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.

January 15, 2023

A case of clerical child rape

TUGUEGARAO CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Manila Times [Manila, Philippines]

January 15, 2023

By Fr. Shay Cullen

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THE many incidents of child sexual abuse by clerics have shamed thousands of good bishops and priests who have been justly angered by the rampant and tolerated child sexual abuse of pedophile priests and some bishops. They feel helpless when their bishop protects the pedophile priest and calls him “his son.” They hunger for justice for the victims and wish to exonerate their own vocation and blemished priesthood.

Church law now says every act of sexual abuse against a child is not only a heinous crime in civil law but is a violation of church law. (www.preda.org) Bishops have been scolded by Pope Francis for covering up child abuse cases among their priests instead of reaching out to help the victims, find them therapy, healing and justice. Instead, they try to buy off the child-victim and the family with money and promises. This is what happened in a case in…

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After excommunication, Rupnik renovated St. Ignatius’ cave

MANRESA (SPAIN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

January 11, 2023

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Fr. Marko Rupnik, SJ, was appointed by the Society of Jesus to create mosaics in one of the most important historic sites of the Jesuit order, after he was found guilty of sexual and sacramental misconduct. The mosaics were then dedicated by Rupnik and Jesuit officials after the priest was accused of more canonical crimes: spiritually and sexually abusing several consecrated women.

Rupnik was declared in 2020 excommunicated for the canonical crime of abusing the sacrament of penance to abet acts of sexual misconduct.

But 11 months after the excommunication was declared, the Society of Jesus announced that Rupnik had been commissioned to install a set of mosaics in the Sanctuary of the Cave, a Spanish church connected to the cave where St. Ignatius of Loyola, the Jesuits’ founder, composed his famous “Spiritual Exercises.”

The church, in Manresa, Spain, is an important site for Jesuits, and a destination for pilgrims…

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Catholic Crisis: This Time, It’s Different

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The American Conservative [Washington DC]

January 14, 2023

By Rod Dreher

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Sometimes it is wise to keep calm and carry on in the face of church problems. For Rome, this is not one of those moments

That above is Pope Francis meeting with Cardinal George Pell, who died this week. Both men’s names were much talked about at the table last night with three young American Catholics in Budapest for a fun weekend together. The guys are all theological conservatives, well educated and well informed about things going on in their church. Naturally they’re concerned about the situation today. We got to talking about the bombshell “Demos” memo authored secretly by Cardinal Pell, who described the Francis papacy as a “catastrophe.” In the memo, Pell called on the cardinals heading into the eventual conclave that will replace Francis to choose someone who will address several grave problems in the Roman Curia and papacy.

One of the guys at the table las night…

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January 14, 2023

How might the latest George Pell coverage affect child sexual abuse survivors?

(AUSTRALIA)
The Conversation [Waltham MA]

January 12, 2023

By Kim Felmingham

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You might have wondered if the recent death of George Pell, who was jailed in 2019 for child sexual abuse and then later acquitted, would bring a sense of relief or closure for victim survivors of Catholic clergy sexual abuse.

After all, the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse found Pell had failed to do enough during his time in senior church roles in Australia to stop priests who abused children.

In fact, news of Pell’s death may generate a roller coaster of complex and variable emotions among abuse survivors.

This mix of emotions may include sadness for the ongoing consequences of the abuse for fellow victim/survivors, and anger at the lack of justice for so many.

There’s also the potential post-traumatic stress reactions triggered by this recent round of media coverage – such as fear, dissociation, distressing memories and sleep disturbance.

Lifelong impacts

Extensive research reveals how…

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George Pell: what the five-year royal commission into child sexual abuse found

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

January 11, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

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Un-redacted report released in 2020 revealed how archbishop failed to take proper steps to act on complaints about dangerous priests

The child sexual abuse royal commission in 2020 released a bombshell un-redacted report examining the failings of George Pell during his time as an assistant priest, bishop, auxiliary bishop and cardinal in Australia.

The report found he both knew about child abuse, particularly within the Victorian diocese of Ballarat, and failed to take proper steps to act on complaints about dangerous priests.

The findings – which Pell always disputed – were arrived at after an exhaustive, five-year…

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Vincentian priest sentenced to prison over child pornography

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

January 14, 2023

By Gina Christian, OSV News

Read original article

A Vincentian priest in St. Louis was sentenced Jan. 10 to prison and ordered to pay restitution for possessing 6,000 images of child pornography, an act which one victim told the presiding judge was “depressing and sickening.”

Father James T. Beighlie, a 72-year-old retired member of the Congregation of the Mission, Western Province, was ordered to serve five years in jail after pleading guilty Oct. 12, 2022, to two counts of possessing images depicting child sexual abuse. Following the prison term, Father Beighlie will be on supervised release for life.

U.S. District Judge Matthew T. Schelp also ordered Father Beighlie to pay $26,750 in restitution — $4,750 to one of the victims depicted in the child pornography images, and $22,000 toward other victims of crimes involving children.

“It’s depressing and sickening to know that people were looking at images and videos of my online sexual abuse when I was a…

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Doing Better Than Your Predecessor is Good, But Not their Best

FORT LAUDERDALE (FL)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

January 12, 2023

By Adam Horowitz Law

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The coverage of the recent death of Pope Emeritus Benedict highlights a persistent problem regarding clergy sex crimes and cover-ups. Unlike most of the Catholic abuse crisis, this problem is one where rank-and-file Catholics can really make a difference. Without getting political, we at Horowitz Law are reminded of a memorable phrase coined by former presidential speechwriter Michael Gerson, “The soft bigotry of low expectations.” He was referring to kids’ education, not kids’ abuse. Gerson claimed that many teachers quietly assume or believe that some groups of kids (primarily minorities) really won’t succeed in the classroom as well as other kids. That assumption, Gerson suggests, becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.Regardless of your views on education, his broader point is valid; “If we expect less, we often get less.”

That brings us to how Pope Benedict’s legacy is defined and what it means for Catholic parishioners. Here’s how one veteran…

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Pope’s role in Vatican financial probe again center stage

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

January 13, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Francis’ own role in the investigation into financial wrongdoing at the Holy See took center stage Friday in the Vatican tribunal, with witnesses saying he encouraged a key suspect to cooperate with prosecutors and a key defendant accusing him of interfering in the trial.

Friday’s hearing was one of the most eagerly anticipated in the Vatican’s “trial of the century,” given it featured testimony from one of the more colorful figures in recent Vatican history, Francesca Chaouqui. The public relations expert was summoned after it emerged late last year that she had played a behind-the-scenes role in persuading a key suspect-turned-star-witness to change his story and implicate his former boss, Cardinal Angelo Becciu.

But the daylong hearing ended with an unexpected bombshell, as Becciu responded to Chaouqui’s testimony by reading aloud an exchange of letters with the pope that suggested Francis himself continued to cast a shadow over the trial,…

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New testimony at Vatican financial trial details intrigue over key witness’s deposition

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 13, 2023

By Claire Giangrave, Associated Press

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In dramatic testimony at the Vatican mega-trial on financial corruption Jan. 13, a former Vatican official who spent time in prison for her role in the Vatileaks scandal admitted to influencing the deposition of Msgr. Alberto Perlasca, a key prosecution witness in the current trial.

Her goal, said Francesca Chaouqui, a former Vatican diplomat, was to alert Pope Francis to the brewing financial scandal that is at the heart of the 18-month-old proceeding that has charged 10 defendants with fraud and abuse of office.

“I believed that I had to report to the Holy Father a description of what was happening behind his back,” said Chaouqui.

Chaouqui’s testimony was ordered by Vatican judges overseeing the trial after Perlasca, who once headed the administrative office of the Vatican Secretariat of State, revealed in his own testimony in early December that his deposition was made under pressure from Chaouqui. Perlasca, once a…

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Vermont Bill Proposal Could Jeopardize Seal of Confession

MONTPELIER (VT)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

January 13, 2023

By Tyler Arnold

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According to the senator who plans to introduce the legislation, the proposal ‘tries to make clear there [will be] no confidentiality’ exception, regardless of the context in which the clergy member becomes aware of the information.

Legislation that would expand mandatory-reporting requirements for clergy and potentially pose a threat to the seal of confession could be introduced into the Vermont Senate within the next week or two. 

Current Vermont law lists members of the clergy, such as priests, as mandatory reporters, which means they are required to report suspected child abuse or neglect within 24 hours of becoming aware of the information. However, the law provides an exemption for clergy if reporting that information would violate a privilege or disclose confidential communication, such as information learned during a confession. 

Sen. Dick Sears, D-Bennington, plans to introduce a bill that would fully eliminate that exception. The bill has not yet been…

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Michigan Parish Files Lawsuit to Protect School From State Intrusion Over Catholic Beliefs on Sexuality

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

January 12, 2023

By Tyler Arnold

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The parish fears the school will be targeted, in the wake of the Michigan Supreme Court’s recent reinterpretation of state antidiscrimination laws to include sexual orientation and gender identity.

Amid fears that a Catholic school could be forced to close its doors if it refuses to compromise its beliefs regarding sexuality, a Grand Rapids parish is suing the Michigan attorney general and Department of Civil Rights.

Sacred Heart of Jesus parish, which operates Sacred Heart Academy in the western Michigan city, filed its lawsuit on Dec. 12, after the Michigan Supreme Court reinterpreted the state’s antidiscrimination laws regarding sex. Under the new interpretation, the prohibition on discrimination based on sex also encompasses sexual orientation and gender-identity discrimination. 

The parish worries that this reinterpretation would prevent the school from maintaining its standard-of-conduct policies for employees and its approach to how it helps students who struggle with same-sex attraction and gender dysphoria. The…

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Former youth pastor accused of sexually abusing 14 girls to be released from prison after 33 months

DENTON (TX)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

January 5, 2023

By Leonardo Blair, Senior Features Reporter

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Robert Shiflet, a former youth pastor at Denton Bible Church in Texas who was sentenced to 33 months in federal prison in June 2021 for child sex trafficking charges, is set to be released next month but will spend the rest of his life under federal supervision.

Shiflet, 51, whose pending release was highlighted by Fox 4, was sentenced in June 2021, on charges of sexually abusing 14 young girls placed under his pastoral care 20 years earlier. The sentence was made after Shiflet made a plea deal which U.S. District Judge Lee Rudofsky lamented.

“You are a terrible person,” Rudofsky told the former youth pastor at the time, according to the Arkansas Democrat Gazette. “I don’t believe that you are sorry in the slightest. I don’t believe you have rehabilitated yourself. I believe you haven’t been caught again but I don’t believe you…

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Wildomar Pastor Charged With 8 Counts Of Child Rape

WILDOMAR (CA)
City News Service [Los Angeles CA]

January 6, 2023

By City News Service, News Partner

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A 54-year-old Wildomar pastor accused of sexually assaulting two girls numerous times pleaded not guilty Friday to nearly two dozen felony charges.

Fredy Romeo Gonzalez Lopez was arrested in November following a Riverside County Sheriff’s Department investigation.

Lopez is charged with eight counts of aggravated rape of a child, seven counts of lewd acts on a minor, five counts of sodomy of a child and multiple sentence-enhancing allegations of targeting two or more victims in a sex crime.

The defendant was arraigned before Superior Court Judge Elaine Kiefer, who scheduled a felony settlement conference for Feb. 22 at the Southwest Justice Center in Murrieta.

Lopez is being held on $1 million bail at the nearby Byrd Detention Center.

According to sheriff’s Sgt. Joshua Parker, Gonzalez presides at a Wildomar church, but the house of worship wasn’t identified.

