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 3, 2019

Retired Boise priest appeals 25-year sentence for child porn, drug crimes

BOISE (IDAHO)
Idaho Statesman

February 2, 2019

By Katy Moeller

The Rev. William Thomas Faucher is appealing the 25-year prison sentence imposed on him by 4th District Judge Jason Scott on Dec. 21.

The 73-year-old retired priest was charged with 24 crimes: 21 counts of sexual exploitation of a child (possession and distribution of child pornography) and three counts of drug possession (marijuana, LSD, ecstasy). He pleaded guilty to five felonies.

Scott sentenced Faucher to 25 years in prison, without the possibility of parole.

Faucher’s notice of appeal to the Idaho Supreme Court was filed with the Ada County Clerk’s Office on Friday morning. According to the document, the issue on appeal is: “Did the presiding judge abuse his discretion in imposition of the sentence?”

Faucher is exempt from fees associated with filing the appeal, the transcript fee and the preparation of the records because he is indigent, according to the filing.

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.

CLERIC SENTENCED TO 5 YEARS FOR DEFILEMENT

NAIROBI (KENYA)
February 2, 2019

By Harun Kutosi

A 60 year old priest was on Friday sentenced to five years in prison after being found guilty of sexually assaulting four young female parishioners one of whom was nine when the offences began.

The sentence is quite lenient being that he would have faced up to 10 years in prison.

The defilement which proceeded even after three of the victims were adults happened between 2001 and 2016.

The priest is also accused of embezzlement of funds to pay one of the ladies for sexual favors.

One of the young ladies now 29 years old received more than 240,000 euros from the cleric. She was charged with “concealment and breach of trust” but was acquitted as it could not be proven that she knew the source of the money she was receiving.

The hearing was held behind closed doors in north east France at the request of the victims who were minors at the start of the offences.

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.

Church abuse survivors sought in FSM

GUAM
Guam Daily Post

February 2, 2018

Concerns of clergy sex abuse have spread to the Federated States of Micronesia, which includes the island states of Chuuk, Pohnpei, Yap and Kosrae. The recent publication of a list of Jesuits against whom “credible” allegations were filed was followed shortly by a call from a local attorney with ties to the FSM for survivors.

Earlier this month, the Jesuits USA Northeast Province listed 50 priests, four of whom served in the FSM, who have one or more credible allegations of abuse of a minor after 1950. According to the list, “an allegation is deemed ‘credible’ if there is a “preponderance of evidence that the allegation is more likely true than not after investigation.”

• Father John Doolan: He worked at Xavier High School in Chuuk from 1957 to 1960 and served at the church in Chuuk from 1965 to 1973. He was removed from ministry in 2006 and died two years later. He admitted to “abuse of minors” in the 1960s and 1970s. Documents state that abuse was reported in 1999 but don’t specify how many allegations were lodged against him.

• Father John Garvey: He taught at an unspecified educational institution in Chuuk from 1968 to 1971, worked in Pohnpei from 1974 to 1977, and worked in Kitti Island in Pohnpei from 1977 to 1978. He died in 2011. The accusations of “abuse of minor” from 1978 to 1979 were found to be credible after investigation. The allegation was reported in 2013.

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.

Trial of former Naugatuck priest accused of abusing boys starts Feb. 25

NAUGATUCK (CT)
Republican-American

February 2, 2019

By Michael Dooling

Arthur J. Perrault, a former priest who once served at St. Francis Church in Naugatuck, has a trial date of Feb. 25 for various sexual abuse charges in U.S. District Court in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

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.

UPDATE: AG to provide assistance in investigations of accused clergy

AUSTIN (TX)
KXAN TV

January 31, 2019

By Phil Prazan

Thursday, Catholic churches across Texas released names of clergy credibly accused of child sex abuse. State law constrains the Texas Attorney General from launching an investigation, as Pennsylvania’s attorney general did.

Several state lawmakers now want to give the Texas Attorney General the power to investigate those crimes without being called upon by a district attorney.

“If our state’s head law enforcement officer does not have the authority to investigate these crimes, I would support legislation that gives the Texas Attorney General the authority that he or she needs to protect Texas children and shine light on institutional cover-ups of such heinous, illegal activity,” said Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin.

“Of course the state should investigate any crimes committed against children or anyone else, for that matter,” said Rep. Celia Israel, D-Austin, “Priests and other religious leaders are not exempt from the law and no institution should get away with hiding criminal activities.”

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.

February 2, 2019

3 Keys to Credibility at the Upcoming Sex Abuse Summit

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

February 2, 2019

By Msgr. Charles Pope

The summit on clerical sexual abuse called by the Holy Father is scheduled for Feb. 21-24. While no meeting of four days can be expected to fully resolve such a devastating scandal, a central goal must be to begin the very long process of restoring credibility to Church leaders in Rome and around the world. The needle on the credibility gauge is currently near zero. For this meeting to have a credibility of its own and to begin restoring credibility in the wider Church, a number of things must be forthrightly addressed. Let’s look at three.

(1) The summit must focus on more than the sexual abuse of minors. Unfortunately, a recent Vatican communiqué does not seem to envision this; it titles the meeting “The Protection of Minors in the Church”. While the Church should certainly speak to this issue and have clear policies protecting minors, much of the recently reported abuse has involved predation on vulnerable and/or subordinate adults. Seminarians as well as younger priests and religious have come forward in significant numbers in a kind of ecclesial version of the #MeToo movement. Unwanted sexual attention, abuse, and attempted seduction by bishops, priests, seminary faculty, religious superiors, and others in positions of authority must be addressed. There have also been numerous cases of clergy using their status to sexually seduce or abuse those in their pastoral care (for example, here and here).

In the secular world there is a growing recognition that relationships among adults are not always equal. Doctors and therapists, for example, are not on equal footing with those who seek their help, and it is unethical for them to use their status to exploit those in their care. Such clients, though adults, are often vulnerable to the sexual advances of influential professionals in their lives; a body of law is developing to protect them and others in subordinate roles (e.g., in the workplace). A similar dynamic can set up with priests and Church leaders if safeguards are not in place.\

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.

DA launches inquiry into alleged child sex abuse by priests

McALLEN (TX)
The Monitor

February 2, 2019

By Cristina M. Garcia

The Cameron County District Attorney’s Office announced its plans Friday to launch an “inquiry” into the Catholic Diocese of Brownsville’s list of 13 priests the church deemed “credibly accused” of sexually assaulting children in Hidalgo and Cameron counties.

“Our office will be conducting an inquiry into this matter to determine what criminal justice actions may or need to be taken in response to this disclosure,” Cameron County District Attorney Luis Saenz said in a statement, adding his office reviewed the diocese’s list of clergy members who “have been accused of sexual abuse of children while they served in the Rio Grande Valley.”

The Brownsville diocese, encompassing the Rio Grande Valley, released its list of clergy members Thursday, an action taken simultaneously with all other Catholic dioceses in Texas.

All of the seven living priests on the list were assigned to churches in Hidalgo and Cameron Counties. The six other priests on the list have died.

An investigation would mean the district attorney’s office can subpoena testimony or records in the Catholic Church’s possession in preparation for a potential criminal case against the accused priests, according to Patti Koo of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priest, or SNAP, a non-profit organization dedicated to supporting victims.

“This is exactly what we want,” Koo 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.

In months, Diocese of Fresno to release names of local priests accused of sex crimes

FRESNO (CA)
KGPE CBS 47

February 1, 2019

By Connie Tran

The Diocese of Fresno may soon release the names of local priests who’ve been accused of sexual misconduct. Bishop Armando Ochoa said they have a process in place to release the names, but it takes time.

Diocese spokesperson Teresa Dominguez believes the list may be released within a year.

“We are broken hearted, we are bruised, we are hurting,” prayed Ochoa on Friday.

It was a prayer for all those who have been sexually abused by the Catholic Church clergy. “Send your healing spirit to our brothers and sisters who have endured pain and abuse…”

Ochoa announced a plan is now in place to review clergy files within the Diocese of Fresno – which spans eight counties that include Fresno, Tulare, Madera, Kings, Merced, and Mariposa.

Dominguez, who is a survivor of abuse too, stated, “Our files date back to 1922, and that’s a lot of material to go through.”

Ochoa and Dominguez explained how the process will begin this Spring. After that, they will format a list of names of accused clergy.

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.

Suvivors of Clergy Sexual Abuse Encouraged to Speak Out

AUSTIN (TX)
Spectrum News

February 1, 2019

By Jeff Stensland

Thursday’s public release by the Roman Catholic Church listing almost 300 former Texas priests was a long time coming for clergy sexual abuse survivors like Carol Midboe, who came forward years ago and now volunteers with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP.

“It’s vital for people’s sense of well-being and to know they are not alone,” she said.

Midboe’s still waiting to hear from new survivors to come forward. She said a priest abused her as a child, which she said caused more than just physical or emotional trauma.

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.

Ocho exalumnos salesianos de Deusto denuncian a “don Chemi” por abusos

[Eight alumni of Salesian school accuse “Father Chemi” of abuse]

BILBAO (SPAIN)
El País

February 2, 2019

By Julio Núñez

Las víctimas acusan al entonces religioso de maltrato físico, tocamientos y violación

Ocho antiguos alumnos del colegio salesiano de Deusto (Bilbao) han denunciado a lo largo de esta semana ante la Ertzaintza al exsalesiano José Miguel San Martín, conocido como don Chemi, por abusos sexuales y físicos durante la década de los ochenta. Los denunciantes, de varias promociones escolares, decidieron denunciar los casos de pederastia después de que a comienzos de este año EL PAÍS publicase el relato de otra supuesta víctima, José Antonio Pérez (que también se ha unido como denunciante), donde narraba cómo San Martín abusó de él entre 1978 y 1980 en las instalaciones del centro.

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.

How Pope Francis plans to fix Catholicism’s sexual abuse crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
Christian Post

February 2, 2019

By Meredith Harbman

“Use it well,” Albus Dumbledore says to Harry Potter in “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” These words accompany his gift of an invisibility cloak to young Harry. Dumbledore knows that the cloak is a tool that Harry will have the opportunity to use responsibly… or not.

The Catholic Church has had the opportunity, recently, to think about the tools it wields as a church—and whether or not it is using them well. Nicholas P. Cafardi, a Catholic expert in canon law, recently said, “When it came to handling child sexual abuse by priests, our legal system fell apart.”

Cafardi was talking about the waves of sexual abuse reports that have rolled over the Catholic Church in recent decades. His sentiment came from the early 2000s, but the past six months have shown its continued truth: the Catholic Church has a long way to go when it comes to handling the sexual misconduct of its priests.

The Catholic Church has a long way to go because, historically, its bureaucracy and hierarchy have enabled abusive priests and clogged the lines of communication for people who wanted to report abuse. A confusing slew of instructions within canon law shows how any chain of command can allow depravity to continue.

Some might use this as an argument against institutional hierarchy, arguing that it encourages evil to take root. However, studies show that sexual abuse occurs at a rate of six percent in the general public, which is just as often as it does in the Catholic Church. There’s nothing worse happening within Catholicism than there is in the outside world, we just expect more of a religious institution.

As a public, we are just as shocked in 2018 as we were almost twenty years ago. At first, we were appalled that such widespread abuse could happen at all, but now we’re horrified that bishops could know about the abuse and choose to cover for their priests—and vice versa.

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.

Catholics tired of recurring accusations of clergy sexual abuse

OAKLAND (CA)
The Oakland Voice

February 2, 2019

By Albert C. Pacciorini

A lively, respectful group of about 100 people met with two representatives of the Diocese of Oakland to discuss the issue of clergy sexual abuse and its coverup at St. Joan of Arc Church in San Ramon the evening of Jan. 22.

Steve Wilcox, chancellor of the diocese, and Rev. Jayson Landeza outlined the historical issues of clergy sexual abuse while saying the evening would be mostly questions from the audience.

Repeatedly, audience members drove home a theme: people, especially the young, are avoiding the Church in vast numbers, older people are falling away. They see the Church as unresponsive in meeting the needs of the gay and transgender community and not doing enough to end clergy sexual abuse.

We’ve heard all this before, many said: People’s lives have been ruined. Families are ruined. We’re tired of the apologies and repetition. Do something now.”

Wilcox said he hopes the diocese can release its list of credibly accused clergy on Feb. 18. While many will be familiar names, there may be one or two not previously widely known.

Rev. Ray Sacca, St. Joan of Arc pastor, opened the evening with prayer, and noted Catholics are expressing outrage at the renewed abuse revelations.

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.

