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.

July 1, 2017

“Keine Differenzen mit dem Papst”: Mainzer Kardinal Müller dennoch von Trennung überrascht

DEUTSCHLAND
Allgemeine Zeitung

[“No differences with the pope”: Mainz Cardinal Müller nevertheless surprised by separation.]

Von Maike Hessedenz

MAINZ – Er sitzt in St. Stephan und lauscht Monsignore Klaus Mayer und dessen Texten zu den Chagall-Fenstern. So als sei nichts gewesen. Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller ist wegen seines Klassentreffen in Mainz, absolviert mit seinen ehemaligen Schulkameraden, mit denen er vor 50 Jahren Abitur am Willigis-Gymnasium gemacht hat, ein buntes Tagesprogramm.

Noch nicht einmal 24 Stunden zuvor hat er von Papst Franziskus erfahren, dass er ab Montag, 3. Juli, nicht mehr Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation sein wird. Eine Entscheidung, die er nicht erwartet habe, sagt Müller im Gespräch mit dieser Zeitung. Überraschung ja, Aufregung nicht.

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.

Cardinal Muller departs the CDF: What does it mean?

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Michael Sean Winters | Jul. 1, 2017 Distinctly Catholic

My colleague Josh McElwee reports this morning on the decision by Pope Francis not to reconfirm Cardinal Gerhard Muller for a second five-year term as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The Holy Father has selected the longtime #2 at the congregation, Archbishop Luis Francisco Ledaria Ferrer, S.J. to move up to the top spot.

The fact that Cardinal Muller was sacked should not come as a surprise. Conservatives within the curia and more progressive types beyond have both long complained that the man, though very gifted intellectually, could not organize a one man parade. He couldn’t run the office. This had become increasingly apparent in the CDF’s continued wrong notes on the subject of clergy sex abuse. Those who see this as an ideological purge on account of Muller’s increasingly confused position on Amoris Laetitia haven’t been paying attention. And, it is more than a little ironic that the same arch-conservatives who are floating the narrative that Muller has been sacked because he stood athwart Francis’ supposedly heterodox agenda were the same people griping about Muller when he was appointed. (See, for example, here and here.) Then, the objection was that Muller was too sympathetic with liberation theology. Now he is the paragon of orthodoxy. These lay faithful who think they embody the papal magisterium are not exactly consistent.

The second principal takeaway is that Pope Francis is completely unafraid to do what is best for the Church. Earlier this week, the Australian authorities brought charges against another high ranking Vatican official, Cardinal George Pell, who was put on a temporary leave of absence to return to his native country and have his day in court. The official statement from the Vatican was deeply ambivalent. Some leaders might think twice before removing a second high ranking official, worried that it would suggest a chaotic situation. Not Francis. He is not someone who cares how things appear so much as how things are. Indeed, this may be the most challenging part of the reform of the curia, getting an organization designed to promote those who work there to remember that its job it to help the pope govern the universal church. Concern with how things look is characteristic of the courtier mentality of year’s past, not the missionary mentality to which the Second Vatican Council and ALL subsequent popes have called the Church.

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.

Cardinal Pell supporters launch public appeal to pay his legal fees after Catholic Church refuses to foot the bill over historic sexual abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By Khaleda Rahman For Daily Mail Australia

A special fund has been established so Australian Catholics can help pay for Cardinal George Pell’s legal fees as he fights charges of historical sexual abuse.

Victorian Police have charged the cardinal, a former Melbourne and Sydney archbishop and Ballarat priest, with multiple sex offences but the details of those offences have not been released.

Australian Catholic authorities have ruled out paying the cardinal’s legal team.

However, a litigation fund has been established for Catholics in Victoria to contribute to Pell’s legal fees, the Herald Sun has revealed.

John Roskam, the executive director of the Institute of Public Affairs, said he obtained an account number and BSB from people ‘assisting the cardinal’ and passed it onto people keen to donate.

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 Francis appoints Spanish Jesuit Ladaria to replace Müller at CDF

VATICAN CITY
America

Gerard O’Connell
July 01, 2017

Pope Francis has appointed Archbishop Luis Ladaria Ferrer, a Spanish Jesuit, as the new prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and successor to Cardinal Gerhard Müller, the Vatican announced at midday, July 1.

Pope Francis’ decision to nominate a new prefect of the C.D.F. is perhaps the most important appointment he has made to the Roman Curia after that of naming Cardinal Pietro Parolin as secretary of state.

It is destined to have far-reaching consequences, not the least of which is to ensure that the C.D.F. and its prefect are rowing with and not against the pope on key issues, including the interpretation of “Amoris Laetitia,” synodality and cooperation with the commission for the protection of minors.

At the time of his appointment, the 73-year old archbishop was Secretary of the C.D.F., that is, the number two position in the congregation. He was appointed to that role by Benedict XVI on July 9, 2008.

Today’s Vatican communique confirmed the story that had been widely circulated the previous afternoon and evening that Francis had not renewed the mandate of the German cardinal. It also announced that Archbishop Ladaria would succeed Cardinal Müller in his roles as the President of the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei,” the Pontifical Biblical Commission and the International Theological Commission.

America has learned that Pope Francis received Cardinal Müller in private audience in his library in the Vatican at noon on June 30 and informed him that he would not be reconfirmed as prefect when his five-year mandate, which was due to end on July 2, concluded. Informed sources told America that Francis offered him the possibility of re-assignment to another position in the Vatican after the summer holidays, but the German cardinal turned this down on the grounds that since he had been head of the “supreme” congregation (as the C.D.F. is called in Vatican parlance) it would be beneath his dignity to accept another post and so he preferred to go into retirement.

Sources told America that the Vatican was scheduled to announce the change at the head of the C.D.F. on Monday, July 3, but after the audience with the pope, Cardinal Müller returned to the C.D.F. and informed his colleagues that he was no longer head of the congregation. That news was quickly passed to media close to the cardinal and became public some hours later. For this reason, the Vatican decided to make the announcement at noon today.

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.

Greek-American Claims He Was Sexually Abused

CALIFORNIA
Pokrov

Author: Theodore Kalmoukos
Date Published: 06/30/2017
Publication: The National Herald

SAN FRANCISCO, CA – Many congregants entering the Annunciation Cathedral in San Francisco on June 18 were surprised to see a young man standing at the door holding assigned alleging that “I was sexually abused at St. Nicholas Range in 2002.”

The 27-year-old Greek-American alleges that the was sexually abused by a Greek Orthodox priest during Confession in 2002 while attending camp at St. Nicholas Range in Dunlap, CA which is under the Greek-Orthodox Metropolis of San Francisco.

Twelve years old at the time, he was sent to confess his sins and the priest allegedly attacked him and now he is trying to find information and photographs to identify his attacker, because he wants to make sure no other boys will be molested by him.

Metropolitan Gerasimos of San Francisco verified the information. Also,he sent out a news announcement stating the following:

“The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese and the Metropolis of San Francisco take all allegations of sexual misconduct very seriously and we grieve for all those affected in such cases.

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 chooses new sex abuse cases chief

VATICAN CITY
SBS (Australia)

Pope Francis has declined to renew the mandate of the Vatican’s conservative doctrine chief, tapping instead a deputy to lead the powerful congregation that handles sex abuse cases and guarantees Catholic orthodoxy.

In a short statement issued on Saturday, the Vatican said Francis thanked Cardinal Gerhard Mueller for his service. …

Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI selected Mueller, his fellow German, to lead the congregation in 2012.

Benedict had taken a hard line against clerical sex abuse during his time as prefect of the congregation himself, and later as Pope, defrocking hundreds of priests accused of raping and molesting children.

It was also Benedict who insisted bishops around the world send all cases of credibly accused priests to the congregation for processing, since bishops had for decades moved pedophiles around from parish to parish rather than sanction or report them to police.

During Mueller’s tenure the sex abuse caseload piled up as more and more victims came forward from Latin America, Europe and beyond.

Last year, Francis confirmed there was a 2000-case backlog and he set about naming new officials in the congregation’s discipline section to process the overload.

Mueller’s handling of the abuse portfolio came under fire from Marie Collins, an Irish survivor of abuse.

Collins resigned from Francis’ sex abuse advisory commission in March in frustration of what she said was the congregation’s “unacceptable” resistance to accepting advice on how to better respond to victims.

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

Vatican won’t pay George Pell’s legal fees, leaving him to foot the bill for a high-powered legal team

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Ellen Whinnett in Vatican City, News Corp Australia Network
July 1, 2017

THE Vatican will not pay George Pell’s legal fees, with the Cardinal required to foot the bill himself for a high-powered legal team as he fights historic sexual abuse charges.

News Corp Australia can confirm Cardinal Pell will not receive financial assistance from the Vatican to cover his transport from Rome to Australia later this month.

As well, he will be required to fund his own legal defence. With a legal team headed by prominent QC Robert Richter, the bill is likely to run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

The Archdiocese in Sydney, where Cardinal Pell was once archbishop, will provide accommodation and “support’’ when he is in Australia.

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.

Special fund set up for donations to cover Cardinal George Pell’s legal bill

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

JOE SPAGNOLO and ELLEN WHINNETT, Herald Sun
July 1, 2017

A SPECIAL fund has been set up for Australian Catholics to donate to Cardinal George Pell’s legal fees after the Sydney archdiocese declared it would not pay for his defence.

The Sunday Herald Sun can today reveal a litigation fund has been established for Catholics in Victoria to help pay for Cardinal Pell’s legal team as he fights historical sexual abuse charges.

Institute of Public Affairs executive director John Roskam today confirmed the fund’s existence.

Mr Roskam, a Catholic, said he had obtained an account number and BSB from “people assisting the cardinal”.

He said he had passed those details on to Catholics who were keen to donate to the 76-year-old’s legal defence.

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.

Too many enemies are basking in George Pell’s situation

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Miranda Devine
July 2, 2017

THE nasty triumphalism which greeted news last week that Cardinal George Pell had been charged by Victoria Police, over historical sexual abuse allegations, beggars belief.

Typical was Fairfax columnist Peter FitzSimons who called on Pell to step down “until such times as he proves innocence”.

Fitz doesn’t seem to understand that our criminal justice system is built on the presumption of ­innocence.

Not that such niceties prevented another Fairfax scribe, Barney Zwartz, to declare yesterday that Pell has “authored his own tragedy (with) his failures of empathy and compassion, his inability to look victims of abuse in the eye, his efforts to limit damage to the church”.

With Pell, the rules of fair play are out the window. All the considerable sins of the Church have been laid at his feet in this hysterical media witch-hunt.

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.

CARDINAL GEORGE PELL SAID TO PARENTS OF ABUSE VICTIMS: “IT’S ALL GOSSIP UNTIL IT’S PROVEN IN COURT”

AUSTRALIA
Kangaroo Court of Australia

In 1997 Cardinal George Pell said to the parents of abuse victims who were whistleblowing on 5 paedophile priests: “We won’t believe any of this. It’s all gossip until it’s proven in court”. It’s one of many examples of George Pell covering up for paedophile priests over many years with some saying he was involved in the cover-ups as far back at the 1970’s. So, it no surprise that Cardinal Pell himself has been charged.

George Pell is about to see firsthand if paedophile allegations can be proven in court given the charges laid against him by the Victoria police on Thursday 29/6/17. What exactly George Pell has been charged with I don’t know other than “multiple historical sexual offences” as announced by the police as per their press release below. But there are previous claims that he sexually abused 3 boys and claims in the recently published book “Cardinal: The Rise and Fall Of George Pell” that George Pell forced 2 boys to give him oral sex in the 1990’s.

A big problem for Pell is that even if he is found not guilty of the charges other evidence might be uncovered during the trial that Pell helped cover-up the crimes of other priests. And that is exactly what is happening in Newcastle now:

“ARCHBISHOP Philip Wilson – the most senior Catholic cleric in the world to be charged with concealing the child sex offences of another priest – will face a two-week hearing in November.” (Click here to read more)

In the below video is Anthony and Christine Foster who had 2 daughters abused by a priest. They fought the church for 9 years to get compensation. Pell said to them regarding paedophile priests: “We won’t believe any of this. It’s all gossip until it’s proven in court”

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 DISMISSES HIS DOCTRINAL CHIEF, CARDINAL MÜLLER, AFTER UNEASY RELATIONSHIP

ROME
The Tablet (UK)

01 July 2017 | by Christopher Lamb

Francis thanked Müller for his work but, unusually, did not announce where the prelate, who is still six years off retirement, would serve next

Pope dismisses his doctrinal chief, Cardinal Müller, after uneasy relationship
Pope Francis has dismissed his doctrinal chief Cardinal Gerhard Müller, after what has been an uneasy relationship between them.

On Saturday the Vatican announced that the German Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith would not serve beyond a single 5-year-term and would be replaced by the congregation’s deputy, Archbishop Luis Ladaria, 73, who is a Jesuit, a member of the same religious order as the Pope.

In a statement Francis thanked Cardinal Müller for his work but, unusually, did not announce where the 69-year-old prelate, who is still six years off retirement, would serve next.

The removal of Müller marks the end of a dramatic week at the Vatican with two senior prelates out of their jobs in the space of three days. Along with the departure of the German doctrinal prefect, Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell announced on Thursday he is taking a leave of absence so he can return to Australia to defend himself against charges of sex abuse.

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 shakes up Vatican by replacing conservative doctrinal chief

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella | VATICAN CITY

In a major shake up of the Vatican’s administration on Saturday, Pope Francis replaced Catholicism’s top theologian, a conservative German cardinal who has been at odds with the pontiff’s vision of a more inclusive Church.