Parker said that detectives initiated an investigation during the first week of November,…

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Montana pastor charged with sexually abusing four girls

LAME DEER (MT)
Baptist Press [Nashville TN]

January 4, 2023

By Laura Erlanson

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Editor’s Note: In support of the sixth strategic action of Vision 2025 adopted by messengers to the 2021 SBC Annual Meeting, Baptist Press will continue to report every instance of sexual abuse related to Southern Baptist churches or leaders of which we are made aware.

Editor’s Note: This story was updated after initial publication to include comments from Montana Southern Baptist Convention Executive Director Barrett Duke.

Dean Alan Smith, longtime pastor of Morning Star Baptist Church in Lame Deer, Mt., pled not guilty Tuesday (Jan. 3) to federal charges filed against him last month.

According to local media reports, Smith, 66, was charged with sexually abusing four girls on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation between 2017 and 2019. Morning Star Baptist Church, a Southern Baptist congregation where Smith has been pastor more than 20 years, sits adjacent to the reservation.

The Billings Gazette reported that charges against him include one count…

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Former teacher at Maryville Apostolic academy accused of sexually abusing 14-year-old girl

MARYVILLE (TN)
Knoxville News Sentinel [Knoxville TN]

January 12, 2023

By Tyler Whetstone,

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The charge against the 26-year-old is used against defendants who are in a position of authority over a juvenile

Key Points

  • Police arrested the former middle school teacher on Monday and took him to Blount County to face charges.
  • Joseph “Kade” Abbott was on the Apostolic Christian Academy staff list as recently as August.
  • Apostolic Christian Academy, based in Maryville, is the school housed in First Apostolic Church.
  • Leaders of the school and church did not return requests for comment about the former middle school teacher.

A former teacher at the Apostolic Christian Academy in Maryville has been arrested on a felony charge that he sexually abused a 14-year-old girl, Knox News has learned.

Joseph “Kade” Abbott was arrested in North Carolina and taken to the Blount County jail on Monday, according to sheriff’s office spokesperson Marian O’Briant. Abbott is being held on a $200,000 bond. His preliminary hearing is Jan. 18.

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New Jersey Youth Pastor Pleads Guilty to Multiple Sex Abuse Crimes Against Minors

MOUNT HOLLY (NJ)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

January 11, 2023

By Josh Shepherd

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A former minister at a New Jersey evangelical church has pleaded guilty to multiple sex abuse crimes, admitting that he blackmailed teenage boys into performing explicit sex acts via webcam.

During a hearing last week at Burlington County Superior Court in Mount Holly, New Jersey, Sean Higgins, 32, of Palmyra, pleaded guilty to four counts of Endangering the Welfare of Children. In exchange for the plea, Higgins is expected to serve 27 years in a New Jersey state prison. Higgins’ sentencing is scheduled for March 3.

According to a grand jury indictment last August, prosecutors say Higgins victimized at least 13 boys, aged 12 to 17, who resided in Alabama, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, South Dakota and Tennessee.

At the time of the crimes, Higgins was on staff as youth pastor and worship leader at Harbor Baptist Church in Hainesport, according to the…

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Former pastor, school employee charged with 2 counts of child grooming

MCLEANSBORO (IL)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

January 11, 2023

By Michael Gryboski, Mainline Church Editor

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A former pastor and Illinois school district employee has been arrested and charged with two counts of sexually grooming a child, following a months-long investigation.

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office posted an update to Facebook announcing the arrest of 28-year-old Garrett S. Biggerstaff of Mcleansboro. 

According to authorities, the investigation into Biggerstaff began last September when “the Benton Police Department received information from a juvenile claiming to be the target of some form of sexual exploitation.”

“Officers handling the complaint in Benton contacted Detectives from the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office and a coordinated investigation [began],” stated the sheriff’s office.

“Evidence was collected and examined by the Sheriff’s Office member of the Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force. From this work, a second juvenile victim was identified.”

After Biggerstaff was arrested Thursday, he was transported to the Jefferson County Jail and booked on felony charges. His bond was set…

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Response To Catholic Church’s Public Relations Statements – SNAP

WELLINGTON (NEW ZEALAND)
The Daily Blog [Auckland, NZ]

January 13, 2023

By The Daily Blog

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SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests) in Aotearoa New Zealand Responds to Catholic Church’s Public Relations Statements

The statements by NZ Catholic Church leaders on “looking forward from the work of the Royal Commission on Abuse in Care,” and their proposed commitments to handle clergy and religious sexual abuse complaints differently, and support mandatory reporting, simply lack credibility.

For Catholic Church leaders to say they support mandatory reporting “but with exemptions” is a contradiction. Mandatory reporting means there must be no “legal, confessional, and therapeutic privilege,” – only respect for privacy at the sole request of the victim or survivor.

Further, to date survivors have not seen any substantial changes in the application and practical procedures responding to abuse complaints. We have seen nothing to bring the Church leaders’ public commitments to light.

In fact, sadly, survivor evidence demonstrates continued denial and cover up, diversion, a lack of…

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January 13, 2023

«Je ne suis plus F. Je suis Paméla Groleau.»

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Présence [Montreal, Canada]

January 13, 2023

By Francois Gloutnay

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Action collective contre l’archidiocèse de Québec

Depuis deux ans, «je me bats contre une institution qui, à coup de menaces et d’intimidation, tente de me faire taire», déplore F., cette agente de pastorale qui participe à l’action collective contre l’archidiocèse de Québec.

Celle que le cardinal Marc Ouellet, l’ex-archevêque de Québec, poursuit en diffamation a décidé de dévoiler son identité et d’exiger, dorénavant à visage découvert, plus «de justice et de transparence» dans l’Église catholique, une institution pour laquelle elle travaille depuis plus de quinze ans. (Lire sa déclaration)

Paméla Groleau – c’est le nom véritable de F. – dit aujourd’hui mener un combat au nom des «victimes du clergé qui, depuis des décennies, cherchent à être entendues et reconnues».

«C’est aussi le combat de tous les chrétiens et chrétiennes qui ont mal à leur Église et qui souhaitent la voir s’épurer des abus de…

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DÉCLARATION. «Je rêve de voir l’Église se porter à la défense des plus faibles, des appauvris, des blessés»

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Présence [Montreal, Canada]

January 13, 2023

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L’agente de pastorale F. dévoile son identité

L’agente de pastorale connue comme « F. » a décidé de quitter l’anonymat. Celle qui a témoigné d’attouchements de nature sexuelle non consentis de la part du cardinal Marc Ouellet, dans un recours collectif contre l’archidiocèse de Québec, est maintenant poursuivie par le cardinal, préfet du dicastère pour les évêques. Présence publie sa déclaration complète.

***

Voilà plus de deux ans que je me bats contre une institution qui, à coup de menaces et d’intimidation, tente de me faire taire. Après avoir essayé les processus de dénonciation internes du diocèse de Québec et du Vatican, je me suis tournée, à bout de ressources, vers la justice civile.

J’ai conservé mon anonymat jusqu’à aujourd’hui pour protéger mes proches, ma famille, mon emploi et aussi, pour préserver ma santé qui a été mise à rude épreuve par toutes les…

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Letter #14, 2023 Thurs Jan 12: Pell

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Inside the Vatican [Rome, Italy]

January 12, 2023

By Robert Moynihan

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Here’s the situation all Rome is talking about:

    1) an anonymous text was circulating at the beginning of this year, signed “Demos” (the text is below) (link)

    2) the respected Vaticanist Sandro Magister revealed in a piece he wrote yesterday (link) — following Pell’s death Tuesday night in Rome at the age of 81 — that “Demos” was, in fact… Cardinal George Pell.

    So the “Demos” text suddenly took on heightened importance.

    This was an “insider” text at the highest level, for those of you interested in such things…

    What was Pell saying in his anonymous text, circulating among his fellow cardinals?

    Essentially, that the Church needed strong leadership which would teach clearly and fearlessly the Church’s doctrine.

    The document also was taken to be Pell’s way to begin to form a consensus on what “type” of man would be the man best suited to… be elected…

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The Catholic Church must free itself from this ‘toxic nightmare’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Spectator [London, England]

January 11, 2023

By Cardinal George Pell

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Shortly before he died on Tuesday, Cardinal George Pell wrote the following article for The Spectator in which he denounced the Vatican’s plans for its forthcoming ‘Synod on Synodality’ as a ‘toxic nightmare’. The booklet produced by the Synod, to be held in two sessions this year and next year, is ‘one of the most incoherent documents ever sent out from Rome’, says Pell. Not only is it ‘couched in neo-Marxist jargon’, but it is ‘hostile to the apostolic tradition’ and ignores such fundamental Christian tenets as belief in divine judgment, heaven and hell.

The Australian-born cardinal, who endured the terrible ordeal of imprisonment in his home country on fake charges of sex abuse before being acquitted, was nothing if not courageous. He did not know that he was about to die when he wrote this piece; he was prepared to face the fury of Pope Francis and the organisers when it was published….

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‘Catastrophe’: Cardinal Pell’s secret memo blasts Francis

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

January 12, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Francis will deliver a final send-off for Cardinal George Pell during a funeral Mass on Saturday, the Vatican said, as revelations emerge of the Australian prelate’s growing concern about what he considered the “disaster” and “catastrophe” of the papacy under Francis.

The Vatican on Thursday said the dean of the college of cardinals, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, would celebrate Pell’s funeral Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica. As is custom for cardinal funerals, Francis will deliver a final commendation and salute.

Pell, who had served as Francis’ first finance minister for three years before returning to Australia to face child sex abuse charges, died on Tuesday at a Rome hospital of heart complications following hip surgery. He was 81.

He had been dividing his time between Rome and Sydney after he was exonerated in 2020 of allegations he molested two choirboys while he was archbishop of Melbourne. Australia’s High Court overturned…

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The missed opportunity that will define the legacy of Cardinal George Pell

(AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald [Sydney, New South Wales, Australia]

January 13, 2023

By Chip Le Grand

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[Note from BishopAccountability.org – For more on the allegations against Pell, as well as his trial, see our summary and our detailed timeline: Timeline of the Allegations and Prosecution Faced by Cardinal George Pell.]

Instead of flights of angels, the death of Cardinal George Pell provoked another roiling culture war to sing the Cardinal to his rest. It’s what Australia’s most prominent church figure would have wanted. The only certainty, other than death, is that arguments about Pell’s ecclesiastic and cultural legacy will rage for years after his remains are interred in the crypt beneath Sydney’s St Mary’s Cathedral.

The battleground preferred by Pell’s supporters, most prominently former prime minister Tony Abbott and Liberal Party leader Peter Dutton, is the ill-fated criminal prosecution of Pell for historical child sex offences which saw him jailed for 14 months before the High Court unanimously set aside his conviction and acquitted him of all charges.

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Catholic order hires independent monitor to oversee members convicted of sex crimes

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

January 13, 2023

By Ben Andrews

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Survivors question why Oblates of Mary Immaculate isn’t identifying the overseer

The Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a Catholic order that operated 48 of Canada’s residential schools, has hired an independent third party to oversee efforts to ensure members who have committed sex crimes do not reoffend.

Some sexual assault survivors have praised the hiring as a positive development — but have also criticized the Oblate’s decision to withhold the monitor’s name.

Tony Charlie, who was sexually assaulted by an Oblate brother during his time at Kuper Island Residential School starting in the mid-1960s, said the hiring of an independent monitor is “a good step.” 

He also said it’s impossible to confirm that the monitor is truly independent if the Oblates are unwilling to release the hire’s name.

“We have no clue who this person is,” he said. “It’s very important that these abusers be accountable and visible and probably monitored closely.”