Defensa de cura acusado de violación solicitará ante Corte penquista cierre definitivo de la causa

[Defense requests that a court definitively dismisses case against accused priest]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 2, 2019

By Felipe Díaz and Fabián Polanco

En una audiencia pública la Corte de Apelaciones de Concepción resolvería si confirma el sobreseimiento de la investigación contra el sacerdote Hernán Enríquez, acusado de violación por el padre de un ex seminarista. Mientras, respecto de la arista canónica no hay un pronunciamiento oficial aún.

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.

French priest jailed for sexual abuse

COLMAR (FRANCE)
Agence France-Presse

February 2, 2019

A French priest Friday sentenced to five years, two without parole, on Friday for sexually assaulting four young female parishioners, one of whom was just nine when the offenses started, and embezzling 100,000 euros ($115,000) to pay one of his victims.

The trial was held behind closed doors at Colmar Criminal Court, in northeast France, which publicly announced the sentence late Friday.

The 60-year-old cleric, who will have to spend at least two years behind bars and be under restrictions for the rest of his term, could have faced up to 10 years in prison.

The priest will also have to undergo psychological treatment, which he has already started, according to his lawyers.

Under the judgement, he is forbidden from contacting his victims or any activity involving minors. He is also barred from staying in the Alsace region, where the offenses were committed.

His sentence was lighter than that sought by the public prosecutor, who had asked for four years in prison followed by three years under a supervision order.

The trial was held behind closed doors at the request of three of the four victims, who were minors at the start of the offenses.

The attacks, which continued after three of the victims were adults, took place between 2001 and 2006 and between 2011 and 2016.

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.

Pope reaffirms priest celibacy requirement

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 2, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis is ruling out any lifting of the celibacy requirement for priests but says there’s reason to consider ordaining older, married men in remote communities where priests are in short supply.

Francis said he believes priestly celibacy is a gift for the Catholic Church and opposes a blanket change to make it optional. But he said “pastoral necessity” might justify alternative options in certain parts of the world.

“I think the problem should be opened in this sense: Where there’s a pastoral problem because of a lack of priests,” he said. “I’m not saying it should be done, because I haven’t reflected or prayed enough about it. But theologians must study it.”

Francis’ comments, to reporters on the way home Sunday from Panama, open the way for discussion about celibacy in the run-up to a big meeting of bishops from the Amazon at the Vatican in October. Brazil’s bishops have long pushed for the church to consider ordaining so-called viri probati, older married men of proven virtue, to minister in remote parts of the Amazon where the faithful can go months without Mass and evangelical and Pentecostal churches are making inroads as a result.

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.

El Tribunal decretó sobreseimiento de cuatro sacerdotes de “La Familia” en Rancagua

[Court orders the dismissal of four priests of “La Familia” in Rancagua]

CHILE
Soy Chile

February 1, 2019

El año pasado otros tres sacerdotes también fueron sobreseídos en el caso.

El Tribunal de Garantía de Pichilemu decretó el sobreseimiento de cuatro sacerdotes implicados en el denominado caso “La Familia” sobre la existencia de una supuesta red de abusos al interior de la Iglesia en la región de O’Higgins. La investigación en contra de los sacerdotes se llevaba a cabo por denuncias de conductas impropias.

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Opinión: Padre Renato Poblete

[Opinion: Father Renato Poblete]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 2, 2019

By Percival Cowley V.

No es una novedad que la Iglesia pase por momentos de crisis. Las ha habido en su larga historia y las seguirá habiendo. Con todo, esa misma historia sigue ofreciéndose como pedagoga de su desarrollo y tarea temporal.

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.

Accused Priest Left in Ministry until Day of Archbishops’ Release, SNAP Responds

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

February 1, 2019

Despite pledging to remove priests from ministry following accusations of abuse, a priest from the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston was left in position up to the day the Texas bishops released lists of accused priests throughout the state.

Fr. John Keller was allowed to say mass the very morning that his name was released as a “credibly accused” cleric. Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the leader of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, had been informed of accusations against Fr. Keller back in November. Moreover, a second victim came forward just last month.

It takes only seconds for an abuser to hurt a child or a vulnerable adult which is why the 2002 promise from Church officials to remove those accused of abuse was so critical to the prevention of future cases. But if the president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops can openly flaunt the provisions of the Dallas Charter, what hope do survivors have?

The answer is a lot of hope. The actions of secular officials in the justice system across the country have generated renewed optimism for justice and accountability. We hope that AG Ken Paxton listens to the news – and the hopes of the hundreds of survivors that have reached out to his office – and begins an independent investigation into Cardinal DiNardo’s handling of abuse cases immediately.

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.

Sheriff ready to investigate Sherman priest abuse cases

SHERMAN (TX)
KTEN News

February 1, 2019

By Brittany Breeding

Now that sexual abuse allegations have been publicly raised against three former Sherman clergymen, the Grayson County Sheriff’s Office is prepared to hear from anyone who wants to file a report.

On Thursday, the Catholic Diocese of Dallas issued a list of church personnel with credible allegations of sexual abuse of children. That list included three men with links to St. Mary’s Catholic Parish in Sherman:

Jeremy Myers, a fixture at St. Mary’s for more than two decades, was removed as a priest last year.
John Duesman died in 1984.

Michael Flanagan died in 2008.

Sheriff Tom Watt said there are no known cases involving Myers in Grayson County, but that is subject to change now that the names have been made public.

“I know the churches are trying to encourage people if they feel they need to make a report to please come and make a report,” said sheriff’s office spokeswoman Capt. Sarah Bigham. “That way the information can be looked into by law enforcement.”

Abuse allegations are being handled by Lt. Heath Wester at 903-813-2216.

The Dallas Diocese provided a copy of its list to police agencies, and the Catholic community seems to be supportive of this decision.

“I think it’s very, very positive that this is happening,” said parishioner Mary Walker of Denison. “Change is good for everyone, including the Catholic church or any church, any religious forum.”

The priests who were investigated by the Diocesan Review Board date all the way back to 1950.

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.

Opus Dei enfrenta primera denuncia a sacerdote por abusos a menores en Chile

[Opus Dei faces first complaint of priest abusing minors in Chile]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 1, 2019

By María José Navarrete

Las acusaciones contra Patricio Astorquiza, hoy de 82 años, mencionan “acoso persistente en el tiempo y abuso de conciencia, ambas con posible connotación sexual”.

La creciente serie de denuncias por presuntos abusos en la Iglesia Católica alcanzó ahora en Chile a otra de sus organizaciones más emblemáticas. El Opus Dei informó que uno de sus sacerdotes, Patricio Astorquiza (82), enfrenta acusaciones por presunto acoso que se remontan a hace aproximadamente 20 años.

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.

‘The devil jumped into the Catholic Church’: Dallas-area parishes react to ‘credibly accused’ list

DALLAS (T)
Morning News

February 1, 2019

Kevin Krause, Dana Branham, Sarah Sarder, LaVendrick Smith and Charles Scudder

After the Catholic Diocese of Dallas released the names of 31 clergy members deemed “credibly accused” of sexually abusing kids since 1950, Danny Blonien went to church.

Blonien, 57, has been a parishioner of St. Thomas Aquinas Catholic Church in East Dallas for 27 years. He’s a member of the church’s choir.

In the 1990’s, he and his wife had counseling sessions with Jeremy Myers, one of the accused priests on the list released Thursday.

Blonien said late Thursday that the news stunned him. The Myers he knew on a first-name basis was warm and engaging and could connect biblical Scripture to contemporary times with ease. He never suspected that Myers, who the diocese said was “suspended” from service in 2018, could be accused of sexual abuse.

“It’s kind of a shock. It’s visceral,” Blonien said. “That’s not consistent with the man that I knew, but you know, people shock you all the time. You think you know them.”

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.

Naming names makes Catholic sex scandal personal

BEAUMONT (TX)
The Enterprise

February 1, 2019

By Haley Bruyn

The Catholic clergy sex scandal, subject of lawsuits, movies and countless works of journalism, became suddenly personal in Southeast Texas this week after the Diocese of Beaumont released the names of 13 priests found to have been credibly accused of abusing minors over the last half-century.

“I was just devastated,” said Angela Mazzola-Burleigh of Orange after learning that former priest Earl Mudd, who married her parents and baptized her oldest sister, was among the presumed violators.

“When I saw his name on that list, he went from priest to predator in my mind,” she said.

It was a scene played out in an uncountable number of Catholic households, here and across the state, following the coordinated release of nearly 300 names from 14 Texas dioceses. It was one of the largest such reckonings in the nation.

Hilda Arisco of Nederland recounted her experiences with another accused priest, Henry Drouilhet, during his time at St. Pius X Catholic Church in Beaumont.

“He was mean,” she said. “I wasn’t surprised to see his name on there. He hated girls but was always nice to the boys.”

Arisco recalled picking up her daughter from catechism class and finding her and the other girls in her class outside. They said Drouilhet had made all of them wait outside while the boys stayed indoors.

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.

For Catholics, what to ask your priest — and yourself — about abuse scandal

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

January 31, 2019

By Anastasiya Zavyalova

It’s a TV image so common we barely pause to look up: a hive of uniformed law enforcement officers swarming onto a crime scene. But the target of this SWAT-type strike was groundbreaking.

Unfolding on air over a “developing story” banner in November, the surprise targeted the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. Instead of contraband or drugs, law enforcers were seeking records linked to a diocese priest, recently released on bond, accused of sexually abusing children.

Unfolding on air over a “developing story” banner in November, the surprise targeted the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. Instead of contraband or drugs, law enforcers were seeking records linked to a diocese priest, recently released on bond, accused of sexually abusing 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.

At least 19 clergy on Baton Rouge list of credibly accused had not been named locally before

BATON ROUGE (LA)
The Advocate

February 1, 2019

By Andrea Gallo

Before Clarence Biggers came to the Diocese of Baton Rouge in 1964, multiple girls told their parents that the Marist priest had kissed them, fondled them and exposed himself to them at St. Joseph Catholic School in Marietta, Georgia.

One of their mothers typed up a letter to Marist officials about his abuse. But instead of removing him from ministry, the Marist order transferred the priest to the Diocese of Baton Rouge, where he worked at St. Joseph Church in the tiny town of Paulina in St. James Parish on the east bank of the Mississippi River.

The Diocese of Baton Rouge named 37 clergymen this week who were credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor, and Biggers was among them. While some of those on the list had previously been targeted by lawsuits and featured in media accounts, 19 of them had never had their misconduct exposed.

Biggers was one of those.

The Diocese reported that Biggers continued to abuse children after he got to Paulina, saying that they received multiple reports in 2000 of abuse that occurred between 1964 and 1967. Dan Borne, a spokesman for the Baton Rouge Diocese, said Friday that they had no records indicating that Biggers sexually abused a minor before he came to Baton Rouge. The Marist order transferred Biggers back to Atlanta in 1967, where he worked at another church parish before he joined a monastery and died in 2009.

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 Fresno will hire former FBI official to review clergy sex allegations

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
Bakersfield Californian

February 1, 2019

By Jose Gaspar

For the first time the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno will publicly name the names of San Joaquin Valley priests accused of sexual misconduct.

About time.

But don’t expect it to happen anytime soon. It’s going to take awhile for investigators to review voluminous archives.

“To ensure that this task is objectively completed in a timely manner, we will undergo an extensive review of our clergy in the spring of 2019,” said Bishop Armando Ochoa, speaking at a news conference at Diocese headquarters in Fresno on Friday.

The Catholic Church is still in crisis because of its mishandling of scores of cases in which priests abused minors.

Why is the Diocese of Fresno just now coming around to taking this action?

After last year’s horrific revelations that more than 300 priests in Pennsylvania sexually molested children, coupled with the resignation of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick and credible allegations that he too sexually abused others, the Diocese was finally spurred to action.

“It shook all of us very deeply and emotionally,” said Dioceses spokeswoman Teresa Dominguez.

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.

Survivors make new allegations after Archdiocese releases list

HOUSTON (TX)
KTRK TV

February 1, 2019

By Shelley Childers

The stories of abuse within Houston-area Catholic churches continue to be shared in the wake of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston releasing a list of 42 clergy credibly accused of child sex abuse.

“It’s very difficult to get a phone call from a 65-year-old man weeping and crying about this,” said Michael Norris, the local leader of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “That’s the kind of pain that survivors are going through.”

Norris held a press conference at the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in downtown Thursday, an hour after the list was released.

His public announcement was to offer support for victims in the wake of the list being released.

“Shortly after the press conference yesterday, I got a phone call,” said Norris. “I got my first phone call, so it was quick.”

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February 1, 2019

Texas dioceses name clergy with credible allegations of sex abuse

HOUSTON (TX)
Catholic News Service

February 1, 2019

By James Ramos

In a step to restore trust in the Catholic Church, dioceses in Texas released their lists of priests against whom credible allegations of sexual abuse of a minor have been determined.

