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.

October 27, 2024

Vatican summit praises women’s leadership, but stops short on women clergy

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

October 26, 2024

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A major Vatican summit of global Catholic leaders ended on Oct 26 with a call for women to be granted more leadership roles in the Church but stopped short of calling for women to be ordained as clergy.

The gathering, which included cardinals, bishops and lay people from more than 110 countries, also did not take a stand on inclusion of the LGBTQ community, despite discussion that it might call on the Church to be more welcoming.

Pope Francis called the month-long summit, known as a Synod of Bishops, to consider the future of the worldwide Church. It was the second of two gatherings, held a year apart, and featured closed-door discussions among 368 “members” with voting rights, including nearly 60 women.

Advocates for greater roles for women in the Church had hoped the synod might call for women to serve as deacons. In its final text,…

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Catholic Church Assembly Acknowledges ‘Obstacles’ For Women

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Channels TV [Lagos, Nigeria]

October 26, 2024

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In its final statement, the synod said “there is no reason or impediment that should prevent women from carrying out leadership roles in the church” — without specifying what the roles might be.

A Vatican assembly on the future of the Catholic Church on Saturday said that more should be done to help women overcome “obstacles” to taking a leadership roles within the Church.

Since October 2, the Assembly of the Synod, comprising 368 religious and lay people — including women — from about 100 countries, has held closed-door debates about rejuvenating the Roman Catholic Church.

It is a personal project of Pope Francis, 87, who will have the final say on any doctrinal changes.

But in a rare move, the pontiff on Saturday said he would directly adopt the consultative body’s proposals.

In its final statement, the synod said “there is no reason or impediment that…

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Biden first U.S. president to apologize for Indigenous boarding school abuses

PHOENIX (AZ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 26, 2024

By Graham Lee Brewer and Sejal Govindarao

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President Joe Biden did something Friday that no other sitting U.S. president has: He apologized for the systemic abuse of generations of Indigenous children endured in boarding schools at the hands of the federal government.

For 150 years the U.S. removed Indigenous children from their homes and sent them away to the schools, where they were stripped of their cultures, histories and religions and beaten for speaking their languages.

“We should be ashamed,” Biden said to a crowd of Indigenous people gathered at the Gila River Indian Community outside of Phoenix, Arizona, including tribal leaders, survivors and their families. Biden called the government-mandated system that began in 1819 “one of the most horrific chapters in American history,” while acknowledging the decades of abuse inflicted upon children and widespread devastation left behind.

For many Native Americans, the long-awaited apology was a welcome acknowledgment of the government’s longstanding culpability. Now,…

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Vatican Sex Abuse Body To Publish First Annual Report

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Independent Newspapers [Ogba, Ikeja, Nigeria]

October 27, 2024

By Ejikeme Omenazu

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Pope Francis set up the panel of experts in December 2014 amid an avalanche of revelations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy across the world.

The pope’s commission on clerical child sex abuse said Friday it will publish its first annual report next week, a decade after the body was established.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors said the report coming on Tuesday would be a “first step” documenting “where risks remain, and where advances can be found”.

Pope Francis set up the panel of experts in December 2014 amid an avalanche of revelations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy across the world, and subsequent cover-ups.

But, it has faced strong criticism over its organisation, funding and role, with numerous high-profile members quitting.

In 2022, Francis incorporated the body into the Roman Curia — the government of the Holy See — and asked for an annual, “reliable account…

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‘Conclave’: Pope On a Rope

AUSTIN (TX)
Book and Film Globe [Austin TX]

October 26, 2024

By Neal Pollack

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On the surface, it’s a prestige Oscar picture about the Catholic Church. But it’s actually a pulpy soap opera.

‘Conclave’ contains all the aspects of a Serious Oscar Contender. It’s about the Catholic Church, stars older, award-winning actors, fills every space with portentous orchestral music, and follows serious people having serious thoughts down seriously long corridors. But unlike, say, ‘Spotlight,’ which at its core was a drama about the church covering up sexual abuse of children, the scandals at the heart of Conclave are barely serious enough to bring down an Alabama Senatorial candidate, much less a candidate for Supreme Pontiff.

The movie hints around at the actual problems with the modern church–that it covers up, again,  the sexual abuse of children and that a very recent Pope had an active membership in the Nazi Party as a youth–and instead mostly focuses on stuff that Donald Trump’s lawyers could persuade…

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Vatican Punts Question of Female Deacons at Major Meeting

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

October 27, 2024

By Elisabetta Povoledo

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A meeting four years in the making said the ordination of women required further study, but it called for women to have more leadership roles, even in seminaries.

A monthlong meeting of Catholic bishops and lay people at the Vatican ended on Saturday with a call for women to be given more leadership roles in the church. But on the question of whether women could be ordained as deacons, the church said the possibility “remains open” and required further meditation.

Cardinal Jean-Claude Hollerich of Luxembourg, one of the top officials at the meeting, said at a news conference on Saturday night that allowing female deacons was a delicate issue, and that the meeting, known as a synod, had not deliberated for or against it.

“The question remains open,” he said, adding that the pope had signed the document approving the meeting’s findings. “Who am I to contradict the Holy Father?”

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Vatican summit praises women’s leadership, but stops short on women clergy

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Premier Christian News [Crowborough, England]

October 27, 2024

By Donna Birrell

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A major Vatican summit of global Catholic leaders ended on Saturday (October 26) with a call for women to be granted more leadership roles in the Church but stopped short of calling for women to be ordained as clergy.

The gathering, which included cardinals, bishops and lay people from more than 110 countries, also did not take a stand on inclusion of the LGBTQ community, despite discussion that it might call on the Church to be more welcoming.

Pope Francis called the month-long summit, known as a Synod of Bishops, to consider the future of the worldwide Church. It was the second of two gatherings, held a year apart, and featured closed-door discussions among 368 “members” with voting rights, including nearly 60 women.

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Vatican meeting ends and hope fades for more change under Francis

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Washington Post

October 26, 2024

By Stefano Pitrelli and Anthony Faiola

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The pope’s “Synod on Synodality” ended Saturday without progress on female deacons, married priests or LGBTQ+ outreach.

The Vatican’s most highly anticipated gathering since the 1960s ended Saturday with the thorniest issues facing the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics largely unanswered.

The Synod of Bishops, which met in October 2023 and again this month, pledged administrative changes that could give more power to local dioceses. But it referred questions on the ordination of female deacons, further outreach to the LGBTQ+ community and married priests for further study.

The outcome calmed the fears of church conservatives that Pope Francis’s “Synod on Synodality” would serve as a smokescreen for radical change while leaving liberals, who had seen it as their best opportunity since Vatican II to promote reform, empty-handed for now.

“It’s hard to say whether this synod has actually taken any decision,” said Massimo Faggioli, a Catholic theologian at Villanova University.

The…

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Victims feel ‘betrayed’ as Vatican investigation of Rupnik hits one year with no answers

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

October 27, 2024

By Hannah Brockhaus

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One year after the Vatican announced it would open a canonical case on Father Marko Rupnik — an artist and former Jesuit accused of spiritual, psychological, and sexual abuse — victims say they feel disappointment and betrayal at the Church’s lack of response and transparency.

Rupnik has been accused of abusing adult women who were under his spiritual care as part of a religious community he helped found in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Some of these accusations became public through the media in early December 2022, although the priest’s superiors and officials at the Vatican were aware even several years earlier.

While the investigation and trial of Rupnik is still pending, the priest remains free to exercise his ministry in the Diocese of Koper, Slovenia, where he was accepted in 2023.

A year ago on Oct. 27, days before the close of the 2023 assembly of the Synod…

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October 26, 2024

Native Americans laud Biden for historic apology over boarding schools. They want action to follow

PHOENIX (AZ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 25, 2024

By Graham Lee Brewer and Sejal Govindarao

Read original article

President Joe Biden did something Friday that no other sitting U.S. president has: He apologized for the systemic abuse of generations of Indigenous children endured in boarding schools at the hands of the federal government.

For 150 years the U.S. removed Indigenous children from their homes and sent them away to the schools, where they were stripped of their cultures, histories and religions and beaten for speaking their languages.

“We should be ashamed,” Biden said to a crowd of Indigenous people gathered at the Gila River Indian Community outside of Phoenix, including tribal leaders, survivors and their families. Biden called the government-mandated system that began in 1819 “one of the most horrific chapters in American history,” while acknowledging the decades of abuse inflicted upon children and widespread devastation left behind.

For many Native Americans, the long-awaited apology was a welcome acknowledgment of the government’s longstanding culpability. Now, they say, words must be…

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Forced assimilation and abuse: How US boarding schools devastated Native American tribes

BILLINGS (MT)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 24, 2024

By Matthew Brown

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The White House says President Joe Biden will apologize on behalf of the U.S. government Friday for its 150-year campaign to break up Native American culture, language and identity by forcing children into abusive Indian boarding schools.

More than 900 children died at the government-funded schools, the last of which closed or transitioned into different institutions decades ago. Their dark legacy continues to be felt in Native communities where survivors struggle with generational trauma from the torture, sexual abuse and hatred they endured.

Biden is expected to formally acknowledge the federal government’s role and apologize for it during an appearance at the Gila River Indian Community outside Phoenix.

A closer look at the federal boarding school system:

150 years of forced assimilation

Congress laid the framework for a nationwide boarding school system for Native Americans in 1819 under the 5th U.S. President, James Monroe, with legislation known as the Indian Civilization Act. It was…

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Embezzlement Probe in Greece Eyes Money Laundering of Catholic Church Money Via Nightclubs

ATHENS (GREECE)
Tovima [Athens ,Greece]

October 26, 2024

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Authorities point to suspicious bank transfers of more than three million euros over past six years from Roman Catholic Church’s treasury

Scrutiny over high-profile embezzlement and money laundering allegations enveloping the Roman Catholic Church in Greece continued unabated on Friday, with authorities now focusing on well-known nightclub entrepreneur.

The latter, with reputed business activity in the western port city of Patras, is alleged to have facilitated money laundering of more than three million euros emanating from the Church’s coffers, with two high-ranking clerics at the center of the probe.

The businessman is described as hailing from western Greece, aged 60, with involvement in previous cases of blackmail, fraud and intimidation. One blackmail victim, reports on Friday revealed, was an Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Greece Metropolitan (an ecclesiastical ranking akin to bishop) in south-central Greece.

The suspect was convicted at the time by a three-justice first instance court of…

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Greece investigates nightclub owners suspected of laundering Catholic Church money

ATHENS (GREECE)
Reuters [London, England]

October 24, 2024

By Reuters

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Greek authorities have frozen the bank accounts and assets of five cafe and nightclub owners on suspicion of laundering Catholic church money supplied by two church officials, a senior Greek official and local media said on Thursday.

During a months-long investigation, the country’s anti-money-laundering authority found that more than 3 million euros ($3.24 million) were directed from the funds of the Catholic Church in Greece to five bank accounts, a source with knowledge of the probe told Reuters.

The authority’s findings have been forwarded to a prosecutor who is expected to open its own investigation, the Athens News Agency said. The two church officials are suspected of embezzlement and the most recent suspicious money transfer was a few days ago, it said.

The businessmen are active in the southern Peloponnese area.