A brief Vatican statement said Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Mueller’s five-year mandate as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, a key department charged with defending Catholic doctrine, would not be renewed.

Mueller, 69, who was appointed by former Pope Benedict in 2012, will be succeeded by the department’s number two, Archbishop Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer.

Ladaria, a 73-year-old Spaniard who, like the Argentine pope is a member of the Jesuit order, is said by those who know him to be a soft-spoken person who shuns the limelight. Mueller, by contrast, often appears in the media.

“They speak the same language and Ladaria is someone who is meek. He does not agitate the pope and does not threaten him,” said a priest who works in the Vatican and knows both Mueller and Ladaria, asking not to be named.

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.

Svolta all’ex Sant’Uffizio: papa Francesco sostituisce Muller con Ladaria Ferrer

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
La Repubblica

CITTÀ DEL VATICANO – Cambio al vertice dell’ex Sant’Uffizio. Papa Francesco ha deciso di non rinnovare di altri cinque anni il mandato dell’attuale prefetto, il cardinale tedesco Gerhard Ludwig Müller. 70 anni, di linea conservatrice, Müller era stato portato a Roma da Benedetto XVI che gli affidò il compito di watchdog della fede dopo l’éra del cardinale William Joseph Levada.

Al suo posto è stato scelto l’attuale segretario della Congregazione, l’arcivescovo Luis Ladaria Ferrer. Spagnolo, gesuita, venne nominato da Benedetto XVI.

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Luis Ladaria, nuevo prefecto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO
Rome Reports

[con video]

–NOTICIA EN ACTUALIZACIÓN.

El Papa Francisco no ha renovado el encargo al hasta ahora prefecto de la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, el cardenal Gerhard Müller y ha nombrado como sucesor al hasta ahora número dos de ese departamento, el jesuita español Luis Ladaria Ferrer.

La medida de no renovar a altos cargos no es habitual en la Santa Sede, aunque podría también encuadrarse dentro de la reforma de Francisco de que los responsables de la Curia alternen su trabajo con cargos pastorales.

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Pope dismisses doctrine chief in turbulent week for Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Digital Journal

BY ELLA IDE (AFP)

Pope Francis has dismissed the church’s chief of doctrine, Cardinal Gerhard Mueller — one of the most powerful cardinals at the Vatican — and appointed a Spanish archbishop to the role, the Vatican said Saturday.

German conservative Mueller, 69, who served a five-year posting as head of the powerful department responsible for church doctrine, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), had clashed with the pope over key reform issues.

He was one of several cardinals who questioned Francis’s determination for the Catholic Church to take a softer line on people traditionally seen as “sinners”, including remarried divorced people who want to take communion.

Mueller had also been caught up in the controversy surrounding the church’s response to the clerical sex abuse scandal after his department was accused of obstructing Francis’s efforts to stop internal cover-ups of abuse.

“In space of three days, two leading Vatican cardinals out of their posts,” said Vatican watcher Christopher Lamb, after Vatican finance chief George Pell was charged with historical sexual assault this week.

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Mother and Baby Home survivors call for State redress

IRELAND
Dublin Live

BY CLAIRE SCOTT
30 JUN 2017

Mother and Baby Homes survivors say the Commission of Investigation has failed to reveal the true horrors of the State-run institutions thus far.

At a meeting in the Westin Hotel this morning, up to 120 people called on the Government to reveal the truth behind what was endured by the unmarried mothers and their children who were put in these homes.

The meeting was called by Minister for Children and Youth Affairs, Katherine Zappone with two primary goals; to identify how the government can help those who were left unaccompanied in institutions; to consult with those affected; and bring proposals to Government before summer recess on July 14.

According to Tony Kelly, founder of United Survivors, a major concern for many of those in attendance was the Minister’s dismissal of the Commission of Investigation’s second interim report.

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.

Zappone critical of HSE failings on mother and baby homes

IRELAND
Irish Times

Kitty Holland

It was a “pity” the HSE did not fully investigate mother and baby homes in 2012 when senior staff warned about probable “criminal” activities in two of them from the 1920s, Minister for Children Katherine Zappone has said.

She said it was “not good”that the call for an inquiry by senior HSE staff five years ago were not heeded. The staff had called for “a fully fledged, fully resourced forensic investigation and State inquiry,” into the Sacred Heart mother and baby homes at Tuam, Co Galway and Bessborough, Co Cork.

A Commission of Investigation into Mother and Baby Homes was established in February 2015. It was in response to public outcry at the findings of historian Catherine Corless that up to 800 infants’ bodies may have been buried in a septic tank at the Tuam home.

However, HSE documents from October 2012, marked “strictly confidential”, show social workers were warning of the “possibility that illegal actions took place” in the Cork and Tuam homes from the 1920s.

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Now This: The Media’s Cardinal Pell Disinformation Campaign

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

The media is having a field day reporting that Australia’s Cardinal George Pell has been accused of child abuse. From the way the media is telling it, one would think that this abuse was something that happened somewhat recently, and the acts of abuse have been well established.

But here are the facts the media is burying and as we know them so far:

1. The accusations date back four decades ago, to the late 1970s.

2. The alleged “abuse” so far does not maintain any explicit sexual acts. After an investigation that went on for nearly two years, two men so far accuse Cardinal Pell of touching them “inappropriately” while splashing and playing games in a swimming pool 40 years ago.

3. One of the accusers, Lyndon Monument, is an admitted drug addict and has served almost a year in prison for violently assaulting a man and a woman over a drug debt. Monument has also accused a boyhood teacher of forcing him to perform sex acts. What an unlucky guy.

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.

Keep Believing

UNITED KINGDOM
The Times

The number of people who attend church services in Scotland is declining at an alarming rate but that does not mean there is no need for what religion offers

These are not heartening days for the church. In Rome, Cardinal Pell, one of Pope Francis’s most senior advisers, is charged with sexual assault, bringing the aura of abuse uncomfortably close to the Holy See. In Scotland, Lady Smith’s inquiry into sexual abuse will hear evidence against institutions whose names — Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul, Sisters of Nazareth, Good Shepherd Sisters, and Christian Brothers — should by rights speak of the Christian values of love and sanctuary, but will instead be explaining why children in their care may not have been safe from assault.

Against this background, a survey of religious attitudes in Scotland shows a steady decline in attendance. Whether the allegations have led to the growing disaffection among churchgoers is hard to say, but they cannot have helped.

The figures are worth closer analysis. They show a steep fall in the years between 1999 and 2016 among those who attend regularly. Only 12 per cent of the population say they go to a service once a week; it used to be 19 per cent. The number of those who never go to church has risen from 49 to 63 per cent, and here it is the younger generation which feels most disconnected: while 56 per cent of 18 to 24-year-olds said in 1999 they did not attend church at all, in 2016 that figure had risen to 80 per cent. This is perhaps the most worrying figure of all because it suggests a rising generation will know or care little about the religion that has formed the country in which they live.

For the Church of Scotland, whose congregations have fallen steeply over the past 17 years, the question arises: what is the kirk for? If it is viewed with suspicion or indifference by the great majority of young people, if its sermons are not heard and its message falls on deaf ears, what then should it be doing to connect with the people it is meant to be serving? Ask any minister and the answer will probably revolve around the church’s pastoral role — the way it acts as a focus for community life, its involvement in care for the elderly or the sick, its function in conducting marriages and funerals, and the way it is frequently the first point of reference when there is an accident or disaster.

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.

Francis replaces Cardinal Muller with deputy Ladaria as head of doctrinal congregation

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

Joshua J. McElwee | Jul. 1, 2017

ROME
Pope Francis has decided not to renew the expiring term of Vatican doctrinal chief Cardinal Gerhard Muller, choosing instead to replace the German prelate with his deputy, a Spanish Jesuit theologian known for keeping a relatively low public profile.

The pontiff has appointed Archbishop Luis Ladaria, 73, as the new prefect for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. He had previously served as the office’s secretary.

A Vatican statement announcing the appointment Saturday did not say whether Muller would be receiving a new role. At 69 years old he is six years away from the traditional retirement age for bishops. It is unusual for a cardinal of that age not to have an official posting.

The Vatican statement simply said the pope thanked Muller for his service at the conclusion of his five-year term as prefect, which began with his appointment by former Pope Benedict XVI on July 2, 2012.

Saturday’s announcement had been highly anticipated over the past day, as rumors began to circulate that Muller would be leaving his position following a meeting the cardinal had Friday with Francis.

The pope’s choice of Ladaria, who has served at the doctrinal congregation since his own appointment by Benedict in 2008, seems to signify that Francis did not want a radical shake-up at the Vatican office, but simply a change in personnel. …

Muller was also publicly questioned in recent months over his willingness to implement recommendations of the new papal commission on clergy sexual abuse, even in instances when Francis had approved them.

When Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins resigned March 1 from the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, she noted in a statement to NCR that Francis’ order for the creation of a new Vatican tribunal to judge bishops who mishandled abuse cases was found by Muller’s congregation to have “legal” difficulties and was never created.

Collins also noted that an order approved by Francis requiring all Vatican offices to respond to letters from abuse victims was not implemented by at least one congregation.

In a March 5 interview, Muller appeared to admit that his congregation was among those that ignored that papal order, saying that if the Vatican responded to victims’ letters it would not respect the role of diocesan bishops in such matters.

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Pell Charges Bring Abuse Scandal to Pope’s Inner Circle

VATICAN CITY
New Delhi Times

A top adviser to Pope Francis was charged with multiple historical sex crimes in his native Australia on Thursday, bringing a worldwide abuse scandal to the heart of the Vatican.

Appointed Vatican economy minister by Francis, Cardinal George Pell is the highest-ranking Church official to face such accusations. He asserted his innocence and said the pontiff had given him leave of absence to return to Australia to defend himself.

“I am looking forward finally to having my day in court. I repeat that I am innocent of these charges. They are false,” the 76-year-old told a news conference at the Vatican. “The whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me.”

Pell’s high-profile departure, even if temporary, puts pressure on a pontiff who has made compassion for the vulnerable his watchword, and has declared zero tolerance for a child abuse scandal that has beset the Church for decades, but has struggled to overcome resistance in the Church hierarchy and clergy.

Pell was hand-picked by Francis to sit on a panel of nine cardinal-advisers to give a greater voice to the Church’s global flock, and to reform the Vatican’s opaque finances. …

Victims angered

Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said Pell would not appear in public Church services for the time being.

Pell told the Australian inquiry last year that the Church had made “catastrophic” choices by refusing to believe abused children, shuffling abusive priests from parish to parish, and relying too heavily on the counsel of priests to solve the problem.

But he angered victims by saying he was too ill to fly home, testifying instead from Rome.

He indicated Thursday that he would now go to Australia.

“I have spoken to my lawyers about when I need to return home and to my doctors about how best to do this,” Pell said.

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Papst trennt sich von Kardinal Müller

VATIKAN
Neue Zurcher Zeitung

(dpa) Kurz nach der Beurlaubung seines Finanzchefs Kardinal George Pell trennt sich Papst Franziskus nun auch vom deutschen Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller. Müller ist Chef der Glaubenskongregation. Seine nach fünf Jahren am 2. Juli endende Amtszeit werde nicht verlängert, hiess es. Das bestätigte der Vatikan am Samstag.

Zunächst hatten dies unter anderem die italienischen Zeitungen «La Stampa» und «Il Messaggero» unter Berufung auf der katholischen Kirche nahestehende Nachrichtenseiten berichtet Den Informationen zufolge traf der Papst Müller bereits am Freitag, um ihm die Entscheidung mitzuteilen.

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Kurienkardinal Müller muss gehen

VATIKAN
BR

Rund zwölf Stunden gab es die Nachricht nur hinter vorgehaltener Hand – jetzt hat sie der Heilige Stuhl bestätigt: Papst Franziskus hat sich von Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller getrennt – seiner Nummer zwei im Vatikan.

Von: Sarah Zerback
Stand: 01.07.201

Nach fünf Jahren an der Spitze der Glaubenskongregation – der ältesten und wichtigsten Behörde der römischen Kurie – endet Müllers Amtszeit regulär morgen. Dafür dankte ihm der Papst in seinem offiziellen Bolletino. Müller selbst war bereits gestern vom Heiligen Vater persönlich informiert worden. Öffentlich begründet wurde die Entscheidung nicht.

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Papst trennt sich von Kardinal Müller

VATIKAN
Katholisch

Vatikan | Rom – 30.06.2017

Papst Franziskus hat sich überraschend von einem seiner ranghöchsten Mitarbeiter getrennt. Wie die Katholische Nachrichten-Agentur (KNA) am Freitagabend im Vatikan erfuhr, wird die Amtszeit von Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller (69) als Leiter der Römischen Glaubenskongregation nicht verlängert. Sie endet nach fünf Jahren fristgerecht am 2. Juli.

Müller verdankte seine Ernennung im Jahr 2012 dem damaligen Papst Benedikt XVI. Im Jahr 2014 erhob Papst Franziskus ihn zum Kardinal. Zwischen Müller und Papst Franziskus hatte es in den vergangenen Jahren Meinungsverschiedenheiten in moraltheologischen Fragen gegeben, insbesondere in der Frage des Umgangs der Kirche mit wiederverheirateten Geschiedenen. Zuletzt hatte Müller am 25. Mai in einem Fernseh-Interview die Tatsache kritisiert, dass Franziskus drei Mitarbeiter des Kardinals gegen dessen Willen entlassen hatte.

