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 7, 2023

New Pa. speaker puts sexual abuse lawsuit window atop agenda

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 6, 2023

By Mark Scolforo

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Pennsylvania’s new state House speaker declared Friday that no other legislation will be taken up by his chamber until it approves a constitutional amendment granting child sexual abuse victims the power to file what would otherwise be outdated claims.

House Speaker Mark Rozzi, who has spoken of being abused as a boy by a Roman Catholic priest, issued his ultimatum ahead of Monday’s scheduled start of a special session on the issue, ordered by outgoing Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf.

Rozzi, a Reading area Democrat, was the surprise pick for speaker on Tuesday. He has promised to act as an independent and not caucus with the Democrats.

Rozzi previously led efforts to provide a two-year “window” during which abuse victims may sue, including his work for the 2021 passage in both General Assembly chambers of a constitutional amendment to create that lawsuit period. To become law, the measure must be passed…

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January 6, 2023

Benedict and Clergy Sexual Abuse: The Leader Who Said ‘No More’

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

January 6, 2023

By Judy Roberts

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While debate continues about whether he should have done even more as pope to address this scourge, knowledgeable observers agree he initiated a decisive change in how the Church deals with the issue.

Even though nearly a decade has passed since Pope Benedict XVI resigned, his death has unleashed yet another scrutiny of his handling of the Church’s sexual-abuse crisis. 

The latest assessments echo those of 2013 when some reports said his legacy had been marred by the abuse scandal and even that he had been complicit in it. At the same time, other observers credited him with aggressively dealing with a problem that had clearly predated his election to the papacy.

Msgr. Robert Oliver, a canon-law expert with 20 years of experience in working with victims and dealing with abuse cases, sees this latest rehashing as a sign.

“More time is clearly needed for us to gain true perspective and…

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Attorney Garabedian Says “Pope Benedict Continued the Cover-Up of Clergy Sexual Abuse”

BOSTON (MA)
GoLocalProv [Providence RI]

January 5, 2023

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On Thursday, as the Vatican was holding funeral ceremonies for Pope Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI, top sexual abuse attorney Mitchell Garabedian issued comments about the ongoing cover-up of sexual abuse that took place. 

Born in Germany, Benedict served as the head of the Catholic Church from 2005 to 2013. 

Benedict, who was the first pontiff in almost 600 years to resign his position rather than hold office for life, passed away on Saturday, according to a statement from the Vatican. 

Garabedian said in a statement:

I have represented childhood clergy sexual abuse victims worldwide for decades. 

For the most part, Pope Benedict continued the cover-up of clergy sexual abuse by saying the right things but not taking substantive action. Respectfully, Pope Benedict did very little to alleviate the suffering and loneliness of childhood sexual abuse victims. The here and there limited action by Pope Benedict compounded the pain of clergy sexual…

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Cardinal O’Malley reflects on Pope Benedict’s legacy

BOSTON (MA)
The Pilot - Archdiocese of Boston [Boston MA]

January 6, 2023

By Antonio Enrique

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As he was preparing to depart for Rome to attend the funeral of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley spoke to The Pilot Jan. 2 about his experiences with the late pope and his impact on the Church. The interview has been edited for clarity.

Q. You had many personal interactions, first with Cardinal Ratzinger and then with Pope Benedict XVI. How would you describe him — his character and demeanor?

He was certainly a very gentle and kind person. He was extremely brilliant intellectually but very respectful of other people. He didn’t use his brilliance as a way of overwhelming or putting people down. He was always searching for the truth and always searching to be faithful to the traditions of the Church. But he was always kind and respectful, even to those who did not share his convictions.

Q. Some coverage of his passing describes him as a fundamentalist…

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Benedict aide’s tell-all book will expose ‘dark maneuvers’

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

January 2, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s longtime personal secretary has written a tell-all book that his publisher on Monday promised would tell the truth about the “blatant calumnies,” “dark maneuvers,” mysteries and scandals that sullied the reputation of a pontiff best known for his historic resignation.

Archbishop Georg Gaenswein’s “Nothing but the Truth: My Life Beside Pope Benedict XVI” is being published this month by the Piemme imprint of Italian publishing giant Mondadori, according to a press release.

Benedict died Saturday at age 95 and his body was put on display Monday in St. Peter’s Basilica ahead of a Thursday funeral to be celebrated by his successor, Pope Francis.

Gaenswein, a 66-year-old German priest, stood by Benedict’s side for nearly three decades, first as an official working for then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger in the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, then starting in 2003 as Ratzinger’s personal secretary.

Gaenswein followed his boss to…

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Diocese challenges Maine law allowing older sex abuse claims

PORTLAND (ME)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 5, 2023

By David Sharp

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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland is challenging a Maine law that eliminated the statue of limitations for child sexual abuse, allowing a wave of new lawsuits.

A motion in the first of the new civil lawsuits suggests the 2021 law is unconstitutional through retroactive changes that violate due process and vested rights.

But Michael Bigos, attorney for plaintiffs, disagreed with claims that the law is unconstitutional, and said the courts should defer to the Legislature on the matter.

The arguments focusing on vested rights, retroactive laws and the emotionally charged subject of child sexual abuse sets up a challenge that ultimately will have to be decided by Maine’s Supreme Judicial Court, said Jim Burke, professor emeritus at University of Maine School of Law.

The motion will be argued before a Superior Court justice at the end of the month. “It’s going to be a powerful argument on both sides,” Burke…

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The controversial legacy Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI leaves behind

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
PBS NewsHour [Arlington VA]

January 5, 2023

By Nick Schifrin and Teresa Cebrian Aranda

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[VIDEO]

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI was celebrated Thursday at a funeral mass in St. Peter’s Square with his successor, Pope Francis, presiding. Though retired nearly a decade, Benedict was a leading light for conservatives in the church. Others look at his mixed record on child sexual abuse in the church as a failure. Nick Schifrin reports.

