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 11, 2019

Following sexual abuse allegation, priest who worked near Penn put on leave by Archdiocese

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Daily Pennsylvanian

February 11, 2019

By Chris Doyle

Rev. Steven Marinucci, a Catholic priest who worked near Penn’s campus for 10 years, has been placed on administrative leave following an allegation that he sexually abused a minor in the late 1970s.

Marinucci, 71, worked at St. Agatha-St. James Church on 38th and Chestnut streets from 2001 to 2010. The church serves Penn and Drexel University students, as well as residents in the University City and West Philadelphia area. The Archdiocese of Philadelphia put Marinucci on leave soon after it received the allegation against Marinucci in late January.

The Archdiocese wrote in a Feb. 3 announcement that it forwarded the allegations to legal authorities, and will continue to cooperate with law enforcement. The church will then conduct an internal investigation of the claim against Marinucci.

Marinucci has denied the allegation, the Archdiocese said. When put on leave, Marinucci was ministering at the St. Matthew Parish in Northeast Philadelphia.

Current and former religious leaders in Penn’s Catholic community said they were saddened by the news of this allegation.

Father Eric Banecker, Catholic priest and 2011 College graduate, was a member of the Catholic Newman Center while Marinucci was stationed at St. Agatha-St. James. Banecker said he had a good relationship with Marinucci when he was a student at Penn.

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.

‘Pure evil’: Southern Baptist leaders condemn decades of sexual abuse revealed in investigation

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 10, 2019

By Kristine Phillips and Amy B Wang

“20 years, 700 victims”

So reads part of the headline of a sweeping investigation that has found years of sexual abuse perpetrated by hundreds of Southern Baptist church leaders against an even larger number of victims.

The Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News reported that nearly 400 Southern Baptist church leaders and volunteers have faced sexual misconduct allegations in the past two decades. As many as 700 victims — some as young as 3 — were sexually abused, some raped and molested repeatedly, according to the report.

But instead of ensuring that sexual predators were kept at bay, the Southern Baptist Convention resisted policy changes, the newspapers found. Victims accused church leaders of mishandling their complaints, even hiding them from the public. While the majority of abusers have been convicted of sex crimes and are registered sex offenders, the investigation found that at least three dozen pastors, employees and volunteers who showed predatory behavior still worked at churches.

The revelations, published Sunday, have not only led to a chorus of condemnation and calls for restructuring, but have also pushed church leaders to grapple with the troubling history — and future — of the largest Protestant denomination in the country.

“We must admit that our failures, as churches, put these survivors in a position where they were forced to stand alone and speak, when we should have been fighting for them,” J.D. Greear, who was elected president of the Southern Baptist Convention last summer, said on Twitter. “Their courage is exemplary and prophetic. But I grieve that their courage was necessary.”

The investigation comes amid a string of recent allegations of widespread sexual abuse by Catholic priests and coverups by the church hierarchy. Just a few days earlier, Pope Francis acknowledged that members of the Catholic clergy had abused nuns for years.

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

Child sex abuse called ‘a serious and pervasive’ issue in US society

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 11, 2019

By Julie Asher

Child sexual abuse in the United States is at epidemic levels.

More than 60,000 children are reported to have been abused every year, outnumbering those killed by guns or cars. Those who survive are often left not only with physical wounds, but also with psychological wounds that may never heal. These wounds exact both a profound personal and social cost.

Much attention has been focused on the issue of child sexual abuse and the Catholic Church, and rightly so. Allegations of abuse by clergy and church workers as well as cover-ups and bureaucratic mishandling by bishops, dioceses and religious orders have caused terrible pain for survivors of such abuse and their families. It also has resulted in disillusionment on the part of ordinary Catholics. The cost of this abuse and its aftermath totals more than $4 billion so far, according to the U.S. bishops’ Secretariat for Child and Youth Protection.

While the Catholic Church continues to struggle with this legacy, it has instituted a wide variety of steps to improve oversight, identify abusers and protect children.

One under-reported fact from the recent, highly publicized Pennsylvania grand jury report is that for all of the many horrors it identified, the good news was that it appeared to document the decline in current cases.

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.

February 10, 2019

A simple defrocking won’t mean the McCarrick case is over

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 10, 2019

John L. Allen, Jr.

Various news agencies have reported, and Crux has confirmed, that the Vatican will shortly announce a ruling in the case of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, accused of sexual abuse of a 16-year-old boy more than 50 years ago as well as various incidents with adult priests and seminarians.

By all accounts, McCarrick will lose his clerical status, more commonly known as being “laicized” or “defrocked.” When that decision is involuntary, it’s considered the death penalty for a cleric in Church law, the most severe punishment that can be imposed for especially heinous offenses.

McCarrick already received an unusual sanction in July, when he became the first cardinal in a century to lose his red hat. Assuming the laicization happens, he would also be the highest-ranking Catholic cleric in modern times to suffer that penalty.

Much of the reporting has indicated that the timing of the announcement is deliberate, in that Pope Francis and his Vatican team want the McCarrick case to be resolved before a high-profile summit of presidents of bishops’ conferences from around the world on the clerical abuse scandals set for Feb. 21-24.

Here’s the thing, however: Even if McCarrick is defrocked, that hardly would mean his case is over.

To be sure, the specter of a former cardinal suffering the Church’s ultimate penalty would send an important signal ahead of the pope’s summit, suggesting that Francis is committed to a “zero tolerance” policy no matter who’s involved.

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

The Irish woman who exposed abuse of nuns by priests 25 years ago

IRELAND
Irish Times

February 10, 2019

By Patsy McGarry

Report by Clare sister claimed such abuse took place in 22 countries, including Ireland

Reports last week Pope Francis said the Catholic Church has faced a persistent problem of sexual abuse of nuns by priests and even bishops, seem to have taken many people by surprise.

Speaking to reporters on the flight back to Rome from his trip last Tuesday it was the first time Pope Francis publicly acknowledged the issue, although it is not new.

Catholic nuns have accused clerics of sexual abuse in recent years in India, Africa, Latin America and in Italy, and a Vatican magazine last week mentioned nuns having abortions or giving birth to the children of priests.

Indeed, 25 years ago an Irish nun prepared an extensive report for the Vatican on just such abuse of nuns internationally by priests. It was shelved.

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

Vatican ex-doctrine chief pens manifesto amid pope criticism

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press via PBS

February 9, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican’s former doctrine chief has penned a “manifesto of faith” to remind Catholics of basic tenets of belief amid what he says is “growing confusion” in the church today.

Cardinal Gerhard Mueller didn’t name Pope Francis in his four-page manifesto, released late Friday. But the document was nevertheless a clear manifestation of conservative criticism of Francis’ emphasis on mercy and accompaniment versus a focus on repeating Catholic morals and doctrine during the previous two papacies.

Mueller wrote that a pastor’s failure to teach Catholic truths was the greatest deception – “It is the fraud of the anti-Christ.”

Francis sacked Mueller as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in 2017, denying the German a second five-year term.

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

Vatican tries to rein in expectations for sexual abuse summit

VATICAN CITY
The Washington Post

February 9, 2019

By Chico Harlan

Pope Francis is preparing to convene an unprecedented summit on sex abuse this month, widely viewed as among the most pivotal moments of his papacy, but the Vatican is cautioning not to expect too much.

“I permit myself to say that I’ve perceived a bit of an inflated expectation,” Francis told reporters in late January. “We need to deflate the expectations.”

The Holy See’s press office released a statement calling the meeting just one stage in a 15-year journey.

The pope described his goal as educating bishops on the problem of abuse and how properly to handle it — which advocates say the church has talked about for years.

Francis called for the summit while facing a crescendo of sexual abuse scandals across the Catholic world — cases in which bishops and cardinals are alleged to have enabled abuse or carried it out themselves.

The four-day meeting — scheduled to begin Feb. 21 and to be attended by the heads of more than 100 national bishops’ conferences — marks the first time a pope has brought together the religion’s top leaders to discuss the issue of abuse. It presents an opportunity for Francis to work to repair the church’s damaged reputation and demonstrate that it will be more proactive in its effort to eliminate the scourge of abuse.

But the landmark event is a risk for the pontiff and could end up boosting criticism that he is moving too slowly and reluctantly to tackle the Roman Catholic Church’s greatest crisis.

Vatican watchers say it is unclear whether the church can emerge from the summit with the kind of concrete policymaking reforms that have long been urged by advocates. Such reforms would include changes in canon law or new mechanisms that aim to hold accountable bishops who cover up abuse.

Speaking to reporters last month, Francis said he intended the event to help bishops become better aware of both the suffering of victims and the “protocols” for dealing with complaints.

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.

Here is the list of Louisville priests accused of sexual abuse

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Louisville Courier Journal

February 8, 2019

Catholic Church leaders in Louisville released a report on Friday listing 48 priests and members of religious orders credibly accused of sexual abuse.

The report released by the Archdiocese of Louisville was prepared by an independent reviewer who examined archdiocese files involving the sexual abuse of minors by diocesan priests. It marks the first time Louisville’s archdiocese has published such a list from its files.

That 48 includes 22 archdiocese priests with substantiated abuse allegations, 14 priests and others who are members of various religious orders such as Franciscan Friars, and 12 priests with allegations considered credible but which there wasn’t enough information to fully investigate or confirm the report.

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

Abuse of Faith: 20 years, 700 victims: Southern Baptist sexual abuse spreads as leaders resist reforms

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

February 10, 2019

By Robert Downen, Lise Olsen, and John Tedesco

Multimedia by Jon Shapley

[This collection of mug shots includes a portion of the 220 people who, since 1998, worked or volunteered in Southern Baptist churches and were convicted of or pleaded guilty to sex crimes.]

First of three parts

Thirty-five years later, Debbie Vasquez’s voice trembled as she described her trauma to a group of Southern Baptist leaders.

She was 14, she said, when she was first molested by her pastor in Sanger, a tiny prairie town an hour north of Dallas. It was the first of many assaults that Vasquez said destroyed her teenage years and, at 18, left her pregnant by the Southern Baptist pastor, a married man more than a dozen years older.

In June 2008, she paid her way to Indianapolis, where she and others asked leaders of the Southern Baptist Convention and its 47,000 churches to track sexual predators and take action against congregations that harbored or concealed abusers. Vasquez, by then in her 40s, implored them to consider prevention policies like those adopted by faiths that include the Catholic Church.

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.

Cardinal Müller: Clergy Sex Abuse Involves Sexual Misconduct, Not Merely Clericalism

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Register

January 23, 2019

By Edward Pentin

Speaking with the Register, the former head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith says Church leaders must acknowledge the central role homosexuality has played in the abuse crisis.

Those who reduce clergy sex abuse to clericalism and never mention the role that homosexuality has played in the crisis “don’t want to confront the true reasons” for the abuse, Cardinal Gerhard Müller has told the Register.

The prefect emeritus of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith also said these groups and individuals who publicly hold these views are against priestly celibacy and are exploiting such abuse crimes “for their own agenda.” Cardinal Müller shared these words in a sit-down interview with the Register in Rome recently, during which he shared his hopes for the Feb. 21-24 meeting of bishops on the “protection of minors” and discussed a range of other topics.

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.

Cardinal Müller Issues ‘Manifesto of Faith’

National Catholic Register

February 8, 2019

By Edward Pentin

The former Vatican doctrinal head upholds key teachings in the face of ‘growing confusion’ about Church doctrine and a ‘growing danger’ that people are ‘missing the path to eternal life.’

Cardinal Gerhard Müller has issued a forthright “manifesto of faith,” calling primarily on Church leaders to fulfil their obligation to lead people to salvation in the face of “growing confusion” about Church doctrine.

In a four-page public testimony (see below) released in multiple languages Feb. 8, and whose title is taken from the Gospel of John “Let not your heart be troubled!”, the prefect emeritus of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith reasserts many key teachings of the faith, reminding clergy and laity it is up to “shepherds” to “guide those entrusted to them on the path of salvation.”

“Today, many Christians are no longer even aware of the basic teachings of the Faith,” the German cardinal laments, “so there is a growing danger of missing the path to eternal life.”

Written in response to requests from “many bishops, priests, religious and lay people,” the cardinal’s testimony comes as the Church awaits the Feb. 21-24 Vatican summit on clergy sexual abuse, and following statements and documents from the Pope down that many practicing faithful have, at times, found confusing, disorienting and inconsistent with the Church’s teaching.

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.

Sacked cardinal issues manifesto in thinly veiled attack on pope

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

February 9, 2019

By Philip Pullella

A cardinal who was sacked from a senior Vatican post by Pope Francis has written his own “Manifesto of Faith,” in the latest attack on the pontiff’s authority by a leading member of the Church’s conservative wing.

Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, 71, a German who was the Vatican’s doctrinal chief until 2017, issued the four-page manifesto on Friday via conservative Catholic media outlets.

He said “many bishops, priests, religious and lay people” had requested it. He did not say how many and why he was issuing it now.

However, conservatives balked this week when Francis made the first trip by a pope to the Arabian peninsula and signed a “Document on Human Fraternity” with a Muslim faith leader.

Ultra-conservative Catholics are opposed to dialogue with Islam, with some saying its ultimate goal is to destroy the West.

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

Vatican to rule next week on defrocking of disgraced U.S. cardinal: sources

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

February 8, 2019

By Philip Pullella

Vatican officials will meet next week to decide the fate of disgraced former U.S. cardinal Theodore McCarrick over allegations of sexual abuse, Vatican sources said on Friday.

Vatican sources told Reuters last month that McCarrick will almost certainly be dismissed from the priesthood, which would make him the highest profile Roman Catholic figure to be defrocked in modern times.

Cardinal Luis Francisco Ladaria, head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), the Vatican department that will rule on the case, met Pope Francis on Thursday, according to a public Vatican schedule.

The Vatican did not say what was discussed but one source said it was likely that Ladaria briefed the pontiff on the final stages of the McCarrick case. The sources spoke on the condition of anonymity because they are not authorized to discuss the case.

Francis, who will have to sign off on any dismissal decision, wants the McCarrick case over before heads of national Catholic churches meet at the Vatican from Feb. 21-24 to discuss the global sexual abuse crisis, three Vatican sources told Reuters last month.

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

Polish archbishop meets pedophilia victims, says concealing abuse inexcusable

WARSAW (POLAND)
Reuters

February 6, 2019

By Marcin Goclowski

Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki said on Wednesday that 28 people who suffered abuse as children had accepted his invitation, some of whom he had already spoken to.

The scandal in Poland follows investigations into widespread abuse of minors by clergy in other countries – notably in Chile, the United States, Australia and Ireland – that have shaken the Roman Catholic Church to its foundations.

Pope Francis is due to receive a report this month that will accuse some bishops in devoutly Catholic Poland of failing to report pedophilia cases, which activist and opposition lawmaker Joanna Scheuring-Wielgus said in January should cost them their jobs.

Gadecki said the victims’ pain and suffering “require everyone – from bishops and religious superiors, from clergy and laity – to be unconditionally involved in the process of reporting, hearing, repairing and preventing such crimes.”

Poland is one of Europe’s most religious countries, where nearly 85 percent of the 38 million population are Catholic and an estimated 12 million attend Sunday mass.

But Church authorities there have yet to reach a consensus on how to address the issue of abuse.

An arm of the Church has filed a suit in the Supreme Court seeking to annul a 1 million zloty ($265,0000) payment ordered by a lower court to a woman who, as a 13-year old child, was repeatedly raped by her local priest.

The case was a landmark ruling in granting compensation and an annuity to a victim of sexual abuse by a Catholic priest in Poland.

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.

Testimonios tras el frustrado traslado a Tolosa de un cura denunciado por acoso

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
La Pulseada [La Plata, Argentina]

February 10, 2019

By Carlos Gassmann

Read original article

Como viene ocurriendo en otros ámbitos, las víctimas ya no están dispuestos a permanecer calladas y  los cambios de nombres no traen consigo modificaciones en  la política de la Iglesia respecto de los pederastas. Conclusiones del fallido intento del arzobispo platense de asignarle nuevo destino a un sacerdote sospechado de pedofilia.  

Por Carlos Gassmann

La iglesia y el Colegio Nuestra Señora del Carmen de Tolosa

La cuestión de la pedofilia en el interior de la Iglesia, sobre el que se ocupó extensamente La Pulseada (N° 165) en su edición de noviembre pasado, ha continuado al tope de las agendas mundial, nacional y local.

Mientras a diario, en distintos rincones del planeta se hacen públicas nuevas denuncias, el propio Papa Francisco, en declaraciones del 28 de enero pasado, dijo que los abusos “continuarán” porque “son un problema humano” y pidió moderar las “expectativas” puestas en la cumbre que convocó al respecto para fines de este mes porque “están un poco infladas”. Como se recordará, desde el Vaticano se llamó a los titulares de los episcopados de todos los países a una reunión, eufemísticamente llamada “debate sobre la protección de menores”, a concretarse en Roma entre el 21 y el 24 de este mes. En ese sentido, el mismo Bergoglio se encargó de desalentar a los que esperaban que por fin tomara medidas drásticas y concretas y aclaró que en el cónclave solo se impartirán “instrucciones a los obispos” que no saben cómo “encarar la cuestión”.

