ABUSE TRACKER

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

March 21, 2024

Grammy-winning Florida pastor restored to ministry after abuse accusations retracted

VENICE (FL)
Detroit Catholic [Archdiocese of Detroit MI]

March 20, 2024

By Gina Christian

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A Florida priest and Grammy-winning recording artist has been restored to ministry after accusations of alleged sexual misconduct with a minor were retracted by the accuser.

Father Jerome Kaywell, pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Punta Gorda, Florida, “has been returned to ministry, effective immediately” and his “good name … restored,” said Bishop Frank J. Dewane of Venice, Florida, in a March 14 letter to parishioners.

Father Kaywell had been placed on administrative leave in January after the diocese had received notice from an unspecified law firm that the popular priest had allegedly engaged in misconduct “with someone who was a minor at the time … in the Winter of 2013/2014.”

Father Kaywell had maintained his innocence throughout the investigation, which in accord with diocesan safe environment policy included notification of the State Attorney’s office and the engagement of an independent investigator.

However, on Feb. 13 the diocese received word…

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Ex-priest charged with sexual abuse while working at Catholic church in Burnaby

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
Burnaby Now [Vancouver, BC, Canada]

March 20, 2024

By Cornelia Naylor

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Ex-Catholic priest Paul J. Blancard, 84, was charged in September with ‘indecent assault’ on a female in Burnaby between May 1, 1967 and Oct. 15, 1970, when he was working at St. Helen’s Parish in Burnaby.

An ex-priest who has already served a sentence for molesting young girls on Vancouver Island has now been charged with sexual abuse during his time at a Catholic church in Burnaby 57 years ago.

Paul J. Blancard, 84, made a video appearance in B.C. provincial court in Vancouver last week after being charged in September with “indecent assault” on a female in Burnaby between May 1, 1967 and Oct. 15, 1970, according to the court registry.

The Archdiocese of Vancouver confirmed Blancard was an assistant pastor at St. Helen’s Parish in Burnaby during that time.

His next court date is scheduled for April 16.

The victim’s name is protected by a publication ban.

The…

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Man Abused by Priest Confronts New Orleans, Louisiana Archbishop Outside Church

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
KTDY [Lafayette LA]

March 19, 2024

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[Includes video]

A man in New Orleans, Louisiana waited outside of a church for Archbishop Gregory Aymond to arrive so that he could plead for the release of documents surrounding alleged abuse from within the church, which he says he was abused in.

WDSU was there to catch the dramatic footage that shows Aaron Hebert passionately speaking to Archbishop Aymond and you can hear by the tone in his voice that Hebert wants closure.

According to the report, Aaron Hebert was allegedly abused by Lawerence Heckler while as a child and the abuse allegedly happened in the church where he confronted the Archbishop, St. Josephs in Gretna.

Hebert hopes that his story and his voice will prevent others from going through what he went through as a kid, but WDSU reports that he doesn’t have much faith in Archbishop Aymond.

In all, Hebert does not feel confident that documents in…

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Former deacon, whose son was abused by priest, excommunicated by Diocese of Lafayette

LAFAYETTE (LA)
KADN - Fox 15 [Lafayette LA]

March 20, 2024

By Jim Hummel

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Scott Peyton, a former deacon whose son was molested by a priest he served alongside in St. Landry Parish, has been excommunicated by Lafayette Bishop J. Douglas Deshotel.

Peyton served as a deacon in the diocese until December 2023. That’s when he resigned citing “distressing revelations regarding sexual abuse scandals involving members of the clergy.”

“The magnitude of these revelations has deeply shaken my faith and trust in the institution to which I have dedicated a significant portion of my life,” Peyton wrote in his resignation letter to Bishop Deshotel. “This decision is not a rejection of my faith in God or my commitment to living a life guided by Christian principles. Instead, it reflects a conscientious objection to the way the Church has handled cases of sexual abuse, and a desire to distance myself from an institution that, currently, falls short of the values it professes.”

In 2019, Father…

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Abuse victims hope to address bankruptcy court; archbishop will attend

BALTIMORE (MD)
Catholic Review - Archdiocese of Baltimore [Baltimore MD]

March 20, 2024

By Christopher Gunty

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The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors in the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s Chapter 11 reorganization case has asked bankruptcy court Judge Michelle M. Harner to allow victims of clergy abuse to present survivor statements at upcoming hearings in April and May. 

Archbishop William E. Lori told the Catholic Review he will attend both court sessions. He said the archdiocese was in favor of the victim-survivors having a chance to present their stories.

“I don’t think that very many of us can really understand the depth of pain suffered by victim-survivors,” the archbishop said. “I think it’s important for me and for church leaders continually to hear from victim-survivors about what happened in their life and what that brought about in their lives. 

“I also think it’s a moment when victim-survivors experience a moment of empowerment and justice. And, I think their testimonies will have a big impact on my mind and…

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Catholic University to Honor Prominent Advocate for Abuse Survivors

WASHINGTON (DC)
OSV News [Huntington IN]

March 20, 2024

By Lauretta Brown

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The Catholic University of America in Washington announced March 20 that Teresa Pitt Green, a writer and speaker who promotes healing for survivors of abuse and their families in the church, would receive an honorary doctoral degree at its May 11 commencement ceremony.

She thanked Catholic University on X, formerly known as Twitter, and called the news of the honorary doctorate “one of the happiest moments” of her life.

Pitt Green is herself a survivor of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy and has been an advocate for survivors for more than 20 years, authoring several books and speaking numerous times to the U.S. bishops on the issue.

She is the co-founder of Spirit Fire, a Christian restorative justice initiative and fellowship of survivors of abuse in the church. She is also vice president of Healing and Recovery Ministries at St. Edmund’s Retreat on Enders Island, Mystic, Connecticut, and she is…

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Abuse crises foster ‘ecumenical realism’ in Germany

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

March 21, 2024

By Tom Heneghan

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The title of a new report – “More visibility in unity and more reconciliation in diversity” – reflected a sober approach.

Germany’s Catholic and Protestant Churches published a joint report last week calling for a more realistic approach to ecumenism.

The report admitted that the historic ecumenical goal of a shared Eucharist remains a distant prospect, instead arguing that rather than setting specific targets the Churches should focus on a “process-oriented ecumenism”.

While Christians of both confessions hope for concrete reforms, the report said, “no breakthroughs are to be expected in the near future”.

The title of the report – “More visibility in unity and more reconciliation in diversity” – reflected its sober approach. The text included no further targets, saying it would be better to focus on similarities than differences.

“Despite differences in some individual ethical issues that have become apparent in the Catholic-Protestant dialogue, there is broad…

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Janet E. Paterson: June 23, 1943 - March 18, 2024

Janet E. Patterson | 1943 – 2024 | Obituary

WICHITA (KS)
Elliott Mortuary & Crematory [Hutchinson KS]

March 18, 2024

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Janet Ellen Patterson, 80, formerly of Conway Springs, died March 18, 2024, at Pleasant View Home, Inman.  She was born June 23, 1943, in Conway Springs, to John Francis and Catherine Virginia (Armour) Andra.

Janet attended school in Conway Springs, and received both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in education.  She taught over 32 years in many locations including Jamaica, St. Margaret Mary and Holy Savior, both in Wichita, St. Robert Bellarmine in Burbank, California, St. Joseph in Conway Springs, and retired from Conway Springs High School as the English and French teacher. She also served many years as the school’s Scholar’s Bowl coach.  Janet enjoyed collecting and polishing rocks, doing puzzles, and spending time with family.  She was an advocate for individuals who were victims of clergy abuse, and helped many people across the country. 

On December 27, 1966, she married Horace E. Patterson, at St. Joseph Catholic Church,…

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March 20, 2024

Polygamous sect member pleads guilty in scheme to orchestrate sexual acts involving children

PHOENIX (AZ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 19, 2024

By Jacques Billeaud

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A businessman pleaded guilty Tuesday to conspiring with the leader of an offshoot polygamous sect near the Arizona-Utah border to transport underage girls across state lines, making him the first man to be convicted in what authorities say was a scheme to orchestrate sexual acts involving children.

Moroni Johnson, who faces 10 years to life in prison, acknowledged that he participated in a scheme to transport four girls under the age of 18 for sexual activity. Authorities say the conspiracy between the 53-year-old Johnson and the sect’s leader, self-proclaimed prophet Samuel Bateman, occurred over a three-year period ending in September 2022.

Authorities say Bateman had created a sprawling network spanning at least four states as he tried to start an offshoot of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, which historically has been based in the neighboring communities of Colorado City, Arizona, and Hildale, Utah. He and his…

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The first outside legal analyses of Vatican’s ‘trial of the century’ are in, and they’re critical

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

March 19, 2024

By Nicole Winfield

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Several prominent lawyers have published stinging academic critiques and legal opinions about the Vatican’s recently concluded “trial of the century,” highlighting violations of basic defense rights and rule of law norms that they warn could have consequences for the Holy See going forward.

The opinions cite Pope Francis’ role in the trial, since he secretly changed Vatican law four times during the investigation to benefit prosecutors. And they call into question the independence and impartiality of the tribunal since its judges swear obedience to Francis, who can hire and fire them at will.

The critiques underscore the growing problems on the international stage for the peculiar microstate that the Holy See calls home: an absolute monarchy where Francis wields supreme legislative, executive and judicial power.

The legal opinions are likely to feature in the appeals within the Vatican court system of the nine people who were convicted in December of several financial crimes…

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Affidavit sheds light on charges against Tell City pastor

TELL CITY (IN)
WEHT-TV [Evansville IN]

March 18, 2024

By Zach McKnight

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An affidavit is shedding more light on charges accusing a Tell City pastor of sexual misconduct with a minor.

Last week, Errol Wright was arrested and charged with multiple counts of sexual misconduct with a minor, child seduction and child solicitation.

Tell City residents “shocked” following arrest of local pastor

Recently released court documents show the incidents allegedly took place over a three-year period. The documents also show Wright was a girls’ soccer coach at Tell City High School and when rumors of an inappropriate relationship with an underage girl surfaced, the school said Wright could not be around the girls unless another adult was present. The documents also show the school reported its suspicions to the Indiana Department of Child Services. It is not known what action the department took. The documents also show the underage female claimed after one of her sexual encounters with Wright,…

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Affidavit reveals new details after arrest of Tell City pastor

TELL CITY (IN)
14 News [Evansville, IN]

March 18, 2024

By Aaron Chatman and Liz DeSantis

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A newly released affidavit has revealed new details after the pastor of Community Christian Church was arrested and accused of sexual misconduct.

In February, detectives say a victim went to the Tell City Police Department accusing 48-year-old Errol Wright of sexually abusing her when she was under the age of 18.

According to the affidavit, the victim claims she and Wright started having sexual intercourse when she was 15-years-old and would have sex up to three times per week for years.

The victim told police that they had intercourse in several different places, including at the Christian Community Church numerous times.

Police say Wright promised the victim he would leave his wife for her, but she says she realized that was a lie and he was using her for sex.

Over a period of several years, the victim reportedly told police she believed Wright had sexual intercourse…

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Sheffield priest in court to face 34 sexual abuse charges

SHEFFIELD (UNITED KINGDOM)
Bracknell News [Reading, England]

March 18, 2024

By PA News Agency

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A priest who led an evangelical movement in the 1980s and 1990s has appeared in court to face multiple allegations of sexual offences against former members of a church congregation.

The Reverend Christopher Brain led the movement called the Nine O’Clock Service in Sheffield between 1986 and 1995.

Brain appeared at Sheffield Magistrates’ Court for a four-minute hearing on Monday where he faced a total of 34 charges in relation to 11 women.

