ABUSE TRACKER

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

February 22, 2019

List of Evansville Diocese priests accused includes one in active ministry until 3 days ago

EVANSVILLE (IN)
Courier & Press

Feb. 22, 2019

By Abbey Doyle

One of the 12 men on a list of “credible” allegations of abuse by clergy in the Diocese of Evansville was still active in public ministry until Feb. 19: three days before the list was released to the public.

Jean Vogler was arrested in 1996 in a massive child pornography ring, according to Courier & Press archives. The federal sting nabbed 130 people across 36 states.

Vogler pleaded guilty to receiving pornographic tapes in the mail. He spent about a year in federal prison and underwent psychiatric treatment when he got out.

He was reinstated to the ministry in 1999. At the time, then-Bishop Gerald Gettelfinger told the Courier that Vogler’s case didn’t fall under a zero-tolerance policy because receiving child pornography didn’t constitute direct abuse of a child.

Evansville Diocese spokesman Tim Lilley, when asked about Vogler’s reinstatement even after a federal conviction of possession of child pornography, said Friday “the U.S. Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People did not exist at that time. Following its issuance and subsequent revisions, the Charter recognizes the receipt, possession or distribution of child pornography as constituting sexual abuse of a minor. Keep in mind that, when reinstated, Father Vogler had completed his sentence and been released.

“Since the time of Father Vogler’s conviction, the Church has recognized the tragic availability of child pornography and clarified that child pornography is a form of child sexual abuse, and that a cleric who acquires, possesses or distributes that material is not to be in public ministry; and if that offense occurs from 2010 forward, it may lead to dismissal from the clerical state (laicization) as a penalty,” Lilley continued in his emailed response to questions from the C&P.

Lilley said Vogler was recently removed from public ministry after a more recent study by the Review Board.

“The bishop determined that Father Vogler is not to be in public ministry,” Lilley wrote in the emailed response. “Bishop (Joseph) Siegel made the decision to remove Father Vogler from public ministry on Feb. 19 after the diocese consulted with the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection and, as I mentioned, the Diocesan Review Board.”

Post-conviction, Vogler lived next to Memorial High School, at Villa Maria on Lincoln Avenue.

When Vogler was still in active ministry, he “celebrated Masses on weekends when pastors had to be away from their parishes,” Lilley said.

In September, the diocese promised to release the names of priests “credibly” accused of sexually abusing a minor.

In a release to media Friday, the Diocese said they compiled the names previously published in The Message, a newspaper of the Diocese. They also contacted a private investigator to review records dating to its founding in 1944 beginning in early October and ending in mid-December.

In December 2003, the diocese said allegations had been brought against 15 priests. This list names 12.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Embattled priest prays U.S. Supreme Court allows libel claim against Catholic Church

FT. LAUDERDALE (FL)
Sun Sentinel

February 22, 2019

By Marc Freeman

A priest from South Florida says he has faith the U.S. Supreme Court will allow him to do the unthinkable for a member of the clergy — sue the Catholic Church.

It might be a longshot, but the Rev. John Gallagher of West Palm Beach is used to people telling him, “You’re crazy for going up against the Catholic Church.”

This is how it’s been since he first went public three years ago with accusations that the Diocese of Palm Beach tried to cover up another priest’s sexual misconduct.

Church officials, in turn, shot back with a statement: “Father Gallagher is blatantly lying and is in need of professional assistance as well as our prayers and mercy.”

They said Gallagher made his allegations after a “ministerial decision” that he’s unfit to become a pastor.

The diocese has insisted it immediately and fully cooperated with a law enforcement investigation that led to the offending priest’s arrest and deportation.

At its core, Gallagher’s defamation lawsuit poses the big legal question of whether the freedom of religion protections under the First Amendment shields the church from such claims.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Survivor speaks out after Diocese releases list of credible allegations against clergy

EVANSVILLE, IN (IN)
WFIE TV

February 22, 2019

By Kate O’Rourke

The list is not just the names. It also includes more details about the allegations and timelines for which churches and in which schools these priests worked.

From this list we were able to do more of our own research and piece together a better narrative surrounding the priests’ allegations. Among the accused is Mark Kurzendoerfer.

He admitted to two of four credible allegations. The first dates back to the year he was ordained.

He was accused of an improper physical relationship with a 14-year-old boy. On Thursday, we sat down exclusively with priest abuse survivor Ken Meyer.

While he was abused as a teenager in St. Louis, he and his family were long-time parishioners at Holy Angles Church in New Harmony. Kurzendoerfer was their priest for nine years.

He noted that many of these names have been brought to the public since 2002.

“And I know that the committee that’s looking at the credibility of the accusations is working hard on trying to come up with a list of people who have been credibly accused. And that word credibly is really important. To come up with an accusation is easy but to have some credibility takes some effort,” says Meyer.

The Diocesan Review Board is made up of six parishioners and one priest. We have tried contacting them in the past but did not get any comment.

Again today after we got the list we reached out to each board member and have not heard back. Meyer has also encountered more than a handful of other priests who turned out to be alleged abusers.

Some of them are on this list. He says he and his family did not know about it until years later.

“Some of these priests that we’ve read about over the years of being credibly accused I’ve worked with, I’m friends with, and it’s a difficult subject,” says Meyer.

Meyer recognizes five priests on the list. He is traveled with John Breidenbach and Wilfred Englert.

Breidenbach admitted to one credible allegation. Englert was convicted of sexual battery and served a prison sentence. Meyer knew Richard Wildeman through Boy Scouts years ago. Wildeman admitted to his one credible allegation.

Meyer was at a mass in New Harmony five years ago held by Jean Vogler. Even though nearly twenty years earlier, Vogler pleaded guilty to receiving child pornography, he was still in public ministry until Tuesday.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Advocates claim names missing from list of clergy accused of child sex abuse

RICHMOND (VA)
WRIC TV

February 22, 2019

By Kerri O’Brien

A group that documents abuse in the Catholic Church says names are missing from a list of accused sex abusers recently released by the Diocese of Richmond.

8News has been combing over the Diocese of Richmond list and comparing it to an online group’s that has been tracking abuse allegations for years.

“It is really important not to let names fall through the cracks,” said Terence McKiernan, president of BishopAccountability.org.

McKiernan spoke to 8News over Skype from Massachusetts about BishopAccountability.org, a website which maintains a database of priests and nuns accused of abuse.

BishopAccountability.org often works with law enforcement to fill out its database.

“We’re careful to include in the database people who have been publicly accused of abusing children,” McKiernan said when asked what criteria the site uses to create the database.
List reveals names of dozens of Virginia priests facing ‘credible’ child sex abuse allegations ​​​​​​​
“We use as evidence,” he continued, “reports in publicly available court documents, reports in mainstream media.”

When reviewing the Bishop Accountability database for the Diocese of Richmond, 8News found five names on their list not found on the list provided by the Richmond Diocese’s bishop last week. This includes an ex-priest on Virginia’s sex offender registry and a nun convicted of molesting a 10-year-old boy in Virginia Beach.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

U.S. Catholics Wanted a Vatican Response on Sex Abuse. Is a New Proposal Enough?

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

February 22, 2019

By Elizabeth Dias

The unprecedented summit in Rome on clerical sex abuse in the Roman Catholic Church has drawn participants from around the world. But there is one country with a particularly large stake in what happens at the Vatican this week.

The clergy sex abuse crisis has engulfed the American Catholic Church for months, as leaders contend with growing state and federal investigations, and ordinary Catholics grow weary of waiting for the Vatican to finally resolve the crisis.

The yearning for a response from Pope Francis yielded on Friday a first step to holding bishops accountable for abuse in their dioceses. And it was an American — Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago — who presented the proposal. But survivors and law enforcement officials say they doubt that the church’s response so far matches the magnitude of the crisis sweeping the United States.

“Now all they are going to do is set guidelines again?” Mark Belenchia, 63, an abuse survivor and activist in Jackson, Miss., asked on Friday. “That is gibberish as far as I am concerned.”

Cardinal Cupich, who presented the proposal for increased bishop accountability, told his colleagues at the conference that the faithful had a right to doubt the church when abuse was “covered up” to protect the abuser or the institution.

“This is the source of the growing mistrust in our leadership, not to mention the outrage of our people,” he said, urging bishops to listen to victims and to provide “just accountability for these massive failures.” A key step, he suggested, was responding to the frustrations of infuriated laity sitting in their pews.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Santa Barbara attorney closely watching historic Vatican summit on clergy sex abuse

SANTA BARBARA (CA)
KCOY TV

February 22, 2019

By Beth Farnsworth

Local survivors of clergy sex abuse and legal experts are following the historic, four day summit happening this week at the Vatican. That includes Santa Barbara Attorney Tim Hale with Nye, Peabody, Stirling, Hale & Miller.

“The one thing they need to tell anyone with anything suspicious, they need to go to the police not the church,” Hale said to reporter Beth Farnsworth.

Hale mentioned the number 21, referring to Pope Francis’ list of 21 “Reflection Points” handed out to the assembly of church leaders, which includes preparing a “practical handbook” of guidelines for handling abuse cases when accusations emerge.

Hale said the Vatican’s 21 “Reflection Points” for the clergy abuse crisis should focus on point 5 which states: Inform the civil authorities and the higher ecclesiatical authorities in compliance with civil and canonical norms.

Hale sent us the following statement:

“Specifically, any suspected child abuse should be reported to law enforcement immediately. “Canonical norms” should not be considered, and there should be no suggestion of any report to the internal structures of the church. Only law enforcement is qualified and has the power to investigate, arrest, and prosecute perpetrators of childhood sexual abuse. As soon as there is any suspicion of abuse, law enforcement should determine each and every next step in the process. It is a child safety issue.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Priest abuse survivor: Nessel right to condemn church-led investigations

LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal

February 22, 2019

By Megan Banta

For decades, Greg Guggemos couldn’t remember the year he spent at St. Vincent Catholic Charities Children’s Home.

It wasn’t until memories came flooding back in 2009 that he realized that, when he and three siblings stayed there in 1954 in 1955, he had been sexually abused by Rev. John Slowey.

Guggemos, a former attorney who settled a decades-old sex abuse claim against the Diocese of Lansing for $225,000 in 2010, said Friday that it’s hard for him to believe Catholic Church officials when they pledge to keep priests accountable.

“How can you even, with a straight face, expect someone to believe that?” Guggemos said. “It’s like the fox loose in the hen house.”

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is preparing for a long investigation into clergy abuse in Michigan. Nessel expects it could turn up more than 1,000 victims.

She said at a press conference Thursday that people should be wary of church-led investigations into clergy abuse, that they should look for a badge if someone asks to speak with them.

Guggemos said that’s exactly right.

‘They obviously haven’t done that in the past’

Guggemos says he has no respect for the Catholic Church.

He says when the repressed memories of his sexual abuse returned in 2009, the emotional and physical toil cause him to quit practicing law.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Former Illinois priest charged with new crimes in Missouri

BLOOMINGTON (IL)
The Pantagraph

February 22, 2019

A former Catholic priest is facing new charges a decade after being declared sexually violent and admitting he abused about 30 boys in Illinois, California and Missouri.

Fred Lenczycki, 74, of the Chicago suburb of Berkeley, Illinois, was charged Thursday in Missouri with two counts each of deviate sexual assault and sodomy. Charging documents allege he repeatedly grabbed one boy’s genitals and tried to force another boy to expose himself in the early 1990s in the St. Louis suburb of Bridgeton.

The documents say the allegations fit “within the pattern of abuse perpetrated by the defendant over many years,” the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

Authorities said Lenczycki has not been taken into custody in Missouri. A man who answered the phone at his home address in Illinois declined comment to The Associated Press on Friday. No attorney is listed for him in online court records. Bail in the case is set at $500,000 cash only.

Lenczycki was removed from the ministry in 2002, when he was charged with sexually abusing three boys at a church in Hinsdale, Illinois, in the mid-1980s. He later pleaded guilty to aggravated sexual abuse and was released from custody in 2009 after becoming the first priest in the country to be declared sexually violent. Victims told authorities that “Father Fred” repeatedly molested them, often using the pretense of swaddling them in “Baby Jesus” costumes for pageants that never took place.

After the parents of one of victim complained, Lenczycki was transferred to California and then Missouri. As documented in diocese and court files, Lenczycki admitted molesting about 30 boys over 25 years. Multiple civil lawsuits have been filed.

“We’re deeply grateful to both the victim for having the courage to report and law enforcement for having the will to pursue charges,” said David Clohessy with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “He’s obviously a very dangerous man, and shame on every church official who knew of or suspected his crimes and ignored or hid them.”

The latest charges against Lenczycki were filed as victims of clergy sexual abuse demand more accountability and transparency from the Catholic church. The Vatican convened a sexual abuse summit Thursday to hear the testimony of several victims.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Evansville Diocese Releases List of Accused Clerics

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

February 22, 2019

A diocese in Indiana has released their list of clerics who have been “credibly” accused of abuse. We applaud this move but push for further action.

The Diocese of Evansville has become the latest – and last –Indiana Catholic Diocese to release a list of accused abusive priests. We hope this will help victims heal. We know this will make children safer.

At the same time, Bishop Joseph M. Siegel promised to take this step more than six months ago. His delay in doing so is inexcusable and has kept children needlessly at risk. We hope his flock will prod him to explain why it took him so long to take this step and why he thought this delay was in the best interests of children and parishioners in Evansville.

Bishop Siegel’s work is just beginning. Now, he must use pulpit announcements, church websites and parish bulletins to warn parents and the public about these potentially dangerous men. Alongside these names, Bishop Siegel should also include photos of these clerics as well as the dates on which allegations were received.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Local Catholic reacts to priest sexual misconduct list

EVANSVILLE (IN)
WFIE TV

February 22, 2019

By Jim Stratman

The Diocese of Evansville released it’s list of priests with credible accusations of sexual misconduct.

“Just pedophile, you know abusing children,” said Jim Goebel.

That was Jim’s first reaction when he heard about the 12 priests listed.

A strong reaction, but as the words settled Jim told us the impact went deeper. He said he has a personal connection to Father Joseph Clauss.

In the report, Clauss has 10 credible accusations against him and admitted to at least one. He was removed from public ministry in 1992 and died in 2003.

In his statement, Bishop Siegle said he hoped the release of this list would begin a process of healing. That is something Jim agrees with.

“Our bishop, though he inherited this mess, is doing some good stuff so…I’m happy to see that,” said Jim. “It’s a big relief. I’m glad to see it. I think it’s high time, it’s been a while.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Catholic church leaders discussed defrocked cardinal at Vatican summit on clergy sex abuse

NEW YORK
Daily News

February 22, 2019

By Leonard Greene

The shadow of a disgraced U.S. cardinal is looming large over a historic Vatican conference where Catholic church leaders from around the world have gathered to discuss sexual abuse by clergy.

