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.

July 5, 2021

Midcoast priest placed on leave amid abuse allegation investigation

PORTLAND (ME)
villagesoup.com/Courier Publications [Rockland ME]

July 5, 2021

Read original article

Father Vaillancourt has denied any wrongdoing and indicated that he will cooperate with any investigation into the matter, the Diocese stated.

In accordance with diocesan policy, Father Robert Vaillancourt has been placed on temporary administrative leave pending an investigation into an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor girl in the 1980s, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland announced Monday, July 5 in a news release.

Father Vaillancourt is currently the pastor of St. Brendan the Navigator Parish (Our Lady of Good Hope Church, Camden; St. Bernard Church, Rockland; St. Francis of Assisi Church, Belfast; St. Mary of the Isles Churches on Islesboro, Vinalhaven and North Haven).

Father Vaillancourt has denied any wrongdoing and indicated that he will cooperate with any investigation into the matter, the Diocese stated.

“The temporary administrative leave is not a presumption of guilt or a result of suspected wrongdoing, but is the protocol followed by the diocese….

View Cache

Vatican Tribunal sends Cardinal Becciu and nine others for trial for misuse of Vatican funds

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
America [New York NY]

July 3, 2021

By Gerard O'Connell

Read original article

The Vatican City State’s chief prosecutor has indicted ten persons including Cardinal Angelo Becciu, his former priest secretary, the woman he hired to gather intelligence, and seven laymen. They are accused of crimes related to the misuse of funds managed by the secretariat of state, also in the purchase of a London property. The prosecutor asked that they be sent for trial, and the Vatican Tribunal acceded to his request.

The Vatican broke the news around midday July 3 when it published a decree from the president of the Vatican Tribunal, acceding to the request, and naming ten persons and four entities— financial companies and a private firm—who are to be sent to trial in relation to the financial investments of the Secretariat of State in London. It said the trial will begin on July 27.

A trial of this nature and dimension has no precedent in the history of…

View Cache

Federal probe of American Indian boarding schools reflects dark chapter in U.S. history

RIVERSIDE (CA)
The Press-Enterprise [Riverside CA]

July 4, 2021

By Joe Nelson, San Bernardino Sun

Read original article

‘It’s a very important chapter in our history that needs to be addressed. You just can’t sweep it under the rug and forget about it’

[Photo: The remains of more than a dozen Indigenous students who died at the former St. Boniface Indian Industrial School in Banning, which operated from 1890 until 1952, remain buried at the former school’s cemetery on Gilman Street, west of 8th Street. (Photos by Joe Nelson)]

Among the crumbling ruins of the former St. Boniface Indian Industrial School in Banning is a fenced enclosure where broken, weathered and worn grave markers lie. A white, wooden cross looms over the cemetery, where the remains of more than a dozen Indigenous children remain buried and forgotten.

Nestled against a hillside, it is a somber reminder of the atrocities that once occurred there.

“Those of us who grew up on Indian reservations, we heard about St. Boniface. My…

View Cache

UN Rebukes Pope Francis on Child Sex Abuse – Again

GENEVA (SWITZERLAND)
The Open Tabernacle

July 3, 2021

By Betty Clermont

Read original article

A letter sent to the Vatican in April was published on the website of the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on June 21. UN human rights experts expressed “utmost concern” about “the apparent pervasiveness of child sexual abuse cases” in the Catholic Church.

This was the third time during his pontificate that UN representatives made clear to Pope Francis the ways he has refused to protect our children and told him what measures needed to be taken.

UN Committee on the Rights of the Child

A UN Committee on the Rights of the Child issued a 15-page report on February 5, 2014. The Holy See had ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child in 1990. It was the first time a pope and his men had been called to account for their actions and omissions on protecting our children by an international body. The subject of the report…

View Cache

Long-awaited apology brings healing for abuse survivors

LEEDS (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

June 30, 2021

By Catherine Pepinster

Read original article

Victims of abuse who endured assaults when they were pupils of a junior seminary have finally received an apology from the Church, more than 50 years after they were attacked.

The survivors, who all endured abuse at the hands of members of the Verona Fathers order of priests, received a heartfelt apology last week from the Bishop of Leeds, Martin Stock. He said he would raise their case with Pope Francis. He told them their abusers were people they should have been able to trust.

Eight of the survivors met Bishop Stock in person at Hinsley Hall, in Leeds, joined via Zoom by Cardinal Vincent Nichols and Archbishop Charles Scicluna, an adviser on abuse to Pope Francis, as well as three other survivors.

Bishop Stock told them: “I wish to apologise to you personally and unreservedly for the childhood sexual abuse you suffered, and I wish to apologise also to…

View Cache

Sex abuse data from Poland’s Catholic Church is decades too late

WARSAW (POLAND)
Al Jazeera

July 4, 2021

By Victor Sande-Aneiros

Read original article

These figures detailing allegations of child sexual abuse by clergy do not tell the full story

Last Monday, Poland’s Catholic Church released new figures of the number of complaints it has received alleging sexual abuse at the hands of its clergy.

In total, 368 complaints were made to the Church between 2018 and 2020 relating to alleged abuse by more than 290 priests and other religious figures. The cases stretch as far back as 1958 and 173 of them concern children under the age of 15, which is the age of consent in Poland.

Following the release of these figures, the head of the Polish Catholic Church, Archbishop Wojciech Polak, apologised to survivors and asked for forgiveness. While some survivors will appreciate this, it does not excuse the fact that Poland’s church has arrived at the issue decades too late.

This is only the second time that Poland’s…

View Cache

July 4, 2021

Firefighters inspect the damage at the burned-out Roman Catholic St Jean Baptiste church in Morinville, Alberta, Canada. Photograph: Anadolu Agency / Getty Images

Burned churches stir deep Indigenous ambivalence over faith of forefathers

PENTICTON (CANADA)
The Guardian [London, England]

July 4, 2021

By Leyland Cecco

Read original article

[Photo above: Firefighters inspect the damage at the burned-out Roman Catholic St Jean Baptiste church in Morinville, Alberta, Canada. Photograph: Anadolu Agency / Getty Images]

After hundreds of unmarked graves were found at Canada’s former Catholic-run residential schools, churches in First Nations territories have been destroyed by suspected arson

For more than a century, the clapboard church set amid rolling hills in western Canada has been a spiritual home to the Upper Similkameen Indian Band.

To build St Anne’s, residents of Chuchuwayha Indian Reserve #2 travelled 40 miles to the closest town, hauling lumber back to their community by horse and wagon.

To reach its pews, generations of congregants would travel miles by foot, past ponderosa pine and sagebrush.

But early last Saturday, thick smoke filled the air and flames ripped through the ageing wooden structure near Hedley in British Columbia. By the time local fire crews…

View Cache

Church fires are latest chapter in unmarked grave scandal

PENTICTON (CANADA)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

July 1, 2021

Read original article

Churches are burning across western Canada in a spate of fires which local authorities are treating as suspicious, and which one local premier has identified as possible hate crime. 

The fires, which have damaged or destroyed at least seven churches in recent days, follow the still ongoing confirmation of hundreds of unmarked graves of First Nations children on the sites of residential schools operated by the Catholic Church throughout the twentieth century.

No direct link has been proven between the discovery of the unmarked graves and the church burnings, but the fires have mostly occurred on tribal lands, amid fierce criticism of the Catholic Church from many Canadians, and renewed expressions of pain by First Nations peoples over systematic injustices, both historic and recent.

As the situation continues to unfold, The Pillar brings you a brief guide to what has happened, and who has said what so far.

History

The residential schools…

View Cache

Fire Destroys Two Catholic Churches on Canadian Indigenous Land

PENTICTON (CANADA)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 22, 2021

By Dan Bilefsky

Read original article

Montreal – National Canadian police were investigating on Tuesday after two century-old Catholic churches burned to the ground within hours of one another on Indigenous lands in British Columbia.

Indigenous leaders said they were particularly disturbed by the timing of the fires, which took place on National Indigenous Peoples Day, which celebrates Indigenous culture. The fires come at a particularly raw moment, just weeks after the unmarked graves of 215 children were found near a former church-run school in British Columbia.

While the circumstances remained murky, investigators said one line of inquiry was arson, including the possibility that the Indigenous communities had been targeted.

Investigators said another possible motive was anger at the Roman Catholic Church. The two churches are about 120 miles from the Kamloops Indian Residential School, where the children’s graves were discovered on the grounds in May.

From 1883 until 1996, an estimated 150,000 Indigenous children were sent…

View Cache

Vatican indicts Cardinal Becciu, former officials involved in London deal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

July 3, 2021

By Junno Arocho Esteves

Read original article

[Via Catholic Philly]

In an unprecedented move, Vatican prosecutors have indicted 10 individuals and entities, including Cardinal Angelo Becciu, former prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, on charges ranging from embezzlement to money laundering and abuse of office.

The indictment included charges against “ecclesiastical and lay personnel of the Secretariat of State and senior figures of the former Financial Information Authority, as well as external figures active in the world of international finance,” the Vatican said July 3.

Their trial at the Vatican was set to begin July 27.

In a statement released by his lawyers shortly after the announcement, Cardinal Becciu declared his “absolute innocence,” saying he was “the victim of a plot hatched against me.”

Cardinal Becciu said the accusations exposed him to “an unparalleled media pillory to which I did not defend myself, suffering in silence.” However, in November, he filed a lawsuit against the Italian…

View Cache

No queer person should face abuse I endured at College of the Ozarks

HOLLISTER (MO)
Springfield News-Leader [Springfield MO]

July 4, 2021

By Saren Craig

Read original article

I have been watching the College of the Ozarks lawsuit against the Biden administration over protections afforded to LGBTQ+ persons and cannot in good conscience keep silent about this very personal matter. I am a queer, non-binary trans person who was born an hour away from College of the Ozarks (C of O) on a cattle farm. My dad attended C of O, and it was expected that this was where I would go. I grew up in the ’80s and ’90s. My mother was a conservative Catholic and raised me in the church.

Although I wasn’t fully aware of my identity as a young child, I did get the message from my parents and my community that being LGBTQ wasn’t an option. I only started realizing I might be queer when it was used as a slur against me as a preteen. I was choked by some older boys…

View Cache

A Catholic Priest Admitted to Raping a Child. Because His Deposition Is Sealed, He Walks Free.

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Big Easy Magazine [New Orleans LA]

June 22, 2021

By Helen Lewis

Read original article

The Survivors of Childhood Sex Abuse (SCSA) issued a letter to various law enforcement officials requesting that they read the sealed deposition of accused child rapist, and former Catholic priest, Lawrence Hecker. 

The President of SCSA Richard Windmann explained that a “Federal Court in New Orleans, Louisiana has sealed a deposition in which a Catholic priest admitted to raping a child. Because the deposition is sealed by the court, this predator is a free man on the streets of our community, and no child is safe, and he has escaped Justice…In the original filing of the motion, the filing attorneys (who conducted the deposition) admitted that Lawrence Hecker admitted to raping a child.” The court ended up sealing the deposition because of the Archdiocese of New Orleans’s bankruptcy filing

Archbishop Aymond, who runs the Archdiocese of New Orleans, has repeatedly stated that the church cannot release personnel records…

View Cache

Tennessee abuse case settled after allegations ‘one of the most respected priests’ exploited adult converting to Catholicism

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Chattanooga Times Free Press [Chattanooga TN]

July 3, 2021

By Wyatt Massey

Read original article

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Knoxville has settled an abuse lawsuit against “one of the most respected priests in the diocese” who was accused of sexually exploiting an adult woman he converted to the Catholic faith in 2000.

In the lawsuit, Celeste Arnone accused the Rev. Michael Sweeney of sexual assault and exploitation, severe psychological distress, defamation, the loss of faith in God and the loss of her marriage. She also accused the diocese of negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress for its handling of her allegations after they were first reported.

