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.

March 5, 2021

[Opinion] A comprehension of the past

(NEW ZEALAND)
NZ Catholic [New Zealand]

March 3, 2021

By Alison Hale

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While utterly condemning sexual abuse on the part of some Catholic clergy and religious, I do have a problem in assessing situations only in terms of the knowledge and understanding of human psychology that we now have from the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

A lot of the offending we hear about took place in the 1950s-1980s, and, in order to help comprehend what took place, without excusing the offending, it is worth looking at certain societal norms of that time, and at what some of the thinking was that informed the approaches taken in response.

The ability to discern sexual deviancy, or the inability to live a celibate life in potential candidates, would have once have been minimal or non-existent. It seems that the expressed desire to be accepted was often enough. Even those who recognised their own disordered desires might well have seen the priesthood or religious…

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Boston College theologian being investigated for alleged sexual assault

BOSTON (MA)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

March 3, 2021

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Boston College is investigating the chairman of its theology department after a former classmate at the University of Notre Dame accused him of sexually assaulting her.

Laura Grimes, a theologian in Detroit, accused Richard Gaillardetz, professor of systematic theology, of sexually assaulting her twice in 1987 while the two were doctoral students at the Indiana school.

The accusations came in two YouTube videos, one posted Jan. 23 and the other Feb. 24. Grimes subsequently posted a series of short videos in which she referenced the purported assaults.

Gaillardetz denied the accusations and voluntarily stepped away from his teaching and administrative duties at Boston College while the investigation continues.

Boston College said in a statement sent March 1 to Catholic News Service that the school “takes any allegation of sexual misconduct with the utmost seriousness, and has hired a law firm to conduct an independent investigation to determine the credibility of allegations raised…

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March 4, 2021

FILE - In this Saturday, July 7, 2018 file photo, The Rev. Michael Pfleger speaks to protesters before marching on the Dan Ryan Expressway in Chicago. A third man has come forward with allegations that Rev. Pfleger made an unwanted sexual advance against him as a teenager, following two brothers' allegations that the priest abused them decades ago when they were teens. (AP Photo/Annie Rice, File)

3rd man accuses a Chicago activist priest of sexual abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 3, 2021

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[Photo above: In this Saturday, July 7, 2018 file photo, The Rev. Michael Pfleger speaks to protesters before marching on the Dan Ryan Expressway in Chicago. A third man has come forward with allegations that Rev. Pfleger made an unwanted sexual advance against him as a teenager, following two brothers’ allegations that the priest abused them decades ago when they were teens. (AP Photo/Annie Rice, File)]

A third man has come forward with sexual abuse allegations against a Chicago priest who has gained widespread acclaim for his activism, saying he felt he owes it to two brothers who have faced criticism for accusing the priest of abusing them decades ago when they were teens.

The 59-year-old man alleges in an affidavit shared late Tuesday with church officials that the Rev. Michael Pfleger once grabbed his crotch over his clothes in the priest’s bedroom area at St. Sabina Church in the…

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Column: Blind loyalty to the Rev. Michael Pfleger could harm the Black community

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

March 1, 2021

By Dahleen Glanton

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One of the Rev. Michael Pfleger’s supporters summed up the sexual abuse allegations against the priest in a way that many might find appropriate.

They don’t fit with “what I know about him,” Northwestern University law student Blair Matthews told a Tribune reporter in January when the accusations came to light. Like many who are standing solidly behind Pfleger, Matthews credits the priest and the St. Sabina Church community with helping him succeed in life.

Many people who have met the outspoken and charismatic priest might agree. Sexual abuse is not the sort of thing that immediately comes to mind when you think of a man who has spent his life helping disadvantaged youths lift themselves up.

But abuse happens. We know from other cases in the Catholic Church and elsewhere, the perpetrators often are the people who garner the most trust.

As much as we might admire Pfleger for…

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Catholic philanthropists launch safeguarding initiative against abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

March 3, 2021

By Christopher White

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Two years after Pope Francis summoned the heads of bishops’ conferences around the world to Rome to confront clergy abuse among their own ranks, Catholic philanthropists are following his lead with a new initiative aimed to encourage Catholic funders to promote safeguarding in their own organizations and philanthropic efforts.

The newly launched multi-year program, “Commitment to Child and Vulnerable Adult Protection” is led by Foundations and Donors Interested in Catholic Activities (FADICA), an umbrella organization representing over 50 member organizations and individuals. It encourages those funders to sign a pledge to review their own internal safeguarding policies, as well as that of their grantee partners.

“One of the things that has been driving FADICA’s initiative is that everyone in the church has a role to play in confronting abuse,” FADICA President and CEO Alexia Kelley told NCR following the initiative’s launch…

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[News Release] Faith-based Institutions to Front Royal Commission on Redress for Abuse

AUCKLAND (NEW ZEALAND)
Scoop [Wellington, New Zealand]

March 4, 2021

By Abuse in Care Royal Commission Inquiry

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Witnesses for faith-based institutions, including Archbishops and a Cardinal, will give evidence before the Abuse in Care Royal Commission of Inquiry this month, on their processes for resolving historic and current abuse claims.

Phase 2 of the Faith-based Redress hearing runs from 15 to 29 March. Phase 1 of the hearing was held late last year and focussed on the experience of survivors in seeking redress (such as compensation, counselling, an apology etc) for abuse and/or neglect in the care of faith-based institutions.

The faith-based institution witnesses – which include representatives from the highest levels within New Zealand’s Salvation Army, and Anglican and Catholic Churches – will be responding to survivors’ evidence and outlining past and current Redress policies and processes.

See hearing timetable and witness summaries below.

COVID INFORMATION: The Covid-19 alert level at the time of this public hearing will determine whether or not it is open to…

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[Opinion] Catholics Are De-Toxing From their Experiences With Traumatic Religion. How You Respond to them Matters.

NEW YORK (NY)
Patheos [Englewood CO]

March 3, 2021

By Rebecca Bratten Weiss

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A few days [ago] a meme came across my Facebook feed. I thought it was relevant to a lot of recent conversations I’d had with friends, as well as to issues I’d touched on in my post about abusive religion. The meme was a screenshot from Twitter which read:

My therapist gave me some homework. I’m supposed to make a list of all the beliefs I was taught as fact, as a child in evangelicalism. So I can shred and/or burn the ones that don’t serve me anymore. What would you put on that list? #exvangelical  #religioustrauma

I was surprised by the outpouring of responses I received from my Catholic, Catholic-adjacent, and ex-Catholic friends. Some of them detailed actual magisterial teachings they had found harmful. Many others described common ideas, mantras, and beliefs one is likely to encounter in Catholic settings. Quite a few commenters addressed popular Catholic ideas about sex…

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Lawyer: New report on abuse in Cologne will incriminate church officials

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

March 3, 2021

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COLOGNE, GERMANY — The second expert report commissioned to investigate abuse in the Archdiocese of Cologne also incriminates church officials who are still alive and accuses them of mistakes in dealing with cases of sexual violence, according to its author, Björn Gercke.

The criminal lawyer who was asked by Cologne Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki to conduct an investigation told the newspaper Kölner Stadt-Anzeiger March 2 that the report had already met with opposition from some officials and their lawyers even before its publication, scheduled March 18.

The German Catholic news agency KNA reported the lawyer did not mention names, but said the people concerned had tried, sometimes in vain, to dispel allegations of breaches of duty. In addition to Woelki, the prominent clerics still alive who held important posts in the Archdiocese of Cologne during the period under investigation include Archbishop Stefan Hesse of Hamburg; two auxiliary bishops of Cologne, Bishops Dominik Schwaderlapp…

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Chihuahua priest sentenced to 34 years for sexual assault of altar girl, 8

CHIHUAHUA (MEXICO)
Mexico News Daily

March 3, 2021

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Prosecutors will seek more jail time

A Chihuahua priest who was convicted in February of aggravated sexual assault against an 8-year-old who served as an altar girl at his church was sentenced Tuesday to more than 34 years in prison.

Aristeo Trinidad Baca, 78, a suspended priest at the Santa María de la Montaña Parish Church in Ciudad Juárez, assaulted the girl between 2015–2018, the court found on February 22. The priest received multiple sentences, totaling 34 years, five months and 10 days, reflecting the fact that he had sexually assaulted the girl on at least three occasions.

Prosecutors said they were dissatisfied with the length of the sentence and would be pursuing action to advocate for more jail time for Baca. They also said they would try to increase the amount of financial restitution Baca was ordered to pay the victim, which currently stands at 59,129 pesos (US $2,800).

Baca’s…

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Methodist church minister in Fiji stood down over allegations he abused 14 boys during past three years

OVALAU (FIJI)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation - ABC [Sydney, Australia]

March 3, 2021

By Marian Faa

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Key points:

  • The ABC understands there was no policy relating to child protection in place at the time of the alleged abuse
  • The issue has sparked concern about child safety in Fiji more broadly
  • Seventy per cent of all sexual assaults indictments in the Fijian High Courts last month involved victims under the age of 18

A Methodist Church minister in Fiji has now been stood down as police investigate allegations he sexually abused 14 young boys between 2018 and this year.

Police told local media the alleged abuse happened in the outer island of Ovalau in the country’s south.

Communications Secretary for Fiji’s Methodist Church Reverend Wilfred Regunamada said the man has been instructed to stop preaching.

“He’s not allowed to be involved in doing any communion service,” Reverend Regunamada said.

“Due to the current investigation he has been instructed to go and stay at his home.”

Reverend…

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French clergy abuse more extensive than thought, bishops’ report says

PARIS (FRANCE)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

March 3, 2021

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PARIS — Catholic clergy in France perpetrated more than three times as many sexual abuse offenses as previously thought, said the head of a bishops’ commission whose report is due out in September.

Jean-Marc Sauvé, 71, a lay Catholic and head of the French Institute of Administrative Sciences, presented new data from the Independent Commission of Sexual Abuse in the Church. The commission of lawyers, psychiatrists, historians and theologians was established by the bishops in 2018.

“I received a Catholic education, and I knew certain abnormal, blameworthy things had happened — but I never imagined the reality would be so bleak and alarming,” Sauvé said in a March 2 interview with France Inter public radio.

“The great question we still have to answer is how all of this could have happened. This is very much our mission, knowing how the Gospels demonstrate the radically intolerable nature of sexual abuse within the…

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Pressure eases on Cardinal Woelki

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

March 3, 2021

By Christa Pongratz-Lippitt

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German bishops have backtracked after sharp criticism of the turmoil in the archdiocese of Cologne in recent weeks caused by Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki’s decision not to publish the abuse report he had commissioned.

At their plenary in the last week of February, they publicly emphasised that they were all responsible for the situation of the German Church.

“A number of things in the Cologne archdiocese certainly need clearing up, but it would be all too hasty a conclusion to put the focus solely on the Archbishop of Cologne. On the contrary, we must all face up to the criticism”, conference president, Bishop Georg Bätzing of Limburg, underlined in his final report after the online plenary. 

The bishops would keep to their commitment unconditionally to appraise and clarify the abuse of minors in the German Church, promised.

The bishops then dealt with the election of a new conference secretary general. The…

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March 3, 2021

Por violación y abuso sexual, condenan a más de 34 años de prisión al cura Aristeo Trinidad Baca

CHIHUAHUA (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

March 3, 2021

By Patricia Mayorga

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Un Tribunal de Ciudad Juárez condenó a más de 34 años de prisión al sacerdote Aristeo Trinidad Baca por violación y abuso sexual de una niña de 8 años que lo auxiliaba como monaguilla en su parroquia.

CHIHUAHUA, Chih. (apro).- Un Tribunal de Enjuiciamiento de Ciudad Juárez condenó a más de 34 años de prisión al sacerdote Aristeo Trinidad Baca por los delitos de violación y abuso sexual en agravio de una niña de ocho años que lo auxiliaba como monaguilla en su parroquia.

El 23 de febrero pasado, los jueces Carlos Rodríguez García, Florina Coronado Burciago y Arnulfo Arellanes Hernández encontraron responsable al cura, y en la audiencia de este martes acordaron que la autoridad ejecutora decida dónde computará la pena, pues hasta ahora se encontraba sujeto a prisión domiciliaria.

El Tribunal determinó que el expárroco cometió el delito de violación al finalizar diciembre de 2015, un abuso sexual…

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Los 765 días del caso Aristeo

CHIHUAHUA (MEXICO)
La Verdad Juaréz [Ciudad Juaréz, Chihuahua, Mexico]

March 3, 2021

By Redacción

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Más de 25 meses pasaron desde que una niña, acompañada de sus padres, acusó ante las autoridades al sacerdote Aristeo Trinidad Baca Baca por violación y abuso sexual, hechos registrados entre 2015 y 2018.

El pasado 22 de febrero el religioso católico fue encontrado culpable por un tribunal de enjuiciamiento en juicio oral y este martes fue sentenciado a 34 años, 5 meses y 10 días de prisión domiciliaria.

Esta es la cronología del primer caso de pederastia por el que un clérigo de la Diócesis de Ciudad Juárez es acusado, detenido, llevado a juicio y sentenciado en 765 días.  

2018

19 de diciembre | Una denuncia por violación y abuso sexual es presentada en la Fiscalía Especializada en Atención a Mujeres Víctimas del Delito por Razones de Género (FEM) en contra del padre Aristeo, por una niña que era monaguilla de su parroquia.

2019

9 de febrero Detienen al…

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Jean-Marc Sauve said the big questions is how many victims will come forward

Head of French clerical abuse inquiry says 10,000 victims possible

PARIS (FRANCE)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

March 2, 2021

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[Photo above: Jean-Marc Sauve said the big questions is how many victims will come forward. This AFP story appeared on the website of RTÉ, Dublin, Ireland.]

The head of an independent inquiry investigating clerical child abuse in France said that there might have been up to 10,000 victims since 1950.

Jean-Marc Sauve, head of a commission set up by the Catholic church, said that a previous estimate in June last year of 3,000 victims “is certainly an underestimate.”

“It’s possible that the figure is at least 10,000,” he added at a press conference where he delivered an update on the commission’s work.

A hotline set up in June 2019 for victims and witnesses to report abuse received 6,500 calls in the first 17 months of operation. 

“The big question for us is ‘how many victims came forward’? Is it 25%? 10%, 5% or less?,” Mr Sauve told reporters.

The Bishops’ Conference of France…

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Catholic clergy in France abused more than 10,000 child victims, independent commission estimates

PARIS (FRANCE)
Washington Post

March 2, 2021

By Rick Noack

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The head of a commission examining sexual abuse in France’s Catholic Church put the possible number of child victims at more than 10,000 on Tuesday, portending a public reckoning in a country where church officials long stalled efforts to investigate complicity.

The Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church, set up two years ago with the approval of French church officials, has so far received more than 6,500 testimonies from victims and witnesses on incidents alleged to have happened in the past seven decades.

“The big question for us is: How many victims came forward? Is it 25 percent? 10 percent, 5 percent or less?” commission leader Jean-Marc Sauvé told journalists.

“It is very possible that the victims will reach at least the number of 10,000. The work in progress, and in particular the survey of the general population, will make it possible to specify the number,” he said….