The Oblates hired the monitor in December 2022 and expect he will begin monthly…

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Maryland AG Seeks to Preserve Massive Set of Sexual Assault Evidence

BALTIMORE (MD)
Pro Publica [New York, NY]

January 13, 2023

By Catherine Rentz

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Two years ago, ProPublica showcased the remarkable tale of a doctor who saved physical evidence from more than 2,000 rape exams starting in the 1970s, years before police began to preserve forensic DNA. Baltimore County police tested just a tiny portion of the samples decades later and solved more than 80 cold cases; they made dozens of arrests and exposed serial rapists, including a man who assaulted at least 25 women and murdered one. The evidence also exonerated an innocent man and gave survivors life-changing closure.

Baltimore County law enforcement could have prioritized testing such a fruitful trove. Instead, it falls through loopholes in laws meant to preserve rape kit evidence and expedite testing.

Each year, the evidence saved by the doctor in the form of glass slides has been excluded from a state-mandated inventory of untested rape kits. A police spokesperson said they did not list the evidence because they…

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Letters to the editor on allegations against Bishop Hubbard

ALBANY (NY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 13, 2023

By Jeffrey Jones, Michael Burgess, Jim Murphy, and Michael McDermott

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When accused Bishop Howard Hubbard requested the Vatican remove his status as a priest, among those caught by surprise were his alleged abuse victims and their civil attorneys, along with canon lawyers. Read letters to the editor from NCR readers responding to our reporting below. The letters have been edited for length and clarity.

The title of this article is false. This article isn’t about “victim’s lawyers” but about the lawyers of alleged victims. Both the repeated use of “alleged” and references to “allegations” in the body of the article are implicitly, and I’d imagine purposely, undermined by the inaccurate title. 

Ultimately, the blurring of the distinction between alleged and proven victims is a reminder that irrationalism is not only rising on the right, but is sharply increasing in the Anglosphere more generally.

The issue here is epistemology. How do we evaluate truth claims? One side suggests that we…

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Knoxville diocese made church sexual abuse review board more secretive after lawsuit

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Knoxville News Sentinel [Knoxville TN]

January 13, 2023

By Tyler Whetstone

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Key Points

  • The Diocese of Knoxville changed last year the rules for how its sex abuse review board operates.
  • The change was initiated three months after the diocese and Bishop Richard Stika were named in a sexual abuse lawsuit.
  • The diocese says the new rules better protect victims.
  • Sex abuse victim advocates say the new rules protect abusers.

Three months after the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville and Bishop Richard Stika were named in an explosive sexual abuse lawsuit last year, leaders made the church’s sexual abuse review board meetings much more secretive, including requiring members to sign nondisclosure agreements, Knox News has learned.

The lawsuit asserted the church did not properly investigate sexual abuse allegations made by a former church employee and instead worked to discredit him. There has since been a separate lawsuit with similar allegations filed by a Sevier County woman.

The diocese maintains a more…

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AG Kaul stands behind his clergy abuse initiative one survivor calls ineffective and harmful to victims

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WMTV [Madison, WI]

January 12, 2023

By Elizabeth Wadas

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A year and a half since the initiative was launched, more than 200 survivors have reported their abuse and two prosecutions have been made. That’s less than one percent.

Ineffective and harmful, that’s how some described a statewide investigation by Wisconsin’s Department of Justice. More than a year and a half after its creation, Attorney General Josh Kaul defends his plan to look into clergy abuse. He says progress is being made to hold religious leaders accountable.

Kaul originally pleaded with survivors, asking them to report their stories of abuse to his office to look into. Some of those survivors say after reporting, they have no idea what, if anything, is actually being looked into.

In April of 2021, standing on the Capitol steps, survivors of abuse put their faith in AG Kaul, faith his initiative would hold clergy and religious leaders accountable by law for past…

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A Retired Priest Who Made Slideshow Presentations Using Thousands Of Child Sex Abuse Images Will Spend 5 Years In Prison

ST. LOUIS (MO)
BuzzFeed [New York NY]

January 12, 2023

By Pocharapon Neammanee

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James T. Beighlie, 72, sparked suspicion after colleagues found “compromising images” of the priest on a church printer, prosecutors said.

A retired priest in St. Louis, Missouri, was sentenced to five years in prison after police discovered he had created a PowerPoint presentation containing thousands of images of child sexual abuse material.

The US Attorney’s Office of the Eastern District of Missouri announced on Tuesday that James T. Beighlie, 72, had amassed 6,000 pictures containing child sexual abuse on one computer, as well as 236 images and 40 videos of similar content on another.

Officials said that the priest had created two PowerPoint presentations with graphic titles that linked to the material and had revised and edited the presentations more than 200 times since 2008.

“This criminal conduct was part of his daily life,” Assistant US Attorney Colleen Lang said in a statement.

Beighlie’s criminal activity was…

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January 12, 2023

Cardinal Pell dies at 81; he kept the faith even amid tribulation, pope says

(AUSTRALIA)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

January 11, 2023

By Cindy Wooden

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[Note from BishopAccountability.org – For more on the allegations against Pell, as well as his trial, see our summary and our detailed timeline: Timeline of the Allegations and Prosecution Faced by Cardinal George Pell.]

[Via Chicago Catholic]

Pope Francis praised the late Australian Cardinal George Pell as a faithful servant of God and of the Catholic Church, who steadfastly followed the Lord even “in the hour of trial” when he was jailed for sexual abuse before his conviction was overturned by Australia’s highest court.

Cardinal Pell died in Rome Jan. 10 at the age of 81 after suffering a heart attack following hip replacement surgery.

The cardinal’s funeral was expected to be celebrated in St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican with burial to take place in St. Mary’s Cathedral in Sydney, but the Vatican did not offer details immediately.

In an interview with Italy’s Mediaset broadcast Dec. 18, Pope Francis…

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Cardinal Pell’s funeral to be held on Saturday in St. Peter’s

(AUSTRALIA)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

January 12, 2023

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Pope Francis will preside over the final portion of the funeral of the late Australian Cardinal George Pell on Saturday in St. Peter’s Basilica.

The Holy See Press Office announced on Thursday that Pope Francis will preside over the rites of Ultima Commendatio and Valedictio at the funeral of Cardinal George Pell.

Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, Dean of the College of Cardinals, will celebrate the Requiem Mass at 11:30 AM on Saturday, 14 January.

The Mass will take place at the Altar of the Chair of St. Peter in the Vatican Basilica.

A host of other Cardinals and bishops are expected to concelebrate the Mass.

‘Dedicated to the Gospel’

The late Australian Cardinal died on Tuesday in Rome at the age of 81 due to heart complications following a hip operation.

Cardinal Pell had served as the Prefect of the Vatican’s Secretariat for the Economy from April 2014 until February 2019.

Pope Francis expressed…

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Cardinal Pell’s long shadow

(AUSTRALIA)
Catholic Culture - Trinity Communications [San Diego CA]

January 11, 2023

By Phil Lawler

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About twenty years ago, in a series of email messages, the late Father Paul Mankowski and I exchanged arguments against the legal recognition of same-sex marriage. This was a private conversation, at first, and since we were old friends, accustomed to speaking freely, the language of the exchange was fairly colorful. Eventually, convinced that our ideas were worthy of a wider audience, we cleaned up that language, removing some of the saltier expressions, and published the result in Catholic World Report.

Before it was published, however, Father Mankowski told me that he had shared the exchange with then-Archbishop George Pell. I was taken aback. Had he sent him the original, uncensored version? Yes, said Father Mankowski, unperturbed. He knew the Australian prelate well, and knew that he would not be flustered by strong language.

In fact, Archbishop Pell shared that exchange with priests in his Sydney archdiocese. I…

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Who Will Step Up to Replace Cardinal Pell in Defending Truth of the Catholic Faith?

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

January 11, 2023

By Jonathan Liedl

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COMMENTARY: In his last years of life, the Australian prelate became one of the universal Church’s most prominent champions for doctrinal orthodoxy, a mantle others will need to carry forward following his departure.

Immediate reflections following the shocking death of Cardinal George Pell have focused on the Australian prelate’s heroic endurance of false accusations of sexual abuse. And rightfully so. 

Cardinal Pell’s fortitude in the face of such ideologically motivated injustices, which included 404 days of solitary confinement in a Melbourne prison cell before the charges were quashed by the Australian High Court in April 2020, were an inspiration to Catholics across the world, a compelling example of faithfully enduring the kind of persecution that Christ foretold those who follow him would face.

But far less attention has been given to the significant role Cardinal Pell took up after his post-exoneration return to Rome in 2020 — a role that makes his passing…

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Cardinal Pell: No state funeral in Victoria due to victim distress

(AUSTRALIA)
BBC [London, England]

January 11, 2023

By Tiffanie Turnbull

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Australian Cardinal George Pell – who was convicted then acquitted of child sex abuse – will not be offered a state funeral in his home state to avoid distress for victims of abuse, Victoria’s premier says.

The former Vatican treasurer died on Tuesday aged 81.

He is Australia’s highest ranking Catholic, and the most senior clergyman ever jailed for child sex offences.

State funerals are frequently offered to notable public figures in Australia.

But the premier of Victoria – where Cardinal Pell was born and spent about half his career – said no such funeral would take place there.

“I couldn’t think of anything more distressing for victim survivors,” Daniel Andrews told reporters on Thursday.

Mr Andrews also said he was unlikely to attend the cleric’s funeral.

Officials in the state of New South Wales, where the Cardinal served as Archbishop of Sydney, have also said they will not offer…

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The legacy of Cardinal George Pell: Is it what the church needs now?

(AUSTRALIA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 12, 2023

By Michael Sean Winters

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Cardinal George Pell, who died this week as a result of complications related to hip surgery, was the poster boy for Pope John Paul II’s “heroic priesthood,” a discernible type of prelate that was common throughout the 20th century. Conspicuous, forceful, determined, dismissive toward contrary opinions, he was a polarizing figure convinced of the need to risk polarization in order to defend the church’s teachings.

“There was nothing bland or half-hearted about George Pell: he was strong, even vehement in his faith, his convictions, his likes and dislikes,” wrote Archbishop Mark Coleridge of Brisbane, Australia, in The Catholic Leader. “He could be a fierce opponent, unafraid to enter the battle. At times this could make him seem an ideological warrior, which did not serve him well. It certainly wasn’t George Pell at his best.”

Coleridge’s heartfelt remembrance of the late cardinal is the best I have…

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Archbishop Scicluna defends Benedict XVI’s efforts to fight abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Aleteia [Paris, France]

January 12, 2023

By Isabella H. de Carvalho

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Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna, who has been a key figure in the Church’s fight against abuse, defends Benedict XVI’s efforts.

Benedict XVI’s passing has reignited talk about how adequately he addressed sexual abuse in the Church. From being the first Pontiff to meet with abuse victims, to taking action against powerful and guilty priests, to being accused of mismanaging cases in his diocese when he was a bishop in Germany, the Pope Emeritus left a mixed record, according to many observers. 

However, the Archbishop of Malta, Charles Scicluna, has instead strongly defended the Pope Emeritus’ efforts in various statements published by multiple media outlets. The Maltese prelate worked alongside Benedict XVI from 2002 to 2012 as the promoter of justice, like a prosecutor in charge of dealing with serious abuse crimes, for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF). 

Cardinal Ratzinger was “instrumental in the lengthy process that updated…

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Jesuits in Slovenia apologize for Rupnik abuse, say they believe victims

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

January 12, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

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[Via Catholic World Report]

Jesuits in Slovenia have asked for forgiveness from the women who have have accused Father Marko Rupnik, S..J, of spiritual and sexual abuse, saying they believe the claims.

Rupnik, a Jesuit priest and artist originally from Slovenia, has been accused of the sexual, spiritual, and psychological abuse of at least nine women from a religious community with which he was formerly connected.

The alleged abuse took place in the late 1980s and early 1990s. An investigation into the claims was dropped by the Vatican in October 2022 due to the statute of limitations.