Read the Full Transcript

Geoff Bennett: Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI was celebrated today at a funeral mass in St. Peter’s Square, with his successor, Pope Francis, presiding.Though retired for nearly a decade, Benedict was a leading light for conservatives in the Catholic Church. Others look at his mixed record on child sexual abuse in the church as a failure.Nick Schifrin looks at his legacy and an historic funeral.

Nick Schifrin:In St. Peter’s Square, a solemn service that hasn’t taken place for more than 200 years, a living pope, Francis, leading the funeral of a…

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B.C. man alleges hundreds of sexual assaults by Scout leader, church volunteer

LANGLEY (CANADA)
Vancouver Is Awesome [Vancouver BC, Canada]

January 5, 2023

By Jeremy Hainsworth

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Local meetings of the North America Man/Boy Love Association were held in Langley and Aldergrove, a B.C. Supreme Court notice of civil claim says.

Warning: This story talks about sexual assault and may be distressing to some readers.

A Surrey man claims he was groomed for sexual abuse from an early age and then sexually assaulted hundreds of times by a man who was a Scout leader and United Church volunteer.

A notice of civil claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court by S.C. alleges Jens Binderup Jensen also took advantage of his work in hotels to access rooms where the alleged assaults took place.

The suit, filed Aug. 22, names as defendants Binderup, Scouts Canada, the United Church of Canada and Board of Trustees of the School District No. 39 Vancouver. The claim calls the aforementioned the youth group defendants.

Also named as defendants: Nurmann Holdings Ltd, La Concha…

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A pope who redefined clerical sex abuse

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

January 6, 2023

By Father Shay Cullen

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As an academic, Benedict XVI could not lead the clean-up but admitted that ‘mistakes have been made’ and apologized

Pope Benedict XVI has gone to his eternal rest after a life of service, teaching and ruling the Catholic Church. He was pope from April 19, 2005, until his resignation on Feb. 28, 2013. Many remember him as a much revered and greatly respected priest, bishop and pope. He has been lauded by many on the conservative side of the Catholic Church.

Before becoming pope he was known as Joseph Ratzinger. Of German nationality, he became a priest in 1951 and later made a bishop in 1977 and pope in 2005. As priest, bishop and cardinal he was a renowned academic and theologian and author of 66 books, three encyclical letters on love (2005), hope (2007), and “charity in truth” (2009).

He was a conservative traditional pope and reinstated the pre-Vatican…

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What Mark Rozzi’s record can tell us about what kind of Pa. House speaker he’ll be

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Daily Item [Sunbury PA]

January 6, 2023

By Angela Couloumbis and Stephen Caruso of Spotlight PA

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In the Pennsylvania Capitol, no other issue defines the legislative career of newly minted state House Speaker Mark Rozzi more than helping survivors of decades-old sexual abuse.

In every legislative session since he was first elected in 2012, Rozzi has sponsored bills that would suspend the state’s statute of limitations for two years to allow people sexually abused as children to sue their perpetrators.

And as each legislative session came and went with no action, the onetime small businessman from Berks County became an unabashed advocate. He organized rallies with survivors in the Capitol rotunda. He called out legislators — sometimes, in unflattering terms — who opposed his bills.

And he butted heads with powerful interests seeking to block his efforts, which only intensified following the scathing 2018 grand jury report detailing decades of child sexual abuse and cover-up in the Roman Catholic Church.

At one point, Rozzi, who was abused…

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January 5, 2023

Benedict Leaves Behind a Conflicted Legacy on Clerical Sexual Abuse

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

January 4, 2023

By Jason Horowitz and Erika Solomon

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Joseph Ratzinger was accused of mishandling cases when he was bishop of Munich, but as pope he was credited with forcing the Catholic Church to face a scourge long ignored. 

Jason Horowitz reported and wrote this article from Rome, where he is bureau chief. Erika Solomon, based in Berlin, spoke with abuse victims and mourners in Munich and Garching an der Alz, Germany.

Before he led the Roman Catholic Church as Benedict XVI, and before he loomed over the church as a powerhouse cardinal and the Vatican’s chief doctrinal watchdog, Joseph Ratzinger, archbishop of Munich, attended a 1980 meeting about a priest in northwestern Germany accused of abusing children.

What exactly transpired during the meeting is unclear — but afterward, the priest was transferred, and over the next dozen years moved around Bavaria to different parishes before he ended up in the tiny village of Garching an der Alz,…

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Pope Benedict XVI was involved in several high-profile Wisconsin abuse cases

MADISON (WI)
Nate's Mission [Milwaukee WI]

January 4, 2023

By Sarah Pearson and Peter Isely, Nate's Mission

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 4 January, 2023

AG Kaul requires evidence from the Vatican regarding all Wisconsin cases to complete his clergy abuse investigation

Ambassador Donnelly must demand evidence on behalf of Kaul’s investigation

On Thursday, a US delegation including US Ambassador to the Holy See, Joe Donnelly, and former Milwaukee Archbishop, now Cardinal Timothy Dolan, will represent President Biden at the funeral of Pope Benedict XVI.

As head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) and then Pope, Benedict XVI was involved in some of the most notorious cases of sexual abuse in the United States, including that of Milwaukee-based Father Lawrence Murphy, who raped and sexually assaulted over 200 deaf children.

When the Milwaukee Archdiocese filed bankruptcy for roughly 8,000 incidents of child sexual abuse, Pope Benedict XVI approved a widely-considered fraudulent transfer of $60 million dollars at the request of then Milwaukee…

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The Southern Baptist Church Ignored Its Abuse Crisis. She Exposed It.

