ABUSE TRACKER

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

July 7, 2023

R.I. Supreme Court sides with Providence Diocese in priest abuse cases

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Boston Globe

July 6, 2023

By Brian Amaral

Read original article

The state Supreme Court ruled last week that a 2019 law extending the deadline to sue over childhood sexual abuse doesn’t retroactively apply to people or institutions who may have enabled child sexual abuse, but didn’t actually commit it.

The decision comes in the cases of three men who said they were abused by priests in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence when they were boys. The justices upheld a lower court’s dismissal of the men’s lawsuits against the diocese and its leaders, finding that the old deadline — which already ran out — applied to their suits.

In 2019, the state extended the deadline to sue over childhood sexual abuse from seven years to 35 years after a victim’s 18th birthday. Victims could use that new deadline to file lawsuits even if the deadline had run out under older versions of the law, but only if they were suing…

View Cache

Monica Doumit: Five years after the Royal Commission, govt schools come under scrutiny

(AUSTRALIA)
The Catholic Weekly [Archdiocese of Sydney NSW, Australia]

July 7, 2023

By Monica Doumit

Read original article

It would be terrible if a focus on the Catholic Church and other religious schools meant that the victim survivors in public schools were not given the opportunity to share their story publicly and, in doing so, encourage others to come forward.

Along with an estimated 60 million others around the world, I was an avid listener of The Australian’s Teacher’s Pet podcast. Released in 2018, the investigative-journalism-meets-true-crime serial led to the conviction of former rugby league player and high school teacher, Christopher Dawson, for the murder of his first wife, Lynette. The motive for the murder, the court found, was Mr Dawson’s desire to have unfettered access to his young lover, one of his students to whom the court gave the pseudonym AB. AB moved into the family home just two days after Lynette’s “disappearance” and married Mr Dawson shortly after.

Last week, Mr Dawson was convicted of carnal knowledge of…

View Cache

Federal judge will stay on case of accused New Orleans priest following recusal request

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WDSU [New Orleans]

July 6, 2023

By Aubry Killion

Read original article

A federal judge who will decide if a sealed deposition linked to a former priest accused of child abuse will stay on the case.

Judge Jane Triche Milazzo is the federal judge overseeing a case where former New Orleans priest Lawrence Hecker is accused of sex abuse.

Attorneys involved in the case asked Milazzo to recuse herself after she voiced that she made donations to the Archdiocese of New Orleans, who is trying to keep Hecker’s deposition on the child sex abuse allegations sealed.

Court documents show Milazzo will stay on the case.

Last month WDSU spoke with Hecker, who did not comment on the abuse allegations but did say there was “good and bad in everybody.”

Attorneys for Hecker’s accusers are still pushing for his deposition to be made public. Milazzo has not ruled yet on that decision.

The Archdiocese of New Orleans says it is protected after they…

View Cache

Lawsuit accuses Metro Vancouver priest of grooming and sexual abuse

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
Vancouver Is Awesome [Vancouver BC, Canada]

July 6, 2023

By Jeremy Hainsworth

Read original article

The lawsuit, brought by a woman from Haida Gwaii, seeks damages against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver and Father James Comey, who worked in parishes in Vancouver, Delta, Langley, Richmond and North Vancouver.

A Haida Gwaii woman has filed a lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver (RCAV) alleging a priest groomed and sexually abused her while she sought help in Vancouver

In a B.C. Supreme Court notice of civil claim filed July 4, the woman – known only as A.B. – names as defendants Father James Comey, the archdiocese, now-Bishop Gary Franken, who served as a Vancouver priest and RCAV vicar general, and former Vancouver archbishop Adam Exner.

The claim said Comey was ordained as a priest in 1970 and, between 1972 and 2015, worked for the archdiocese in parishes in Vancouver, Delta, Langley, Richmond and North Vancouver.

“Comey’s priesthood represented to the…

View Cache

Archbishop Fernández Defends Controversial Book as ‘Catechesis for Teens’

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

July 4, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

As the newest Vatican appointment, Archbishop Fernández has faced significant criticism, including over the 1995 work, which is no longer included in most official lists of the archbishop’s publications.

Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández has responded to criticism from what he termed “anti-Francis groups” of a book he wrote as a priest in the mid-1990s called Heal Me With Your Mouth: The Art of Kissing.

Writing on his personal Facebook page on July 3, Archbishop Fernández said the book was written as “a pastor’s catechesis for teens” and “not a theology book.”

Pope Francis appointed Archbishop Fernández, the archbishop of La Plata, Argentina, the new prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith. The theologian will take up the Vatican post in September.

As Pope Francis’ newest Vatican appointment, Archbishop Fernández has faced significant criticism, including over the 1995 work, which is no longer included in most official lists of the…

View Cache

July 6, 2023

Same-sex blessing, the ‘kissing book’ and abuse: Why Pope Francis’ new head of doctrine is already causing controversy

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

July 6, 2023

By Colleen Dulle

Read original article

Pope Francis has appointed Archbishop Victor Manuel “Tucho” Fernández to succeed Cardinal Luis Ladaria Ferrer as the head of the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, its central doctrinal office. In the days since his appointment was announced on July 1, conversations and debates have swirled about Archbishop Fernández’s mandate, as described by Pope Francis in a letter, and about controversies from his past.

Archbishop Fernández is currently the archbishop of La Plata, Argentina, a city just outside the pope’s hometown of Buenos Aires. He has worked closely with the pope over the years and was credited as a “ghostwriter” for Pope Francis’ apostolic exhortation “Amoris Laetitia” (“The Joy of Love”). Turning 61 years old this month and likely being made a cardinal later this year, Archbishop Fernández appears to be one of Francis’ “legacy appointments”—someone who will continue to wield influence in the Catholic Church well…

View Cache

Judge refuses to recuse herself from New Orleans clergy abuse case

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Guardian [London, England]

July 6, 2023

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Read original article

Judge had been asked to recuse herself over donations she made to church run by archdiocese that employed admitted child abuser

A federal judge overseeing a request to unseal secret files related to a Roman Catholic priest – and self-confessed predator – won’t recuse herself from the case over donations to her church, as a clergy abuse claimant had asked.

New Orleans-based US district court judge Jane Triche Milazzo had been asked to recuse herself by Aaron Hebert, who is pressing a 2019 lawsuit asserting that the admitted clerical child abuser Lawrence Hecker had victimized him decades earlier.

Hebert and his legal team cited Milazzo’s disclosure during a 15 June court hearing that she made an unspecified amount of financial contributions to a church run by the archdiocese that employed Hecker and provided him with retirement benefits.

They contended that recusal was appropriate because the standard for…

View Cache

FBI to exhume body of Joyce Malecki, whose death was chronicled in ‘The Keepers,’ family says

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

July 5, 2023

By Julie Scharper and Justin Fenton

Read original article

The Keepers’ probed the case of the 20-year-old Baltimore woman who was killed in 1969

The FBI plans to exhume the body of Joyce Malecki, who was found killed in 1969 on Fort Meade property in a case explored in the documentary “The Keepers,” according to her brother and one of the family’s legal advocates.

“They’re working on the paperwork to exhume her body,” said Darryl Malecki, one of Joyce’s brothers. “I’m just thinking and hoping and praying that they have a good reason for doing that.”

Malecki said the FBI investigator assigned to his sister’s case told him last week that they were beginning the process to get approval to dig up her body to look for more evidence. He did not know when the exhumation would take place, but said an FBI investigator said a family member could attend.

An FBI spokesperson declined to comment because it is…

View Cache

FBI to exhume body of Joyce Malecki, whose death was chronicled in ‘The Keepers,’ family says

BALTIMORE (MD)
CBS News [Baltimore, MD]

July 6, 2023

Read original article

The FBI plans to exhume the body of Joyce Malecki, who was found killed in 1969 on Fort Meade property in a case explored in the documentary “The Keepers,” according to her brother and one of the family’s legal advocates.

“They’re working on the paperwork to exhume her body,” said Darryl Malecki, one of Joyce’s brothers. “I’m just thinking and hoping and praying that they have a good reason for doing that.”