The 15 dioceses disclosed Jan. 31 the names of 278 individual clerics who have such credible allegations in Texas. The statewide disclosure removed duplication of clerics who appear on multiple diocesan lists.

The Diocese of Fort Worth, which made public its list in 2007, has continued to update its disclosure on its website. It identifies 15 priests, one permanent deacon and one religious brother.

Archbishop Gustavo Garcia-Siller of San Antonio repeatedly called the release “the just and right thing to do,” and that it is a “move forward in building a healthier community, a healthier society.”

The lists were compiled separately by each individual diocese. Many dioceses worked in cooperation with diocesan lay review boards, with some also working with independent consultants.

The release includes the Galveston-Houston and San Antonio archdioceses and the Austin, Amarillo, Beaumont, Brownsville, Corpus Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Worth, Laredo, Lubbock, San Angelo, Tyler and Victoria dioceses. The oldest diocese is Galveston-Houston, established in 1847, with San Antonio founded next in 1874. Since 1950 nine additional dioceses have been established, resulting in a total of 15 dioceses. Laredo is the most recent to be established, that being in 2000.

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Top US cardinal removed priest day before abuse list issued

HOUSTON (TX)
Associated Press

February 1, 2019

By Nomaan Merchant

The cardinal who leads the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops removed a priest accused of sexual abuse from ministry the day before the priest’s name was among those released on a list of clergy credibly accused of abuse.

The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston said Friday that Cardinal Daniel DiNardo told the Rev. John T. Keller he would be removed from ministry late Wednesday. DiNardo still let Keller celebrate Mass Thursday morning, hours before Keller was listed among more than 40 priests as being removed due to “recent allegations currently under investigation.”

According to the archdiocese, DiNardo gave Keller permission to celebrate the Mass since it had been previously scheduled.

A man told CBS News in November that Keller gave him alcohol and fondled him when the man was 16. Another man came forward with allegations last month.

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Denunciantes de abusos jesuitas exigen a Compañía de Jesús publicar nombres de sacerdotes acusados de delitos sexuales o encubrimiento

[New whistleblower group demands Jesuits publish names of priests accused of sexual crimes or cover-up]

CHILE
The Clinic

February 1, 2019

En una carta abierta acusan que la congregación adoptó una actitud pasiva ante las primeras señales y testimonios de denuncia, y exigen acciones de verdad, justicia y reparación con los sobrevivientes.

A través de una carta abierta a la Compañía de Jesús, el nuevo Grupo de Denunciantes de Abusos Jesuitas critica a la congregación por haber hecho caso omiso a las primeras señales o testimonios de delitos sexuales, y la emplaza a publicar los nombres de todos los sacerdotes o profesores acusados, el tipo de abusos cometidos y el estado actual del proceso de investigación o condena aplicada.

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Opus Dei says 1 of its priests in Chile is probed for abuse

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Associated Press

February 1, 2019

The Opus Dei movement says that one of its priests in Chile is being investigated for allegedly abusing underage minors.

The conservative movement said in a statement Friday that 82-year-old Patricio Astorquiza has been accused of prolonged harassment and abuse “with possible sexual connotation” against two minors.

Chile’s entire Catholic hierarchy has been humiliated in a mushrooming sexual abuse and coverup scandal. The Opus Dei had been spared until now.

Astorquiza has been banned from officiating Mass. He had been questioned starting late last year, even before the two alleged victims filed their complaints. The priest has been banned from officiating mass in public.

The Opus Dei said that it will send the result of the investigation to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

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José Andrés Murillo: desde la Compañía de Jesús me reconocieron que “todos sabíamos que Renato Poblete era mujeriego”

[José Andrés Murillo: Members of Society of Jesus admit “we all knew Renato Poblete was a womanizer”]

CHILE
El Mostrador

January 30, 2019

Tras la denuncia de Marcela Aranda contra el emblemático capellán del Hogar de Cristo, la Compañía de Jesús abrió una investigación que puso en manos del abogado laico Waldo Bown, y además admitió que hay más casos, sin dar detalles ni precisar cifras. Sin embargo, el director de la Fundación Para la Confianza y denunciante del cura Fernando Karadima reveló que ya van cerca de 8 testimonios de víctimas.

El director de la Fundación para la Confianza y denunciante de Fernando Karadima, José Andrés Murillo, aseguró que “ya van cerca de ocho testimonios de víctimas” del excapellán del Hogar de Cristo Renato Poblete Barth y que desde el interior de la Compañía de Jesús le reconocieron que era un secreto a voces el comportamiento del emblemático cura.

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Víctimas de abusos: “La Compañía de Jesús ha tenido una directa responsabilidad institucional en estos casos”

[Abuse victims say: “The Society of Jesus has a direct institutional responsibility in these cases”]

CHILE
El Mostrador

January 31, 2019

Una carta abierta a la Compañía de Jesús envió un grupo de denunciantes de abusos por parte de sacerdotes de esta comunidad religiosa, en donde señalan que la congregación “tiene hoy el deber y la gran oportunidad de apuntar a la total transparencia, corregir el rumbo, reconocer sus errores, pedir perdón como institución, cerrar bien los procesos en curso y proponer acciones concretas”.

La agrupación que reúne a denunciantes de abusos por parte de jesuitas acusó un “grave” encubrimiento de la congregación a los delitos cometidos por sacerdotes y señalaron que “la Compañía de Jesús ha tenido una directa responsabilidad institucional en estos casos, que es incluso más grave que los delitos individuales de algunos de sus miembros”.

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Nearly 300 priests and clergy in Texas accused of sex abuse over decades

NEW YORK (NY)
ABC News

February 1, 2019

By Meghan Keneally

Nearly 300 priests and clergy members of the Catholic dioceses in Texas were identified this week for alleged sexual abuse of minors.

In total, 14 archdioceses and dioceses in Texas released their lists on Tuesday, making them the latest in a string of disclosures by Catholic Church bodies across the country. The Diocese of Laredo announced that there were no credible accusations in its region.

All of the lists name the accused priests and clergy members as well as their assignments, but they differed in the amount details they disclosed about the alleged abuses, the timing of the abuse and whether they resulted in any disciplinary action.

For example, The Diocese of Amarillo, which detailed the accusations against its priests, noted that one priest was the subject of 16 allegations.

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Víctimas de abuso sexual en colegios Maristas exigen a la iglesia no financiar defensa de sacerdotes responsables

[Victims of sexual abuse in Marist schools demand that the church not fund priests’ defense]

CHILE
Publimetro

January 31, 2019

El grupo, manifestó que mientras la iglesia financia abogados, hay víctimas que no se atreven a iniciar acciones legales por no contar con profesionales del derecho, viéndose obligados a ser asesorados por practicantes.

Las víctimas de abuso y violación en los colegios Maristas solicitaron a la Iglesia dejar de financiar las defensas de los responsables de delitos, como el del encubrimiento, indicando que la jerarquía ha guardado silencio en muchos casos.

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Ingresa en prisión un cura por un delito de pederastia en Málaga

[A priest goes to prison for child pornography in Malaga]

MALAGA (SPAIN)
El País

February 1, 2019

By Nacho Sánchez

Un sacerdote ha ingresado en prisión por un presunto delito de corrupción de menores y abusos sexuales. Según han explicado fuentes del Tribunal Superior de Justicia de Andalucía (TSJA), el clérigo fue detenido el pasado lunes y puesto a disposición judicial. Ese mismo día declaró ante el juzgado de instrucción 12 de Málaga, que decretó su entrada en la cárcel ese mismo día. Este ha sido el segundo arresto del cura, que el pasado mes de agosto fue detenido en la llamada operación Sandrina por posesión de pornografía infantil.

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“Vi con mis propios ojos los tocamientos en el confesionario”

[“I saw with my own eyes the touching in the confessional”]

GIRONA (SPAIN)
El País

February 1, 2019

By Marta Rodríguez

El alcalde de Báscara, Narcís Saurina, asegura haber presenciado los abusos del expárraco de Vilobí d’Onyar investigado por el Obispado de Girona

El alcalde del pequeño municipio gerundés de Báscara, Narcís Saurina, asegura que fue testigo de los presuntos abusos que cometió, durante décadas, monseñor Tomàs Pons, el expárraco de Vilobí d’Onyar investigado por el Obispado de Girona. Saurina lo conoció cuando él estudiaba en el colegio Bell-lloc de Girona, donde Pons era profesor. El ahora alcalde de Báscara y algunos de sus compañeros de clase simulaban ir a confesarse para no ir a clase y se escondían en una zona oscura desde la que veían los confesionarios. Allí lo presenció todo. Él y otros exalumnos, insiste. “Vi con mis propios ojos los tocamientos en el confesionario”, sentencia.

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Vaticano abre proceso penal contra Diego Ossa, sacerdote del círculo de Karadima

[Vatican opens criminal proceedings against Diego Ossa, priest in Karadima’s circle]

CHILE
La Tercera

January 31, 2019

By María José Navarrete

La investigación durará 60 días. Hasta agosto de 2018, el presbítero se desempeñaba como vicario en una parroquia de Ñuñoa. Uno de los denunciantes, Óscar Osbén, relató a La Tercera los abusos que habría cometido el sacerdote.

“Yo a los 30 años de edad recién pude tomar decisiones que no fueran consultadas por mi director espiritual. Entre los 13 y 28 años, mis decisiones fueron manejadas por Diego Ossa”. Así describe Óscar Osbén Moscoso, denunciante del sacerdote diocesano, su relación con quien fue su director espiritual, al relatar los abusos de poder y de conciencia que se habrían cometido en su contra desde que era menor de edad.

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El turno del Opus Dei: informan dos denuncias contra sacerdote Patricio Astorquiza

[Opus Dei’s turn: two accusations against priest Patricio Astorquiza]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 1, 2019

By Carlos Reyes

Se refieren a un acoso persistente en el tiempo y a un abuso de conciencia, ambas con posible connotación sexual”, indicaron en un comunicado.

El Opus Dei informó esta jornada que en los últimos meses han recibido dos denuncias contra el sacerdote de la Prelatura del Opus Dei Patricio Astorquiza (82 años).

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Cardenal Ezzati se juega su última carta para impedir que la Fiscalía lo investigue como encubridor de abusos

[Cardinal Ezzati plays his last card to block prosecutor’s abuse investigation]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 1, 2019

By Leslie Ayala C.

Su abogado, el reconocido penalista Hugo Rivera, apeló ante la Corte capitalina para que sean estos tribunales superiores los que sobresean definitivamente la causa en que el ex arzobispo de Santiago tiene calidad de imputado.

El magistrado Eduardo Gallardo –titular del 13° Juzgado de Garantía de Santiago- citó al ex supremo Milton Juica al momento de rechazar el sobreseimiento definitivo de la causa por encubrimientos en la Iglesia católica chilena que estaba solicitando el cardenal Ricardo Ezzati. El miércoles 30 dijo enfático: “Me parece que en una investigación desformalizada, vulgarmente ‘matar el caso’, sin permitirle al Ministerio Público –precisamente- ejercer ese rol institucional sería una decisión hoy día a mi juicio premeditar, porqué sí creo que hay algo susceptible de ser investigado “.

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Retired WA priest extradited to Britain on sex assault charges

CANBERRA (AUSTRALIA)
Canberra Times

February 1, 2019

By Nick Miller

An Anglican priest from Perth, Western Australia, has been extradited to Britain to face sex assault charges dating back to the 1970s and 80s.

Meirion Griffiths, 80, from Maddington in Perth, was charged on an extradition warrant issued by Westminster magistrates court in London in December 2016, Sussex police said.

The warrant alleges that he committed several indecent assaults against a girl then in her late teens in the mid-1970s, and several indecent assaults against a woman then in her mid-20s in 1982.

The offences allegedly took place in West Sussex. At the time of the alleged offences Griffiths was Church of England vicar of St Pancras in Chichester, police said in a statement issued on Thursday.

Chichester is a cathedral city near the English south coast, between Southampton and Brighton.

Griffiths arrived at Heathrow from Australia on Thursday in the custody of Sussex Police officers.

He appeared in court the same day, pleaded not guilty and was remanded in custody to appear at Portsmouth Crown Court on March 1, the police statement said.

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Diocese of Lake Charles says it is working on list of credibly accused priests

LAKE CHARLES (LA)
KPLC TV

February 1, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Lake Charles says it is working on a list of credibly accused priests.

The Diocese released the statement to KPLC after the Catholic Diocese of Baton Rouge on Thursday released a list of clergy credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

Diocese statement:

The Diocese of Lake Charles is presently reviewing all files with the help of experienced personnel. Once this process is complete, an objective panel of professionals with expertise in law will assess the files and a list will be compiled that is thorough, transparent, just and truthful. The concern of the clergy and laity of the Diocese remains the victims of sexual abuse.

