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.

January 24, 2019

LA Archdiocese settles suit alleging former Redondo Beach priest sexually abused a Covina boy in 2001 and 2002

LOS ANGELES (CA)
City News Service

January 23, 2019

A young man who alleges he was sexually abused by a pastor at the Catholic church he attended in Covina settled his lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, attorneys told a judge Tuesday.

The plaintiff, identified only as John CJ Doe, alleged child sexual abuse and negligence. The lawyers informed Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Holly Kendig that the case was resolved, but no terms were divulged. Kendig heard pretrial motions last week prior to the settlement.

The suit was filed in May 2015 and also named as defendants St. Louise de Marillac Church and the Rev. Chris Cunningham. The plaintiff alleged that Cunningham abused him in 2001 and 2002 when Doe was 12 and 13 years old.

Cunningham served at St. Lawrence Martyr Catholic Church in Redondo Beach from 1998 to 2001 and is accused of abuse there.

The archdiocese issued a statement regarding the Covina settlement.

“The archdiocese did not know of any allegation of sexual misconduct by Father Cunningham until 2015, when the initial claim was filed, and was not aware of the additional claims until recently advised by plaintiffs’ counsel,” the statement read. “Father Cunningham has been inactive and out of ministry since 2005 after the archdiocese received allegations of improper boundary violations concerning Father Cunningham in August 2005.”

The matter was investigated according to archdiocese policy and an announcement concerning the allegations was made at Father Cunningham’s parish informing the parish community, the archdiocese added.

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.

Hartford List of Accused Clerics Includes A Priest Who Also Worked in NYC

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

January 24, 2019

A former Staten Island priest was named as a “credibly accused” cleric yesterday by Catholic officials in Connecticut.

The clergyman is Fr. Edward Tissera, a native of Sri Lanka, who also worked at St. Clare’s on Staten Island from 1997-2000. The parish had a school with around 700 students and a religious education program with roughly 2000 students. Fr. Tissera also went by the names W. Edward Julian Tissera, Edward J. Tissera, Edward Warnakulasuriya, and Edward Warnakulasooriya.

We implore anyone who may have been abused by Fr. Tissera on Staten Island or elsewhere in NY state, or who witnessed or suspected such abuse, to contact the NYPD immediately. Reports should also be made to the NY’s Attorney General by either filling out the online form or calling 1-800-771-7755. Survivors, witnesses and whistle blowers can also contact groups like ours for help and support as they come forward.

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

SNAP accuses Diocese of Belleville of not releasing complete list of ‘credibly accused’ clergy

BELLEVILLE (IL)
Fox 2 News

By Erika Tallan

January 23, 2019

Representatives with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) protested Wednesday in front of the Belleville Archdiocese calling out Belleville Bishop Edward Braxton and his list of “credibly accused” clergy.

SNAP says his list is incomplete because it leaves out 10 names as well as important information like photos, whereabouts, and work histories.

David Clohessy, a SNAP spokesperson, shared a list of 10 names of clergy who have been publicly accused in other communities across the country that he believes should be added to Braxton’s list because they are men who were ordained elsewhere and molested elsewhere but spent time in Belleville and had access to Belleville kids:

Fr. Larry Lorenzoni
Fr. Chester E. Gaiter
Fr. Kenneth J. Roberts
Fr. Fred Lenczycki
Fr. Thomas Gregory Meyer
Fr. Emil Twardochleb
Fr. Michael Charland
Fr. Orville Munie
Fr. Paul Kabat
Fr. James Vincent Fitzgerald
Clohessy said he wanted to publicly reveal the names in the community to prevent any more children from being harmed and to help victims heal.

“We believe very firmly that someone in Belleville area tonight there’s a woman or a man who will drink two bottles of wine or three 6-packs of beer to numb the pain of having being sexually violated by one of these priests and that individual needs and deserves to know that he or she is not alone and it is not their fault and that by making these names public at least some tiny measure of justice and comfort will be brought to them,” said Clohessy.

We attempted to reach the Catholic Diocese of Belleville for comment.

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.

Sen. Holland introduces bill to make church clergy mandatory reporters of suspected sex crimes

LAWRENCE (KS)
Lawrence Journal World

January 24, 2019

State Sen. Tom Holland, D-Baldwin City, introduced a bill Wednesday to require that church clergy and employees be mandatory reporters of sexual assault.

“Clergy leadership are adults that children must be able to trust to keep them safe,” Holland said during an afternoon news conference at the Capitol in Topeka. “(The bill) mandates that they report suspected abuse or neglect to authorities. It is an extra layer of protection for all Kansas children.”

Holland said the bill would add clergy and employees to already existing laws that require teachers, social workers, firefighters, police, psychologists, therapists and other professionals to relay information of possible sexual assaults to law enforcement.

“Many other states, including Missouri, have laws in place that make clergy mandatory reporters,” he said. “It only makes sense that Kansas add it to our law.”

Holland said he expected support from his colleagues to make the bill law.

Holland introduced the bill alongside a family from Jefferson County who allege that their 10-year-old son was sexually assaulted by teenagers at a rural Lawrence church in 2017. The Journal-World has determined that the case was investigated by the Douglas County Sheriff’s Office.

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

Is the Clergy Required to Report Child Sex Abuse? Not in Some States

WASHINGTON (DC)
Governing

January 24, 2019

By Elaine S. Povich

When a Virginia 16-year-old told her parents that their church’s youth leader, Jordan Baird, had been sending her sexually suggestive text messages, they immediately confronted their pastor.

Pastor David Baird, the perpetrator’s father, said the church would investigate, but he did not tell law enforcement authorities — and he wasn’t required under Virginia law to report a suspected case of abuse or face criminal charges. The abuse became physical, and later other girls accused Jordan Baird of assaulting them.

Jordan Baird served eight months in prison after being convicted on five felony counts of indecent liberties with a minor. But church members want state law changed to force pastors like David Baird, who still leads the Life Church in Manassas, Virginia, to join the list of professionals specifically required to report such incidents.

They brought their story to Democratic Virginia state Del. Karrie Delaney, who was a sexual assault crisis counselor in Florida before moving to Virginia.

“Their church was really torn up by the allegation and the fact that the young man who was the perpetrator ended up doing the same thing to another person after the first one wasn’t reported,” Delaney said. “When I sat down with them and heard the story I knew this was something I had to do.”

She and others introduced legislation this year that would add clergy to the state’s list of “mandatory reporters,” people who work with children — such as teachers, counselors and athletic coaches — and who are required by law to report suspicions of child abuse to law enforcement authorities.

While most states have broad laws calling on anyone who learns of child abuse to report it, mandatory reporters can be charged with a crime for failing to do so.

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.

January 23, 2019

Clergy abuse survivors speak out

HARTFORD (CT)
WTNH TV

January 23, 2019

On Tuesday, the Hartford Archdiocese released the names of dozens of priests “credibly” accused of sexual abuse.

For survivors of abuse, those names have opened old wounds, and some claim the names on that list are just the tip of the iceberg.

The group known as SNAP, or, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, came out swinging hard on Wednesday.

A spokesperson called the list put out by the Hartford Archdiocese “incomplete,” and said more suspected abusers remain among the ranks of clergy.

SNAP accused the Catholic Church of withholding information on abusive priests, essentially shielding them from accountability.

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.

Calgary Catholic Priest Charged with Sexual Assault

CALGARY (CANADA)
The Iron Warrior

January 23, 2019

By Mridu Walia

Allegations have surfaced against a Catholic priest working at St. Mark’s Roman Catholic Church in Marlborough, a residential neighbourhood in the city of Calgary, Alberta. The priest, Malcolm Joe D’Souza (age 62) is being accused of sexually assaulting a woman on several occasions in the church about six years ago between September and October 2012.

The victim, an adult woman, reported being sexually touched without consent on several occasions by a priest at the church. Following these allegations, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Calgary also received allegations involving two minors and several adults who were allegedly sexually assaulted by the priest between the years 2010 and 2016, when he was assigned as a pastor at St. Mark’s.

The diocese released an official statement on Saturday, October 27 at 5 PM (MDT) stating, “Bishop McGrattan has removed Fr. Malcolm D’Souza from St. Bernard’s and Assumption parishes and placed him on administrative leave. Fr. D’Souza is currently prohibited from exercising priestly ministry in the Diocese of Calgary”. Fr. D’ Souza was put on administrative leave by the diocese last fall and was arrested on Friday, 11 January 2019. He is next scheduled to appear in court on Thursday, February 21, 2019.
Allegations have surfaced against a Catholic priest working at St. Mark’s Roman Catholic Church in Marlborough, a residential neighbourhood in the city of Calgary, Alberta. The priest, Malcolm Joe D’Souza (age 62) is being accused of sexually assaulting a woman on several occasions in the church about six years ago between September and October 2012.

The victim, an adult woman, reported being sexually touched without consent on several occasions by a priest at the church. Following these allegations, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Calgary also received allegations involving two minors and several adults who were allegedly sexually assaulted by the priest between the years 2010 and 2016, when he was assigned as a pastor at St. Mark’s.

The diocese released an official statement on Saturday, October 27 at 5 PM (MDT) stating, “Bishop McGrattan has removed Fr. Malcolm D’Souza from St. Bernard’s and Assumption parishes and placed him on administrative leave. Fr. D’Souza is currently prohibited from exercising priestly ministry in the Diocese of Calgary”. Fr. D’ Souza was put on administrative leave by the diocese last fall and was arrested on Friday, 11 January 2019. He is next scheduled to appear in court on Thursday, February 21, 2019.

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.

Victims of clergy sexual abuse question Archdiocese of Hartford list of abusive priests

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant

January 23, 2019

By Dave Altimari

A group representing victims of sexual abuse by priests is questioning why as many as six alleged abusers were left off a list of “credibly accused” priests released by the Archdiocese of Hartford this week.

At a press conference Wednesday afternoon in front of the Archdiocese in Hartford, members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) also called on the church to release more information on the whereabouts of living abusers.

On Tuesday, Archbishop Leonard Blair released the names of 48 priests that either had been sued or were “credibly accused” of sex abuse, but Gail Howard, the director of the local chapter of SNAP, said the list is incomplete. As she stood on the steps of St. Joseph’s Cathedral in the shadow of the archdiocese’s offices she held a sign with the names of six clergy members she claims should have been included – priests Donal Collins, Cornelius T. “Neil” Otero, Enrique Vasquez and Walter A. Vichas, and brothers Thomas Sawyer and Michael Benedict Taylor.

The Hartford Archdiocese has released names of priests accused of sexual abuse. Here’s who they are and where they served. »
“SNAP was able to identify six priests within 24 hours, how many others aren’t on there as well?” Howard said. “Where are the priests who are still alive now? You have child molesters trained and assigned to the Catholic Church they are now saying are no longer their responsibility,” Howard said. She called on the church to release photos of all the accused priests.

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

Chicago priest Gary Graf found not guilty of sexual wrongdoing

CHICAGO (IL)
WGN Channel 9

January 23, 2019

By Dina Bair

A Chicago priest accused of sexual wrongdoing has been found not guilty.

Rev. Gary Graf was pastor at San Jose Luis Sanchez Del Rio Parish in Hermosa. A church employee, who was a minor, accused him of inappropriate behavior in July.

The teenager said he once received a phone call from the church secretary saying Graf was attracted to him. He said Graf would also rub his shoulders and once offered him a free car. The teen said he immediately told his parents.

The Archdiocese of Chicago removed Graf from ministry pending an investigation. The Department of Children and Family Services looked into the matter and found no wrongdoing.

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

Former Minneapolis rabbi avoids jail time after being snared in online child-sex sting

St. PAUL (MN)
Pioneer Press

January 16, 2019

By Sarah Norner

A former rabbi at a Jewish learning center in Minneapolis won’t serve jail time for making arrangements online with someone he thought was a child for sex.

Aryeh Cohen, 44, received a stayed 30-day sentence from a Ramsey County district judge at his sentencing hearing Wednesday afternoon.

The St. Louis Park man also was placed on probation for three years, ordered to serve 150 hours of community service, undergo mental health counseling and register as a sex offender.

Cohen was working as a rabbi and director of youth outreach for the Minneapolis Community Kollel when he was arrested last winter as part of a metro-area law enforcement sting aimed at combating online solicitation of sex [https://www.twincities.com/2018/08/02/minneapolis-rabbi-aryeh-cohen-among-those-charged-in-twin-cities-underage-sex-stings] with children. The operation was carried out in advance of Super Bowl LII, which was being held in Minneapolis on Feb. 4.

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.

Hartford Catholic Archdiocese defends list of accused clergy despite omission accusations

HARTFORD (CT)
Fox 61 News

January 23, 2019

By Matt Caron

In the wake of the renewed scandal of clergy sex abuse at the hands of priests, a local victim’s advocacy group is calling out the Hartford archdiocese for what they call a glaring omission. The group revealed six additional names of catholic officials who, they say, have been credibility accused of child sex abuse.

But “credibly” is the key word. It can be interpreted differently. Of these six names, two have been convicted in other countries, and at least two are facing lawsuits. They’ve all been publicly accused.

SNAP is the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. They identified:
-Fr. Donal Collins
-Fr. Cornelius T. “Neil” Otero
-Fr. Enrique Vasquez
-Fr. Walter A. Vichas
-Br. Thomas Sawyer
-Br. Michael Benedict Taylor

SNAP claims these names were left off the list of 48 names released Tuesday by the Hartford Archdiocese. SNAP obtained the names from a database called “Bishop Accountability.” Gail Howard is the Co-Founder of SNAP’s Connecticut Chapter, “The database has been around since the Boston revelations in 2002,” she said.

She called the allegedly incomplete list by the diocese a slap in the face to the 60 survivors in her network and to those who’s alleged abusers were not named. “What about them?” asked Howard. Now they feel even less validated than ever.

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.

Survey assesses views of bishops, diaconate directors on women deacons

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

January 23, 2019

By Mark Pattison

Should the Vatican permit the ordination of women as deacons — a topic that has been studied by a papal commission — a majority of U.S. bishops surveyed said they would expect the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to pave the way to implement it.

There was, though, only a minority of U.S. bishops answering the survey who believe the ordination of women as deacons is theoretically possible.

These were two key findings of a report issued Jan. 22 by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate.

Sixty-two percent of U.S. diocesan diaconate directors, who also were included in the survey, said their local bishop would implement the sacramental ordination of women as deacons, but just 54 percent of the bishops themselves said “yes” when asked “if the Holy See authorizes the sacramental ordination of women as deacons, would you consider implementing it in your diocese?”

Pope Francis established a 16-member commission on the diaconate of women in August 2016. Members’ task was to review the theology and history of the office of deacon in Roman Catholicism and the question of whether women might be allowed to become deacons.The group met over a two-year period and submitted its report to the pope in late 2018. The findings have yet to be released.

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

Former Lincoln priest cited for giving alcohol to teen enters not guilty plea

LINCOLN (NE)
KLKN TV

January 23, 2019

By Brent BonFleur

A former Lincoln priest has waived his right to a formal arraignment and entered a not guilty plea to the courts, after being cited for giving alcohol to a minor.