En tanto en la Argentina, en los últimos meses de 2018 se ventiló profusamente el caso del obispo de Orán (Salta), Gustavo Zanchetta, uno de los 40 titulares de diócesis -sobre 83 en total- que fueron nombrados por el pontífice actual. Aunque adujo “motivos de salud”, Zanchetta debió renunciar frente a acusaciones de abusos sexuales y maniobras económicas. Mientras muchos aseguran que el Papa lo designó “asesor del Patrimonio de la Sede Apostólica” cuando ya estaba al tanto de las denuncias en su contra, desde el Vaticano lo niegan.

Causa archivada no es causa cerrada

En el partido de La Plata, por su parte, el año comenzó con mucha agitación para los integrantes de la comunidad educativa del Colegio Nuestra Señora del Carmen (115 e/530 y 531), que se enteraron de que un cura que había sido denunciado por abusos sería puesto a cargo de la parroquia lindera a la escuela por decisión del nuevo arzobispo local. En efecto, Víctor «Tucho» Fernández había dispuesto que Julio César Veliche, trasladado al templo Nuestra Señora de la Paz (4 y 611), sea sustituido por Eduardo Lorenzo.

El presbítero Alfonso Eduardo Francisco Lorenzo -tal es su nombre completo- está desde hace doce años al frente de la parroquia Inmaculada Madre de Dios (502 entre 15 y 16) de Gonnet. Ordenado sacerdote en 1988, Lorenzo ya se había encargado antes de templos de Berisso, Olmos, Los Hornos y La Plata. A partir de 1990 comenzó a desempeñarse como capellán del Servicio Penitenciario bonaerense y, en tal carácter, actuó como confesor de colegas que se encuentran presos, como Cristian Von Wernich, condenado a reclusión perpetua por delitos de lesa humanidad, y Julio César Grassi, sentenciado a quince años por violación de menores.

Lorenzo niega ser el “confesor habitual” de Grassi aunque admite “haberlo confesado alguna vez”. Además es representante legal de varias instituciones educativas católicas, capellán de los boy scouts, del cementerio de Berisso, de la Asociación de Guías Argentinas y vicepresidente del Foro de Seguridad de Olmos.

En 2008 fue acusado de abuso sexual en perjuicio de un adolescente rescatado de la calle que residía en una institución dependiente de Cáritas y que lo ayudaba a oficiar misa. La víctima, que intentó suicidarse, era un chico alojado por orden de un juez en el Hogar Los Leoncitos de Gonnet.

A raíz de la denuncia, se abrió la causa penal N° 25.601, archivada pocos meses después por “falta de mérito” por la fiscal Ana Medina. Lo cual jurídicamente implica que se considera que se carece de elementos para continuar con el proceso y no que el imputado haya sido absuelto, sobreseído o declarado inocente.

El tribunal eclesiástico, por su lado, le impuso una “reprensión canónica” por “sus modos en sus tratos con algunas personas”. En aquella oportunidad, Lorenzo envió una carta documento intimando a padres de jóvenes que se habían solidarizado con el damnificado. Poco después, en un allanamiento de las policías federal y bonaerense les secuestraran una computadora que no les ha sido devuelta hasta el presente.

Julieta Añazco, fundadora de la Red Argentina de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico, señaló en noviembre último a La Pulseada que “hace pocos meses apareció una nueva víctima (de Lorenzo), un niño cuya familia presentó un pedido de informes al Arzobispado de La Plata y no obtuvo la respuesta esperada”. Pese a que se trata de un clérigo sobre el que pesan sospechas graves desde hace más de diez años, está claro que ni él ni la Iglesia han optado por el perfil bajo. En internet y en distintos medios de comunicación han aparecido fotografías en las que Lorenzo aparece al lado del intendente de La Plata, Julio Garro, durante los festejos del aniversario de un colegio de Gonnet; posando junto al ministro de Justicia bonaerense, Gustavo Ferrari o próximo a la mismísima gobernadora María Eugenia Vidal, en la Catedral, durante la asunción del arzobispo Fernández en reemplazo de Héctor Aguer.

Una comunidad educativa movilizada 

La Pulseada pidió a Agustina Feregotto, abogada, madre de una niña que cursa quinto grado en Nuestra Señora del Carmen de Gonnet y una de las impulsoras de la reacción de la comunidad educativa del colegio, que le narrara cómo se fueron los acontecimientos durante estas últimas semanas. “Alrededor del 8 de enero -recordó- la madre de una compañerita de mi hija me mandó por WhatsApp esta información del cambio de párrocos, donde se designaba para Nuestra Señora del Carmen a Eduardo Lorenzo. Además me reenvió una nota en la que se refería la denuncia penal de abuso que pesaba sobre él. Luego de verificar que ese dato era correcto, me comuniqué por Facebook con la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico. Me contestó el abogado Carlos Lombardi, quien me confirmó que la víctima y su tutor habían estado entonces en contacto con ellos. Me contó los pormenores del caso, lo que fue la denuncia penal y el archivo al poco tiempo de la causa, sin que se tomara declaración indagatoria ni se realizaran pericias a la supuesta víctima. También me proporcionó detalles de la denuncia eclesiástica, que dio lugar a un informe que manifiesta que ‘como resultado de la investigación fue descartada la comisión de graviora delicta (delitos graves) por parte del Pbro. Eduardo Lorenzo’ pero que ‘sin embargo, se le ha impuesto una reprensión canónica por sus modos en el trato a algunas personas, por lo que ha sido llamado a la prudencia, a la ejemplaridad en la labor pastoral y se lo ha instado a evitar todo tipo de situaciones equívocas que puedan dar lugar a malos entendidos o sospechas’. En todo este tiempo estuvimos en contacto con el Lombardi, quien nos ayudó mucho y se puso junto a toda la Red a nuestra disposición”.

“Empecé entonces a contactar a otras mamás -continúa Agustina- y formé un grupo de WhatApp con padres de todo el colegio. Era la única forma de acercarnos, ya que muchos, como es mi caso, solo conocemos a los padres del curso de nuestros hijos. En un par de horas ese grupo se llenó y hasta tuvieron que empezar a salir padres para dejarles lugar a otros porque la aplicación no permitía tanta gente. Por ese medio íbamos compartiendo las novedades que cada uno podía recolectar. También se creó un grupo en Facebook. Acordamos  redactar una nota dirigida al Arzobispado y recolectar firmas. En aproximadamente una semana conseguimos alrededor de 2.000 adhesiones de padres de alumnos, familiares y vecinos. Varios medios de comunicación de la ciudad nos entrevistaron. Desde el Arzobispado solo nos respondieron por las redes sociales a través de una nota suscripta por ‘los representantes legales del colegio y del párroco’ pidiéndonos ‘prudencia’ y evitar ‘comentarios infundados que no tengan certeza plena’. Luego el propio Arzobispado, que jamás contestó nuestros correos electrónicos, nos respondió por medio de un comunicado publicado en el diario El Día”.

En dicho comunicado, la Arquidiócesis afirma que tanto la justicia civil como la eclesiástica llegaron “a una misma conclusión”: “La inexistencia del delito de abuso sexual por parte del sacerdote Eduardo Lorenzo”. Tras varias inexactitudes, como confundir el archivo de una causa con la absolución o asegurar que la víctima prestó declaración en la investigación efectuada según el derecho canónico, el escrito dice que “pasada una década” Fernández solicitó una “consulta complementaria a jóvenes, laicos adultos y sacerdotes” de la que “no surgieron elementos nuevos” y ratifica implícitamente la designación de Lorenzo como párroco de Nuestra Señora del Carmen.

Respaldo al día

El arzobispo Víctor «Tucho» Fernández

El racconto de Feregotto parece confirmar que el alineamiento del principal multimedios platense con el Arzobispado no ha cambiado en con la sustitución de Aguer por Fernández: “Pedimos derecho a réplica al mismo diario pero nos lo negaron. Antes, dos periodistas del diario me habían consultado sobre lo que ocurría. Redactaron notas en las que expusieron sus propios puntos de vista y no citaron literalmente ninguna de mis declaraciones. En cambio sí reprodujeron textualmente el comunicado de la Arquidiócesis. Quise contactarme para que difundieran nuestra respuesta y les envié el texto. Al día siguiente vi que otra vez figuraba solo el comunicado del Arzobispado. Los consulté por ello y al principio no me contestaron. Hasta que uno me respondió que lo que pretendíamos era una suerte de ‘réplica a la réplica’. A partir de entonces desistí de seguir insistiendo”.

“Mientras tanto –agregó Agustina–, nos topamos con varias personas que desestimaron nuestros dichos, juzgaron nuestro accionar y hablaron muy ofensivamente de nosotros. Entre ellos, sacerdotes de otras parroquias y periodistas que más se parecían a encubridores. El  21 de enero llevamos la nota al Arzobispado. Nos pidieron los datos de las madres que fuimos. Escuchó que estábamos allí la vicecanciller del Arzobispado, Maruca Cabrera, y nos requirió la nota. Se fue a otro despacho, la leyó y luego dio muchas vueltas para recibirla: que no sabía si las firmas de las personas que adherían se correspondían a la nota, que no estaba foliada, que en el título no se aclaraba que entre los firmantes había otras personas además de los padres. Al mismo tiempo nos preguntaba y repreguntaba 
–juzgándonos– por qué actuábamos así y qué pensábamos sobre la culpabilidad del cura Lorenzo. Solicitamos audiencia con el Arzobispo y nos contestaron que hasta fines de febrero no estaría en la ciudad. Pedimos entonces una reunión con algún otro obispo y quedaron en avisarnos porque solo quedaba el ‘obispo de guardia’ y tenían que revisar sus disponibilidades de agenda. Llevamos también una copia de la nota a la Dirección de Escuelas de Gestión Privada de la provincia. Luego llamaron a algunas madres para avisarles que el viernes 25 de enero las recibiría el obispo auxiliarAlberto Bochatey. Concurrieron y conversaron con él mientras las filmaban.  Expusieron lo que estaba ocurriendo y por qué nos preocupaba que alguien que había sido denunciado por abuso sexual forme parte de la comunidad del colegio de nuestros hijos.  Mientras seguían llegándonos mensajes y audios – de  padres de chicos de otra escuela, familias de boy scouts, vecinos de las casas parroquiales y la quinta de verano de Lorenzo y hasta trabajadores del Servicio Penitenciario bonaerense– que relataban conductas aberrantes y siniestras relacionadas con la misma persona. Pero no podemos dar certeza de esos hechos ni aseverar nada porque no hay denuncias penales al respecto y nuestra intención no es injuriar a nadie. A pesar de que cada uno pueda sacar sus conclusiones, no es algo que nos conste”.

Presencias intimidatorias

“El jueves 31 de enero –continuó Feregotto– llamaron desde el Arzobispado a las mismas madres y les pidieron que asistan al día siguiente. Al llegar se encontraron con la ingrata sorpresa de que estaba allí presente el mismísimo Eduardo Lorenzo, acompañado de un letrado. Les mostraron una carta de Lorenzo en la que renunciaba al nombramiento en Nuestra Señora del Carmen y otra del Arzobispo Fernández en la que le aceptaba la dimisión. En sendas misivas se afirma que por nuestra parte hemos calumniado, difamado, actuado en forma maliciosa y puesto en duda la integridad moral del sacerdote, entre otras expresiones que me resultan tan repulsivas que prefiero evitar releer”.

En su carta, Lorenzo vuelve a plantear que está probada su inocencia (“la justicia ya resolvió la causa y la archivó hace años por falta de méritos”), se victimiza al considerarse objeto de una campaña de difamaciones e injurias sin precisar por quién está motorizada y presenta su renuncia, no por sus antecedentes, sino “por amor a la Iglesia” y “por el bien de todos”, incluidos la “comunidad” y los “chicos” de Tolosa. En su respuesta, Fernández suscribe la teoría conspirativa, se conduele de Lorenzo y hasta termina pidiéndole “disculpas” por haberlo “expuesto al dolor y la humillación pública”. Otra vez, acepta su renuncia, no en virtud de los delitos de los que es sospechado, sino para librarlo de trabajar donde no es bienvenido.

Agustina no duda de que hubo una intención deliberada de “confundir con ese juego de palabras planteado entre ‘archivar’ y ‘cerrar una causa’. Se sabe que una causa archivada, si aparecen nuevos elementos de prueba –y estando dentro del tiempo procesal oportuno– puede reactivarse. El archivo no significa ni una absolución ni un sobreseimiento”.

Tres víctimas de abusos eclesiásticos se juntaron en octubre pasado para una producción de fotos de la La Pulseada

Amenazas de persecución

“En la reunión del 1° de febrero –retomó Feregotto– también manifestaron que enviarían cartas documento a los medios que habían difamado y en particular a mi persona.  Entiendo que esto es nuevamente –como se hizo hace diez años con los padres del colegio de Gonnet a los que se les allanó la casa y se les secuestró la computadora– una forma clásica y pura de persecución. Dentro de este último encuentro, se dijeron además, entre otras cosas que cito textualmente, que ‘hay servicios detrás de todo esto’ (en referencia a cómo se ha habrían filtrado las comunicaciones entre los padres y el Arzobispado) y que ‘detrás de ustedes hay mucha gente que tiene experiencia en manejar esto, abogados que cobran plata y organizaciones que reciben dinero del extranjero’. Lorenzo, haciendo alusión a la fiscal, señaló: ‘Yo a Ana Medina ni la conozco’ y que él ‘jamás’ lo citaron. Agregó que ‘la justicia dijo que no hay delito, que no hay imputado y que fue esclarecido’ y que ‘al supuesto abusado no se le pudo tomar declaración porque era menor’».

“Una de las madres le dijo entonces que, a través de la cámara Gesell, sí se puede recoger ese testimonio. A lo que le respondieron que ‘hace diez años atrás esa declaración no se podía tomar’. Por su parte, el abogado presente afirmó: ‘yo trabajé cinco años en un juzgado de violencia de familia y solo tuve dos cámaras Gesell’ y que a los menores ‘se los manda a un cuerpo técnico’. Alguien debería avisarle que los cuerpos técnicos de los juzgados protectorios no tienen nada que ver con la justicia penal.  Tampoco faltaron amenazas explícitas: ‘ustedes están diciendo algo que no es verdadero y que si se llega después a un juicio las va a perjudicar’”, prosiguió.


“ Se sabe que una causa archivada, si aparecen nuevos elementos de prueba puede reactivarse. El archivo no significa ni una absolución ni un sobreseimiento”, Agustina Feregotto, madre de la Colegio Nuestra Señora del Carmen.

Para Agustina, en esa reunión del 1° de febrero hubo amedrentamiento. “Lamentablemente no pude asistir. Pero que haya estado Lorenzo allí, y con un abogado, sin haberles avisado antes a las madres que concurrieron, me parece de una falta de ética total. Y también entiendo que el hecho de filmar las reuniones fue otra manera de poner nerviosas a simples madres que velan por el bienestar de sus hijos y que por primera vez se tienen que enfrentar con algo así”.
Feregotto descuenta que “habrá represalias” por “el simple hecho de que ya amenazaron con enviarme cartas documento y dijeron que van a emprender ‘acciones legales’ contra nosotros. Hay que recordar que cuando unos padres del colegio Concilio Vaticano II de Gonnet se enteraron de la denuncia por abuso sexual contra Lorenzo y lo comentaron con otros, este sacerdote  inmediatamente les envió una carta documento, se  les allanó la casa con las policías federal y bonaerense y se les incautó su computadora –que hasta hoy, luego de varias presentaciones judiciales, no les ha sido devuelta–». 
Pese a las amenazas, Agustina manifestó que “los audios que han recibido los padres, que yo también escuché, me convencieron absolutamente de que una persona así no debe estar en contacto con chicos ni adolescentes. También repudio el maltrato a adultos. Pero los mayores pueden defenderse por sí mismos. El caso de los niños es distinto porque somos nosotros quienes debemos velar para que se respeten sus derechos”. Respecto a que Lorenzo continúe en funciones en Gonnet, contó que “un grupo de padres de allí se contactó con nosotros y nos comentaron que nunca lo quisieron, pero que al haber tantos otros que lo apoyan o que prefieren guardar silencio, se les hace muy difícil”.
Conductas que alejan de la Iglesia
“Definitivamente llevan adelante un encubrimiento constante –responde sobre la actitud de la Iglesia–.  Yo creí que con los cambios de paradigma de estos últimos años la Iglesia iba a adecuarse un poco a la realidad. Que iba a oír la voz de los que hasta ahora, como mujeres, niños y víctimas, no hemos sido escuchados. Que por fin nos iban a creer. El Papa Francisco también se comprometió en un principio a esclarecer los casos de abusos y, por sobre todas las cosas, a evitarlos en el futuro. Pero, por lo visto, no es así, ni nunca lo será”.
“Lo único que consiguen actitudes como la de Fernández –añadió– es que, en lo personal, me sienta cada vez más alejada de la Iglesia como institución. Lo único que tuvimos de él fue un comunicado difundido por un diario y una nota avalando a Lorenzo. Yo antes me definía como ‘católica’. Hoy solo me considero una creyente en Dios. La institución me fue alejando de lo que es la comunidad de la Iglesia como conjunto de personas. Por supuesto, pienso que hay muchos que predican la palabra del Señor que son excelentes pastores. Sin ir más lejos, la persona más extraordinaria, bondadosa y humilde que conozco es un cura franciscano que fue mi profesor en la Facultad Católica de Derecho. Pero empañan a la institución todos aquellos que abusan, se olvidan de su voto de humildad y pobreza y maltratan a los demás creyéndose por encima del resto”.
 
