ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

February 28, 2022

Table 1. Reproductive abuse cases documented in Bishop Accountability’s archives. For the full table, see the article.

Reproductive Abuse in the Context of Clergy Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church

BOSTON (MA)
Religions [Basel, Switzerland]

February 24, 2022

By Doris Reisinger

Read original article

[Table 1 above: Reproductive abuse cases documented in Bishop Accountability’s archives. Please share the URL of this open source article with others who are interested. Many of the document URLs in the reference section at the end of the article link to the actual documents.]

(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sexual and Spiritual Violence against Adult Men and Women in the Catholic Church)

Abstract

In a significant number of cases, clerical sex offenders impregnate their victims and force them into hiding, abortion, or adoption. This phenomenon is referred to in this paper as reproductive abuse. Clearly, most victims of reproductive abuse are adults, but even among minor victims of clerical child abuse, between 1 and 10 percent may have experienced reproductive abuse. On the basis of pertinent studies, this paper explores archival material on several dozen allegations of reproductive abuse in the context of clergy sexual abuse of minors…

View Cache

How Prince Andrew could face more sex abuse lawsuits – including from woman who claims she was ‘groped’ by royal

ALBANY (NY)
The U.S. Sun [New York NY]

February 28, 2022

By Alex Diaz

Read original article

Prince Andrew could face more sex abuse lawsuits in the US due to a potential change in the law – including from a woman who claims she was groped by the disgraced royal. 

The Duke of York, 62, settled the rape case brought against him by accuser Virginia Giuffre, 38, for an undisclosed amount thought to be up to $15 million

Ms Giuffre’s case was allowed by a New York law which gave victims of historic child sex abuse a year to sue their alleged abusers despite the statute of limitations.   

Florida hair salon owner Johanna Sjoberg, 42, has repeatedly claimed that Andrew touched her breast in 2001 when she was 21.

So far she would have been able to sue the prince for the alleged sex assault because the child sex abuse law did not apply to her and too much time has gone by. 

But new bill…

View Cache

Area priest notorious in sex abuse lawsuits passes away in Florida

BUFFALO (NY)
The Daily News [Batavia NY]

February 23, 2022

By Matt Surtel

Read original article

Batavia – A longtime area priest who became the one of the most notorious in the Buffalo Diocese’s sex abuse scandal has died.

The Rev. Donald W. Becker, 79, died Feb. 15 in Fort Myers, Fla. He was accused of molesting children in 30 lawsuits under the state’s Child Victims Act.

Becker always denied the allegations, but the sheer number of lawsuits made him the most-accused priest in the diocese.

Becker was ordained in 1968 and the lawsuits against him allege incidents dating back to at least that time. One such lawsuit accused him of getting a 15-year-old male drunk and then raping him during a 1975 incident in North Java.

Becker was pastor from 1992 to 2002 at the former St. Mary’s Church in Batavia. He was removed from his duties in 2002 on a “medical leave of absence” and named by the diocese in 2018 among the dozens…

View Cache

Archdiocese sues insurance companies over sexual abuse coverage

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe NM]

February 24, 2022

By Rick Ruggles

Read original article

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe, in the throes of Chapter 11 bankruptcy, sued four insurance companies this week, claiming they haven’t fulfilled their contracts to provide liability coverage for sexual abuse complaints.

The archdiocese hopes to raise enough money, including through insurance payouts, to settle the bankruptcy case involving more than 400 people who allege they were victims of clergy sexual abuse, with some claims dating back decades.

At least one attorney sees the archdiocese’s lawsuit as a step toward a resolution in the case, which has stretched over more than three years and is on its third mediator. While it was clear the archdiocese and its insurance companies haven’t reached deals on payouts, the lawsuit reveals the severity of the disagreements between them.

The defendants named in the suit are Great American Insurance Co., Arrowood Indemnity Co., St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. and United States Fire Insurance…

View Cache

Archdiocese sues insurers over sexual abuse coverage

SANTA FE (NM)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 28, 2022

Read original article

One of the oldest Roman Catholic dioceses in the U.S. is suing four insurance companies over claims that they haven’t fulfilled contracts to provide liability coverage for sexual abuse complaints.

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe filed the lawsuit this week as it deals with a bankruptcy case involving more than 400 people who allege they were victims of clergy sexual abuse. Some of the claims date back decades.

The archdiocese hopes to raise enough money, including through insurance payouts, to settle the bankruptcy case, which has stretched over more than three years and is on its third mediator.

At least one attorney sees the archdiocese’s lawsuit as a step toward a resolution in the case, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported.

The defendants named in the lawsuit are Great American Insurance Co., Arrowood Indemnity Co., St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. and United States Fire…

View Cache
Erie County District Attorney Brad Foulk, left, and Erie Catholic Bishop Donald W. Trautman, right, walk out of an office at the Erie diocese's headquarters on April 15, 2002, after the two met over clergy abuse cases as the clergy abuse crisis was exploding nationwide. Foulk died in 2009. File Photo, Erie Times-News

Retired Bishop Donald Trautman, who led Catholic Diocese of Erie for two decades, dies at 85

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

February 26, 2022

By Ed Palattella

Read original article

[Photo above: Erie County District Attorney Brad Foulk, left, and Erie Catholic Bishop Donald W. Trautman, right, walk out of an office at the Erie diocese’s headquarters on April 15, 2002, after the two met over clergy abuse cases as the clergy abuse crisis was exploding nationwide. Foulk died in 2009. File Photo, Erie Times-News]

Trautman directed diocese during turbulent time and retired in 2012. He said his “heart and soul” were with the people, though he was heavily criticized for handling of clergy sex abuse crisis.

  • Donald W. Trautman, a Buffalo native, was installed as the ninth bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Erie in July 1990
  • Trautman served as bishop for 22 years, retiring in October 2012 and ending a career marked by hard work and scandal
  • “He gave himself totally to his role as bishop,” said Trautman’s successor as bishop of Erie, Lawrence T. Persico

Retired Bishop Donald W. Trautman,…

View Cache

Judgment in Cologne: Abuse priest sentenced to 12 years in prison

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
T-Online [Berlin, Germany]

February 25, 2022

By Johanna Tuentsch

Read original article

[Google translation followed by German text]

Judgment in the trial of a Catholic priest: A 70-year-old has been imprisoned for twelve years for sexual abuse. He had molested several girls over the years. 

The trial against a 70-year-old priest before the Cologne Regional Court ended with a sentence of twelve years in prison. He worked in the Voreifel, in Gummersbach, Wuppertal and Zülpich. After the testimonies of the witnesses had become overwhelming, he himself admitted that he had sexually abused girls in all these places on numerous occasions.

“You were not the luminary that you were perceived as, but a pedophile serial offender who has abused for decades,” said judge Christoph Kaufmann to the 70-year-old priest, who on Friday before the 2nd major criminal chamber of the Cologne district court was sentenced to twelve years imprisonment. He has committed 110 cases of sexual abuse, of which 23 are classified as serious and 15 as…

View Cache

New Jersey doctor protests against late Bridgeport priest for sexual abuse

BRIDGEPORT (CT)
WTNH-TV, ABC-8 [New Haven CT]

February 27, 2022

By Olivia Perreault

Read original article

A New Jersey doctor [Hoatson is a Ph.D.] is protesting against a late Bridgeport priest who is accused of sexually abusing a child.

Bob Hoatson stood in Bridgeport Sunday outside of St. Michael the Archangel Church with a sign reading: “Abuser of minor children – Father George Maslar.”

This comes after an unidentified woman claimed she was abused twice by the priest when she was young.

Hoatson is the co-founder of a non-profit in New Jersey, Road to Recovery, that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families.

We’re told Maslar moved around at least 25 times to different churches. According to Maslar’s assignment record, the late priest began his career in 1965 at St. Michael’s Church. He moved to several different churches throughout Connecticut, Maryland, New York, and Pennsylvania before ending at St. Maximilian Kolbe Friary in Hamburg, New York.

Hoatson said Father Maslar’s name has not appeared in…

View Cache

Pre-trial battles form as Albany diocese fights release of records

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union [Albany NY]

February 27, 2022

By Brendan J. Lyons

Read original article

Last August, former Bishop Howard J. Hubbard reflected on his handling of decades of child abuse allegations in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, noting that his “most fervent prayer each day is that victims … and their families will find healing, reconciliation and peace in God’s love and that we as a church and a society will learn from this tragedy.”

The remarks by the bishop emeritus, who headed the diocese from 1977 to 2014, were made in an extraordinary opinion piece that was published in the Times Union on Aug. 13 — the final day that alleged victims of childhood sexual abuse could file claims under New York’s Child Victims Act, which had lifted the statute of limitations for two years.

Hubbard, who is among numerous clergy facing allegations of sexually abusing children, wrote in his op-ed that the diocese’s response “fell short,” and he admitted church officials had…

View Cache

February 27, 2022

Germany: Catholic priest convicted for abusing girls

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

February 25, 2022

Read original article

A priest who abused children and adolescents over many years has been handed a 12-year jail sentence by a Cologne court. The archdiocese where he worked has denied any responsibility.

The Catholic Church has been facing a wave of abuse allegations against many priests

A  court in the western German city of Cologne on Friday convicted a Catholic priest of sexually abusing children in cases spanning many years, sentencing him to 12 years in prison.

The priest was also ordered to pay three co-plaintiffs in the cases damages totaling €50,000 ($56,000).

The conviction comes as the German Catholic Church is under intense scrutiny after revelations of decades of sexual abuse of children and misconduct toward minors by church employees, including in the Cologne Archdiocese. 

The church is seen by many to have abused its position of power by covering up abuse by priests

What was the priest convicted…

View Cache

US bishops defend planned $28 million eucharistic congress amid criticism

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

February 23, 2022

By Brian Fraga

Read original article

To organize a National Eucharistic Congress in 2024, the Catholic bishops in the United States have partnered with an event planner who was accused of charging exorbitant rates during the preparations for Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration in January 2017.

The bishops are also relying on conservative Catholic organizations to provide funding and create catechetical and promotional materials for a multiyear National Eucharistic Revival that will lead up to the four-day congress in July 2024. The bishops intend to set up a nonprofit organization to handle logistics and raise $28 million over the next two years to hold the event in downtown Indianapolis.

Some Catholic observers, including experts in financial planning and church management, say the bishops’ plan is sound and consistent with other large religious events in recent years, including the 2015 World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia.

Also linking belief in the real presence of Jesus in the Eucharist…

View Cache

Bishop Stika will ‘vigorously challenge’ Knoxville cover-up allegations

KNOXVILLE (TN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

February 25, 2022

Read original article

The Bishop of Knoxville says he will fight a lawsuit which claims he both covered up a rape allegation against a former diocesan seminarian, and defamed the alleged rape victim.

“I am taking this matter seriously and my plan is to vigorously challenge these allegations,” Bishop Rick Stika wrote in a Feb. 25 letter, distributed to priests and other personnel within the Tennessee diocese. 

“We know that the legal system works deliberately, and with good reason. I welcome a thorough examination of these allegations, but this will take some time,” Stika wrote.

The bishops’ letter came after a Feb. 22 lawsuit against Stika and the Knoxville diocese, filed by a former cathedral organist, who charges that he was raped and sexually harassed by seminarian Wojciech Sobczuk in February 2019, and that Stika did not take seriously the allegation — and in fact, tried to pressure him to keep silent. 

Stika…

View Cache

‘It’s time to heal’: Judge rules church, school assets part of bankruptcy estate

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
Guam Daily Post

February 27, 2022

By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert

Read original article

Handing a key legal victory to survivors of clergy sexual abuse, U.S. District Court Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood on Saturday ruled the assets of Catholic parishes and schools belong to the Archdiocese of Agana as a whole – and could therefore be used to help pay abuse claimants.

The judge’s ruling capped a three-year-old request from hundreds of survivors, represented by Leo Tudela, 78.

