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.

December 17, 2022

Catholic priest, accuser agree to drop dueling lawsuits involving New Orleans church

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

December 17, 2022

By Stephanie Riegel

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They walk away from the litigation as FBI reviews spending at St. Peter Claver Church

A man who had said he was raped as a 10-year-old boy on an overnight trip by a Roman Catholic priest from New Orleans has reached an agreement to drop his lawsuit, court documents show. The Rev. John Asare-Dankwah, former pastor of St. Peter Claver Church in Treme, has, in turn, agreed to drop a countersuit against the accuser, who is now in his 20s and is identified in court documents only as A.A. Doe.

In a conference Thursday with U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan, attorneys for both sides said they will file a joint motion by Dec. 22 to dismiss the allegations against each other, according to court records. That doesn’t mean the two sides reached a monetary settlement, only that they decided to walk away from the high-profile suits.

The Asare-Dankwah case is significant…

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Ex-seminary professor accused of sexual abuse by student sues SBC for defamation

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

December 17, 2022

By Leah MarieAnn Klett

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A former Southern Baptist Convention seminary professor accused of sexual abuse by a student has filed a defamation lawsuit against the SBC and several other entities, claiming he was an “easy target” and a “bona fide scapegoat” in the sex abuse scandal surrounding the denomination.

David Sills, a former professor of missions and cultural anthropology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, and his wife, Mary, filed a complaint on Nov. 21 in the Circuit Court of Mobile, Alabama.

The lawsuit centers on allegations that Sills sexually abused Jennifer Lyell starting in 2004 when Lyell was a student and Sills was a professor.

Lyell, who served as vice president of LifeWay Christian Resources, posted a confession in 2018 claiming how Sills, who has been married for over 30 years, sexually abused her and groomed her. At the time, Lyell  View Cache

Citing pressure on archbishop, Montreal abuse commission co-chair resigns

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

December 16, 2022

By Francois Gloutnay, Catholic News Service

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The retired judge who has co-chaired the Montreal Archdiocese’s committee to implement abuse procedures has resigned, saying serious problems remain in the application of “regulations, policies and procedures approved by the archbishop.”

“I began my mandate as co-chair with real enthusiasm and the hope that I would be able to make important changes that would make the Catholic Church in Montreal an example of transparency and accountability to victims of abuse,” Pepita G. Capriolo wrote in her resignation letter, dated Dec. 7 and published as an appendix to the Fifth Ombudsman’s Report for the Archdiocese of Montreal. The ombudsman’s report was submitted to Montreal Archbishop Christian Lépine the same day.

She said “the numerous difficulties highlighted in the ombudsman’s last reports” led to her resignation.

Two years ago, Capriolo signed an incriminatory report on the handling of Father Brian Boucher’s case by Montreal archdiocesan authorities and even Vatican officials. Her…

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Cardinal sues for defamation over accusations of sexual assault

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Aleteia [Paris, France]

December 14, 2022

By Cyprien Viet

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Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet is suing a woman for defamation, after she accused him of sexual assault in a class action lawsuit. If he wins, the money will go to Indigenous victims.

“I am taking legal action for defamation before the courts of Quebec in order to prove the falsity of the allegations made against me and to restore my reputation and honor,” said Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet in a statement published on December 13, 2022.

The current Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, who was Archbishop of Quebec from 2002 to 2010, was named in a class action lawsuit on August 16, after being accused of inappropriate touching by a former employee of the diocese. He denounced the “slanderous and defamatory accusations” and is now suing the woman, known only as F., for 100,000 Canadian dollars (about 70,000 euros, 74,000 US dollars) in compensatory damages.

“On August 16, 2022, unfounded…

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Alleged Abuse by Catholic Priest Haunting, 50 Years Later

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
The Intelligencer/Wheeling News-Register [Wheeling WV]

December 17, 2022

By Linda Harris

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A Steubenville Catholic Central High School graduate who says he was molested by a priest 54 years ago wants the Diocese of Steubenville to admit “it wasn’t my fault.”

The man, who asked not to be identified, alleges the Rev. Kenneth Bonadies grabbed his “private area” after class and asked some inappropriate questions in the confessional 54 years ago.

He said he’s looking for “validation from the diocese that it wasn’t my fault, I had nothing to do with that, that the diocese wasn’t doing its job.”

“It really has bothered me,” he said recently. “It changed my life forever, a Catholic priest doing this to me. It made it hard to get along with other people, it made me not trust people — especially priests. Every time I would go to church I would think, ‘I wonder if he’s ever abused anyone?’”

On Thursday, the diocese confirmed that attorneys…

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Baltimore archbishop battled against release of abuse documents for nearly 8 years: ‘I fought the good fight’

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 15, 2022

By Jonathan M. Pitts

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As bishop of Bridgeport, Connecticut, the Most Rev. William E. Lori fought for nearly eight years — all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court — to prevent the wide release of information about the history of child sexual abuse in that branch of the Catholic Church.

The soft-spoken prelate argued in the case two decades ago that what was already publicly known about sexual misconduct by clergy in the diocese was all the information the public needed to grasp the scope of the crisis and understand who was responsible.

Now archbishop of Baltimore, the 71-year-old Lori is facing a tidal wave of criticism — and even calls for his resignation — as the Maryland Attorney General’s Office seeks to release the results of its four-year investigation into the abuse of children by Catholic clergy in Baltimore and nine counties in the state.

Democratic Attorney General…

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Debate on investigation John Paul II

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
CNE (Christian Network Europe) [The Netherlands]

December 16, 2022

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There has been criticism of Dutch journalist Ekke Overbeek’s investigation into the actions of the later Pope John Paul II concerning the abuse of children by Roman Catholic clergy in his homeland of Poland. Overbeek rebounds. “The Polish secret service did not have pure motives but often reported accurately.”

Earlier this month, Overbeek, a journalist from the Netherlands living in Poland, said he had found “concrete cases of priests abusing children in the Archdiocese of Krakow, where the future pope was archbishop. The future pope knew about it and transferred them anyway, which led to new victims.” Overbeek spent years digging through thousands of documents in the archives of the SB, the Polish security service, during the era of communism, which existed until 1990.

However, there is criticism of how Overbeek did his research and presented it, the Dutch Christian daily Nederlands Dagblad writes. “We did research at…

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French Church sets up new national court for canonical crimes

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

December 16, 2022

By Tom Heneghan

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The French Church has opened a National Canonical Criminal Court, a novelty in the Catholic world, to have clerical and lay experts deal with major canonical crimes such as sexual abuse of adults, abuse of authority and financial crimes. 

It takes over from the diocesan or interdiocesan tribunals that used to handle such cases. Lesser cases, such as marriage nullifications, make up the majority of cases at the diocesan level and will continue to be adjudicated there.  

Clerical sexual abuse of minors remains the responsibility of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), as does accusations against a bishop who, since appointed by the Pope, also comes under the Vatican. Rome can refer cases back to the French court but will handle all appeals.

This first national canonical court was created in response to a proposal by the so-called Sauvé report of 2021 into clerical sexual abuse.

It…

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December 16, 2022

The complex case of Fr Marko Rupnik, explained

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

December 15, 2022

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Fr. Marko Rupnik is at the center of a complicated, and still unfolding, set of allegations in Rome. ‘The Pillar’ explains what’s happening.

The global leader of the Jesuit order on Wednesday told journalists that Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik, SJ, was excommunicated in 2019 — two years before he faced allegations of spiritually abusing religious sisters in the priest’s native Slovenia.

Speaking to journalists Dec. 14, Fr. Arturo Sosa, superior general of the Society of Jesus, said that Rupnik had indeed been excommunicated, but that the penalty was remitted after Rupnik – a well-known Jesuit artist – repented of a serious canonical crime, namely the absolution of an accomplice in a sin against the sixth commandment.

Sosa’s admission brings some clarity to the complicated set of allegations against Rupnik, and confusing statements issued in response to them.

But the allegations against Rupnik are still fairly complicated, and the timeline…

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Glasgow priest Neil McGarrity who touched girls ‘stunned’ by sex assault charges

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

December 16, 2022

By Connor Gordon

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A priest has told of his shock at being accused of sexually abusing four girls after claims that he hugged inappropriately and touched their waist.

Father Neil McGarrity, 58, is accused of carrying out the crimes in Glasgow at St Thomas the Apostle Roman Catholic church in Riddrie, St Bernadette’s church in Carntyne, and his parish house between December 2018 and February 2020.

McGarrity, of the Germiston area, denied two charges of sexual assault against a girl at his trial at Glasgow sheriff court yesterday. He also pleaded not guilty to a further two charges of sexual assault and engaging in sexual activity with other girls.

McGarrity told the trial in his evidence that he was made aware of the allegations after a phone call from his archbishop in May 2020.

Billy Lavelle, for the defence, asked the priest of 33 years for his reaction to the claims. McGarrity said he…

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Cardinal Ouellet sues for defamation over accusations of sexual assault

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

December 13, 2022

By Kevin Jones, Catholic News Agency

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 Cardinal Marc Ouellet has filed a defamation lawsuit in Quebec courts contending that a woman wrongly accused him of sexual assault in a class-action sex abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec.

“I have never been guilty of these reprehensible behaviors, much less of those alleged against other members of the clergy cited in the class action,” the cardinal said in a Dec. 13 statement accompanying the lawsuit. “This inappropriate association, intentionally constructed and widely spread for improper purposes, must be denounced.”

“Having preliminarily made sure to protect the plaintiff’s anonymity by obtaining an order to that effect, today I am taking legal action for defamation before the courts of Québec in order to prove the falsity of the allegations made against me and to restore my reputation and honor,” Ouellet said.

The 78-year-old cardinal served as archbishop of Quebec from 2002 to 2010. He is currently prefect of the…

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Jesuit case underscores secrecy, leniency for abuse of women

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

December 15, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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Revelations that the Vatican let a famous priest off the hook twice for abusing his authority over adult women has exposed two main weaknesses in the Holy See’s abuse policies: sexual and spiritual misconduct against adult women is rarely if ever punished, and secrecy still reigns supreme, especially when powerful priests are involved.

The Jesuit order, to which Pope Francis belongs, was forced to admit Wednesday that its initial statements about the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, an internationally recognized religious artist, were less than complete. The order had said Rupnik was accused in 2021 of unspecified problems “in the way he exercised his ministry” but that the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith determined the allegations were too old to prosecute.

But under questioning by journalists, the Jesuit superior general, the Rev. Arturo Sosa, acknowledged the Congregation had prosecuted Rupnik for a separate, prior case from 2019 that…

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Catholic church settles lawsuit around historical sex abuse of 10-year-old B.C. girl

VICTORIA (CANADA)
North Island Gazette [Fort Hardy, British Columbia, Canada]

December 15, 2022

By Karl Yu

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Incidents allegedly happened at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church at Nanaimo in 1976

WARNING: This article contains information about allegations of sexual abuse.

A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit involving accusations that a former Catholic priest on Vancouver Island sexually abused a 10-year-old girl during confession decades ago.

The woman, now 57 and whose identity is protected, filed a notice of civil claim in 2020 against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria, in B.C. Supreme Court. She alleges that Father Gerhard Hartmann, who has since died, used his position as an authority figure to take advantage of her when she was a parishioner at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church at Nanaimo in 1976.