Days after defrocking former cardinal Theodore McCarrick, 88, who served as the archbishop of Washington, D.C. from 2001 to 2006, Pope Francis is presiding over the summit, which is aimed at developing guidelines to prevent sexual abuse by priests.

McCarrick was the highest ranking Catholic figure to be laicized, or dismissed from the clerical state. A canonical investigation found that he was guilty of soliciting sex while hearing confession and sexual crimes against minors and adults.

Two U.S. cardinals said on Friday they hope there will be a new air of accountability in the church.

“The situation of Theodore McCarrick is a very, very sad moment in history. It’s a shameful moment,” Cardinal Blase Cupich, Chicago’s archbishop, told reporters. “And yet, at the same time, it causes each one of us to make sure we live our lives authentically before the people of God that we serve.”

Boston’s archbishop, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, said he hoped the summit would lead to zero tolerance and no cover-ups by clergy.

“I would hope that any bishop who is aware of this kind of misbehavior would certainly make that known to the Holy See, and not feel that they in any way should try to cover up or turn a blind eye to this,” O’Malley said.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Belmont Abbey, Where I Met Waterloo as a Theologian, Back in News

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Bilgrimage blog

February 22, 2019

By William Lindsey

Readers of this blog who have followed it for any length of time will know the story of how my career as a Catholic theologian and that of my now-husband Steve were destroyed by a Benedictine college in North Carolina, Belmont Abbey, with the active assistance of the diocese of Charlotte. The “About Me” section of Bilgrimage’s home page contains a brief biographical statement with links to a number of postings providing details of that story. Please click them if you want further information about this story. A compendium is here.

Steve and I were hired by Belmont Abbey College in 1991 to teach in its theology department. I was appointed department chair. In the spring semester 1993, I was presented with a one-year terminal contract. I had just received a glowing evaluation of my teaching, scholarship, and service to the college community and community at large. When I asked for an explanation for the termination, the college president refused to provide one.

I asked — repeatedly — to meet with both the abbot of the Belmont Abbey monastery that owns Belmont Abbey College and the bishop of Charlotte, who was then William Curlin. Both gentlemen refused to meet with me. I told them as I requested these interviews that how the college was treating me was producing crisis for me. My faith was being seriously challenged. The effect of the stonewalling I was encountering was to make me think I had no choice except to resign, rather than spend one more year working for an institution that could betray basic Catholic values about honesty and human decency and workers’ rights in such an appalling way. I wanted to discuss all of this with Abbot Oscar and Bishop Curlin before I took that step.

Both gentlemen refused to meet with me, and I did resign. Not long before I did so, Abbot Oscar convened a meeting of the entire college community in which he said that diseased limbs must be lopped from the tree of the college community to make it wholesome. After I resigned, he gave an interview to the local media speaking of the need to shore up the college’s Catholicity because it had been threatened.

A step I took before resigning was to ask for a hearing of the college’s grievance committee. Prior to that hearing, a lay member of the committee said to me, “I’m not sure there’s any point to this hearing. What if you sexually assaulted a student? The college would have grounds to fire you.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Bishops in Rome struggle to find way to investigate bishops

WASHINGTON (DC)
Religion News Service

February 22, 2019

By Thomas Reese

For Catholics in the United States, one of the most pressing questions about the clergy sexual abuse crisis is how the church should deal with bishops who are accused of covering up allegations of abuse or who have committed abuse themselves.

Two onetime archbishops of Washington, D.C., just to cite the most prominent examples, have been felled in recent months by allegations of their own misconduct or the failure to act on allegations of others’. The cases only compounded complaints that while there is a system in place in the United States for investigating accusations against priests, there is not a good one for dealing with accusations against bishops.

How to deal with bishops’ abuse or negligence is also one of the biggest problems ahead for the Vatican conference on clergy sexual abuse meeting in Rome this week.

Canon law says that only the pope can judge a bishop, but with more than 5,000 bishops worldwide, this is an impossible task for the pope to do on his own.

In a talk to the bishops on Friday at the four-day meeting with the pope here, Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich called for clear procedures for dealing with cases that could justify the removal of a bishop.

In his proposal, Cupich suggested that if a bishop is accused of misconduct or of mishandling abusive priests, the metropolitan archbishop of his region should investigate and report his findings to Vatican officials.

Cupich’s proposal is an expanded version of one he put forward last year at the November meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, where it was heavily criticized as having no credibility, since bishops would be investigating bishops.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Catholic clarity: Brooklyn diocese must release details it used to create list of predatory priests, lawyer says

BROOKLYN (NY)
Brooklyn Paper

February 22, 2019

By Colin Mixson

The Diocese of Brooklyn must release the criteria its leaders used to determine the credibility of sex-abuse accusations against the dozens of Catholic priests included in a list of alleged predators church officials unveiled this month, according to a lawyer for abuse victims.

“Many of my clients are looking at the list with skepticism,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston-based attorney with local clients alleging abuse at the hands of Kings County Catholic clergymen. “The Brooklyn Diocese has not stated what criteria it has used to determine if a priest should be listed as a perpetrator, or sex abuser.”

The Catholic Church’s 166-year-old Kings County diocese on Feb. 15 published a list of 108 clergymen — a whopping 5-percent of its borough priests — facing sex-abuse accusations that diocesan officials believe “may be true.” The list features additional information including the named priests’ past parish postings and their current status within the church, according to the diocese, whose leader said he published the list in an effort to help victim’s heal.

“I have met with many victims who have told me that more than anything, they want an acknowledgment of what was done to them,” said Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio. “This list gives that recognition and I hope it will add another layer of healing for them on their journey toward wholeness.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

A time of reckoning for NJ’s predator priests

HUDSON (NJ)
Hudson

February 22, 2019

By Mike Montemarano

The list of priests accused of abusing children is “expanding,” said Cardinal Joseph Tobin.
Editor’s note: Due to the statute-of-limitations and the failure of many Church leaders to report wrongdoing to police, most of the priests listed have not been tried and therefore are only alleged to have committed the crimes of which they are accused.

This month, Roman Catholic Church leaders in New Jersey shed new light on allegations of sexual abuse by priests that have been kept hidden for nearly a century, naming men in their clergy accused of preying on children, in some cases for decades.

Beginning on Feb. 13, the five New Jersey archdioceses, which oversee Catholic parishes in the state, publicized previously buried records of 188 clergy members who were “credibly accused” of sexually abusing children. The records ended the official silence and secrecy that cloaked the systemic atrocities within the established church.

Many of the priests “credibly accused” of sexual assault will escape prosecution because New Jersey’s statute of limitations for charging them with sexual abuse will have expired. And to pursue a civil case, victims must report the abuse within two years of their 18th birthday, according to current law.

Cardinal Joseph Tobin, who heads the Newark Archdiocese, said the investigation is not completed. “The disclosure of this list of names is not an endpoint in our process,” he said.

The revelations were preceded by a number of events. Last year a statewide New Jersey task force was created by the attorney general. In Pennsylvania, the Catholic Church was subject to a grand jury hearing in which more than 1,000 childhood victims of sexual assault connected to over 300 Catholic priests were uncovered. On Feb. 16, Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, a former Archbishop of Newark was stripped of his priesthood by Pope Francis.

The Newark Archdiocese, which oversees churches in Hudson, Bergen, Essex, and Passaic counties, released 63 records out of the 188 cases in the state. Some of the allegations date back to 1940.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

O’Malley wants Vatican report on who knew what about McCarrick

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 22, 2019

By Inés San Martín

Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston wants to see a report from the Vatican detailing who knew what and when about Theodore McCarrick, once among the most influential men of the Church in the United States – and, as of last Saturday, an ex-priest found guilty of sexual sins with both minors and adults.

O’Malley said he believes that report will include information sent to the Holy See by the four dioceses where McCarrick served, meaning New York, Metuchen, Newark and Washington, D.C.

Knowing what happened, O’Malley said, is “very important” when it comes to possible wrongdoing both in the United States and in the Vatican. Transparency is key, he said if the Church wants to be able to confront the problem.

O’Malley never mentioned McCarrick’s name during a Vatican news conference on Friday as part of Pope Francis’s summit on child sexual abuse. Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago did but short of every ecclesiastical title, reflecting the fact that the former U.S. cardinal is no longer a priest.

“The only thing I can tell you is that I and everyone else has to be held accountable, and I’ve always believed that,” Cupich said. “The situation of Theodore McCarrick is a very sad moment in history, a very shameful moment.”

Cupich was tapped by Francis as one of four prelates organizing this week’s summit on the protection of children.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Diocese foot-dragging made matters worse in priest sex-abuse probe

SAGINAW (MI)
Saginaw News

February 22, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Saginaw is facing a crisis, and its initial slow response didn’t help.

Prosecutors say the diocese “stonewalled” law enforcement as it investigated claims of child sexual abuse by clergy. Some of those claims go back decades, prosecutors contend.

For victims of clergy sex abuse, the wounds run deep. Some describe a lifetime of guilt and doubt after church officials and their parents either ignored their stories of sexual abuse as children or hushed them up – priests wouldn’t do that.

Would they?

The Catholic Church today is grappling with the sex-abuse scandal across Michigan, the United States and worldwide. Pope Francis is meeting this weekend with church leaders at the Vatican to discuss the issue.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

US cardinals hope new accountability stops abusers in future

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 22, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

Two U.S. cardinals attending the Vatican’s sex abuse prevention summit said Friday that the downfall of their former colleague, Theodore McCarrick, was sad for the Catholic church but they hoped a new spirit of accountability would prevent future cover-ups of bishop misconduct.

Cardinals Sean O’Malley of Boston and Blase Cupich of Chicago addressed the McCarrick scandal at a press conference on the second day of Pope Francis’ summit, which was dedicated Friday to holding the Catholic hierarchy accountable for preventing sexual abuse.

Francis defrocked McCarrick, 88, last week after a Vatican investigation found him guilty of sexually abusing minors and adults, including during confession. His downfall has sparked a crisis in credibility in the Catholic hierarchy, since it was apparently an open secret in some U.S. and Vatican circles that he slept with seminarians.

“The situation of Theodore McCarrick is a very, very sad moment in history. It’s a shameful moment,” Cupich told reporters. “And yet, at the same time, it causes each one of us to make sure we live our lives authentically before the people of God that we serve.”

O’Malley said he expected the Vatican and the four U.S. dioceses investigating McCarrick would soon release the results of their investigations. The Holy See refused a request from the U.S. bishops conference to conduct a full-scale Vatican investigation into who knew what and when about McCarrick’s rise through the church’s ranks, agreeing instead to a limited review of the Holy See’s own archives.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Diocese of Evansville releases list of credible allegations against clergy

EVANSVILLE (IN)
WFIE TV

February 22, 2019

By Jill Lyman

In late September 2018, in response to the request of clergy abuse victims and their families, Bishop Joseph M. Siegel announced that the Diocese of Evansville would collect and release the names of priests who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors.

The following list of clergy is based on the review of records and the recommendations of current and previous Diocesan Review Board members. The current Review Board consists of six lay persons and one priest.

Current and past members of the Board hold or have held positions in mental health counseling, clinical psychology, the practice of law, the medical field, and law enforcement, including specialty in areas of child physical and sexual abuse.

A credible claim is one for which, following a review of information, the Review Board determined as believable and plausible, and the Bishop accepted as credible; or the priest admitted to or acknowledged.

Michael Allen

Year of birth: 1944

Date of priestly ordination: June 5, 1971

Number of credible allegations: 1; Admitted

Action taken: Not in public ministry, July 2002

Places Served:

Associate Pastor, Sts. Peter and Paul Church, Haubstadt, June 29, 1971
Summer Ministry Program Director, December 6, 1972
Associate Pastor, St. Joseph Church, Princeton, June 14, 1974
Associate Pastor, St. John the Baptist Church, Vincennes, August 21, 1975
Teacher, Rivet High School, Vincennes, August 21, 1975
Administrator, St. Patrick, Corning, January 13, 1976
Administrator, All Saints, Cannelburg, January 13, 1976
Associate Pastor, St. Joseph Church, Jasper, August 1, 1979
Associate Pastor, St. Simon Church, Washington, July 29, 1980
Pastor, St. Mary Church, Washington, August 10, 1981
Associate Pastor, St. Joseph Church, Jasper, August 3, 1982
Military service, Assigned outside the diocese, September 21, 1984
Associate Pastor, St. Joseph Church, Jasper, June 5, 1995
Pastor, St. Joseph Church, Evansville, March 3, 1999
Pastor, St. Theresa Church, Evansville, March 3, 1999
Pastor, St. Celestine Church, Celestine, June 27, 2001
Not in public ministry, July 2002
Date posted as part of this list: February 22, 2019

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Priest abuse survivor shares personal story

EVANSVILLE (IN)
WFIE TV

February 21, 2019

By Kate O’Rourke

A man from New Harmony is breaking his silence on the state of sexual abuse by Catholic Priests.

He sat down exclusively with us to share his own story and his thoughts on how accused priests are being handled both locally and globally.

“But for what the Bishops did just to move these guys around, that’s criminal,” says survivor Ken Meyer. “That’s protecting your job, protecting your business, and throwing these kids under the bus to achieve that goal. That’s wrong. That’s hard to forgive.”

Right now, 170 Bishops are gathered at the Vatican. The Pope is demanding Bishops act now in the wake of the church’s abuse crisis.

“I’ve lost a lot of faith in the Catholic Church’s ability to recover,” explained Meyer.

We first met Ken Meyer in January at the the SNAP protest outside the Evansville Catholic Diocese. What we did not know then was that Meyer is a survivor of priest abuse.

Meyer has his own experiences influencing his opinions on how accused priests are being handled. For decades, they fueled personal research.

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Clergy Sex Abuse Victims ‘Beyond Angry’ Over Pope’s ‘Friends Of The Devil’ Comment

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Newsradio 1020 KDKA

February 22, 2019 – 11:38 AM

By Marty Griffin and Wendy Bell

Pittsburgh’s Bishop and local abuse victims are reacting to developments at the Vatican summit on preventing clergy sex abuse.

Jim Van Sickle of Coraopolis is in Rome watching developments. He tells KDKA Radio he was angered to hear the Pope say those who spend their life accusing are with the devil.

“Luckily I heard it in Italian so I didn’t react right away but I can tell you everybody here is angry, beyond angry.”

During the summit Pope Francis said “One cannot live a whole life accusing, accusing, accusing, the church . . . (people who do are) the friends, cousins and relatives of the devil”.

“I was a Catholic, to me my predator was Satan, I’m not Satan for speaking out,” said Van Sickle.

Feeling “deflated” Van Sickle adds he doesn’t see any action being taken by the church, “How can you talk about responsibility, accountability and transparency if you don’t even want to admit there’s a problem?