(TX)
Vice [Brooklyn NY]

January 4, 2023

By Sarah Stankorb

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For decades, Christa Brown documented cases of sexual abuse within the world’s largest Baptist denomination—including her own.

Christa Brown describes her girlhood self as a “goody-two-shoes nerd.” She sang in the church choir and played piano. She adored God with the “wholehearted, unlimited love” of a child. 

She felt cool riding with other church kids in her Baptist youth pastor’s ‘66 Mustang. The pastor, Tommy Gilmore, was then in his late twenties. According to Brown, when he played flag football with her, he kept ending up on top of her, pinning her face-down to the ground. He lingered there. When the youth group played Twister, he played too, pressing his body against hers. When she wore high heels for the first time at 15, Gilmore told her how he loved what heels did for a woman’s legs. 

Brown trusted him. She confided family secrets to Gilmore, and as he began…

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RIP Pope Benedict XVI — but let’s not ignore all the harm he did the church and its people

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Salon [San Francisco, CA]

January 5, 2023

By Celia Viggo Wexler

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Before we canonize the late pope, let’s remember all the harm his preaching caused — and hope for something better

They say you should never speak ill of the dead, but we may need to make an exception for Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. I don’t presume to judge the state of his soul when he met his maker. But in the mostly positive coverage of this complicated man and his troubled papacy, I fear we will forget all the damage he did to so many Catholics over the course of his long career. 

This is not about vengeance. It’s an attempt to stop a Benedict cult before it begins. During his more than four decades at the Vatican, Benedict had a profound impact on the American Catholic church, long dominated by conservative prelates appointed by him and his predecessor, Pope John Paul II. These American bishops placed their allegiance in Benedict…

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Pope Benedict’s most important legacy is Francis

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

January 2, 2023

By Ed. Condon

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It may seem counterintuitive, but the defining legacy of Pope Benedict XVI is that he gave the Church Pope Francis.

Following the death of Pope Benedict XVI, the tributes and testimonies to his life have flowed, offering different accounts of an extraordinary life of study and service to the Church.

Joseph Ratzinger, ordained a priest in 1951 and a bishop in 1977, was a prolific theologian and author. A major force in the post conciliar decades, his academic and theological writings seem likely to form part of the canon of essential study for future generations of professors, priests and bishops.

As a bishop, priest, and cardinal, Ratzinger was also, contrary to many media caricatures, well known as a kindly and personal figure, often sending thoughtful, handwritten letters in response to mail he received from Catholics around the world.

The legacy of Joseph Ratzinger the theologian and the man seems obvious.

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Highlights from the life of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI

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

December 31, 2022

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, the first pope in 600 years to resign, has died. Here are highlights from his life.

April 16, 1927: Born Joseph Alois Ratzinger in Marktl am Inn, Germany, youngest of three children to Joseph and Maria Ratzinger.

1943-1945: Assistant in Germany’s anti-aircraft defense and infantry soldier; imprisoned in 1945 in American POW camp in Neu-Ulm.

June 29, 1951: Ordained along with brother Georg Ratzinger in Freising.

1969-1977: Professor at University of Regensburg.

March 25, 1977: Named archbishop of Munich and Freising.

June 27, 1977: Made a cardinal by Pope Paul VI.

Nov. 25, 1981: Named prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith by Pope John Paul II; takes up post in March 1982.

April 2, 2005: Pope John Paul II dies.

April 8, 2005: As dean of the College of Cardinals, Ratzinger presides over John Paul’s funeral.

April 19, 2005: Elected 265th pope…

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A man of contradictions, Benedict leaves us two very different legacies

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
NBC News [New York NY]

January 4, 2023

By Donna B. Doucette

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The pope emeritus took the first strong steps to stop clery sex abuse, but ultimately prioiritized the institution of the church.

A man of contradictions. A pope of colliding centuries. It’s as if Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who is being laid to rest Thursday in Vatican City, has two legacies instead of one. 

The theologian Joseph Ratzinger was a significant architect of the theology that informed the doctrines of the Second Vatican Council, a reform effort in the 1960s that brought fresh air to the church by encouraging outreach to other religions, the use of local languages instead of Latin at Mass, support for religious freedom and much more.

Despite this promise and the potential for transparency, Benedict continued the church’s centuries-old preference for handling abuse cases privately.

Ratzinger was deemed one of the influential progressives at the council, but as a cardinal starting in 1977 and then as pope…

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Global clergy abuse survivors to state delegations: reconsider attending Pope Benedict XVI’s funeral, join victims in demanding zero tolerance instead

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Ending Clergy Abuse (ECAGlobal.org) [Seattle WA]

January 4, 2023

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State delegations’ silence on Pope Benedict XVI’s clergy abuse cover-up record devastating to victims and families around the world

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 4 January, 2023

The following is a letter from the Ending Clergy Abuse (ECA) Board Members to their respective state delegations regarding their potential attendance of Pope Benedict XVI’s funeral and their public statements praising his life and legacy.

To our respective state delegations:

This week, the Vatican will lead a global memorial and celebration, honoring the life and legacy of Pope Benedict XVI. You will travel to Vatican City for his funeral, and in doing so, you will be acknowledging the historical, political, and social power of the Catholic Church. Meanwhile millions of clergy abuse victims around the world will be forced to witness what will likely be a rewriting of history concerning the legacy and actions of a man who is directly and partly responsible…

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SNAP reacts to the death of Pope Benedict XVI

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

December 31, 2022

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(For Immediate Release December 31, 2022) 

In our view, the death of Pope Benedict XVI is a reminder that, much like John Paul II, Benedict was more concerned about the church’s deteriorating image and financial flow to the hierarchy versus grasping the concept of true apologies followed by true amends to victims of abuse. The rot of clergy sexual abuse of children and adults, even their own professed religious, runs throughout the Catholic church, to every country, and we now have incontrovertible evidence, all the way to the top.