“I will stay a Catholic,” Tudela told the court after the ruling, while also urging other survivors to come forward for “healing” and to put aside differences within the Catholic Church.

Millions of dollars worth of buildings, parking lots, vehicles, cemeteries, bank accounts and other parish and school property are now part of the archdiocese’s bankruptcy estate, which could be liquidated.

But the judge and the creditors committee, along with the archdiocese, said the end goal is to justly compensate the abuse survivors while keeping the…

View Cache

Judge rules parish, school assets can be used to pay sex abuse victims

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
Pacific Daily News [Hagåtña, Guam]

February 27, 2022

By Julianne Hernandez

Read original article

District Court of Guam Chief Judge Frances Tydingco-Gatewood ruled on Saturday that funds from the Archdiocese of Agaña’s Catholic parishes and schools could be used to help pay survivors of sexual abuse.

In January 2019, the Archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 reorganization bankruptcy to allow it to restructure its finances to pay the plaintiffs in about 202 clergy sex abuse claims.

The church listed $22.96 million in assets, with $45.66 million in liabilities, according to PDN news files.

Attorney Edwin Caldie, who represented some of the survivors and other creditors, said that the parties currently are trying to agree on a settlement between what the claimants are asking and what the church can pay without losing its entire community.

“It’s complicated. The church chose to file for bankruptcy and so the bankruptcy code, all of the laws, federal laws, relating to bankruptcy, they’ll guide and they’ll help us figure out…

View Cache

Archbishop: Child abuse scandal shames us

GLASGOW (UNITED KINGDOM)
Sunday Post [Glasgow, Scotland]

February 27, 2022

By Katrine Busey

Read original article

The new Archbishop of Glasgow yesterday said the Catholic Church should feel ashamed over the child abuse scandal while praising survivors for speaking out.

William Nolan also insisted the Church must “change our ways to ensure what happened in the past does not happen again”.

His comments came as he was installed as the new leader of Scotland’s largest Catholic community at a mass in the city’s St Andrew’s Cathedral. Pope Francis had nominated the former Bishop of Galloway for the role after the former archbishop, Philip Tartaglia, died following contracting Covid-19 last year.

As he was welcomed into his new role, Nolan spoke about “scandals” that have impacted the Church in recent years and “in particular the child abuse scandal”.

He praised those who had been abused and who had gone on to speak out for ­having “taken what happened in the dark and brought it to light”.

He…

View Cache

Shocking statistics

(ITALY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

February 21, 2022

By David Quinn

Read original article

An extraordinary claim appeared in a column by Matthew Syed in the Sunday Times yesterday, namely that up to a million Italian children have been abused by Italian priests since 1950. No-one can fail to have been shocked by such a figure, but from where does it originate? The answer is that it comes from a member of ‘The Abuse Network’ which is calling on the Church in Italy to investigate clerical sex abuse as has happened recently in France and Germany. Speaking to The Times, Francesco Zanardi (pictured above), himself an abuse victim and member of ‘The Abuse Network’, said: “I believe the number of victims could be as high as a million here”.

But what does he base that figure on? What he has done is extrapolate from a number that appears in the recent French report that was commissioned by the French hierarchy.

Based on a survey, that…

View Cache

OPINION | Sexual abuse survivor/activist advises churches

NASHVILLE (TN)
Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette (nwaonline.com)[Fayetteville AR]

February 26, 2022

By Terry Mattingly

Read original article

In this age of small-group ministries, most pastors would know how to handle a crisis that affected significant numbers of believers in their pews.

“If you had 1 in 4 members of your congregation actively battling cancer, or 1 in 4 members … experiencing being widowed or losing a spouse, chances are that you would have some level of intentional ministry to those individuals,” said Rachael Denhollander at a recent Trinity Forum event focusing on how churches respond to sexual abuse. “Maybe you would have a support group or a Bible study for them. You would have meal trains to help provide for their physical needs.”

But many sexual abuse survivors hesitate to speak out, she said, because churches act as if they don’t exist. Thus, they have little reason to believe the sins and crimes committed against them will be handled in a way that offers safety and healing.

View Cache

A million children abused by Italian priests, and it barely makes the news

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Times/The Sunday Times [London, England]

February 20, 2022

By Matthew Syed

Read original article

We must now accept that such evil is not an aberration but part of a duality central to institutional religion

The most dangerous moment in any scandal is when anger shades into indifference, when revelations that once had the power to shock become so normalised that they scarcely register. I wonder if we have reached such a tipping point in one of the most disturbing stories of our age: the sexual abuse of children by Roman Catholic priests.

If so, this should trouble us all.

On Wednesday a Vatican insider estimated that up to a million Italian children had been abused over seven decades. We do not know the true number because the clergy enjoy various immunities in Italy and the nation has never confronted, let alone fully investigated, the evil that has taken place within its borders. This should have led the news worldwide but scarcely merited a mention on…

View Cache

Letters to the Editor: Sunday Times [UK]

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Times/The Sunday Times [London, England]

February 27, 2022

Read original article

Religion should carry a health warning

I applaud Matthew Syed’s piece “A million children abused by Italian priests, and it barely makes the news” (Comment, last week). In my work as a psychotherapist, I witnessed the lifelong psychological damage experienced by survivors of abuse. It leads me to wonder: should all religious belief systems carry a mental health warning?
Tony Warren, Burgess Hill, West Sussex

Priests unfairly damned
The Catholic church is an easy target in countries with a long tradition of anti-Catholic bigotry such as Britain. A comprehensive survey of sexual abuse by priests in the US by John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York found that about 4 per cent were accused (but not all found guilty). That means 96 per cent had no accusations against them. This is comparable with many other organisations and churches.
Professor John Loughlin, fellow, Blackfriars Hall, Oxford

Fallibility must be acknowledged
It is difficult…

View Cache

German court convicts Catholic priest of abusing girls

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 25, 2022

Read original article

A German court on Friday convicted a Catholic priest of sexual abuse of children in cases that spanned many years and sentenced him to 12 years in prison.

The Cologne state court also ordered the 70-year-old to pay three co-plaintiffs in the cases damages totaling 50,000 euros ($56,000), news agency dpa reported.

The priest was identified by local media only as Hans U.

According to the indictment, the case against the priest covered 118 counts and the youngest victim was a 9-year-old girl. The priest was taken into custody during the trial because more victims came forward and the court saw a danger of him reoffending.

The court heard that the suspect’s victims included a girl who complained of homesickness at a holiday camp and a girl to whom he was supposedly giving anger therapy.

The priest continued to have opportunities to be alone with children although the officials with…

View Cache

February 26, 2022

Kanakuk issues new statement on camp child sex abuse; survivor calls it ‘disgusting’

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

February 25, 2022

By Gregory J. Holman

Read original article

“We’re very let down by this open letter from Joe White,” said a 34-year-old Branson man who says he was abused by a former Kanakuk counselor now in state prison serving two life sentences.

Kanakuk camp near Branson went public late Friday with a new statement aiming to redefine its relationship with people who say they are survivors of sexual abuse that took place at the Christian summer camp.

For more than a decade, the camp has been under scrutiny for reports of sexual abuse. As the News-Leader reported in 2010, a charismatic former camp counselor, Peter Newman, pleaded guilty to sexually abusing boys and is now serving two life sentences in Missouri prisons, plus 30 years.

Eleven months ago, Kanakuk was again in the spotlight due to new reporting by journalists Nancy French and David French published by The Dispatch, a conservative-leaning news site. Much…

View Cache

Lay employee fired amid child sex abuse investigation launched by Pennsylvania, New Jersey dioceses

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Episcopal News Service [New York, NY]

February 25, 2022

By The Rt. Reverend Daniel G. P. Gutiérrez

Read original article

Pennsylvania Bishop Daniel Gutiérrez issued the following message to his diocese on Feb. 25 outlining an investigation of child sex abuse claims against a New Jersey lay employee who previously had served for 20 years at a parish in Philadelphia. The employee, Thomas Whittemore, was terminated from parish ministry this week as the two dioceses’ investigation continues.

My Siblings in Christ,

It grieves me to tell you that several months ago, we were contacted by someone who reported that he had been sexually abused as a child by Mr. Thomas Whittemore during the time Mr. Whittemore served as the director of music at St. Peter’s Church, Pine St., Philadelphia. Mr. Whittemore was employed by St. Peter’s from 1984 to 2004 and employed from 1980 to 1983 at All Saints, Wynnewood. At the time we received the report, Mr. Whittemore was employed by a parish in the Episcopal Diocese of New Jersey.

We…

View Cache

Southern Baptist leaders apologize to sex abuse survivor

NASHVILLE (TN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 22, 2022

By Deepa Bharath

Read original article

The Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee has offered a public apology and a confidential monetary settlement to sexual abuse survivor Jennifer Lyell, who was mischaracterized by the denomination’s in-house news service when she decided to go public with her story in March 2019.

The committee, which acts on behalf of the SBC between its annual national meetings, announced the resolution during their Tuesday meeting in Nashville, the latest chapter in a saga that has raised questions about the handling of sexual abuse in the nation’s largest Protestant denomination. In addition to a public apology, Lyell also received a financial settlement of an undisclosed amount, according to Gene R. Besen, the committee’s interim legal counsel.

Lyell publicly disclosed she was a sexual abuse survivor after learning the man she accused of abuse, a former Southern Baptist seminary professor, had recently returned to ministry. She said she came forward with her story…

View Cache

Alabama church leader accused of sex abuse of 15-year-old

ALBERTVILLE (AL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 25, 2022

Read original article

A youth church leader in north Alabama has been arrested after authorities said she sexually abused a 15-year-old high school student.

Allison Brianna Cookston Stone, 26, of Albertville, was arrested Wednesday and charged with second-degree sodomy and second-degree sexual abuse, Marshall County Sheriff Phil Sims said.

Stone is a youth leader at the Church of God of Union Assembly in Albertville, Sims told reporters Thursday.

“That’s a position of trust in our community,” the sheriff said, according to al.com.

Stone was released after posting $60,000 bond. It was unknown if she has an attorney who could comment on her behalf.

The alleged victim in the case was identified as a teenaged boy from Boaz High School.

Authorities believe the boy’s parents “were unaware of the sexual nature” of the relationship between him and Stone, Sims said. The alleged abuse had been going on “for some time,”…

View Cache

Archdiocese sues insurers over sexual abuse coverage

SANTA FE (NM)
CT Post [Bridgeport, CT]

February 25, 2022

Read original article

One of the oldest Roman Catholic dioceses in the U.S. is suing four insurance companies over claims that they haven’t fulfilled contracts to provide liability coverage for sexual abuse complaints.

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe filed the lawsuit this week as it deals with a bankruptcy case involving more than 400 people who allege they were victims of clergy sexual abuse. Some of the claims date back decades.

The archdiocese hopes to raise enough money, including through insurance payouts, to settle the bankruptcy case, which has stretched over more than three years and is on its third mediator.

At least one attorney sees the archdiocese’s lawsuit as a step toward a resolution in the case, the Santa Fe New Mexican reported.

The defendants named in the lawsuit are Great American Insurance Co., Arrowood Indemnity Co., St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Co. and United States Fire Insurance Co. Representatives of…

View Cache

More than surviving: A life after abuse

CINCINNATI (OH)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

February 25, 2022

By Charlie Camosy

Read original article

Michael Vanderburgh is a lot of things. He is a husband, and a father. He’s a college graduate, and a former cop. He is the executive director of the Society of St. Vincent de Paul in Dayton, Ohio. He is also a survivor of clerical sexual abuse when he was a child. 

Like a lot of survivors of abuse, Michael never told anyone what he went through at the hands of a priest and family friend. He first came forward in the aftermath of the Spotlight scandals which rocked the Church in the early 2000s.