Cambiar para que todo siga igual

El 17 de diciembre pasado, a pocos meses de haber asumido, el nuevo arzobispo de La Plata, Víctor Manuel Fernández, hizo público a través del Sitio Web de la Arquidiócesis su Decreto N° 177, referido a “normas básicas sobre la prevención de abusos”.

La disposición señala que la Iglesia “debe tutelar la integridad moral de todos los fieles” pero “en especial de los menores” porque “están más expuestos a riesgos”. Considera que “el abuso sexual de menores” y de “adultos vulnerables” es “un grave pecado que clama al cielo y es también un grave delito, tanto en el ordenamiento jurídico canónico como en el del Estado”.

Fernández ordena a “clérigos, docentes y dirigentes” relacionados con “menores de edad” o “adultos vulnerables”, en primer lugar, que “se abstengan de compartir habitaciones en hoteles, casas, carpas u otros habitáculos”; de “viajar largas distancias en autos u otros medios de transporte sin la presencia de los padres”; de “escuchar confesiones o permanecer a solas en lugares no visibles” y de “estar a solas en baños, duchas, vestuarios o áreas semejantes”.

En segundo término, les prescribe que “atiendan en capellanías, colegios y parroquias a personas de cualquier edad en habitaciones con aberturas vidriadas” o en su defecto “con la puerta abierta”.

En tercera y última instancia, pide que “procuren los clérigos ser prudentes en so comportamiento con jóvenes en actividades, encuentros personales, etc., tanto en la parroquia como fuera de ella, mostrándose siempre ejemplares en el desempeño de su labor pastoral”.

Pero el Arzobispo había borrado previamente con el codo lo que después escribió con la mano. Poco más de dos semanas antes de la redacción de este decreto ya había dispuesto, entre otras diecisiete nuevas designaciones de párrocos y vicarios parroquiales, el traslado de Lorenzo a Tolosa, haciendo caso omiso de sus antecedentes y de que las denuncias en su contra ya eran ampliamente conocidas por la opinión pública.

Carta abierta al arzobispo del padrino de la víctima

Julio César Frutos, padrino del menor por cuyo abuso fue denunciado el cura Lorenzo en 2008, escribió una “carta abierta” al arzobispo, “para disipar tanta confusión publicada y publicación confusa”, que no le fue recibida hasta el momento por la Arquidiócesis ni aceptada para su publicación por el diario El Día.

Como laico comprometido en la tarea evangelizadora de la Iglesia desde hace más de quince años, Frutos le pide a Fernández “consejo” y “orientación”, aunque admite que pese a todos sus esfuerzos nunca ha logrado que lo atienda.

Aclara que “al menor víctima lo conocimos a los 12 años en situación de calle”, “lo hicimos bautizar a los 14 años en la parroquia de Gonnet”, “mi esposa y yo fuimos sus padrinos” y “al momento de los hechos era residente interno del Hogar Los Leoncitos y acólito de la parroquia Inmaculada Madre de Dios, donde colaboraba en las misas y en los casamientos”. También puntualiza que tenía 16 años cuando Lorenzo se hizo cargo del templo y 17 cuando se presentaron las denuncias.

“El menor que ha sido víctima tampoco ha sido citado para ser oído o evaluado pericialmente” – Julio César Frutos, padrino de quien habría sido víctima de abuso.

Niega terminantemente que en su caso, como sugiere el intercambio de cartas en la que Lorenzo renuncia a asumir como párroco en Gonnet y Fernández acepta su dimisión, exista intención alguna de “difamar”, “calumniar” e “injuriar”. Expresa que los sacerdotes que “nos tildan de mentirosos” actúan “más como barrabravas de la fe que como pastores de la verdad y la caridad”.

En el escrito Frutos vuelve a enumerar “datos” que no son “opiniones” sobre la imputación que le realizó a Lorenzo. Recuerda haber efectuado la denuncia ante el arzobispado el 11 de mayo de 2008 y ante la Fiscalía –que archivó la causa el 9 de enero de 2009– el 20 de agosto de 2008. Confirma que ante la justicia civil prestaron testimonio él mismo, la víctima y otras personas –entre ellas una que “refirió situaciones de índole sexual con menores por parte del Pbro. Lorenzo en el ámbito de otra parroquia”– y que “no se llevaron a cabo pericias de ningún tipo”.

También señala las irregularidades que afectaron a la causa eclesiástica: “No he sido citado por el tribunal eclesiástico a declarar o ampliar por escrito mi denuncia”, “el menor que ha sido víctima tampoco ha sido citado para ser oído o evaluado pericialmente”, menos se tomó  declaración al “testigo que en la causa penal refiriera haber visto conductas sexuales del sacerdote denunciado con menores a su cargo en un campamento”, “no me consta que sobre el denunciado se haya realizado pericia psicológica o médica”, “no me consta que se haya hecho inspección ocular sobre el escenario de los hechos” ni que respecto a “otros menores expuestos a abuso sexual se haya hecho exploración o comunicación familiar preventiva”.

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February 9, 2019

I was groped by a man called “Mary”: The world changes but not the Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Salon

February 9, 2010

Lucian K. Truscott IV

The Catholic Church is still only groping its way toward telling the truth about sexual abuse by priests

“Mary’s” real name was Francis Cardinal Spellman. The year was 1967, and he was Archbishop of the diocese of New York. An intimate of popes going back to Pope Pius XII, whom he had befriended when he was Archbishop Eugenio Pacelli in the 1920’s and serving as Papal Nuncio in the Vatican, Spellman was the most powerful Catholic figure in the United States, and one of the most powerful in the world.

The groping took place in his private quarters behind St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Manhattan in the presence of two West Point cadets and one Monsignor who was introduced to us as the Cardinal’s “personal assistant.”

I was a junior at West Point, and one of the editors of the cadet magazine, The Pointer. Cadets were allowed only two weekend leaves each semester in those days, and what they called a “weekend leave” consisted of being allowed to leave the campus on the Hudson from noon on Saturday until 6 p.m. on Sunday, so it wasn’t a “weekend” at all.

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‘Who Is This Stupid God?’

PHILIPPINES
Commonweal Magazine

February 8, 2019

By Adam Willis

At La Loma Cemetery in Caloocan City, Manila, Bishop Pablo “Ambo” David’s cassock curled behind him as he stepped through the iron chapel doors into the morning light, half-past nine on All Souls Day last November. Mass was over. So were the blessings, greetings, and photo-ops that always follow, and he stepped away from the stone chapel with warlike urgency. At the bottom of the chapel steps, he was whisked off in a white van, and I jumped into an SUV with two other journalists, speeding out of a parking spot to keep pace.

Ambo was headed for the grave of Kian Delos Santos, the most famous of the nearly twenty-five thousand victims in Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs. In August of 2017, security cameras in Caloocan City captured uniformed officers dragging the seventeen-year-old into an alley, and multiple witnesses watched as the officers forced a gun into his hand and shot him as he kneeled on the ground in his boxer shorts. Whatever veneer of justice still hung over the anti-drug operations was stripped away with Kian’s death. Though the Philippine Catholic Church was slow to respond to the vicious, violent anti-drug campaign, Kian’s death galvanized marches in the streets and spurred calls to activism in the church.

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Arcebispo da PB assina decreto que proíbe padres de estarem sozinhos com menores de idade

[Archbishop of PB signs decree prohibiting priests from being alone with minors]

PARAÍBA (BRAZIL)
Globo

February 8, 2019

Decreto foi assinado duas semanas depois de condenação da Igreja Católica pela Justiça do Trabalho ter sido divulgada.

Um decreto assinado pelo arcebispo metropolitano da Paraíba, Dom Manoel Delson proíbe que os padres estejam na companhia de menores e de adultos vulneráveis desacompanhados dos pais ou responsáveis, na casa paroquial, no carro paroquial ou em outros ambientes reservados. O decreto foi assinado na quarta-feira (6).

[Decree was signed two weeks after the Catholic Church’s conviction for Labor Justice has been disclosed.

[A decree signed by the metropolitan archbishop of Paraíba, Dom Manoel Delson prohibits priests from being in the company of minors and vulnerable adults unaccompanied by their parents or guardians, in the parish house, in the parochial car or in other reserved places. The decree was signed on Wednesday (6).]

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Catholic archbishop in Brazil bans priests from being alone with children

PARAIBA (BRAZIL)
The Independent US

February 9, 2019

By Tom Embury-Dennis

Decree follows court order forcing archdiocese to pay almost £2.5m in compensation over sexual exploitation of minors

A Brazilian Catholic archbishop has banned priests in his district from being alone with children.

Manoel Delson, archbishop of the northeastern state of Paraiba, signed the decree on Wednesday following a court order forcing the archdiocese to pay almost £2.5m in compensation over the sexual exploitation of minors.

Mr Delson’s decree prohibits priests from being in the company of children and vulnerable adults unaccompanied by their parents or guardians.

It also states they are not allowed to offer parish accommodation to minors, while “spiritual care” must be done in confessionals or locations that “ensure safety and visibility”, according to Brazilian newspaper Globo.

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Nun’s Rape Case Against Bishop Shakes a Catholic Bastion in India

KOCHI (INDIA)
The New York Times

February 9, 2019

By Maria Abi-Habib and Suhasini Raj

When Bishop Franco Mulakkal agreed to personally celebrate the First Communion for Darly’s son, a rare honor in their Catholic Church in India, the family was overcome with pride.

During the ceremony, Darly looked over at her sister, a nun who worked with the bishop, to see her eyes spilling over with tears — tears of joy, she figured. But only later would she learn of her sister’s allegation that the night before, the bishop had summoned the nun to his quarters and raped her. The family says that was the first assault in a two-year ordeal in which the prelate raped her 13 times.

The bishop, who has maintained his innocence, will be charged and face trial by a special prosecutor on accusations of rape and intimidation, the police investigating the case said. But the church acknowledged the nun’s accusations only after five of her fellow nuns mutinied and publicly rallied to her side to draw attention to her yearlong quest for justice, despite what they described as heavy pressure to remain silent.

“We used to see the fathers of the church as equivalent to God, but not anymore,” said Darly, her voice shaking with emotion. “How can I tell my son about this, that the person teaching us the difference between right and wrong gave him his First Communion after committing such a terrible sin?”

The case in India, in the southern state of Kerala, is part of a larger problem in the church that Pope Francis addressed on Tuesday for the first time after decades of silence from the Vatican. He acknowledged that sexual abuse of nuns by clerics is a continuing problem in the church.

At a time when church attendance is low in the West, and empty parishes and monasteries are being shuttered across Europe and America, the Vatican increasingly relies on places like India to keep the faith growing.

“India’s clergy and nuns are hugely important to the Catholic Church in the West. The enthusiasm of Christians in Asia stands in stark contrast to the lower-temperature religion in the West,” said Diarmaid MacCulloch, a professor of church history at the University of Oxford.

But the scandal in Kerala is dividing India’s Catholics, who number about 20 million despite being a relatively small minority of a vast population.

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Former priest arrested on sex abuse charges, kidnapping

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
KOAT-TV

February 8, 2019

A victim says he was raped by Archuleta when he was 6 years old and attending Holy Cross Catholic School.

An 81-year-old priest was arrested by New Mexico State Police on Friday. Marvin Archuleta was taken into custody at the Sun Village Apartments in Albuquerque after a two-year investigation by the New Mexico Office of the Attorney General.

Archuleta faces multiple charges, including sexual penetration of a minor and kidnapping. A victim says he was raped by Archuleta when he was 6 years old and attending Holy Cross Catholic School.

Archuleta served as a priest in the 1970s and 1980s at several churches in New Mexico. Investigators say the crimes allegedly happened in the ’80 in Santa Fe County.

This arrest comes as several cases of child sexual abuse by church officials across the nation are being investigated and victims are coming forward.

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Column: He tried speaking out about priest abuse in Catholic church. Now he’s shouting about it.

GREEN BAY (WI)
Green Bay Press-Gazette

February 8, 2019

By Paul Srubas

https://www.greenbaypressgazette.com/story/news/2019/02/08/catholics-abuse-norbertines-jason-jerry-green-bay-llama-news-survivor-speaks-out/2747719002/

The problem with Jason Jerry is he makes a lousy victim.

Victims are supposed to be subdued, repressed, sorrowful. It helps if they can look up at us with sad eyes, maybe bite their lower lip a little. Obviously, we don’t want them to be beaten down or crushed, but we’re used to thinking of them as tender and vulnerable, and that’s what we need to get our caring, nurturing instincts kicked into high gear.

Jerry, 44, of Howard, is none of that. He’s an angry victim. He’s mouthy. He can be, let’s face it, kind of abrasive when he talks about how a priest molested him years ago and got away with it.

“What are you going to do about the Norbertines?” he shouted at Bishop David Ricken at a listening session in September. “And for you to sit there and nod? Your silence is deafening.”

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Ex-priest accused of child abuse in Texas gets trial delayed

HOUSTON (TX)
Associated Press via Houston Chronicle

February 8, 2019

El Paso – The trial of a former Texas priest accused of sexually abusing an alter server for years has been postponed after Catholic leaders revealed the names of hundreds of priests with links to the state who are credibly accused of child abuse.

Miguel Luna, one of the clergymen identified by the Catholic Diocese of El Paso last week, had his trial delayed on Wednesday, the El Paso Times reported. Luna is charged with molesting and raping a child at an El Paso Catholic church.

Luna’s lawyer, Francisco Macias, said the delay will allow media coverage of the list to calm down and hopefully give Luna a chance at a fair trial. His new trial date is set for April 5, according to court records.

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Nephew accuses his uncle, Father Art Smith, of abuse

BUFFALO (NY)
WGRZ-TV

February 5, 2019

By Claudine Ewing

A well known local Catholic priest in Buffalo, who is suspended for allegations of sexual abuse, is now accused by a family member of abuse. For the first time that family member is sharing his story.

Reverend Arthur Smith, known by many in Buffalo, inside and outside the Catholic Church, as Father Art, is accused by his nephew of sexual abuse. Three members of the family tell 2 On Your Side that Father Smith abused someone in his own family.

Ryan Cooley, now 33, says he was 9 years old when he was abused by his uncle. Cooley recalls it happened in a family member’s North Buffalo home in a bedroom. Cooley could not hold back tears while telling a story that has bothered him for nearly his entire life.

“I wanted to crawl under the bed,” Cooley said.

During the one and only encounter, Cooley said his uncle Father Smith sat him on the bed and said, ” ‘You’re growing up so fast.’ He just started like rubbing my back, stuck his hand up my shorts and just kept touching me. He knew that I didn’t want that, and from that moment on he disrespected me.”

Cooley never told anyone about the abuse until a couple of years ago. He was raised in a Catholic family in South Buffalo.

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Arkansas Priest Sex Abuse Allegations Grow

SPRINGFIELD (MO)
Ozarks First

February 8, 2019

Little Rock, Ark. – The Catholic Diocese of Little Rock is releasing new information in the continuing investigation into allegations of clergy sexual abuse of children. The office is also urging other alleged victims to come forward.

On Friday, Bishop Anthony B. Taylor released a statement to the Catholics in the Diocese of Little Rock following a review by an outside firm, Kinsale Management Consulting, of more than 1,350 files of clergy and religious who served in ministry in the diocese.

The DOLR released these items:
An Updated Clergy Disclosure List,
A Historical Explanation of the Church’s Handling of Allegations of Abuse of Minors Prior to 2002, and
An exit letter from Kinsale Management Consulting (full letter posted below)

The Diocese says Bishop Taylor remains deeply concerned for anyone who has been a victim of sexual abuse, especially anyone who has been abused by a priest, deacon or other representative of the church.

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Louisiana clergy abuse lists include one priest who left three-decade-long trail of victims

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The New Orleans Advocate

February 8, 2019

By Andrea Gallo and Ramon Antonio Vargas

It was 1959 when priest John Franklin was stripped of his ability to minister to Catholics in the New Orleans area because he had been credibly accused of sexually abusing a minor.

Yet within a few years, Franklin was working as a priest in central Louisiana, holding invocations at prep sports awards banquets, presiding over funerals — and by 1966, allegedly abusing another child.

He was still a priest 20 years later, when he fatally shot himself in the head shortly before he could be tried on charges that he sexually abused a preteen altar boy in Florida

His suicide note said he preferred to be “a dead memory than a living … disgrace.”

Franklin’s story, buried in the balkanized record keeping of the U.S. Catholic Church, has slowly resurfaced following his appearance on last year’s list of credibly accused clergy abusers from the Archdiocese of New Orleans and a listing this week on the release from the Diocese of Alexandria.

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Accused priest tries to block film on French child abuse scandal

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Local / Agence France-Presse

February 8, 2019

A priest accused of molesting more than 80 boys is trying to block the release of a film about a scandal which has rocked the French Catholic church and put one of its most senior cardinals in the dock.

The acclaimed director Francois Ozon worked for years in secret on “By the Grace of God”, which will be premiered Friday at the Berlin film festival.

But its release in France later this month is threatened, with the accused priest Bernard Preynat going to court to demand that it is not shown until after his trial, which is due to start later this year.

A lay voluntary worker for the Lyon diocese, Regine Maire, has also issued a legal challenge to have her name removed from the film.

The movie’s premiere comes as Cardinal Philippe Barbarin, the archbishop of Lyon, and five others including Maire await the verdict of a court in the central eastern city on charges of covering up the abuse.