Any celebration that marks the life of abuse enablers like Benedict must end. It is past time for the Vatican to refocus on change: tell the truth about known abusive clergy, protect children and adults, and allow justice to those who have been hurt. Honoring Pope Benedict XVI now is not only wrong. It is shameful.

It is almost a year after…

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Benedict remembered for role in pushing US bishops to confront clergy abuse

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

January 5, 2023

By Christopher White

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Under intense national scrutiny after the groundbreaking reporting on clergy sexual abuse and cover-up in the Boston Archdiocese in 2002, the U.S. Catholic bishops created a new lay-run review board to advise their national conference on how to better protect children and vulnerable persons from abuse. 

One of the group’s first tasks was to thoroughly investigate the nature of the scandal, in view of an eventual first-of-its-kind report that would detail the enormous scope of abuse in the U.S. church across some five decades. And a key ally in the task? None other than Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the future Pope Benedict XVI. 

Anne Burke, a former chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court who served as interim chair of the bishops’ National Review Board from 2002-04, recalled the tale in a phone interview with me on Jan. 3, two days ahead of Benedict’s funeral on Jan. 5.

In…

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‘Unfair’ to say ex-pope Benedict covered up church sexual abuse cases — ex-PPCRV head

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Philippine Daily Inquirer [Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines]

January 4, 2023

By Jean Mangaluz

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MANILA, Philippines — It is unfair to imply that former Pope Benedict XVI hushed up church sexual abuse cases, the chairman emeritus of the Parish Pastoral Council for Responsible Voting (PPRCV) said Wednesday.

During his pontificate, Benedict was confronted with allegations of sexual abuse by clergy members; he publicly apologized for the scandal.

While serving as Archbishop of Munich in 2022, an independent inquiry claimed he ignored reports of abuse.

Henrietta De Villa, who also knew Benedict personally, said that while she was not privy to the internal workings of the church, she knew the late pope did not tolerate abuse.

“Unfair naman na sabihin na pinagtakpan niya, hindi eh. Kaya nga lang siguro, ika niya, yung nature niya, at may edad na siya. Matanda na rin siya nung inelect siyang pope, na baka wala na siyang lakas na talagang fully implement lahat ng reforms na isinulat na niya,” said…

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January 4, 2023

Former Paris archbishop target of sexual assault probe

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 4, 2023

By John Leicester

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French police are investigating an allegation that the former archbishop of Paris sexually assaulted a woman who is under legal protection as a vulnerable person, prosecutors said Wednesday.

Michel Aupetit, who unexpectedly resigned in 2021 after admitting to an “ambiguous” relationship with a woman in 2012, denies any wrongdoing, his lawyer said.

The police investigation of Aupetit was opened on the basis of information from the Paris archdiocese, the Paris prosecutors’ office said, confirming French media reports.

It was launched in late November 2022, on a preliminary potential charge of sexual assault on a vulnerable person, the prosecutors’ office said. The alleged assault took place several years ago, it added, providing no other details.

Aupetit’s lawyer, Jean Reinhart, said the probe was triggered by a letter sent to the Paris archdiocese. The letter was then forwarded to prosecutors, an automatic procedure for handling potential abuse cases that Aupetit himself put in…

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Benedict Leaves Behind a Conflicted Legacy on Clerical Sexual Abuse

ROME (ITALY)
New York Times [New York NY]

January 4, 2023

By Jason Horowitz and Erika Solomon

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Joseph Ratzinger was accused of mishandling cases when he was bishop of Munich, but as pope he was credited with forcing the Catholic Church to face a scourge long ignored.

Before he led the Roman Catholic Church as Benedict XVI, and before he loomed over the church as a powerhouse cardinal and the Vatican’s chief doctrinal watchdog, Joseph Ratzinger, archbishop of Munich, attended a 1980 meeting about a priest in northwestern Germany accused of abusing children.

What exactly transpired during the meeting is unclear — but afterward, the priest was transferred, and over the next dozen years moved around Bavaria to different parishes before he ended up in the tiny village of Garching an der Alz, where he sexually abused Andreas Perr, then 12.

“It feels so heavy,” Mr. Perr said on Tuesday, puffing cigarettes outside the house where he was molested, just a few steps from the white steeple…

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Even in death, Benedict XVI stirs mixed reactions in Vatican crowds

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 4, 2023

By Elise Ann Allen

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For the past two days, tens of thousands of devotees, tourists, the simply curious and even lapsed Catholics have streamed to the Vatican to say a final farewell to the late Pope Benedict XVI, whose historic resignation forever changed the papacy and the church as a whole.

According to the Vatican, so far around 135,000 people have visited Benedict XVI, who has been laying in state in St. Peter’s Basilica since Monday morning. He will remain there until Thursday, when his funeral will be celebrated by Pope Francis.

Impressions among those who’ve filed through the Vatican to see the late pontiff can best be described as a mixed bag, with some praising his keen intellect and writings, some simply eager to participate in a historic moment, and others fairly critical.

Father Joseph Apfelbeck, who, like Benedict XVI, hails from the Diocese of Regensburg in Bavaria, told Crux that he knew the late…

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KBI’s Catholic clergy abuse investigation continues

TOPEKA (KS)
Kansas Reflector [Topeka, KS]

December 21, 2022

By Tim Carpenter

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Agents so far authorized 74 cases in more than 30 Kansas counties

Susan Leighnor expressed frustration on Wednesday state law enforcement agencies had yet to release findings of an investigation launched nearly four years ago by the attorney general into alleged sexual misconduct by members of the Catholic clergy in Kansas.