The Holy Synod of the Catholic Church of Greece said in a statement on Thursday that it has not…

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Catholic Diocese of Alexandria seeks ‘mediated resolution’ for sexual abuse victims

ALEXANDRIA (LA)
Louisiana Record [Slidell, LA]

October 25, 2024

By Michael Carroll

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The Diocese of Alexandria is moving to conduct a “mediated resolution” with victims of alleged sexual abuse by priests prior to filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy – a scenario that may offer both benefits and challenges for abuse victims, according to observers.

The diocese has previously acknowledged that 27 of its priests were accused of sexual misconduct and abuse of minors. The mediation plans were detailed in a Sept. 24 letter from the law firm Gold Weems Bruser Sues & Rundell, according to a report from the Catholic News Agency.

The Diocese of Alexandria’s plans follow a different pattern than the New Orleans archdiocese, whose petition for bankruptcy protection in May 2020 surprised abuse victims in that region. The letter obtained by the Catholic News Agency indicates that the Alexandria diocese wants to move forward in a way that would avoid the slow pace and high…

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Youth pastor accused of trafficking teenage girl, living off of her earnings

PLANTATION (FL)
WTVJ - NBC 6 [Miami FL]

October 24, 2024

By Kim Wynne

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Stephen Johnson, 40, met the alleged victim on a social media app when she was 12 years old and selling nude content online. 

A youth pastor and counselor appeared before a judge in bond court, charged with one count of living off the earnings of a teenager who worked as a prostitute. 

According to a complaint affidavit, Stephen Johnson, 40, met the alleged victim on a social media app when she was 12 years old and selling nude content online. 

Investigators say the girl met someone on the app who she thought was a woman who offered to help her sell more nude content, but that woman was really Johnson. 

According to the complaint, the acts continued until the alleged victim was 17 and flew to Birmingham, Alabama, where the suspect allegedly posted her on escort ads and directed her to engage in commercial sex acts for money. 

“He trafficked a…

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New lawsuit alleges child sexual abuse of WWE ‘ring boys’ in Maryland

BALTIMORE (MD)
WMAR - ABC 2 [Baltimore MD]

October 25, 2024

By Lea Skene

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A new lawsuit accuses the WWE and its founders of fostering a culture of sexual abuse within the organization and looking the other way while a longtime ringside announcer preyed on young men he hired as “ring boys.”

The suit was filed Wednesday in Maryland, where a recent law change eliminated the state’s statute of limitations for child sex abuse claims, opening the doors for victims to sue regardless of their age or how much time has passed.

The complaint alleges that Melvin Phillips, who died in 2012, would target young men from disadvantaged backgrounds and hire them as “ring boys” to help with the preparations for wrestling matches. Phillips would then assault them in his dressing room, hotels and even in the wrestlers’ locker room, according to the complaint, which was filed on behalf of five men.

The abuse detailed in the lawsuit occurred over several years during Phillips’ long tenure…

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‘We got justice today’: Former Decatur pastor found guilty of sodomy

DECATUR (GA)
WAAY TV 31 [Huntsville, AL]

October 24, 2024

By Paige Meyer

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A former Decatur pastor accused of sex crimes with a child has been found guilty of sodomy in the second degree.

Danny Duane Pitts will soon be registered as a sex offender after being charged for sexually abusing a minor while he was the Pastor at GracePoint Church in Decatur.

Authorities arrested Pitts back in November 2021. Pitts faced two felony charges, sodomy in the first degree and sodomy in the second degree, as well as two misdemeanor charges, sexual abuse in the first degree and sexual abuse in the second degree.

Since the former pastor’s arrest, his case has been continued four different times.

This week, the courtroom heard from two accusers formerly a part of GracePoint.

One of the victims testified Pitts sexually abused him in the early 2000s.

Another victim who is a part of another indictment against the former pastor in Tennessee claimed the…

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Abuse survivors cry out to ‘their’ church: ‘The bad win when the good do nothing’

MADRID (SPAIN)
Crux [Denver CO]

October 25, 2024

By Jesús Bastante, Religión Digita

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“When I was 14 years old, I was forced to go to a religious club meeting. I had to call my parents in front of a priest, who monitored what I had to say to them in order to get permission. Even then, I was brutally pressured in a planned way by the people who spoke to me to join the organization, under the threat of eternal damnation if I didn’t…they forced me to hide my entry from my parents.”

Héctor (not his real name) was one of the ten testimonies heard Monday in the portico of the cathedral of La Almudena, next to the statue of John Paul II, in an Act of Reparation for the victims that brought together hundreds of people in the diocesan temple of Madrid before a deafening silence, which shook the stones of the cathedral.

Men and women who were sexually, physically and emotionally…

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Peru priest ousted from scandal-plagued group demands ‘corrections’ from papal embassy

(PERU)
Crux [Denver CO]

October 26, 2024

By Elise Ann Allen

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A Peruvian priest recently expelled from a scandal-plagued lay group, in part over charges of financial irregularities, has sent a registered letter to the papal embassy in Peru demanding a series of corrections to its Oct. 23 announcement of his ouster, calling its contents “false and defamatory.”

Crux has also learned that the priest in question, Father Jaime Baertl, has business ties with an individual who helped launch a criminal complaint in Peru against of the Vatican officials leading an investigation into the group, the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (SCV).

Last July, Pope Francis sent his top investigating team – Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, an adjunct secretary of the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), and Spanish Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, an official of the dicastery – to Lima to conduct an in-depth inquiry into the allegations against the sodalitium.

This past week, the papal embassy in Peru, known as the…

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Michigan youth pastor arrested on charges of criminal sexual conduct against minors

YPSILANTI (MI)
NBC [Washington, DC]

October 24, 2024

By Corky Siemaszko

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Zachary Radcliff, who worked at Oakwood Church, where his father is the senior pastor, is also a Christian rock musician. He is being held on $3 million bond.

A Michigan church youth pastor who moonlights as a Christian rock singer and has performed before high-profile conservative audiences has been accused of preying on teenagers in his father’s flock for more than 10 years.

Zachary Radcliff, 29, was fired Oct. 12 from his job as the music and youth director of Oakwood Church in Ypsilanti, an Ann Arbor suburb, 10 days after the Michigan State Police launched an investigation. His father, Frank Radcliff, is the church’s senior pastor.

“We realized while talking to him that there was more to the situation than was being expressed,” the church said in a statement posted on its website.

Zachary Radcliff was arrested over the…

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October 25, 2024

Commission to present pilot Annual Report on Church Policies and Procedures for Safeguarding

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors (Tutela Minorum) [Vatican City]

October 25, 2024

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The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors announced that it will present its pilot Annual Report on Safeguarding at the Holy See Press Office on Tuesday, October 29th.

Among those presenting the report at the press conference are: Cardinal Seán Patrick O’Malley, Commission President; Maud De Boer Buquicchio, Commission Member and Annual Report Chairperson; Bishop Luis Manuel Alí Herrera, Commission Secretary; and Teresa Kettelkamp, Commission Adjunct Secretary.

“Our goal is to develop an Annual Report with a commitment to transparency and accountability, in solidarity with victims and survivors throughout the world,” Cardinal O’Malley said.

A request from Pope Francis

The launch of the Annual Report is both a milestone for the Commission and a work-in-progress. It is the first step towards a process of data gathering and reporting within the Catholic Church, which began by papal request.

 “I would like you, on an annual basis, to prepare for me a report…

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Vatican sex abuse body to publish first annual report

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Channels TV [Lagos, Nigeria]

October 25, 2024

By Ignatius Igwe, AFP

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The pope’s commission on clerical child sex abuse said Friday it will publish its first annual report next week, a decade after the body was established.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors said the report coming on Tuesday would be a “first step” documenting “where risks remain, and where advances can be found”.

Pope Francis set up the panel of experts in December 2014 amid an avalanche of revelations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy across the world, and subsequent cover-ups.

However, it has faced strong criticism over its organisation, funding and role, with numerous high-profile members quitting.

In 2022, Francis incorporated the body into the Roman Curia — the government of the Holy See — and asked for an annual, “reliable account of what is presently being done and what needs to change”.

Next week’s report “collects resources and good practices to be shared across the Universal…

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‘Cycle of abuse’: Tribal leaders react to expected apology for Indian boarding schools

TAHLEQUAH (OK)
WJAC-TV [Jamestown PA]

October 25, 2024

By Tom Ferguson

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TAHLEQUAH, Okla. (KOKH) — On Friday, President Joe Biden is set to become the first president to formally apologize for the U.S. government’s Indian boarding school policy, which lasted for approximately 150 years until the 1960s.

Tribal leaders say it brought devastation to native communities across the nation.

Cherokee Nation Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin, Jr. described the move as “long-overdue.”

Tori Holland, tribal counsel attorney and designated congressional delegate for the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians, noted boarding schools sought to “kill the Indian and save the man. So it was pretty devastating for Native Americans all across.”

The impact of Indian boarding schools is still being felt today, Holland added.

The National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition stated that in the 19th and 20th centuries, government agents took native children by force and brought them to the schools. The coalition asserted the students then suffered physical, sexual, cultural,…

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Amid lawsuits over alleged abuse, a Roman Catholic diocese in Vt. files for bankruptcy. Victims say it’s a ploy.

BURLINGTON (VT)
Boston Globe

October 24, 2024

By Kevin Cullen

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The Burlington diocese filed for bankruptcy to shield itself from more lawsuits over the abuse of children

BURLINGTON, Vt. — When Brenda Hannon heard the Roman Catholic diocese here had filed for bankruptcy on Oct. 1, her mind drifted back to St. Joseph’s Orphanage, the nuns, and the peanut butter pudding.

In 1961, Hannon was 8, living at the orphanage, and did not like peanut butter pudding.

“It looked like dirty dishwater,” she said, “and it tasted like dirty dishwater.”

But when Hannon refused to eat it, she alleges, some of the nuns became incensed.

“They tied me to a chair,” Hannon said. “They tried to force my mouth open. One of them held my nose so I couldn’t breathe. They forced me to eat it, but I spit it out.”

One of the nuns began smacking her in the head, she said, a final punch sending her face-first to…

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Vatican: Swiss bishops mishandled sex abuse claims, but no cover-up found

BERN (SWITZERLAND)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

October 25, 2024

By Daniel Payne

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The Vatican has reprimanded the Swiss bishops for their handling of sexual abuse claims in that country after a more-than-yearlong investigation into how the bishops addressed allegations of clergy sex crimes there.

Yet the Vatican’s inquiry found no evidence of a conspiracy by the prelates to cover up abuse claims, one of the key allegations that launched the Holy See’s investigation last year.

In September of last year the Swiss Bishops’ Conference (SBK) revealed an ongoing Vatican-ordered investigation into the reported mishandling of sexual abuse allegations by Church officials there, specifically allegations that clergy had covered up abuse cases.

Allegations had been made in May “against several emeriti and acting members of the Swiss Bishops’ Conference” as well as against several other clerics there.

The Swiss bishops forwarded the allegations to the Dicastery for Bishops in Rome, which shortly thereafter opened a canonical investigation into the matter. Earlier…

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Three new lawsuits filed against accused former Dubuque priest

DUBUQUE (IA)
KCRG-TV [Cedar Rapids IA]

October 25, 2024

Read original article

DUBUQUE, Iowa (KCRG/WWSB) – Three new civil cases are filed against the Dubuque Catholic Archdiocese and a former Dubuque priest accused of sexually abusing boys.

Three new civil cases were filed this week in Charlotte County, Florida brought forward by anonymous altar boys from Iowa claiming Leo Riley sexually abused them in Dubuque in the 1980s.