A former Lincoln priest who was cited by police for giving alcohol to a minor has entered a not guilty plea to the courts.

Charles Townsend, 57, was cited on January 9 for giving alcohol to a 19-year-old.

Townsend was formerly a priest at St. Peter’s Catholic Church in south Lincoln.

In a written statement, Townsend waived his right to a formal arraignment and entered a not guilty plea.

He is scheduled to be back in court in March.

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.

STATES MOVE TO EASE RESTRICTIONS ON CHILD SEX-ABUSE LAWSUITS

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

January 23, 2019

In many states across the U.S., victims of long-ago child sex-abuse have been lobbying for years, often in vain, to change statute of limitation laws that thwart their quest for justice. This year seems sure to produce some breakthroughs, due in part to the midterm election results and recent disclosures about abuse by Roman Catholic priests.

New York state is Exhibit A. The Democrats’ takeover of the formerly Republican-controlled Senate seems almost certain to produce a more victim-friendly policy in place of one of the nation’s most restrictive laws.

Prospects are considered good for similar changes in Rhode Island and New Jersey, and the issue will be raised in Pennsylvania — which became the epicenter of the current abuse crisis in August when a grand jury accused some 300 Catholic priests of abusing more than 1,000 children over seven decades.

Abuse survivors and their allies are once again proposing a two-year window for now-adult victims to sue perpetrators and institutions over claims that would otherwise be barred by time limits. That provision was approved by the Pennsylvania House last year but rejected by the top Republican in the Senate.

Nationwide, only a handful of states — including California, Minnesota, Delaware and Hawaii — have created these “lookback windows” enabling victims to file civil lawsuits against institutions such as churches and youth groups that bore some responsibility for the abuse. California’s one-year window opened in 2003, leading to hundreds of civil actions and more than $1 billion in payouts by the Catholic church; activists and legislators in California hope to create a new lookback window this year.

In California, Minnesota and Delaware, large payouts prompted several dioceses to file for bankruptcy. The Catholic Church, the insurance industry and the Boy Scouts of America have lobbied vigorously against efforts to create lookback windows in other states.

University of Pennsylvania professor Marci Hamilton, an expert on statute-of-limitations reforms, predicts that more states will provide windows despite the vociferous lobbying. She says the Pennsylvania grand jury report has changed the dynamics of the debate, increasing pressure on lawmakers to take victim-friendly actions.

“Before, people were giving the bishops the benefit of the doubt, but this time there was outrage,” said Hamilton, the CEO of Child USA, a think tank focused on preventing child abuse. “Politicians now understand that people are behind the victims.”

In New York, victim advocacy groups and their allies in the Legislature have tried for a dozen years to loosen the statute of limitations.

Last year, the legislature’s Democratic-controlled lower chamber overwhelmingly approved the long-stymied Child Victims Act, which would extend the time frames for pursuing civil and criminal cases in the future, and create a one-year window allowing victims to sue over past abuse claims. Senate Republicans blocked the bill from getting a vote and suggested alternatives that lacked the lookback window.

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

Diocese of Scranton to Start Paying Abuse Victims

SCRANTON (PA)
WNEP Channel 16

January 23 , 2019

By Stacy Lange

The Diocese of Scranton has released the details of how they will pay victims of clergy sexual abuse.

This comes after a few dozen former priests were named as child predators in a statewide grand jury report last summer.

Bishop Joseph Bambera announced this victim’s compensation fund last year, and this week, the diocese laid out how it will all work.

The diocese will be providing the money but how much victims receive will be decided by a law firm from Washington D.C.

People who were sexually abused by priests from the Diocese of Scranton can now apply to receive financial compensation from the diocese.

The diocese appointed a law firm based in Washington D.C. to handle the victims’ compensation fund. Lawyers will determine how much money a victim will receive, and they will answer to an independent local committee which includes former Luzerne County District Attorney Robert Gillespie.

“I think, quite frankly, it helps the church only in that it shows the church is now interested in trying to make sure that this never happens again and that the people that were victims are fairly compensated. It’s not about the church. This is about the victims in this point in time,” said Gillespie.

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.

EDITORIAL: Reassigned St. John’s rector is a familiar story — and a problem for O’Malley

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

January 22, 2019

It looks like it might be the same old game of musical chairs for problem priests — and that’s a problem for Cardinal Sean O’Malley.

Monsignor James P. Moroney , the rector of St. John’s Seminary, was quietly reassigned back to his home diocese in Worcester while an investigation into sexual harassment allegations at the seminary continues. Moroney himself has not been accused of sexual misconduct, but the transfer raises questions about his role in handling the allegations.

“It seems pretty clear that the rector should not have been reassigned before the independent investigation is completed,” said Attorney General Maura Healey. “The public deserves transparency throughout the process.”

In response, Terrence Donilon, a spokesman for O’Malley said: “We agree with the attorney general that the public deserves transparency. We are committed to follow through on the cardinal’s pledge to allow the independent report to be completed and a report made public on the findings along with any recommendations.”

Donilon also said, “we would not draw any conclusions” concerning any connection between the investigation and Moroney’s new assignment.

The probe was launched in August, after two former seminarians made allegations of improper conduct at St. John’s Seminary. The alleged misconduct doesn’t involve minors and doesn’t appear to be criminal in nature, but casts concerns about the church’s internal culture. At that time, Moroney also went on sabbatical leave for the fall semester.

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.

Survivors network calls on bishop to add 10 more names to clergy sex abuse list

BELLEVILLE (IL)
News Democrat

January 23, 2019

By Lexi Cortes

A victims group and advocates say Belleville Bishop Edward K. Braxton’s list of priests “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of children is missing 10 names.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests gathered Wednesday afternoon outside the Diocese headquarters to request that Braxton update the list, and that he release work histories, photos and current locations of every accused priest or deacon.

The group, known as S.N.A.P., said releasing more details could help victims identify them.

Braxton didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

The Diocese previously published a list of 17 members of the clergy who had been removed from ministry because of allegations of sexual abuse. In a statement from December, the Diocese said most of them were removed in the 1990s, after a diocesan review board was formed to investigate allegations from victims.

According to S.N.A.P., the priests all have ties to Southern Illinois and should be added to the Diocese’s list because they are accused of abusing children in other places.

David Clohessy, of S.N.A.P., said he believes they were left off the list because they either weren’t ordained in the Belleville Diocese or they belonged to a different religious order.

But the group says they worked in Belleville, Alton, Henry, Sparta, Godfrey, Toluca, Mendota, Bethany, Campus and Carbondale at one point.

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The February meeting at the Vatican: its nature and scope

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Catholic

January 23, 2019

By Cardinal Blase Cupich

On Nov. 23, 2018, the Vatican announced that Pope Francis asked Cardinal Oswald Gracias, archbishop of Bombay and member of the Council of Cardinals; Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, adjunct secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith; Jesuit Father Hans Zollner, founder and president of the Center for Child Protection at the Pontifical Gregorian University and member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors; and Cardinal Cupich to serve on an organizing committee to plan a historic global meeting at the Vatican, scheduled for Feb. 21-24, 2019, on the topic of “The Protection of Minors in the Church.” Victim-survivors of abuse by clergy and members of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, including lay women, lay men and clergy, are involved in the planning.

Pope Francis has made it clear that this meeting will be an assembly of pastors, not an academic conference. The aim is to provide clear direction and concrete steps so that when the bishops return to their home countries around the world, they will know exactly what the church expects of them regarding the prevention of abuse, the need to provide care for victim-survivors and the obligation to make sure abuse is not covered up.

Participants have received a questionnaire as a means of gathering information that will establish a common starting point, and they have been asked to meet with victim-survivors in their respective countries. The Holy Father has assured us of his presence throughout the meeting, which will include plenary sessions, working groups, prayer, listening to the testimonies of victims, a penitential liturgy and a closing Mass.

The abuse of minors is a global problem that requires a global response by the church. Those participating in the meeting will be called to take responsibility not just for their particular church and the clergy and religious under their care and supervision, but for the church as a whole.

As Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, who will serve as moderator of the meeting, observed in a Dec. 19, 2018, La Civilta Cattolica article:

“The entire church must choose to live in solidarity, above all with the victims, with their families and with the ecclesial communities wounded by the scandals. As the pope has written, ‘If one member suffers, all the members suffer together’ (1 Cor 12:26), and the commitment to protect minors has to be taken on clearly and effectively by the entire community, starting with those in the highest positions of responsibility.”

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The Diocese of C.C. will release list of priests accused of sex abuse next week

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
KRIS TV 6 News

January 23, 2019

By Veronica Flores

The Diocese of Corpus Christi plans to release the names of priests who have been accused of sexually abusing minors at the end of this month.

In October, the Texas Catholic Bishops announced its plan to release the names of priests and clergy members who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

The Diocese of Corpus Christi’s Director of Communications Margie Rivera told KRIS 6 News it plans to release the list at the end of this month.

She also said other dioceses across the state have decided to release their lists at the end of this month as well.

The lists trace abuse back to the 1950s.

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D.C. attorney general proposes making clergy mandated reporters of abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

January 23, 2019

By Fenit Nirappil and Michelle Boorstein

D.C. Attorney General Karl A. Racine (D) is proposing legislation to add clergy to the list of mandatory reporters who must tell authorities about suspected child abuse or neglect, the latest fallout from a growing clergy sexual-abuse scandal in the Catholic Church.

Racine’s bill also would require mandatory reporters to attend training on their responsibilities under the law and would increase penalties for failing to report abuse.

Clergy, teachers, health-care workers and others would face up to $2,500 in fines and 180 days in jail upon the first failure to report.

“Teachers, health professionals, and clergy have a special responsibility to protect children, but far too often abuse goes unreported or is covered up,” Racine said in a statement. “To help stop child abuse in the District, this bill requires more adults to report it and trains them on how to spot.”

Clergy are mandatory reporters in 28 states, according to the Children’s Bureau, an arm of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

Racine’s office has been meeting with faith groups in the nation’s capital to discuss his proposal. His aides originally considered mandatory reporting of sexual abuse even if accusations were revealed in confession — a sacrament in Catholic doctrine for parishioners to seek forgiveness for their sins.

But the bill has an exception in such circumstances, saying ministers are not required to report abuse if “the basis for their knowledge or belief is the result of a confession or penitential communication made by a penitent directly to the minister.”

Texas, West Virginia and a few other states do not exclude the confessional in mandatory-reporting laws.

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Priests accused of abuse formerly pastored in Boone

BOONE (NC)
Watauga Democrat

January 23, 2019

By Anna Oakes

The Maryland Province Jesuits and Diocese of Charlotte have said that two Catholic priests who pastored Boone’s St. Elizabeth of the Hill Country in the 1990s are “credibly” accused of sexually abusing minors.

H. Cornell Bradley, who now is 80, is among a list of priests named last month by the Maryland Province Jesuits. Bradley had “multiple allegations of sexual abuse” against him in Ocean City, Md., and Washington, D.C., in the 1970s and 1980s, according to the province, a Roman Catholic order of 17,000 priests and brothers.

“Today, the Maryland Province of the Society of Jesus is releasing the names of Jesuits from our province, and other Jesuits who have served the province, who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors since 1950,” said Father Robert Hussey, provincial superior of the Maryland Province, in a statement Dec. 17.

“We are deeply sorry for the harm we have caused to victims and their families. We also apologize for participating in the harm that abuse has done to our church, a church that we love and that preaches God’s care for all, especially the most vulnerable among us,” said Hussey. “The people of God have suffered, and they rightly demand transparency and accountability. We hope that this disclosure of names will contribute to reconciliation and healing.”

The list of names released by the province did not indicate if any of the allegations were reported to law enforcement.

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St. Martins priest on leave for alleged misconduct

JEFFERSON CITY (MO)
News Tribune
.
January 11th, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Jefferson City has received an allegation of inappropriate behavior by the Rev. Mark Porterfield, pastor of St. Martin Catholic Church in St. Martins and judicial vicar for the diocese.

A statement from the diocese provided to parishioners and staff and shared with the News Tribune on Friday reads: “While the allegation does not involve a minor, it does fall within the protocol of the diocese for clergy conduct and requires further consultation and investigation.”

Diocese officials said Porterfield is on administrative leave while the canonical investigation is underway. He is not allowed to function publicly as a priest while on administrative leave.

The Rev. Chris Aubuchon, who serves as chaplain at Helias Catholic High School and diocesan director of vocations, has been appointed temporary pastoral administrator of St. Martin Catholic Church.

Porterfield’s duties as judicial vicar have been re-assigned to various personnel, with Monsignor Gregory Higley continuing in the position of adjutant judicial vicar.

The judicial vicar serves as the chief church lawyer for the diocese, diocese officials explained. He oversees the Tribunal, which is the church court. Most cases before a modern Tribunal deal with marriages — most of which are marriages in which the parties have received a civil divorce for the civil marriage but also need an annulment regarding the sacramental marriage.

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Milwaukee DA Calls For Statewide Investigation Into Church’s Response To Sex Abuse Claims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Wisconsin Public Radio

January 23, 2019

By Mary Kate McCoy

Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm is calling for a statewide investigation into the Catholic Church’s response to allegations of child sexual abuse over the past 50 years.

The call comes at a time when dioceses across the country are under heightened pressure to release names of priests with credible accusations of abuse against them.

Just last week the Diocese of Green Bay released the names of 46 priests who are known to have committed sexual offenses against minors dating back to 1906. Green Bay Police Chief Andrew Smith urged victims of abuse to go directly to law enforcement officials — not the church — Friday.

Chisholm told the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel he hopes to team up with Attorney General Josh Kaul and district attorneys across the state to review decades of clergy abuse allegations.

Peter Isley, a clergy abuse survivor and founding member of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said the likelihood of an investigation is higher than it ever has been.

We’re really hopeful, victims and survivors and our families in Wisconsin”We’re really hopeful, victims and survivors and our families in Wisconsin,” he said.

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Rep. again introduces bill that would give sex-abuse victims more time to file lawsuits

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

January 23, 2019

By Katherine Gregg

Spurred by the molestation of her sister by their parish priest in West Warwick when they were both children, state Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee has lined up more than 50 co-sponsors for her reworked bill to extend the time that child victims have, after reaching adulthood, to lodge civil suits against their abusers.

The Rhode Island Catholic Diocese successfully blocked an earlier version of McEntee’s bill in 2018. The church insisted on limiting the application of the proposed law to “prospective” cases of alleged abuse, which McEntee deemed unacceptable. The bill died in the final hours of last year’s session, after hours-long hearings in both the House and the Senate that drew speaker after speaker to the Rhode Island State House with tales of abuse by their family priests and other trusted elders in positions of authority.

The reworked bill which McEntee, D-South Kingstown, introduced on Tuesday would extend Rhode Island’s seven-year statute of limitations on the filing of civil suits against the perpetrators of sex abuse of children to 35 years, to more closely mirror the law in Massachusetts.

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EXCLUSIVE: Revised, tougher Child Victims Act set to be introduced in NYS Legislature

ALBANY (NY)
New York Daily News

January 22,2 019

By Kenneth Lovett

State lawmakers will soon introduce a revised, tougher bill designed to make it easier for victims of child victims abuse to seek justice as adults, the Daily News has learned.