Leighnor, who said she was abused as a child by two Catholic priests, said she had spoken to Kansas Bureau of Investigation agents regarding her memories of what transpired at the rectory and school at Church of the Holy Cross in Hutchinson. She also has testified before the Kansas and Colorado legislatures on her experiences.

In an interview, she said a Catholic priest warned her as a child disclosing the abuse would condemn her to hell because the situation was like a person talking to a priest at confession. Confession in the Catholic church is a sacrament in which…

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Victim Speaks Out Against Abuser’s Plan to Create Halfway House for Sex Offenders

CHARLESTON (SC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

December 31, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

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Twenty years after she revealed her abuse to a friend at summer camp, Meagan Bishop is speaking out once again. This time, it’s to oppose her abuser’s plans to found a Christian halfway house in a small South Carolina town.

“David Truluck was my stepfather, and he was also my abuser,” Bishop told The Roys Report (TRR) this week.

Truluck runs Shield Ministries, which recently announced plans to open a new facility to house up to 55 men, including up to 10 sex offenders. Truluck’s wife, Melodie Truluck, co-founded the organization and is its operations manager.

As TRR previously reported, David Truluck is also a registered sex offender, who in 2003 was convicted of committing or attempting a lewd act on a child under age 16. Bishop told TRR she was the victim involved in that case.

Bishop first revealed her link to David Truluck on Wednesday at a community meeting…

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Indonesia to clamp down on child porn

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

January 4, 2023

By UCA News reporter

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The growing demand from abroad has made child porn a $7.3 million industry in the world’s largest Muslim nation

The Indonesian government has decided to step up efforts to combat child pornography, which is proving a growing menace in the world’s largest Muslim nation with more takers from abroad.

Under the new measures, stricter punishments will be awarded to the perpetrators, Nahar, deputy for special protection of children at the Ministry of Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection in Indonesia, said on Jan. 4.

Nahar, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, said the ministry will rope in police and the ministry of communication to keep a tab on criminal acts like distributing pornographic content involving children by tracking and blocking websites that sell child porn videos.

We are planning three strategies that include prevention, better handling and institutional strengthening, he said.

The prevention strategy includes disseminating data, conducting awareness…

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Death sentence upheld for Indonesian teacher for rape

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

January 4, 2023

By Katharina Reny Lestari

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There was disappointment when the religious teacher was sentenced to life in prison by a district court in February 2022

The Indonesian Supreme Court upheld the death sentence for a religious teacher convicted of raping more than a dozen students at an Islamic boarding school in Bandung, the capital of West Java province.

A three-member panel of judges presided by Sri Murwahyuni rejected the appeal of Herry Wirawan who was sentenced to death in April last year by the High Court in Bandung, according to the court’s ruling posted on its website on Jan. 4.

He was awarded life imprisonment by the Bandung District Court in February 2022 for raping 13 students aged 13-16 including eight of whom became pregnant, between 2016 and 2021.

The verdict was changed to the death sentence following an appeal from the prosecution team representing the alleged victims. The accused later appealed against the sentence.

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January 3, 2023

New judge assigned to archdiocese sexual abuse case

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

January 3, 2023

By Julie Scharper and Tim Prudente

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Judge Robert K. Taylor Jr. will oversee case to release grand jury investigation into abuse 

The debate over the release of a massive investigation into sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Baltimore will be decided by a new judge, a judiciary spokesman said Tuesday.

Baltimore Circuit Judge Robert K. Taylor Jr. will oversee proceedings regarding the release of an investigation from the Maryland Office of the Attorney General detailing the “sexual abuse” and “physical torture” of more than 600 children and teens at the hands of 158 Catholic priests.

The 456-page report is the product of a four-year investigation by the attorney general’s office with the assistance of a Baltimore grand jury. Under state law, grand jury materials are confidential without a court order.

Taylor, 56, has served on the bench since 2018. Previously, he served as an assistant attorney general and was senior counsel for forensic litigation,…

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The Rev. John J. Curran performed the wedding ceremony in June 1963 at St. Augustine Church in Augusta, Maine. FORTIN FAMILY ARCHIVES

A change in Maine law prompts a wave of new church abuse allegations

PORTLAND (ME)
Boston Globe

January 2, 2023

By Mike Damiano

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The Diocese of Portland argues the amendment is unconstitutional.

A change in Maine law has unleashed a flood of new allegations of long-ago sex abuse by priests. But now the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland is challenging the legislation in court in an apparent attempt to stem the flow of lawsuits.

The Childhood Sexual Abuse amendment, which was signed into law last summer, retroactively eliminated the statute of limitations for lawsuits alleging childhood sex abuse in most circumstances. The result is that former altar boys and Catholic school students who are now in their 50s, 60s, and 70s can sue the church over abuse that allegedly occurred half a century ago or even earlier.

The elimination of the statute of limitations was a salve for people like Robert Dupuis, 73, who said he was abused by a priest when he was 12 years old and had never been…

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Benedict, a pope who shaped his times but didn’t tower over them, dies at 95

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

December 31, 2022

By Joshua J. McElwee

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, known most recently as the pontiff who renounced the papacy, but who was situated squarely at the centers of power during five decades of epochal change and unprecedented scandal in the global Catholic Church, died on Dec. 31 in the apartment he kept inside a Vatican monastery.

A man whose very name conjured images of a return to the theological repression of the 16th century for many, he first appeared on the church’s international stage as Joseph Ratzinger, a young German priest-theologian advocating for progressive reforms at the 1962-65 Second Vatican Council.