Details of the settlement were not available, but the plaintiff and her lawyer Robert Talach told the News Bulletin the matter was settled to everyone’s satisfaction.

Beginning in 1976, Hartmann is alleged to have,…

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We Declare You Restored: How Christian ‘Forgiveness’ Is Deployed to Enable Abuse and Corruption

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Religion Dispatches [Somerville, MA]

December 14, 2022

By Greg Carey

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Popular theology routinely enables powerful men to rehabilitate their public image after their misconduct goes public. This pattern applies especially to men known for their dedication to Jesus. The standard line holds that the man has repented of his sin and found forgiveness. Therefore, just as Jesus no longer holds his sin against him, neither should society. Far too often, the social harms attached to his transaction are ignored, and no transparent process for rehabilitation and reformation occurs. In late November two such cases hit the news, each reflecting how powerful White men protect one another in the wake of moral failure.

Earlier this year allegations of sexual assault surfaced in a report on sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention. The report’s most prominent charge pointed to former SBC president Johnny Hunt, who resigned his Georgia megachurch pastorate. Then, in late November, Hunt was declared restored to ministry by…

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Podcast: What we know (so far) about the abuse case of Jesuit artist Marko Rupnik

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

December 15, 2022

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This week on “Inside the Vatican,” host Colleen Dulle and veteran Vatican correspondent Gerard O’Connell give an update on the new facts that have emerged in the case of the Jesuit artist Marko Rupnik, who was suspended from parts of his ministry in response to allegations of abuse against him.

The facts are difficult to confirm, so this week on the podcast Colleen and Gerry also explain the process they use to determine whether information is credible.

The day after this episode was recorded, Father Arturo Sosa, superior general of the Society of Jesus, confirmed to journalists in response to a question from the Associated Press that in 2019, two years prior to the most recent allegations of abuse, Father Rupnik had been “convicted and sanctioned” by the Vatican for granting absolution in the confessional to a woman with whom he had “engaged in sexual activity.” A priest absolving someone…

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NY GOV. AND AG DOWNPLAY SEXUAL ABUSE

NEW YORK (NY)
Catholic League [New York NY]

December 15, 2022

By Bill Donohue

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Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on how New York officials are handling accusations of sexual harassment:

When Kathy Hochul succeeded Andrew Cuomo as governor of New York (she was his lieutenant governor), she was asked about the culture of sexual abuse that had arisen under her boss. “Anyone who crosses the line will be addressed by me.” Not true.

Hochul is giving a pass to an accused sexual abuser in her administration,  Ibrahim Khan, the former chief of staff to Attorney General Letitia James: he is accused of sexually harassing a former AG employee, Sofia Quintanar. Hochul said last week that she does not support an investigation of this matter. But when it came to probes of accused priests, she supported all of them.

Attorney General Letitia James was also tough on Cuomo. “Allegations of sexual harassment should always be taken seriously. There must be a truly independent investigation…

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No longer secret – over 300 sexual abuse survivors of upper-class Catholic school speak out

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
IrishCentral [New York NY]

December 15, 2022

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Blackrock College and the Spiritan priests sexual abuse accusations bring Ireland’s Catholic Church to be further exposed, now among the upper classes.

The latest chapter in Ireland’s seemingly perpetual crisis of child abuse in religious institutions is now being written. We have cycled through abuse in orphanages, industrial schools and Magdalene Laundries, only to now contend with abuse at literally the highest order of all.

The name Blackrock College reeks of privilege and upper-class mores. The South Dublin institution was as close to the equivalent of the playing fields of Eton as you could get. Among its alumni are Eamon de Valera, founder of the 26-county Irish state who ruled over Ireland for decades, and Archbishop John Charles McQuade, who almost single-handedly imposed his puritanical control over the Irish church for decades.

Surely, there could be no whiff of pedophile activity in such an established school.

Think again, sadly.  Thanks to…

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December 15, 2022

Closing of Jesuit abuse case left victims feeling betrayed, expert says

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

December 14, 2022

By Philip Pullella

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One of the Catholic Church’s top sexual abuse experts has called for a review of how his own Jesuit order and the Vatican handled allegations against an internationally known priest and artist.

The case of Father Marko Ivan Rupnik has rattled the Jesuit order, of which Pope Francis is a member, and prompted criticism of the Vatican doctrinal department for not pursuing it further.

“I can understand how victims feel betrayed,” Father Hans Zollner, a member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors and the head of Rome’s Gregorian University Centre for the study of abuse, told Reuters.

Following Italian media reports that Rupnik had sexually and psychologically abused nuns when he was their spiritual director in his native Slovenia three decades ago, Jesuit headquarters issued a statement on Dec. 2 saying he had been disciplined.

It said it had commissioned an unnamed, non-Jesuit to investigate Rupnik, 68,…

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B.C. woman settles lawsuit over alleged childhood sexual abuse by Catholic priest during confession

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

December 15, 2022

By Bethany Lindsay

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Father Gerhard Hartmann served with the Hitler Youth before his career in the church on Vancouver Island

WARNING: This story contains an account of sexual assault.

A Vancouver Island woman who says she was sexually abused as a child by a former Nazi turned Catholic priest has settled her lawsuit against the church.

Father Gerhard Hartmann repeatedly sexually assaulted and fondled the victim over a period of three years at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church in Nanaimo, B.C., beginning in 1976, when she was just 10 years old, according to the notice of claim.

“It happened during confession, which for a Catholic is a sacred time,” the plaintiff said. Because she is a victim of alleged sexual abuse, CBC has agreed to refer to her by her initials, S.P.

“I was in a very vulnerable position and I was just a young child. It’s such an abuse of power on so many…

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Jesuit superior says that Fr. Marko Rupnik was excommunicated in 2019

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

December 14, 2022

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The Jesuit Superior General, Father Arturo Sosa, has confirmed that Jesuit artist Father Marko Rupnik incurred an automatic excommunication in 2019 for absolving a woman he had sex with, a fact his religious order was aware of but did not disclose until now.

According to a report by the Associated Press, Sosa disclosed this new information Wednesday in a briefing with journalists in Rome.

Abusing the sacrament of confession in this manner is one of the most serious crimes in the Catholic Church.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith “said it happened, there was absolution of an accomplice,” Sosa said. “So he was excommunicated. How do you lift an excommunication? The person has to recognize it and has to repent, which he did.”

Sosa also contradicted the Jesuits’ earlier statement and said the restrictions on Rupnik’s ministry, which remain in effect, dated from this earlier conviction,…

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Jesuits admit artist excommunicated before new abuse claims

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

December 14, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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The head of Pope Francis’ Jesuit religious order admitted Wednesday that a famous Jesuit priest had been convicted of one of the most serious crimes in the Catholic Church some two years before the Vatican decided to shelve another case against him for allegedly abusing other adult women under his spiritual care.

The Rev. Arturo Sosa, the Jesuit superior general, made the admission during a briefing with journalists that was dominated by the scandal over the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik and the reluctance of both the Vatican and the Jesuits to tell the whole story behind the unusually lenient treatment he received even after he had been temporarily excommunicated.

Rupnik is unknown to most Catholics but is a giant within the Jesuit order and the Catholic hierarchy because he is one of the church’s most sought-after artists. His mosaics depicting biblical scenes decorate the basilica in Lourdes, France, the…

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December 14, 2022

Officials at Archdiocese of Montreal meddled in abuse investigations, ombudsman says

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

December 12, 2022

By Leah Hendry

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High-ranking official leaked confidential information about abuse complaints, according to new report

The lawyer appointed to help make the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Montreal more transparent in the way it handles allegations of abuse against clergy says her job is being undermined by those inside the church.

In a report made public Monday and obtained in advance by CBC News, Marie Christine Kirouack, the church ombudsman, said she discovered a high-ranking clergy member was leaking information about abuse complaints, and in some cases, actively discouraging complainants from contacting her.

“I was totally flabbergasted,” Kirouack said in an interview. The lawyer was appointed to her role by the archdiocese  in the spring of 2021 to deal with complaints of abuse and other inappropriate conduct.

Although the complaint process is supposed to be confidential, Kirouack said the priest, who is not named in her report, was sharing emails with a person outside the…

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Letter to Bishop Michael Barber-Diocese of Oakland-SNAP has identified 227 publicly accused perpetrators

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

December 13, 2022

By Dan McNevin

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December 13, 2022

SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

PO Box 16376

Chicago, IL, 60616

Most Reverend Michael C. Barber, SJ

Diocese of Oakland

2121 Harrison Street, Suite 100

Oakland, CA 94612

Dear Bishop Barber,

We are writing to you because, so far, SNAP has identified 227 publicly accused perpetrators associated with the Diocese of Oakland, a stark contrast from your current list which only includes 65 names. Our list has been created through careful study of documents in the public domain, including culling the lists released by other Catholic dioceses and religious orders. We are sending you this complete list and ask that you take our research and use it to update your own list.

While we have strived very hard for accuracy, as you review our list if you find we have mistakenly included a name, please let us know why you believe we have erred. We will then modify our list…

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Advocates Demand Oakland Bishop Add 100+ Priests to List of Alleged Abusers

OAKLAND (CA)
NBC News [San Francisco, CA]

December 13, 2022

By Candice Nguyen, Michael Bott and Mark Villarreal

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Leaders representing the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) unveiled a list of East Bay church officials, mostly priests, they say have been accused of sexual abuse. Standing at 227 names, SNAP says its list is more than three times longer than the list released by Oakland Bishop Michael Barber in 2019.

Advocates from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests gathered Tuesday at the doorstep of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland to unveil a list of East Bay priests they say have been accused of sexual abuse, mostly against children. 

“We’ve painstakingly gone through all the records we could find,” said Dan McNevin, a survivor of clergy abuse and one of the architects behind SNAP’s list, detailing his process of combing through court filings, news reports and other publicly available sources for bits of new information.

Currently standing at 227 names, the list just published by…

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SNAP to share its list of those publicly accused of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Oakland

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

December 12, 2022

By Dan McNevin

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At a sidewalk press conference outside the Cathedral of Christ the Light in Oakland, SNAP will share its list of those publicly accused of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Oakland

Following the press conference, SNAP will hand deliver a letter and a copy of its list to Bishop Michael Barber, asking him to expand his list

The list published by the Diocese of Oakland contains 65 names

SNAP’s list is currently at 227, with more names anticipated to be added before the 3-year civil window opened by California Assembly Bill 218 closes at the end of the month

WHEN

Tuesday, December 13, 2022, at noon

WHERE

On the public sidewalk outside of the Cathedral of Christ the Light, 2121 Harrison St. in Oakland, CA

WHO

5-6 survivors of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Oakland, supporters and advocates

WHY

The Diocese of Oakland released its own list of abusers in 2019. That list…

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‘No place was safe’; Advocates demand names of abusive priests from the Diocese of Oakland

OAKLAND (CA)
CBS News [New York NY]

December 14, 2022

By Betty Yu

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The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, has called for the Diocese of Oakland to publicly released the full list of alleged abusive priests in the Catholic church. 

One survivor of abuse is encouraging victims to come forward before the window to file a civil suit closes at the end of the year. 

Joey Piscitelli claims he was first molested when he was playing pool at a Catholic school in Richmond when he was 14 years old. He said the abuse by a priest went on for more than a year and a half.  