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French Catholic clergy may have abused at least 10,000 people since 1950, say investigators

PARIS (FRANCE)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

March 2, 2021

By Pierre Bairin,

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French Catholic clergy could have abused at least 10,000 minors and other vulnerable people since 1950, according to an independent investigation set up by the Church in France.

The Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church (CIASE) “estimates that the number of victims could reach ‘at least ten thousand,’” it said in a statement released on Monday.

The commission said it had so far received 6,500 testimonies, which concern at least 3,000 different victims.

Jean-Marc Sauvé, the president of the CIASE, said it is not known at this stage what percentage of all victims have testified to the commission.

“It is very possible that the victims will reach at least the number of 10,000. The work in progress, and in particular the survey of the general population, will make it possible to specify the number,” he said.

The commission was set up in 2018 by the French Catholic Church…

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Third man alleges inappropriate behavior by beloved South Side priest Pfleger

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

March 3, 2021

By Christy Gutowski

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As the Chicago Archdiocese investigates allegations that the Rev. Michael Pfleger molested two brothers in the 1970s, a third man has come forward to say the priest made an unwanted sexual advance when the accuser was 18.

In an affidavit shared with church officials late Tuesday, the 59-year-old man alleges Pfleger once grabbed him in a sexual manner in the priest’s bedroom area at St. Sabina Church in summer 1979 while the teen pretended to sleep.

Though he was not a minor at the time, the man said he did not consent to the alleged sexual contact with Pfleger, whom he said he met about three years earlier and considered to be a trusted mentor and friend.

The affidavit also alleges the two often drank alcohol and smoked pot together, beginning when the man was 15 or 16, within years of the young priest’s ordination.

Unlike the…

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Accused priest sues bishop, saying he was slandered

NEW BEDFORD (MA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 2, 2021

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 Roman Catholic priest in Massachusetts who was removed from ministry after the church determined that allegations of child sexual abuse he faced were “credible” has filed a defamation lawsuit against his bishop.

Daniel Lacroix, 61, sued Diocese of Fall River Bishop Edgar da Cunha last week, The Standard-Times of New Bedford reported Tuesday.

Lacroix, who most recently served at three New Bedford churches, was placed on administrative leave in 2019. A diocese review board in November determined the allegations of sexual abuse of a minor were credible and removed Lacroix from ministry.

The suit does not seek monetary compensation, but a declaratory judgment that Lacroix did not engage in any misconduct.

“My client has been viciously slandered, and his entire life and career have been put on hold, all without any measure of due process,” Lacroix’s attorney, Philip Beauregard, said in a statement.

“This lawsuit is intended…

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Belvedere College publishes name of Jesuit priest who abused pupils in 1970s

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Examiner [Cork, Ireland]

March 2, 2021

By Ciarán Sunderland

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Belvedere College has released the name of a priest who abused students at the school in the 1970s after a former pupil has come forward detailing the abuse. 

The Jesuit Order of Ireland said Joseph Marmion, a priest and former teacher, “abused boys sexually, emotionally and physically while he was on the teaching staff at Belvedere College in the 1970s”.

The religious order hopes other pupils who suffered abuse at the hands of Fr Marmion are able to come forward and get the support they need following the decision to make the priest’s name public. 

Joseph Marmion SJ was a teacher in Belvedere College from 1969 until 1978. He died in 2000.

Public decision

In 2019, a former student of Belvedere College contacted the Jesuits about the abuse he suffered as a pupil attending the school in Dublin City centre. The abuse took place when the man was aged 13. 

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Priest who abused pupils at Belvedere College is named by Jesuit order as Fr Joseph Marmion

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

March 2, 2021

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A priest who abused students at one of the most prestigious schools in the country in the 1970s has been publicly named by the Jesuit order at the behest of a former pupil of Belvedere College.

Fr Joseph Marmion SJ abused boys sexually, emotionally and physically while he was on the teaching staff at the private Dublin school.

He was named by the Jesuits on Tuesday in the hope that others who may have suffered abuse will come forward and get support.

The priest taught in the Dublin school from 1969 until 1978. He also taught in Crescent College Limerick, and Clongowes Wood College, Co Kildare. Fr Marmion died in 2000.

On Tuesday, the Jesuits said they have been in contact over many years with others who were abused by Joseph Marmion while they were young students.

“They have spoken of sexual abuse and physical and emotional bullying by him….

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Scots priest who abused three young children in horrific 20 years of abuse has died

DUMFRIES (UNITED KINGDOM)
Daily Record [Glasgow, Scotland]

March 3, 2021

By Tracy-Ann Carmichael

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The Church said it would pray for Moore after details of his death on Saturday emerged.

A priest who abused three children, the youngest aged just five, has died.

Francis Moore was eventually jailed for an eight-year term over the violations, which spanned more than 20 years.

BBC investigation found that Moore, known as Father Paul Moore, had made confessions in 1996 which were covered up by a Bishop.

The Church said it would pray for Moore after details of his death on Saturday emerged.

He was transferred from his cell at HMP Dumfries to Dumfries and Galloway Royal Infirmary after falling seriously ill.

Moore, who was 85, abused three youngsters in Ayrshire between 1977 and 1996 – even striking at a leisure centre.

Even contemporaries did not escape his attentions – Moore also abused a student priest.

He was ordered to serve nine years in prison for his crimes but…

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March 2, 2021

Dan 34 años de cárcel a sacerdote por abuso sexual

CIUDAD JUáREZ (MEXICO)
Excelsior [Mexico City, Mexico]

March 2, 2021

By Carlos Coria Rivas

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La juez Florina Coronado leyó la condena la tarde del martes en Ciudad Juárez, donde el religioso cometió el delito en el 2019, en las instalaciones de su parroquia

CIUDAD DE MÉXICO.

El sacerdote católico Aristeo Baca Baca fue condenado a 34 años y cinco meses de prisión por los delitos de violación sexual agravada y abuso sexual agravado en contra de una menor de 8 años de edad.

La juez Florina Coronado leyó la condena la tarde del martes en Ciudad Juárez, donde el sacerdote cometió el delito en el 2019, en las instalaciones de su parroquia.

Actualmente, el sacerdote se encuentra en arraigo domiciliario con vigilancia policiaca, por su avanzada edad.

La jueza dictaminó que el sacerdote deberá pagar alrededor de 59 mil pesos como pago de reparación del daño y multa, más los gastos por las medidas de protección que la Fiscalía General del Estado otorgó a…

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From left, Methodist Church president Reverend Ili Vunisuwai, vice-president Apisalome Tudreu, Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, and former church presidents Dr Epineri Vakadewavosa and Tevita Banivanua, Photo: Facebook / Fiji govt

Fiji police probe alleged sex abuse against Methodist Church

LEVUKA (FIJI)
Radio New Zealand [Wellington, New Zealand]

March 2, 2021

By Christine Rovoi

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Photo above: From left, Methodist Church president Reverend Ili Vunisuwai, vice-president Apisalome Tudreu, Prime Minister Frank Bainimarama, and former church presidents Dr Epineri Vakadewavosa and Tevita Banivanua, Photo: Facebook / Fiji govt

Fiji Police are investigating allegations that a member of the Methodist Church clergy sexually assaulted 14 boys while serving on an outer island.

Police said the alleged incidents happened on Levuka, Ovalau, in the south of the country.

Police spokesperson, Ana Naisoro, said the latest alleged acts were committed between 2018 and this year.

“There is a report being investigated by Levuka Police,” she said. “The 14 victims are boys and juveniles.”

This is not the first time a member of the clergy in Fiji has been accused of sexually abusing children.

Just last year, the Catholic Church was rocked with allegations of sexual abuse against boys at a school decades earlier.

A man had claimed he was molested by…

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Fr. Michael Pfleger’s parish stops payments to Chicago archdiocese to expedite his investigation

CHICAGO (IL)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

March 1, 2021

By Christine Rousselle

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The parish of St. Sabina in Chicago announced on Sunday that it would withhold its monthly contributions to the archdiocese until an abuse investigation into its longtime pastor is completed.

Two brothers in January had accused Fr. Michael Pfleger of sexually abusing them when they were teens. Pfleger denies the allegations, but he stepped aside from ministry after the first accusation was made and the archdiocese first announced its investigation. Fr. Pfleger is known for his outspoken social justice activism.

Almost two months after the first allegation was made against Pfleger–and the archdiocese announced its investigation–Pfleger’s parish on Sunday said it would stop sending its monthly assessments to the archdiocese in order to expedite the investigation.

“In its continued effort to get the Archdiocese of Chicago to swiftly conclude its investigation into the allegations against Fr. Pfleger, that it has made the decision to withhold the monthly assessments of the…

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St. Sabina Leaders Halt Monthly Payments to Archdiocese Until Pfleger Sex Abuse Investigation Is Over

CHICAGO (IL)
Block Club Chicago

March 1, 2021

By Jamie Nesbitt Golden

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Leaders of the South Side church say the financial strain is “hurting their mission to serve” as longtime pastor Michael Pfleger is sidelined from his ministry.

Auburn Gresham – St. Sabina Church leaders will no longer send the church’s offerings to the Archdiocese of Chicago, a move they hope will expedite the ongoing sexual abuse investigation into Father Michael Pfleger.

The St. Sabina parish council announced Sunday its members will withhold its $100,000 monthly assessment to the archdiocese, citing “strained finances.” The money will not be used for any ministry or current programming, and instead will be set aside “to be paid at the conclusion of the investigation.”

“This has jeopardized our ability to serve. We’re asking parishioners to continue to support our church with their tithes and offerings as they would normally to continue the work of the ministry to the community at this time,” council leaders said in…

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New Bedford priest accused of sex abuse files defamation suit against Fall River Diocese

FALL RIVER (MA)
Standard-Times - SouthCoastToday [New Bedford MA]

March 2, 2021

By Anastasia E. Lennon

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A New Bedford priest accused of sexually abusing a minor has filed a defamation suit against the Bishop of the Diocese of Fall River.

Daniel Lacroix, 61, was placed on administrative leave for alleged misconduct in November2019. At the time, he was serving as co-pastor at three North End churches — St. Joseph-St. Therese, St. Mary, and Our Lady of Fatima Parishes.

A Ministerial Review Board in November 2020 determined the allegations of sexual abuse of a minor were credible and subsequently removed Lacroix permanently from ministry.

On Feb. 29, Lacroix filed the lawsuit seeking relief from the Fall River Diocese Bishop Edgar M. da Cunha, who he says “substantially and irreparably” harmed his reputation.

According to a press release from Lacroix’s attorney, Philip Beauregard, the removed pastoris not seeking compensation for monetary losses; he is instead seeking vindication and a declaratory judgment that he did not engage in the…

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New clergy sex abuse claims against archdiocese pour in as filing deadline arrives

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

March 1, 2021

By David Hammer and Ramon Antonio Vargas

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As a 5 p.m. deadline to file sex abuse claims against the local Catholic Church loomed, roughly 50 claimants filed forms saying they were preyed upon by members of the clergy.

Another 370 claimants filed proof of claim forms saying the Archdiocese of New Orleans owed them millions of dollars for other reasons, from outstanding utility company bills to accidental falls on church property.

The New York-based firm processing the compensation demands received at least 56 claims in which the claimant’s name and address was intentionally omitted, a likely signal those were filed by anonymous clergy abuse victims.

That number is likely to grow, according to attorneys counseling alleged victims.

Uncertainty surrounding the total number and value of claims could linger throughout the week. Claims can be filed electronically or by mail. And documents mailed in to the claims administrator, Donlin Recano, will be accepted past the…

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Priest ‘sexually and physically’ abused boys at Belvedere College in 1970s

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

March 2, 2021

By Patsy McGarry

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A Jesuit priest abused boys at Belvedere College in Dublin’s city centre when he taught there in the 1970s, the congregation has confirmed, two years after being confronted by a former victim about the secrecy surrounding the case.

Fr Joseph Marmion “abused boys sexually, emotionally and physically while he was on the teaching staff at Belvedere College in the 1970s”, the Jesuits said in a statement.

Fr Marmion also taught in Crescent College Limerick and Clongowes Wood College.

Tuesday’s statement followed contact with the Jesuits in early 2019 by a former pupil of Belvedere College. A student at the College in the 1970s, at the age of 13 he was sexually and emotionally abused by Fr Marmion, a teacher in Belvedere from 1969 until 1978. The priest died in 2000.

In their statement on Tuesday, the Jesuits said they were issuing it so “following engagement with a former pupil who was himself abused,…

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March 1, 2021

Caso del cura Dorado: “Nos hacía confesar para conocernos más y poder abusar de nosotras”, el valiente relato de Florencia

AñATUYA (ARGENTINA)
Periodico Sur Santiagueño [Bandera, Argentina]

March 1, 2021

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A pesar de la imputación, su víctima asegura que sigue oficiando misas en Santiago. Un valiente testimonio que genera gran indignación. 

El caso del sacerdote Carlos Alberto Dorado, imputado por abuso sexual agravado contra un grupo de adolescentes a quienes acompañaba pastoralmente, sigue generando grandes repercusiones.

Esta vez, Florencia, una de las jóvenes que sufrió del abuso sexual, tuvo la valentía de contar lo sucedido cuando era adolescente, en una entrevista con la emisora radial de Bandera “FM San Francisco”.

Así como ella, otras dos mujeres acudieron a la Justicia para denunciar los abusos a los que fueron sometidas por parte del sacerdote Dorado, y silencio cómplice que tuvo por entonces la iglesia.

 “Yo era alumna del colegio cuando tenía 15 años, y fue en ese entonces que llega un seminarista ya próximo a recibirse de sacerdote, que era Carlos Dorado. Era nuestro profesor del colegio y decide formar un grupo misioneros. Y…

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Photo above: John W. Hallahan Catholic Girls' High School students participate in a Nov. 20, 2020, school walkout to protest the archdiocese’s decision to close their high school. (Courtesy of Kim Kimrey)

Philadelphia community fights to save oldest US diocesan all-girls high school

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

February 24, 2021

By Lucy Grindon

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Photo above: John W. Hallahan Catholic Girls’ High School students participate in a Nov. 20, 2020, school walkout to protest the archdiocese’s decision to close their high school. (Courtesy of Kim Kimrey)

When Jill Kimrey, a junior at John W. Hallahan Catholic Girls’ High School, learned on Nov. 18 that the Philadelphia archdiocese would be closing her school in June, she and her family were shocked. Jill loves Hallahan — she made this video to prove it — and she was looking forward to graduating with the class of 2022, joining more than 100 years of alumnae from the oldest Catholic diocesan all-girls high school in the United States, her own grandmother among them.

She made a pact with her friends that they would stay together for their senior year, she told NCR. She cried for hours after visiting another high school as a prospective student, her mother Kim said….

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R.I. lawmakers want to change deadline to sue over sexual abuse

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Boston Globe

March 1, 2021

By Brian Amaral

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“There’s been no justice for these people,” said state Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee. “Time alone should not be the reason to allow an injustice to occur.”

In 2019, Rhode Island gave victims of childhood sexual abuse more time to file lawsuits against their perpetrators, even if the abuse occurred decades ago.

But victims’ advocates say the state courts have too narrowly defined what a “perpetrator” is. So now some lawmakers are going back to the drawing board: They want people to be able to sue not just the person who actually committed the abuse, but the institutions that aided and abetted them, even if the deadline to do so had already run out under the old law.