Related stories: 

This story by Justin Fenton and Julie Scharper continues. Read the rest at The Baltimore Banner: FBI to exhume body of Joyce Malecki, whose death was chronicled…

View Cache

CT’s new bishop once served as spokesman for disgraced Boston Cardinal Bernard Law

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant [Hartford CT]

July 6, 2023

By Ed Stannard

Read original article

Coadjutor Archbishop Christopher Coyne, named to succeed Hartford Archbishop Leonard Blair, once served as spokesman for Cardinal Bernard Law of Boston, the most well-known cleric involved in the Roman Catholic Church’s sexual abuse scandals.

Coyne later was named bishop of the Diocese of Burlington, Vermont, in 2014.

Coyne was named coadjutor archbishop of Hartford on June 25, meaning he will automatically succeed Blair when Blair retires next year. According to his curriculum vitae, which has been removed from the Diocese of Burlington’s website, Coyne served as secretary for communications and principal spokesman of the Archdiocese of Boston from 2002 to 2005.

Since his Hartford appointment, his handling of abuse cases has come under criticism.

According to a spokeswoman for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, Coyne could have been more transparent about priests who had been accused of sexual abuse in Vermont.

“…His Burlington list of abusers was incomplete,” Melanie…

View Cache

Catholic clergy abuse

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Courthouse News Service [Boston, MA]

July 3, 2023

Read original article

The Rhode Island Supreme Court affirmed that three alleged victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic priests cannot sue the bishops who supervised those priests. The law draws a clear dichotomy between perpetrators and non-perpetrator defendants for retroactive application of the amended 35-year statute of limitations. The new, extended limitations period applies only to perpetrators.

Read the ruling here. [From BA: See our cached version here.]

View Cache

Pope Fires Catholic Pastor For Abuse

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Globe Echo [London, England]

July 6, 2023

By David Sadler

Read original article

Pope Francis has dismissed a pastor convicted of multiple abuses from the clergy. According to the Archdiocese of Cologne, the former clergyman will finally lose all rights and privileges associated with priestly ordination.

A Catholic minister sentenced to 12 years in prison for multiple abuses has been released from the clergy. At the request of Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki, Pope Francis imposed this maximum penalty under canon law, as announced by the Archdiocese of Cologne.

As a result, the former clergyman will lose all rights and privileges associated with priestly ordination forever. According to the Archdiocese, he is no longer allowed to administer the sacraments, to be pastoral or to exercise the priestly ministry in any way. The ecclesiastical proceedings against the pastor were thus concluded.

Dismissal meets approval

Archbishop Rainer Maria Woelki of Cologne welcomed the decision from Rome. The dismissal is more than appropriate, “even though I know…

View Cache

Father John Clemens reinstated to ministry

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Catholic [Archdiocese of Chicago IL]

July 5, 2023

Read original article

On June 20, Cardinal Cupich sent letters to Our Lady of Hope Mission and Mary, Seat of Wisdom Parish informing them of the reinstatement of Father John Clemens.

“As I previously informed you, the archdiocese received an allegation of child sexual abuse against Father Clemens dating back approximately 50 years ago. In accordance with our policies for the protection of children and youth, the archdiocese’s Independent Review Board, assisted by our Office of Child Abuse Investigation and Review and outside investigators, conducted a thorough review of the allegation,” the cardinal wrote.

“In light of the information presented, the IRB determined that there is not a reasonable cause to believe Father Clemens sexually abused a minor. In addition, the board recommended that the file be closed and Father Clemens be returned to ministry. Having given careful consideration to their recommendation, which I accept, I now inform you that I am…

View Cache

A question of ‘discipline’: Is Archbishop Fernández up to the DDF job?

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

July 5, 2023

By Ed. Condon

Read original article

Following his appointment Saturday as the new prefect for the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, Pope Francis’ choice of Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández faced immediate criticism. 

While much of the reaction to Fernández’s appointment has concerned his theological writing and engagement with issues like blessings for same-sex couples, some has focused on his canonical qualifications and experience handling accusations of clerical sexual abuse.

As the incoming head of the DDF, beginning in September, Archbishop Fernández will lead the Vatican department charged with overseeing doctrinal matters, but also the legal processes by which instances of abuse of minors are investigated, prosecuted, and judged.

But while some commentators have noted Fernández’s lack of canonical qualifications and the criticism of his record as a local bishop, what is actually expected of the prefect in matters of discipline, and is he actually underqualified for the role?

At the time of Fernández’s…

View Cache

July 5, 2023

A Catalan priest from the Piarist order sexually abused children in Senegal for years

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
ElNacional.cat [Barcelona, ES]

June 29, 2023

By Julio Collado

Read original article

The abuse continued from 1980 to 2005, and only now has the Escola Pia in Barcelona accepted the facts and given an apology

The Catalan branch of the Piarist Order of the Roman Catholic church – known as the Escola Pia in Catalonia – has finally recognized 25 years of sexual abuse of minors committed by a priest of the order, Manel Sales, when he was working as a missionary in Senegal. The abuses took place between the years 1980 and 2005 and both students at the Piarist schools and the local people in the African country were aware of these abuses. However, due to a “cultural issue” as well as the fact that in Senegal homosexuality is illegal and punishable by prison sentences, no one has denounced the crimes for all this time.

It wasn’t until 2005, after more than two decades of abuse by Manel Sales, when a group of Catalan women became aware of the abuse and decided to report…

View Cache

The Spanish priest who sexually abused children in Senegal for 25 years: ‘When he saw children, he couldn’t resist’

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

July 5, 2023

By Jose Naranjo

Read original article

Victims talk to EL PAÍS about the abuse they suffered at the hands of Manel Sales Castellà, who worked as a missionary for years, even though ‘everyone knew’ he was preying on minors

“I was 19 years old, and I wanted to be a priest. Father Manel called me to his office and after asking me for my papers, he stood behind me and began to touch my private parts. I didn’t understand anything, I thought it was a fertility test or something like that to be a priest. But I noticed that he was aroused and he was sweating a lot. Back then, we didn’t understand that a man could have sex with another man, it’s not part of our culture. But when he saw children, he couldn’t resist.” That’s how the Phillipe (not his real name) describes the abuse he suffered at the hands of Manel Sales Castellà,…

View Cache

Will a Baltimore judge lift redactions from the Catholic Church abuse report?

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

July 5, 2023

By Tim Prudente

Read original article

Legal arguments are set to begin Wednesday behind closed doors on whether redactions will be lifted from the state’s 456-page report on the history of child sexual abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

The Maryland Office of the Attorney General issued its report in April, with the names of five archdiocesan officials and 10 church figures redacted. The five officials are accused of failing to take appropriate action when presented with allegations of abuse and the 10 church figures are accused of acts of abuse. Authorities shielded the identities of these men and women by also redacting names of their parishes and Catholic schools.

Catholic church investigation

View Cache

Church of the Brethren leaders respond following reporting of sexual abuse by former employee

ELGIN (IL)
Brethren.org [Elgin, IL]

July 4, 2023

By Church of the Brethren Newsline

Read original article

A statement by the Mission and Ministry Board of the Church of the Brethren, approved July 4, 2023

Current Church of the Brethren, Inc. organizational leaders have become aware of sexual abuse by an employee in a work setting, reported to have taken place several decades ago. Both the abused victim and the alleged perpetrator were adults at the time of the abuse and both are now deceased. Action was taken by church leaders at that time, but a recently published book, Her Words, My Voice, has expanded and brought new attention to that reporting.

The General Secretary’s office, represented by acting general secretary Shawn Flory Replogle during general secretary David Steele’s recent sabbatical, has been responding to this new knowledge. Replogle and Mission and Ministry Board chair Carl Fike have met with the family of the abused person. More actions related to past practices and current policies and procedures are…

View Cache

Stop the illegal trade in AI child sex abuse images

(PHILIPPINES)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

July 3, 2023

By Shay Cullen

Read original article

Artificial intelligence can also be used to protect children but needs a strong leader to stand against online pedophilia

Recently I came across a research article by Angus Crawford and Tony Smith published by BBC News that said: “Paedophiles are using artificial intelligence [AI] technology to create and sell life-like child sexual abuse material.”

The opening statement tells us something shocking about the human species that has made the sexual abuse of children a brutal destructive entertainment, a money-making business to satisfy the lust and evil desire to have sex with children.

It is the most unnatural act one could think of, but what is more unnatural and more shocking is that most humans ignore, tolerate, and even approve of it and law enforcers and internet corporations are unwilling or incapable of stopping it.