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O’Malley wants Vatican report on who knew what about McCarrick

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

Feb 22, 2019

By Inés San Martín

Cardinal Sean O’Malley of Boston wants to see a report from the Vatican detailing who knew what and when about Theodore McCarrick, once among the most influential men of the Church in the United States – and, as of last Saturday, an ex-priest found guilty of sexual sins with both minors and adults.

O’Malley said he believes that report will include information sent to the Holy See by the four dioceses where McCarrick served, meaning New York, Metuchen, Newark and Washington, D.C.

Knowing what happened, O’Malley said, is “very important” when it comes to possible wrongdoing both in the United States and in the Vatican. Transparency is key, he said if the Church wants to be able to confront the problem.

O’Malley never mentioned McCarrick’s name during a Vatican news conference on Friday as part of Pope Francis’s summit on child sexual abuse. Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago did but short of every ecclesiastical title, reflecting the fact that the former U.S. cardinal is no longer a priest.

“The only thing I can tell you is that I and everyone else has to be held accountable, and I’ve always believed that,” Cupich said. “The situation of Theodore McCarrick is a very sad moment in history, a very shameful moment.”

Cupich was tapped by Francis as one of four prelates organizing this week’s summit on the protection of children.

Guaranteeing that children are safe is a priority for the Catholic Church, O’Malley said, adding that Francis understands this cannot be only a “Church effort.”

“By addressing the problem, the Church is helping the broader society,” O’Malley said Friday. “But we have to begin by putting our house in order.”

Addressing the “crimes, the betrayals, inflicted on so many children and vulnerable adults,” he said, is part of the mission of the Church.

O’Malley served as president of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors. He noted that Francis requested a series of documents from the United Nations on clerical abuse be distributed to the 190 participants in his Feb. 21-24 summit.

“We’re part of a human family, and we’re all concerned about the safety of our children,” O’Malley said.

Also speaking with journalists Friday were Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna, formerly the Vatican’s top prosecutor on sex abuse crimes; Italian layman Paolo Ruffini, head of the Vatican’s communication apparatus; and Italian Father Federico Lombardi, a former papal spokesman who’s moderating the summit.

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Look Back | SNAP Seeks ‘Transparent’ Study of Clergy Sex Abuse

NASHVILLE (TN)
Ethics Daily

February 22, 2019

By Bob Allen

Editor’s note: This article first appeared on Sept. 18, 2007. Bob Allen was managing editor at the time of publication. This story was part of EthicsDaily.com’s efforts to bring to light clergy sexual abuse in the U.S., particularly within Baptist churches. More than a decade later, reporting by The Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News documented 700 cases of abuse over a 20-year period. This has resulted in repentance by Southern Baptist Convention leadership, including current president J.D. Greear calling for a formal investigation of sexual abuse within the convention and its affiliated congregations.

A victims’ advocacy and support group asked Southern Baptist Convention leaders to seek input from outside experts and victims in developing a denomination-wide response to sexual abuse by clergy.

In June, SBC messengers referred a motion to the SBC Executive Committee requesting “a feasibility study concerning the development of a database of Southern Baptist clergy and staff who have been credibly accused of, personally confessed to or legally been convicted of sexual harassment or abuse and that such a database be accessible to Southern Baptist churches.”

“Baptist believers have spoken, and it is time for their leaders to listen,” Christa Brown, Baptist outreach leader for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said in a sidewalk press conference outside SBC headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee.

Brown, of Austin, Texas, and SNAP National Director David Clohessy of St. Louis traveled to Nashville to hand-deliver a letter to members of the Executive Committee’s bylaws work group urging them to be “open and transparent” about the study’s methodology and resources.

“We request that you proactively solicit input from experts and from other religious leaders who have gone down similar roads ahead of you, and that you receive their testimony in a public hearing,” the letter said. “We request that you schedule a private hearing to receive testimony from victims.”

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A Life Destroyed’: Survivors And Pope Address Clergy Sex Abuse At Vatican Summit

ROME (ITALY)
National Public Radio

February 21, 2019

By Amy Held and Sylvia Poggioli

Thursday at the Vatican, Pope Francis stood before some 200 participants in an unprecedented summit on preventing clergy sex abuse and said Catholics are seeking not simply “condemnations” but “concrete, effective measures.”

But a crisis that has crossed borders and generations, lacerating the church and shaking the pope’s credibility, is standing in the way as he seeks to forge a path ahead.

Francis, who leads more than 1 billion Catholics across the world, offered 21 “reflection points,” which were distributed to attendees. They include general guidelines for addressing the crisis.

Among the proposals:

Establishing protocols for handling accusations against bishops.
Having candidates for priesthood undergo psychological evaluations.
Formulating mandatory codes of conduct for clerics and volunteers outlining “appropriate boundaries in personal relationships.”
Establishing a group with a “certain autonomy” from the church easily accessible to victims who want to report a crime.
The pope exhorted the bishops and religious superiors in attendance to “listen to the cry of the young seeking justice.”

Five anonymous abuse survivors addressed the gathering via video.

A woman from Africa relayed her experience of being raped by a priest, beginning at the age of 15.

“I got pregnant three times, and he made me have abortions three times.” She added that her life had been “destroyed.”

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Priest accused of rape, defrocked – then got government job helping mentally disabled people

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

February 22, 2019

By Candy Woodall

The church found that two reports of child sexual abuse by David Luck were credible.

Even an investigation launched in the wake of the Sandusky trial failed to reveal these allegations.

Luck has now filed a grievance against York County, which fired him in August.

Father David H. Luck allegedly raped one boy and molested another, according to findings in a Pennsylvania grand jury report.

He reportedly told people that he fantasized about sex with boys and that he was a pedophile.

The Diocese of Harrisburg removed him from ministry in 1990.

But for nearly 24 years after that, a York Daily Record investigation has revealed, York County hired him to work with some of the area’s most vulnerable residents.

Reached at his home recently, Luck declined to discuss the past allegations or his work with the county. That work typically involves direct contact with many people who have mental disabilities.

County officials say they were unaware of his history until August when Luck’s name appeared among 301 priests named in a Pennsylvania grand jury report. He was terminated about a month later.

The diocese and Roman Catholic Church concealed the allegations against him in secret archives for decades.

The family of a 15-year-old boy who said he was raped by Luck went to police, according to the grand jury report. A document from 1996 said the diocese would cooperate if it was contacted by police about Luck, but Luck was never criminally charged and diocese officials never reported the allegations.

Hiding the allegations against him ensured Luck would never appear on a Megan’s Law list or have any trouble passing a background check for child sexual abuse, although he was accused of abusing two boys.

Even so, it took the county 21 years to run any kind of background check on Luck, who is now 58 years old. The county didn’t search state and federal records until 2015, when state child safety laws changed and required it.

Luck was hired by York County on Jan. 18, 1994, as a caseworker in the Mental Health/Intellectual and Development Disabilities section of the Human Services department.

He was terminated on Sept. 21, 2018, about a month after the Pennsylvania grand jury report was released. The county has not specified the reason for his termination.

‘It happened everywhere’: How Pa. upended deep history of priest abuse across the nation

More: Catholic church still breaking its own laws, 16 years after priest abuse scandal exposed

“His employment separation was involuntary,” said county spokesman Mark Walters. “There is currently an outstanding grievance case between David Luck and the county, so regarding his involuntary separation, we won’t comment further.”

It remains unclear what the county knew in the 1990s when it hired Luck and how much it tried to learn about his past.

The grand jury report revealed that “a mental health agency” in 1996 asked the Diocese of Harrisburg for a reference. In a memo dated July 15, 1996, the Rev. Paul Helwig told Bishop Nicholas Dattilo the diocese “received a standard form, but instead of responding to the questions on the form, I wrote a letter and stated that, ‘Because of conduct unbefitting a minister of the Church, David was relieved of his duties and does not have authorization to present himself or work as a priest.'”

A compilation what’s happened since a sweeping grand jury report on decades of abuse by priests in Pennsylvania. Paul Kuehnel and Brandie Kessler and Mike Argento, York Daily Record

There are no records that indicate the mental health agency followed up to ask what kind of conduct was unbefitting of a minister of the church or why he was relieved of his duties during a time when the church rarely removed priests, even for abuse.

What that mental health agency didn’t know was that Luck was accused of raping a 15-year-old boy and fondling an 11-year-old boy in the late 1980s.

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The sex abuse summit and the Vatican’s lack of transparency

ROME (ITALY)
LaCroix International

February 22, 2019

By Robert Mickens

On the eve of the Vatican’s summit aimed at getting the entire Church to face up to the ever-widening clerical sex abuse crisis, some in the media wondered if the meeting risked being overshadowed by other controversies.

One was supposed to be the issue of gay priests — whom traditionalist Catholics have scapegoated as pederasts, and a French author has sensationalized in a just-released book in which he claims the Catholic hierarchy and the Roman Curia are full of gay men who are either leading double lives or are actually homophobic and militantly anti-homosexual.

Another looming controversy that was destined to detract from the abuse summit was the recent revelation that the Vatican has issued secret rules for priests who have fathered children. And yet another was the issue of religious women (nuns) who have been sexually abused and raped by priests and bishops, something the Vatican has tried to keep quiet for a number of decades.

None of these controversies is directly related to the sexual abuse of minors; with apologies to our traditionalist brothers and sisters who are convinced that gay priests are prone to be child molesters. However, there is an issue that is related to the abuse summit. And it is one that very few people are talking about. It’s the Vatican’s lack of transparency in dealing with credibly accused predator priests working directly for the Holy See.

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Catholic Church’s problems with abuse are playing out in India amid summit

ATLANTA (GA)
CNN

February 21, 2019

By Swati Gupta and Helen Regan

As more than 200 leaders from the Roman Catholic Church meet in Rome for an unprecedented summit to address clergy sexual abuse, a crisis is being renewed in India.

In the southern Indian state of Kerala, accusations of sexual abuse involving the Catholic Church have demonstrated the challenges of holding some members of the clergy to account, and the clerical pressures victims face to remain silent.

Last Saturday, a senior Catholic priest was sentenced to 20 years in prison by an Indian court for raping a 16-year-old girl in Kerala. The incident came to light only after the victim gave birth in February, 2017.

Robin Vadakkumchery, 51, was found guilty of raping the underage girl. He was handed down three concurrent sentences of 20 years each for rape and sexual abuse.

The case has been mired in controversy. The girl’s father attempted to direct the focus away from the priest — by initially telling police that he was the father of his daughter’s baby.

According to Beena Kaliyath, state prosecutor for the case, the girl’s father told police he was the one who had raped her, in order to take pressure off the Church. DNA testing subsequently proved that Vadakkumchery, the priest, was the father.

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Abuse Victims Say Italian Law Helps Bishops Dodge Accountability

NEW DELHI (INDIA)
New Delhi Times

February 22, 2019

U.S. and Italian advocates for victims of pedophile priests are pressing for Italy to overhaul legislation that allows bishops to dodge accountability for predator clergy in the predominantly Roman Catholic country where the church wields considerable political influence.

A U.S. state legislator joined an Italian lawmaker and American and Italian victims of pedophile clergy at the Italian Parliament on Thursday to put a spotlight on what they described as significant gaps in how the Italian justice system handles the problem.

Francesco Zanardi, who heads an Italian survivors’ advocacy group, said Italy must revise its 1929 Lateran Treaty with the Holy See. He noted that under that agreement, bishops can refuse to respond to magistrates investigating their alleged roles in hiding pedophile crimes by priests.

Thus, as long as they personally are not being investigated for abuse, bishops “have the right to refuse to answer questions from the judiciary,” Zanardi told a news conference in the Chamber of Deputies, Parliament’s lower house.

The same treaty, he noted, also requires magistrates to inform church hierarchy they have started investigations of priests, effectively giving bishops more time to possibly discourage witnesses or victims from coming forward.

Italian law doesn’t require bishops to denounce cases of abuse by clergy, Zanardi said.

“There is a legislative vacuum,” he said.

The Catholic church holds a privileged place in Italian society and wields significant influence in politics. Parishes in small towns and big cities alike run after-school and weekend recreation programs for youngsters, since public schools don’t offer them. That gives priests easy access to minors.

A U.S. advocate for accountability for pedophile priests noted that the American Catholic church was forced to “be more transparent” after victims came forward as adults when several states opened windows on statutes of limitations. That nudged U.S. bishops to adopt a “zero tolerance” policy toward abusive priests.

But the Italian church still allows itself to beguided by canon law, which “gives the priest a second chance”and “leaves it to the bishop’s discretion” on whether a priest should be punished or removed from children, said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org.

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Federal prosecutors broke law in Jeffrey Epstein case, judge rules

MIAMI (FL)
Miami Herald

February 21, 2019

By Julie K. Brown

Federal prosecutors, under former Miami U.S. Attorney Alex Acosta, broke the law when they concealed a plea agreement from more than 30 underage victims who had been sexually abused by wealthy New York hedge fund manager Jeffrey Epstein, a federal judge ruled Thursday.

While the decision marks a victory for crime victims, the federal judge, Kenneth A. Marra, stopped short of overturning Epstein’s plea deal, or issuing an order resolving the case. He instead gave federal prosecutors 15 days to confer with Epstein’s victims and their attorneys to come up with a settlement. The victims did not seek money or damages as part of the suit.

It’s not clear whether the victims, now in their late 20s and early 30s, can, as part of the settlement, demand that the government prosecute Epstein. But others are calling on the Justice Department to take a new look at the case in the wake of the judge’s ruling.

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The global pervasiveness of the sex abuse problems in the Catholic Church

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 21, 2019

Pope Francis’ high-stakes sex abuse prevention summit is meant to call attention to the crisis as a global problem that requires a global response.

His decision was sparked by the realisation that in many parts of the world, bishops and religious superiors continue to deny or play down the severity of the scandal and protect their priests and the reputation of the church at all costs.

Much of the developing world has largely escaped a public explosion of the scandal, as have conflict zones and countries where Catholics are a minority.

But even majority Catholic countries have lagged. Just this week, the online resource BishopAccountability listed Brazil, Mexico, the Philippines, Congo and a handful of other heavily Catholic countries as places where the church leadership has failed to respond adequately when priests rape and molest children.

Some countries where the scandal has played out visibly in recent years:

ARGENTINA

Francis’ home country is beginning to see an eruption of the scandal, with some cases even implicating the pontiff himself.

As Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Francis played a decisive and divisive role in Argentina’s most famous abuse case, commissioning a four-volume, 2,000-plus page forensic study of the legal case against a convicted priest that concluded he was innocent, that his victims were lying and that the case never should have gone to trial.

Despite the study, Argentina’s Supreme Court in 2017 upheld the conviction and 15-year prison sentence for the Rev. Giulio Grassi, a celebrity priest who ran homes for street children across Argentina.

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Cardinal at abuse summit calls clericalism ‘distortion’ of ministry

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 21, 2019

By Christopher White

Church leaders were warned not to blame the outside world for the Church’s abuse crisis and that “the enemy is within.”