He was a bishop and cardinal who exalted the position of Catholic clergy, considering them privileged and apart from lay faithful. But he would eventually, following decades of delay, act against sexually abusive priests, after spending hours each week reading through the briefs of the global scandal when he was head of the Vatican’s…

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Pope Benedict XVI Promoted Traditional Faith, Contended With Sex-Abuse Crisis

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

December 31, 2022

By Liam Maloney

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German theologian made history with his papal resignation

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI was a scholar and longtime senior official in the Catholic Church who sought to reinvigorate Christian faith and strengthen church orthodoxy before becoming the first pontiff to resign in nearly 600 years.

formidable theologian and arbiter of church doctrine for years under papal predecessor St. John Paul II, Benedict anchored his nearly eight-year pontificate in promoting a transcendent faith in Jesus Christ grounded in definitive truths and compatible with human reason.

“We are moving toward a dictatorship of relativism which does not recognize anything as for certain and which has as its highest goal one’s own ego and one’s own desires,” he cautioned in a 2005 homily shortly before he was elected. The passage would come to be used to define much of Benedict’s reign.

A formidable theologian and arbiter of church doctrine,…

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Time has run out for Pope Benedict, but it’s not too late for Pope Francis

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Nate's Mission [Milwaukee WI]

December 31, 2022

By Peter Isely

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This week, Pope Francis and the Vatican will orchestrate a global celebration, honoring the life and legacy of the late Pope Benedict. Heads of state, religious leaders, and prominent Catholics will travel to Vatican City acknowledging the historical, political, and social power of the Catholic Church. Meanwhile millions of clergy abuse victims around the world will be forced to witness the rewriting of history concerning the legacy and actions of a man who may have been directly responsible for allowing their abuse.

Throughout most of his professional life, Pope Benedict was one the chief architects of the systematic cover-up of the rape and sexual abuse of children in the Catholic Church. As Archbishop of Munich, he concealed and transferred known abusive clergy and lied about it. As head of the Congregation of the Doctrine of Faith under John Paul II, he acted as the Pope’s chief global fixer, shielding…

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How Pope Benedict ignored Vatican responsibility for child sex abuse in Ireland

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

December 31, 2022

By Patsy McGarry

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Pontiff excoriated Ireland’s Catholic bishops for their handling of clerical child sexual abuse allegations but refused to blame Vatican

It was April 19th, 2005, and the Cardinal Archbishop of Dublin Desmond Connell was both euphoric and exhausted. The conclave, which concluded some time earlier, had elected Benedict XVI as Pope and, at the Irish College in Rome, Cardinal Connell told media it was “the most memorable experience of my life”.

He and the man formerly known as Cardinal Ratzinger had served on many Vatican congregations together, including the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. Both shared a similar theological and philosophical outlook and both had a passion for Mozart.

Cardinal Connell was barely able to hide his delight but, scrupulously, he did not betray his oath to keep proceedings at that conclave secret even if, in his exhaustion, he was unable to hide his euphoria.

“I’ve worked with him…

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Jehovah’s Witnesses abuse scandal is a reminder to end cover-up culture | Editorial

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer [Philadelphia PA]

January 3, 2023

By Editorial Board

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A disturbing pattern of denial and concealment emerges across sexual abuse scandals that rock secular and religious organizations. Bringing the abuse to light is a critical first step.

Locked inside the Jehovah’s Witnesses world headquarters are secret files detailing sexual abuse by members of the religious denomination. Some of those files are slowly coming to light thanks to a grand jury investigation by state Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s office that was spurred by The Inquirer.

With Shapiro scheduled to be sworn in as Pennsylvania’s 48th governor on Jan. 17, hopefully the investigation will continue at full steam. Shapiro has been fearless in taking on influential religious institutions, starting with a 2018 grand jury report of the Roman Catholic Church that detailed decades of sexual abuse by more than 300 priests in Pennsylvania.

Catholic Church doesn’t hold a monopoly on these horrific crimes.

Similar sexual abuse scandals have recently rocked other…

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Benedict’s brief papacy was marred by the priest sex abuse scandal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
NBC News [New York NY]

December 31, 2022

By Corky Siemaszko

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“He essentially continued the cover-up,” says victims advocate David Clohessy of SNAP.

The priest sex-abuse scandal was the albatross around the neck of Pope Emeritus Benedict’s brief eight-year reign as leader of the Roman Catholic Church, according to Vatican analysts.  

Long-suppressed allegations that priests had been preying on children — and that the bishops covered up the crimes — were already roiling the church when Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger was elected pope in April 2005 and took Benedict as his papal name.

Like his predecessor, Pope John Paul II, Benedict also apologized to the victims and then took some steps to punish the predators. 

“I have had great responsibilities in the Catholic Church. All the greater is my pain for the abuses and the errors that occurred in those different places during the time of my mandate,” he said in February.

But critics say that the…

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World mourns loss of complicated, controversial and cerebral Pope Benedict

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 1, 2023

By Elise Ann Allen

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All across the world, political and religious leaders, as well as activists and former colleagues and friends, are remembering the life and legacy of the late Pope Benedict XVI, hailed as one of the greatest minds and most influential figures of the 20th and early 21st centuries.

Though many continue to take issue with some of Benedict’s policies on issues of morality and doctrine, and critics still question his record on fighting clerical sexual abuse, by and large the world has remembered the late pontiff as someone deeply in love with God, whose writings will continue to be developed for years to come.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz hailed the world’s first German pope as a “special church leader for many, not just this country,” saying the world “has lost a formative figure of the Catholic Church, an argumentative personality, and a clever theologian.”

Speaking to Crux, Cardinal Oswald Gracias, the Archbishop…

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For Pope Benedict, his papacy was not the peak of his influence

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Boston Globe

December 31, 2022

By Massimo Faggioli

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The zenith of his influence was there even before he was elected pope and it lasted after his renunciation of the papacy.