It should make us rethink our own human nature and admit it is morally flawed as it tends…

View Cache

Exclusive: Church victimises whistle blowers

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Eastern Eye [London, UK]

July 5, 2023

By Barnie Choudhury

Read original article

Asian campaigner accuses Anglican church of preventing abuse survivors from reporting crime

THE Church of England stands accused of failing survivors of child abuse and punishing whistle blowers who give them a voice, a former independent advocate has told Eastern Eye.

The church sacked Jasvinder Sanghera, who founded Karma Nirvana, a charity for mainly south Asian survivors of domestic abuse, forced marriage and honour-based violence, and her white colleague, Steve Reeves.

She said by firing the pair, abuse survivors will lose confidence in the church and prevent them from complaining.

Documents seen by this newspaper reveal the extent of the acrimony between C of E leaders and its former independent board members.

The pair took out a ‘dispute notice’ grievance after relationships broke down.

“What became apparent was, as we started to develop the work, that there was this resistance to independence,” Sanghera said.

Sanghera went through a panel interview in…

View Cache

Ex-Santa Fe priest Balizan allowed to await trial from home

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

July 4, 2023

By Nicholas Gilmore

Read original article

Longtime Santa Fe priest Daniel Balizan, facing federal charges of sex abuse of a minor, will await trial at his home in Springer, a judge has ruled.

Federal Magistrate Judge Laura Fashing in Albuquerque on Monday ordered Balizan to be released from custody to house arrest with electronic monitoring.

Balizan, who for a decade was a pastor at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community in Santa Fe before he was removed by the Archdiocese of Santa Fe in 2022, is accused of enticement of a minor with the intent to engage in sexual activity during a relationship prosecutors allege he carried on with a 15-year-old boy in 2012.

Balizan was arrested June 29 in Springer.

Federal prosecutors had argued Balizan should be placed in a halfway house in the run-up to the trial, writing the weight of evidence in the case “favors detention.”

Balizan, who has pleaded not guilty,…

View Cache

July 4, 2023

Texas pastor pleads guilty to possession of child sex abuse images

ROUND ROCK (TX)
NBC News [New York NY]

July 3, 2023

By Julianne McShane

Read original article

David Lloyd Walther, 57, admitted downloading the materials to a computer at Faith Baptist Church in Round Rock, where he was pastor before his arrest in November.

A Texas pastor pleaded guilty to an enhanced charge of possession of child sex abuse images after he admitted having downloaded some of the materials at his church, according to federal prosecutors and court documents.

David Lloyd Walther, 57, “knowingly searched for, downloaded, distributed and possessed” child sex abuse images, some of which depicted prepubescent minors, on a peer-to-peer file sharing network while he was the pastor of Faith Baptist Church in Round Rock, a city 18 miles north of Austin, the U.S. attorney’s office for Western Texas said Thursday.

Walther…

View Cache

Northview Church defends hiring pastor accused of leadership abuse

MUNCIE (IN)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

July 3, 2023

By Leonardo Blair

Read original article

Northview Church in Indiana is defending the hiring of CJ Johnson to serve as their senior pastor in 2021 despite former members of the now defunct Southland City Church in Minnesota, where he served in a similar role, accusing him of leadership abuse in an environment that also lacked financial transparency.

The allegations against Johnson were first highlighted in a report by Current in which a number of former members and employees of both Southland City Church and Northview Church raise concerns about what they characterize as a troubling pattern of abuse by the megachurch pastor.

Johnson, 38, is accused of “speaking dishonestly from the pulpit, lacking transparency about church finances and threatening or manipulating those who questioned his ideas or leadership” according to Current.

Johnson’s alleged abuse allegedly forced a majority of Southland’s staff to quit without new jobs lined up within…

View Cache

Church of Scientology forced underage girl to MARRY senior official she accused of rape or spend five years in labor camp while teen was signed-up to billion-year work contract with sect, lawsuit claims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Daily Mail [London, United Kingdom]

July 3, 2023

By Neirin Gray Desai

Read original article

  • A woman is suing the Church of Scientology, its leader, and one of its recruiters
  • She alleged in a lawsuit that after the recruiter raped her she had to marry him

A woman born into the Church of Scientology and drafted into its inner circle at 14 was raped by a notorious recruiter at 16 and forced to marry him when she spoke out, according to a newly unsealed lawsuit.

The woman, anonymized as Jane Doe, alleges she was groomed and sexually abused by high-ranking recruiter Gavin Potter during a series of car rides while enrolled in a ‘billion-year contract’ with the Sea Organization – a ‘clergy’ that runs the church’s operations.

The attacks are said to have taken place in California, where the age of consent is 18, with the accuser two years younger than that when the attacks began. 

On reporting them, Jane Doe says she was offered the chance to embark…

View Cache

‘Spiritualised’ abuse revealed in Brothers of St John report

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

July 4, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

Marie-Dominique Philippe was so revered that the community accepted his claim that his abuse was a spiritual gift.

The Brothers of St John have published a scathing report on sexual and spiritual abuse in its ranks, implicating its founder Fr Marie-Dominique Philippe OP of exploiting members under the guise of spiritual development.

The 800-page report, “To Understand and to Heal”, was commissioned by the general chapter in 2019, and covers the past 35 years. Of the 872 professed brothers in that time, 72 were abusers while 167 members of the community were victims. 

Most victims were adult women, many of them nuns, and abuse ranged from “solicitations to rape”. The report uses testimonies from victims and hitherto unknown archives.

One of its key findings is that Philippe was so revered that the community accepted his claim that his abuse was a spiritual gift that must be hidden not to “cast pearls…

View Cache

Argentine bishop named to Vatican office rejects criticism of his handling of abuse allegations

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

July 3, 2023

By ALMUDENA CALATRAVA

Read original article

BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (AP) — An Argentine bishop named by Pope Francis to lead a powerful Vatican office that ensures doctrinal orthodoxy on Monday rejected accusations that he refused to believe victims of sexual abuse by a priest, saying he took actions when the allegations resurfaced in 2019.

Monsignor Victor Manuel Fernández, archbishop of La Plata, Argentina, was appointed to head the Holy See’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, whose mandate includes handling sex abuse allegations lodged against clergy.

BishopAccountability.org, a Massachusetts organization that maintains an online archive of abuse in the Roman Catholic Church, said over the weekend in a statement that Fernández refused to believe victims who accused Eduardo Lorenzo, a priest in the La Plata archdiocese, of sexually abusing boys.

In a statement sent by La Plata Archbishop’s office to the Associated Press on Monday, Fernández stated that he “never” said…

View Cache

Jenna Marie Cooper: How is Father Rupnik still a priest?

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Hawaii Catholic Herald [Diocese of Honolulu HI]

July 3, 2023

By Jenna Marie Cooper

Read original article

QUESTION CORNER Q: I read that Father Marko Rupnik (the famous mosaic artist who has been credibly accused of sexual abuse) was expelled from the Jesuit order but remains a priest. How does that work? (Flushing, New York)

A: First for some background, priesthood and religious life are actually two distinct vocations, even if they often go together in many cases. Religious life is a call to follow Christ more closely by living a vowed life in community according to the evangelical counsels of poverty, chastity, and obedience. On the other hand, priesthood is a sacramental sharing in Christ’s mission of sanctification, with a priest being specially empowered to celebrate the sacraments, particularly by making Jesus truly present in the Eucharist.

There are male religious who are not priests, called religious brothers. Conversely, there are priests who are not members of religious communities. Still, there is no such thing as a…

View Cache

Timeline: how the CofE has tried to stop sex abusers

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Religion Media Centre [England]

July 3, 2023

By Tim Wyatt

Read original article

How does safeguarding work now in the Church of England?

Every parish church, cathedral, church plant or other local church body has a safeguarding policy and a volunteer appointed to act as safeguarding officer. They are supposed to be a first point of contact for disclosures of abuse, promote good practice and training, and uphold the policies.

Then, each diocese also has a diocesan safeguarding adviser (DSA). This person, often with a background in social work or the police, is responsible for leading safeguarding training and advice in the diocese. They, and whatever team the diocese has, may manage directly cases arising from their area and liaise with other statutory agencies such as the police or social services if a particular case involves a priest or church officer. There has been controversy around the exact powers of the DSA and the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse has recommended they become…

View Cache

New Vatican doctrine czar says he’s ‘not qualified’ to handle abuse cases

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Crux [Denver CO]

July 4, 2023

By Elise Ann Allen

Read original article

ROME – Argentinian Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández, Pope Francis’s pick as the new head of the Vatican’s powerful Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, has said that he originally declined the position in part because he feels incompetent in handling the clerical abuse crisis.