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Ex-chief priest, CEO of Badrinath-Kedarnath Temple Committee accused of molestation, case lodged

INDIA
Firstpost

Dehradun: Uttarakhand police has lodged a case against Badrinath-Kedarnath Temple Committee CEO BD Singh and ex-chief priest VD Namburi after a Sadhvi accused them of molestation.

In a similar incident in 2014, the then chief priest of the Badrinath shrine, Keshavan Namboodiri, was arrested for allegedly molesting a pregnant woman in a hotel in News Delhi, PTI had reported.

According to the woman, Namboodiri had called her, whose father knows him, to the hotel. After refusing initially, she went there with her driver. The priest’s associate Vishnu Prasad was present there.

“Namboodiri asked Prasad to go out and shut the door. When the woman sat on a chair, he tried to inappropriately touch her, following which she came out and reached the police station with her driver,” an officer was quoted as saying.

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Mystery of nun’s unsolved murder is latest US documentary hit

UNITED STATES
Daily Mail (UK)

AFP

A documentary about the mysterious killing of a beloved young Catholic nun half a century ago is the latest smash hit on Netflix, highlighting the popularity of true crime stories in America these days.

The series called “The Keepers,” which began last month, is a suspenseful examination of the crime committed in 1969. People with information about the case are now either deceased or elderly.

The nun, a cheerful, buoyant woman known as Sister Cathy, was 26 when she died. She was a teacher at the all-girls’ Archbishop Keough High School, and her students were crazy about her.

But there was apparently a dark side of the school, overseen by the Baltimore archdiocese. The school chaplain, Father Joseph Maskell, was allegedly a dangerous pedophile who exerted psychological domination over his victims.

Maskell, who was also a police chaplain, denied any wrongdoing. He died in 2001 and was never charged.

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Suche nach Missbrauchsopfern wird auf Afrika und Südamerika ausgedehnt

SCHWEIZ
kath.ch

[The West-Swiss association “Groupe Sapec” wants more information with regard to sexual abuse by priests. It expands its search to countries of Africa and South America, Sapec President Jacques Nuoffer told kath.ch.]

Fey VD, 30.6.17 (kath.ch) Mehr Klarheit bezüglich des sexuellen Missbrauchs durch Priester will die Westschweizer Vereinigung «Groupe Sapec». Sie weitet ihre Suche auf Länder Afrikas und Südamerikas aus, erklärte Sapec-Präsident Jacques Nuoffer gegenüber kath.ch.

Sapec war massgeblich an der Schaffung der Kommission «Cecar» (Commission d’écoute, de conciliation, d’arbitrage et de réparation / Kommission für Anhörung, Schlichtung, Urteil, Wiedergutmachung) beteiligt, die vor einem Jahr in der Westschweiz ihre Arbeit aufnahm. Dieser Kommission gehören Vertreter der Kirche, der Zivilgesellschaft und der Opfer an. Bestärkt durch diese Gründung weitet Sapec nun ihre Aktivität aus.

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Head of historical abuse inquiry urges Brokenshire to adopt recommendations

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

July 1 2017

The chairman of Northern Ireland’s historical abuse inquiry has urged James Brokenshire to implement recommendations in his report.

They include compensation, an apology to survivors and a memorial.

Sir Anthony Hart said his report was both widely supported in the previous Assembly earlier this year and the subject of an assurance from the Prime Minister that it would be acted on.

His Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry into the treatment of children in residential homes over many decades found evidence of widespread mistreatment.

Sir Anthony said: “Because of the wide welcome for, and support of the report, expressed in the previous Assembly on 23 January, and the clear undertaking by the Prime Minster to the House of Commons on 8 February that the findings of the report will be ‘taken into account and acted upon’ I feel justified in urging you to put in hand the necessary steps to implement the recommendations of the Inquiry in full as a matter of urgency and without delay.”

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Papst trennt sich vom deutschen Kardinal Müller

VATIKAN
Spiegel

[The task of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is also to act on cases of clergy abuse. At the end of February, Müller had still rejected the allegation of systematic cover-up of child abuse in the Catholic Church. “The church does not cover anything,” said Müller to the Italian newspaper “La Repubblica”. “In some cases, it may have happened from cluelessness, but not systematically.”]

The Vatican and the Catholic Church are still being accused of not being hard enough against child abuse and of partly pedophile clerics. Critics also accuse the Vatican not to deal transparently with the cases.

At the time of Pope Franziskus Predecessor Benedict XVI. It had emerged that Catholic clerics had abused or abused innumerable children worldwide for decades, and the cases were swept under the carpet.

Kurz nach der Beurlaubung seines Finanzchefs Kardinal George Pell trennt sich Papst Franziskus Medienberichten zufolge nun auch vom deutschen Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller. Das berichten am Samstag unter anderem die italienischen Zeitungen “La Stampa” und “Il Messaggero” unter Berufung auf Nachrichtenseiten, die der katholischen Kirche nahestehen.

Müller ist Chef der Glaubenskongregation, die Behörde soll die Glaubens- und Sittenlehre der gesamten katholischen Kirche schützen. Müllers Amtszeit endet nach fünf Jahren am 2. Juli und werde nicht verlängert, hieß es. Gründe für diesen Schritt wurden nicht genannt. Allerdings war bekannt, dass Franziskus und Müller nicht immer auf gleicher Linie lagen

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Pope names Jesuit prelate to succeed Müller at doctrine office

VATICAN CITY
Crux

Catholic News Service
July 1, 2017

ROME – Promoting the secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to the office of prefect, Pope Francis chose not to ask German Cardinal Gerhard Müller to serve a second five-year term in the post.

The Vatican announced July 1 that the pope chose as prefect Spanish Archbishop Luis Ladaria Ferrer, 73, a Jesuit theologian who had been appointed secretary of the congregation in 2008 by then-Pope Benedict XVI.

“The Holy Father Francis thanked His Eminence Cardinal Ludwig Müller at the conclusion of his quinquennial mandate,” the Vatican announcement said. No new position was announced for Cardinal Müller, who at 69 is still more than five years away from the normal retirement age for a bishop.

Anticipating an announcement of the pope’s decision June 30, both the English Rorate Caeli blog and the Italian Corrispondenza Romana blog presented the pope’s move as a dismissal of the German cardinal, who originally was appointed to the post by now-retired Pope Benedict XVI.

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Cardinal Pell’s sex abuse charges come as no surprise to those familiar with the Church’s attitude

UNITED KINGDOM
Independent

The Catholic Church has systematically tried to discredit and silence sex abuse survivors, while forgiving the perpetrators

Phil Johnson

Unless you have been a victim of childhood sexual abuse it is difficult for people to understand the often life-long impact that it can have. Survivors suffer low self-esteem, guilt, shame and often have mental health problems which can lead to addiction and even suicide.

When that abuse is committed by a priest, it is compounded by the abuse of power as well as being linked to the victim’s faith. This often leaves survivors conflicted and more vulnerable to being exploited by church authorities who seem to be prone to forgiving the abusers and blaming the victims.

The vast majority of children do not report their abuse at the time, most of those who disclose or seek help do so well into adulthood. When they do report abuse to the churches they are often branded a liars or fantasists and in many cases little real action is taken.

Both major churches, Roman Catholic and Anglican, have consistently demonstrated that they are more interested in protecting the status and reputation of the institution, than in protecting children and the vulnerable, and there is little pastoral or counselling support for the victims.

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AG’s office nabs three men, including Bible study teacher, in child sex sting

PENNSYLVANIA
PennLive

BY CHRISTINE VENDEL cvendel@pennlive.com

The state attorney general’s office this week arrested three men after they allegedly agreed to meet an undercover officer posing as a 14-year-old boy for sex.

One of the men, Timothy M. Myers, 32, of Latrobe, told police after his arrest that he was a youth pastor. While his claim of being a pastor didn’t appear to be accurate, investigators said, the AG’s office was continuing to investigate Myers’ background and exposure to other potential victims.

It does appear Myers volunteered at his church and was preparing to travel to Peru in late July to conduct a Bible School for children. He used an online fundraising page to pay for his trip.

Myers also is shown on a Facebook page dressed in a sumo wrestler costume participating in a Westmoreland County youth event in 2009.

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HIA inquiry chairman repeats plea to politicians

NORTHERN IRELAND
BBC News

The chair of a major inquiry into child abuse in Northern Ireland has repeated his plea to politicians to act on his recommendations to compensate victims.

Sir Anthony Hart chaired the Historical Institutional Abuse (HIA) Inquiry which gave its report to Stormont in January.

Stormont’s government collapsed later that month before any action was taken.

Sir Anthony has written to Secretary of State James Brokenshire urging him and Stormont party leaders to implement the recommendations as a matter of urgency.

The inquiry recommended that a tax-free compensation payment should be made to all survivors of institutional child abuse, with lump sums ranging from £7,500 to £100,000.

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Laws introduced to help prevent child abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

New laws have been introduced in Victoria to help protect children from abuse, holding religious, childcare, government and community organisations to account and modernising child pornography laws.

The Wrongs Amendment (Organisational Child Abuse) Act 2017 came into force on Saturday with new duty-of-care requirements for organisations that care for or have authority over children.

The onus of proof has been reversed, reducing the legal barriers for survivors to sue.

Also, the Crimes Amendment (Sexual Offences) Act 2016 came into force on Saturday, which reforms 50 sexual offences in a bid to stop abuse taking place online via platforms such as Skype or Snapchat.

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Sex abuse accused George Pell hires one-time Mick Gatto lawyer

AUSTRALIA
7 News

AAP on July 1, 2017

Cardinal George Pell has hired top criminal barrister Robert Richter, QC, to help defend him on charges of historical sexual assault and will reportedly be at a Melbourne court on July 26 for a scheduled hearing.

The 76-year-old on Thursday told journalists at the Vatican Press Office he was looking forward to having his day in court after a two-year investigation, “leaks to the media” and “relentless character assassination”.

Victorian Police have charged the cardinal, a former Melbourne and Sydney archbishop and Ballarat priest, with multiple sex offences but the details of those offences have not been released.

Cardinal Pell said the laying of charges had strengthened his resolve to prove his innocence.

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Vaticano. Ladaria Ferrer nuovo Prefetto della Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Avvenire

Oggi papa Francesco ha ringraziato il cardinale tedesco Gerhard Mueller alla conclusione del suo mandato quinquennale di Prefetto della Congregazione per la dottrina della fede e di Presidente della Pontificia Commissione “Ecclesia Dei”, della Pontificia Commissione Biblica e della Commissione Teologica Internazionale, e ha chiamato a succedergli Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer, gesuita spagnolo attuale segretario del stesso dicastero.

Chi è il nuovo Prefetto della Congregazione per la dottrina della fede?

Il 9 luglio 2008 Benedetto XVI aveva nominato Ladaria Ferrer come “numero due” del dicastero: è professore dell’Università Gregoriana, ha 73 anni, è originario di Manacor, la seconda città, dopo Palma, dell’isola di Maiorca nelle Baleari.

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Pope names Archbishop Luis Ladaria as Müller’s successor to head CDF

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

By Elise Harris

Vatican City, Jul 1, 2017 / 04:21 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The Vatican announced Saturday that as Cardinal Gerhard Müller’s term as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith comes to an end, the Pope has not renewed it, but has appointed Jesuit Archbishop Luis Ladaria to take his place.

The decision was officially published in a July 1 communique from the Vatican, which stated the Holy Father’s thanks to Cardinal Müller for his term.

July 2nd marks the end of Müller’s five-year mandate as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which included the positions of president of the Pontifical Commission “Ecclesia Dei,” the Pontifical Biblical Commission and the International Theological Commission.

Pope Francis named Jesuit Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer, archbishop of Thibica, as his successor in the same duties. Archbishop Ladaria has been secretary, the second in command, of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith since 2008.

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Pope Francis dismisses church’s chief of doctrine Cardinal Gerhard Mueller after clashes over reform measures

VATICAN CITY
Firstpost

AFP

Jul 01 2017

Vatican City: Pope Francis has dismissed the church’s chief of doctrine Cardinal Gerhard Mueller — one of the most powerful cardinals at the Vatican — and appointed a Spanish Archbishop to the role, the Vatican said on Saturday.

German conservative Mueller, 69, who served a five-year posting as head of the powerful department responsible for church doctrine, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), had clashed with the pope over key reform issues.

He was one of several cardinals who questioned Francis’s determination for the Catholic Church to take a softer line on people traditionally seen as “sinners”, including remarried divorced people who want to take Communion.

Mueller had also been caught up in the controversy surrounding the Church’s response to the clerical sex abuse scandal after his department was accused earlier this year of obstructing Francis’s efforts to stop internal cover-ups of abuse.

The Vatican said Mueller’s five-year term would not be renewed and he would be replaced by CDF Secretary Archbishop Luis Francisco Ladaria Ferrer, a 73-year-old Spaniard.

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POPE DECLINES TO RENEW MANDATE FOR GERMAN DOCTRINE CHIEF

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

BY NICOLE WINFIELD
ASSOCIATED PRESS

VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis declined Saturday to renew the mandate of the Vatican’s conservative doctrine chief, tapping instead a deputy to lead the powerful congregation that handles sex abuse cases and guarantees Catholic orthodoxy around the world.

In a short statement, the Vatican said Francis thanked Cardinal Gerhard Mueller for his service. Mueller’s five-year term ends this weekend and he turns 70 in December. The normal retirement age for bishops is 75.

Francis could have kept him on, but declined to do so. The two have clashed over the pope’s opening to allowing civilly remarried Catholics to receive Communion. Mueller has insisted they cannot, given church teaching on the indissolubility of marriage.

The Jesuit pope tapped the No. 2 in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Jesuit Monsignor Luis Ferrer, to succeed Mueller.