In delivering his afternoon remarks at the pope’s closely watched abuse summit taking place at the Vatican this week, Cardinal Rubén Salazar Gómez of Bogotà, Colombia, and President of the Latin American Episcopal Council (CELAM), said “the damage is not done by outsiders but that the first enemies are within us, among us bishops and priests and consecrated persons who have not lived up to our vocation.”

Echoing a common theme from Pope Francis on this issue, Salazar pinpointed clericalism as the root cause, leading to a “distortion of the meaning of ministry,” which he said had heightened the severity of the crisis.

Clericalism is “a clerical mentality that leads us to misunderstand the institution of the Church and place it above the suffering of the victims and the demands of justice,” he said. “This mentality accepts the justifications of the perpetrators over the testimony of those affected.”

During his remarks, the South American cardinal urged for “conversion” to replace a clerical culture in the Church, which has led to abusive priests being transferred around to other assignments instead of properly being punished and using monetary settlements to “buy silence” from victims.

Salazar’s remarks were titled “The Church in a moment of crisis: Facing conflicts and tensions and acting decisively,” and he used them, to among other things, call for a new “code of conduct” for bishops as a “concrete” means of reform and heightened attention to screening candidates for the priesthood and renewed attention to priestly formation.

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St. Louis diocese won’t post list of abusive priests

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Post Dispatch

February 22, 2019

By Kathy Peterson and Anne Harter

To the west, the Jefferson City Catholic diocese has posted a list of accused abusive priests on its website. To the south, the Springfield-Cape Girardeau diocese has too. To the east, the Belleville diocese has posted a list. In fact, more than half of America’s 187 dioceses have produced such lists, starting in 2002.

It’s not just dioceses. A St. Louis-based Jesuit region revealed a list of 42 accused clerics (with 12 who worked at one local high school.) But the St. Louis archdiocese steadfastly refuses to do so.

Arguably if any area prelate should do this, it should be Archbishop Robert Carlson. In court filings five years ago, his lawyers admitted that 115 of the archdiocese’s staff had been accused of sexual misdeeds.

According to BishopAccountability.org, only 58 St. Louis-area clerics are publicly identified as accused of abuse. That means no Catholic jurisdiction in the bistate area is hiding so many alleged child molesters. So only half of the priests, nuns, brothers and seminarians who church officials acknowledge face accusations are known to the public. (And that information has come mostly because of brave victims who’ve filed civil lawsuits.)

These lists are not panaceas. They are small, long-overdue steps toward transparency. They’re happening now because of intense pressure on bishops — from parents, parishioners, police and prosecutors. Over the past few months, 16 attorneys general have announced investigations into the Catholic hierarchy’s handling of abuse cases.

But they do make kids safe? Sometimes. A Jefferson City priest, for instance, went on to work at Disney World after being suspended. After the Springfield, Ill., bishop posted his “accused” list, an ex-priest was fired from his taxpayer-funded job.

Even those prelates who have posted such lists usually still fall short in several key ways.

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Editorial: Catholic Church must own up to all aspects of clergy sex abuse

WEST LEBANON (NH)
Valley News

February 21, 2019

On Thursday, Pope Francis convened a long-awaited meeting of Catholic bishops and other church leaders to frame a global response to the abuse by clergy of “minors and vulnerable adults.” The Vatican considered this so-called summit meeting so important that it asked the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops last year not to act on new measures to hold bishops accountable for covering up for abusive priests until after the meeting took place.

It’s scandalous that the Vatican is convening this meeting only now, after decades of revelations of abuse by priests of children and others, and delay and denial by church leaders (including the current pope, who has apologized after defending a Chilean bishop accused of covering up abuse). If this four-day meeting is to be judged a success, the pope must make it clear to participants that if they won’t deal decisively and transparently with predatory priests — and complicit superiors — in their home countries, Rome will do it for them. That message needs to be sent not only in connection with the abuse of children and adolescents by clergy, an evil that the church has been grappling with for decades, but also with a scandal that has attracted attention more recently: the sexual exploitation of adults, including seminarians and nuns, by powerful clerics. It’s increasingly clear that abuse of minors is only one dimension of the crisis.

Unfortunately, clerics involved in preparations for the summit have suggested that its focus will be primarily or even exclusively on sexual abuse of minors. Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, said that although the sexual abuse of adults must be addressed, the summit should focus on young victims because “minors don’t have a voice.” But limiting the discussion to the abuse of children would be a mistake — the church needs to address on all forms of sexual misconduct by the clergy, and do it soon.

That reality is underlined by the Vatican’s announcement last week that it had defrocked Theodore McCarrick, the 88-year-old former archbishop of Washington, D.C., who had been accused of molesting a teenager decades ago while serving as a priest in New York. (McCarrick said he had no recollection of the abuse and believed he was innocent.) That revelation quickly led to McCarrick’s resignation from the College of Cardinals. But it then emerged that the prelate also had been accused of sexually harassing young seminarians, contriving to have them share his bed. Two New Jersey dioceses secretly paid settlements to men who said they had been preyed upon by McCarrick.

McCarrick’s behavior with seminarians figured in a sensational document published last summer by Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a retired Vatican diplomat who accused Francis of rehabilitating McCarrick after Pope Benedict XVI had supposedly imposed “sanctions” on the American prelate. Vigano’s screed floated a conspiracy theory about a “homosexual current” in the Vatican, and it may have been unfair to Francis. But his description of McCarrick as a “serial predator” seems to have been confirmed by the Vatican’s decision to defrock him.

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France’s bishops agree to compensation for sex abuse victims

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press

February 22, 2019

Still struggling to come to terms with their share of responsibility in the clerical sex abuse scandal rocking the Catholic Church, France’s bishops have agreed to award financial compensation to victims whose cases fall outside of the country’s statute of limitations.

“We have agreed in principle to make a financial gesture,” Vincent Neymon, head of communications for the French bishops’conference, told the Associated Press. He said he hoped to have a system for paying victims in place in less than a year.

France has not been immune to the scandal that has prompted a credibility crisis for the Catholic hierarchy, and that is the topic of a summit at the Vatican this week on preventing sex abuse and prosecuting pedophile priests.

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Vatican summit on sex abuse focuses calls for accountability of predator priests

/ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 22, 2019

Cardinals attending Pope Francis’ summit on preventing clergy sex abuse called Friday for a new culture of accountability in the Catholic Church to punish bishops and religious superiors when they fail to protect their flocks from predator priests.

On the second day of Francis’ extraordinary gathering of Catholic leaders, the focus of debate shifted to how church leaders must acknowledge that decades of their own cover-up, secrecy and fear of scandal had only worsened the crisis.

“We must repent, and do so together, collegially, because along the way we have failed,” said Mumbai Cardinal Oswald Gracias. “We need to seek pardon.”

Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich told the 190 bishops and religious superiors that new legal procedures were needed to both report and investigate superiors when they are accused of misconduct or negligence in handling abuse cases.

He said lay experts must be involved at every step of the process, since rank-and-file Catholics know far better than priests what trauma abuse and cover-up has caused.

“In large part it is the witness of the laity, especially mothers and fathers with great love for the church, who have pointed out movingly and forcefully how gravely incompatible the commission, cover-up and toleration of clergy sexual abuse is with the very meaning and essence of the church,” he said.

“Mothers and fathers have called us to account, for they simply cannot comprehend how we as bishops and religious superiors have often been blinded to the scope and damage of sexual abuse of minors,” he said.

Francis summoned 190 bishops and religious superiors for the four-day tutorial on preventing abuse and protecting children after the scandal erupted again last year in Chile and the U.S. While the Vatican for two decades has tried to crack down on the abusers themselves, it has largely given the bishops and superiors who moved them around from parish to parish a pass.

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‘We Gave Him a Chance’: Mercy for Abusive Priests Divides Church

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

February 22, 2019

By Drew Hinshaw, Francis X. Rocca and Natalia Ojewska

Read original article

Sex offenders keep their jobs in some parishes in Poland, with congregations’ blessings

WEGROW, Poland—One Sunday morning last year, the Rev. Jacek Wentczuk stood before his congregation and made a startling admission. He was a convicted sex offender, he said, found guilty in 2012 of molesting a 15-year-old girl in a nearby town. His bishop was considering transferring him.

Parishioners rallied to the side of the popular Catholic priest, who insisted he had done nothing wrong. They brought flowers and children’s drawings to persuade church leaders to keep Father Wentczuk in his job in this small town in eastern Poland, where he is known for ministering to the sick and dying.

“We gave him a chance,” said Monika Landzberg, a doctor at the local hospital. “This crime cannot weigh on a man until the end of his life.” Father Wentczuk didn’t respond to requests for comment.

There are deep splits in the world-wide Catholic Church over how to handle cases of sexual abuse involving priests, with some clergy and laity arguing that any member of the clergy who sexually abuses a minor should be removed from ministry. Others call for a more flexible, lenient response.

In the U.S., the church has adopted a zero-tolerance approach. Church leaders in Australia, Canada, Ireland and elsewhere also have moved aggressively against clergy who transgress.

But in many other places, including Poland, a less-strict standard prevails. The faithful often defend accused priests. And church leaders can be reluctant to punish abusers.

“You have to exonerate the human being,” said the Rev. Bogdan Jaworowski, a priest in southeastern Poland whose congregation rallied behind a colleague convicted of distributing child pornography.

At the start of a Vatican conference on sex abuse on Thursday, Pope Francis said priests’ preying on children was a plague on the church. He called on bishops to devise “not simple and predictable condemnations but concrete and effective measures” to stamp out misconduct.

Victims and anti-abuse activists will hold a “March to Zero” in Rome on Saturday, urging the pope to institute a world-wide zero-tolerance policy for abusers.

In a discussion guide for summit participants, Pope Francis wrote about clergy who commit abuse having to give up public ministry, but also emphasized the “traditional principle of proportionality of punishment.”

Since America’s sex-abuse scandals erupted in 2002 in Boston, the church in the U.S. has moved to remove any priest found guilty of sexual abuse of someone under the age of 18 from ministry, either by dismissal from the priesthood—“defrocking”—or restriction to a private life of “prayer and penance.”

The church in the U.S. requires bishops to inform police of suspected abuse and cooperate with investigations.

The American rules “do not always transport or travel well,” said the Vatican’s top sex-abuse prosecutor, the Rev. Robert Geisinger, in a rare 2017 public statement of the Vatican’s thinking

on disciplinary policy. “Cultural sensitivity is needed in understanding how abuse is understood.”

Of the 20 countries with the world’s largest Catholic populations, including Poland, only the

U.S. church has a “zero tolerance” policy, according to Anne Barrett Doyle of BishopAccountability.org, a U.S. organization that tracks abuse cases and supports zero tolerance.

In Italy, the national bishops’ conference decided in 2014 against requiring bishops to report abuse to civil authorities. Students and teachers in Spain have formed human chains to protest on behalf of accused clerical sex offenders, and Italian Catholics have demonstrated for their own.

In Poland, at least nine Catholic clergymen convicted of child sex abuse-related crimes continue to offer Mass, according to court and church records reviewed by The Wall Street Journal and interviews with church officials.

A Krakow priest, the Rev. Lukasz Kubas, molested a 12-year-old girl, according to his 2010 court verdict, but still regularly celebrates Mass. Another, the Rev. Andrzej Seidler, who ministers to a town in Poland’s southeast, was sentenced to two years probation for molesting a 13-year-old girl. Neither responded to requests for comment.

In one case, the Rev. Roman Jurczak was convicted of the sexual abuse of a girl younger than 15, and spent four months in prison. He celebrates Mass weekly at a church in southern Poland, a local church official said.

Father Jurczak didn’t respond to a request for comment. In a 2016 statement, the local bishop said the accusations “have never been repeated…. The media have destroyed his good name.”

In some cases, parishioners have thronged courtrooms, thumbing rosaries, to show their support for accused priests.

“In the 70s and 80s, this topic was like a taboo,” said Boleslaw Senyszyn, a judge under Communism and now a lawyer for sex-abuse victims. Even today, “many lawyers feel afraid to take these cases against the church. It’s the reaction from the society.”

Polish church officials referred requests for comment to local dioceses, several of which said they hadn’t broken Polish church rules in allowing convicted sex offenders to remain in the ministry.

In 2007, in the village of Sarnaki, about an hour from Wegrow, Father Wentczuk began his abuse of Ernesta Miłkowska, then 15, as her parents moved toward divorce, after he recruited her for a play about the life of St. John Paul II, according to the court verdict. Ms. Milkowska confirmed this account to the Journal.

For three months they met regularly late in the evening in his apartment, the verdict said. Neighbors including another priest began to notice and in July 2007 her mother, Marta Miłkowska, reported her suspicions—first to the bishop and then to police and prosecutors. A fellow priest testified against Father Wentczuk during a subsequent trial.

Father Wentczuk was found guilty by a local court of molestation in 2012. “The accused was perfectly aware of the fact that he as a priest and educated person, enjoys within the society, especially a village, huge trust and respect and used that fact in order to get closer to the victim without raising suspicion,” the judgment reads. “He used her to gratify his sexual needs.”

The church defrocked him, but he appealed and the Vatican reversed the ruling. “Because of this, the bishop of the diocese was free to appoint the priest to new assignments,” the Wegrow diocese said in statement to the Journal.

Classmates stopped talking to Ms. Milkowska, other priests blamed her, and neighbors grew cold, her mother said. “We were excluded from the society,” her mother recalls. “We could have escaped, but I wanted to prove to those wool hat ladies at the church that it is not we who are guilty.”

When Father Wentczuk arrived in Wegrow, some locals complained to the bishop. “He

shouldn’t be a priest, and he definitely shouldn’t be around children,” said Ewa Swiniarska, a church member. “Older people are more supportive…they grew up in a different world.”

Father Wentczuk was distraught when his bishop told him he was considering transferring him, according to Dr. Landzberg, in whom the doctor said the priest confided. The doctor, who describes herself as an atheist, defended the priest to the bishop. “It’s typical man behavior.

And this is just a man in a cassock,” she said.

After Father Wentczuk told parishioners he might be moved, dozens of churchgoers stormed the bishop’s office carrying a roll of wallpaper signed by most of the church’s several hundred regulars. People deserve a second chance, one said. Fifteen-year-old girls dress like women, another protested. A week later, the bishop decided to allow him to stay.

Ms. Milkowska, now 27, was frustrated when she heard of the decision, and expressed outrage that anyone would blame her for what happened.

“What he did is still very much alive in me,” she says. “I find it hard to comprehend.”

Corrections & Amplifications

The Rev. Roman Jurczak was convicted of the sexual abuse of a girl younger than 15. An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated he was convicted of performing sexual acts on two girls. (Feb. 22, 2019)

Write to Drew Hinshaw at drew.hinshaw@wsj.com and Francis X. Rocca at francis.rocca@wsj.com Appeared in the February 23, 2019, print edition as ‘Forgiveness for Abusive Priests Divides Church.