This was their intention all along, and the new bill, introduced late last month, would make that perfectly clear, the lead sponsor said. The effort would expose the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence…

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Editorial: Investigation of Rev. Pfleger demands fairness and thoroughness, not a timetable

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

March 1, 2021

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Michael Pfleger is one of the most remarkable Catholic priests in Chicago history. He leads one of the most vibrant congregations in the city, having first helped breath new life into St. Sabina’s Church 40 years ago. He has been a crusader for social justice.

We admire Pfleger for this. Always have and always will.

At the same time, Pfleger now stands accused of sexual abuse. Two brothers allege they were victimized by Pfleger when they were minors more than 40 years ago.

We take all such accusations seriously, as of course we must. There is no statute of limitations on moral responsibility for sexual abuse. There is no expiration date on the emotional toll of abuse.

Our hope, then, is that an ongoing investigation by the Archdiocese of Chicago will be impartial, complete and in no way rushed. As important as it is to…

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After infighting, Colorado lawmakers revive effort to give child sex assault survivors unlimited time to sue abusers

DENVER (CO)
Colorado Sun [Denver CO]

February 25, 2021

By Jesse Paul

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A similar effort last year failed after proponents of the legislation couldn’t agree about whether to challenge the state constitution in the hopes of giving past victims of abuse a window to take legal action

olorado lawmakers are once again debating whether to give recent and future victims of child sexual assault unlimited time to sue their abusers after a similar effort failed last year because of infighting among proponents of the policy change. 

Senate Bill 73 cleared its first hurdle on Wednesday, unanimously passing the Senate Health and Human Services Committee.

Victims of child sexual assault have just six years after they turn 18 to sue their abusers. The bipartisan legislation would eliminate that restriction. The measure would apply to people abused after Jan. 1, 2022, as well as for those still within the window of the statute of limitations by that date.

A companion measure, Senate Bill 88, seeks…

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Statues from Christ the King Seminary went missing, only to reappear for sale at an antique store

CLARENCE (NY)
WKBW [Buffalo NY]

February 26, 2021

By Olivia Proia

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On February 4, 2020, the Buffalo Diocese announced Christ the King Seminary would close.

In August, former seminary volunteers said statues around the property began disappearing.

By November, volunteers said six bronze statues were completely gone, only to reappear at Kelly Schultz’s Antiques on Main Street in Clarence.

Kevin Brun is an abuse survivor and a member of the diocese unsecured creditor’s committee, appointed by the United States Trustee when the diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

“I jumped in my vehicle and I drove to the antique store in Clarence which was a 60 mile round trip. The statues were exhibited outside the building,” Brun said, “I asked if they were for sale and he said yes they are and quoted me on the prices. Needless to say, I was taken back by that.”

7 Eyewitness News has confirmed with the antique shop the statues are for sale, ranging…

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BC Theology Department Chair Accused of Sexual Assault

NEWTON (MA)
The Heights - Boston College [Chestnut Hill MA]

March 1, 2021

By Megan Kelly, Julia Kiersznowski, and Victor Stefanescu

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Boston College is investigating allegations that Richard Gaillardetz, chair of the theology department, sexually assaulted a former classmate at the University of Notre Dame.

In two YouTube videos released on Wednesday and Jan. 23, theologian Laura Grimes alleges that Gaillardetz sexually assaulted her twice—on Halloween and in early December of 1987—while the two were students in a theology doctoral program at Notre Dame. 

“I will come to you in this series of videos reflecting on ecclesial rape culture in which you so strongly enable and perpetrate,” Grimes said addressing Gaillardetz in the first video.

Gaillardetz, who denies the allegations, has voluntarily stepped away from his teaching and administrative duties at BC while the investigation continues. 

In an email to The Heights, Gaillardetz said that he first learned of Grimes’ accusations on Jan. 23. BC has hired an independent law firm to investigate the credibility of the allegations—an investigation that is still ongoing—he wrote.

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Pope can’t make ends meet with a ‘no firing’ policy

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

February 24, 2021

By John L. Allen Jr.

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From the beginning, Pope Francis has been committed to financial reform of the Vatican. It was the first study commission he created, it was the first major appointment he made, and it’s been a constant of his papacy over what’s now almost eight years.

Yet after all this time, Francis faces the same fundamental dilemma he did at the beginning: There’s no way to cut expenses and increase income, thereby reducing the incentives for suspect maneuvers, without trimming payroll, i.e., firing people – a step this pontiff (like all of his predecessors) has proven extraordinarily reluctant to take.

During a recent meeting of the Council for the Economy, a mixed body of cardinals and lay financial experts created by Pope Francis to oversee the Vatican’s money management, the numbers for 2020 and projected numbers for 2021 came up for consideration.

The results were sobering: For 2020, the Vatican ran a…

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Tonia Carr, chair of St. Sabina’s cabinet, explained Sunday why the church will be withholding roughly $100,000 in monthly assessments to the Archdiocese of Chicago. The assessments, which come from St. Sabina’s church and school, will be withheld until officials close the ongoing investigation into sexual abuse claims lodged against Father Michael Pfleger. Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times Anthony Vazquez / Sun-Times

St. Sabina withholding $100K in monthly assessments until archdiocese closes Pfleger abuse probe

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

February 28, 2021

By Tom Schuba

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Photo above: Tonia Carr, chair of St. Sabina’s cabinet, explained Sunday why the church will be withholding roughly $100,000 in monthly assessments to the Archdiocese of Chicago. The assessments, which come from St. Sabina’s church and school, will be withheld until officials close the ongoing investigation into sexual abuse claims lodged against Father Michael Pfleger. Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times Anthony Vazquez / Sun-Times

Father Michael Pfleger was removed from the church as the Archdiocese of Chicago investigates claims he sexually abused two brothers over four decades ago.

In a bid to put pressure on the Archdiocese of Chicago, leaders at St. Sabina Church in Auburn-Gresham announced Sunday the parish plans to stop paying roughly $100,000 in monthly assessments until church officials close the ongoing investigation into sexual abuse claims lodged against Father Michael Pfleger.

During a service Sunday morning, Tonia Carr, chair of St. Sabina’s parish…

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Coram- and Soper-backed bill to lift statute of limitations on civil sex abuse claims advances

DENVER (CO)
Montrose Press [Montrose CO]

February 25, 2021

By Katharhynn Heidelberg

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A bill that would lift the statute of limitations for civil suits related to child sexual abuse handily cleared committee Wednesday, leaving its Western Slope sponsors hopeful of greater justice for victims.

Senator Don Coram, R-Montrose, with Sen. Jessie Danielson, D-Wheat Ridge, are primary Senate sponsors of Senate Bill 73. Primary House sponsors are Rep. Matt Soper, R-Delta County and Dafna Michaelson Jenet, D-Denver.

The bill is similar to one Coram advanced last year, only to see it held over indefinitely, with, he said, no explanation. He is optimistic SB-73, which he called his “second bite of the apple,” will pass.

The bill, “Civil Action Statute of Limitations Sexual Assault” would change existing law that precludes child sexual assault survivors from bringing a civil suit after six years of turning 18. In addition to lifting this statute of limitations, the bill would eliminate current restrictions on what damages can be…

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Deadline to file sexual abuse by Catholic clergy 5 p.m. Monday

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

February 28, 2021

By Erika Ferrando

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[Includes video.]

The deadline, known as a ‘bar date,’ comes 10 months after the Archdiocese filed for chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, May 1, 2020.

Monday is the deadline for victims who have been sexually abused by Catholic clergy to file compensation claims against the Archdiocese of New Orleans.

“They’re heart-wrenching, the stories are heart-wrenching,” said Kevin Bourgeois, an advocate for sexual abuse survivors.

Bourgeois has helped several people file claims for sexual abuse by Catholic clergy.

“It’s the hardest thing anyone will ever do because you have to document what happened to you, but it’s easy in the sense that it’s all online, it’s private,” he said.

One of those victims he helped is a family friend.

“Less than an hour we went through everything and there were tears shed, and hugs given, and support,” he said.

The deadline for victims of sex abuse by Catholic clergy to file compensation…

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Letter to the Editor: In defense of accused Greater New Bedford priest Daniel Lacroix

FALL RIVER (MA)
Standard-Times - SouthCoastToday [New Bedford MA]

February 27, 2021

By Paul Rego

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Over the last two decades, the Roman Catholic Church has rightfully come under worldwide scrutiny for its mishandling of sexual misconduct by its clergy. As a lifelong and ardent Catholic, I applaud the Vatican’s recent efforts to right these wrongs, and I believe that however late these actions may be, our Church is finally on the path to healing. Still, I have no words to convey the sorrow I feel for the victims of sexual abuse, and it is particularly nauseating to me to think that some of these vile acts were committed within the confines of an institution as sacred and hallowed as the Roman Catholic Church.

I believe that when an individual is accused of sexual abuse or misconduct, the accuser’s allegations must be taken as seriously as those of a murder. All avenues must be explored in investigating the allegations, and all resources must be exhausted to…

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NY archdiocese reports slight offertory downturn as Child Victims Act payments loom

NEW YORK (NY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

February 25, 2021

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Timothy Cardinal Dolan of New York on Wednesday offered an update on finances in the archdiocese, noting that although offertory was down overall for the fiscal year, the percentage of offertory given online increased.

He also noted that a large number of clerical abuse lawsuits filed under New York’s Child Victims Act present a challenge to the financial stability of the archdiocese.

“Thanks to the generosity of you, our people, the dedication and commitment of our pastors and priests, and the hard work behind-the-scenes of people in the field and in the chancery, we have
managed to hold our own in some ways, but continue to face some uphill battles in others,” Dolan wrote in a Feb. 24 Flocknote.

Dolan pointed to clerical abuse claims brought under the Child Victims Act, which the state enacted in 2019 following the revelations of abuse perpetrated by former cardinal Theodore McCarrick.

The law set…

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Dunedin priest stood down after being accused of sexual misconduct

DUNEDIN (NEW ZEALAND)
Stuff [Wellington, New Zealand]

March 1, 2021

By Hamish McNeilly

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A Catholic priest in Dunedin has been stood down pending an investigation by his church.

Father Fivins Chittilappilly has been working as an assistant priest in Mercy Parish in South Dunedin since January 2020.

A statement read out at his church’s mass over the weekend said he had been stood down pending an investigation.

The statement, released by Dunedin Bishop Michael Dooley, said: “Recently there has been a complaint by an adult person concerning Fr Chittilappilly and this is in the process of being investigated by the Church authorities.”

“During this investigation Fr Chittilappilly will remain in New Zealand but will not be working in ministry or residing in Dunedin Diocese.

“I realise this is a stressful time and ask for your prayers for all involved at this time.”

Dooley declined to comment on the specific allegation to Stuff due to “the wishes of the complainant”.

The Otago Daily Times reported Chittilappilly was being…

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February 28, 2021

Church officials OK’d moving another priest accused of abuse to Hyde Park friary, records show

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

February 26, 2021

By Robert Herguth

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A 2018 case involving St. John Stone Friary — which is near a Catholic school — caused a stir. But it wasn’t the first time a priest facing child sex-abuse allegations was moved there, once-secret records show.

Intended to be a place of contemplation, Hyde Park’s St. John Stone Friary instead became a source of consternation in 2018 when it came to light that the Rev. Richard McGrath was living there.

A former president of Providence Catholic High School in New Lenox, McGrath was accused of having child pornography on his cell phone and of sexually abusing a student and moved into the building as the allegations began to emerge.

The monastery is next to a day care center and around the corner from a Catholic elementary school. Yet no one informed the people running those institutions McGrath was living there. Not the Augustinian religious order, which occupies the friary….

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Cardinal convicted, acquitted of sexual abuse charges to speak at Ave Maria University graduation

AVE MARIA (FL)
Naples Daily News [Naples FL]

February 26, 2021

By Rachel Fradette

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Australian Cardinal George Pell, who was accused, convicted and then acquitted of sexual abuse charges, will speak at Ave Maria University’s commencement where he will also receive an honorary degree from the school.

Pell will be one of the highest-ranking Catholic Church officials to have addressed the university’s graduates, according to the school.

Pell, who once served as the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy, spent more than a year in prison following his conviction in 2018. The High Court of Australia overturned his conviction in April 2020.

Ave Maria University President Christopher Ice said Pell expressed to him his excitement to attend and speak at commencement.

“He went on to articulate and ask me a lot of questions about the local community and university and how things are going, very much in tune and in touch,” Ice said.

Domino’s Pizza founder Tom Monaghan founded the private Catholic university in 2003.

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Child sexual abuse victims retraumatised in their fight for justice

CHRISTCHURCH (NEW ZEALAND)
Stuff [Wellington, New Zealand]

February 27, 2021

By Mariné Lourens

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Thousands of New Zealanders were sexually abused as children in state care and faith-based institutions, but will never get the justice they need to move forward. MARINÉ LOURENS reports.

He was 12 years old when the abuse started.

The principal at his elite Christchurch Catholic school would call the boys to his office to check their lunch boxes. When J arrived, the principal would take him into his office and tell him his parents had sent him to the school “to help him become a man”.

It started with the principal giving him a pornographic magazine to look at, and asking him how it made him feel. Over the next two years, J was raped weekly, mostly in the principal’s office, but sometimes in the cathedral behind the school or the changing rooms of the local community swimming pool.

“When he raped me, I couldn’t ride my bike home.”

Forty…

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February 27, 2021

German bishops elect female leader amid abuse-dominated meeting

BONN (GERMANY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

February 26, 2021

By Anli Serfontein

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Berlin – The German bishops’ conference elected a woman as general secretary during a virtual assembly that turned into a crisis meeting focused on the church’s handling of sex abuse.

Beate Gilles, a 50-year-old theologian, became the first noncleric and woman to head the bishops’ secretariat. She will take up her post July 1.

“Last year, there was still the debate of whether a woman could hold such an office here. Now we know it is possible,” she said Feb. 23 at the news conference after her election.

Limburg Bishop Georg Bätzing, president of the bishops’ conference, said the appointment was a strong signal “that the bishops are honoring their agreement to promote women in leading positions.”

Yet Gilles’ election could not distract from the fact that the Catholic Church in Germany is under pressure and at a critical point. It has fallen into disrepute among its members after a…

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Despite cardinal’s plea, Dominicans haven’t posted a list of members credibly accused of abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

February 26, 2021

By Robert Herguth

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The order’s Midwest leader blames the difficulty of corroborating allegations. Other Catholic orders have released such lists over the past few years

Eight clerics belonging to the Dominican religious order that runs a Catholic high school in Oak Park and who served in the Chicago area at some point have been accused of molesting children.

That’s according to a report a group of lawyers who have been suing the church over sex-abuse accusations put out in 2019.

And three years ago, Cardinal Blase Cupich urged all religious orders serving in the Chicago area to publish lists of members who have credibly been accused of child sexual abuse, with such lists serving as tools of transparency and healing for the victims.

But the Dominicans — who run Fenwick High School and also staff a handful of parishes around Chicago — still haven’t released such a list and say…

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Clergy abuse survivor embraces Lent, and God’s plan, again

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CatholicPhilly.com - Archdiocese of Philadephia

February 26, 2021

By Michael McDonnell

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Perhaps someone reading this is wondering what a survivor of those abused by the clergy, religious, nuns or lay people within the Catholic church, does for Lent? The answer to that remains unclear.