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Abuse victims ask DA to investigate when Oakland Diocese reported priest

SAN JOSE (CA)
The Mercury News

February 8, 2019

By John Woolfork

State law requires church officials to immediately report suspected abuse

Concerned that church officials took too long to report a priest’s misconduct, abuse victims are asking the Alameda County District Attorney to investigate when the Diocese of Oakland first learned of child abuse allegations involving a priest who was placed on leave last week.

Representatives of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) sent a letter to District Attorney Nancy O’Malley noting that the diocese publicly announced it had placed the Rev. Alex Castillo on leave five hours before notifying Oakland police

Clergy members along with teachers, medical professionals, law enforcement officials and others are required under state law to immediately or as soon as practical report suspected child abuse to police or child welfare authorities when they become aware of it. Failure to do so is a misdemeanor.

“There was obviously a delay in reporting, but whether it was hours, days, weeks, or months, is
not entirely clear,” said the letter to Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley from Bay Area SNAP representatives Melanie Sakoda, Dan McNevin, Joey Piscitelli and Zach Hiner.

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Archdiocese: 48 Louisville priests, others credibly accused of sex abuse

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Louisville Courier Journal

February 8, 2019

By Chris Kenning

Louisville Archbishop Joseph Kurtz on Friday released the names of 48 archdiocese priests and members of religious orders credibly accused of child sexual abuse dating back 70 years, the first such accounting since the priest abuse scandal exploded in 2002.

The report, prepared by former assistant U.S. attorney and Kentucky State Police Commissioner Mark Miller, follows a growing number of Catholic diocese from Atlanta to Indianapolis issuing similar lists, spurred partly by a 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury investigation that reignited outrage and sparked new priest-abuse investigations.

Kurtz said the list was meant to provide transparency and healing for a “tragic history” and said the list is only a beginning, not a final accounting. The numbers will likely rise, he said, and he said he hoped the report would inspire others to report abuses.

Of the 48 named people, 22 were archdiocese priests with at least one substantiated allegation. Another 14 were priests (including one who became a bishop) and other members of religious orders such as Franciscan Friars, and 12 were priests with credible allegations for which there was insufficient information to fully investigate or confirm.

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Restoring Trust: Report on Sexual Abuse in the Archdiocese of Louisville

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Archdiocese of Louisville

February 8, 2019

By Archbishop Joseph E. Kurtz

[Includes links to the Miller report, with its list of accused archdiocesan priests, and a list of accused religious order priests and others.]

Dear Sisters and Brothers in Christ:

May God bless you! I have written on many occasions over the last several months about the sexual abuse of children in the Church and how the Archdiocese is responding in a pastoral way.

As part of our response, the Archdiocese of Louisville Sexual Abuse Review Board requested a careful review by an independent investigator of our records involving sexual abuse of minors by diocesan priests with a report of the findings. The investigator is Mr. Mark Miller, a former Assistant U.S. Attorney, former First Assistant Jefferson County Commonwealth Attorney, and former Commissioner of the Kentucky State Police, and he presented his report to the Sexual Abuse Review Board today. This report includes a list of credibly accused diocesan priests. In addition to Mr. Miller’s report, we also are releasing a list of credibly accused religious order priests. Because the personnel records for these priests are maintained by the religious order, we had only limited information for review, and so religious order priests are not included in Mr. Miller’s report. Many religious orders have published a list or are in the process of doing so, and we provided the web page for each religious order involved.

Several weeks ago, Mr. Miller shared his initial findings with the Sexual Abuse Review Board. During that meeting, I confirmed with him that he had received unfettered and independent access to what he needed to complete his work.

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February 8, 2019

Nuns: Time to rethink male hierarchy

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press via Portland Press Herald

February 8, 2019

The statement by the sisters comes after Pope Francis admitted the problem of priests and bishops sexually abusing nuns.

By Nicole Winfield

The largest association of religious sisters in the United States called Thursday for an overhaul of the male-led leadership structure of the Catholic Church, after Pope Francis publicly acknowledged the problem of priests and bishops sexually abusing nuns.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious also appealed in a statement for reporting guidelines to be established so abused nuns “are met with compassion and are offered safety.”

The conference’s statement followed Francis’ acknowledgement this week that clergy abuse of nuns was a problem. The pope said the Vatican was working on it but that more needed to be done.

His comments, given in response to a reporter’s question during an in-flight news conference, were the first public acknowledgement by a pope of a long-simmering scandal that is erupting at the same time that the Catholic hierarchy is under siege for its decades-long cover-up of the sexual abuse of minors.

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Baton Rouge Diocese list of credibly accused clerics grows from 37 to 38 with new addition

BATON ROUGE (LA)
The Advocate

February 8, 2019

By Andrea Gallo

The Diocese of Baton Rouge is adding Timothy Sugrue, a priest who served for at least seven years in St. James Parish, to its list of Catholic clergymen who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse.

With the addition of Sugrue, the diocese’s list now includes 38 clerics who served under its umbrella who stand credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor. The Advocate reported Tuesday that Sugrue had been left off the diocese’s list even though he was targeted by a high-profile lawsuit in Arkansas and was included on a similar list from the Diocese of Little Rock last year.

Dan Borné, a spokesman for the Diocese of Baton Rouge, said the diocese has yet to receive any credible allegations against Sugrue from his time at St. Michael the Archangel in Convent and St. Joseph Church in Paulina. The Marist priest left the Diocese of Baton Rouge in 1987.

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Sex-Abuse Crisis: Bishops Press Forward With Own Reforms

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Register

February 8, 2019

By Stephen Beale

A number of U.S. dioceses have already announced new initiatives to deal with the crisis, ahead of this month’s global summit on clerical sexual abuse at the Vatican.

While the hands of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops may have been tied until the Vatican conference on clerical sex abuse later this month, many individual bishops aren’t waiting to usher in sweeping new reforms in their dioceses in the wake of the latest revelations.

“I believe that bishops have sufficient latitude to implement reforms in their dioceses,” Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore told the Register. “As I understand it, canon law affords bishops authority to make certain decisions for the good of the local Churches they serve. In view of the importance of transparency and accountability, it was determined that these additional protocols were warranted and within my authority to implement.”

In mid-January, Archbishop Lori announced a third-party reporting system for accusations of any improprieties, criminal actions or unethical behavior — sex abuse or otherwise — for any bishops actively serving in the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

Any allegations will be assessed by an independent review board headed up by two retired judges. The board will also be publishing an annual report on how the archdiocese has dealt with the allegations it has received.

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Vatican advances probe of Argentine bishop close to Pope

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Associated Press

February 8, 2019

The Vatican is proceeding with an investigation into an Argentine bishop close to Pope Francis who has been accused of improper behavior with seminarians and sexual abuse.

In a statement posted to its Facebook page, the Argentine Diocese of Oran said Feb. 5 that the Vatican’s Congregation for Bishops had entrusted Tucuman Archbishop Carlos Alberto Sanchez with the next phase of the investigation regarding accusations against Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta.

The development is significant because it signals that a preliminary investigation conducted by the Oran diocese and sent to the Vatican was deemed credible enough to warrant further investigation by an outside party.

The Associated Press reported last month that the Vatican received indications of inappropriate behavior by Zanchetta in 2015 and again in 2017, with reports from his former vicars and the seminary rector.

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New name added to Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge’s list of names of clergy credibly accused of sexually abusing minors

BATON ROUGE (LA)
WAFB-TV

February 8, 2019

By Kevin Foster, Nick Gremillion, and Matt Houston

UPDATE – FEB. 8

Another name has been added to the Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge’s list of clergy members accused of sexually abusing minors.

The diocese released the updated list Friday, Feb. 8. It includes a new name, one that was released in a report from the Diocese of Little Rock in September of 2018. The Baton Rouge diocese was reportedly not notified he had served in Louisiana.

Timothy Sugrue reportedly left Baton Rouge in 1987. The Baton Rouge diocese says they have no record of a credible allegation against him while he served in Baton Rouge, but that since he’s listed on the report from Little Rock, his name has been added to their list.

The diocese also noted another change to the list in which an individual accused was misidentified.

“The change involves Myles Joseph Kearney, whose is name No. 17 under Section A of our list. Two individuals named Myles Joseph Kearney served the Diocese of Baton Rouge. The allegation listed is NOT against the Fr. Kearney who was ordained in 1938 and served at Our Lady of Mt. Carmel in St. Francisville. In addition, the Myles Joseph Kearney on our list served as a transitional deacon at St. George Parish in Baton Rouge, and he did not serve at Ascension of Our Lord Parish in Donaldsonville as had previously been reported. (Note: Prior to their ordination to the priesthood, seminarians are ordained to the diaconate. This diaconate is usually called the “transitional diaconate” because it is conferred in anticipation that the man will be ordained to the priesthood. Men who are not anticipating ordination to the priesthood are also ordained as deacons. They are generally called ‘permanent’ deacons. There are no permanent deacons on our diocesan list.)”

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‘Listening to the victims will be a core mission’ La Croix speaks to Jean-Marc Sauvé, president of the French bishops’ new independent commission of inquiry into sexual abuse within the Church

PARIS (FRANCE)
La Croix International

February 8, 2019

By Anne-Bénédicte Hoffner and Céline Hoyeau

The first meeting of the Independent Commission of Inquiry into Sexual Abuse within the Church (CIASE) is being held on Feb. 8 in Paris.

Jean-Marc Sauvé, former Vice-President of the Council of State, explains the philosophy of the Commission, which he was appointed to lead by the bishops of France.

La Croix: You were appointed at the end of November 2018 to preside over the Commission, with the aim of “casting light on the sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable persons” in the Church and in order to “study the manner in which these cases were handled.” How are you planning to proceed?

Jean-Marc Sauvé: The starting point of this work is the acknowledgment and understanding of the victims’ suffering. From now on, this must be taken into account and addressed. This will occur through attentive listening.

The sexual abuse of minors and of vulnerable persons constitutes a denial of the foundation of the Church: it is therefore particularly intolerable.

Responding to the suffering of the victims is what has motivated me. Listening to them will therefore be one of the core missions of the Commission

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There was brave talk at St. Joseph’s University about clergy abuse. Will Pope Francis follow with action? | Maria Panaritis

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

February 8, 2019

By Maria Panaritis

On a Jesuit campus in Lower Merion Township, inside a building named for a Delaware County man who would one day become a cardinal of the Roman Catholic church, the answers to clergy sexual abuse seemed, at least to those typically in church pews, perfectly clear.

Major changes are in order, said a group of thoughtful people who call themselves the faithful but who, unlike their bishops, do not wear mitre hats or white robes. Such people gathered at St. Joseph’s University a few nights ago to demand major institutional reforms.

Here’s some of what they had to say:

Force dirty bishops and priests to resign or fire them. Let women become priests. Let priests marry. Let married men and women become priests. Make sure that American leaders of the church return from this month’s Vatican meeting on clergy abuse with substantive orders to fix the rotting architecture of a religious institution that millions of Pennsylvanians turn to for sacred guidance.

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Much of $100 million from sale of Holy Name lot to go to church sex-abuse debts

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

February 8, 2019

By Robert Herguth

Anticipating getting $100 million or more from the sale of a parking lot at Holy Name Cathedral, the Archdiocese of Chicago expects to spend most of that windfall repaying money that was borrowed to cover the financial costs of clergy sex abuse claims.

That’s according to a Chicago Sun-Times examination of the church’s most recent financial reports and interviews that show the archdiocese owes more than $200 million, mostly related to sex abuse claims. And the church estimates it could end up with another $100 million in costs for pending and future claims.

In October 2017, church officials, discussing plans to sell the property across from Holy Name, the seat of the archdiocese, said, “We sought a developer who shared our vision of improving the neighborhood we have been proud to call home for nearly 175 years.”

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Column: He tried speaking out about priest abuse in Catholic church. Now he’s shouting about it.

GREEN BAY (WI)
Green Bay Press-Gazette

By Paul Srubas

February 8, 2019

The problem with Jason Jerry is he makes a lousy victim.

Victims are supposed to be subdued, repressed, sorrowful. It helps if they can look up at us with sad eyes, maybe bite their lower lip a little. Obviously, we don’t want them to be beaten down or crushed, but we’re used to thinking of them as tender and vulnerable, and that’s what we need to get our caring, nurturing instincts kicked into high gear.

Jerry, 44, of Howard, is none of that. He’s an angry victim. He’s mouthy. He can be, let’s face it, kind of abrasive when he talks about how a priest molested him years ago and got away with it.

“What are you going to do about the Norbertines?” he shouted at Bishop David Ricken at a listening session in September. “And for you to sit there and nod? Your silence is deafening.”

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Spain questions Catholic Church over sex abuse cases

MADRID (SPAIN)
Associated Press

February 8, 2019

Spain’s justice minister has asked the country’s Catholic Church leaders to hand over all the information they possess about internal investigations or proceedings related to sexual abuse allegations at church institutions.

The Justice Ministry says in a statement that the request sent by letter Thursday reflects a need to move forward with any criminal proceedings as well as to throw a light on “deeds our society can no longer remain quiet about.”

The Spanish Episcopal Conference replied that it has already provided information about known cases to the Vatican and Spanish judicial authorities, as required by law.

It also expressed “sincere concern” for the victims of “a serious problem which affects the whole of society.”

Only a handful of church-linked sexual abuse cases have emerged in Spain.

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Catholic Abbot didn’t report abuse allegation against priest jailed for child sex offences

LONDON (England)
Express

February 8, 2019

By Joe Duggan

The Abbot of a Benedictine abbey withheld an allegation of abuse from police about a priest who was later jailed for child sex offences committed while teaching at a leading Catholic school, an inquiry heard this week.

Abbot Shipperlee admitted to the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) he failed to report a claim of abuse against Soper to the police when informed of it in 2001.

He said: “Because I simply did not believe that this was possible.

“I was outraged that such an accusation could be made against someone of whom I – well, it did not occur to me that it was possible that this sort of thing could happen.”

In October 2009, Pearce, a former junior school head master at St Benedict’s, was jailed for eight years for abuse at the school from 1972 to 1992, as well as one offence in 2007.

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Transcript: How a culture of secrecy covered up the abuse of nuns in the Catholic Church

WASHINGTON (DC)
PBS News Hour

February 7, 2019

Pope Francis is publicly acknowledging for the first time that clergymen have sexually abused nuns. Private reports that were sent to top Vatican officials, but not publicly reported on until much later, indicate the abuse goes as far back as the 1990s. John Yang speaks to Associated Press reporter Nicole Winfield about why it took so long for the accusations to come to light.

Amna Nawaz:

Pope Francis broke his silence on Wednesday, acknowledging for the first time that clergymen have sexually abused nuns.

John Yang has more on the story

John Yang:

Amna, for decades, the persistent allegations of sexual abuse of nuns and religious women by Roman Catholic priests and bishops have been overshadowed by other scandals in the church.

Now decades of silence are ending. Last year, a bishop in India was arrested after a nun told police he had repeatedly raped her between 2014 and 2016. Many priests celebrated when the bishop was released on bail. He faces trail later this year.

This week, for the first time, Pope Francis addressed the issue as he returned to Rome from the United Arab Emirates.

Pope Francis:

It’s not something that everyone does, but there have been priests and even bishops who have done this. And I think it is still taking place because it is not as though the moment you become aware of something, it goes away.

The thing continues, and we have been working on this for some time. We have suspended a few clerics and sent some away over this.

John Yang:

The pope was responding to a question from Associated Press Vatican correspondent Nicole Winfield, who joins us now from Rome.

Nicole, thanks so much for being with us.

You published an investigation last summer that documented abuse going back decades and spreading across at least four continents. Why has it taken so long for this silence to break and for this to surface?

Nicole Winfield:

The first public reports were in 2001. The National Catholic Reporter did a groundbreaking report and provided documentation that had been given to the Vatican a decade before about the situation in Africa.

So, I took that as a starting point and decided that, with the reckoning that was going on in the United States, that it was a time to really look at what was going on around the world as far as the religious sisters were concerned.

And, indeed, we found that really nothing had changed.

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Pope Francis Admits Priests, Bishops Have Sexually Abused Nuns

BOSTON (MA)
WBUR – On Point

February 7, 2019

By Meghna Chakrabarti with Nicole Winfield, Sister Kathleen Bryant, Susan Reynolds

[Audio – 45 minutes, interviews and call-in]

Pope Francis publicly acknowledges the sexual abuse of nuns by priests and bishops. Worldwide, nuns are speaking out. We’ll shed light on the newest scandal for the Catholic Church.

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Priest insists fighting child abuse goes well beyond the Church

DENVER (CO)
Crux

February 8, 2019

By Elise Harris

Rome – Speaking at a secular conference on child pornography and online threats to youth on Thursday, a Catholic priest said the fight against child abuse isn’t merely a cause for the Church, but for the entire human family and for civilization itself.

During the Feb. 7 panel titled, “Pornography, Minors and Safety on the Internet,” sponsored by the Italian government, Father Aldo Bonaiuto told attendees that “the human family, if we are really civil, we want to fight.”

“We are here because these people belong to us, we feel that they belong to us, we feel that they are our children,” he said, referring to children and adolescents who experience online abuse or who are exposed to harmful content on digital devices.