For a member of the Catholic clergy, the election to the papacy represents the zenith of his influence — his pontificate, the period of most influential and consequential activity. This was not the case for Pope Benedict XVI, who died Saturday at age 95. It wasn’t because he was the first pope in modern Catholicism to renounce the papal office. It’s because the zenith of his influence was there even before he was elected pope and it lasted after his renunciation of the papacy. His pontificate was, paradoxically, not the peak but almost an interlude.

Joseph Ratzinger became a brand in the 1970s when his interpretation of Vatican II — which updated the Church’s traditions, including ending the requirement that Mass be said in Latin and opening up…

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Death of Pope Benedict XVI: Statement by BishopAccountability.org

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
BishopAccountability.org [Waltham MA]

December 31, 2022

By Anne Barrett Doyle

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For Immediate Release, 12/31/2022

Pope Benedict XVI will be remembered for his failure to achieve what should have been his job one: to rectify the incalculable harm done to the hundreds of thousands of children sexually abused by Catholic priests. When he resigned as Pope, he left hundreds of culpable bishops in power and a culture of secrecy intact.

The tragedy is that in refusing to enact needed reforms, he ended up hurting the faith he cherished. Had he punished cover-up and abuse as sternly as he did doctrinal violations, the Church’s abuse crisis might have ended under his watch.

Benedict’s public statements on the crisis sparked hope. When he traveled to the US in April 2008, he promised that the Church would do “whatever possible to help, to assist, to heal” victims. In February 2010, meeting with Irish bishops, he called child sexual abuse “heinous.” A month later,…

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US bankruptcy court approves $121M clergy abuse settlement

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 29, 2022

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A federal bankruptcy judge on Thursday approved a $121 million reorganization plan for one of the oldest Roman Catholic dioceses in the U.S. as it tries to stem financial losses from clergy abuse claims that date back decades.

The Archdiocese of Santa Fe in New Mexico said U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma confirmed the agreement during a hearing in which he commended the parties for working through what had been an arduous process.

In a statement, Archbishop John C. Wester thanked the panel of abuse survivors who represented fellow survivors in their claims against the archdiocese. He described it as challenging work as the group continued to deal with the aftermath of their own abuse.

“While I hope and pray that the bankruptcy outcome will bring a measure of justice and relief to the victims of clergy sexual abuse, I realize that nothing can ever compensate them for the criminal…

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Benedict was criticized for his handling of the church’s sex abuse scandal.

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

December 31, 2022

By Elisabetta Povoledo

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His efforts to rid the church of what he called “filth” went further than those of John Paul II, but he was reluctant to hold bishops accountable.

The clerical sex abuse scandal broke under Pope John Paul II in the years that Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger — who would later become Pope Benedict XVI — headed the Vatican’s doctrinal office, which handled the cases of priests accused of abusing children.

Presented with case files, Cardinal Ratzinger sometimes set disciplinary measures in motion, even having accused priests defrocked. But other times, the record shows, he took the side of the accused priests and failed to listen to the victims or their warnings that an abuser could violate more young people.

When Cardinal Ratzinger became pope, the scandal exploded publicly throughout the global church. It continues to reverberate, causing some to lose faith and presenting challenges for the church’s current leadership.

During his time as…

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A year of reckoning for Albany diocese as records shed light on abuse

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union [Albany NY]

December 31, 2022

By Brendan J. Lyons

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The Archdiocese of New York recently was ordered to turn over more than 120 pages of confidential files related to an internal investigation of sexual abuse claims against Howard J. Hubbard, who was bishop of the Albany diocese from 1977 to 2014.

The ruling by state Supreme Court Justice L. Michael Mackey capped a roughly two-year period in which the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, Hubbard and the New York archdiocese have lost a series of court decisions in which they sought to limit the materials that would be turned over to attorneys for hundreds of alleged victims of child sexual abuse. 

The records included the psychological treatment records of suspected pedophile priests, a lengthy deposition of Hubbard that took place over four days in April 2021 and, now, the archdiocese’s internal records on Hubbard’s “Vos estis lux mundi” investigation — initiated under a 2019 directive from Pope Francis that established…

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Lawsuit Against Pope Benedict XVI Will Continue Despite Death

(ITALY)
Daily Beast [New York NY]

January 3, 2023

By Barbie Latza Nadeau

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A victim of clerical sex abuse during the time the late pope Benedict was archbishop of Munich launched the lawsuit in June.

A 38-year-old German man who says he was abused by a known predatory priest has been allowed to continue his civil lawsuit against the late Pope Benedict XVI’s eventual heirs. In November, Benedict said he would defend himself in the case in front of a German court. Benedict died Dec. 31 at the age of 95 and had secured a law firm which will continue to represent his estate.

Andrea Titz, spokesperson for the Traunstein Court in Bavaria, confirmed that the suit, which accuses the former pope, of willfully ignoring complaints about Father Peter Hullermann, who allegedly abused the victim when he was just 11 years old.

The victim, who uses the pseudonym Julian Schwarz, said that the priest showed him pornography and forced him to have sexual intercourse and…

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Pope Benedict XVI Dies, 1927–2022

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

December 31, 2022

By Massimo Faggioli

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Almost ten years after making history for resigning from the papacy, Joseph Ratzinger—Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI—has died at the age of ninety-five, in the Vatican’s Mater Ecclesiae monastery, where he had been living since May 2013.