I can tell you that I hear from many survivors of abuse that the public statements I have made about my own personal journey have helped them in their own. For a guy like me who has experienced failure, fault and a rock bottom, receiving these messages re-enforces my belief in God and his plan for me.

As an adolescent, an altar boy or lector as a young man, I was captivated by the Lenten season. The reverence of Ash Wednesday, stations of the cross, reconciliation and Holy Week brought great joy to me despite carrying horrific experiences. During those beautiful moments, I asked God to take my pain, my memory and shame from me, I couldn’t…

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Child Abuse Allegation Against Father Pfleger ‘Unfounded,’ DCFS Says — But Church Says Priest Not Cleared

CHICAGO (IL)
Block Club Chicago

February 26, 2021

By Kelly Bauer and Jamie Nesbitt Golden

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The investigation was to determine if Pfleger is an ongoing risk to minors. It does not relate to abuse allegations filed by two brothers in January.

A state agency has found a report of child abuse against Father Michael Pfleger to be “unfounded,” but the popular pastor has not been cleared of the decades-old abuse allegations reported by two brothers earlier this year.

The “unfounded” finding by the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services doesn’t mean an incident didn’t occur, the agency wrote in a letter to Pfleger released Friday. But it does mean investigators couldn’t find “credible evidence of child abuse or neglect” that rose “to the level required” by state law and department rules.

In a statement, the Archdiocese of Chicago said the state’s finding came because it was investigating if Pfleger, the longtime and nationally known leader of St. Sabina Church in Auburn Gresham, posed a…

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Chihuahua priest found guilty of sexual abuse of 8-year-old girl

CHIHUAHUA (MEXICO)
Mexico News Daily

February 26, 2021

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Aristeo Baca will be sentenced on March 1

A Catholic priest was found guilty guilty by a court in Chihuahua this week of the violation and sexual abuse of a minor.

Evidence from more than 20 witnesses, official experts’ reports and documentary evidence showed that the victim was sexually abused by Aristeo Baca, now 78, at least three times between 2015 and 2018.

Prosecutors said “the accused broke the relationship of trust and took advantage of the access he had to the victim, who served as an altar girl in the church where he celebrated Mass.”

Baca was arrested in Ciudad Juárez and subsequently suspended in 2019 when the family of the victim noticed her aversion to Baca and she finally spoke out about the abuse.

Initially many parishioners came out in support of Baca, and the family of another victim received threats from his supporters and were forced to…

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Michael Pfleger file image Photo credit USA Today Network

State has good news for Pfleger, but Archdiocese says abuse investigation isn’t over

CHICAGO (IL)
WBBM - CBS 2 [Chicago IL]

February 26, 2021

By Steve Miller

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[Image above: Michael Pfleger file image Photo credit USA Today Network]

The state’s child-welfare agency has sent Father Michael Pfleger a letter saying an allegation of suspected child abuse is “unfounded,” but the Archdiocese indicates that’s not good enough to the activist priest yet.

The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services tells Pfleger that “no credible evidence” of child abuse was found.

Earlier this year, the Archdiocese of Chicago asked Pfleger to step aside at St. Sabina Catholic Church because of recent allegations of abuse that go back decades.

“I’m happy to get the report that they conducted their investigation and they deemed the accusation to be unfounded,” Michael Monico, Father Pfleger’s attorney, said Friday.

To unpack that a little bit: The DCFS letter to Father Pfleger means, basically, there’s no evidence children currently are in harm’s way. Still unanswered is whether the allegations from 40 years ago are…

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The Conscience of the Catholic Church

WALTHAM (MA)
Elle [New York NY]

February 26, 2021

By Rose Minutaglio

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Anne Barrett Doyle is a devoted mother, practicing Catholic, and one of the fiercest crusaders against clergy sex abuse.

“Are you Catholic?” Anne Barrett Doyle smiled at me expectantly with kind, sea-green eyes. It was months before the pandemic hit, and Barrett Doyle had invited me over to the Boston loft she and her husband moved into after the last of their four kids left for college. A crucifix hung on the wall, and a Jesus statuette prayed from a wooden desk. Several Bibles lined the bookshelf.

We sat side by side on a plush beige couch. Barrett Doyle, small and soft-spoken, with shoulder-length auburn hair and rosy cheeks, folded her hands politely and crossed her ankles.

As co-director of Bishop Accountability, an archive documenting the sexual abuse problems of the Catholic Church, Barrett Doyle has devoted her life to chronicling the prosecution of priests who have sexually abused…

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News Analysis: Will the Vatican investigate a cardinal implicated in its own abuse trial?

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

February 26, 2021

By John L. Allen Jr.

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An unusual sex abuse trial currently underway in the Vatican took a potentially explosive turn Wednesday, and the response may have a great deal to say about how serious the reforms launched by Pope Francis actually are.

Three witnesses testified that Italian Cardinal Angelo Comastri, who was relieved of his position as Archpriest of St. Peter’s Basilica last Saturday by Pope Francis, or his aides, had been aware of sexual abuse allegations at a pre-seminary on Vatican grounds and took no action. Though the merits of that testimony have to be critically examined, at the very least it creates the basis for an investigation of the 77-year-old Comastri, which, depending on the outcome, could lead to a charge of criminal negligence.

This isn’t just a canonical issue about Comastri’s clerical status. In this case, the alleged crimes took place inside the Vatican itself, meaning that if Comastri did something wrong,…

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February 26, 2021

Timor-Leste: Political leadership, patriarchal relationships, and the paedophile priest

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Monash University

February 26, 2021

By Sara Niner

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Xanana Gusmao’s recent contrived jovial participation in the birthday celebrations of “self-professed” paedophile and defrocked foreign priest Richard Daschbach has shocked many of his supporters, not least his Australian former wife and three Timorese-Australian sons who have publicly condemned the visit and written apologetic letters to the young women who are due to give evidence against Daschbach in court this week.

At the very well-publicised “birthday party” held in the home of a diehard Catholic supporter, Gusmao embraced and hand-fed Daschbach birthday cake, and tipped champagne into his mouth. The visit has been interpreted as a heavy-handed attempt to whitewash Daschbach’s ruined reputation just before the court case commences, and intimidate the prosecution, and the young witnesses who are in hiding due to just this sort of pressure.

Xanana Gusmao has come under fire for visiting self-confessed paedophile priest Richard Daschbach.

In blatantly favouring the reputation of an ex-priest over the safety and wellbeing of his alleged victims, these male elites demonstrate a fundamental element of patriarchy defined as: “… a set of social relations between men, which have a material base, and which, through hierarchy, establish or create interdependence and solidarity among men that enable them to dominate women.” (Hartmann, 1979, p11).

Xanana Gusmao has come under fire for visiting self-confessed paedophile priest Richard Daschbach.
Xanana Gusmao has come under fire for visiting self-confessed paedophile priest Richard Daschbach.

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

The long road to justice for Timor-Leste’s sex abuse victims

HONG KONG
Union of Catholic Asian News

February 26, 2021

By Rock Ronald Rozario

The case of Richard Daschbach must make the tiny Catholic-majority nation confront its dark past

Finally, the wheels of justice for scores of Timorese sex abuse victims of self-confessed pedophile former priest Richard Daschbach have started to move, albeit slowly.

A court in Timor-Leste started the trial of Daschbach, 84, on Feb. 22 before it was adjourned the next day until March 22 when both sides will testify before the judges.

Richard Daschbach waves from a police van before starting his trial on Feb. 22. (Photo: YouTube)
Richard Daschbach waves from a police van before starting his trial on Feb. 22. (Photo: YouTube)

Daschbach, a US citizen and former priest and missionary from the Society of the Divine Word, is the first clergyman in the tiny Catholic-majority Southeast Asian nation to face a sex abuse trial. He faces 14 counts of child abuse including sex crimes, child pornography and domestic violence. If convicted, he faces 20 years in jail.

In the US, he faces wire fraud charges and Interpol has listed him in a red notice as a fugitive international criminal.

The case of Richard Daschbach is an extraordinary example of falling from grace for a celebrity missionary who was once revered in Timorese Catholic communities as well as social, political and religious circles.

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

Priest accused of sex abuse was told to pay 20,000 euros

LAGOS (NIGERIA)
The Guardian from Agence France Presse

February 25, 2021

An Italian priest accused of sexually assaulting a teenager was told by a bishop to compensate his alleged victim with 20,000 euros, a Vatican court heard Thursday.

Father Gabriele Martinelli served as a papal altar boy in his teenage years while attending the St Pius X pre-seminary, which hosts boys interested in the priesthood.

He is accused of assaulting a younger boy enrolled at the same institution, which is located within the walls of the Vatican.

Oscar Cantoni, a bishop who looked into the allegations, told the court he had earlier proposed that Martinelli pay 20,000 euros ($24,500) to his victim, plus 5,000 euros to church officials to cover the cost of their investigation.

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

As Fr Pfleger abuse inquiry continues, Chicago archdiocese counters ‘misconceptions’ of priest’s supporters

DENVER (CO)
Catholic News Agency

February 25, 2021

Chicago – Defenders of outspoken activist priest Fr. Michael Pfleger are wrong to claim an investigation has cleared him of decades-old sexual abuse allegations or to claim that the priest was singled out, the Archdiocese of Chicago has said.

Father Michael Pfleger / Photo: Daniel X. O'Neil CC BY 2.0
Father Michael Pfleger / Photo: Daniel X. O’Neil CC BY 2.0

“It is mystifying why anyone would believe the leadership of the archdiocese, which has consistently supported Fr. Pfleger’s good works, would concoct a ruse to remove him,” the Chicago archdiocese said Feb. 24.

“Let’s be clear. This case began when an adult male came forward to the archdiocese on his own with an allegation of child sexual abuse,” the archdiocese continued. “His brother subsequently came forward to the archdiocese with an allegation of child sexual abuse. The archdiocese did not have any prior contact with these men, nor did it look for them or anyone else. These men have made serious allegations, which demand that we follow the same process as we have in other cases.”

Earlier that day a group of about 100 people gathered outside the headquarters of the Chicago archdiocese to call for Pfleger’s reinstatement, the Chicago Sun-Times reports.

Pfleger, who is white, has been a politically involved community leader based out of the predominantly African-American Saint Sabina Parish in Chicago. He has served at the church since 1983 and is presently described as its senior pastor.

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Vatican abuse trial: Witnesses say allegations about youth seminary were ignored

DENVER (CO)

February 25, 2021

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

Witnesses at the fifth hearing in a trial for alleged abuse and cover-up at a Vatican youth seminary testified on Wednesday to an unhealthy culture of ridicule and abuse of power.

This Oct. 14, 2020, file photo shows the Vatican City State criminal court during the opening of the trial of Father Gabriele Martinelli and Msgr. Enrico Radice. At a Vatican trial Feb. 24, former students of the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary told the court that there was an "unhealthy" environment at the seminary and that they endured psychological pressure and witnessed inappropriate touching by Father Martinelli, who is accused of abusing a younger student. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)
This Oct. 14, 2020, file photo shows the Vatican City State criminal court during the opening of the trial of Father Gabriele Martinelli and Msgr. Enrico Radice. At a Vatican trial Feb. 24, former students of the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary told the court that there was an “unhealthy” environment at the seminary and that they endured psychological pressure and witnessed inappropriate touching by Father Martinelli, who is accused of abusing a younger student. (CNS photo/Vatican Media)

The witnesses also alleged that reports of sexual abuse were ignored or dismissed by authority figures, including the cardinal in charge of St. Peter’s Basilica.

Three former students at the Pius X pre-seminary testified before the city state’s court on Feb. 24 that the environment was “unhealthy,” indicating that taunts of a sexual nature were common and that they had witnessed one of the accused grope the genitals of other students.

The three witnesses also alleged that reports of abuse were known by Cardinal Angelo Comastri, the archpriest of St. Peter’s Basilica, who dismissed them as “false and calumny.” It was reported in the course of the hearing that Comastri may have blocked the removal of the pre-seminary’s then rector, one of the defendants.

Located inside Vatican City State, the Pius X pre-seminary is a residence for about a dozen boys aged 12 to 18 who serve at papal Masses and other liturgies in St. Peter’s Basilica and are considering the priesthood.

The pre-seminary is run by a religious group, the Opera Don Folci, which is overseen by the Diocese of Como in northern Italy.

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‘Spotlight’ editor on retirement: Clergy abuse coverage has permanently changed church

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 26, 2021

By Christopher White

[Includes five-minute Zoom interview with Baron.]

When Martin Baron, one of the most consequential newspaper editors in America, announced his upcoming retirement, he cited his work overseeing the Boston Globe’s coverage of clergy sexual abuse and cover-up as a highlight of his journalistic career.

Executive Editor Martin Baron, holding microphone, speaks to staff at The Washington Post in this undated photo. (Courtesy of The Washington Post)
Executive Editor Martin Baron, holding microphone, speaks to staff at The Washington Post in this undated photo. (Courtesy of The Washington Post)

“I think the impact has been really quite profound on several levels,” he told NCR ahead of his retirement. “One on investigative journalism, the other on the Catholic Church and then more broadly on institutions that are facing allegations of abuse of various types, but particularly sexual abuse.”

Baron, who will retire as executive editor of The Washington Post on Feb. 28 and who previously helmed the Globe and the Miami Herald, led news coverage of the Florida presidential ballot recount in 2000, the 9/11 terrorists attacks, the historic election of President Barack Obama, two impeachment proceedings against President Donald Trump and a global pandemic.

Yet it was his Spotlight team’s pioneering work in 2001 and 2002, which earned the Globe a Pulitzer Prize in Public Service for chronicling decades of abuse in the Boston Archdiocese and subsequent cover-up by the most powerful Catholic cleric in the country, Cardinal Bernard Law, that would be turned into an Academy Award-winning film in 2015 in which Baron was memorably portrayed by Liev Schreiber.

While Baron may be a newspaperman’s newspaperman, he doesn’t mind the fact that it was a movie that increased his prominence beyond the newsroom, telling NCR it was gratifying to see the way “Spotlight” elevated the importance of journalism.

“A film reaches tens of millions of people around the world,” said Baron, who praised the film for the way it demonstrated the significance of investigative reporting and how, if done well, it can confront power and hold it accountable.

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February 25, 2021

Clergy sex abuse survivors and whistleblower priests join together for healing and worship

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WVUE

February 24, 2021

By Kimberly Curth

Survivors and whistleblower priests are joining together in an unconventional way. They’ve found common ground in their personal experiences speaking out about clergy sexual abuse while continuing their fight for transparency from the church.

Survivor Mark Vath.
Survivor Mark Vath.

On Sunday mornings, you will find a sanctuary for survivors. It’s a private mass that doesn’t take place within church walls.

“Yes, it is a strange experience after so many years presiding and celebrating Eucharist, not to be able to be with the people in the church and behind the altar,” said whistleblower priest, Father Ryszard Biernat.

Survivor Richard Windmann
Survivor Richard Windmann

“We deal with betrayal a lot as victims and survivors so there was the thought of betraying other victims who have completely cut themselves off from the Catholic religion, so we decided to grow it organically,” said survivor Mark Vath.