The charges relate to allegations of sexual offences committed against women who had joined the movement, police have said.

Brain, now 66, of Park Road, Wilmslow, Cheshire, is charged with one count of rape and 33 counts of indecent assault, alleged to have been committed between 1981 and 1995.

The Nine O’Clock Service was initially held at St Thomas’s Church, in the Crookes area of Sheffield, before moving to Ponds Forge sport complex in the city centre.

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Senate orders arrest of Pastor Apollo Quiboloy

DAVAO CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Minda News [Mindinao, PH]

March 19, 2024

By Antonio L. Colina IV

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Embattled Pastor Apollo C. Quiboloy, the self-appointed “Son of God” and founder of Kingdom of Jesus Christ, was ordered arrested by the Senate on Tuesday, March 19, for snubbing committee hearings.

The Senate Committee on Women, Children, Family Relations and Gender Equality, chaired by Senator Risa Hontiveros, had summoned Quiboloy to attend its investigation on allegations of human trafficking and sexual abuse, but he defied it.

Senate President Miguel “Migz” F. Zubiri signed the arrest order for Quiboloy, who will be detained at the Senate.

Earlier, Hontiveros cited Quiboloy in contempt for his non-appearance during committee hearings on January 23, February 19, and March 5, despite being served with subpoenas, and ordered his arrest.

In a Facebook live, Hontiveros said the arrest order can be enforced anytime and that its issuance is timely as the country observes the National Women’s Month.

Hontiveros thanked Zubiri for signing the arrest order, saying…

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Michigan priest sentenced to jail for embezzling $780K from retired priests

LANSING (MI)
WDIV-TV, NBC-4, Click on Detroit [Detroit MI]

March 18, 2024

By Dane Kelly

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Will also have to pay restitution to victims’ families

A Michigan priest was sentenced to four to 20 years incarceration Monday, March 18.

A jury in Clinton County returned guilty verdicts on the charges against David Rosenberg, 72, of DeWitt, for embezzling or stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from retired priests. He was originally charged in Dec. 2022.

Rosenberg will also have to pay restitution to the victims’ families.

According to authorities, Rosenberg was employed as Director of the Lansing Catholic Diocese’s St. Francis Retreat Center in DeWitt between 2015 and 2021. He embezzled or stole approximately $780,000 from three priests and gave the stolen funds to his charitable foundation, FaithFirst, formerly the Rosenberg Family Corporation. The 95-acre Retreat Center property includes apartments that house retired priests. The three victims resided at the Retreat Center apartments until their deaths.

In February, he…

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Michigan priest who stole from priests gets prison term

LANSING (MI)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

March 18, 2024

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A Michigan priest was sentenced to at least four years in prison Monday, one month after a jury found he stole more than $830,000 from elderly priests for whom he supposedly helped to care.

Fr. David Rosenberg’s prison sentence came after has was convicted Feb. 9 on eight felony counts, including three felony counts of embezzlement from a vulnerable adult of more than $100,000. The priest will also be ordered later this year to make restitution, but the amount has not yet been determined.

While Judge Cori Barkman declined to impose a lengthy sentence requested by prosecutors, she told the priest in court March 18 that his lack of remorse was “egregious and even heinous.”

The priest retains his presbyteral faculties, but has been directed by the Lansing diocese not to engage in public ministry.

Rosenberg, 72, was charged in December 2022 with multiple counts of criminal embezzlement, committed against…

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My Priest Tried to Kill Me

CINCINNATI (OH)
Newsweek [New York NY]

March 20, 2024

By Gregory Flannery

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Father Earl Bierman used to tell people that, in 30 years as a teacher, I was the only student he ever threw out of class. It was because I argued with him about the Vietnam War.

Twenty years later, he tried to kill me.

The failed murder-suicide attempt shocked Greater Cincinnati. A Catholic priest caught on tape threatening to shoot a former student and then kill himself.

Echoes of Father Bierman’s demented voice can still be heard 30 years later in Catholic churches across the United States and beyond.

In 1992, child sexual abuse by priests was a new phenomenon. The blockbuster book Lead Us Not into Temptation by Jason Berry documented 400 cases of sexual abuse by priests in the United States.

The book didn’t surprise me. I knew a priest who had committed hundreds of such crimes all by himself.

Bierman had taught my health and religion classes at Covington…

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Critic says report paid for by Church about French priest is ‘not justice’

(CANADA)
APTN - Aboriginal Peoples Television Network [Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada]

March 19, 2024

By Kathleen Martens

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Lieve Halsberghe says Oblate Safeguarding Commission report ‘unworthy of a democracy’

A report that reviews a Catholic order’s handling of child sexual abuse allegations against one of its priests in Nunavut is being dismissed as nothing but propaganda by one of its staunchest critics.

“This report is not justice,” says Lieve Halsberghe, a researcher for BishopAccountability.org. “The church permits herself to create a parallel system they call justice, but which it is not.

“It is unworthy of a democracy that the church is allowed to investigate” itself.

The Oblates say the report, released Tuesday, is intended to provide a form of justice not available through the courts. France has refused to extradite Rivoire to face charges in Canada.

The Oblate Safeguarding Commission report commissioned by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate a year ago was released Monday and written by retired Quebec judge Andre Denis.

Denis says he concluded, based on the…

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March 19, 2024

Paying the costs of sexual abuse

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday [Melville NY]

March 16, 2024

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The allegations of child sexual abuse against former Bay Shore teacher Thomas Bernagozzi are enormous. So are the potential costs for that school district, which will be on the hook for any civil damages his victims may win in the 45 cases filed under the state Child Victims Act.

The legislation enacted in 2019 created a legal window to allow anyone who was abused years ago when they were children to file for compensation. Bay Shore faces more lawsuits under this act than any Long Island school district. The window for filing these lawsuits closed in 2021.

Unsurprisingly, that extraordinary change in the law had consequences that only now are being quantified. It allowed lawsuits that otherwise would have been barred because of time limits to be filed against schools, nonprofit organizations and religious groups like the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rockville Centre, which recently filed for bankruptcy because of…

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Brazil basilica will keep murals created by priest accused of sex abuse

APARECIDA (BRAZIL)
Angelus - Archdiocese of Los Angeles [Los Angeles CA]

March 19, 2024

By Eduardo Campos Lima

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While church groups in different nations have been discussing what to do with Father Marko Rupnik‘s works after sex abuse allegations against him came to light, Brazil’s Sanctuary of Our Lady of Aparecida, the major Catholic shrine in the South American country, has apparently decided with no debate it will not halt the installation of giant murals produced by Centro Aletti, where Father Rupnik is still listed as director of spiritual art and theology atelier.

During a program that was aired Feb. 28 by TV Aparecida, owned by the sanctuary, Redemptorist Father Eduardo Catalfo, the shrine’s rector, along with Aparecida’s administrator, Father Fábio Evaristo, announced the basilica’s new south facade will be inaugurated May 11.

That was the second of the temple’s four facades to be covered with Father Rupnik’s mosaics depicting biblical scenes. The north facade — Father Rupnik’s largest work in the whole…

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Report concludes Oblate abused Nunavut children

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

March 19, 2024

By Quinton Amundsen

Read original article

[See the report.]

Following an exhaustive investigation, retired Superior Court of Quebec Justice André Denis concluded French priest Joannès Rivoire was guilty of sexually assaulting five minors in Naujaat, Nunavut, between 1968 and 1970, and one in Arviat and Whale Cove, Nunavut, between 1974 and 1979.

Denis also found that Rivoire departed Canada on Jan. 16, 1993, “hiding this terrible reality” from his Oblates of Mary Immaculate (OMI) superiors and Churchill-Hudson Bay Bishop Reynald Rouleau. Thus, “the Oblates in Canada and the ecclesiastical authorities in Nunavut neither concealed nor organized Joannès Rivoire’s ‘flight’ from Canada to France in 1993, and they too were victims of his duplicity and prevarication” when Rivoire told his order he needed to return to his home country to care for his ailing parents.

Between Jan. 20 and Feb. 28, 1993, four plaintiffs visited the RCMP detachment in Nunavut to sign a statement accusing Rivoire of…

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Statement of the Diocese of Toledo Announcing Dismissal from the Clerical State of Michael Zacharias

TOLEDO (OH)
Diocese of Toledo [Toledo OH]

March 18, 2024

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At the conclusion of the federal trial and conviction of Michael Zacharias, the Diocese of Toledo, in accord with Canon (Church) Law, had transmitted the case to the Holy See along with the request to the Holy Father to impose the penalty of direct dismissal from the clerical state (returning him to the lay state). The Holy Father alone has the authority to impose this penalty of direct dismissal from the clerical state when the case warrants such an action.

The Diocese was recently informed that the Holy Father has imposed upon Zacharias the perpetual penalty of direct dismissal from the clerical state (returning him to the lay state), for the sexual abuse of minors and other reprehensible immoral behavior.

Bishop Daniel E. Thomas reiterated, “with the imposition of this penalty, it is my hope and prayer that healing for victims may continue and justice be restored, as we remain vigilant…

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Pope Francis laicizes Toledo priest after life sentence for sexual abuse of minors

TOLEDO (OH)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

March 19, 2024

By Daniel Payne

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Pope Francis has laicized an Ohio priest after the clergyman received a life sentence in prison for the sexual abuse of minors, the Diocese of Toledo said this week. 

Michael Zacharias, 57, was convicted on five counts of sex trafficking by a federal jury in the Northern District of Ohio last May. His crimes, committed between 1999 and 2020, involved three victims, two of whom were minors when Zacharias began abusing them.

Upon his conviction, he faced a minimum of 15 years in prison. The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) said in November that the then-priest received a life sentence for the crimes. 

In a press release on Monday, the Diocese of Toledo said that following Zacharias’ convection, diocesan officials “had transmitted the case to the Holy See along with the request to the Holy Father to impose the penalty of direct dismissal from…

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Punta Gorda Catholic priest cleared of child sexual abuse allegations

VENICE (FL)
WBBH - NBC 2 [Fort Myers FL]

March 19, 2024

By Summerleigh Stones

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A Punta Gorda priest has been cleared and will not be charged after the alleged victim withdrew their claims of child sexual abuse, according to a new statement.

In February, the Rev. Jerome Kaywell, at Sacred Heart Punta Gorda, was accused of sexual misconduct with a minor in the winter of 2013/2014.

Throughout the investigation, the Diocese of Venice stated that Father Kaywell maintained his innocence and denied the allegations.

A new statement claims that the allegations were taken seriously and acted upon in accord with the Diocesan Policy for the Protection of Children and Vulnerable Adults.

Due to the case involving a minor, the State Attorney’s Office was also notified.

On Feb. 13, the Diocese received a letter from the Law firm representing the alleged victim. The letter stated, “The alleged victim withdrew his allegation, and an apology was written by the accuser, declaring it was a false memory.”

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Catholic abuse survivors: Baltimore archbishop to listen in court if victims testify

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

March 19, 2024

By Alex Mann and Jonathan M. Pitts

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Survivors of sexual abuse committed by clergy in the Archdiocese of Baltimore may have an opportunity to describe their suffering in bankruptcy court, and say they struck an agreement with the church to have Archbishop William Lori there to hear them.

The committee assigned to represent all survivors of clergy abuse in the diocese’s bankruptcy case raised the prospect of at least two days of grueling victim testimony in a court filing Friday, saying it would serve as an opportunity to humanize the technical, money-oriented proceedings.

It also would restore to survivors the chance to share their stories in a courtroom, an option lost when the church declared bankruptcy in September, effectively side-stepping a new state law that eliminated time limits for lawsuits stemming from child sex abuse, the committee’s attorneys wrote.