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Greater transparency: Church abuse victim sees chance for justice

GENEVA (NY)
Finger Lakes Times

By Steve Buchiere

When a bill that would extend the statute of limitations on child molestation cases breezed through the state Legislature this past week, there weren’t many people happier than Peter Saracino.

Saracino, a native of Seneca Falls and a retired Marcus Whitman teacher, says a Capuchin priest at a former Catholic seminary in Geneva abused him when he was 8 or 9.

The former Geneva seminary on Lochland Road was run by the Capuchin Friars of the Province of the Sacred Stigmata of Union City, N.J. It is now the upscale Geneva On the Lake resort.

In a meeting with local press last summer, Saracino made public the name of his accuser, whom he said Monday is still an active priest in New Jersey. He provided a photo as well.

The Finger Lakes Times has not divulged his name because there has been no official acknowledgement of the abuse by the Order.

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Cardinal Dolan criticizes Cuomo for ‘stinging criticism’ of church

NEW YORK (NY)
Catholic News Service

February 1, 2019

New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan in a Sirius XM broadcast Jan. 29 criticized Gov. Andrew Cuomo for his “stinging criticism of the Catholic Church” in singling out Catholics over the crisis surrounding the sexual abuse of minors.”

“He really caricatured the church and only the church, singling it out for the sexual abuse of minors and contesting that we were the ones that had blocked the Child Victims Act,” Cardinal Dolan told Father Dave Dwyer, co-host of “Conversation With Cardinal Dolan,” which airs every Tuesday afternoon on Sirius XM’s The Catholic Channel.

“And then misquoting, taking out of context, Pope Francis, and to flaunt his dissent from established church teaching and to use all that as an applause line,” the cardinal said of the governor.

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Vatican magazine denounces sexual abuse of nuns by priests

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

February 1, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican’s women’s magazine is denouncing the sexual abuse of nuns by priests — and the resulting “scandal” of religious sisters having abortions or giving birth to children who are then not recognized by their fathers.

The February issue of “Women Church World,” a monthly magazine distributed alongside the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, was published Friday. It cited Pope Francis’ own analysis of abuse by saying clerical power was at the root of the problem.

It said nuns have been silenced for years by fear of retaliation against themselves or their orders if they report the priests who molested them.

The publication marks a significant public acknowledgment from inside the Vatican of the problem that the Holy See has long known about but has done next to nothing to address.

Last year, after The Associated Press and other media reported on the scandal, the international association of women’s religious orders urged sisters to report abuse to police and their superiors, a significant shattering of the silence that has long kept the problem secret.

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This Nun Is Fighting To End Sexual Abuse In India’s Churches Despite Threats

INDIA
HuffPost India

January 31, 2019

By Piyasree Dasgupta and Meryl Sebastian

Going against the church is equivalent to going against the entire society for nuns, but Lucy Kalapura is not perturbed.

When Bishop Franco Mulakkal returned to the Jalandhar diocese in October after spending 21 days in jail, his supporters welcomed him back with massive garlands and showers of rose petals. As images of the hero’s welcome given to the rape-accused priest filled her TV screen and social media timeline, something snapped in sister Lucy Kalapura.

The 52 year old, who has been a nun for more than three decades, had often heard stories of powerful men of the cloth sexually abusing women and sometimes children. But the Mulakkal case shook her.

“I couldn’t believe how relentless it was. I heard the man raped her 13 times,” Kalapura told HuffPost India.

It was in June 2018 that a nun from a convent in Kottayam’s Kuruvilangad filed a police complaint, accusing Mulakkal of sexually abusing her multiple times between 2014 and 2016.

As news of the assault broke, a few nuns from the survivor’s congregation, the Missionaries of Jesus, began protesting, demanding that action be taken against Mulakkal.

Kalapura waited, expecting more women from convents to take to the streets to demand Mulakkal’s arrest.

“Forget the Bishop being arrested, I realised more and more women were going against the nun who complained,” said Kalapura, who belongs to the Franciscan Clarist Congregation.

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Think McQuaid’s priest abuse list is complete? Our investigation shows it’s not

ROCHESTER (NY)
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle

January 31, 2019

By Sean Lahman and Steve Orr

MORE VICTIMS HAVE REACHED OUT TO THE DEMOCRAT AND CHRONICLE AND BRIGHTON POLICE ABOUT ALLEGED ABUSE AT MCQUAID JESUIT HIGH SCHOOL.

When Tom Chiarella read last month about sexual abuse allegations against seven priests once assigned to his alma mater, McQuaid Jesuit High School, he was sick to his stomach.

Chiarella had known that sexual abuse had occurred at the Brighton secondary school because he was a victim of it. The trauma hung over his head for years before he could find a way out.

His personal escape culminated in the bold step of telling the world what had happened to him in an article for Esquire magazine in 2003 called “My Education.” Chiarella recounted how French teacher John J. Tobin had harassed, stalked and sexually abused him between 1975 and his graduation in 1979.

What disturbed Chiarella were allegations that came to light Jan. 15, when a regional Jesuit organization named 50 priests who had been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors. Seven of those priests once taught at McQuaid.

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Haitian Times News Roundup – Feb. 1

HAITI
The Haitian Times

February 1, 2019

Haitian Men to be Compensated Following Sexual Assault Case

More than 130 young men may receive $60 million in damages after a couple of Jesuit men was found guilty of sexually assaulting the young men. The proposed settlement seeks to compensate anyone who has been sexually assaulted by Douglas Perlitz, one of the founders of Pierre Toussaint school in Cap-Haitien, and Reverend Paul Carrier, between January 1, 1996 and July 1, 2009. If approved by a Connecticut federal judge, this $ 60 million deal will be the second of its kind, resulting. In 2013 lawyer Mitchell Garabedian received $12 million for 24 Haitian teenagers claiming to have been sexually assaulted by Perlitz, radio Television Caraibes reports.

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Former Perth Anglican Archbishop Roger Herft could be ‘de-frocked’ amid royal commission into child abuse findings

PERTH (AUSTRALIA)
PerthNow

January 31, 2019

By Nick Butterly

The former Anglican Archbishop of Perth Roger Herft is to face a significant internal investigation that could ultimately see him stripped of any right to officiate as a priest.

In a statement, the Anglican Church’s Episcopal Standards Commission confirmed it was investigating complaints about the conduct of the former Archbishop following his appearance before the child abuse royal commission in 2016.

Archbishop Herft resigned from his position as Perth’s most senior Anglican in 2016 after admitting he let down survivors of child sexual abuse when he was Bishop of Newcastle

[ New South Wales, Australia ] between 1993 and 2005.

At the time the resignation marked Archbishop Herft as one of the most senior casualties of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual abuse.

“Complaints about the conduct of Bishop Roger Herft when he was Bishop of Newcastle are being investigated by the Episcopal Standards Commission, the Anglican authority for dealing with allegations about bishops,” a spokesperson for the commission said.

“The conduct of Bishop Herft and other Newcastle bishops and leaders was examined by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Case Study 42, published in November 2017.

“The Episcopal Standards Commission is investigating the many issues which arise from the information it has received. It will determine its course of action as soon as it can.”

In hearings in 2016 the Royal Commission heard how Archbishop Herft had mishandled a series of horrific abuse cases and had been “wilfully blind” to the criminal conduct of clergy under his authority.

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Diocese of Baton Rouge Releases Names of Accused Priests

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

February 1, 2019

Yesterday, the Diocese of Baton Rouge, LA released a list of priests that have been accused of abuse.

We are grateful for this development. Releasing these names publicly is crucial not only for the healing of survivors, but also to encourage victims who may be suffering in silence to come forward and to help deter future clergy sex crimes and cover ups. However, releasing these names is only the first step on the path towards healing and deterrence.

It is notable that Bishop Michael Duca went a step further than many of his brother bishops in ensuring that his list also includes the date that the allegations were first received as well as what action was taken by church officials and when. SNAP has been asking for this kind of transparency.

Yet we still believe that there should be an independent investigation by independent governmental officials into clergy sex abuse and cover ups in Louisiana. We encourage Bishop Duca to continue showing other Catholic officials the right way to do things by personally appealing to Attorney General Jeff Landry to launch an investigation into his diocese and other dioceses in the state. Only trained law enforcement professionals can truly judge when an accusation is “credible” or not and compel full transparency.

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Vatican women’s magazine condemns sexual abuse of nuns by priests

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

February 1, 2019

By Rose Gamble

The sexual abuse of nuns by priests and the resulting “scandal” of religious sisters having abortions or giving birth to children not recognised by their fathers has been condemned in an article in the Vatican’s women’s magazine, published on Friday (1 February).

The February issue of “Women Church World,” distributed alongside the Vatican newspaper L’Osservatore Romano, says that religious sisters for years have not reported offences against them by priests for fear of retaliation.

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Statements from Texas bishops on clergy credibly accused of abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 1, 2019

The following are excerpts of statements made by the bishops of several Texas dioceses Jan. 31 on the disclosure of the names of clergy who have been credibly accused of sex abuse of minors. The lists from all 15 Texas dioceses included the names of 278 clergy dating to 1950.

From Bishop Patrick Zurek of Amarillo: “The Diocese of Amarillo seeks to express regret and apologizes for the failing and sins that have hurt the church so deeply, especially in our most vulnerable members. The diocese especially asks forgiveness for the failings of those who have held positions of leadership in the church.”

From Bishop Joe Vasquez of Austin: “With a contrite heart, today I have published a list of clergy and religious who have been credibly accused of committing sexual abuse against a minor. … It is my prayer and hope that publishing this list will help to bring healing from the hurt and anger caused by the lack of accountability and transparency on the part of church leadership.

“The victims of sexual abuse by clergy have experienced much pain; we must continue to pray and care for our brothers and sisters who have suffered greatly. I apologize to the victims and their families for the diocese’s failures. The church must always be willing to recognize and correct its failings.”

From Bishop Daniel Flores of Brownsville: “An accurate accounting of the past is necessary for us to move forward with integrity. I and the bishops in Texas believe that releasing the names after an exhaustive review of the files will contribute to restore trust and healing. The humble and honest acceptance of the truth calls us to move forward in poverty of spirit for purification and renewal. We must think of the victims first and be sensitive to any renewed pain this release may cause.

“In these times of sorrowful purification, we know that by prayer and penance we journey together in the Lord. As I shared with you in September in a letter published in our diocesan newspaper, it is necessary now more than ever, that we dedicate ourselves anew as a people of faith to the work the Lord has commended to us, to bind the wounds of the broken-hearted and announce the power of his grace that is greater than any evil. Let us preach the Gospel, serve the poor, practice evangelical virtues, pray for sinners, and always hope in the triumph of grace over sin.”

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Oakland Diocese Moves Towards Publishing Sex Offender List as New Allegations Surface

OAKLAND (CA)
KQED Radio

February 1, 2019

By Rachael Myrow

After a lengthy delay, the Diocese of Oakland says it is getting closer to releasing a list of priests credibly accused of sexual misconduct.

Professing a commitment to protect children, Bishop Michael Barber wrote in a blog post for the Catholic Voice website, published on Oct. 8, 2018, that he planned to release the list within 45 days.

“Over the years, we have been continually revising and improving our accountability process, reinforcing our commitment to protect children, utilizing background checks and mandatory safe environment training for all church employees and volunteers,” wrote Barber. “I have instructed my staff to prioritize this work while also recognizing the importance of making the list as accurate as possible.”

It has been more than three months since Barber wrote the post.

San Jose Diocese Names 15 Clergy Accused of Child Sexual Abuse, But Critics Say the List Falls Short

Stephen Wilcox, the Oakland Diocese chancellor and victims assistance coordinator, said Barber’s timeframe was too aggressive.

“It’s a complicated process,” Wilcox said. “There’s a lot of files to go through. And we committed to a pretty big task.”

Dan McNevin, a spokesman for the national support organization Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, called Barber’s delay a “cover-up.”

“I now believe he delayed it because this case was perking along,” McNevin said. “He didn’t want to expose it.”

The case in question centers on new allegations that surfaced this week against an East Bay priest. The Oakland Diocese has placed Father Alex Castillo on administrative leave as it investigates allegations of sexual misconduct involving a minor. Castillo was ordained in 2011 and has served at parishes in Oakley and Fremont.

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Top Vatican Official Investigating Sex Abuse Resigns After Being Accused Of Sex Abuse

Patheos blog

January 31, 2019

By Michael Stone

Another creepy priest: A top Vatican official in charge of investigating sex abuse in the Catholic Church has resigned from the position after being accused of sexual abuse himself.

The Washington Post reports:
A Vatican official who handles sexual abuse cases for the Catholic Church has quit two months after being accused of sexual abuse.