It was the second major shakeup this week, after Francis granted another Vatican hardliner, Cardinal George Pell, a leave of absence to return to his native Australia to face trial on sexual assault charges.

Mueller and Pell are two most powerful cardinals in the Vatican, after the Vatican secretary of state, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, and their absences will likely create something of a power vacuum for the conservative wing in the Holy See hierarchy.

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How Cardinal Pell Rose to Power, Trailed by a Cloud of Scandal

AUSTRALIA/ROME
The New York Times

By DAMIEN CAVE
JUNE 30, 2017

SYDNEY — When more than a dozen sexual abuse victims from Cardinal George Pell’s hometown in Australia, Ballarat, flew to Rome to meet with him last year, they carried crushing stories of pain caused by local priests, and varied demands for Vatican action.

As they spoke, the victims said, Cardinal Pell remained stiff, eyes downcast. Then Andrew Collins, whose family had been close to Cardinal Pell for years, gave him a hug. The cardinal seemed to soften and later delivered an emotional statement promising to help.

“But that never happened,” Mr. Collins said. “I’ve had four survivors that I’ve known personally take their own lives this year.”

“That was part of what we were trying to get through to people in Rome,” he said. “We need help and assistance.”

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Personal records a priority for mother and baby home survivors

IRELAND
Irish Times

Kitty Holland

The “most important” thing for survivors of mother and baby homes is getting all their personal information, according to many of those attending the first of a series of consultation meetings with Minister for Children Katherine Zappone.

Speaking to The Irish Times after the meeting in Dublin on Friday, survivors said they wanted redress, counselling, more information about the ongoing Commission of Inquiry into the homes and the recording of a “collective history” of their experiences.

Almost all, however, said “the biggest thing” was accessing the records of their time in institutions, as well as to those of their mothers and siblings, and their own medical records.

Ms Zappone hosted the event in Dublin city centre which was attended by 120 survivors and family members. It was oversubscribed and more events are planned around the country.

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Volunteer Bible study teacher arrested in undercover child sex sting, police say

PENNSYLVANIA
WPXI

A Westmoreland County Bible study teacher is the latest person accused of trying to meet for sex with a person he thought was a teenage boy, police say.

Timothy Michael Myers, 32, of Latrobe, is the third person to be arrested in two days, accused of trying to meet with an undercover agent posing as a 14-year-old boy.

Myers is accused of exchanging sexual messages with the undercover agent, and then showing up to try and meet the person for sex.

Myers volunteered at a Greensburg church where he worked with children and taught a Bible study class within the past month.

He was arrested Wednesday evening after agents said he showed up at a Hempfield Township hotel thinking he was meet with a 14-year-old boy.

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BREAKING: Pope removes conservative Vatican doctrine chief

ROME
LifeSite News

John-Henry Westen

ROME, June 30, 2017 (LifeSiteNews) – Pope Francis is removing the head of the Vatican’s doctrinal office, one of the Church’s most senior cardinals, who has taken an orthodox stand from the beginning of the pontificate.

LifeSite has confirmed with a source in Rome that Cardinal Gerhard Muller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, is to be removed from his office on July 2, the end of his five-year mandate in the position.

In recent years, the mandate for the office has been extended until the normal retirement age of 75. In the case of Cardinal Josef Ratzinger, it was extended beyond, until his election to the pontificate at age 78. …

The story broke last week in the Spanish-language newspaper Clarin, and was reported today by the Rome-based Corrispondenza Romana.

Clarin suggested Muller would be replaced by Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley, known as a yes-man in Church circles. Other candidates include Vienna Cardinal Chistoph Schonborn and Archbishop Victor Fernandez, a close collaborator of Pope Francis.

According to the Vatican press office, Pope Francis met Cardinal Muller this morning, but no information about the meeting has been made public.

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June 30, 2017

“Il cardinale Mueller pronto a lasciare”

ROMA
La Stampa

[According to two sites, Rorate coeli (United States) and Corrispondenza Romana (Italy), internet channels Catholic groups tradizionialisti and conservatives, the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Mueller will leave office when his term expires on July 2.]

Secondo due siti, Rorate coeli (Stati Uniti) e Corrispondenza Romana (Italia), canali internet di gruppi cattolici tradizionialisti e conservatori, il prefetto della Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede, il cardinale Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, che il 2 luglio prossimo compie i suoi cinque anni di nomina canonica, lascerà l’incarico.

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Papst Franziskus trennt sich von Kardinal Müller als Leiter der Glaubenskongregation

VATIKAN
Sueddeutsche Zeitung

[Pope Francis has separated himself surprisingly from one of his senior staff. The term of office of Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller as head of the Roman Congregation for the Doctine of the Faith was not extended. It ends after five years on time 2 July. This is reported by the Catholic News Agency (KNA) and thus confirms corresponding media reports.]

Papst Franziskus hat sich überraschend von einem seiner ranghöchsten Mitarbeiter getrennt. Die Amtszeit von Kardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller als Leiter der Römischen Glaubenskongregation werde nicht verlängert. Sie ende nach fünf Jahren fristgerecht am 2. Juli. Das berichtet die Katholische Nachrichten-Agentur (KNA) und bestätigt damit entsprechende Medienberichte.

Müller, ehemals Bischof von Regensburg, verdankte den Posten dem damaligen Papst Benedikt XVI, der ihn 2012 nach Rom holte. Zwei Jahre später erhob ihn Papst Franziskus zum Kardinal.

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El Papa avanza en la renovación y relevaría al guardián de la ortodoxia

VATICANO
Clarin

[In the Vatican corridors one speaks in a low voice or whispering of a change in the Roman Curia, the central government of the Church which could arrive sooner than many expect. The pope would take advantage of the fact that on July 2 he fulfills his five-year mandate at the head of the strategic Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. German Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, who will turn 70 in December, is said to be replaced by Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the 73-year-old Boston archbishop. He is said to be a favorite to replace Mueller. It is not by chance that Pope Francis recently appointed O’Malley as a member of the CDF and thus training him in the mechanisms of the congregation over which he would preside. Cardinal O’Malley chairs the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.]

Julio Algañaraz

En los pasillos vaticanos se habla en voz baja o susurrando de un cambio de fondo en las cumbres de la Curia Romana, el gobierno central de la Iglesia, que podría llegar más pronto de lo que muchos esperan. El Papa aprovecharía que el 2 de julio cumple su mandato de cinco años al frente de la estratégica Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe el cardenal alemán Gerhard Mueller, que en diciembre cumplirá 70 años. Francisco lo cambiaría en primer lugar para sacarse de encima una relación difícil, a veces conflictiva, con el guardián de la ortodoxia, que recibió en herencia de su predecesor, Benedicto XVI, el hoy Papa emérito Joseph Ratzinger.

Sin el pesado condicionamiento de Mueller, quedaría abierto el camino de renovación de la última fase del pontificado de Jorge Bergoglio, quien en diciembre cumplirá 81 años. Para el relevo es favorito el arzobispo de Boston, cardenal Sean O’Mailley, de 73 años, que no por casualidad Jorge Bergoglio nombró hace poco miembro de la Doctrina de la Fe, adiestrándolo en los mecanismos de la congregación que estaría destinado a presidir.

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CDL. GERHARD MÜLLER BOOTED FROM CDF

UNITED STATES
Church Militant

by Christine Niles, M.St. (Oxon.), J.D. • ChurchMilitant.com • June 30, 2017

Speculation that Boston’s Cdl. Sean O’Malley will replace him

VATICAN (ChurchMilitant.com) – The Vatican’s chief doctrinal watchdog has been dismissed from his post. Reports claim Cdl. Gerhard Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) — and outspoken critic of the agenda to open Holy Communion to the divorced and remarried — is being removed by Pope Francis at the end of Müller’s five-year term, July 2, 2017. Speculation is that Boston’s Cdl. Sean O’Malley may replace him.

The news follows months of rumors that Müller’s time at the CDF was nearing an end, as he became increasingly vocal about his denunciations of attempts to change Church discipline and doctrine on marriage and the sacraments. …

Spanish newspaper Clarìn speculates Cdl. O’Malley of Boston is being eyed to head the CDF, a Franciscan who has come under fire for his refusal to confront Catholic politicians, including attending a gala ceremony in honor of President Obama in May, appearing with Democrat John Kerry at a graduation ceremony in 2014, and sitting in choir at pro-abort stalwart Ted Kennedy’s funeral in 2009.

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Vatican silent in response to reports of Müller’s dismissal from C.D.F.

UNITED STATES
America

Gerard O’Connell
June 30, 2017

Editor’s note: This story will be updated as events develop.

Late Friday evening, as multiple news outlets were reporting that Pope Francis has not reconfirmed Cardinal Müller as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the end of his five-year mandate, the Vatican remained silent.

The news was first reported by the blog Rorate Caeli, which has frequently criticized Pope Francis. Despite queries to the Vatican press office, neither a statement nor a denial has been issued, and church officials are uniformly refusing to comment.

Benedict XVI appointed Cardinal Müller as head of the C.D.F. in 2012 for a period of five years. The 69-year-old German cardinal, who has remained close to the emeritus pope, was due for reconfirmation in that position on July 2 and had a meeting with Pope Francis on the morning of June 30.

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SUORE INDAGATE PER STALKING/ Roma, Superiora costretta a rassegnare le dimissioni: aggressioni e minacce

ITALIA
Il Sussidiario

[SISTERS INVESTIGATED FOR STALKING, ROME: LIANA SISTER FORCED TO RESIGN, INVOLVED TWO PRIESTS – It ‘an incredible story that would take place in the Institute of the Society “Queen of the Lilies” in Rome where four religious, namely two nuns and two priests, werey were investigated for stalking. To tell the story is the daily La Repubblica that reveals the suspicions of the prosecution against the two nuns and their colleagues.]

SUORE INDAGATE PER STALKING, ROMA: SUOR LIANA COSTRETTA A DIMETTERSI, COINVOLTI ANCHE DUE PRETI – E’ una storia incredibile quella che sarebbe avvenuta nell’Istituto della Compagnia “Regina dei Gigli” a Roma, dove quattro religiosi, precisamente due suore e due preti, sarebbero stati indagati per stalking. A raccontare la vicenda è il quotidiano La Repubblica che rivela i sospetti della procura nei confronti delle due monache e dei loro colleghi. Secondo l’accusa, i quattro religiosi avrebbero messo in atto una serie di atteggiamenti fino a riuscire nell’intento di destituire illegalmente dall’Istituto la Madre Superiora. Sarebbe così emerso un presunto golpe messo in atto dalla suore finite nel registro degli indagati per stalking insieme ai due preti coinvolti e che avrebbero spinto Suor Liana, l’anziana guida dell’Istituto, a lasciare il suo ruolo a causa delle ripetute minacce. Sul caso sono in corso le indagini da parte del pm Vincenzo Barba intenzionato a fare piena luce sull’intricata vicenda.

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Celia Wexler explores women’s struggles to be feminist and Catholic

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Gail DeGeorge | Apr. 5, 2017

CATHOLIC WOMEN CONFRONT THEIR CHURCH: STORIES OF HURT AND HOPE
By Celia Viggo Wexler
Published by Rowman & Littlefield, 216 pages, $34

The central question explored in Celia Viggo Wexler’s engaging and thought-provoking book is one that no doubt many millions of women have struggled with: Is it possible for a woman to be both a feminist and a Catholic?

For Wexler, an award-winning journalist and Huffington Post blogger, this is not an academic question. She had reached a juncture in which she had to “find a way to stay Catholic that made sense to me and respected my intellect and feminism, or I would have to leave the church.”

She is not a theologian or historian, she writes, nor does she intend the book to be a definitive work about the views of Catholic women. She seeks instead to inspire conversations among women who, like her, are “torn between the faith they love and the institutional church that often sets their teeth on edge.”

Wexler profiles nine Catholic women and their personal stories, faith journeys and often complicated relationships with the church. In choosing women to write about, Wexler says she didn’t have an agenda, she simply wanted to know if others shared her struggle.

Some of the women are well-known:

* Social Service Sr. Simone Campbell, executive director of the Catholic social justice lobby NETWORK;
* Barbara Blaine, founder of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP);
* Frances Kissling, who opposed the church’s teaching on contraception and abortion and was president of Catholics for a Free Choice (now Catholics for Choice) for 25 years;
* Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of DignityUSA, which represents gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Catholics;
* Diana Hayes, the first African-American woman to earn a pontifical doctorate in sacred theology from the Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium, who is now an emeritus professor of theology at Georgetown University.

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Pope Francis may be about to dismiss Vatican’s doctrinal chief

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

By Josephine McKenna

VATICAN CITY (RNS) Pope Francis may be about to dismiss his enforcer of orthodoxy, one of the most powerful cardinals at the Vatican, according to unconfirmed media reports.

The Italian Catholic website Corrispondenza Romana reported Friday (June 30) that Francis would not renew the term of Cardinal Gerhard Mueller, a conservative German cardinal who heads the powerful department responsible for church doctrine.

Mueller’s five-year term as head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith was due to expire on Sunday. He is 69, which is six years short of the normal retirement age of bishops. Under normal circumstances, his five-year contract would be renewed.

If the reports are correct, Mueller’s ouster would cap one of the most tumultuous weeks at the Vatican since the election of Pope Francis in 2013.

On Thursday, Cardinal George Pell announced he would take a leave of absence as Vatican finance chief to face charges he sexually abused boys while a young priest in Australia.