In a Facebook post Saturday, Fernández told his friends and followers that when the pope initially asked him to take over at the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), “I gave him various reasons for saying no.”

“One of them is that the task includes the issue of child abuse, and I do not feel prepared nor trained for these issues,” he said, reiterating the point in a second Facebook post on Sunday in which he said the abuse crisis “pains and embarrasses us,” but insisted that “I do not feel qualified or trained to guide something like this.”

Currently the archbishop of…

View Cache

July 3, 2023

Muere impune exsacerdote mexicano de Legionarios de Cristo considerado culpable de abusos sexuales

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

July 3, 2023

Read original article

Fernando Martínez falleció el lunes en el sur de Italia a los 84 años, informó la congregación.

CIUDAD DE MÉXICO (AP) — El exsacerdote mexicano Fernando Martínez, integrante de los Legionarios de Cristo al que la Iglesia Católica le retiró el estado clerical en 2020 tras considerarlo culpable de varios delitos de abuso sexual contra menores, murió el lunes en el sur de Italia a los 84 años, informó la congregación.

El Vaticano declaró a Martínez culpable de los abusos, pero nunca enfrentó a la justicia civil a pesar de que su propia congregación emitió a finales de 2019 un documento en el que detallaba los abusos sexuales habían comenzado en Ciudad de México en 1969 y continuaron hasta la década de 1990.

Los últimos casos conocidos en contra de Martínez fueron los de abuso sexual a niñas de entre 6 y 9 años en el Instituto Cumbres de la…

View Cache

Muere impune exsacerdote mexicano de Legionarios de Cristo considerado culpable de abusos sexuales

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Reporte Indigo [Mexico City, Mexico]

July 3, 2023

Read original article

Fernando Martínez falleció el lunes en el sur de Italia a los 84 años, informó la congregación.

Fue el 13 de enero de 2020 cuando el padre Fernando Martínez confesó haber abusado sexualmente de varios niños durante su ministerio, aunque no dio detalles al respecto, más de tres años después falleció.

Fue en ese entonces, también, cuando la congregación de los Legionarios de Cristo confirmó que el padre Fernando Martínez Suárez había abusado sexualmente de, al menos, ocho niños durante los noventa; sin embargo, no se le expulsó de la organización y se pidió una disculpa.

¿Quién era el padre Fernando Martínez?

Fernando Martínez inició en la iglesia Católica como aprendiz del fundador de la Legión de Cristo, Marcial Maciel, quien ha sido acusado de pederastia.

Sin confirmarse, algunos reportes indican que Fernando Martínez habría sido abusado sexualmente por Marcial Maciel a sus 15 años, en 1954.

Sin embargo, lo que sí fue…

View Cache

El violador Fernando Martínez, Legionario de Cristo, murió impune: sobreviviente

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Aristegui Noticias [Mexico City, Mexico]

July 3, 2023

By Redacción AN/ SBH

Read original article

Aristegui Noticias publicó que Ana Lucía Salazar denunció directamente al sacerdote por abusos cometidos en el Instituto Cumbres.

Los Legionarios de Cristo dieron a conocer el deceso del exsacerdote Fernando Martínez Suárez, a los 84 años, a causa de una enfermedad pulmonar.

Se trata de uno de los sacerdotes que cometió abusos contra menores de edad bajo el cobijo del fundador de esa congregación católica: Marcial Maciel.

Los Legionarios reconocen siete abusos, pero víctimas denuncian que pudo haber más.

La congregación fundada por Marcial Maciel informó que el sacerdote vivía en un “centro para ancianos al sur de Italia que permitía la atención que requería su condición”.

En 2019, Aristegui Noticias publicó que Ana Lucía Salazar denunció directamente al sacerdote por abusos cometidos en el Instituto Cumbres.

Un informe de los legionarios comprueba que en 1990 el sacerdote fue denunciado por abusos contra una niña en el Instituto Cumbres de Lomas en…

View Cache

Former Santa Fe priest makes plea in sexual abuse case

SANTA FE (NM)
KRQE - CBS/Fox 13 [Albuquerque NM]

July 3, 2023

By  Laila Freeman

Read original article

A former Santa Fe priest is accused of sexually abusing a minor. He pleaded not guilty to the charges.

Daniel Balizan was arraigned in front of a federal judge this morning.

He’s accused of sexually abusing a minor from 2012 to 2022 while he was a priest of the Santa Maria de La Paz Catholic Church in Santa Fe.

Balizan is also facing two lawsuits, claiming he did the same thing to two other minors while at the Santa Fe church.

He’s being held at a half-way house until trial, and a date has not been set.

View Cache

Archbishop Fernández didn’t side with alleged sex abuser, archdiocese says

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 3, 2023

By Peter Pinedo

Read original article

A spokesperson for Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández, the Vatican’s newly appointed head of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, responded to accusations that he has been soft on sex abusers by firmly denying the allegations.

In an email to CNA late Monday afternoon, a spokesperson for the Archdiocese of La Plata, Argentina, said that “the archbishop never expressed that he did not believe them [the victims], beyond what some blogs that issue free opinions may have said.”

“When asked by the journalists, the archbishop clearly responded that ‘when someone presents an accusation of this type, in principle, THEY ARE ALWAYS BELIEVED, but beyond that, an investigation and due process are necessary because the legislation itself establishes it,’” the spokesperson wrote.

Fernández, who turns 61 later this month, has served as the archbishop of La Plata since 2018.

As Pope Francis’ newest Vatican appointment, Fernández has faced significant criticism,  View Cache

Bishop accountability group voices concerns about Archbishop Fernández appointment

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 3, 2023

By Peter Pinedo

Read original article

A bishop accountability group that tracks sexual abuse in the Catholic Church released a statement July 1 voicing serious concerns about Pope Francis’ new appointment of Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández to head the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The group keeps an online database of sexual abuse by clergy on its website, BishopAccountability.org.

In its statement, written by co-director Anne Barrett Doyle, the group called Fernández’s appointment “a baffling and troubling choice” for a position that “will have immense power, especially when it comes to judging and punishing priests who abuse children.”

Fernández, who is almost 61, has served as the archbishop of La Plata, Argentina, since 2018.

Pope Francis announced Fernández’s appointment to the influential dicastery on July 1. A longtime personal theologian and ghostwriter for the pope, Fernández is expected to take up his new post in mid-September.

“As the new prefect of the Dicastery for…

View Cache

Tucho Fernández y el cura argentino que se suicidó en 2019

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Los Ángeles Press [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

July 3, 2023

By Rodolfo Soriano-Núñez

Read original article

El nombramiento de Tucho Fernández en el Dicasterio de la Doctrina de la Fe lo hace responsable de los casos de abuso sexual en la Iglesia católica.

En 2019, el sacerdote Eduardo Lorenzo, que dependía de Víctor Manuel TuchoFernández, se suicidó al ser acusado de abuso sexual.

Religión y vida pública: Tucho Fernández deberá demostrar disposición a resolver la crisis de abusos sexuales, no basta la cercanía al papa Francisco

Por Rodolfo Soriano-Núñez

El pasado sábado las redes sociales estallaron en una combinación de júbilo y pesar por el nombramiento de Víctor Manuel Fernández, conocido en Argentina y ahora en todo el mundo como Tucho, como nuevo responsable del Dicasterio de la Doctrina de la Fe.

Unos lo celebraron porque es una persona cercana al papa Francisco, que se espera evite los conflictos que marcaron la relación entre el papa argentino y el cardenal alemán Gerhard Müller, responsable desde antes de la renuncia de Benedicto XVI de la entonces Congregación para la…

View Cache

Group protests against accused priest in Orinda

OAKLAND (CA)
KNTV - NBC Bay Area [San Jose CA]

July 2, 2023

Read original article

Several survivors of alleged priest abuse and other advocates gathered in Orinda near the Church of Santa Maria.

The group protested an accused priest who is still ministering.

NBC Bay Area first reported on the story of Father George Mockel on June 30. He’s named in a “John Doe” lawsuit against the Oakland Diocese for allegedly sexually abusing a teenage altar boy in the mid-1970’s.