“I think the most promiment side effect I deal with is chronic insomnia and triggering, flashbacks, nightmares, and dissociation. I still seek help for that,” Piscitelli said. 

Piscitelli may now be 66 years old, but his memories of sexual abuse remain painful and vivid. As the Northern California leader of SNAP, he…

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Diocese of Worcester Priest Accused of Sexual Abuse of a Minor

WORCESTER (MA)
This Week in Worcester [Worcester, MA]

December 13, 2022

By Tom Marino

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The Diocese of Worcester announced that Bishop Robert McManus has determined a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor exists against Reverend Alan J. Martineau and he will remain on leave from his pastoral duties. Martineau was first placed on leave in January.

In a statement issued on Monday, the Diocese said that it scheduled Martineau for transfer to a new parish in January due to “concerns over boundary issues with a minor.” Additional information reported to the Diocese before that transfer took place led McManus to put Martineau on leave.

An independent investigation into the allegations, completed recently, led to McManus making the determination that the allegation are credible.

The Diocese says it notified the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement about the allegations in early February. It also notified the Vatican and began a canonical process to adjudicate the allegation, according to hits…

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Former Virginia priest convicted of 1985 sex assault on teen

LEESBURG (VA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 12, 2022

By AP News staff

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A former priest in northern Virginia pleaded guilty Monday to sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy more than 35 years ago.

Scott Asalone, 65, the former priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville, pleaded to a single count of felony carnal knowledge of a minor. He faces up to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced in April.

The victim in the case is former D.C. Council member David Grosso, who publicly identified himself as Asalone’s victim when the charges were filed in 2020.

Grosso, in a phone interview Monday, said he wrote a letter in 1992 to Asalone, and the priest responded by admitting his misconduct.

Grosso said the letter served as evidence to convict Asalone in a case that stretched back 37 years, to 1985.

“I love the fact that justice never stops in Virginia,” Grosso said.

Asalone, who now lives in Asbury Park, New…

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Cardinal Ouellet announces lawsuit against woman who claimed assault

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

December 13, 2022

By Cindy Wooden for Catholic News Service

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Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet announced he is filing a defamation lawsuit in Quebec against a woman who accused him of sexual assault.

“Having preliminarily made sure to protect the plaintiff’s anonymity by obtaining an order to that effect, today I am taking legal action for defamation before the courts of Quebec in order to prove the falsity of the allegations made against me and to restore my reputation and honor,” the cardinal said in a statement Dec. 13.

The woman accused the cardinal of inappropriately touching her at a meeting of the Quebec archdiocesan staff in 2008, when he was archbishop, and kissing her, pressing against her and making inappropriate comments at other gatherings.

“I have never been guilty of these reprehensible behaviors, much less of those alleged against other members of the clergy cited in the class action” lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Quebec and involving more than…

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German bishops’ VP faces ‘Vos estis’ complaint over abuse cases

OSNABRüCK (GERMANY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

December 12, 2022

By Luke Coppen

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Bishop Franz-Josef Bode has said he now expects to face a Vatican investigation over his handling of abuse cases in the Diocese of Osnabrück.

The Vatican has received a canonical complaint against Bishop Franz-Josef Bode, the vice president of the German bishops’ conference, concerning the bishop’s handling of abuse cases in the Diocese of Osnabrück. The bishop has said he now expects to face a Vatican investigation.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Hamburg confirmed that Archbishop Stefan Hesse received the complaint against Bode on Dec. 8, reported Katholisch.de, the German Church’s official website.

Bode has led the Osnabrück diocese since 1995, is Germany’s longest-serving diocesan bishop, and was elected deputy chairman of the German bishops’ conference in 2017.

As the metropolitan archbishop, Archbishop Heße is responsible for forwarding reports to the Holy See under the 2019 motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi, promulgated by Pope Francis after a global summit of…

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The unsung committee shaping the USCCB

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

December 13, 2022

By JD Flynn

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New USCCB president Archbishop Timothy Broglio explains how its most powerful, yet underappreciated, committee works.

When Archbishop Timothy Broglio was elected president of the U.S. bishops’ conference last month, media attention landed on the bishop’s history in the Vatican, his views on sexuality and clerical sexual abuse, and whether he could be considered “anti-Francis” — a charge the archbishop has laughed off.

Amid the commentary on theological and political questions, very little attention was given to what happened after Broglio was elected — and what it demonstrated about the most powerful, yet underappreciated, committee in the U.S. bishops’ conference.

But the bishops’ Committee on Priorities and Plans shouldn’t be overlooked — if you want to understand where conference leadership comes from, or how the conference spends its money and allocates staff hours, you’ve got to understand the central role of the USCCB’s central planning committee.

While customarily the USCCB’s vice-president…

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Investigation Finds Author, Pastor Dane Ortlund Likely Retaliated Against Church Employee

CHICAGO (IL)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

December 13, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

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Best-selling author and Chicago-area pastor Dane Ortlund may have fired a church employee in retaliation for complaining of bullying and discrimination, an Illinois state investigation has found.

Ortlund is the author of “Gentle and Lowly” and pastor of Naperville Presbyterian Church (NPC). The Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR), which handles charges of employment discrimination, investigated and found “substantial evidence” of retaliation in the firing of NPC’s former operations director.

Christianity Today first reported the investigation’s finding this week. The outlet noted that this type of finding is rare, both at the state level and nationally.

A copy of the finding obtained by The Roys Report (TRR) shows Emily Hyland had been a longtime church member. In 2013,  the church  hired her as the church’s operations director. Ortlund fired her in March 2021 nine days after she complained of sex-based discrimination to the church’s elders, according to the…

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Surviving Hillcrest

JOS (NIGERIA)
The Christian Century [Chicago IL]

December 13, 2022

By Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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Letta Cartlidge created a group for missionary kids who’d attended her boarding school in Jos, Nigeria. The stories of abuse poured in.

It was on a Friday in spring 2021 that Letta Cartlidge decided she had seen enough.

In her backyard in a suburb of Denver, Colorado, a stack of bangles on her arm and an oversized cardigan draped around her shoulders, Cartlidge explained to the Century how on April 15, 2021, James McDowell, a former principal at Hillcrest—a boarding school primarily for the children of missionaries in Jos, Nigeria—admitted in a private Facebook group for Hillcrest alumni that he had “molested” two students during his tenure.

In his post, McDowell, who was at Hillcrest from 1974 to 1984, said he’d already apologized to the two students and offered restitution. But he also wanted to apologize to the wider Hillcrest community for “this breach of trust which these days is considered criminal.”

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December 13, 2022

Over 300 abuse allegations to date against Spiritan priests

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

December 13, 2022

By Patsy McGarry

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Catholic bishops believe a ‘reckoning’ has yet to take place regarding sexual abuse in the church in Ireland

Over 300 people have made abuse allegations against at least 78 Spiritan priests, a spokesman for the religious congregation has said. He also said the latter figure may increase slightly when all recent contacts have been fully processed.

Some people making allegations have done so directly to the Spiritans, while others may have gone to the gardaí, “and we know that a number have gone initially to the independent expert on Restorative Justice, Mr Tim Chapman”, the spokesman said.

Allegations have not been broken down by the school or College where the alleged abuse took place, whether in Ireland or abroad, but the majority are understood to relate to Blackrock College /Willow Park in Dublin, he said.

No allegation about abuse abroad involving Spiritans had been made to the congregation in recent…

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Fr. Martineau on Leave for Credible Allegation of Abuse of a Minor

WORCESTER (MA)
Diocese of Worcester [Worcester MA]

December 12, 2022

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Following an independent investigation, and subsequent recommendation by the Diocesan Review Committee, Most Reverend Robert J. McManus has determined that there is a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by Reverend Alan J. Martineau.  Fr. Martineau has been on administrative leave since January, 2022 and will remain on leave and cannot present himself as a priest.  The Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement authorities have been notified in a timely manner and a canonical process, including notice to the Vatican, has been initiated to adjudicate the allegation.

In late January of this year Fr. Martineau was scheduled to be transferred to a new parish to benefit from the tutelage of a seasoned pastor because of concerns over boundary issues with a minor, and for other pastoral issues.  Before that assignment took place, additional information was reported to the Diocese that prompted Bishop McManus to place Fr….

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‘Mishandling and delays’ of Montreal archdiocese abuse complaints: ombudsperson

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Global News [Toronto, Canada]

December 12, 2022

By Sidhartha Banerjee, The Canadian Press

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The ombudsperson of Montreal’s Roman Catholic archdiocese is highlighting the “mishandling and delays” of abuse cases against the church and says she hopes that by speaking out, it will jolt the organization to act.

Lawyer Marie Christine Kirouack says in her new report that since June, delays in some files have become “interminable” and are causing complainants to lose faith in the process.

In an interview Monday, she said the problems began when she started reviewing older complaints.

“I feel that we’re in the midst of a storm right now,” she said. “Is it linked to the fact that I started working in late May and June into the old files?” Kirouack suggested some of the “old guard” at the archdiocese don’t want it made public that they didn’t act on abuse claims.

In the report — her fifth since being named to the role in 2021 — Kirouack described the…

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Rochester Church of Latter-day Saints member speaks out on church’s abuse issues

KASSON (MN)
Rochester Post Bulletin [Rochester MN]

December 13, 2022

By Mark Wasson

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Michael Benjamin said his testimony led local LDS Church leaders to “attempt to silence me from being vocal about the sex abuse case that the local leaders were involved in.”

Michael Benjamin has been involved with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints most of his life.

Baptized at age 8, he has served in several callings, or leadership assignments, over the years, including branch president, elders quorum president, Sunday school president, ward mission leader, Sunday school teacher, counselor in the bishopric, and stake young men’s counselor.

The LDS church has influenced almost every aspect of his life, from how he spent his time, where he could marry, how to raise his children, where he went to college — Brigham Young University — and what foods and drinks he could or could not consume.

“It has helped shape the values I have including service, love, kindness, compassion, hard work,…

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Claim of sexual abuse of minor against Father Alan J. Martineau ‘credible,’ says Bishop McManus

WORCESTER (MA)
The Republican - MassLive [Springfield MA]

December 12, 2022

By Tom Matthews

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Bishop Robert J. McManus has determined that an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor levied against a Diocese of Worcester priest is credible.

The diocese announced Monday that the allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Father Alan J. Martineau is credible. Martineau has been on administrative leave since January. He will remain on leave and cannot present himself as a priest, the diocese said in a release Monday.

“The Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement authorities have been notified in a timely manner and a canonical process, including notice to the Vatican, has been initiated to adjudicate the allegation,” the diocese said.

Martineau was scheduled to be transferred to a new parish to “benefit from the tutelage of a seasoned pastor because of concerns over boundary issues with a minor, and for other pastoral issues,” according to the…

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Pastors guilty of sexual abuse should never be restored to ministry

NASHVILLE (TN)
PremierChristianity.com [London, UK]

December 9, 2022

By Beth Allison Barr, Professor of History

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High profile US pastor Johnny Hunt was restored to ministry despite serious allegations of sexual misconduct. What happened to permanent disqualification, asks Beth Allison Barr. And what does it say to the women in their congregations?

Actions speak louder than words.

Last year, the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) approved a resolution to “permanently” disqualify perpetrators of sexual abuse from holding the office of pastor.