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Divisive Cardinal Pell faces his day in court over abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
Irish Times

Pádraig Collins in Sydney

For years, Cardinal George Pell was dogged by questions of what he knew about the child sexual abuse that happened under his watch in his home state of Victoria. Only his alleged victims knew that he might one day be charged with sexual assault offences himself – allegations Pell denies.

Born to a father, also called George, of English Anglican heritage, and a mother, Margaret (nee Burke), of devout Irish Catholic descent, Pell was always marked for success. Academically bright (he has a PhD from Oxford) and athletically gifted (he is 6’4” and to this day looks more like the retired Australian rules footballer he could have been than what you might expect a 76-year-old cardinal to look like), he was drawn inexorably to the church.

A portrait of the Cork-born Melbourne archbishop Daniel Mannix hung in the family home in Ballarat when Pell was growing up. Mannix was by far Australia’s most famous Catholic of his time (he died in 1963), and Pell is by any measure the most well known now.

From his refusal to give communion to gay people (in May 2002 he told the congregation at Sydney’s St Mary’s Cathedral: “God made Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve, and important consequences follow from this”), to his climate change scepticism (in July 2015 he publicly criticised Pope Francis’s decision to speak out on environmental matters: “The church has got no mandate from the Lord to pronounce on scientific matters,” he said), Pell has always been contentious.

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Cardinal George Pell’s sex-assault charges will ripple through the Vatican

CANADA
The Globe and Mail

MICHAEL W. HIGGINS
Special to The Globe and Mail

Michael W. Higgins is a distinguished professor of Catholic Thought at Sacred Heart University in Fairfield, Conn. He is the co-author of Suffer the Children Unto Me: An Open Inquiry into the Clerical Sex Abuse Scandal.

It couldn’t have happened at a more inauspicious time: on the very day when Pope Francis is celebrating with his most recently “created” cardinals and his newly appointed Metropolitan Archbishops in Rome, news came that his Prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy, Cardinal George Pell, has been charged with multiple counts of historical sexual assault by police in the Australian state of Victoria.

Cardinal Pell is a senior-ranking prelate who enjoys the pontiff’s confidence on all matters fiduciary. Francis put him in command of a new dicasterial or governance structure designed to clean house among the various financial bodies operative in the Vatican, including the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See (APSA) and the Institute for the Works of Religion (IOR), commonly known as the Vatican Bank. Both institutions could be rogue in their accounting and auditing procedures, fiercely autonomous in the exercise of their power and draped in Medici-like opacity.

Cardinal Pell was to bring clarity, accountability and transparency to all the financial transactions conducted within the Vatican, and his progress – impeded in part by recalcitrant groupings of clerics and laity fearful of losing their authority – has been impressive, if laboured.

But the qualities that Pope Francis admired in the outspoken former archbishop of both Melbourne, and latterly Sydney, qualities that included a relentless application of energy and focus to his reforming task, a no-holds-barred approach to opposition to his initiatives and an able intelligence quick to grasp the complexity of things, were in and of themselves incapable of securing Cardinal Pell sanctuary from the controversies that hounded him “Down Under.”

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Investigator: Former Columbus youth pastor shares inappropriate photos through email

GEORGIA
WTVM

[with video]

By Sharifa Jackson, Reporter

COLUMBUS, GA (WTVM) – New details were released Friday morning after a former youth pastor appeared in court on an attempted sodomy charge.

Jay Singleton, 45, pleaded not guilty to attempted aggravated child molestation and criminal attempted sodomy and guilty to contempt of court.

Singleton was arrested Wednesday when Columbus Police Department’s Special Victims Unit was investigating an individual for attempted aggravated child molestation.

His bond was set at more than $50,000 including $25,000 for criminal attempt sodomy, $25,000 for attempted aggravated child molestation and $1,000 for driving while license suspended/revoked.

According to investigators, an undercover sting revealed that more than 400 emails were shared between the investigator and Singleton. Investigators say he was engaged in a plan to meet with a 14-year-old girl, however, no juvenile was actually involved.

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Are Catholic Clergy more Likely to Be Paedophiles than the General Public?

The Tippling Philosopher

June 30, 2017 by Jonathan MS Pearce

This is a question that has been kicking around ever since the child sex abuse scandal involving the Catholic church came to the fore. In around 2010, loads of articles came out, citing some data, that the priesthood was broadly in line with national averages, some people claimed it was actually worse in Protestant churches/organisations, and many claiming (as a result) that this was not a Catholic problem per se, and that other denominations rate the same.

The reality could be, as Andrew Brown surmised, that the notoriety of the scandal and public perception might be skewed because of the institutional cover-up of the Catholic church. Let’s have a brief look.

Australia

The Royal Commission, an investigation started by the then Australian PM Julia Gillard into historic sex abuse, has thrown this data wide open.

The research has shown that, in Australia, 7% of priests nationally have been accused of sex abuse. In the Diocese of Sale, it is twice as many, with 15.1%, and a whopping 40% of the St John of God order being accused. Here are some interesting Australian stats:

Catholic Data Project Results:

4,444 — number of people who alleged incidents of child sexual abuse,
1,000 — The number of separate institutions the claims related to,
78 percent male, 22 percent female — gender of the person making the claim,
97 percent male — people who made claims of child sexual abuse received by religious orders, with only religious brother members,
11.5 for boys, 10.5 for girls — the average age of people who made claims of child sexual abuse at the time of the alleged abuse,
33 years —the average time between the alleged abuse and the date the claim was made,
1880 — number alleged perpetrators were identified in claims,
597 or 32 percent were religious brothers,
572 or 30 percent were priests,
543 or 29 percent were lay people,
96 or 5 percent were religious sisters,
90 percent male, 10 percent female — age [??] of the allege perpetrators,
500+ — number of unknown people were identified as alleged perpetrators.#

The relevance of this is that this is now perhaps the biggest and most comprehensive review of Catholic sex abuse.

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‘Cardinal Rambo’ has the Kangaroo Cardinal George Pell in his sights

ROME
The Weekend Australian

July 1, 2017

JACQUELIN MAGNAY
Foreign correspondentEurope
@jacquelinmagnay

When George Pell swaps his Rome apartment overlooking the Vatican for a Melbourne courtroom later this month, Italians will be saying a firm adieu, not expect­ing him to return.

Eighty-year-old Pope Francis, who placed extraordinary belief in Cardinal Pell to reform and instit­utionalise the tangled web of the church’s multi-billion-dollar fin­an­ces and rich assets, has already foreshadowed his retirement in 2019.

If all goes well for Cardinal Pell, his anticipated return to an influential position — for he knows the church always looks after its own — will have been vastly watered down and almost impossible to enact if the Pope is gone.

Cardinal Pell has a string of enem­ies inside the Vatican, includin­g one whose penchant for owning guns earned him the moniker “Cardinal Rambo’’.

This cardinal, real name Dom­enico Calcagno, heads the APSA — the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See — or the bank of the Vatican, with more than $1 billion in assets.

For the past three years, there has been enmity and a power tussl­e between cardinals Rambo and Pell — known as the Kangaroo Cardinal — over ultimate control of these monies.

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Cardinal Müller to Be Dismissed?

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

Reports say prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith will not have his five year mandate renewed on Sunday.

Edward Pentin

Three Vatican sources, including one close to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, have told the Register this evening that Cardinal Gerhard Müller is to be imminently dismissed as prefect of the dicastery, although the Vatican itself has not officially confirmed the news.

If true, an announcement is likely tomorrow.

The Italian Catholic website Corrispondenza Romana and the Rorate Caeli blog were the first to break the news, with Corrispondenza Romana sending out an email this evening with the definitive message: “His Eminence Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller, prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith from July 2, 2012, has been fired by Pope Francis on the exact date that his 5-year mandate expires.”

It went on to note that Cardinal Müller is one of the cardinals who sought to interpret Amoris Laetitia (The Joy of Love), Pope Francis’ apostolic exhortation on the family, “according to a hermeneutic of continuity with the Tradition of the Church.” It added that that had made him a critic of the direction taken by the Pope.

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St. Paul’s School investigating new allegations of ‘concerning’ behavior

NEW HAMPSHIRE
Boston Globe

By John R. Ellement GLOBE STAFF JUNE 30, 2017

Administrators at St. Paul’s School are once again turning to an outside investigator after students reported “concerning” behavior at the elite private boarding school, just weeks after the school admitted that 13 staffers engaged in sexual misconduct with students over four decades.

In a statement provided Friday by the school’s public relations department, Rector Michael G. Hirschfeld said an outside investigator has been hired to “get to the bottom of what took place. The investigation is ongoing and we do not yet have a final report.’’

According to Hirschfeld, the investigation at the Concord, N.H., school started earlier in June when “students came forward and alerted SPS faculty to behaviors that were concerning to them.” He did not specify what the “behaviors” were.

But the Concord Monitor reported Thursday that about eight boys in the same dormitory competed in a “game of sexual conquest” where the winners would get their names on a crown. The newspaper’s account broadly mirrors the “senior salute” sexual contest among St. Paul students that played a role in the sexual assault of Chessy Prout by Owen Labrie at the school in 2014.

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Guide to the Pell Case: What processes has he faced and what are the accusations?

ROME
Rome Reports

[with video]

2017-06-30

Cardinal George Pell gave a press conference in the Vatican before traveling to Australia, where he is due to testify on July 18 since he is accused of alleged sexual abuse. The cardinal explained that it is a crime that he abhors and has vigorously denied the accusations.

CARD. GEORGE PELL
Prefect, Secretariat for the Economy
“These matters have been under investigation and now for two years. There have been leaks to the media. There has been relentless character assassination. I’m innocent of these charges. They are false. The whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me.”

Cardinal George Pell has testified in various interrogations and commissions established by the Australian authorities in recent years.

Now the cardinal will take a leave of absence to attend a new judicial process in which he now appears as the one accused of alleged abuse.

In the press communication, the Vatican has expressed their respect for justice, but also their discontent.

GREG BURKE
Spokesman for the Holy See
“The Holy See has learned with regret the news. The Holy Father, having been informed by Card. Pell, has granted the Cardinal a leave of absence so he can defend himself.”

The first time George Pell was accused of sexual abuse was in 2002, when he was archbishop of Sydney. The case was finally dismissed for lack of evidence.

In 2012 ,the Australian government established a commission of inquiry to clarify the alleged sexual abuse committed from 1960 to 1980 in Australia in different religious institutions in the country.

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Clerical abuse survivor says Pell leave “comes too late

ROME
Xinhuanet

Source: Xinhua 2017-07-01

Editor: Mu Xuequan

ROME, June 30 (Xinhua) — Clergy sexual abuse survivor Marie Collins told Italian newspaper La Repubblica in an interview Friday that the placing on leave of Cardinal George Pell, a senior adviser to Pope Francis, had “come too late.”

The Pope placed Pell on leave Thursday, after the Cardinal announced at a Vatican press conference that he was leaving to fight sexual assault charges in Australia.

In an official statement, the Vatican Press Office said Thursday that the Vatican “has learned with regret the news of charges filed in Australia against Card. George Pell for decades-old actions that have been attributed to him.”

“The Holy Father, having been informed by Card. Pell, has granted the cardinal a leave of absence so he can defend himself,” the Vatican press statement said.
In 2014, Pope Francis appointed Pell as Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy, a powerful post in the Vatican.

“His nomination…was a slap in the face to Australian victims first, and then to those in the (Catholic) Church who combat pedophilia,” said Collins, who was sexually abused by Catholic priests as a child in the 1960s, according to her foundation’s website.

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The Pope’s Pedophile?

UNITED STATES
New York Magazine

By Andrew Sullivan

Well into Pope Francis’s pontificate, one of his closest aides, the third-highest official in the Catholic Church, Cardinal George Pell, has now been credibly accused of several acts of sexual assault, including one of rape. Australian police have concluded that the evidence they have is sufficient to move forward, even in cases that happened long ago. Yesterday, Pell was allowed to hold his own press conference at the Vatican to tell us that he spoke with the Pope only a few days ago about a campaign of “character assassination” against him: “I’m very grateful to the Holy Father for giving me this leave to return to Australia.” The Pope’s spokesperson defended the Cardinal by saying that “it is important to recall that Cardinal Pell has openly and repeatedly condemned as important and intolerable acts of abuse committed against minors.” And, of course, we should respect a presumption of innocence before a trial on crimes of this magnitude and depravity.

But it all feels sickeningly familiar. And this denouement comes as absolutely no surprise to anyone who has been following the sex-abuse crisis in the church — including Cardinal Pell’s own behavior — for the last few decades. A cloud has hung over Pell since he was an Episcopal vicar in a parish in the 1970s that has been described as a “pedophile’s paradise and a child’s nightmare.” A full 15 years ago, Pell was accused of molesting a 12-year-old boy but when the church investigated, a retired Supreme Court justice found that there wasn’t enough evidence, even though the victim appeared to be “speaking honestly from actual recollection.” A year later, Pope John Paul II made Pell a cardinal. Several new alleged victims spoke out in a book published only last month.

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Pell case shows poor judgment, will stain Pope Francis legacy, victims say

VATCAN CITY
Reuters

By Philip Pullella | VATICAN CITY

The charging of a top Vatican official, Cardinal George Pell, with sex-abuse crimes this week will permanently stain the legacy of Pope Francis, exposing poor judgment in his appointment, victims of sexual abuse said.

Francis’ appointment of Pell, dogged for many years by victims’ allegations that he shielded abusers and had himself molested two young boys in the 1960s, underscores a lack of sufficient vetting for top Vatican posts, Vatican sources said.

Pell, appointed as Francis’ economy minister in 2014, has always strongly denied he molested children or turned a blind eye to abuses. On Thursday, Australian police charged him with historical sex crimes after a two-year investigation.