Coming forward meant that Michael, like a lot of victim-survivors, had to come to terms with what he’d been through all over again. 

Michael thought the process of coming forward ended with his home Archdiocese of Cincinnati offering him $21,000 in compensation, while acknowledging that “no amount of money can sufficiently compensate a victim of…

View Cache

German priest guilty in 110 child sex abuse cases, handed 12-year sentence

BERLIN (GERMANY)
Reuters [London, England]

February 25, 2022

By Reporting by Riham Alkousaa, Editing by Miranda Murray and David Gregorio

Read original article

A German Catholic priest was sentenced to 12 years in prison for child sexual abuse, a German court said on Friday, the latest in a string of cases that have shaken the German Catholic Church.

The Cologne district court found the man, identified in court documents as Hans Ue., guilty in a total of 110 cases between 1993 and 2018, including 23 cases of serious sexual abuse of children.

The court ordered the defendant to pay compensation to three of the nine plaintiffs for their pain and suffering.

German newspaper Sueddeutsche Zeiting said the youngest victim was 9 years old at the time of the crime, adding that three plaintiffs were nieces of the 70-year-old priest.

Court hearings in the case, underway since November last year, revealed additional potential victims and led to the priest’s detention in January, the Cologne court said.

The lawsuit is the latest case in a…

View Cache

February 25, 2022

Abp Stanisław Gądecki na procesie pedofila: Zeznam tyle, ile skleroza mi pozwol

POZNAń (POLAND)
Gazeta Wyborcza [Warsaw, Poland]

February 25, 2022

By Piotr Żytnicki

Read original article

Nie obawiam się przeszukania kurii – mówi poznański metropolita abp Stanisław Gądecki. Nie chce też płacić zadośćuczynienia gwałconemu mężczyźnie: – Odpowiedzialność zbiorową stosowali hitlerowcy.

Abp Stanisław Gądecki przyjechał w piątek 25 lutego do Chodzieży, 75 km od Poznania. Sąd wezwał go na świadka w sprawie księdza, który molestował i gwałcił ministranta Szymona Bączkowskiego. – Pierwszy raz mam zeznawać w sądzie w takiej sprawie – przyznał Gądecki po zmierzeniu temperatury i wejściu do sądu.

Sprawa jest głośna, bo choć księdza usunięto ze stanu duchownego, to Kościół nie chce pokazać sądowi dowodów, które zgromadził.

Abp Stanisław Gądecki nie pomógł sądowi

Sąd utajnił proces pedofila, by chronić ofiarę. Przed piątkową rozprawą Szymon Bączkowski poprosił jednak o odtajnienie procesu – chciał, by abp Gądecki zeznawał jawnie, w obecności dziennikarzy. Mimo że to zdanie ofiary powinno być najważniejsze, sędzia Katarzyna Orzeł odrzuciła wniosek i proces pozostał tajny. Uzasadnienia nie ujawniła.

Opinia publiczna nie pozna zatem zeznań…

View Cache

Ministers to offer public apology to historical institutional abuse victims

BELFAST (UNITED KINGDOM)
Belfast Telegraph [Belfast, Northern Ireland]

February 24, 2022

By Rebecca Black, PA

Read original article

A long-awaited public apology is to be offered by five Stormont ministers to victims of historical institutional abuse.

The compromise move comes as the offices of the First and deputy First Minister remain empty following the resignation of Paul Givan, which also forced Michelle O’Neill out of the role.

The public apology was recommended in the final report of the Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry (HIAI), which was published five years ago.

Mr Givan and Ms O’Neill announced last month that the apology would be given in Parliament Buildings in Stormont on behalf of the powersharing executive on March 11.

However, since then the DUP has resigned the first minister role, in protest at the workings of the post-Brexit Northern Ireland Protocol, leading to doubt over whether the apology would go ahead.

It was confirmed on Thursday morning that the public apology will be offered by ministers Michelle McIlveen, Conor Murphy, Nichola…

View Cache

Mohawk community in Quebec to vote on removing remains of allegedly abusive priest

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

February 23, 2022

By Virginie Ann

Read original article

Survivors are calling for the remains of a Catholic priest to be exhumed from church grounds after they allege he sexually abused children.

The First Nation of Kahnawake south of Montreal will vote next month in a referendum on whether the remains of a Jesuit priest alleged to have committed sexual abuse should be exhumed and removed from the community.

Exhumation “was an idea proposed by community members, alleged victims and supporters,” Tonya Perron, one of the Mohawk Council’s elected chiefs, said in an interview this week.

“They proposed having him removed from the territory, and it started a dialogue in the community about his remains being here in the first place. We don’t have any precedent to go by.”

After the discovery last summer of what are believed to be 215 unmarked graves at a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C., several Kahnawake residents came forward with allegations that…

View Cache

Agard backs bill requiring clergy to report child abuse, neglect

MADISON (WI)
Sun Prairie Star [Sun Prairie WI]

February 24, 2022

Read original article

Senators Melissa Agard (D-Madison) and Lena Taylor (D-Milwaukee), joined by Rep. Kristina Shelton (D-Green Bay), on Thursday, Feb. 24 released LRB-6112.

The bill requires members of clergy, like other professionals interacting with children, to report all instances of child abuse and neglect, including sexual abuse, of which they become aware in their professional capacity.

Peter Isley, Program Director of Nate’s Mission, joined Agard in support of the bill. Nate’s Mission is committed to “dismantling the structural mechanisms that allow abuse” within churches.

Agard and Isley released the following statements:

Agard: “For far too long, secrecy has clouded justice and healing for victims. It is time to put an end to keeping the known abuse of children in the shadows. This bill will hold accountable clergy and faith leaders who sexually abuse children, as well as those who have worked to hide this abuse. These are heinous crimes and an abuse…

View Cache

Brave survivor comes forward about the abuse suffered at the hands of Franciscan priest

BRIDGEPORT (CT)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

February 24, 2022

Read original article

A disclosure by the Diocese of Bridgeport about Fr. George Maslar has us infuriated, but not surprised. A brave survivor, identified only as “Jane Doe,’” has stepped up and shared publicly about the abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of Fr. Maslar. The woman received a settlement from the Diocese last year, after notifying Church officials in Bridgeport in 2017 that she was assaulted by the priest in 1971 when she was just 15 years of age. She met the cleric when both attended prayer meetings at the Cathedral of Saint Augustine in Bridgeport.

The Diocese of Bridgeport said in response to the woman’s public disclosure of the abuse, “It is important to note that when the Diocese first became aware of the allegations in November 2017, it immediately reported them to the Connecticut State Department of Children and Family, Child Abuse and…

View Cache

Statement regarding the sentencing of Father Jean Claude Jean-Philippe, CM

MIAMI (FL)
Archdiocese of Miami [Miami FL]

February 17, 2022

Read original article

Today’s sentencing of Fr. Jean Claude Jean-Philippe, CM,  a member of the Vincentian religious order, hopefully will bring closure to his victim, and we pray that she and her family, hurt by this betrayal of trust, can begin to heal. The Archdiocese of Miami deeply regrets the harm perpetrated by this priest which extends not only to the survivor of this assault and her family but to the parishioners, to priests of integrity, and to the entire community of faith. 

It is over twenty years since the leaders of the United States Catholic Church established a charter to protect children and those who are vulnerable. One hundred ninety-five dioceses in the country now have very clear and mandatory policies along with educational tools to maintain the safety of children and vulnerable adults. 

Along with proactive directives, the Archdiocese of Miami’s policy dictates immediately reporting allegations of abuse by clergy or…

View Cache

Lawsuit against Catholic church alleges woman was sexually assaulted at Vernon school

VERNON (CANADA)
Vernon Morning Star [Vernon, British Columbia, Canada]

February 24, 2022

By Brendan Shykora - Morning Star

Read original article

The woman claims she was abused by a priest while attending a church-run school in 1970

Editor’s note: This story contains graphic subject matter that may be upsetting to some

An Okanagan Indian Band member has sued the Catholic Church, alleging she was sexually assaulted by a priest more than 50 years ago at a Vernon elementary school that was run by the church.

The woman filed a statement of claim Feb. 22 in B.C. Supreme Court against the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Kamloops. According to the court documents, the woman does not know the identity of the priest who assaulted her but claims the diocese does. The priest is listed as defendant John Doe.

The statement of claim states that the woman attended St. James Catholic School from 1968 to 1972. She was allegedly molested in 1970.

“In or around the spring of 1970, when the…

View Cache

Priest retirement home, high schools among assets at risk in Harrisburg Diocese bankruptcy

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Daily Item [Sunbury PA]

February 24, 2022

By Eric Scicchitano, The Daily Item

Read original article

A federal judge found sufficient claims of fraud allegations exist against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg and ruled that attorneys representing sexual abuse survivors can seek a judgment to have an estimated $95 million in assets the Diocese transferred behind two different trusts moved to its bankruptcy estate.

According to the Feb. 17 ruling by Chief Bankruptcy Judge Henry W. Van Eck, the assets include $50 million in real estate like the Diocesan Campus, bishop’s residence and a retirement home for priests, all in Harrisburg, along with eight cemeteries including All Saints Cemetery in Elysburg and seven high schools including Our Lady of Lourdes Regional in Coal Township.

Also at risk of being returned to the bankruptcy estate is $45 million in furniture and appliances, cash and securities, religious artifacts and objects, vehicles, notes, records and books, according to filings with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District…

View Cache

Woman files lawsuit alleging abuse against St. James Church in Vernon, B.C.

VERNON (CANADA)
North Shore News [North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada]

February 24, 2022

By Darren Handschuh /Castanet

Read original article

The woman was a student at St. James School from 1968 to 1972 and was allegedly molested in 1970

Another lawsuit alleging sexual abuse has been filed against St. James Catholic Church in Vernon.

A member of the Okanagan Indian Band is claiming she was sexually abused at a church-run elementary school in Vernon when she was a child.

The woman filed a claim in B.C. Supreme Court Feb. 22 against the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Kamloops and John Doe.

Court document state the woman does not know the name of the priest who allegedly molested her, but claims his identity is known by the diocese.about:blank

According to court documents, the woman was a student at St. James School from 1968 to 1972 and was allegedly molested in 1970.

“In or around the spring of 1970, when the plaintiff was seven years old…

View Cache

Lawsuit: Diocese didn’t properly investigate sex abuse claim

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 24, 2022

Read original article

he Roman Catholic Diocese of Knoxville and its bishop have been named in a lawsuit alleging that sexual abuse allegations against a former employee weren’t investigated properly.

The complaint filed Tuesday in Knox County Circuit Court details multiple allegations of sexual harassment and abuse that a then-employee of The Cathedral of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus in Knoxville lodged against a then-assistant to Bishop Knoxville Bishop Richard Stika, news outlets reported.

The lawsuit claims that Stika overreached in his response to the abuse complaint. It says the diocese hired an outside consultant to investigate the claims, but the bishop replaced the initial investigator with someone who only interviewed the former assistant and not the employee who made the allegation, according to the lawsuit.

Stika was notified Tuesday evening of the lawsuit and attorneys are reviewing the claims, diocesan spokesperson Jim Wogan said in a statement.

“The diocese expects the…

View Cache

Sexual Abuse by Catholic Clergy and Laypersons in France: How Many Victims?

PARIS (FRANCE)
Bitter Winter - Center for Studies on New Religions [Torino, Italy]

February 25, 2022

By Massimo Introvigne

Read original article

The number of 300,000+ mentioned in a 2021 report, now seems uncertain and is hotly debated. But the problems for the Catholic Church remains huge.

In October 2021, the Commission indépendante sur les abus sexuels dans l’Église (CIASE, Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the [Catholic] Church) released its report. The CIASE studied sexual abuse in a Catholic context rather than sexual abuse by the Catholic clergy only, as it also included abuse perpetrated by laypersons associated with Catholic institutions. Although the detail was overlooked by some foreign media, the CIASE was “independent” in the sense that the Catholic Church did not control its work and results, but it was appointed and funded by the French Catholic Bishops, not by the government or by any other secular institution.