The bishop and Mockel deny the allegations.

The protesters who gathered in Orinda Sunday said they want Mockel suspended and more transparency from the church concerning accused priests.

“He’s in ministry. He’s not supposed to be in ministry. He should have been suspended,” said Dan McNevin with the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. “The policy of the church is to suspend those who have been accused and to investigate…

View Cache

Former Archbishop Curley teacher, 41 others added to archdiocese list of accused clergy

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

June 30, 2023

By Tim Prudente

Read original article

The Archdiocese of Baltimore on Friday added the names of 42 people to its online list of priests and brothers accused of child sexual abuse.

One of the accused, the Rev. Michael Miller, taught religion at Archbishop Curley High School in the 1990s and was later arrested in Connecticut for possessing child sex abuse materials, according to the archdiocese.

Most of the people, 39 in total, were identified last April in the Maryland attorney general’s 464-page report on the history of child sexual abuse within the church. None of the 39 had served in the archdiocese for years, and 33 of them are dead, according to the church.

Archdiocese officials also added three additional names to the list; these three had not been identified in the attorney general’s report. They are Miller and the Revs. Phillip Linden and Joseph O’Meara.

The Baltimore Banner previously…

View Cache

Analysis: Francis orders regime change at doctrine office

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

July 2, 2023

By Christopher Lamb

Read original article

Archbishop Fernández’ appointment is significant in light of the Church’s ongoing synod process.

The appointment of Archbishop Victor Fernández to lead the Church’s doctrine office has set off an ecclesial earthquake. Not only has Pope Francis chosen a trusted theological adviser and fellow Argentinian to lead one of the most important Holy See offices, but he has announced a total overhaul in how the doctrine department does business. 

The Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, the oldest department in the Roman Curia, is responsible for doctrine and discipline and was formerly known as the Holy Office responsible for the Inquisition.

During the 20th century, including under the papacies of John Paul II and Benedict XVI, it gained a reputation for investigating and silencing theologians. Some recent high-profile cases include Fr Jacques Dupuis, a Belgian Jesuit, and Fr Tony Flannery, an Irish Redemptorist, who said he experienced…

View Cache

Watchdog group slams Pope Francis’ pick for investigating priest sex abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
New York Daily News

July 2, 2023

By Joseph Wilkinson

Read original article

The priest selected by Pope Francis to lead Vatican investigations of child sex abuse helped cover up such abuse in Argentina, according to a watchdog group.

Victor Manuel Fernandez, 60, was chosen Saturday to lead the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, which handles sex abuse allegations against members of the clergy.

Bishop Accountability, a U.S.-based organization that tracks allegations against priests, called Fernandez’s appointment “baffling and troubling.”

“Fernandez’s recent handling of a clergy sex abuse case in his home archdiocese of La Plata raises great concern,” said Bishop Accountability co-director Anne Barrett Doyle. “In his response to allegations, he stood in stout support of the accused priest and refused to believe the victims.”

La Plata priest Eduardo Lorenzo was accused of child sex abuse in February 2019. Fernandez publicly backed the alleged perv and said the accusers had alternate motivations. While Lorenzo was investigated…

View Cache

Archbishop Fernández, new DDF prefect, has ‘troubling record on abuse,’ group warns

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic Culture - Trinity Communications [San Diego CA]

July 3, 2023

Read original article

Pope Francis’s decision to appoint Argentine Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández as prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith is “a baffling and troubling choice,” Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, said in a statement.

BishopAccountability.org hosts the largest public collection of information on the clergy abuse crisis.

“Fernández’s recent handling of a clergy sex abuse case in his home Archdiocese of La Plata raises great concern,” said Doyle. “In his response to allegations, he stood in stout support of the accused priest and refused to believe the victims.”

“Showing disregard for the safety of children, Fernández kept the priest at his parish post even as more victims came forward,” Doyle added. “For his handling of this case, Fernández should have been investigated, not promoted to one of the highest posts in the global Church. Nothing about his performance suggests he is fit to lead the Pope’s battle against…

View Cache

Catholic Movie Club: What ‘Jaws’ can tell us about the sex abuse crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
America [New York NY]

June 30, 2023

By John Dougherty

Read original article

Editor’s note: Join John Dougherty for a discussion of this and other films by visiting the Catholic Movie Club on Facebook.

July is Blockbuster Month at the Catholic Movie Club! Blockbusters are movies at their most maximalist: the ones that draw the biggest crowds and earn the biggest box office. Often they’re dismissed as empty noise, but they can also hold deep insights about God and life. So join me as we dig into some of the biggest summer movies of all time and search for the soul in the spectacle.

There is no better place to start than with the original blockbuster: “Jaws” (1975). Directed by the then-unknown Steven Spielberg, “Jaws” made a record-shattering amount of money, reinvented the summer movie landscape and still frequently appears on “best of” lists (including the American Film Institute’s 100 Greatest American Films).

In “Jaws,” a ravenous great white shark prowls the waters…

View Cache

Ex-wrestling coach at Baltimore Catholic high school acquitted in sex abuse case

TOWSON (MD)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 29, 2023

Read original article

A Maryland judge acquitted a former Catholic high school wrestling coach Friday in a sex abuse case.

Neil Adleberg, 75, of Reisterstown, had been charged with second-degree rape, second-degree attempted rape, sex abuse of a minor and sexual solicitation of a minor. His was the sole indictment stemming from the state’s attorney general’s yearslong investigation into child sex abuse and coverups within the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

Outside the Circuit Court for Baltimore County, Adleberg thanked his family and friends who stuck with him and the judge for his “attentiveness to the facts,” news outlets reported. The accusations prevented him from participating in Maryland wrestling and helping other young wrestlers, he said.

“I have to regain that reputation somehow,” Adleberg said. “The wrestling community in Maryland, in my opinion, has suffered a little bit because for the year and a half that I’ve been waiting for a trial. I…

View Cache

Former Santa Fe priest arrested on federal child sexual abuse charge

SANTA FE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque NM]

June 29, 2023

By Olivier Uyttebrouck and Colleen Heild

Read original article

A Roman Catholic priest removed last year from his parish church in Santa Fe was arrested Thursday on a federal charge alleging that he sexually assaulted a boy in 2012.

Daniel Balizan, 61, a former pastor at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community in Santa Fe, was indicted last week by a federal grand jury for a reported case of child sexual abuse in August and September of 2012, according to the indictment.

Balizan is scheduled for his first appearance on Friday before Magistrate Judge Jennifer Rozzoni in U.S. District Court in Albuquerque. If convicted, Balizan faces 10 years to life in prison.

A Tennessee man filed a lawsuit in 2022 alleging that Balizan sexually assaulted him a decade ago when he was 15 years old. The alleged abuse occurred on the premises of Santa Maria de la Paz Church, where Balizan served as pastor from 2012 to 2022,…

View Cache

Head of school linked to Amy Coney Barrett’s faith group abruptly resigns

SOUTH BEND (IN)
The Guardian [London, England]

July 3, 2023

By Stephanie Kirchgaessner

Read original article

Then a professor at Notre Dame, the supreme court justice was on a board that selected Jon Balsbaugh to head the Trinity Schools

A senior administrator of Christian private schools closely linked to People of Praise, conservative supreme court justice Amy Coney Barrett’s controversial faith group, abruptly resigned from his post earlier this year following complaints that allegations of teacher misconduct had been mishandled.

Jon Balsbaugh, an influential figure within the Christian education movement, was appointed president of Trinity Schools in February 2017, after being selected by a board of trustees that included Barrett, who was a professor at Notre Dame at the time.

Trinity is closely affiliated with People of Praise, the covenanted Christian charismatic community that has counted Barrett as a lifelong member. Her role as a trustee of Trinity from July 2015 to March 2017 is controversial in part because she served at a time when the…

View Cache

July 2, 2023

Ta’ Pinu mosaics will stay, despite expulsion of artist over abuse allegations

(MALTA)
Times of Malta [Mriehel Malta]

July 2, 2023

By Matthew Xuereb

Read original article

‘No one would remove Caravaggio’s paintings because of his grave moral mistakes’

The Gozo diocese has said it is “distinguishing between the artist and the work of art” following the expulsion from the Jesuits of the famous artist priest Marko Rupnik, who is behind the mosaics that adorn Ta’ Pinu Sanctuary,  in Gozo.