“It’s very important for Southern Baptists to speak unequivocally and in a way that everyone can understand”, said Nathan Finn, the vice chair of the 2021 SBC resolutions committee. “We believe that sexual abuse is a disqualifying factor for anyone who would serve in church leadership.”

THE CASE OF JOHNNY HUNT

Yet, less than two weeks ago, four pastors (including two from within the SBC) declared that Johnny Hunt, a well-known speaker, leader, veteran pastor, and former SBC president, as fully qualified to resume his ministry. Last May, Hunt…

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Your words are not enough, Beth Allison Barr tells male SBC pastors on sexual abuse after Johnny Hunt’s ‘restoration’

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

December 12, 2022

By Mark Wingfield

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Pastors guilty of sexual abuse never should be restored to ministry, Baylor University professor and author Beth Allison Barr wrote for a news service in the United Kingdom Dec. 9.

The opinion piece published by Premier Christianity addresses the case of Johnny Hunt, the former Georgia pastor and former executive vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board. Six months after Hunt was named as a perpetrator in a public investigation of sexual abuse in the SBC, a group of four male pastors issued a video declaring him “restored” to ministry under their unlicensed care.

That drew a sharp retort from current SBC President Bart Barber, who said if it were up to him he would permanently defrock Hunt, a previous SBC president.

Barr, professor of history at Baylor and author of the bestselling The Making of Biblical Womanhood, noted messengers to the SBC annual meeting last year adopted a resolution…

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December 12, 2022

More sex abuse lawsuits filed against Catholic Diocese of Portland, bringing total to 11

PORTLAND (ME)
WCSH - NBC News Center Maine [Portland ME]

December 12, 2022

By Vivien Leigh

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Three men claim they were sexually abused by a deceased priest, John Curran.

AUGUSTA, Maine — Three new lawsuits were filed against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland in Cumberland County Superior Court on Monday. 

Three men claim the Rev. John Curran, a former priest who has since died, sexually abused them between the ages of 11 and 14 in the early 1960s. 

Eleven lawsuits have been filed seeking civil relief under a new law that removed the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse. 

The law that went into effect in 2021 lifted a statute of limitations, allowing Maine survivors of childhood sexual abuse to file a civil claim against their abusers, no matter when the abuse allegedly occurred. 

Previously, claims could only be pursued for cases dating back to 1987.

NEWS CENTER Maine is not identifying two alleged victims, but one of the plaintiffs, Andre Fortin, alleges Curran groomed him….

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Attorney General Miyares Announces Guilty Plea in Loudoun Clergy Sexual Assault Case

ARLINGTON (VA)
Attorney General of Commonwealth of Virginia

December 12, 2022

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Commonwealth of Virginia
Office of the Attorney General

Jason S. Miyares
Attorney General

The Office of the Attorney General successfully prosecuted a 37-year-old Child Sexual Assault case  

RICHMOND, VA — Attorney General Jason Miyares announced that Scott Asalone, 65, a former priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville, Va.,was convicted today in Loudoun County Circuit Court of felony carnal knowledge of a minor between 13 and 15 years of age. The abuse occurred during the summer of 1985 when Asalone was 29 and the victim was a minor.   

Asalone, of Asbury Park, NJ, was indicted by a multi-jurisdiction grand jury in March 2020 following an investigation by the Office of the Attorney General. He was arrested in New Jersey on March 14, 2020, extradited to Virginia, and remained on bond pending trial. Asalone, was removed from public duties in 1993 and dismissed from the Order of Capuchin Friars in 2007.

“Every victim…

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Former Catholic priest convicted of child sex abuse that happened in Virginia in 1985

ARLINGTON (VA)
WUSA - ABC 9 [Washington, DC]

December 12, 2022

By Alanea Cremen

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According to a release from the Office of Attorney General Jason Miyares, Scott Asalone was previously the priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church.

A 65-year-old former priest of a Purcellville church was convicted Monday for sexually abusing a minor during the summer of 1985 when the former priest was 29 years old. 

According to a release from the Office of Attorney General Jason Miyares, Scott Asalone was previously the priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church.

Asalone was arrested in New Jersey on March 14, 2020, and he was extradited to Virginia where he was indicted by a multi-jurisdiction grand jury for felony carnal knowledge of a minor between 13 and 15 years of age. The abuse happened during the summer of 1985 when Asalone was 29 and the victim was a minor.  

“Every victim deserves to be heard. My office is dedicated to…

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Former Catholic priest convicted in 1985 sex assault in Loudoun

ARLINGTON (VA)
Washington Post

December 12, 2022

By Tom Jackman

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Scott A. Asalone, a rector in Purcellville, was removed from his church in 1993, but not arrested until 2020. The victim went on to become a D.C. councilman.

A former Catholic priest from Loudoun County, who was quietly discharged from his parish after abuse allegations in the 1990s, was convicted Monday in Loudoun circuit court of felony carnal knowledge of a minor for abusing a boy who would go on to become a D.C. councilman.

Scott A. Asalone, 66, who worked as a stockbroker and consultant in New Jersey for nearly three decades after leaving his parish, was arrested in March 2020, and released on bond during the pandemic. Jury selection for his trial was scheduled to begin Monday when Asalone decided to enter an “Alford” plea, in which a defendant doesn’t admit guilt but admits the prosecution has enough evidence to convict. Loudoun Circuit Court Judge James E. Plowman…

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Maryland state senator signals support for bill Catholic church lobbied against, giving hope to childhood abuse survivors

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 12, 2022

By Lee O. Sanderlin and Hannah Gaskill

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Legislation that would give childhood victims of sexual abuse a chance to sue their abusers, regardless of when it happened, has the support of a key Maryland state senator.

Sen. Will Smith, the Democratic chair of the Judicial Proceedings Committee, told The Baltimore Sun he would support what’s previously been known as the “Hidden Predator Act,” which would create a “look-back window,” where survivors would have two years from the act becoming law to file a lawsuit regardless of when the abuse happened.

Under existing state law, childhood sexual abuse survivors have until their 38th birthday to file a lawsuit or three years after their abuser was convicted in criminal court, whichever is later.

Regularly sponsored by Del. C.T. Wilson, a Charles County Democrat who is a survivor of childhood abuse, the bill has been passed repeatedly by the House of Delegates only to die in Smith’s committee. Wilson said…

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Bishop McManus: Sex abuse allegations against priest are credible

WORCESTER (MA)
Worcester Telegram & Gazette [Worcester MA]

December 12, 2022

By Mike Elfland

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The Rev. Alan J. Martineau, most recently of parishes in Warren, will remain on administrative leave after an investigation sought by the Diocese of Worcester deemed an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor to be credible.

Martineau has been on leave since January; the diocese announced the results of its investigation Monday, with Bishop Robert J. McManus ruling on the case.

Martineau, a former associate pastor at St. Anne’s of Shrewsbury, was most recently the administrator of St. Paul Parish and St. Stanislaus Parish in Warren. He grew up in Spencer and graduated from St. John’s High School, the diocese said in 2018, when Martineau was ordained.

The diocese gave the following account of the case: “In late January of this year Fr. Martineau was scheduled to be transferred to a new parish…

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The Aftermath

BOSTON (MA)
Boston University [Boston MA]

December 12, 2022

By Sukanya Mitra

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[VIDEO]

The Aftermath looks into how victims of clergy abuse are dealing with the abuse endured and steps taken by the Catholic Church to prevent such abuse from happening.

The full documentary is 14 minutes long and looks into the perspectives of five subjects.

See trailer.

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Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse Have Until December 31 to File a Lawsuit

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Jeff Anderson and Associates

December 12, 2022

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Today, the law firms of Jeff Anderson & Associates and Greenberg Gross revealed that 44 Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) employees have been identified in 69 lawsuits filed under the California Child Victims Act and are accused of child sexual abuse. The public data collected is believed to be a small portion of what attorneys and advocates anticipate the final number of cases identifying LAUSD to be.

“Los Angeles Unified School District has a notorious history of hiring, and harboring perpetrators of child sexual abuse,” said Brian Williams of Greenberg Gross. “We hope by exposing perpetrators in lawsuits filed under the California Child Victims Act, children and students who participate in LAUSD will be protected in the present and future.”

Included below is a list of LAUSD employees accused of child sexual abuse and identified in lawsuits available to the public. The current whereabouts of some of these alleged perpetrators and…

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Lawsuit Deadline for Older California Childhood Sex Abuse Cases is December 31, 2022

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Los Angeles Legal Examiner - Saunders & Walker [Pinellas Park FL]

December 12, 2022

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The three-year window established by California’s Child Victims Act – also known as Assembly Bill 218 (AB 218) – which temporarily set aside the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse victims to file claims, will close on December 31, 2022. This “lookback window” opened a three-year window for those of any age to revive past claims that may have been prohibited from being filed as lawsuits because the legal time limit to bring such claims, known as the statute of limitations, had run out.

Since AB-218 was signed into law in 2019 over 1000 victims of sexual abuse have brought lawsuits against large organizations such as the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts of America. Victims were able to seek recompense in cases dating back decades. According to a list of settlements compiled by the website Bishop Accountability, California Catholic churches have paid among the highest dollar amounts for sex abuse settlements of…

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German bishop must face Vatican investigation, abuse council demands

OSNABRüCK (GERMANY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 12, 2022

By AC Wimmer

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An advisory body of sexual abuse survivors on Monday called for canonical procedures against the vice president of the German Bishops’ Conference.

Bishop Franz-Josef Bode should be charged under canon law for his handling of abuse cases, the advisory council said in a statement sent to media Dec. 12, reported CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner.

The advisory body represents those affected by sexual abuse for the metropolitan archdiocese of Hamburg and the dioceses of Hildesheim and Osnabrück.

Under pressure for months to resign following the findings of a study that he has mishandled cases of sexual abuse, Bode has so far refused to step down.

The 71-year-old bishop of Osnabrück in northwestern Germany has been vice president of the German bishops’ conference since 2017. He is also vice president of the German Synodal Way.

On Monday, the victims’ advisory council said it had filed an official complaint and referred to…

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Versäumnisse bei Missbrauch: Betroffenenbeirat zeigt Bischof Bode an

OSNABRüCK (GERMANY)
Katholisch.de [Bonn, Germany]

December 12, 2022

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Anzeige Gemäss Kirchenrecht Bei Erzbischof Hesse

[PHOTO: Obwohl ihm eine Studie der Uni Osnabrück Versäumnisse im Umgang mit Missbrauch attestierte, will Bischof Bode nicht zurücktreten. Sein Betroffenenbeirat hat jetzt Anzeige gemäß Kirchenrecht erstattet – nun sind Erzbischof Heße und der Vatikan am Zug.]

Der Betroffenenbeirat der Bistümer Hamburg, Hildesheim und Osnabrück hat gegen den Osnabrücker Bischof Franz-Josef Bode kirchenrechtlich Anzeige wegen seines Umgangs mit sexuellem Missbrauch gestellt. Am Montag teilte der Betroffenenbeirat mit, dass er bereits am Donnerstag Anzeige beim zuständigen Erzbischof von Hamburg, Stefan Heße, erstattet hat. “Bischof Bode hat entgegen klaren päpstlichen Vorgaben gehandelt und bspw. sexualisierte Gewalt gegen Minderjährige noch in diesem Jahr als ‘Beziehung’ deklariert”, heißt es in der Pressemitteilung des Beirats zur Begründung. In der Gesamtschau zeige sich ein klares kirchenrechtliches Fehlverhalten Bodes, “der zum einen die Schilderungen der Betroffenen zum Sachverhalt gänzlich falsch eingeschätzt hat, und zum anderen die Anzeige nach Rom verzögerte,…

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Study of moral injury measures ‘added weight’ of clergy sexual abuse and its concealment

CINCINNATI (OH)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

December 12, 2022

By Katie Collins Scott

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A research team from Xavier University in Cincinnati has created a tool that measures the “moral injury” caused by clergy sexual abuse and its concealment by officials in the Catholic Church.