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As the Vatican addresses priest abuse, more people are reporting sexual abuse by nuns

NEW YORK (NY)
CBS News

February 22,2019

At the Vatican summit on clergy abuse Friday morning, attention turned to abuse by nuns. Victims’ advocates delivered a letter to an organization representing nuns asking predator nuns be exposed so survivors can begin to heal. This call to action comes as more victims speak out.

Nun abuse survivor Virginia June was at home in Ann Arbor, Michigan, when she heard fellow survivor Trish Cahill talking about her experience on “CBS This Morning.”

“I whipped around. I could not believe that somebody was actually talking about it,” June told CBS News’ Nikki Battiste.

In a CBS News report last month, Cahill called nun abuse “the secret not yet told.” Hearing that made June feel “validated” for the first time.

Facing a troubled childhood at home in the Detroit suburb of Farmington Hills, June said she turned to Sister Pat Kulwicki for guidance. Kulwicki taught June’s religious study class at what was then Our Lady of Mercy High School.

“She seemed to be very consoling and very nurturing and very wonderful and she became a mentor to me,” June said.

The 57-year-old said Sister Kulwicki began molesting her when she was 14 years old. The first time was at Kulwicki’s apartment.

“I knew it was wrong and I didn’t know who to tell … I was so confused it was like this sister is doing these sexual things to me and I thought she was married to God,” June said.

June said the abuse continued for a decade and fueled her addiction to drugs and alcohol. She claims the school and the Detroit Archdiocese failed to act when June and her family say they reported the alleged abuse in the late 80s. June said Kulwicki denied any wrongdoing, allegedly calling June troubled. She continued to teach at the school until she died in 1994.

In response to June’s allegations, Mercy High School said it is “deeply saddened” and “immediately contacted local police and initiated an internal investigation” upon receiving our request for comment.

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New charges filed in St. Louis County against ‘sexually violent’ ex-priest

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

February 21, 2019

By Rachel Rice

New assault charges have been filed alleging a priest assaulted a boy in the early 1990s in St. Louis County.

Fred Lenczycki, 74, now faces two charges of deviate sexual assault and two counts of sodomy.

Lenczycki is a known sexual predator with multiple allegations in three states that span several years during the time he was active as a priest.

He was removed from ministry in 2002 and later laicized.

He is currently listed in the Illinois sex offender registry as “sexually violent,” having been convicted of acts of aggravated sexual abuse against victims younger than 13 . He currently lives in Berkeley, Ill., in suburban Chicago.

According to the charges filed in St. Louis County Circuit Court on Thursday, between January 1991 and December 1994 Lenczycki abused a boy younger than 14 by grabbing his genitals on multiple occasions, and abused a second boy by trying to force the boy to expose himself. The abuse reportedly happened in the 12300 block of DePaul Drive in Bridgeton.

Online listings by a law firm that advocates for sexual abuse victims say he was assigned to the DePaul Health Center in that block in the 1990s and until 2002. Those listings also say Lenczycki’s other local assignments in the 1990s included the Church of North America Martyrs Rectory in Florissant and St. Blaise Parish in Maryland Heights in the 1990s.

Charging documents note that the abuse described by the victims “fits within the pattern of abuse perpetrated by the defendant over many years.”

In 2008, Lenczycki was the first clergy member committed under Illinois’ Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act, which allows prosecutors to seek commitment in a state facility of sex offenders they believe will re-offend.

David Clohessy, advocate for Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said that while he knows of Lenczycki, the predator priest isn’t yet infamous enough. Parishioners deserve to know, he said.

“We’re deeply grateful to both the victim for having the courage to report and law enforcement for having the will to pursue charges,” Clohessy said. “He’s obviously a very dangerous man, and shame on every church official who knew of or suspected his crimes and ignored or hid them.”

Victim’s advocate Jeff Anderson said he had worked to bring at least half a dozen allegations against Lenczycki to light over the years.

“(Lenczycki) is an incredibly dangerous offender, and the more that can be known about him the more likely he will be put behind bars,” Anderson said. “The number of kids he actually violated is not known, but he’s among the most dangerous perverse serial predators.”

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Cardinal calls for global recognition of sex abuse in Catholic Church

VATICAN CITY
AFP

February 21, 2019

By Ella Ide

A leading cardinal acknowledged the global scale of the child sex abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church on Friday, on the second day of a landmark summit at the Vatican on tackling paedophilia in the clergy.

The refusal by some bishops — notably in Asia and Africa — to admit clerical paedophilia was an issue in their countries was unacceptable, Indian Cardinal Oswald Gracias told the extraordinary summit.

“The point is clear. No bishop may say to himself, ‘This problem of abuse in the Church does not concern me, because things are different in my part of the world’,” he said.

His comments came after Pope Francis opened the global summit on Thursday — the first of its kind — calling on the 114 top bishops present to forge “concrete measures” to deal with sex abuse cases in the Church.

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Victims testify at child sex abuse conference, Pope promises to fight ‘enemy within’

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

February 21, 2019

By Philip Pullella

Pope Francis promised that concrete action against child sexual abuse by priests would result from a conference he opened on Thursday, with one cardinal acknowledging that the Church had to fight “the enemy within”.

Francis convened Catholic leaders from around the world for the four-day meeting to address the scandal that has ravaged the Church’s credibility in the United States – where it has paid billions of dollars in settlements – Ireland, Chile, Australia, and elsewhere over the last three decades.

His opening remarks appeared aimed at countering scepticism among victims who said the meeting looked like a public relations exercise.

“Faced with the scourge of sexual abuse committed by men of the Church against minors, I wanted to reach out to you,” Francis told the assembled bishops and heads of religious orders. He asked them to “listen to the cry of the little ones who are seeking justice”.

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A global look at the Catholic Church’s sex abuse problem

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

February 21, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis’ high-stakes sex abuse prevention summit is meant to call attention to the crisis as a global problem that requires a global response.

His decision was sparked by the realization that in many parts of the world, bishops and religious superiors continue to deny or play down the severity of the scandal and protect their priests and the reputation of the church at all costs.

Much of the developing world has largely escaped a public explosion of the scandal, as have conflict zones and countries where Catholics are a minority.

But even majority Catholic countries have lagged. Just this week, the online resource BishopAccountability listed Brazil, Mexico, the Philippines, Congo and a handful of other heavily Catholic countries as places where the church leadership has failed to respond adequately when priests rape and molest children.

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Pope Francis presents action plan for tackling clerical sex abuse but victims dismiss it as inadequate

VATICAN CITY
The Telegraph

February 21, 2019

By Nick Squires

Pope Francis put forward a 21-point plan for combating the sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests on Thursday, but the proposals were dismissed by victims as wholly inadequate and a recycling of procedures that already exist.

The list of “reflection points” was put forward by the Pope on the first day of a summit that was convened in response to sex abuse scandals that have undermined faith in the Catholic Church around the world.

“The holy people of God looks to us, and expects from us not simple and predictable condemnations, but concrete and effective measures to be undertaken,” the Pope said as the conference, the first of its kind, got underway at the Vatican. “Hear the cry of the little ones who plead for justice.”

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Pope Francis: We Need To ‘Hear The Cry Of The Little Ones’

VATICAN CITY
MSNBC via NEWS WATCHER

February 21, 2019

Velshi & Ruhle

Pope Francis: We Need To ‘Hear The Cry Of The Little Ones’ | Velshi & Ruhle | MSNBC
An historic summit is underway at the Vatican over the Catholic church’s sex abuse scandals, with the Pope saying “we need to hear the cries of little ones.” NBC’s Anne Thompson and attorney for priest abuse victims Mitchell Garabedian join Stephanie Ruhle to discuss whether this meeting means the church will actually confront the decades old problem.

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Parishioners still seeking answers after Bransfield’s resignation | What’s Next?

WHEELING (WV)
WTRF

February 21, 2019

By Kathryn Ghion

It’s been a long few months for the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, that all started with the resignation of Bishop Michael Bransfield.

It’s a time that’s left parishioners with questions, and some questioning their faith. In a time that leaves many searching for answers, 7News wanted to know: what’s next?

“Our faith is founded on truth,” said Archbishop William E. Lori. “Jesus said the truth will set you free.”

Since being named the Apostolic Administrator for the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston in September, Archbishop William Lori said he has aimed to seek the truth and be transparent.

“I want to thank the priests, the deacons, the religious and above all the lay people of the diocese for their patience, their love and their understanding,” Archbishop Lori continued.

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Judy Jones on the Sex Abuse Summit and What Needs to be Done

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Newsradio 1020 KDKA

February 21, 2019

By Robert Mangino

Judy Jones from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests joins Robert Mangino to talk about the sex abuse summit that is being held at the Vatican by Pope Francis. She explains the five demands the survivors want from the Pope. At the top of the list is that any bishop or cardinal should be fired if there was any evidence that they covered up any sex scandal.

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Vatican holding meeting over church’s sex abuse scandals

VATICAN CITY
MSNBC

February 21, 2019

An historic summit is underway at the Vatican over the Catholic church’s sex abuse scandals, with the Pope saying “we need to hear the cries of little ones.” NBC’s Anne Thompson and attorney for priest abuse victims Mitchell Garabedian join Stephanie Ruhle to discuss whether this meeting means the church will actually confront the decades old problem.

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Catholic clarity: Brooklyn diocese must release details it used to create list of predatory preists, lawyer says

BROOKLYN (NY)
Brooklyn Paper

February 22, 2019

By Colin Mixson

The Diocese of Brooklyn must release the criteria its leaders used to determine the credibility of sex-abuse accusations against the dozens of Catholic priests included in a list of alleged predators church officials unveiled this month, according to a lawyer for abuse victims.

“Many of my clients are looking at the list with skepticism,” said Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston-based attorney with local clients alleging abuse at the hands of Kings County Catholic clergymen. “The Brooklyn Diocese has not stated what criteria it has used to determine if a priest should be listed as a perpetrator, or sex abuser.”

The Catholic Church’s 166-year-old Kings County diocese on Feb. 15 published a list of 108 clergymen — a whopping 5-percent of its borough priests — facing sex-abuse accusations that diocesan officials believe “may be true.” The list features additional information including the named priests’ past parish postings and their current status within the church, according to the diocese, whose leader said he published the list in an effort to help victim’s heal.

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February 21, 2019

Pope Francis Lays Out Plan to Combat Sex Abuse in Church

WASHINGTON (DC)
National Review

February 21, 2019

By Mairead McArdle

On Thursday, the opening day of a Vatican summit addressing the sexual abuse of minors by members of the clergy, Pope Francis laid out a 21-point plan to combat the crisis battering the Church in almost all corners of the world.

“We hear the cry of the little ones asking for justice,” Francis said. “We sense the weight of the pastoral and ecclesial responsibility that obliges us to discuss together, in a synodal, frank, and in-depth manner, how to confront this evil afflicting the Church and humanity. The holy people of God looks to us, and expects from us not simple and predictable condemnations, but concrete and effective measures to be undertaken.”

Some of the recommendations Francis listed include informing the civil authorities and higher ecclesiastical authorities about incidents of abuse, protecting and offering support to victims, raising the minimum age for marriage to 16, and setting up protocols to handle various situations.

The Vatican’s top sex-crimes investigator, Archbishop Charles Scicluna, called Francis’s “reflection points” a “road map for our discussion.”

The four-day summit, dubbed “The Protection of Minors in the Church,” has gathered 190 Church leaders from around the world. Francis has said that the summit is designed to determine “how best to protect children, to avoid these tragedies, to bring healing and restoration to the victims, and to improve the training imparted in seminaries.”

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AG’s Investigation Into Catholic Church Could Result In Over A Thousand Victims And Take Two Years

EAST LANSING (MI)
WKAR Radio

February 21, 2019

By Cheyna Roth

More than 70 police officers, special agents and government officials executed search warrants on each of the seven Catholic dioceses in Michigan simultaneously.

They loaded vehicles with boxes and filing cabinets – everything they could find related to potential sexual abuse by priests who have worked in Michigan from 19-50 until now.

Attorney General Dana Nessel said Michigan is the first state to execute a search warrant on the Church in this way.

“We did not depend on the dioceses to turn over documents which is what primarily happened in other states.”

Nessel said she expects her office’s investigation to last at least two years.

“Hundreds of thousands of documents were seized during the raids and an investigative team is reviewing more than 300 tips already received. “

Attorney General Dana Nessel was slim on details about the investigation since it is ongoing. But Michigan State Police Colonel Joe Gasper said not all dioceses are being as cooperative as investigators would like.

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Abuse survivors organization calls for St. Louis Archbishop to reveal names of priests who faced abuse allegations

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KMOV TV

Feb 21, 2019

A group of demonstrators gathered outside the Cathedral Basilica of St. Louis in the Central West End Thursday, pushing St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson to publish the names of all alleged predator priests.

The group, Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), released five more names of priests who are in or have served in the St. Louis community who have faced allegations of sexual assault.

The president of SNAP, David Clohessy, said it’s time for some stern punishment.

“What needs to happen is heads need to roll. Pope Francis needs to fire, publicly fire, bishops who conceal abuse. Not let them voluntarily resign,” he said. “Not quietly move them somewhere else. But he needs to fire them and he needs to say that publicly.”

News 4 reached out the St. Louis Archdiocese today about SNAP’s demands to publish the names of priests.

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Victims of clergy sexual abuse demand mandatory reporting to police

WICHITA (KS)
KAKE TV

February 21, 2019

“Upon our meeting lays a burden of pastoral and ecclesial responsibility that compels us to discuss together, in a frank and in-depth way, how to tackle this evil that afflicts the church and humankind at large,” Pope Francis told leaders of the Catholic Church Thursday morning as he opened an International Summit on how to deal with sex abuse scandals rocking the church.

A Wichita activist says she’s happy the pope is recognizing the church has a problem, but now victims want action.

“I call it third degree burns of the soul,” Janet Patterson says about the psychological injuries victims of sexual abuse at the hands of priests have to deal with. “Maybe they can’t see those burns, but they hurt and they hurt constantly.”

Patterson has spent the last nineteen years working with survivors of sexual abuse by Catholic priests. She does it in part, because it’s something she wasn’t able to offer her own son, Eric.

“He had been sexually abused at the age of 12 by his parish priest in the Wichita diocese,” she said.

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Release of report on clergy sex abuse delayed

ENID (OK)
Enid News

February 21, 2019

By James Neal

The release of a report by the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City detailing allegations of abuse by clergy dating back to 1960 has been delayed, at the request of a law firm retained to draft the report.

Archbishop Paul Coakley commissioned the report last August, and it had been scheduled for a release Feb. 28. It now has been delayed to “before the end of March,” said Diane Clay, director of communications for the archdiocese, in an email to the News & Eagle.