The charges bring the Church’s global abuse scandal to the heart of the Vatican and, according to victims and their advocates, weaken the pope’s credibility in tackling a decades-old crisis against which he vowed “zero tolerance”.

“I think his legacy is under severe threat,” said Peter Saunders, a victim of clergy abuse who took a leave of absence from the papal advisory commission on abuse last year in protest over a lack of progress.

“I genuinely thought when I met with Francis three years ago that ‘this man is the real deal’ and he is going to get on with things and I really thought there was a prospect of real, significant, and rapid change,” Saunders, a Briton, said in a telephone interview.

“But he is surrounded by people who don’t want change.”

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Cardinal’s sex abuse charges raise questions about pope’s record

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

By Josephine McKenna

VATICAN CITY (RNS) As the Vatican reeled from news that one of its top officials was taking a leave to fight historical sex abuse charges in Australia, the spotlight quickly turned to Pope Francis, with his critics slamming him for failing to do enough to tackle the vexing issue.

Cardinal George Pell, the most senior figure in church history to face child sex abuse charges, is the Vatican’s financial czar and a trusted adviser to the pope.

Pell, 76, is facing “multiple charges in respect of historic sexual offences,” said police in the Australian state of Victoria. …

“There is a deep disconnect between the pope’s words and his actions,” said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the advocacy group Bishop Accountability.

Barrett Doyle was critical of the pope for keeping Pell in his post until now, despite knowledge of the allegations against him.

“The pope is not a reformer when it comes to the crisis,” she said. “He apologizes often and uses buzz phrases like ‘zero tolerance.’ But underneath he remains the minimizer and the defender of accused priests.”

Robert Mickens, an American editor for the French Catholic magazine La Croix, said it was significant that Pell had stepped aside but he criticized the pope’s record on clerical abuse.

“Whether Pell specifically asked for a leave from his Vatican duties to return for the trial, or whether the pope ordered him to do so, the effect is the same. And it is a development from the past,” Mickens said, when the church would have defended Vatican churchmen.

But Mickens said Francis has never made the church’s sexual abuse crisis a priority of his administration.

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Licenziato da papa Francesco il cardinale Müller

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Corrispondenza Romana

[Cardinal Gerhard Ludwig Müller , prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith since July 2, 2012, was dismissed by Pope Francis at the exact expiration of his term of 5 years. Cardinal Müller is one of the cardinals who have sought to interpret the ‘ Amoris Laetitia, according to a hermeneutic of continuity with the tradition of the Church. This was enough to count him among the critics of the new course imposed by papa Bergoglio.

Licenziato da papa Francesco il cardinale MullerLicenziato da papa Francesco il cardinale Muller
Sua Eminenza il Cardinale Gerhard Ludwig Müller, Prefetto della Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede dal 2 luglio 2012, è stato licenziato da papa Francesco allo scadere esatto del suo mandato di 5 anni.

Il cardinale Müller è uno dei cardinali che hanno cercato di interpretare l’Amoris laetitia, secondo un’ermeneutica di continuità con la Tradizione della Chiesa. Ciò è bastato per annoverarlo tra i critici del nuovo corso imposto da papa Bergoglio.

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Paedophilia scandals sully merciful Pope’s reputation

ROME
The Times (UK)

Tom Kington, Rome

The sexual abuse charges against Cardinal Pell will further sully what critics say is the Pope’s inadequate record of tackling priestly abuse.

Francis has won praise around the world for his focus on mercy over doctrine, but many believe he still does not comprehend the gravity of abuse in the Church. In 2014 he appeared to be on the right track in creating a commission to advise on weeding out predator priests but, three years on, two of the commission members, Peter Saunders and Marie Collins — themselves victims of abuse by clergymen — have left amid frustrations over its perceived inaction.

In 2015 the Pope provoked an outcry when he described as “lefties” the opponents of a Chilean bishop accused of covering up for an abuser. The same year, Jozef Wesolowski, a former archbishop accused of paying shoeshine boys for sex in the Dominican Republic, died before he could face trial.

The accusations against Cardinal Pell are the latest in a wave of abuse scandals which started in the US before spreading to Europe and Australia over the past two decades, and which marred the papacy of Francis’s predecessor, Benedict. Francis has himself been accused of overlooking abuse while archbishop of Buenos Aires.

“The Pell case will rock the Vatican to the core,” said Mr Saunders, who questioned the Vatican’s appetite for reform. “Pell will have the best lawyers, while our abuse commission lacked resources,” he added.

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ANALYSIS: Charges against Cardinal Pell bring taint of abuse to the top of the Catholic Church

ROME
The Local

AFP
news@thelocal.it
30 June 2017

Australia’s move to bring sexual assault charges against Cardinal George Pell is the latest chapter in a damaging saga of abuse that the Catholic church has struggled to draw a line under.
Pell has been ordered to appear on July 18th before a Melbourne judge to answer unspecified multiple counts arising from his country’s extensive inquiry into decades of abuse in institutions dealing with children.

The 76-year-old is the most senior cleric yet to be directly implicated in a multi-faceted scandal that has plagued the Church for decades but has never before come so close to its highest ranks.

As head of a powerful economic department, Pell is one of Pope Francis’s closest advisors, his point-man on cleaning up Vatican finances and the number three in the Holy See’s hierarchy.

As such he is a much higher-profile figure than Keith O’Brien, the former archbishop of Edinburgh who renounced his rights as a cardinal in 2015 after admitting misconduct in relation to alleged drunken sexual assaults on young priests.

Pell has admitted errors in managing abuse by priests under his authority but denies any personal wrongdoing and Francis has offered him strong support.

But regardless of its outcome, the impending court case seems likely to further tarnish the image of a global institution long accused of complacency over a cancer in its midst.

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Sex offence charges against George Pell have put Pope Francis’ vision for the Church under pressure

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

Ellen Whinnett in Vatican City, News Corp Australia Network
June 30, 2017

THE police decision to lay historic sex offence charges against Australian Cardinal George Pell has triggered a scandal within the Vatican and will further fuel criticism of Pope Francis’ vision for the future of the church.

News of the charges — lodged on the holy day of the Feast of Saint Peter and Saint Paul — sent shockwaves through the Vatican, the independent city state in Rome which is the global headquarters of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics.

Thirty minutes before Pope Francis led a feast-day Mass in Saint Peter’s Square, Pell did something never done before by such a senior Vatican official.
The former Archbishop of Melbourne and Sydney, now the third highest-ranked official in the Vatican, faced the world’s media and confirmed he was returning to Australia to fight charges of sex offences laid against him.

The news of the charges, first announced by Victoria Police at 2am Rome time, sparked global headlines, with the international media rushing to the Holy See press office to cover Pell’s press statement.

Paddy Agnew, the Rome correspondent for the Irish Times, told News Corp the situation was unprecedented, with Cardinal Pell the highest-ranked official ever to face such charges.

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Cardinal George Pell in hiding as Vatican opponents move to exploit his sex offence charges

AUSTRALIA
Daily Telegraph

Ellen Whinnett in Vatican City, News Corp Australia Network

CARDINAL George Pell has gone to ground, disappearing from his apartment outside the walls of the Vatican as he prepares to return to Australia to fight sex offence charges levelled against him.

The 76-year-old has not been seen at his apartment since he issued a press statement on Thursday morning confirming he would return to Australia in order to clear his name in court.

While staff came and went throughout Thursday and into Friday morning, there was no sign of Cardinal Pell, Australia’s most senior Catholic, prompting speculation he had moved into a temporary apartment inside the walls of the Vatican, or even to one of the country retreats owned by the church.

He has been granted a leave of absence by Pope Francis from his job as Vatican treasurer while he returns to Australia to defend himself in a process which will take months, and possibly years, to resolve.

While the Vatican has issued a statement of support, the Pope himself is yet to directly comment on the charges.

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Peter Saunders on the George Pell charges

AUSTRALIA
ABC – 7.30

[with video]

Transcript

LEIGH SALES, PRESENTER: Peter Saunders is a member of the Papal Child Abuse Commission. It advises the Catholic Church on how to better deal with abuse allegations and victims.

To give us a bit more context about this issue within the church and the significance of the Pell charges, Peter Saunders joined me from London.

Peter Saunders, a priest being charged with sexual offences is nothing unique. Why is this case making such an impact?

PETER SAUNDERS, VICTIM ADVOCATE: I think this is a massive story because there has certainly has never been anybody of the seniority and the position within the Vatican having been charged before, so this is huge and unlike many other places around the world where there have been accusations against very senior clerics, but the power of the church, sometimes the local or the corruption of local politicians and, of course, the power of money, has resulted in clerics not actually being charged, which is an outrage and I can give examples, but I think credit to Australia and to the Victoria Police for doing their job.

LEIGH SALES: You said that this is the first time somebody of this seniority has been charged. Do you mean with sexual assault offences or have there been other cases that involve say criminal charges in other matters?

PETER SAUNDERS: I am not aware of any cardinals, certainly any cardinals with positions within the hierarchy of the Vatican having ever been charged with any kind of crime in the past, so I think this is a unique occurrence.

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CNN OP-ED ON SEXUAL ABUSE IS FLAWED

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on a CNN posted piece by Heidi Schlumpf:

CNN has every right to post the commentary of any author it chooses, but is it too much to ask that someone fact check the submissions?

The recent attacks on Cardinal George Pell, which I debunked on June 29, gave Heidi Schlumpf the opportunity to write “Why the Catholic Church Must Continue Soul-Searching.” It is more than tendentious, it is factually wrong. She writes for the National Catholic Reporter, a dissident publication that rejects the Church’s teachings on sexuality.

The title of her article accurately conveys her thesis: the abuse scandal is on-going. That is why she says that the charges against Cardinal Pell are “a reminder that the church’s sex abuse crisis is not over.” She adds that Pell’s case “shows that the decades long sex abuse crisis is not a ‘once and done’ thing.”

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Will priests discuss George Pell at Sunday Mass?

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

Emily Woods Neelima Choahan

Tens of thousands of Victorians will go to mass this weekend, just days after Australia’s highest ranking Catholic was charged with historical sex abuse.

But how will Catholic priests address the allegations against Cardinal George Pell, if they address them at all?

Father Brendan Reed, from Our Lady of Good Counsel and All Hallows in Balwyn, said he would discuss the news, as “you can’t pretend it’s not happening”.

“I think people want to know what their priests are thinking when things like this come out in the public,” he said.

“I’ll be saying that I think we should have faith and trust in our judicial and legal system, that a just outcome is what everybody is hoping for, for all parties concerned.”

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Canadian bishops to issue new sexual-abuse prevention document

CANADA
Catholic Register

BY DEBORAH GYAPONG, CANADIAN CATHOLIC NEWS
June 30, 2017

OTTAWA – Twenty-five years after becoming pioneers in establishing protocols for the protection of minors, Canada’s bishops are poised to issue an updated document on sexual-abuse prevention.

The new document by the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops was approved in principle at the bishops’ plenary last September and is slated for publication later this year, said CCCB communications director Rene Laprise. The document is in the final stages of translation into French and English and proofreading of both texts, he said.

The new document — with a working title of Moving Towards Healing and Renewal: the Canadian Experience — will update and replace the 1992 document From Pain to Hope.
The CCCB initiative comes amid reports of a pilot program in the Montreal archdiocese that requires digital fingerprints and background checks for priests and pastoral staff who work with children, minors and vulnerable adults. That program will be expanded from 10 churches to all of the archdiocese’s 194 parishes by 2020.

Even those who pass the checks are not allowed to be alone with children. For example, a priest hearing a child’s confession will be in a place where they are visible to another adult.

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The day with Sarah Harman

AUSTRALIA
DW

Catholic Sex Abuse Scandal: Australian police charge top Vatican cardinal with sexual assault offenses Nemtsov Murder Trial: Jury convicts five men over death of Russian opposition leader Turkish-German Tensions: Berlin refuses to allow Turkish President to hold rally in Germany

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La sombra de los abusos sexuales llega por primera vez a la cúpula vaticana

ROMA
El Pais (Espana)

Roma 30 JUN 2017

DANIEL VERDÚ

Las dos principales áreas de reforma del papa Francisco se vieron ayer golpeadas en la misma persona. George Pell, superministro de Finanzas del Vaticano, consejero directo del Pontífice y máxima autoridad eclesiástica de Australia, ha sido imputado por un caso múltiple de abusos a menores. A ello se suma su presunto encubrimiento masivo a sacerdotes. Es la primera vez que un escándalo de este tipo afecta a una autoridad vaticana de tan alto rango.

El día no podía ser peor. A las 8.30, justo antes de la gran misa oficiada por el Papa con motivo del día de San Pedro y San Pablo y con la mayoría de cardenales del mundo llegados al Vaticano para el Consistorio del día anterior, Pell comparecía ante los medios. Se sabía que había sido imputado por un caso múltiple de abusos a menores. Pero anunció que regresa a Australia para testificar el 18 de julio ante el juez. El Vaticano, al menos públicamente, le respalda y no le obliga a dimitir. “La Santa Sede recibe con desagrado la noticia del envío a juicio del cardenal […] El Santo Padre le ha concedido un periodo de excedencia para poderse defender”.

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Cardeal George Pell acusado de abuso sexual de menores na Austrália

PORTUGAL
DN

O cardeal George Pell, que dirige a Secretaria da Economia do Vaticano, foi hoje acusado de crimes de abuso sexual de menores na Austrália e intimado a comparecer em tribunal dentro de dias, anunciou a polícia.