“I hope my case will help survivors to, first of all, realize that this is not your fault, even if you might think it is, and it may take years to realize what actually did happen to you,” Arnone said in a statement to the Times Free Press.

The news comes as Pope Francis has moved to…

View Cache

July 3, 2021

Lansing Diocese deems abuse allegations against late Bishop as “credible”

LANSING (MI)
WILX - NBC 10 [Lansing MI]

July 2, 2021

By Krystle Holleman

Read original article

Friday the Diocese of Lansing announced it has deemed two allegations of sexual abuse leveled against the late Bishop James Sullivan as credible. Bishop Sullivan, who died of Alzheimer’s disease at the age of 76, was Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Lansing from 1972 to 1985. Sullivan then became Bishop of Fargo in North Dakota from 1985 to 2002.

Both accusations stem from the mid-1960′s when then-Father Sullivan was living at a parish in Lansing. Both male victims were subject to sexual grooming and inappropriate contact by Sullivan.

“Following investigation and review, the Diocese of Lansing has found two allegations against the late Bishop James Sullivan to be credible,” said David Kerr, spokesman for the Diocese of Lansing, July 2, 2021.

“Bishop Sullivan’s actions were gravely immoral, deeply scandalous and betrayed both the trust of the Catholic community within the Diocese of Lansing and, more significantly, the faith placed…

View Cache

Benedict XVI to mark 70 years as priest with brother’s choir

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

June 28, 2021

By Elise Ann Allen

Read original article

This week marks the 70th anniversary of retired Pope Benedict XVI’s ordination as a priest – an anniversary his personal secretary says will be celebrated with things of personal significance: The liturgy, and former members of his late brother’s choir.

Speaking to Rome Reports, German Archbishop Georg Gänswein, head of the Prefecture for the Papal Household and Benedict XVI’s personal secretary, said the choir was a surprise for Benedict.

For Benedict XVI, “surprises are always related to the liturgy,” Gänswein said, noting that for the June 29 anniversary, “We’ve invited a group of former members of the choir from Regensburg who learned to sing alongside his brother.”

By now, the chorists, who were children at the time of their participation in the Regensburg choir, are between 40 and 60 years old, and “some of them will sing in the chapel during Mass,” Gänswein said.

Gänswein was among the speakers for a…

View Cache

Vatican indicts 10 people, including a cardinal, in UK deal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 3, 2021

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

A Vatican judge on Saturday indicted 10 people, including a once-powerful cardinal, on charges including embezzlement, abuse of office, extortion and fraud in connection with the Secretariat of State’s 350 million-euro investment in a London real estate venture.

The president of the Vatican’s criminal tribunal, Giuseppe Pignatone, set July 27 as the trial date, according to a Vatican press statement.

The indictments were handed down following a sprawling, two-year investigation into how the Secretariat of State managed its vast asset portfolio, much of which is funded by the Peter’s Pence donations from the faithful. The scandal has resulted in a sharp reduction in donations and prompted Pope Francis to strip the office of its ability to manage the money.

Five former Vatican officials, including Cardinal Angelo Becciu and two officials from the Secretariat of State, were indicted, as well as Italian businessmen who handled the London investment.

Also indicted on…

View Cache

LA Judge Rules Childhood Sex Abuse Statute Allowing Triple Damages for Cover Up Unconstitutional

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Legal Examiner - Saunders & Walker [Pinellas Park FL]

July 2, 2021

By Joseph H. Saunders

Read original article

The Judge handling the coordinated Clergy childhood sex abuse cases in Los Angeles and Orange Counties ruled on June 11, 2021 that California Statute, CCP 340.1(b)(1) is unconstitutionally vague and that it violates the ex post facto clauses of the state and federal constitutions. The ruling let stand the core of CCP 340.1 which provides a window in the Statute of Limitations for survivors of childhood sex abuse to bring cases from years or decades ago that would have otherwise been time barred.  Hundreds of lawsuits have been filed by survivors of childhood sex abuse since AB 218 was passed by the California Legislature and signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom in 2019.

The section of Statute 340 that was stricken states:

(b) (1) In an action described in subdivision (a), a person who is sexually assaulted and proves it was as the result of a cover up may recover up…

View Cache

July 2, 2021

Destitución definitiva del estado clerical a un exsacerdote de Reconquista

SANTA FE (ARGENTINA)
AICA - Agencia Informativa Católica Argentina [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

July 2, 2021

Read original article

El Obispado de Reconquista emitió un comunicado de prensa en el que informa que fue rechazada la apelación presentada por Néstor Fabián Monzón, quien fue definitivamente destituido del estado clerical.

El Obispado de Reconquista emitió un comunicado en referencia a la apelación presentada por Néstor Fabián Monzón a un decreto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, en el que informa que dicha apelación fue rechazada y el estado clerical de Monzón fue destituído de forma definitiva.

Texto del comunicado

Reconquista, 1 de julio de 2021.

A los cristianos de la Diócesis de Reconquista, y a la Comunidad en General:

Mediante una carta recibida el día 01 de junio de 2021, dirigida al obispo diocesano, Mons. Ángel José Macín, con fecha del 11 de mayo de 2021, Prot. 262/2016-82797, el Prefecto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe y Moderador del Colegio para el Examen de…

View Cache
The Catholic Diocese of Lansing determined allegations against the late Bishop James Sullivan, accused of abusing two boys, to be credible.

Sexual abuse allegations against late Lansing priest deemed credible

LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal [Lansing MI]

July 2, 2021

By Mark Johnson

Read original article

[Photo above: The Catholic Diocese of Lansing determined allegations against the late Bishop James Sullivan, accused of abusing two boys, to be credible.]

LANSING —The Catholic Diocese of Lansing determined allegations against the late Bishop James Sullivan, who is accused of sexually abusing two boys, to be credible.

Sullivan, who died in 2006, was the auxiliary bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Lansing from 1972 to 1985 before leaving to become bishop in Fargo, North Dakota from 1985 to 2002, according to a Diocese of Lansing press release issued Friday. 

The Diocese of Lansing launched an investigation in July 2020 after the Michigan Attorney General provided it with abuse allegations against Sullivan. A second allegation emerged during a probe led by a private investigator.

In 1964, Sullivan inappropriately touched a boy, who was 12 years old at the time, according to the press release, and subjected the boy to “uninvited sexualized conversations.” The…

View Cache

Ex-New Orleans priest accused of molestation surrenders law license after lying about past

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WWL-TV [New Orleans LA]

July 2, 2021

By David Hammer and Ramon Antonio Vargas / The New Orleans Advocate

Read original article

Patrick Sanders insists he is innocent, saying, “I feel an injustice has been done to me and my life’s vocation has been taken away.”

NEW ORLEANS — A former New Orleans-area priest who was removed from the ministry over credible allegations of child sex abuse before becoming a successful personal injury attorney recently surrendered his law license forever because he hid his scandalous past from bar exam administrators.

According to documents filed with the Louisiana Supreme Court, which metes out discipline to attorneys in the state, Patrick Sanders signed up to take the bar exam in 2007 and 2009. Both times, the application asked, in various forms, whether he had ever been forced out of a job, disciplined for misbehavior or simply accused of misconduct.

Sanders answered “no” each time, even though Catholic Church leaders in New Orleans had stripped him of his position as the pastor of Our Lady…

View Cache

Lansing Diocese: Accusations that ex-bishop sexually abused two boys are ‘credible’

LANSING (MI)
WSYM-TV - Fox 47 [Lansing MI]

July 2, 2021

By Matthew Miller

Read original article

LANSING, Mich. — The Diocese of Lansing has determined that two allegations of sexual abuse against former Bishop James Sullivan are credible.

Both victims were boys who were “subject to sexual grooming and inappropriate contact by Sullivan” in the mid-1960s when Sullivan was living at the Church of the Resurrection Parish in Lansing, according to a statement released by the diocese on Friday.

Sullivan, who died in 2006, was auxiliary bishop of the diocese from 1972 to 1985 before becoming Bishop of Fargo in North Dakota from 1985 to 2002.

“Bishop Sullivan’s actions were gravely immoral, deeply scandalous and betrayed both the trust of the Catholic community within the Diocese of Lansing and, more significantly, the faith placed in him by the victims and their families to whom we say: ‘This should not have happened to you and we are profoundly sorry that it ever did,’” said David Kerr, spokesman…

View Cache

Allegations of minor sex abuse in Michigan against former Fargo Catholic Bishop James Sullivan

FARGO (ND)
KFGO radio [Fargo ND]

July 2, 2021

By Paul Jurgens

Read original article

FARGO (KFGO) – The Fargo Roman Catholic Diocese says sexual abuse claims of a minor by former Bishop James Sullivan have been substantiated while he was serving as a priest in Lansing, Michigan.

The diocese says the abuse took place several decades ago.

There were no credible abuse allegations made against Sullivan while he was in Fargo. Sullivan died in June 2006 after his retirement.

As a result of the substantiated claims in Michigan, the diocese has changed the name of Sullivan Middle School in Fargo to Sacred Heart Middle School.

View Cache

Ex-Vatican adviser faces trial after claiming he could cure gay men by having sex with them

PARIS (FRANCE)
Pink News [United Kingdom]

July 2, 2021

By Lily Wakefield

Read original article

A former Vatican adviser who campaigned against same-sex marriage and gay priests is facing trial over claims he told gay men he could cure them with sex.

Tony Anatrella, an 80-year-old French psychotherapist, Catholic priest and former Vatican adviser, who has been plagued by accusations of sexual abuse for the last 20 years.

Finally, the Paris Archdiocese has confirmed that Anatrella will face trial in a church court, according to the National Catholic Reporter.

There are not yet any details on the charges he will face, or when the trial will begin.

In 2006, a man named Daniel Lamarca went public with his accusations of sexual abuse by Anatrella in an interview with Dutch newspaper Nederlands Dagblad. 

Lamarca said he tried to report the alleged abuse to the archbishop of Paris in 2001, but was ignored. “I know details about Anatrella’s body that could only be known…

View Cache

Both Are Abuse Survivors, but One Can Sue and One Can’t

SYRACUSE (NY)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 7, 2021

By David W. Chen

Read original article

A proposed law in New York would clear the way for people who were abused after turning 18 to sue for damages

SYRACUSE, N.Y. — After months of video calls and group emails, Robert Druger and Robert Bender agreed to meet for the first time on Memorial Day and revisit the places that had caused so much parallel anguish, four decades ago.

Here, Druger said, was the loading dock at the rear of a Syracuse University residence hall. This was where a charming graduate student who happened to be a former Olympic hurdler had sneaked high school athletes like Druger into his suite, only to groom and molest them later.

There, Bender pointed, behind the glass doors, was the elevator that he rode up to his room, the day he arrived on campus in 1980. This was where that same Olympian, upon learning Bender was a gymnast, had promised elite…

View Cache

Stray Thoughts: A church and its misplaced priorities

DES MOINES (IA)
Bloomfield Democrat [Bloomfield IA]

June 29, 2021

By Randy Evans

Read original article

Talk about lousy timing.

The biggest religion story in Iowa last week was a jaw-dropper. Attorney General Tom Miller announced he has concluded a three-year investigation of sexual abuse allegations against priests in the four Roman Catholic dioceses in our state.

Miller’s staff examined church records, some dating to the 1930s, that involved about 100 priests. His office also received and looked into 50 allegations against 36 priests, many of whom were the subject of earlier complaints.

Most of the cases involved priests who are now either deceased or retired. But three of the allegations involved priests who are still active in the church’s ministry.

“Sexual abuse took place over decades,” Miller’s report said. “The complaints, the victims, the duration of the abuse were overwhelming.”

He continued: “The cover-up was extensive. The image and reputation of the church were put ahead of the enormous harm to young people.”

Here we…

View Cache

U.S. to Search Former Native American Schools for Children’s Remains

WASHINGTON (DC)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 23, 2021

By Christine Hauser and Isabella Grullón Paz

Read original article

Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland announced a new initiative that would delve into the records of the federal schools to which Native American children were forcibly relocated for 150 years.