The latest draft obtained by the Daily News would raise the top age that a child sex abuse survivor can bring a civil lawsuit to 55, up from the current 23.

Gov. Cuomo last week and a previous version of the bill in the Legislature had sought to raise the age to 50.

But with research showing that many survivors don’t begin dealing with what happened to them until later in life, lawmakers ultimately decided giving them even more time to bring a civil lawsuit would be appropriate, Senate bill sponsor Brad Hoylman (D-Manhattan) explained.

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Archdiocese of Hartford makes major sex abuse disclosures

HARTFORD (CT)
Journal Inquirer

January 23, 2019

By Alex Wood

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Hartford on Tuesday made a major disclosure of information about sexual abuse by clergy, including naming 48 priests it says have been the object of lawsuits or legal settlements — or who have been “credibly accused” of abuse occurring in the archdiocese.

Archbishop Leonard P. Blair took an introspective and penitent tone in a statement he issued about the abuse that has occurred in the archdiocese since its establishment in 1953.

“It is a cause of profound sorrow and of soul-searching for me that we bishops, the church’s pastors, have often failed to grasp the spiritual and moral devastation that results from sexual abuse, either in a misguided attempt to ‘save’ an abuser’s vocation or to shield the church from scandal,” Blair wrote in an open letter to “the Catholic faithful” and other Connecticut residents.

“Whatever institutional worries present themselves to me as a bishop as a result of abuse, it takes only one personal meeting with a victim survivor for me to see that any institutional concerns are insignificant compared to the deep spiritual and psychological wounds and suffering that can and often do result from sexual abuse by a priest,” he continued.

But at the same time, the materials released by the archdiocese make clear its belief that it has made significant strides in dealing with the problem in recent decades.

No Archdiocese of Hartford priest currently serving in the ministry in the archdiocese has “had credible allegations of child sexual abuse asserted” against him, Blair wrote in the open letter.

Elsewhere in the materials released Tuesday, the archdiocese defined a “credible claim” as “one that, under the circumstances known at the time of determination, would cause a prudent person to conclude that there was a significant possibility that the incident occurred.”

The archdiocese went on to say that its public identification of the priests “does not necessarily mean that the accusation has been proven in a court of law or definitively shown to have occurred through a formal process, or has been admitted by the person accused.

“It is also important to keep in mind that the priests who died before any allegation was made against them did not have an opportunity to respond to the allegations,” the archdiocese continued.

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Ex-Radnor Catholic School Priest Investigated For Sex Abuse

RADNOR (PA)
Patch National

January 14, 2019

By Kara Seymour

A priest who once worked at Archbishop Carroll High School is on administrative leave after new allegations he sexually abused a minor.

A priest who once served at a Radnor Catholic school has been placed on administrative leave following new allegations he sexually abused a minor several decades ago, the Archdiocese of Philadelphia announced this week.

Reverend Monsignor Joseph L. Logrip, 73, who is now on administrative leave amid the investigation, served at Archbishop Carroll High School in Radnor from 1983 to 1990, according to the Archdiocese.

Law enforcement is now involved in the investigation, and the Archdiocese said it will cooperate fully with authorities.

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Priests who served in Chester County face new sex charges

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Digital First Media

January 13, 2019

A Catholic priest who served at Bishop Shanahan in the early 1990s was found to be “not suitable for ministry” following an investigation that he sexually abused a minor in the 1980s, and a Catholic priest who served at Saints Philip and James in Exton has been placed on administrative leave after a new claim that he sexually abused a minor in the 1980s.

A Philadelphia-area priest, Rev. John F. Meyers, 64, was also found to be not suitable for ministry following sexual abuse allegations, the Philadelphia Archdiocese announced Sunday, noting that is referring the allegation to law enforcement.

The Rev. Raymond Smart, 74, was employed at Bishop Shanahan High School from 1991 to 1995, when it was located in West Chester, and the Rev. Monsignor Joseph L. Logrip, 73, served at Saints Philip and James in Exton from 2007 to 2008.

The allegations comes on the heels of a Pennsylvania grand jury report that found Roman Catholic leaders in Pennsylvania had covered up decades of child sex abuse dating back to the 1940s involving hundreds of priests and more than 1,000 victims.

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Aiia Maasarwe’s sister calls out violence against women in emotional Instagram posts

AUSTRALIA
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

January 21, 2019

By Jack Kerr

A sister of killed exchange student Aiia Maasarwe has taken to social media to express her grief over the death, and her contempt for the manner in which it is alleged to have happened.
“A little girl with BIG dreams, that how Aiia was,” Noor Maasarwe posted on Instagram alongside a painting of the words “Dare to dream”, which was done by her sister in 2014.

“She was living a dream in Melbourne, a dream that ended up being [worse] than a nightmare.”

The body of the 21-year-old Arab-Israeli student was found by passers-by near a tram stop in Bundoora, in Melbourne’s north, shortly after dawn last Wednesday.

Police allege she was raped and murdered on her way home from a comedy club in North Melbourne shortly after midnight. They have charged 20-year-old Codey Herrmann.

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Church scandal hits close to home

CINCINNNATI (OH)
Xavier Newswire

January 23, 2019

By Trevor McKenzie

A report issued last month by the Midwest Province of Jesuits revealed that no members of the society currently associated with Xavier face allegations of sexual abuse of minors.

The Province’s Dec. 17 report listed all Jesuit priests with established allegations of sexual abuse of minors since 1955 to a nation of believers and non-believers alike wrestling with the consequences of the 60-year scandal.  

Although no one currently associated with the university was named, four individuals who had at one point been assigned to Xavier appeared in the report: Fr. Mark Finan, S.J., (at Xavier 1956-1958), Fr. David McCarthy, S.J., (1956-1961), Fr. Donald Nastold, S.J, (1979-1991) and most notably Fr. Edward O’Brien, S.J., who was associated with Xavier from 1950-1983 and had a scholarship named for him after his death in 1983. The scholarship is no longer offered by the university. 

Of those named in the report, only O’Brien was the subject of allegations for incidents that occurred while serving in a position at Xavier. Those allegations did not arise until 1990, seven years after his death.  

According to a statement released the same day by Fr. Michael Graham, president, two other individuals formerly associated with Xavier — Br. Jerome Pryor, S.J., (at Xavier 1974-2002) and Fr. Louis Bonacci, S.J., (1994-1999) — were also named in allegations of past sexual improprieties.  

Pryor was removed from Xavier in 2002 after reports of improprieties with students. However, allegations involving Pryor did not involve abuse of minors, and he therefore did not appear in the Province’s report. Bonacci was permanently removed from ministry by the Maryland Province in 2011 following allegations of misconduct with a minor in the late 1970s, prior to his time at Xavier. 

The individuals implicated in the report served in multiple capacities at Xavier, such as faculty and ministry roles.

The report was released four months after an 18-month Pennsylvania grand jury report claimed more than 300 clergy had sexually abused more than 1,000 children throughout several decades.  

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Jesuit priests and brothers named in sexual assault accusations

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Loyolan

Januaary 23, 2019

By Isabella Murillo

Over winter break, Jesuits West Province revealed in a press release the names of priests and brothers who had been accused of sexual assault, 11 of whom had worked at LMU in the past 50 years.

The priests were found to have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of “minors and vulnerable adults,” according to a letter sent to students’ emails from the Office of the President, naming all 11 priests.

The names of the priests and the years they were active at LMU are as follows:

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Bethany man named to Diocese of Buffalo sex abuse task force

BUFFALO (NY)
Batavia News

January 23, 2019

By Scott Desmit

A Bethany man who helped form Genesee Justice and whose work with what was known as ‘restorative justice’ earned him national attention has been named to a newly-formed adult sexual abuse and misconduct task force for the Diocese of Buffalo.

Dennis J. Wittman was one of five people named to the task force, which will review and recommend policies and procedures for “assessing and responding to allegations of sexual misconduct with adults by priests, deacons, religious and lay employees,” according to a news statement issued by the Diocese.

“The Task Force will ensure that the diocesan policies for adult abuse and misconduct complement the existing diocesan policy on child abuse,” the statement says. “In addition, the Task Force will review the investigation framework of sexual abuse allegations to ensure compliance with federal and state law, canon law, and the Diocese of Buffalo Code of Conduct to ensure the protection of all of God’s people.”

The Diocese, which includes Catholic churches in Genesee, Orleans and Wyoming counties, has been under strain as it has dealt with a number of allegations in recent years about priests molesting children. In 2018, the Diocese released a list of 78 priests that had been accused and those where allegations were substantiated.

Wittman, of Francis Road, was serving as town of Bethany supervisor in 1981 when he was asked to help form what is now known as Genesee Justice.

At the time it was known as Community Service/Victim Assistance.

Wittman served for more than 25 years, seeing the program grow and gaining national attention for his efforts at restorative justice, which focuses on rehabilitating offenders through reconciliation with the victims and the community.

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Shame: Fordham Releases List of Abusive Priests

NEW YORK (NY)
The Fordham Ram

January 23, 2019

By Collin Bonnell

On Jan. 15, the Office of the President sent out an email containing a “Joint Message from Fordham’s President and the Chairman of the Board of Trustees,” concerning the list of Jesuits accused of sexually abusing minors released earlier that day by the Northeast Province of the Society of Jesus. The email contained the names of nine Jesuits who had ties to Fordham University and Fordham Prep, and the allegations against these priests reveal a pattern of gross negligence by various parties, including Fordham University, Fordham Prep and the Northeast Province of Jesuits, which endangered members of the Fordham community.

Mirroring a larger trend within the Catholic Church, these priests, whose affiliations with Fordham University and Fordham Prep span six decades, were moved around after accusations against them arose and shifted to different positions so as to not draw public attention. The story of one of the accused, Rev. Philip Conroy, S.J., exemplifies this trend.

According to an article by WKBW, Conroy was accused of groping two female minors in the mid-1970s while employed by Fordham University. Conroy left Fordham after the events took place and was sent to Canisius College, where he became Director of Campus Ministry. The Jesuit remained at Canisius until 2002, when the Buffalo Diocese was informed of the allegations and Conroy was then moved to the Jogues Retreat Center near Poughkeepsie, where he is still a priest and, despite the allegations against him, remains in close proximity to the laity.

While the revelations concerning Conroy are troubling, the circumstances surrounding the relationship between Fordham and two other Jesuits on the list, Rev. Roy Drake, S.J. and Rev. Eugene O’Brien, S.J., were sufficiently incriminating to push two activist groups—the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests and BishopAccountability.com—to accuse Fordham Preparatory School of sheltering child molesters in 2008.

The first of these priests, Drake, a former science teacher at Fordham Prep, was accused of raping the friend of a Fordham Prep student while on a ski trip in 1968. That year, Drake left Fordham Prep, but later returned to Fordham as a resident of Murray-Weigel Hall, until he was sent to a “treatment center” for troubled priests in 2006. The church has refused to offer Drake’s accuser an apology.

The other, O’Brien, served as the president of Fordham Prep from 1960 until 1979 and allegedly molested a minor in the early 1970s. O’Brien returned to Fordham in 1986, when he joined the staff of the university, where he would remain until 1991 and during which time he served as vice president for community relations.

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Pittsburgh Diocese’s Independent Reconciliation Compensation Program Goes Live

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA TV

January 22, 2019

By David Highfield

The Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese program to help sexual abuse victims went live on Tuesday.

There is no limit on how big cash settlements can be but there are some guidelines. Any victims who accept money will give up the right to take the church to court later on.

The Independent Reconciliation Compensation Program, for people who were victims of child sex abuse by clergy is the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese, is now live.

It’s the latest in the diocese response to a scathing grand jury report, which showed sexual abuse by priests. They’ve also held listening sessions, including one last month in Jefferson Hills.

“I do think the Holy Spirit needs to come and clean up this church,” one parishioner said.

Under the compensation program, claims must be submitted by the end of September. New allegations must be registered by the end of July. People who have already settled cannot participate.

Two members of a Washington D.C. law firm will determine eligibility and compensation offers. One of them spoke at a press conference last month.

“There’s no protracted litigation, no roll of the dice in the courtroom, no uncertainty as to whether the claim will be upheld on appeal or anything like that,” settlement attorney Kenneth Feinberg said.

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PRIEST ADDRESSES DIOCESE BANKRUPTCY

ROCHESTER (MN)
KIMT 3 TV

January 23, 2019

By Isabella Basco

The Diocese of Winona Rochester is facing 121 claims of child sexual abuse by clergy and while the process for the bankruptcy is still happening, one priest is speaking out about the Church’s scandals.

“Now, they are working towards settlements and towards a final summary of all the claims,” Father Jason Kern, the Vocations Director for the Diocese said.

Kern says now is a time of healing for the Church which has been rocked by child sexual abuse claims.

“The church is broken, it has broken members and leaders like myself who are not perfect and we are all in need of healing,” Kern said.

Kern is upfront about the fact that the claims have also hurt him.

“I suffer with them in this,” Kern said. “It’s been difficult, all of the allegations and working through these things for what feels like way too long.”

Selina Leang is active in the Church and supports the Diocese’s move.

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Columna de Óscar Contardo: Los santos en la corte

[Oscar Contardo Column: The saints in court]

CHILE
La Tercera

January 19, 2019

By Óscar Contardo

Los sacerdotes jesuitas dan entrevistas para diagnosticar el estado de las cosas, para criticar a otros sacerdotes, no para dar explicaciones sobre las miserias que guardan puertas adentro.

Nadie nunca supo nada. Nadie habló. A nadie le contó ningún apoderado lo que sucedía cuando el jesuita Jaime Guzmán Astaburuaga invitaba periódicamente a alumnos adolescentes a un fin de semana al Cajón del Maipo. Nadie nunca dijo que hacerlos desnudarse, sacarles fotos y confesarlos en su falda para preguntarles detalles de cómo, cuándo y en qué pensaban mientras se masturbaban podía ser inapropiado. Eso era diversión, era festivo. El cura Guzmán era el encargado de captar vocaciones, director espiritual de aspirantes, seminaristas y exalumnos del Colegio San Ignacio El Bosque. Tenía un apodo entre los estudiantes, un nombre vulgar con el que el sacerdote se refería al pene. Hablaba mucho de genitales.

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Laity must defend the faith not wait for bishops to ‘get their act together’, says Dreher

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

January 23, 2019

By Sarah MacDonald

Best-selling author and conservative thinker Rod Dreher has urged the Irish laity not to passively wait for their bishops to “get their act together” but to speak out and defend the faith themselves.

In an address at University Church in Dublin, hosted by the Iona Institute and the Notre Dame Newman Centre for Faith and Reason, the author of ‘The Benedict Option’ told a crowd of 350 that Catholics in Ireland that he knew “from bitter experience that the institutions of the Catholic Church cannot be relied on to teach, defend, and evangelise for the faith”.

The popular blogger and editor at ‘The American Conservative’, who is author of several books, told The Tablet that it would be “a fatal mistake to sit back and wait for them [the bishops] to get their acts together”.

“Pray that they do but in the meantime faithful Catholics must catechise themselves and their children. They must act themselves to deepen their experience of faith through prayer, the sacraments, Bible reading, and embracing spiritual disciplines.”