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Sexual Abuse of Nuns: Longstanding Church Scandal Emerges from Shadows

ROME
New York Times

February 6, 2019

By Jason Horowitz

The sexual abuse of nuns and religious women by Catholic priests and bishops — and the abortions that have sometimes resulted — has for years been overshadowed by other scandals in the Roman Catholic Church.

That seemed to change this week when Pope Francis publicly acknowledged the problem for the first time.

“I was so happy,” said Lucetta Scaraffia, the author of an article denouncing the abuse of nuns and religious lay women by priests that was published this month in a magazine, Women Church World, which is distributed alongside the Vatican’s newspaper.

Speaking from her Rome apartment, which she said had essentially been converted into a television studio full of international reporters, Ms. Scaraffia said, “Finally, now many women will have the courage to come forward and denounce their abusers.”

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Pope Acknowledges Nuns Were Sexually Abused by Priests and Bishops

VATICAN CITY
New York Times

February 5, 2019

By Jason Horowitz and Elizabeth Dias

Pope Francis said on Tuesday that the Roman Catholic Church had faced a persistent problem of sexual abuse of nuns by priests and even bishops, the first time he has publicly acknowledged the issue.

Catholic nuns have accused clerics of sexual abuse in recent years in India, Africa, Latin America and in Italy, and a Vatican magazine last week mentioned nuns having abortions or giving birth to the children of priests. But Francis has never raised the issue until he was asked to comment during a news conference aboard the papal plane returning to Rome from his trip to the United Arab Emirates.

“It’s true,” Francis said. “There are priests and bishops who have done that.”

The pope’s admission opens a new front in the long-running scandal of sexual abuse by priests, recognizing nuns who have tried for years to call attention to their plight. With the #MeToo movement going strong, and Francis under pressure for neglecting the victims of child abuse, the nuns’ pleas have gained traction.

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Without any touching – ​A serious wound

VATICAN CITY
Women Church World

February 1, 2019

By Lucetta Scaraffia

Touch – as we are taught on the one hand by the commentaries on the Gospels and on the other by psychoanalysis – which occupies a crucial place in Gospel evangelical teaching is an essential factor of our way of knowing the truth and of communicating with others. It is a hidden but most powerful sense that involves the deepest aspects of the human psyche. The fact that for priests and religious touch has become an impracticable form of contact with children and women for some years now as a result of the abuses scandal not only constitutes a new form of etiquette and a form of elementary prudence to avoid (even unfounded) suspicion but is also a real mutilation of relational life and of the apostolate in the Christian community. At a time in history when the Church is going through a serious crisis regarding her capacity for transmitting the Gospel message, the heart of the Christian message, the impossibility of giving a caress to a child or of shaking the hand of a woman who is grieving or upset is a serious wound. By denying the possibility of using touch as a form of communication it becomes almost impossible to understand the ability of the person involved to face the reciprocity of the relationship and the intimacy and identity of the other person – essentially the profound reality of a human relationship.

It cannot of course be denied that it is a question of a deserved mutilation, but nevertheless it is still a mutilation.

Returning to the freedom to bestow a caress, to take someone by the hand, to put an arm round a shoulder – charity also consists of this – some way out of the abuses scandal needs to be found.

Every gesture has become suspect because the simple, good and affectionate meaning of so many gestures has been used not to reassure or encourage someone but to violate the intimacy of a child or a woman, that is, of someone weak.

Pope Francis has given the strongest and most radical interpretation of this crisis: it is not, he says, a question of falling into the temptations of the flesh, of sexual sins, but rather of an abuse of power, an abuse that is born from a perverted interpretation of the priestly role, arising from an evil which he has called clericalization.

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Release of Names of Priests Who Served in the Former Diocese of Alexandria-Shreveport Removed for Sexual Abuse of Minors

SHREVEPORT (LA)
Diocese of Shreveport

February 6, 2019

By Peter B. Mangum

[Note: This press release includes the list.]

http://www.dioshpt.org/release-of-names-of-priests-who-served-in-the-former-diocese-of-alexandria-shreveport-removed-for-sexual-abuse-of-minors/

RE: Release of Names of Priests Who Served in the Former Diocese of Alexandria-Shreveport Removed for Sexual Abuse of Minors

The following is a statement from the Very Rev. Peter B. Mangum, Diocesan Administrator, on the public release of names of priests accused of sexual abuse of minors in the Diocese of Alexandria, which, prior to 1986, included what is now the Diocese of Shreveport.

In my press release on November 8, 2018, I explained that the Diocese of Shreveport was established in 1986 when the Diocese of Alexandria-Shreveport was divided by the Vatican. When the Diocese of Shreveport was formed, all historical documents and records, including the files related to priests, living and deceased, remained in Alexandria, as per Church protocol. Thus, all records of priests who served in what is now the Diocese of Shreveport before June 1986 are still located in the Diocese of Alexandria’s files.

I reported then that, since June 1986, no allegations of sexual misconduct of a minor by a bishop, priest or deacon have been received in the Diocese of Shreveport. This review of the files of all priests (living and deceased, diocesan priests and those in religious orders, native and foreign born) who have served in the Diocese of Shreveport since its creation, was conducted by a lay professional and local attorney, without the presence of any clergy or employee of the diocese. (To read the Diocese of Shreveport’s complete press release from November 8, 2018, visit: http://www.dioshpt.org/release-of-names-of-priests-removed-for-sexual-abuse-of-minors/)

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17 north Louisiana priests accused of sexually abusing children prior to 1986

SHREVEPORT (LA)
Shreveport Times

February 6, 2019

By Nick Wooten and Ashley Mott

Seventeen priests who served in north Louisiana were accused of sexually abusing minors before 1986. Nearly all of them had ties to the Shreveport-Bossier City area, according to a report released by the Diocese of Alexandria Wednesday.

Prior to 1986, the Diocese of Alexandria included the Diocese of Shreveport, but all files related to priests, living and deceased, stayed in Alexandria due to church protocol. No allegations of sexual misconduct of a minor by a bishop, priest or deacon was received in the Diocese of Shreveport since June 1986, said Rev. Peter B. Mangum, the Shreveport diocesan administrator.

The Shreveport diocese covers 16 north Louisiana parishes — Bienville, Bossier, Caddo, Claiborne, DeSoto, East Carroll, Jackson, Lincoln, Morehouse, Ouachita, Red River, Richland, Sabine, Union, Webster and West Carroll.

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Priest who died in 2004 accused of sexual abuse at Central Catholic in 1960s

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

February 7, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh on Thursday said it received an accusation of sexual abuse of a minor against a lay brother teaching at Central Catholic High School who later became a priest.

The allegation against Father John O’Brien, who died in 2004, dates to the mid-1960s.

No details were released about the alleged abuse.

Father O’Brien was a Christian brother known as Brother Firmilian John at the time of the alleged abuse. He was ordained as a priest in 1975.

It’s the first accusation that the diocese or the Christian Brothers have received against Father O’Brien, according to the diocese.

He was not one of the Pittsburgh-area priests whose names were released in last year’s grand jury report about clergy sex abuse in six of Pennsylvania’s eight dioceses.

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February 7, 2019

Three Names Added to List of Abusive Priests in the Diocese of Peoria

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

February 7, 2019

A diocese in Illinois added names to their list of publicly accused priests in the wake of new disclosures of credibly accused priests from other states and the hard work of journalists in Illinois.

Three priests total were added to the list previously published by the Diocese of Peoria. One of those priests is Fr. Kenneth J. Roberts. The cleric was added after his name was included on the list of abusive priests in Dallas, TX. Fr. Roberts has been accused of abuse in Dallas, St. Louis, Peoria and Belleville. To date, Belleville Bishop Edward Braxton has yet to add Fr. Roberts to the Belleville list.

We know a brave and persistent survivor who reported his abuse by Fr. Roberts years ago, so it is difficult for us to believe that Peoria Bishop Daniel Jenky only recently learned of Fr. Roberts’ presence in the Peoria Diocese. It is a shame that bishops continue to minimize allegations and hide information related to abusive priests unless they are faced with continued external pressure.

The other two priests in question – Fr. Ron Roth and Fr. Bernard Tomaszewski – were also added to the list of abusive priests from the Diocese of Peoria this week, but apparently only after having been ‘outed’ by the News Tribune.

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SNAP Prods Alameda County DA to Investigate Oakland Diocese’s Response to Abuse Allegations

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

February 7, 2019

Members of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, recently wrote to Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley asking her to investigate whether or not the Oakland Diocese reported allegations that Fr. Alex Castillo sexually abused a minor to law enforcement in a timely fashion.

Mandatory reporters in California must make an “immediate” phone call to law enforcement when they learn someone is accused of child sexual abuse. Clergy, such as Oakland Bishop Michael C. Barber, SJ, are among those who are required to make that call. Failure to report is a crime punishable by up to 6 months in jail or a $1000 fine.

From media reports it appears that no one from the Diocese made an “immediate” report to the Oakland Police as required by law. Moreover, the Church may have known about the allegations earlier in the month, or even since last fall.

“We know there was a delay in reporting,” said Dan McNevin, Volunteer Oakland SNAP Leader and a survivor of abuse himself. “What we don’t know is if the delay was a matter of hours, days, weeks or even months. We are hoping that the DA can nail down the timeline, and make a determination as to whether the law has been violated.”

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SNAP Stands in Solidarity with Nuns who have been Victimized by Clergy

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

February 7, 2019

Our hearts ache for the thousands of nuns who have been sexually abused and harassed by priests, bishops and other Catholic clerics. We are glad their plight is finally attracting attention but feel compelled to stress that when it comes to the Church hierarchy, awareness does not guarantee action.

It is worth noting that, once again, a clergy sex scandal surfaces only because of outside pressure on the Vatican. Sometimes, it is a prosecutor or governmental body or an external study that achieves prompt disclosure. This time, it was investigative journalism. We are grateful for all those individuals and institutions who keep chipping away at this ancient, rigid, male-dominated hierarchy that remains so dreadfully committed to secrecy.

We share the view of Anne Barrett Doyle of BishopAccountability who said that she is “bewildered that the pope verifying this should make headlines — it‘s an epidemic problem in certain areas. The Vatican has documentation on likely tens of thousands of cases of sexual violence, and so when a Vatican official or the pope makes a pronouncement as if it’s occurring to them for the first time — as if they’re identifying a problem for the first time — it strikes me as disingenuous.”

Those who have been sexually assaulted by priests, bishops, brothers, seminarians, deacons and yes, nuns, have heard many pledges of reform from Catholic officials over the years, and have witnessed these promises fall short. So we are not in the least encouraged by the pope’s claim that high-ranking church staff has the will to stop this horror.

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Church releases more names of Catholic priests accused of molesting children

SHREVEPORT (LA)
KTBS TV

February 9, 2019

The Catholic church has released the names of 17 priests assigned to churches in North Louisiana who are believed to have sexually abused children before 1986. Thirteen served at churches in Shreveport-Bossier City.

The names were released Wednesday by the Diocese of Alexandria, which oversaw Shreveport until 1986, when Shreveport became a separate diocese. Under church protocol, the files of accused pedophile priests stayed in Alexandria.

The diocese released the names of priests both living and dead, the North Louisiana churches where they served and general allegations against them. The church has paid damages to several of the victims, although it has not disclosed details of the amounts. In each case there were “credible allegations” of sexual abuse of a minor, the diocese said.

The priests identified by the diocese are:
Father Edward Allen; St. Theresa in Shreveport and St. Lucy in Hodge. Allegations of sexual abuse of a boy dating to 1973 was brought before a Permanent Review Board in 2005. Allen resigned from the ministry in 2005 and a settlement with the victim was made in 2012. Allen died in 2018.

Father William Allison; Our Lady of Fatima in Monroe and Christ the King in Bossier City. An allegation of sexual abuse of a boy dating back to 1961 was brought before the review board in 2004. Allison died in 1986.

Father William Bressler; St. Catherine of Siena in Shreveport. Multiple allegations of sexual abuse of boys and girls dating back to the 1960s were brought before the review board in 2004 and 2005. Bressler died in 1990. Settlements were made with victims in 2006 and 2017.

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Diocese of Alexandria says it has no plans to release parishes where accused clergy worked

ALEXANDRIA (LA)
KALB TV

February 7, 2019

By Andrea Finney, Brooke Buford & Allison Bazzle

We are continuing with our coverage of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church involving clergymen within the Diocese of Alexandria. Twenty-seven priests and deacons, both living and dead, are accused of sexual abuse and misconduct. That list was compiled beginning last August.

According to the Diocese of Alexandria, there are five former clergymen still living. And, Thursday morning, with the help of the Rapides Parish Tax Assessor’s Office, we were able to track down one of them – Monsignor Frederick Lyons, who still lives in Alexandria.

He’s accused of multiple allegations of sexual misconduct and abuse of boys dating back to the 1960s. When those allegations were deemed credible, he was removed from active ministry in 2006. But, according to a press release issued by the diocese in 2013, he was not stripped of his priesthood. Instead, the diocese imposed “a life of prayer and penance” on him.

“When he met with the review board, which he did not have to do, he chose to do it. I was not present, but the report they gave me was that he neither admitted nor denied,” said Bishop Ronald Herzog in 2006. “Of course, that is always someone’s option to listen to what is presented without addressing it beyond that.”

According to information provided in 2013, Lyons served as a priest at St. Francis Xavier Cathedral in Alexandria, St. John the Baptist in Cloutierville, St. Anthony Padua in Bunkie, and Our Lady of Prompt Succor in Alexandria. He was appointed monsignor in 1962 and retired in 1989.

On Thursday, we visited his home to find out if he would comment on the list and were met at the door by him and a caretaker. He chose not to comment.

News Channel 5 also requested information on the assignments of the priests and deacons on the list, including specific schools and churches where they may have been placed.

The Diocese of Alexandria gave us this statement:

“The members of the Personnel Review Board (PRB) discussed this aspect of their investigation thoroughly.

Along with not wanting to re-victimize any victims, the PRB understood that communities were also affected in the past, where the rumor of a “bad priest” or rumors of untold behaviors or rumors of a child or teen affected by the behavior of a cleric affected the spirit of the community negatively. Communities (parishes, missions) are not to be re-traumatized about a sad portion of their history (with allegations or convictions of abusive priest(s) ), placing an unwanted spotlight on the community of faith today in 2019.

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Pope reveals nun abuse, but U.S. Catholic women say it has been happening for decades

ARLINGTON (VA)
USA TODAY

Feb. 7, 2019

By Lindsay Schnell

Pope Francis’ acknowledgement aboard the papal plane this week that nuns have suffered sexual abuse by priests and even bishops — including nuns in the U.S. — caught many offguard with his frankness.

But it wasn’t exactly new information, according to U.S. women leaders within the Catholic Church.

In a statement issued Thursday, the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the largest association representing nuns in the U.S., said that while this problem is prevalent mostly in developing countries — there have been many cases in Africa, and last year a nun in India accused a priest of repeatedly raping her between 2014 and 2016 — it has gone on in the U.S., too.

The conference specifically referenced a 1996 study from St. Louis University that indicated, “there were sisters in the United States who had suffered some form of sexual trauma by Catholic priests. Often those sisters did not share this information even with their own communities.”

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability, a website that tracks abusive priests, was both underwhelmed and hopeful after hearing the pope’s comments.

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El crudo relato de una monja argentina abusada por un cura

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Perfil.com [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

February 7, 2019

By Eugenio Druetta

Read original article

La dura respuesta de una ex religiosa de una congregación de Salta al Papa Francisco luego de que admitió abusos de sacerdotes a fieles.

Mientras volvía en avión al Vaticano luego de su visita a Emiratos Árabes Unidos, el Papa Francisco admitió que curas y obispos abusaron sexualmente de monjas y generó sorpresa ya que nunca antes había tratado esta problemática interna de la Iglesia. Sin embargo, no nombró casos puntuales ni tampoco hizo referencia a los lugares donde ocurren estos crímenes sexuales.

A pesar de la omisión de Bergoglio, que apuntó a que estos abusos están más presentes en“algunas congregaciones nuevas y en algunas regiones”, en su país de origen también hubo varios casos de sacerdotes que impusieron su poder para aprovecharse de sus fieles.

Uno de los más conocidos es el del padre Agustín Rosa Torino del Instituto Discípulos de Jesús de San Juan Bautista de Salta, que fue llevado a la Justicia aunque, tras pasar 9 meses preso, hoy está con prisión domiciliario y no fue expulsado de la Iglesia, aunque las víctimas esperan la fecha del juicio.

La monja que se animó a denunciar los abusos del sacerdote fue Valeria Zarsa, pero no sólo pasó un “infierno” en su larga estadía en la congregación, sino también cuando decidió hacer público todo lo que vivió, que derivó en su exilio de la provincia por miedo a represalias.

El Papa Francisco admite que curas y obispos abusaron sexualmente de monjas

“Apenas llegué (1997) Rosa me puso cerca de su círculo privado. Teníamos una relación de padre hija. Era la única que me animaba a entrar a su casa”, inició su relato en diálogo con PERFIL la monja predilecta del sacerdote.

Poco a poco, comenzó a notar “actitudes raras”: “Me rozaba o me apoyaba su miembro, y me hacía interpretarlas como que eran pensamientos raros míos”. Con el correr del tiempo, empezó a recriminarle esos abusos. “Él siempre tenia una excusa y me echaba la culpa a mí. Teníamos un lavado de cabeza muy grande”, contó Zarsa.