In a report on the pilot study, released Dec. 12, moral injury is described as persistent psychological and emotional distress, spiritual anguish, moral confusion, social isolation, and distrust for institutions. It results from a betrayal of trust or violation of deeply held moral values.

“When the perpetrator of sexual abuse is a priest — someone ordained in persona Christi — and represents the holy, the sacred or the entire church or even God, the trauma of abuse takes on an added weight,” said Marcus Mescher, a principal investigator for the study and professor of Christian ethics at Jesuit-run Xavier. “I thought the concept of moral injury would be a helpful hermeneutical lens for understanding the many…

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Jesuits unlikely to be prosecuted over sexual abuse of Limerick students

LIMERICK (IRELAND)
Limerick Post [Limerick, Ireland]

December 10, 2022

By David Raleigh

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GARDAÍ are unlikely to prosecute any members of the Jesuits over the religious order’s handling of historic allegations of child sexual abuse by one of its priests Fr Joseph Marmion.

Garda sources said that enquires into allegations against Marmion of abusing pupils at Belvedere College, Clongowes Wood College and the former Crescent College in Limerick City have also run cold because Marmion died in 2000 at the age of 75.

In 1977 a number of pupils at Belvedere, where Marmion taught from 1969 to 1978, made disclosures to senior Jesuits of sexual abuse by Marmion.

The Jesuit Order dealt with the matter in-house, and Marmion was never questioned by the civil authorities.

A Garda spokesman told the Limerick Post that “while it is our intention to effectively deal with all complaints and information received, there will be limitations as to the action we can take in some cases due to…

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California and Confession. 1. A Catholic Victory—Which Did Not Solve All Problems

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

December 12, 2022

By Massimo Introvigne

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In 2019, Catholics managed to stop a draft law that would have opened a breach in the confessional privilege. But they left a problem unsolved.

Article 1 of 4.

The confessional privilege is the legal protection of the secret of the confession in the Catholic Church and of similar practices in other religious bodies. A Catholic priest should not reveal to anybody, including law enforcement officers or courts of law, what has been told to him in confession, under penalty of excommunication.

As Bitter Winter reported in a previous series, this privilege has been historically protected by both statutes and common law in most countries, and extended to confessional practices of other religions. In recent years, however, the sad tragedy of sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests has induced some jurisdictions, including Ireland, most states and territories of Australia, and some U.S. states, to pass laws introducing…

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Abuse “whistleblower” says “forgiveness” is often a pretext to silence victims

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

December 9, 2022

By Xavier Léger

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A response to Fra Bernard-Marie, a secular Franciscan who has argued that victims of sexual abuse need to forgive their abusers and get on with their lives

The testimony of this brother, which was recently published in La Croix, bothers me – and not just a little. He wrote and published the article to promote his personal decision.

When he says “it is undoubtedly this attitude, both just and merciful, that we should adopt towards our guilty brothers and sisters”, he is indirectly passing an unsympathetic judgment on the victims who denounce and fight against their predator, in spite of all his precautions. In the final analysis, are their struggles neither just nor merciful?

In response to this article, which I believe is symptomatic of the confusion that is often seen in Catholic circles on this subject, I would like to share four conclusions that I have reached after thirteen…

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Why is the Catholic Church still investigating itself?

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

December 12, 2022

By Francis Sullivan

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For those still interested, the erosion of episcopal authority from the clerical sex abuse scandal continues at pace

The views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official editorial position of La Croix International.

Despite the findings from any number of independent inquiries and investigations of the closed and self- referential culture of the institution, the official Catholic Church stance remains defensive and controlling. The Vatican’s history of handling abuse cases has been riddled with a misguided clericalist attitude that accommodated and protected their own. Priest abusers were seldom defrocked, offending bishops were often conveniently furloughed and the curial instinct to resist submission to civil authorities perpetuated.

The Church’s canon law imposes mind numbing time delays and the verdicts of canonical trials seem devoid of any consistent jurisprudence leaving local bishops the unenviable tasks of defending the indefensible.

The French…

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“Tak powstają święci” według o. Tadeusza Rydzyka

KALISZ (POLAND)
Więź [Warsaw, Poland]

December 6, 2022

By Ks. Adam Świeżyński

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„Prywatny komentarz” dyrektora Radia Maryja o bp. Napierale jako „współczesnym męczenniku” został wygłoszony publicznie w obecności kilkunastu biskupów oraz licznych wiernych – i dlatego domagał się natychmiastowej publicznej reakcji i sprostowania. Takiej reakcji jednak nie było, zresztą nie po raz pierwszy.

Ojciec Tadeusz Rydzyk nie ustaje w swoich wysiłkach wykreowania współczesnego modelu świętości w Kościele w Polsce. Jego najnowsza wypowiedź na ten temat, wygłoszona publicznie podczas uroczystości z okazji 31. rocznicy powstania Radia Maryja, nie pozostawia wątpliwości kogo, zdaniem redemptorysty, należy uważać za świętego.

Nawiązując do osoby bp. Stanisława Napierały i jego nieobecności podczas wspomnianej uroczystości spowodowanej wyraźnym zaleceniem Stolicy Apostolskiej w sprawie nieuczestniczenia w publicznych celebracjach, o. Tadeusz Rydzyk powiedział: „Tak powstają święci. To jest pchanie na ołtarze, tak. Dla mnie to są współcześni męczennicy”.

Dla Kościoła w Polsce nastał czas, kiedy mówienie o tym, co dotąd było oczywiste, stało się problematyczne, a nazywanie rzeczy po imieniu – zdecydowanie…

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December 11, 2022

Former Iowa youth pastor accused of sexual abuse, supplying alcohol to teens

ANKENY (IA)
KLJB, Fox-18 (ourquadcities.com) [Davenport IA]

December 9, 2022

By Kelly Maricle

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A former youth pastor is facing charges in Polk and Story counties for allegedly sexually abusing teens and providing them with alcohol.

Twenty-six-year-old Caleb Toney of Elkhart is charged with two counts of assault with intent to commit sexual abuse, one count of assault, three counts of supplying alcohol to persons under the legal age, and one count of permitting minors to consume alcohol.

Cmdr. Dan Walter with the Ames Police Department said the first charges stem from incidents in the fall of 2017 at a residence where Toney lived at the time. Toney is accused of giving a 15-year-old alcohol and once the teen was intoxicated Toney allegedly touched him in an “unwanted, insulting, and offensive” manner. Court documents show he provided alcohol for a 15-year-old and a 16-year-old on multiple occasions and allowed them to drink at his Ames residence.

The other incidents are alleged to have happened…

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Church officials clear Chicago priest Pfleger of abuse claim

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 11, 2022

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A prominent Roman Catholic priest known for his activism has been reinstated as leader of his Chicago parish after being cleared by church officials of allegations that he sexually abused a minor decades ago.

The Chicago Archdiocese released a letter Saturday saying that a review board found “no reason to suspect” that the Rev. Michael Pfleger was guilty of the allegations. Pfleger had stepped away from his duties as pastor of St. Sabina Church in October during the review.

Cardinal Blase Cupich said in the letter that he recognizes the “great toll” Pfleger’s absence had on the parish and said “I am committed to do everything possible to see that his good name is restored.”

In October, a man in his late 40s said through an attorney that Pfleger abused him twice in the late 1980s during choir rehearsals in the St. Sabina rectory. That claim was similar to other  View Cache

Jesuit artist Father Rupnik has been practising ministry despite Vatican restrictions

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

December 6, 2022

By Mark Lambert

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A prominent Jesuit priest has been continuing to practise his ministry despite the fact that it was restricted by the Vatican in January 2022 following allegations of sexual misconduct made against him.

According to reports on a number of Italian news sites, 68-year-old Father Marko Ivan Rupnik was in January 2022 ordered to stop practising his ministry following a series of complaints about his conduct going back to 1992.

However, despite the ban, Fr Rupnik received an honorary doctorate from the Pontifical Catholic University of Paraná in Brazil on the 30th of November. He has also featured in a regular YouTube slot every Sunday commenting on the Sunday Gospel. The Diocese of Rome also posted a video of Rupnik speaking about Eucharistic adoration in February this year.

Fr Rupnik is a high profile figure in Rome and known as a friend and advisor to Pope Francis. 

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The Father Rupnik Case: How Transparent Have the Jesuits and the Vatican Been About These Abuse Allegations?

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

December 10, 2022

By Edward Pentin

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NEWS ANALYSIS: Crucial questions remain unanswered with respect to the handling of allegations of physical, sexual and spiritual abuse against the prominent Slovenian Jesuit priest.

Ever since the Society of Jesus acknowledged last week that it had restricted the well-known Jesuit artist Father Marko Ivan Rupnik from ministry following allegations of abuse against religious sisters in Slovenia, questions have arisen about the transparency of both the society and the Vatican.

So what do we know about the case, and how forthright have both the Jesuits and the Vatican been, especially in light of Pope Francis’ recent appeal for greater transparency in all clerical abuse cases?

Father Rupnik, a 68-year-old Slovenian Jesuit best known for designing mosaic artworks for chapels, churches and shrines around the world for 30 years, is close to Pope Francis and influential in his native Slovenia where he is known as “one of the great reformers” and…

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Rev. Michael Pfleger reinstated at St. Sabina after review board clears him of latest sex abuse allegation

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

December 10, 2022

By Mitchell Armentrout and Zack Miller

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Pfleger, 73, said he would return to lead Mass on Sunday. He has staunchly denied all claims of wrongdoing and was roundly supported by parishioners.

Chicago’s highest-profile and sometimes controversial priest was reinstated to his South Side pulpit Saturday as archdiocese officials dismissed the latest accusation of sexual abuse against the Rev. Michael Pfleger. 

The St. Sabina preacher had been sidelined from the ministry for almost two months after another man came forward saying Pfleger abused him in the rectory of the Auburn Gresham parish in the 1980s — marking the second time in the past two years that Pfleger had been benched due to decades-old accusations. 

In a letter to parishioners Saturday evening, Cardinal Blase Cupich announced the archdiocese’s review board “has concluded that there is no reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty of these allegations.”

“I want to recognize that these months have taken a great toll…

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Letter from Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on the Reinstatement of Father Michael Pfleger

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

December 10, 2022

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December 10, 2022

Dear members of the Faith Community of St. Sabina,

Thank you for your patience and prayers during the absence of your senior pastor, Father Michael Pfleger. As you know, earlier this year the archdiocese received allegations of child sexual abuse against Father Pfleger. In accordance with our policies for the protection of children and youth, the archdiocese Independent Review Board. assisted by our Office of Child Abuse Investigation and Review and outside investigators conducted a thorough review of the allegations.