Catholic commentators have raised the question of what should be done with Rupnik’s art after he was accused of “spiritual, psychological or sexual abuse” of multiple women, including nuns, over the course of more than 30 years. 

Asked a similar question, the spokesperson for the Gozo diocese told Times of Malta that one had to distinguish between the artist and the work of art.

“No one would ever imagine removing Caravaggio’s paintings because of the grave moral mistakes he committed. Even though we are here speaking of sacred art, the same argument applies,” he said.

A similar conclusion was…

View Cache

New report analyzes origins and phenomena behind abuse in France’s St. John community

PARIS (FRANCE)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

July 2, 2023

By Solène Tadié

Read original article

The Brothers of St. John Community in France published on June 26 the findings of its internal investigation into a system of sexual and spiritual abuse initiated and propagated by its founder, Father Marie-Dominique Philippe, a charismatic figure who died in 2006.

The 800-page report, titled “Understanding and Healing: Origins and Analysis of Abuse in the St. John Family,” revealed that since its foundation in 1975, 167 people have been victims of abuse committed by 72 brothers — about 8% of all the brothers belonging to the community since its creation.

In a press release, the brothers stated that the majority of incidents have been committed against adult women in the context of spiritual accompaniment and that they range from inappropriate language to rape.

The fruit of a three-year investigation, the report was commissioned after the release, at the community’s general chapter in 2019, of a…

View Cache

Bishop named to Vatican office handling sex abuse complaints discounted some victims, US group says

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

July 2, 2023

By Frances D'Emilio

Read original article

A U.S.-based group that tracks how the Catholic hierarchy deals with allegations of sexual abuse by clergy says Pope Francis made a “troubling” choice in appointing an Argentine prelate to a powerful Vatican office that handles such cases.

On Saturday, the Vatican announced the pontiff had picked Monsignor Victor Manuel Fernández, archbishop of La Plata, Argentina, to head the Holy See’s watchdog office for doctrinal orthodoxy. Its mandate includes handling sex abuse allegations lodged against clergy.

BishopAccountability.org, a 20-year-old Massachusetts organization that maintains an online archive of abuse in the Roman Catholic Church, said in a statement that the prelate in 2019 refused to believe victims who accused a priest in the La Plata archdiocese of sexually abusing boys.

Francis “made a baffling and troubling choice,’’ the group said in statement emailed late Saturday in the U.S., citing how Fernández handled the case.

“In his response to allegations,…

View Cache

Baltimore’s Catholic archdiocese adds 42 names to list of staff credibly accused of sexual abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

June 30, 2023

By Lee O. Sanderlin and Jean Marbella

Read original article

The Archdiocese of Baltimore added more than 40 names to its public list of Catholic Church staff credibly accused of sexually abusing children, including for the first time deacons, nuns and lay teachers.

The additions, approved at the direction of Archbishop William Lori, mark the largest single expansion of the archdiocese’s credibly accused list since it first published 57 names in 2002 as part of its response to the national clergy abuse scandal. With Friday’s update, the church’s list now runs to more than 180 names.

Although the vast majority of newly added names already were known publicly — 41 of 42 had been published either in news reports or in the Maryland Attorney General’s Office report on eight decades of clergy sexual abuse and cover-ups in the archdiocese — the church said the move demonstrated its commitment to transparency.

The attorney general’s report identified 36 priests, brothers, nuns, deacons…

View Cache

Pope Francis appoints Archbishop Victor Manuel Fernandez as the new head of Vatican office for doctrine

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

July 1, 2023

By Gerard O’Connell

Read original article

In an unexpected and highly significant move, Pope Francis has appointed the Argentine theologian and archbishop Victor Manuel “Tucho” Fernández as the new prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Vatican announced today.

Pope Francis wrote a letter to the new prefect in which he told him in Spanish, “As prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, I entrust to you a task that I consider invaluable. It has as its main purpose to safeguard the teaching that comes from the faith ‘to give reasons for our hope, but not as an enemy who critiques and condemns.’ (Evangelii Gaudium, 271).”

“The dicastery that you will preside over in other epochs came to use immoral methods. Those were times when more than promoting theological knowledge they chased after possible doctrinal errors. What I expect from you is something without doubt much different,” Francis…

View Cache

Pope names Argentine bishop, author of kissing book, to top Vatican post

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Reuters [London, England]

July 1, 2023

By Philip Pullella

Read original article

Pope Francis has named an Argentine theologian and prolific author who decades ago wrote a book on the healing properties of kissing to be the Catholic Church’s new doctrinal chief, one of the Vatican’s top posts.

A Vatican statement on Saturday said Francis had chosen fellow Argentine Archbishop Victor Manuel Fernandez to be the head of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF).

The DDF, modern-day successor of the notorious Inquisition which persecuted heretics, is tasked with promoting and safeguarding doctrine on faith and morals. It monitors theological work to make sure it adheres to Church doctrine and issues guidance, clarifications, and corrections.

In an apparent reference to the Inquisition, known for torture and executions in Medieval times, Francis said in a letter to Fernandez that in the past the department had used “immoral methods” and itself made doctrinal mistakes.

The powerful post of DDF prefect was held…

View Cache

Archbishop Fernández named Vatican doctrinal chief

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

July 1, 2023

By Luke Coppen

Read original article

The controversial Argentine theologian Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández is the new prefect of the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The Vatican announced July 1 that the Archbishop of La Plata would succeed the 79-year-old Spanish Jesuit Cardinal Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer as head of the dicastery, as well as president of the Pontifical Biblical Commission and the International Theological Commission. Fernández, who will take up the role in mid-September, is the first Latin American to serve as the dicastery’s prefect.

Since Francis’ election in 2013, Fernández has been known as an influential papal theological adviser. He has been described as the “ghostwriter” of several papal documents, including the 2016 apostolic exhortation Amoris laetitia, which sparked intense debate with its reference to the admission of divorced and remarried Catholics to Holy Communion. 

Alongside the announcement of the appointment, the Vatican released a July 1 letter from Pope Francis to the…

View Cache

Judge dismisses Texas monastery’s lawsuit against Fort Worth bishop

FORT WORTH (TX)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 1, 2023

By Shannon Mullen

Read original article

A Texas judge has dismissed a Carmelite monastery’s civil lawsuit against Fort Worth Bishop Michael Olson.

Without comment, Tarrant County District Court Judge Don Cosby, sitting in Fort Worth, issued a ruling June 30 granting the Fort Worth Diocese’s motion to dismiss the monastery’s complaint, which accused Olson of theft, defamation, and abuse of power.

In response, Matthew Bobo, attorney for the Carmelite nuns of the Most Holy Trinity Monastery in Arlington, Texas, said his client would appeal the decision.

“We are shocked, extremely disappointed, and respectfully disagree with Judge Crosby’s decision,” Bobo said in a statement.

“This decision indicates that anyone who goes into a Catholic church in Texas can be required to turn over his mobile device, the church can make a copy of all of its contents, keep them for an indefinite period of time, trounce private citizens’ constitutionally-protected civil liberties, and that the Catholic Church may…

View Cache

Full Text: Pope Francis’ letter to new doctrine chief Archbishop Fernández

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

July 1, 2023

By Pope Francis

Read original article

The announcement on July 1 that Pope Francis has named Archbishop Víctor Manuel Fernández to lead the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith was accompanied by a letter the Holy Father addressed to the Argentine theologian.

While Fernández’s appointment came as a surprise to many, the pope’s letter also has attracted attention because of what it reveals about Francis’ vision for the dicastery, one of the most important and powerful offices in the Roman Curia.

The pope says in the letter that the dicastery at times has promoted pursuing “doctrinal errors” over “promoting theological knowledge.”

“What I expect from you is certainly something very different,” Francis said. “I ask you as prefect to dedicate your personal commitment in a more direct way to the main purpose of the dicastery, which is ‘guarding the faith.’”

Quoting from his first apostolic exhortation Evangelii Gaudium, which Fernández reportedly helped to draft, Pope Francis…

View Cache

Pope appoints bishop from his native Argentina to lead Vatican office that enforces church doctrine

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

July 1, 2023

By Frances D'Emilio and Nicole Winfield

Read original article

Pope Francis on Saturday chose a bishop who is a trusted theological advisor from his native Argentina for one of the Vatican’s most powerful positions — head of the watchdog office that ensures doctrinal orthodoxy.

