jobs while investigations are conducted.

Those who participate in cover-ups and allow suspected child molesters to be reassigned must also be held accountable. Pretending the problem does not exist won’t make it go away. Decades of trying to resolve the problem internally have proven futile.

One of the more troubling cases on the Bexar County list is that of Jose Luis Sandoval, who was ordained in 1974 in Mexico and served in San Antonio from 1974 to 1998. During his time in Texas, he was investigated for alleged child sexual abuse, sent to psychiatric evaluation and treatment for a year, and then allowed to return to his job.

He later fled the country when new allegations of abuse surfaced and was subsequently removed from his assignment and prohibited from exercising any priestly ministry in the Archdiocese of San Antonio by Archbishop Patrick Flores in 1998.

Yet despite all that, Flores, who retired in 2004, later wrote a general letter of support for Sandoval without a reference to his problems in San Antonio. Sandoval proceeded to work with the Archdiocese of Guadalajara in 2000, but four years later lost his privileges there as well.

It appears what Flores did was common practice. Problem priests were removed from jobs when trouble arose and then simply allowed to go into unsuspecting communities where the same issues often surfaced.

The number of children who were abused will never be known. Some victims are still trying to come to terms with what happened to them and have not come forward.

And the list is likely to grow. As the report was released, the local archdiocese was investigating cases involving other priests.

All credible allegations must be investigated, not just in Texas or the U.S. but abroad as well.

A week after Texas archdioceses gained international attention for the release of their priest lists, Pope Francis publicly acknowledged the sexual abuse of nuns by priests and bishops. The sexual abuse of nuns by clergy in Europe, Africa, Asia and South America was reported by the Associated Press last year. The news agency’s investigation found the Vatican had not supported the victims or taken adequate measures to punish the offenders.

Pope Francis is slated to meet with the presidents of the world’s bishops’ conferences later this month to focus on a response to the global sex abuse crises. He has said he is committed to ending the problem.

Following the Catholic Church’s release of names, a Houston Chronicle/San Antonio Express-News report revealed similar abuse stories within the Southern Baptist Convention. We will comment separately on this matter in the coming days. For now, suffice to say that such revelations — absent accountability and absent acceptance of responsibility — will have the effect of diminished trust in institutions in which many thought trust was a given.

It can be again, but only if that commitment to address the problem is vigilant and continuing.

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Philly organization pushing for clergy abuse reform laws says lawsuits turn tragedy into justice

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
KYW Newsradio

February 13, 2019

By Steve Tawa

The parents of a man who won what may be the largest payout to date from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia in a clergy abuse case are donating a chunk of it to CHILD USA to track the Statute of Limitations reform movement.

University of Pennsylvania Law School professor Marci Hamilton, a nationally-recognized advocate for survivors of clergy sex abuse, believes that 26-year-old Sean McIlmail, a former student in a northeast parish, died of a heroin overdose in 2013 because he was unable to cope.

“He was under tremendous pressure, because he was the only victim who could go after a prosecution of a priest,” Hamilton said.

She says that was due to Pennsylvania’s exceedingly short limit to file a lawsuit. He was about to testify against a now-defrocked priest, Robert Brennan.

Hamilton says public pressure is forcing state legislatures to allow child abuse victims to go after the Roman Catholic Church.

“Over half of the states this year have already introduced legislation to expand or eliminate the criminal and civil statutes of limitations. That’s a record,” she said.

Sean’s father, Michael, a former Philadelphia police officer, recalls the church approaching the family to donate part of their settlement to the church to deal with abusive priests. They decided instead, to give it to Hamilton’s CHILD USA.

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Church in New Jersey names 188 credibly accused priests

DENVER (CO)
Crux

February 13, 2019

By Christopher White

Following a trend throughout the country, New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses released on Wednesday the names of its priests credibly accused of sexual abuse.

In total, 188 names were included on the five lists: 63 from Newark, 56 from Camden, 30 from Trenton, 28 from Patterson, and 11 from Metuchen.

While the majority of the priests named are deceased, one name appearing on two lists remains the subject of intense controversy: Theodore McCarrick.