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Ireland: Archbishop Martin Consults Faithful Ahead of Rome Summit

ROME (ITALY)
Zenit

January 22, 2019

Archbishop Eamon Martin, President of the Irish Episcopal Conference, in a letter issued January 22, 2019, has invited the faithful in Ireland to share their thoughts on abuse ahead of a universal Church summit on safeguarding in Rome next month.

As well as consulting with victims and survivors, Archbishop Eamon is also inviting Catholics, in an open letter, to pray, reflect and offer feedback on a number of key questions:

How would you describe the present situation regarding sexual abuse of minors in the Catholic Church in Ireland?
How would you describe the level of awareness of this topic among the public?
In your opinion, what are the greatest risk factors for the sexual abuse of minors in Ireland?
What are the factors in Ireland that contribute to a lack of adequate response by the Church in dealing with child sexual abuse?
What are the most effective preventive measures that the Catholic Church in Ireland has adopted to protect children from sexual abuse in the Church?
If you had one key message to communicate to the meeting in Rome on this issue, what would it be?

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Eric Schmitt should fix Josh Hawley’s feeble Catholic Church investigation

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Kansas City Star

January 22, 2019

By David Clohessy

Under pressure from the attorney general, every bishop in the state released or expanded their lists of priests who are proven, admitted or credibly accused abusers. Some 185 names are now public.

Unfortunately, that state was Illinois, not Missouri.

In Missouri, only two of four bishops have divulged such names, and those bishops run the smallest dioceses. Yet Catholics — and all Missourians — recently learned the names of 35 clerics who have worked in the Jefferson City diocese who have also been credibly accused of molesting children, as reported in The Sedalia Democrat.

And to the south, we recently learned the names of three more similarly-accused clerics who have worked in the Diocese of Springfield–Cape Girardeau, bringing the total there to 12.

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One-third of U.S. bishops believe church ‘should’ ordain women as deacons

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

January 22, 2019

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

As Pope Francis mulls a report about women deacons in the early church, a new survey reveals that at least when it comes to U.S. bishops, support for ordaining women as deacons remains uneven.

According to a report released by the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University on Jan. 22, just 33 percent of bishops in the United States think the church “should” ordain women as deacons.

Late last year, a papal commission wrapped up its work studying whether the early church ordained women as deacons and passed its findings on to Pope Francis. Two of the commission’s 12 members—Phyllis Zagano and Bernard Pottier, S.J.—said in an interview with America last month that their own research supports the idea that women were ordained deacons in the early church.

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Christians Must Face The Reality Of Rape Culture

Patheos blog

January 23, 2019

By Beth Allison Barr

I am so pleased to welcome guest blogger Leslie Hahner, PhD, to The Anxious Bench today. Leslie is a brilliant thinker, writer, and professor. I know this because we have been in an interdisciplinary writing group together since 2011. She has two recently published books, To Become an American: Immigrants and Americanization Campaigns of the Early Twentieth Century and Make America Meme Again: The Rhetoric of the Alt-right. Her current book project, which she is writing with fellow Baylor professor Scott Varda, focuses on how individuals deny the existence and pervasiveness of sexual assault. Today, Leslie Hahner offers her insights on what the church is called to consider.

In October 2017, actress and activist Alyssa Milano tweeted a note that asked those who had “been sexually harassed or assaulted” to reply “‘me too’” to her tweet. Within one day, the “post received more than 38,000 comments, 13,000 retweets and 27,000 likes.” The responses then spread from Twitter to Facebook and Instagram. The expanse of the problem, as Sophie Gilbert wrote in the New York Times, could be grasped once the public woke “up to a feed dominated by women discussing their experiences of harassment and assault.” Inspired by Tarana Burke, the hashtag had spawned a movement, a public insistence from thousands that sexual violence was pervasive, systematic, and unabated by current measures of justice. Sparked by the vicious actions of Harvey Weinstein and others, the #metoo movement began to demonstrate the expanse of rape within a culture that enabled the perpetuation of sexual violence.

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ADAMCZYK: Sacred is in the mind of the beholder

NIAGRA (NY)
Niagra Gazette

January 23, 2019

By Ed Adamczyk

Local agencies of the Catholic Church regularly reveal lists of priests, many long dead, accused of sexual abuse against the young. While I never hung around with many Catholic priests, one I once knew recently appeared on such a list. No, he never got me; I have no claim against him, any more than anyone I have ever met who pitched his or her own brand of salvation.

The release of lists of suspected abusers using the church to cover their sins is not new, nor is it confined to Western New York. Australia, for example, is currently reeling from revelations about several high-ranking men within the Catholic hierarchy there, and the resulting civil trials. Yes, out there, courts are actively going after suspected sex abusers in the church.

Any large and entrenched organization can, upon investigation, expose irregularities conflicting with its reason for being. Someone once said that employment anywhere for a period of one year qualifies a person to say “You won’t believe what goes on in there.” It goes for General Motors, the U.S. government, any church or school, and notably for families. It goes for any outfit hiding incidents contrary to law or to its mission.

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‘Credibly accused’: Complete list of priests named by the Archdiocese of Hartford

WATERBURY (CT)
Republican American

January 22, 2019

The following priests were accused of sexual abuse, according to the Archdiocese of Hartford:

Altermatt, Gregory – Ordination 3/27/1976
Assistant Pastor, Incarnation, Wethersfield
Assistant Pastor, St. Timothy, West Hartford
Assistant Pastor, St. Ann, Waterbury
Chaplain, St. Mary Hospital, Waterbury
In residence, Our Lady of Victory, West Haven
Chaplain, St. Raphael Hospital, New Haven
Removed from ministry, 2/3/2012
A civil case is pending

Buckley, Joseph – Ordination 5/21/1932
Assistant Pastor, St. Vincent, East Haven
Assistant Pastor, St. Agnes, Niantic
Pastor, St. Therese, Stony Creek (Branford)
Administrator, St. Mary, Newington
Pastor, St. Mary, Newington
Retired 5/14/1970
Died in 1975 before the single claim against him was received in 2003.

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January 22, 2019

Jesuit Sexual Abuse Scandal Shakes University

NEW YORK (NY)
Fordham University Observer

January 22, 2019

By Courtney Brogle

In a statement released on Jan. 15, University President Rev. Joseph M. McShane, S.J., and Chairman of the Board of Trustees Robert Daleo identified nine Jesuit priests credibly accused of sexual assault with connections to the Fordham community.

The statement was prompted by the Northeastern Province of the Society of Jesus, who released a comprehensive list earlier that day of Jesuits with credible allegations of abuse upon minors. Among those listed in the Northeast Province, five Jesuits were assigned by the Province to serve at Fordham University or Fordham Preparatory School.

Additionally, McShane and Daleo disclosed four other Jesuits connected to the university or preparatory school with credible accusations against them. These men were named on lists prepared by the four other American provinces.

The ties between Fordham and the nine men in question date as far back as 1936. Each offender, while employed at Fordham, interacted with students in some capacity: as professors, campus ministry participants and even residents in University housing.

In addition, several men listed by the Northeast Province resided at Murray-Weigel Hall, the Jesuit nursing home located adjacent to Fordham College at Rose Hill property. The Northeast Province owns and operates this facility; at Fordham’s request, Jesuits with known allegations against them that still reside there were removed.

The statement to the Fordham community openly condemned the actions of these Jesuits. “As the sexual abuse scandal that has engulfed the Catholic Church unfolds,” McShane and Daleo’s joint statement read, “it is incumbent on all of us who are leaders at affected institutions to support the survivors and to acknowledge the inalterable harm that was inflicted on these brave survivors and their families.”

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Priest accused of sex abuse scheduled to change plea

RAPID CITY (SD)
Rapid City Journal

January 22, 2019

By Arielle Zionts

The former Rapid City priest accused of sexually touching a 13-year-old girl is expected to change his not guilty plea next month.

John Praveen, 38, is scheduled for a change of plea hearing 9:30 a.m. on Feb. 5 at the state court in Rapid City, according to court records.

It’s unclear whether he plans to plead guilty, no contest or make some other kind of plea. Messages to Praveen’s lawyer and the Pennington County State’s Attorney were not immediately returned.

Praveen previously pleaded not guilty to two charges of having sexual contact with a 13-year-old girl, a class 3 felony that carries a punishment of up to 15 years in prison on each count.

Before his duties were suspended, Praveen had worked at the Cathedral of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Rapid City since June. Before that, he served at churches in Eagle Butte. Praveen joined the diocese for a 10-year assignment in December 2017 after serving in India, where he was born.

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Vatican: No prior accusation of sex abuse against Argentine

ORáN (ARGENTINA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 22, 2019

By NICOLE WINFIELD

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VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Vatican is insisting that there were no accusations of sexual abuse against an Argentine bishop close to Pope Francis when he resigned suddenly in 2017 and was promoted to a job at the Vatican.

Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti repeated Tuesday that the Vatican only received the first accusations of alleged sexual abuse by Archbishop Gustavo Zanchetta a few months ago.

Zanchetta’s former deputy, the Rev. Juan Jose Manzano, told The Associated Press last week that he had sent the Vatican information in 2015 and 2017 of alleged inappropriate sexual behavior by Zanchetta that included taking naked selfies and reports that he engaged in harassment and misconduct with adult seminarians.

Manzano told the AP those reports didn’t constitute formal canonical accusations of sexual abuse, but were merely reports of behavior that he, another former vicar general and the rector of the seminary in Oran, northern Argentina, considered important to bring to the Vatican’s attention.

He said he didn’t believe there had been any cover-up and that he considered Francis a victim of Zanchetta’s “manipulation.”

Gisotti didn’t directly address or dispute Manzano’s reports in his statement Tuesday.

“In reference to the articles published recently by several news sources, as well as to some misleading reconstructions, I resolutely repeat what was stated this past 4 January. In addition, I emphasize that the case is being studied and when this process is over, information will be forthcoming regarding the results,” the statement said.

In his Jan. 4 statement, Gisotti confirmed that Zanchetta was under preliminary investigation for alleged sexual abuse, but said that the accusations were first made in the autumn of 2018. He said the reasons for Zanchetta’s resignation were due to his difficult, tense relations with the Oran clergy and inability to govern them.

He said the current bishop of Oran was gathering testimony that hadn’t yet arrived at the Vatican’s bishops’ office, and that Zanchetta would refrain from working during the preliminary investigation.

Manzano’s comments to the AP, in an on-camera interview and a subsequent email, undermined the Vatican’s assertion that Zanchetta had only faced accusations of authoritarianism and difficulty governing his clergy at the time of his July 2017 resignation, since Manzano said the reports concerned allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior and alleged misconduct with seminarians.

After accepting Zanchetta’s resignation Aug. 1, 2017, Francis in December that year named him to a newly created position of “assessor” in the Vatican’s office of financial management, APSA.

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Jesuits’ list did not reveal accused priest who served in Norwich Diocese

NEW LONDON (CT)
The Day

January 22. 2019

By Joe Wojtas

A third Jesuit priest “credibly accused” of sexually assaulting minors, served for years in the Norwich Diocese.

But when the USA Northeast Jesuit Province released a list last week of 50 Northeast priests “credibly accused” of sexually assaulting minors since 1950, the Rev. Eugene Orteneau was not listed as serving at St. Thomas Aquinas Church in Storrs. In 2007, the Norwich Diocese agreed to pay $300,000 of a $1.2 million settlement — the Jesuits paid the remainder — to Joshua Heathcote of Coventry, who claimed Orteneau repeatedly molested him at St. Thomas Aquinas beginning when he 16.

Instead, the Jesuits only listed Orteneau as serving at Bishop Connolly High School in Fall River, Mass., from 1976 to ’78 and at Cheverus High School in Portland, Maine, from 1978 to ’79.

Rev. Robert Pecoraro, the president of Cheverus, posted a message on the school website last week saying Orteneau was among seven accused priests who served at the school. He wrote that Orteneau was accused of sexual assaulting a minor during the time frame of 1992 to ’95.

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Pittsburgh Diocese’s victim compensation program goes live

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WTAE TV

January 22, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh said its “Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program” for those who suffered child sexual abuse by clergy went live Tuesday.

The program was created in the wake of the Pennsylvania grand jury report on clergy sex abuse that was released in August.

“It is about recognizing the harm done by past abuse and continuing our pledge of taking every appropriate action to prevent the occurrence of future abuse,” Bishop David Zubik said in a written statement Tuesday.

“It should be noted that no funds for this program will come from Our Campaign for the Church Alive!, Catholic Charities, parishes, schools, or any other funds designated for a specific use by the donor, nor have such funds been used in the past to compensate victims,” the diocese said.

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Letter to the Catholic Bishops

Patheos blog

January 22, 2019

By David Russell Mosley

Dearest Readers,
Over the past few months I have been part of a group which existed for the express purpose of creating a public letter to the Catholic Bishops. Before the current news cycle makes us forget other problems within our Church, I want to make sure this message gets out. I did not contribute to any of the text, I won’t try to make that claim, Dr. Holly Taylor Coolman of Providence College has been the chief architect. But I am glad I was a part of this from early on. The idea is to get as many signatures as possible. We want this letter to get national coverage. Not to spread anyone’s name, but to ensure that the Bishops respond.

Below is the text of the letter. I ask that you read it and prayerfully consider signing:

Dear fathers and brothers in Christ,

We write with profoundly heavy hearts. The latest wave of revelations regarding sexual abuse in the Church, and the way in which that abuse was covered up and made possible, has pushed us to a breaking point.

Abuse and the enabling of abuse are not simply individual sins to be forgiven. They are a radical and ongoing affront to the Church’s witness to the Gospel. They communicate contempt for the people of God, and particularly the most vulnerable members.

As bishops, successors to the Apostles, you have the roles of teaching, governing and sanctifying God’s people. The response to many cases of reported abuse represents failure to accomplish these on the most fundamental level. We are asking you now to take responsibility as a pastoral body for this failure.

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Archdiocese of Hartford Releases List of 48 Clerics Accused of Abuse

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

January 22, 2019

Today the Archdiocese of Hartford has released a list of 48 clerics that have been accused of abuse.

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

However, we believe that Archbishop Leonard Blair could have included more information that would be helpful to survivors. In the list released today, the Archbishop omits photos and the current whereabouts of those accused who are still alive. While he does provide a list of assignments in the Archdiocese, he does not include the dates of those assignments. He also neglects to provide information about when the allegations were received, except in those cases where the priest died prior to the victim coming forward.

Where these priests are now is important, as it provides a warning to those nearby about a potential threat to young people. That is the best step the bishop could take to prevent more horrific crimes against more innocent children.

How these clerics looked in the past, and when they worked in a particular parish, is important because that information helps victims identify those who hurt them. It usually takes decades for survivors to come forward. The victim might only recall the priest’s name, what parish he/she attended when the abuse occurred, and a face. Even parents who were long-time parishioners may have trouble remembering a clergyman who only worked in their parish for a short time.

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Diocese of Scranton launches Independent Survivors Compensation Program

SCRANTON (PA)
Times Leader

January 22, 2019

By Bill O’Boyle

The Diocese of Scranton on Tuesday launched its Independent Survivors Compensation Program designed to compensate survivors of childhood sexual abuse.