The report concluded that between 1950 and 2020 the victims of sexual abuse in a Catholic context in France had been 330,000, of…

View Cache

Opinion: In clergy abuse scandals, the Catholic Church still hasn’t reckoned with what it allowed

(ITALY)
Washington Post

February 23, 2022

By Editorial Board

Read original article

Reports of clergy sex abuse in the Catholic Church have become so routine — and the scale of victimization and coverup so vast — that the effect is to dull the impact of each new revelation. It appears that over the course of decades, practically every higher-up in the institution knew, or should have known, what was going on.

Yet even the apparent sameness of so many disclosures and admissions, over so many years, should not blunt the importance of a recent report that Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, as archbishop of the German cities of Munich and Freising from 1977 to 1982, failed to discipline abusive priests and enabled them to maintain their roles in ministry.

Similar allegations have been leveled, and often documented, regarding many bishops. But the German report, two years in the making, implicates a future pope, who at the time was known as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

View Cache

The Forgotten Victims of Clergy Abuse

(MA)
Catholic Mom (Holy Cross Family Ministries) [North Easton MA]

February 23, 2022

By Ellen Gable Hrkach

Read original article

Ellen Gable Hrkach explains how she has kept her faith even after learning that her father was a victim of abuse by a priest.

He heals the brokenhearted,  and binds up their wounds. (Psalm 147:3, Revised Catholic Edition)

 Almost four years ago, the revelations about the now-defrocked Theodore McCarrick and the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report were disturbing, especially to the most devout Catholics. Since then, many members of the Church have left in disgust. 

In the years that followed, revelations that homosexual networks exist within seminaries and dioceses have caused some Catholics to have a crisis of faith. Numerous seminarians have tried to alert higher-up prelates to no avail. It’s unacceptable that a bishop – or as in the case of McCarrick, a cardinal – would not only be complicit but also participate in the abuse. 

For every abuse reported, there are likely hundreds, perhaps thousands over the past 70-plus…

View Cache

February 24, 2022

Tras publicación, apartan a supuesto cura abusador

(ARGENTINA)
La Nación [Fernando de la Mora, Paraguay]

February 24, 2022

Read original article

El cura Raúl del Castillo, que había sido denunciado por supuesto abuso sexual en un colegio salesiano de Argentina fue apartado ayer del Colegio Don Bosco de Ypacaraí, donde estaba fungiendo como miembro administrativo.

“Estábamos atravesando una situación bastante preocupante, pero felizmente se resolvió el problema debido a que este sacerdote Raúl del Castillo, que fue denunciado por abuso sexual en niños en Mendoza, Argentina, puso su cargo a disposición y ya la Inspectoría en el transcurso del día va a estar resolviendo su traslado a otra institución o casa salesiana”, indicó Gerardo Almirón, padre de un alumno de la institución.

De acuerdo a lo informado, su renuncia fue aceptada por la Congregación Salesiana del Paraguay tras la presión de los padres y la publicación de este diario el 21 de febrero pasado. Fue tras una reunión entre el Consejo de Delegados de Padres, los docentes y sacerdotes de la…

View Cache

Knoxville Catholic diocese accused of improper sexual abuse investigation, lawsuit alleges

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Knoxville News Sentinel [Knoxville TN]

February 23, 2022

By Liam Adams

Read original article

An unnamed plaintiff is suing the Roman Catholic Diocese of Knoxville and its bishop, alleging the diocese did not properly investigate sexual abuse allegations against a former employee.

The complaint, filed Tuesday in Knox County Circuit Court, outlines in vivid detail several instances of sexual harassment and abuse the plaintiff said he suffered. It also makes several allegations about the bishop overreaching in an investigation of abuse claims, using information reported last year by a news agency. 

The plaintiff didn’t learn of the diocese’s “casually connected and conspiratorial efforts to conceal their involvement in his sexual abuse” until The Pillar, a Catholic news agency, published articles on the diocese early last year, the lawsuit alleges. 

Diocesan attorneys are currently reviewing the claims after Knoxville Bishop Richard Stika received notification of the lawsuit on Tuesday evening, diocesan spokesperson Jim Wogan said in a statement Wednesday.

 “The diocese expects the process to be fair and thorough…

View Cache

Stika lawsuit: What’s next for the Knoxville diocese?

KNOXVILLE (TN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

February 23, 2022

By JD Flynn

Read original article

Analysis

A lawsuit filed Tuesday against Bishop Rick Stika and the Knoxville, Tennessee, diocese provides new details about allegations of both diocesan cover-up and a sexual assault committed by a former diocesan seminarian who remains close to the bishop. 

Both the alleged assault and ensuing administrative misconduct, including the removal of an investigator appointed to look into the matter, were first reported in 2021 by The Pillar. 

But while the suit brings to light more allegations against Stika, it also makes nearly certain that the Holy See will not be forthcoming about the results of its own investigation into the bishop, which began last year. 

At the crux of the Feb. 22 lawsuit are these allegations:

  • Stika invited in 2018 to the diocese a Polish seminarian, Wojciech Sobczuk, who had been dismissed from the Society of Jesus after being accused of sexual misconduct at St. Cyril and Methodius Seminary in Orchard…
View Cache

Knoxville Catholic Diocese, Bishop Stika accused of rape cover-up in lawsuit

KNOXVILLE (TN)
WVLT-TV, PBS-39 [Knoxville TN]

February 23, 2022

By Paige Hill

Read original article

The lawsuit was filed on Feb. 22 under the name of “John Doe.”

A lawsuit filed in Knox County alleges that the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville and its Bishop, Richard Stika, failed to stop the rape of an employee then attempted to cover the incident up.

The lawsuit was filed on Feb. 22 under the name of “John Doe” to protect the man’s privacy, according to the person’s lead counsel at Janet, Janet & Suggs, LLC. However, it is stated that the person filing the lawsuit was a former musician and dedicated Diocesan employee. According to the 46-page filing, the Diocese employed a seminarian who was reportedly a friend of the Bishop. The lawsuit claims the seminarian raped Doe on Feb. 5, 2019 at Doe’s home. After the incident, the filing states that the seminarian sent the plaintiff a written apology after the incident but continued to sexually harass him…

View Cache

Diocese of Knoxville responds to recent lawsuit

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Diocese of Knoxville [Knoxville TN]

February 23, 2022

Read original article

On Tuesday, Feb. 22, the Diocese of Knoxville and Bishop Stika were named as defendants in a lawsuit filed in Knox County Circuit Court. Bishop Stika was notified of the filing Tuesday evening, and diocesan attorneys are reviewing the allegations. The diocese understands that the legal system works at a very deliberate pace, and with good reason. The diocese expects the process to be fair and thorough and looks forward to the opportunity to vigorously defend itself if this matter moves forward.  

View Cache

Letter: Work location is irrelevant for child abusers to succeed

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

February 21, 2022

Read original article

Regarding “Lawsuit accuses De Soto priest of sexual abuse at boys’ home” (Feb. 15): Since when did child molesters limit themselves to assaulting only children at their current place of employment? It seems to me that’s what officials at the St. Louis Catholic archdiocese believe.

In response to a new abuse and cover-up lawsuit against the Rev. Alexander Anderson, a church statement says that the charges are “demonstrably false.” Why? Because the church says Anderson “was not assigned to St. Joseph Home during the time the claimant was a resident.”

Is it impossible for a teacher to return to his former school and engage in unwanted sexual advances with children?

This type of denial — “I couldn’t have done it. I wasn’t even there at the time” — is commonly offered up by alleged abusers. But it obscures a simple reality: In mere seconds, a predator can hurt a child….

View Cache

Woman accuses former Bridgeport priest of sexual abuse

BRIDGEPORT (CT)
WTNH-TV, ABC-8 [New Haven CT]

February 23, 2022

By Jenn Brink

Read original article

[VIDEO]

A woman is coming forward with sexual abuse allegations against a former Bridgeport priest.

“Jane Doe” said Fr. George Maslar sexually abused her twice in his car in 1971 when she was around 15 years old.

“I never envisioned myself doing this,” the woman said during a press conference Wednesday. “I was too afraid. I felt ashamed as if it was my fault. Thinking about it made me physically sick.”

She said she met Maslar when both attended prayer meetings at the Cathedral of Saint Augustine in Bridgeport.

Last year, “Jane Doe” reached a five-figure settlement, even though the statute of limitations had expired. She’s calling for it to be extended.

“The legislature needs to understand it’s more the norm to say nothing for years because you blame yourself rather than to come forward sooner,” she said.”

“Jane Doe” said she hopes her speaking out encourages other victims to…

View Cache

Time’s up for Catholic Church in Italy to reckon with clerical abuse, survivor group says

WEST MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

February 22, 2022

By Claire Giangravé

Read original article

Italian activists fighting sexual abuse by Catholic clergy decry the ‘conspiracy of silence’ between the Italian church and state.

Recent reports on the clerical sexual abuse scandals in France and Germany have put the spotlight once again on the Catholic Church in Italy, which has so far avoided confronting the history of abusive priests in the country.

Advocates for victims in Italy believe it’s time for the local church to allow a thorough investigation into claims of sexual abuse by priests but lament a “conspiracy of silence” between the Catholic institution and the Italian state.

“Italy has a big problem,” said Francesco Zanardi, founder of Rete L’Abuso, Italy’s largest network for victims of clergy abuse, in an interview with Religion News Service on Monday (Feb. 21).  

In Italy “the dynamic of stopping sexual abuse is entirely in the hands of the church,” he said, adding that “the state doesn’t interfere.”

Zanardi,…

View Cache

Report shows more dioceses establish foundations to fund work of church

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

February 15, 2022

By Christina Lee Knauss, Catholic News Service

Read original article

Despite fundraising challenges nationwide caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, Catholic foundations continue to grow their role in helping the U.S. church with its fundraising needs, according to a recent study.

“Catholic Foundations in the U.S. Revisited,” released in late 2021, is the work of Walter Dillingham, a Catholic who serves as director of endowments and foundations at the Wilmington Trust, a New York City-based firm that specializes in helping nonprofits manage their finances.

This is Dillingham’s third look at the role of Catholic foundations nationwide, and this report highlights not only the role foundations play, but also which fundraising tools they find most effective and how they provide information about their work to current and prospective donors.

According to the report, more Catholic dioceses than ever before are establishing foundations to handle the bulk of their fundraising.

“Foundation assets continue to grow rapidly with $12 billion in long-term investments, and…

View Cache

Marylands School abuse: How a tiny religious order in Christchurch became an outsized scandal

CHRISTCHURCH (NEW ZEALAND)
NZ Herald [Auckland, New Zealand]

February 18, 2022

By Isaac Davison

Read original article

Abuse of children at Marylands School in Christchurch was so rife it was described as a state-supported, church-run brothel for paedophiles. But so far the spotlight has focused on a handful of individual abusers. An inquiry this week tried to find out how deep the rot went.

Alan Nixon nearly had to burn a church down to get noticed.

After Nixon racked up 400 convictions including arson, vandalism and burglary, his lawyer eventually asked him why he had targeted church buildings.

Nixon told a story he had already told many times: He had been sexually and physically abused at a Catholic school, Marylands, in the 1970s. Any building with a steeple reminded him of the school in Halswell, Christchurch, which he attended from age 8 to 14.

He had told police the same story 30 years earlier after they caught him running away, but later found in their records that…

View Cache

Letter: Guam’s Catholics will rebuild after abuse case

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
Pacific Daily News [Hagåtña, Guam]

February 22, 2022

By Tim Rohr

Read original article

As trial in the archdiocesan abuse case moves forward to determine whether assets of churches and schools should be included in the quest “to find an authentic and thorough resolution” for “real healing,” as one lawyer put it, all involved should be reminded why Guam’s case is different than any other.