According to an archdiocese press release from last August, the report was commissioned to identify “instances where credible allegations of child sexual abuse were reported, substantiated, prosecuted or admitted to among priests serving in the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City.”

The archdiocese retained the services of Oklahoma City law firm McAfee & Taft to examine all files containing any allegations of sexual abuse by clergy, dating back to 1960 in a first report. A second report is expected to examine earlier files.

According to the August press release, McAfee & Taft attorney Ron Shinn, “an expert in internal institutional investigations,” will “conduct an independent review of the files and investigate further, if necessary.”

Clay said Thursday the law firm “asked for more time to review a few more files before completing the first stage of this review process.”

“There were a couple of files where they wanted to do more interviews, so they requested more time,” Clay said. “They also are producing the report and wanted to make sure they had the information added.”

There currently are 119 priests serving in the archdiocese, according to figures provided by Clay. She said she expects the number of priests implicated in the report, dating back to 1960, to be fewer than 20.

Clay said in an earlier interview the current review is focused solely on ordained clergy and does not include non-ordained church or school staff members in the archdiocese.

The review process currently underway also includes implementation of new reporting protocols that will enable the archdiocese to better track and process any abuse allegations, Clay said.

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Nessel warns Catholic Church: Let state investigate clergy sexual abuse

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit Free Press

February 21, 2019

By Niraj Warikoo

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel accused Catholic Church leaders of not fully cooperating with law enforcement, telling them to stop “self-policing” and allow state investigators to probe sexual abuse by clergy.

Speaking Thursday at her first news conference, Nessel said she will continue the investigations into Michigan’s seven Catholic dioceses launched under her predecessor, former Attorney General Bill Schuette. Schuette conducted raids in October at dioceses in Michigan that involved 70 police officers and 14 assistant attorney generals, Nessel said.

Nessel told victims of abuse and others to speak with state investigators rather than Catholic officials, expressing concern that nondisclosure agreements (NDAs) are being used to discourage victims of abuse to speak with law enforcement authorities.

“Stop self-policing” and let the state do its investigations, she said. “Our office is conducting a thorough investigation and it’s important we be able to talk with any and all victims harmed by these egregious acts without the intervention of the church.”

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Clergy Sex Abuse Survivors Release New List of NYC Predators

QUEENS (NY)
Queens Daily Eagle

February 21, 2019

By David Brand

Survivors of clergy sex abuse have named 112 additional clergy members from the Archdiocese of New York, who they say molested and abused them when they were children.

Attorney Jeff Anderson, who represents survivors of clergy sex abuse, said that 57 of the alleged perpetrators are alive, 42 are dead and 13 could not be located. Anderson joined survivors to publicize the list today in Manhattan.

“We are releasing this list publicly because Cardinal [Timothy] Dolan will not release a list,” Anderson said. Dolan is cardinal at the Archdiocese of New York. “He has made a conscious and calculated choice to keep these names and documents secret and he has the power to release the names right now.”

On Friday, the Diocese of Brooklyn, which includes Queens, released the names of 108 clergy members “credibly” accused of sexual abuse.

The Archdiocese of Brooklyn and The Archdiocese of New York did not provide a response to requests from the Eagle.

It is unclear how Catholic schools are preparing to discuss the latest church abuse revelations when students return from winter break on Monday.

At one K-through-8 school in the Bronx, which is located in the Archdiocese of New York, staff members have not received any guidance on how to talk about child sex abuse, one 8th grade teacher who asked to remain anonymous told the Eagle on Wednesday.

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What one survivor, advocate wants to hear from pope’s summit on clergy sex abuse

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
Minnesota Public Radio

February 21, 2019

By Cathy Wurzer ·

Catholic leaders from around the world are gathered at the Vatican today for the start of a four-day summit on clergy sex abuse.

MPR News host Cathy Wurzer spoke with Frank Meuers about his expectations for the summit. Meuers leads the Minnesota chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP.

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Latest revelations hint at shocking global scope of Catholic Church sex abuse scandal

TORONTO (CANADA)
CBC News

February 21, 2019

By Jonathon Gatehouse

How big is the problem of child sexual abuse within the Catholic Church?

No one but the Vatican knows.

Last summer, Pope Francis wrote an unprecedented letter to the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics apologizing for the church’s abandonment of “the little ones,” and asking for the laity’s help in “uprooting this culture of death.”

But as a special four-day summit on abuse prevention opens in Rome this morning, the scope of the crisis might best be described as both huge and hazy.

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Pope Francis’ Sex Abuse Summit Is Missing A Huge Opportunity To Center Survivors

NEW YORK (NY)
Huffington Post

February 21, 2019

By Carol Kuruvilla

Pope Francis’ highly anticipated summit on sex abuse kicked off on Thursday ― but there appears to be a glaring gap in the official list of speakers.

Of the nine individuals chosen to give presentations and offer recommendations for combating sexual abuse, none have publicly identified themselves as abuse survivors. Nor are any of them advocates representing prominent survivors’ networks.

While victims’ testimonies are woven into the summit during some key moments, there appear to be no sessions wholly dedicated to listening to survivors freely share their demands for concrete action.

This lack of representation for sex abuse survivors at a sex abuse summit would be surprising if it weren’t taking place under the auspices of the Vatican ― a notoriously hierarchical institution exclusively run by men.

“Put very simply, the church is a monarchy and has been for centuries,” Zach Hiner, the executive director of the U.S.-based Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP), told HuffPost. “Its hierarchy hasn’t had to be responsive to their essentially powerless constituents.”

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Pope demands ‘concrete’ response to abuse crisis at Vatican summit

ROME (ITALY)
Religion News Service

February 21, 2019

By Jack Jenkins

Pope Francis on Thursday (Feb. 21) opened a highly anticipated four-day meeting on his church’s ongoing sex abuse crisis by calling on the assembled bishops and other Catholic leaders to “hear the cry of the little ones who plead for justice” and be “concrete.”

“The holy People of God look to us, and expect from us not simple and predictable condemnations, but concrete and effective measures to be undertaken. We need to be concrete,” Francis said.

But as the day wore on and the nearly 200 clerics debated ways to respond to the crisis, it became less clear which “concrete” responses can be agreed upon by a global church rattled by multiple scandals, or whether they will satisfy abuse victims.

Francis opened the conference the featured episcopal presidents of the more than 150 nations by distributing 21 “reflection points” for consideration by church leaders. The recommendations included preparing a handbook for local churches to follow in abuse cases, establishing protocols for handling accusations against bishops and raising the minimum age for marriage to 16.

At a news conference after the session, the Rev. Federico Lombardi, former director of the Holy See press office, described the list as “starting points” for conversation among bishops. But Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia, speaking after Lombardi, made clear that the bishops’ various perspectives on abuse were as different as the countries they represented.

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Searing testimony heard at Vatican sex abuse summit

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

February 21, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

The day began with an African woman telling an extraordinary gathering of Catholic leaders that her priestly rapist forced her to have three abortions over a dozen years after he started violating her at age 15. It ended with a Colombian cardinal warning them they could all face prison if they let such crimes go unpunished.

In between, Pope Francis began charting a new course for the Catholic Church to confront the “evil” of clergy sexual abuse and cover-up, a scandal that has consumed his papacy and threatens the credibility of the Catholic hierarchy at large.

Opening a first-ever Vatican summit on preventing abuse, Francis warned 190 bishops and religious superiors on Thursday that their flocks were demanding concrete action, not just words, to punish predator priests and keep children safe. He offered them 21 proposals to consider going forward, some of them obvious and easy to adopt, others requiring new laws.

But his main point in summoning the Catholic hierarchy to the Vatican for a four-day tutorial was to impress upon them that clergy sex abuse is not confined to the United States or Ireland, but is a global scourge that requires a concerted, global response.

“Listen to the cry of the young, who want justice,” Francis told the gathering. “The holy people of God are watching and expect not just simple and obvious condemnations, but efficient and concrete measures to be established.”

More than 30 years after the scandal first erupted in Ireland and Australia, and 20 years after it hit the U.S., bishops and Catholic officials in many parts of Europe, Latin America, Africa and Asia still either deny that clergy sex abuse exists in their regions or play down the problem.

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Column: For Catholic church, just another brick in the wall

RIVERHEAD (NY)
Riverhead News Review

February 21, 2019

By Steve Wick

The gigantic scandal that is the Roman Catholic Church continues to grow worse, with new revelations of criminal behavior and the sexual abuse of children. With each new disclosure, the church itself looks more and more like a criminal cabal partly inhabited by pedophiles whose behavior was covered up and filed away, hidden from the public.

The latest report involves two women now in their 60s who say they were sexually abused as children by former Diocese of Rockville Centre Bishop John McGann. They were about 11 at the time of the alleged abuse, when McGann was a monsignor and auxiliary bishop. One of them said she was also abused by another priest in the diocese at age 5. The parents of these girls were devout Catholics who believed priests and bishops were in a special class by themselves and were to be revered. Little did they know the truth.

McGann is the once-esteemed bishop whose name adorned the Catholic high school in Riverhead, which was shuttered by the current bishop of the diocese — whose name appears in a grand jury report published last year about abuse by priests in Pennsylvania and the bishops who knew about it.

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Statement from NY Leader Janet Klinger on Bishop John McGann

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

February 21, 2019

We are members of a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. We exist for two reasons: To protect the vulnerable and to heal the wounded. We are here today for three reasons.

First, we are begging anyone with information or suspicions about crimes or cover ups by former Long Island Bishop John McGann to come forward.

McGann was sued this week by two brave women. We in SNAP strongly suspect there are others in and around Rockville Centre who saw, suspected or suffered McGann’s crimes and misdeeds. They should find the courage to speak up so that they can heal and so that others who ignored or hid McGann’s wrongdoing will be expose or punished.

Our message to victims: You CAN get better. But to do so, you must break your silence. Everyone recovers from the horror of abuse in different ways. But few recover alone. Reach out to trusted sources of help – police, prosecutors, therapists, loved ones or support groups like ours! Do it today.

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Policy Change is Meaningless Without Discipline

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

February 21, 2019

For immediate release: February 21, 2019

As Pope Francis’ global abuse summit officially got underway today, the world’s top Catholic leader opened his global meeting with a list of 21 “reflection points” to help end the clergy sex abuse crisis.

Some of the points that the Pope has called for echo some of our own demands. We agree that Bishops must be cooperating with civil investigations and that they should be fully open and honest with the public when making decisions about accused priests.

But as we have grown to expect from the Church hierarchy, every step forward is complemented by at least one step backwards. What we wanted to see from Rome was action, yet we have heard these words before. Formalizing these points into policy is meaningless without any willingness to back them up with punishment.

In refusing to discipline those prelates in attendance who have had an active role in covering up and minimizing cases of child sex abuse, Pope Francis sends the message that Bishops and Cardinals are able to openly flout the very policies designed to hold them accountable. For example, despite being published more than 15 years ago, the guidelines within the Dallas Charter were ignored by Cardinal Daniel DiNardo in his recent dealings with cases of abuse within the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston.

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“Raza de Víboras”: monjas argentinas abusaban sexualmente y usaron látigos o mordazas en víctimas

[“Raza de Víboras:” Argentine nuns sexually abused and whipped victims]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 20, 2019

By Paola Alemán

Cuando las historias que llegan casi a diario acusando de violaciones a sacerdotes en todo el mundo, incluyen a monjas entre los verdugos, la trama se vuelve más oscura para la iglesia católica, pero sobre todo para las víctimas. Así lo revela una entrevista publicada por la revista Perfil en Argentina. El abuso sexual no solo tiene cara masculina en las iglesias. También hubo vejámenes en conventos de ese territorio, donde las víctimas de las superioras, hablaron del calvario vivido.

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Abogado Hermosilla afirmó que han aparecido nuevas denuncias en contra del excapellán Renato Poblete

[Lawyer Hermosilla confirms there are new accusations against priest Renato Poblete]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 20, 2019

By Tamara Rojas

El abogado Juan Pablo Hermosilla, quien representa a Marcela Aranda denunciante del excapellán del Hogar de Cristo, Renato Poblete, aseguró que hay nuevos casos y testimonios de presunto abuso sexual por parte de Poblete.

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Arzobispado de Concepción notificó a sacerdote acusado por violación inicio de juicio en su contra

[Archbishop of Concepción notifies priest about his rape trial]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 21, 2019

By Yessenia Márquez and Carlos Avendaño

El Arzobispado de Concepción notificó al sacerdote Hernán Enríquez del inicio del juicio administrativo penal en su contra por la presunta violación de un exseminarista en el año 2002. El religioso en conversación con Radio Bío Bío en la zona, valoró la instancia por permitirle defenderse de las acusaciones.

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Cruz en cita histórica contra pederastia en el Vaticano: En Chile hay sacerdotes que son una escoria

[Cruz in historical role against abuse at Vatican: “In Chile there are priests who are a scum”]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 21, 2019

By Valentina González and Nicole Martínez

Este jueves comenzó la cumbre de obispos en el Vaticano, que estuvo antecedida ayer por un encuentro del comité organizador con 12 sobrevivientes de abuso sexual eclesiástico de varios países. La reunión estuvo encabezada por el arzobispo de Malta, Charles Scicluna, quien integra el comité que organiza la cumbre de obispos en el Vaticano. Los sobrevivientes, de distintos puntos del planeta, estuvieron encabezados por el chileno Juan Carlos Cruz, uno de los denunciantes de Fernando Karadima.

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Cae el secreto de los abusos en España

[Five months of research reveals hidden clergy abuse in Spain]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 21, 2019

By Íñigo Domínguez and Julio Núñez

Cinco meses de investigación de EL PAÍS han sacado a la luz 19 casos con 87 víctimas de la pederastia, casi la mitad de los que se conocían hasta ahora en los últimos 30 años

EL PAÍS se propuso hace cinco meses comprobar si España era una excepción, o si lo excepcional era que en este país aún no hubieran salido a la luz más casos de pederastia en la Iglesia. La respuesta empieza a estar clara: los abusos en España sí han existido. Queda ahora por saber cuál es la dimensión del problema. Este periódico ha investigado y desvelado ya 19 casos, con al menos 87 víctimas. Es más de la mitad de lo que estaba registrado oficialmente en los últimos treinta años: 36 casos, a través de 34 sentencias civiles y seis eclesiásticas. Además, por primera vez hemos contabilizado los casos de los que se tiene constancia, sumando los judicializados y los que han aparecido en distintos medios de comunicación. Suman un total de 82 casos conocidos en 33 años; 28 de ellos en los últimos 14 meses. Un acelerón vertiginoso tras décadas de silencio. Un secreto que empieza a caer. Ha sido posible por la valentía de las víctimas, que se han decidido a hablar.