The United States will search federal boarding schools for possible burial sites of Native American children, hundreds of thousands of whom were forcibly taken from their communities to be culturally assimilated in the schools for more than a century, the interior secretary announced on Tuesday.

The initiative is likely to resemble a recent effort in Canada, where the discovery of the remains of 215 children at the site of a defunct boarding school rekindled discussion of the traumatic history and treatment of Native populations.

Addressing a virtual conference of the National Congress of American Indians, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland said the program would “shed light on the unspoken traumas of the past, no matter how hard it will…

View Cache

Sex abuse claims against ex-Fargo bishop credible, Sullivan Middle School renamed

FARGO (ND)
KVRR-TV (Fox, Ch. 15) [Fargo ND]

July 2, 2021

By Jim Monk

Read original article

FARGO (KVRR) – The Diocese of Fargo says an investigation has found that sexual misconduct allegations against former Bishop James Sullivan have been deemed credible.

The investigation was conducted by the Diocese of Lansing, Michigan.  The allegation involves a minor and took place several decades ago when Sullivan was a priest in Lansing.

There have been no allegations made against Sullivan during his time as Bishop of Fargo or after his retirement.

Sullivan was Bishop of the Fargo Diocese from 1985 to 2002.  He died in 2006.

“I am saddened by the reports concerning Bishop Sullivan, and I am sure the faithful of the Diocese of Fargo share in my disappointment” Diocese of Fargo Bishop John Folda said.  “I ask that we join in prayers for healing and continue in our resolve and efforts to protect those whom we serve.”

Sullivan Middle School, part of the St. John Paul II Catholic…

View Cache

Announcement from Bishop John Folda on allegations against the late Bishop Sullivan

FARGO (ND)
Diocese of Fargo ND

July 2, 2021

Read original article

The Diocese of Fargo has been informed by the Diocese of Lansing, MI that after an investigation, accusations of sexual misconduct with a minor made against the late Bishop James Sullivan, sixth Bishop of Fargo, and previously a priest of the Diocese of Lansing, have been deemed credible. The Diocese of Lansing has added Bishop Sullivan’s name to its list of clergy with credible accusations of sexual misconduct with a minor.

As a result of this, the Diocese of Fargo has also added Bishop Sullivan’s name to its list of clergy who served or ever lived within the Diocese of Fargo who are on the list of another diocese/religious order. 

“I am saddened by the reports concerning Bishop Sullivan, and I am sure the faithful of the Diocese of Fargo share in my disappointment,” said Bishop Folda. “I ask that we join in prayers for healing and continue in our resolve and efforts…

View Cache

Sex abuse allegations against former Fargo bishop deemed credible; middle school renamed

FARGO (ND)
InForum [Fargo ND]

July 2, 2021

Read original article

Sullivan Middle School, part of the St. John Paul II Catholic Schools network, was named after Bishop Sullivan. Due to the allegations, Sullivan Middle School has been renamed Sacred Heart Middle School, the Fargo Diocese said.

FARGO — Accusations of sexual abuse of a minor against a former Fargo bishop have been deemed credible by Catholic officials, the Fargo Diocese said in a statement issued Friday, July 2.

The accusations are against the late Bishop James Sullivan, the sixth bishop of Fargo, who was previously a priest of the Diocese of Lansing, Michigan.

“The accusations allege the incidents took place several decades ago when Bishop Sullivan was a priest in the Lansing Diocese. There have been no allegations made against Bishop Sullivan during his time as Bishop of Fargo or after his retirement,” the Fargo Diocese said in its statement.

Sullivan died June 12, 2006, in Fargo.

Sullivan Middle School,…

View Cache

Poland’s Bishops Release Data on Allegations of Clerical Sexual Abuse

WARSAW (POLAND)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

July 1, 2021

Read original article

Over the course of eighteen months, from July 2018 to December 2020, the Catholic Church in Poland recorded 368 allegations of sexual abuse of minors, with accusations going as far back as 1958.

The nation’s Catholic bishops presented the figures at a press conference on Monday. It was the second report on abuse cases released by the Bishops’ Conference, with the first detailing 382 cases reported between January 1990 and June 2018. Monday’s report reflects new allegations since then.

At Monday’s press briefing, the Conference’s coordinator for the protection of children and young people, Adam Zak, said, “We have a wave of revelations. This is a continuous wave, you can see that this is not a downward trend, but there are consistently quite high figures.”

The cases reported between 2018 and 2020 involved 292 priests and religious, with 58 having more than one allegation against them. Half of the cases…

View Cache

The Cosby Conviction Reversal Reveals a Faultline in Our Justice System for Sex Assault Victims: Unfairly Short Statutes of Limitation

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Justia [Mountain View CA]

July 1, 2021

By Marci Hamilton

Read original article

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court sent shockwaves through the sex assault survivor community when it let Bill Cosby off on a narrow technicality. Over 50 women have accused Cosby of assault, and the testimony at his second criminal trial sealed the truth: this man is a predator. A jury said so, because the evidence is overwhelming.

So why did the Pennsylvania Justices let him out? Because they said District Attorney Bruce Castor gave Cosby a deal that his successor couldn’t renege—a promise not to prosecute the charges brought by Andrea Constand in a press release, which then opened the door to Cosby being sued for civil damages. He settled for $3.4 million in that case and admitted to slipping Quaaludes to women to have sex with them, aka, to rape them.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s majority held that Castor’s public promise not to prosecute was binding and that, therefore, Cosby never should have been…

View Cache

Catholic priest faces charges after being accused of sexually assaulting a child in 1998

PLUM (PA)
Tribune-Review [Pittsburgh PA]

June 29, 2021

By Tanisha Thomas

Read original article

A Catholic priest is facing multiple charges stemming from an alleged sexual assault on an 8-year-old boy on two occasions 23 years ago at a parish in Plum.

The Rev. Robert Cedolia is charged by Allegheny County Police with aggravated indecent assault, corruption of minors, two counts of indecent assault and one count of unlawful contact with minor.

The accuser, now 31, told county detectives on Oct. 20, 2020, that both incidents occurred prior to his first Holy Communion in spring 1998 at Our Lady of Joy in Plum, according to a criminal complaint.

In the first incident, according to the complaint, the accuser said he was removed from the other students attending the training and taken to the Sacristy room by Cedolia. Because the boy had previously requested to be more involved in Mass as a bell ringer, he thought that Cedolia was sizing him for a robe. But the…

View Cache

FMCSD reviewing sexual abuse accusations against namesake of Father Turcotte School

FORT MCMURRAY (CANADA)
Grande Prairie Daily Herald Tribune [Alberta, Canada]

July 2, 2021

By Vincent McDermott

Read original article

Two people who attended the Holy Angels Residential School in Fort Chipewyan are accusing Father J.A. Turcotte, who has an elementary school named after him in Fort McMurray, of sexually abusing their peers in the 1960s.

“I could hear him do things to the others,” the man said. “He didn’t get what he wanted from me but I watched out for him all the time.”

Chief Allan Adam of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation said the older students used to call Turcotte “Father Jerk-off.” He was not at the school at the same time as Turcotte, but said stories were common among the older children, including siblings, who knew him.

“They honour him while we walk the streets of Fort McMurray,” said Adam.

Adam made his accusations while speaking at the Bring Our Children Home Healing Rally outside St. John the Baptist Roman Catholic Church in downtown Fort McMurray.

During his…

View Cache

182 human remains discovered in unmarked graves near former residential school

CRANBROOK (CANADA)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

July 1, 2021

By Rebekah Riess, CNN

Read original article

A search has revealed 182 human remains in unmarked graves at the site of another residential school in British Columbia.

The Lower Kootenay Band, a member band of the Ktunaxa Nation, has announced that remains were found at the site of the former St. Eugene’s Mission School near the city of Cranbrook.

This announcement comes after hundreds of unmarked graves thought to contain the remains of Indigenous children were recently discovered at the sites of two other former boarding schools in Canada and many First Nations communities having called for a halt to Canada Day celebrations Thursday.

“It is believed that the remains of these 182 souls are from the member Bands of the Ktunaxa nation, neighbouring First Nations communities, & the community of aqam,” the Lower Kootenay Band said in a statement released Wednesday.

A search conducted by the Aqam community using ground-penetrating radar showed…

View Cache

Catholic groups urge action against child pornography in Europe

OXFORD (UNITED KINGDOM)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 1, 2021

By Jonathan Luxmoore, Catholic News Service

Read original article

OXFORD, United Kingdom — Catholic campaigners have demanded action to curb growing online pornography and child abuse in the European Union, as the bloc’s Catholic bishops welcomed new legislative proposals but also urged tighter controls.

“Internet access and digitization have greatly increased during the coronavirus pandemic, and we’re deeply concerned about the effects on children of harassment, abuse and grooming,” said Bénédicte Colin, policy manager with the Federation of Catholic Family Associations in Europe.

“In most EU member-states, it’s illegal for minors to access online pornography, but these regulations aren’t put into practice. However effective your laws, they count for little or nothing if not implemented.”ADVERTISING

The French lay Catholic spoke as the Commission of the Bishops’ Conferences of the European Union, representing over a thousand bishops, published a statement on current EU efforts to combat online crime.

In a June 20 interview with Catholic News Service, Colin said her federation,…

View Cache

Quebec religious order settles two class-action suits out of court

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 2, 2021

By Francois Gloutnay

Read original article

Quebec’s Brothers of the Sacred Heart agreed to pay 60 million Canadian dollars (US$48.5 million) to settle two class action lawsuits on clerical sexual abuse.

The suits, filed in 2016 and 2019, were settled out of court at a conference presided over by retired Judge Claudette Picard. The agreement must be approved by the Superior Court.

The two class actions “targeted no less than 90 aggressors,” said Pierre Boivin, one of the victims’ lawyers. The aggressors — several of them are named in the applications to institute proceedings — are religious and ex-religious. Many are now deceased.

In a statement issued June 29, the Quebec leaders of the Brothers of the Sacred Heart made a point of officially apologizing to the victims.

“Any form of abuse is in flagrant contradiction with the values and educational mission of religious communities who want to establish a relationship of trust with the young…

View Cache
The man said in the suit he was abused by Bruce Ritter (above) for three years as a teenager.David Rentas/N.Y. Post

NY Catholic church sued by Cali man who claims years of abuse in youth home

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

July 1, 2021

By Priscilla DeGregory and Jessica Sonkin

Read original article

[Photo above: The man said in the suit he was abused by Bruce Ritter (above) for three years as a teenager. David Rentas/N.Y. Post]

A California man has filed suit against the Catholic church in New York claiming he was repeatedly sexually abused when he was a teen by Covenant House founder Father Bruce Ritter in the 1980s, new court papers show.

The man — who filed suit anonymously in Manhattan Supreme Court under the initials BC — claims Ritter began molesting him when he was just 13 in 1981, with the abuse continuing until he was 16, according to the complaint from Thursday.

Ritter — who died in 1999 — first befriended the teen buying him gifts and clothing and paying him special attention “in an effort to earn his trust,” the court papers allege.

But within a month of arriving at the home for wayward youths, Ritter started his years-long…

View Cache

Explosion of clergy sexual abuse cases in Poland

La Croix International [France]

June 30, 2021

By Magda Viatteau

Read original article

The wave of sexual abuse accusations within the Church is intensifying in John Paul II’s homeland, according to a new report published by Poland’s Catholic bishops

The Catholic bishops of Poland have released new statistics on sexual abuse in the Church, following the Holy See’s recent sanctioning of a several prelates for “negligence” in handling cases of priests who abused minors.

The publication of the new data this past Monday also followed a lengthy visit to Poland by Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, president of the Council of the Bishops’ Conferences of Europe (CCEE).

The Italian was in the Eastern European country to investigate similar accusations of negligence against John Paul II’s former secretary, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz.