Participation in the program by survivors is voluntary and the program is run independently of the Diocese.

“Our first priorities are to provide support for survivors of child sexual abuse and to take every step necessary to eradicate abuse from the Church altogether,” said the Most Reverend Joseph C. Bambera, D.D., J.C.L., Bishop of Scranton. “This program helps. While no financial compensation can change the past, it is my hope that this program will help survivors in their healing and recovery process.”

The Diocese’s program includes all victims, whether the abuser was a priest from the Diocese of Scranton, from a religious order, or was a lay employee of the Diocese. The Diocese announced on Nov. 8, that the program would be administered by Kenneth Feinberg and Camille Biros, two leading experts in mediation and alternative dispute resolution who have overseen similar programs started by five Catholic Dioceses in New York. Feinberg and Biros will have absolute autonomy in determining compensation for survivors, and the Diocese of Scranton has agreed to abide by all of their decisions.

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How the Vatican summit’s moderator approaches the problem of clerical sexual abuse

DENVER (CO)
Catholic News Agency

January 22, 2019

By Andrea Gagliarducci

The moderator of the Vatican’s February summit on child sexual abuse has written an article outlining his take on the Church’s most effective models of response for addressing its sexual abuse crisis.

The article, written by Fr. Federico Lombardi, is published in the Jan. 19 issue of the Jesuit-run bi-monthly magazine La Civiltà Cattolica. Lombardi, a Jesuit and former papal spokesman, will be a central actor in the Feb. 21-24 meeting, which will convene the leaders of bishops’ conferences from around the world to discuss the clerical sexual abuse of minors.

Lombardi has long known in Italy as a key figure in the fight against sex abuse by clergy.

In 2011, Lombardi was part of a significant moment related to combating sexual abuse: A conference, “Toward Healing and Renewal,” organized by the Pontifical Gregorian University. The work of the conference become the basis for the establishment of the Gregorian’s Centre for Child Protection, which partially inspired the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

In 2017, Lombardi was involved in the organization of the conference “Child Dignity in Digital Age,” which drafted and presented to Pope Francis the “Declaration of Rome”, which proposed new approaches needed to countering sexual abuse in the internet era.

Lombardi is also part of the steering committee of the “Child Dignity Alliance.”

The former papal spokesperson has also gained attention as an expert on sexual abuse issues because of his articles on La Civiltà Cattolica. In an essay last month, he retraced step-by-step the history of the clergy sex abuse crisis and of the Church’s response.

In his most recent article, Lombardi listed some “good practices” for an effective response. Those documents will be likely at the center of the discussions in the February meeting.

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Could World Youth Day in Panama give the Pope a boost?

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS Radio

January 22, 2019

World Youth Day in Panama is supposed to be about young people, from all over the globe, celebrating their Catholic faith with the Pope. But this year, it’s happening during arguably the greatest crisis of Pope Francis’ pontificate and of the modern-day Catholic Church.

The gathering is taking place January 22-27 in Panama City, with the Pope arriving on the 23rd. Panama is 88% Catholic, according to the Vatican, and despite the shadow of controversy, this is a coming home of sorts for Pope Francis, the first Latin American pontiff. His 10 speeches will be in his native Spanish, which typically means he might improvise instead of sticking to prepared texts.

According to the Vatican, about 150,000 youth have enrolled so far, a much lower turnout than World Youth Days in 2013 in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and in 2016 in Krakow, Poland, which attracted about 3 million each.

The Pope is expected, as he often does, to weave politics into his speeches, particularly issues such as migration, corruption, violence and the role of women, said a Vatican spokesperson.

Will the Pope meet with clergy abuse survivors?

Two clergy abuse survivors from nearby Costa Rica are hoping to meet with Pope Francis in the sidelines of World Youth Day. As is customary, the Vatican has not announced if the pontiff will meet with survivors; but advised reporters the Pope might address the topic.

Survivors Michael Rodriguez and Anthony Venegas, both from Costa Rica, say the Latin American culture of “machismo” justifies the actions of the abusers and revictimizes the victims, making it very difficult for survivors to break their silence.

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Catholic Church must embrace reality of the sexual nature of its priests

PALM SPRINGS (CA)
The Desert Sun

January 22, 2019

By Lou A. Bordisso

Many Catholics and other people of good will are disgusted with the sexual scandal cover-ups, smokescreens and veil of secrecy postulated by bishops and their apologists. The shameless rationalization repetitively advanced by church authorities for being deceptive, deceitful and dishonest is plausible deniability is unacceptable.

My late Irish-Catholic mother often reminded me to “Tell the truth and shame the devil” as I was growing up. Given the enormity of clergy sexual scandals, there is no better time than the present to tell the truth or ever be labeled as a complicit collaborator and/or guilty of the “sin of omission.”

Increasingly, it seems as though not a day goes by without a media story about sexual allegations, charges and convictions against Roman Catholic priests and some bishops. The stories of illicit sexual activity range from the sexual abuse of children by priests to bishops keeping female mistresses or male lovers.

Celibacy research studies among Catholic clergy suggest that gay, straight, and bisexual priests are significantly sexually active, and many priests outright reject mandatory celibate chastity. The largest empirical research to date by Richard Sipe studied 1,500 Catholic priests over the period of 25 years and concluded that fewer than 50 percent of Roman Catholic priests in the United States even attempt celibacy, while only 2 percent achieve total celibate chastity.

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Pedophile priest molested boy, then blamed him for it and made him confess

JACKSON (MS)
Metro News

January 22, 2019

By Jimmy McCloskey

A pedophile priest abused a young boy – then blamed the child for making him molest him, and made him confess it as a sin.

Mark Belenchia was abused by the Reverend Bernard Haddican from around 1969, when he was just 12 years old. Haddican would tell the child afterwards that he had committed the sin of ‘self abuse,’ then order him to confess the supposed wrongdoing to the man guilty of perpetrating it.

Recalling how Haddican escalated his campaign of abuse, Belenchia told the Clarion-Ledger: ‘That was my first sexual experience with another person. ‘I don’t know if you can call it a sexual experience – a nightmare.’

Belenchia was abused while living in Shelby, Mississippi, and says Haddican charmed locals by dressing in casual clothes, and acting in a far more personable way than his precedessors. He says Haddican began abusing him six months after he arrived, and would invite children over to watch baseball games, before plying them with liquor.

Haddican continued to groom his victims by hosting ‘sleepovers’ at his rectory, before molesting Belencia. The victim, who is now campaigning for justice said: ‘The actual abuse started off slow. I can’t recall all of it, I just know that I ended up in the bed.

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Vatican insists no reports of sexual abuse against Argentine

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

January 22, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican is insisting that there were no accusations of sexual abuse against an Argentine bishop close to Pope Francis when he resigned suddenly in 2017 and was promoted to a job at the Vatican.

Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti repeated Tuesday that the Vatican only received the first accusations of alleged sexual abuse by Archbishop Gustavo Zanchetta a few months ago.

The former deputy to Archbishop Gustavo Zanchetta, the Rev. Juan Jose Manzano, told The Associated Press last week that he had sent the Vatican information in 2015 and 2017 of alleged inappropriate sexual behavior by Zanchetta that included taking naked selfies and reports that he engaged in harassment and misconduct with adult seminarians.

Manzano told AP those reports didn’t constitute formal canonical accusations of sexual abuse, but were merely reports of behavior that he, another former vicar general and the rector of the seminary in Oran, northern Argentina, considered important to bring to the Vatican’s attention.

He said he didn’t believe there had been any cover-up and that he considered Francis a victim of Zanchetta’s “manipulation.”

In a statement, Gisotti said: “In reference to the articles published recently by several news sources, as well as to some misleading reconstructions, I resolutely repeat what was stated this past 4 January. In addition, I emphasize that the case is being studied and when this process is over, information will be forthcoming regarding the results.”

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Legionaries to help police investigate abuse cover-up

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

January 22, 2019

By Junno Arocho Esteves, CNS

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The ‘cursed inheritance’ left by Maciel and other members of the Legionaries of Christ is a source of shame for the church.

Pope John Paul II blesses Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionaries of Christ, at the Vatican in 2004. 
CNS photo/Tony Gentile, Reuters

The Legionaries of Christ have pledged they will cooperate with an investigation after a report stated that the congregation failed to address sexual abuse and cover-ups at one of its prestigious schools in Mexico.

The Associated Press reported that the Legionaries failed to investigate abuses committed by Father Fernando Martinez Suarez at its elite Cumbres School in Cancun despite reforms established nearly a decade ago after it was revealed that the congregation’s founder, Father Marcial Maciel Degollado, abused dozens of children.

In a statement released by the religious congregation, the Legionaries said they would work with the Vatican as well as civil authorities “to identify the persons responsible for negligence or cover-up in this case”.

In 2010, the Vatican announced that Father Maciel was guilty of “seriously and objectively immoral behavior” and “real crimes” and had lived a “life devoid of scruples and of genuine religious meaning”.

That same year, Pope Benedict XVI named the late Cardinal Velasio De Paolis to supervise reform of the Legionaries.

However, an investigation conducted by the congregation and published in late November revealed that although Cardinal De Paolis and then-superior general German Father Sylvester Heereman were made aware of the abuse allegations against Father Martinez, they “did not consider a canonical investigation nor sending out a written restriction necessary”.

The article, which included several survivors’ horrifying accounts of the abuse, was published the same day the Legionaries of Christ began its weeklong general chapter in Rome. Revelations of the abuses and cover-up caused one member of the congregation to withdraw as a member of the general chapter.

According to AP, Beatriz Sanchez, an English teacher at the school in the 1990s, said she was fired after reporting the abuses committed by Father Martinez to his superior at the time, Father Eloy Bedia.

Two days before the report was published, Father Bedia released a statement saying that he would not attend the Rome chapter meeting and that he understood how survivors and their families would “experience my presence in the general chapter as a new wound”.

However, despite Sanchez’s allegation, Father Bedia denied “before God” that he covered up the abuses and insisted he was not responsible for personnel changes.

“I became territorial director in 1992,” he said. “I had no awareness of Fernando Martinez Suarez’s history. As everyone knows, in those years, the general director (Maciel) made the decisions regarding processes and movements of personnel.”

In an interview with Mexican news agency Notimex, Archbishop Franco Coppola, apostolic nuncio to Mexico, said the “cursed inheritance” left by Father Maciel and other members of the Legionaries of Christ who have abused children are a source of shame for the church.

“It gives us much sorrow and shame that this has happened; we are trying to make it so that this does not happen ever again,” said Archbishop Coppola.

Addressing the fact that Martinez continues as a member of the Legionaries of Christ despite the abuses he committed, Archbishop Coppola explained that in some cases of abuse, those dismissed from the clerical state or from their religious orders or both became fugitives and disappeared after authorities attempted to arrest them.

“The fact that Fernando Martinez continues to be a Legionary means that, if any civil authority is looking for him, they know where to find him and can force the Legionaries to make him physically available to civil justice,” he said.

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Information on sex abuse cases released by Archdiocese of Hartford

HARTFORD (CT)
Fox 61 News

January 22, 2019

By Doug Stewart

The Archdiocese of Hartford released information Tuesday, regarding clerical sexual abuse of minors in the archdiocese.

The archdiocese post the information at Promise.archdioceseofhartford.org The website was very slow to respond when it was first released. The list of clergy is below.

Last week, Jesuits in Northeast posted list of priests accused of abuse and 16 of them had Connecticut connections.

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Hartford says it has paid $50.6 million to settle priest sexual abuse claims over the last several decades.

The archdiocese said Tuesday that it has settled 142 claims involving 32 clergy members. The archdiocese paid out $24.5 million from its general reserve fund and insurance recoveries covered the rest of the cost of the settlements.

The archdiocese said 98 percent of the settlements paid were over allegations of abuse of minors that occurred before 1990.

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Buffalo Catholic Diocese creates Adult Sexual Abuse and Misconduct Task Force

BUFFALO (NY)
WGRZ TV

January 22, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo has created a task force to review and recommend policies and procedures in dealing with sexual abuse allegations with adults.

According to the Diocese, the Adult Sexual Abuse and Misconduct Task Force will ensure the diocese’s policies for adult abuse/misconduct complement the policies on child abuse.

The task force, which in consists of five members, will also review investigation framework of sexual abuse and ensure it is in compliance with federal and state law, canon law and the Diocese of Buffalo’s Code of Conduct.

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Experto en iglesia compara “en impacto” casos de Renato Poblete y Cristián Precht

[Church expert compares potential impact of Renato Poblete and Cristián Precht abuse cases]

CHILE
Emol TV

January 21, 2019

Marcial Sánchez, experto en historia de la iglesia, asegura que “sí va a haber condenas” tras los procesos en Fiscalía. Respecto a la situación del sacerdote Óscar Muñoz Toledo, el experto dijo que sí debiera perder el estado clerical.

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Getting to February: The decisions that could shape the pope’s summit

ROME (ITALY)
Catholic News Agency

January 22, 2019

By Ed Condon

As the Church continues to wrestle with the fall-out of last year’s sexual abuse scandals, the Vatican faces a series of crucial decisions in the coming weeks. How they are resolved, and in what order, will likely set the tone for the rest of the year.

One month from today, the heads of the world’s bishops’ conferences will gather in Rome for a special summit to address the abuse crisis. Ahead of that meeting, the Vatican has attempted to lower what it has called “excessive” expectations.

These efforts notwithstanding, the credibility of its discussions and conclusions will likely play a large part in shaping wider assessments of the Church in 2019. But before the three-day meeting begins, two other events could do much to frame how the February session will be seen from the outside.

The first of these events is the replacement of Cardinal Donald Wuerl as Archbishop of Washington, DC. The second is the conclusion of the penal process handling the allegations against Wuerl’s predecessor, Archbishop Theodore McCarrick. Both are expected imminently, and both seem sure to cast a shadow, for good or for ill, on February’s meeting and whatever it produces.

As has been previously reported, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith recently concluded the investigative phase of its handling of the McCarrick case. The CDF also confirmed that, instead of a full canonical trial, McCarrick was facing a penal administrative process – ordinarily reserved for handling cases where the evidence is clear and compelling.

Officials in different Vatican departments, if not the CDF itself, have already begun pointedly referring to the former cardinal as “Mr. McCarrick” in a nod to his likely laicization if he is found guilty of sexual abuse.

While Rome appears intent on ensuring the McCarrick case is resolved – one way or another – before the February meeting, how much detail the CDF makes public about the resolution will be important.

McCarrick is accused of a number of grave crimes, including the sexual abuse of minors and adults. What is done and said about his alleged abuse of adults may prove more significant, even if it represents the lesser charge canonically speaking.

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‘A nightmare.’ Man tells all, says he was abused by Mississippi priest more than 75 times

JACKSON (MS)
Mississippi Clarion Ledger

By January 22, 2019

Sarah Fowler

Mark Belenchia remembers the first time he saw his would-be abuser.

Belenchia was playing third base, wearing a white, wool baseball uniform with green socks pulled up to his knees. A matching green hat covered his mop of dark brown hair. He was 12 years old.