The Review Board has concluded that there is no reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty of these allegations. Having given careful consideration to their decision, which I fully accept, I now inform you that I am reinstating Father Pfleger to his position of senior pastor of the Faith Community of St. Sabina, effective immediately. I want to recognize that these months have taken a great toll…

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Rev. Michael Pfleger Cleared of Sex Abuse Allegations, Reinstated as Pastor at Saint Sabina

CHICAGO (IL)
WMAQ - NBC 5 [Chicago IL]

December 10, 2022

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In October, a Chicago attorney confirmed that a client of his had filed a claim with the Archdiocese of Chicago, alleging that Pfleger had sexually abused him when he was a minor in the late 1980s.

Rev. Michael Pfleger has been reinstated as the pastor of Chicago’s Saint Sabina Catholic Church after an Archdiocese of Chicago review board cleared Pfleger of sexual abuse allegations brought forth against him two months ago, according to a letter from Cardinal Blase Cupich.

Cupich wrote a letter to the Saint Sabina parish community Saturday, announcing he was reinstating Pfleger as pastor immediately following a thorough review by the archdiocese’s Independent Review Board and outside investigators. The Review Board, according to the cardinal, concluded “there is no reason to suspect” Pfleger is guilty of the accusations.

“Having given careful consideration to their decision,…

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Chicago priest Michael Pfleger cleared of abuse charges, reinstated to St. Sabina

CHICAGO (IL)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

December 10, 2022

By Bob Smietana

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Cardinal Blase Cupich of the Archdiocese of Chicago announced Saturday that an investigation had found no support for the allegations against the well-known priest.

A prominent Roman Catholic priest has been reinstated to his south Chicago parish after an investigation found that abuse charges against him were not credible.

The Rev. Michael Pfleger, longtime pastor of St. Sabina Catholic Church was suspended in October after the Archdiocese of Chicago received an allegation of abuse against him.

The archdiocesan Independent Review Board and Office of Child Abuse Investigation and Review, with help from outside investigators, reviewed the allegations against Pfleger, Cardinal Blase Cupich told St. Sabina parishioners in a letter Saturday (Dec. 10).

“The Review Board has concluded that there is no reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty of these allegations,” he wrote.

Plefger had been accused of abuse once before and was suspended as the charges were investigated, then reinstated….

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‘I’m back’: Fr. Michael Pfleger reinstated after cleared of latest sex abuse allegation

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS - ABC 7 [Chicago IL]

December 10, 2022

By Tre Ward

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Father Michael Pfleger wasted no time speaking to his congregation after a review board found no evidence the pastor is guilty of sexual abuse.

Cardinal Blasé Cupich announced Saturday that he has reinstated St. Sabina Catholic Church pastor to his senior role, effective immediately.

In a letter to the Saint Sabina parish, Cupich said, “The Review Board has concluded that there is no reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty of these allegations.”

Fr. Pfleger shared the reinstatement letter on his Facebook page with the caption: “Like MJ said. ‘I’M BACK.’”

His entrance was met with applause, tears, and relief from St. Sabina parishioners.

“I thank you for believing in me. I thank you for never giving up on me,” Fr. Pfleger said during his first public comments after being reinstated. This has been very painful. It would be twice in a row in, like, two-and-a-half years. But two things, God…

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Chicago Catholic Archdiocese reinstates Father Michael Pfleger, says ‘no reason to suspect he is guilty’

CHICAGO (IL)
WFLD - Fox 32 [Chicago IL]

December 10, 2022

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Chicago Catholic Archdiocese reinstates Father Michael Pfleger, says ‘no reason to suspect he is guilty’

The Chicago Catholic Archdiocese reinstated Father Michael Pfleger on Saturday, saying “there is no reason to suspect Father Pfleger is guilty” of sex abuse.

“I just want to thank you for your love, believing in me,” Pfleger told parishioners on Saturday afternoon. “I apologize for taking you through all this craziness again because of me. I love you. I’ll talk with you soon.”

In October, Pfleger had been accused of abusing a minor more than 30 years ago. During the investigation, he was removed from his post at St. Sabina Church.

In a statement, attorney Eugene Hollander, who represents the latest accuser, said: “”My client is extremely disappointed by today’s finding.  We had overwhelming evidence concerning these sexual abuse allegations….

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December 10, 2022

Nuevo Párroco a San Martín

SAN LUIS POTOSí (MEXICO)
Periódico El Sur [Tamazunchale, Mexico]

December 10, 2022

By Redacción/El Sur

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San Martín Chalchicuautla, S.L.P.- La Diócesis de Ciudad Valles realizó el cambio de Sacerdotes a este municipio asignando a Humberto Covarrubias Rendón quien se desempeñaba en la parroquia de San Agustín ubicada en Xilitla, desde hace 7 años.

El nuevo Presbítero llegará a la parroquia de San Martín Obispo de Tours a partir del 13 de diciembre a las 10 de la mañana se realizará  una misa para recibir el nuevo Cura, donde el Padre Antonio Gómez Sánchez fue asignado a otra iglesia.

El 21 de noviembre del presente año Covarrubias Rendón dejó la iglesia de San Agustín y tomó posesión el nuevo Párroco, José Marcelino Feliz Zavala.

Humberto Covarrubias es originario del barrio “La Pagua”, en el municipio de Xilitla, quien se desempeñó como Párroco de ese lugar por 7 años.

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2 plead to misdemeanors in Missouri boarding school case

OZARK (MO)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 9, 2022

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Two men who were facing felony charges alleging they abused boys at a private Christian boarding school in southwest Missouri have pleaded guilty to misdemeanors, and the case against a third was dropped.

Scott Dumar, 46, the medical coordinator at the Agape Boarding School near Stockton, pleaded guilty Thursday to two misdemeanors and was placed on two years probation. Everett Graves, 40, pleaded guilty to one misdemeanor.

The case against Chris McElroy was dropped after the alleged victim did not appear at a preliminary hearing Thursday, The Kansas City Star reported.

They were among five staff members charged in September 2021 with low-level felonies after an investigation into accusations by former and current students of widespread abuse at the school

The Missouri Attorney General’s Office had recommended prosecuting 22 staff members with a total of 65 counts on behalf of 36 students. But Cedar County Prosecutor Ty…

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Arthur Baselice Jr.’s Story

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CHILD USA [Philadelphia PA]

December 7, 2022

By By Karim Sharif, MSW & CHILD USA’s Social Work Intern, who collaborated with Art Baselice Jr. to write this story and honor the memory of his son, Art Baselice III.

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“See, that’s my problem: too much respect”.

If you speak with Arthur Baselice Jr., you’ll believe it, too. While we talk, the retired Philadelphia detective’s undivided attention is on our conversation with intense, genuine engagement. Arthur’s presence commands respect – not to be confused with demanding it. 

Arthur is sharp, present, no-nonsense, and yet tactful, inviting, level. He invites me to walk with him some time, and, at my request, clarifies where I can get a proper cheesesteak (you should only trust the opinion of a lifelong Philadelphian – even if they now live in South Jersey). When I ask what he’s up to lately, he conveys patient urgency and substantive, ripened anger: 

“These days, we’re waiting and making it happen for as long as we can.”

The loss of Arthur’s only son, Arthur Baselice III, is no secret. Quite the opposite – since losing him, the elder Arthur commits…

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Senior Indian clergy face charge in sex assault case

PUNE (INDIA)
Preda Foundation

December 5, 2022

By Michael Gonsalves for UCA News

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Several senior Church figures have been charged with trying to protect a Catholic priest arrested and remanded in police custody in western India at the weekend.

A bishop, two cardinals and two priests are accused of failing to take action over an alleged assault by the priest on a schoolboy. 

Father Vincent Pereira was arrested late on Nov. 25 in the city of Pune and remanded in police custody a day later after being accused of sexually assaulting the schoolboy.

The arrest of the 55-year-old Catholic priest from Pune diocese followed his conditional release by a court the same day in connection with similar complaints lodged against him.

However, several senior Church figures were also named in the latest complaint, a copy of which was seen by UCA News, and charged with trying to protect the priest.

The accused clergymen were Bishop Thomas Dabre of PuneCardinal…

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Prominent North Carolina Church Embroiled in Controversy Following Alleged Abuse & 3 Investigations

CHAPEL HILL (NC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

December 8, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

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A prominent church near the campus of the University of North Carolina (UNC) is embroiled in controversy and bleeding members following allegations of spiritual abuse, abuse of power, racism, and sexism.

Chapel Hill Bible Church—a church of about 1,000, including several former and current UNC professors—has reportedly lost about 200 people over the past several years.

The church also has been the target of three investigations. The result of its most recent one, conducted by GRACE (Godly Response to Abuse in a Christian Environment), has not been made public despite calls by members to do so.

On Saturday, church elders responded to the growing unrest by telling members that if they don’t trust the leadership, they should leave.

In an email to church members, the elder board stated, “We will no longer refer or respond to the group that identifies as Concerned Members or Concerned Congregants. We…

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Pope’s cardinal advisers discuss Church’s efforts to prevent abuse

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

December 7, 2022

By Courtney Mares

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At Pope Francis’ meeting with his cardinal advisers this week, Cardinal Sean O’Malley reported on the work of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, now within the Roman Curia.

The Holy See press office said on Dec. 7 that the pope met with his council of advisers for a two-day meeting at the current papal residence, the Casa Santa Marta.

The members of the Council of Cardinals discussed the continental phase of the Synod on Synodality and the work of the most recent United Nations Climate Change Conference before listening to O’Malley’s briefing on the protection of minors. 

Earlier this year, Pope Francis made changes to the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors in his attempt to reform the Roman Curia with the new apostolic constitution Praedicate evangelium.

The constitution placed the pontifical council within the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a move that led…

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Who is Father Marko Rupnik, the Jesuit priest and artist accused of abuse?

LJUBLJANA (SLOVENIA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 7, 2022

By CNA Staff

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Father Marko Ivan Rupnik, a well-known Jesuit priest and artist, has been accused of abuse he allegedly committed in the early 1990s against at least nine consecrated women of the Loyola Community, a Slovian community co-founded by Rupnik and Sister Ivanka Hosta.

According to an official statement from the Society of Jesus, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith received a complaint against the Slovenian priest and requested that a preliminary investigation be launched.

The investigation was carried out by a Dominican religious who heard the testimony of several people.

During the preliminary investigation, precautionary measures were taken against Rupnik, such as the prohibition of “exercising the sacrament of confession, spiritual direction, and giving the Spiritual Exercises,” according to the official statement released in Italian by the Society of Jesus on Dec. 2. 

The Provincial of the Jesuits in Slovenia explained that the results of this investigation…

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TOO BIG TO FAIL – “RUPNIK ABUSE OF ME”

LJUBLJANA (SLOVENIA)
Silere Non Possum [Italy]

December 10, 2022

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The canonical trial of Father Ivan Rupnik can be represented with the image of a bottle. The consecrated women of the Loyola Community, where the Slovenian Jesuit was confessor and spiritual director, found themselves victims of a man who was abusive and, at the same time, aware of his power. Indeed, one cannot count the friendships that Rupnik cultivated over the years. Too big to fail, whispers someone, here in the Vatican.