Riley now works at a congregation in Florida. He sat for a disposition last month in a separate lawsuit there from a John Doe claiming Riley had sexually abused him in Florida.

In the complaint, the plaintiff alleges Father Riley “sought and gained parental consent for Plaintiff to participate in counseling and other activities, and to spend time alone with him.”

It goes on to say Riley would force the minor to drink alcohol and then engage in harmful and illegal sexual contact with the plaintiff.

The alleged victim says the abuse started in 1985,…

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‘Survivors deserve better.’ Expert report blames ‘toxicity,’ feuds for delays in costly church bankruptcy

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Nola.com [New Orleans, LA]

October 25, 2024

By STEPHANIE RIEGEL

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A consultants’ report on the Archdiocese of New Orleans bankruptcy blames both the local church and attorneys for abuse survivors for the case’s massive costs and slow progress, recommending that the federal judge overseeing the process immediately freeze legal fees and bring in an independent “examiner” to propose a settlement if the two sides can’t agree soon.

The 35-page report from New York-based M3 Advisory Partners said that Archbishop Gregory Aymond and his advisors are “cognitively capable” of guiding the local Roman Catholic Church through the bankruptcy process, but said they have not “exercised the leadership” needed to do it, have failed to share crucial financial information, have lacked transparency and haven’t provided oversight of mounting fees.

At the same time, it faults a group of attorneys who, together, represent more than 100 of the abuse survivors for “aggressive litigation tactics that have been disruptive to the forward progress of…

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Portland-area priest sent to India to face child sex abuse allegations

PORTLAND (OR)
The Oregonian [Portland OR]

October 24, 2024

By Zane Sparling

Read original article

A Catholic priest connected to a church and school in Cedar Mill has returned to India to face allegations of sexual misconduct involving children, according to correspondence obtained by The Oregonian/OregonLive.

The Rev. Joaquim Gracias of the Saint Pius X church was reportedly leaving to face the allegations in India, according to an email sent to members of the parish on June 27 and shared this week with the news organization.

Read more

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Biden expected to apologize for federal government’s role in Indian boarding schools

PHOENIX (AZ)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

October 24, 2024

By Arlette Saenz

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President Joe Biden is expected to issue an apology to the Native American community for the federal government’s role in the abusive Indian boarding schools that forced Native American children to assimilate over a 150-year period, two sources familiar with the plans said.

“I’m heading to do something that should have been done a long time ago: To make a formal apology to the Indian Nations for the way we treated their children for so many years,” Biden told reporters as he departed the White House on Thursday.

Biden is expected to make the announcement during a visit at the Gila Crossing Community School outside of Phoenix on Friday as he makes his first trip to Indian Country while in office.

“The federally-run Indian boarding school system was designed to assimilate Native Americans by destroying Native culture, language and identity through harsh militaristic and assimilationist methods,” the White House said Thursday….

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Biden set to apologize to Native Americans for Indian boarding schools

PHOENIX (AZ)
Washington Post

October 24, 2024

By Dana Hedgpeth, Sari Horwitz and Toluse Olorunnipa

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The president’s apology would come less than two weeks before the election and mark the first formal acknowledgement by a U.S. president of the government’s role in atrocities against Native children.

President Joe Biden plans to formally apologize Friday for the U.S. government’s role in running hundreds of Indian boarding schools for a 150-year period that stripped Native American children of their language and culture in a systematic effort to force them to assimilate into White society.Cut through the 2024 election noise. Get The Campaign Moment newsletter.

“I’m heading to do something that should have been done a long time ago — to make a formal apology to the Indian nations for the way we treated their children for so many years,” Biden told reporters at the White House on Thursday. “That’s why I’m heading west.”

These remarks would be the first time a…

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President Biden to apologize for 150-year Indian boarding school policy

PHOENIX (AZ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 24, 2024

By Graham Lee Brewer

Read original article

NORMAN, Okla. (AP) — President Joe Biden said he will formally apologize on Friday for the country’s role in forcing Indigenous children for over 150 years into boarding schools, where many were physically, emotionally and sexually abused, and more than 950 died.

“I’m doing something I should have done a long time ago: To make a formal apology to the Indian nations for the way we treated their children for so many years,” Biden said Thursday as he left the White House for Arizona.

Interior Secretary Deb Haaland launched an investigation into the boarding school system shortly after she became the first Native American to lead the agency, and she will join Biden during his first diplomatic visit to a tribal nation as president as he delivers a speech Friday at the Gila River Indian Community outside Phoenix.

“I would never have guessed in a million years that something like this would…

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Letters to the Editor: Sex abuse settlement, Trump at the Al Smith dinner — a bad look for the Catholic Church

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times [Los Angeles CA]

October 24, 2024

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Oct. 24, 2024 3 AM PT

To the editor: The irony of your story on the latest too little, too late settlement with victims of clerical abuse and hierarchical cover-up running at the same time as coverage of the latest Alfred E. Smith Memorial Foundation Dinner is palpable.

Each year, under the guise of supporting Catholic Charities, politicians seeking votes and money, business people seeking customers, and media executives and journalists seeking access to the great and powerful, gather in formal attire to kiss the ring of the archbishop of New York.

With the exception of Donald Trump, who just spews venom, presidential candidates gently insult each other with gags written for them as they pretend to rise above their lust for power and money with a display of false bonhomie.

I submit that anyone of conscience invited to this event should have attended a protest outside, particularly the journalists, whose colleagues have…

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Biden to issue historic apology for Indigenous boarding school abuses

PHOENIX (AZ)
Axios [Arlington VA]

October 25, 2024

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President Biden will formally apologize Friday to Indigenous communities for the role the U.S. government played in abuses committed in federal Indian boarding schools that Native American children attended after being forcibly removed from their homes.

Why it matters: Biden’s remarks in Arizona’s Gila River Indian Community will mark the first time a U.S. president has both formally acknowledged and apologized for the policy that saw abuses occur for more than 150 years and which the United Nations regards as genocide.

  • 2022 federal report found Native American children at these 408 boarding schools suffered whippings, sexual abuse, manual labor and severe malnourishment from 1819-1969 as part of the U.S. government’s campaign to compel their assimilation.
  • An Interior Department report out this year found more than 900 children died while being forced to attend the schools.
  • “I’m heading to do something that should have been done a long time ago: to make a…
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Opinion: School choice is a misuse of taxpayer dollars

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Courier Journal [Louisville KY]

October 24, 2024

By John Schaaf

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If Amendment 2 passes and Kentucky adopts a dangerous school voucher plan like other states, there will be unaccountable private school operators who will misuse or steal millions of taxpayer dollars and be involved in other criminal activity. 

That’s exactly what’s happened in states that bought into the radical policy of throwing hundreds of millions of tax dollars at private and church school operators, with taxpayers having no oversight of how it’s spent or who’s spending (or stealing) it.

Fraud follows school voucher programs

Earlier this year, three private school operators in Indiana were indicted by a grand jury on 76 counts of money laundering and wire fraud.  According to the indictment, the operators inflated enrollment numbers at their schools to get taxpayer money for kids who did not actually attend.

The Indiana Attorney General is suing the operators for $154…

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Philippine preacher denies accusations of sexual abuse

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
NBC News [New York NY]

October 24, 2024

By Reuters

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Apollo Quiboloy, the self-styled “Appointed Son of God,” faced off with former church members for the first time at a Senate hearing investigating his alleged misdeeds.

MANILA, Philippines — Apollo Quiboloy, a Philippine preacher accused of sexually abusing his followers, spoke out on Wednesday for the first time since being indicted on trafficking and other criminal charges, denying new allegations of wrongdoing on top of existing charges.

Apollo Quiboloy, the self-styled “Appointed Son of God” who founded the Kingdom of Jesus Christ church, faced off with former church members for the first time on Wednesday in a Senate hearing investigating his alleged misdeeds.

During the public Senate inquiry, he was accused of grooming children for sex, forcing a teenager to stop going to school to sell food to fund his church, and obliging workers to flout government rules while working long hours to construct…

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Sex abuse victim sues St. Paul Lutheran Church and School

BATAVIA (NY)
The Daily News [Batavia NY]

October 25, 2024

By SCOTT DESMIT

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BATAVIA — St. Paul Lutheran Church and School are facing a lawsuit which claims it failed to protect children from its former principal, who earlier this year admitted repeatedly molesting a student.

The lawsuit by Andreozzi & Foote Law Firm of Harrisburg, Pa. is on behalf of the child victim in the case. The firm is a nationwide firm that handles sexual abuse cases.

Jason R. Clark, 43, in June admitted that he repeatedly molested the child from the beginning of the 2014 school year to the end in June 2015.

Clark was working as a physical education teacher at the time. He was named principal in 2019 and served in that role until his arrest.

He pleaded guilty to second-degree course of sexual conduct against a child, a D felony punishable by up to seven years in prison.

Clark, however, was given a deal and was placed on one…

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October 24, 2024

Pope Francis Expels Two More Members of Sodality of Christian Life

(PERU)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

October 23, 2024

By Eduardo Berdejo/ACI Prensa/CNA News

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The text mentions José Ambrozic Velezmoro, former assistant for Temporalities, Communications, and Apostolate as well as former vicar general, along with Father Luis Antonio Ferroggiaro Dentone.

The apostolic nunciature in Peru announced that Pope Francis has approved the expulsion of two more members of the Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (Sodality of Christian Life) in the wake of the report of the special mission he sent in July 2023 to investigate allegations of abuse.

The statement from the nunciature was published Oct. 21 by the Peruvian Bishops’ Conference.

The text mentions José Ambrozic Velezmoro, former assistant for Temporalities, Communications, and Apostolate as well as former vicar general, along with Father Luis Antonio Ferroggiaro Dentone.

Although the name of Ricardo Trenemann Young also appears in the statement, his expulsion from the sodality had already been announced on Sept. 25.

According to the nunciature, Pope Francis made the decision “after evaluating the defense [statements] corresponding to…

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200 women believed to have suffered sexual exploitation at KOJC, says PNP

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
ABS-CBN [Quezon City, Philippines]

October 23, 2024

By RG Cruz

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MANILA — The Philippine National Police (PNP) believes about 200 women are victims of sexual exploitation within the Kingdom of Jesus Christ (KOJC) community, with nearly 70 by its leader Pastor Apollo Quiboloy. 

The PNP said that while KOJC has been publicly announcing that their members reach 8 million followers, only 8,000 are believed to be currently active members based on interviews conducted  by PNP.

Members are said to be recruited and groomed to be either a member of the Inner Pastoral, allegedly sexually exploited by Quiboloy, or they become an ordinary miracle worker who is forced into labor to raise funds for the KOJC.

The PNP also showed pictures of Quiboloy’s alleged luxurious bedroom, which had its own jacuzzi. 

The PNP also claimed that Quiboloy tapped the so-called Angels of Death, a private armed group to sow fear.

ABUSE, TORTURE

Yulya Tartova Voronina, a Ukrainian who was among those sexually abused,…

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Ex-KOJC member recalls sexual abuse, months-long fasting ‘to slowly kill me’

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
ABS-CBN [Quezon City, Philippines]

October 23, 2024

By Jauhn Etienne Villaruel, ABS-CBN News

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MANILA — A founding member of Pastor Apollo Quiboloy’s Kingdom on Jesus Christ (KOJC) on Wednesday recounted some of the violence she allegedly endured from the religious group, including sexual and physical abuse.