In every other U.S. diocese which was similarly sued, the impetus for justice originated with lawyers, legislators or journalists. In Guam, lawyers, legislators and journalists had nothing to do with it.

In Guam, the impetus to rid our church of its decades of demons originated with what we shall call “the regular Catholics,” the Catholics in the pews.

The history of the law now being wielded to sue for real healing is this:

The regular Catholics called for the lifting of the statute of limitations in order to hold the bad guys accountable. A lawmaker later introduced a bill…

View Cache

All sex abuse survivors deserve a day in court

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Daily News

February 17, 2022

By Dr. Robert Druger

Read original article

Over the course of almost five decades and across two countries, the man who abused me and countless others — track coach and former Olympian Conrad Mainwaring — used his Olympic status to gain access to young male athletes in order to manipulate and abuse them. During Mainwaring’s time working at Syracuse University in the early 1980s, he abused me and many others under the deception of coaching and mentorship.

Because of New York State’s Child Victims Act (CVA), which was signed into law three years ago this month, I had legal recourse — but most of my fellow survivors do not.

I was a high school student at the time the abuse started and under the age of 18, which meant I was eligible to file a civil lawsuit thanks to the CVA’s lookback window. Most survivors of Mainwaring’s abuse were in college and…

View Cache

Spain’s Catholic bishops move tepidly to “audit” abuse cases

MADRID (SPAIN)
La Croix International [France]

February 22, 2022

By Matthieu Lasserre

Read original article

Under intense outside pressure, Catholic leaders in Spain approve “independent audit” on sexual abuse committed by clerics, but it is not intended to be an in-depth study

The Catholic bishops of Spain have finally caved-in to outside pressure to shed light on cases of Church-related sexual abuse, being among the last prelates in Europe to do so.

The Spanish Episcopal Conference (CEE) announced on Monday that they approved the launch of an independent audit by the law firm Cremades & Calvo Sotelo to investigate cases of clergy sex abuse.

“The firm… will open an independent channel to receive possible complaints, review legal procedures to punish criminal practices and offer its collaboration to the authorities to help clarify the facts and establish a prevention system that meets social demands in this matter,” said a CEE statement.

Lack of transparency

But it is still not clear whether the episcopal conference will participate…

View Cache

February 23, 2022

Jose Barba, one of the many victims of the Legion of Christ sex scandal, poses for a portrait in Mexico City, Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2022. Barba was one of the first persons to come forward, accusing the disgraced founder of the Legion Father Marcial Maciel of sexual abuse before the Vatican. It has been 25 years since a Connecticut newspaper exposed one of the Catholic Church’s biggest sexual abuse scandals. And still some of the whistleblowers are seeking reparations from the Legion of Christ after reporting that the revered founder of the Legion of Christ religious order had raped and molested them when they were boys. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)

25 years later, Legion of Christ victims seek reparations

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

February 23, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

[Photo above: Jose Barba, one of the many victims of the Legion of Christ sex scandal, poses for a portrait in Mexico City, Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2022. Barba was one of the first persons to come forward, accusing the disgraced founder of the Legion Father Marcial Maciel of sexual abuse before the Vatican. It has been 25 years since a Connecticut newspaper exposed one of the Catholic Church’s biggest sexual abuse scandals. And still some of the whistleblowers are seeking reparations from the Legion of Christ after reporting that the revered founder of the Legion of Christ religious order had raped and molested them when they were boys. (AP Photo/Marco Ugarte)]

A Connecticut newspaper exposed one of the Catholic Church’s biggest sexual abuse scandals by reporting 25 years ago Wednesday that eight men had accused the revered founder of the Legion of Christ religious order of raping and molesting them…

View Cache

Suspended Predator Priest Is Welcome at Vatican Conference

(ITALY)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

February 23, 2022

Read original article

It’s SO counter-intuitive. It’s SO hard to imagine.

How could Catholic officials – after decades of devastating, embarrassing and morale-destroying prosecutions, lawsuits and exposes – how could they NOT radically reform and prevent the widespread sexual abuse of boys and girls in the church? How could they NOT work overtime to fix this?

But they don’t, and here’s the latest head-scratching, mind-numbing proof (AND a reminder of why each of us has to do our part to safeguard kids in the church).

“Prominent French priest barred from ministry over abuse attends Vatican priesthood conference.” That’s the headline in the Feb. 18, 2022 National Catholic Reporter.

https://www.ncronline.org/news/vatican/prominent-french-priest-barred-ministry-over-abuse-attends-vatican-priesthood

Let us briefly break it down for you.

He’s rabidly anti-gay.

He has said publicly – just a few years back – that the church hierarchy does NOT have an obligation to report abuse to police or prosecutors.

And he’s purportedly been removed…

View Cache

Stika, Knoxville diocese, sued for alleged rape cover-up

KNOXVILLE (TN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

February 23, 2022

Read original article

A Feb. 22 lawsuit against the Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee, and its bishop, alleges that a former parish organist was raped and sexually harassed by a diocesan employee and seminarian, and that a diocesan investigation into his allegation was impeded by the bishop.

Bishop Rick Stika told The Pillar last year that he removed a diocesan investigator looking into the rape allegation, and that he “knew in [his] heart” the seminarian was innocent.

The suit also charges that Stika has claimed the seminarian, Wojciech Sobczuk, was himself sexually assaulted by the lawsuit’s plaintiff. The suit characterizes that claim as an “egregious” defamation of a rape victim.

“The lawsuit raises disturbing questions regarding the Diocese of Knoxville’s commitment to protecting its employees and the community from sexual abuse. It raises disturbing questions regarding the Diocese of Knoxville’s commitment to providing for the welfare and healing of victims of sexual abuse. And it raises…

View Cache

Bishop Richard Stika and Knoxville Diocese in lawsuit over an alleged rape cover-up

KNOXVILLE (TN)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

February 23, 2022

Read original article

(FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE FEBRUARY 23, 2022)

In a shocking lawsuit filed in the Knox County Circuit Court of Knoxville Tennessee on February 22, 2022, the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville and Bishop Richard Stika face six counts including defamation, negligence in supervision, and retention as well as negligence in the training of a diocesan seminarian. Also, in the list of counts is intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress.

The lawsuit describes the outrageous behavior of one of its seminarians, culminating in the rape of an employee of the diocese named John Doe for the purposes of this lawsuit. ‘The Pillar’ reported on the unrest in the diocese among both priests and the laity over many issues, including the retention of Sobczuk as a seminarian even after he was expelled from St. Meinrad Seminary, Rockport, Indiana, where three seminarians accused Sobczuk of sexual harassment…

View Cache

Lawsuit alleges seminarian raped church employee and Knoxville’s bishop covered it up

KNOXVILLE (TN)
WBIR-TV, Ch. 10-NBC [Knoxville TN]

February 23, 2022

By Cole Sullivan

Read original article

The church said it is aware of the lawsuit and “looks forward to the opportunity to vigorously defend itself.”

A civil lawsuit filed in Knox County Circuit Court Tuesday alleges a Knoxville seminarian raped a church musician, who then faced intimidation by Bishop Richard Stika into staying silent about the assault.

The musician, who was named as a John Doe in the suit, said a Polish priest-in-training came to his house after celebrating mass one evening in early February 2019. He tried to kiss Doe, performed unwanted oral sex on him and then raped him, the lawsuit said.

Weeks later, on Valentine’s day, Doe said the seminarian wrote him a card that said, in part, “Thank you for everything. And for what was wrong – I apologize with all my heart.” A photo of the card is attached in the lawsuit.

Doe said he contacted the Knoxville Police Department in…

View Cache

Tras protestas, cura denunciado por supuesto abuso fue trasladado del colegio de Ypacaraí

(ARGENTINA)
La Nación [Fernando de la Mora, Paraguay]

February 23, 2022

Read original article

El cura Raúl del Castillo, quien había sido denunciado por supuesto abuso sexual en un colegio salesiano de Argentina y que estaba fungiendo como administrativo del Colegio Don Bosco de Ypacaraí, puso a disposición su cargo y su renuncia fue aceptada por la congregación Salesiana del Paraguay y, finalmente, fue apartado de la institución educativa. Esto, tras la presión de los padres y la publicación de La Nación. 

La decisión de ser trasladado fue tomada en el marco de una reunión entre el Consejo de Delegados de Padres del Colegio, los docentes y sacerdotes de la congregación Salesiana del Paraguay, quienes aceptaron la renuncia del cura, según informaron hoy miércoles.

“Estábamos atravesando una situación bastante preocupante, pero felizmente hoy se resolvió el problema debido a que este sacerdote Raúl del Castillo, que fue denunciado por abuso sexual en niños en Mendoza, Argentina, puso su cargo a disposición y ya la…

View Cache

Argentine court hears testimony of porn on accused bishop’s phone, requests for ‘massages’

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Crux [Denver CO]

February 23, 2022

By Inés San Martín

Read original article

On the second day of the trial against Argentine Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta over sexual abuse, a priest testified that he had porn on his phone, while a psychologist of one of the alleged victims testified that the bishops’ behavior “scared and intimidated him.”

As the trial began Monday, Zanchetta, bishop emeritus of Orán, in northern Argentina, denied all charges of alleged sexual abuse. 

This is the civil trial against the prelate, who used to boast of his friendship with Pope Francis, with whom he worked at the Argentine bishops conference. Zanchetta was one of the first bishop appointments made by the Argentine pontiff, and led the Diocese of Oran from 2013 to 2017. Following his tenure in Oran, he went to Spain, where he received psychological treatment for undisclosed causes. Later, he was appointed by the pontiff to APSA, which oversees the Vatican’s property portfolio.

According to a statement from…

View Cache

Argentine bishop had porn on phone, priest says at second day of abuse trial

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Reuters [London, England]

February 22, 2022

By Agustin Geitz

Read original article

BUENOS AIRES – An Argentine bishop requested massages from young men studying to be priests and stored pornographic photos on his phone, witnesses testified on Tuesday on the second day of the cleric’s trial for sex abuse.

The judiciary in Salta issued a statement summarizing the testimony on Tuesday, part of an unprecedented trial in Argentina that is the latest case of alleged sex abuse to rock the Roman Catholic church in one of its Latin American strongholds. The trial is being held behind closed doors.

Gustavo Zanchetta, the former bishop of Oran in the northern province of Salta, has been accused of sexually abusing seminarians, as well as abuse of power and financial mismanagement.

He denied the accusations on Monday, arguing he had “a good and healthy relationship” with all seminarians and that his accusers seek revenge. 

One of the three priests who lodged the first complaints against Zanchetta,…

View Cache

‘4 years of hell’: Allegations of abuse inside now-defunct Parma children’s orphanage

PARMA (OH)
WJW-TV, Fox - 8 [Cleveland OH]

February 22, 2022

By Jennifer Jordan

Read original article

[VIDEO]

A North Carolina woman is sounding the alarm about abuse she says she endured inside a now-defunct Northeast Ohio home for children.

“I was there for four years of hell,” said Carolyn Mason.

Mason was 4 years old when she became a resident of Parmadale Children’s Village of St. Vincent DePaul in Parma, which was founded in 1925.

During a news conference in Westlake Tuesday, Mason, now 61, says she endured serious physical abuse at the hands of a nun who was her primary caregiver.

“I was upset for being there. She said we don’t waste food and I would throw up and she would feed it back to me, a spoon at a time,” Mason said.

She also alleged sexual abuse at the hands of a priest.

“Now they’re doing an investigation,” said Mason. “There’s two separate investigators, one for the priest abuse sodomy and…

View Cache

Pastor accused of sex crimes is arrested in Albuquerque

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe NM]

February 22, 2022

By Phaedra Haywood

Read original article

A Las Vegas, Nev., pastor accused of child sexual assault made his first appearance before a New Mexico judge Monday after being arrested Saturday in Albuquerque and jailed as a fugitive from justice.