The year was 1968, and the Rev. Bernard Haddican had just arrived in Shelby, a small town nestled in the Mississippi Delta. From his position on the field, Belenchia saw Haddican arrive, mingling with parents and parishioners of St. Mary’s Church, the local Catholic parish. He was in street clothes and was personable. No one in Shelby had ever met a priest like him.

“All of the priests prior to him stayed real close to the church, in the rectory,” Belenchia said. “They didn’t get out in the community and, when they did, they were always dressed in black, with their collar on. That’s the way priests presented themselves.

“He showed up at the Little League baseball game and he wasn’t in a collar. Here he was, this breath of fresh air, coming into our town. He was different. He took up with the youth, he was at a baseball game. It was a moment to be proud and to relish, ‘Here’s our guy.’

“The protestant preachers, their kids were there and they might have been an umpire or a coach or whatever. We just didn’t have that…it knocked down a bunch of shields right there, just because he came and saw a Little League baseball game.”

Six months later, give or take, Belenchia says, Haddican touched his penis for the first time. The abuse would progress. It continued for years.

In hindsight, Belenchia believes he was being groomed by Haddican from the moment the priest met him.

The church announced in November that dioceses in Mississippi and Alabama would be releasing the names of priests who were removed from the ministry after allegations of abuse. Haddican, who has since died, was never removed from the ministry.

Belenchia said by sharing his story with the Clarion Ledger, he’s hoping the Jackson Diocese will feel compelled to go ahead and release the names of priests identified as abusers.

Maureen Smith, communications director for the Jackson Diocese, said the list of names is expected to be released this spring.

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Hartford Archdiocese reveals 48 priests accused of sexual abuse

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant

January 22, 2019

By Dave Altimari

The Archdiocese of Hartford Tuesday released the names of 48 priests “credibly accused” of sexual abuse, leading to the archdiocese paying out $50.6 million to settle more than 140 claims.

The archdiocese also announced it would hire a retired state judge to review priest personnel files in an effort, according to Archbishop Leonard Blair, to remove the “dark cloud” that still hangs over the Catholic Church.

“I have been a bishop now for almost 20 years and most of them have been overshadowed by the sin and scandal of sexual abuse and its devastating effect on the victims survivors and their families, on the morale of our priests and on the faith and even the practice of the faith among the Catholic people,”Blair said in a statement released on the church website.

“The lingering unhealed wounds from past abuse continue to cry out for further actions and answers,” Blair said.

The priests identified Tuesday include:
Gregory Altermatt, Joseph Buckley, Stephen Bzdyra, Herbert Clarkin, Stephen Crowley, Robert Doyle, Ivan Ferguson, Stephen Foley, Thomas Glynn, Paul Gotta, John Graham, Philip Hussey, Edward Hyland, Joseph Lacy, Robert Ladamus, Felix Maguire, Terry Manspeaker, Richard McGann, Daniel McSheffery, Peter Mitchell, Edward Muha, Howard Nash, John T. O’Connor, Raymond Paul, Louis Patrurzo, Arthur Perrault, William Pzrybylo, George Raffaeta, Edward Reardon, Adolph Renkiewicz, Joseph Rozint, Robert E. Shea, Kenneth Shiner, Edward Tissera, Felix Werpechowski and Peter Zizka.

Twelve others were identified from other religious orders or other dioceses related to allegations that happened in the Hartford Archdiocese. The six from other dioceses are Roman Kramek, Lucien Meunier, Edward Franklin, Bruno Primavera, John B. Ramsey and Jose Rivera. The six priests from other religious orders that were on assignment in Hartford are William Izquierdo, Michael Miller, Robert Leo Pelkington, John Pryor, John Rudy and John Szantyr.

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GUEST OPINION: Blaming homosexual priests for sexual abuse scandal is wrong

SYDNEY (NOVA SCOTIA)
Cape Breton Post

January 22, 2019

By Robert Coleman

The belief that homosexual priests are the cause of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church is gaining traction. While it is widely acknowledged that we need to understand the roots of the problem so as to effect change, healing and justice, we should be wary of being comforted by simplistic answers.

Think for a moment about the claim that homosexual priests are to blame for the abuse. What that suggests is that the homosexual orientation causes, predisposes and compels a man to engage in sexual predatory behaviour against children. Thus it is a risk factor by its very nature. Such a position, however, is not supported by scientific research as conducted by experts in psychology and behavioural studies. In fact, research has shown that the vast majority of sex offenders who victimize children are actually heterosexual men who most often victimize their own family members.

As a heterosexual man, therefore, I am statistically much more of a threat to sexually abuse a minor. Is that because my heterosexual orientation causes, predisposes and compels me to sexually abuse children? Is it a risk factor by its very nature? I somehow think that most people would recognize the absurdity of that proposition and reject it outright. So why don’t we recognize it as being equally absurd when we make such a claim about a person with a homosexual orientation? Could it be that we view heterosexual orientation as normal and homosexual orientation as abnormal? That would indicate that the homosexual orientation is a mental disorder. Again that is simply not supported by science.

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The Gay Church

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Magazine

January 22, 2019

By Andrew Sullivan

We have no reliable figures on just how many priests in the Catholic Church are gay. The Vatican has conducted many studies on its own clergy but never on this subject. In the United States, however, where there are 37,000 priests, no independent study has found fewer than 15 percent to be gay, and some have found as many as 60 percent. The consensus in my own research over the past few months converged on around 30 to 40 percent among parish priests and considerably more than that — as many as 60 percent or higher — among religious orders like the Franciscans or the Jesuits.

This fact hangs in the air as a giant, unsustainable paradox. A church that, since 2005, bans priests with “deep-seated homosexual tendencies” and officially teaches that gay men are “objectively disordered” and inherently disposed toward “intrinsic moral evil” is actually composed, in ways very few other institutions are, of gay men.

The massive cognitive dissonance this requires is becoming harder to sustain. The collapse of the closet in public and private life in the past three decades has made the disproportionate homosexuality of the Catholic priesthood much less easy to hide, ignore, or deny. This cultural and moral shift has not only changed the consciousness of most American Catholics (67 percent of whom support civil marriage for gay couples) and gay priests (many of whom are close to quitting) but also broken the silence that long shrouded the subject.

Five years ago, Pope Francis made his watershed “Who am I to judge?” remark after being asked about a flawed gay priest. “A person once asked me, in a provocative manner, if I approved of homosexuality,” Francis went on. “I replied with another question: ‘Tell me, when God looks at a gay person, does he endorse the existence of this person with love or reject and condemn this person?’ We must always consider the person. Here we enter into the mystery of the human being.” In the final draft of the 2014 Synod on the Family, Francis included explicit mention of the “gifts and qualities” of homosexuals, asking, “Are we capable of welcoming [them]?” These sentiments won 62 percent of the votes of the synod bishops — just shy of what was necessary to pass, but still evidence of a sharp shift in tone in official Catholic teaching.

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Pope Francis’ critics at Sacred Heart Seminary in Detroit are vocal online

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

January 22, 2019

By Peter Feuerherd

Pope Francis is confusing, is weak on enforcing doctrine, and sows discord among believers, according to a cadre of faculty at Sacred Heart Major Seminary here who regularly express their consternation online and in other public forums.

Behind the iron gates of Sacred Heart Seminary, noted for its imposing Gothic architecture, there is a loyal opposition to Pope Francis, with a number of professors questioning the pontiff’s approach to doctrinal and moral issues. They say he is too lax on a roster of issues, including LGBT people in the church, capital punishment, and Communion for divorced and remarried Catholics.

Sacred Heart students include 120 seminarians studying for 10 dioceses and an eparchy from the Midwest, as well as four religious orders, and 365 lay students, most of whom are studying for teaching and lay ministry positions in the Detroit Archdiocese.

Some Sacred Heart professors have suggested that the pope should resign. One noted on social media that Francis’ most prominent clerical critic, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, should be pope, a post that was quickly edited with an added “(jk),” meaning “just kidding.”

Another professor, Edward Peters, argued in an online post Sept. 5, 2018, that if Viganò’s accusations are true that the pope knew about sexual harassment and abuse by former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Francis should resign.

Peters, a professor of canon law, has argued on his contentious blog that Francis has been pastorally reckless and wrongheaded in his approach. The most outspoken of the pope’s social media critics from Sacred Heart, Peters also argues that the pope overstepped his authority with a blanket condemnation of the death penalty last August.

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January 21, 2019

Hartford Archdiocese has paid $50 million to sex abuse victims, will identify dozens of ‘credibly’ accused priests Tuesday

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant

January 22, 2019

By Dave Altimari

The Archdiocese of Hartford is scheduled to reveal Tuesday that it has paid $50.6 million to settle more than 140 priest sexual abuse claims made mostly by minors, including 20 credible allegations against one priest, according to information shared Monday with area clergy.

The archdiocese also will announce that it is hiring former state Judge Antonio Robaina to do an independent review of church records from 1953, when the archdiocese was formed, until now. Church officials, including Archbishop Leonard Blair, met with priests at the St. Thomas Seminary to share details of the report.

There will be 47 priests named who have either had civil lawsuits filed against them or have been the subject of claims that archdiocese officials deemed credible. Included are six priests from other dioceses who allegedly abused a child while assigned to Hartford and six priests from other religious orders.

Diocese spokeswoman Maria Zone declined to comment on what would be revealed Tuesday.

Priests who gathered Monday were informed that slightly more than half of the $50.6 million was paid by the church’s insurance carrier and that the rest came from the general fund. Of the 142 claims that were settled, about 84 percent involved allegations against nine priests.

One priest had 20 credible abuse claims against him that were settled for $10.7 million.

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Lawyer for ex-Maryville priest calls sex-abuse allegations ‘ridiculous’

CHICAGO (IL)
Sun-Times

January 21, 2019

By Mitch Dudek

The attorney representing a Catholic priest who is accused of sexual abuse during his time as head of a facility in Des Plaines that cared for troubled kids called the allegations “ridiculous.”

Attorney Frank DiFranco said Rev. John Smyth “adamantly denies” the allegations that he molested two boys in his office while head of Maryville Academy.

“It never happened. It’s a lie. The stuff that was alleged is nonsense,” he told the Sun-Times on Monday.

“You’ve got this man who’s never been accused of anything … and then you’ve got two convicted felons who concoct a story in prison of how they were abused,” DiFranco said. “It’s ridiculous, especially when you consider the thousands and thousands of kids who went through Maryville.”

Jeanine Stevens — the attorney representing the two accusers, who are both in their 30s and but were ages 13 and 14 when they were allegedly abused — said it’s common for traumatic events to take years to bubble to the surface.

“People spend their lives burying this kind of thing. People don’t concoct these stories. They feel humiliation and shame,” she said.

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These are the must-do’s in the Catholic Church’s reformation

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

January 21, 2019

Regarding the Jan. 17 Metro article “Wuerl apologizes for false statements”:

It has been important to know the facts concerning the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal and Cardinal Donald Wuerl’s involvement in former c ardinal Theodore McCarrick’s sexual misconduct scandal. I trust there will be just as thorough reporting of the Catholic Church’s reform of sexual abuse and abuse-of-authority standards as the global church hierarchy meets at its synod. Church leaders realize they have “nowhere to run, nowhere to hide,” in the words of the Martha and the Vandellas song.

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Catholic ‘town meeting’ in Bennington next Monday

BENNINGTON (VT)
Bennington Banner

January 21, 2019

By Mark Rondeau

Sacred Heart St. Francis de Sales Church will be the site on Monday, Jan. 28, of one of six Catholic “town meetings” to be held around Vermont this month.

The meetings will feature Diocese of Burlington Bishop Christopher Coyne. This is part of an overall effort to improve communications within the diocese, which encompasses all of Vermont.

The church is located at 238 Main St. The meeting will run from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Catholics and anyone else interested may attend.

“I think it’s wonderful to have the bishop coming down here to have a town hall meeting and talk to the parishioners,” said the Rev. Bob Wiseman, C.S.C., pastor of Sacred Heart St. Francis de Sales and St. John the Baptist Church in North Bennington. “We’re three hours from the headquarters, but the fact he’s committing to an hour and a half with the parish, asking questions and answering questions, I think that’s very positive.”

Coyne announced the town meetings in a Jan. 2 letter to the diocese.

“When I returned from the U.S. bishop’s meeting in November, I felt it was important to establish better two-way communication with people in the pews,” Coyne wrote. “Because of my schedule, it took a while to plan these meetings in easily accessible locations around the state, but now I am ready to listen and respond to concerns and questions from the Catholic community. I think it so important to be as open and transparent about all matters as much as possible.”

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Statement Concerning Rev. John F. Meyers

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Malvern Retreat House

January 14, 2019

Dear Friends in Christ,

I write to share troubling news regarding our former Rector, Father John F. Meyers, who served at Malvern Retreat House/St. Joseph in the Hills (MRH) from June 2017 until October 2018, when he resigned his position. The information below and news release was provided to us by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

In late 2018, the Archdiocese placed Father Meyers on administrative leave and restricted his priestly faculties following receipt of an allegation that he had sexually abused a minor in the early 1980s. It was the first allegation of this kind lodged against Father Meyers. The allegation was referred to law enforcement and the Archdiocese cooperated with authorities in the course of their work. No criminal charges were filed.

The required canonical investigation of Father Meyers was launched after law enforcement declined to press charges. The Archdiocesan Office of Investigations undertook that canonical process. The results of the canonical investigation were provided to the Archdiocesan Professional Responsibilities Review Board. This board recently recommended to the Archbishop that Father Meyers was unsuitable for ministry based on a substantiated allegation of sexual abuse of a minor.

Archbishop Chaput accepted that recommendation and determined that Father Meyers is unsuitable for ministry. His case will now be forwarded to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican in keeping with procedure for the formal canonical process.

We felt it was important that we inform our Board, staff, and retreatants of this matter and the determination made by the Archbishop regarding Father Meyers’ suitability for ministry.

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US bishops gather in Mundelein as clergy sex abuse outrage grows

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS TV

January 2, 2019

By Jessica D’Onofrio and Mark Rivera

As high-ranking members of the Catholic Church met Wednesday in north suburban Mundelein, clergy sexual abuse survivors gathered in front of the Archdiocese of Chicago to call criticize the handling of abuse allegations.

“The church has a history of minimizing and denying the unbelievable pain and horror of being sexually abused by a priest,” said clergy sex abuse survivor Patricia Gallagher Marchant.

Survivors and activists from End Clergy Abuse and Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) issued a letter to Pope Francis calling for Cardinal Blase Cupich’s removal from his prominent role organizing a worldwide papal summit on clergy sex abuse next month, and they are demanding action.

An 89-year-old man was killed and a woman critically injired in a fire in a five-story apartment building Wednesday morning in the Dunning neighborhood.

“How are survivors going to trust this process if he’s in charge of it,” asked Peter Isely, US Spokesperson for End Clergy Abuse. “They can’t. How can the public an Catholics trust this process around the world? They can’t.”

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US clergy abuse survivors demand inclusion in Vatican reforms

SINGAPORE
Channel News Asia

January 3, 2019

Patricia Gallagher Marchant was first abused by a priest who befriended her family when she was seven or eight years old.