Facing Quiboloy himself at the Senate, Teresita Valdehueza, who joined KOJC in the 1980s when she was just 17, narrated how she dedicated her life to the Davao City-based church. 

“At the age of 17, I became a member of the church led by this man, Apollo C. Quiboloy, in 1980… In 1988, I made the difficult decision to dedicate my life to his ministry… This choice meant leaving behind my family, my career, and the person I once was,” she told the Senate Committee on Women, which is leading the probe into Quiboloy’s alleged abuses. 

“Over time, I gained the trust and became a respected worker within the ministry,” Valdehueza added.

She said she felt spiritual satisfaction…

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Arrested Philippine televangelist confronted in the Senate by women he’s accused of sexually abusing

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 23, 2024

By Jim Gomez and Aaron Favila

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MANILA, Philippines — Former followers of an arrested Filipino televangelist confronted him in a Senate hearing Wednesday, accusing him of repeatedly abusing them sexually by portraying the assaults as their religious duty to the “appointed son of God.”

Apollo Carreon Quiboloy, who was brought to the Senate under heavy police security, denied the allegations from several women, including some from Ukraine as well as the Philippines. He challenged his accusers to file criminal complaints so he could face them in court.

The 74-year-old preacher said he could not discuss his response because criminal charges against him, including sexually abusing women and human trafficking, were already being heard in two Philippine courts.

Yulya Voronina told the Senate hearing through a video link from Ukraine that Quiboloy and his key aides allegedly forced her and other victims into agreeing to have sex with him through religious deception and coercion.

“They always used the Bible as an instrument…

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October 23, 2024

Father of Santa Barbara Teen Molested by Catholic Priests Reacts to Los Angeles Archdiocese’s $880M Settlement

SANTA BARBARA (CA)
Santa Barbara Independent [Santa Barbara CA]

October 22, 2024

By Nick Welsh

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After Catholic Church Settles with 1,353 Sexual-Abuse Survivors, Ray Higgins Cautions, ‘We Might Not Have Heard the Last Yet’

Ray Higgins shakes his head. Just briefly, his eyes well up. His voice quavers. At 92, Ray Higgins is in great shape. His hair has thinned over the years, but it remains a rusty red. His eyes are slightly rheumy but still a piercing blue. Early-morning sunlight explodes through the window over Higgins’s head; dust motes dance in the air.

“No,” Higgins declares. “You never get over it. We never did.”

By “we,” Higgins is referring to himself and his wife, Anne. By “it,” he is referring to the fact that their son Mike was molested by two priests while attending St. Anthony’s Seminary in Santa Barbara as a high school student in the early 1980s.

Higgins and his wife would not know anything until 1992, when the public accusations against…

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Trial for Circle of Hope founder pushed back to 2025

STOCKTON (MO)
KOLR-TV [Springfield MO]

October 17, 2024

By Jessica Hammer

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The trial for the southwest Missouri woman accused of abusing young girls at a Christian reform school has been pushed back again.

Online court records show Stephanie Householder was in court again on Oct. 16, 2024 and has pleaded not guilty to multiple counts of abuse at the Circle of Hope Girls Ranch in Cedar County. In 2021, she was charged with 10 counts of abuse and neglect of child and 12 counts of endangering the welfare of a child.

Stephanie Householder now faces a jury trial that is scheduled for five days starting on Sept. 29, 2025.

Stephanie Householder’s husband, Boyd Householder, was also charged in the case, but died while in the hospital in June 2024. The Householders’ attorney, Adam Woody, said at the time of Boyd Householder’s death, he maintained “…his innocence against any criminal conduct…”

Then-Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt got involved…

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Co-owner of Mo. boarding school accused of child abuse to appear in court

HUMANSVILLE (MO)
KCTV CBS 5 [Kansas City, MO]

October 16, 2024

By Sarah Motter

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The co-owner of a Missouri boarding school who was accused of dozens of child abuse crimes is set to appear in court.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests says that on Thursday, Oct. 17, Stephanie Householder, who previously ran the Circle of Hope Girs Ranch in Humansville, Missouri, will appear in court as she faces nearly two dozen charges of child abuse and neglect.

“She’s Missouri’s most prolific female abuser,” said David Clohessy, Missouri volunteer director of SNAP.

SNAP noted that Householder and her husband Boyd also worked at Agape Boarding School in Cedar County. Boyd, who had been charged on 79 similar counts, died in June following cardiac arrest. Both facilities have since been shuttered.

Also Read: Agape Boarding School announces it will close Jan. 20

Court records indicated that Householder’s plea setting is set to begin at 12:30 p.m. on…

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Malaysia charges 22 members of an Islamic business group, including its CEO, for organized crime

KUALA LUMPUR (MALAYSIA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 23, 2024

By Associated Press

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Twenty-two members of an Islamic business group, including its CEO, were charged Wednesday for being part of an organized crime group after hundreds of children believed to have been sexually abused were rescued last month from welfare homes linked to the group.

Nasiruddin Mohamad Ali, CEO of Global Ikhwan Services and Business Holdings, and his wife Azura Mohamad Yusof were among dozens detained last month as police investigations widened to include human trafficking and money laundering. Islamic authorities are also investigating GISB for deviant teachings linked to the banned Islamic cult Al Arqam.

Global Ikhwan was established by Al Arqam leader Ashaari Mohamad and flourished after his death in 2010. The government deemed the sect heretical and banned it in 1994.

Nasiruddin, his wife and a son of Ashaari were among the 22 charged on Wednesday. No plea was recorded from the group as the case must be transferred to a higher…

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2nd Chapter of Acts Partners with Christian Streaming Service Tied to Registered Sex Offender

COLORADO SPRINGS (CO)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

October 22, 2024

By Liz Lykins

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The popular 1970’s Christian music group, 2nd Chapter of Acts, has premiered their music archive on a new Christian streaming service—and the person behind that platform is a registered sex offender and husband of a band member.

Steve Greisen, husband of 2nd Chapter’s Nelly Greisen, was convicted in 2023 of attempting to solicit sex online with a minor in Colorado Springs, Colorado, El Paso County’s sex offender registry reports. Greisen evaded jail time through a plea deal.

A year later, 2nd Chapter of Acts shared about partnering with ExploreFlix in a Facebook post. The streaming service aims to “bring faith-affirming content to families everywhere” by sharing more than 600 films, documentaries, children’s programs, and music.

ExploreFlix contains 2nd Chapter of Acts archived “never-before-seen performances, live events, recordings, and television appearances.”

“This extensive archive is nothing short of a musical buffet for 2nd Chapter…

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What to expect from the 1st global child protection report

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

October 22, 2024

By Luke Coppen

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The pope’s safeguarding commission has announced the “imminent” release of its first annual report on the Church’s worldwide efforts to protect minors and vulnerable adults.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors (PCPM) said Oct. 18 that the eagerly awaited document would “provide an assessment of the nature and effectiveness of safeguarding policies and procedures in the Church, and offer recommendations for continuous improvement.”

Why is the report significant? What do we know about its contents? And what should we look out for when it’s released? 

The Pillar takes a look.

Why is the report significant?

The report is notable because it marks the first time a Vatican body has published an assessment of the state of safeguarding in the worldwide Catholic Church.

If you haven’t been following the Church’s child protection efforts closely, that might not sound like much of an achievement. Perhaps it even sounds like something the Church…

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Pope expels more Sodalitium members, calls increase for group’s suppression

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Our Sunday Visitor [Huntington IN]

October 22, 2024

By Junno Arocho Esteves

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Pope Francis has expelled two more members and upheld the expulsion of one member of the controversial lay movement Sodalitium Christianae Vitae due to allegations of sexual abuse, abuse of power and financial malfeasance.

In a letter dated Oct. 21 and posted on the Peruvian bishops’ conference website, the apostolic nunciature in Peru announced that the decision was made after the pope evaluated allegations revealed during a Vatican investigation last year.

The investigation, dubbed as a “special mission,” was conducted in July 2023 by Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta and Msgr. Jordi Bertomeu, officials of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, who traveled to Peru to meet with victims of Sodalitium, the movements’ leaders and journalists who uncovered the abuses within the group.

Founder and noted journalist among those expelled

As a result of the investigation, Luis Fernando Figari, Sodalitium’s founder, was expelled from the group in August.

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Trial begins for Decatur pastor charged with sex crimes, state plans to introduce new evidence

DECATUR (AL)
WHNT-TV, Ch. 19 [Huntsville AL]

October 21, 2024

By Rebecca Teutsch

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A former Decatur pastor charged with sex crimes is set to go on trial this week after his trial was previously continued four times.

Danny Duane Pitts is charged with two counts of sodomy and pleaded not guilty in 2022. Court documents show Pitts’s trial was set to begin on Monday, October 21.

On October 18, documents were filed by the state showing their intent to use “404b evidence” at the trial. 404b evidence is used to introduce new evidence at trial to establish a motive, plan and intent.

The notice of intent to use the 404b says that the state would like to introduce “evidence and testimony relating to acts of sodomy and sexual abuse committed by [Pitts] against an additional victim who was of a similar age at the time of the abuse as the named victim in the case.”

Documents show other evidence the state wants to…

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Vatican Announces Imminent Release of Annual Report on Protection Policies and Procedures in the Catholic Church

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Zenit [Rome, Italy]

October 22, 2024

By Zenit staff

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The goal of the Annual Report, which was requested by the Holy Father in 2022, is to provide an assessment of the nature and effectiveness of safeguarding policies and procedures in the Church and offer recommendations for continuous improvement.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors gathered in Rome on October 7-11 for their fall Plenary Assembly. In his homily at the Assembly’s opening Mass on October 7, Commission President, Cardinal Seán Patrick O’Malley OFM Cap., said “Those who are hurting have a particular claim on our love. The Commission has an opportunity and obligation to make the Church a more Samaritan Church.”

The weeklong meeting of 30 expert members and personnel from across five continents was the first gathering under Commission Secretary, Bishop Luis Manuel Ali Herrera, and Adjunct Secretary, Teresa Kettelkamp since their appointment by the Holy Father last Spring.

The working sessions focused on…

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October 22, 2024

Why the Menendez brothers’ allegations of sexual abuse are being taken seriously more than three decades after they killed their parents

BOSTON (MA)
Northeastern Global News [Boston, MA]

October 22, 2024

By Cynthia McCormick Hibbert

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A Northeastern University professor says the case of Lyle and Erik Menendez, who are serving life imprisonment for the shooting deaths of their wealthy parents in 1989, indicates a major societal shift in how male victims of childhood sexual abuse are perceived — and believed.

Around the time they were convicted of first-degree murder for killing Jose and Kitty Menendez, the young men were ridiculed in newspaper columns, talk shows and even “Saturday Night Live” as being motivated by greed.

But 28 years after their sentencing, family members are calling for the brothers’ release, saying they were driven to desperation by longtime sexual abuse at the hands of their father, a well-known executive in the entertainment industry. 

Carlos Cuevas, Northeastern professor of criminology and criminal justice, says in the decades since the Menendez sentencing there has been growing recognition that childhood sexual abuse affects…

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Sexual abuse of children by priests was known ‘at all levels’ in Catholic Church, says Archbishop of Dublin

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

October 22, 2024

By Patsy McGarry

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There was ‘no effort made to deal with perpetrators’, Dermot Farrell tells US Catholic TV network

The sexual abuse of children by priests was blamed on survivors and there was “no effort made to deal with the perpetrators”, Catholic Archbishop of Dublin Dermot Farrell has said.