“It is obvious that, as a province, in the past we did not know how to listen to the victims and take appropriate action to clear up the issues and put an end to the suffering. We fully accept and understand the indignation, anger, and disappointment of the victims and their loved ones,”…

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After KBI report on clergy abuse, will Kansas allow survivors to sue the Catholic Church?

KANSAS CITY (KS)
Wichita Eagle [Wichita KS]

January 12, 2023

By Jonathan Shorman and Katie Bernard

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More than 50 years ago, Susan Leighnor says she was raped in the 4th grade by priests at Holy Cross Catholic School in Hutchinson, Kansas.

All told, Leighnor says four priests in her childhood either sexually abused her or helped facilitate abuse against her, including the late William Wheeler, who appears on the Wichita diocese’s list of clergy with substantiated sexual abuse allegations against them. One of them told her she would go to hell if she spoke out, she said.

After repressing what happened for decades, Leighnor, now 67, says she has been recovering memories in recent years that paint a portrait of terrible trauma.

“I was furious that the Catholic Church could get away with this,” Leighnor, who lives in Colorado, said in an interview this week.

Kansas prevents nearly all survivors of childhood sexual abuse from filing lawsuits against their abusers or the institutions that enabled them….

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January 11, 2023

Pope honors Cardinal George Pell, divisive Australian cleric

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

January 11, 2023

By ROD McGUIRK, NICOLE WINFIELD and NICK PERRY

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[Note from BishopAccountability.org – For more on the allegations against Pell, as well as his trial, see our summary and our detailed timeline: Timeline of the Allegations and Prosecution Faced by Cardinal George Pell.]

Pope Francis on Wednesday paid tribute to Cardinal George Pell, who spent 404 days in solitary confinement in his native Australia before his child sex convictions were overturned, praising his diligence in reforming the Vatican’s finances and his faith “even in the hour of trial.”

Francis sent a telegram of condolences to the head of the College of Cardinals, expressing his “sadness” over Pell’s death and relaying his prayers and sympathy to the Australian prelate’s family.

Pell died Tuesday in Rome, where he had attended the funeral last week of Pope Benedict XVI. Pell suffered fatal heart complications following hip surgery, said Archbishop Peter Comensoli, Pell’s successor as archbishop of Melbourne. He was 81.

He was a…

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Cardinal George Pell, convicted then acquitted of child sex abuse, dies at 81

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Washington Post

January 10, 2023

By Rachel Pannett and Frances Vinall

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Cardinal George Pell, a conservative theologian who served as the Vatican finance chief for Pope Francis and who was acquitted after becoming the most senior Catholic cleric to be convicted of sexually assaulting children, died Tuesday in Rome. He was 81.

His death was confirmed by Peter Comensoli, one of his successors as the archbishop of Melbourne, who said the cardinal died of heart complications after undergoing hip surgery. Cardinal Pell had been in Rome to attend Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s funeral last week.

Cardinal Pell spent more than a year in solitary confinement in his native Australia after a jury found him guilty in 2018 of assaulting two teenage choirboys in a Melbourne cathedral while he was the city’s archbishop in the 1990s. His conviction was overturned by a top Australian court in 2020.

The cardinal remained a polarizing figure in Australia and the church even after…

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George Pell, Cardinal Whose Abuse Conviction Was Overturned, Dies at 81

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

January 10, 2023

By Natasha Frost and Damien Cave

Read original article

[Note from BishopAccountability.org – For more on the allegations against Pell, as well as his trial, see our summary and our detailed timeline: Timeline of the Allegations and Prosecution Faced by Cardinal George Pell.]

An adviser to Pope Francis and a prominent figure in Australia, Cardinal Pell went to prison on charges of abusing two boys in the 1990s, but a higher court later acquitted him.

Cardinal George Pell, an Australian cleric and adviser to Pope Francis who became the most senior Roman Catholic prelate to be sent to prison for child sexual abuse and was later acquitted of all charges, died on Tuesday in Rome. He was 81.

The cause was complications of hip replacement surgery, according to Peter Comensoli, the archbishop of Melbourne, Australia, who confirmed the death in a post on Twitter. Cardinal Pell had gone to Rome to attend the funeral last week…

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Exclusive: Vatican must treat abuse victims better, pope’s lead investigator says

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 11, 2023

By Joshua J. McElwee and Christopher White

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Pope Francis’ lead clergy abuse investigator has acknowledged survivors’ frustrations with the Vatican’s strict culture of secrecy about Catholic bishops accused of misconduct or cover-up. Victims who bring a claim forward have a right to know how it is handled, said Maltese Archbishop Charles Scicluna.

In a National Catholic Reporter interview, Scicluna admitted the Vatican is not at what he termed “an optimal point” with regard to how it follows up with abuse victims, calling the matter “something that needs to be developed.”

Scicluna, who serves as an adjunct secretary for the Vatican’s powerful Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith and has investigated abuse claims across the world, said, “Most of the suffering I have seen is when victims are left in the dark without any follow-up of the disclosure they have given.”

“We have a law and we have a system which empowers people to disclose abuse or…

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Vatican replaces Indian bishop accused of serious crimes

MYSURU (INDIA)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

January 9, 2023

By Michael Gonsalves

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An Indian Catholic bishop probed by a Vatican-appointed team of bishops for alleged involvement in serious crimes like murder, rape and misappropriation of church funds, has been ordered to “take a period of absence from the ministry.”

Bishop Kannikadass A William of Mysore (now Mysuru) has been replaced by retired Archbishop Bernard Moras of Bangalore as apostolic administrator of southern India’s Karnataka state.

“I wish to inform that The Dicastery of Evangelization has appointed His Grace Most Rev Bernard Moras, Apostolic Administrator sede plena et ad nutum Sanctae Sedis of the Diocese of Mysore for the ordinary administration and pastoral care of that local Church,” Archbishop Felix Machado, secretary-general at the Catholic Bishops Conference of India, said in a Jan.7 communication to cardinals, archbishops and bishops in India.

The appointment became effective from Jan. 7, he added.

Significantly, the Vatican…

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Retired priest sentenced; possessed thousands of child porn images

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Hays Post [Hays, KS]

January 10, 2023

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A retired Catholic priest in Missouri who used thousands of images of child pornography to make PowerPoint presentations for several years was sentenced Tuesday to five years in prison.

James T. Beighlie, 72, pleaded guilty in October to two counts of possession of child pornography. He was also ordered to pay $4,750 to one of this victims, and another $22,000 for a fund that will go toward other child victims of crimes.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Colleen Lang said Beighlie had thousands of images and videos that he used for the PowerPoint presentations, which he revised several times. He had been using child pornography since at least 2008, she said. The prosecutor’s office has not indicated that Beighlie showed the presentations to anyone.

“All I can say is that I am ashamed and deeply remorseful,” Beighlie told the judge.

A church investigation began in May 2021, after co-workers at the Congregation of…

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Priest from Gosport struck off for five years for ‘inappropriate’ relationship with ‘vulnerable’ woman he told: ‘Come and have a treat with Father Pete.’

GOSPORT (UNITED KINGDOM)
The News [Portsmouth, UK]

January 6, 2023

By Steve Deeks

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A PREDATORY priest who was exposed for having an ‘inappropriate’ relationship with a ‘vulnerable’ churchgoer has been struck off for five years.

The victim of Gosport clergyman The Rev Peter Lambert said today that she had felt ‘massively used’ and exploited into having the relationship with the man of the cloth. After he was disciplined following an investigation the woman received a written apology from the Bishop of Portsmouth.

Married Mr Lambert was a self-supporting minister and a volunteer who led services across the town in churches including Christ Church, Holy Trinity Church and St John’s Church.

He was ordained as a priest but was not employed by or paid by the Church of England and had no specific church he was vicar of.

Mr Lambert, a chartered surveyor who has worked at Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, struck up a friendship with the woman, who The News is not naming. The mum said it…

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Former South Carolina Priest Indicted for the Sexual Abuse of a Minor

COLUMBIA (SC)
The U.S. Department of Justice

January 10, 2023

By U.S. Attorney's Office, District of South Carolina

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Press Release

A federal grand jury in Columbia returned a 3-count indictment against Jamie Adolfo Gonzalez-Farias, a/k/a “Father Gonzalez,” a/k/a “E,” 67, a former South Carolina priest, for the alleged sexual abuse of an 11-year-old minor.

The indictment charges three counts: Coercion and Enticement of a Minor, Transportation of a Minor with Intent to Engage in Criminal Sexual Activity, and Aggravated Sexual Abuse with a Child.  The Grand Jury also identified Florida state statutes of Lewd or Lascivious Molestation and Lewd or Lascivious Exhibition as implicated by Gonzalez-Farias’s conduct.

The indictment alleges that Gonzalez-Farias has been ordained as a Priest since at least 1990, and that he has held various positions in the churches in which he served, including Pastor, Parochial Vicar, Administrator, Chaplain, and Priest.  The indictment further alleges that Gonzalez-Farias began serving in South Carolina in 2015, and that he sexually abused a minor to whom he had…

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Former SC priest accused of sexually assaulting 11-year-old pleads not guilty

COLUMBIA (SC)
The State [Columbia SC]

January 10, 2023

By Ted Clifford

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The Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting an 11-year-old child pleaded not guilty to the federal charges on Monday.

Jaime Adolfo Gonzalez-Farias, 68, appeared in shackles, his silver hair neatly combed, in a federal courtroom in Columbia, South Carolina, after being extradited from Florida. He has been charged with aggravated sexual abuse of a child, coercion of a minor and transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity.

Wearing a dark green jumpsuit and bright orange plastic sandals, the Roman Catholic priest peered over his glasses as he waived reading of the indictment.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Elliott Daniels, who is prosecuting the case, requested that Gonzalez-Farias be detained. Through his attorney, federal public defender Allen Burnside, Gonzalez-Farias stated that he was not contesting the detention at this time.

The court advised him that he had a right to file a motion at any time to…

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Saint or sinner? Australia split over Cardinal George Pell

(AUSTRALIA)
France 24 [Paris, France]

January 11, 2023

By AFP, Sydney

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In death as in life, Cardinal George Pell split opinion in Australia: while believers on Wednesday mourned the passing of a “great churchman”, sexual abuse survivors said they would shed no tears.

One of the most powerful figures in the Roman Catholic Church, Pell died at the age of 81 on Tuesday in Rome due to heart complications following a hip operation.

The man who was convicted, jailed and then cleared of molesting two 13-year-old choirboys in the 1990s remains deeply polarising.

“It was very sad personal news to hear and quite a shock,” said Archbishop of Melbourne Peter Comensoli.

But Phillip Nagle, an abuse survivor in Victoria, said he believed Pell knew more about sexual abuse than he let on.

“None of us will be shedding any tears,” he was quoted as saying in Melbourne’s The Age newspaper.

‘All of us are sinners’

A mass was held for Pell…

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Former altar boy’s father to press on with abuse case against Pell

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

January 11, 2023

By AFP, Sydney

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Lawyers say they would continue to pursue the claim against any estate left by the cardinal, who died Tuesday in Rome

The father of a former altar boy will press ahead with legal action against Cardinal George Pell’s estate over the alleged sexual abuse of his son, his lawyers said Wednesday.

Shine Lawyers said they would continue to pursue the claim against any estate left by the cardinal, who died Tuesday in Rome.

The former altar boy died in 2014, and his father — who has not been identified — filed the claim against Pell and the Archdiocese of Melbourne in 2021.

“A civil trial would have provided the opportunity to cross-examine Pell and truly test his defense against these allegations,” Shine Lawyers, representing the father, said hours after the powerful Church figure’s death.