On the weekly zoom call, clergy sex abuse survivors and their families come to worship, Father Ryszard Biernat presides over the online service.

Fr. Ryszard Biernat, whistleblower priest of the Diocese of Buffalo
Fr. Ryszard Biernat, whistleblower priest of the Diocese of Buffalo

“We are there to pray together and worship God together,” said Biernat.

“I can tell you that I speak to many survivors and victims and they tell me, no, they said, they can never go back in that building, in that church again, and myself is included, if it was anybody else, I probably wouldn’t go,” said survivor Richard Windmann.

Biernat is a whistleblower priest in Buffalo, New York, credited with helping expose an alleged church sex abuse cover-up within the Diocese there. He secretly recorded Bishop Richard Malone and released the recordings to the public. In November of last year, the New York Attorney General filed a lawsuit against the Diocese of Buffalo and former senior leaders including Malone, “for failing to follow mandated policies and procedures that would help to prevent the rampant sexual abuse of minors by priests within the Catholic Church.”

“I have been suspended by Bishop Malone, day before he left, for the reason of recording him and making those recordings public and for criticizing him and my co-workers in the media,” said Biernat. “In addition to that, I would like to add that when I was in the seminary in the year 2003, I was sexually assaulted by one of the priests of the Diocese of Buffalo.”

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Brooklyn bishop calls suit accusing him of decades-old abuse ‘defamatory’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service via National Catholic Reporter

February 24, 2021

Brooklyn – Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio said Feb. 22 a lawsuit filed against him in New Jersey Superior Court over a claim of abuse that allegedly occurred decades ago “is defamatory.”

“I did not abuse the accuser or anyone else in my 50-year ministry as a priest,” he said, adding: “False claims do real damage to victims of sexual abuse.”

ishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, N.Y., is seen celebrating Mass Nov. 7, 2020, at St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. (CNS/Gregory A. Shemitz)
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn, N.Y., is seen celebrating Mass Nov. 7, 2020, at St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. (CNS/Gregory A. Shemitz)

According to a story in The Tablet, Brooklyn’s diocesan newspaper the plaintiff is Samier Tadros, 47, who now lives in Daytona Beach, Florida.

He claims the abuse took place from 1978 to 1980 in Holy Rosary Church in the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey, the paper reported. “At the time, Bishop DiMarzio lived in the parish and, in court documents, Tadros contended that he was receiving one-on-one religious instruction from him.”

DiMarzio said in his statement that the accuser “did not attend the parish or the parish school and does not appear to have been Catholic.”

“Anyone with a minimal understanding of parish life knows that it stretches the imagination to think a priest would be providing private catechism lessons to a non-Catholic 6- or 7-year-old on a one-to-one basis,” he said. “Additionally, I simply resided at the parish in question as I was assigned by the Archdiocese of Newark to minister full-time at Catholic Charities.”

DiMarzio also said there is “nothing new” in the suit that is different from “the original letter of complaint” submitted to the Newark Archdiocese March 9, 2020. In the letter, the accuser sought $20 million.

According to a National Catholic Reporter story of June 4, 2020, Tadros’ attorney, Mitchell Garabedian, told the paper that Tadros came forward after hearing from a family member that another man, Mark Matzek, had accused the bishop of abuse that supposedly occurred in the 1970s.

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Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio says allegation of abuse ‘never happened’ and ‘false claims do real damage to victims’

BROOKLYN (NY)
The Dialog – Diocese of Brooklyn

February 24, 2021

Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio said Feb. 22 a lawsuit filed against him in New Jersey Superior Court over a claim of abuse that allegedly occurred decades ago “is defamatory.”

“I did not abuse the accuser or anyone else in my 50-year ministry as a priest,” he said, adding: “False claims do real damage to victims of sexual abuse.”

According to a story in The Tablet, Brooklyn’s diocesan newspaper the plaintiff is Samier Tadros, 47, who now lives in Daytona Beach, Florida.

He claims the abuse” took place from 1978 to 1980 in Holy Rosary Church in the Archdiocese of Newark, New Jersey, the paper reported. “At the time, Bishop DiMarzio lived in the parish and, in court documents, Tadros contended that he was receiving one-on-one religious instruction from him.”

Bishop DiMarzio said in his statement that the accuser “did not attend the parish or the parish school and does not appear to have been Catholic.”

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Bendigo Catholic church leader ‘deeply disappointed’ that ribbons were removed from cathedral fence

BENDIGO (VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA)
Bendigo Advertiser

February 25, 2021

By Tom O’Callaghan

A senior Bendigo Catholic leader is “deeply disappointed” in the person who removed ribbons from a “loud fence” at the city’s cathedral.

The ribbons are both a protest and an acknowledgement of the church’s role in institutional sexual and other abuse and have appeared regularly on fences of religious institutions.

The Very Reverend Brian Boyle said he found out someone had them down late on Wednesday afternoon.

The Very Reverend Brian Boyle is deeply disappointed that ribbons protesting and acknowledging the Catholic church's role in institutionalised sexual abuse have been removed. Picture: Supplied
The Very Reverend Brian Boyle is deeply disappointed that ribbons protesting and acknowledging the Catholic church’s role in institutionalised sexual abuse have been removed. Picture: Supplied

“The ribbons had been taken without my permission or authorisation as administrator of the Cathedral, or without the permission or authorisation of the Bishop of Sandhurst,” he said.

“I would welcome individuals or groups to put ribbons back on the fence surrounding the Sacred Heart Cathedral in Bendigo to show support for those who have suffered from sexual abuse,” he said.

Dr Boyle was planning to add more ribbons either later on Thursday or tomorrow.

He was also preparing to address the matter in a church bulletin that would likely circulate over the weekend.

“In the bulletin, I will be suggesting that the whole purpose of the ribbons are to draw attention to the silent suffering that so many people have been through over the last several decades as victims of sexual abuse – particularly as it affects the Catholic community in this country,” Dr Boyle said.

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February 24, 2021

‘Hidden Predator’ bill for child sex-abuse victims to sue in Georgia advances

ROME (GA)
Rome News Tribune

February 23, 2021

By Beau Evans

A Georgia House subcommittee approved legislation that would prohibit local governments from adopting building codes based on the source of energy to be used.

Legislation to extend the statute of limitations for Georgians who were sexually abused as children to sue their abusers years later as adults advanced in the state House of Representatives on Tuesday.

Sponsored by Georgia Rep. Heath Clark, R-Warner Robins, the bill would extend the deadline for victims to bring suits against their childhood abusers to age 52, a steep increase from age 23 under current state law.

The bill would let victims sue their alleged abusers up to a year after realizing that past abuse has led to present-day trauma. Research shows adults often tend to recognize the impacts of childhood sex abuse decades after it happened.

Controversially, the bill would also give victims a four-year window to sue public and private organizations like the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts of America for harboring predators on staff who abused them as children.

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Alleged abuse victim of Brooklyn bishop files civil lawsuit

DENVER (CO)
Catholic News Agency

February 3, 2021

Trenton, N.J. – An alleged abuse victim who last year went public with allegations against the Bishop of Brooklyn has now filed a lawsuit in a New Jersey court, claiming that the bishop abused him repeatedly in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn.
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn.

Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of Brooklyn has denied all claims against him, calling the accusations “defamatory.”

The lawsuit concerns allegations that Samier Tadros, who now lives in Florida and says he was six years old at the time of the abuse, made public during summer 2020.

The Associated Press reported last June that Tadros had accused DiMarzio of sexual abuse, allegedly committed while DiMarzio was a parish priest in the Archdiocese of Newark.

Tadros, 47, asserts in the lawsuit that the abuse occurred when DiMarzio was giving him “instruction in Catholic doctrine and the Catholic faith” at Holy Rosary parish in Jersey City, where DiMarzio was assigned while a parish priest, in 1979 and 1980.

DiMarzio is already the subject of a Vatican ordered Vos estis investigation, following an allegation made during November 2019.

Mark Matzek alleges that DiMarzio and another priest, now deceased, repeatedly abused him when he was an altar server at St. Nicholas Catholic Church in the Archdiocese of Newark in the 1970s.

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Opinion: Are you a former New Yorker? Time’s almost up for childhood sex-abuse survivors to seek justice

MIAMI (FL)
Miami Herald

February 19, 2021

By Jennifer Freeman

Former New York residents who experienced sex abuse as children, no matter how long ago, can file claims to hold culpable institutions, individuals accountable.

We all know it — every year, thousands of New Yorkers move to Florida for its warm weather and leisurely lifestyle. Some stay — I’m a former New Yorker delighted to be living in the Sunshine State for the past three years. The pandemic has accelerated this trend, with thousands more choosing Florida as a new home.

Yet most former New Yorkers have no idea that our legal rights were dramatically expanded recently. In 2019, New York State enacted landmark legislation that makes it possible to seek justice for decades-old child sex-abuse crimes — the Child Victims Act (CVA). For a short time, this new law suspends the statute of limitations for child sex-abuse claims and provides a unique opportunity for survivors of such abuse, which happened in New York, to seek accountability and finality.

But the time to take action is almost up. The CVA provides a one-time, two-year window for survivors to sue for abuse regardless of when the abuse occurred. Survivors have until early August 2021 to seek justice against institutions such as the Catholic Church, New York medical institutions, public and private schools, foster-care providers, athletic organizations, religious groups, summer camps and any other entity, as well as individuals who perpetrated or enabled these heinous crimes.

This law doesn’t just apply to current New York residents, it extends to anyone who was ever abused in New York, no matter how long ago and regardless of where they live now. If you grew up in New York State and suffered abuse at the hands of a clergy member, youth director, doctor, teacher, coach, family member or anyone else, this law applies to you. Over the past year, following New York’s lead, several states have reformed their statutes of limitation; sadly, Florida is not among them — but we’re working on it.

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Ex-US Priest Goes on Trial in East Timor on Sex Abuse Charges

OECUSSE (EAST TIMOR)
Associated Press via NBC10 Philadelphia

February 23, 2021

By Raimundos Oki

A defrocked American priest went on trial Tuesday to face charges he sexually abused young girls at his shelter for orphans and children from impoverished families, in the first clergy sex case to emerge in East Timor — the most Catholic place in the world outside the Vatican.

A police officer escorts Richard Daschbach, left, a former missionary from Pennsylvania, U.S. upon his arrival for a trial at a courthouse in Oecusse, East Timor, Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021.
A police officer escorts Richard Daschbach, left, a former missionary from Pennsylvania, U.S. upon his arrival for a trial at a courthouse in Oecusse, East Timor, Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021. Raimundos Oki / AP

Richard Daschbach, 84, a former missionary from Pennsylvania, is facing 14 counts of sexual abuse of children under 14 years old, as well as one count each of child pornography and domestic violence, according to the country’s prosecutor general.

He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

Police presence was heavy at the small courthouse near the beach, as about 100 supporters of the former priest showed up but were denied entry to the courtroom for the closed proceedings.

Devout followers in the young country of 1.3 million — 97% of whom are Catholic — have been sharply divided by the case, with some families and politicians pitted against one another and tensions so high accusers fear they will be targeted by violence if publicly identified.

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February 23, 2021

Sioux City diocese settles sexual abuse lawsuit

SIOUX CITY (SD)
Sioux City Journal

February 22, 2021

By Nick Hytrek

A man who had alleged that he was sexually abused by a priest in the late 1960s has settled a lawsuit against the Diocese of Sioux City.

Samuel Heinrichs had sued the diocese in October 2019, saying he was sexually and physically abused by the Rev. Dale Koster at Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Mount Carmel, Iowa.

Terms of the settlement agreement are confidential, said Heinrichs’ attorney, Patrick Hopkins, of West Des Moines.

“We were able to resolve the case,” Hopkins said.

The diocese released a similar statement.

“The matter has been resolved,” said Dawn Prosser, director of communications.

The lawsuit, filed in Woodbury County District Court, was dismissed Wednesday.

Heinrichs, who was living in California when the suit was filed, was a student at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel grade school when Koster was the head of the school, and the abuse began in 1968 when Heinrichs was in the fourth and fifth grade and recurred when he was in the eighth grade, the lawsuit said.

“Koster used his status and substantial power as a priest to groom (Heinrichs) for sexual abuse, to convince plaintiff that the abuse was normal, to convince him that reporting his abuse would be futile and to sexually abuse him,” the lawsuit said.

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Child sex abuse lawsuit names Diocese of Ogdensburg as defendant

WATERTOWN (NY)
NNY360

February 22, 2021

By Sydney Schaeffer

Ogdensburg – The Diocese of Ogdensburg has been named as a defendant in a child sex abuse lawsuit filed in state Supreme Court late last week.

The plaintiff, identified in court documents as LG 83 DOE, filed suit Feb. 17 in state Supreme Court in St. Lawrence County against the diocese and St. John the Baptist Church in Keeseville, which is a hamlet that straddles the border of Clinton and Essex counties.

The plaintiff is a resident of New York state and was born in 1963.

In the suit, it’s alleged that Monsignor Thomas J. Robillard, who is now dead, committed acts of sexual assault, battery, rape and more against the plaintiff. The alleged acts happened between the years of 1970 and 1973 at the Keeseville church.

Monsignor Robillard, an Ogdensburg native, served at various other churches in St. Lawrence and Lewis counties throughout his career with the diocese. He retired in 1993 and resided in Norfolk until his death.

Monsignor Robillard died at Claxton-Hepburn Medical Center in March 2009. He was 91 years old.

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Lawsuit Filed Against Children’s Home of Poughkeepsie

POUGHKEEPSIE (NY)
Hudson Valley Post

February 18, 2021

By Bobby Welber

On Wednesday, Greenstein & Milbauer, LLP, a personal injury law firm based in New York City filed a lawsuit in Dutchess County Supreme Court alleging that from approximately 2004-2008, when the victim was approximately 12 to 16 years old, he was repeatedly sexually abused while a resident at The Children’s Home of Poughkeepsie.

Helen Fahy, acting as an or the administrator of The Children’s Home of Poughkeepsie, allegedly groomed the boy over a period of time before physically assaulting him. The sexual abuse endured for approximately 3.5 years, officials say.

“Helen Fahy had Plaintiff participate in mutual oral sex and intercourse at least once per week at her office at The Children’s Home of Poughkeepsie and every day at her home when Plaintiff was on break. It is alleged that throughout the period in which the abuse occurred, Defendants were generally negligent, they negligently employed, supervised, and retained employees, agents, and/or representatives, including Helen Fahy, who sexually abused minor residents, including Plaintiff, and gave them access to children,” Greenstein & Milbauer, LLP wrote in a press release.

*

Helen Fahy is listed on the New York State Sex Offender’s database as a Level-2 Sex offender. In 2017 she was sentenced to 18 months in prison after she was convicted for raping someone younger than 17-years-old. She was arrested by the Hyde Park Police Department in 2016, according to the New York State Sex Offenders database.

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Number of people suing Children’s Village for alleged sex assault doubles to 22

YONKERS (NY)
News 12

February 22, 2021

News 12 has learned that the number of people suing The Children’s Village in Dobbs Ferry for sexual assault allegations has now doubled.

Eleven more men have come forward with allegations against The Children’s Village, bringing the total to 22.