The request for the victims’ testimony needs the approval of U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michelle M. Harner, who is presiding…

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Archdiocese of Chicago sat on or lost child sexual abuse accusation, didn’t question priest about allegation specifics, accused priest says

CHICAGO (IL)
Noir News [Chicago IL]

March 19, 2024

By Iain Carlos

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Fr. Daniel McCarthy said he was never directly questioned about the details of child sexual abuse allegations leveled against him, and one of the allegations wasn’t investigated for about a year.

By the accused priest’s telling, an Archdiocese of Chicago investigation of child sexual abuse had big problems.

Fr. Daniel McCarthy said that during an Archdiocese investigation of child sexual abuse allegations leveled against him, he was never directly questioned about the specifics of the accusations. And despite its child safety policy to remove a priest from his parish until it completes an investigation, the Archdiocese knew about an abuse accusation against McCarthy for around a year before it removed him from Saint Elizabeth of the Trinity Parish or told the public about the allegations.

Noir could not obtain a document verifying McCarthy’s claims, but sources familiar with the Archdiocese’s investigative process confirmed parts of his recollection. The Archdiocese did not…

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Retired Quebec judge says he believes sexual abuse allegations against former Nunavut priest

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

March 19, 2024

By Emma Tranter and Tessa Vikander

Read original article

[See the report.]

Canadian Oblates commissioned Andre Denis to investigate handling of allegations against Johannes Rivoire

A retired Quebec Superior Court judge, in a report commissioned by the Canadian Oblates, says he believes allegations made against former Nunavut priest Johannes Rivoire of sexually abusing children in the territory are true. 

The report, written by Andre Denis, also suggests the Catholic church was not aware of the allegations made against Rivoire at the time because the RCMP didn’t notify them. 

“Rivoire did not tell the whole truth to his superiors, to his confrères, to the Inuit for whom he had pastoral responsibility, and he himself denies a reality that has nevertheless been demonstrated,” Denis wrote in a 57-page report released Tuesday. 

Denis’s report is not a legal finding of guilt. His investigation makes conclusions based on a “preponderance of evidence,” and not “proof beyond a reasonable doubt.”

Rivoire, an Oblate priest…

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The members of the Southern Cross province of the Oblates, 2018. In the circle, Rafael Fleitas López.

From Paraguay to Mexico, a new route for the risk of sexual abuse

TEHUANTEPEC (MEXICO)
Los Ángeles Press [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

March 19, 2024

By Rodolfo Soriano-Núñez

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[Photo above: The members of the Southern Cross province of the Oblates, 2018. In the circle, Rafael Fleitas López.]

Rafael Fleitas López, a priest accused of sexual abuse in Paraguay, has been received in Mexico by the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a Catholic religious order.

Fleitas López could restart his career as a priest in the Mexican town of Magdalena Tequisistlán, despite having been accused of sexual abuse in Paraguay.

Religion and public life: The Oblates would have sent Fleitas López to the Mexican Rougier Center for a three-month therapy to prevent sexual abuse, so the bishop of Tehuantepec, Mexico accepted him.

This is a story about the way in which a Catholic religious order with a global presence, can move with relative ease a Paraguayan priest accused of sexual abuse in his country and send him to Mexico, to a small rural town of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec.

It is…

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Church unaware of allegations against Rivoire, independent Oblate review says

(CANADA)
Nunatsiaq News [Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada]

March 19, 2024

Read original article

[See the report.]

Safeguarding commission concludes Rev. Johannes Rivoire sexually abused 5 Inuit children, should be kicked out of order

Evidence gathered by a retired Quebec judge “overwhelmingly demonstrates” Rev. Johannes Rivoire sexually assaulted five Inuit children between 1968 and 1979.

André Denis, a former Quebec superior court judge, spent 10 months leading the Oblate Safeguarding Commission. It was created by the religious order to investigate allegations against Rivoire and possible coverups by the church and RCMP.

“My conclusion is that Johannes Rivoire was guilty of sexual abuse of Inuit children,” Denis wrote in the safeguarding commission’s report, which was released Tuesday.

“I can affirm that the Oblates in France did everything in their power to convince him to return to Canada and answer for his actions. To no avail.”

The Oblates of Canada commissioned Denis to provide an “independent perspective” on the circumstances of Rivoire’s 1993 departure from Canada…

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Oblates of Mary Immaculate Receive Report on the Oblate Safeguarding Commission

(CANADA)
OMI Lacombe Canada - Oblates of Mary Immaculate [Ottawa, Ontario, Canada]

March 19, 2024

Read original article

[See the report.]

Following a commitment to independently review the congregation’s response to historical allegations of sexual abuse against Joannès Rivoire in present-day Nunavut, including the circumstances under which he left Canada, OMI Lacombe Canada and the Oblates of the Province of France (the “Oblates”) appointed Justice André Denis to lead the Oblate Safeguarding Commission.

The commission aimed to better understand how these allegations were addressed by Oblates, listen to victims and their families, and identify any improvements to Oblate governance, policies and processes that can safeguard children and ensure a high level of accountability. On March 15, 2024, the Oblate Safeguarding Commission issued its final report.

The report found that the allegations made against Joannès Rivoire were well-founded.

“I wish to thank Justice Denis for his thorough, independent report and to apologize to anyone who was harmed by an Oblate,” said Fr. Ken Thorson, Provincial for OMI Lacombe…

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Oblates of Mary Immaculate Receive Report on the Oblate Safeguarding Commission

(CANADA)
OMI Lacombe Canada - Oblates of Mary Immaculate [Ottawa, Ontario, Canada]

March 19, 2024

By Fr. Ken Thorson OMI and Fr. Renaud Saliba OMI

Read original article

Congregation thanks Justice André Denis for independent review, stands in solidarity with victims and survivors of abuse

The Oblates of Mary Immaculate of OMI Lacombe Canada and the Province of France (the “Oblates”) wish to thank Justice André Denis for completing a thorough, independent review of historical allegations against Joannès Rivoire, including the circumstances under which he left Canada. The commission aimed to better understand how these allegations were addressed by Oblates, listen to victims and their families and identify any improvements to Oblate governance, policies and processes that can safeguard children and ensure a high level of accountability.

Justice Denis concluded that on the ‘preponderance of evidence,’ Joannès Rivoire was guilty of sexually assaulting five minor children in Naujaat, Nunavut, between 1968 and 1970, and one minor child in Arviat and Whale Cove, Nunavut, between 1974 and 1979.

We accept the report’s conclusions with a heavy heart. We wish…

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Review of priest accused of sexual assaults in Nunavut finds Oblates unaware

(CANADA)
The Canadian Press [Toronto, Canada]

March 19, 2024

By Kelly Geraldine Malone

Read original article

An independent review of a priest accused of sexually abusing Inuit children in Nunavut says his Catholic order wasn’t aware of the allegations when he returned to France.

Retired Superior Court justice André Denis led the review into 93-year-old Johannes Rivoire.

Denis found the Oblates of Mary Immaculate didn’t know Rivoire was being investigated by Canadian police when he arrived in France in 1993, and the religious order was not contacted by RCMP when charges were laid five years later. 

The review says the Oblates in France learned of the charges through a news report in 2013.

“Rivoire did not tell the whole truth to his superiors, to his confrères, to the Inuit for whom he had pastoral responsibility, and he himself denies a reality that has nevertheless been demonstrated,” Denis says in his final report released Tuesday.

Rivoire refused to return to Canada after an arrest warrant was issued…

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Joannes Rivoire OMI as a young priest in Canada’s Arctic in this undated photo. Photo courtesy: Lieve Halsberghe

Retired judge concludes Catholic priest Rivoire sexually abused children in Nunavut

(CANADA)
APTN - Aboriginal Peoples Television Network [Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada]

March 19, 2024

By Kathleen Martens

Read original article

The judge’s conclusion on Rivoire’s guilt appears to be outside the mandate he signed to review the Oblates’ policies and processes.

[Photo above: Joannes Rivoire as a young priest in Canada’s Arctic in this undated photo. Photo courtesy: Lieve Halsberghe]

A retired Quebec judge has concluded what a Canadian court has not been able to, which is that a Catholic priest sexually assaulted six children in Nunavut between 1968 and 1979.

André Denis was hired by the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate Lacombe in 2023 to review the order’s handling of criminal accusations against Joannes Rivoire, who spent 30 years in Nunavut.

Along with concluding Rivoire is guilty, Denis says the now 93-year-old French citizen hid the allegations of child abuse from his superiors.

“The conclusions I reach…are based on the preponderance of evidence gathered during this investigation, not on proof beyond a reasonable doubt,” Denis writes in his 61-page Oblate…

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Bankruptcy Court Approves Camden Diocese’s $87.5M Plan for Abuse Victims

CAMDEN (NJ)
Insurance Journal [San Diego CA]

March 18, 2024

By Andrew G. Simpson

Read original article

Almost three-and-one-half years after the Catholic Diocese of Camden, New Jersey filed for bankruptcy citing financial effects from the pandemic and sexual abuse settlements, its Chapter 11 reorganization plan has been approved.

The final plan, the ninth amended proposal, establishes an $87.5 million trust to compensate about 324 survivors of sexual abuse within the diocese. The trust will be funded with $87.5 million from the diocese and related Catholic entities. Insurance policies turned over to the diocese will contribute $30 million.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jerrold N. Poslusny, Jr., in Camden, approved the plan that allows the diocese to pay into the trust over five years and keep operating so it can pay creditors.

The settlement also requires the church to maintain and enhance protocols for the protection of children that were first implemented in 2002.

The plan was approved last April by all classes of creditors and 97%…

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Letter to the Faithful about Bankruptcy Filing

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Diocese of Sacramento [Sacramento CA]

March 16, 2024

By Bishop Jaime Soto

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Dear Friends in Christ:

Last December I shared with you my decision to file a Chapter 11 petition with the United States Bankruptcy Court on behalf of the administrative offices of the Diocese of Sacramento. I will file that petition on Monday, April 1, 2024.

As I shared in the December announcement, the bankruptcy process is the only respectful, and equitable way to address the substantial number of claims by those who have been abused by clergy and other Church Workers. Bankruptcy is a lengthy process, but it provides supervision and transparency for all the parties involved so that an equitable resolution is offered to the victim-survivors of abuse. The court-supervised reorganization will also allow me to sustain the sanctifying, teaching, and charitable work of the Catholic community in Northern California.

The Diocese is creating an easily accessible Chapter 11 Bankruptcy page on its website. On this page you will…

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Catholic Diocese of Sacramento announces date for bankruptcy filing amid sexual abuse lawsuits

SACRAMENTO (CA)
KXTV - ABC 10 [Sacramento CA]

March 18, 2024

By Vicente Vera

Read original article

Catholic Diocese of Sacramento Bishop Jaime Soto said the diocese will petition for Chapter 11 bankruptcy with a filing on April 1.

“As I shared in the December announcement, the bankruptcy process is the only respectful, and equitable way to address the substantial number of claims by those who have been abused by clergy and other Church Workers,” he said in an open letter posted to the diocese website Saturday.

Soto says the bankruptcy will be a lengthy process, but it provides supervision and transparency allowing equitable resolutions for survivors of sexual assault at the hands of clergy.

In 2019, the Diocese of Sacramento published a list of clergy members and church workers credibly accused of sexually assaulting minors and young adults. The list of credibly accused clergy has been updated as of Jan. 31.

Soto says the court-supervised bankruptcy…

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Catholic Diocese of Sacramento to file for bankruptcy next month following sexual abuse lawsuits

SACRAMENTO (CA)
KTXL - Fox 40 [Sacramento CA]

March 18, 2024

By Jacque Porter

Read original article

Bishop Jamie Soto of the Catholic Diocese of Sacramento said the diocese would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on April 1.