Earlier this summer, McCarrick, the former bishop of Metuchen and later archbishop of Newark (and then Washington, D.C.), was credibly accused of abusing an altar boy while serving as a priest of the archdiocese of New York during the 1970s.

McCarrick would go on to become one of the most prominent members of the U.S. Church, and the scandal surrounding him led Pope Francis to accept McCarrick’s resignation from the College of Cardinals last summer, along with removing him from ministry.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), the powerful Vatican body that investigates abuse against minors, is expected to issue a decision on whether to laicize McCarrick in the coming days. Should the Vatican make such a move, McCarrick would be permanently removed from the priesthood.

The archdiocese of Newark included McCarrick in its full listing, noting: “Archbishop Theodore McCarrick has been included on the list based on the findings of the Archdiocese of New York that allegations of abuse of a minor against then Father McCarrick were credible and substantiated.”

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Doing the right thing: Abuse summit aims to put the world’s bishops on the same page

TORONTO (CANADA)
The Catholic Register

February 13, 2019

By Michael Swan

Ever since Pope Francis announced in September that he was calling the heads of the world’s bishops’ conferences to Rome for an unprecedented summit on sexual abuse, expectations have been mounting.

He called for the summit as the Church was reeling from several abuse scandals that had implicated priests, bishops and even cardinals. Nine months into 2018, it was already a horrible year for the Church and it would get worse. More than just a Pennsylvania grand jury report on 70 years of clerical abuse and cover-ups, or lurid tales of sexual predation by former Washington Archbishop Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, or having every single bishop in Chile tender his resignation — beyond these ghastly headlines was a relentless drip of revelations of abuse, negligence and concealment.

Then in November the Pope instructed the American bishops to postpone a vote on stringent new abuse protocols that included creation of a phone line to report misconduct by bishops. He wanted them to wait until the abuse crisis was discussed by bishops from around the world. His intervention further fuelled anticipation of major developments when the three-day summit convenes Feb. 21 in the Vatican.

But as the date approaches, the Vatican has been trying to dampen anticipation.

“I’ve perceived a bit of an inflated expectation,” Pope Francis told reporters on the plane as he returned to Rome Jan. 26 from World Youth Day in Panama. “We need to deflate the expectations.”

That doesn’t mean the Pope is having second thoughts about his own summit. But his ambitions differ from the thousands of Catholics worldwide who may be expecting dramatic announcements or the immediate imposition of new measures to combat abuse.

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What the Army can teach the Catholic Church about responding to sexual abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

February 13, 2019

By James M. Dubik

When Pope Francis said in a 2015 interview, “I am a sinner,” he reminded us of a fundamental truth: We are all imperfect. Even those striving for both moral and spiritual perfection are prone to mistakes, errors in judgment, blindnesses and biases. As human beings, we cannot be otherwise, and the organizations we create to govern ourselves—whether for business, political, security, social or religious purposes—reflect these imperfections. The Catholic Church is facing twin crises that prove this point exactly: a sexual abuse crisis and a crisis of confidence in leadership practices that allowed, then covered up, the abuse.

The issue now is how to restore trust in church leadership. My experience in the United States Army—over 37 years, 11 as a general officer—suggests that the path of “I’m sorry, trust me this time” won’t work. Rather, the church must become trustworthy, and that means taking comprehensive corrective action.

Addressing scandal in the ranks

At one point in my career, I witnessed how then-Chief of Staff of the Army, General (now retired) Dennis J. Reimer, and the rest of the senior Army leadership dealt with the 1996 Aberdeen sexual abuse scandal. I was a colonel then, General Reimer’s executive officer. This scandal broke when Major General (now retired) Robert Shadley discovered, reported and began an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse involving the Army drill instructors responsible for training new recruits at Aberdeen Proving Grounds, Md.

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Diocese of Camden Lists Names of 56 Priests ‘Credibly Accused’ of Sexual Abuse of Minors

CAMDEN (NJ)
Cape May County Herald

February 13, 2019

On Feb. 13, 2019, the Diocese of Camden, in concert with the other dioceses of New Jersey, has published the names of all diocesan priests credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors.