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Scicluna profundiza en abusos sexuales cometidos por la Iglesia en Chile: “Sólo la verdad nos liberará”

[Scicluna delves into sexual abuse committed by the Church in Chile: “Only the truth will set us free”]

CHILE
The Clinic

February 18, 2019

El religioso que viniera a nuestro país para recopilar información sobre este tipo de casos, sostuvo que “sé que abrimos una caja de Pandora” y que “hay una serie de casos que están siendo revisados. El material que se nos entregó durante esas dos misiones en Chile es enorme, y cada caso debe ser estudiado por sus propios méritos y debido al debido proceso”.

En medio de la cumbre de “La Protección de Menores en la Iglesia” a realizarse entre el 21 y 24 de febrero en el Vaticano, el secretario adjunto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, Charles Scicluna, profundizó en los abusos sexuales cometidos por miembros de la Iglesia en Chile.

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Schöenstatt busca nuevo defensor para el exobispo Cox

[Schöenstatt order seeks new defender for ex-bishop Cox]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 20, 2019

By Juan Castellón

Las denuncias por presuntos abusos contra el exarzobispo serán vistas por los juzgados del crimen.

“Este magistrado y este tribunal no tienen la competencia, ni la jurisdicción, para poder mantener el conocimiento de esta causa”. Esa fue la determinación que ayer comunicó el juez Alaín Maldonado, del 2° Juzgado de Garantía de La Serena, respecto de los presuntos abusos sexuales cometidos por el exsacerdote Francisco José Cox, quien no asistió a la audiencia.

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Scicluna advierte a la iglesia católica de Chile: “Tendrán que limpiar la suciedad”

[Scicluna warns the Catholic Church of Chile: “They will have to clean the dirt”]

CHILE
Publimetro

February 18, 2019

El arzobispo de Malta y secretario adjunto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe analizó el momento de la iglesia criolla sumida en una profunda crisis.

En conversación con el sitio Crux, Scicluna señaló que “hay una serie de casos que están siendo revisados. El material que se nos entregó durante esas dos misiones en Chile es enorme, y cada caso debe ser estudiado por sus propios méritos y al debido proceso”.

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El “factor Chile” irrumpe en la cumbre del Papa Francisco contra los abusos

[The “Chile factor” breaks into Pope Francis’ anti-abuse summit]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 18, 2019

By S. Rodríguez, S. Rivas, C. Reyes y M. J. Navarrete

Juan Carlos Cruz, denunciante de Karadima y quien tiene demandada a la Iglesia de Santiago por supuesto encubrimiento, coordinará al grupo de víctimas que entregará este miércoles su testimonio. Su rol fue solicitado por Charles Scicluna.

“El arzobispo (Charles) Scicluna me pidió no solo asistir y entregar un testimonio, sino que conversar con los demás denunciantes, que irán de otras partes del mundo, para coordinar y facilitar esta reunión con los organizadores, que en un principio será el miércoles”, dijo este lunes a La Tercera Juan Carlos Cruz.

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“Es impresentable que la Iglesia chilena sea un símbolo de los abusos sexuales a nivel mundial”

[“It is disgraceful that the Chilean Church is a symbol of sexual abuse worldwide”]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 19, 2019

By Paz Fonseca

Comentario de Tomás Mosciatti y Katherine Ibáñez en la edición matinal de Radiograma sobre la cumbre del Papa con los obispos de todo el mundo y la posición de la iglesia chilena ante los casos de abuso sexual.

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Church Sex Abuse Survivors Want Reform Now. Here’s Why That Might Not Happen

ROME (ITALY)
New York Times

February 20, 2019

By Jason Horowitz

In parts of the vast Catholic world, some bishops view clerical sexual abuse as more of a sin than a crime. Others attribute it to homosexuality or question that it exists at all. Where Catholics are a minority, as in the Middle East, reporting a pedophile priest to the civil authorities is tantamount to sentencing him to death.

As Pope Francis convenes church leaders for a meeting at the Vatican starting on Thursday to address the scourge of clerical sexual abuse, victims’ advocates are demanding urgent and uniform church laws to impose zero tolerance for priests who abuse minors and for the bishops who cover up for them, regardless of the culture in which they operate.

But Vatican officials say such a demand reflects a misconception that change in a global and ancient institution can be made with the wave of a papal wand.

The diversity of legal and cultural barriers to identifying abusers and assisting victims, as well as entrenched denial, makes putting in place one world standard virtually impossible, they say.

Before the conference, The New York Times interviewed bishops and priests on four continents, and their views varied widely on the urgency, extent and very existence of sexual abuse of children and minors among priests — a problem that by now has been painstakingly documented in many parts of the globe.

“It is not so simple,” said the Rev. Hans Zollner, an organizer of the meeting, member of the Vatican’s child-protection commission and president of the Center for Child Protection of the Pontifical Gregorian University.

Vatican leaders have worked for weeks to tamp down expectations of a sudden revolution in the sprawling bureaucracy governing the church.

The conference instead will amount to a kind of four-day crash course to instruct church leaders on how to handle abuse cases with responsibility, accountability and transparency, and to convince some that the problem exists at all.

That has hardly appeased survivors of abuse and others in the church who call the arguments against more decisive action a cop-out.

“They are saying there are all these bishops who don’t understand sexual abuse, which is stunning!” said Peter Isely, an American abuse survivor and leader of Ending Clergy Abuse, an advocacy group for survivors of clerical child abuse.

“How do you get to be a bishop if you have to be given an education about the rape of a child?” he said, after he met on Wednesday with Father Zollner and the prelates organizing the conference. He was furious that Pope Francis himself did not show up.

“The only way to solve this is at the top,” Mr. Isely said. “He can do it with the stroke of a pen.”

Father Zollner said he understood the anguished call from victims and advocates for action. But while the Vatican is a monarchy, it is not monolithic and has “as diverse backgrounds as you can imagine in humanity,” he said.

“If you think that by the pope declaring that these are guidelines you have solved the problem, actually I think that you may run the risk of being very much disappointed,” Father Zollner said in an interview in his office in Rome.

The pope has already provided the church with zero-tolerance laws, he argued, adding that if Francis introduced new norms prematurely, he would risk eroding papal authority, because they had a good chance of being ignored.

When the pope emphasized change starting at the bottom, Father Zollner said, he was not shirking responsibility, but making the only choice available, because that was where the change needed to happen.

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Pope Francis wants ‘concrete’ steps on sexual abuse. Here are his 21 starting points.

ROME (ITALY)
Washington Post

February 21, 2019

By Julie Zauzmer

As the Vatican’s much-anticipated first summit on the abuse of children got underway Thursday, Pope Francis said he hopes “concrete and effective measures” will emerge from the gathering of the world’s leading bishops. To get that discussion started, Francis handed out a list of points for the days-long conversation among 190 Catholic leaders.

The document raises a number of ideas: a handbook for how abuse cases should be handled, an increase in the church’s minimum marriage age to 16, mandatory codes of conduct, and background checks for all church staff and volunteers worldwide.

Some of the suggestions are already in place in the United States, such as psychological evaluations of men who want to become priests and removal from ministry of any priest found guilty of abusing a child, but not in all countries.

The document recommends protocols for handling accusations against bishops, which was a central proposal at a meeting of U.S. bishops last fall, when the Vatican asked the Americans not to implement their ideas yet.

Read the complete list of Francis’s proposals, as distributed by the Vatican, here.

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Pope Francis calls for ‘concrete measures’ as historic clergy sex-abuse summit opens in Rome

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

February 21, 2019

By Jeremy Roebuck

Pope Francis warned the globe’s top Roman Catholic leaders Thursday that they would need to emerge with more than just “predictable statements” as he opened a highly-anticipated summit aimed at finally defining a worldwide response to the issue of sex abuse within the church.

In an opening address before an audience of leading bishops from more than 100 countries, Vatican officials and experts, the pontiff urged those in attendance to “listen to the cry of the small who are asking for justice.”

“The holy people of God are looking at us, expecting not only simple and predictable condemnations but concrete and effective measures in place,” he said. “We need to be concrete.”

Francis’ remarks kicked off the three-day, closed-door meeting at the Holy See, which will see the presidents of the world’s bishops’ conferences participating in lectures and work sessions on how to prevent sex abuse, hold each other accountable and care for victims in their churches back home.

Organizers have said they hope it will prove to be a “turning point” for a hierarchy battered by a series of scandals — especially in the United States, which saw top Cardinal Theodore McCarrick defrocked over allegations he abused seminarians and minors, a scathing grand jury report in Pennsylvania and the launch of several similar investigations in more than a dozen states all within the last year, including New Jersey.

The meeting also presents an opportunity for Pope Francis to shore up his own record on the issue. His critics have described him as sluggish to respond and, at times, callous.

Clergy sex abuse victims and representatives from their most outspoken advocacy groups — have turned the area surrounding St. Peter’s Square into their own home base in the days leading up to Thursday’s session and have sought to wrest the spotlight from the summit’s official agenda.

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Survivors blast pope’s ‘reflection points’ on abuse as less than zero tolerance

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 21, 2019

By Elise Harris

As part of Pope Francis’ high-stakes summit on clerical sexual abuse this week at the Vatican, during Thursday’s opening session he released a list of 21 “points for reflection”- including a couple that didn’t necessarily sit well with abuse survivors, who say they fall short of the Catholic Church’s pledge of zero tolerance.

One of those points, which Pope Francis said he got from suggestions made by bishops’ conferences ahead of the summit, dealt with releasing names of accused priests. Another concerned defrocking clergy guilty of abuse, and still another with listening structures so bishops can hear victims’ stories.

In comments following the opening session of Pope Francis’ Feb. 21-24 summit on the protection of minors in the Church, abuse survivor and co-founder of the U.S. branch of the Ending Clergy Abuse advocacy group Peter Isely said the pope’s list contains “not-very-concrete points,” despite a statement from Francis earlier in the day that people want “concrete, effective” measures.

The suggestions are not a sign of progress, Isley said, because “they don’t go anywhere, they’re not moving the line anywhere.”

“There’s nothing different in here than there was yesterday. Where is it in these points that if you’re a bishop or a cardinal and you’ve covered up child sex crimes, that you’re going to be removed from the priesthood or that any action will be taken against you?” he said.

“That’s not in here at all, so that’s not accountability and that’s not zero tolerance,” he said.

Speaking of point 15 on Francis’ list, which suggests that the Church’s traditional principle of “proportionality of punishment with respect to the crime committed” should be observed and asked for “deliberation” on defrocking, Isely said the idea that some priests guilty of abusing children would not lose their clerical status is “unacceptable.”

In a news conference after Thursday’s morning session, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, a former Vatican prosecutor on clerical abuse cases and a leading figure in the protection of minors in the Church, said that dismissing abuser priests from the clerical state is not always a given, but in his view, should happen on a “case-by-case” basis.

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The Latest: Pope issues ideas for handling clergy sex abuse

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 21, 2019

The Latest on the Vatican’s conference on dealing with sex abuse by priests (all times local):

3:40 p.m.
Pope Francis has issued 21 proposals to stem the clergy sex abuse around the world, calling for specific protocols to handle accusations against bishops and for lay experts to be involved in abuse investigations.

Francis distributed the list on Thursday as he opened his high-stakes abuse prevention summit at the Vatican. The four-day event brings together some 190 bishops and religious superiors for tutorials on preventing abuse and protecting children.

The aim is to show pedophile priests a global problem and therefore require a global response.

The pope’s proposals draw heavily from existing best practices, including establishing rules for transferring seminarians and priests.

Another idea suggests a basic handbook showing bishops how to investigate cases.

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Polish activists pull down statue of disgraced priest

WARSAW (POLAND)
Associated Press

February 21, 2019

Activists in Poland toppled a statue of a prominent Solidarity-era priest early Thursday amid allegations that he sexually abused minors, a protest against what they called a failure by the Catholic Church and society to resolve the problem of clergy sex abuse.

The protest came only hours before Pope Francis gathered Catholic leaders from around the world for a landmark summit at the Vatican to address the Church’s sex abuse crisis.

Video footage showed three men attaching a rope around the statue of the late Monsignor Henryk Jankowski in the northern city of Gdansk and then pulling it down to the ground in the dark. The activists then placed children’s underwear in one of the statue’s hands and a small white lace church vestment worn by altar boys on the statue’s body to symbolize the suffering of the young people he allegedly molested.

It was a striking act in a country where more than 90 percent of the population identifies as Roman Catholic and where the Church still enjoys significant authority in public life. That position appears to be changing, however, as secularization grows along with a developing economy.

Church leaders have also alienated some Poles with their close ties to the conservative ruling party, which has been accused of eroding Poland’s democratic culture and institutions.

Police detained the three men and opened an investigation into whether they committed the crime of “insulting a monument.”

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In six months, abuse allegations against over 2,600 priests and church workers have been revealed

NEW YORK (NY)
CBS News

February 21, 2019

By Matthew Sheridan, Elizabeth Gravier and Alexandra Myers

In the past six months, authorities and Catholic Church dioceses across the U.S. have said that credible accusations of abuse have been made against more than 2,600 priests and other church employees over a span of several decades, according to a CBS News tally. The number includes sexual abuse accusations made against 301 priests over 70 years that a Pennsylvania grand jury revealed last summer.

Since then, individual dioceses and archdioceses across the country have been reviewing their files and releasing lists of people who they said face credible allegations of abuse. The issue has prompted Pope Francis to call church leaders from all over the world to the Vatican for a summit that started Thursday.

Between the release of the Pennsylvania grand jury investigation on Aug. 14, and Monday of this week, dioceses in two states have each named more than 300 people who have been accused of abuse. In New York, dioceses have named a total of 343 people, and Texas dioceses have named 304.

Dioceses in 31 other states and Washington, D.C., have come forward with what they said they’ve found in their files. The findings range from Mississippi, where the diocese of Biloxi said in January that credible allegations have been made against three priests since 1989, to California, where the diocese of Oakland on Monday released a list of 45 clergy members accused of abuse dating back to the 1960s.

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SNAP exposes five more publicly accused predators

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Nearly 100 alleged predators are now publicly known here

Many abused elsewhere but are or were in St. Louis area to0

In last 6 months, 37 accused child molesting clerics are ‘outed’ here

Still, archbishop won’t disclose more than 50 others who are accused

Local Catholic victims will also discuss upcoming Vatican abuse summit

WHAT

Holding five signs listing 100 accused clericsa at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will

reveal the identities of five accused priests who are/were in St. Louis but have escaped virtually all scrutiny or attention here, and
challenge local Catholic officials to disclose the names of ALL alleged predator priests,
prod Missouri’s attorney general to work harder to bring victims, witnesses and whistleblowers forward for his statewide probe into clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

WHEN
Thursday, February 21 at 1:00 p.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the Cathedral Basilica of Saint Louis (“new” cathdral), 4431 Lindell Blvd, (between Taylor & Newstead) in the Central West End in St. Louis

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U.S. groups: Pope must sustain guilty verdict, defrock Guam’s Apuron

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

February 20, 2019

By Haidee V. Eugenio

Two leading U.S. organizations protecting victims and documenting the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic priesthood have called on Pope Francis to sustain the guilty verdict on Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron in a case involving sexual abuse of minors, and to defrock or expel him from priesthood.