The diocese previously announced the plan to file for bankruptcy in December as a result of over 200 lawsuits alleging sexual abuse of minors but did not disclose a date.

“…[T]he bankruptcy process is the only respectful, and equitable way to address the substantial number of claims by those who have been abused by clergy and other Church Workers,” Soto said. “Bankruptcy is a lengthy process, but it provides supervision and transparency for all the parties involved so that an equitable resolution is offered to the victim-survivors of abuse. “

The diocese said it would set up a page for news about the bankruptcy proceedings.

“As this journey of atonement continues, join me in prayer for all the victim-survivors of abuse.   May the Lord of mercies also renew us…

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Former Catholic school student awarded millions in sexual abuse case against principal

ROCHESTER (NY)
WHAM-TV, Ch. 13 [Rochester NY]

March 19, 2024

By Jackie Napier

Read original article

[Includes video.]

A $5.4 million verdict has been awarded to a former Siena Catholic Academy student who alleges he was sexually abused.

The plaintiff testified that he was sexually abused by Father Joseph Grasso, the school’s former principal, for more than a year starting in 2002, when he was just 12 years old. Grasso was the school administrator at the now-closed academy from 1998 to 2004.

In 2019, the New York Child Victims Act extended the statute of limitations for survivors of child sexual abuse to take their cases to court.

“A strong reason I believe the Child Victims Act was passed was to address the fact that many survivors, many victims of childhood sexual assault, do not feel they are able to come forward until adulthood,” says attorney Amy Keller.

Keller says one of those people is her client, referred to as “LG 55 Doe,” who says…

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March 18, 2024

Punta Gorda priest cleared of wrongdoing after allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor

VENICE (FL)
WFTX - Fox 4 [Cape Coral FL]

March 15, 2024

By Alex Orenczuk

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Father Jerry Kaywell has been on administrative leave since late January when the Diocese first learned of the allegations.

The Diocese of Venice Florida has confirmed that Father Jerry Kaywell of Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Punta Gorda, will return to the church following an investigation into allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor.

Kaywell has been on administrative leave since late January when the Diocese received notice that a sexual misconduct with a minor allegation had been filed against him.

Bishop Frank Dewane wrote a letter to Sacred Heart parishioners informing them of the investigation’s findings. According to Dewane, the “alleged victim withdrew his allegation, and an apology was written by the accuser declaring it was a false memory.”

Initially, on January 26, Dewane wrote a letter to Sacred Heart parishioners informing them of the allegation.

The letter also stated an investigation would be conducted by Diocese leaders and community members.

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Twelve victims of sexual abuse in Portugal’s Catholic Church apply for compensation

LISBON (PORTUGAL)
Portugal Resident [Lagoa, Portugal]

March 18, 2024

By Natasha Donn

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Number represents 50% increase on victim applications announced last month

So far 12 victims of sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church in Portugal have applied for compensation, Group VITA – the group set up to implement the findings of an independent report on the subject – has announced.

The figure represents a 50% increase on the number announced a month ago.

According to a note sent to the press by Group VITA, “several people are undergoing regular psychological and/or psychiatric follow-up, and 12 are requesting financial compensation” – a matter that will be analysed in April by the plenary assembly of the Portuguese Bishops’ Conference (CEP).

The group’s coordinator, psychologist Rute Agulhas, gave her progress update to Lusa in which she said VITA has now been contacted by 84 people in its 10 months of operation – this means another five people have come forward in the space of a month. 

“Fifty-two appointments…

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Sheffield priest in court to face 34 sexual abuse charges

SHEFFIELD (UNITED KINGDOM)
Yahoo! [Sunnyvale CA]

March 18, 2024

By Dave Higgens

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A priest who led an evangelical movement in the 1980s and 1990s has appeared in court to face multiple allegations of sexual offences against former members of a church congregation.

The Reverend Christopher Brain led the movement called the Nine O’Clock Service in Sheffield between 1986 and 1995.

Brain appeared at Sheffield Magistrates’ Court for a four-minute hearing on Monday where he faced a total of 34 charges in relation to 11 women.

The charges relate to allegations of sexual offences committed against women who had joined the movement, police have said.

Brain, now 66, of Park Road, Wilmslow, Cheshire, is charged with one count of rape and 33 counts of indecent assault, alleged to have been committed between 1981 and 1995.

The Nine O’Clock Service was initially held at St Thomas’s Church, in the Crookes area of Sheffield, before moving to Ponds Forge sport complex in the city centre.

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‘The Holy Spirit is doing something’ – How Awake aims to support survivors

MILWAUKEE (WI)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

March 18, 2024

By Michelle La Rosa and JD Flynn

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When Sara Larson left her parish job after the Church’s 2018 scandals began to unfold, she knew that God was calling her to do something to help survivors.

At first she started locally, helping to launch the emerging non-profit Awake Milwaukee. But over time, the group’s work with abuse victims and survivors extended well beyond Wisconsin, through opportunities Larson sees as God’s Providence.

Earlier this year, Awake Milwaukee announced it would become Awake, changing its name to reflect a broadening scope of its mission.

Executive director Sara Larson talked with The Pillar about the name change, and about her organization’s work to support survivors, and work for change in the Church.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Can you tell us broadly about the mission of Awake?

Awake’s mission is to awaken our community to the full reality of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, work for transformation, and…

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Jury awards man $5.4M; he claims abuse by Siena principal at Brighton church

ROCHESTER (NY)
WHEC - NBC News10 [Rochester NY]

March 15, 2024

Read original article

A jury has awarded a local man more then $5 million after he said he was sexually assaulted 20 years ago by the principal of the former Siena Catholic Academy in Brighton.

The victim, who is now in his 30s, says the abuse happened when he was in middle school at Siena. He says the principal, Joseph Grasso, sexually assaulted him in St. Thomas More Church next door to the school.

This week, the jury verdict awarded the victim $5.4 million against Grasso. The priest denies the allegations.

Siena Catholic University closed in 2020.

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New Jersey Catholic diocese’s $87.5 mln abuse settlement approved

CAMDEN (NJ)
Reuters [London, England]

March 14, 2024

By Dietrich Knauth

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Deal had been held up by insurance concerns

A U.S. bankruptcy judge on Thursday approved the Diocese of Camden’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy plan, allowing the New Jersey diocese to move ahead with a $87.5 million settlement of sex abuse lawsuits.

The diocese initially had agreed to settle with about 300 sex abuse victims in April 2022, but the deal had been held up in bankruptcy court over objections raised by the diocese’s insurers. U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jerrold Poslusny said at a Thursday court hearing in Camden that recent changes to the deal had resolved all of the insurance-related issues.

The bankruptcy settlement was supported by more than 97% of the abuse claimants who voted on it.

Bishop Dennis Sullivan said in a Thursday statement that the approval would allow the diocese to move on from a “painful” three-year bankruptcy restructuring and “provide substantial reparations to survivors harmed by sinful priests…

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March 17, 2024

What it Really Means When a Bishop Says a Predator is “Outside of the Diocese”

FORT LAUDERDALE (FL)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

March 15, 2024

By Adam Horowitz

Read original article

In our lives, we’re often faced with situations that demand clarity and specific answers. Imagine asking someone where they placed a particular item, only to receive an ambiguous “not around here” in response. Frustrating, isn’t it? This need for specificity isn’t just a preference in trivial matters, but a crucial expectation when the stakes are high, especially concerning safety and justice. This brings us to a disconcerting practice within the Catholic Church involving the handling of child molesting clerics, often shielded by the phrase “outside the diocese.”

The Demand for Specific Answers Concerning Scenarios

When it comes to serious concerns, vagueness isn’t just inadequate; it’s negligent. Let’s delve into a few hypothetical yet relatable scenarios:

Undesirable Answers to Important Questions

• The Missing Car Dilemma: Your spouse inquires about the whereabouts of your car, and you respond with “Not around here.” This answer is evasive and unhelpful, showing a disregard for…

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‘He preyed on the vulnerable’: priest accused of sexually abusing minors in Jerusalem monastery

JERUSALEM (ISRAEL)
ynetnews.com [Rishon LeZion, Israel]

March 17, 2024

By Liran Tamari

Read original article

Notre Dame de Sion, once a sacred haven, now tainted with allegations of misconduct by priest Thiago Cardoso against five minors; mother of victim shares distressing experiences her son endured

Thiago Cardoso, a cleric volunteering at a monastery in Jerusalem’s Ein Kerem neighborhood, faces accusations of multiple instances of sexual misconduct involving minors from the Notre Dame de Sion community.

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Pope: Church’s efforts to safeguard minors must not wane

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic Outlook [Diocese of Parramatta NSW, Australia]

March 17, 2024

By Devin Watkins

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Pope Francis encourages the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors to continue helping the Church safeguard minors and vulnerable people by ensuring a climate of listening and respect.

As the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors holds its plenary assembly, Pope Francis took the opportunity to invite its members to continue strengthening the Church’s efforts to prevent abuse.

The Pope thanked the Commission’s members for their personal and collective witness, and acknowledged that many of them have dedicated their lives to caring for victims of abuse.

He called their work “a courageous vocation that comes from the heart of the Church and helps her to be purified and to grow.”

The Pontifical Commission, he added, has expanded its efforts over the past 10 years in response to his call to “make the Church an increasingly safe place for minors and vulnerable adults.”

Healing fabric of lives

Pope Francis…

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Pope names new officials for Pontifical Commission for Protection of Minors

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

March 15, 2024

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Pope Francis appoints Bishop Luis Manuel Ali Herrerra as Secretary, and Ms Teresa Morris-Kettelkamp as Adjunct Secretary, for the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

Pope Francis has appointed Bishop Luis Manuel Ali Herrera, Auxiliary Bishop of Bogota, as the new Secretary for the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. At the same time, the Holy Father also appointed Ms Teresa Morris Kettelkamp as Adjunct Secretary of the Commission. Both have been serving as Members of the Commission.

The new appointments were announced on Friday by the Holy See Press Office. 

In a statement following the announcement, Cardinal Seán O’Malley, the President of the Commission, said the new appointments mark “a further important step in making our Church an ever-safer place for children and vulnerable persons.”

Cardinal O’Malley said that, while “coming from different backgrounds and possessing unique gifts in safeguarding,” the new Secretary and Adjunct Secretary “share…

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Catholic Diocese of Sacramento sets date for planned bankruptcy protection filing

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Sacramento Bee [Sacramento CA]

March 17, 2024

By Sam Stanton

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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Sacramento, which announced in December that it planned to file for bankruptcy protection because of a crush of sexual abuse lawsuits, will file with the bankruptcy court on April 1.

“The faithful of the diocese are being notified of the filing date at this weekend’s Masses,” diocese spokesman Frank Lienert wrote Saturday in an email to The Bee.

Bishop Jaime Soto announced in December that the diocese would follow the same path as some other ecclesiastical districts in California, including the Diocese of San Francisco, Diocese of Oakland, Diocese of Stockton and Diocese of Santa Rosa.

Soto said in a statement in December that “it is now clear to me that this is the only way available to me to resolve these claims as fairly as possible.”

“There are many victim-survivors awaiting compensation for the reprehensible sins committed against…

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‘It’s not too late for others’: Kansas clergy must report child abuse if this bill passes

TOPEKA (KS)
Topeka Capital-Journal [Topeka KS]

March 15, 2024

By Jack Harvel

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When entering the Kansas Statehouse, one often will be greeted by proponents of adding clergy to the list of occupations that are mandated by law to report abuse and neglect of children.