The following is Bishop Dennis Sullivan’s explanatory statement regarding the release of names.

In keeping with a promise made by the Roman Catholic Bishops of New Jersey, I am today releasing the names of 56 priests and one deacon of the Diocese of Camden who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors. The other bishops from New Jersey are simultaneously releasing the names of priests from their dioceses.

In the Diocese of Camden, these 56 priests are a small percentage of the more than 800 priests who have faithfully served the people of South Jersey since the diocese was founded in 1937.

As to the names on the attached list, it includes those who admitted to the abuse, those who were found guilty after a trial in the church courts or the civil courts, and others against whom the evidence was so overwhelming as to be virtually unquestionable. Most of these incidents occurred in the 1970s and the 1980s and involved male teenagers. It should also be noted that the majority of these priests, all of whose names have been provided to local law enforcement authorities, are dead.

In many cases, a single allegation from 30 or 40 years ago was the only such charge that had ever been made against the priest and was received after he had died. Thus, he was unable to respond to the allegation.

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Former Prince George priest listed as sex abuser

PETERSBURG (VA)
Progress Index

February 13, 2019

By Bill Atkinson

Diocese releases names of 42 men with ‘credible, substantiated’ accusations of assault of minors

The Catholic Diocese of Richmond released a list Wednesday of 42 former diocese priests having “credible and substantiated” accusations of sexual abuse of minors, and that list includes a former priest at a Prince George County parish.

In an open letter to the diocese membership, Bishop Barry C. Knestout said the release coincides with his promise for transparency and accountability in how the church has dealt with the allegations. Knestout said the release is being done to help the survivors and their families heal from their past abuse.

“To those who experienced abuse from clergy, I am truly, deeply sorry,” Knestout wrote. “I regret that you have to bear the burden of the damage you suffered at the hands of those you trusted. I am also sorry that you must carry the memory of that experience with you. Moreover, I apologize to family members and friends of the abused, and to all members of the Catholic Church.”

Knestout stated that the crisis calls for the diocese to “be immersed in three aspects of reconciliation” — acknowledgement of the abuse, regret for the victims and a commitment that it never happens again.

“In doing so, we make known — and support with actions — our commitment to repair the damage that has been done,” the bishop wrote.

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Protesters say Norwich diocese list of priests is incomplete

NORWICH (CT)
Norwich Bulletin

February 13, 2019

By Kevin Aherne

The Diocese of Norwich this week released the names of 43 former priests in the diocese with “allegations of substance” made against them regarding the sexual abuse of minors, but a group of protesters say the church has not gone far enough to address the issue.

A small group of protesters from the Connecticut chapter of SNAP — the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests — held a press conference Wednesday afternoon in front of the Cathedral of Saint Patrick in Norwich urging the diocese to “come fully clean now” and to out additional priests the organization said were excluded from the list.

Also Wednesday, the Roman Catholic diocese in Richmond, Va., published a list of 42 priests with a “credible and substantiated” allegation of sexual abuse against a child, while New Jersey’s five Roman Catholic dioceses listed more than 180 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors over a span of several decades.

Gail Howard, the leader of the Connecticut chapter of SNAP, said the release of the names by the Norwich diocese was a step forward in addressing decades of abuse that had been previously covered up, but more steps need to be made.

Howard also claimed the list of 43 clergy in the Norwich diocese omitted at least nine names, citing six missing names reported Tuesday by The Day, and three more identified by SNAP.

Howard unveiled details on the three priests that had previously gone unreported by the diocese and the media including: a priest who allegedly repeatedly assaulted a boy in New Hampshire in the 1960s and had served in the Norwich diocese at a church in Willimantic; a priest charged in 1993 with molesting a child in Massachusetts who had previously served in the Norwich diocese at a church in Middletown; and a priest who admitted abuse who had served in the diocese at a church in Middlefield.