On Monday, Hermann Geissler resigned from his position as chief of staff in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a body that handles discipline in sexual abuse cases within the Catholic Church, according to a statement from the Holy See’s press office.

According to the report, Father Geissler is accused of sexually harassing women while they were in confession. One victim, former nun Doris Wagner, explained her experience with the abusive priest while she was in confession:

He would keep me there kneeling in front of him for hours, and he would tell me how much he liked me and that he knew that I liked him and even though we couldn’t marry, there would be other ways. At some point, he would try to hold me and kiss me, and I simply panicked and ran out of the room.

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Parents of priest abuse victim hopes others come forward

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
KZTV TV

February 1, 2019

A Tynan family of a victim of sex abuse by a Catholic priest isn’t sure what purpose the release of the names of credibly accused priests really serves. They only hope others who have been victimized will come forward and begin their own healing.

Jimmy and Sheryl Hunt say they’ve been fighting for justice for years for their daughter. Their daughter was raped by a priest in their home seven years ago They got it last February when a Bee County jury found Father Stephen Dougherty guilty of sexual assault.

Father Stephen Dougherty’s name is on the list released by the Diocese of Corpus Christi today. He is serving a 60-year prison sentence for sexual assault.

Sheryl Hunt is sharing her daughter’s story to help other people who may have been abused and never said anything. She says her child said nothing for years, and then troubling signs started to show when she was around 12 years old. Finally, in 2015, the girl revealed that Dougherty had raped her three years earlier.

“Never give up, never give up on your child. If your child even hints something, you as a parent have the responsibility to believe them. And keep on until you get the truth,” said Sheryl Hunt, mother of the sex abuse victim.

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Priest found not guilty of indecently assaulting altar boy

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

February 1, 2019

By David Raliegh

A priest has been found not guilty by a jury on eight counts of indecently assaulting an altar boy in Munster 30 years ago.

The accused had contested all of the charges which related to various dates between 1988 and 1990.

The trial at Limerick Circuit Court heard allegations the priest masturbated himself while the boy was on his lap, and that he had placed his hands inside the boy’s underwear.

The prosecution had alleged the assaults took place at time when the boy was carrying out menial jobs at the priest’s home, such as washing the priest’s car, cutting his lawn, and carrying out painting work.

On Thursday, the accused denied he carried out the alleged assaults, and said he had “no recollection” of the boy ever coming to his home to carry out this work.

The accused, who stepped aside from ministry following the allegations, agreed with Lily Buckley BL, for the prosecution, that he organised and went on outings with altar boys at the time of the alleged assaults on the injured party.

The accused agreed also he was in a position of “great trust” in his parish.

The alleged injured party’s mother told gardaí she remembered her son going to the priest’s house to cut his grass around the time of the alleged offences.

When asked by Ms Buckley if the boy’s mother was “a liar”, the priest replied: “I’m not saying that. I’m saying I have no recollection.”

The accused said he was “shocked” when gardai contacted him about the allegations.

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Report names 80-plus alleged predator priests over 6 decades in San Bernardino parishes

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

January 31, 2019

By Laura Newberry

A Minnesota-based law firm has released a report chronicling decades of alleged sexual abuse by clergy within the San Bernardino Diocese.

In October, the diocese released its own list of 34 priests who had been accused of abusing children. In the new report, released Thursday, Jeff Anderson & Associates of Minnesota contend that the diocese has not been fully transparent about the extent of sexual misconduct within the district.

“San Bernardino has disclosed in the past a certain number of offenders,” said Mike Reck, an attorney for the firm. “We know and believe and can prove that their list is incomplete.”

The report names more than 80 clergy members accused of sexual misconduct dating back to the 1950s. Most of the claims brought against these clerics have been settled or have not been fully evaluated in court, according to the report.

The firm notes that when the diocese released its list, it did not include accused priests who worked within the existing geographical bounds of the San Bernardino Diocese before it was formed in 1978. Before that year, the Diocese of San Diego represented parishes in San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

The names of accused clergy obtained by the firm were found in lawsuits, newspaper articles and reports from other dioceses, according to Reck. The firm also included priests who were accused of sexual misconduct elsewhere but worked in the San Bernardino Diocese at some point.

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KCK archdiocese left six priests off list of clergy who abused minors, group says

KANSAS CITY (KS)
Kansas City Star

January 31, 2019

By Judy L. Thomas

The Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas failed to include six priests on a list it released last week of 22 clergy who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors, a victims’ advocate group said Thursday.

“The allegations arose elsewhere, but these six publicly accused child-molesting priests worked at some point in or around Kansas City, Kansas,” said David Clohessy, former national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “Therefore, they could very well have molested here, too.”

The six priests, Clohessy said, have either been convicted, sued or publicly exposed by Catholic

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The ‘Annus Horribilis’ (Terrible Year) of the Roman Catholic Church

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
Evangelical Focus blog

February 1, 2019

By Leonardo De Chirico

Stable. Traditional. Consistent. For many this has been the image of the Roman Catholic Church. But that was ages ago.

The present-day situation appears to be quite different: uncertain, scrutinized, wavering. The public image of the Roman Catholic Church now is that of a disrupted institution going through a season of internal turmoil. Here are few signs of the current crisis.

Annus Horribilis In September 2016, four cardinals sent to the Pope five questions (in Latin “dubia”, doubts). These questions gave voice to the “grave disorientation and great confusion” that exist in the Catholic community concerning the interpretation of key parts of Amoris Laetitia, the papal document that relaxes access to the sacraments by the divorced. In July 2017, more than 200 Catholic priests and intellectuals from around the world wrote “a filial correction concerning the propagation of heresies” to the Pope, thus elevating the tone of the criticism to the denunciation of doctrinal deviations.

At the end of July 2017, Father Thomas Weinandy, a former chief of staff for the U.S. Bishops’ Committee on Doctrine and a current member of the Vatican’s International Theological Commission, made public a letter sent to the Pope. In it, he argued that “a chronic confusion seems to mark your pontificate obscured by the ambiguity of your words and actions. This fosters within the faithful a growing unease. It compromises their capacity for love, joy and peace”.

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Why Releasing Names Of Accused Texas Clergy Abusers Will Be Triggering For Survivors, But Healing

AUSTIN (TX)
KUT Radio News

January 31, 2019

By Laura Rice

On Thursday, 15 Texas Catholic dioceses plan to release a list of bishops, priests and other Catholic clergy who, according to the church itself, have been “credibly accused of sexually assaulting minors.”
The list is reported to include those alleged of abuse as far back as the 1950s; for many of these cases, it’s the first time they’re getting any public scrutiny. There are more than 4.5 million Catholic Texans, according to the Texas Almanac, and it’s the single largest religious community in the state.

The church itself is making the determination of whether an accusation is credible or not, and the release of the list doesn’t mean any criminal charges have been filed against the alleged abusers. In a church newsletter obtained by Houston TV station KPRC, which is set for release on Sunday, church leaders appear to anticipate fallout among parishioners. “There is no excuse for such acts, and clergy should be held to the highest standard.”

Many have been waiting for this day since last October when the church announced it was preparing the list. Patti Koo leads the San Antonio chapter of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Despite the potential fallout from the lists, Koo says it will also be an empowering experience for abuse survivors.

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Accused Hartford Diocese priest gets questioned in video deposition

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant

February 1, 2019

By Sabrina Herrera

This is a video conference deposition of Father Daniel F. McSheffery taken on Nov. 11, 2005 as part of a series of lawsuits filed by attorney Joel Faxon starting in 2002.

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The rise and fall of Rev. Daniel McSheffery, the ‘sickest, sociopathic monster ever to wear a Roman Catholic collar in Connecticut’

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant

February 1, 2019

By Dave Altimari

A grainy photograph from 1964 shows a collar-wearing Rev. Daniel McSheffery receiving his badge from Hartford’s city manager and fire chief – the young priest towering over the city officials appointing him fire chaplain.

It was the beginning of the ascendancy of Hartford-born McSheffery: over the next eight years he became head administrator of the local Catholic school and the archdiocese’s first-ever pastor-associate. In time, he grew so close to city and state officials that in 1972 the city declared a “Daniel McSheffery Day.” More than 600 people turned out for a dinner honoring him at the Valle’s steakhouse where the keynote speaker was state Attorney General Robert Killian.

But by 2005, McSheffery was sitting at a table in a nondescript Florida office, his eyes avoiding a video camera fixed on him. During that lawsuit deposition, he was confronted with a long list of individuals who accused the church’s former rising star of sexually assaulting them when they were children.

He was asked whether he had assaulted each accuser. Over 35 minutes, McSheffery declined to answer 56 times, citing his Fifth Amendment rights against answering even basic questions like where he was born. When attorney Joel Faxon asked him pointed questions about accusations of raping young boys in church rectories and school offices, McSheffery avoided eye contact, removed his glasses, rubbed his eyes and shrunk his 6-foot-4 body deeper into his chair.

Last week the Archdiocese of Hartford released a list of priests who had been “credibly accused” of molesting children and revealed it had paid $50.6 million to settle lawsuits. It said there was one priest who had 20 claims settled against him for nearly $11 million.

While the archdiocese did not identify that priest, The Courant has determined through court records and interviews with attorneys that it is McSheffery. The 20 claims making him the second-most sued in Connecticut history, just shy of the 21 claims made against former priest Raymond Pcolka from the Bridgeport Diocese.

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Former child abuse victims, advocates push Tennessee to end its expiration date for seeking justice

NASHVILLE (TN)
Nashville Tennessean

February 1, 2019

By Holly Meyer

The sexual abuse started when Scott Walker was 11 years old.

Walker says a young man who befriended him in the late 1980s in their Murfreesboro neighborhood repeatedly raped him until he was 12. But Walker kept quiet and turned to alcohol.

More than a quarter of a century would pass before Walker, then a few years sober, would report the sexual abuse to police. But by then it was too late. The crime was too old to prosecute, the local authorities would tell him.

So eventually, Walker, who is the president of WGNS radio in Murfreesboro, went to his state lawmakers and asked them to help him change the law by eliminating the statute of limitations on child felony sex abuse crimes in Tennessee. Statutes of limitations, intended to protect people from unfair prosecution, put an expiration date on pursuing legal action.
Unbeknownst to Walker, it would not be long before other ordinary Tennesseans would start their own fights for the same change he wanted.

But Walker’s solo quest is what put him in front of panels of lawmakers last spring, recounting the sexual trauma he suffered as a child and the 20-plus years of drinking that followed. His testimony helped. The Tennessee General Assembly directed a state commission to study the matter and report back.

“I’m glad that I was able to give words to hopefully make a difference,” Walker said in a recent interview.

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Our Views: BR diocese grapples with shameful legacy of abuse

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Advocate

February 1, 2019

In a few weeks, Catholics in south Louisiana will join with Christian communities across the world in observing Lent, a season of somber self-appraisal and reflection on the church calendar.

But the Diocese of Baton Rouge isn’t waiting for Ash Wednesday to acknowledge grievous lapses of heart and mind that have shaken the church’s credibility. On Thursday, the diocese released a list of some three dozen clergy who had been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors over the past few decades.

Victims of abuse have already waited too long for help from a church where they had sought spiritual comfort, only to be harmed by those in positions of sacred trust. While that shameful past can’t be changed, Thursday’s release of accused clergy is a necessary step toward reform.

“It is hard to publish this list for all to see, but real renewal and healing cannot take place until we acknowledge the truth of our past,” Bishop Michael Duca, who was appointed last year to lead the diocese, wrote in a letter earlier this month. “Yet even though in this moment we are rightly brought low, I have not lost hope.”

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Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) to Texas Bishops: it’s not enough

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

January 31, 2019

SNAP applauds the release of lists but says that true transparency comes through investigations and urge independent authorities to “trust but verify.”

As advocates and survivors of clergy sexual abuse, we believe that any and all transparency is to be applauded coming from a closed and secret culture such as the Roman Catholic Church. The releasing of these names is at least one small step towards transparency. Still, we are concerned that these lists might not be as transparent as promised.

We recently learned in places like Buffalo, Pennsylvania and Illinois that the dioceses have not been forthright in disclosing full lists of credibly accused priests, nor providing information about the church officials who covered-up their crimes. The only way to ensure that the bishops here in Texas are truly sincere about rebuilding their sacred trust is to allow for independent, properly trained experts in law enforcement to review all the files, including the “secret files” which we learned exist from the Pennsylvania grand jury report last year. We call upon prosecuting attorneys and the Texas attorney general to launch an independent investigation into clergy sex abuse crimes and cover-ups.

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Another Priest Removed from the Diocese of Oakland for Abuse Complaints

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

January 31, 2019

A priest within the Diocese of Oakland has been placed on leave following allegations of sexual abuse of a minor.