Some of that group of persistent citizens spoke during a House Judiciary Committee hearing that would add clergy as mandatory reporters of abuse, while maintaining some carveouts to uphold the confidentiality of confession.

Versions of the bill have been shopped around the Statehouse over the past five years, but the last time one got a committee hearing was in 2019. The bill has butted up against such religious practices as Catholic confessionals that are considered confidential between a priest and parishioner.

About half of all states designate clergy as mandator reporters of abuse, and six require it even if it’s learned during a religious rite, such as confession. In 18 states, any individual is required…

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March 16, 2024

Lawsuit: Louisville Catholic school ignored behavior by teacher charged with creating child porn

LOUISVILLE (KY)
WLKY [Louisville, KY]

March 15, 2024

By Matthew Keck

Read original article

Just more than a month after a Louisville Catholic grade school teacher was charged with using students’ pictures to create child pornography, a lawsuit has been filed against the archdiocese.

Jordan Fautz, 39, was arrested on Feb. 2 and is facing charges that include distributing obscene visual representations of child sexual abuse, distributing child pornography, and possession of child pornography.

He was a seventh and eighth-grade religion teacher at St. Stephen Martyr Catholic School.

Fautz is accused of using students’ photos to create and distribute child pornography between March 2022 and February 2024.

‘Breaks my heart’: Louisville religion teacher accused of creating child porn with student photos

The lawsuit, filed on March 7, by 11 parents and students, alleges that the school and Archdiocese possibly ignored signs that Fautz was acting inappropriately.

To begin, the lawsuit says that Fautz’s mother was business manager at the school,…

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Lawsuit alleges Louisville Catholic school ignored misconduct by teacher facing child porn charges

LOUISVILLE (KY)
WDRB [Louisville KY]

March 15, 2024

Read original article

A lawsuit filed last week against the Archdiocese of Louisville claims instances of misconduct by a teacher accused of distributing images of child porn were ignored for years.

Jordan Fautz, 39, was arrested and charged in February with distributing child pornography, distributing obscene visual representation of child sexual abuse and possession of child pornography between March 31, 2022, to Feb. 2, 2024. Federal investigators said those photos included edited images of faces taken from the school’s yearbook.

The United States Department of Justice said Fautz, a seventh and eighth grade religion teacher and maintenance employee at St. Stephen Martyr Catholic School, sent child sexual abuse materials to a law enforcement officer who was working undercover online.

According to court documents, Fautz used yearbook photos of students and at least one adult from the school. The distributed images had photoshopped faces of students and the adult onto other nude…

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Maryland church teacher who assaulted girls was an illegal twice deported: report

GERMANTOWN (MD)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

March 15, 2024

By Michael Gryboski

Read original article

A church teacher in Maryland who was arrested for allegedly assaulting four girls entered the United States illegally after having been deported twice, according to an official with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Ervin Jeovany Alfaro Lopez, 33, of Germantown, was arrested on Monday after an investigation by the Montgomery County Department of Police, Special Victims Investigations Division.

A citizen of El Salvador, Alfaro Lopez had been arrested and deported in 2018 and then granted voluntary departure in 2019, following two instances of him unlawfully entering the country, reported the Washington, D.C.-based Fox 5.

In 2020, Alfaro Lopez was deported a second time when he was caught by border patrol agents in Texas, only to return to the United States under unknown circumstances.

Alfaro Lopez was arrested by Montgomery County police last August and charged with rape second-degree and two counts of sex offense third-degree. But when an…

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Ministry leader used Bible to normalize sexual abuse of blind student, lawsuit says

HUNTSVILLE (TX)
The State [Columbia SC]

March 15, 2024

By Kate Linderman

Read original article

A ministry group leader is accused of using religion to groom and normalize the sexual abuse of a blind college student, a Texas lawsuit says.

Daniel Savala has a history of sexual abuse accusations dating back to the 1990s and has registered as a sex offender since 2013, according to the lawsuit filed this week.

Savala is currently in a Harris County jail facing sexual assault and indecency charges involving children, according to jail records. His attorney did not immediately respond to McClatchy News’ request for comment.

The lawsuit alleges ministry group Assemblies of God and religious fraternal organization Chi Alpha Campus Ministries created the “perfect haven” for Savala to sexually abuse people beginning in 2017.

“He used (religion) as part of his grooming process to normalize the sexual abuse, and he used religious text in order to make it seem normal and would say things like, ‘Nudity…

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New Orleans court appoints sanity commission for Lawrence Hecker

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WDSU [New Orleans]

March 15, 2024

By Aubry Killion

Read original article

A former New Orleans priest accused of rape and kidnapping a child in the 1970s will undergo a mental evaluation ahead of his trial.

New court records state after a motion for psychiatric evaluation was filed. The court will appoint the sanity commission in this matter. A mental competency hearing has been set for Lawrence Hecker this month.

This is just days before his trial, which is set to begin on March 25.

His attorneys said that Lawrence Hecker is in restraints and is on antipsychotic medication.

According to the filing, Hecker is currently in a continued care facility where records show he is “confused” and “in restraints for his own protection” after pulling out his IVs.

This comes after his attorneys said Hecker was “barely conscious” and questioned if he would be healthy enough for trial in March.

WDSU obtained records in the case. Prosecutors say…

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Diocese of Camden bankruptcy plan confirmed after more than three years

CAMDEN (NJ)
The Courier-Post [Cherry Hill NJ]

March 15, 2024

By Jim Walsh

Read original article

The Diocese of Camden is to pay $87.5 million to survivors of clergy sex abuse under a plan approved by a bankruptcy judge.

A trust intended to help some 300 abuse survivors will receive payments from the diocese and related entities over a five-year period, court records show.

The reorganization plan, confirmed about 3½ years after the diocese sought protection from creditors, also calls for “maintaining and enhancing the protocols for the protection of children,” Bishop Dennis Sullivan said in a statement.

He said the plan was “a just resolution for survivors, while also ensuring that the diocese is able to continue to provide its services and ministries to the people of South Jersey.”

The plan also allows for the assignment of the diocese’s insurance rights to victims, a provision “expected to yield additional millions,” said a statement from lawyers representing a creditors committee for survivors.

State board takes action: View Cache

Nearly 500 victims of church sex abuse in France have received financial compensation

NICE (FRANCE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 14, 2024

By Barbara Surk

Read original article

Hundreds of victims of child sexual abuse by priests or church representatives have received financial compensation so far from France’s Catholic Church under a sweeping reparations program, an independent body in charge of the process said Thursday.

An annual report by the Independent National Authority for Recognition and Reparation said 1,351 victims came forward to claim compensation and seek psychological support in an effort to recover from childhood trauma.

The average age of victims who have come forwards is 61, Marie Derain de Vaucresson, the head of the body said during a news conference Thursday.

Of them, 66%, are men and 34% are women, she said. The claims process started in 2022.

So far, the reparations authority has approved compensation claims of 489 victims, the report said. Of those, 88 people were granted the maximum of 60,000 euros ($65,000). Last year, 358 victims’ compensation claims were approved, with each individual…

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Children’s pastor in Jasper under FBI investigation, fired from church

JASPER (IN)
14 News [Evansville, IN]

March 15, 2024

By Jill Lyman

Read original article

A Jasper church has sent a letter to their congregation saying Aaron Lockman has been fired as Kids Pastor due to a “significant moral failure.”

The letter is from Redemption Christian Church. It reads:

“Parents,

We need to share some important information with you regarding our Kids Ministry. Based on information we have received this week, Aaron Lockman, because of a significant moral failure, has been terminated from his position as Kids Minister at our Jasper Campus.”

Lockman is no longer listed on the church’s website.

Officials with the Dubois County Sheriff’s Office confirm they assisted with the investigation, but it is a case from the Evansville FBI Office.

A Facebook page for Lockman and also a Facebook page for the church’s kids ministry have been deleted.

Redemption Christian Church provided this statement Friday afternoon:

“We are horrified, angry, and grieving the actions of, and allegations against, the church’s former…

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Fr Sean Fortune – The predator priest who left a legacy of scars 25 years after his death

NEW ROSS (IRELAND)
Sunday World [Dublin, Ireland]

March 14, 2024

By David Looby, New Ross Standard

Read original article

It is a quarter of a century since Fr Sean Fortune took his own life on the eve of standing trial for child sexual abuse charges.

Wednesday, March 13, is 25 years to the day when notorious priest, Fr Sean Fortune died by suicide at his home in New Ross.

Days before he was due before Wexford Circuit Court on 29 charges of sexual abuse against eight young males – between June 1981 and December 1987 in Co Wexford – the serial abuser took his own life.

The groundbreaking Ferns Report in 2005 detailed 26 separate cases of sexual abuse by Fr Fortune against specific individuals including rape, masturbation and oral sex.

The Inquiry concluded that there were inexcusable and dangerous failings in the handling of Fr Fortune’s career and the many complaints made against him and if guidelines for priestly training had been followed he would never have been…

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Catholic confessions to remain secret under Hong Kong security law: Diocese

(HONG KONG)
Channel News Asia (CNA) [Queenstown, Singapore]

March 15, 2024

Read original article

The Catholic Church in Hong Kong said on Friday (Mar 15) that confessions by devotees to priests would remain confidential under the city’s upcoming national security law.

Hong Kong is fast-tracking a homegrown national security law, following the one Beijing imposed in 2020 after quashing huge and sometimes violent protests.

The government Bill – expected to be put to a legislature vote within days – proposes a maximum jail term of 14 years for any person who knows that someone will commit treason but fails to report it to the police.

The Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong said in a statement Friday that it “recognises that citizens have an obligation to ensure national security”.

But the security law “will not alter the confidential nature of confession”, the diocese added.

The diocese had “expressed its views” on the legislation, but told AFP that it did not intend to make those views…

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Polish Catholics get a new leader as the church struggles to reckon with sexual abuse

WARSAW (POLAND)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 14, 2024

Read original article

The leaders of Poland’s influential Catholic Church on Thursday chose moderate Archbishop Tadeusz Wojda to be their new principal, at a time when the church is still struggling to reckon with the abuse of minors by some Polish clergy, while the number of Poles going to church has fallen sharply.

At a two-day conference, bishops and archbishops elected Gdansk Archpishop Wojda, 67, to replace the conservative Archbp. Stanislaw Gądecki, of Poznan, as the head of the Polish Episcopate, for a five-year term, a communique said.

More than 90% of Poles, a nation of some 38 million, are still officially members of the Catholic Church, but figures from 2022 showed less than a third of Catholics attended mass, according to the church’s statistical institute.

For 27 years, from 1990 until 2017, Wojda served at the Vatican’s Congregation for the Evangelizations of Peoples, during the terms of three popes: Polish-born…

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N.J. Catholic diocese’s $87.5M settlement with sexual assault victims OKed by judge

CAMDEN (NJ)
nj.com [New Jersey]

March 15, 2024

By Brianna Kudisch, NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

Read original article

A federal bankruptcy judge approved a plan Thursday that clears the way for the Catholic Diocese of Camden to finalize agreements to pay child sexual abuse survivors.

The deal comes nearly two years after the diocese agreed to pay $87.5 million in settlements to people who were abused by clergy members as children.

Judge Jerrold Poslusny signed off on the plan despite objections from several of the diocese’s insurance companies, attorneys for the survivors said in a news release.

“This moment comes after decades of survivors suffering, and it is their courage and their voice that is making the Diocese accountable and safer for kids,” said Jeff Anderson, an attorney representing the victims.

“It is the survivors deserving of credit, who courageously stand in Camden and across this nation,” he said. “From their courage and collective action, brings about real reckoning.”