The survivors claim they were sexually abused by staff and older residents when they were boys as young as 6. Their allegations date back to the 70s.

The attorney representing the men discussed with News 12 why they are coming forward now, decades after their alleged abuse.
“Their sexual identity to a certain extent was thrown into question when they were kids. Some of them had been fed alcohol and drugs,” says Robert Greenstein, the plaintiffs’ attorney.

The Children’s Village was supposed to be a safe haven for kids – many of them homeless, runaways or juvenile delinquents.

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New Orleans archdiocese overhauls support for sex abuse survivors

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service via National Catholic Reporter

February 22, 2021

By Paul Finney Jr.

New Orleans – An ongoing series of discussions between New Orleans Archbishop Gregory M. Aymond and Kevin Bourgeois, the leader of the New Orleans chapter of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, has led to a significant broadening and restructuring of Archdiocese of New Orleans’ response to abuse survivors.

Aymond announced Feb. 11 that Joey Pistorius, director of the archdiocesan Catholic Counseling Service, will become the archdiocese’s new Victims’ Assistance coordinator April 1.

The victims’ assistance office will move from its current location in the archdiocesan administrative offices to the offices of the Catholic Counseling Service.

In addition, Bourgeois, who is a licensed clinical social worker, will serve as a volunteer who will offer training to the counseling team when there are disclosures of sexual abuse trauma.

The archbishop, on the recommendation of Bourgeois and other victims’ advocates, also will appoint a sexual abuse survivor to the Independent Review Board, a body primarily composed of lay professionals who review allegations of abuse to determine their credibility and make such recommendations to the archbishop.

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Survivors of sex abuse by nuns suffer decades of delayed healing

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Global Sisters Report – National Catholic Reporter

February 22, 2021

By Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

Anne Gleeson was 12 years old when she says Sister of St. Joseph of Carondelet Judith Fisher — her charismatic, redheaded history teacher at Immacolata School in Richmond Heights, Missouri — began singling her out for special attention.

“She’d wander around the classroom, and she’d lean on my chair and press her fingers into my back. Or she’d send me a little note or leave a present in my desk,” Gleeson, now 63, said. The secret, forbidden touches gave Gleeson shivers.

She says the rape began in 1971 when she was 13, although it would take three decades and some therapy for her to recognize it as such. In Gleeson’s adolescent mind, she was simply head over heels in love with a woman 24 years her senior. The sexual contact happened anywhere and everywhere, Gleeson said: in stairwells at the school, in Fisher’s bedroom at the convent, on the overnight trips Fisher arranged with Gleeson’s mother and another Sister of St. Joseph.

To me, it was almost miraculous,” Gleeson told Global Sisters Report. “I was even kind of jealous of the ring on her finger. She was the bride of Christ — and, yet, she told me that we would always be together forever.”

According to the watchdog group BishopAccountability.org, as of September 2020, 162 women religious have been publicly accused of sexual abuse in the United States. Mary Dispenza, who heads the subgroup within the Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests (SNAP) for those abused by Catholic sisters, has received more than 90 phone calls and emails with stories of both physical and sexual abuse, about 60 of them just in the last two years.

But Dispenza, a former Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary, suspects that the real total might be in the thousands. After all, there are more than 6,700 credible abuse accusations against priests, and women religious, globally, outnumber priests by more than 200,000.

But for two decades, the singular focus of both the media and the Catholic Church when it comes to sexual abuse seems to have been only priests.

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‘I exploited them’: Ex-priest and ALP official ‘ashamed’ of child sexual abuse

SYDNEY (NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

February 23, 2021

By Jenny Noyes

A former Labor party official and Catholic priest told a Sydney court he feels guilty and ashamed for exploiting vulnerable boys in Vietnam and the Philippines for his own sexual gratification and said he never doubted that what he was doing was criminal.

Peter Andrew Hansen, who has also practised as a lawyer, gave evidence during a sentence hearing in the NSW District Court on Tuesday after he pleaded guilty earlier this month to 31 charges, including one of engaging in sexual intercourse with a child under 18 in the Philippines and 15 counts of producing child abuse material.

He said he feels guilt and shame not only for breaking the law but for “contravening my own standards of morality” in his exploitation of the boys he abused.

“The record of my life says I did work for people who were in difficult circumstances and yet here with these victims, these boys, I exploited them.

“I didn’t only exploit their age, I exploited the fact they came from a poor Asian country,” he told the court. “I not only contravened society’s standards… I also used and manipulated to my own advantage, a power imbalance between me and them.”

“I never doubted the criminality of my action and I understand that exacerbates my culpability,” he said.

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Vatican projects nearly 50M-euro deficit due to COVID losses

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 19, 2021

By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican said Friday it expects a deficit of nearly 50 million euros ($60.7 million) this year because of pandemic-related losses, a figure that grows to 80 million euros ($97 million) when donations from the faithful are excluded.

The Vatican released a summary of its 2021 budget that was approved by Pope Francis and the Holy See’s Council for the Economy, a commission of outside experts who oversee the Vatican’s finances. The publication was believed to be the first time the Vatican has released its projected consolidated budget, part of Francis’ drive to make the Vatican’s finances more transparent and accountable.

The Vatican has run a deficit for the past several years, narrowing it to 11 million euros in 2019 from a hole of 75 million euros in 2018. The Vatican said Friday it anticipated the deficit would grow to 49.7 million euros in 2021 but that it expected to make up the shortfall with reserves.

Francis particularly wanted to release information about the Peter’s Pence collections from the faithful, which are billed as a concrete way to help the pope in his ministry and works of charity but are also used to run the Holy See bureaucracy.

The funds have come under scrutiny amid a financial scandal about how those donations were invested by the Vatican’s secretariat of state.

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Clergy sex abuse jury trial moved to July 2022 due to scheduling error

ALAMOGORDO (NM)
Alamogordo Daily News

February 22, 2021

By Nicole Maxwell

The case alleging complicity in the rape of a child against several Catholic entities scheduled to begin in December 2021 was moved to July 2022.

The case was originally scheduled to go to jury trial on December 13, 2021, but that trial date was canceled due to a scheduling error, court records show.

A pre-trial conference is set for June 9, 2022 in front of New Mexico Second Judicial District Judge Daniel Ramczyk with the jury trial expected to begin at 8 a.m. on July 11, 2022.

The case was filed by a John Doe against several parishes, dioceses and the Servants of the Paraclete alleging each were complicit in allowing Fr. David Holley, who moved to Alamogordo in the 1970s, to sexually abuse the complainant.

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Will Pope have a ‘Pell Problem’ with Super Mario over visions of reform?

DENVER (CO)
Crux

February 21, 2021

By John L. Allen Jr.

Rome – During the St. John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI years, the Vatican had a council of cardinals from around the world who allegedly oversaw its financial affairs. Members of that body routinely complained that the information they received was incomplete, that it lacked credibility and was fundamentally untrustworthy.

Two of the prelates voicing those objections most consistently were Cardinals Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and George Pell of Sydney, Australia. Thus when the new “Papa Bergoglio” made Pell his tip of the spear for Vatican financial reform in February 2014, it boiled down to one veteran reformer turning to another, despite their clear ideological differences on other fronts.

Unfortunately, the odd couple partnership between Francis and Pell fell apart almost before it could begin. The rift had nothing to do with the sexual abuse charges against Pell in his native Australia, which came later – it was about the transition from what the two men had been against, to what they were actually for.

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Ex-US Priest on Trial in East Timor on Sex Abuse Charges

OECUSSE (EAST TIMOR)
Associated Press via The Citizens Voice

February 23, 2021

By Raimudos Oki

A defrocked American priest went on trial Tuesday to face charges he sexually abused young girls at his shelter for orphans and children from impoverished families, in the first clergy sex case to emerge in East Timor — the most Catholic place in the world outside the Vatican.

Richard Daschbach, 84, a former missionary from Pennsylvania, is facing 14 counts of sexual abuse of children under 14 years old, as well as one count each of child pornography and domestic violence, according to the country’s prosecutor general.

He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted.

Police presence was heavy at the small courthouse near the beach, as about 100 supporters of the former priest showed up but were denied entry to the courtroom for the closed proceedings.

Devout followers in the young country of 1.3 million — 97% of whom are Catholic — have been sharply divided by the case, with some families and politicians pitted against one another and tensions so high accusers fear they will be targeted by violence if publicly identified.

Former President Xanana Gusmao, himself a revered revolutionary fighter, was briefly present in the courtroom with Daschbach on Tuesday. The former leader is still very powerful in the country, and some — including his own children — have questioned why he is publicly supporting a man accused of abusing children.

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Juarez priest found guilty of sexually assaulting 8-year-old girl

CIUDAD JUáREZ (MEXICO)
BorderReport [El Paso TX]

February 23, 2021

By Julian Resendiz

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JUAREZ, Mexico (Border Report) – A three-judge panel has found a Juarez Catholic priest guilty of sexually abusing an altar girl when she was 8 years old, Chihuahua state officials said.

The judges on Monday afternoon convicted the Rev. Aristeo Baca of two counts of aggravated sexual assault and one count of aggravated sexual abuse. The abuse allegedly took place inside the Santa Maria de la Montana parish in South Juarez between December 2015 and January 2018, the state Attorney General’s Office said.

The investigation began when the girl’s parents called police after their daughter refused to go back to the church in early 2019. Police psychologists and medical personnel determined the girl had suffered sexual assault, the AG’s Office said in a statement.

Baca denied the charges, although prosecutor alleged he once asked forgiveness from the girl’s father.

“The evidence presented during the trial shows the accused broke the trust and took advantage of the access he had to the victim,” the AG’s Office said.

The same three-judge panel that found him guilty will sentence Baca on March 1. He faces up to 80 years in prison.

Several supporters of Baca showed up outside the courtroom throughout the trial with signs proclaiming he was innocent. However, women’s rights groups such as Red Mesa de Mujeres celebrated his conviction.

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Lawsuit accuses Brooklyn bishop of sex abuse in Jersey City decades ago

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
The Record and NorthJersey.com

February 22, 2021

By Abbott Koloff

One of two men who have accused Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio of sexually abusing them as children in Jersey City decades ago has filed a lawsuit based on allegations that he made public last year.

The suit, filed last week in New Jersey Superior Court, alleges that DiMarzio sexually abused the man repeatedly when he was a 6-year-old boy at Holy Rosary parish in 1979 and 1980. The accuser, Samier Tadros, who lives in Florida, went public with the allegation in 2020, months after another man publicly alleged that he had been abused by DiMarzio at another Jersey City parish in the 1970s.

The bishop has in the past denied the allegations by both men. On Monday, his attorney, Joseph Hayden, issued a statement saying DiMarzio had passed a lie detector test.

“The allegations in the lawsuit against Bishop DiMarzio never happened,” Hayden said in the statement.

He said DiMarzio agreed to take a lie detector test after a letter alleging abuse was sent to the Catholic Archdiocese of Newark in March 2020. That letter had been sent by Tadros and his attorney. The bishop’s “categorical denial of the claim was found to be truthful by an independent retired law-enforcement polygrapher of national stature,” Hayden said in the statement.

The statement addressed only the allegation in the lawsuit. Hayden said in a subsequent email that DiMarzio was also asked during the lie detector test about allegations made by the other accuser. “He categorically denied both allegations and he was found to be truthful as to both answers,” Hayden said.

Both accusers are represented by Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston attorney, who said he anticipates filing a second lawsuit “in the near future.” The attorney said in an email that lie detector tests are “unscientific and therefore unreliable. The results of it would not be admissible in court.”

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February 22, 2021

Sacerdote de Chihuahua irá a prisión por violar a niña de 8 años

CIUDAD JUáREZ (MEXICO)
Excelsior [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 22, 2021

By Carlos Coria Rivas

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Al sacerdote Aristeo Baca le otorgaron el beneficio de regresar a su casa bajo custodia, mientras se dictamina su sentencia

La tarde de este lunes un sacerdote católico fue declarado culpable de abuso sexual y violación agravada, en perjuicio de una niña que acudía con sus padres a la iglesia del párroco en Chihuahua.

El padre Aristeo Baca escuchó el dictamen del juez Carlos Jaime Rodríguez García y otros dos magistrados, quienes otorgaron al sacerdote el beneficio de regresar a su casa bajo custodia, mientras se dictamina su sentencia.

El Ministerio Público local dio a conocer que solicitará la pena máxima de 80 años de prisión, aunque la edad del sacerdote no le permitiría ni acumular al menos 20 años en la cárcel.

El sacerdote fue encontrado culpable de los delitos mencionados en contra de una niña de 8 años de edad.

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Juicio en Italia: En un seminario menor de la Legión de Cristo en Gozzano, un niño de 12 años fue abusado sexualmente por un sacerdote de la Legión llamado Vladimir Reséndiz Gutiérrez

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Infolliteras [Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico]

February 22, 2021

By Eduardo Lliteras

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Eduardo Lliteras Sentíes.- En un seminario menor de la Legión de Cristo en la región italiana de Lombardía, en la ciudad de Gozzano, a partir de 2008, un niño de 12 años fue abusado sexualmente por un sacerdote de la Legión llamado Vladimir Reséndiz Gutiérrez, de nacionalidad mexicana. 

Un cable de la agencia estadounidense Associated Press (AP) informaba por aquéllas fechas que cuando la familia del niño lo supo en 2013 gracias a la psicóloga que lo atendía -estaba sujeto a depresión- presentó una denuncia ante la policía italiana.

La congregación fundada por el criminal y pederasta, Marcial Maciel, ofreció una indemnización de 15 mil euros para que la denuncia fuese retirada. Y la familia guardara silencio, ya que de lo contrario deberían resarcir el dinero por partida doble.

Sin embargo, la madre del menor abusado, Yolanda Martínez García, acudió con  Velasio De Paolis, el delegado pontificio al que Benedicto XVI confió, en 2010, el comisariamiento de la institución, que duró cuatro años.

Pero la reacción del cardenal al que el Papa hoy en “retiro espiritual” le confió el cargo de vigilar a la Legión tras las denuncias sin fin contra su fundador, no fue la esperada: se rió entre dientes, le aconsejó a la madre del menor abusado que no firmara ese convenio (redactado en un contrato de seis páginas por los abogados de la congregación), y le dijo que propusiera otro sin los abogados involucrados: “Los abogados complican cosas -le dijo-, incluso la Escritura dice que hay que llegar a un acuerdo entre los cristianos ”. 

El acuerdo entre “cristianos” era el siguiente: si la familia violaba el pacto de confidencialidad, deberían pagar a la congregación el doble de lo pactado, 30.000 euros

“Fue una segunda violación, porque para todos los efectos y objetivos, en esa carta nos pidieron que negáramos los hechos. Y para nosotros eso fue una puñalada por la espalda porque nos la trajo nuestro padre espiritual. Él sabía todo sobre nosotros porque mi esposo confiaba en él. Y eso lo hizo aún más doloroso”, relató Martínez a la agencia AP.

Esa conversación, decía el cable de AP, fue grabada y preservada, al igual que la propuesta de compensación, y ambas han sido pruebas cruciales en el juicio llevado a cabo en Milán, en el que sacerdotes y abogados de la Legión fueron acusados ​​de obstrucción de la justicia y extorsión. 