“There is a great deal of evidence for this claim to rely on, and the court…

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New Pa. speaker wants ‘work group’ after slow session start

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 10, 2023

By Mark Scolforo

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A week after he was a surprise choice to become speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, Democratic state Rep. Mark Rozzi on Monday canceled sessions for the rest of the week after failing to reach a deal on his primary legislative priority.

Lawmakers were brought to the Capitol for a hastily called special session designed to speed passage of a two-year window for letting some victims of child sexual abuse file otherwise outdated lawsuits.

But the House did virtually no business, and after hours of delay Rozzi issued a statement saying the two caucuses were too far apart. He announced he would create a “working group” of three Republicans and three Democrats “of varied interests from across the commonwealth to sit down and find a way forward.”

He said “statute of limitations reform” was his objective, “but we also must fix the workings of our government and find a…

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Attorney who represents sexual abuse victims reacts to KBI report on Catholic clergy

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KSHB - NBC 41 [Kansas City MO]

January 10, 2023

By Megan Abundis

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On Friday, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation released a report which identified dozens of Catholic clergy who may have committed sex crimes against children.

KSHB 41 News spoke with an attorney who tried and won many cases in Kansas and Missouri on behalf of sexual assault survivors of the Catholic church.

Attorney Rebecca Randles believes the KBI report highlighted fraudulent concealment of sexual abuse well.

In the report, the KBI said it found 188 suspected sexual predators in the clergy, but didn’t release their names.

“If anyone is looking to protect their children from a given predator, there’s no way this report would allow that,” Randles said.

According to Randles, she tried her first case in 1998. Since then, she’s had more than 400 cases.

Randles says in this report, it’s the “what’s missing” that stands out to her.

“It was released on a Friday evening just before…

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Archdiocese of Milwaukee honors Pope Benedict, anti-clergy abuse organization protests memorial Mass

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WDJT-TV, Ch. 58 [Milwaukee WI]

January 10, 2023

By Gabriella Bachara

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The Archdiocese of Milwaukee honored Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI during a memorial Mass at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist on Tuesday, Jan. 10.

Benedict died on Dec. 31, 2022. 

Archbishop Jerome Listecki led the Mass.

“I’ll always remember Pope Benedict because I wouldn’t be standing here before you if it wasn’t for Pope Benedict,” Listecki said.

During the memorial Mass and again when talking to CBS 58, Listecki said Benedict will be remembered as a great theological intellect, a proponent of objective truth, and one who was truly committed to Christ.

“You felt a personal dignity that was bestowed upon you when you were with him. He really cared about you. He was interested in who you were,” Listecki said.

Meanwhile, Nate’s Mission, a statewide anti-clergy abuse organization, protested honoring Benedict, who they said played a role in covering up the admitted actions of Fr. Lawrence Murphy. 

Murphy…

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If Thy Right Eye Scandalize Thee: What Should Be Done With Father Rupnik’s Art?

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

January 10, 2023

By Andrew Thompson-Briggs and Gwyneth Thompson-Briggs

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In light of the emerging scandal surrounding Jesuit artist Father Marko Rupnik, Catholics are asking what should be done with his sacred art. 

Some are calling for it to be removed — even destroyed — out of respect for his alleged victims or as a way to censure Father Rupnik himself. Others object that such an approach seems to align with the contemporary “cancel culture” and would logically extend to stripping churches of all art, since after all every artist is also a sinner. Others again claim that art must be judged on its own standards: If Father Rupnik’s art is of value, it should remain, regardless of his personal sins. Still others point to the economic and social costs of removing the artworks: Father Rupnik’s workshop has accounted for projects for more than 200 liturgical spaces around the world, including Lourdes, Fatima and the Vatican. Indeed, it would be…

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Vatican court schedules hearing for auditor’s lawsuit despite investigation

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

January 10, 2023

By The Pillar

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A Vatican court has scheduled a preliminary hearing for the wrongful termination lawsuit filed by Libero Milone, despite a criminal investigation.

A Vatican City court has scheduled a preliminary hearing for the wrongful termination lawsuit filed by Libero Milone, the former Vatican auditor who was accused by Cardinal Angelo Becciu of spying on the private lives of Vatican officials.

The hearing is scheduled for Jan. 25, despite an ongoing criminal investigation into the plaintiff. Under Vatican law, a criminal investigation into the same events should suspend the lawsuit, raising questions about both the legal tactics of Vatican prosecutors, and about how the lawsuit might overlap with the ongoing Vatican financial corruption trial.

Milone was named the Vatican’s first auditor general in 2015. After two years in that job, Milone was forced to resign under threat of legal prosecution after he was accused by the then sostituto at the Secretary of…

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Former MN Pastor Sentenced for Molesting Teen; Survivor Confronts Denomination for Supporting Abuser

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

January 9, 2023

By Sarah Einselen

Read original article

The former assistant pastor of a rural Minnesota church will spend about a month in jail after pleading guilty to molesting a girl in his youth group.

Sean Patrick Masopust, 33, was sentenced Thursday to 30 days’ confinement and 10 years of probation after pleading guilty to criminal sexual conduct, a fourth-degree felony, according to Minnesota court records.

Masopust will be allowed to attend sex offender programming and is eligible for work release, his court record shows. If he does not successfully complete probation, he could go back to jail for 18 months.

Meanwhile, the survivor of Masopust’s crime is confronting leaders of the Assemblies of God (AOG) for allegedly supporting Masopust and “coddling” those who covered up his crime.

In a victim impact statement read during the sentencing last week, Masopust’s victim Katie Morgan wrote, “(AOG leaders) decided to give Sean a severance pay,…

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January 10, 2023

Cardinal George Pell, Australia’s most powerful Catholic, who was dogged by scandal – obituary

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Guardian [London, England]

January 10, 2023

By Jennifer King

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Pell was acquitted on appeal of child sexual abuse charges, but remained tarnished by his response to paedophile priests over decades

The Australian cardinal George Pell rose from modest beginnings to become one of the world’s most powerful Catholics but his reputation was fatally damaged by association with the church’s child sexual abuse scandals in his home country. Pell himself became the highest-ranking Catholic to be convicted of such offences, and he spent more than a year in jail before his conviction was overturned by Australia’s high court in 2020.

In his role as cardinal and inaugural treasurer of the Vatican’s Secretariat of the Economy, Pell had the ear of Pope Francis, but his influence had already begun to wane by the time he was charged with child sexual abuse offences in Australia in 2017. Pell was acquitted on appeal after his conviction in 2018, having…

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Suspenden a sacerdote por presunto abuso sexual en SLP

SAN LUIS POTOSí (MEXICO)
El Universal [Mexico City, Mexico]

August 13, 2014

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[Via vLex] 

SAN LUIS POTOSÍ, SLP., agosto 13 (EL UNIVERSAL).- El arzobispo Jesús Carlos Cabrero Romero suspendió de sus funciones sacerdotales al párroco del templo de Nuestra Señora de Fátima, José de Jesús Cruz Rodríguez, a quien se le acusa de abusar a un joven de 19 años.

El representante legal de Arquidiócesis, Marco Antonio Luna Aguilar, anunció que por decreto del arzobispo este miércoles se envió un oficio a la Secretaría de Gobernación (Segob) en el que le notifica que Cruz Rodríguez “ha sido dado de baja” como titular de la Parroquia de Fátima.

La institución religiosa también inició un proceso canónico en contra del padre Cruz Rodríguez, detenido el lunes por la Policía Municipal, por el presunto abuso sexual en agravio de un joven con el que había estado embriagándose en la casa parroquial.

José de Jesús Cruz Rodríguez es el quinto párroco de…

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Abuse victim speaks out

BOSTON (MA)
The Eagle-Tribune [North Andover MA]

January 10, 2023

By Will Broaddus

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The priest who sexually abused David Rigby in 1976 said he was giving the young student a medical exam.

“As a naive, 14-year-old boy I didn’t realize that priests with no medical qualifications don’t have the right to give a medical exam to anybody,” Rigby said Monday.

He was speaking on a corner in Andover across from St. Augustine Parish, where he was accompanied by Robert Hoatson of Road to Recovery, a charity that assists victims of sexual abuse.

Mitchell Garabedian, the Boston attorney who represents clergy sex abuse victims, was present on Zoom. He said he earned a low, six-figure settlement a month ago for Rigby’s abuse and that of one other boy at the hands of the priest, Robert Turnbull.

“I have settled more than 15 cases involving Father Turnbull, who was a serial pedophile,” Garabedian said.

Turnbull, who died in 2000, taught math and physics and served…

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Editorial: Child sex abuse is ‘soul murder.’ Massachusetts should lift the statute of limitations.

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

January 9, 2023

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The Bay State has fallen behind neighboring states, which have opened up new legal avenues for victims to sue the institutions that harbored their abusers decades ago.

A recent change in Maine law has given people in their 50s, 60s, and 70s a chance to seek justice, at long last, for the sex abuse they endured as children.

The measure retroactively eliminated the statute of limitations for civil lawsuits in these cases, allowing victims to seek restitution from the churches and summer camps and Boy Scout troops that had failed them so grievously decades ago.

Robert Dupuis, 73, is among those who have filed suit since the law changed.

In the early 1960s, he says, a priest at St. Joseph Church in the central Maine community of Old Town periodically summoned him to a closet he called his “office” and pulled Dupuis’s buttocks into his crotch and fondled his genitals…

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Kansas found 188 Catholic clergy accused of sex abuse. Now the state’s getting pressed for names

KANSAS CITY (KS)
KCUR (NPR affiliate) [Kansas City MO]

January 10, 2023

By Celia Llopis-Jepsen

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The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests also wants Kansas to change its laws on old cases so that more abusers could potentially face justice.

Janet Patterson remembers attending a Catholic Mass at her parish near Wichita and hearing the congregation’s newly assigned priest lecture the parishioners.

“I remember him saying, ‘You must never criticize the priest,’” she said. “I was sitting there in the church with my son, Eric, and my other kids and my husband. And I remember thinking, ‘Who’s criticizing the priest?’”

Only later did Patterson learn about the long list of accusations of sexual abuse levied against the previous priest, Father Robert Larson, who had just been reassigned from this church in Conway Springs to another congregation in Newton, Kansas.

Ultimately convicted of molesting four boys, Larson allegedly molested many more. Five of them died by suicide as young men, including Patterson’s son,…

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Law could eliminate statute of limitations in civil cases involving sexual assault

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
KRIS-TV [Corpus Christi TX]

January 9, 2023

By Bryan Hofmann

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Survivors of sexual assault by priests ask for legislation to be passed

Churches across the country, including Corpus Christi, have survivors of sexual abuse by priests asking for information about their alleged assailant.

Patrick Wilkes has requested secret files on his father, James Wilkes, who was a priest in Corpus Christi but he said they have not been provided.

He also said his father sexually abused him, his siblings and others.

“He was a priest of the Diocese of Corpus Christi, ordained in 1950,” Wilkes said. “During that time, he became a part of a group of priests that went across the river into Mexico and had their way with prostitutes and children, because they could.”

Wilkes said he has received little to no response from the diocese, and that Father Wilkes’ name was not on the Diocese 2019 list of credible sexual abuse offenders.

Robert Pastor is an attorney…

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6 Investigates obtains secret documents held by the Diocese of Corpus Christi

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
KRIS-TV [Corpus Christi TX]

January 9, 2023

By Bryan Hofmann

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Documents reveal inaction in cases involving accusations of sexual assault against local priests

The history of sexual abuse by clergy in the Catholic Church is widely documented. Locally, there are at least 12 pending civil cases against the Diocese of Corpus Christi.

6 Investigates obtained secret documents from the Diocese of Corpus Christi, which showed the steps they took, or didn’t take, when dealing with accusations against a local priest.

“The Diocese of Corpus Christi and other dioceses like it are trying to protect. They do not want people to realize that we knew about this information, and instead of protecting the child, we protected the brother priest,” attorney Robert Pastor said.