In a letter addressed to…

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Sex abuse victims seek to testify in Baltimore Catholic archdiocese bankruptcy case

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

March 15, 2024

By Alex Mann, The Baltimore Sun

Read original article

The committee representing survivors of clergy sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s bankruptcy case is seeking to give victims an opportunity to tell their stories in court.

In a legal brief filed Friday in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Baltimore, attorneys for the group of survivors representing all of the diocese’s victims, known as the Creditors Committee, asked a judge to allow survivors to give testimony about their abuse over several hours during hearings in April and May.

The Baltimore diocese, America’s oldest, declared bankruptcy on the eve of Maryland’s Child Victims Act, which lifted a longstanding time limit for abuse survivors to sue perpetrators and the institutions that enabled their torment, taking effect Oct. 1. Survivor advocates had long fought to pass the law, eventually overcoming a strong lobbying effort from the church.

Bankruptcy was a strategic decision from the church to limit its liability and protect its assets. The move,…

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Diocese of St. Augustine Responds to Child Sexual Abuse by Catholic School Employees

ST. AUGUSTINE (FL)
Catholic Vote [Madison, WI]

March 15, 2024

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The Diocese of St. Augustine, Florida, has responded to the arrest of two Catholic school employees who were involved in the reported sexual abuse of several students.

The diocesan statement refers to reports of sexual misconduct of Christopher Chell, a physical education teacher working at St. Patrick Interparish School in Gainesville. He was arrested on March 7. 

Assistant Principal Ryan Clemens was arrested shortly afterwards and was charged with child neglect and tampering with evidence regarding the reported sexual misconduct.

“The diocese, along with its school officials, continues to cooperate fully with the ongoing investigation,” the diocese said in the statement. “We continue to keep the families who have been impacted by this case and the St. Patrick faith community informed and in our prayers.”

According to local news outlet WCJB, Clemens appeared in court Thursday and his bond is set at $60,000.

WCJB added that “Chell…

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Ex-Catholic teacher dies before child abuse sentencing

(AUSTRALIA)
The Examiner [Launceston, Tasmania, Australia]

March 15, 2024

By Miklos Bolza

Read original article

Just over a month after being found guilty of sexually abusing his students through crimes dating back 65 years, a former Catholic teacher has died.

Peter Mervyn Samuel passed away on Christmas Day.

He was due to face a sentence hearing in Sydney’s Downing Centre District Court on March 8 over the historical child sex offences.

At a jury trial in November, prosecutors said he had abused three boys between 10 and 13 years old between 1958 and 1972.

The assaults took place while Samuel was teaching year-six classes at two Patrician Brothers’ College campuses in Blacktown and Granville, and Marist Brothers Primary School in Mosman.

Samuel, who was in his mid-90s at the time, fought the allegations.

However on November 14, jurors found him guilty of eight counts of indecent assault on a male.

He was found not guilty of one count of buggery.

At the trial, jurors heard…

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March 15, 2024

Child Sex Abuse Victim Wins $5.4Mil Verdict Against Siena Catholic Academy

ROCHESTER (NY)
WHAM1180 Radio [Rochester NY]

March 15, 2024

Read original article

A victim of childhood sexual assault has been awarded a $5.4 million jury verdict in a case brought against Siena Catholic Academy.

The victim is a Brighton man identified only as LG 55 Doe in court filings to protect his privacy.

Doe is now an adult in his 30s, but from 2002-to-2004 he attended Middle School at Siena Catholic Academy.

It was there he met Father Joseph Grasso, the Catholic Priest who served as the academy’s principal.

Grasso used his position to have Doe pulled out of his classes and sexually assault him in the sacristy of the adjacent Saint Thomas Moore Church.

He filed suit in 2020 after New York adopted the Child Victim’s Act.

His law firm says the jury verdict in Doe’s favor this week was unanimous.

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Diocese of St. Augustine Responds to Child Sexual Abuse by Catholic School Employees

ST. AUGUSTINE (FL)
Catholic Vote [Madison, WI]

March 15, 2024

Read original article

CV NEWS FEED // The Diocese of St. Augustine, Florida, has responded to the arrest of two Catholic school employees who were involved in the reported sexual abuse of several students.

The diocesan statement refers to reports of sexual misconduct of Christopher Chell, a physical education teacher working at St. Patrick Interparish School in Gainesville. He was arrested on March 7. 

Assistant Principal Ryan Clemens was arrested shortly afterwards and was charged with child neglect and tampering with evidence regarding the reported sexual misconduct.

“The diocese, along with its school officials, continues to cooperate fully with the ongoing investigation,” the diocese said in the statement. “We continue to keep the families who have been impacted by this case and the St. Patrick faith community informed and in our prayers.”

According to local news outlet WCJB, Clemens appeared in court Thursday and his bond is set at $60,000.

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Diocese of Camden, N.J., establishes $87.5 million trust for abuse victims in bankruptcy resolution

CAMDEN (NJ)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

March 15, 2024

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The Diocese of Camden, N.J., and related Catholic entities will fund a trust of $87.5 million for more than 300 survivors of sexual abuse in the diocese, in a plan confirmed March 14 to resolve the diocese’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

The trust, which is to be paid over five years, is part of the diocese’s plan for reorganization approved by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Jerrold N. Poslusny Jr.

“Once again, I express my sincere apologies and prayers to all those who have been affected by sexual abuse in our Diocese,” said Bishop Dennis J. Sullivan of Camden in a March 14 letter posted by the Catholic Star Herald, the diocesan newspaper.

“I pledge my continuing commitment to ensure that this terrible chapter in the history of the Diocese of Camden, New Jersey never happens again,” he continued. “This settlement will enable the diocese to meet its obligations to the survivors of clerical abuse while we continue to serve the parishes, schools and those in need who utilize our…

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Polish Catholics get a new leader as the church struggles to reckon with sexual abuse

WARSAW (POLAND)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 15, 2024

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The leaders of Poland’s influential Catholic Church on Thursday chose moderate Archbishop Tadeusz Wojda to be their new principal, at a time when the church is still struggling to reckon with the abuse of minors by some Polish clergy, while the number of Poles going to church has fallen sharply.

At a two-day conference, bishops and archbishops elected Gdansk Archpishop Wojda, 67, to replace the conservative Archbp. Stanislaw Gądecki, of Poznan, as the head of the Polish Episcopate, for a five-year term, a communique said.

More than 90% of Poles, a nation of some 38 million, are still officially members of the Catholic Church, but figures from 2022 showed less than a third of Catholics attended mass, according to the church’s statistical institute.

For 27 years, from 1990 until 2017, Wojda served at the Vatican’s Congregation for the Evangelizations of Peoples, during the terms of three popes: Polish-born…

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Taiwan accredits first Catholic priest to probe child abuse

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

March 15, 2024

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John Lee Hua attended state-sponsored training to obtain a state certification

Jesuit priest John Lee Hua became the first Catholic priest in Taiwan to obtain certification from the civil authorities in Taiwan to investigate child protection cases.

Lee dedicated himself to the work of protecting children and young adults for years, and recently obtained qualification in the “Scholar and Experts Pool for Investigating Violations of Laws by Individuals Involved in the Protection of Children and Young People,” says a report from the Jesuit Conference of Asia Pacific (JCAP) on March 12.

Lee, 58, a member of the Chinese Jesuit Province, is the first priest in Taiwan to attain this certification, JCAP said.

Last July, Lee participated in a three-day training session organized by the Ministry of Education.

The training aimed to ensure that investigation procedures for suspected cases of child abuse within educational and protection service organizations are…

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Boarding School Teacher Charged With Assault

PIEDMONT (MO)
Wayne County Journal Banner [Piedmont MO]

March 15, 2024

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An employee at ABM Ministries is accused of bloodying a boy’s face while boxing – the third person associated with the same school to be charged this month.

Caleb Sandoval, 22, was charged Monday, March 4, with abuse or neglect of a child. His initial court appearance was Thursday, March 7, for a probable cause hearing.

A probable cause statement said Sandoval is a teacher at ABM Ministries in Piedmont, which operated as Lighthouse Christian Academy. Sandoval, who is the son of Julio Sandoval, the school’s director, does not have a listed attorney.

ABM Ministries owners Larry Musgraves Jr., 57, and his wife, Carmen Musgraves 64, have been charged with first-degree kidnapping for allegedly locking a student in a small room.

The probable cause statement against Caleb Sandoval said a 15-year-old student suffered a bloody nose while boxing with him sometime between Sept. 1 and Jan. 1.

Sandoval initially told…

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Victims group seeks help from area ministers

PIEDMONT (MO)
Wayne County Journal Banner [Piedmont MO]

March 15, 2024

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A support group for abuse victims is writing to more than two dozen churches in Wayne County asking them for help in finding and consoling anyone who’s been hurt at Lighthouse Christian Academy, where three officials have recently been arrested.

 It also plans to hold two meetings in the Piedmont area in the weeks ahead.

“Now is not the time to be complacent.” SNAP’s letter reads. It wants to “find and help the ‘lost sheep’ – anyone who was hurt at Lighthouse, recently or in years past…so they won’t have to “suffer in shame, silence and self-blame.”

The group is urging ministers to preach about the Lighthouse scandal from the pulpit, give out and post leaflets about the situation to their members and ask anyone with knowledge or suspicions about the facility to contact law enforcement.

In the weeks ahead, SNAP plans to hold two meetings in Wayne County. “One…

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‘It’s not too late for others’: Kansas clergy must report child abuse if this bill passes

TOPEKA (KS)
Topeka Capital-Journal [Topeka KS]

March 15, 2024

By Jack Harvel

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When entering the Kansas Statehouse, one often will be greeted by proponents of adding clergy to the list of occupations that are mandated by law to report abuse and neglect of children.

Some of that group of persistent citizens spoke during a House Judiciary Committee hearing that would add clergy as mandatory reporters of abuse, while maintaining some carveouts to uphold the confidentiality of confession.

Versions of the bill have been shopped around the Statehouse over the past five years, but the last time one got a committee hearing was in 2019. The bill has butted up against such religious practices as Catholic confessionals that are considered confidential between a priest and parishioner.

About half of all states designate clergy as mandator reporters of abuse, and six require it even if it’s learned during a religious rite, such as confession. In 18 states, any individual is required to…

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Pope swaps leaders at abuse commission, months after reports on priest’s financial dealings

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

March 15, 2024

By Christopher White

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Pope Francis on March 15 appointed new leadership to his papal commission on clergy sexual abuse, naming a Colombian prelate and a former U.S. bishops’ conference official to run the group’s day-to-day operations.

The shake-up in leadership follows the resignation of one of the commission’s most prominent members and comes months after reports about the outgoing secretary’s previous financial dealings raised questions about his suitability to lead a group tasked with promoting best practices for preventing misconduct and abuse.

Oblate Fr. Andrew Small, a dual British and U.S. national, had served in an interim capacity as the No. 2 official at the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors since 2021. He will be succeeded by Bishop Luis Manuel Alí Herrera, currently auxiliary bishop of Bogotá, Colombia, who Francis appointed as the group’s new secretary.

Alí, a psychologist, has already served as a member of the commission. Since 2022, he…

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Behind Closed Doors: The Alarming Reality of Abusers and Their So-Called Restrictions

WASHINGTON (DC)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

March 11, 2024

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Wonder if Your Abuser is Obeying His “Restrictions?” He’s Likely Not.