“We are facing a wave of accusations,” said Adam Żak, the Jesuit priest in charge of the Polish episcopal conference’s office for the protection of minors.

“The trend is not downward; it remains at a…

View Cache

Boy Scouts of America reach $850 million deal with sex abuse accusers

WILMINGTON (DE)
New York Daily News

July 1, 2021

By Stephen Rex Brown

Read original article

The Boy Scouts of America have reached an agreement that will pay around $850 million to more than 60,000 men who say they were abused as scouts, the Daily News has learned.

The deal, announced late Thursday, is major step toward the embattled youth organization emerging from bankruptcy.

Under the agreement filed in Delaware Bankruptcy Court, the Boy Scouts of America will pay $250 million. Local councils of the Scouts will pay at least $600 million, some of it through the transfer of property.

The deal is the result of months of negotiations between survivor groups, the Boy Scouts of America and more than 250 local councils, which are akin to franchises. Victims will continue to seek money from insurers, former insurers and chartered organizations of the Scouts such as the Catholic and Mormon Churches.

The process of distributing money to victims will begin once the Scouts exit chapter 11…

View Cache

July 1, 2021

CCCB Statement – Date of the Delegation to the Holy See

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB)

June 29, 2021

Read original article

Following the 10 June 2021 announcement regarding the delegation of Indigenous people to meet with the Holy Father to foster meaningful encounters of dialogue and healing, the Catholic Bishops of Canada are pleased to announce that the delegation is scheduled to take place from 17‑20 December 2021 in compliance with global travel restrictions.

Pope Francis is deeply committed to hearing directly from Indigenous Peoples, expressing his heartfelt closeness, addressing the impact of colonization and the role of the Church in the residential school system, in the hopes of responding to the suffering of Indigenous Peoples and the ongoing effects of intergenerational trauma. The Bishops of Canada are deeply appreciative of the Holy Father’s spirit of openness in generously extending an invitation for personal encounters with each of the three distinct groups of delegates – First Nations, Métis and Inuit – as well as a final audience with all delegates together on…

View Cache

Pope Agrees to Meet With Indigenous Groups From Canada About Schools

OTTAWA (CANADA)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 30, 2021

By Ian Austen and Vjosa Isai

Read original article

OTTAWA — Pope Francis will meet with Indigenous leaders later this year to discuss coming to Canada to apologize for the church’s role in operating schools that abused and forcibly assimilated generations of Indigenous children, a step toward resolving the grievances of survivors and Indigenous communities, the head of Canada’s largest Indigenous organization said on Wednesday.

In a statement, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops said that the pope will meet separately at the Vatican with the representatives of Canada’s three biggest Indigenous groups — the First Nations, the Métis and the Inuit — during a four-day series of meetings in December that will culminate in a joint session with all three.

“Pope Francis is deeply committed to hearing directly from Indigenous Peoples, expressing his heartfelt closeness, addressing the impact of colonization and the role of the Church in the residential school system,” the bishops wrote.

Canada’s Indigenous…

View Cache

Opinion: Deb Haaland: My grandparents were stolen from their families as children. We must learn about this history.

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

June 11, 2021

By U.S. Interior Secretary Deb Haaland

Read original article

Deb Haaland, the U.S. interior secretary, is the first Native American to serve as a Cabinet secretary.

Deb Haaland discusses this piece in more detail on James Hohmann’s podcast, “Please, Go On.” Listen now.

As I read stories about an unmarked grave in Canada where the remains of 215 Indigenous children were found last month, I was sick to my stomach. But the deaths of Indigenous children at the hands of government were not limited to that side of the border. Many Americans may be alarmed to learn that the United States also has a history of taking Native children from their families in an effort to eradicate our culture and erase us as a people. It is a history that we must learn from if our country is to heal from this tragic era.

I am a product of these horrific assimilation policies. My maternal grandparents were stolen from…

View Cache

Secretary Haaland Announces Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative

WASHINGTON (DC)
U.S. Department of the Interior

June 22, 2021

Read original article

Outlines Path Forward on Troubled Legacy of Federal Boarding School Policies in Remarks to National Congress of American Indians

Contact: Interior_Press@ios.doi.gov

WASHINGTON — In remarks to the National Congress of American Indians 2021 Mid Year Conference today, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland announced a Federal Indian Boarding School Initiative, a comprehensive review of the troubled legacy of federal boarding school policies.

Today’s announcement is accompanied by a secreterial memo in which Secretary Haaland directs the Department to prepare a report detailing available historical records, with an emphasis on cemeteries or potential burial sites, relating to the federal boarding school program in preparation for a future site work. This work will occur under the supervision of the Assistant Secretary for Indian Affairs.

“The Interior Department will address the inter-generational impact of Indian boarding schools to shed light on the unspoken traumas of the past, no matter how hard it will be,” said Secretary…

View Cache

Menominee Tribal members say ancestors’ stories and unmarked graves on reservation detail past residential school abuse

KESHENA (WI)
WBAY-TV [Green Bay WI]

July 1, 2021

By Jeff Alexander

Read original article

[VIDEO]

KESHENA, Wis. (WBAY) – The recent discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves on the grounds of former residential schools for Indigenous children in Canada is triggering pain and anger on the Menominee Indian Reservation.

Tribal members say many of their ancestors suffered traumatic experiences at similar boarding schools on the reservation and across the country. They say their grandparents’ and great-grandparents’ stories, along with many unmarked graves near where boarding schools once stood, are proof of rampant abuse and neglect.

Behind a Catholic church in Keshena, Lorraine Shooter leads us into the woods where a number of Menominee children a buried.

“Some of the ages are pretty young and it makes you wonder how they passed away,” says Shooter.

Most of the graves on this land, though, are unmarked.

“Back here some of the elders had said that they just pushed the graves back there and there are people…

View Cache

Update On Ongoing Investigation Of Abuse

BIG ROCK (IL)
Anglican Diocese of the Upper Midwest [Wheaton IL]

June 29, 2021

By Bishop Stewart Ruch III

Read original article

Beloved Upper Midwest Diocese:

I am writing to give you an update on the ongoing independent investigation that I announced to you in this pastoral letter several weeks ago about a heartbreaking situation in one of our former congregations in Big Rock, Illinois. 

As some of you may be aware, one of the survivors recently spoke about this on social media, identifying herself as a victim of sexual violence and raising important questions and concerns about the diocese’s investigative process related to Mark Rivera.

Let me first say that I and our diocesan leadership continue to be deeply grieved and disturbed that anyone within our diocesan community has been victimized. This is an extremely painful, traumatic experience. We long for our diocese to be a place of true safety for all. 

Not only that, but we are committed to responding to any allegations of abuse within any of our churches in…

View Cache

New ‘twin-track’ Clergy Conduct Measure is flawed, warn critics

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Church Times [London, England]

July 1, 2021

Read original article

THE “twin-track” replacement for the Clergy Discipline Measure (CDM) proposed by the Lambeth working group and due to be discussed at General Synod in a week’s time is missing a track, critics say.

The Vicar-General of York, the Rt Worshipful Peter Collier QC, chaired an independent working group on the CDM set up by the Ecclesiastical Law Society (News, 24 FebruaryComment, 11 December 2020). In an online article for the Church Times this week, he expresses appreciation of the acknowledgement done by the society (ELS) that is contained in the short paper produced for the Synod by the Lambeth Working Group, which was commissioned by the House of Bishops to find reforms and, latterly, a replacement for the discredited CDM.

But he writes: “I don’t understand how we can be said to have assisted to shape their proposals when they appear to have rejected the fundamental thrust of what we…

View Cache
Msgr. Tony Anatrella speaks during a conference in Lille, France, in 2012. (Wikimedia Commons/Peter Potrowl)

French priest, former Vatican adviser, to face church trial on abuse claims

PARIS (FRANCE)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

July 1, 2021

By Elisabeth Auvillain

Read original article

[Photo above: Msgr. Tony Anatrella speaks during a conference in Lille, France, in 2012. (Wikimedia Commons/Peter Potrowl)]

PARIS — A prominent French priest and psychotherapist who was once an influential Vatican adviser on matters regarding human sexuality is going to face trial in a church court over accusations of inappropriate sexual relationships with male clients, the Paris Archdiocese has confirmed.

The charges against Msgr. Tony Anatrella have not been announced. Neither has a date for the beginning of the proceedings been given. Catholic Church canonical proceedings are often held with strict secrecy requirements.

Rumors of sexual abuse by Anatrella have been circulating for nearly two decades. French dioceses often sent seminarians suspected of being gay to the therapist, who claimed to know how to help young men suppress their homosexuality.

Anatrella, now 80, was banned from ministering as a priest by Paris Archbishop Michel Aupetit in 2018. The canonical…

View Cache

Polish Catholic Archbishop Sanctioned by Vatican Defends Election as Mayor

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

July 1, 2021

By Catholic News Agency

Read original article

The apostolic nunciature in Poland announced on March 29 that the Vatican had sanctioned Archbishop Głódź after a probe under the norms of Pope Francis’ 2019 motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi.

A Polish Catholic archbishop sanctioned by the Vatican has defended his election as a village mayor.

Archbishop Sławoj Leszek Głódź told Radio Zet on June 29 that his role as mayor of Piaski, in northeastern Poland, did not conflict with canon law. 

Canon 285 of the Code of Canon Law says that “clerics are forbidden to assume public offices which entail a participation in the exercise of civil power.”

But Archbishop Głódź, who holds a doctorate in Eastern Catholic canon law, insisted that the canon did not apply to his new role.

“This is not a government function,” he said.

Archbishop Głódź served the archdiocese of Gdańsk from 2008 to Aug. 13, 2020, when the pope accepted his resignation on his…

View Cache

Former St. Mary’s priest named in attorney general’s abuse report

STORM LAKE (IA)
The Storm Lake Times [Storm Lake IA]

June 30, 2021

By Tom Cullen

Read original article

A former Storm Lake priest and Fonda man affiliated with the Catholic church have been accused of sexually abusing young boys decades ago, according to an Iowa Attorney General’s report that commended the Sioux City Diocese for keeping an active list of “credibly accused” priests and clergy members.

The attorney general’s report released last week said Everett Apt of St. Mary’s Parish and an unidentified “non-clergy member who was involved in a Catholic organization” in Fonda were among its list of 31 alleged abusers. The allegations reportedly occurred in the 1940s and mid-1960s, which falls out of Iowa’s statute of limitations for criminal prosecution. 

The report said a woman told “several priests” in the 1980s about sexual abuse allegedly committed by Apt against her husband when he was in high school. Apt was already leveled with 10 credible allegations. The woman’s claims were made after Apt’s death.

The diocese withheld…

View Cache

Buffalo priest placed on leave following abuse allegations in new lawsuits

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

June 30, 2021

By Jay Tokasz

Read original article

A retired Buffalo priest who is accused of child sex abuse in two recent Child Victims Act lawsuits has been put on administrative leave.

Bishop Michael W. Fisher suspended Monsignor James G. Kelly from active ministry Wednesday after an unnamed plaintiff said in court papers that Kelly molested him from 1980 to 1982. The plaintiff was an 8-to 10-year-old student of the Diocesan Educational Center and attended church at St. Nicholas and St. Benedict the Moor at the time of the alleged abuse. The school and both parishes are now defunct.

The Buffalo Diocese is launching a monitoring program that will include monthly home visits and other restrictions for offending priests.

Kelly, 83, also was accused in a June 11 lawsuit by an unnamed plaintiff of engaging in unpermitted sexual contact with a minor from 2005 to 2007 while assigned to St. Margaret Church in North Buffalo.