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Survivors group in Topeka reveals names of more Catholic priests accused of molestation

TOPEKA (KS)
Topeka Capital-Journal

February 13, 2019

By Tim Hrenchir

The names of five Roman Catholic priests thought to have molested children in other states — though they weren’t on the list the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas released Jan. 25 identifying 22 priests it concluded had sexually abused children — were made public Wednesday in Topeka by the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

Four of the five priests on the list released by Kansas City SNAP leader Jim McConnell are deceased. They include the Rev. Anthony Palmese, whom an obituary provided by SNAP indicated held assignments that included serving at Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Topeka.

The archdiocese confirmed Wednesday that two of the priests had served there but said it had no record of sexual allegations against either during their time there.

The archdiocese indicated it had no record of the other three, including Palmese, having been assigned there and had confirmed that with Husch Blackwell, the law firm hired to independently review all its files.

“It is possible that one or more of these individuals worked, undertook studies or lived in the area at some time in the past,” said Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann. “But if they did, we were not aware of it because the records, going back some 75 years, did not show it.”

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Virginia’s two Catholic bishops release names of 58 priests they say have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 13, 2019

By Michelle Boorstein and Sarah Pulliam Bailey

Virginia’s two Catholic dioceses Wednesday released lists of clergy whom officials say were deemed “credibly accused” of sexually abusing youth, the latest in a slew of U.S. dioceses to make public such names amid a national crisis over clerical abuse and cover-ups.

The diocese of Arlington, which covers the northeastern corner of Virginia, released a list of 16 names. It said the list was the product of two former FBI agents contracted by the diocese and given access to clergy files and information dating to its founding in 1974. It wasn’t immediately clear if any of the names were completely new to Catholics of the diocese.

Bishop Michael F. Burbidge said in a letter that he ordered the list be released to help “victims and survivors of clergy abuse to find further healing and consolation.”

The diocese of Richmond, which covers the rest of the state, released 42 names.

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List reveals names of dozens of Virginia priests facing ‘credible’ child sex abuse allegations

RICHMOND (VA)
WRIC TV

February 13, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Richmond has released the names of dozens of priests that are facing ‘credible and substantiated’ allegations of sexual abuse against a minor.

The list, which contains the names of 42 priests, was published by the Diocese of Richmond Wednesday afternoon.

The full list of priests can be found below.

“To the victims and to all affected by the pain of sexual abuse, our response will always be about what we are doing, not simply what we have done,” the Most Rev. Barry C. Knestout, Bishop of Richmond, said in an open letter published with the clergy list.

“We will seek not just to be healed but will always be seeking healing. We will seek not just to be reconciled but will always be seeking reconciliation.”
In an open letter addressed to the Catholic Church community last September, Bishop Barry Knestout says he is committed to addressing accusations of abuse quickly and transparently., Bishop Knestout promised to address all accusations ‘quickly and transparently.’

Snap, or Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, called for the names, “that may have been omitted,” to be added to the list on Wednesday. Snap also asked for additional background information about the priests, including how the diocese handled each allegation, to be made public.

We urge catholic officials in Virginia to not only go back to these lists and add any names that may have been omitted, but also to add work histories, information about current whereabouts and, critically, when the diocese first learned of the allegations and what their immediate response was. Only by including this information can we get a clearer picture of what went wrong in Virginia and what must be done now to protect children and prevent abuse.”-Snap

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In countdown to summit, abuse scandals rock pope’s native Argentina

MENDOZA (ARGENTINA)
Wayback Machine Internet Archive [San Francisco CA]

February 13, 2019

By Inés San Martín

Read original article

ROME – As a Feb. 21-24 Vatican summit on the protection of minors approaches, ferment related to clerical sexual abuse continues to percolate in Pope Francis’s native Argentina.

The episodes in question range from a bishop given refuge in the Vatican who is now facing charges, to a monastery in trouble and a bishops’ conference president with great expectations for the pope’s assembly.

The Zanchetta affair

A prosecutor’s office in the northern province of Salta, where Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta served until his resignation in 2017, confirmed through a statement on Monday that an alleged victim had come forward with a charge against the prelate.