When pain and betrayal stem from those meant to guide and protect, finding solace in the whispers of reassurance seems like the last beacon of hope. If you’ve ever reported a cleric who molested you to church authorities, you were likely comforted with the assertion that the accused is under some form of “restrictions.” These measures are presumed to make it harder for them to harm others. While this claim might provide a temporary sense of security, the unfortunate reality is that adhering to these “restrictions” is more of an exception than the norm. Let’s explore why authentic enforcement is rarely more than a facade, the implications, and the true avenue for justice.

→ The Illusion of “Restrictions”

The comfort provided by the church in times of crisis cannot be understated. However, when it comes to protecting the most…

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Priest Sues Indiana Diocese After ‘No Evidence’ Found in Sex Abuse Investigation

LAFAYETTE (IN)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

March 14, 2024

By Daniel Payne, CNA

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The diocese did not follow proper Church protocol in its handling of the controversy, Father DeOreo’s filing claims.

A priest in Indiana is suing his diocese for fraud and defamation after he was suspended over what the clergyman claims were false allegations of sexually abusing a minor. 

Father James DeOreo in a filing at Boone County Circuit Court earlier this month alleged that the Diocese of Lafayette-in-Indiana, along with its vicar general, Father Theodore Dudzinski, committed both defamation and fraud, respectively, against DeOreo in a yearslong conflict over accusations against the priest. 

The filing alleges that in January 2021, a parishioner alleged that Father DeOreo “abused the [parishioner] by encouraging him to fast and engage in other spiritual and ascetic practices,” which eventually led the individual to “suffer an eating disorder.”

A subsequent investigation found that “no abuse had occurred.” The diocese, however, “agreed to pay for the…

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March 14, 2024

The Path Forward on Abuse Reform in the SBC

NASHVILLE (TN)
Center for Baptist Leadership [Atlanta GA]

March 4, 2024

By Josh Abbotoy, Jon Whitehead

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Returning to Baptist Accountability

The path forward for addressing sex abuse within the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) is deceptively simple: Baptist accountability.

By Baptist accountability, we mean the accountability that naturally flows from the biblical and historically Baptistic principles that undergird the cooperation of autonomous local churches while preserving their direct accountability to God.

This Baptist accountability, as G.K. Chesterton might say, hasn’t been tested and found wanting; rather, it has been deemed challenging and left unexplored. 

Our modest statement of faith, the Baptist Faith and Message, defines the theological commitments and parameters of our cooperation. Baptist churches form voluntary and advisory bodies designed to “elicit, combine, and direct the energies of our people in the most effective manner” for the advancement of Christ’s Kingdom. Baptists seek to be unified in “spiritual harmony and voluntary cooperation for common ends.” But there is a limit. Cooperation cannot include “violation…

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Podcast unravels cover-up, negligence in Italy abuse case

PIAZZA ARMERINA (ITALY)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

March 13, 2024

By OSV News

Read original article

The seven-episode series developed by three Italian journalists was unveiled at a press conference in Rome on March 11

A survivor of clergy sexual abuse said he hopes a new podcast detailing his case will shed light on the uphill battle victims in Italy face when seeking justice from the Catholic Church.

The podcast, titled “La Confessione” (The Confession) and premiering March 13, highlights the case of Antonio Messina, who at 16 was abused by Father Giuseppe Rugolo, a priest of the southern Italian Diocese of Piazza Armerina, as well as the attempt by church authorities to silence Messina. The abuse occurred when the priest was a seminarian.

The seven-episode series was unveiled at a press conference in Rome on March 11. It was developed by three Italian journalists who covered the case — Federica Tourn, Giorgio Meletti, and Stefano Feltri.

Father Rugolo was convicted on March 5 by an…

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Maryland church teacher arrested on child sexual abuse charges

DERWOOD (MD)
WUSA9 [Washington, DC]

March 12, 2024

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Ervin Jeovany Alfaro Lopez, 33, was arrested Monday after a 10-month-long investigation. Detectives think there may be more victims.

DERWOOD, Md. — A man who worked as a teacher at a church in Derwood was arrested on sexual abuse charges, the Montgomery County Department of Police said Tuesday.

In May of 2023, detectives with the police department’s Special Victims Investigations Division opened an investigation after a victim reported being sexually abused by a teacher at a Derwood church located near the 15700 block of Crabbs Branch Way in Montgomery County.

Pastor Bernal Osorio with the Elim Giathersburg Church confirmed to WUSA9 that the alleged abuse happened in their Derwood location. 

After the first victim came forward in May, police say three more victims came forward between September 2023 and January 2024. All of the victims claimed to have been sexually abused by the same man at the same…

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Former Mormon bishop highlighted in AP investigation arrested on felony child sex abuse charges

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 13, 2024

By Jason Dearen and Michael Rezendes

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A former bishop in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who was featured in an Associated Press investigation into how the church protects itself from allegations of sexual abuse was arrested by police in Virginia this week after being indicted on charges he sexually abused his daughter while accompanying her on a school trip when she was a child, according to court filings.

Police and federal authorities had been searching for John Goodrich after a grand jury in Williamsburg on Jan. 17 found probable cause that he committed four felonies, including rape by force, threat or intimidation, forcible sodomy, and two counts of felony aggravated sexual battery by a parent of a child.

Those charges were filed weeks after the AP investigation revealed how a representative of the church, widely known as the Mormon church, employed a risk management playbook that has helped it keep child sexual abuse cases secret…

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Catholic Church fighting back against claims it is vicariously liable for 1971 sexual abuse of five-year-old boy by Ballarat Catholic priest

(AUSTRALIA)
Sky News Australia [AU]

March 13, 2024

By Amy Roulston

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The Catholic Church is pushing back against the High Court of Australia’s finding that it was vicariously liable for the 1971 sexual abuse of a five-year-old boy committed by a Ballarat priest.

The victim, who was brought up in a strict Catholic family, was found to have been sexually assaulted by Father Bryan Coffey at the home of his parents in Port Fairy in 1971.

Coffey was the assistant priest and taught at the victim’s primary school, Saint Patrick’s Catholic Parish Primary in Ballarat.

The presiding judge found the Diocese of Ballarat vicariously liable for the two 1971 sexual assaults.

The victim was awarded $230,000 in damages largely due to the psychological injuries, including complex post-traumatic stress disorder, that he sustained as a result of the abuse.

On Thursday, the Church began its legal battle in the High Court of Australia in Canberra, reiterating its previous defence that Coffey was…

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High Court battle set to begin over liability of Catholic Church for 1971 child sexual abuse in regional Victoria

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

March 13, 2024

By Elizabeth Byrne

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  • In short: The High Court will hear a challenge to the Catholic Church’s liability over the abuse of a five-year-old boy by an assistant priest in regional Victoria in 1971.
  • Lower courts have accepted that on the balance of probabilities, Father Brian Coffey assaulted the boy, but the Catholic Church is challenging its liability for the abuse.
  • What’s next? The court will hear the case today.

The Catholic Church will launch a High Court battle today, over whether it was vicariously liable for the actions of an assistant priest who sexually abused a five-year-old boy in 1971.

The offences happened in the boy’s home at Port Fairy soon after he had started school.

Father Bryan Coffey is accused of molesting the boy on two occasions during family social gatherings when the assistant priest was visiting.

Father Coffey was later convicted in the Ballarat County Court in February 1999 of multiple counts…

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Australian court reveals abuse charges against bishop

(AUSTRALIA)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

March 13, 2024

By Mark Bowling

Read original article

Christopher Saunders faces multiple sexual assault charges, although his lawyer has strenuously denied them all.

A court in Western Australia has lifted a suppression order in a criminal case against the former Bishop of Broome Christopher Saunders, revealing details of the sexual abuse allegations against him.

The 74-year-old served for decades a priest and then bishop in the Diocese of Broome, whose vast area covers the tropical north of Western Australia and includes remote aboriginal townships and communities in the Kimberley region.

After a long-running police investigation, Saunders faces multiple sexual assault charges, although his lawyer has strenuously denied them all.

Saunders was arrested on 21 February and released on bail. At his first court appearance on 1 March, a judge lifted a suppression order to allow the publication of the charges against him.

He will face 26 charges including two counts of sexual penetration without consent, three counts of indecent…

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March 13, 2024

Catholic Diocese Challenges NJ Insurer’s Abuse Coverage Suit

In a legal showdown with high stakes, the Catholic Diocese of Trenton is fervently contesting a bold move by Century Indemnity Co. seeking an escape route from covering over 200 lawsuits alleging sexual abuse by clergy members. The diocese and its affiliated parishes are urging a New Jersey federal court to dismiss what they deem a “premature, vague, and ambiguous” coverage dispute.

The Gambit: A Premature Clash?

The diocese, in a motion to dismiss filed on Monday, argued that Century’s attempt to extricate itself from indemnifying the diocese is premature. They assert that the ongoing suits are still in the discovery phase, and crucially, no damages have been awarded against the diocese. The diocese contends that Century’s request for speculative relief could lead to inconsistent rulings, potentially prejudicing the diocese in fulfilling its moral and legal obligations to survivors of child sexual abuse.

NJ Insurer’s Abuse Coverage Suit: The Child Victims Act…

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Philippine vice-president backs fugitive pastor

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

March 12, 2024

By Ronald O Reyes

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A controversial Philippine-born pastor accused of financial and sexual crimes has drawn support from the nation’s vice president Sara Duterte after he laid out 17 conditions to show up for a Senate investigation into his alleged crimes.

Pastor Apollo Quiboloy, 73, the founder of Kingdom of Jesus Christ sect who claimed himself as the “appointed Son of God” made the demands in a video posted on social media in February-end.

“I stand in solidarity with the call for the implementation of law and justice in the future issue of Pastor Apollo Quiboloy and Sonshine Media Network Inc. [SMNI],” the daughter of Rodrigo Duterte said in a statement on March 11.

“In the ongoing hearings, it seems that Pastor Quiboloy has been given a guilty verdict even though this hearing was based only on the allegations of witnesses who concealed their identity and could not prove their…

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Harsh penalties sought against women and child abuse in Macau

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

March 13, 2024

By UCA News reporter

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The rise in cases of violence against women and children showed more victims have had the courage to seek help, activist says

A leading women’s rights group in Macau has called on the authorities to introduce tougher punishments to tackle rising number of cases of violence against women and children in the region.

Macau should “strengthen the deterrent effect” to ensure safety of women and children from violence including raising the limit of maximum sentence, removing the provision of suspended sentence, and reviewing the execution of coercive measures, said Loi I Weng, vice-president of the Women’s Association in a press statement.

Loi also demanded more comprehensive support for victims of domestic violence, Portuguese language daily Ponto Final reported on March 13.

She said that an increase in number of cases of violence against women and children showed that more victims have dared to seek help, however, “prevention and deterrence are always the best…

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Pope: Church must eradicate situations that protect abusers

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

March 12, 2024

By Devin Watkins

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Pope Francis sends a message to participants in a safeguarding conference in Panama, and calls on Church institutions to eradicate situations that protect abusers who hide behind their positions of authority.

“Humanizing relationships in any society, including the Church, means working tirelessly to form mature, coherent individuals who, firm in their faith and ethical principles, are capable of confronting evil, bearing witness to the truth in capital letters.”

Pope Francis offered that consideration on Tuesday in a message sent to participants in the 3rd Latin American Congress, taking place in Panama on March 12-14.

Promoted by the Center for the Protection of Minors (CEPROME), the event has gathered Church representatives from across the region to reflect on the theme: “Vulernability and abuse: Towards a broader view of prevention”.

Eradicating scourge of abuse

In his message, the Pope entrusted to the Lord the Church’s efforts to eradicate “the scourge of abuse…

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Pope: Church must stop protecting abusers ‘who hide behind their position’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Detroit Catholic [Archdiocese of Detroit MI]

March 12, 2024

By Justin McLellan, CNS

Read original article

The work of protecting minors and other vulnerable people in the Catholic Church involves holding those in positions of power accountable for the abuse the commit, Pope Francis said.