George Pell, o principal conselheiro financeiro do papa Francisco e o mais alto representante da Igreja católica na Austrália, é o mais alto membro do Vaticano a ser formalmente indiciado por crimes relacionados com abuso sexual de menores.

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Vatikan-Finanzchef legt Amt vorübergehend nieder

DEUTSCHLAND
Frankfurter Allgemeine

Eiiner der ranghöchsten Kardinäle im Vatikan, Finanzchef George Pell, legt angesichts von Missbrauchsvorwürfen in seiner Heimat Australien sein Amt vorübergehend nieder. Papst Franziskus habe ihm die Erlaubnis für die Auszeit gegeben, um in Australien seine Unschuld zu beweisen, gab der Papst-Vertraute am Donnerstag in Rom bekannt. Die Anschuldigungen seien komplett falsch.

In Australien war kurz zuvor ein Ermittlungsverfahren gegen den 76-Jährigen wegen Missbrauchsverdachts eingeleitet worden. Wie die Polizei im Bundesstaat Victoria mitteilte, muss Pell am 18. Juli zu einer Gerichtsanhörung in Melbourne erscheinen. Es ist das erste Mal, dass gegen einen derart ranghohen Würdenträger im Vatikan wegen Missbrauchsvorwürfen ermittelt wird.

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CARDINAL GEORGE PELL

IRELAND
Marie Collins

Cardinal Pell.is facing criminal charges of sex abuse in his home country of Australia.
I have been asked if I think he will be found guilty of these charges. As I have always believed in justice for all it would not be right for me to pre judge any criminal case before it is tried in a court, the law will take it’s course.

What I have no hesitation in saying is that it has been proved that Cardinal Pell is guilty of the appalling mishandling of cases of abuse when still in place in Australia and causing untold pain to the victims in those cases. He should never have been allowed to hide out in the Vatican to avoid having to face those in his home country who needed answers. The fact that Cardinal Pell was appointed to a very senior post in the Vatican rather than having to face any sanction for his mishandling of abuse cases was a slap in the face to all those he had let down so badly, not only victims but Catholic people who have spent years now hearing assurance from the Catholic Church that it is taking the issue seriously. How does promotion to an exalted position in the Church show justice to those he had failed?.

Finally now that the Cardinal has actually been charged with abuse himself he has been stepped down from his position and will not be allowed to avoid facing court by remaining in the Vatican – far too late. Leaving aside the issue of whether he should have been in that position in the first place, once an accusation of sexual abuse was made against him he should have been stepped down until that accusation had been investigated. This is the standard that applies to ordinary priests and religious in my country and elsewhere under Church guidelines- why should rank make any difference.
———————————————–

Bishop Accountability

The case of Cardinal Pell has shown is how little reliance we can put on assurances from the Catholic Church that bishops and religious superiors will face sanctions if they mishandle abuse cases. It did not happen with him and still we have not seen any bishop transparently sanctioned or removed for negligence in handling abuse. We were told that the PCPM’s recommended Accountability Tribunal announced in June 2015, though never implemented, had not been needed as the Holy Father’s Moto Propo in 2016 “As a Loving Mother” expanded on it and all provisions for sanctions were in place and would be implemented.

We are now half way through 2017 – can the Vatican show that any cases of negligent bishops or religious superiors have been been examined or that the provisions of the moto propo been put in place? or is it just another case of many promises, many words but no action.

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KEY PART OF LAW TO HELP CHILD SEX ABUSE SURVIVORS TO EXPIRE

GEORGIA
Associated Press

BY KATE BRUMBACK
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ATLANTA (AP) — A key provision of a Georgia law meant to help survivors of childhood sexual abuse is set to expire Saturday.

State law says victims must file lawsuits seeking damages before they turn 23. The 2015 Hidden Predator Act provided a two-year window during which victims older than that could sue their alleged abusers.

While a law to help victims of childhood sex abuse may seem like a no-brainer, advocates say they often meet resistance from powerful groups that say they could lead to a flood of lawsuits, false claims and ruined reputations.

The law’s sponsor, Republican Rep. Jason Spencer, is trying to get his colleagues in the General Assembly to extend the measure and go even further in the legislative session that begins in January.

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Franziskus in Bedrängnis?

DEUTSCHLAND
Katholisch

[For the first time, a Vatican cardinal is investigated for sexual abuse. This could also bring the Pope into an unpleasant situation.]

Nun hat der Skandal um sexuellen Missbrauch endgültig auch die Führungsetage im Vatikan erreicht: Die australische Staatsanwaltschaft ermittelt gegen Kardinal George Pell, den vatikanischen Finanzchef und Berater von Papst Franziskus. Dem früheren Erzbischof von Sydney wird sexueller Missbrauch vorgeworfen. Pell wies die Anschuldigungen am Donnerstag zurück. Es ist das erste Mal, dass gegen einen Kurienkardinal wegen eines solchen Verdachts ermittelt wird. Zwar gab es auch früher bereits Ermittlungen gegen vatikanische Kardinäle. Dabei ging es aber stets um weniger schwerwiegende Delikte, oft hatten sie mit Geld zu tun.

Wie heikel die Angelegenheit für den Vatikan ist, zeigte sich auch daran, dass das Presseamt zu ungewohnt früher Stunde, um 8.30 Uhr, kurzfristig eine Pressekonferenz mit Pell anberaumte. Die offizielle Mitteilung war vorsichtig formuliert. Auffällig war, dass sich der Vatikan darin nicht gegen eine Vorverurteilung Pells wandte und auf die Unschuldsvermutung pochte. Stattdessen begnügte er sich damit, seinen “Respekt” vor dem australischen Justizsystem zu bekunden, Verdienste Pells im Kampf gegen sexuellen Missbrauch aufzuzählen und seine Arbeit im Vatikan zu loben.

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Papst Franziskus in der Bredouille

DEUTSCHLAND
Sueddeutsche

[Critics accuse the Vatican of doing too little for the enlightenment of sex scandals.]

Von Matthias Drobinski

Die Sensation kommt in dürren Zeilen daher: Kardinal George Pell sei mit jahrzehntealten Vorwürfen aus Australien konfrontiert, heißt es im Bulletin des päpstlichen Pressesaals in Rom, und “in vollem Respekt vor den staatlichen Gesetzen” habe der Kardinal entschieden, sich in seiner Heimat den Anschuldigungen zu stellen und bei der Wahrheitssuche zu helfen. Papst Franziskus habe Pell deshalb die “Erlaubnis für eine Auszeit” gegeben. Der Vorwurf, mit dem sich Kardinal Pell, der Finanzchef der Kurie und Beauftragte des Papstes für die Kurienreform, nun auseinandersetzen muss, lautet: sexueller Missbrauch an Minderjährigen. Noch nie hat es ein Verfahren gegen einen derart ranghohen Vertreter der katholischen Kirche gegeben: Pell gilt als Nummer vier in der Kurie, nach Papst, Kardinalstaatssekretär und Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation.

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Anklage gegen Ex-Pfarrer wegen Missbrauchs

DEUTSCHLAND
BR

[The public prosecutor’s office Deggendorf today protested against a 53-year-old ex-priest. He is accused among other things of several sexual injuries, especially in children.The formerly convicted ex-priest is said to have attempted to rape an 18-year-old woman in Austria. Furthermore, he was accused of having sexually abused five children of male sex on more than 100 occasions for the period before and after his imprisonment.The extensive investigations have also revealed that the 53-year-old has made the ordination of priests by submitting false documents on a really non-existent school and university degree in Poland.]

Von: Harald Mitterer
Stand: 29.06.2017

So soll der einschlägig vorbestrafte Ex-Priester versucht zu haben, in Österreich eine 18-jährige Frau zu vergewaltigen. Weiter wird ihm für die Zeit vor und nach dem Haftvollzug aus seiner Vorstrafe vorgeworfen, fünf Kinder männlichen Geschlechts bei insgesamt über 100 Gelegenheiten sexuell missbraucht zu haben.

Die Missbrauchstaten wurden im Raum Mainz, in Österreich, Italien, der Schweiz und Polen sowie im Landkreis Deggendorf begangen. Die Auslandstaten konnten schnell aufgeklärt werden. Einzelheiten zu den einzelnen Missbrauchstaten, die rechtlich in einer Vielzahl von Fällen als schwerer sexueller Missbrauch von Kindern zu qualifizieren sind, können aus Opferschutzgründen und mit Rücksicht auf das Persönlichkeitsrecht der zur Tatzeit minderjährigen Geschädigten nicht genannt werden, so die Staatsanwaltschaft.

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Missbrauchsvorwurf gegen Tiroler Ordensbruder

OSTERREICH
KathPress

[A member of the Tyrolean Servites province is said to have sexually abused a teenager.]

Innsbruck, 29.06.2017 (KAP) Die Polizei in Tirol ermittelt gegen einen Tiroler Ordensbruder, dem sexueller Missbrauch eines Jugendlichen vorgeworfen wird. Die Tiroler Servitenprovinz bestätigte am Donnerstag einen entsprechenden Bericht der Tiroler Tageszeitung. “Als Provinzleitung sind wir zutiefst betroffen und bedauern den Vorfall ausdrücklich. Wir verurteilen entschieden jede Form sexuellen Missbrauchs. Wir vertrauen jetzt auf eine rasche und vollständige Klärung der Vorwürfe und hoffen, dass auf diese Weise dem mutmaßlichen Opfer Gerechtigkeit widerfahren kann”, teilte der stellvertretende Provinzial P. Martin M. Lintner mit und sicherte die volle Kooperation der Ordensgemeinschaft in dem Fall zu.

Nach Angaben der “Tiroler Tageszeitung” hat ein mittlerweile 18-Jähriger Ende Mai bei der Polizei Anzeige wegen sexuellen Missbrauchs gegen ein Mitglied der Tiroler Servitenprovinz erstattet. Der Ordensmann – er ist ein Servitenbruder ohne Priesterweihe – leitete offenbar einen Gastronomiebetrieb, in dem der Jugendliche seit Sommer 2015 als damals 16-jähriger Lehrling gearbeitet hatte. Ab Frühjahr 2016 ist es nach Angaben des Jugendlichen zu Übergriffen gekommen. Der Ordensbruder soll dem Lehrling zur Einnahme von Medikamenten gedrängt und ihn mehrmals sexuell missbraucht haben. Im vergangenen Frühjahr erkrankte der 18-Jährige für mehrere Wochen und kehrte im Anschluss nicht mehr in den Betrieb zurück. Im Juni sei das Arbeitsverhältnis aufgelöst worden, so die “Tiroler Tageszeitung”.

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Archbishop Philip Wilson will face a two-week hearing in November on a conceal crime charge

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

Joanne McCarthy
30 Jun 2017

ARCHBISHOP Philip Wilson – the most senior Catholic cleric in the world to be charged with concealing the child sex offences of another priest – will face a two-week hearing in November.

Newcastle Local Court magistrate Ian Cheetham confirmed the November 27 special fixture hearing at Newcastle during a brief mention on Friday.

The matter is expected to be heard by a Hunter magistrate brought in for the hearing.

Confirmation of the date followed three unsuccessful appeals by Archbishop Wilson to have the charge against him quashed or permanently stayed.

He was charged in March, 2015 with failing to report information he knew or believed about Hunter priest James Fletcher to police between April 2004, when Fletcher was charged with child sex offences, and 2006 when Fletcher died in jail after his conviction.

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Victims advocates: Case against Vatican official should send a message

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

By Dave Sutor
dsutor@tribdem.com

Robert Hoatson, an advocate for victims of child sexual abuse, thinks the multiple charges of sexual assault filed against Cardinal George Pell in Australia can send a message to organizations that have allegedly protected abusers within their ranks, including the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown.

Pell, the third-ranking official in the Vatican, has been ordered to appear in court next month, having been accused by police officials of committing vaguely described historical sexual assault offenses.

“I hope it sends the message that law enforcement is watching very carefully,” said Hoatson, founder of the advocacy group Road to Recovery, who has offered support to many victims of alleged abuse perpetrated by priests and other religious leaders in Altoona-Johnstown. “No longer is the church going to be treated differently than any other organization or person.”

Mitchell Garabedian, a nationally known Boston attorney who has represented local victims of child sexual abuse, said, “It sends a clear message to dioceses and orders around the world that child abuse will be prosecuted whenever possible.”

For years, Garabedian and others have contended the alleged abuse and cover-up has gone to the very top of the Catholic Church. “I’m not surprised that a high-ranking Vatican official has been named as a sexual abuser,” Garabedian said.

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At last Cardinal Pell can—sort of—face his accusers

UNITED STATES
Catholic Culture

By Phil Lawler Jun 29, 2017

If you’re surprised by the criminal charges against Cardinal George Pell, you haven’t been paying attention.

For two years now the Australian cardinal has been the primary focus of an aggressive media campaign, with rumors about a police investigation constantly leaking into the press. Now at last the charges are out in the open—more or less. We know that prosecutors will bring formal charges against Cardinal Pell; we still don’t know exactly what those charges will be.

The cardinal himself was obviously not surprised by the announcement. He had already made arrangements to take a leave of absence from his Vatican duties; he had consulted with doctors about his trip back to Australia to defend himself. (Notice, by the way, that if he chose to duck the prosecution, he could stay at the Vatican, since the Holy See does not have an extradition treaty with Australia.) He knew this was coming. Both his actions and his attitude are consistent with his public statement that he is happy for the opportunity finally to defend his reputation.