Diocese officials said…

View Cache

‘No guarantees’ of papal apology for residential schools after Vatican trip: AFN

OTTAWA (CANADA)
CTV Television Network [Toronto, Canada]

June 30, 2021

By Stephanie Taylor, The Canadian Press

Read original article

OTTAWA — Assembly of First Nations National Chief Perry Bellegarde says there are no guarantees an Indigenous delegation travelling to the Vatican will lead to Pope Francis apologizing in Canada for the Catholic Church’s role in residential schools — but they must try.

Bellegarde confirmed AFN representatives will join Metis and Inuit leaders making the trip in late December to seek a papal apology.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission’s final report into the residential school system released in 2015 called for the pope to come to Canada to apologize to survivors as well as their families and communities for the abuses faced by Indigenous children.

It asked for that to happen within one year of the report’s release and to be similar to the papal apology delivered to victims in Ireland that suffered different abuses through the Catholic Church.

Outrage over the lack of an apology has been reaching new…

View Cache

As Catholic Church fundraising falls short, Saskatoon bishop still hopes Pope will apologize for residential schools

SASKATOON (CANADA)
CTV Television Network [Toronto, Canada]

June 30, 2021

By Chad Leroux

Read original article

SASKATOON — When the Indian Residential School Settlement Agreement (IRSSA) was signed in 2006, the Roman Catholic Church agreed to provide $25 million in compensation for historical wrongs – and the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) says the church hasn’t done enough to reach that goal.

According to a release from the Roman Catholic Diocese of Saskatoon, those who signed the IRSSA committed to the following:

  •  Payment of $29 million in cash, which was directed to programs and services und the supervision of First Nations organizations, and to the “Returning to Spirit’ program. The diocese of Saskatoon’s share of this amount was $25,000.
  •  A “services-in-kind” commitment, whereby various community services and programs worth more than $25 million were organized by the various Catholic entities to be provided for Indigenous communities. The diocese of Saskatoon’s services-in-kind contribution to restorative ministry was valued at $43,000.
  •  A final fundraising appeal that…
View Cache

Retired Buffalo priest placed on administrative leave after allegations of abuse surface

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB [Buffalo NY]

June 30, 2021

By Patrick Ryan

Read original article

A retired Buffalo priest, who still helps in parish ministry, has been placed on administrative leave after allegations of abuse were levied against 83-year-old Rev. Msgr. James G. Kelly.

The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo says a complaint was filed anonymously pursuant to the Child Victims Act by someone who claims they were abused as a child 15 years ago by Msgr. Kelly. The complaint wasn’t served directly to the diocese, it was discovered “during a recent search of publicly filed complaints.”

Msgr. Kelly denied committing any acts of abuse. The diocese notified the Erie County District Attorney’s office and contacted the plaintiff’s attorney after learning of the complaint. The matter has also been reported to their Independent Review Board — responsible for appointing an independent investigator. 

The diocese says they’re working to see if the victim is willing to participate in an investigation.

While waiting for a response from the…

View Cache

Pope to meet with Canada Indigenous amid demands for apology

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 30, 2021

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

Pope Francis has agreed to meet in December with Indigenous survivors of Canada’s notorious residential schools amid calls for a papal apology for the Catholic Church’s role in the abuse and deaths of thousands of native children.

The Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops said Francis had invited the delegations to the Vatican and would meet separately with three groups — First Nations, Metis and Inuit — during their Dec. 17-20 visit. The pope will then preside over a final audience with all three groups Dec. 20, the conference said in a statement Tuesday.

The Vatican didn’t confirm the visit Wednesday, but the Holy See’s in-house news portal reported on the bishops’ statement. The Canadian bishops said the trip was contingent on the pandemic and that the delegations would include survivors of the residential schools, Indigenous elders and youths, as well as Indigenous leaders and Canadian bishops.

In recent weeks, investigators…

View Cache

Canadian Indigenous group says more graves found at new site

CRANBROOK (CANADA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 30, 2021

Read original article

A Canadian Indigenous group said Wednesday a search using ground-penetrating radar has found 182 human remains in unmarked graves at a site near a former Catholic Church-run residential school that housed Indigenous children taken from their families.

The latest discovery of graves near Cranbrook, British Columbia follows reports of similar findings at two other such church-run schools, one of more than 600 unmarked graves and another of 215 bodies. Cranbrook is 524 miles (843 kilometers) east of Vancouver.

The Lower Kootenay Band said in a news release that it began using the technology last year to search the site close to the former St. Eugene’s Mission School, which was operated by the Catholic Church from 1912 until the early 1970s. It said the search found the remains in unmarked graves, some about 3 feet (a meter) deep.

It’s believed the remains are those of people from the bands of the…

View Cache

Milwaukee Archbishop: ‘It’s the Church That Is Continually Targeted’

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

June 30, 2021

By Joseph O'Brien

Read original article

Archbishop Jerome Listecki discusses his challenge to the Wisconsin attorney general’s request to reopen old sexual abuse cases.

Archbishop Jerome Listecki of Milwaukee is one of only a relative handful of clergy in the Catholic Church to hold canon law and civil law degrees. Putting his knowledge of the law to work, the archbishop of Milwaukee has challenged the Wisconsin attorney general’s request to review reports of clergy abuse in the state, seeing it as an infringement on the Church’s rights and a constitutional violation of religious freedom.  

Wisconsin attorney general Josh Kaul announced this past April that it was heading up an investigation into alleged sexual abuse in “the state’s Catholic dioceses and at least three religious orders.”. The review would begin with Wisconsin Department of Justice (WDOJ) requests for files and documents from Catholic dioceses and religious orders. 

Kaul’s review follows on similar reviews by his counterparts in other…

View Cache

2016 allegation of Catholic church employee’s sex with minor reported in June

CHARLESTON (SC)
The Post and Courier [Charleston SC]

June 30, 2021

By Olivia Diaz

Read original article

The allegation was reported to Charleston Police Department on June 18, reports show.

The employee was identified by the diocese but his position was not noted. The Post and Courier is not naming the accused. 

“(The employee) was terminated after officials with the Diocese of Charleston learned of an allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor,” Aselage wrote on June 29.

Charleston police are investigating the allegation. No charges have been filed.

“The complainant, a security consultant for the Catholic Diocese, reported a fondling incident from the summer of 2016 that occurred at or near Blessed Sacrament and the victim’s home,” according to the incident report.

Follow Olivia Diaz on Twitter @oliviardiaz.

Olivia Diaz covers breaking news and public safety in the Charleston area. She spent the past four years in Richmond, Virginia, double majoring in journalism and global studies at the University of Richmond.

View Cache

June 30, 2021

The Catholic Church must come clean—completely—about what it did to Native Americans

(CANADA)
America [New York NY]

June 30, 2021

Read original article

Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission has helped all Canadians and First Nations communities grapple with the sorrowful realities of their nation’s colonial past, particularly the gruesome legacy of its residential schools for Indigenous children. Those schools, many administered by Catholic religious orders and intended to be engines of assimilation, became centers of despair and brutality.

The recent discovery of hundreds of unmarked graves at two schools, and the likelihood that thousands more will be found at other residential school sites, have added to the anguish. But at least in Canada, a foundation for healing is being laid by the government-sponsored truth and reconciliation commission.

No similar process has started in the United States, though many of the same outrages likely occurred on this side of the border, in the system of more than 350 Native American boarding schools in the 19th century that were the model for the Canadian network….

View Cache

Denuncian a sacerdote por supuesto abuso sexual; Diócesis de Querétaro ofrece disculpas

LEóN (MEXICO)
El Universal Querétaro [Querétaro, Querétaro, Mexico]

June 30, 2021

By Zulema López

Read original article

El Papa Francisco advirtió que existirá tolerancia cero contra los abusos sexuales, además de que reformó el Código Penal Canónico para atender esas denuncias

El vicario general de la Diócesis de Querétaro, Martín Lara

Becerril, informó que se suspendió a un sacerdote, derivado de

que en el 2019 se presentó contra el clérigo la denuncia por

presunto abuso sexual cometido contra un monaguillo.

La investigación que se realiza al interior de la Diócesis es

independiente de la que se efectúa al interior de la Fiscalía

General del Estado, aunque quien la realiza debería coadyuvar

con las autoridades, además de dar asesoría psicológica al

menor, pero indicó desconocer si efectivamente se está

ofreciendo ese apoyo.

Ofreció una disculpa a la sociedad por cualquier abuso que

pueda haberse cometido por algún sacerdote o alguna religiosa.

Llamó a tener en cuenta que las denuncias no alcanzan ni al 1 %

de los religiosos…

View Cache

Give survivors of sexual abuse a chance to pursue justice, no matter their birthday

DES MOINES (IA)
Des Moines Register [Des Moines IA]

June 30, 2021

By Janet Petersen

Read original article

It is time to open the window to justice to give survivors their day in court, no matter when they were born. Other states have done it.

In an episode of “This is Us,” the show depicts a scene of a woman in labor in a 1960s delivery room. The camera toggles between the woman struggling through the final minutes of labor and the wall clock above her. The baby’s birthday is about to be determined — before midnight or after. Just two minutes before midnight, the baby is born. 

Earlier in the same episode, two young brothers are sitting at a bar watching television intensely as the Selective Service draft lottery pulls the birthday of one of the young men, the baby born in the other scene. That birthday, right before midnight, got assigned a single0digit draft number, which sent the young man to Vietnam and changed the…

View Cache

My relatives went to a Catholic school for Native children. It was a place of horrors

LOWER BRULE (SD)
The Guardian [London, England]

June 30, 2021

By Nick Estes

Read original article

After the discovery of 751 unmarked graves at the site of a former school for Native children in Canada, it is time to investigate similar abuses in the US

There is so much mourning Native people have yet to do. The full magnitude of Native suffering has yet to be entirely understood, especially when it comes to the nightmarish legacies of American Indian boarding schools. The purpose of the schools was “civilization”, but, as I have written elsewhere, boarding schools served to provide access to Native land, by breaking up Native families and holding children hostage so their nations would cede more territory. And one of the primary benefactors of the boarding school system is the Catholic church, which is today the world’s largest non-governmental landowner, with roughly 177 million acres of property throughout the globe. Part of the evidence of how exactly the church acquired its wealth in North America…

View Cache

Trust with First Nations has been severely broken

AGASSIZ (CANADA)
B. C. Catholic [Archdiocese of Vancouver, British Columbia]

June 29, 2021

By Jamie Meskas

Read original article

To contribute to a dialogue of healing and understanding following the Kamloops Indian Residential School announcement, The B.C. Catholic is sharing stories of individuals who have been working toward truth and reconciliation. We are publishing first-person accounts as well as interviews over a few weeks.

The news coming out of Kamloops has been very deflating for me. As a permanent deacon I have worked very hard in the communities I serve – Sts’ ailes and Seabird Island –  to promote the Church where First Nations people have distanced themselves from the Church.

It’s been difficult for me to encourage them to give the Church another chance. There are difficult questions, such as why the Church would be involved in such a thing, and how priests and nuns abused people while representing the Church. No one is here to help me answer those questions.

COVID has been tough on the ministry,…

View Cache

5 more priests named in latest archdiocese sexual abuse report

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
B. C. Catholic [Archdiocese of Vancouver, British Columbia]

June 29, 2021

By Agnieszka Ruck

Read original article

The latest progress report from the committee studying clerical sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Vancouver names five more clergymen involved in abuse settlements, lawsuits, or other cases.

The previously unpublished names are Father Roland Joncas, Brother Edward Patrick English, Father Frederick Robert Neilsen, Father Duncan George Goguillot, and Father William Crawford Mendenhall.

The cases of Joncas, English, and Goguillot involved allegations of abuse of a minor, while Mendenhall reportedly admitted to sexual misconduct with adult men. Information published about Neilsen doesn’t specify the age of those who came forward alleging sexual abuse, but says he served as a high school counsellor for five years.

Joncas and Goguillot are deceased and Neilson and Medenhall were removed from ministry or laicized. A lawsuit involving allegations against Goguillot is currently before the courts, while English was named as an accused in a class action lawsuit in 2021.