Pastor, an attorney in Arizona who represents survivors of sexual abuse by priests, is involved in eight ongoing suits against the Diocese of Corpus Christi involving its priest, Father Clement Hageman.

The suits allege that the…

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Priest who served in Diocese of Charleston charged with sexual abuse of 11-year-old girl

CHARLESTON (SC)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

January 9, 2023

By Joe Bukuras

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Father Jaime Adolfo Gonzalez-Farias, a visiting priest from Chile who served in the Diocese of Charleston, South Carolina, has been arrested in Florida and charged with sexually abusing an 11-year-old girl in 2020.

Gonzalez-Farias, from the Diocese of San Bernardo, Chile, was arraigned this afternoon in federal court for the district of South Carolina. 

According to the federal indictment from the U.S. district court for the district of South Carolina, Gonzalez-Farias — who went by “Father Gonzalez” — “used a facility and means of interstate and foreign commerce to knowingly attempt to and did persuade, induce, entice, and coerce” an 11-year-old girl “to engage in sexual activity.” 

The indictment further charged that Gonzalez-Farias “did knowingly transport” the 11-year-old girl “in interstate commerce, with intent that the individual engage in sexual activity.”

A third charge in the indictment says that Gonzalez-Farias “crossed a state line with intent to engage in a…

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January 9, 2023

Pope Benedict XVI: A life and legacy

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

January 5, 2023

By Colm Flynn

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[Audio presentation, 27 minutes, including interviews with Doris Reisinger, Anne Barrett Doyle, John L. Allen Jr., Bishop Robert Barron, et al.]

In this special programme to mark the death of Pope Benedict XVI, Colm Flynn explores the life story of the gentle German academic who became the spiritual leader of 1.3 billion Catholics all over the world.

The 95-year old Pope Emeritus died at the Vatican on New Year’s Eve 2022. He will perhaps be best remembered as the first Pope to retire in 600 years. But his life and legacy is much more complicated and varied, with a papacy filled with both majestic spiritual moments and embarrassing and hurtful blunders.

Benedict led the Catholic Church for fewer than eight years but is considered by many to be one of the most influential religious leaders of modern times. Born Joseph Ratzinger in rural Bavaria, he has a deeply religious upbringing…

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Douglas Henshall says late pope Benedict protected paedophiles in savage attack

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Scottish Daily Express [Glasgow, Scotland]

January 9, 2023

By John Glover

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The Shetland actor caused in online stir when he criticised the late Pope’s ‘nice send-off’

Scottish actor Douglas Henshall has launched a savage attack on the late Pope Benedict, criticising his nice “send-off”, despite “protecting paedophiles”.

The actor known for his role in Shetland tweeted his salvo on the former Pope after his funeral on Sunday as 50,000 paid their respects to the late leader of the Catholic church.

Mr Henshall tweeted: “Why did the paedophile protecting pope get a nice send off. I really don’t get it.”

The comment caused on online storm. Heather Macphail wrote: “Not true. He was defrocking priests. Of course he didn’t want publicity. But he took action.”

Another wrote: “Terrible, unsubstantiated accusation that demeans you.”

Pope Benedict XVI resigned in 2013 around the same time as the UK’s most senior cardinal, Keith O’Brien. Cardinal O’Brien was forced to resign as the archbishop of…

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Ex-archbishop of Paris accused of sexually assaulting vulnerable woman

PARIS (FRANCE)
La Croix International [France]

January 6, 2023

By Christophe Henning

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French police have opened a preliminary investigation into Archbishop Michel Aupetit following a report that was filed by the Archdiocese of Paris

The Archdiocese of Paris has filed a report concerning its former archbishop, Michel Aupetit, with the French capital’s Public Prosecutor’s Office. An email correspondence that was discovered between the archbishop and an unidentified woman – the circumstances of which have not been specified – led to the belief that there may have been a relationship of a sexual nature between the two.

A preliminary investigation for sexual assault was then opened because the woman was under guardianship as a vulnerable adult at the time. The investigation will have to determine whether she possessed the capacity to freely consent to a possible sexual relationship.

In a press release published Tuesday evening, the archdiocese confirmed that it had made the report at the end of November. But it also…

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Communiqué du diocèse de Paris à la suite de l’information diffusée dans les médias à propos de Mgr Michel Aupetit

PARIS (FRANCE)
Archdiocese of Paris, France

January 3, 2023

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BFMTV a indiqué ce mardi 3 janvier 2023 que l’archevêque émérite de Paris, Mgr Michel Aupetit, faisait l’objet d’une enquête préliminaire pour des faits d’agressions sexuelles sur personne vulnérable, et que le parquet de Paris a ouvert une enquête après avoir reçu, à la fin du mois de novembre 2022, un signalement du diocèse de Paris.

Le diocèse de Paris confirme avoir adressé un signalement et précise – ainsi qu’il l’a indiqué au parquet de Paris – qu’il n’est pas en mesure de vérifier si les faits en cause sont avérés, ni s’ils constituent une infraction. C’est pour que toutes les vérifications nécessaires puissent être effectuées par la justice, en cohérence avec le protocole signé en 2019 entre le diocèse et le parquet de Paris, que le signalement – qui ne comportait pas la qualification d’agression sexuelle – a été réalisé.

Il est demandé à chacun de respecter l’enquête en…

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Former archbishop of Paris under investigation for sexual assault is ‘outraged but serene’

PARIS (FRANCE)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

January 4, 2023

By Solène Tadié

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The former archbishop of Paris, Michel Aupetit, is reportedly under preliminary investigation for sexual assault on a vulnerable person, according to a report from the Archdiocese of Paris in late November 2022, French news channel BFMTV reported. 

According to the TV channel’s report, the allegations date back to 2011 and concern a vulnerable former parishioner, subject to a judicial protection measure. Aupetit is suspected of having exchanged sexual emails with this parishioner, who suffers from a “slight mental deficiency.”

The investigations opened by the Paris prosecutor’s office have been entrusted to the French Brigade of Repression of Delinquency People. For the moment, neither the former archbishop nor the alleged victim — who has not filed any complaint — have been heard from by the police.

In a statement issued on the evening of Jan. 3, the Archdiocese of Paris said it was not “able to…

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Pope Francis had an impossible task with Pope Benedict’s funeral

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

January 8, 2023

By Christopher R. Altieri

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Criticisms of the handling of the January 5th funeral at the Vatican are missing the real question about the current pontificate.

Pope Francis and the Vatican were going to be under a microscope during the days between Benedict XVI’s passing and his interment.  There was never any question of avoiding it. The period, however, turned pretty quickly into a sort of Rorschach test for Catholics all around the world.

The test was not so much apt to determine where on the spectrum of political, social, and liturgical opinion people sit, as it was apt to reveal how they view the papacy – the office – and the Church generally.

People were always going to complain. The folks in the Vatican knew it, especially Pope Francis, the first person to succeed a living former pope in more than six centuries. Popes die in office. At least, they are supposed to die…

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Pope Francis meets Benedict’s top aide as memoir rattles Vatican

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

January 9, 2023

By Philip Pullella

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Pope Francis on Monday privately met Archbishop Georg Ganswein, former Pope Benedict’s closest aide, who has rattled the Vatican with a book describing what he says were the strains while two men wearing white lived within its ancient walls.

The Vatican’s daily bulletin listed Ganswein in the pope’s schedule of audiences but as is customary gave no details.

Hours after Benedict was buried on Thursday, an Italian publishing house sent some news outlets including Reuters advance copies of Ganswein’s 330-page “Nothing But The Truth – My Life Beside Benedict XVI”.

Ganswein, 66, was Benedict’s personal secretary from 2003, when Benedict was still Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, and remained as his side for nearly 20 years until his death on Dec. 31. He was also Francis’ gatekeeper until the two had a falling out.

The main question now facing Francis is what position to give Ganswein. Many are waiting to see if…

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Benedict’s Burial Leaves Francis Alone, and Unbound

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

January 7, 2023

By Jason Horowitz

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Since the first day of his papacy nearly a decade ago, Pope Francis has had to navigate an unprecedented complication in the Roman Catholic Church: coexisting with his retired predecessor in the same Vatican gardens. Supporters of Francis studiously played down the two-pontiff anomaly, but it generated confusion, especially when conservative acolytes of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI sought to wrap their fervent opposition in their leader’s white robes.

Now, with the burial of Benedict on Thursday, Francis, never bashful about exercising his power, is for the first time unbound.

“Now, I’m sure he’ll take it over,” said Oswald Gracias, the archbishop of Mumbai, as he walked around St. Peter’s Square before Benedict’s funeral Mass.

Some liberal supporters of Francis, who has often balked in the face of advancing major overhauls, are raising expectations for a late-breaking season of change.

Many bishops and cardinals in the Vatican are convinced “he’s thinking ahead,”…

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Pedophilia at Kanakuk: Power, lies and evangelical values that cover up abuse

BRANSON (MO)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

January 9, 2023

By Mallory Challis

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Sometimes ministers and church volunteers make mistakes. Usually, these can be corrected, and the adults who made them can learn how to be better and continue their ministry. As many evangelicals proudly assert, forgiveness and reconciliation are important in the walk with Christ.

But when children are in danger, where do we draw the line with mistakes?

At Kanakuk Kamps, a popular evangelical Christian summer camp outside Branson, Mo., the line has been blurry for decades. For years, Kanakuk leadership allegedly has been aware of abuse at the hands of camp counselors and staff. Reports from victims and their parents appear to have been ignored, and many allegedly were silenced by Non-Disclosure Agreements. Pedophiles have been protected for a “lifetime of ministry” among innocent children who became subject to repeated and preventable abuse.

Part of a long list of survivors, Logan Yandell recently rejoined the fight against sexual abuse at Kanakuk Kamps…

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Spiritan scandal: ‘Why was Fr Arthur Carragher moved to Canada, where he was free to abuse my 10-year-old brother?’

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

January 8, 2023

By Maeve Sheehan

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The Spiritans transferred the abusing priest abroad, after complaints were made about him in Dublin school

Pete Fischer was standing in a queue at the supermarket when the call came that turned everything he knew, or thought he knew, about his older brother Jeff on its head.

It was August 2018. The Pope’s visit to Ireland was making international headlines. An Irish man was interviewed on Canadian television about the sexual abuse he’d suffered as a child in Dublin at the hands of a priest called Fr Arthur Carragher, who was later shunted off to Canada.

Jeff Fischer was watching at home in London, Ontario, when a photograph of Carragher flashed on screen and brought suppressed memories flooding back. The first person he told was his brother.

“Jeff always called me, just ‘hey what’s going on?’ We were very close,” remembers Pete. “I said: ‘Hey, what’s going on.’ He said: ‘Do you…

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Victims’ attorney reacts to KBI report detailing child abuse by Catholic clergy in Kansas

KANSAS CITY (KS)
KMBC - ABC 9 [Kansas City MO]

January 8, 2023

By Peyton Headlee

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The 21-page report details what KBI calls an immense investigation. It has a scope of more than 50 years, looking into all four archdioceses of Kansas

A new report from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation shows the extent of child abuse by clergy in the Catholic Church in Kansas.

The 21-page report details what KBI calls an immense investigation. It has a scope of more than 50 years, looking into all four archdioceses of Kansas.

During the four-year investigation, KBI’s Catholic Clergy Sexual Abuse Task Force identified more than 400 victims, opened 125 criminal cases and investigated nearly 200 clergy members.

The Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas, recommended this investigation to the Attorney General’s Office in November 2018. On Saturday, they released a statement in response to the report — saying you cannot read it without your heart breaking.