The archbishop made his remarks on clerical abuse in an interview with a US conservative Catholic TV network.

Of the perpetrators of the abuse, he said: “Sometimes they were left in situ, sometimes they were moved around, because there was maybe a thinking the problem was the person they were involved with rather than with the actual perpetrators,” he said.

“So if you moved them somewhere else that’ll deal with the problem. They were putting the blame on the survivor,” he said.

“We know different now but then, because there was a sexual element in it, they [church authorities] didn’t…

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Midland church pastor, charged with child sex crimes, has criminal history

MIDLAND (MI)
WNEM [Saginaw, MI]

October 21, 2024

By Blake Keller

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A Living Word International Church pastor in Midland, charged with criminal sexual conduct crimes, could become a repeat offender if convicted.

MIDLAND, Mich. (WNEM) – A Living Word International Church pastor in Midland, charged with criminal sexual conduct crimes, could become a repeat offender if convicted.

WARNING: Details in this story may be considered graphic.

Mark Barclay Ministries’ Rev. James Randolph, 58, is currently on administrative leave from the church after an alleged victim testified in court that he would touch her at night starting in the sixth grade.

In February 2024, Randolph was charged with six criminal sexual conduct felonies after his arrest in Nov. 2023. He’s charged with two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct and four counts of second-degree criminal sexual conduct.

A motion to amend his $5 million bond was denied.

WNEM-TV5 requested the felony complaint that resulted in Randolph’s charges from the Midland County Prosecutor’s Office….

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North Texas pastors accused of crimes, sins, and moral failures in 2024

DALLAS (TX)
Chron [Houston TX]

October 21, 2024

By Eric Killelea

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Former Gateway Church pastor Robert Morris is among a rising number of Dallas-Fort Worth pastors to resign this year due to sexual abuse allegations and moral failures.

A number of megachurch pastors in North Texas have resigned this year after being accused of sexual abuse and other crimes. Other religious leaders in the Dallas-Fort Worth metro have stepped down or faced significant consequences due to a series of ‘moral failures’ and unexplained transgressions. Here is a running list of the Texas clergy who’ve face public scrutiny in 2024.

May Terren Dames, North Dallas Community Bible Fellowship in Plano

Terren Dames, the former senior pastor North Dallas Community Bible Fellowship, was arrested and charged on May 2 for alleged solicitation of prostitution. Plano police accused Dames…

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Top Vatican canonist’s comments point to Pope Francis role in Príncipi case

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

October 22, 2024

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Controversy deepened Saturday over a recent Vatican attempt to reinstate a former priest twice convicted of sexual abuse of minors in Argentina, after an interview with the Vatican’s top canon lawyer suggested that Pope Francis could be personally involved in the case.

As questions linger about the Vatican’s handling of the abuse case, focus will now likely shift from the Vatican’s Secretariat of State to Pope Francis himself.

In an Oct. 19 interview with official Vatican media, Archbishop Filippo Iannone of the Dicastery for Legislative Texts pointed out that officials at the Vatican’s Secretariat of State can be legitimately involved in clerical abuse cases, when they act as confidential couriers for decisions reached by other Vatican departments competent to deal with those cases.

But Iannone also pointed out that appeals by or for priests laicized for abuse crimes can only be considered by the pope personally, or by others acting…

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‘At least it’s acknowledgement’: Abuse survivors welcome LA settlement

LOS ANGELES (CA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

October 22, 2024

By Alicia A. Caldwell

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Aimee Torres was in disbelief as she read the email from her lawyer on Wednesday telling her that the Los Angeles Archdiocese had finally agreed to settle a sexual abuse class action lawsuit for $880 million.

A childhood survivor of sexual abuse at the hands of a local Catholic priest who had befriended her family, Torres had long hoped for some acknowledgement of the abuse and a sense of justice. But part of her never expected it would actually happen, she told National Catholic Reporter in a phone interview a day after the settlement was announced.

“It’s definitely something I never thought I’d see in this lifetime,” Torres said, as she fought back tears. “I mentioned to my husband that I hoped it would be resolved before I was 40, to move on to the next chapter of my life without something glaring over my shoulder.”

Torres…

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Local attorney says Catholic Church’s $880 million settlement just “scratches the surface”

LOS ANGELES (CA)
KEYT-TV [Santa Barbara CA]

October 21, 2024

By Tracy Lehr

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[See video.]

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. – More than 1,350 child sexual abuse survivors will receive part of $880 million settlement with the Archdiocese of Los Angeles thanks to a California law that opened 3-year window for lawsuits exceeding the usual statute of limitations.

Lawyer Tim Hale, who is know for his work on behalf of sexual abuse survivors, said this is not the end of these cases.

“We are just scratching the surface, unfortunately even though this sounds like an incredible number of victims the terrifying thing is that there are so many more who have not been able to come forward and speak their truth and talk about what happened,” said Hale, “and the people who did come forward deserve an incredible amount of credit, but the reality is there are many, many more remaining silent unfortunately.”

Some of the abuse dates back to the 1940s.

“There have been…

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Vatican safeguarding body meets with doctrine dicastery during plenary

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

October 21, 2024

By Justin McLellan, Catholic News Service

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VATICAN CITY (CNS) — The Vatican’s safeguarding commission has “an opportunity and obligation to make the church a more Samaritan church,” Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, told commission members during its plenary assembly.

According to an Oct. 17 statement by the commission, 30 of its expert members and personnel met with officials from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith to discuss safeguarding procedures during the commission’s Oct. 7-11 plenary assembly in Rome.

The commission said it met with Archbishop John Kennedy, secretary of the discipline section for the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith; Jesuit Father Robert Geisinger, the dicastery’s promoter of justice; and Father Brian Taylor, an official at the dicastery.

During the meeting the commission “addressed current procedures in confronting sexual abuse in the Church, as well as safeguarding guideline development,” it said. “The engagement during the…

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Church youth director charged with criminal sexual conduct in Washtenaw County

(MI)
WXYZ-TV - ABC, 7 [Detroit MI]

October 22, 2024

Read original article

AUGUSTA TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WXYZ) — A man who is a music and youth director at a church in Washtenaw County is facing several charges in connection to sexual abuse of children.

Zachary Radcliff, 29, was arraigned on charges of criminal sexual conduct and possession of child sexually abusive material, among others, Michigan State Police said.

Radcliff is an employee of Oakwood Church in Augusta Township and is the son of the senior pastor.

MSP said the investigation started on Oct. 2 when it was found that Radcliff asked for sexually abusive material from a minor. Investigators say multiple victims have been identified.

Police said church leaders have been cooperating with the investigation. The church says Radcliff has been suspended with pay pending further investigation.

Oakwood Church sent out a statement:

We received some very disturbing news about our music and youth director, Zachary Radcliff who is also the son of…

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Presbyterian Church Releases Response To Royal Commission Of Inquiry Into Abuse In State And Faith-Based Care Findings

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

October 22, 2024

By Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand

Read original article

Tuesday, 22 October 2024, 4:54 pm

Press Release: Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand

Today the Presbyterian Church of Aotearoa New Zealand released its response to the findings of the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in State and Faith-Based Care.

The Presbyterian Church accepts the findings of the Royal Commission, including the Presbyterian Church’s reluctance to confront abuse, its failure to remove people, and the lack of consistent policies and procedures to prevent and report abuse.

The Presbyterian Church grieves deeply for all who have been harmed by its actions and inaction. Its sorrow is deep, and it is committed to working with all in building safe places for everyone.

In its response, the Presbyterian Church has apologised as a first step in doing the work of repentance, and from which it hopes that in time restoration may come. A public apology to survivors, their whanau and support networks will…

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Their pastor pleaded guilty to a felony but hasn’t resigned

GREENSBORO (NC)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

October 21, 2024

By Mark Wingfield

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Four days after their senior pastor pleaded guilty to lying to federal investigators, members of Friendly Avenue Baptist Church in Greensboro, N.C., heard a sermon on biblical qualifications for pastors Sunday.

Matthew Queen, who has been on administrative leave from the North Carolina church since May, entered a guilty plea last Wednesday, Oct. 16, on one count of making false statements to the United States Southern District of New York attorney’s office and the FBI in a June 2023. The charges are related to an alleged coverup of sexual abuse claims against at student at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas, where Queen at the time was serving as evangelism professor and interim provost.

Queen has not resigned from the Greensboro pastorate, and church leaders reportedly are working through how to handle the odd circumstances. Church bylaws require a 75% affirmative vote to remove a pastor who won’t resign on…

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Youth pastor accused of sexually abusing children was leading ‘double life,’ father says

(MI)
MLive [Walker MI]

October 22, 2024

By Jordyn Pair

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WASHTENAW COUNTY, MI – The lead pastor of an Ypsilanti-area church and father of a man accused of criminal sexual conduct against children said he was “blindsided” by the allegations.

“I have been as freaked out as everyone else has been,” said the Rev. Frank Radcliff, the lead pastor of Oakwood Church, 9074 Whittaker Road in Ypsilanti.

Zachary Joseph Radcliff, the 29-year-old son of Frank Radcliff, was arraigned on a charge of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, two charges of aggravated child sexually abusive activity, two charges of child sexually abusive activity and six charges of using the internet to communicate with another to commit a crime. He faces up to life in prison.

Zachary Radcliff served as the worship director and interim youth pastor for Oakwood Church.

Church leadership was notified of a potential incident in early October, leading them to suspend Zachary Radcliff with pay…

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October 21, 2024

Sister Sally Butler, right, in 2002 with Sister Sheila Buhse, center, and Sister Georgianna Glose. The three of them worked to expose sexual abuse at a Roman Catholic church in Brooklyn.Credit...Nancy Siesel/The New York Times

Sister Sally Butler, Nun Who Blew the Whistle on Sex Abuse, Dies at 93

(NY)
New York Times [New York NY]

October 20, 2024

By Penelope Green

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In the 1960s, she worked with priests to serve residents of housing projects in Brooklyn. Decades later, she learned that those priests had been abusing young boys.

[Photo above: Sister Sally Butler, right, in 2002 with Sister Sheila Buhse, center, and Sister Georgianna Glose. The three of them worked to expose sexual abuse at a Roman Catholic church in Brooklyn. Credit…Nancy Siesel/The New York Times]

Sister Sally Butler, a nun, social worker and activist who blew the whistle on the sexual abuse of children in the parish where she once worked, died on Oct. 6 at the residence of her order, the Sisters of St. Dominic of Amityville, in Suffolk County, N.Y. She was 93.

Her niece Kate Morris said the cause was a sudden respiratory illness.

Sister Butler was teaching high school and living in her order’s convent when she and two other nuns were…

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Survivors of clergy sex abuse frustrated by years-long wait for attorney general’s findings

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

October 20, 2024

By Brian MacQuarrie

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George Shea of Uxbridge, who was sexually abused as a boy by Roman Catholic priests, sat down for hours in 2021 with investigators from then-attorney general Maura Healey’s office to detail what had happened to him at the hands of clergy he had trusted.

Shea, 64, said he was told that Healey was conducting a wide-ranging investigation into clergy sexual abuse in the Worcester diocese. Shea had become an outspoken advocate for survivors of such abuse, and he was heartened that the state was looking beyond the well-publicized scandals that had rocked the Archdiocese of Boston.

Three years later, Shea and other survivors from the Worcester, Fall River, and Springfield dioceses are still waiting for the results of that investigation to be made public.