More than five decades later, the 61-year-old stood Wednesday (Jan 2) in front of a throng of news cameras outside the downtown Chicago headquarters of the Catholic archdiocese in this sprawling American city, and demanded the church listen to survivors.

“They’ve counted on our silence,” Marchant said. “The horror of what happened to each of us needs to be out and spoken.”

Marchant was joined by leaders of two survivors’ advocacy groups who sent an open letter to Pope Francis asking to be a part of a historic gathering that the Catholic leader called for in February at the Vatican, to discuss the ongoing crisis roiling the church.

At issue was the very credibility of the pope’s conference, they claimed, and whether survivors would have faith in its outcome.

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Attorney representing alleged clergy sex abuse victims says he has received 13 settlement offers

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB TV News 4

Dec 19, 2018

An attorney representing more than a dozen alleged clergy sex abuse victims released a list of settlement offers from the Buffalo Catholic Diocese’s compensation program.

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian says he has received a total of 13 offers, ranging from $10,000 to $340,000.

The list goes into detail, stating which priests from which churches were allegedly involved, the date of the alleged abuse and the ages of the alleged victims.

The earliest date is 1959 and the latest is 1988.

Garabedian did not disclose the specific money amount each alleged victim was offered in the settlement.

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Disgraced rabbi convicted of sexual assault to be de-ordained

BEIT EL (ISRAEL)
Israel National News

January 20, 2019

By Arutz Sheva

The Chief Rabbinate of Israel began the process of revoking the title of rabbi from Moti Elon following the new allegations against him.

Elon was convicted [https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/170666] of performing an indecent act with a minor while taking advantage of being in a position of authority in 2013. He was given a sentence of jail time and fined NIS 10,000.

According to the report of Akiva Weiss in Kan 11, the legal adviser of the rabbinate sent a letter to Rabbi Elon in which the legal adviser wrote that he has three weeks to present his position before the meeting of the disciplinary committee of the Chief Rabbinate.

Many of those who supported Elon in 2013 changed their positions in light of the most recent allegations against him. Rabbi Chaim Druckman, one of the leading religious Zionist rabbis in Israel, called on Elon to cease teaching and avoid all contact with students.

Last week [https://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/257541], Rabbi Drickman wrote: “As soon as I received the information, and after conferring with other rabbis, I delivered an order that Rabbi Elon should not be allowed to deliver lectures or host any other public activities for the greater public, and that he should not have any private meetings with youth.”

“Obviously, following our obligation to fulfill the commandment, “V’haya machanecha kadosh, and your camps shall be holy,” we must take every necessary action in order to create a safe, protective and respectful environment for everyone.”

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Mundelein report details heavy security, no arrests during Catholic bishop retreat

ST. PAUL (MN)
Pioneer Press

January 21, 2019

By Rick Kambic

The weeklong retreat that brought hundreds of U.S.-based Roman Catholic bishops to Mundelein Seminary earlier this month was flagged by the FBI as an event worthy of resources despite a government shutdown, according to a recent report from police.

Approximately 280 cardinals and bishops, plus more than 100 assistants and two representatives from the Vatican were at the seminary between Jan. 2 and Jan. 7, Mundelein Police Chief Eric Guenther said during a Jan. 14 Village Board meeting.

A campus-wide phone outage was the only issue of note, as Guenther said no arrests were made and no threats or acts of vandalism were investigated.

“It was very well run, very smooth, the archdiocese couldn’t have been nicer or more complimentary of how we handled it,” Guenther said during his report.

The FBI issued a level five special event assessment rating for the retreat, according to Guenther.

“It is the lowest level that can be given, but (the event) rose to the point of the (federal) government saying this is a legitimized event that needs to be managed and overseen,” Guenther said.

Pope Francis called for the Mundelein retreat in October after a grand jury report in August documented bishops and other church leaders in Pennsylvania covering up the sexual abuse of children by hundreds of priests and other clergy over roughly seven decades.

Then in December, a report from Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan said accusations have been leveled against 690 Illinois priests, while Catholic officials have publicly identified only 185 clergy with credible allegations against them.

Although the report says that “clergy sexual abuse of minors in Illinois is significantly more extensive than the Illinois dioceses previously reported,” it does not estimate how many of the allegations, some of which are decades-old, should have been deemed credible.

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Faded Memories

UNITED STATES
Faded Memories blog

January 19, 2019

By Dan Carlson

When I was in Air Force technical school many years ago, one of my instructors kept a toy tractor on his desk. As we in the class learned quickly, the tractor was a useful motivational tool … when a student gave a wrong answer in class, the instructor would pass him the tractor telling him to use it to pull his head out of his … well … someplace where it should not have been.

Watching the continuing comedy of errors in Catholic Church leadership, I have a feeling that my instructor’s tractor could be useful. The most recent candidate for this piece of machinery would have to be Cardinal Donald Wuerl who, last week, remembered that he had forgotten about an accusation he had forwarded to Rome in 2004, concerning sexual misconduct by disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick.

Yes, you read that correctly … he remembered that he had forgotten.

It is important to note that this hollow explanation follows upon Wuerl’s repeated obfuscation regarding what he knew about McCarrick’s sexual misconduct, when he became aware of it, and what he did about it. Meanwhile, McCarrick, who has been ordered to a life of seclusion, prayer and penance at a friary in Kansas, awaits disposition of his case in the Vatican justice system.

In the late 1970s, comedian Steve Martin explained how using the words “I forgot” can get us out of trouble. Martin went on to explain that it is possible to become wealthy simply by not paying taxes, and when the IRS comes calling all we have to do is say: “I forgot that I am supposed to pay taxes.” The same thing goes for a charge of armed robbery … according to Martin, all we have to tell the judge is: “I forgot armed robbery is illegal.”

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SIN ABOUNDETH

NEW YORK (NY)
First Things

January 21, 2019

by Dan Hitchens

The story of offshore finance is a familiar one. Individuals or companies want to avoid taxes, fines, lawsuits, or investigations, so they move their wealth to the Cook Islands, or register some part of their business in Switzerland. The millionaire can still live and spend in America, the business can sell Brazilian beef to China, but their cash takes a few detours through tax havens. As the author Nicholas Shaxson puts it, “You take your money elsewhere, to another country, in order to escape the rules and laws of the society in which you operate.”

One aspect of Shaxson’s 2011 book Treasure Islands is especially disturbing, not least for Catholics at the present moment. Shaxson has a skill for finding offshore’s outsiders and telling their stories. They describe a world that, quietly but forcefully, defends wrongdoers. An unnamed “former hedge fund administrator” in the Cayman Islands found that, when he raised concerns about crooked accounting, he began to be shut out of important conversations. It’s typical of the system, he says. No threats are made explicitly, no anger is shown; but those who don’t fit in will be excluded—or given huge amounts of work, or subtly reminded that “If you speak in one place, the network works in a way that you will never get work again.” The ex-banker Beth Krall tells Shaxson that not only do the bank chiefs all know each other, they also know the police and the regulators. A lawyer in Jersey, who spoke up about the corruption he saw at first hand, says bluntly: “I have all the qualifications, and I couldn’t get a job in a law firm to make tea now.”

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Accused priest remains active at Vatican’s doctrinal congregation

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Reporter

January 21, 2019

By Joshua J. McElwee

A Catholic priest serving as an official of the Vatican’s doctrinal congregation has remained in his role after being publicly accused of soliciting a woman for sex in the confessional.

Although the claim against Fr. Hermann Geissler was brought forward two months ago, he was listed by the Vatican Jan. 18 as taking part in an international meeting of Asian bishops’ conference officials in Bangkok, as head of the doctrinal section of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Asked about the case against Geissler, Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti told NCR Jan. 21 that the priest is “under examination by the Superiors of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, who reserve the right to take the appropriate initiatives.”

Doris Wagner, a German, recalled being approached by Geissler during confession in 2009 at a Nov. 27 Rome event focused on giving voice to women survivors of clergy sexual abuse.

While Wagner did not name Geissler at the event, she said the incident had occurred with someone who is “now a capo ufficio (section leader) in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.”

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The Society of St. Peter Damian

LAFAYETTE (LA)
KATC YV

January 21, 2019

By Jim Hummel

Transparency and openness in the Diocese of Lafayette is being questioned by a group of devout Catholics who have formed an anonymous group called The Society of St. Peter Damian (SSPD). Now, one of their members is coming forward.

“St. Peter Damian, our patron, was very outspoken, he was a priest and very outspoken,” said Quinn Hebert, a member of the SSPD. “We don’t see that among clergy, because it is really not our place to be doing this, and yet we’ve been forced to, because those whose place it is refuse to act.”

Hebert is a former seminarian in the diocese, who says he and others were compelled to do something because of the church’s response to the clergy sex abuse crisis locally and worldwide.

“It’s for the good of the church,” he said. “We love the church, we absolutely adore the church, we love the hierarchy, we have no intention of usurping the authority of the bishop, that’s not our goal. We want to assist the bishop, encourage him to do the right thing.”

In their posts on social media, the SSPD has called into question the effectiveness of the church’s Safe Environment Program and called for transparency in the clergy sex abuse crisis.

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17 Years Later, The Impact Of Clergy Sex Abuse On Boston’s Catholic Community

BOSTON (MA)
WBUR Radio

January 21, 2019

The top Catholic bishops from around the world will gather at the Vatican for a historic summit next month. The topic will be sex abuse by the clergy. Here & Now’s Lisa Mullins looks at the impact of the revelations on the once thriving Catholic community in Boston.

This segment airs on January 21, 2019. Audio will be available after the broadcast.

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Víctimas de abusos en la Iglesia piden al Gobierno una comisión de investigación y que actúe la Fiscalía

[Clergy abuse victims ask Spain’s Government for an investigative commission and action by prosecutor’s office]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

January 21, 2019

By Íñigo Domínguez

La primera organización nacional de afectados en España denuncia el desinterés de los políticos y recoge 500.000 firmas para que el delito no prescriba hasta los 65 años

Las víctimas de abusos del clero en España empiezan a movilizarse. Hasta ahora, estas personas denunciaban sus casos de forma aislada en la prensa y habían surgido varias asociaciones, pero de forma local. “No conseguíamos hacer oír nuestra voz, por primera vez vamos a denunciar juntos y así nadie nos podrá parar”, ha explicado hoy en rueda de prensa Miguel Hurtado, que ha revelado en EL PAÍS su denuncia de abusos en el monasterio de Montserrat en 1999. Junto a otras víctimas ha fundado la Asociación Nacional de Infancias Robadas (ANIR), cuyo objetivo no es prestar asistencia, por falta de recursos, sino movilizar a la sociedad sobre esta cuestión. Está asociada a un colectivo internacional de organizaciones de varios países, ACA, Fin del Abuso Clerical, en sus siglas en inglés.

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Opinión: A un año de la visita del Papa a Chile

[Opinion: One year after the Pope’s visit to Chile]

CHILE
La Tercera

January 21, 2019

La semana pasada se cumplió un año de la visita del Papa al país, la que despertaba grandes expectativas luego de lo vivido tres décadas antes con Juan Pablo II. Sin embargo, el complejo escenario que enfrentaba la Iglesia en Chile por acusaciones hacia religiosos por abusos sexuales y de poder -entre ellos algunas figuras emblemáticas- durante los últimos años, como asimismo de encubrimiento por parte de autoridades del clero, determinaron una menor participación del público en las actividades con el Pontífice. Una situación que adquirió una connotación aún más delicada con la polémica defensa que Francisco hizo del obispo Juan Barros al término de su viaje.

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Benito Baranda recalca que sintió “una mezcla de rabia, indignación y dolor” tras acusación contra Renato Poblete

[Benito Baranda stresses that he felt “a mixture of anger, indignation and pain” after accusation against Renato Poblete]

CHILE
La Tercera

January 21, 2019

By Rosario Gallardo

En línea con lo que dijo en entrevista con La Tercera este fin de semana, el exdirector del Hogar de Cristo no ocultó su decepción por la dura imputación que afecta al fallecido sacerdote jesuita.

El exdirector del Hogar de Cristo y presidente ejecutivo de América Solidaria, Benito Baranda, reiteró que al enterarse de la acusación mientras viajaba a Chile desde Haití, lo que pasó por su mente fue una “mezcla de rabia, indignación y dolor fuerte. Inmediatamente pensé en las personas que les tocó experimentar estos abusos, por ese tormento“, en declaraciones concedidas a la radio Imagina.

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Milwaukee DA John Chisholm calls for a statewide review of Catholic Church abuse files

MILWAUKEE (WI)
Journal Sentinel

January 21, 2019

By Annysa Johnson

Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm is calling for a statewide investigation of the Catholic Church’s response to allegations of sexual abuse of minors, similar to the Pennsylvania probe that sparked a wave of inquiries across the country.

Chisholm said he would like to work with district attorneys around the state and newly elected Attorney General Josh Kaul to review all abuse allegations over the last 50 years. He said he would hope the state’s bishops would voluntarily open their files.

If not, he said, he would be open to other mechanisms, such as a John Doe or grand jury proceeding.

Chisholm said he also would consider asking the U.S. Bankruptcy Court to share with authorities the names of more than 100 alleged offenders under seal as part of the now-closed Archdiocese of Milwaukee bankruptcy.

“I strongly believe that we should have access to all of the dioceses’ complaints for the last 50 years, similar to a process we started in Milwaukee County in the early 2000s,” Chisholm said in an interview with the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.

He acknowledged “criminal prosecutions in most cases would be highly unlikely” because victims or perpetrators may have died or the statute of limitations has run out.

“I still think there’s a value in looking at this systematically and assessing what happened, just to make sure it is transparent and there’s an honest accounting of it,” he said.

Repeated efforts by the Journal Sentinel to reach Kaul to gauge his interest in a statewide probe have not been successful, but a comment from his staff over the weekend suggests he may be considering such a move.

Kaul’s office told the Wisconsin State Journal on Saturday that it would not comment on a request by the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests for him to open a statewide investigation, “given this relates to a potential investigation.”

Abuse survivor and founding SNAP member Peter Isely called the developments “promising” and heartening for victim-survivors who have been calling on state and federal authorities to launch such a probe for years.

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A wake-up call against sexual abuse

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

January 21, 2019

By Mary Lilly Driciru

Sexual abuse is a widely discussed topic today. It has cut across families (often in the form of domestic violence), spreads even to religious institutions, and is often used as a weapon in conflict situations. Many have experienced this humiliating trauma, and felt its stigma. We are overwhelmed and concerned about it as if it were a cancer! Few could be aware of its magnitude unless they are close to its reality.

In the Great Lakes Region of Africa, consecrated women and men who have been exposed to the realities of sexual abuse were urged to address its horror through a wakeup call at two formation workshops about “Compassionate Response to Victims of Sexual Abuse in Conflict Situations,” held in Goma, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Kampala, Uganda, in 2017 and 2018 respectively. They were dynamic workshops that drove concepts home with group discussions, presentations, role plays and the like.

I was invited to attend the workshop in Kampala as the Association of Religious in Uganda (ARU) Justice and Peace Executive Committee Secretary, and a member of the hosting team. We felt this was important to chart our way forward to enhance our justice, peace and integrity of creation activities.