Sin embargo, hubo un momento que fue el quiebre en esa relación: “Con la excusa de que quería probar cómo quedarían los cinturones en las monjas. Me dijo quedate quieta, pasó su cinturón detrás de mí, me jaló y puso su cabeza sobre mis pechos. Lo empujé. No recuerdo las palabras que le dije, pero sentí una sensación de querer escaparme. Después de eso me daba miedo y asco”.

De todas maneras, Zarza seguía sin terminar de comprender la situación que sufría y aceptó que el cura la mande a terapia porque tenía ataques de llanto. Sin embargo, ahí se iba a encontrar con una nueva dificultad, ya que Rosa Torino la derivó con la única psicóloga aprobada por la congregación. “No nos podíamos atender por otra persona. Me medicaron y me dejaron atontada“, señaló.

La iglesia investiga a un obispo acusado de abusos sexuales cercano al Papa Francisco

Su reacción al “lavado de cabeza” finalmente llegó cuando fue a visitar a su hermana a España. “Cuando volví le dije a él que las cosas en la congregación no estaban funcionando. No me dijo nada, se retiró y me mandó, a través de mi superior, a un retiro espiritual. Ahí me tenían prácticamente encerrada, hasta que no aguanté más y escapé en abril del 2015″, contó.

Sin embargo, su calvario no terminaría allí, sino que al querer hacer público los crímenes de la congregación comenzó un nuevo “infierno”. “Me empezaron a perseguir y a amenazar. A uno de los testigos le pusieron una bomba en el auto”, aseguró la ex monja. Se refiere a que, diez días después de que le den la prisión domiciliario al padre Rosa Torino, uno de los testigos encontró su auto en llamas, aparentemente por una falla del motor, aunque algunos lo tomaron como una clara amenaza. “Por ese episodio, me fui de Salta a La RiojaMe tuve que exiliar en el anonimato por el temor que tenía”, expresó Zarsa.

“Era una ola de abusos y una red de encubrimiento. Fueron 20 años de mi vida, cuando me di cuenta que todo lo que me enseñaban eran mentiras, era tarde porque no pude estudiar o conformar una familia. Hay días que me levanto y me cuesta”, relató compungida la ex monja.

Para Valeria Zarsa, tras la traumática situación vivida, ni la imagen del Papa Francisco ni la religión la seducen. “A Bergoglio no lo puedo escucharlo hablar”, dijo sobre Francisco y, además, aseguró que ya no cree en Dios: “Soy atea. Si hubiera existido un Dios, ¿por qué no tuvo misericordia con todos los jóvenes que pasaron por esa congregación que queríamos de corazón servir a Dios?”.

“Hoy en día el padre Agustín Rosa debería dejar de llamarse padre, pero lo sigue siendo. No lo echan de la Iglesia”, concluyó su emotivo relato Valeria Zarsa.

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“Confess”: The profoundly spiritual art exhibit tackling the abuse crisis

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

February 7, 2019

By Jim McDermott

Eight years ago, the Irish-born artist Trina McKillen returned to Dublin to discover that her elderly mother no longer wanted to go to Mass—the ongoing revelations of clerical child abuse were just too much.

This was a woman who had nine children “because you have as many children as God gave you,” Ms. McKillen told a gathering of over 200 people at Loyola Marymount University a week ago. Her mother had an image of the Sacred Heart across from her bed; “she used to say, ‘The Sacred Heart is my best friend.’”

“For me, she was the church,” Ms. McKillen told the crowd. “And here she was walking away at the age of 84 from her spiritual home. I felt I had to do something. It’s not right for my mother not to have her refuge.”

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U.S. Nuns Call for Catholic Leadership Overhaul After Pope Admits They Are Abuse Victims Too

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 7, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

The largest association of religious sisters in the United States called Thursday for an overhaul of the male-led leadership structure of the Catholic Church, after Pope Francis publicly acknowledged the problem of priests and bishops sexually abusing nuns.

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious also appealed in a statement for reporting guidelines to be established so abused nuns “are met with compassion and are offered safety.”

The conference’s statement followed Francis’ acknowledgement this week that clergy abuse of nuns was a problem. The pope said the Vatican was working on it but more needed to be done.

His comments, given in response to a reporter’s question during an in-flight press conference, were the first public acknowledgement by a pope of a long-simmering scandal. Reporting by The Associated Press and other news media, as well as the reckoning demanded by the #MeToo movement, has brought the issue to the fore.

The LCWR, which represents about 80 percent of Catholic sisters in the U.S., said it was grateful Francis had “shed light on a reality that has been largely hidden from the public and we believe his honesty is an important and significant step forward.”

The group also said some religious congregations had been part of the problem and didn’t support sisters in coming forward to report abuse.

“We regret that when we did know of instances of abuse, we did not speak out more forcefully for an end to the culture of secrecy and cover-ups within the Catholic Church that have discouraged victims from coming forward,” the association based in Silver Spring, Maryland, said.

It made two recommendations: the creation of reporting mechanisms and what it called a “refashioning” of the church’s overall leadership structure to involve laity and to reform the clerical culture that affords all power to the clergy.

“The revelations of the extent of abuse indicate clearly that the current structures must change if the church is to regain its moral credibility and have a viable future,” the group said.

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Doris Reisinger: For clergy, ‘I was the perfect victim’

BONN (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle

February 7, 2019

As the Catholic Church reels from continued reports of sexual abuse by clergyworldwide, Pope Francis has, for the first time, acknowledged the rape of nuns by clergy, saying the Vatican must do more to prevent assault.

In January, the Austrian theologian Hermann Geissler resigned as chief of staff of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican body that investigates reports of assault within the Catholic Church. The priest’s departure comes after a nun’s accounts of repeated rape by him were made public.

German dioceses have invited Reisinger to address assault in the Catholic Church

The former nun Doris Reisinger, a well-known philosopher, theologian, author and activist, told DW that the hierarchies of many religions and faith communities, such as the Catholic Church, subordinate individuals and often provide the ideal conditions for assault by men higher up in the ranks. She also spoke of her own experiences of assault within the Catholic Church.

Reisinger was born in Germany in 1983. At the age of 19, she joined the Catholic religious community Das Werk, which maintains close ties to the Roman Curia. She says she was subjected to various forms of abuse by Catholic clergy, from spiritual manipulation to rape and assault by priests.

In 2011, Reisinger left Das Werk. In 2014, she completed her theology studies in Germany. As Doris Wagner, her birth name, she has written two books about sexual assault by Catholic clergy and her experiences. Reisinger is currently writing her PhD thesis in analytical philosophy. She is married and has a child.

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El Gobierno pide a la Iglesia datos sobre los casos de pederastia

[Spanish government asks bishops for information on church abuse cases]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 7, 2019

By Julio Núñez

La iniciativa del Ejecutivo deja fuera a los casos cometidos dentro de las órdenes religiosas

El Gobierno ha solicitado este jueves a la Conferencia Episcopal Española (CEE) información sobre los casos de pederastia de los que tiene constancia, los que está investigando y los que ha instruido en el pasado con el objetivo de “arrojar luz sobre unos hechos que nuestra sociedad no puede permitirse seguir manteniendo ocultos si desea afrontar el futuro con dignidad”. A través de una carta oficial al presidente de la CEE, el cardenal Ricardo Blázquez, la ministra de Justicia, Dolores Delgado, ha subrayado que los casos de abusos, “sean en el seno de la Iglesia como en cualquier otra institución, no pueden ser ocultados ni considerados como hechos privados”, sino que merecen “la contundente respuesta del ordenamiento jurídico penal”.

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El arzobispo de Tarragona renuncia en pleno escándalo de abusos a menores

{Archbishop of Tarragona resigns in midst of abuse scandal]

TARRAGONA (SPAIN)
El País

February 7, 2019

By Marc Roviro

Jaume Pujol alega que cesa del cargo por motivos de edad

El arzobispo de Tarragona, Jaume Pujol, presenta ante el Vaticano su renuncia al cargo. La dimisión se produce justo cuando la diócesis de Tarragona está en el punto de mira por una sucesión de escándalos relacionados con abusos sexuales a menores por parte de curas que dependen del Arzobispado. Tras descubrirse las prácticas de los sacerdotes, Pujol compareció este miércoles ante la prensa y calificó los abusos como un “mal momento” por parte de los capellanes. Justificó que no se les expulsara del oficio religioso porque, dijo, no fue un asunto lo suficientemente importante como para alejarles del contacto con los feligreses. “No fue tan grave como para secularizarlos”, dijo Pujol.

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‘Archangel’ who led lay movement wants fast-track trial on abuse charges

ROM (ITALY)
Crux

February 6, 2019

By Claire Giangravè

Charged with sexually abusing at least six underage girls, the head of a lay Catholic association in southern Italy considered by his devotees to be the incarnation of an archangel, who’s scheduled to go to court Feb. 18 for a preliminary hearing, has asked for an expedited trial.

“Often this is a decision that we can describe as a media strategy,” said Tommaso Tamburino, who represents four of the six alleged victims, in a phone interview with Crux on Feb. 5.

“It’s a decision often made by someone who wants to give the impression to the public opinion to have independently chosen to go to trial,” he said. “It’s a way of saying that [Capuana] himself wants justice and wishes to go to trial quicker.”

Under Italian law, the decision to ask for an expedited trial can only come from the accused party and not from a judge. According to Tamburino, it’s often a way of trying to persuade the public that since an indictment is inevitable, Capuana can act as if the decision to go to trial is his own instead of the judge’s.

Defense sources contacted by Crux said they didn’t want to discuss the case ahead of the trial.

Piero Alfio Capuana, 74, is among the founders of the Catholic Culture and Environment Association (ACCA) near Catania, Sicily, which counts almost 5,000 followers, many of whom consider him to be the reincarnation of the Archangel Michael.

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What we know about the priests accused of sexual abuse of minors in Corpus Christi

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
Corpus Christi Caller Times

February 7, 2019

By Alexandria Rodriguez

Twenty-six clergy members with ties to the Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi had “credible” claims of sexual abuse to minors

The diocese was among the 15 in Texas that released names of clergy members with “credible” accusations Jan. 31.

Twelve of the clergy members listed were dead and two received criminal convictions. Bishop Michael Mulvey said no one on the list is active in the ministry.

Here’s what we know about the men on the Diocese of Corpus Christi’s list.

More: These Diocese of Corpus Christi priests were accused of sexual abuse

Bishop Michael Mulvey answers questions from the media after Diocese of Corpus Christi released a list of names of priests accused of sexual abuse of minors on Thursday, Jan. 31, 2019.Buy Photo
Bishop Michael Mulvey answers questions from the media after Diocese of Corpus Christi released a list of names of priests accused of sexual abuse of minors on Thursday, Jan. 31, 2019. (Photo: Courtney Sacco/Caller-Times)

Bishop Joseph Vincent Sullivan
Joseph Vincent Sullivan was ordained in the Diocese of Kansas City in 1946. The Diocese of Corpus Christi said in its list that Sullivan visited the area. He died in 1982.

He was the bishop of Baton Rouge.

In 2009, a Nueces County judge ordered the Catholic dioceses of Baton Rouge and Corpus Christi to hand over records for a civil lawsuit alleging Sullivan abused a boy in Corpus Christi from 1978 to 1982, according to a Caller-Times article.

The man, who was a teenage student in the Baton Rouge minor seminary and the Corpus Christi Minor Seminary, said Sullivan would visit him in Corpus Christi. The lawsuit alleged the dioceses “failed to protect the boy,” the article states.

“The man did not remember the abuse until within two years of the filing of the lawsuit in 2007, according to court documents. Attorney Johnny Garza said memories resurfaced in therapy the man underwent after his second marriage collapsed,” the article reads.

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‘Zero tolerance’ doesn’t seem an inflated expectation for pope’s summit

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 7, 2019

By John L. Allen Jr.

Twice now, and with ascending levels of authority, we’ve been cautioned not to expect too much from the summit on clerical sexual abuse Pope Francis has called for Feb. 21-24 for the presidents of bishops’ conferences around the world.

First came the Vatican’s new editorial director, veteran Italian journalist Andrea Tornielli, who penned a Jan. 10 editorial complaining of media “hype” over the meeting, quipping that it’s being covered as if it were “halfway between a council and a conclave.”

Then on his way home from World Youth Day in Panama in late January, Francis waded into the fray during an in-flight news conference.

“Let me say that I’ve perceived expectations that are a little inflated,” he said. “We need to deflate those expectations.”

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Africa is also grappling with clerical abuse, say Catholic leaders

NAIROBI (KENYA)
Catholic News Service

February 7, 2019

By Fredrick Nzwili

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, said Catholic leaders.

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,” Precious Blood Sister Hermenegild Makoro, general secretary of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference, told Catholic News Service.

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.

Sister 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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SNAP Delivers Letter to Papal Nuncio in Advance of February Summit

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

February 7, 2019

Leaders from the nation’s oldest and largest advocacy group for victims of clergy and institutional sex abuse delivered a letter today to the papal nuncio, asking for Pope Francis to take five specific actions at his summit in February and requesting a meeting with Pope Francis.

Representatives from SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, delivered the letter today which outlines specific actions that they are asking the Pope to take at the papal abuse summit to be held in Rome from February 21 to 24. They are also asking for a meeting to explain why these requested actions will not only help survivors heal but also protect children by preventing future cases of abuse from happening in the first place.

In their letter, the group calls for Pope Francis to:

Fire any and all bishops or cardinals who have had a hand in clergy sex abuse cover-ups,
Impose “dramatic and punitive consequences” to deter any future cover-ups,
Eliminate any directive for church staff to report abuse to bishops and instead direct all church staff and officials to make reports to law enforcement, and
Compel bishops around the world to turn their files over to law enforcement for independent investigations into their handling of clergy sex abuse cases, and
Order your bishops and other hierarchs to cease lobbying efforts against legislative reform that would benefit survivors.

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Church clerical abuse: Former nuns share their experiences

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

February 7, 2019

A day after Pope Francis publicly admitted for the first time that clerics had sexually abused nuns, promising to tackle the issue that was “still going on” within the Catholic Church, two former female members of the Church have spoken about their experiences with the BBC.

Appearing on BBC Radio 4’s Woman’s Hour on Thursday morning, the women welcomed the pontiff’s acknowledgement of the scandal, saying that for too long there had been a “culture of silence and secrecy within the hierarchy”.

But the descriptions of their experiences will only serve to exacerbate a scandal that continues to rock the Catholic Church.

Dr Rocio Figueroa says she was “very naive”

Dr Figueroa is a theologian and lecturer in Auckland, New Zealand, and a survivor of abuse she says she suffered at the hands of a priest in Lima, Peru.

She told the BBC that she joined the society of apostolic life within the Catholic Church as a teenager living in a “very poor part of the world” because she “needed to do something”.

“I was 15 years old and the founder asked me to begin a spiritual direction with a vicar, who became my spiritual director.

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Pope wants bishops conferences to take responsibility for sexual abuse issue

ROME (ITALY)
LaCroix International

February 7, 2019

By Anne-Bénédicte Hoffner

The presidents of the world’s episcopal conferences as well as the primates of the Eastern Catholic churches in communion with Rome will take part in the Vatican summit from Feb. 21-24.On Sept. 12, the Holy See announced that the pope had decided to call the summit, which will have an unprecedented format, “to discuss the prevention of abuse of minors and vulnerable adults.”Pope Francis will take part as will representatives of victims and religious communities, several members of relevant congregations of the Rome Curia and finally “men and women lay experts in the field of abuse.”

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Peoria Diocese expands list of accused priests

PEORIA (IL)
Journal Star

February 7, 2019

By Brett Herrmann

A former priest who once served in a leadership role at a Catholic retreat at St. Bede has been listed as “credibly accused” of sexual abuse by the Catholic Diocese of Peoria.

Kenneth J. Roberts, a priest with sexual abuse allegations made against him in multiple states, was listed with 285 other priests in Texas last week, and this week the Peoria Diocese added him to a list of “Incardinated priests in other dioceses/religious orders removed from ministry due to allegations of abuse of a minor.”

The Illinois Valley has ties to a list of priests with abuse allegations, and the list could get a lot longer
It was last month when Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan unveiled that the Catholic Church in Illinois had received allegations against a…

Roberts spent time in a leadership position during the Diocese of Peoria Emmaus Days Retreats in the 1980s, some of which took place at St. Bede. And it was there that one of his alleged abuses took place. Roberts was accused of sexually abusing a boy at one of the retreats in the early 1980s, according to a 2009 article from the Peoria Journal Star.

Roberts also had accusations made against him during his time in the St. Louis, Dallas and Belleville dioceses.

Roberts was ordained in 1966 and suspended from public ministry by the Diocese of Dallas in 1998. He died in 2018.

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Cardinal says new ‘season’ could come after abuse crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 7, 2019

By Rhina Guidos

The laity may be angry over the most recent revelations of the Catholic Church’s sex abuse crisis, but bishops, particularly younger ones, share in that anger and “want to move with real force” toward solutions and it could yield a new season for the church, said the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, who is the archbishop of Galveston-Houston, made the comments on Feb. 6 during a day-long conference to address the problem.

The “Healing the Breach of Trust” conference, the second such meeting at The Catholic University of America in Washington, addressed the need of more involvement by lay women and men – one inspired by the teachings of the Second Vatican Council – in building what the cardinal called in the morning part of the conference a new “season” for the church, and one that may not be accidental.