The canonical process

The first courageous women who chose to denounce Mark Ivan Rupnik’s abuse of power were confronted by people who said: ‘No, it cannot be possible‘. This often happens when the perpetrator is powerful and enjoys an aura of sanctity. The human mind cannot accept this being questioned. Yet, psychology teaches us, it is in this very fabric that the worst violence is born.

The complaints, however, became more and more numerous and the canonical investigation became a duty. H.E.R. Msgr. Daniele Libanori, Auxiliary Bishop…

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French bishops set up national church court, recommended by abuse report

PARIS (FRANCE)
Detroit Catholic [Archdiocese of Detroit MI]

December 9, 2022

By Catholic News Service

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France’s Catholic bishops have set up what they believe to be the world’s first major national church court, replacing a previous network of local tribunals, although sexual abuse cases involving children will still be referred to the Vatican.

“As a community of believers, the church has developed a comprehensive legal system, which includes the right to sanction behavior by members” who undermine “the church’s spiritual and human values,” the bishops’ conference said in a statement.

“These ecclesial procedures do not conflict with French law. … Like all religions, the Catholic Church is free in its internal organization, and all Catholics, as French citizens, also remain subject to the state law.”

The statement explained the role of the National Canonical Penal Court, set up in Paris Dec. 5.

It said the 20-member court, approved by the Vatican in September, would be tasked with judging “canonical offenses committed by clergy and laity”…

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Was a beloved Bay Area priest also a pedophile? Survivor hopes lawsuit will spark change

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle [San Francisco CA]

December 9, 2022

By Joshua Sharpe

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On a chilly November morning, Derek Lewis sat on a bench in front of a haunted little white building, remembering.

The 34-year-old Hayward man’s psychologist says it’s good to come to this quiet spot in Contra Costa County to confront the past. The structure used to house the office and living area of the head priest at the church that was once next door. Inside the building, as well as inside the church, Lewis said, the priest sexually abused him repeatedly over two years starting when Lewis was about 8 years old, inflicting trauma that set his young life on a tortuous path.

Lewis looked away from the building, hiding tears, as he described what it was like inside: the old brown carpet, the musty smell, the portrait of Jesus looking on as the priest reached to touch him.

“An ugly place,” Lewis said.

After some 25 years of avoiding…

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After visitation, what’s next for Stika and Knoxville? And how long could it take?

KNOXVILLE (TN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

December 7, 2022

By JD Flynn

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After a pair of Virginia bishops made an apostolic visitation to the troubled Diocese of Knoxville, what happens next?

Twenty months after priests in East Tennessee first sounded an alarm regarding their bishop’s leadership, they got what they asked for: A pair of Virginia bishops traveled last week down to the Smoky Mountains for an apostolic visitation with the clergy of the Diocese of Knoxville.

The Vatican-ordered inspection came after earlier enquiries by Archbishop Joseph Kurtz, after media coverage of their bishop’s administrative misconduct – on matters both alleged and confirmed – and after a letter last year in which priests asked the apostolic nuncio for “merciful relief” from a diocesan culture they said was demoralizing and dysfunctional.

Priests in Knoxville have alleged that Bishop Rick Stika bullies and threatens to get what he wants, has acted with disregard for the Church’s financial laws, and intervened to cover up, or…

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New allegations of sexual abuse against a Servite High School priest surface in court

ANAHEIM (CA)
The Bharat Express [Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India]

December 9, 2022

By The Bharat Express News

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Three former Servite High School students allege they were repeatedly sexually assaulted by a priest, according to three new lawsuits filed in court, the latest in a series of allegations against a pastor who also acted as a teacher and swim coach at the prestigious school.

A total of eight former students have filed lawsuits against the private school in Anaheim and Father Kevin Fitzpatrick, who, according to the attorney for several of the plaintiffs, worked to gain the trust of young boys at the school and “commanded” a room that was being used to isolate and sexually abuse them.

At one point, Fitzpatrick also brought what looked like an old barber chair that the victims said was used during some of the alleged abuse, according to Mike Reck, one of the lawyers.

Allegations against Fitzpatrick first surfaced in a lawsuit in June, which was followed in September by another…

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Lawsuits mounting against the Catholic Diocese of Portland

PORTLAND (ME)
WCSH - NBC News Center Maine [Portland ME]

December 9, 2022

By Vivien Leigh

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Three lawsuits filed this week allege the Diocese failed to keep children safe from clergy members who were known abusers.

Cases are mounting against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, which oversaw priests who are accused of sexually abusing children decades ago.

Lawsuits filed by a former parishioner at St. Joseph Church in Portland, and two brothers who served as altar boys at St. Hyacinth Church in Westbrook, allege the Diocese failed to keep children safe from clergy members who were known abusers. NEWS CENTER Maine is not naming the alleged victims. 

The brothers accuse a priest, Michael Plourde, of sexually abusing them in 1978. Their mother reported the alleged incidents to Plourde’s supervisor, Rev. Antonio Gosselin, but family members never heard back from him about the reported abuse. Michael Bigos of Berman & Simmons represents the alleged victims.

“Two years before, the abuse was reported at St. Hyacinth. That report…

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For Second Consecutive Year, Diocese Of Scranton Receives Top Score In Independent Financial Transparency Report

SCRANTON (PA)
Diocese of Scranton [Scranton, PA]

December 9, 2022

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For the second consecutive year, a lay organization of faithful Catholics has named the Diocese of Scranton as being one of the most financially transparent dioceses in the United States.

For six years, Voice of the Faithful has reviewed all U.S. Catholic dioceses’ online financial transparency. The group’s 2022 report identifies the Diocese of Scranton as one of only five dioceses to receive an overall score of 100% in regards to transparency. This year’s other top-scoring dioceses include Charleston, Lexington, Orlando and Rochester.

The Diocese of Scranton also received an overall score of 100% for financial transparency in 2021.

The Voice of the Faithful’s sixth annual review of all dioceses was conducted between June 1 and Aug. 31 by three independent reviewers and their report, “Measuring and Ranking Diocesan Online Financial Transparency: 2022 Report,” was released on Nov. 28, 2022.

In addition to receiving a perfect score in the report,…

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Catholic Diocese of Superior releases its abusive clergy list

SUPERIOR (WI)
Baldwin Bulletin [Baldwin, WI]

December 9, 2022

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Most. Rev. James P. Powers, Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Superior, last month released the list of abusive clergy who have substantiated allegations of sexual abuse of a minor. The list of names is the result of three separate clergy file reviews, including one by a private independent security consulting firm, more than a year of meetings, multiple sessions with the Diocesan Review Board (lay people with various life experiences), and much prayer and discernment.  

Bishop Powers sincerely acknowledges the sinful harms of the past, apologizes on behalf of the local Church, and prays for the healing of all victims-survivors and their affected families and friends. 

“I wish we could go back in time and undo all of the hurt and pain, the sins of the past. But we cannot,” said Bishop Powers.  “What we can do is learn from the past and do everything in our power to never…

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Baltimore abuse survivors file request to make abuse report public

BALTIMORE (MD)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 8, 2022

By Jonah McKeown

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A group of clerical sexual abuse survivors has filed a request with the Baltimore Circuit Court in an attempt to make public a recently sealed attorney general’s report that claims to chronicle hundreds of instances of clerical abuse.

At issue is a 456-page report compiled by the office of Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh, which consists of information given by the Archdiocese of Baltimore along with information gathered from interviews, and which claims to identify more than 600 victims of clerical abuse in the archdiocese dating back eight decades. It is currently unclear whether the report will lead to any new criminal charges.

A judge in Baltimore last week ordered all proceedings, filings, and communications related to the release of the report on clerical sexual abuse to be made confidential. Going forward, the legal processes of releasing the full report will not be disclosed to the public because of the confidentiality order….

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December 9, 2022

‘I’ve needed this!’ — Child abuse victims start to see payment after brutal existence at Parmadale

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

December 8, 2022

By Jonathan Walsh

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News 5’s yearlong investigation getting results

It’s something victims never thought would happen, but now payments are coming to those who experienced severe abuse as kids at a former home for children called the Parmadale Children’s Village of St. Vincent DePaul. It’s restitution that’s starting to help heal those who had no hope in the past.

“I feel better that I did it. I’m still not crazy about being on camera…” said Carolyn Mason about telling her story publicly. She said she feels much better than the first time she sat down with us back in January while wiping away tears. “If I had bruises, which one time she blacked my eye really, really good. So, that Sunday I couldn’t see my grandma and grandpa because it was too bruised and black,” she told us back then.

She had opened up for the first time about the severe abuse she…

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Jesuit expert in the fight against abuse: Vatican dicastery must respond regarding Father Rupnik

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

December 8, 2022

By Almudena Martínez-Bordiú

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Father Hans Zollner, a Jesuit priest and an expert in the fight against abuse, said the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith “must respond” to questions surrounding the case of Father Marko Rupnik, a member of the Society of Jesus accused of abuse.

Zollner is one of the leading experts in the field of safeguarding from sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. He is a member of the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors since its creation in 2014 and is the director of the Institute of Anthropology: Interdisciplinary Studies on Human Dignity and Care (IADC) at the Gregorian University in Rome.

In a statement to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language sister news agency, Zollner said that he believes that “it’s obvious that the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith has to respond.”

Zollner’s statement marks another development in the widening controversy surrounding Rupnik, a well-known Jesuit…

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Op/Ed: Priest convicted of pedophilia avoids prison. Will there be clerical consequences?

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Indianapolis Star [Indianapolis, IN]

December 9, 2022

By Lynn Starkey

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U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) has apparently prioritized their anti-LGBT stance rather than addressing their pedophile priest scandal. Here’s a recent example of how this plays out:

Father David Marcotte was suspended from his ministry as an Archdiocese of Indianapolis Catholic priest in February 2019, due to allegations of sexual abuse of a minor in 2016.

In October 2019, Marcotte was arrested and charged with three felony counts: child solicitation (Level 5 felony), vicarious sexual gratification (Level 5 felony), and dissemination of matter harmful to minors (Level 6 felony).

Then on Nov. 9, Marcotte was sentenced to a year of home detention and 18 months probation under a plea agreement for the lesser Level 6 felony. The plea agreement allows Marcotte to avoid prison time and avoid registering as a sex offender. The parents of the young male victim begged the…

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Crisis of confidence over cardinal shakes Cologne Catholics

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 9, 2022

By Kirsten Grieshaber

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An unprecedented crisis of confidence is shaking a historic center of Catholicism in Germany — the Archdiocese of Cologne. Catholic believers have protested their deeply divisive archbishop and are leaving in droves over allegations that he may have covered up clergy sexual abuse reports.

While Cardinal Rainer Maria Woelki’s personal fate is in the hands of Pope Francis, the drama has reverberations nationwide, given that the Cologne archdiocese has more Catholics than any other in Germany — about 1.8 million. Its double-domed cathedral is an iconic tourist attraction and one of the oldest, most important pilgrimage sites of Northern Europe.

And the crisis in Cologne, in which many thousands of Catholics in the region have left the church, is in some ways a microcosm of the issues playing out in the German Catholic Church as a whole as it undergoes a profound and controversial reform process precisely to respond to…

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Seattle Archdiocese pays $2.3 million to settle five claims of sexual abuse

SEATTLE (WA)
Seattle Times [Seattle WA]

December 9, 2022

By Lauren Girgis

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The Archdiocese of Seattle has paid nearly $2.3 million since August to settle five claims brought by people who alleged they were sexually abused decades ago by clergy and parish school personnel.