We are grateful that the Diocese of Oakland has taken steps to protect children and prevent future cases of abuse by removing Fr. Alex Castillo. However, simply removing allegedly abusive priests from ministry is not enough. We believe that Bishop Michael Barber should also inform the public and parishioners about when his office first received the allegations and what their immediate response was. Only by sharing this information can Catholic officials live up to their 2002 promise to be “open and transparent” in their handling of sexual abuse allegations.

On the point of transparency, we cannot help but notice that the Diocese of Oakland was slated to release a list of “credibly” accused priests last October, yet this release was suddenly delayed. In light of this newest case, we call on Bishop Barber to release this list immediately.

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DA urges victims of sexual abuse by priests to come forward, regardless of when it happened

BATON ROUGE (LA)
WAFB TV

February 1, 2019

By Carmen Farrish

Victims of abuse at the hands of clergy often struggle with reporting what happened to them.

“This is a real personal, difficult decision people will have to make and we respect that, but we need much more information than what we have right now,” said East Baton Rouge District Attorney Hillar Moore. Even after coming forward, victims often have to face tough questions so prosecutors like Moore will know what, if any, legal options they have to press charges.

“We would have to know what act is alleged to have been performed. Is it a touch, penetration… what is it? When did it occur? We would have to compare that with what the law was at the time for those particular acts,” the DA said.

Moore would only be able to prosecute those cases that happened in East Baton Rouge Parish; cases in other parishes would fall to the DAs in those jurisdictions.

Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry has been urged to open a statewide investigation into clergy abuse, and to make it easier for victims to report abuse.

One group that’s calling for that is the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). Victims can call SNAP at 1-877-SNAP-HEALS.

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What it means to be a laicized priest in the Catholic Church

EL PASO (TX)
El Paso Times

January 31, 2019

Zulekha Pitts

Catholic leaders in Texas on Thursday released the largest list of Catholic clergy accused of sexually abusing children since a Pennsylvania report in August 2018. According to the Texas list of 286 priests accused of abuse, only a fraction have been stripped of their clergy status, or laicized.

Laicize defined
To laicize a priest means to dismiss him from his clerical state and reduce him to the lay state, or secularize him, according to Webster’s New World College Dictionary. Catholic.com states that “laicization renders a cleric for ecclesiastical purposes the equivalent of a layman.”

The clerical state if a priest is a juridical status. A priest can lose his clerical state by requesting its removal or by having it taken away. Defrocking and unfrocking also are terms referring to the laicization of a priest.

When a priest is laicized
When a priest is laicized, it doesn’t mean that he is no longer a priest. It means that he is banned from exercising the rights fitting to the clerical state, according to an article on The Catholic World Report website. These privileges include celebrating Mass, listening to confessions and offering the sacraments.

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By the numbers: Where the 31 accused Dallas diocese priests were assigned

DALLAS (TX)
WFAA-TV (Channel 8)

January 31, 2019

By Charlotte Huffman

The 31 priests named by the Dallas Diocese as having been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse had a total of 180 different assignments throughout their careers.

Here’s a breakdown of the list by the numbers:

Which priests have worked in the most number of places?

• Jose Saldana – 16 assignments

• Patrick Lynch – 13 assignments

• Henry McGill – 13 assignments

• Michael Barone – 11 assignments

• Richard Johnson – 10 assignments

• Robert Crisp – 10 assignments

• Michael Flanagan – 10 assignments

Which churches had the highest number of credibly accused priests working there at one time or another?

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A Dallas diocese priest accused of abuse was celebrating Mass and hearing confessions in Duncanville last fall

DALLAS (TX)
WFAA TV

January 31, 2019

By Jason Trahan, Matt Howerton

One of the most recently accused priests on the Dallas diocese list was celebrating Mass and hearing confessions at a Duncanville Catholic church just weeks before he was removed over abuse allegations.

Father Alejandro “Alex” Buitrago is listed as retired in 2017 and was “removed” from his job as a priest in 2018, according to the Dallas diocese list released Thursday. There was no exact date of that removal on the list, but a diocese official said he was removed just last month, in December.

WFAA found several online church bulletins – one from June, two from July, and two from September – noting that Fr. Buitrago is a “guest priest” celebrating Mass, sometimes in Spanish, at the Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Duncanville.

And according to these bulletins, Buitrago was hearing confessions in October and as late as Nov. 17.

The Duncanville church does not appear on Buitrago’s “assignment history” released Thursday by the diocese. When asked why, the diocese said it doesn’t keep track of “guest” appearances by priests, specifically retired ones. Those assignments, they said, are usually scheduled by the local parish priest who may need to fill a spot for Mass or confessions quickly.

Dallas Diocese Bishop Edward Burns told reporters today during a news conference that he would not address questions about specific priests.

Buitrago was ordained in 1967 and served in several parishes before he retired in 2017 and was removed “with faculties suspended” in 2018.

Buitrago told WFAA by phone late Thursday that the “allegations are not true.”

He also said that “there’s no proof.”

Before ending the conversation, Buitrago said he was looking to hire an attorney.

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Lawmakers want to give AG power to investigate accused priests

AUSTIN (TX)
KXAN TV

January 31, 2019

By Phil Prazan

Thursday, Catholic churches across Texas released names of clergy credibly accused of child sex abuse. State law constrains the Texas Attorney General from launching an investigation, as Pennsylvania’s attorney general did.

Several state lawmakers now want to give the Texas Attorney General the power to investigate those crimes without being called upon by a district attorney.

“If our state’s head law enforcement officer does not have the authority to investigate these crimes, I would support legislation that gives the Texas Attorney General the authority that he or she needs to protect Texas children and shine light on institutional cover-ups of such heinous, illegal activity,” said Rep. Eddie Rodriguez, D-Austin.
.
“Of course the state should investigate any crimes committed against children or anyone else, for that matter,” said Rep. Celia Israel, D-Austin, “Priests and other religious leaders are not exempt from the law and no institution should get away with hiding criminal activities.”

“I haven’t spoken with the AG’s office about this particularly reviling aspect of sexual assault,” said Rep. Donna Howard, D-Austin, “But I would be open to exploring the issue of concurrent jurisdiction if it was determined that this was the best path forward to bringing justice to these victims.”

KXAN reached out to the three most influential people in state government – Governor Greg Abbott, Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, and Speaker of the House Dennis Bonnen – and has not yet heard back.

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Baton Rouge bishop includes more details on alleged sex abusers than New Orleans, Houma dioceses did

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Advocate

January 31, 2019

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

It was the third clergy sex-abuse list to be released by a Catholic bishop in Louisiana. And it was by far the most transparent.

In a notable departure from his counterparts in New Orleans and Houma, Baton Rouge Bishop Michael Duca on Thursday made public — in most cases — the number of victims that each clergy member is alleged to have molested and where the abuse occurred.

The list released by New Orleans Archbishop Gregory Aymond on Nov. 2 did not provide that level of detail. Neither did the list put out by Houma-Thibodaux Bishop Shelton Fabre on Jan. 14.

When asked why that information was not included in Aymond’s list, spokeswoman Sarah McDonald defended the completeness of his disclosure, which included names, birth dates, dates of ordination, estimated times of abuse, years when the allegations were first received, years when clergy members were removed from ministry, and pastoral assignments.

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Dallas Catholic Diocese releases list of 31 clergy members

DALLAS (TX)
Dallas Morning News

February 1, 2019

By David Tarrant

The Dallas Catholic Diocese on Thursday joined Catholic leaders across Texas in releasing the names of nearly 300 clergy members who have been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse of children over the last seven decades.

The Dallas diocese said its list of 31 — which was met with skepticism from victims’ advocates — includes those accused of sexual abuse of a minor since 1950 and does not constitute a determination of guilt. Seventeen of the people on the list are dead. Five had been convicted in court. Four of the living had already been “laicized,” or removed from the clergy.

During an afternoon news conference at the diocese headquarters, Dallas Bishop Edward J. Burns said Thursday was “a difficult day for the church in the state of Texas and for the Diocese of Dallas.”

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January 31, 2019

New Columbus Bishop Announced: Diocese Won’t Say When List Of Abusive Priests Will Be Released

COLUMBUS (OH)
WCBE Radio

February 1, 2019

By Jim Lettizia

The Columbus Catholic diocese will soon have a new leader.

Bishop Robert Brennan takes over on March 29. He’ll replace Bishop Fredrick Campbell. The Vatican has accepted Campbell’s resignation, as required when bishops are about to turn 75-years-old. Brennan previously served as Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Rockville Centre, New York. Campbell submitted his resignation last year.questions remain about when the diocese will follow through with a September promise to release a list of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse. Columbus is the only diocese in the state not to do so. Campbell told reporters the list is under review, but gave no release date. Brennan responded this way.

The group called Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said wants Campbell to release the list before he leaves the diocese.

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These Diocese of Corpus Christi priests were accused of sexual abuse

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
Corpus Christi Caller Times

January 31, 2019

By Alexandria Rodriguez

The Catholic Diocese of Corpus Christi released the names of priests and other clergy Thursday that have been “credibly” accused of sexual abuse of minors.

The decision to release the information was made in October by The Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter and the 15 Texas dioceses.

More than 20 Diocese of Corpus Christi clergy members were “credibly” accused of sexual abuse of minors.

The 26 names were released after The Ordinariate of the Chair of St. Peter and the 15 Texas dioceses made the decision to release the names back in October 2018.

The list is split in two parts. One is a list of clergy in “religious orders clerics and extern clerics,” meaning those not from the Diocese of Corpus Christi but those who have visited at some point, the list shows. There are a total of nine names on that list.

The other part is a list of clergy “from or incardinated into the Diocese of Corpus Christi.” Seventeen names are included in that portion of the list.

“The process we went through is to hire four independents that are not part of the diocese, professionals in the legal community to come in and let them have the definitions from their experience of what is credible accusations so they used that in reviewing all of these files,” Bishop Michael Mulvey said. “So they really told us what was credible in their minds as a legal community so we took that and used that.”

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7 Texoma priests accused of child sexual abuse

DALLAS (TX)
KXII TV

January 31, 2019

Seven local clergymen have been named in a list released by the Dallas Dioceses Thursday accused of sexually abusing children.

One of the names on this list is Father Jeremy Myers, a longtime priest at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Sherman. Parishioners tell us his suspension came in just the last few months, and that a meeting was held Wednesday night at the church to prepare the congregation for the news. Sherman Police Chief Zachary Flores said Thursday he is aware of the situation but the department is not actively investigating any cases at this time.

In total, the Dallas Diocese released 31 names of Priests who served in the North Texas area who have been accused of crimes against children since 1950. The church says they did this in an effort to be transparent and open about this problem and in hopes of beginning the process of healing.

The Diocese’s Bishop, Edward Burns, says the names on this list are those of Priests who have allegations against them that the Church considers “credible”. That means that the allegation has been reviewed by a board at the church, and they believe it to be true.

Other names on the list with local ties include Michael Flanagan of St. Mary’s in Sherman (died 2008), William Hughes from St. Patrick’s in Denison (removed in 1989, laicized), William Lane from St. Charles in Gainesville (died 1986), Jose Saldana from St. Elizabeth/Bonham (removed in 1998, laiciziation pending), and Michael Barone from Our Lady of Victory in Paris (retired, removed 2018).

Full details are below.

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Law Firm Names 84 Priests Accused Of Clergy Sex Abuse In San Bernardino, Calls For More Church Transparency

LOS ANGELES (CA)
LAist

January 31, 2019

By Aaron Schrank

A law firm representing California survivors of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests has released a new report detailing alleged abuse by clergy in the Roman Catholic Diocese of San Bernardino.

The 70-page report by Minnesota-based Jeff Anderson and Associates provides background information and assignment history on more than 80 clergy accused of sexual misconduct in San Bernardino and Riverside counties.

The firm — which is representing a Camarillo man in a public nuisance suit against California’s Catholic bishops — has released similar reports on the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and the Diocese of Orange in recent months.

At a news conference in Ontario Thursday, attorneys demanded San Bernardino Bishop Gerald Barnes release the names of predatory priests and Church officials who hid their behavior.

Attorney Mike Reck says today’s disclosure makes children safer.

“This information is information that could have and should have been shared by Church officials long ago,” Reck said. “We’re doing this because the Diocese of San Bernardino did not.”

In October, the Diocese of San Bernardino County released a list of 34 priests who have been accused of sexually abusing children since the diocese formed in 1978. Officials added one name to that list the following month.

Anderson’s report includes those 35 names, as well as 32 names of priests accused of abuse in San Bernardino before 1978, when the region was still part of the Diocese San Diego.