Unfortunately the damage is done. If the charges are tossed out of court at the first opportunity, for lack of plausible evidence—as the cardinal’s staunch defenders believe they will be—critics will complain that the case was suppressed. Even if Cardinal Pell could prove with mathematical certainty that he is innocent, he will still be remembered as the cardinal who was accused of sexual abuse. The trial-by-media has already concluded. Public opinon, which does not concern itself with the niceties of the legal process, has already reached a verdict. The cardinal has been found guilty, before he even made his defense—indeed, before the actual charges were made public.

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Gelzinis: Cardinal O’Malley urged to speak up on abuse

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Peter Gelzinis Friday, June 30, 2017

Did cops in Australia take more decisive steps to address alleged sex abuse by the hand of a top Vatican prelate, Cardinal George Pell, than either Pope Francis, or Boston’s Cardinal Sean O’Malley?

Anne Barrett Doyle of Milton, founder of Bishop­Accountability.org, believes they did.

“Accountablity is happening,” Doyle told me yesterday. “The problem is, it’s happening outside the church at the hands of civil authorities looking to solve a crime and secure some justice.

“This pope and our cardinal should be leading the way,” Doyle said.

Yesterday she urged both Pope Francis and Cardinal Sean O’Malley to seize this particular moment to weigh in forcefully on the humiliating scandal of a prince of the church facing sex abuse charges.

“I think Pope Francis and especially Cardinal Sean need to speak up, and speak out loudly about what has happened. They both need to address this issue head-on. And do it now.”

But for the collar and the crucifix, George Pell might well have been a senator or congressman proclaiming his innocence, instead of the cardinal archbishop of Australia, third-highest prelate in Rome and treasurer of the Vatican bank.

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Rabbi Greer Seeks New Trial

CONNECTICUT
New Haven Independent

A prominent Edgewood rabbi is asking a court to throw out a $20 million verdict against him and order a new trial on sexual abuse allegations.

Attorney David Grudberg filed the motion Wednesday in U.S. District Court on behalf of the rabbi, Daniel Greer.

A federal jury last month awarded a former yeshiva student named Eliyahu Mirlis $15 million in damages, and his lawyers another $5 million, based on testimony that Greer repeatedly sexually abused him and another student over a period of years.

Grudberg’s motion asks the court the court either to throw out the case and order a new trial; or, barring that, reduce the award to under $1 million.

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Catholic priest’s alleged inappropriate conduct kept hidden from school nearby his residence for ‘privacy reasons’

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

By Jesse Dorsett

The Catholic Church decided not to tell a Canberra primary school a priest living next door had been accused of inappropriate conduct with children because it was concerned about his privacy, an independent report has found.

The historical allegations involve two girls, and include the priest putting his arms around an 11 or 12-year-old from behind and nibbling her ear when they were alone in a Tumut church in the Riverina.

While the alleged victims decided not to press charges, a church report found the complaints were sustained and the man was removed as the parish priest.

But his lawyers denied he was guilty of any misconduct.

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George Pell highlights the Vatican’s failure to act

IRELAND
Newstalk

Sexual abuse charges against Cardinal George Pell have been a long time coming.

He has been charged with multiple historical sexual abuse offences, which he will face in a Melbourne court next month.

Pell is Australia’s most senior Catholic and the third ranking official at the Vatican.

Boston Globe investigative reporter Michael Rezendes told Rachel Smalley it comes as no surprise.

“This is the direct result of the Vatican’s failure to come to grips with this issue. After all it’s been 15 years more than 15 years since my colleagues and I on the Boston Globe broke this story.”

Rezendes said the Vatican has made many fine statements about victims of clergy sex abuse and its plans to do something about it, but says really nothing has happened.

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‘This must not distract us’

AUSTRALIA
The Border Mail

Derrick Krusche and Rachel Browne
30 Jun 2017

Ballarat clergy sexual abuse survivors hope Cardinal George Pell’s trial will not distract from implementing the royal commission’s recommendations.

Peter Blenkiron, who was abused by disgraced Christian Brother Edward Dowlan, said whether Cardinal Pell was guilty or not was a red herring.

“If we focus on one person, on one issue, then that can distract the whole community and eclipse what really needs to change,” he said.

“We must not take our eyes off the ball and we must make sure all recommendations are implemented.”

The $500 million inquiry is Australia’s longest royal commission, starting in 2013 and due to finish with a final report to the federal government in December.

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Pope Francis faces worst ‘crisis’ as shockwaves at Cardinal Pell charges spread around the world

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

Andrew Koubaridis
news.com.au
@akoubaridis

THE historic sexual offence allegations made against Cardinal George Pell have plunged Pope Francis into the greatest crisis of his papacy, a Vatican watcher says.

Christopher Lamb, the Rome Correspondent for Catholic newspaper The Tablet, said the news of the charges against Cardinal Pell — the third most powerful figure in the church and the most senior Australian — created “shockwaves” when it came through yesterday.

“It’s fair to say it has had a huge impact on people who work in the Vatican … obviously [it was known] there was a possibility the Cardinal would be charged and the police were about to make a decision, but when it came through it really sent shockwaves through the global headquarters of Catholicism and the church is still coming to terms with this news,” he told ABC’s Lateline last night.

Lamb said The Cardinal had been “entrusted” by the Pope to repair the Vatican’s finances and was now the most senior church figure to be charged with sex offences.

The 76-year-old must return to Melbourne on July 26 to face charges relating to multiple complainants. He has vehemently denied any wrongdoing and has vowed to clear his name. Addressing the world’s media from the Vatican yesterday, Cardinal Pell said: “I am innocent of these charges. They are false. The whole idea of sexual abuse is abhorrent to me.”

He has stepped down from his Vatican duties as he begins his defence of the charge — but Mr Lamb told Lateline the effect on the Pope’s papacy had been immediately felt.

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No stranger to child abuse scandals, cardinal now finds himself in firing line

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Annette Blackwell
June 30 2017

The Pope is likely shaking the dust off a letter of resignation from one of his top men, Australian cardinal George Pell.

The letter has been gathering dust in a Vatican file for just over a year – Pell submitted it, as obliged, when he turned 75 last year.

Francis, if truly committed to reassuring the faithful a reforming Church had zero tolerance for a culture of silence, or worse, a wilful and deliberate cover-up of child sex abuse, would have said a year ago, “Thank you, George”, and breathed a sigh of relief.

This is because controversy and George Pell have been inseparable from the time he was a priest in the Australian diocese of Ballarat in the 1970s to his ascension in 2014 as a chief adviser to the Pope and the Holy See’s main beancounter.

And much of that controversy has been about the former archbishop’s responses to priests who sinned grossly against children and his legalistic solution for dealing with abuse survivors.

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Why the Catholic Church must continue soul-searching

UNITED STATES
CNN

[with video]

By Heidi Schlumpf

Heidi Schlumpf is a columnist for the National Catholic Reporter and teaches communication at Aurora University. The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of the author.

(CNN)The news that a high-ranking Vatican official has been charged with sexual abuse is a reminder that the church’s sex abuse crisis is not over — and that it has potential to affect the entire church, across so-called liberal or conservative lines, even to the top echelons of the church hierarchy.

Cardinal George Pell, former archbishop of Sydney and Melbourne and current head of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy, denied the allegations that will require him to return to Australia from Rome to face multiple charges of sexual assault.

Speculation about Pell’s abuse is detailed in a recent book, which the publisher has now pulled from the shelves in the Australian state of Victoria so as not to prejudice the court. Pell also has a less than credible record for his handling of sexual abuse allegations against other priests, especially his involvement in the case of Gerald Ridsdale, a former priest who was convicted of abusing more than 50 victims. Last year, testifying via video to the Australian child abuse royal commission, Pell said the church made “enormous mistakes” in its handling of the matter.
Pell’s story is significant not only because it marks the first time authorities have charged a Vatican official with sexual abuse, but also because it shows that the decadeslong sex abuse crisis is not a “once and done” thing. Catholics will be hearing about this for a while.

Certainly, the early 2000s were the peak, with the Boston Globe bringing the issue to national prominence, resulting in lawsuits, criminal charges and the Academy Award-winning movie “Spotlight,” about the journalists who uncovered both the abuse and the coverup by the church hierarchy.

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Archdiocese says it won’t fund George Pell’s defence

AUSTRALIA
The New Daily

The Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney will house Cardinal George Pell when he returns to Australia to face historic sexual assault allegations.

But Archbishop Anthony Fisher said the Archdiocese would not pay for his legal fees as the Cardinal prepares to face a Melbourne court next month.

“While the Archdiocese will assist with the Cardinal’s accommodation and support as it would for any of its bishops or priests, it is not responsible for the Cardinal’s legal bills arising from these matters,” Archbishop Fisher said, ABC reports.

Victoria Police charged Cardinal Pell on Thursday with “multiple charges” relating to “multiple complaints”, sending shockwaves to the top of the Vatican.

Cardinal Pell, the third most powerful person in the Catholic Church, has been put on leave while he defends the charges and immediately ceased public duties.

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What led to Cardinal George Pell’s abuse chargers?

AUSTRALIA
CBS News

JUNE 29, 2017, 8:09 PM| Cardinal George Pell has been a contentious figure in the church for some time, yet he remained prominent and has maintained close ties to Pope Francis. Now Pell faces sexual assault charges in Australia. Investigative reporter and author of “”Cardinal: The Rise and Fall of George Pell”” Louise Milligan spoke about Pell’s downfall.

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Cardinal George Pell: Charges of historical sex offences will define Vatican official’s legacy

AUSTRALIA
The Age

Barney Zwartz

Five years ago, the news that Australia’s most famous Catholic, Cardinal George Pell, was to be charged with historical sex offences would have been like a tsunami inside the church. Not now.

Today the mood is numbed acceptance, the feeling that this is the inevitable last act in the drama of a man who authored his own tragedy.

It was his appearances before the child abuse inquiries by the Victorian Parliament and the Royal Commission that really savaged his reputation, both because of the deficiencies they uncovered and because of his wooden, cold responses.

But in the Australian Catholic Church, the damage from clergy abuse was done long ago, and the latest development is merely cause for more disappointment. For years, most ordinary Catholics have focused on their local parishes and ignored the hierarchy, as dismayed as anyone by the shocking revelations of official cover-ups, moving paedophile priests and silencing victims.

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Italian newspaper brands Australia ‘a paradise of the orcs’ in its coverage of ‘controversial kangaroo’ George Pell’s historical sex offences charges

ITALY
Daily Mail

By Australian Associated Press and Kate Darvall For Daily Mail Australia

Sex charges laid against Cardinal George Pell are getting heavy coverage in the Italian media, with one newspaper branding him ‘controversial kangaroo’ and Australia ‘a paradise of the orcs’.

The Italian media attacked Australia’s record of sexual assault, and claimed seven per cent of priests had been accused of the offences.

Cardinal Pell was on Thursday charged by Victorian Police with historical sexual assault offences.

He’s the most senior Catholic Church cleric to face such charges in the world in modern times.
Italian newspaper websites on Thursday ran prominent pictures of the 76-year-old and television networks carried long segments with footage of the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

They also broadcast footage of Australian sexual assault survivors who attended the Rome end of a Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse hearing when Cardinal Pell gave evidence last year.

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Protected Church, not children: Victim on Cardinal Pell child sex abuse charges

AUSTRALIA
The Asian Age

AFP

Sydney: From country priest to trusted top Vatican aide, the rise of Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric George Pell has been plagued in its twilight by sordid controversies from the past.

To his admirers, the 76-year-old cardinal embodies the orthodox traditions of Australian Catholicism, but to his critics he represents an institution that has failed to properly deal with child sex abuse allegations.

Pell, who was charged Thursday with historical sex abuse, strongly denies the allegations, details of which were not given by police.

He also says he had no knowledge of widespread paedophilia in the church in Australia, even suggesting a conspiracy to bring him down.

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George Pell: How Italian media reacted to the historical sexual offence charges

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

The charges against George Pell have been heavily covered in the Italian media, with the Cardinal described as a “controversial kangaroo” and Australia’s record on sexual abuse criticised.

Australia’s most senior Catholic cleric has been ordered to appear in the Melbourne Magistrates’ Court on July 26, after Victoria Police served charges on his legal representatives.

Pell strongly denied the charges, saying he had been the victim of “relentless character assassination” and looked forward to returning to Australia to clear his name in court.

As head of the Vatican’s finances, Pell is considered number three in the Catholic hierarchy, making him the most senior Catholic Church cleric to face such charges in the world in modern times.

The significance of the charges — and Pell’s senior position — has seen the story heavily covered by Italian media.

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Catholic Church rallies behind Pell after sex charges

AUSTRALIA
Times Live (South Africa)

AFP

Australia’s Catholic leaders have spoken out in support of Cardinal George Pell describing the Vatican finance chief as a “thoroughly decent man” after he was charged with historical sexual offences.

Pell, who has been ordered to face a Melbourne court hearing next month, said Thursday he would return to Australia “as soon as possible to clear his name” after consulting with his doctors.

The pre-eminent cleric rose through the ranks to the highest offices of the church in Australia before leaving to manage the Vatican’s powerful economic ministry.

The Australian’s successors spoke warmly of his legacy and reputation.

“The George Pell I know is a man of integrity in his dealings with others, a man of faith and high ideals, a thoroughly decent man,” the Archbishop of Sydney Anthony Fisher said in a statement.

Pope backs Australian cardinal in fight against sex abuse charges

Cardinal George Pell said Thursday that he would take leave from the Vatican to return to Australia to fight sexual assault charges after being given …
NEWS 23 hours ago
But Fisher said that while his archdiocese would help Pell with accommodation on his return to Australia to face the charges, “it is not responsible for the Cardinal’s legal bills arising from these matters”.

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