Reynaldo Crespin, 59, conferred briefly with a public defender before waiving his right to fight an extradition to Nevada to face criminal charges.

Bernalillo County Metropolitan Judge Linda Rogers issued an order directing Nevada law enforcement officials to retrieve Crespin within 15 days. He’ll remain in jail until then, the judge said.

Crespin is the pastor of New Horizon Christian Church and Fellowship in Las Vegas, according to the church’s website. He co-founded the church in 2002.

He also had been a second grade teacher at a public elementary school in Clark County, Nev., for about five years before he “separated” from the the school district earlier this month, according to the CBS affiliate in Las Vegas.

View Cache

Record damages for man abused by members of religious order

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

February 22, 2022

By Madoc Cairns and Brian Morton

Read original article

A man abused by members of a Catholic religious order at a residential school in Fife has been awarded record damages. Known only as AB, the man was a pupil at St Ninian’s in Falkland at the beginning of the 1980s. While there, he was physically and sexually assaulted by the Christian Brothers.

Damages have been set at £1.4 million, believed to be the largest ever secured in such a case. Although the total sum is derived from different sources, the single largest amount, at around £1 million, relates to lifetime lost earnings due to AB’s difficulties in maintaining employment given the psychological issues resulting from his abuse.

During his time at St Ninian’s, dating from February 1980 to April 1981, he was subject to forcible sexual assault and regularly beaten, as well as suffering other forms of abuse. Due to the weight of evidence his favour, AB was not…

View Cache

Mulakkal verdict signals a need for structural and systemic change

(INDIA)
Global Sisters Report [Kansas City, MO]

February 23, 2022

By Dororthy Fernandes

Read original article

[This article appears in the Bishop Mulakkal trial feature series. View the full series.]

The verdict acquitting Bishop Franco Mulakkal in the much-awaited case of the sexual abuse of a religious sister has been disappointing to many of us, and has made us suspicious. I write this for many reasons; first, because I have journeyed with this case from a distance; and because I feel the need for speaking up in defense of our sisters, and sounding a wake-up call for us as women religious.

What has pained me more than anything else is that some women religious that I know have rejoiced about the verdict of acquittal of a bishop who was accused of nothing less than rape — and worst of all, he happens to be the patron of that local congregation. We all know now that…

View Cache

I forgive Pope Benedict. I hope others can too.

(ITALY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

February 22, 2022

By Thomas Reese, Religion News Service

Read original article

I first met Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in 1994 when I was researching my book “Inside the Vatican: The Politics and Organization of the Catholic Church.” I was getting ready to leave Rome and he was one of the last and most important interviews for the book. Because of illness, he had to cancel our first appointment and then graciously rescheduled me for a time when most Vatican officials were taking their siestas.

At the end of the interview, I asked for his blessing — something I only did with two other Vatican officials — because I sensed I was in the presence of a holy man.

But I also knew I was in the presence of a man who, as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, had done irreparable harm to theological discussion in the church. There were scores of theologians who had been investigated and…

View Cache

Spanish bishops announce national investigation of clerical sexual abuse

MADRID (SPAIN)
Crux [Denver CO]

February 22, 2022

By Inés San Martín

Read original article

Caving to pressure from abuse survivors, politicians and the media, the Spanish bishops announced on Tuesday that they will conduct a full, nation-wide investigation of clerical sexual abuse.

Cardinal Juan José Omella, president of the Spanish bishops’ conference, and lawyer Javier Cremades announced a twelve-month investigation with the necessary historical “breadth” which will include both dioceses and religious congregations.

This decision backtracks from what Omella said last month, when he announced there was no need to carry out such an investigation, because each diocese and religious congregation were doing so independently.

In the beginning of the investigation, 18 professionals will take part in the process. Although  reporters were told the commission will analyze cases linked to both the present and the past, it is unclear what historical periods will be included.

According to Omella, the investigation will be carried out in a way that allows the formation of a “credible…

View Cache

Spanish Cardinal: Clerical-Abuse Audit Is a ‘Step Forward’ in Transparency

MADRID (SPAIN)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

February 22, 2022

By Courtney Mares, CNA

Read original article

The head of the Spanish Catholic bishops’ conference said that the Church sees the comprehensive audit as a step forward in transparency and reparation to victims.

At the launch of an independent investigation into clerical sex-abuse cases in Spain, the head of the Spanish Catholic bishops’ conference said that the Church sees the comprehensive audit as a step forward in transparency and reparation to victims.

Cardinal Juan José Omella, the archbishop of Barcelona, apologized at a press conference on Feb. 22 on behalf of the Catholic Church in Spain to the victims “who have suffered and continue to suffer so much pain.”

“We are hurt by all the abuse, including that which has occurred in other institutions. This hurts us, and we would like these cases to be investigated as well,” Cardinal Omella said, according to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner.

In commissioning the investigation, Cardinal Omella said that the…

View Cache

The abuse audit commissioned by the Church will investigate the cover-up and propose compensation

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

February 22, 2022

By Julio Núñez and Iñigo Domínguez

Read original article

[This is a Google translation of an article that appeared 2/21/2022 in the Spanish newspaper El País. To see the original article, click here: La auditoría de los abusos encargada por la Iglesia investigará el encubrimiento y propondrá indemnizaciones]

A law firm will investigate pedophilia: “We have the task of going to the bottom so that the whole truth comes out.” It will have the collaboration of the German office that the Munich diocese hired and appointed Benedict XVI, and will follow its work model

The president of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, Cardinal Juan José Omella, on January 14 during the meeting with the media to report on the ad limina meetings held with Pope Francis – Antonello Nusca

The investigation that the Spanish Episcopal Conference (CEE) has commissioned the law firm Cremades & Calvo Sotelo to independently investigate cases of pederasty in the Church in recent decades will…

View Cache

La auditoría de los abusos encargada por la Iglesia investigará el encubrimiento y propondrá indemnizaciones

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

February 22, 2022

By Julio Núñez and Iñigo Domínguez

Read original article

Un bufete de abogados indagará en la pederastia: “Tenemos el encargo de ir hasta el fondo para que aflore toda la verdad”. Contará con la colaboración del despacho alemán que contrató la diócesis de Múnich y señaló a Benedicto XVI, y seguirá su modelo de trabajo

La investigación que la Conferencia Episcopal Española (CEE) ha encargado al despacho de abogados Cremades & Calvo Sotelo para indagar de forma independiente en los casos de pederastia en la Iglesia de las últimas décadas abordará también el posible encubrimiento de estos delitos por la jerarquía eclesiástica y el pago de indemnizaciones, según aseguran a EL PAÍS fuentes cercanas al proceso. Del mismo modo, sostienen que el equipo de trabajo colaborará con cualquier investigación que se ponga en marcha desde las instituciones y le facilitará toda la información de que disponga. El objetivo de los obispos, aseguran las mismas fuentes, es que…

View Cache

Spanish Catholic Church announces investigation into sexual abuse of children

MADRID (SPAIN)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

February 22, 2022

By Guy Hedgecoe

Read original article

Senior clergy divided on need for investigation

Spain’s Catholic Church has pledged to carry out an independent investigation into alleged cases of sexual abuse of children by members of the clergy, following claims by victims that it has attempted to cover up any wrongdoing.

The head of the church in Spain, Cardinal Juan José Omella, said the main objective of the inquiry, which would be the first of its kind in Spain, was to provide “help and compensation” to victims of abuse.

He said the Catholic Church “wants to assume its responsibilities by setting up a new tool that helps clarify the acts of the past and prevents them from reappearing in the future”.

The church has hired a law firm, Cremades & Calvo-Sotelo, to carry out the investigation, which will also see an advisory role for Westpfahl Spilker Wastl, a German firm which carried out a similar probe in Munich,…

View Cache

Bishops in Spain ask lawyers to audit their sex abuse record

MADRID (SPAIN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

February 22, 2022

By Aritz Parra

Read original article

A Madrid-based law firm will conduct a year-long inquiry into past and present sexual abuse committed by Spain’s Roman Catholic clergy, members of religious orders, teachers and others associated with the church, the law firm and the head of the country’s bishops’ conference said Tuesday.

The public announcement marked a departure from the previous position of the Spanish Episcopal Conference, which for years rejected the idea of taking a comprehensive approach to investigating sex abuse. Some abuse survivors met the news with skepticism.

Cardinal Juan José Omella, the conference’s president, said the goal of the inquiry by law firm Cremades & Calvo Sotelo “is the help and reparation of the victims, establishing new and additional channels to collaborate and denounce in addition to those existing in over 40 offices established by the Church.”

The inquiry is intended to cover all abuse and is not limited to investigating only cases in…

View Cache

February 22, 2022

Mar del Plata: la Armada estuvo presente en la 40° Fiesta Nacional de los Pescadores

MAR DEL PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Mi Argentina (Argentina.gob.ar) [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

February 22, 2022

Read original article

Se llevó a cabo en honor a San Salvador, patrono de la colonia pesquera.

Mar del Plata- En la Parroquia La Sagrada Familia y San Luis Orione el domingo por la mañana se llevó a cabo una celebración religiosa, dando inicio a los 94° festejos en honor a San Salvador, patrono de la comunidad portuaria.

La misa fue concelebrada por el sacerdote Miguel Cacciutto, y contó con la presencia del Intendente del Partido de General Pueyrredón, Guillermo Montenegro; la participación del Capitán de Navío Rodolfo Ramallo, en representación del Comandante del Área Naval Atlántica y del Subdirector de la Escuela Nacional de Pesca, Capitán de Corbeta Gastón Berón.

Asimismo, estuvieron presentes el Presidente de la Sociedad de Patrones Pescadores, Vicente Galeano; la Directora General de Cooperación Internacional, Colectividades y Culto, Cecilia Torres; el Delegado del Distrito Descentralizado Municipal Vieja Usina, Patricio Ciminelli; representantes de Prefectura Naval, de la Fuerza Aérea…

View Cache

Alleged victims of abuse at Parmadale orphanage have discussed counseling, restitution with Catholic leaders

CLEVELAND (OH)
WEWS - ABC News 5 [Cleveland OH]

February 22, 2022

By Jonathan Walsh

Read original article

Asking others who suffered abuse to speak out publicly

[VIDEO]

[Photo above: Decades-old abuse allegations against the Catholic Church come to the forefront today. A national organization is lending its support to people who claim they endured severe abuse when they were children at the former Parmadale home for children in Parma. – Photo by Rob Klein]

Decades-old abuse allegations against the Catholic Church come to the forefront today. A national organization is lending its support to people who claim they endured severe abuse when they were children at the former Parmadale home for children in Parma.

Decades-old abuse allegations against the Catholic Church came to the forefront Tuesday. A national organization is lending its support to people who claim they endured severe abuse when they were children at the former Parmadale home for children in Parma.

Dr. Robert Hoatson and Carolyn Mason held a news conference Tuesday talking about…

View Cache

Former Parmadale orphan details allegations of abuse by nuns and priests that caused a lifetime of psychological damage

PARMA (OH)
WKYC-TV, NBC - 3 [Cleveland OH]

February 22, 2022

By Dave "Dino" DeNatale and Emma Henderson

Read original article

“I was trying to follow all the rules, but it was just hell.”

[VIDEO]

 A woman who was an orphan at the former Parmadale facility is speaking out, detailing allegations of physical and sexual abuse by nuns and priests that has caused her a lifetime of psychological damage. 

On Tuesday in Westlake, Carolyn Mason held a news conference and recalled several traumatic incidents that she alleges took place at Parmadale while living there from age 5 through 8. 