The workshops were held in partnership with the Justice, Peace and Integrity of Creation Commission (JPIC) of the Union of International Superior Generals (UISG) in Rome, at the request of the British government, represented by the United Kingdom Embassy of the Holy See.

The first workshop was organized and hosted in 2017 in Goma, where sexual violence has been used as a weapon of war. As woman activist Lina Zedriga Waru says, “the body of woman is the battle field for the perpetrators.”

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Women religious shatter the silence about clergy sexual abuse of sisters

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

January 21, 2019

By Gail DeGeorge

Galvanized by the #MeToo movement and the sex abuse crisis commanding the attention of the Vatican, women religious are now openly discussing a subject that was once taboo — sexual harassment, abuse and rape of sisters by clergy — in congregational motherhouses and national conference offices.

Slowly, an era is ending in which Catholic women religious were silent victims of sexual abuse by priests and bishops. Consider these developments in the past year:

In Chile, the Vatican is investigating complaints by members of a congregation of sexual abuse by priests and mistreatment by their superiors.

In India, Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jalandhar faces charges for raping a former superior of a congregation multiple times. He is the first bishop in India to be arrested for sexual abuse of a nun. He has denied the charges. More than 80 sisters were among 167 signers of a letter in July asking that he be relieved of his pastoral duties. Five sisters of the congregation and other supporters engaged in a highly unusual public demonstration supporting the former superior and protesting initial inaction by church and state authorities.

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Zmirak: U.S. Gov’t Should Cut Off Federal Funds to Catholic Charities After Sex Abuse Scandal

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Breitbart News

January 20. 2019

John Zmirak, senior editor at The Stream, called for the federal government to end contractual relationships with Catholic Church-affiliated nonprofits in response to revelations of senior Catholic officials’ involvement in sexual abuse and related cover-ups.

He offered his remarks in a Friday interview on SiriusXM’s Breitbart News Tonight with host Rebecca Mansour.

Mansour began, “We now have absolute proof that former Washington, DC Cardinal Donald Wuerl totally lied about not knowing that his predecessor, Cardinal McCarrick, was a total sexual predator. We now know for a fact that Cardinal Wuerl lied his behind off, and it’s just appalling and disgusting. He knew exactly what was going on.”

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What’s known, and unknown, about pope’s abuse summit in February

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

January 21, 2019

By Inés San Martín and Christopher WhiteJ

When presidents and other representatives of the world’s nearly 130 bishops’ conferences gather in Rome next month for a summit on clerical sex abuse, many experts are predicting it will be the most-covered Vatican event since the last papal election in 2013.

Whether the gathering lives up to that hype, however, remains to be seen.

The Vatican has sought to downplay expectations for the February 21-24 event, with newly minted editorial director of the Vatican’s dicastery for Communications and veteran journalist Andrea Tornielli labeling the media hype of it as “excessive.” Yet the fact remains that after nearly a year of ongoing sex abuse scandals that have shaken the Church to its core, survivors and rank-and-file Catholics alike are increasingly impatient for results.

As the countdown begins, here’s Crux’s look at what is known – and what remains unknown.

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A Catholic University Is Hosting an Art Show That Confronts the Church’s Sex Abuse Scandal

LOSS ANGELES (CA)
LA Magazine

January 17, 2019

By Catherine Womack

Church was a refuge for Trina McKillen when she was young. Growing up in Belfast, Northern Ireland, during “the Troubles” of the 1960s and ’70s, her neighborhood was a hotspot for political violence. When bomb scares threatened her elementary school, McKillen and her classmates were led into a nearby church for safety.

“That had an unbelievable effect on me,” the artist says. “I felt like, well, they might bomb the school, but they’ll never bomb the church. So I had this sense that the church could never be destroyed, that I was always safe there. I have so many beautiful memories of sitting in church. I remember feeling this sense of transcendence, an escape from the war in our streets outside.”

McKillen eventually left Northern Ireland for Dublin, Ireland, where she attended art school. She then moved to Los Angeles, where McKillen’s made her home since 1989. She doesn’t attend Mass much anymore, and she and her Jewish husband did not raise their son Catholic, but she still prays daily.

“You can’t take the Catholic out of me,” she says.

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Montreal priest convicted of sex crimes stands trial for new set of allegations

MONTREAL (CANADA)
CBC News

January 21, 2019

Brian Boucher, a Roman Catholic priest who has worked at 10 churches in Montreal over the last two decades, is set to stand trial today for sex-related offences against two minors.

The trial, before judge alone, is expected to get underway Monday at the Montreal courthouse.

Boucher was found guilty earlier this month of sexually harassing and assaulting a former altar boy more than a decade ago. The sentencing hearing in that case has been set for March 25.

One of the alleged victims in the case now before the court testified as a “similar fact witness” at Boucher’s first trial.

Boucher was ordained in Montreal in 1996 and served at English-language parishes throughout the greater Montreal region. He also worked as a chaplain at McGill University and at Lakeshore Hospital in Montreal’s West Island.

Although Boucher is still a priest, the Montreal archdiocese removed him from all ministry functions, including saying mass in public or hearing confessions, as soon as he was arraigned.

The archdiocese issued a statement immediately after the Jan. 8 guilty verdict in the first court case, saying it “arouses a gamut of feelings among both parishioners in the pew and Church leadership, including bishops and priests: feelings of shame, revulsion and anger as well as confusion, sadness and compassion.”

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January 20, 2019

Supporters of Catholic priest John P. Smyth accused of sex abuse speak out

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS TV

January 20, 2019

By Michelle Gallardo

Two days after prominent Catholic priest John P. Smyth was removed amid allegations of sexual abuse, many of his parishioners and former students expressed support for the retired priest.

Smyth has not commented on the allegations, but he is no longer living at the rectory of Our Lady of Guadalupe, where he was prior to his removal.

Cardinal Blase Cupich disclosed the news about Smyth, who is accused of sexually abusing a minor sometime between 2002 and 2003, when the now 84-year-old was at the head of Maryville Academy in Des Plaines. The allegations are still under investigation.

“He dedicated his life to take care of kids that were neglected and abused. Fifty years. He’s had thousands, not hundreds, but thousands of kids that he has taken care of,” said Art Contreras, a Maryville Academy alumnus.

On Sunday, the group of supporters delivered a letter to the church. They say they are upset with the handling of the case because it should have remained a private affair.

“It’s so hurtful and how the Archdiocese is handling this. Whatever happened to you’re innocent until proven guilty? They’re doing the opposite and that’s why we totally disagree with what’s going on,” said John Maher, Maryville Academy alumnus.

However, others disagree.

Larry Antonsen, a member of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said he believes it’s not enough to just release the names of the accused. He said the American Catholic Church continues to violate the policies they put in place in 2002, the same year Father Smyth is alleged to have committed his crimes.

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Pope Francis Knew Pedophile Priest Took Nude Selfies

ROME (ITALY)
Daily Beast

January 20, 2019

By Barbie Latza Nadeau

Pope Francis was apparently told in 2015 and again in 2017 that an Argentine priest he once called his “spiritual son” and elevated to bishop before he became pope had taken naked selfies, exhibited obscene behavior including public masturbation, and had harassed seminarians, according to an exclusive report by the Associated Press.

In early January the Vatican confirmed that it had just learned that Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta, who resides in Vatican City with complete immunity, faces credible criminal allegations in Argentina for sexually abusing seminarians in the remote Argentine diocese of Oran.

But Juan Jose Manzano, the former vicar where Zanchetta allegedly carried out the sexual harassment that included sending nude photos of himself in various stages of arousal, told the Associated Press that he first reported Zanchetta’s lewd behavior to the papal nuncio or ambassador to the Holy See, who then delivered the complaints to the Vatican in 2015, two years after Francis was elected.

The Vatican spokesman did not immediately respond to questions about the AP report on Sunday. The pope has summoned Catholic leaders to Rome from Feb. 21-24 for a crisis summit to address the systematic global clerical abuse scandal. Revelations like these that imply that the pope himself may have been involved in the cover-up of errant priests will do nothing to set the stage for much-needed change.

Manzano claims he even sent nudie photos of the priest to Rome as proof to back up the complaint. Manzano told the AP that Francis then actually summoned Zanchetta to Rome to discuss the matter, in direct contradiction with the Vatican press office, which claims the news of sexual impropriety on the part of Zanchetta only came to light in late 2018.

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Bill Nemitz: Dangerous times at Cheverus High

PORTLAND (ME)
Press Herald

January 20, 2019

By Bill Nemitz

At first glance, it was yet another list, released last week by yet another Roman Catholic institution, detailing yet another travesty involving sexual abuse of minors.

But overlay the timelines of the seven Jesuit priests, all admitted or credibly accused predators, who passed through Cheverus High School in Portland over the course of nearly a half century and something startling emerges:

The years 1978 and 1979 were a particularly dangerous time for a vulnerable teenage boy to attend Cheverus. During those years, no fewer than five predatory men worked simultaneously at the school– four so-called “men of God” and one layman coach.

Think about that. Five adults, all prone to sexually exploiting their power and authority in a school where hierarchal discipline ruled the day. All free to roam the teeming hallways, the packed classrooms and, yes, the lonely locker room with an eye out for those who might make an easy mark.

At the same time, we can only wonder: How many more victims, now in their 50s, are still out there, their lives forever damaged, their trauma still raw, their stories shared with no one?

And how much are Cheverus and its alumni community really doing to reach back and help them?

“I’m sure you’re right,” Mark Smith, who graduated from Cheverus in 1972 and went on to teach biology there for 41 years, said in a telephone interview Friday. “I’m sure there have to be some others out there.”

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I’m a survivor of clergy sexual abuse. Here’s what N.J. should do to protect victims

NEWARK (NJ)
Star-Ledger

January 20, 2019

By Mark Crawford

For more than 20 years the local chapter of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, has called on the five New Jersey Catholic bishops to release the names, assignment histories and what church officials knew about all known credibly accused clergy who molested children. Years of silence was their only response.

Last summer we learned that New Jersey’s Archbishop Theodore McCarrick had not only sexually abused seminarians and fellow priests under his authority, he abused children as well. The abuse of the subordinate seminarians and clergy was a fact well known to church bishops and officials as he was promoted on up the ladder, becoming one of the most influential cardinals of the Catholic Church.

Last August, the release of a Pennsylvania grand jury report revealed allegations that more than 300 priests had abused more than 1,000 children in six of the eight Catholic dioceses in that state. The report revealed in horrific detail the systemic abuse of children and church officials’ efforts to cover up such crimes to protect the institution as they abandoned the concerns of the abused.

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Sin dar declaraciones llega enviado papal a Puerto Montt

[Papal envoy arrives in Puerto Montt without comment]

CHILE
BioBioChile

January 20, 2019

By Yessenia Márquez and Diego Barría

Durante horas de esta tarde de este sábado llegó a Puerto Montt el sacerdote mexicano Jorge Carlos Patrón. El visitador apostólico fue enviado por el papa Francisco para investigar la arquidiócesis de la zona.

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Victims of jailed abuser who remains a priest feel betrayed by Church

DUNDEE (SCOTLAND)
The Sunday Post

January 20, 2019

By Marion Scott & Janet Boyle

A Catholic churchman jailed last year for abusing boys as young as five has yet to be stripped of his priesthood.

Father Paul Moore was jailed for nine years last April after he was found guilty of abusing three young boys and indecently assaulting a trainee priest.

But the Bishop of Galloway has revealed that the process of laicisation – removing a priest from the church – has not been completed.

Bishop William Nolan said the process had been held up by Moore refusing to admit his guilt.

One of his victims said he felt “betrayed all over again” by the Church.

Moore was twice sent for “treatment” after confessing to his bishop he had a “desire to abuse minors.”

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Letter to the editor: Church has dealt with its sex assault problem

PORTLAND (ME)
Press Herald

January 20, 2019

The narrative that there is an ongoing widespread and unaddressed rape culture in the Catholic Church in the United States is false. This is not today’s Catholic Church.

In 2002, Catholic bishops passed the Dallas Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People in the wake of revelations by The Boston Globe about sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests.

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‘Impossible contradiction’ besets Erie-area priest case

ERIE (PA)
Erie Times

January 20, 2019

By Ed Palattella and Madeleine O’Neill

Parishioners, others reveal shock, dismay in letters of support for Rev. David Poulson, sentenced to up to 14 years in state prison.

Faith was at the center of the Rev. David L. Poulson’s sentencing hearing for sexually abusing two boys while in ministry in the Catholic Diocese of Erie.

The judge told Poulson he “weaponized” the boys’ faith and abused his authority as a priest when he molested them.

Poulson, 65, said at his sentencing earlier in January that he prays for the victims every day and offers penance for his actions.

It was Poulson’s expressions of faith and reverence over his 39-year career as a cleric that made the crimes so shocking in the traditional Catholic communities he served in northwestern Pennsylvania.

A series of character letters submitted by the defense at the sentencing highlight Poulson’s double life — and the difficult questions the faithful must confront when a spiritual leader is revealed as a predator.

A prison sentence was the final step in Poulson’s fall from grace. He received two and a half to 14 years in state prison from Jefferson County Judge John H. Foradora at the sentencing on Jan. 11.

The defense filed the 19 character letters, sent by Poulson’s friends and former parishioners, with a sentencing memorandum that asked Foradora to issue a much shorter sentence. The Erie Times-News received a copy of the sentencing memorandum, which was filed publicly at the Jefferson County Courthouse, last week.

“We have been crushed by what has come to light since February,” wrote one former parishioner, who said Poulson baptized his children.

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AP EXCLUSIVE: VATICAN KNEW OF ARGENTINE BISHOP MISCONDUCT

ORAN (ARGENTINA)
Associated Press

January 20, 2019

By Almudena Caltrava, Natacha Pisarenko and Nicole Winfield

The Vatican received information in 2015 and 2017 that an Argentine bishop close to Pope Francis had taken naked selfies, exhibited “obscene” behavior and had been accused of misconduct with seminarians, his former vicar general told The Associated Press, undermining Vatican claims that allegations of sexual abuse were only made a few months ago.

Francis accepted Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta’s resignation in August 2017, after priests in the remote northern Argentine diocese of Oran complained about his authoritarian rule and a former vicar, seminary rector and another prelate provided reports to the Vatican alleging abuses of power, inappropriate behavior and sexual harassment of adult seminarians, said the former vicar, the Rev. Juan Jose Manzano.

The scandal over Zanchetta, 54, is the latest to implicate Francis as he and the Catholic hierarchy as a whole face an unprecedented crisis of confidence over their mishandling of cases of clergy sexual abuse of minors and misconduct with adults. Francis has summoned church leaders to a summit next month to chart the course forward for the universal church, but his own actions in individual cases are increasingly in the spotlight.

The pope’s decision to allow Zanchetta to resign quietly, and then promote him to the No. 2 position in one of the Vatican’s most sensitive offices, has raised questions again about whether Francis turned a blind eye to misconduct of his allies and dismissed allegations against them as ideological attacks.

Manzano, Oran’s vicar general under Zanchetta who is now a parish priest, said he was one of the diocesan officials who raised the alarm about his boss in 2015 and sent the digital selfies to the Vatican.

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