The settlements, for allegations of abuse occurring in the 1950s, 1970s, and 1980s, were announced by the archdiocese in November. Three of the five cases involve alleged perpetrators who have since died. They are the only individuals named in an archdiocesan news release.

The settlements, collectively totaling $2,285,000, are the latest of more than 450 cases the archdiocese has paid more than $116 million to settle since the 1980s. 

Attorney Darrell Cochran, whose firm has represented scores of clients who’ve alleged clergy abuse, represented a woman who said she was abused at St. Louise Parish School in Bellevue and settled one of the five cases.

The woman, identified by her initials, J.C. in a complaint for sexual abuse, negligence and…

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Old sex-abuse claims bankrupt a Bay Area Catholic diocese. Will others follow?

SANTA ROSA (CA)
Lake County Record-Bee [Lakeport CA]

December 8, 2022

By John Woolfolk

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Bishop cited an “insurmountable number of claims”

Payouts for childhood sexual abuse claims have taken a financial toll on a host of venerable American institutions that provided youth programs where predators lurked, from the Boy Scouts of America to Penn State, Michigan State and numerous church organizations.

With a three-year window for new claims of decades-old abuse closing at the end of this month, the Diocese of Santa Rosa, one of five Roman Catholic dioceses serving the Bay Area, has announced it will file for bankruptcy protection early next year.

“It is the inevitable result of an insurmountable number of claims,” Bishop Robert F. Vasa wrote in an announcement last Friday that said the diocese is facing more than 130 abuse claims dating back to its establishment in 1962, mostly from the 1970s and 1980s.

The claims are made possible by AB 218, a California law that made it easier…

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Three new lawsuits filed against the Catholic Diocese of Portland

PORTLAND (ME)
WMTW-TV, ABC-8 [Portland ME]

December 8, 2022

By Jim Keithley

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The number of people who claim they were abused by Catholic priests when they were children continues to grow, including two brothers who served as altar boys at St. Hyacinth Church in Westbrook.

The lawsuit against the Diocese of Portland alleges two brothers, who were 10 and 12 years old, told their mother that the Rev. Michael Plourde sexually abused them before early morning mass at St. Hyacinth Church in the late 1970s.

The lawsuit said the mother pulled the boys out of church and reported the abuse to church leaders, and never heard another word. The family never returned.

The complaints state that the diocese removed Plourde from ministry in 1994 based on multiple allegations of sex abuse.

Lawyers for the alleged victims said Plourde is still alive and living in Cumberland County. Efforts to reach him for comment were unsuccessful.

The third case filed Thursday involves another man who said he…

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Maine Catholic church faces mounting lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse

PORTLAND (ME)
Bangor Daily News [Bangor ME]

December 8, 2022

By Judy Harrison

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If you or someone you know needs resources or support related to sexual violence, contact the Maine Coalition Against Sexual Assault’s 24/7 hotline at 800-871-7741.

Three men who claim they were sexually abused by priests as children decades ago sued the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland on Thursday in Cumberland County Superior Court.

And in a separate lawsuit earlier this week, a Portland, Oregon, woman sued the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate Eastern Province in U.S. District Court in Bangor. The woman, now in her 70s, claims she was sexually abused by priests in the 1950s at a seminary the order ran in Bar Harbor and a retreat house in Bucksport.

The lawsuits are the latest legal claims made possible by a 2021 change in state law that lifted a statute of limitations on such claims. Previously, state law effectively prevented people who were abused as children before the late 1980s from…

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Jesuit priests demand transparency in abuse case against Vatican artist

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

December 7, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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One of the Vatican’s leading Jesuit advisers on preventing clergy sexual abuse called Dec. 7 for church authorities to shed more light on the case of a famous Jesuit artist who wasn’t sanctioned by the Holy See after he was accused of spiritually abusing women during confession.

Jesuit Fr. Hans Zollner said the recent statement by the Jesuit order about Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik “raised questions that, as far as I see, can only be answered by the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith.”

The Jesuits said in a statement made public this week that the Dicastery, which handles abuse cases, had closed its file on Rupnik, one of the most famous Catholic artists alive today, because the statute of limitations had expired.

The order said precautionary measures imposed on the priest by his Jesuit superior remained in effect, forbidding him from hearing confession or giving spiritual…

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Franciscan University responds to SNAP concerns over Father Morrier student sex abuse case

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
WTRF-TV [Wheeling WV]

December 8, 2022

By Karen Compton

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SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, is calling for an investigation into what Franciscan University of Steubenville knew about its former priest, Father David Morrier.

Morrier admitted to a single count of sexual battery and was sentenced to five years probation earlier this year for abusing a student he was counseling. He is required to register as a sex offender.

Morrier, while working as a priest at Franciscan University, allegedly convinced a student he was counseling that having sex with him was necessary for mental health treatment purposes.

SNAP says that documents that have recently come to light about the abuse of the the student by the priest are “troubling.”

SNAP said this in a statement:

“We do know that Fr. Morrier is a convicted & registered sex offender who targeted and preyed on an extremely vulnerable student. The published documents detail additional very troubling…

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December 8, 2022

Madison Diocese brother charged with felonies for alleged sexual abuse of 17-year-old girl

MADISON (WI)
Wisconsin State Journal [Madison WI]

December 6, 2022

By Chris Rickert

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A brother in the Diocese of Madison had sexual contact and exchanged inappropriate videos with a 17-year-old girl he met in a Bible study he led at a DeForest-based parish, a criminal complaint says.

Rajnal Rehmat, 31, was charged Monday with sexual assault of a child by a person who works or volunteers with children and child enticement, both felonies, for the incidents alleged to have happened between Sept. 5 and Oct. 1. A Dane County court commissioner on Monday set Rehmat’s bail at $5,000 and ordered the Pakistan native to relinquish his passport.

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A complaint against Rehmat, who had been working for the diocese since June, details two instances when Rehmat and the girl kissed and engaged in sexual touching in a vehicle — once near St. Olaf parish in DeForest, where he was living on the weekends, and once at Warner Park…

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Catholic church paid Maryland lobbyists more than $200K to help limit, prevent abuse lawsuits

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 8, 2022

By Lee O. Sanderlin

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For years, the three Roman Catholic dioceses operating parishes in Maryland have successfully lobbied lawmakers to keep sexual abuse survivors from filing lawsuits against the church, a review of lobbying records shows.

Over the past five years, the Maryland Catholic Conference, the church’s public policy arm for the three dioceses, has spent more than $200,000 hiring former lawmakers and government officials and consultants as lobbyists to stop the Maryland General Assembly from expanding the state’s statute of limitations on lawsuits arising from sexual abuse claims.

“This is money that goes into collection,” said Teresa Lancaster, an Edgewater attorney who was abused five decades ago while attending Archbishop Keough High School. “The church is using it to lobby against children.”

Under state law, childhood sexual abuse survivors have until their 38th birthday to file a lawsuit or three years after their abuser was convicted in criminal court, whichever…

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Worcester only diocese in Mass. not to release list of priests credibly accused of sex abuse

WORCESTER (MA)
The Republican - MassLive [Springfield MA]

December 7, 2022

By Kiernan Dunlop

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In the two decades since widespread child abuse within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston came to light, every diocese in Massachusetts has released a list of priests credibly accused of sex abuse — except the Diocese of Worcester.

“There is no public precedent for the publishing of lists of the accused — such as those accused in other positions of trust such as medicine, education or law enforcement,” Ray Delisle, a spokesperson for the Diocese of Worcester, said in an email addressing the diocese’s lack of a list.

The diocese publishes and distributes information on each priest who is placed on administrative leave and/or laicized and that information remains public on its website, according to Delisle.

Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented survivors in their claims against the Catholic Church nationally and internationally, told MassLive Friday it is important to have a list of credibly accused…

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Journalists Contradict Allegations of “cover up” Against John Paul II Before He was Pope

KRAKóW (POLAND)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 7, 2022

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Journalists investigating secular and Catholic Church sources in Poland have called into question allegations by a Dutch writer that St. John Paul II “covered up” sexual abuse while still a bishop in Poland.

On Dec. 2, Ekke Overbeek, a journalist from the Netherlands living in Poland, said he had found “concrete cases of priests abusing children in the Archdiocese of Krakow, where the future pope was archbishop. The future pope knew about it and transferred them anyway, which led to new victims.”

Overbeek referred to the case of the priest Eugeniusz Surgent and “many others” whom Karol Wojtyla allegedly “covered up.”

The Dutch publication NOS, in which Overbeek’s statements appeared, reported the journalist spent three years combing “Polish archives.”

“Almost all documents collected directly about Wojtyla have been destroyed. However, in other surviving documents, he is mentioned very often. And if you put them all together, they are…

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Survivors of clergy sex abuse want AG report against archdiocese made public

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

December 7, 2022

By Jeff Hager

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Investigators with the Maryland Attorney General’s Office uncovered 80 years’ worth of child sex abuse cases inside the Catholic Church, and alleged victims want to be part of the legal proceedings over whether that report will be made public.

They say they don’t trust the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

“They claim to follow the Gospel of Jesus Christ, but they turn their back on the lepers of today,” said SNAP Maryland Director David Lorenz.

The Attorney General’s report identifies 600 different alleged victims and advocates want to make sure they no longer remain silenced.

Advocates have retained a pair of catastrophic injury law firms with experience representing systemic sexual abuse to make sure they have a voice in the process.

“We’ll be filing a motion to intervene so that we’ll become parties to the proceedings and then once granted standing in the proceedings, we are going to seek to have the…

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SNAP Calls For Transparency at Franciscan University Steubenville

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

December 7, 2022

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We are unable to authenticate the documents calling into question whether Franciscan University of Steubenville’s statement that they only learned of the sexual assault allegations against Fr. David Morrier in 2015. However, since they have now been published publicly, the university needs to be investigated, preferably by an outside authority, to determine who knew what, when they knew it, and what they did, or did not, do about these serious accusations. Moreover, the process, as well as the results of the probe, need to be completely open and transparent.

We do know that Fr. Morrier is a convicted & registered sex offender who targeted and preyed on an extremely vulnerable student. The published documents detail additional very troubling accusations that call into question the integrity and truthfulness of this Catholic college.

Enough is enough, light needs to be shined into this dark corner. The courageous…

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Bishops Blasted for Hiding Assets the Same Way they Hide Offenders

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Jeff Anderson and Associates

December 6, 2022

By Mike Finnegan

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ALERT: Statute of Limitations is up December 31 for California Child Sex Abuse Survivors  

(Los Angeles, CA) – In a new report, a nationwide Catholic lay group, Voice of the Faithful (VOTF), has analyzed the relative ‘financial transparency’ of every US Catholic diocese or archdiocese. We applaud the study and harshly criticize California’s 12 bishops for being “as reckless and secretive with parishioners’ money as they are with their own child molesting clerics.”

“They hide their assets the same way they hide their offenders,” said attorney Jeff Anderson.

For the sixth year in a row, the Boston-based Voice of the Faithful has issued a 49-page study called “Measuring and Ranking Diocesan Online Financial Transparency”. Over a three-month period (6/1/22 – 8/31/22), independent reviewers weighed ten factors including whether dioceses post audited financial reports, list diocesan finance council members, and use “common sense chain of custody” procedures, like “using at least…

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