Si bien la Legión se atrincheró detrás de la justificación de que en ese momento no existían pautas para la protección de menores ahora vinculantes, el comportamiento de De Paolis, fallecido en 2017, solo demuestra su complicidad con los legionarios que protegían a los sacerdotes pedófilos. 

De Paolis se había enterado del comportamiento de Reséndiz en 2011, cuando otro chico del seminario de Gozzano, lo había acusado de maltrato y mientras estaban surgiendo otros casos en Venezuela, donde el sacerdote había sido enviado después de 2008 para esconderlo de las acusaciones en Italia.

Posteriormente, los Legionarios apartaron a Reséndiz Gutiérrez de su ministerio en el seminario menor en Venezuela, así como del trabajo pastoral con menores. Ocho días después, tras ser interrogado por su superior fue retirado de todo ministerio sacerdotal activo.

Luego se presentó el caso a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe. En abril de 2013, el dicasterio vaticano decretó la expulsión del estado clerical de Reséndiz Gutiérrez.

Posteriormente en Italia, el mexicano Vladimir Reséndiz Gutiérrez, exsacerdote de la congregación, fue sentenciado a siete años de cárcel y al pago de indemnizaciones por abuso de dos menores.

ACUSADO Y SENTENCIADO EN ITALIA

Fue acusado de intento de extorsión contra una de las víctimas y complicidad el ex rector del seminario de menores de los Legionarios de Cristo en Gozzano, el mexicanoVladimir Resendiz Gutiérrez, quien fue condenado definitivamente a 6 años y 6 meses, pero huyó a México antes del juicio en 2020.

Ahora, cinco personas ex líderes y abogados de la congregación religiosa de los Legionarios de Cristo han sido imputadas el pasado 13 de febrero y por lo tanto enfrentarán también un juicio. Las acusaciones se formularon como parte de la investigación, que pasó de Novara a Milán porque el hecho ocurrió en la capital lombarda, que vio a los ex líderes de la congregación involucrarse en la investigación sobre presuntas presiones puestas en marcha para retirar la versión de los hechos. a una víctima de abuso.

Al concluir la audiencia preliminar ante la jueza Patrizia Nobile y la PM Alessia Menegazzo, se presentó la acusación de los máximos directivos de los Legionarios de Cristo cuya primera audiencia está prevista para el próximo 13 de mayo. En total cuatro integrantes de los Legionarios de Cristo son acusados: Óscar Náder Kuri, director territorial en Italia, Manuel Cordero Arjona y el sacerdote y psicólogo Víctor de Luna así como el abogado italiano Corrado D’Agostino y el prelado Luca Gallizia.

La abogada de la víctima, Daniela Cultrera, también interpuso una acción civil a favor de la familia.

En la acusación se afirma que Vladimir Resendiz Gutiérrez “con más acciones ejecutivas del mismo plan criminal, en su calidad de titular del seminario menor de la Congregación de Derecho Pontificio de los Legionarios de Cristo, actuando con violencia, amenaza, abuso de autoridad y en todo caso con la intención de abusar de la inferioridad psicofísica del menor (omitido), en el momento de tener doce años, quien le fue encomendado por motivos de educación, instrucción, cuidado, vigilancia y custodia”… “forzando al menor a realizar actos sexuales”.

Entre los cargos hay otros detalles de violencia, incluida la violencia psicológica; Resendiz presuntamente hizo sufrir a la víctima:  “Impidió que el menor regresara a casa, con motivo de las visitas de sus padres”; también lo sometió a “interrogatorios sobre cualquier práctica de masturbación por parte de los padres”.

En el centro de esta línea de investigación se encuentran dos escrituras privadas que se habrían presentado, para su firma, entre octubre y diciembre de 2013 a los familiares de la menor, que en ese momento tenía 12 años, para obtener una retractación de la denuncia por delitos sexuales y violencia. Según el acuerdo, según las investigaciones, si el niño no hubiera guardado silencio sobre la violencia, la familia habría tenido que pagar 15 mil euros por partida doble.

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Resigning from priesthood, Harrison claims Fresno Catholic Bishop sacrificed ‘the Gospel for politics and money’

FRESNO (CA)
San Joaquin Valley Sun

February 18, 2021

By Alex Tavlian

Craig Harrison, a longtime priest with the Fresno Roman Catholic Diocese who held the title of Monsignor, resigned his post on Thursday following a 22-month leave that sparked a flurry of defamation lawsuits stemming from accusations of misconduct.

“It was almost two years ago that Bishop Armando Ochoa called me into his office to put me on temporary administrative leave because of a phone call he said he received of an accusation against me,” Harrison said during a Thursday afternoon press conference at the office of his attorney.

[Craig Harrison]

Through 2019 and early 2020, prosecutors in four counties investigated the claims and uniformly declined to prosecute on a combination of insufficient evidence or lapse in the statute of limitations for the offenses.

“He wouldn’t tell me what the accusation, he wouldn’t tell me where it came from, and the church’s guidelines have always said that before a priest is removed, an investigation has to be done to protect his name.”

Subsequent to discussions with Ochoa, in April 2019, a wave of accusations and claims of sexual misconduct perpetrated by Harrison dating back to his earliest priestly duties in Fresno, Merced, and Kern counties emerged.

“That did not happen,” Harrison said of an initial, internal inquiry by the Diocese.

During the emotional press conference, Harrison said Ochoa declined to initiate an internal probe because he was “leaving office.”

Ochoa was succeeded by Bishop Joseph Brennan in May 2019.

“Finally! Someone would investigate and my name would be cleared,” Harrison said of Brennan’s arrival. “Instead, I waited for months. Finally, the Bishop contacted me and left a phone message on my recorder telling me that – even though he had only been in office for two months – he was going on vacation.”

“My life was on hold.”

Harrison said his next brush with the Diocese was when Fresno Diocese spokeswoman Teresa Dominguez spoke with KQED, the Bay Area National Public Radio affiliate.

Harrison is currently suing Dominguez, along with the Diocese, for defamation for comments originating from that interview.

“I had a death threat and still not one word from the Diocese of Fresno,” he added.

Choking up, Harrison noted that not a single member of Diocese personnel had asked him a single question about the allegations during the two-year freeze.

Harrison detailed a back-and-forth of written restrictions from Brennan on his personal conduct while on leave. Among them: restricting his ability to post reflections and prayers on Facebook, participating in funeral services of friends, wearing dark clothing.

He stopped to note his light blue dress shirt and light gray plaid jacket.

“I have done everything I can to comply with the rules the Bishop changes every day,” Harrison said, holding back tears. “But now the rules have gone too far.”

Harrison eventually announced that he sent a letter of resignation to Pope Francis.

“I cannot ignore my call from Christ to serve and minister to his people,” Harrison said. “I have come to accept that I cannot do this within any organization led by people who are willing to sacrifice the Gospel for politics and money.”

He added that his call to minister has “never been stronger” and said he would continue to preach, albeit beyond the cloth of the Catholic Church.

After issuing a prepared statement emotionally excoriating Brennan, Harrison’s attorney Kyle J. Humphrey continued.

“This result [of Harrison’s resignation] is a result of the failure of the Bishop in his obligations to seek truth and justice,” Humphrey said.

Humphrey similarly blamed lack of transparency, shifting Diocesan rules, and lack of integrity from Church management as driving the Harrison’s untimely exit from the priesthood.

The Fresno Roman Catholic Diocese, now under the management of Brennan, engaged its own internal investigation into priest misconduct, both including and beyond allegations related to Harrison, with the assistance of former FBI Executive Assistant Director Kathleen McChesney.

The Sun has contacted the Fresno Roman Catholic Diocese for comment on Harrison’s exit.

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Timor-Leste starts child abuse trial of former US priest

HONG KONG
Union of Catholic Asian News

February 22, 2021

Richard Daschbach faces 14 charges of sexual abuse of children under the age of 14, child pornography and domestic violence

Dili, East Timor – A court in Timor-Leste has started the trial of a self-confessed pedophile American priest who was dismissed from the priesthood by the Vatican on charges of child abuse in 2018.

The trial of Richard Daschbach, 84, a former priest and missionary from the Society of the Divine Word, started on Feb. 22 but was abruptly postponed until the next day, reported Associated Press.

According to Timor-Leste’s prosecutor general, Daschbach faces 14 charges of sexual abuse of children under the age of 14, child pornography and domestic violence. If convicted, he faces up to 20 years in prison.

Meanwhile, he also faces wire fraud charges in his homeland in the US and has been placed on Interpol’s red notice list, an online database of fugitive international criminals.

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East Timor postpones child sex abuse trial of ex-US priest

OECUSSE (EAST TIMOR)
Associated Press via ABC News

February 21, 2021

East Timor abruptly postponed the trial of a defrocked American priest facing allegations he sexually abused young girls at a children’s shelter he ran in a remote enclave in East Timor — one of the most Catholic places on Earth

East Timor abruptly postponed the trial Monday of a defrocked American priest facing allegations he sexually abused young girls at a children’s shelter he ran in a remote enclave in East Timor — one of the most Catholic places on Earth.

Soon after Richard Daschbach, a former missionary from Pennsylvania, arrived in the courtroom, judges said they needed more time to make revisions to documents and asked the 84-year-old defendant to return on Tuesday.

The former priest is charged with 14 counts of sexual abuse of children under the age of 14, as well as counts of child pornography and domestic violence, according to the country’s Prosecutor General.

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Somebody Needs to Be Dad

NEW YORK (NY)
First Things

February 22, 2021

By Francis X. Maier

For Catholics, the Second Vatican Council (1962–65) stands as the key event of the last 60 years. It renewed the Church’s self-understanding. It reimagined her relations with the Jewish people, other Christians, and the world. It also acknowledged in a new and powerful way the importance of the lay vocation.

It did not, however, break radically with the past, notably regarding authority. In the person of the local bishop, stressed the council, “the Lord Jesus Christ . . . is present in the midst of the faithful.” Every local bishop has the authority to teach, encourage, govern, and correct the faithful entrusted to him. Thus, as “father and pastor” of his people, he should be “an example of sanctity in charity, humility, and simplicity of life,” with the duty to “mold his flock into one family” so that all “may live and act in the communion of charity.”

Those are beautiful words. They’re also profoundly sobering. Reading the council’s documents about the duties placed on a bishop is a bracing experience. Ambition in the Church is not necessarily a bad thing; it’s naïve to assume otherwise. But any man longing for the job had better think twice and carefully. Any privileges that once went with the work of a bishop have thinned out over the past few decades as the demands have fattened up. The abuse scandal of the last 20 years, the hostility of today’s cultural and political environment, and the toxic nature of criticism within the Church herself have led many men—some claim as many as a third of candidates—to turn down the episcopacy when offered. Mediocre, incompetent, and even bad men still do become bishops. The remarkable thing is how many of our bishops, the great majority, are good men doing their best, and doing it well, as a “father and pastor.” I saw this firsthand in 27 years of diocesan service. I observed it again and again over the past two months.

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Fr. Craig Harrison, in an emotional announcement, steps away from priesthood

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
KGET

February 18, 2021

By Robert Price

Monsignor Craig Harrison’s battle of almost two years with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno appears to have come to a close — at least in the most meaningful sense.

Harrison announced Thursday he is leaving the priesthood.

It was an emotional day for Harrison, both difficult and liberating. After almost two years of limbo — suspended by the Diocese over allegations of sexual impropriety and barred from even the appearance of performing priestly duties — Harrison, pastor of Bakersfield’s St. Francis of Assisi Church, surrounded by family and his team of attorneys — announced he was moving on.

It’s time, he said, to re-engage with the community, even if it’s without his clerical collar.

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In Ireland, the Candle of Atonement Reminds Victims of Abuse

ARMAGH (IRELAND)
Swords Today

February 17, 2021

By Scout Mitchell

Since 2017, the Catholic Church in Ireland has dedicated a day of prayer for victims of sexual abuse. “I am convinced that prayer and relationships with survivors of abuse are a modern creation of physical and spiritual compassion,” said Bishop Emon Martin, President of the Episcopal Conference in Ireland.

The first Friday of Lent, February 19, is celebrated in Ireland as a day of prayer for survivors and victims of sexual abuse.

Lent has been celebrated in Ireland every year since 2017, at the behest of Pope Francis, at the behest of some of the survivors. During the day, read a prayer and light candles of atonement in the cathedrals and in all the parishes of the country, “As a church apologize for the suffering caused by the abuse.”

“When we light these candles, we will remember our brothers and sisters and their families who marked their lives by the abuse they suffered,” explains Bishop Emon Martin, Archbishop of Armagh and President of the Episcopal Conference in Ireland. “His faith was severely betrayed, and those responsible for the abuse within the church brutally tested his faith.”

The Irish Catholic Primate recalls the honor of meeting the abused, survivors and their families several times in the four provinces of Ireland: “Many have told me about the importance of prayer and the need for the Church to be open to justice and atonement, never to forget them. I was humbled by his courage and I moved by his courage ”.

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Who’d want to be a witness when it just means more trauma?

SYDNEY (NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

February 12, 2021

By Declan Fry

“Groomers groom communities, not just children.” This sentiment occurs throughout Witness, veteran investigative journalist Louise Milligan’s follow-up to 2017’s Walkley Award-winning Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell. Working deep within the ninth circle of Dante’s hell, Milligan’s counsel interviewees (almost invariably men) seek to uphold the principle of “beyond reasonable doubt” at any cost – especially if the client is both monied and powerful.

Through her experience as a witness during the Pell trial, Milligan, who won the people’s choice award in the Victorian Premier’s Literary Awards, learns first-hand how the adversarial system of cross-examination – with its indignities and seething manipulations, its brow-beating and haranguing – visits new traumas upon the multiply abused. Yes, multiply: first by their abuser; then by their trial; and finally by the aftermath of the process – perhaps the abuse whose pain lingers longest.

Although she acknowledges that there are counsel ready to engage in cross-examination without eviscerating witnesses, much of the old guard depicted here don’t trouble themselves too much. Among them, Robert Richter QC emerges as one of the more vain, tunnel-visioned, and immoderately foolish – not least in his own words.

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Vigil held for victims of abuse, including minor allegedly abused by Juarez priest

EL PASO (TX)
KTSM

February 19, 2021

By Natassia Paloma

A vigil was held Friday in Juarez for women and children.

Several organizations came together to bring awareness for women, boy and girls who are victims of abuse.

Candles were lit, and participants dressed in black.

At the vigil, organizers demanded a fair trial for a minor who was allegedly abused by a priest, Aristeo Baca.

The trial ended this week with final arguments. Judges will give final sentence next week.

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February 21, 2021

La ex monja Pacheco fue absuelta por retiro de la acusación

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Interactiva Noticias [Salta, Argentina]

February 21, 2021

By PRENSA

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Por retiro de la acusación fiscal una exmonja resultó absuelta de abuso y corrupción de menores 

Por retiro de la acusación fiscal, María Alicia Pacheco (45) resultó absuelta del delito de abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante por la duración en el tiempo y las circunstancias de su realización, agravado por ser ministro de culto, y corrupción de menores, todo en concurso real.

El juicio se llevó a cabo en la Sala VII, presidido por el juez Federico Diez.