Among the stories shared by Mason:

  • She claimed she was physically abused by a nun. Citing an example, Mason says when she got sick from eating, the nun made her eat her own vomit because they ‘don’t waste food.’
  • Mason says she was a bed-wetter and if an incident happened, she was made to stand the entire night with her underwear over her head while the sheets were being…
View Cache

Timeline: Allegations of Child Abuse at Parmadale Children’s Village, Parma OH, Diocese of Cleveland

PARMA (OH)
BishopAccountability.org [Waltham MA]

February 22, 2022

Read original article

On January 11, 2022, Cleveland’s WEWS-TV aired accounts by three women of the brutal physical abuse they suffered or witnessed as young children at Parmadale Children’s Village, a residential institution for orphans and children from troubled homes in Parma, Ohio. Carolyn Folyn Mason and another woman described being viciously beaten by a Sister Myra Wasikowski, CSA.

The report was merely the latest in two decades’ worth of abuse revelations at the now-closed facility.

When the Cleveland diocese opened Parmadale Children’s Village of St. Vincent de Paul in 1925, it was promoted as the nation’s first residential cottage plan in Catholic children’s homes. Parmadale was staffed for decades by the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine, based in Richfield OH, and eventually came under the auspices of the Catholic Charities of Cleveland.

In 2002, former residents began going public with allegations of sexual and physical abuse by the nuns, priests and lay…

View Cache

Marcelino Moya: la Sala Penal denegó recurso extraordinario federal

PARANá (ARGENTINA)
Diario UNO de Entre Ríos [Paraná, Argentina]

February 22, 2022

Read original article

La Sala Penal denegó la concesión del recurso extraordinario federal en la causa de corrupción agravada del cura Marcelino Moya

La Sala Penal el Superior Tribunal de Justicia resolvió por mayoría denegar la concesión de los recursos extraordinarios federal, para ante la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación, interpuestos por el Ministerio Público Fiscal y el abogado Florencio Montiel, en su calidad de querellante particular, contra la sentencia dictada por la Sala el 27 de agosto de 2021, en la causa del cura Marcelino Moya caratulada “Moya, Marcelino Ricardo -Promoción de la corrupción agravada “.

La vocal Claudia Mizawak entendió que los recursos debían ser concedidos, argumentando que “el remedio intentado es formalmente admisible toda vez que se ha planteado de manera prístina una cuestión que afectaría las garantías constitucionales de las víctimas y la resolución fue adversa a tales derechos invocados, que indiscutiblemente cuentan con un status y alcance…

View Cache

Lawsuit accuses De Soto priest of sexually abusing boy

DE SOTO (MO)
The Leader/myleaderpaper.com [Festus MO]

February 21, 2022

By Tony Krausz

Read original article

The priest at St. Rose of Lima Catholic Church in De Soto has been accused in a lawsuit of abusing a child two decades ago at a St. Louis boys’ home.

Christin Hornbeck says in the lawsuit that the Rev. Alexander Anderson fondled him in the late 1990s or early 2000s at St. Joseph’s Home for Boys, 4753 S. Grand Ave., in south St. Louis. The lawsuit was filed Feb. 10 in the St. Louis Circuit Court.

Hornbeck, who now lives in Georgia, was between the ages of 11 and 13 at the time of the alleged abuse, said his lawyer, Rebecca M. Randles of the Randles Mata law firm in Kansas City.

The Leader typically does not identify alleged victims of sexual abuse, but Hornbeck’s suit uses his name and his lawyer said Hornbeck does not object to being identified.

In the lawsuit, Hornbeck is seeking a jury trial and asks…

View Cache

SNAP Applauds SB 153, HB464 and its Sponsors, Urges “Needed Reform” to Kentucky’s Statute of Limitations

FRANKFORT (KY)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

February 18, 2022

Read original article

For Immediate Release: February 18, 2022

We applaud Senator Morgan McGarvey and Representative Lisa Willner for their sponsorship, support, and shepherding of SB 153 and HB 464. We believe these bills are much-needed reform that would remove archaic barriers that have been placed in front of survivors of childhood sexual abuse and will allow them the opportunity to expose abusers and enablers in court. We know that giving survivors the opportunity to bring cases against their abusers helps create safer communities and hope that SB 153 and HB464 quickly move forward so that children in Kentucky are safer.

SB 153 and HB464 would remove the statute of limitations for civil actions arising from childhood sexual assault or abuse, giving those survivors who were abused as children the opportunity to receive justice for the crimes they experienced. Because the average age of a survivor of sexual abuse coming forward is 52,…

View Cache

Retired bishop Zanchetta denies sex abuse claims at trial in Salta

(ARGENTINA)
Buenos Aires Times [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

February 21, 2022

Read original article

Retired Argentine bishop Gustavo Oscar Zanchetta, seen as close to the Pope and with a history managing Vatican property, denies charges of sex abuse allegedly committed a decade ago.

A retired Argentine bishop seen as close to the Pope, and who worked as an advisor for management of Vatican property, on Monday denied charges of sex abuse allegedly committed a decade ago.

Gustavo Oscar Zanchetta, 57, appeared behind closed doors in the court of San Ramón de la Nueva Orán, where he was bishop from his appointment by Pope Francis in 2013 until his resignation in 2017.

Orán is some 1,700 km (1,050 miles) north of Buenos Aires in Salta Province.

Zanchetta, who travelled from the Vatican to attend the hearings, is charged with “simple sexual abuse continued and aggravated by being committed by a recognised minister of religious worship,” according to a statement from judicial officials in Salta.

A…

View Cache

Zanchetta trial to begin without Vatican files

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

February 9, 2022

Read original article

The criminal trial of Bishop Oscar Zanchetta in Argentina is set to begin later this month, but the process is set to commence without requested case files from the archbishop’s canonical process at the Holy See.

Zanchhetta is accused of sexually abusing two former seminarians, and will face trial Feb. 21 in Oran, the northern Argentine city where he was diocesan bishop from 2013 until 2017.

Ahead of the trial, Zanchetta’s attorneys have subpoenaed the Vatican’s files on the bishop’s 2019 canonical trial at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The trial in Argentina, originally set to begin in October 2021, had been delayed while the court waited for those documents, according to local newspaper El Tribuno

Since they have not arrived, the trial’s judge has ordered the process begin this month.  

While Pope Francis has acknowledged authorizing the CDF process, the Vatican has released no details about…

View Cache

Argentine bishop rejects sex abuse claims as trial begins

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Reuters [London, England]

February 21, 2022

By Agustin Geist

Read original article

The trial of a Roman Catholic bishop accused of sexually abusing young men in northern Argentina began Monday with the cleric denying the claims, in the latest court case to highlight sex crimes that have roiled the global church in recent decades.

Pope Francis, the former archbishop of Buenos Aires and the first Latin American pontiff, has repeatedly apologized for past crimes by priests and pledged to end cover-ups while ensuring that priestly sexual abuse be “erased from the face of the earth”.

The latest Argentine case centers on accusations that Gustavo Zanchetta, who served as bishop of Oran in the northern province of Salta, preyed on young men studying for the priesthood at a seminary he founded in 2016.

Zanchetta denied the accusations on the first day of the trial, stressing that he had “a good and healthy relationship” with all seminarians, according to a statement from Salta’s judiciary.

View Cache

Spain’s Catholic Bishops Ask Law Firm to Open Independent Audit on Clerical Sex Abuse

MADRID (SPAIN)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

February 21, 2022

By Courtney Mares, Catholic News Agency

Read original article

In addition to a comprehensive report, the investigation is expected to open an independent channel to receive potential complaints and recommend further preventative measures.

Spain’s Catholic bishops have commissioned a law firm to conduct an independent investigation of sex abuse committed by Church members.

The independent audit will be administered by the Cremades & Calvo-Sotelo law firm and is intended to create a “comprehensive report” of all clerical sex-abuse cases, ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, reported on Feb. 21.

The move follows an independent study commissioned by the Catholic Church in neighboring France that generated headlines worldwide, as well as a recent high-profile inquiry conducted by a law firm in the German Archdiocese of Munich and Freising. 

Cardinal Juan José Omella, the president of the Spanish bishops’ conference, will answer questions about the audit together with Javier Cremades, the president of the law firm, at a press conference on Feb. 22.

In addition…

View Cache

Spain church pledges external probe into child abuse

MADRID (SPAIN)
Philippine Daily Inquirer [Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines]

February 21, 2022

By Agence France-Presse

Read original article

Spain’s Catholic Church said Monday a law firm would carry out an independent investigation into allegations of child abuse involving its clergy as political pressure grows to hold an inquiry.

The legal team will “open an independent channel” to receive complaints, review the legal procedures to punish criminal practices and help the authorities clarify the facts, the CEE Episcopal Conference, which groups Spain’s leading bishops, said in a statement.

The firm, Cremades & Calvo-Sotelo, would also “set up a protection system in line with society’s demands”, the statement said.

Church leaders will further address the matter at a news conference on Tuesday.

Until now, there has never been an official investigation into alleged abuse by members of the clergy, not by Spain’s government nor by the Spanish church itself.

The Church, which has only recognised 220 cases of abuse since 2001, has ruled out “a comprehensive investigation” into reports of…

View Cache

February 21, 2022

Survivor has her story to tell Pope Francis

TORONTO (CANADA)
The Catholic Register - Archdiocese of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

February 20, 2022

By Michael Swan

Read original article

Phyllis Googoo is ready to share her story with Pope Francis. She’s been wrestling with her memories of Shubenacadie Indian Residential School for more than 60 years.

“We get better, us survivors,” she told The Catholic Register. “Among the AFN (Assembly of First Nations), we meet once in a while. Our stories are so sad. When we first met, it was mostly crying. It was hard.”

Googoo will have her chance to speak with Pope Francis March 31 as one of 13 First Nations delegates going to Rome. The Metis delegation will meet with Pope Francis March 28 and the Inuit later that same day. All the delegations together will have an audience with Pope Francis April 1. Each of the four meetings is scheduled for one hour.

Googoo knows she will have only five-to-10 minutes to speak her piece. She wants to be sure to leave space for other delegates who…

View Cache

The Church in Africa and the difficulty of reporting sex abuse

(ITALY)
La Croix International [France]

February 21, 2022

By Lucie Sarr

Read original article

How Catholics on the African continent are coming to grips with sexual abuse in the Church three years after a major summit that the pope held in Rome

It has been three years since Pope Francis summoned the presidents of all the world’s episcopal conferences to Rome for an unprecedented summit on the sexual abuse of minors in the Catholic Church.

The aim of the meeting – which took place February 21-24, 2019 – was to make the bishops understand the urgency of dealing with a crisis that is undermining the Church’s credibility.

At the time, some of the African Church leaders and their clergy did not do much about it, with some believing that this scourge was primarily a Western reality.

The very notion of sexual abuse did not seem to be understood by everyone.

A priest in Burkina Faso, for example, described sexual relations between a 15-year-old girl…

View Cache

Argentine court starts trial of Catholic bishop accused of sexual abuse

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Reuters [London, England]

February 21, 2022

By Agustin Geist

Read original article

The trial of a Roman Catholic bishop accused of sexually abusing young men in northern Argentina will start on Monday, in the latest court case to highlight allegations of sex crimes that have roiled the global church over the past few decades.

Pope Francis, the former archbishop of Buenos Aires and the first Latin American pontiff, has repeatedly apologized for past crimes by clerics and pledged to end cover-ups while ensuring that priestly sexual abuse be “erased from the face of the earth”.

The Argentine case centers on accusations that Gustavo Zanchetta, who served as bishop of Oran in the largely Catholic northern province of Salta, preyed on young men studying for the priesthood at a seminary he founded in 2016.

In late 2017, Zanchetta left Oran to work in the Vatican’s Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, a financial and accounting office that also manages church properties…

View Cache

Benedict XVI and the German Church He Served Seek Forgiveness in Very Different Ways

(ITALY)
The New Yorker

February 20, 2022

By Paul Elie

Read original article

The Church hierarchy has been signalling a new openness to change, but a plea from the Pope emeritus, following the release of a report on abuse, follows an old path.