It says in part, “[Archbishop Joseph Naumann] joins bishops across the state of…

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Former SC visiting priest charged with sexual abuse of 11-year-old

CHARLESTON (SC)
WCIV-TV, ABC-4 [Charleston SC]

January 8, 2023

By Bailey Wright

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A former visiting priest with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston has been charged with sexual abuse of a minor, according to federal court documents.

Father Jamie Gonzalez-Farias is due for an arraignment Monday afternoon at federal court in Columbia. Magistrate Judge Paige Gossett is presiding.

Gonzalez-Farias was transferred to the district of South Carolina in 2015. The alleged crimes happened in the fall of 2020, court documents say.

He was arrested in Miami, Florida last November and transferred to South Carolina for court.

Court documents say Gonzalez-Farias was charged with aggravated sexual abuse of children, coercion of a minor and transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity.

The priest was not on the list of “credibly accused” released by the diocese in 2019, but has since been added.

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January 8, 2023

Liz and Linda’s wait for justice: A 50-year fight against a child rapist and the nun they say enabled him

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

January 7, 2023

By Julie Scharper

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Liz and Linda. Linda and Liz.

Liz was from “Up the Hill,” Federal Hill. Confident and sporty, with thick blond hair and ice-blue eyes, she dominated the basketball court. Her father was a police officer; the family sacrificed to send their nine children to Catholic school.

Linda was from “Down the Point,” Locust Point. She inherited her olive skin and dark brown curls from her mother, who left when Linda was 3 months old. Linda’s father, too, was a police officer. He brought baby Linda to his mother to raise. Linda was softer, shy, a rule follower.

The girls met in John Merzbacher’s class at the Catholic Community School of Baltimore in 1972. You can call me “Merz,” he said. Merz was different. He smoked a pipe in the classroom. He said bad words. He had a stoplight, a real stoplight that flashed green and yellow and red during class….

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Archbishop Scicluna: Benedict XVI was ‘instrumental in tackling clerical sexual abuse’

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

January 5, 2023

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Archbishop Charles Scicluna, the man universally recognized as having served as the Vatican’s top prosecutor in cases of clerical misconduct, upholds and commends the handling of clerical sex abuse by the late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna says Pope Francis continues to build on the progress made under Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s papacy in the Church’s response to clerical abuse cases through many documents.

The Maltese Archbishop, Adjunct Secretary of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, served for 10 years as Promoter of Justice within that Congregation and played an instrumental role in the handling of clerical sex abuse cases.

He notes that then-Cardinal Ratzinger “was instrumental in the lengthy process that updated the law and procedures on the gravest canonical delicts (crimes; delicta graviora) reserved to the jurisdiction of the Congregation (now Dicastery) for the Doctrine of the Faith (1996 – 2001).” 

As Prefect of the…

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Rev. Tom Reese reflects on Pope Benedict’s legacy as mourners gather in Rome

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Public Radio - NPR [Washington DC]

January 2, 2023

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NPR’s Rob Schmitz speaks with Rev. Tom Reese, a senior analyst with the Religion News Service, about the legacy of the late Pope Benedict XIV.

LISTEN • 4:36

ROB SCHMITZ, HOST:

And Catholic Jesuit priest Thomas Reese is with us this morning to add to this. He’s a senior analyst with Religion News Service and the author of “Inside The Vatican: The Politics And Organization Of The Catholic Church.” Good morning.

THOMAS REESE: Good morning.

SCHMITZ: Father Reese, we just heard from NPR’s Sylvia Poggioli in Rome, who described Pope Benedict’s legacy. How would you describe his legacy?

REESE: Well, I agree with much of what Sylvia said. He certainly will go down in history as the first pope to resign in 600 years, and it makes it easier for future popes to resign. In addition, you know, he was the first person in the Vatican to take the sex abuse crisis…

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Press conference by Road to Recovery, January 9, 2023

ANDOVER (MA)
Road to Recovery [Livingston NJ]

January 8, 2023

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For immediate release

DAVID RIGBY, A SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIM OF FATHER ROBERT TURNBULL, O.S.A., AT AUSTIN PREP IN READING, MA, WILL SPEAK IN PERSON IN FRONT OF ST. AUGUSTINE CHURCH IN ANDOVER, MA, ABOUT THE ABUSE HE EXPERIENCED

ST. AUGUSTINE IS THE ONE AND ONLY PARISH ADMINISTERED BY THE AUGUSTINIAN FRIARS IN THE ARCHDIOCESE OF BOSTON AND AUSTIN PREP IS THE ONLY SECONDARY SCHOOL ADMINISTERED BY THE AUGUSTINIAN FRIARS IN THE ARCHDIOCESE OF BOSTON

An Augustinian priest from Austin Prep, Reading, MA, Father Robert Turnbull, who has been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minor children previously, once again has been found credibly accused of sexual abuse of two minor children and students from Austin Prep School in Reading, MA, and each of the victims received low six-figure financial settlements because of the sexual abuse.

The victims are represented by Attorney Mitchell Garabedian of Boston, MA, who will join the…

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Prosecutions unlikely as Kansas Catholic clergy sexual abuse investigation targets 14 suspects

KANSAS CITY (KS)
Kansas Reflector [Topeka, KS]

January 7, 2023

By Tim Carpenter

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Attorney general releases summary of four-year inquiry on last full day on job

TOPEKA — The Kansas Bureau of Investigation’s four-year inquiry into alleged child sexual abuse in four Catholic dioceses and a breakaway Catholic sect in the state resulted in referral of 30 cases to county prosecutors targeting 14 members of the clergy, state officials said Friday.

An executive summary of the KBI report said no prosecutor had charged any priests named in KBI affidavits with sexual crimes. It’s unlikely the cases would result in charges against alleged abusers because Kansas eliminated the statute of limitations on certain sex crimes in 2013, but didn’t make the statute retroactive.

Historical crimes of rape, indecent liberties with a child or criminal sodomy, like most of the clergy allegations investigated by the KBI, were tied to the statute of limitations at the time of the crime. In most instances, the statute of…

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Archdiocese of KCK responds to news of sexual abuse victims

KANSAS CITY (KS)
WDAF-TV - Fox 4 [Kansas City MO]

January 8, 2023

By Mike Coutee

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The Archdiocese of Kansas City released a statement Saturday after the Kansas Bureau of Investigation released a report results from a four-year investigation into abuse in Kansas’ Catholic Churches.

The investigation started when departing Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt requested it in 2018 after Kansas City Archdiocese Archbishop Joseph Naumann asked to have each diocese investigated.

It found all four dioceses in Kansas not only had clergy members who abused children between 1950 and the 2000s but also helped cover up those crimes.

“You cannot read this report without your heart breaking,” said Archbishop Joseph Naumann, leader of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas.

“The Archdiocese has openly collaborated with the KBI from the moment we initiated an extensive and thorough review of our internal files by an independent, outside law firm,” Vicar General Father John Riley said in a written statement. “We shared the full results of our…

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South Carolina priest charged with federal sex crimes

CHARLESTON (SC)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 8, 2023

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A South Carolina priest who served in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston has been charged with federal sex crimes stemming from allegations that he abused an 11-year-old child.

Jaime Adolfo Gonzalez-Farias, known in church as “Father Gonzalez,” was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Service in Miami on Nov. 29, according to court records. A recently unsealed indictment shows Gonzalez-Farias, 68, was charged with aggravated sexual abuse of children, coercion of a minor and transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity.

Between Nov. 8 and Nov. 12, 2020, Gonzalez-Farias is accused of taking an 11-year-old child to Florida and engaging in the “intentional touching, not through the clothing, of (the victim’s) genitalia,” according to the indictment.

In a statement provided to The State, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston said they first became aware of an allegation of sexual misconduct with a…

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Catholic priest who formerly served in Charleston indicted on federal sex abuse charges

CHARLESTON (SC)
The Post and Courier [Charleston SC]

January 8, 2023

By Jocelyn Grzeszczak

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Federal prosecutors charged a Catholic priest who served for several years in the Charleston Diocese with sexually abusing an 11-year-old child.

Jaime Adolfo Gonzalez-Farias, 68, was arrested Nov. 28, 2022, in Florida, court records show. The Chilean national had worked in South Carolina as a visiting priest of the Diocese of San Bernardo, Chile, between 2015 and 2020, according to church records.

Prosecutors charged him in an October 2022 indictment with three counts of sexual crimes: coercion or enticement of a minor; transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity; and aggravated sexual abuse of children.

Prosecutors allege his crimes began in fall 2020, when Gonzalez-Farias persuaded the 11-year-old to engage in sexual activity with him, according to the recently unsealed indictment.

The defendant traveled with the child from South Carolina to another state, where Gonzalez-Farias is accused of “intentional touching, not through the clothing, of (the victim’s) genitalia,”…

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Vicar of Rome latest papal confidante to fall out of favor

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 8, 2023

By John L. Allen Jr.

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ROME – In the 1999 film “The Talented Mr. Ripley,” based on Patricia Highsmith’s 1955 novel, Dickie Greenleaf is a charismatic and rich young socialite who’s in the habit of drawing people into his orbit and making them feel special, until he loses interest and casts them aside.

When this begins to happen to Tom Ripley, the title character, Greenleaf’s girlfriend Marge Sherwood expresses sympathy.

“It’s like the sun shines on you and it’s glorious,” she says of Dickie’s favor, “and then he forgets you and it’s very, very cold.”

As Italian Cardinal Angelo De Donatis would be the latest to tell you, there’s a somewhat similar phenomenon with Pope Francis. After almost a decade in power, there’s an increasingly long list of figures who were once part of the pontiff’s inner circle, but who, for one reason or another, have lost that standing.

One day after Francis laid his…

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Decades-old abuse claims against Portland diocese, once blocked, pour in after state law change

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald [Portland ME]

January 8, 2023

By Emily Allen and Eric Russell

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More than a dozen people once barred by statutes of limitations are suing the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland.

When the Rev. Lawrence Sabatino allegedly sexually abused a 6-year-old Ann Marie Burke at St. Peter Parish nearly 60 years ago, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland already was aware of at least one other girl Sabatino had reportedly abused at a different church in Lewiston several years earlier.

The church moved Sabatino from Lewiston to Portland in 1958, after 6-year-old Patricia Butkowski‘s parents presented church officials with evidence the priest had sexually abused their daughter, a report from the Maine Attorney General’s office revealed 46 years later.

Records show Sabatino was ordered not to contact Patricia or her family and to stop “playing games” with little girls. But when the priest arrived at St. Peter, he was allowed to oversee a group of young girls, including Ann,…

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Timeline of alleged abuse

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald [Portland ME]

January 8, 2023

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Thirteen lawsuits have been filed against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland so far this year, all alleging the church failed to stop priests and other employees from sexually abusing children. The complaints lay out a timeline of abuse, much of which the church has acknowledged, that spans decades.

 1957: Mary Geraldine Walsh, a nun working at St. John Parochial School in Bangor, is accused of sexually abusing a student.

1958: Lawrence Sabatino is accused of abuse at St. Patrick Parish in Lewiston. The diocese later moves him to St. Peter Parish in Portland.

1961: John Curran is accused of abuse at St. Joseph Parish in Old Town.

1962: Curran arrives at St. Augustine Parish in Augusta, where he is accused of abusing at least three boys in the early 1960s.

1964: Sabatino is accused of abuse at St. Peter Parish.

1966: Edward F. Ward is accused of abuse at St. Mary…

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Feeble clergy sex abuse report exposes Schmidt’s sins. He betrayed his office and Kansas kids.

TOPEKA (KS)
Kansas Reflector [Topeka, KS]

January 8, 2023

By Clay Wirestone

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[PHOTO: Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt released the summary of an investigation into clergy sexual abuse on his last full day in office. (Tim Carpenter/Kansas Reflector)]

Now we know the true legacy of outgoing Attorney General Derek Schmidt: allowing likely sexual abusers of children to walk free.