“It’s frustrating,” said Shea, who recalled that he sat for a lengthy interview with the attorney general’s office, which included a state trooper, in September 2021….

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Emmaus Federation of Switzerland distances itself from Abbé Pierre

BERN (SWITZERLAND)
Swissinfo [Bern, Switzerland]

October 21, 2024

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The Emmaus Federation of Switzerland has condemned the sexual abuses attributed to the late Abbé Pierre, a French Catholic priest who campaigned for the poor and homeless. The federation will no longer use his image, in a sign of solidarity with all victims, it said.

“Without denying the history of the Emmaus movement, the Federation condemns these unspeakable acts and distances itself from the figure of Abbé Pierre, its founder,” said the Emmaus Federation of Switzerland in a press release on Monday, following an extraordinary general meeting held on October 15 in Bern.

The federation stressed that it will no longer use Abbé Pierre’s image or quotes in its communication material, “as a sign of solidarity with all victims of sexist and sexual violence”. It invited its members to do the same.

The federation offered its unreserved support to the victims, noting their courage in coming forward to testify. It…

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Pope Francis and practicing what one preaches

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

October 21, 2024

By Kieran Tapsell, Pearls and Irritations

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Pope Francis urges cooperation on child abuse cases, but the Vatican’s lack of transparency contradicts this

Pope Francis has called upon Church authorities to cooperate with civil authorities in relation to child sexual abuse by Church personnel. But when it comes to the Vatican cooperating, it is a different story.

On Sept. 28, while in Belgium, Pope Francis is reported to have said: “‘There is no room for abuse in the church. I ask everyone, don’t cover up abuse! Evil must not be hidden, it must be in the open … so that the abuser is judged, whether they be a layman or a laywoman, a priest or a bishop, that they be judged. The word of God is clear.”

If the word of God is clear, Pope Francis is not listening to it. The Holy See only publishes its disciplinary decisions when the allegations are in the…

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Immanuel Little Rock is making news again

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

October 20, 2024

By Mark Wingfield

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An Arkansas church rocked by child sexual abuse scandals is preparing to adopt bylaws for the first time in its 132-year history, but the draft proposal would muzzle church members from speaking to reporters and non-members about the affairs of the church.

This unusual bylaw provision was unveiled just days before one of the church’s former ministers was formally charged with repeated sexual assault and kidnapping of a child during what he called “closet time” with her at Immanuel Baptist Church.

Patrick Stephen Miller previously served Immanuel as assistant director of children’s ministry and was sent from there to an Oklahoma church without any notice to that church of accusations made against him. Miller was charged with two counts each of kidnapping and second-degree sexual assault, which together carry a potential life sentence.

It was church members speaking out about this and other unaddressed matters of sexual abuse at the church that…

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Cardinal Dolan Still Getting Flamed For Breaking Bread With Donald Trump At Catholic Dinner

NEW YORK (NY)
International Business Times

October 20, 2024

By Mary Papenfuss

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Sitting down with a controversial felon not a good look for the church just now, critics complain

New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan is still getting scorched after he was photographed smiling and laughing it up with former President Donald Trump at a key dinner held by the Catholic Diocese of New York.

Dolan was clearly enjoying himself immensely at the annual Alfred E. Smith dinner last week as he chatted and joked with convicted felon Trump, who a jury earlier this year declared had sexually abused E. Jean Carroll in a Manhattan department store. The annual event which was held the same day the Los Angeles diocese agreed to pay $1.5 billion to hundreds of sexual abuse victims of Catholic priests, raises money for Catholic Charities.

It was insult on top of grievous injury, many are complaining.

New York Times columnist Maureen Down wrote Saturday of Dolan: “ View Cache

October 20, 2024

Archbishop Iannone on Church’s fight against abuse and existing norms

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

October 19, 2024

By Andrea Tornielli

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As the Synod on Synodality explores the issue of abuse and the Church’s efforts to combat it, Archbishop Filippo Iannone, Prefect of the Dicastery for Legislative Texts, speaks to Vatican News about the various procedures being implemented and the efficacy of existing canonical norms.

The fight against abuse remains a constant concern within the Church, especially in recent years. The topic has also surfaced in the discussions of the ongoing Synod and continues to be monitored closely by the media.

We spoke to Archbishop Filippo Iannone, Prefect of the Dicastery for Legislative Texts, to explore some of the procedures being implemented.

Q: Can you tell us where we stand in terms of the laws in force? Are they effective?

This is certainly a topic of central concern for the entire Church, as the Pope frequently emphasizes, so it naturally found its way into the interventions of the Synod members. Canon…

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Pontifical Commission for Protection of Minors to strengthen ties with DDF

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

October 18, 2024

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A statement released on Friday, October 17, by the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors says the body looks ahead to the pilot Annual Report and to strengthening ties with the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors held its Plenary Assembly in Rome from October 7-11. In a statement released on Friday, the Commission said the gathering brought together 30 expert members from across five continents to discuss the strategic direction of the Commission under the leadership of newly appointed Secretary Bishop Luis Manuel Ali Herrera and Adjunct Secretary Teresa Kettelkamp.

Cardinal Seán Patrick O’Malley, OFM Cap., President of the Commission, celebrated Mass for the opening of the Assembly.

“Those who are hurting have a particular claim on our love,” he said in his homily, “The Commission has an opportunity and obligation to make the Church a more Samaritan Church.”

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Feds Arrest Child Abuse Material Distributor Convict, Father Of Kearsarge Trans Athlete

CONCORD (NH)
Patch.com [Concord NH]

October 19, 2024

By Tony Schinella

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Marc Jacques, who was on delayed sentencing after pleading guilty to a felony count, was arrested Friday after appearing to violate bail.

The father of a trans athlete, recently convicted on a child sexual abuse material distribution charge, has been arrested by the federal government after parents of children participating and attending Kearsarge Regional High School soccer games raised concerns about his presence.

Marc A. Jacques, 50, was arrested on Friday on unknown charges, government sources confirmed to Patch. He is scheduled to be arraigned on Monday. He was out on bail on delayed sentencing after pleading guilty to a single felony count of distribution of child sexual abuse material in March. Marc Jacques is the father of Maëlle Des Lauriers Jacques, a trans athlete and goalie on the Kearsarge girls’ soccer team, and had been attending his child’s games before his arrest.

During the past few weeks, parents wondered…

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Texas man’s execution halted after last-minute subpoena to testify before state Legislature

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

October 19, 2024

By Daniel Payne

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A condemned Texas man’s execution has been halted after lawmakers subpoenaed him to appear before the state Legislature amid claims of his innocence.

The Supreme Court of Texas said in a post on X late Thursday that it had “granted a Texas House of Representatives’ emergency motion” and “effectively [halted] the execution of Robert Roberson,” which was scheduled to take place on Thursday night.

Roberson was convicted in 2003 of the murder of his infant daughter, Nikki, whom he had brought to a local hospital with severe injuries. Roberson claimed the baby had fallen from her bed, but medical experts argued that her injuries were consistent with child abuse.

Testimony at his trial included the claim that Nikki’s injuries were consistent with “shaken baby syndrome.” Since his conviction, Roberson has attempted to establish his innocence by invoking Texas’s “junk science” law, which allows defendants to argue that scientific evidence used…

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The Wages of Sin Paid by the Innocent

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Catholic Thing [Springfield VA]

October 20, 2024

By David G Bonagura, Jr.

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After years of bankruptcy litigation, my diocese has just agreed to a record $330 million payout to victims of sexual abuse by clergy. The Archdiocese of Los Angeles made even that hefty sum look small with an $880 million settlement. In these and many other cases, all of the diocese’s parishes will be forced to contribute to the debt. Which means parishioners will be paying for the sins of their priests.

Not a few Catholics are as angry as our Lord was when He chased the money changers from the temple. Why should the innocent pay from their wages to cover the sins of the guilty?

This conundrum reformulates an old question that cries out with the blood of Abel and continues until today: Why does a good God allow the innocent to suffer?

Sin destroys the innocent far more rapidly than the sinner. The drunk driver kills…

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What caused clergy sexual abuse? | READER COMMENTARY

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

October 19, 2024

By Christy Bergland

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With nearly 1,000 people filing sexual abuse claims against the Archdiocese of Baltimore to which the Roman Catholic Church admits, I will continue to ask an important question (“Attorney: 900 to 1,000 filed sex abuse claims in Archdiocese of Baltimore bankruptcy case,” Oct. 15).

Where is the Catholic Church’s deep dive into the root-cause analysis of this horrendous behavior?

Certainly, the public deserves to know.

— Christy Bergland, Baltimore

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Camp for people with special needs to cease operations, Manchester Diocese says

MANCHESTER (NH)
WMUR-TV, ABC-9 [Manchester NH]

October 20, 2024

By Imani Fleming

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An annual weeklong camp in Gilmanton for people with special needs will no longer be offered, the Diocese of Manchester announced on Friday.

For 60 years, Exceptional Citizens’ Week at Camp Fatima in Gilmanton offered people ages 9 and older with intellectual or physical challenges a week of traditional camp activities such as horseback riding, swimming, boating, arts and crafts, and more at no cost to the camper.Advertisement

In a statement, Bishop Peter Libasci of Manchester said all programs at Camp Fatima and its sister facility, Camp Bernadette, must “create a strong and healthy Catholic culture, remain faithful to Church teaching and, very importantly, reinforce the Camps’ values. These imperatives supersede any one program of the organization and is why E.C. Week will not continue at Camp Fatima.”

When News 9 reached out to the diocese for clarification, a spokesperson provided a statement that said, “Code of conduct violations occurred…

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UK bishop responds to report saying Catholics reduced Mass attendance due to abuse crisis

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

October 19, 2024

By Andy Drozdziak

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A leading U.K. bishop has vowed to make the Church a place of “safety and sanctuary for all” after a report showed a third of Mass-goers reduced their Mass attendance because of concerns about the child sexual abuse crisis.

Last week, the Centre for Catholic Studies at Durham University published a study titled “Attitudes of Catholics in England and Wales to Child Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church.”

The study showed that a third of Catholics who previously went to Mass have reduced their attendance or stopped going altogether as a result of the child sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church.

Responding to the report, Bishop Paul Mason, lead bishop for safeguarding at the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales, said: “I would like to assure Catholics, and indeed anyone who has concerns, that safeguarding is integral to a bishop’s work and ministry and that…

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What to know about the Los Angeles Catholic Church’s $880M settlement with sexual abuse victims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 20, 2024

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Los Angeles Archdiocese agrees to $880M settlement in sex-abuse cases. The $880 million settlement is in addition to $740 million paid previously to Southern California victims of sex abuse.

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to hundreds of victims of clergy sexual abuse dating back decades.

The settlement with 1,353 people who allege that they were abused by local Catholic priests is the largest single child sex abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese, according to experts. The accusers were able to sue after California approved a law that opened a three-year window in 2020 for cases that exceeded the statute of limitations.

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has previously paid $740 million to victims. With the settlement announced Wednesday, the total payout will be more than $1.5 billion.

Attorneys still need to get approval for the settlement from all plaintiffs to finalize it, the Plaintiffs’…

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October 19, 2024

L.A. Catholic church covered up molesting priests for decades. The price: $1.5 billion and so much pain

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times [Los Angeles CA]

October 19, 2024

By Richard Winton and Hannah Fry

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Clergy sex abuse scandals have rocked Catholic churches across the world, but few places have seen the financial toll of the Los Angeles Archdiocese.