Francis named Monsignor Victor Manuel Fernández, the archbishop of La Plata, Argentina, as the prefect, or chief, of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Fernández has been nicknamed the “pope’s theologian″ since he is widely believed to have helped author some of Francis’ most important documents.

The Dicastery, or department, enforces orthodoxy of church teaching and disciplines theologians deemed to have strayed from Catholic doctrine in their lectures or publications. But it has taken on considerably more importance to rank-and-file faithful as the stain of pedophile priests spread across the globe in recent decades. Among the department’s duties are evaluating and processing sex abuse…

View Cache

July 1, 2023

Pope chooses archbishop with troubling record on abuse for top Vatican post: Statement by BishopAccountability.org

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
BishopAccountability.org [Waltham MA]

July 1, 2023

By Anne Barrett Doyle

Read original article

New prefect of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith publicly defended and retained priest with multiple allegations: Statement by Anne Barrett Doyle, Co-Director, BishopAccountability.org

Pope Francis has appointed a fellow Argentine, Archbishop Victor Fernández, to head the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF). The Pope and the archbishop know each other well; Fernández has been called one of Francis’ “closest collaborators.”

As DDF prefect, Fernández will have immense power, especially when it comes to judging and punishing priests who abuse children. It will be up to Fernández to implement and enforce Pope’s zero tolerance pledge. To do this, he will need to make child protection and justice for victims his highest priority. 

But the Pope has made a baffling and troubling choice: Fernández’ recent handling of a clergy sex abuse case in his home archdiocese of La Plata raises great concern. In his response to…

View Cache

42 names added to list of Baltimore Archdiocese employees accused of sex abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
CBS News [Baltimore, MD]

June 30, 2023

By Christian Olaniran

Read original article

The Archdiocese of Baltimore added 42 names to its list of those accused of child sexual abuse, but some survivors told WJZ the church should have made them public long ago. 

It is one of the biggest expansions of the list since the archdiocese began publishing it 21 years ago.

WJZ Investigator Mike Hellgren spoke to Dave Lorenz of the Survivors Network of Those Abuse by Priests.

“They had to be forced into revealing these names by the Attorney General and by supporters and by the press,” Lorenz said. “All three combined have made them so embarrassed that they had to publish these names.”

Thirty-three of the newly-named people on the list are dead.

Many were included in the Maryland Attorney General’s landmark report detailing decades of abuse within and enabled by the church.

“All of this is simply rubbing salt into the wound,” Lorenz said….

View Cache

Archdiocese of Baltimore adds more names to list of priests, brothers accused of child sex abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBAL-TV, NBC-11 [Baltimore MD]

June 30, 2023

By Greg Ng

Read original article

The list of priests and brothers accused of child sexual abuse grew by dozens of names, the Archdiocese of Baltimore announced on Friday.

VIDEO ABOVEAttorneys to sue archdiocese over child sex abuse (May 2023)

The archdiocese voluntarily began publishing its online list in 2002. The addition of the names comes after Baltimore Archbishop William Lori made a recommendation to the Independent Review Board and is an acknowledgment of the Maryland attorney general’s recommendation that the archdiocese expand the list.

“Today’s transparency and culture of child protection in the church certainly does not erase the untold trauma, deep pain and lasting anguish of those who have been impacted by child sexual abuse,” Lori said in a statement.

The Maryland Attorney General’s Office spent years on an investigation before it released a report in April that paints a damning picture of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, which is the oldest Catholic…

View Cache

‘Accept ownership’: Advocates call on Peoria diocese to add names to priest sex abuse list

PEORIA (IL)
The Journal Star [Peoria IL]

July 1, 2023

By Leslie Renken

Read original article

A representative of Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests visited Peoria on Friday to publicize the names of 10 priests who are not on the Peoria Catholic Diocese’s list of those credibly accused of sexual abuse.

“We want church officials in Peoria to publicize these names,” St. Louis resident David Clohessy, a representative of SNAP, said while standing outside the Peoria Diocese offices Friday afternoon.

Beside Clohessy, Darin Buckman, a former Chillicothe resident and an abuse survivor, held a list of names.

“We are asking the bishop to come clean and list every single child-molesting cleric — proven, admitted and credibly accused — who was, or is, in the diocese, whether it was for two decades or two days. Because that’s what the bishop promised, that’s what will protect kids, that’s what will help heal victims, and that’s what will help restore the faith of so many disillusioned Catholics.”

A representative of  View Cache

State Health Examiner Agrees That McCarrick is Unfit to Stand Trial

DEDHAM (MA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

June 29, 2023

By Joe Bukuras

Read original article

Former cardinal Theodore McCarrick is not competent to stand trial on criminal sexual abuse charges in Massachusetts, a mental health expert hired by the state said after examining the disgraced ex-prelate.

The update in the case could lead to the dismissal of the first criminal charges against McCarrick, 92, following several accusations of sexual abuse of minors and seminarians, which led to his removal from the clerical state in 2019. Criminal sexual assault charges filed against McCarrick in Wisconsin in April are still pending, as are a number of civil lawsuits.

McCarrick is charged in state court with three counts of indecent assault and battery on a person over the age of 14 relating to allegations that he sexually abused the teenager who was a family friend at a wedding ceremony in the 1970s at Wellesley College in Wellesley, Massachusetts. 

That teenager was identified by NorthJersey.com in February as James…

View Cache

Former priest gets 7 years for sexual abuse of boy at Evanston hotel

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

June 29, 2023

By Matthew Hendrickson

Read original article

Kenneth Lewis, 62, entered the plea Thursday to a felony count of aggravated sexual abuse in a deal with Cook County prosecutors that saw other charges against him dropped, including predatory criminal sexual assault.

A former Catholic priest has been sentenced to seven years in prison after pleading guilty to molesting a boy more than two decades ago at an Evanston hotel.

Kenneth Lewis, 62, entered the plea Thursday to felony aggravated sexual abuse in a deal with Cook County prosecutors that saw other charges dropped, including predatory criminal sexual assault, court records show.

Lewis was immediately sentenced by Cook County Judge Anjana Hansen and will be required to register as a sex offender for life after his release.

Known as “Father Ken,” Lewis was charged in 2018

The former Tulsa, Oklahoma, pastor was accused of sexually assaulting the 13-year-old boy on a trip in the summer of 2001,  View Cache

RI Supreme Court rules in favor of diocese, says they are not perpetrators of abuse

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal [Providence RI]

June 30, 2023

By Paul Edward Parker

Read original article

The Rhode Island Supreme Court ruled Friday that a state law that extended time limits for filing suit against priests who molested children does not also change the time limits for filing suit against church higher-ups who supervised the offending priests.

The high court upheld a ruling by a Superior Court judge who had dismissed three lawsuits against officials of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence brought by people who said they were abused by priests when they were children.

Ruling draws the line of who is a perpetrator

The Supreme Court ruled that the General Assembly, when it changed state law to extend the time limits, clearly drew a distinction between those who perpetrated sexual abuse against children and those who were not actual perpetrators.

More:Can the Diocese of Providence be sued over clergy sexual abuse? Appeal argues it was a perpetrator

“The alleged conduct of the…

View Cache

2 active East Bay priests accused in recent child sex abuse suits

OAKLAND (CA)
KNTV - NBC Bay Area [San Jose CA]

June 30, 2023

By Candice Nguyen, Michael Bott and Michael Horn

Read original article

As the Diocese of Oakland attempts to seal the names of accused clergy during its ongoing bankruptcy case, NBC Bay Area has learned two working East Bay priests are among those alleged to have abused children in a recent wave of civil lawsuits.

At least two priests actively serving Catholic parishes in the East Bay are among hundreds of Bay Area clergy being accused of abusing children in a flood of recent lawsuits.

On a legal call with its bankruptcy creditors last week, the Diocese revealed two of its accused priests are still in ministry, according to a plaintiff’s attorney and a former Oakland priest who were on the call.

One of the active priests now facing abuse allegations is Fr. George Mockel, the current pastor of Santa Maria parish in Orinda, which NBC Bay Area has confirmed through a review of state court records.

In a civil lawsuit filed last…

View Cache

North Carolina megachurch exits Southern Baptist Convention after expulsions over women pastors

(NC)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 30, 2023

By Peter Smith

Read original article

Less than a month after finalizing the ouster of one of its largest churches for having women pastors, the Southern Baptist Convention has lost another of its biggest congregations.