“It is wrong for Pope Francis to leave Guam Catholics twisting in the wind and waiting to discover the fate of Archbishop Apuron, especially since it has been nearly a full year since the archbishop was found guilty of abusing children,” according to Zach Hiner, executive director for the Missouri-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, the world’s largest and oldest survivors group for abuse victims.

BishopAccountability.Org, which documents the Catholic clergy sex abuse crisis, said Apuron and four other bishops must be defrocked, just like the disgraced former cardinal archbishop of Washington, D.C., Theodore McCarrick.

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Women activists float ‘Shawshank solution’ to Church’s abuse scandals

ROME
Crux

February 20, 2019

By Elise Harris

In the 1994 movie classic “The Shawshank Redemption,” Tim Robbins plays a wrongly convicted inmate who eventually escapes by tunneling out of the thick stone structure using only a tiny rock hammer he uses to chip the prison wall away over a long stretch of time.

His primary confidante behind bars is played by Morgan Freeman, who, after the escape, comments on his friend’s passion for geology: “Geology is the study of pressure and time. That’s all it takes, really … pressure and time.”

At a Rome news conference Tuesday, a panel of women activists touted what might be called a “Shawshank solution” to the woes plaguing the Catholic Church, including the clerical sexual abuse crisis and sexual assaults against women religious – recommending the application of pressure, combined with the determination to stay the course.

It was a piece in a women’s supplement published by the Vatican newspaper earlier in February that prompted Pope Francis to acknowledge sexual abuse of nuns by clergy.

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Pope Francis skips meeting with survivors on eve of Vatican clergy abuse summit

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Trib Live

February 20, 2019

By Deb Erdley

Clergy sexual abuse survivors were left waiting for answers Wednesday as an international mix of Catholic Church leaders gathered in Rome to address the child sexual abuse scandal that has rocked parishes around the world — including Western Pennsylvania.

Calls for an apology to survivors, an acknowledgement of their pain, sweeping global policy changes and the ouster of a Pennsylvania bishop some deemed to have been complicit in cover-ups were among the demands survivors took to Rome.

Shaun Dougherty, a 49-year-old Johnstown native, was among 12 survivors invited to meet with church leaders in advance of the official call to order of the four-day summit on clergy sexual abuse, which Pope Francis will convene at the Vatican beginning Thursday. Dougherty was disappointed but not surprised the pope did not attend Wednesday’s meeting with survivors.

“I’m aggravated. This is the CEO of the Roman Catholic Church,” Dougherty told CBS News reporter Nikki Battiste. “We came to his house to meet with him about his abusive priests … and he wasn’t there. He delegated.”

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‘I obeyed like a robot’: Abuse survivor tells of predator priest

PARIS (FRANCE)
AFP

February 18, 2019

By Lucie Peytermann

Denise Buchanan was 17 when she was raped by a seminarian who continued to abuse her when he became a priest in her native Jamaica. The Catholic Church, she says, has offered her nothing but their “prayers”.

“I got pregnant and he arranged a clandestine abortion,” Buchanan, still shaking and close to tears 40 years after the ordeal, told AFP.

Today aged 57, the academic is a leading member of a new international organisation, Ending Clerical Abuse (ECA), which is bringing together victims in Rome this week to pressure Pope Francis to take a tougher line on child abuse by clerics.

She has struggled in vain for years for the Church to officially recognise her as a victim — even writing to the pope himself — while the priest who abused her has escaped justice.

Buchanan’s struggle underscores the sense of isolation felt by many victims who see the institution as still in denial, particularly in poorer countries where the Church remains politically and socially influential.

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Vatican to hold first-ever sex abuse conference

VATICAN CITY
Reuters Videos

February 20, 2019

Pope Francis will convene the Church’s first conference solely about sex abuse this week. But victims and activists fear it won’t touch senior clerics who cover up the crimes. Philip Pullella and Lucy Fielder report.

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The stakes are high for Pope Francis, Catholics worldwide in unprecedented sex abuse summit

VATICAN CITY
USA TODAY

February 19, 2019

By John Bacon

A crucial summit on clergy sexual abuse, which opens Thursday at the Vatican, will draw church leaders from around the world in an effort to break a “code of silence” that allowed the misconduct to take place over decades.

Presidents of more than 100 bishop conferences will be joined by high-ranking Vatican officials – and Pope Francis himself. The summit will focus on making bishops aware of their responsibilities, accountability and transparency, the Vatican said.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna, a member of the organizing committee, described the summit as a major step in the pope’s efforts to end the code of silence. The Rev. James Bretzke, a theology professor at Marquette University, said the pope demands a change in “clerical culture.”

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Oakland Diocese releases names of priests accused of sex abuse; Survivor advocates say it omits names of dangerous priests

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
KGO – San Francisco

February 18, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Oakland published a list of 45 priests who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse, but survivor advocates say the list omits names of dangerous priests.

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Mexican president will not ‘confront’ church over sexual abuse claims

MEXICO CITY
Reuters

February 18, 2019

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said on Monday he would not confront the country’s Catholic Church over sexual abuse allegations and that it would fall to the prosecutor’s office to investigate such claims.

At least 152 Catholic priests in Mexico have been suspended over the past nine years for sexual abuse against minors, and some of those priests have been jailed over those offences, Mexico’s Archbishop for Monterrey said earlier this month.

The Catholic Church has reeled from sexual abuse scandals in the United States, Chile, Australia, Germany and a number of other countries in recent years. Mexico is home to the world’s second-largest Catholic community after Brazil.

“We don’t want to confront the church,” Lopez Obrador said at a regular news conference when asked about the role his administration would take in investigating sexual abuse allegations.

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Chilean nuns relieved by Pope’s recognition of abuse

CHILE
Reuters Videos

February 19, 2019

Three former Chilean nuns who claim to have been sexually abused over two decades ago by priests in their religious order have hailed comments by Pope Francis earlier this month in which he recognized the abuse of nuns in the Catholic Church. Havovi Cooper reports.

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Roman Catholic Church leaders gather at Vatican for global meeting on clergy sex abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS – Chicago

February 19, 2019

A historic meeting is about to begin at the Vatican as leaders of the Roman Catholic Church gather for a global meeting on the clergy sex abuse crisis, led by Chicago’s Cardinal Blase Cupich.

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Victims ‘out’ two accused Long Island priests

Victims ‘out’ two accused Long Island priests

They also blast Long Island’s Catholic bishop

SNAP: “He should identify child molesting clerics”

And he must seek out others hurt by his predecessor, group says

Victim to read a letter the now-accused McGann wrote to her dad in 1995

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will disclose the names of two publicly accused priests who are or were in the Rockville Centre dioceses but have largely been ‘under the radar,’

They will also prod Rockville Centre Catholic officials to
–reveal the names of ALL proven, admitted and ‘credibly accused’ predator priests,
–permanently and prominently post their photos, whereabouts, and work histories on church websites, and
–‘aggressively reach out’ to anyone who may have been hurt by a Long Island ex-bishop

WHEN
Thursday, February 21 at 1:00 p.m.

WHERE

On the sidewalk outside St. Agnes Cathedral, 29 Quealy Place in Rockville Centre, NY

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Catholic Church credibility on the line at abuse meeting

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

February 17, 2019

By Philip Pullella

The Vatican will gather senior bishops from around the world later this week for a conference on sex abuse designed to guide them on how best to tackle a problem that has decimated the Church’s credibility, but critics say it is too little, too late.

The unprecedented four-day meeting, starting on Thursday, brings together presidents of national Roman Catholic bishops conferences, Vatican officials, experts and heads of male and female religious orders.

“I am absolutely convinced that our credibility in this area is at stake,” said Father Federico Lombardi, who Pope Francis has chosen to moderate the meeting.

“We have to get to the root of this problem and show our ability to undergo a cure as a Church that proposes to be a teacher or it would be better for us to get into another line of work,” he told reporters.

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Vatican needs to offer more

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 20, 2019

In a recent letter to U.S. bishops, Pope Francis called for a “change of mindset” to regain credibility forfeited by the Catholic Church after nearly two decades of temporizing, equivocation and half-measures to address clerical sex abuse. In fact, the pontiff himself, whose response to the scandal has been a fog of mixed messages, would benefit from this advice. Just as important, as he prepares for a meeting of some 130 top bishops from around the world what is needed is a concrete blueprint that will shift the church toward a new era of accountability and transparency.

Those are among the stated goals of the meeting, called by the pope, of the presidents of the world’s Conferences of Catholic Bishops, scheduled for today through Sunday in Rome. Yet, rather than identifying specific agenda items that would signal a no-nonsense new approach, the Vatican has tried to lower expectations. Francis says the meeting will be an occasion for deep “discernment.” New policies would help more.

A good start would be the establishment of a muscular new mechanism, including lay members of the church, that would enable the Vatican to investigate and remove bishops and other senior clerics implicated in covering up for pedophile priests. Even now, more than 17 years after revelations of systematic abuse and coverups first rocked the American church, the wall of impunity that has long protected bishops is only gradually starting to crack.

In the United States, the church must also drop its largely successful efforts to block changes in state law that would allow adults who were once child victims of abuse to bring civil lawsuits against their abusers and the dioceses that enabled them. Owing to pressure by the church and insurance companies, only a handful of states have, so far, allowed such lawsuits. It’s hypocrisy on the church’s part to pledge “zero tolerance” for pedophile priests while lobbying resolutely to impede legislation that would allow victims to seek a measure of justice in the courts.

A genuine change of mindset would also mean a shift in tone by church officials at all levels. Many implicitly excuse the church’s epidemic of child sex abuse as no more than a reflection of society’s own problem with the same blight. It’s a fact that pedophilia isn’t limited to the church; it’s also a fact that no other large institution has been similarly plagued by the scale and scope of abuse that has beset the church, or by such massive systematic, institutional foot-dragging in the face of reform efforts.

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Aly Raisman on Larry Nassar assault: Sometimes people forget I’m still coping with it

UNITED STATES
Yahoo News Video

February 19, 2019

By Rebecca Corey

“Through Her Eyes” is a new weekly half-hour show hosted by human rights activist Zainab Salbi that explores contemporary issues from a female perspective. You can watch “Through Her Eyes” every Tuesday at 8 p.m. ET on Roku and see full episodes at yahoonews.com.

It has been a year since former USA Gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar was sentenced to 40 to 175 years in prison for abusing more than 150 girls entrusted in his care. But Aly Raisman — an Olympic gold medalist and former captain of the U.S. women’s Olympic gymnastics team — is still coming to terms with the sexual abuse she experienced as a teenager.

“When I go out on the street, or I’m at the airport, or the grocery store, or whatever it is, people are so supportive. And I’m so grateful for that,” Raisman said during an interview with the Yahoo News show “Through Her Eyes.”

Raisman is frequently approached by supportive strangers who are eager to share their own traumatic experiences of sexual assault. But these stories from fellow survivors can sometimes be difficult for Raisman to hear.

“I think sometimes people forget I am coping with it too,” Raisman explained. “And sometimes people will go into graphic detail.”

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“Everything in This Spreading Crisis Revolves Around Structural Mendacity”

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Bilgrimmage blog

February 20, 2019

By William Lindsey

Pope news
@Pope_news
Poland’s most senior nun has been banned from further media contact after condemning the sexual abuse of religious sisters by Catholic priests in her country https://www.thetablet.co.uk/news/11385/polish-nun-silenced-for-speaking-out-on-abuse- …

12:36 PM – Feb 19, 2019
Polish nun ‘silenced’ for speaking out on abuse
Poland’s most senior nun has been banned from further media contact after condemning the sexual abuse of nuns by Catholic priests in her country

Talking abuse, Catholic context and Southern Baptist context: good things I’ve been reading and want to share with you:

Carol Howard Merritt, “The Problem of ‘Evil’ in Describing Southern Baptist Abuse Crisis”:

The Southern Baptist Church upholds gracious submission as godly and relegates the abuse as “satanic,” casting them into different realms. Yet, submission and abuse should not occupy spaces so far apart in our theological imaginations, because they work together. When leaders demand unquestioning obedience from women and girls, it sets up the perfect environment for predation to occur.

Jonathan Merritt, “The Lessons Southern Baptists Need to Learn”:

It’s correct that Southern Baptist churches are autonomous, unlike Catholic churches, are not under the authority of a hierarchy. And yet, claims that the denomination’s hands are tied in this matter will come as a shock to the many churches that have been censored or kicked out of the denomination due to their acceptance of LGBT people, ordination of women, or more progressive interpretations of the Bible. The denomination does actually possess the power to impose standards on its member churches, but heretofore protecting children from sex predators hasn’t been prioritized to that level. …

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How far will Pope Francis go in rooting out sexual abuse?

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Economist

February 21, 2019

“We hear the cry of the little ones asking for justice,” said Pope Francis on February 21st to 100 bishops from around the world and other leading members of the Catholic hierarchy who had gathered in the Vatican for a four-day meeting on clerical sex abuse. The conference is the most conspicuous effort yet to extirpate the cancer eating at the world’s biggest Christian church.

In the run-up to the meeting, a series of events had charged the atmosphere. Earlier this month, the pope admitted that there was truth in stories that nuns around the world had been raped by priests and bishops. This week a book by a French journalist, Frédéric Martel, was published, claiming that 80% of the clerics in the Vatican are gay. That may seem to have little bearing on the subject of the conference: there is abundant evidence to show that heterosexuals are as likely as homosexuals to prey on the young. But Mr Martel, himself gay, argues that sexually active homosexual priests are reluctant to report abusers for fear of being “outed” in revenge.

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Pope’s credibility ‘on the line’ as Vatican convenes global meeting on combating child abuse by clergy

VATICAN CITY
The Telegraph

February 18, 2019

By Nick Squires

Victims of clerical sex abuse have warned Pope Francis that his credibility is on the line as he confronts the biggest challenge of his papacy with a landmark conference on protecting children from rape and molestation.

Nearly 200 bishops, archbishops, patriarchs and other senior Catholic figures from around the world will convene in Rome on Thursday for an unprecedented four-day conference that is supposed to tackle the scourge of child abuse by clergy.

It is the biggest effort so far to address scandals that have eroded faith in the Catholic Church in the US, Ireland, Australia and elsewhere.

“There’s going to be every effort to close whatever loopholes there are,” said Charles Scicluna, an archbishop from Malta who is one of the organisers of the summit.

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Predator priest was moved around

HOUSTON (TX)
KHOU TV

February 20, 2019

The Catholic Church often shuffled priests accused of sexually abusing children from one assignment to another instead of removing them from ministry immediately, a KHOU 11 Investigates analysis has found.

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