“Several measures were arranged in order to clarify the allegations, and it is not ruled out that new complaints against the former bishop may be added,” the judicial body said in a statement.

Zanchetta resigned without explanation as the bishop of Oran in northwestern Argentina on Aug. 1, 2017, and later that year was appointed by Francis to the new position of “assessor” in the Vatican’s financial management office, APSA.

According to a January statement by the Vatican’s spokesman, Alessandro Gisotti, at the time of Zanchetta’s resignation in Argentina there were no allegations of sexual abuse.

At the time, Gisotti said, Zanchetta asked Francis to allow him to leave Oran, some 1,025 miles from Buenos Aires, because he had difficult relations with his priests and was “unable to govern the clergy.”

“There were accusations against him of authoritarianism, but there were no accusations of sexual abuse,” the statement said.

However, a report by The Associated Press from Jan. 21 includes claims made by Zanchetta’s former vicar, Father Juan Jose Manzano, who said allegations of abuses of power, inappropriate behavior and sexual harassment of adult seminarians had been sent to the Vatican in 2015 and 2017.

Francis appointed Zanchetta to Oran in 2013, one of the first moves the pontiff made in his home country. The two knew each other well, and then-Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, today Francis, was reportedly the bishop’s confessor.

Zanchetta also had been an undersecretary of the Argentine bishops’ conference, which Bergoglio headed for two successive terms from 2005-2011.

Earlier this month, the Vatican confirmed that the new bishop of Oran had opened a preliminary canonical investigation into Zanchetta for alleged sexual abuse.

Before a formal allegation against the former bishop was made, local authorities had already opened an investigation after reports from local media detailed improper behavior. Due to public interest in the case, Salta’s judicial authorities have appointed two prosecutors to investigate.

The case of the monastery

In December, two priests, Diego Roque and Oscar Portillo, were imprisoned after a former student of the community of the Monastery of Cristo Orante(Praying Christ) accused them of sexual abuse. The crime allegedly began in 2009, when the student was a minor, and continued until 2015, when the young man was 23.

They were formally charged for “abuse, aggravated by the fact that they are figures of authority, and for abuse with carnal access.”

RELATED: Abuse allegations at famed monastery rock pope’s native Argentina

New information shows that in both 2015 and 2018 the alleged victim went to the local archdiocese to make a report, before going to civil authorities in October 2018.

According to the newspaper Los Andes, after the first allegation Portillo was sanctioned by then-Archbishop Carlos Franzini, who transferred the founder of the monastery to a different province.

An ecclesial commission investigated the case again in March, and its report claims that Portillo recognized “his sin,” without giving details, describing him as “very sorry and nervous.”

The priest allegedly acknowledged that the events were “of a sexual nature,” but claimed it was the victim who pursued him. The two priests who signed the report concluded that they found it “hard to understand” how adults could allow an 18-year old man to accost them.

According to their report, the allegation was credible and should be investigated.

Regarding Portillo and the other priest accused, ecclesial investigators underlined that through various witness they were able to detect a “behavior of systemic manipulation of conscience.”

The archdiocese confirmed that seeing the credibility of the allegation, a canonical process had been opened and the Vatican had agreed for the priests to be tried in a tribunal in Buenos Aires to guarantee objectivity.

It’s unknown why Portillo was allowed to return to the monastery and why he was reinstated as prior after the allegation of 2015.

“Great expectations” over the February summit

Bishop Oscar Ojea of San Isidro, president of the Argentine bishops’ conference, released a statement on Monday saying he has “great expectations” for the February meeting in Rome, because “by deepening [awareness] of the consequences of this drama and finding  appropriate ways to fight it, we will enormously help not only victims of abuses committed by clergy and the Church, but also society as a whole affected by this scourge.”

Abuse affects “the whole of society, families and even institutions,” he said. “The key to understanding abuse is the manipulation of a situation of inequality of power; the power that derives from physical and intellectual difference, or from occupying a higher role.”

“It takes the form of invading the intimacy of another [person] who is vulnerable, and includes physical and psychological abuse,” Ojea said.