According to a summary from the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, more than 400 children in our state were sexually abused by Catholic clergy since 1950. While the KBI looked into nearly 200 clergy and opened 125 criminal cases, not a single person faced legal consequences. You can credit the statute of limitations and a tradition of stonewalling church bureaucracy.

Schmidt appears to have sat on the KBI report. Despite beginning in 2018, its results didn’t appear until after he lost a race for governor against Democrat Laura Kelly. His office buried the news on a Friday…

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Media Statement, Archdiocese of Kansas City KS

KANSAS CITY (KS)
Archdiocese of Kansas City [Kansas City KS]

January 7, 2023

By Archdiocese of Kansas City KS

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The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas learned from media reports last evening that the Kansas Attorney General has released a report by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation of its investigation of historical allegations of sexual abuse made against Catholic clergy in the state.  

Although there has not been sufficient time to carefully study the report, it reflects a detailed four-year investigation of all four dioceses (or church jurisdictions) in Kansas covering more than 50 years. 

The trauma experienced by the victims is clear from the KBI report, said Archbishop Joseph Naumann, leader of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas.

“You cannot read this report without your heart breaking,” he said.

The archbishop expressed his gratitude to the Kansas attorney general for the professionalism and thoroughness he and the Kansas Bureau of Investigation brought to the study. It was Archbishop Naumann who initially requested the investigation of archdiocesan files…

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Former South Carolina Catholic priest charged with sexual abuse of 11 year old

CHARLESTON (SC)
The State [Columbia SC]

January 7, 2023

By Ted Clifford

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A Catholic priest who served in the Charleston Diocese has been charged with federal sex crimes.

Jaime Adolfo Gonzalez-Farias, known as “Father Gonzalez,” was arrested by the U.S. Marshall Service in Miami, Florida on Nov. 29, according to records filed in South Carolina federal court. He is being remanded to South Carolina where he will face allegations that he sexually abused an 11-year-old.

In a recently unsealed indictment, Gonzalez-Farias is charged with aggravated sexual abuse of children, coercion of a minor and transportation of a minor with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity.

Beginning Oct. 17, 2020, Gonzalez-Farias sought to “persuade, induce, entice and coerce” the 11-year-old victim, named in the indictment as Minor Victim 1, to engage in sex with him, the indictment states.

Between Nov. 8 and Nov. 12, 2020, Gonzalez-Farias is accused of transporting the child to Florida and engaging in the…

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January 7, 2023

Newly released KBI report identifies 400+ victims of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in Kansas

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KSHB - NBC 41 [Kansas City MO]

January 6, 2023

By David Medina

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Charges not filed due to statute of limitations, priest deaths

A four-year long investigation conducted by the Kansas Bureau of Investigation identified dozens of Kansas Catholic clergy suspected of committing sex crimes against children.

The Kansas Attorney General’s Office released a lengthy report of the KBI’s findings on Friday evening.

Investigators conducted their review for the whole Catholic church in Kansas, which is divided across Dodge City, Kansas City, Salina and Wichita.

According to the report, the KBI pinned 188 members who may have committed crimes including aggravated criminal sodomy, rape, aggravated indecent liberties with a child and aggravated sexual battery.

As a result of its investigation, the KBI presented charging information against 30 clergy.

Because of statute of limitations has run out on many cases, and the deaths of the clergy member in others, no prosecutors have yet to file any charges.

As part of the investigation,  View Cache

Report finds Catholic church in Kansas covered up sexual abuse of children by priests for decades

TOPEKA (KS)
KCUR (NPR affiliate) [Kansas City MO]

January 6, 2023

By Scott Canon

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The Kansas Bureau of Investigation found that the church minimized child rape with euphemisms, protected priests accused of rape and supported clergy financially after they had been implicated in sexual assault.

A Kansas Bureau of Investigation report released late Friday documents a chronic pattern of sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the state, and the church’s history of protecting its clergy.

The report released by the state attorney general’s office said dioceses across the state frequently failed to follow church policies regarding allegations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy.

“By any objective review,” the report states, “practices existed that were designed to conceal the truth about what took place.”

The task force that conducted the overview said efforts to prosecute cases were hampered by actions of the church, by expiring statutes of limitations and the deaths of both alleged abusers and their victims.

In late 2018, Kansas…

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Kansas Catholic priest sex abuse report leads to no charges

TOPEKA (KS)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 7, 2023

By Margaret Stafford and John Hanna

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The Kansas Bureau of Investigation said Friday that it has distributed 30 charging affidavits to prosecutors as part of its investigation into sexual abuse by Catholic priests but, so far, no charges have been filed.

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt released the KBI’s report concluding an investigation of the state’s four Roman Catholic dioceses in Wichita, Salina, Dodge City and Kansas City, Kansas.

The bureau said it would continue to investigate clergy associated with the Society of Saint Pius X, a breakaway Catholic group with a large branch in St. Marys.

A summary of the report said a six-member task force had interviewed 137 victims of abuse, initiated 125 criminal cases and distributed 30 affidavits to prosecutors for charging consideration.

Investigators identified 188 clergy members suspected of committing various criminal acts from records that stretched to the 1950s.

Michael McDonnell, a spokesperson for the international Survivors Network of those Abused…

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Kansas report on sex abuse in Catholic dioceses identifies 188 clergy suspected of crimes

TOPEKA (KS)
Kansas City Star [Kansas City MO]

January 7, 2023

By Judy L. Thomas

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A four-year investigation into sexual abuse in Kansas’ Catholic dioceses and a breakaway Catholic sect has identified 188 clergy members suspected of committing criminal acts, according to a report released Friday by outgoing Attorney General Derek Schmidt.

But because of statute of limitations issues, no charges have yet resulted from the investigation conducted by the state’s top law enforcement agency.

“In summary, the task force received and reviewed 41,265 pages of records, received and reviewed 224 tips, interviewed 137 victims of abuse, initiated 125 criminal cases and distributed 30 charging affidavits to the appropriate prosecutors for charging consideration,” wrote Kansas Bureau of Investigation director Kirk Thompson in a letter to Schmidt.

“Our investigations identified 188 clergy members suspected of committing various criminal acts, to include: aggravated criminal sodomy, rape, aggravated indecent liberties with a child and aggravated sexual battery.

” The report said the investigation turned up many…

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Slovenian Jesuits ask for forgiveness in major abuse case

ROME (ITALY)
Reuters [London, England]

January 7, 2023

By Philip Pullella

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Slovenia’s Jesuits say they believe sexual abuse allegations against a prominent member of their order are true and have asked for forgiveness.

It is the latest development in the case of Father Marko Ivan Rupnik that has rattled the religious order and the Vatican.

It was only after Italian media reports in November alleging that Rupnik, 68, had sexually and psychologically abused nuns when he was their spiritual director in his native Slovenia three decades ago that Jesuit headquarters acknowledged the case.

They said he is under partial sanctions, including a ban on hearing confessions and leading spiritual retreats, but that the Vatican’s doctrinal department ruled that the case had gone beyond the statute of limitations.

Jesuit headquarters also said the same Vatican department had excommunicated Rupnik several years ago but lifted the excommunication after the priest had repented.

The order’s public statements in Rome have been contradictory, leaving many…

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SBC’s sexual abuse hotline raises ethical issue

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

January 6, 2023

By Christa Brown

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Callers to the Southern Baptist Convention’s sexual abuse hotline are often routed to a person who also serves the SBC’s abuse reform implementation task force.

Did you know this? I’m betting most of you didn’t. It’s information about the hotline that has not been widely disseminated. And that’s troubling.

For clergy sex abuse survivors, whom church and denominational leaders have often lied to, deceived and betrayed — again and again and again — maximum transparency about the entirety of the reporting process is essential for cultivating trust.

From the get-go, long before they ever pick up the phone or draft the first email, survivors should have this information about the hotline. It is information that should be public.

As confirmed in multiple text messages from Rachael Denhollander, when survivors contact the SBC’s sexual abuse hotline, currently operated by Guidepost Solutions, Denhollander is the “advocate” to whom Guidepost refers survivors so that Denhollander can…

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Portland Diocese challenging 2021 Maine law lifting statute of limitations on childhood abuse claims

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald [Portland ME]

January 4, 2023

By Emily Allen and Eric Russell

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Attorneys for the diocese and the 13 plaintiffs suing the church will argue the case before Superior Court Justice Thomas McKeon later this month.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland is challenging the constitutionality of a state law that removed the statute of limitations for anyone who wants to file a lawsuit alleging that they experienced childhood sexual abuse in Maine.

When the law eliminating the time limit for childhood abuse claims passed in the summer of 2021 it opened the door for people to sue the diocese for decades-old incidents.

The diocese says the Legislature overstepped its bounds, and that the newfound ability to sue for incidents before 1987, which had been the statute of limitations in most cases, violates both the Maine and U.S. constitutions. The attorney leading a group of new plaintiffs suing the diocese rebutted that argument Wednesday at a news conference in Lewiston.

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Supporters disappointed by failure of ‘Scout’s Honor Law’ during lame duck session

COLUMBUS (OH)
NPR WOSU 89.7 [Cleveland, OH]

January 5, 2023

By Matthew Rand

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Supporters of a plan to raise a civil statute of limitations to let Ohio survivors of Boy Scout abuse get larger settlements are expressing disappointment that it failed to pass in the recent lame-duck legislative session.

Ohio’s civil statute of limitations for victims of sexual abuse currently ends at age 30.

The Scout’s Honor Law would ensure that survivors in Ohio will get 100% of their settlement rather than 30 to 45%.

In a bankruptcy settlement, the Boy Scouts of America set aside nearly $3 billion for more than 82,000 sexual abuse survivors. About 1,911 of the survivors are in Ohio.

Chris Graham is not involved in that case, but he is a sexual abuse survivor and advocate for the Scout’s Honor Law.

Graham said Ohio ranks poorly when it comes to statutes of limitations for sex crimes.

“It means that the Boy Scouts here in Ohio are eligible to…

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Key Backer of Sexual Abuse Reforms Wins New Position in Pennsylvania

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

January 5, 2023

By Adam Horowitz Law

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Across the US, there are 7,386 state legislators. Roughly 200 of them were picked for leadership positions in their respective chambers. A man in Pennsylvania just won the election to such a post. Why is this big news to abuse victims and advocates? Because he is State Rep. Mark Rozzi and now the Speaker of the State House of Representatives. The New York Times just ran a nearly-full page article about him. 

Here are some interesting facts about Rozzi:

    • He is a survivor of child sexual abuse by a Catholic priest
    • He disclosed this publicly
    • His revelation prompted at least two other victims to come forward
    • He sued his perpetrator and the diocese that ordained and supervised him
    • He disclosed criminal investigations into the Allentown and Harrisburg dioceses
    • He testified before a grand jury investigating predator priests and church cover-ups in Pittsburgh
    • He publicly called on…
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Gov. Wolf issues call for PA special session for amendment for childhood abuse victims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WJAC-TV [Jamestown PA]

January 6, 2023

By Tyler Jeski

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Pennsylvania Governor Tom Wolf has called for a special session of the General Assembly to propose a constitutional amendment that would retroactively extend the timeline for victims of childhood sexual abuse to file civil actions.

The governor has called for the special session to start on Monday January 9, 2023.

In the proclamation he called for lawmakers to begin the process of passing House Bill 14 for the second time.

The bill would open what’s become known as a two year “window of justice.” It would allow victims of childhood sexual abuse to file lawsuits against their alleged abusers. One example, is it would give victims of sex abuse at the hands of priests the ability to sue the church, event if the statute of limitations had expired.

“For far too many Pennsylvanians, justice and healing for the pain they’ve experienced is out of reach,” said Gov. Wolf in a…

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