More details about the allegations and…

View Cache

June 29, 2021

Joe Croteau, left, hugs Retired priest Rev. James Scahill after Scahill spoke at held a graveside memorial service for Joe's little brother Danny, the 13-year-old altar boy authorities determined was killed by his parish priest in 1972. (Don Treeger / The Republican) 6/28/2021

Gravesite memorial service for slain altar boy Danny Croteau provides closure for family

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Republican - MassLive [Springfield MA]

June 28, 2021

By Stephanie Barry

Read original article

[Photo above: Joe Croteau, left, hugs Retired priest Rev. James Scahill after Scahill spoke at held a graveside memorial service for Joe’s little brother Danny, the 13-year-old altar boy authorities determined was killed by his parish priest in 1972. (Don Treeger / The Republican) 6/28/2021]

Forty-nine years after his violent death at the hands of his parish priest, more than 100 gathered at the Croteau family gravesite on Monday for a memorial service that shone a bright light on a boy’s life cut short.

Daniel Croteau’s older brother, Joseph Croteau, asked mourners to replace their memories of the melancholy portrait of their late parents holding a painting of their dead son that featured so frequently in media coverage over the years.

“I want you to instead imagine a happy mother with a little boy’s feet on hers while she taught him to dance,” said Joseph…

View Cache

Catholic Church in Poland Discloses Hundreds of Sexual Abuse Accusations

WARSAW (POLAND)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 28, 2021

By Andrew Higgins

Read original article

Church authorities said they had received 368 reports of the sexual abuse, and almost half involved children under 15.

Poland’s Catholic Church, assailed by accusations that it for years ignored the sexual abuse of minors by clergy members, on Monday acknowledged that from July 2018 through the end of last year, it had received complaints of abuse against 368 boys and girls.

Pleading for “forgiveness” from “those wronged and all those shocked by the evil in the church,” the head of the Polish church, Archbishop Wojciech Polak, said the figures “do not express the full depth of the drama of sexual abuse of minors perpetrated by some clergymen.”

Nearly half the latest cases reported related to accusations of abuse against victims under age 15.

The timing of the figures’ release — just days after the Vatican said it was investigating accusations against a retired Polish cardinal of negligence on sexual…

View Cache

Canada: two more Catholic churches on First Nations reserves destroyed by fire

HEDLEY (CANADA)
The Guardian [London, England]

June 28, 2021

By Leyland Cecco

Read original article

  • Investigators treating fires in British Columbia as suspicious
  • Anger over church’s historical role in forced assimilation

Two more Catholic churches on First Nations reserves in western Canada have been destroyed by fires that investigators are once again treating as suspicious.

Over the weekend, crews in southern British Columbia responded to early morning blazes at St Ann’s Church on Upper Similkameen Indian Band land, and the Chopaka Church on the lands of the Lower Similkameen Indian Band. Both churches, built from wood and more than 100 years old, were burned to the ground.

The fires come nearly a week after two other churches were destroyed , and amid growing anger over the church’s role in Canada’s campaign to forcibly assimilate Indigenous people.

In recent weeks, the country has been rocked by the discovery of nearly a thousand unmarked graves at the sites of church-run residential schools where Indigenous children were forcibly converted to Christianity and…

View Cache

Pa. lawmakers passed a budget on time, but here’s what they didn’t do

HARRISBURG (PA)
Erie Times-News/GoErie.com [Erie PA]

June 29, 2021

By Candy Woodall

Read original article

Pennsylvania legislators and Gov. Tom Wolf all claimed some level of victory after the state budget passed the General Assembly late Friday night. 

Wolf, a Democrat, championed what he saw as wins for his party, especially the largest education funding increase in state history. 

But the $416 million state funding increase in public education was less than the $1.3 billion Wolf wanted, which he intended to pay for with a tax hike on high earners before federal stimulus money and bigger tax revenues flowed in.

When Republicans cheered the budget passage on their way out of Harrisburg, they were quick to say they blocked Wolf’s “huge tax burden.” 

But for all the political theater, lawmakers left the state capital with a lot of unfinished business.

Despite the lingering pandemic fallout and the challenges Pennsylvania faced before COVID-19, lawmakers did little to solve problems this session other than passing a budget. 

View Cache

Former S.I. principal, monsignor faces yet another sex-abuse lawsuit, this time in Bronx

(NY)
Staten Island Advance [Staten Island NY]

June 28, 2021

Read original article

Monsignor John Paddack, a former principal on Staten Island, faces a new allegation of sexual misconduct during his time at Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx.

The Advance/SILive.com previously reported on claims of sex-abuse levied against the priest while he served in administrative positions at Monsignor Farrell High School in Oakwood and St. Joseph by-the-Sea High School in Huguenot.

Overall, more than a dozen individuals have filed lawsuits accusing Monsignor Paddack of abuse at the cleric’s various assignments throughout the Archdiocese of New York since the 1980s.

Monsignor Paddack and former religious Brother Christopher Keogan are referred to as “serial pedophiles” in a lawsuit filed in Bronx Supreme Court on May 31 by the Herman Law Firm on behalf of an anonymous male victim.

The defendants in the case, brought under the state’s Child Victims Act, are the archdiocese and Cardinal Hayes…

View Cache

Former Catholic priest in Oakland County faces additional sex abuse charges

DETROIT (MI)
WXMI - Fox 17 [Grand Rapids MI]

June 28, 2021

By Bianca Cseke

Read original article

A former priest in Oakland County previously charged with sexually assaulting a minor is now facing two additional cases, Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced Monday.

Gary Berthiaume, 80, was charged last year with one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct – a 15-year felony.

A preliminary exam is set in that case for July 21 at 9 a.m. before Judge James Brady in Oakland County’s 47th District Court.

He was arraigned Friday on two additional cases.

All three cases stem from allegations of abuse in the 1970s involving three different victims who were between 13 and 15 years old at the time.

Berthiaume was a priest at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Wyandotte and later Our Lady of Sorrows in Farmington during that timeframe.

He now faces two counts of gross indecency – 5-year felonies or $2,500 – in Oakland’s 46th District Court.

In the 47th District Court, where he was charged…

View Cache

Ex-Catholic priest in Oakland County faces more sex abuse charges

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit News [Detroit MI]

June 28, 2021

By Mark Hicks

Read original article

A former priest in Oakland County charged with sexually assaulting a minor decades ago now faces two more cases, the Michigan Attorney General’s office announced Monday.

The three cases against Gary Berthiaume stem from allegations in the 1970s involving victims who were between 13 and 15 at the time, investigators said in a statement.

Berthiaume, 80, was then a priest at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Wyandotte and later Our Lady of Sorrows in Farmington, according to the release.

Last year, he was charged with one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct, a 15-year felony.

The victim was 14 and told authorities an assault took place in August 1977 at the Our Lady of Sorrows rectory in Farmington, officials have said.

A preliminary examination in that case is scheduled for 9 a.m. July 21 in Oakland County’s 47th District Court. 

On Friday, Berthiaume was arraigned in two other cases. 

He now faces two counts of gross indecency,…

View Cache

Polish church report lists sex abuse of over 300 children

WARSAW (POLAND)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 28, 2021

By Monika Scislowska

Read original article

In its latest report released Monday on the sexual abuse of minors, Poland’s Catholic Church lists 292 clergymen who are alleged to have abused over 300 boys and girls from 1958 though 2020.

The cases were reported to church authorities from mid-2018 until the end of 2020. The reports came from the victims, their families, other clergymen, the media and from other sources.

At an online conference in Warsaw, the head of Poland’s Catholic Church, Archbishop Wojciech Polak, apologized to the victims and asked their forgiveness, echoing apologies he has made before.

According to church statistics gathered from all dioceses, 368 reports of abuse of people under the age of 18 were made to church authorities between July 1, 2018, and Dec. 31, 2020. They cover a period ranging from 1958 though 2020.

Of them, 144 cases have been confirmed or considered credible at an initial stage of an investigation…

View Cache

June 28, 2021

Victim of priest abuse says Miller Report is a step forward

SIOUX CITY (IA)
KSCJ [Sioux City IA]

June 25, 2021

By Tim Lennon and Woody Gottburg

Read original article

[Includes audio clips of the interview.]

The former Iowan who pushed the attorney general to investigate cases of priest abuse says the report just released by the A-G is another positive step forward.

Tim Lennon was living in Sioux City when he got involved in the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests or SNAP.

Lennon says things are much different now than they used to be.

He says this report and Iowa’s recent change in the law that lifts the statute of limitations on child sex abuse charges are examples of the progress made.

The four catholic bishops in Iowa released a statement saying the Attorney General’s report will be studied for suggestions on how the catholic church’s efforts might be improved.

Lennon says the church has not stepped up like others have.

Lennon says he was abused when he was 12, but it took until he was 63…

View Cache

Why criminal charges for deaths at residential schools would be unprecedented — and enormously complex

GATINEAU (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

June 27, 2021

By Nick Boisvert

Read original article

Proving a case decades after the schools ceased to operate would be very difficult, experts say

Cowessess Chief Cadmus Delorme said he is treating the site of 751 unmarked graves at the former Marieval Indian Residential School “like a crime scene.”

Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations (FSIN) Chief Bobby Cameron said the deaths of children at the school was “a crime against humanity.”

And yet, after the second discovery in less than a month of hundreds of previously unknown burials at former residential schools, there is no indication that criminal charges of any kind will be laid in connection to those deaths.

The Native Women’s Association of Canada (NWAC) says those charges are not only warranted, but necessary if Canada wants to fulfil its pledge of reconciliation with Indigenous peoples.

“If they have committed a crime, then they need to be held criminally responsible for those actions,” said Lynne Groulx, NWAC’s CEO.

The…

View Cache

Calls for transparency, access to records grow as more residential school graves found

EDMONTON (CANADA)
Channel 3000 [Madison WI]

June 26, 2021

Read original article

On the grounds of the former Marieval Indian Residential School in Saskatchewan, where an estimated 751 unmarked graves have now been identified, Carol Lavallee remembers a skating rink.

At the time Lavallee, who was forced to attend the school at just six-years-old, had no idea the rink was situated above a burial site. It wasn’t until she was an adult that she heard rumours of unmarked graves on the school grounds.
“There was a barn there. There used to be a chicken coop, a pig sty, and a cattle corral was over those graves… why would any religion condone something like that,” Lavallee told CTV National News.

“The priest was in charge of the school, he knew there were bodies there…. There must be records of it.”

On Thursday, Cowessess First Nation, located 164 kilometres east of Regina, announced the discovery of the unmarked graves, found after radar scanning of the…

View Cache

June 27, 2021

Ken Thomas at the Muskowekwan Indian Residential School, a part of a system of schools that were designed to sever Indigenous children from their culture, near Lestock, Saskatchewan.

With Discovery of Unmarked Graves, Canada’s Indigenous Seek Reckoning

(CANADA)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 26, 2021

By Ian Austen / Photographs by Amber Bracken

Read original article

Two gruesome discoveries of what Indigenous groups say are the remains of hundreds of children have strengthened the groups’ resolve to hold the country accountable for a long-hidden brutal history.

[Photo above: Ken Thomas at the Muskowekwan Indian Residential School, a part of a system of schools that were designed to sever Indigenous children from their culture, near Lestock, Saskatchewan.]

MUSKOWEKWAN FIRST NATION, Saskatchewan — At age 6, Ken Thomas said he was put in a van, driven two hours from his home and dropped on the steps of the Muskowekwan Indian Residential School. The nuns immediately shaved off his braids, and he soon learned that whenever he spoke his Indigenous language they would wash out his mouth with soap.

During his 10 years there he experienced many more searing horrors. He recalled a friend committing suicide after being stripped naked and locked into a dorm after trying to escape….

View Cache

Hundreds More Unmarked Graves Found at Former Residential School in Canada

(CANADA)
New York Times [New York NY]

June 24, 2021

By Ian Austen and Dan Bilefsky

Read original article

An Indigenous group said the remains of as many as 751 people, mainly children, had been found in unmarked graves on the site of a former boarding school in Saskatchewan.