Talking about the path that survivors and victims of abuse go through, the bishop said that being able to talk about it is the right way to begin resolving the problem, but for this to happen, it’s needed for “everyone to learn to generate spaces to listen.”

Only then will the Church be able to begin repairing the damage, he said, which involves civil justice as well as psychology and spirituality.

Referring to the Church’s mission in confronting sexual abuse of minors and helping survivors heal, Ojea said it’s essential to teach girls and boys to say “no” and to trust responsible adults if they need to make an allegation.

The bishop also said that encountering victims “changed my way of understanding the seriousness of sexual abuse.”

“I had to listen to some very hard and devastating things, in front of which it was impossible to say a word other than being on their side,” he said. “In these situations, the bishop lives an authentic experience of the cross, feeling that he is part of a great purification to which the Church is called.”

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Group says other priests could be part of Omaha sex abuse claims

OMAHA (NE)
KMTV

February 13, 2019

By Jake Wasikowski

A victim’s support group is calling for more transparency from the Archdiocese of Omaha amid the sexual abuse scandal.

“The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests” is calling on Omaha’s Catholic Church to include four clerics who were accused of sexual abuse on children in other states.

In December, the church released a list of 38 clergy with substantiated claims of sexual abuse or sexual misconduct with a minor.

SNAP says Fathers Thomas Laughlin, Alphonsus Ferguson, James Kelly, and Michael Nash all worked or spent time in Nebraska and were accused of sex crimes in other states. Though Laughlin and Ferguson have died; they say the others could be living here.

“Our view is that any child molesting priest, brother, nun, bishop, seminarian who was in this arch diocese the Catholics and the citizens need and deserve to know about them because we can protect our kids best if we know who and where these predators are,” said David Clohessy, with SNAP.

The Nebraska Attorney General’s Office has asked the Omaha, Lincoln, and Grand Island diocese to share investigation reports dating back 40 years.

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CZECH CARDINAL DOMINIK DUKA AGREES TO MEET VICTIMS OF SEXUAL ABUSE BY PRIESTS

PRAGUE (CZECH REPUBLIC)
Czech Radio

February 13, 2019

Unlike elsewhere in Europe, the Catholic Church in the Czech Republic has faced relatively few scandals involving the sexual abuse of minors or nuns by priests. But as is common worldwide, many cases are never reported or become public knowledge.

Petra Panská, a former nun, is among seventeen people, including victims, who have signed on to a letter to Cardinal Dominik Duka asking him to meet in person with those abused by clergymen. After years of silence, she told Czech Radio, she began speaking out about her own repeated abuse by a Catholic priest, since convicted of multiple counts of rape.

“In my case, I experienced post-traumatic stress disorder, and a multiple personality disorder and depressive disorder also developed. Again and again in my mind I intensively re-live these traumatic events.”

Cardinal Duka has tended to downplay the problem, claiming that only 10 percent of accusations against priests are proven – which does not mean they did not occur. In 2010, when still Archbishop of Prague, he spoke of sexual abuse by the clergy as “abominable” but also said it was over-reported, part of a wider “media campaign” against the Catholic Church and the Pope.

It was for such a stance on the issue that the US-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, includes Cardinal Duka on its “Dirty Dozen” list of papabiles deemed unfit to ever become Pope. This due to his role, according to SNAP, in protecting paedophile priests and making public statements offensive to their victims.

The letter challenging Cardinal Duka to meet face to face with victims was initiated by documentary filmmaker Michal Štingl. He says it stems from the frustration of signatories – all practising Catholics – with the Church’s reluctance to address the issue in open discussion.

“I have repeatedly tried to meet both with the Archbishopric and with the heads of the dioceses where cases have occurred. There was virtually no reaction anywhere. The vast majority are simply not willing to talk about it.”

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380 Southern Baptist leaders and volunteers accused of sexual misconduct

WASHINGTON (DC)
Religion News Service

February 13, 2019

By Daniel Burke

Since 1998, about 380 Southern Baptist leaders and volunteers have faced allegations of sexual misconduct, according to a sweeping investigation by two Texas newspapers.

The Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News also found that in the past 20 years, more than 700 victims have been abused, with some urged to have abortions and forgive their abusers.

The newspapers said their investigation included “examining federal and state court databases, prison records and official documents from more than 20 states and by searching sex offender registries nationwide.”

In Texas alone, the newspapers interviewed police and district attorneys in 40 counties.

“Ultimately, we compiled information on 380 credibly accused officials in Southern Baptist churches, including pastors, deacons, Sunday school teachers and volunteers,” the newspapers said. “We verified that about 220 had been convicted of sex crimes or received deferred prosecutions in plea deals.”

Of those 220, 90 remain in prison and 100 are registered sex offenders, according to the report.

The investigation comes as other religious bodies, including the Catholic Church, face accusations of widespread sexual abuse of its members, especially children, over decades.

Churches are autonomous
But unlike the Catholic Church and other Christian denominations, the Southern Baptist Convention is a collection of 47,000 autonomous churches, with little power to force churches to comply with policies.

“The SBC presents no governing policies to churches because the SBC is not a governing organization; it is a service organization. Each church is self-governing,” said Sing Oldham, a spokesman for the Southern Baptist Convention.

“However, the Convention has consistently called on churches to report immediately to law enforcement any known or suspected instance of sexual abuse in a church context and has provided resources to inform churches of ways to help protect their congregants,” Oldham added.

With about 15 million members, the Southern Baptist Convention is the largest Protestant denomination in the United States.

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When the Catholic Church’s prohibition on scandal helped women

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 13, 2019

By Sara McDougall

Speaking with reporters last week, Pope Francis acknowledged that the Catholic Church is confronted not just with a crisis of widespread allegations of sexual assault and abuse of minors, but also the rape and even “a kind of sexual slavery” of nuns.

This statement was not technically news. Many already knew of these long-standing allegations of such horrific abuses of power.

What was new, and what some might consider a grave sin on the part of the pope, was not his silence but his public recognition of the problem.

We know all too well how long Catholic authorities have sought to keep priests’ sexual sins quiet. Only recently, because of the brave children and nuns who have come forward, has the depth of sexual abuse in the church been acknowledged as a crisis that must be addressed.

But why has scandal been systematically silenced in the church for so long? One answer lies in the medieval church’s doctrine on scandal.

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Will the release of names of abusive priests in NJ restore church credibility?

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 13, 2019

By Mike Kelly

The names are just ordinary. John and Michael and Robert and Peter and William and Thomas and Ken.

All Catholic priests.

All accused of abusing little boys and girls.

On Wednesday, after decades of CIA-like secrecy and obfuscation, the Catholic church in New Jersey finally opened its files and told the faithful in the pews what it knew about priests who had molested children.

“I wish to express my genuine sorrow to the victims and their families who were so profoundly betrayed,” Newark’s Cardinal Joseph Tobin wrote in a letter that accompanied the list. “On behalf of our Church, I beg your forgiveness. You have my solemn promise of prayers and support as you continue on your healing journey.”

In itself, the list is shocking – more than 60 names, just in the Newark Archdiocese, which includes roughly 1.3 million Roman Catholics in Bergen, Hudson, Essex and Union counties. By noon, the list had grown to nearly 200 priests across the state as New Jersey’s four smaller dioceses of Paterson, Metuchen, Trenton and Camden released names of abusive priests.

Click here for the full list of names.

At the same time, however, these lists– and, in particular, how many priests were named – should not shock anyone who has followed the sex-abuse crisis that has crippled the Catholic church for the past two decades, draining its finances and its moral credibility.

Church officials, in New Jersey and across the world, have known for years that far too many priests led secret lives in which they regularly abused some of the most vulnerable members of their flock.

The list of Newark Archdiocesan abuser priests dates back to 1940. It includes ordinary parish priests and others who became significant leaders. The archdiocese said all the cases had been “previously reported to law enforcement agencies.”

One prominent name is former Newark Archbishop Theodore McCarrick, who regularly abused seminarians but was nevertheless promoted to cardinal and placed in charge of the politically significant Archdiocese of Washington, D.C. McCarrick, now in retirement near Washington, has since been stripped of his cardinal’s title by the Vatican.