Those 32 names can be found on the Diocese of San Diego’s list of credibly accused priests, which recently added 8 new names, including Rev. Raymond Etienne, who served as pastor in a San Bernardino church 20 years ago. Etienne allegedly sexually assaulted seminarians in Riverside.

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CATHOLIC LEADERS IN TEXAS NAME 286 ACCUSED OF ABUSING CHILDREN

NEW YORK (NY)
CBS News

January 31, 2019

Catholic leaders in Texas on Thursday identified 286 priests and others accused of sexually abusing children. The number represents one of the largest collections of names to be released since an explosive grand jury report last year in Pennsylvania.

Fourteen dioceses in Texas named those credibly accused of abuse. The only diocese on Thursday not to provide names, Fort Worth, had done so more than a decade ago and then provided an updated accounting in October.

The move by Texas church leaders comes months after the shocking Pennsylvania report detailed seven decades of child sexual abuse by more than 300 predator priests. In the months after that report, which came out in August, about 50 dioceses and religious provinces have released the names of nearly 1,250 priests and others accused of abuse. Approximately 60 percent of them have died.

About 30 other dioceses are investigating or have promised to release names of credibly accused priests in the coming months.

In Texas, the Diocese of Dallas and some others relied on retired police and federal investigators to review church files and other material to substantiate claims of abuse.

It’s not clear whether any of the names released Thursday could result in local prosecutors bringing criminal charges. The majority of those identified have died. Some investigations dated back to 1940 while other reviews, as in the case of the Diocese of Lubbock, only went to 1983 because that’s when that diocese was established.

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Diocese of Tyler releases names of clergy ‘credibly accused’ of child sexual abuse

TYLER (TX)
KYTX TV

January 31, 2019

Bishop Joseph E. Strickland and the Diocese of Tyler have released the names of clergy who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing a minor, dating back to at least 1950.

The letter Bishop Strickland released reads as follows:

My Dear Clergy, Consecrated Religious, and Faithful of the Diocese of Tyler,

Today, I join with the other bishops of Texas in releasing the names of clergy (priests and deacons) in our dioceses who are subject to credible allegations of sexual abuse of a minor. Personally, and with my brother bishops, I express my deep sorrow to the survivors of abuse and my commitment to providing pastoral care for each survivor. I apologize for the failings and sins that have hurt the Church so deeply, especially with our most vulnerable members. I especially ask forgiveness for the failings of those who have held positions of leadership in the Church. I have only one name to release for which a credible allegation exists in the Diocese of Tyler since its creation in 1987. But even that is one too many. The abuse of minors – physical, emotional, and above all, sexual – should NEVER happen in churches, in homes, in schools, or anywhere. All of us are called to holiness and to serve as examples of virtue, but our priests and deacons are to be held to a high standard – and rightly so.

The name I am releasing to you today is that of Gustavo Cuello.

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Here are names of Houston-area priests ‘credibly accused’ of child sexual abuse

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

January 31, 2019

By Nicole Hensley

The Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston released the names of priests Thursday who have been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing children over the past decades.

Some of the names were already known, including former Galena Park priest Fernando Noe Guzman, who pleaded guilty in 1992 to sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl, and Donald Leroy Stavinoha, who was convicted of assaulting a 9-year-old altar boy in a church van in 1986.

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Diocese of Lafayette files protective order in request for list of accused priests

LAFAYETTE (LA)
KATC 3

January 31, 2019

By Jim Hummel

The diocese of Lafayette calls a legal request for its list of accused priests “unnecessary”, “grandstanding” and “irrelevant” to the case filed against a St. Landry Parish priest who’s accused of molesting a boy.

Abbeville attorney Tony Fontana filed suit on behalf of a St. Landry Parish man who claims he was molested by Father Michael Guidry while he was a minor. Also named as plaintiffs in the case are the man’s parents; his father is a deacon in the diocese, who served alongside Fr. Guidry at St. Peter’s Church in Morrow.

In October, Fontana filed Interrogatories and Requests for Production to Guidry and the Diocese of Lafayette in the lawsuit. Interrogatories are questions that parties in a lawsuit ask each other; Requests for Production are requests for documents. Answering them is not optional – there are deadlines and requirements that parties have to follow. If the questions aren’t answered, the court gets involved to order compliance.

In his filing, Fontana requested that the diocese name all priests who have credible complaints against them since 2002, as well as all church employees who have credible complaints against them.

In their formal response this month, the diocese objected to the requests, calling them impermissibly vague, grandstanding, unnecessary, and irrelevant. The diocese then filed a motion for a protective order against the plaintiffs’ request.

In response to the action by the diocese, Fontana says he’ll be changing the scope of his lawsuit. He argues over decades, the diocese has created a culture of protecting priests, that enabled Fr. Guidry to molest his client.

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Diocese releases names of Valley priests accused of abuse

BROWNSVILLE (TX)
The Brownsville Herald

January 31, 2019

By Miguel Roberts

Bishop Daniel E. Flores says of the seven bishops, 711 priests and 171 deacons who have served in the Diocese of Brownsville since it was established in 1965, 14 clergy were identified (13 priests and one permanent deacon).

The bishop says none of the clergy listed are in active ministry in the Diocese of Brownsville.

List of Clergy with Credible Allegation of Sexual Abuse of a Minor before the Year 2002

Humberto Acosta

Born: February 7, 1949

Ordained: May 30, 1974

Left diocese in 1994. Allegation fully disclosed to receiving Military Ordinary in Venezuela.

Assignments: St. Mary, Mother of the Church, Brownsville; St. Joseph Church, Edinburg; St. Anthony Church, Harlingen; Our Lady of Mercy Church, Mercedes; St. Margaret Mary Church, Pharr

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28 priests were accused of sex abuse in late 2018. Here’s a running list.

EL PASO (TX)
El Paso Times

January 31, 2019

In November 2018, the Diocese of Las Cruces released the names of 28 priests identified as credibly accused of sex abuse. It included at least six priests with ties to the El Paso Diocese. The Las Cruces Diocese was created from the El Paso Diocese in 1982.

Previously identified accused priests
Santiago Almaguer

Allegations of abuse were reported to the Las Cruces Diocese in 2012, and the incidents are alleged to have occurred between 1975 and 1978. Almaguer was assigned to St. Anthony Seminary in El Paso in 1975. Almaguer officiated several funeral Masses in the early 1980s, according to El Paso Times archives.

Rosario Lopez

In 2010, a man identified as “John Doe” accused the Rev. Rosario Lopez and another priest, Manuel Perez Maramba, of sexual misconduct. He sued both the Las Cruces and El Paso dioceses. The case was settled in 2011. The alleged abuse occurred in 1974, while he was assigned to St. Genevieve in Las Cruces, and Lopez officiated at several funeral Masses in El Paso in 1975, according to El Paso Times archives.

Manuel Perez Maramba

The same man, identified as “John Doe,” named Maramba in his suit against the Las Cruces and El Paso dioceses, but that was not the first allegation against Maramba. The church has settled at least three cases involving Maramba. The Las Cruces Diocese says allegations against Maramba were reported from 2004 to 2012. The sexual misconduct by Maramba is alleged to have occurred between 1976 and 1977. He was assigned to the Diocese of Las Cruces in 1976, to the St. Francis Newman Center in Silver City, New Mexico, in 1976 and 1977; and at St. Genevieve in 1977.

According to a 2007 article in the El Paso Times, a former altar boy said Maramba sexually assaulted him during sleepovers with other altar boys at Maramba’s residence on church property and during trips, including one to Disneyland in California. Maramba, a Benedictine, is believed to have returned to the Philippines in the 1970s. He is believed to still be alive.

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A Dallas diocese priest accused of abuse was saying mass in Duncanville last fall

DALLAS (TX)
WFAA

January 31, 2019

By Jason Trahan

One of the most recently accused priests on the Dallas diocese list was saying mass at a Duncanville Catholic Church through last fall, church bulletins show.

Father Alejandro “Alex” Buitrago is listed as retired in 2017 and was “removed” from his job as a priest in 2018, according to the Dallas diocese list released Thursday. But there is no exact date of that removal.

WFAA found four online church bulletins – one from June, two from July, and one from September – noting that Fr. Buitrago is a “guest priest” giving a mass, sometimes in Spanish, at the Holy Spirit Catholic Church in Duncanville.

Dallas Diocese Bishop Edward Burns told reporters today during a news conference that he would not address questions about specific priests.

Buitrago was ordained in 1967 and served in several parishes before he retired in 2017 and was removed “with faculties suspended” in 2018.

Buitrago could not be reached Thursday.

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Archdiocese releases list of accused clergy with credible sex abuse accusations

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
KXTS TV

January 31, 2019

By Zack Hedrick

The Archdiocese of San Antonio has released a report on allegations of child sexual abuse by clergy members in the Archdiocese.

The report goes back to 1940, outlining more than 150 credible accusations and naming 57 clergy members.

“We were not where we should have been,” said Garcia-Siller. “We did not act in a timely manner.”

From 1940 to 2019, the report states more than 3,000 priests have ministered in the Archdiocese of San Antonio.

The most recent allegation was actually submitted in the last few weeks, Garcia-Siller says.

The Archdiocese states most of the priests identified in the report are either dead or have been removed from ministry.

“This report can bring more people to come forward and it’s part of what we intend,” said Garcia-Siller.

The report shows no one has alleged they were sexually abused by a clergy member in the Archdiocese between 2010 and 2019.

While the list was being compiled, Archbishop Garcia-Siller says he met with survivors of sexual abuse here in San Antonio.

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Dallas diocese names 31 Catholic clergy credibly accused of sexual abuse

DALLAS (TX)
Dallas Morning News

January 31, 2019

By Bill Hanna

The Catholic Diocese of Dallas on Thursday named 31 clergymen credibly accused of sexual abuse against minors.

Twenty-four were priests and seven others were in other dioceses or religious orders. It does not mean there is an admission of guilt by the priests.

The list was compiled by former state and federal law enforcement officers who reviewed the files of 2,424 priests, said Dallas Diocese Bishop Edward Burns.

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Suspended Oakland priest accused of sexual misconduct with a minor

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

January 31, 2019

By Gwendolyn Wu

Father Alex Castillo, a clergyman in the Diocese of Oakland, has been placed on administrative leave following an allegation of inappropriate sexual conduct with a minor, diocese officials said.

“He is not allowed to function publicly as a priest while on administrative leave,” the diocese said in a statement. “As is normative for such a process, the diocese will not provide any further information on the matter during the investigation.”

Castillo was born in Costa Rica and worked at a software development company before joining the seminary. In 2008, he moved to the U.S. and completed his theological studies at St. Patrick’s Seminary in Menlo Park, according to a news release. He was ordained in 2011 by Salvatore Cordileone, the former bishop of Oakland.

It’s unclear when the alleged sexual misconduct occurred and when the allegation was made. Diocese officials said the case was referred to law enforcement because the church is a mandated reporter, but they did not provide any other details.

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Church sex abuse survivors: What to do if you need to report, find support

HOUSTON (TX)
January 31, 2019

By Amanda Cochran

Sexual abuse survivors may be facing a difficult day in the wake of names released by the Catholic Church in Texas.

KPRC wants to remind survivors that there resources available for those who need to report abuse, and those looking for support.

If you are a survivor, and you’d like to report sex abuse, call police. The Houston Police Department Adult Sex Crimes Unit is 713-308-1180. Here is more information published by HPD (pdf).

If you’re feeling suicidal, call 1-800-SUICIDE (1-800-784-2433) to be connected to a certified crisis center near where you are.

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, a self-help group that supports people who have been victimized by clergy, has information for survivors, which includes recommended reading, survivors “wisdom,” information about flashbacks, and how to choose a therapist with your particular experience in mind.

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‘I have no recollection’ – priest denies indecently assaulting altar boy at parochial house

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent

January 31 2019

A priest has denied indecently assaulting an altar boy at his parochial house, 30 years ago.

The accused has pleaded not guilty to a total of eight counts of indecent assault, on dates between September 1988 and June 1990.

The accused, who is in his 60s, is alleged to have put the boy on his lap and placed his hands inside his pants.

On the opening of the trial last Tuesday the prosecution alleged the assaults took place while the boy was carrying out jobs at the priests’s home, such as washing his car, cutting his lawn, and painting.

On Thursday the accused gave direct evidence that had “no recollection” of the boy coming to his home to carry out this work.

The accused, who stepped aside from ministry following the allegations, agreed with Lily Buckley BL, for the prosecution, that he organised and went on outings with altar boys at the time of the alleged assaults on the injured party.

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Ridgeland Man Files Lawsuit for Abuse he Suffered in 2004 as a 9 Year Old

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

January 31, 2019

A man from Ridgeland, MS has filed a lawsuit against the Diocese of Jackson alleging that he was abused in 2004 as a 9 year old. We applaud this brave man for taking action to expose clergy sex crimes and cover ups in the Jackson diocese.