In Germany, lately, powerful bishops have been speaking of prospects for change in Catholic life with a frankness not seen from the Church hierarchy anywhere else in a long time. When some hundred and twenty-five priests and other Church employees collectively “came out” as gay last month—with a manifesto faulting the Church’s “defamatory” teachings on sexuality and gender—Jean-Claude Hollerich, a Jesuit who is the archbishop of Luxembourg, told the German news outlet KNA that the foundation of Catholic teaching on homosexuality “is no longer true,” and called for a “fundamental revision of the doctrine.” Reinhard Marx, the archbishop of Munich and Freising—who last year spoke approvingly of the prospect of some form of Church blessings for same-sex-unions— View Cache

In Traditionally Catholic Poland, the Young Are Leaving the Church

WARSAW (POLAND)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

February 19, 2022

By Francis X. Rocca and Natalia Ojewska

Read original article

Secularization, sex-abuse scandals and the country’s culture wars are contributing to the decline

Warsaw – Julian Rembelski, 21, grew up in the Catholic Church, like most other Polish children, receiving First Communion and Confirmation and taking religion class in school. He says he enjoyed the sense of community he found in the church, particularly when taking part in volunteer activities such as distributing food and clothing to the poor.

But around the age of 17, Mr. Rembelski ceased to consider himself a Catholic, alienated by revelations of clerical sex abuse and what he says are the church’s efforts to impose its teachings against abortion, contraception and gay relationships on the rest of Polish society.

“I believe in God, but I don’t like what the church is doing now, because it’s doing politics and that’s not what the church is supposed to,” said Mr. Rembelski, now a student of…

View Cache

Marylands School: Abuse in Care inquiry unravels mysteries from Christchurch’s past

WELLINGTON (NEW ZEALAND)
Radio New Zealand [Wellington, New Zealand]

February 20, 2022

By David Cohen

Read original article

Business has been brisk this past week at the Abuse in Care Royal Commission of Inquiry.

The latest phase of the inquiry has looked at the historical wrongdoing that took place at the Marylands residential school and its co-located St Joseph’s orphanage in Christchurch, as well as the nearby Hebron Trust facility.

These residences were overseen by the Brothers Hospitaller of St John of God, a Catholic order known for its work with at-risk young people, including kids with learning disabilities – and rather too many of the 1680 reports of abuse against local Catholic clergy and workers from 1950 to the present day.

Like its state-run counterparts, the order’s local operation seems to have been established with benevolent intentions. The aim was to provide a refuge for youngsters not unlike the order’s own namesake Portuguese-born saint, who as a child was forced to live on the streets of Europe.

As…

View Cache

Archbishop Byrnes, finance volunteer take the witness stand in payment case for abuse survivors

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
Guam Daily Post

February 21, 2022

By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert

Read original article

Archbishop Michael Jude Byrnes and former Archdiocesan Finance Council President Richard Untalan on Monday took the witness stand in a trial that would determine whether the assets of Catholic parishes and schools could also be used to pay hundreds of survivors of alleged clergy sexual assaults.

Byrnes acknowledged the position of the archdiocese that he, as archbishop of the Archdiocese of Agana, only holds the assets of schools and parishes in trust, for the benefit of schools and parishes. 

It was the second day of the marathon trial, which starts at 8 a.m. and ends at 3:30 p.m. daily over the next two weeks.

As archbishop, Byrnes said he signs off on parish and school spending exceeding $25,000.

Creditors’ committee counsel Edwin Caldie said because the archbishop himself described the Catholic Church on Guam as “one body,” then he administers the church for the benefit of the whole archdiocese.

The…

View Cache

French cleric suspended over sex abuse crashes Vatican’s priesthood conference

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
La Croix International [France]

February 18, 2022

By Robert Mickens

Read original article

Tony Anatrella, a former psychoanalyst with important connections in the Roman Curia, has been suspended from public ministry and speaking engagements since 2018

What would happen if a prominent Catholic priest who’s been suspended for sexually abusing seminarians were to show up at a major Vatican conference — on the future of the priesthood, no less?

Do you think the organizers would tell him to hit the road or invite him to stay for lunch at the pope’s residence?

No kidding. Something similar to this actually happened. Not years or decades ago. It happened this week.

The priest was Tony Anatrella, a cleric and former psychoanalyst who was suspended by the Archdiocese of Paris in July 2018 following years of accusations that numerous young men had brought to the attention of Church officials.

The 81-year-old priest was among the 400 or so participants who gathered in the spacious Paul VI Hall on Thursday…

View Cache

February 20, 2022

Spain investigating 68 allegations of child abuse by Catholic clergy, staff

MADRID (SPAIN)
Reuters [London, England]

February 16, 2022

By Emma Pinedo

Read original article

 Spanish prosecutors are investigating 68 cases of alleged sexual abuse of minors by Catholic church staff, the public prosecutor’s office said on Wednesday in the first release of official data about such cases.

Allegations of child abuse by Catholic clergy and of possible cover-ups by the church are only surfacing now in Spain, years after similar scandals rocked the Church in other countries such as the United States, Ireland and France.

The prosecutor’s office released a spreadsheet with the criminal cases launched in 17 Spanish regions into alleged sexual abuse of minors in congregations, schools and other religious institutions, but did not provide any details.

Suspected abuse of children has been in the spotlight in the country since El Pais newspaper reported two months ago it had found 1,200 cases reported between 1943 and 2018.

In January, the Spanish Bishops’ Conference said it would set up commissions at diocese level…

View Cache

Vatican statistics show global imbalance in ratio of Catholics per priest

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

February 18, 2022

By Cindy Wooden

Read original article

The number of Catholics and of Catholic men and women who devote their lives to serving them continues to grow in Africa and Asia, Vatican statistics show, but pastoral ministry is still much more readily available to Catholics in Europe.

At the end of 2020, the number of Catholics in the world reached 1.36 billion, an increase of 16 million over the previous year, according to the Vatican’s Central Office of Church Statistics, which published a brief overview of the global numbers in early February.

While Catholics remained about 17.7% of the global population, their numbers grew in Africa by about 2.1% and in Asia by 1.8% while in Europe the increase was just 0.3%, said the summary, which was based on numbers reported Dec. 31, 2020.

And while just over 20% of the world’s Catholics live in Europe, 40% of the world’s priests minister there. The Americas have 48%…

View Cache

Pope’s use of authority becomes new front in Vatican ‘trial of the century’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

February 20, 2022

By John L. Allen, Jr.

Read original article

As the dust began to settle last year on the Vatican’s troubled $400 million dollar land deal in London, and as the colossal dimensions of the failure it represents became clear, Pope Francis was determined to put someone on trial, including his former chief of staff, Italian Cardinal Becciu, along with nine other defendants.

Yet, under the heading of “be careful what you wish for,” Francis could find that the primary person on trial ends up being not Becciu and the rest, but himself.

That, at least, seems to be the new tactic defense lawyers rolled out Friday, when a Vatican tribunal led by veteran Italian jurist Giuseppe Pignatone conducted its latest hearing in a process that’s been underway for seven months and still hasn’t gotten anywhere close to considering the actual charges.

Instead, the process has been bogged down with preliminary procedural issues. Initially, they had to do with…

View Cache

Pope, cardinal look at what ails the priesthood, offer antidotes

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

February 17, 2022

By Cindy Wooden

Read original article

Opening an international conference on priesthood, Pope Francis insisted that those who are not close to God in prayer, close to their bishop and other priests and immersed in the lives of their people are simply “‘clerical functionaries’ or ‘professionals of the sacred.’”

“A priest needs to have a heart sufficiently ‘enlarged’ to expand and embrace the pain of the people entrusted to his care while, at the same time, like a sentinel, being able to proclaim the dawning of God’s grace revealed in that very pain,” the pope said Feb. 17 as he opened the conference in the Vatican audience hall.

With some 500 people attending in person and hundreds more online, the Feb. 17-19 symposium was organized by Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, and aimed at renewing a theological understanding of Catholic priesthood.

The cardinal told participants he understood how people could wonder…

View Cache

The Abuse of Abuse

MUNICH (GERMANY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

February 19, 2022

Read original article

Editorial: The harshness of the attacks that were directed at Benedict XVI following the report’s publication is not justified by the actual evidence in the report, and seem strangely timed considering the recent German Synodal Way.

Clergy sexual abuse of minors is an appalling crime. It’s a scandal so grave that it has completely undermined the trust of many of the faithful in their Catholic leaders. It has also profoundly injured the Church’s capacity to undertake its fundamental evangelical mission of the salvation of souls.

That’s why it’s so disturbing to see this issue cynically commandeered by some progressive Catholics. The Church must continue to strive for authentic solutions to combat sexual abuse, support the victims of abuse, punish sexual abusers, and learn from prior mistakes. Instead, these Catholics exploit it as an instrument to advance agendas that contradict settled Church teachings — as in the case of the doctrinal…

View Cache

Is it more difficult to be a priest today? Cardinal Ouellet’s answer (interview)

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Aleteia [Paris, France]

February 17, 2022

By Cardinal Marc Ouellet

Read original article

As a symposium in Rome considers the priesthood, we hear from the prefect who organized the event.

ardinal Marc Ouellet, prefect of the Congregation for Bishops, is leading a symposium titled Toward a Fundamental Theology of the Priesthood at the Vatican through February 19, 2022.

In the lead-up to this event, I.Media spoke with the Canadian cardinal about what is at stake for the Church today.

Why did you choose to hold a symposium on the priesthood today?

Cardinal Ouellet: The Church is currently in a synodal process that raises the question of the participation of the People of God in the whole life of the Church. In launching the Synod on Synodality, the Pope does not wish to conduct a survey of opinions in the Church, a parliamentary operation or a collection of ideas. He wants to reawaken the faith of the People of God.

After the Synod…

View Cache

Lawyers: papal decrees violated fraud suspects’ human rights

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

February 18, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

Defense lawyers in the Vatican’s fraud and extortion trial on Friday accused Pope Francis of violating their clients’ human rights by issuing four secret, executive decrees that gave prosecutors free reign to investigate in ways that deprived the suspects of basic legal guarantees.

The lawyers argued that the resulting trial into the Vatican’s bungled 350 million euro investment in a London real estate deal is therefore illegitimate, and they again called for Tribunal President Giuesppe Pignatone to throw out the indictments. Pignatone is set to rule on their motions March 1.

The pope’s prosecutors have accused the Holy See’s longtime money manager, Italian brokers and lawyers involved in the London deal of fleecing the Vatican of tens of millions of euros, much of it donations from the faithful, and of then extorting 15 million euros from the Vatican to finally get full ownership of the property. The 10 suspects deny…

View Cache

February 19, 2022

Víctimas de abuso en la iglesia católica: el dolor que no prescribe

TIJUANA (MEXICO)
La Diaria Política [Montevideo, Uruguay]

February 19, 2022

By Eduardo Delgado

Read original article

Personas que sufrieron abusos de religiosos y curas de la iglesia católica dieron su testimonio y coincidieron en la falta de sanción a los agresores de parte de las autoridades eclesiásticas.

Ruben Barrios iba a la iglesia de niño. A los 13 años, cuando su madre enfermó y le era difícil hacerse cargo de él, un sacerdote que lo conocía le planteó irse a vivir con él a una parroquia de Villa Rodríguez, para poder continuar sus estudios, y así lo hizo. Estuvo tres años allí. A ese cura lo ve como un padre, y fue quien tiempo después de convivir lo invitó a ir a un seminario en Florida porque le veía condiciones para el sacerdocio.

“Unos días antes llegó un sacerdote misionero redentorista, era Reynaldo Gómez, cenamos y hablamos sobre que yo tocaba la guitarra en misas. El padre se fue a dormir y él se quedó conmigo,…

View Cache