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Another prominent figure is the Rev. Charles Hudson, a well-known parish priest in Bergen County and former chaplain at Holy Name Medical Center, who became a nationally recognized leader in the hospice movement. Hudson died two decades ago. But the hospice he founded, the Center for Hope in Union County, is still considered a trend setter in the care of those who are dying. One of the center’s facilities in Elizabeth is called “Father Hudson House.”

The release of names such as McCarrick and Hudson underscore just how damaging the sex abuse scandal has been to the church and what it sees as its mission to offer guidance on a wide range of social, political and moral issues.

Just a few weeks ago, in the midst of the partial shutdown of the federal government over President Donald Trump’s demand for a wall along the Mexican border, Cardinal Tobin wrote a passionate op-ed article for the The New York Times in which he called for more lenient treatment of immigrants. The article was part of Tobin’s unabashed effort to become a national voice in America’s immigration debate.

“There are moral issues involved,” Tobin said in an interview about his stance on immigration. “I think the responsibility from a Christian standpoint is to welcome the stranger, to assist those in danger, certainly to offer love we owe to children and the mothers who carry them.”

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Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the leader of the Newark Archdiocese posted this video message on the Newark Archdiocese web site on Feb. 13, 2019. North Jersey Record

This week, however, Tobin has been pulled back to the church’s dark side – its sex-abuse crisis.

On Monday, he announced a special fund to compensate victims. On Wednesday, he released the names of abuser priests.

“The revelations of clergy sexual abuse of minors throughout this past year have provoked feelings of shock, anger, shame, and deep sorrow throughout our Catholic community,” Tobin said Wednesday. “Victims, their families, and the faithful are rightfully outraged over the abuses perpetrated against minors. Additionally, the failure of Church leadership to immediately remove suspected abusers from ministry is particularly reprehensible.”

Instead of calling police or defrocking abusive priests, bishops and other church leaders regularly often moved them to different parishes – a pattern that sometimes resulted in even more abuse.

Nevertheless, the fact that the files were finally pried open just a bit represents a significant change from the church’s long history of secrecy – and, sometimes, outright lies – when it comes to questions of behavior by priests.

But while Wednesday’s release of names of abuser priests in New Jersey represents a renewed emphasis by the Vatican on transparency, the list is still not complete.

Not included were priests from some religious orders such as the Franciscans, Dominicans, Benedictines and Carmelites who served parishes or schools in New Jersey. Last month, the Jesuit order released names of 50 abusive priests from northeast states, including 10 who worked in New Jersey.

Also not included are the files on the abusive priests that could offer some context on how many children were victimized and why bishops and other church officials did not impose some measure of discipline. And finally, there is no reporting yet by church officials on whether bishops or other Catholic leaders might be disciplined for helping to cover up the reports of abuse.

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

Catholic Church names New Jersey clergy accused of sexual abuse

NEWARK (NJ)
KTRK TV

February 13, 2019

New Jersey’s five Roman Catholic dioceses listed more than 180 priests Wednesday who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors over a span of several decades, joining more than two dozen other states that have named suspected abusers in the wake of a landmark grand jury report in Pennsylvania last year.

The lists released Wednesday (and posted below) identified priests and deacons who served in the dioceses of Camden, Trenton, Metuchen and Paterson and the archdiocese of Newark. Many priests on the lists are deceased, and others have been removed from ministry.

Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the archbishop of Newark, which listed 63 former priests, said in a statement that he hoped the disclosure “will help bring healing to those whose lives have been so deeply violated.”

Camden’s diocese listed 56 priests and one deacon; Trenton’s diocese named 30 priests; the Paterson diocese listed 28; and Metuchen’s diocese named nine plus two others who are currently the subject of civil investigations.

State Attorney General Gurbir Grewal formed a task force in the fall to conduct a criminal investigation into sexual abuse by clergy in the state, shortly after a Pennsylvania grand jury report identified over 300 predator priests and more than 1,000 victims in that state.

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.