With a record $880-million settlement with victims announced this week, the Los Angeles Archdiocese has now paid out more than $1.5 billion.

The bill reflects its rank as the largest archdiocese in the nation, with more than 4 million members, and a California law that gave accusers more time to file suit.

But attorneys and others who have been involved in more than two decades of litigation say it also is an indication of the failures of church leaders to identify molesting priests and prevent them from committing more crimes.

Some of those priests, after undergoing treatment at residential centers, were shuffled to new parishes, frequently in immigrant neighborhoods where the abuse would continue.

With the latest settlements, the number of people alleging abuse now stands…

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Houston’s Champion Forest Baptist agrees to settle child sex abuse suit

HOUSTON (TX)
Chron [Houston TX]

October 17, 2024

By Eric Killelea, Religion Reporter

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The plaintiffs sought $1 million in relief for the boy’s medical bills and his “pain and suffering.”

Champion Forest Baptist Church in far northwest Houston agreed to pay “minimal money” to settle a civil case that alleges one of its Sunday school teachers beat and sexually assaulted a 4-year-old boy in 2019, an attorney for the church confirmed this week.

“The case, like many lawsuits in North America, was settled by the church’s insurance company,” Marc Sheiness, a Houston-based attorney representing Champion Forest, said in an email Wednesday. “The insurance company paid minimal money to eliminate the expense of ongoing litigation.” In response to additional questions via email, Sheiness declined to disclose the cost of the proposed settlement. He said the amount “was not determined by the church and had nothing to do with the allegations or injuries being…

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Late priest ID’d as child molester

TOLEDO (OH)
Sandusky Register [Sandusky OH]

October 17, 2024

By Angela LaRosa

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A late local priest was recently added to a list of Toledo-area clerics that the area’s diocese said were “credibly accused” of child sex abuse.

It’s not known when the name was added to the list, but Sandusky native Father Michael G. Madden was added to the list, which is kept by the Toledo Catholic Diocese.

The list includes 10 other priests who were added after their deaths. There are 26 other names on the list, which include clergy who have substantiated allegations of sexual abuse of a minor or child pornography.

“This is same groceries, different bag,” said Claudia Vercellotti, an advocate with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known also as SNAP, adding that the diocese’s method of “stealthily” releasing the information was “as effective as putting a note in a bottle and throwing it out to the ocean.”

Madden, who passed away in 2007, is…

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Cyber Tips From NCMEC Lead to Arrest of Arkansas Pastor, James Vincent Henry, on Possession of Child Sexual Abuse Material Charges

DELIGHT (AR)
Legal Examiner [Los Angeles CA]

October 17, 2024

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A pastor from Delight, Arkansas, has been arrested for possessing and distributing child sexual abuse materials. James Vincent Henry, 43, faces 100 counts related to these crimes.

Investigation and Arrest of Pastor on Charges Including Distribution of Child Sexual Abuse Material

On September 25, 2024, Arkansas State Police executed a search warrant following two cyber tips from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. These tips originated from the social media platforms Snapchat and Kik.

After examining digital evidence, authorities obtained an arrest warrant for Henry. He was taken into custody on October 14 and charged with 100 counts of possession, viewing, and distribution of child sexual abuse material.

Pastor’s Background Working With Children

Henry served as the pastor of Crossroads Assembly of God Church in Delight. His past roles included working as a youth pastor at various churches, notably Newsong Church in Centerton, where he was also part…

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Embattled Southern Baptist Church Proposes Bylaws Restricting Members’ Speech

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

October 17, 2024

By Josh Shepherd

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An Arkansas Baptist church, under fire for alleged cover-up of sexual abuse, has devised a new way to control negative publicity—forbid members from speaking anything with “(negative) intent” in public.

The church, Immanuel Baptist Church (IBC) in Little Rock, Arkansas, has faced intense public scrutiny since December, when former IBC deacons alleged that church leaders failed to disclose sexual abuse of minors.

On February 4, longtime IBC Senior Pastor Steven Smith told the church’s board of deacons, “I can’t have trust restored if people inside the church are talking to the newspaper,” according to sources reported by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.  

Two months later, Smith stepped down. 

Now, Immanuel is revising its bylaws to include a restriction on free speech.

“Church members are expected to avoid making statements to the general public, media, or via the Internet with intent to breach Church business confidentialities, injure the reputation of the Church,…

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Arkansas Pastor, a Foster Parent to 70 Children, Charged With 100 Counts of Possessing and Distributing CSAM

DELIGHT (AR)
ChurchLeaders [Colorado Springs CO]

October 17, 2024

By Jesse T Jackson

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James Vincent Henry, pastor of Crossroads Assembly of God in Delight, Arkansas, has been charged with 100 counts of possessing, viewing, and distributing child sexual abuse material (CSAM).

Editor’s note: This article refers to reports of child sex abuse that some readers might find triggering and/or disturbing.

According to the church’s website, the 43-year-old pastor has been married to his wife Brittney for 12 years, and the couple has three children.

Henry’s wife is also listed as a pastor of Crossroads Assembly of God.

Before becoming pastor of Crossroads Assembly of God, Henry served as a youth pastor at four different churches: Lacey Assembly of God, McGehee First Assembly of God, Mountain Pine First Assembly of God, and Newsong Church in Centerton, Arkansas.

RELATED: Christian Ethics Professor Arrested for Alleged Possession of Child Sex Abuse Material

“An Arkansas State Police (ASP) Internet Crimes Against…

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NC Pastor Charged With Sexual Exploitation of a Minor Following 2-Month Investigation

NEWLAND (NC)
ChurchLeaders [Colorado Springs CO]

October 18, 2024

By Dale Chamberlain

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A North Carolina pastor has been arrested and charged with sexual exploitation of a minor following a two-month investigation. Timothy Charles Rupard, 44, believed that he was communicating online with a 16-year-old girl. 

Editor’s note: This article refers to reports of child sex abuse that some readers might find triggering and/or disturbing.

Rupard is pastor of Temple Baptist Church, an independent KJV-only Baptist congregation in Newland, North Carolina.

According to WCYB, an investigator received a message in August from Rupard on an undercover social media account. In the message, Rupard, who reportedly utilized the fake username “David Eller,” allegedly solicited sex from a 16-year-old girl. 

RELATED: Florida Pastor, Previously Convicted in Sex Abuse Case, Under Investigation as Authorities Seek To Identify Other Victims

The account received more messages of a similar nature through September. In October, the investigator obtained a search warrant and determined that the account…

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Rev. De Leon’s appeal denied: Vatican strips priesthood status

LAREDO (TX)
Laredo Morning Times [Laredo TX]

October 17, 2024

By Maria Ruiz

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The Office of the Bishop Diocese of Laredo announced the official dismissal of Rev. Michael (Juan Antonio) De Leon, pastor of Divine Mercy Catholic Church, after the Vatican rejected his appeal in June.

On June 30, 2023, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith dismissed De Leon from the clerical state for reasons unstated, with him unable to perform mass in public.

The Vatican rejected De Leon’s recourse a year later, stripping his title as a priest. Bishop James A. Tamayo received news of this on Oct. 6, 2024.

“He can no longer present himself as a priest or celebrate the sacraments,” Tamayo said in an official statement.

During the process of his appeal undergoing review with the Vatican, the Diocese provided his full salary, health insurance and housing, benefits he now loses after leaving the priesthood. De Leon will continue to acquire benefits for the next six months…

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October 18, 2024

Dikasterium erachtet Verhalten der betreffenden Oberhirten als “nicht korrekt”

FRIBOURG (SWITZERLAND)
Katholisch.de [Bonn, Germany]

October 18, 2024

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Vatikan rügt Schweizer Bischöfe bei Umgang mit Missbrauch

Zürich ‐ Der Vatikan sieht Mängel beim Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch in der Schweiz und rüffelt sechs Bischöfe persönlich. Nach einer internen Untersuchung hatte die Schweizer Bischofskonferenz selbst um ein Schreiben gebeten.

Der Vatikan wirft sechs Schweizer Bischöfen Fehlverhalten im Umgang mit Meldungen über sexuellen Missbrauch vor. Das geht aus einem Schreiben des vatikanischen Dikasteriums für die Bischöfe hervor, über das die Schweizer Bischofskonferenz am Freitag auf ihrer Webseite informierte. Demnach hat das Dikasterium unter Leitung von Kardinal Robert Francis Prevost das Verhalten der betreffenden Bischöfe als “nicht korrekt erachtet”.

Vatikan fordert mehr Sorgfalt

Es habe sich herausgestellt, “dass die im kanonischen Recht vorgesehenen Verfahren nicht ordnungsgemäß befolgt wurden”, heißt es weiter. “Aufgrund dieser formalen Irregularitäten erteilte das Dikasterium für die Bischöfe kanonische Rügen”, so die Bischofskonferenz. Das Dikasterium fordere “die gesamte Schweizer Bischofskonferenz auf, künftig aufmerksamer zu agieren, die gemeldeten Missbrauchsfälle mit größter Sorgfalt und Fachkenntnis…

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Woman in Burundi imprisoned after accusing a priest of sexual abuse

GITEGA (BURUNDI)
La Croix International [Montrouge Cedex, France]

October 18, 2024

By Guy Aimé Eblotié

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After accusing a priest of sexually abusing minors, Émilienne Sibomana has been imprisoned in Burundi for false accusations. Despite being acquitted in July, she remains in prison, in violation of her country’s legal procedures, according to her lawyers.

Acquitted but still imprisoned—that is the fate of Émilienne Sibomana, a Burundian woman who has been behind bars for nearly two years for false accusations after she accused a priest, who was also a school principal, of sexually abusing minors in the Archdiocese of Gitega, located in Burundi’s second-largest city with the same name.

The case began in January 2023. According to the appeal decision, which La Croix International obtained, Émilienne Sibomana, a secretary at a high school, accused the school’s principal during a public meeting of sexually assaulting some female students in his office. The day after the meeting, she was arrested and imprisoned for making false accusations.

La Croix International has confirmed that on…

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Archdiocese of Los Angeles Agrees to Pay $880 Million Settlement to Clergy Sex Abuse Victims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Forbes [Jersey City NJ]

October 17, 2024

By Siladitya Ray

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Topline The Archdiocese of Los Angeles on Wednesday said it has agreed to pay $880 million to settle claims of clergy sexual abuse dating back several decades, which the victims’ attorneys say is the largest such settlement with a Catholic archdiocese.

Key Facts

  • The settlement covers 1,353 child sexual abuse claims dating back to the 1940s and filed after California’s Assembly Bill 218 was enacted in 2019, which allowed civil claims of older sexual abuse cases involving minors to be reopened.
  • In a letter to the city’s Catholic residents, LA Archbishop José H. Gomez wrote: “I am sorry for every one of these incidents, from the bottom of my heart,” adding that he hoped the settlement “will provide some measure of healing for what these men and women have suffered.”
  • Gomez said the church would fund the settlement by drawing from its “reserves, investments, and loans, along with…
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Is clerical celibacy a marker of Catholic faith?

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

October 18, 2024

By Jean D’Cunha

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Clerical celibacy is an issue that the ongoing final sessions of the Synod on Synodality should have discussed. However, the hierarchy continues to peripheralize it, despite its deleterious impacts on witnessing Christ and evangelizing.

Historically, the androcentric Roman Catholic Church has been mired in an endless crisis over clerical celibacy and chastity with pernicious implications, especially for its lay and religious women and children.