CALGARY, Alberta — For decades, the Indigenous children were taken from their families, sometimes by force, and housed in crowded, church-run boarding schools, where they were abused and prohibited from speaking their languages. Thousands vanished altogether.

Now, a new discovery offers chilling evidence that many of the missing children may have died at these schools: The remains of as many as 751 people, mainly Indigenous children, were found at the site of a former school in the province of Saskatchewan, an Indigenous group said on Thursday.

The burial site, the largest one to date, was uncovered only weeks after the remains of 215 children were found in unmarked graves on the grounds of another former church-run school for Indigenous students in…

View Cache

Catholics question relationship with church after residential school grave discovery

(CANADA)
Kamloops This Week [Kamloops, British Columbia, Canada]

June 27, 2021

By Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press

Read original article

Bob Hilbig’s crisis of confidence in the Roman Catholic Church isn’t his first reckoning with the institution that shaped his childhood. It’s not even his second.https:

But the discovery over the past month of what’s believed to be nearly 1,000 bodies in unmarked graves at two former residential schools for Indigenous children could prove to be the last, he said, unless church officials take responsibility. article continues below 

“I’m really hopeful that there is some transparency and atonement to go around,” Hilbig said. “I’ll be analyzing…I’m going to be paying close attention to how they react.”

The disappointment that came with news of the residential school grave sites carried reminders of past personal letdowns, he said, including the 2005 appointment of ultra-conservative Pope Benedict XVI and the co-ordinated coverups of priests’ sexual abuse of children.

Given that recent history, the 35-year-old Hilbig said, along with what he already knew of the…

View Cache

Calgary Catholic bishop hopes apology over residential schools will lead to healing

CALGARY (CANADA)
Global News [Toronto, Canada]

June 27, 2021

By Carolyn Kury de Castillo

Read original article

Calgary’s Catholic bishop says the faith of some parishioners is being tested following the recent discoveries of unmarked graves at former residential schools.

For some Catholics attending mass in Calgary on Sunday, the church’s role in residential schools has weighed heavily on their hearts.

“It’s totally devastating, all the news, especially because we have kids too. I was so shocked,” said Rose Dela Cruz, who was attending mass at St. Mark Catholic Church in northeast Calgary.

Diocese of Calgary Bishop William McGrattan said he’s heard from some parishioners who have been feeling disenchanted.

“People feel disillusioned sometimes. They question why this took place and sometimes even the responses we offer are not necessarily adequate,” McGrattan said.

“But sometimes people aren’t necessarily understanding that as these come to light, our faith is tested.”

Earlier this month, in response to the unmarked graves found at a former residential school…

View Cache

‘Don’t be disrespectful. He’ll be upset if you don’t sleep with him’

(TIMOR-LESTE)
Sydney Morning Herald [Sydney, New South Wales, Australia]

June 26, 2021

By Chris Ray

Read original article

For almost three decades, missionary Richard Daschbach ran an orphanage providing refuge for some of East Timor’s most needy children. He has since admitted to sexually abusing countless young girls – yet locals still support him.

Nona was born in a dirt-floor hut in a East Timor highland village, where hungry children grow up stunted and wise men see omens in the flight of birds. Her parents grew rice and corn in swidden gardens, but struggled to feed six children. At the age of 9, Nona decided on a solution: she would leave home to live at an orphanage called Topu Honis. It had brightly painted dormitories, neat vegetable gardens and a tiny church. “There was a playground with a slide and swings and the girls wore colourful, clean outfits. It seemed like a dream for a little girl,” she remembers.

Topu Honis sits in a mountain valley in Oecusse,…

View Cache

Renee Schafer Horton: With latest stance, bishops demonstrate their cluelessness

TUCSON (AZ)
Arizona Daily Star [Tucson AZ]

June 27, 2021

By Renee Schafer Horton

Read original article

The following column is the opinion and analysis of the writer:

I have a Catholic friend who can’t receive Eucharist.

This isn’t because she’s a sinner; far from it. Rather it is because ever since the decadeslong, thought-it-was-over clergy sex abuse crisis reappeared in a horrific August 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury report, she fears no priest is worthy of handling Jesus in Communion.

Her stance came to mind after the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ decision June 18 to draft a “teaching document” on the Eucharist.

The document’s outline, as reported in various media outlets, would emphasize church teachings on the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist and, according to Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades, “how participation in the Eucharist compels us to conversion.” Rhoades is chairman of the USCCB’s doctrine committee.

The controversial part is a subset of this conversion paragraph that addresses “Eucharistic consistency,” which is theological language…

View Cache

Jess Casey: Traumas might be ‘historical’ but they are living, breathing memory

CORK (IRELAND)
Irish Examiner [Cork, Ireland]

June 27, 2021

By Jess Casey

Read original article

Have we ever grasped how to adequately atone for the sins of the Church and of the State in this country for the abuses suffered in industrial schools, day schools, symphysiotomy, and Magdalene laundries? Jess Casey finds out

“Redress; to remedy, or set right.” The history of modern Ireland is woven tightly with a litany of human rights violations, often referred to as ‘historical’ abuses as if they are confined, now, only to books.

These traumas are living, breathing memory.

We live amongst the legacy of abuse of power, most often inflicted on children, women, and unmarried mothers.

Redress should be an acknowledgment of victims’ pain, and for the loss of opportunity, they suffered as a result, as well as a symbol of reconciliation and a move towards righting an injustice of the past.

But have we ever grasped how to adequately atone for the sins of the Church and…

View Cache

“Who touched me?” (Mark 5: 31).

()
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

June 27, 2021

By Pat Marrin

Read original article

Pencil Preaching for Sunday, June 27, 2021

Thirteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time

Wis 1:13-15; 2:23-24; Ps 30; 2 Cor 8:7-9, 13-15; Mark 5:21-43

It is hard to miss the theme of touch in today’s masterful Gospel. Mark nests one story about a woman with a blood issue inside another about Jesus raising a young girl from her deathbed. In both instances, legal and social taboos were broken. The woman with the blood flow would be faulted for contaminating the crowd by pushing her way through to touch Jesus’ cloak. The little girl was presumed dead and, therefore, touching her would have rendered Jesus unclean. 

Jesus’ freedom to touch the dead and lepers, dine with public sinners, allow women to anoint and kiss his feet, speak with a Samaritan woman in public and accept water from her at the well, were part of his mission as the Incarnate Word. Every healing…

View Cache

Sexual abuse survivors’ group make demands of San Antonio archbishop, St. Mary’s University president

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
San Antonio Express-News [San Antonio TX]

June 23, 2021

Read original article

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests is urging community leaders to aggressively search for sexual abuse victims and to add 12 Marianist clergy members’ names to the Archdiocese of San Antonio’s list of those accused of committing it.

Self-described clergy abuse survivors and advocates with SNAP gathered Wednesday outside the archdiocese’s headquarters on Woodlawn Avenue to bring public attention to their demands, calling on Archbishop Gustavo García-Siller and St. Mary’s University President Thomas Mengler to take action.

The archbishop “must include these 12 new names on the archdiocese list and its website, parish announcements and newsletters,” SNAP officials said in a news release. “He should be speaking at every school, parish and retreat center in the San Antonio area where these Marianist priests worked. Mr. Mengler should write to (all) alumni who attended St. Mary’s University during the time these accused predators worked there.”

Only three credibly accused…

View Cache

Vatican says an envoy sent to Poland probed alleged abuse by late Polish cardinal

WARSAW (POLAND)
New York Daily News

June 26, 2021

By Brandon Sapienza

Read original article

The Vatican’s Polish embassy said on Saturday that the Holy See sent an envoy to Poland for more than a week to investigate reports of abuse from Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, a close confidant to Pope St. John Paul II.

The envoy was headed by retired Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, who along with his team, held numerous meetings and reviewed documents relating to the abuse allegations.

“The aim was to verify signals, also made in public, of negligence by Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz during his term as the archbishop of Krakow (2005-2016),” the Holy See embassy said in a statement.

At the conclusion of the investigation, Bagnasco will present his findings to high-ranking officials at the Vatican.

In 2012, the Rev. Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski, a Polish priest, gave Dziwsz a letter that contained evidence of a fellow priest sexually abusing a 12-year-old altar server. Initially, Dziwsz denied the letter and believed that there should…

View Cache

Buffalo bishop to predator priest: you’re either supervised or you’re on your own!

BUFFALO (NY)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

June 26, 2021

Read original article

It’s about time!

That’s how we at Horowitz Law reacted to the news that a New York bishop is telling his credibly accused clerics “Either live under supervision or live without my financial support.”

A Buffalo TV station reports that a priest, deemed by Buffalo church and lay officials ‘credibly accused’ of abuse, is fighting his boss’ ultimatum.

We solidly side with the bishop. It’s about time a Catholic prelate uses his powers to keep suspected abusers away from kids.

For decades, bishops have recruited, educated, ordained, paid, supervised and transferred priests, even or especially those who do wrong. But when their wrongdoing surfaces, bishops often feign powerlessness over these same priests. When they do this, bishops usually blame the church’s internal, archaic, ‘canon laws.’

“Once a priest, always a priest,” the claim goes, so “Church policy is that we must keep Father on the payroll, no matter what he’s…

View Cache

Vatican probing John Paul II aide over abuse cover-ups

WARSAW (POLAND)
Times of Malta [Mriehel Malta]

June 26, 2021

Read original article

Polish Cardinal investigated over tenure as Krakow archbishop up to 2016

The Vatican said Saturday it was investigating an influential aide to late pope John Paul II, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz, following allegations of abuse cover-ups.

Its embassy to Poland said the Holy See had sent Italian Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco to Poland from June 17 to 26 to look into the matter.

The visit’s “goal was to verify reports, including those made public, of negligence on the part of Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz during his tenure as Krakow archbishop (2005-2016),” the Apostolic Nunciature, the official name for the embassy, said in a statement.

Dziwisz, now 82, worked alongside the Polish pontiff in the Vatican and later served as Archbishop of Krakow, before retiring in 2016. 

“Bagnasco reviewed documents and held a series of meetings and will report back to the Holy See regarding the visit,” the embassy added.

In November, Poland’s bishops…

View Cache

Vatican probes alleged abuse negligence by Polish cardinal

WARSAW (POLAND)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 26, 2021

Read original article

The Vatican’s embassy in Poland said Saturday that a Holy See envoy spent 10 days in the country checking reports of alleged negligence by a retired archbishop of Krakow who had served as personal secretary to the late Pope St. John Paul II.

The embassy said that during his June 17-26 visit, retired Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco held a number of meetings and reviewed documents.

“The aim was to verify signals, also made in public, of negligence by Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz during his term as the archbishop of Krakow (2005-2016),” the embassy statement said.

Bagnasco is to present his finding at the Vatican.

A priest in Poland, the Rev. Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski, says that in 2012 he personally gave Dziwisz a letter containing evidence of sex abuse by a priest of a 12-year-old altar boy. Dziwisz at first denied it and suggested the matter should be investigated, but later said the letter…

View Cache

Reforming the Vatican’s Code of Canon law, #MeToo Insights, and Zero Tolerance

WASHINGTON (DC)
Justia [Mountain View CA]

June 24, 2021

By Lesley Wexler

Read original article

In recent days, Pope Francis has described the Catholic Church’s sexual abuse crisis as a worldwide catastrophe. He urged that the Catholic Church end its “head-in-sand policy”, acknowledge its institutional hypocrisy, and “take responsibility for this history, both as individuals and as a community.” While much of that activity must, by definition, be backward-looking, forward-looking action that makes a decisive break with the past is just as important.