Al inicio del debate, el fiscal penal de la UDIS 2, Rodrigo González Miralpeix,comunicó que desistía de la comparecencia de los testigos citados y sostuvo que retiraba la acusación y que solicitaba la absolución de la acusada. Esto, por entender que no se habían reunido los elementos suficientes para mantener la imputación.

El fiscal señaló que, luego de hablar en numerosas oportunidades con la denunciante, la joven (actualmente de 29 años de edad) ratificó su falta de interés en seguir adelante con la causa. El representante del Ministerio Público sostuvo que en este tipo de delitos se debe valorar la voluntad de la víctima, su interés particular y su afectación personal.

María Alicia Pacheco había llegado a juicio luego de que la denunciante refiriera que cuando tenía 13 años y asistía a la Parroquia de la Santa Cruz, la acusada -que en aquel momento era monja- habría abusado de ella en reiteradas oportunidades.

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Sex abuse survivors lose archive as Facebook removes news from ‘life saving’ site

AUSTRALIA
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

February 18, 2021

By Rhiannon Shine

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-02-18/facebook-news-ban-sees-sex-abuse-survivors-lose-archive/13167708?fbclid=IwAR0Ae90iNd4m0iwxT_ZtYqe8RR3p_yEQot98o-PtMZYAVAy37gJKLa2vwRs

A survivor of clergy abuse who started a Facebook group to help other survivors says he is “devastated” by the social media giant’s decision to block Australian news.

Richie Scutt, who was sexually abused by an Anglican priest when he was 11 years old, started the Facebook group Survivors and Friends in 2016.

He said he started the group to share news reports on the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse and it became a lifeline for many.

Mr Scutt said the group had grown to around 200 members from across Australia and still primarily shared news stories.

He estimated more than 2,000 news articles had been shared to the Facebook group since 2016, and said he was devastated to find they had all disappeared when he logged onto Facebook this morning.

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74-yr-old pastor arrested in Kerala for alleged sexual assault of minor girl

KERALA (INDIA)
The News Minute

February 21, 2021

The accused pastor, who according to police, goes around houses preaching religious matters, was arrested from Konnathady on Saturday.

Kunnathunad police in Ernakulam district on Saturday arrested a 74-year-old Christian pastor for allegedly sexually assaulting a minor girl. The accused, Mathew is a resident of Mukaddam near Konnathady in Idukki district. According to the police, the crime took place in January and the girl’s mother who came to know about the incident filed a complaint in Kunnathunad police station. The accused pastor, who according to police, goes around houses preaching religious matters, was arrested from Konnathady on Saturday.

Mathew has been charged with various provisions under Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act, said police. “We cannot reveal other details on where the alleged crime took place or other details as that would reveal the identity of the child,” an official of Kunnathunad police station said. After the arrest, the accused has been remanded to judicial custody by court.

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Eton hires council officer who urged police action over abuser

ENGLAND
The Sunday Times

February 21, 2021

By Sian Griffiths

The safeguarding leader who prompted the school to report concerns over a teacher now in jail has been taken on full-time

Eton College has appointed its first director of safeguarding after a child abuse scandal that she helped stop.

Alice Vicary-Stott has been hired to the full-time post at the boys-only boarding school, where Princes William and Harry and Boris Johnson were educated.

Her appointment follows last year’s conviction of Matthew Mowbray, who taught at Eton for more than 20 years, for offences against pupils at the £42,500-a- year school.

Vicary-Stott was the “local authority designated officer” overseeing children’s safety for three councils when Eton first reported its suspicions about Mowbray to her in May 2019. She advised that the case be referred to the police and Mowbray was arrested within days.

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Former student sues The Bishop’s School over allegations of past sexual abuse by teacher

LA JOLLA (CA)
La Jolla Light

February 19, 2021

By Ashley Mackin-Solomon

The Bishop’s School in La Jolla has been sued by a former student over allegations of sexual misconduct by a teacher while the student was a minor during the 1970s and ‘80s.

The suit, filed in November in San Diego County Superior Court, alleges offenses including sexual battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor. The unidentified plaintiff seeks damages “in an amount to be determined at trial.” A trial date has not been set.

The suit accuses the plaintiff’s former teacher of inappropriate sexual behavior — including “grooming” her from the time she was 12 years old up to their sexual encounters when she was 17 — and accuses the school of covering up the teacher’s actions and creating an environment that allowed it to continue.

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February 20, 2021

Absuelve una ex monja salteña acusada de abuso sexual y corrupción de menores

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Página/12 [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

February 20, 2021

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El fiscal, Rodrigo González Miralpeix, comunicó que la denunciante, que cuando ocurrió el hecho tenía 13 años y hoy tiene 29 años, no tiene interés en seguir adelante con la causa. 

La ex monja María Alicia Pacheco (45), resultó absuelta del delito de abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante por la duración en el tiempo y corrupción de menores. La religiosa, había sido detenida en diciembre de 2016, tras la denuncia de Gracia Ramia Damario, quien aseguró que cuando tenía 13 años, fue acosada y abusada sexualmente de forma reiterada por Pacheco. 

Durante el inicio del juicio que era presidido por el juez Federico Diez, y que se produjo ayer en la Sala VII de la Ciudad Judicial, el fiscal penal de la UDIS 2,Rodrigo González Miralpeix, comunicó que desistía de la presentación de los testigos, que retiraba la acusación y que pedía la absolucion de la acusada. A entender, el pedido fue porque no se habían reunido los elementos suficientes para mantener la imputación.

Además, Miralpeix informó que la denunciante, que hoy tiene 29 años, no tenía interés en seguir adelante con la causa. Por lo tanto, se dio lugar a respetar la voluntad de la víctima, su interés particular y su afectación personal.

De acuerdo a los hechos denunciados, la ex monja entre 2004 y 2005, habría acosado sistemáticamente a la mujer. Además, de abusarla sexualmente y de forma continuada, hasta que decidió desvincularse de la congregación. Los hechos se producían tanto en el domicilio de la víctima como en el edificio de la parroquia de la Santa Cruz, ubicaba en la calle Santa Fe al 1.200, de la ciudad de Salta.

En la iglesia, Pacheco, que era conocida como la Hermana Micaela, colaboraba con el también denunciado por abuso sexual, el cura Agustín Rosa Torino. Por ese entonces, la víctima asistía al instituto religioso Hermanos Discípulos de Jesús de San Juan Bautista, que el propio Rosa Torino fundó en 1986 avalado por el papa Juan Pablo II.

Entre los relatos que contó la víctima en medios públicos, “un día que había pocos religiosos en la parroquia me pidió que la acompañara a buscar los instrumentos, cerró la puerta e intentó besarme. Me dijo que desde el día que me había conocido se había enamorado de mí“.

A partir de ahí, la ex monja solía agarrarle la mano y le pedía tener relaciones sexuales. “Me tocaba las piernas, me acosaba con llamadas telefónicas a mi casa, me controlaba los mensajes que los chicos me hacían al celular”, agregó.

Sin fecha para Rosa Torino

El sacerdote, que enfrenta los delitos de abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante y de abuso sexual simple, aún espera la fecha de inicio del juicio oral y público que debe definir Maximiliano Troyano. La elevación a juicio se produjo en junio de 2020 y quedó radicada en la Sala IV del Tribunal de Juicio de Salta. 

Las víctimas son dos seminaristas y la ex monja Valeria Zarza. Esta última, tras radicar la denuncia contra el sacerdote, fue denunciada por cometer abuso sexual contra la sobrina del cura Josué Salas, miembro de la Congregación y amigo de Rosa Torino. Siendo acusada por el mismo delito que denunció, llegó a juicio en 2019, mucho antes que el propio Rosa Torino.

No obstante, resultó absuelta por el juez Javier Aranívar, y por pedido del fiscal Fedérico Obeid. El fiscal argumentó que durante el juicio oral no pudo llegar a una convicción plena sobre la culpabilidad de Zarza y solicitó la absolución por el beneficio de la duda. 

“Probar inocencia o culpabilidad en un abuso sexual siempre es difícil. Son delitos tremendos donde generalmente no hay testigos. Eso es lo complicado. El fiscal hizo su deber. Pero quedaba más que claro que yo no tengo perfil psicológico de abusadora y que detrás de todo esto se encuentra alguien muy siniestro a quien no le importó someter a su sobrina a un juicio con tal de cumplir sus propios intereses”, expresó Zarza a Salta/12 cuando la absolvieron.

La ex religiosa acompañó a otras víctimas en el proceso de denuncia. Ella relató que se escapó de la Congregación en mayo del 2015 e hizo la denuncia canónica contra Rosa Torino. 

Mientras aún no hay una fecha definida para el inicio del juicio, el sacerdote goza de prisión domiciliaria desde septiembre de 2017. Cuando fue denunciado en diciembre de 2016, fue puesto en prisión pero sólo lo estuvo durante 9 meses. En su momento, la vocal 2 de la Sala 4 del Tribunal de Impugnación, Virginia Solórzano, rechazó un pedido presentado por la defensa que buscaba la nulidad del requerimiento de elevación a juicio. 

Si bien, se produjeron 3 denuncias penales contra Rosa Torino, se sabe que el menos se efectuaron 30 “denuncias canónicas”, que fueron tenidas en cuenta por el Vaticano cuando se tomó la decisión de cerrar el Instituto el 18 de junio de 2019. Ya en el 2015, el Monseñor Emil Paul Tscherrig, había solicitadola intervención de la institución, “tras haber recibido serias denuncias sobre diversos aspectos de la vida del instituto religioso”, según consignó la Agencia Informativa Católica Argentina (AICA). 

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Absuelven a la ex monja María Alicia Pacheco porque se retiró la acusación

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Nuevo Diario de Salta  [Salta, Argentina]

February 20, 2021

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María Alicia Pacheco, la ex monja de 45 años, quien fue detenida en 2016, aunque luego fue liberada, ahora resultó absuelta del delito de abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante por la duración en el tiempo y las circunstancias de su realización, agravado por ser ministro de culto, y corrupción de menores.

Pacheco pertenecía a la orden religiosa fundada por el cura Agustín Rosa Torino, quien también está acusado y a la espera de ser juzgado por delitos sexuales. 

La denunciante que expuso a Pacheco, y que provocó su detención el 30 de diciembre de 2016, sostuvo que cuando tenía 13 años habría sido abusada en reiteradas oportunidades en la Parroquia de la Santa Cruz.

El 9 de octubre de 2019, la fiscalía pidió juicio para la ex monja, sin embargo, ayer en una audiencia llevada a cabo en la Sala VII, y presidida por el juez Federico Diez, la ex religiosa resultó absuelta.

Fiscalía

Al inicio del debate, el fiscal penal de la UDIS 2, Rodrigo González Miralpeix, comunicó que desistía de la comparecencia de los testigos citados y sostuvo que retiraba la acusación y que solicitaba la absolución de la acusada.

Esto, por entender que no se habían reunido los elementos suficientes para mantener la imputación. El fiscal señaló que, luego de hablar en numerosas oportunidades con la denunciante, la joven ratificó su falta de interés en seguir adelante con la causa. Por ende, sostuvo que en este tipo de delitos se debe valorar la voluntad de la víctima, su interés particular y su afectación personal.

Ante ello, el juez priorizó la voluntad de la víctima y dispuso la absolución.

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Today – Watch SIPE: SEX, LIES, AND THE PRIESTHOOD

Click here for tickets to the world premiere of SIPE: SEX, LIES, AND THE PRIESTHOOD. Includes a conversation with the filmmakers and a panel discussion at 8pm Eastern.

Richard Sipe was a former Benedictine monk and Catholic priest, trained as a psychotherapist to deal with the mental health problems of the clergy. Over the years he dealt with the records of over six thousand patients and recognized a pattern of behavior within the Church that eventually led him to leave the priesthood. “The monastery that had been my idealistic home when I was thirteen, by the time I was thirty-seven, it was in a sense a junkheap to me.”

Upon leaving the priesthood, Richard helped lift what he refers to as “the mask”, revealing the truth behind celibacy and its connection to the sexual abuse of minors. In a series of provocative books, he wrote frankly and extensively about sexuality in the priesthood. He also became an expert witness for the prosecution in hundreds of clergy abuse cases. Richard has appeared in dozens of documentaries and was the person The Boston Globe reporters called on for advice in SPOTLIGHT – the 2015 Academy Award Winner for Best Film.

SIPE: SEX, LIES, AND THE PRIESTHOOD is the first documentary to focus completely on Richard’s own journey – from the priesthood to an outspoken and informed critic of the institution. The film is directed by Joe Cultrera. One of Cultrera’s previous documentaries (HAND OF GOD – Frontline, 2006) explored his brother’s abuse by a Catholic priest and the repercussions inside his Italian American family.

Following the Film:

A panel discussion will provide intimate perspectives on Sipe’s life and the survivor experience, together with cutting-edge analysis of Catholic clergy abuse and celibacy, the two issues that were revolutionized by Sipe’s work. The panel will include important revelations about Sipe’s own life and will reflect on the much-discussed connection between celibacy and Catholic clergy sex abuse. These topics were analyzed together for the first time in Sipe’s groundbreaking A Secret World: Sexuality and the Search for Celibacy (1990) and Sex, Priests, and Power: Anatomy of a Crisis (1995).

Panelists:

Marianne Benkert Sipe is a psychiatrist and expert witness specializing in Catholic clergy abuse and the lives of religious sisters; she and her husband Richard Sipe frequently worked together on abuse cases.

Phil Saviano is the activist and survivor of childhood sexual abuse by Fr. David Holley whose story was told in the movie Spotlight; he is a board member of BishopAccountability.org and represents Mexican folk artists through his import business www.vivaoaxacafolkart.com .

Robert Orsi is Grace Craddock Nagle Chair of Catholic Studies at Northwestern University, where he is also Professor of Religious Studies, History, and American Studies; he is the author of many books, including the award-winning Madonna of 115th Street, and is working on Give Us Boys (Columbia University Press, forthcoming in 2022), about sexual abuse in Jesuit prep schools; Orsi is a leader of the University of Notre Dame / BishopAccountability.org partnership Gender, Sex, and Power: Towards a History of Clergy Sex Abuse in the U.S. Catholic Church.

Kara French is Associate Professor of History at Salisbury University and author of Against Sex: Identities of Sexual Restraint in Early America (University of North Carolina Press, forthcoming in June 2021); she is a researcher in the Gender Sex, and Power partnership, where she is working on celibacy in the Catholic abuse crisis.

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Ministry leaders’ rush to empathize with Ravi Zacharias is beyond alarming

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

February 19, 2021

By Kyle J. Howard

It is deeply troubling to see so many men, especially in ministry leadership, find a more immediate connection with the abuser rather than the abused.

There is a reckoning taking place in the evangelical church as more and more people are becoming aware of the reality of spiritual and sexual abuse — and their prevalence in many churches.

There is also a reckoning taking place among evangelical leaders as they confront and respond to these abuses coming to light.

Sadly, the responses from many of these esteemed Christian leaders are falling woefully short. Instead of healing, they are serving to further wound and even traumatize God’s people.

This is most recently evident in the way many leaders have reacted to the dark secrets in the life and ministry of the late Christian apologist Ravi Zacharias.

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