The church’s safeguarding efforts “must undoubtedly aim at eradicating situations that protect those who hide behind their positions to impose themselves on others in a perverse way,” the pope wrote in a message to participants in a safeguarding conference.

In the message, released March 12, he also said the church must try to understand why such people are “unable to relate to others in a healthy way.”

The papal message was sent to a three-day conference in Panama City organized by the Research and Formation Center for the Protection of Minors, also known as CEPROME Latin America.

Titled “Vulnerability and Abuse: Toward a Wider View of Prevention,” the conference was designed to discuss “the handling of power and authority in the…

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Papal commission to submit first safeguarding report, launches study group

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

March 12, 2024

By Justin McLellan, Catholic News Service

Read original article

The pope’s commission for advancing the Catholic Church’s efforts to prevent the abuse of vulnerable persons is due to submit its first annual report on the state of safeguarding in the church.

In a statement dated March 8 and sent to reporters March 11, the commission said it had approved the submission of its “pilot annual report” on safeguarding policies and procedures to Pope Francis, who had requested a report from the group in April 2022.

While focused particularly on safeguarding policies and procedures in the 13 countries whose bishops made their “ad limina” visits to Rome in 2023 and engaged with the commission staff as part of those visits, the report also offers an assessment of the trends at a regional level, pointing to areas for improvement and it offers recommendations.

The commission’s annual report will offer “recommendations on how to move forward in achieving the goals of truth, justice, reparation”…

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Canon Patrick McEntee to stand trial on historical sexual assault charges

DROMORE WEST (IRELAND)
BBC [London, England]

March 12, 2024

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A County Tyrone priest is to stand trial on historical indecent assault charges against two males.

Canon Patrick McEntee, 69, from Esker Road, Dromore, faces a total of of five counts of indecent assault dating back to the 1980s.

The priest pleaded not guilty to each charge at Dungannon Crown Court.

Canon McEntee is a former teacher, governor and college president at St Michael’s College in Enniskillen.

He has been on a leave of absence from his ministry since last year.

Bail conditions

Canon McEntee is charged with four counts of indecent assault on one male between 1988 and 1989.

There is also a single count of indecently assaulting a second male between 1980 and 1981.

No details surrounding the circumstances of the alleged offences were disclosed during the short hearing on Tuesday.

Judge Fiona Bagnall remanded Canon McEntee on continuing bail until his trial in September.

As part of…

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Priest detained for alleged sexual offences against colleague, underage male

KUANTAN (MALAYSIA)
New Straits Times [Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia]

March 12, 2024

By T.N.Alagesh

Read original article

A temple priest suspected of committing sexual offences against two male victims including a juvenile, was arrested at his house here yesterday.

The 40-year-old suspect was picked up by police several hours after both the victims, aged 16 and 21 years old respectively lodged a report against him.

Sources said one of the victims had been enduring the sexual harassment since he began working at the temple in 2022 but claimed he did not tell anyone of the incidents as the job at the temple was his only source of income.

“The suspect allegedly threatened the victim not to tell others about the incident and he (victim) continued to work in fear. He only came forward to lodge a police report after he quit the job.

“The other victim claimed he was sexually assaulted last month and lodged a police report as he was emotionally disturbed,” said the source, adding…

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Kansas considers requiring church leaders to report suspected child abuse in most cases

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Yahoo! [Sunnyvale CA]

March 12, 2024

By Jenna Barackman, The Kansas City Star

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When Joe Cheray wanted to escape the horrific abuse she suffered at the hands of a relative, she said she turned to church leaders for help. And then nothing happened.

Cheray’s abuser was heavily involved in and a large financial contributor to a church located in northeast Kansas. But behind closed doors, Cheray said he was her worst nightmare.

Cheray said she suffered everything from emotional abuse and molestation – which she said would sometimes occur even in the pews during church services – to physical and financial abuse from ages 10 to 15.

But when she went to church leaders for help on two separate occasions, she was ignored.

“They didn’t have to do anything because they weren’t mandated at that time to do anything,” Cheray said. “I felt hopeless.”

A Kansas bill, advocated for months by Cheray, would designate clergymen as mandated reporters, thereby requiring them to report…

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Dozens allege child sexual abuse in Maryland treatment program under newly filed lawsuits

BALTIMORE (MD)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 12, 2024

By Lea Skene

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More than three dozen people allege in two lawsuits filed Tuesday that they were sexually abused as children at a Maryland residential program for youths that closed in 2017 following similar allegations.

In the separate lawsuits, atorneys detailed decades of alleged abuse of children by staff members of the Good Shepherd Services behavioral health treatment center, which had billed itself as a therapeutic, supportive environment for Maryland’s most vulnerable youth.

The program was founded in 1864 by the Sisters of the Good Shepherd, a Catholic religious order focused on helping women and girls. It began at a facility in Baltimore before moving to its most recent campus just outside the city.

Tuesday’s lawsuits add to a growing pile of litigation since Maryland lawmakers eliminated the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse cases last year.

Many of the plaintiffs — almost all of them women — reported being injected with sedatives that…

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Pope Francis laicizes North Dakota priest after sexual assault guilty plea

FARGO (ND)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

March 12, 2024

By Daniel Payne

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Pope Francis has ordered the laicization of a North Dakota priest who pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting a woman in that state. 

Diocese of Fargo Bishop John Folda said in a statement this month that former priest Neil Pfeifer “received a dispensation from the clerical state (laicization) from Pope Francis” effective March 8.

Pfeifer himself “sought the dispensation after adult women came forward with allegations of sexual misconduct,” Folda said in his statement. 

“Mr. Pfeifer pleaded guilty on July 13, 2023, to a misdemeanor charge of sexual assault in Stutsman County,” the bishop said.

Laicization is the term for when a priest has been dismissed from the clerical state. An individual who is confirmed as a priest will always remain one, but laicization takes away his ability to licitly execute the functions of the priesthood, except in the extreme situation of encountering someone who is…

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March 12, 2024

Report: Man studying to be priest uploaded child sexual abuse videos using Cincinnati seminary’s IP address

CINCINNATI (OH)
WCPO - ABC 9 [Cincinnati OH]

March 11, 2024

By Craig Cheatham

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Former seminarian Broderick Witt faces 15 criminal charges

A former seminary student used the IP address of the Mount St. Mary’s Seminary in Cincinnati to repeatedly upload videos of naked children being sexually abused, according to police and court records.

Broderick Witt, 28, allegedly shared the material online from November 2023 to February 2024, according to his 15-count indictment.

“It’s extremely concerning,” Theresa Dinwiddie-Herrmann told the WCPO 9 I-Team.

Herrmann is a co-founder of the nonprofit Ohioans for Child Protection. The group pushes the Archdiocese of Cincinnati for more transparency.

“We continually hear that they are trying to make changes that protect our children, but these things come up again and again,” Dinwiddie-Herrmann said. “Until we clean it up, the Church is going to suffer and children are going to suffer.”

Catholic church records show Witt interned for at least three Catholic churches; Saint Ann of Groesbeck, Our Lady of the Rosary…

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Rupnik still listed as Vatican consultant as DDF trial continues

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

March 11, 2024

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Fr. Marko Rupnik, the disgraced religious artist and alleged serial sexual abuser, remains listed as an official consultant at a major Vatican department, despite his ongoing canonical process and past expulsion from the Society of Jesus.

According to the website of the Dicastery for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, the priest remains listed as an expert consultor to the Vatican department following his appointment to the post in 2022.

Consultants to Vatican dicasteries serve as officially appointed expert advisors to the Roman curia on issues central to the governance of the universal Church. The appointments are usually made for a set, renewable, term of five years.

However, despite the years of accusation and scandal over the allegations of sexual abuse brought against Rupnik by dozens of religious sisters, the Dicastery for Divine Worship has not terminated his appointment — according to its own website.

It is not…

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Netflix documentary ‘The Program’ leads to call for investigation into former academy in upstate New York

OGDENSBURG (NY)
Spectrum News [Syracuse NY]

March 8, 2024

By Brian Dwyer

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A North County assemblyman on Friday called on the New York state attorney general to launch an investigation into accusations of abuse at the former Academy at Ivy Ridge in Ogdensburg.

The allegations are being made by those who attended the Academy, which closed in 2009.

The Academy is the subject of a documentary airing on Netflix. In it, former students make a return trip to the school and enter abandoned buildings. They claim they found documents and videos that show mental, physical and sexual abuse.

Titled “The Program: Cons, Cults and Kidnapping,” it is now the number one watched show on the streaming service in all of the U.S.

In calling for the state investigation, Assemblyman Scott Gray released the following statement.

“The situation portrayed at the now-closed Academy at Ivy Ridge is very serious. The Academy at Ivy Ridge was shut down approximately 15 years ago. The reported…

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Pastor accused of raping impaired teen was going through ‘difficult times’ with sick wife

MARATHON (FL)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

March 7, 2024

By Leonardo Blair

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Warning: Explicit details in the article might be disturbing to some readers 

A Florida pastor accused of raping a 15-year-old girl drunk then sexually assaulting her while she was impaired recently lamented online that he was going through a difficult time with his wife of 40 years.

The pastor, 62-year-old Monte Lavelle Chitty of Marathon, who leads First Baptist of Marathon, and recently started a dockside ministry for a boating community in Boot Key Harbor, was charged with sexual battery of a minor, lewd and lascivious conduct and contributing to the delinquency of a minor, the Monroe County Sheriff’s Office said.

In a post on Facebook on Jan. 9, Chitty revealed he was “going through some difficult times” with his sick wife.

“For the past month, my wife and I have been going through some difficult times. Brought…

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Historical sexual abuse charges filed against B.C. minister belonging to church with no name

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

March 8, 2024

By Karin Larsen

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Complainant says she is speaking out about what happened in 1989 to protect others

A Vancouver Island woman is speaking out about the alleged sexual abuse she suffered as a teenager while a member of an insular and secretive Christian sect that has no official name, but is most commonly called the Two-by-Twos, or 2x2s.

Lyndell Montgomery was 14 years old in 1989 when the alleged abuse happened. She claims her alleged abuser was 2x2s minister, Lee-Ann McChesney.

McChesney, 60, was arrested in January and charged with one count of sexual abuse and one count of sexual exploitation after an investigation by the Delta Police Sexual Offence Section and Vulnerable Sector Unit. 

According to court documents, the charges stem from incidents in 1989 in or around the B.C. communities of Terrace, Delta and Surrey.

None of the allegations have been proven in court.

Now 49, Montgomery says she wants to go…

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Italy abuse case highlights how scandal slowly beginning to come to light in pope’s backyard

(ITALY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

March 11, 2024

By Nicole Winfield

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The clergy sexual abuse scandal is slowly gathering steam in Italy with increasing media coverage, criminal convictions and the launch Monday of an investigative podcast dedicated to a case that tangentially involved Pope Francis.

A Sicilian court last week convicted a priest of sexual violence and attempted sexual violence against three minors and sentenced him to four and a half years in prison. It also held his diocese, Piazza Armerina in Sicily, liable for separate civil damages and legal fees, a significant ruling given the influence the Catholic Church wields in all aspects of Italian society, particularly in small-town Sicily.

Piazza Armeria Bishop Rosario Gisana was recorded admitting to having covered up for the priest, the Rev. Giuseppe Rugolo. He was recorded saying he had covered up for another priest who did far worse and describing Rugolo’s actions as mere “stupidities” of a young man.

Victim Antonio Messina told his…

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