Is the recent overhaul of the Vatican’s Code of Canon law such an action? Pope Francis announced the changes to the 1983 Code of Canon as required “to allow Pastors to employ it as a more agile salvific and corrective tool, to be applied promptly and with pastoral charity to avoid more serious evils and to soothe the wounds caused by human weakness.” Code drafters explained the changes as facilitating the Catholic Church’s embrace of the routine administration of justice and rejecting the notions…

View Cache

Buffalo Bishop warns ‘credibly accused’ priests: join monitoring program or risk losing your retirement funds

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB [Buffalo NY]

June 24, 2021

By Daniel Telvock

Read original article

Suspended priest Samuel Venne has been fighting back against the Diocese of Buffalo since 2018, when allegations first surfaced that he sexually abused children decades ago.

But the fight he is in now could cost him more than the seven-year suspension he received late last year for being what the diocese deemed as “credibly accused.”

Venne, 79, refuses to join the diocese’s monitoring program for priests it deems as “credibly accused.”

His reluctance to sign up could cost him his modest living and result in him living in his old van, his attorney told News 4 Investigates.

The problem is Venne has never been charged or convicted of any such crime, said Mike Taheri, the priest’s attorney.

He has neither been tried nor has he had the opportunity to testify and present evidence that raised questions about the decades-old allegations against him, including that Venne might be a…

View Cache

Iowa law eliminating statute of limitations for child sex abuse doesn’t go far enough, critics say

DES MOINES (IA)
WeAreIowa.com/WOI-DT, ABC affiliate [Des Moines IA]

June 25, 2021

By Lakyn McGee

Read original article

The Catholic clergy members who victimized Iowa children years ago cannot be criminally prosecuted despite the changes to the statute of limitations passed in May. 

The amended law eliminates the statute of limitations for child sex abuse— but not for those born before 1986. 

Under the old law, those sexually abused as children had 15 years after turning 18 to press charges.

The new law changed that expiration date, allowing survivors of child sex abuse born after 1986 to come forward and seek prosecution at any time.

The new law only affects the statute of limitations for criminal charges, not civil.

“We find enough corroborating evidence and have enough to file prosecutors can still do that, instead of saying, ‘I have enough evidence to file this, but I’ve been barred by that statute of limitations and therefore I can’t,’” explained Jessica Reynolds, executive director of the Iowa Counties Attorney…

View Cache

June 26, 2021

Priest accused of molesting 8-year-old boy at Plum church in 1998

PLUM (PA)
WTAE - Action News 4 [Pittsburgh PA]

June 23, 2021

By Paul Van Osdol

Read original article

A Catholic priest in the Pittsburgh Diocese is facing criminal charges for allegedly molesting an 8-year-old boy at a Plum church in 1998.

According to a criminal complaint, the victim was just 8 when Rev. Robert Cedolia assaulted him at Our Lady of Joy.Advertisement

The victim told police the first incident occurred when he was training for first communion. The second incident happened two weeks later.

During the second alleged assault, the victim said Cedolia told him, “God sees all.”

“Just those words are so eerie to hear not only as a survivor myself but these are the methods predator priests will use,” said Michael McDonnell, spokesman for Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

Defense attorney Lisa Mantella said Cedolia “vehemently denies the accusations and he is completely innocent of the charges.”

A Pittsburgh diocese spokesperson said the diocese placed Cedolia on administrative leave after first getting word of…

View Cache

If You Support Abortion Rights, You Might Soon Lose Communion — Even If You’re Joe Biden

WASHINGTON (DC)
WBUR [Boston MA]

June 24, 2021

By Rich Barlow

Read original article

So the U.S.’s Catholic bishops will draft guidelines, for debate this November, on when the faithful should be denied the Eucharist.

Good.

After unhinged clergy helped incite January’s insurrection — which was awash in Christian symbols — by preaching partisan, profanity-laced poison, traitors urging or committing violence should not receive what we Catholics consider the body of Christ.

Oh, wait — the bishops aren’t targeting terrorists and those who goad them, but rather the president of the United States and other Catholic politicians who support abortion rights?

It would be tempting to channel an iconic Saturday Night Live character and say “never mind.” Actually, that response is appropriate in a way the bishops don’t intend: Never mind the antics of their conference’s kooky corner. Putting aside the Catholic right’s defective moral math (terminating a pregnancy=unforgivable; fascist violence against democracy=we can live with it), the episcopal right is blowing smoke, and not the kind from an…

View Cache

Disgraced Polish archbishop elected mayor; more bishops sanctioned

JAśWIłY (POLAND)
CatholicPhilly.com - Archdiocese of Philadephia

June 25, 2021

By Jonathan Luxmoore, Catholic News Service

Read original article

A disgraced Polish archbishop has been elected mayor of his hometown after being sanctioned by the Vatican for ignoring sexual abuse by his clergy, as two more bishops were disciplined for similar offenses.

In a statement, the Jaswila district council said Archbishop Slawoj Glodz, who headed the Gdansk Archdiocese until last August, had been elected administrator, of Piaski, adding that local officials had extended “heartfelt congratulations.”

However, Poland’s Catholic Wiez quarterly, which has campaigned against sexual abuse in the church, warned the “unprecedented move” would provoke “irritation and scandal in society.”

“Unfortunately, this isn’t the opening of a new TV comedy season, but part of our Polish ecclesial life,” Wiez commented June 24.

“As a doctor of canon law, Archbishop Glodz may well defend his decision from the letter of the law — but the letter isn’t everything. An additional issue is the disgust associated with yet another exposure of…

View Cache

Chicago Archdiocese settles sexual abuse suit for $880,000

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 23, 2021

By Don Babwin

Read original article

Two men who said they were sexually molested decades ago by a notorious Catholic priest who was imprisoned for molesting other boys have agreed to a settlement of $880,000 from the Archdiocese of Chicago, attorneys announced Wednesday.

The men alleged Norbert Maday sexually abused them repeatedly starting when they were as young as 10 years old while they were alter boys and students at St. Bede the Venerable Elementary School on the city’s South Side, attorneys Jason Friedl and Martin Gould said.

Based on lawsuits, court cases and documents, the two were among at least 14 boys whom Maday molested at the six parishes where he was assigned from 1967 to 1986, the attorneys said, adding that they believe Maday died in recent years.

Archdiocese spokesman Manny Gonzalez declined to comment on the settlement.

Friedl and Gould said the agreement was reached before a lawsuit was even filed, representing a…

View Cache

A pair of Hillsong docuseries planned, examining the megachurch’s culture, the fall of Carl Lentz

NEW YORK (NY)
Washington Post

June 24, 2021

By Roxanne Stone, Religion News Service

Read original article

The streaming channel Discovery+ has announced plans for a documentary series on Hillsong Church and its disgraced former pastor, Carl Lentz, according to a report Monday (June 21) from the entertainment news website Deadline.

But Discovery+ is not the only production company with an eye on the controversy-laden megachurch and its trendily tattooed former pastor. In February, Deadline also signaled that “Queer Eye” producer Scout Productions was working on a limited documentary series examining Hillsong. 

Both docuseries are planned in partnership with separate news organizations and based on their respective coverage of the ongoing scandals plaguing the church, founded in Australia by Brian Houston and his wife, Bobbie, in the 1980s. Now a multimedia company, it has 130 worship centers around the globe. 

Discovery+ will base its three-episode series, “Breaking Hillsong,” on a series of articles by Hannah Frishberg that appeared in the New York Post, covering primarily the downfall of…

View Cache

Bishop’s ‘heartfelt’ apology over Catholic college abuse

MIRFIELD (UNITED KINGDOM)
BBC [London, England]

June 25, 2021

Read original article

Men who were sexually abused as boys at a training school for Roman Catholic priests have welcomed a bishop’s “momentous” apology.

The group were pupils at St Peter Claver College in Mirfield, West Yorkshire, when they were molested in the 1960s and 70s.

At a meeting with the men, the Bishop of Leeds said their abusers were people they should have been able to trust.

One victim said the apology marked a changing attitude from the church.

St Peter Claver was a seminary run by a Roman Catholic mission, The Verona Fathers, now known as the Comboni Order.

Former students who experienced sexual abuse at the school said their complaints had been ignored for decades by the church.

‘A long journey’

One victim, Bede Mullen, said the abuse and the way the victims had been treated had a major impact on all of their lives, with the message up until…

View Cache

The Vatican confesses: the hierarchical Church has lost the people

ROME (ITALY)
La Croix International [France]

June 25, 2021

By Robert Mickens, "Letter from Rome"

Read original article

Holy See makes ill-fated, last-ditch attempt to alter proposed anti-homophobia law supported by most people in democratic Italy

Call it the Vatican or call it the Holy See.

 It hardly matters anymore because the difference and nuances between the two terms (or entities) are lost on most people. That includes the majority of Catholics.

Increasingly, it seems, people don’t care whether a distinction even exists.

Holy See and Vatican mean only one thing to most folks — headquarters of the Catholic Church or bureaucratic center of a two-millennia-old religious behemoth.

And that behemoth, as I argued last week, continues to experience an implosion that dates back to at least the Reformation. Certainly by the time of the Enlightenment in the 17th century, this implosion became an ongoing process.

As the ancien régime arrangement of “throne and altar” in Old Europe was giving way to democracy, the Church — especially the…

View Cache

Former Iowan calls AG report more progress in fighting clergy abuse

SIOUX CITY (IA)
RadioIowa.com [Des Moines IA]

June 25, 2021

By Dar Danielson

Read original article

The former Iowan who pushed the Attorney General to investigate cases of priest abuse says the report just released by the AG is another positive step forward.

Tim Lennon was living in Sioux City when he got involved in the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests or SNAP. “I think it’s the voice of survivors who have risen up. I was one of many who called for reform and change and investigation — because too many people had been harmed,” Lennon says.

Lennon says things are much different now than they used to be. “Twenty years ago every victim of sexual abuse, especially child sexual abuse, would come forward as an individual. Now we come forward as organizations, as a movement,” Lennon says. “And I think politicians, society, and culture have come to realize how much sexual abuse there is in society and has taken action.”

He says this report…

View Cache

Attention to clergy sexual abuse began in Louisiana in 1983

LAFAYETTE (LA)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

June 24, 2021

Read original article

Do you think the Catholic clergy sexual abuse and cover up crisis started in Boston in 2002? Think again.  It really started much earlier, in 1983 in fact, down in Louisiana.

And now – finally, thankfully – there’s a new Louisiana law that may benefit some of those very first clergy abuse survivors who stepped forward, long before the pubic had even heard the phrase ‘pedophile priest.’

Many of those brave pioneers were victims of Fr. Gilbert Gauthe, the first U.S. priest to generate nationwide headlines due to his stunning crimes against kids.

His victims started filing abuse reports in the early and mid-1980s, eventually leading to Fr. Gauthe’s 1985 conviction on charges of molesting at least 39 boys, mostly in the Lafayette diocese.

Imagine, for a moment, what they endured. Horrific childhood sexual trauma, inflicted by a so-called “man of God,” who represented Jesus, who could forgive their sins…

View Cache

Internationally Infamous Abusive Priest has Roots in Malone NY

MALONE (NY)
Noaker Law Firm LLC [St. Louis Park MN]

June 22, 2021

Read original article

The ghastly child abuse history of F. Barry Bossa follows what has unfortunately become an all too familiar pattern in the Catholic Church.  Both prior to and after F. Barry Bossa became a Catholic priest, he has been the subject of both criminal prosecution and numerous civil lawsuits in Massachusetts and New York for abusing children in his care at every assignment.  In fact, at one point in 2002, the Vatican even plucked him from his assignment at a parish in Yonkers in order to evade criminal and civil accountability to Bossa’s victims.  The Vatican’s removal was so abrupt, Bossa’s sister had to retrieve his belongings from his living quarters at his church in Yonkers.

What is not popular knowledge is that prior to becoming a Catholic priest, Barry Bossa was the Religious Education Coordinator at the Malone District School of Religion, which was associated with St. John Bosco parish in Malone, New York. …

View Cache