“Think about what the Spirit might be doing in all of this,” Cardinal DiNardo said. “In saying this, I am in no way trying to deny or dodge the issues of the episcopal responsibility and accountability that this crisis has raised,” but added it’s worth it to ponder St. Augustine’s principle “that God can bring good even out of evil.”

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Bishops must be held to account

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

February 7, 2019

The Vatican summit which Pope Francis has convened for 21 February could be a watershed moment in the history of the Catholic Church’s response to the scandal of child sexual abuse within its ranks. There is no quick fix available, but there is a deep appreciation within the Church of how profoundly serious the issue really is, and a growing consensus about what needs to be done. The summit, to which presidents of bishops’ conferences throughout the world have been invited, is aimed at solidifying that consensus and drawing into it those parts of the Church not yet fully on board. Bishops’ conferences, of which there are more than a hundred, have been required by the Vatican to implement local guidelines for dealing with safeguarding issues. So far as many as a quarter of them have failed to do so. The religious orders, too, must no longer be allowed to escape the net.

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Systemic abuse

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

February 7, 2019

Regarding “What you need to ask about Catholic scandals” (Outlook, Sunday): Not much frustrates me more than lines such as this one in the opinion piece: “The world has been aware of systemic sexual abuse in the U.S. Catholic Church since 2002, when the Boston Globe […] exposed the breadth of this crime epidemic.”

No! Read Jason Berry’s “Lead Us Not Into Temptation” for details on the early 1970s abuse scandal in Lafayette, La., with charges continuing into the early 1980s, and look at the mid-1980s for Father Tom Doyle’s comprehensive report on priests’ sexual abuse, the early 1990s for abuse charges in Providence, Fall River and Boston, and the late 1990s for abuse lawsuits in Dallas, and then 2001 in Tucson — all before the powerful Boston Globe reporting. Note that this list is not comprehensive, and it includes only cases within the United States.

Catholics and their church must stop wringing their hands and pretending that this is a new aberration that they were somehow unaware of before 2002. That damaging illusion simply continues the abuse.

Sarah Jenkins, The Woodlands

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Here’s what we know about Thomas Ericksen, former priest accused of assaulting children

WAUSAU (WI)
Wausau Daily Herald

February 7, 2019

By Laura Schulte

Nearly nine years after victims first told police that Thomas Ericksen molested them when they were children, the former Wisconsin priest is behind bars as four sexual-assault cases against him make their way through the legal system.

The allegations were initially met with inaction and delays by law enforcement, but there have been many new developments in recent weeks as more victims have come forward.

Here’s what we know so far about Ericksen:

Police knew about Ericksen’s actions in the town of Winter since 1983
Ericksen was ordained in the early 1970s and served as a priest in Eagle River, Merrill, Winter and other parishes. The Sawyer County Sheriff’s Department first investigated the priest in 1983, but ended up releasing him to then-Bishop of Superior George Albert Hammes after Ericksen confessed to investigators that he “had a problem.”

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India’s Kerala state publishes guidelines on clerical sex abuse

MUMBAI (India)
Crux

February 7, 2019

By Nirmala Carvalho

Bishops in India’s most Christian state have declared a “zero tolerance” policy for the sexual abuse of children.

The Kerala Catholic Bishops’ Council issued safe environment guidelines this week, sending them to every Catholic institution in the state.

Kerala has 6.1 million Christians – over 18 percent of the population of the southern state – and 60 percent of them are Catholic, divided into Latin, Syro-Malabar, and Syro-Malankara rite jurisdictions.

Kerala’s Catholic Church is highly influential throughout India, since many priests and religious in other parts of the country come from the state.

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Atonement

EUREKA (CA)
North Coast Journal

February6, 2019

By Jennifer Fumiko and Thadeus Greenson

While the Roman Catholic Church’s sexual abuse scandal has been widely known and reported on the North Coast going back 25 years, the Santa Rosa Diocese’s recent release of a list of 39 accused priests illuminates the systemic nature of the problem. These were not the isolated incidents of a few bad actors. As you’ll see in this week’s cover story, this was a case of widespread predation by a significant portion of the diocese’s clergy that its leaders worked to conceal and allowed to continue with horrendous consequences, especially for Humboldt County families.

While we can all hope the days of the diocese turning an indifferent eye to priests molesting children, and then simply moving them to another community when parishioners refused to do the same are over, it’s important to recognize the ripple effect of this abuse continues to sprawl. People’s faith has been broken. Lives have been shattered, consuming families and, in turn, communities. Studies have repeatedly shown that sexual abuse perpetrators are more likely than the general population to have experienced sexual abuse themselves as children, meaning some of the church’s victims have themselves likely grown up to victimize, continuing a devastating cycle.

There is no salve that can heal this wound, nothing that can stop the ripples. The best we as a community — and the Catholics among us, especially — can hope for is atonement.

The Santa Rosa Diocese took a marked step in that direction this week, releasing the list of the accused and devoting much of the January issue of its newspaper to the subject, with a lengthy apology from Bishop Robert Vasa, an urging for additional victims to come forward and an explanation of the diocese’s revised “policy for the protection of children and young people,” which makes clear that clergy should be considered mandated reporters and that anyone who hears an abuse allegation should report it to police. While these are all positive steps, they are also woefully inadequate — and decades late. The idea that in 2019 an institution that asks parents to entrust it with their children should be applauded for making clear it has a zero -tolerance policy toward sexual predators would be laughable if it didn’t expose the horrid depths from which we have come.

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‘Rid me of This Troublesome Priest’

EUREKA (CA)
North Coast Journal

February 7, 2019

By Thadeus Greenson

Earlier this month, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Santa Rosa took an unprecedented step — for the church, anyway — releasing a list naming 39 of its priests who have been accused of sexually abusing minors. While the North Coast began publicly grappling with predatory clergy earlier than most communities — the arrest of Rev. Gary Timmons, a former St. Bernard priest who founded Camp St. Michael in Leggett, on 17 counts of child molestation came more than six years before the nation became aware of the growing crisis in the church. But the diocese’s list — which critics charge is an incomplete effort at damage control — reveals that the extent of such abuses in Humboldt County was far beyond what anyone outside the church likely knew.

Consider this: Of the 39 priests on the diocese’s list, at least 10 worked in Humboldt County, together comprising an almost consistent 45-year stretch when a priest who had been or would face allegations of abuse was working in a local church. Five of them worked at St. Bernard, four at St. Mary’s in Arcata, three at Humboldt State University’s Newman Center. And, coupled with the Santa Rosa bishops’ history of extensive efforts to protect and even enable the accused, that’s led some advocates to draw a very dark conclusion.

“Humboldt County and Eureka, unfortunately, was one of the ‘dumping grounds’ for abusive clergy, and the church is not going to reveal the true depths of depravity that has existed there,” says Joey Piscitelli, who was abused by a priest in the Bay Area and is now a member of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “What I can say without reservation is that the Catholic Church in Northern California was inundated with child rapists, pedophiles and depraved molesters for decades, and depraved bishops who harbored them, shuffled them, shielded them and enabled them without any regard for children’s safety.”

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The Archdiocese of Santa Fe left names off its list of pedophile priests—and has no plans to add them

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe Reporter

February 6, 2019

By Matt Grubs

Jim Field loved going to church.

As a kid, he remembers waking for morning mass.

“The sun might just about be coming up. And I’d get in the bathtub, I’d clean myself up, I’d hop on my bike and ride to Sacred Heart Church in Farmington,” he says. “And I would sit and wait for mass. I just loved being there.”

It was around 1960 and the service, he recalls, was in Latin. He didn’t understand a word, but something about the ceremony—the quiet, the reverence—resonated with him.

He was 8 years old, getting ready to turn 9 in 1961, when the abuse happened. It was summer. Father Conran Runnebaum, a Franciscan priest, had only been a cleric since 1955. Farmington was his second assignment, starting in 1958.

Field is not sure how many times the priest abused him. Once for sure. Maybe three times, he thinks.

“Conran had me pull down my pants and he pulled up his habit, like a cassock,” Field begins. He had no idea what was happening.

“How would I know what was going on? Except, I do remember at one point, enters Miguel … and he’s horrified,” Field says of another priest, Miguel Baca. Horrified—but also the same man who would later expose himself to, and further abuse, Field.

“I have a memory of later, in the bathroom, which you accessed from outside the church in those days … but it was in that bathroom where those …” Field trails off.

It would be 40 years before the memories, in terrifying flashes, started to come back to him. “My knees went weak and I fell to the floor and began to sob and cry. … It was like lava in a volcano coming up through me,” he says.

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Catholic bishops should have experts at conference to address global clerical sexual abuse

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

February 6, 2019

By Thomas G. Plante

Catholic bishops from across the globe will meet Feb. 21-24 at the Vatican for a much anticipated conference to discuss global clerical sexual abuse. While clerics might know a lot about theology, church history and church law, they aren’t experts on research and best practices in child protection, child abuse or pedophilia. Those experts aren’t invited to the conference. And it is a shame.

Without experts in attendance and actively involved, we can expect that the most conservative voices in the church will try to blame the clergy sexual abuse crisis on homosexual clerics or liberal approaches to church teachings that began to get traction after Vatican II. The most liberal voices may blame the problem on mandated clerical celibacy or the fact that only men can be priests in the Roman Catholic Church.

Both groups would be wrong. And their views may lead to unproductive or counterproductive directions for interventions and resolutions of this problem that have plagued the institution for too long.

What the experts might say, if invited and allowed to speak, would be that best practices in child protection and screening adults who work with children are readily available and can be enlisted to make the church and other organizations much safer than they are now. Among the most commonsense solutions: incorporate careful screening and training of those who work with children and teens into any plan to protect minors both in and outside of church communities.

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Things Get Heated At Hearing For Local Priest Accused Of Molestation

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA TV

February 6, 2019

By Brenda Waters

A local priest accused of molesting a 10-year-old boy will stand trial, but his attorney is raising some objections to the way his client was treated on Wednesday.

Once a priest at Saint Therese Catholic Church in Munhall, Father Hugh Lang is now accused of sexual abuse of a child and indecent assault and exposure.

The 88-year-old left his preliminary hearing on Wednesday afternoon after his attorney, Kerry Lewis, told the magistrate judge, Thomas Terkowsky, he objected to the hearing and found his attitude toward him and his client to be disgraceful.

Lewis wanted Terkowsky to recuse himself, and the judge refused.

The 29-year-old accuser, who was 10-years-old at the time of the alleged incident, claims Lang took him away from other boys during alter training, He alleges Lang took him to the basement of the church, had him take off his clothes and took a Polaroid picture and committed a sexual act.

“He is charged with an act that is a pedophile,” Lewis said. “This kind of conduct when he was 72 years old, there’s never been any complaint against him before and there hasn’t been one since. He just didn’t become an abuser, a pedophile, one day in June in 2001.”

The accuser, who now lives in another country, said in court his mother told him about indictments against priests who had abused children and he called the attorney general’s office in August of last year.

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Local victim pushes for reforms in the Catholic Church ahead of the Pope’s sexual assault summit

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK TV

February 6, 2019

By Chris Davis

Pope Francis has acknowledged for the first time that nuns have been sexually abused in the Catholic Church.

The pope admits the abuse at the hands of priests and other clergy has been going on for decades.

Some had even been subjected to sex slavery in a French order.

This comes as the pope prepares to convene a summit of bishops from around the world to address the crisis of sexual abuse in the church.

A local advocate wants even more from the pontiff.

“I was abused from the time I was about 6 until I was 12-13 by my best friends uncle, who was a priest at our parish,” Barbara Dorris said.

Her abuse was constant. Her priest had access to her far beyond the St. Louis parish walls.

“He could call my mother, she’d send me. He could call the nuns at school, they’d send me to his bedroom,” Dorris said.

When the abuse finally ended, she blocked the memories and moved on.

It wasn’t until 1991 while she was teaching at the same parish, that she revisited her own pain by witnessing someone else’s.

“And I caught the associate pastor molesting a child, and that’s what brought me into the movement,” she said.

Ever since, she’s dedicated her life to helping other victims and putting pressure on the church the change their practices.

“It’s not that there are abusive priests, it’s the fact that when they’re caught, they’re protected, enabled and moved to a new parish,” Dorris said.

While Dorris celebrates the pope’s acknowledgment, she fervently believes he must do more.

“Women and girls have been fairly ignored in this process so to finally acknowledge that I believe women are almost equally abused as the men, is important,” she said.

Barbara no longer seeks the church as a place of comfort, but still holds on to her faith.

“I believe in what I was taught as a child, and I try to live by it,” she said.

Her prayer: that the church will finally address this problem head-on.

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Catholic Diocese Discloses Alleged Abusers

AUSTIN (TX)
Austin Chronicle

February 8, 2019

By Mike Clark-Madison and Sarah Marloff

Along with its fellow Roman Catholic dioceses throughout the state, the Diocese of Austin last week published the names and clerical assignments of priests who have been “credibly accused” of committing sexual abuse against minors. A total of 22 ordained religious who had ministered in the diocese, which includes Austin, Waco, Temple/Killeen, Bryan/College Station, and surrounding counties, were identified “with a contrite heart” by Bishop Joe Vásquez, who said he’d commissioned an outside review of 70 years of church archives to compile the list. Half of the men on the list have died; only one is apparently serving as a priest, in Jamaica, the rest having retired or been defrocked.

The bishop’s list gives no indication of whether the “credible” allegations had been substantiated, or when the acts of abuse may have occurred, or to whom, or how many times, or whether those acts constituted criminal offenses, or whether these or other clergy had also been accused of misconduct with adults. The coordinated effort by the Texas bishops, which had been announced last fall, follows the November raid by local and federal agents of the offices of Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, archbishop of Galveston-Houston, who also serves as president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, in connection with the case of a priest arrested in September on four counts of indecency with a child. “It is my prayer and hope that publishing this list will help to bring healing from the hurt and anger caused by the lack of accountability and transparency on the part of church leadership,” said Vásquez. One of the priests on the list, the now-deceased Fr. Milton Eggerling, was the subject of a 2016 lawsuit regarding alleged abuse in the Seventies of a teen altar boy at St. Louis King of France Catholic Church in North Austin (“Austin Diocese Implicated in Child Abuse Suit,” April 1, 2016).

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February 6, 2019

Priest accused of abuse worked in Shelby County

KIRKSVILLE (MO)
Kirksville Daily Express

February 6, 2019

An advocacy organization for the victims of abuse by Catholic priests has claimed that a newly accused priest worked in 11 parishes throughout Missouri, including two in Shelby County.

The Diocese of Jefferson City, which covers 38 counties in northeastern and central Missouri, released a list of priests “credibly accused of sexual abuse” which included Fr. Eric A. Schlachter, who the diocese said had been deemed “unsuited for ministry out of concern for the safety of our youth.”

The organization Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests said in a press release Monday that the diocese has refused to provide work histories for Schlachter or the other priests and religious brothers publicly accused of misconduct in the diocese; the list currently includes 38 names.

SNAP released a list of parishes where it found Schlachter to have worked in the past, including St. Mary’s in Shelbina and St. Patrick’s in Clarence, as well as parishes in Jefferson City, Hannibal, Boonville, Chamois, Morrison, Pilot Grove, Clear Creek, Kahoka and Wayland.

“The group suspects Fr. Schlachter may have molested kids in some of those places and feels that Catholic officials have a moral and civic duty to warn and alert parents, police, prosecutors, parishioners and the public about him,” SNAP said in a press release.

Helen Osman, director of communications for the diocese, said the diocese does not provide work histories of accused priests in order to protect victims’ privacy, at the request of some victims. She confirmed that Schlachter did work in parishes in Shelby County.

SNAP’s information is drawn from the Official Catholic Directory and the website bishopaccountability.org, which maintains a database of priests accused on abuse and their work assignments.

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At least eight people say, when they were children in the 1960’s and 70’s, they were sexually abused by Father Joseph Friel.

BUFFALO (NY)
WGRZ Channel 2

February 6, 2019

By Steve Brown and Dave Harrington

‘Am I the only one?’

For years, Christopher Szuflita wondered.

He didn’t think so. But now, he knows.

He is not the only child in the late 60’s who says they were sexually abused at the hands of Father Joseph Friel.

Szuflita’s encounters with Friel happened after the then-teenager had completed his elementary education at the parish school at Fourteen Holy Helpers in West Seneca.

He returned to attend religious instruction classes. That’s where Friel made his move, pulling Szuflita from class and leading him to the parish rectory.

“We were taught to respect priests and nuns,” says Christopher Szuflita.

“It was in his own room, up the stairs,” recalled Szuflita, “I guess he played some music. I don’t remember if there was alcohol served but I remember smelling alcohol on him… and he tried to kiss me. Sat me on the bed and… and from there things progressed.”

After pausing, Szuflita continued, “And then it happened again.”

…and again.

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2 priests on New Orleans’ list of accused clerics face additional molestation claims in lawsuit

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Advocate

February 6, 2019

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

A Catholic priest allegedly masturbated while lotion was being rubbed on his feet by a New Orleans altar boy — an act which the cleric called “the best hand job” his feet had ever gotten.

Another priest would allegedly fondle the genitals of that same altar boy and other children while play-wrestling with them at that cleric’s family’s summer home in Mississippi.