Elevation Church — a North Carolina-based megachurch that draws thousands of worshippers to its multiple campuses and has wielded a strong influence on contemporary Christian worship music — sent notice to the SBC on June 26 that it was withdrawing its affiliation.

Elevation’s letter didn’t state a reason. Elevation Pastor Steven Furtick’s wife, Holly Furtick, preaches at Elevation to men and women, and has links to her sermons on her website.

The Baptist Faith and Message — the denomination’s statement of faith — says the office of pastor is limited to qualified men. Influential Southern Baptist leaders have said that preaching is inextricably linked to the role of pastor.

Earlier in June, the SBC representatives overwhelmingly voted at their…

View Cache

Diocese of Oakland priest accused of child sexual abuse in a current lawsuit still in ministry in Orinda

OAKLAND (CA)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

July 1, 2023

By Zach Hiner

Read original article

Diocese of Oakland priest accused of child sexual abuse in a current lawsuit still in ministry in Orinda

As far as SNAP can tell, the faithful were never alerted and the cleric was never suspended

Survivors’ group wonders why the promises of the Dallas Charter were ignored?

Victims and advocates urge Bishop Michael Barber to be transparent with the parishioners of his Diocese and the public and explain why this happened

WHAT: Holding signs at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and advocates will:

— Discuss whether the failure of the Diocese of Oakland to remove an accused priest from ministry while the claim is still pending, along with the recent motion in bankruptcy court to hide the names of those sued in the civil window, is part of a deliberate strategy to keep information about child sexual abuse secret;

— Urge Bishop Michael Barber to come clean to…

View Cache

Michigan Episcopal Bishop Accused by His Sons of Physical Abuse

(MI)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

June 28, 2023

By Kirk Petersen

Read original article

The adult sons of Michigan Episcopal Bishop Prince Singh have publicly accused their father of physically abusing them throughout their childhoods, and the bishop has requested a formal church investigation of the allegations.

Singh, the former Bishop of Rochester, has served as bishop provisional of the combined dioceses of Eastern and Western Michigan since 2022.

Presiding Bishop Michael B. Curry’s office acknowledged the request for an investigation under Title IV of the canons, and issued a statement saying: “Please be assured that these allegations are being taken seriously, and that Bishop Curry has been in contact with Bishop Singh’s sons and his ex-spouse during the past several months.”

“It is my firm belief and hope that the investigation will determine that I have not broken my vows to the church and my adherence to the canons,” Singh said in a message to…

View Cache

Behind The Duggar Smile: Family’s Troubling Connection To Bill Gothard’s IBLP Uncovered

OAK BROOK (IL)
Religion Unplugged - The Media Project - Institute for Nonprofit News [Dallas TX]

June 22, 2023

By Princess Jones

Read original article

(REVIEW) America got a glimpse of the happy Duggar family in an hour-long special, “14 Kids and Counting,” way back in 2004. They kept having kids, soaking up viral fame in the reality TV era and raising questions about big families, home schooling and Christianity in America.

Americans would become so captivated by this well-behaved Christian family that 10 seasons of “19 Kids and Counting” would showcase the happy family. However, behind the smiling faces were dark secrets and a religion that resembled a cult. These were the real lives of the Duggar children, who are now growing up and starting families of their own. 

“Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets” is the latest docuseries from Amazon Prime that focuses on the family and its connections to the nonprofit organization Institute in Basic Life Principles, created by an unordained teacher named Bill Gothard, who was based in the Chicago suburb of…

View Cache

BREAKING: Bill Gothard Victim Names Witness to Grooming—Duggar Relative, Pastor David Waller

FORT WORTH (TX)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

June 30, 2023

By Rebecca Hopkins

Read original article

A 76-year-old Bill Gothard reportedly told teenager Emily Anderson that he loved her, put a hand on her thigh, then took her by the hand and escorted her up to his office. All the while, a man was there, working on his computer and witnessing Gothard’s grooming for abuse, Anderson says.

For the first time, Anderson, an alleged victim of Gothard’s sexual abuse, is publicly naming the male witness she described in the hit Amazon docuseries “Happy Shiny People.” The witness is David Waller, brother-in-law to disgraced reality TV star Josh Duggar, Anderson wrote yesterday on her Thriving Forward Facebook page. Waller’s wife, Priscilla Waller, is the sister of Josh Duggar’s wife, Anna Duggar.

Waller also is a pastor at Fairpark Baptist Church, an Independent Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas.

Anderson hadn’t released Waller’s name for the documentary, which was the “biggest…

View Cache

Bishop Olson ‘grateful’ after Texas court dismisses nuns’ lawsuit

FORT WORTH (TX)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

June 30, 2023

By The Pillar

Read original article

A judge in Texas has ruled that a district court does not have jurisdiction to hear a lawsuit brought by a monastery of Carmelite nuns against Bishop Michael Olson of the Diocese of Fort Worth.

The decision, handed down on Friday, June 30, ruled that the nuns’ suit is “dismissed for want of subject-matter jurisdiction.” Responding to the decision, Bishop Olson said in a statement that he is “grateful.” 

“The decision vindicates our steadfast belief that this is a private Church matter that does not belong in the courts,” Bishop Olson. “This matter will continue to proceed through an established canonical process.”

The bishop also asked “the faithful for their continued prayers for the Diocese, Mother Teresa Agnes, and all of the nuns at the monastery.” 

The civil attorney acting for the sisters, Matthew Bobo, said he would appeal the decision dismissing the case on which the sisters accused the…

View Cache

Former prioress in Forth Worth admits to sexual misconduct in recording, names priest

FORT WORTH (TX)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

June 28, 2023

By Peter Pinedo

Read original article

In the latest development in the ongoing dispute between a Texas Carmelite monastery and the Diocese of Fort Worth, Texas, former prioress Theresa Gerlach admitted to sexual misconduct and identified the priest involved as “Father Bernard Marie” in an audio recording played in court Tuesday.

Though Gerlach identified the man involved as a member of the Transalpine Redemptorists religious order, CNA has learned that the man allegedly involved is a priest from the Diocese of Raleigh by the name of Father Philip Johnson, who spent time with the Redemptorists but returned back to his home diocese in May.

The audio clip containing Gerlach’s admission was played in the diocese’s testimony Tuesday in the Texas 67th District Court in Tarrant County. 

Who is Father Bernard Marie? 

Though Gerlach said Father Bernard Marie is a member of the Transalpine Redemptorists, the order claims he is a diocesan priest from Raleigh, North Carolina,…

View Cache

New Mexico U.S. Attorney Indicts Former Catholic Priest; SNAP Responds

SANTA FE (NM)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

June 30, 2023

By Zach Hiner

Read original article

A Roman Catholic priest who had been dismissed from his parish church in Santa Fe last year was arrested Thursday on federal charges of sexually assaulting a young boy in 2012.

Fr. Daniel M. Balizan, 61, ordained in 1989, a former pastor at Santa Maria de la Paz Catholic Community in Santa Fe, was indicted last week by a federal grand jury for a reported case of child sexual abuse in August and September of 2012, according to the indictment. Court documents state that he allegedly used text messages to coerce and entice a minor victim, identified as John Doe in court documents, to engage in sexual activity with him. It is common knowledge that methods of grooming victims encompass a wide variety of tactics that include virtual communication apps, social media, and instant messaging, Balizan also used Facebook.

We stand with the…

View Cache

Former New Mexico priest indicted on child sex abuse charges

SANTA FE (NM)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

June 30, 2023

By Tyler Arnold

Read original article

A former priest for the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, New Mexico, was indicted on charges that he allegedly sexually abused a minor, according to a Thursday news release from the U.S. Department of Justice.

Daniel Balizan, who had served as a priest in at least eight New Mexico parishes dating to 1989, is accused of coercing and enticing a child under the age of 18 to engage in sexual activity, according to the news release. If convicted, the 61-year-old would face a minimum of 10 years in prison.

The child Balizan is accused of victimizing is listed under the pseudonym John Doe. The age of the alleged victim has not been released.

“Abusing children under the veil of religious authority is an attack on the faith itself,” U.S. Attorney Alexander M.M. Uballez said in a statement. “I am humbled by the bravery of John Doe. With our partners, we will…

View Cache