In the lawsuit, the man – who filed anonymously – claims that he reported his allegations to the diocese in 2014 but that his allegations were never fully investigated by the investigator hired by the diocese. According to the newly-filed lawsuit, the Diocese of Jackson said that the victim’s mother was assured the matter would be fully investigated, telling her that “a private investigator would be hired to undertake an investigation beyond what the church would do internally or what the police department would do.”

Making matters worse is the allegation that, immediately after being abused, John Doe told his teacher at his school what had happened to him. In response, the teacher told him “don’t lie like that.” It is difficult to fathom the pain and confusion that must have gone on in the mind of a 9-year-old child when, the very first time that he opened up about what happened, he was branded a liar (to say nothing of the fact that this teacher’s response flies in the face of how she would have been trained to respond in a post-Dallas Charter world).

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37 Baton Rouge-area clergy members on diocese’s official sex abuse list

BATON ROUGE (LA)
The Advocate

January 31, 2019

Bishop Michael Duca on Thursday released the names of 37 clergy who were removed from ministry after accusations that they sexually abused minors were deemed credible. This is the first time in the history of the Diocese of Baton Rouge that a Catholic bishop has attempted to provide an accounting of the identities of the alleged abusers in church ranks.

The list below, in alphabetical order, does not include employees of the church, or any other religious — such as nuns or brothers — who may have been accused. Clergy accused of sexually abusing a minor can try to clear their names through church tribunals, the outcomes of which are secret.

The biographies combine information provided by the bishop with information found in media reports, court documents and interviews.
.
Name: John J. Berube

Age: Died in 2001, age unknown

Position: Missionary Order of Our Lady of La Salette priest

Served where: St. Theresa of Avila in Gonzales (1965), other church parishes in Canada (1970s) and Boston.

Ordained: 1953

Date of abuse: 1965

Allegation received: 1965

Number of allegations: More than one

Assignment at time of abuse: St. Theresa of Avila, Gonzales, LA

Lawsuits filed/previous known allegations: Four men filed a lawsuit in 2003 that alleged Berube’s abuse in 1965.

Removed from ministry: Remained a priest until his death.

Action taken: Priestly service in Diocese of Baton Rouge was terminated in 1965. The La Salette Order was notified of the allegation and he was transferred to the supervision of the La Sallette Superior.

Details: Four boys told their parents in 1965 that Berube had abused them. The parents reported the abuse to their parish priest and the Diocese of Baton Rouge sent Berube back to his missionary order of La Salette. But Berube remained in ministry, was the pastor of Our Lady of Victory in Gatineau, Quebec and several other church parishes in Boston before his death.

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After Diocese of Baton Rouge shares list of priests accused of abuse, here’s what diocese says

BATON ROUGE (LA)
The Advocate

January 31, 2019

The Diocese of Baton Rouge released on Thursday a list of 37 clergy with credible allegations of sexual abuse.

The list included included 14 diocesan priests, 15 priests from religious orders, one seminarian and seven priests of the Archdiocese of New Orleans who had also served in Baton Rouge. Two dozen of the revelations had not been made public before.

Below is everything that the Diocese of Baton Rouge released with the list.

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Jane Does fight for priest abuse policy changes in Catholic Church

AUSTIN (TX)
KXAN TV

January 31, 2019

By Brittany Glas

Assaulted and held captive in the confessional. For devout members of the Catholic Church, it’s something that is difficult to imagine. Isolated, scared and terrified. These are only a few of the ways one woman says she felt when she alleges an assault took place at St. Thomas More in Northwest Austin, located at 10205 N. Farm to Market Road 620.

“The confessional is a sacred space to Catholics where we experience God’s love and His mercy,” the woman explained. “All of that was taken away from me.”

She continued, “You’re already in a vulnerable position when you are in the confessional. As a predator, he took advantage of that vulnerability.”

The woman says within the last five years, Father Isidore Ndagizimana, known as “Father Izzy,” touched her inappropriately during confession and then wouldn’t let her leave.

Terrified and uncertain of what she should do, the woman never called police to report what happened. She told herself she didn’t have to — she says leadership at the parish and the Diocese of Austin assured her they were taking care of the priest and this issue. After all, she says this wasn’t the first complaint they’d received regarding Father Izzy. She trusted the diocese and the church.

“We fully expected to have their full support of us and when that didn’t happen, it was alarming to all of us,” she said.

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NYS lawmakers pass Child Victims Act

NEW YORK (NY)
Queens Chronicle

January 31, 2019

by Ryan Brady

New York is finally set to make the Child Victims Act law.

The legislation was passed by the state Legislature on Monday and is expected to soon be signed by Gov. Cuomo, who included the bill in his fiscal year 2020 budget proposal.

The Child Victims Act would extend the statute of limitations for victims to bring civil legal actions against sexual abusers and organizations thought to have allowed the abuse to occur, giving victims until they turn 55 years old to bring a case.

The bill also seeks to extend the statute for prosecutors to bring criminal charges. Those would be brought until the victim of the abuse turns 28 years old in felony cases; for misdemeanors, it would be 23 years old.

Additionally, the legislation would create a one-year “lookback window” during which civil actions could be started over abuse cases with expired statutes of limitations.

It aims also to change the law so civil claims against public institutions over sexual abuse do not require a 90-day notice of claim.

Many Capitol observers were moved by the remarks of four female legislators, including Assemblywoman Catalina Cruz (D-Jackson Heights), who spoke on the floors of their chambers about sexual abuse they’d personally experienced.

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Cardinal Dolan criticizes Cuomo for ‘stinging criticism’ of church

NEW YORK (NY)
Catholic News Service

January 31, 2019

New York Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan in a Sirius XM broadcast Jan. 29 criticized Gov. Andrew Cuomo for his “stinging criticism of the Catholic Church” in singling out Catholics over the crisis surrounding the sexual abuse of minors.”

“He really caricatured the church and only the church, singling it out for the sexual abuse of minors and contesting that we were the ones that had blocked the Child Victims Act,” Cardinal Dolan told Father Dave Dwyer, co-host of “Conversation With Cardinal Dolan,” which airs every Tuesday afternoon on Sirius XM’s The Catholic Channel.

“And then misquoting, taking out of context, Pope Francis, and to flaunt his dissent from established church teaching and to use all that as an applause line,” the cardinal said of the governor.

He was referring to Cuomo’s State of the State address in which he cited his own Catholic faith and Pope Francis and at the same time emphasized his full backing of a bill — now signed in to law — to radically expand abortion access in the state. Cuomo also criticized the state’s Catholic bishops for their earlier opposition to the Child Victims Act, also now a law.

The new law makes it easier for abuse victim-survivors to sue. The bishops did support the final measure because it included both private and public institutions. Earlier versions only targeted the church.

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Austin man stands by Catholic faith after surviving priest’s alleged abuse

AUSTIN (TX)
News4SA

January 30, 2019

By Melanie Barden

Austin resident Allen Hebert says he’s a survivor of a priest’s abuse and he’s glad the Catholic church is making an effort to be transparent. (CBS Austin)

Thursday, Catholic leaders across Texas will release the names of clergy who have been credibly accused of sexually assaulting children. The list could have names dating back to the 1950’s, according to the Austin Diocese.

Austin resident Allen Hebert says he’s a survivor of a priest’s abuse and he’s glad the Catholic church is making an effort to be transparent.

“The list will help some people realize ‘wow the guy was caught,'” says Hebert.

Hebert says Father Andrew Willemsen, a former priest in the Diocese of Austin, befriended his family and sexually abused him from age 12 to 14. “He just gradually convinced me that doing these things was normal, ‘don’t tell your parents because they don’t understand in fact the church doesn’t understand, but I do,'” says Hebert.

Years later, Hebert reported Father Willemsen to a bishop who knew him. The bishop said Father Willemsen was sent out of the country years earlier after other victims came forward. Willemsen has since passed away.

“It’s been 21 years of healing,” says Hebert.

Hebert tells CBS Austin part of his healing will come from seeing Father Willemsen’s name on the Austin Diocese list.

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Chicago Catholic Teacher Accused Of Sexually Abusing Student

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Patch

January 31, 2019

By Amber Fisher

A Catholic school teacher on Chicago’s West Side is accused of sexually abusing a 14-year-old boy and battering a 13-year-old boy, police said. The teacher taught junior high school at St. Procopius in Pilsen since 2014, according to a statement from the Archdiocese of Chicago.

Yesenia Rodriguez, 27, of the 900 block of North Honore Street, has been suspended and “will remain away from the school until the matter is resolved,” the archdiocese stated.

Rodriguez is accused of sexually abusing the 14-year-old boy in the 1600 block of South Allport — the same block as the school — on May 1, police said.

She is also accused of battering the 13-year-old boy a few blocks from the school in the 1800 block of South Allport between Sept. 15 and Jan. 25, police said.

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Convicted former priest arrested for probation violation

BROWN COUNTY (WI)
WBAY TV

January 31, 2019

A former Green Bay priest convicted of exposing genitals to a child has been arrested on a probation violation, according to jail records.

Richard L Thomas, 81, was arrested Jan. 29, according to the Brown County Inmate lookup website.

VINE, a website that alerts victims of crimes to offender movement, states that Thomas is in custody at the Brown County Jail.

Action 2 News is working to get information on the nature of the probation violation. We’ve reached out to several agencies and will update this story when we get that information.

In 2016, Thomas pleaded no contest to two counts of Exposing Genitals/Pubic Area/Intimate Parts to a Child. He was found guilty and sentenced to four months in jail and three years on probation.

Conditions of probation include lifetime registry on the Wisconsin Sex Offender list and no contact with minors unless approved by the parole agent.

Thomas had exposed himself to a teenager while living at Grellinger Hall, a residence for retired priests.

Last November, Thomas was denied his request to relocate to a new home in Green Bay. A citizen board listened as Thomas cited his two-and-a-half years in therapy for the crimes he committed, hoping the board would grant him the move.

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DiNardo: Tell police if you have information about clergy sex abuse [Opinion]

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

January 31, 2019

By Cardinal Daniel DiNardo

We are still weeks away from Ash Wednesday and the start of the Lenten season, and yet this week like so many I am overwhelmed with thoughts and prayers of contrition as, together with the other Catholic Dioceses in Texas, we will release a list of clergy dating back to 1950 who have been credibly accused of abusing minors.

I very much appreciate this opportunity to tell you why we are releasing this list, how the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston compiled it, and where we go from here.

First, we are releasing this list because we recognize the great and lasting harm done by persons who were supposed to represent Christ to the world, but instead committed the most heinous acts against the most vulnerable people in our society — our youth. I can assure you the genuine shame, embarrassment and outrage that accompany this week’s announcements across Texas are superseded only by the determination we collectively feel to assist victims of these acts of evil to begin or continue the healing process.

To anyone who has been personally affected by this crisis, or their families, I apologize most sincerely. I furthermore understand the anger and frustration you may harbor in your hearts concerning the perpetrators of abuse; or those who in the past may have concealed or ignored such unthinkable behavior; or even those in positions of authority today — yours truly included — who are doing our best however imperfectly to rebuild the trust of the faithful. It is my most fervent prayer that whatever pain was caused would not make you sever your relationship with the Lord, for the Lord — not man — is the truest source of hope and joy in our lives. I implore you not to let any darkness overtake the light in your life.

Let me add: we are also releasing this list because we want anyone with any additional information about any abuse of a minor that may have taken place in this Archdiocese to notify the civil authorities immediately. I recognize and indeed admire the courage required to step forward and share such traumatic experiences, but it is critical that the civil authorities are made aware of any allegations of abuse so as to protect our children.

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Why this time was different: The church’s objections to the Child Victims Act finally ran out

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Daily News

January 29, 2019

By Marci Hamilton

It took more than 15 years, but when the Child Victims Act finally made it to the floor of the Senate, it passed unanimously. This is the harbinger of good things to come in other states.

For the very first time, the most powerful bishop in a state — Cardinal Timothy Dolan — publicly withdrew his opposition to the bill. That opened the door for Republicans to vote for the Child Victims Act, but it also changed the discourse about window legislation across the United States and even the world.

The Catholic bishops, the most publicly relentless opponents of victims’ access to justice, have been running out of arguments against the irrefutable logic of child sex abuse statute of limitations (SOL) reform. At first, they opposed SOL reform, period. Their battle against extending the civil and criminal SOLs did not last long, because it implied that they expected to have ongoing problems in the future. But they continued to ferociously battle the lookback, or window, legislation that revives expired civil SOLs.

They tried to blame the priests (and the victims) while not taking responsibility for their role, or they claimed it all happened decades ago. The 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury report put those arguments to rest, as it prompted the world to take the side of the victims.

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