Apart from explicit violence against them by the celibate clerics, the hierarchy’s double standards of male sexual morality have placed the burden of blame, shame, guilt and sin on women survivors — the proverbial Eves, and have treated women in relationships with clerics as moral pariahs.

The abusive clerics have almost always emerged relatively unscathed as gentlemen of the cloth. Despite its claim of being the custodian of morality, the Church has reneged on accountability behind the smokescreen of theological and legal semantics.

In the Church’s…

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Letter from Archbishop Gomez

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Archdiocese of Los Angeles [Los Angeles CA]

October 16, 2024

By Archbishop José H. Gomez

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My dear brothers and sisters in Christ:

I want to inform you that we have reached a settlement with men and women who survived childhood sexual abuse at the hands of priests and other clergy and individuals serving in the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

I am sorry for every one of these incidents, from the bottom of my heart. My hope is that this settlement will provide some measure of healing for what these men and women have suffered.

Most of the alleged acts of abuse covered in this settlement took place more than fifty years ago, with a number of the cases dating back to the 1940s. Some of these acts are alleged to have been committed by Archdiocesan clergy, some by lay people, and some by religious order priests and clergy from other dioceses who were serving here.

As you know, for many years now the Archdiocese has…

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Archdiocese of Los Angeles announces nearly $1 billion clergy abuse settlement

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

October 17, 2024

By Daniel Payne

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The Archdiocese of Los Angeles announced a massive $880 million clergy abuse settlement on Wednesday, a record payout that Archbishop José Gomez expressed hope would “provide some measure of healing” for abuse victims.

Lawyers for both victims and the archdiocese said in a joint press release that the near-$1 billion settlement would address 1,353 childhood sexual abuse claims filed against the California archbishopric.

The mediation process, conducted under retired California Judge Daniel Buckley, took roughly a year.

Abuse survivors filed the claims against the archdiocese following the state’s enactment of Assembly Bill 218, which offered victims a three-year window to file civil abuse claims that had otherwise gone beyond the statute of limitations. 

Gomez in a statement on Wednesday said the settlement — the largest ever for a U.S. diocese or archdiocese — would “provide just compensation to the survivor-victims of these past abuses.”

It would also allow…

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What to know about the Los Angeles Catholic Church’s $880M settlement with sexual abuse victims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 17, 2024

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The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to hundreds of victims of clergy sexual abuse dating back decades.

The settlement with 1,353 people who allege that they were abused by local Catholic priests is the largest single child sex abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese, according to experts. The accusers were able to sue after California approved a law that opened a three-year window in 2020 for cases that exceeded the statute of limitations.

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has previously paid $740 million to victims. With the settlement announced Wednesday, the total payout will be more than $1.5 billion.

Attorneys still need to get approval for the settlement from all plaintiffs to finalize it, the Plaintiffs’ Liaison Committee said.

The agreement brings to an end most sexual abuse litigation against the largest archdiocese in the United States, though a few lawsuits against the church are still…

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October 17, 2024

In an April 29, 1961, clipping from the Chattanooga News-Free Press, the Rev. Joel Wiggs is shown, back row, fourth from left. The photo shows 20 Girl Scouts and two Boy Scouts receiving Catholic religious awards at Sts. Peter and Paul's Church.

Priest accused of abuse had ties to Chattanooga youth long ago

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

October 16, 2024

By Andrew Schwartz

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The Rev. Joel Wiggs was Scout leader, worked at St. Francis, Our Lady of Lourdes, Blessed Sacrament

[Photo above: In an April 29, 1961, clipping from the Chattanooga News-Free Press, the Rev. Joel Wiggs is shown, back row, fourth from left. The photo shows 20 Girl Scouts and two Boy Scouts receiving Catholic religious awards at Sts. Peter and Paul’s Church.]

Decades ago, a Humboldt, Tennessee, Catholic priest was coaxing boys to get naked with him, massaging them, molesting them and more, a man has alleged in a lawsuit filed last month in federal court.

The suit focuses on the period of time the Rev. Joel Wiggs, who died in 2001, spent in West Tennessee. But before the priest moved there, he’d spent many years in Chattanooga — as a leader in its Catholic and Boy and Girl Scout communities.

Scouting America records indicate Wiggs was a vice president on…

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Irish archbishop blocks Vatican interference in abuse case

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Catholic [Dublin, Ireland]

October 17, 2024

By Chai Brady

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An attempt to reinstate a priest laicised for the sexual abuse of minors by a top Vatican cleric has been decried by a leading Irish child protection campaigner Marie Collins, who warned children would have been put in danger.

The Vatican Secretariat of State tried to undo the laicisation of Ariel Alberto Príncipi, a former diocesan priest convicted of child sexual abuse while in Argentina, but was thwarted by Irishman Archbishop John Joseph Kennedy, head of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith disciplinary section.

Archbishop Kennedy declared void the September order from the Secretariat of State to rescind the laicisation in one of the most controversial public clashes between Vatican departments in recent times.

Speaking to The Irish Catholic, Marie Collins said within the Vatican “there is a great emphasis on authority and power and obviously somebody thought that they had enough authority to overturn something that the…

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A graph shows the number of accused clergy identified in allegations received by Archdiocese of LA by the year of alleged misconduct. The numbers include allegations that could not be substantiated or were not found credible. Most of the accused are now deceased. (Courtesy Archdiocese of Los Angeles)

LA Archdiocese to settle more than 1,300 historic abuse claims in new agreement

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Angelus - Archdiocese of Los Angeles [Los Angeles CA]

October 16, 2024

By Pablo Kay

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[Above: A graph shows the number of accused clergy identified in allegations received by Archdiocese of LA by the year of alleged misconduct. The numbers include allegations that could not be substantiated or were not found credible. Most of the accused are now deceased. (Courtesy Archdiocese of Los Angeles)]

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has reached an agreement in principle worth $880 million to compensate more than a thousand decades-old claims of childhood sexual abuse. 

Announced Wednesday in a joint statement from archdiocesan counsel and a committee of plaintiffs’ lawyers, the global settlement caps a yearlong mediation process that followed California’s three-year revival of civil claims of past sexual abuse involving minors.

The 1,353 claims to be compensated by the agreement are based on allegations against priests, other clergy, women religious and lay people from the archdiocese, along with religious order priests and clergy from other…

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How a conspiracy of silence evolves in time

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Catholic [Dublin, Ireland]

October 17, 2024

By Fr Martin Delaney

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This month I want to share three distinct reflections with a common thread. 

  1. The recent scoping enquiry into abuse perpetrated in schools run by Catholic religious orders revealed another very sad chapter in our Irish social history. The media follow up inevitably led to an avalanche of personal stories detailing the physical, emotional and sexual abuse suffered by many people during their school days, often in the distant past.

The state authorities and in particular The Department of Education now must decide where the enquiry process goes from here. There is an ongoing debate about the shape of any such enquiry. I can understand why some would want to limit the perimeters to ensure a more efficient outcome. However, any enquiry which does not include schools beyond those operated by Catholic leadership would be woefully unbalanced and unfair.

Such a limited scope could be open to the charge of being…

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Announcement of Settlement of Archdiocese of Los Angeles Childhood Sexual Abuse Claims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
PR Newswire [New York, NY]

October 16, 2024

By Plaintiff’s Liaison Committee and Kirk Dillman, Counsel for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles

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Attorneys representing the Plaintiff’s Liaison Committee and Kirk Dillman, Counsel for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles announced today that a settlement agreement in principle has been reached for the payment of $880 million to settle 1353 childhood sexual abuse claims filed against the Archdiocese after the enactment of California Assembly Bill 218 (AB 218) that provided a three-year window for the revival of civil claims of past sexual abuse involving minors.

“While there is no amount of money that can replace what was taken from these 1353 brave individuals who have suffered in silence for decades, there is justice in accountability,” said Plaintiffs’ Liaison Counsel in a joint statement. “We are grateful to the brave survivors who came forward to hold those responsible accountable and to protect the children of the future. We appreciate the Archdiocese of Los Angeles for acknowledging its failures that enabled and perpetuated the harm that came to these children and remain hopeful that the Archdiocese will be vigilant…

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Los Angeles Archdiocese reaches $880 million sex abuse settlement

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Reuters [London, England]

October 16, 2024

By Dietrich Knauth

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The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to 1,353 people who alleged that they were sexually abused as children by Catholic priests, in the largest settlement by a U.S. diocese over decades-old abuse claims.

Archbishop Jose H. Gomez expressed sorrow for the abuse in announcing the settlement on Wednesday.“

I am sorry for every one of these incidents, from the bottom of my heart,” Gomez said in a statement. “My hope is that this settlement will provide some measure of healing for what these men and women have suffered.”

The Archdiocese began mediating the abuse claims after California enacted a law that allowed new lawsuits to be based on past instances of sexual abuse involving minors.

The California law and similar laws in other states have driven many large Catholic organizations to seek bankruptcy protection around the U.S. In California, the Archdiocese of San…

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Catholic Archdiocese of LA agrees to $880 million settlement over hundreds of sex abuse claims

LOS ANGELES (CA)
CBS News [New York NY]

October 16, 2024

By Dean Fioresi

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The Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to settle sex abuse claims made by more than 1,300 alleged victims dating back to the 1940s. 

“I am sorry for everyone one of these incidents, from the bottom of my heart,” said Archbishop José H. Gomez in a statement. “My hope is that this settlement will provide some measure of healing for what these men and women have suffered.”

The settlement brings the overall amount the Archdiocese of Los Angeles has paid out to settle sex abuse lawsuits to nearly $1.5 billion, following a $660 million settlement with about 500 alleged victims in 2007.

Officials say the agreement in principle was reached to settle the remaining claims filed under Assembly Bill 218, which temporarily waived the statute of limitations for alleged victims to seek damages in sex abuse claims, allowing a three-year window for old cases to…

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Archdiocese of Los Angeles to pay $880M in sexual abuse settlement

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Washington Post

October 16, 2024

By Kelsey Ables

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The agreement, believed to be the largest single settlement of its kind by a Catholic archdiocese, will settle 1,353 claims of childhood sexual abuse.

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to settle more than 1,300 claims of childhood sexual abuse. The sprawling agreement is believed to be the largest single child sexual abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese and comes after a state law provided a three-year window to revive past civil claims of sexual abuse involving minors.

Some of the claims date to the 1940s, and the acts are alleged to have been perpetrated byarchdiocesan clergy, lay people and religious order priests and clergy from other dioceses who were serving in Los Angeles, a letter from Archbishop José H. Gomez said. The Archdiocese of Los Angeles is the largest Catholic diocese in the United States.

“I am sorry for every one…

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Archdiocese of Los Angeles agrees to pay $880 million to victims of clergy sexual abuse

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 16, 2024

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The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has agreed to pay $880 million to victims of clergy sexual abuse dating back decades, in what an attorney said was the largest single child sex abuse settlement with a Catholic archdiocese, it was announced Wednesday.

After the announcement of the agreement in principle, Archbishop José H. Gomez said in a statement, “I am sorry for every one of these incidents, from the bottom of my heart.”

“My hope is that this settlement will provide some measure of healing for what these men and women have suffered,” the archbishop added. “I believe that we have come to a resolution of these claims that will provide just compensation to the survivor-victims of these past abuses.”

Attorneys for 1,353 people who allege that they suffered horrific abuse at the hands of local Catholic priests reached the settlement after months of negotiations with the archdiocese, the Los Angeles  View Cache