Both priests, Michael Fraser and Paul Calamari, were named Nov. 2 on a list of Archdiocese of New Orleans clergy who had been stripped of their ministries years earlier after facing credible allegations of sexually abusing minors. And both were named in a lawsuit filed Wednesday in Orleans Parish Civil District Court that accuses them of previously unreported sexual molestation that was unrelated to the abuse that landed them on the archdiocese’s list.

The unnamed plaintiff’s lawsuit is the latest legal volley fired at the local Catholic Church involving clerical abuse allegations dating back decades.

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Editorial: Explanations, not just lists, needed in Catholic abuse scandal

AUSTIN (TX)
American-Statesman

February 6, 2019

The Roman Catholic dioceses’ release last week of roughly 300 names of clergy members across Texas who were credibly accused of abusing children was overdue, unprecedented — and still, sadly, not enough.

Those who endured unspeakable abuse, often decades ago, at the hands of trusted religious leaders deserve more than names. They deserve an explanation.

Seeking to promote healing and rebuild trust amid sexual abuse scandals that have roiled the church for years, Texas dioceses took the exceptional step of opening their files to outside reviewers, then publicly sharing the names of credibly accused clergy.

The Archdiocese of San Antonio made an exemplary effort with its 25-page report, giving a short narrative account of when and where each victim was abused, specifying the number of allegations against each clergy member, and disclosing when supervisors reported incidents to police — or when they failed to take action or alert other parishes.

Such transparency is badly needed. We are dismayed it is lacking in the minimal lists posted by most other Texas dioceses, including the Diocese of Austin, which simply provided the names of credibly accused clergy, their dates of service and a list of their parish assignments — with a disclaimer noting the abuse may not have happened at any of those locations.

Austin Bishop Joe Vásquez told Statesman reporter Asher Price that “out of respect for the victims,” he wouldn’t say how many accusers the diocese knows about or how many cases it had reported to law enforcement. After we pressed the matter, diocese spokesman Christian González told us the review team found the church properly notified law enforcement when credible allegations surfaced against living priests.

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Investigation finds 27 local priests accused of sexual abuse

ALEXANDRIA (LA)
Opelousas Daily World

February 6, 2019

By Jeff Matthews

Twenty-seven priests incardinated or serving in the Diocese of Alexandria were found to have credible accusations of sexual abuse against minors in an investigative by the diocese.

The names of the priests were released Wednesday in a letter from Bishop David P. Talley. The cases, which were discovered through a review of hundreds of files of priests who have served in the diocese, date back to the 1940s.

In the letter, Talley calls the accusations an “evil chapter in the life of our diocese.” He said the entire diocese extends “our heartfelt sorrow for all the pain and anguish caused to our children and youth by this evil. Please know that I am ready to meet with any victim in this healing process.”

“In publishing this list, it is not our intent to re-victimize those who have already been so wounded by the actions of some clerics who served in our diocese over the past one hundred sixty-five years,” the letter read. “This evil can only be purged through a vigilant process that is transparent to the public. Our response must demonstrate the highest levels of honesty and scrutiny.”

The Diocesan Permanent Review Board reviewed 535 files of clergy who have served in the diocese since its establishment in 1853. Both clergy and lay people were part of the investigative team.

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Charges held against suspended priest as victim testifies at hearing

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

February 6, 2019

By Peter Smith

Criminal charges against the Rev. Hugh Lang, an 88-year-old retired Catholic priest of the Diocese of Pittsburgh, were held for trial at a contentious preliminary hearing Wednesday in Munhall that featured graphic testimony by a 29-year-old man who alleged an episode of sexual abuse in 2001, when he was 11 years old.

The accuser, who now lives overseas, appeared in a dark suit, and answered questions from both prosecutor Thomas Kelly and defense attorney J. Kerrington Lewis readily and without emotion. The young man said that he was punished for a comment he made while in training to be an altar server at St. Therese Parish in Munhall in 2001. He described in detail how, he said, Rev. Lang brought him to a basement room, had him undress, and sexually assaulted him.

During the hearing, Mr. Lewis became frustrated with District Judge Thomas Torkowsky’s rulings on objections and even on the arrangement of the courtroom. Mr. Lewis asked the judge to recuse himself from the case. The judge refused.

Mr. Lewis then said that when the case proceeds to the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas, he will ask that the assigned judge order a new preliminary hearing.

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St. Francis Xavier pastor accused of sexual harassment against junior priest

GAYLORD (MI)
Petosky News

February 6, 2010

By William T. Perkins

A top-ranking vicar in the Diocese of Gaylord and at St. Francis Xavier Catholic Parish in Petoskey has continued to be active approximately six months after having been accused of sexual harassment against a younger priest.

The Rev. Dennis Stilwell is alleged to have initiated unwanted physical contact with the Rev. Matthew Cowan during the summer of 2015, when Cowan, then 30 years old, was newly assigned to the Diocese of Gaylord. He filed a complaint of the behavior in late August last year.

Stilwell is pastor of St. Francis Xavier Parish in Petoskey.

Candace Neff, spokeswoman for the diocese, said Tuesday that Stilwell had not been suspended from his duties. She said she preferred more time to answer some of the News-Review’s questions and would be following up with additional information over email.

“Following the independent investigation, the Diocesan Review Board (which is also an independent body composed primarily of laity from throughout the diocese) met and concluded that the allegation did not reach the level of credible and substantiated sexual misconduct,” she said in that followup email Wednesday.

A press release Wednesday from Gaylord Diocesan Watch, a newly formed activist group, claimed that Bishop Steven Raica “suspended” Matthew Cowan, the accuser. That group is calling for Cowan to be reinstated. Neff told the News-Review that Cowan had been placed on administrative leave — not suspended — and that his faculties for ministry were withdrawn on Jan. 7, and that the decision was not based on his harassment complaint.

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Diocese of Alexandria releases names of clergy with credible allegations of sexual abuse

ALEXANDRIA (LA)
KALB TV

February 6, 2019

The Diocese of Alexandria released a list of clergy members, both living and dead, with credible allegations of sexual abuse on Wednesday afternoon.

A team of eight laypersons and seven clergy members reviewed over 500 files of clergy who served the Diocese of Alexandria since 1853 when it was established.

“I believe, together with all the members of the Permanent Review Board, that we have done what we can to present as truthful and as thorough a record of the alleged instances of sexual abuse by clerics against minors during our long history,” said Bishop David Talley. “I know that this list may be incomplete, not because we have held anything back, but because this kind of evil is perpetrated in secret and out of fear and shame some may not have been able to come forward.”

Talley also encouraged victims to come forward with any information.

“If you are a victim of sexual abuse, please contact your local law enforcement agency,” Talley said. “Sexual abuse is a serious crime and must be treated as such. If you would like more information or are in need of assistance, please contact our Victims’ Assistance Coordinator, Dr. Lee Kneipp, at (318) 542-9805.”

The full document, along with Bishop Talley’s letter, can be found in the Related Documents section of this page.

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Buffalo Diocese says Bishop Kmiec correctly handled Nashville abuse complaint

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 6, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

A lawyer for the Buffalo Diocese defended retired Bishop Edward U. Kmiec’s handling of a case of alleged clergy sex abuse from Kmiec’s time as bishop of the Nashville Diocese.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests of Tennessee said this week that Kmiec allowed the Rev. James A. Rudisill to retire as a priest in good standing and remain in ministry, despite the priest’s alleged admission in 1994 that he had molested a 12-year-old girl in the 1950s.

But diocesan attorney Lawlor F. Quinlan III said that Kmiec did remove Rudisill from ministry and forbade him from presenting himself as a priest. A lawyer for the Nashville Diocese also notified governmental authorities in Tennessee about the case, Quinlan said in a letter emailed to The News late Tuesday.

“It is unfair and wrong to criticize Bishop Kmiec in this case when he correctly removed the offender from ministry,” said Quinlan.

Quinlan also suggested that The News did not provide the diocese with enough time to respond to the criticisms of Kmiec.

The News called Kmiec last week Friday and he referred the query to Buffalo Diocese spokeswoman Kathy Spangler, who provided no comments. The News also asked Rick Musacchio, spokesman for the Diocese of Nashville, for details about the handling of the Rudisill case and Musacchio said he did not know any additional details.

The News published its story online Monday afternoon and in print editions on Tuesday. No one from the Buffalo Diocese got back to The News to comment until Quinlan’s letter Tuesday evening.

Kmiec was Nashville bishop from 1992 to 2004 and Buffalo bishop from 2004 until his retirement in 2012.

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Italian protesting clerical abuse arrested in front of the Vatican

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 5, 2019

By Claire Giangravè

Just a few weeks before bishops from around the world convene in Rome to discuss the clerical sexual abuse crisis, an Italian victim peacefully protesting in front of the Vatican Feb. 4 was escorted away by police officers.

“Police agents escorted him to the station after he handcuffed himself to a pole,” Carlo Grezio, the victim’s lawyer, told local reporters.

“He was treated with regard and respect. Some agents know his story and expressed solidarity, but regardless, a formal charge will be made against him for wasting police time,” he added.

Arturo Borrelli, 40, claims to have been sexually abused by Father Silverio Mura, who was his religion teacher, about thirty years ago in the peripheries of Naples, Italy.

“I ask for justice and that all victims have justice because it’s essential to heal,” Borrellli told Crux in a phone interview Feb.4. “I will continue my fight until the end.”

The victim said he had informed the Vatican’s Secretary of State that he was coming to Rome to denounce his abuse. He claims that when he arrived Monday morning at the St. Anna entrance of the Vatican, about twenty police officers and journalists were awaiting him.

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A Utah Orthodox rabbi said his childhood nanny sexually abused him for 10 years. Here’s why he decided to tell his story for the first time

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Deseret News

February 5, 2019

By Gillian Friedman

From behind the witness stand, Utah Rabbi Avrohom (“Avremi”) Zippel gazes out into the sea of faces and prepares to speak.

It’s a dreary Tuesday morning, and normally, public speaking doesn’t intimidate the 27-year-old. Since he was a child — the precocious and prized eldest son of a prominent rabbi — he has revelled in the attention of a crowd.

But today, sitting in a courtroom in downtown Salt Lake City, the confidence that usually comes so easily evades him.

He fidgets nervously, his fingers playing with his long dark beard, adjusting his black suit and yarmulke, the traditional garb of observant Jewish men.

Time seems to slow to a stop, and all he can hear is the sound of his heart pounding in his ears. But then, one message rings clear in his head, as if from on high: you are doing the right thing.

He clears his throat, and in a voice barely above a whisper, begins to share a story that has haunted him for decades.

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Recommendations for Churches Dealing with Abuse

JENKINTOWN (PA)
Dr. Diane Landberg blog

February 5, 2019

Like any other institution churches are susceptible to the twin plagues of the abuse of power and sexual misconduct. How should a church respond when such things are alleged or exposed?

GENERAL PRINCIPLES
We need to acknowledge to ourselves and publicly that the problems of abuse (child sexual abuse, rape, physical abuse and clergy sexual abuse) are not just out there; they are also in here with us.

We need to approach this work carefully and with great humility. Churches often have little to no education about these matters. Most seminaries never speak about abuse. We have not invited victims to tell us their stories and learned from them. We have not been taught about offenders and how they work. We have not developed policies and safeguards for the children under our care. We teach about God, marriage, sex and parenting but we do not usually include the topics of sexual abuse, rape or domestic violence.

We often assume that when sin occurs in a relationship it is always a 50-50 proposition. We have assumed that with rape, domestic violence, verbal abuse and with clergy or counselor sexual abuse. We look for an external cause for sin. “I hit her because she…”

The Bible does not support the assumption of an external cause. Jesus said that it is out of our hearts that evil proceeds. Abuse is an exposure of the abuser’s heart, not the victims.

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Gay Catholic Leader Confronts Alt-Right Harassers

NEW YORK (NY)
Gay City News

February 6, 2019 l

By Matt Tracy

By his own admission, Aaron Bianco was a “nobody” until he was discovered by the alt-right.

An out gay former pastoral associate at St. John’s the Evangelist Catholic Church in San Diego, Bianco was long treated with respect in the workplace and largely accepted by parishioners and church leaders alike.

But everything went downhill in June of 2017 when the parish’s priest left, forcing Bianco to assume more responsibilities and play a more visible role in the absence of a permanent replacement pastor.

The alt-right news sites LifeSite News and Church Militant started attacking him, first when Bianco’s role expanded and again in August of last year when the Pennsylvania Supreme Court named at least 300 Catholic priests in an investigation of child sex abuse.

The news articles written about him were followed by a barrage of horrifying events: Bianco started receiving death threats laced with homophobic slurs, found his car’s tires entirely punctured, and saw someone creepily stalking him outside of his house. He arrived at the church one day to find the doors had been lit on fire and “NO FAGS” spray-painted on a wall.

Bianco recalled the time he had to dodge a punch from a man who walked up to him following Mass and demanded to know if he were married. In a fit of rage, the man had to be restrained by others nearby, and a police investigation followed, according to Bianco.

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Time to restore marriage rights to priests

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Washington Times

February 6, 2019

By Cheryl K. Chumley

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, SNAP, is holding a summit this week to press Pope Francis into taking stronger action against clergy members who commit acts of sexual abuse.

Well and good. Stronger action is definitely warranted.

But a better course of action would be for the Catholic Church to open its priestly ranks to marriage.

Yes, Jesus was chaste. Yes, Paul, one of the apostles, recommended celibacy as a means of moving closer to God. But Peter, the first pope, was married

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Amid uproar, Vatican clarifies Pope’s comments on ‘sexual slavery’ of nuns

ATLANTA (GA)
CNN

February 6, 2019

By Daniel Burke

A day after Pope Francis created an international uproar by saying Catholics nuns had been subjected to “sexual slavery” by the founder of a French order, the Vatican sought to clarify his remarks.

“When the Holy Father, referring to the dissolution of a Congregation, spoke of ‘sexual slavery,’ he meant ‘manipulation,’ a form of abuse of power which is reflected also in sexual abuse,” said Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti.

The Pope’s shocking comments were the first time he has publicly acknowledged the sexual abuse of nuns by Catholic bishops and priests. To date, much of the clergy abuse scandal has focused on minors, who represent the vast majority of cases.

But many Catholics say abuse of vulnerable adults, including nuns and seminarians, has long been a problem in the church. Some hope the church will address the issue at the upcoming meeting on the abuse crisis to be convened by Pope Francis from February 21 to 24 in Rome.

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Polish archbishop meets victims of pedophile priests

WARSAW (POLAND)
Agence France-Presse

February 6, 2019

Polish Archbishop Stanislaw Gadecki on Wednesday said he had met with several victims of church sex abuse ahead of a Vatican meeting on the issue later this month.

Pope Francis has called senior bishops from around the world to Rome on February 21-24 to provide them with concrete measures to deal with widespread clergy sex abuse of children and young people.

“A couple of weeks ago… I invited victims of clergy sexual abuse in childhood or youth to meet with me,” Gadecki said in a video message on the episcopate’s website.

“I am grateful to all 28 individuals who accepted the invitation. I have already met with some of them. The rest of the meetings will be scheduled bit by bit.”

It is difficult to pinpoint the extent of sex abuse by clergy in the devout Catholic country of 38 million people.

But Marek Lisinski, head of a Polish foundation for its victims, told AFP that around 700 victims had disclosed clergy abuse to the organisation.

Polish courts have convicted 62 priests of the crime.

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Nuns ‘sex slaves’ scandal fresh blow to Catholic Church

CHANDIGARH (INDIA)
India Tribune

February 6, 2019

Pope Francis’s public admission that priests have used nuns as “sexual slaves”—and may still be doing so—marks a new chapter in the abuse crisis rocking the Catholic Church.

“It is the first time that the pope, but also the church as an institution, has publicly admitted this abuse is taking place, and that’s hugely important,” Lucetta Scaraffia, editor of the Vatican’s women’s magazine, told AFP on Wednesday.

The pontiff on Tuesday said Catholic priests and bishops had been sexually abusing nuns, and that his predecessor Benedict XVI had dissolved a religious order of women because of “sexual slavery on the part of priests and the founder”.

The Church has “suspended several clerics” and the Vatican has been “working (on the issue) for a long time”, he said.

The abuse was “still going on, because it’s not something that just goes away like that. On the contrary”, he added.

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Editor of Vatican’s women’s magazine says ‘many’ rape claims have been filed with the Church ‘but not followed up’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Daily Mail

February 6, 2019

By Sara Malm

The editor of the Vatican’s women’s magazine has accused the Catholic Church of ignoring complaints of rape and sexual abuse made against priests by nuns.

Lucetta Scaraffia is now calling for a commission to be set up by the Vatican to investigate historical and contemporary allegations.

This came after Pope Francis’s public admission that priests have used nuns as ‘sexual slaves’ – and may still be doing so.

‘It is the first time that the pope, but also the church as an institution, has publicly admitted this abuse is taking place, and that’s hugely important,’ Ms Scaraffia, editor of ‘Women Church World’, told AFP.

‘Many complaints have been filed with the Vatican and have not been followed up.

‘I very much hope that a commission will be set up to investigate, and that nuns expert in the issue will be called to take part,’ she told AFP.

‘They could move quickly with trials, and above all raise awareness because silence is what allows rapists to continue to rape,’ she added.

The pontiff on Tuesday said Catholic priests and bishops had been sexually abusing nuns, and that his predecessor Benedict XVI had dissolved a religious order of women because of ‘sexual slavery on the part of priests and the founder’.

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