Born in Bavaria, Germany, on April 16, 1927, Ratzinger had a remarkable impact on the life and intellectual tradition of the Catholic Church, not only as pope, but also as one of the most influential theologians at Vatican II. After publishing major works commenting positively on the documents of Vatican II during the council and in the late 1960s, his insights affected the reception of the council from the 1970s onward, as his anti-progressive views—often expressed with a contrarian spirit—became inseparable from his persona, even after his election to the papacy in 2005.

As a powerful doctrinal policy-maker in the era following Vatican II, Ratzinger was in many ways the alter-ego of Pope John…

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Thousands pay last respects to Pope Benedict in St. Peter’s Basilica

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

January 2, 2023

By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

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A quiet hush covered the vast expanse of St. Peter’s Square even though it was filled with thousands of people slowly winding their way around the colonnade into St. Peter’s Basilica to pay their last respects to the late Pope Benedict XVI.

Outdoor souvenir sellers were well-stocked with rosaries Jan. 2, but they seemed to have been caught off guard with a plethora of touristy tchotchkes and few to no images or mementos of the late pope.

A damp chill hung in the air at 9 in the morning when the doors of the basilica opened to the public on the first of three days to view the pope’s body.

Special accommodations, however, were made for officials of the Roman Curia, Vatican staff and dignitaries who were allowed access from the back of the basilica and offered a place to sit or kneel on either side of the pope’s…

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January 2, 2023

Statement on the Passing of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Archdiocese of Boston [Boston MA]

December 31, 2022

By Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley, OFM Cap

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“Today a loving God called Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI home to his eternal reward for a lifetime of dedicated service to the Church. That service included 71 years as a priest, 28 years as a Cardinal, and nearly eight years leading the Catholic Church as the Bishop of Rome and Successor to St. Peter. His life and his pontificate were based in a deep and abiding faith and an extraordinary record of theological scholarship. In the years leading to the Second Vatican Council and at the Council itself, Father Joseph Ratzinger made substantial contributions to the renewal of Catholic theology, and he played a significant role in the drafting of key conciliar documents. Pope John Paul II called Cardinal Ratzinger to Rome to serve as the Cardinal Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. In that role, he proved to be an invaluable contributor throughout the pontificate of his predecessor. Pope Benedict XVI’s…

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Special Report: Boy Scouts, Catholic dioceses find haven from sex abuse suits in bankruptcy

WINONA (MN)
Reuters [London, England]

December 30, 2022

By Kristina Cooke, Mike Spector, Benjamin Lesser, Dan Levine, and Disha Raychaudhuri

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Lawmakers around the United States have tried to grant justice to victims of decades-old incidents of child sexual abuse by giving them extra time to file lawsuits. Now some of the defendants in these cases, including church and youth organizations, are finding a safe haven: America’s bankruptcy courts.

In New York, nearly 11,000 cases flooded state courts, many seeking to hold Catholic dioceses responsible for sexual abuse by clergy, after a 2019 law suspended statutes of limitations that would have otherwise barred many of the lawsuits. In response, four New York dioceses that collectively faced more than 500 sexual-abuse claims filed for bankruptcy. That halted the cases — and blocked those from anyone who might sue later — and forced the plaintiffs to negotiate a one-time settlement for all abuse claims in bankruptcy court.Advertisement · Scroll to continue

The pattern has taken hold across the United States, a Reuters review…

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‘God’s Rottweiler’: Benedict shaped Catholic doctrine but faced criticism for handling of sexual abuse crisis

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

December 31, 2022

By Daniel Burke and Hada Messia

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, whose death at 95 was announced Saturday, was a powerful intellectual force who shaped the Catholic Church’s theology for more than a quarter century before shocking the world by resigning in 2013.

While not quite unprecedented, Benedict’s resignation was highly unusual. Popes typically hold office until death, and the last pope to step down was Gregory XII, who quit in 1415 to end a civil war within the church.  

Bookended by globally popular and charismatic popes – St. John Paul II and Pope Francis – Benedict cut a different figure. Friends and biographers described him as quiet and scholarly, more at home among theological tomes than adoring crowds.

In typical fashion, Benedict announced his unexpected resignation in Latin. He was 85 at the time and cited his advanced age as ill-suited for the demands…

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Church’s ex-prosecutor on sex abuse defends Benedict XVI’s record

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 2, 2023

By John L. Allen Jr.

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As the world marks the death of Pope emeritus Benedict XVI, his record on the clerical abuse scandals that have rocked Catholicism for the past three decades inevitably forms part of any evaluation of his legacy.

For many abuse survivors and their advocates, it’s axiomatic that Benedict was the public face of denial and cover-up. The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, for instance, declared in a Dec. 31 statement that “any celebration that marks the life of abuse enablers like Benedict must end.”

“Honoring Pope Benedict XVI now is not only wrong. It is shameful,” the group said. “Pope Benedict XVI is taking decades of the church’s darkest secrets to his grave with him.”

Arguably the one person on the planet best positioned to assess the late pontiff’s performance, however, has a very different take.

According to Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, it was Benedict XVI who first began to…

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Maltese victim of clerical sex abuse: ‘Benedict’s apology restored our faith’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Times of Malta [Mriehel Malta]

January 2, 2023

By Giulia Magri

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Pontiff was very emotional during 2010 meeting – Lawrence Grech

A victim of clerical abuse said his surprise meeting with Pope Benedict XVI during his visit to Malta in 2010 together with his apology had restored victims’ faith in the church.

“At the time, many of us had lost our faith completely but that changed during our personal meetings with Pope Benedict,” Grech told Times of Malta on Sunday.

“Those few moments that we spent with him in private restored our faith. It was a very powerful and emotional meeting.”

Pope Benedict, who spent almost eight years leading the Catholic Church before he resigned in 2013, died on Saturday at the age of 95.

As crowds visited St Peter’s Basilica to express their sorrow at the news of his death, for many Maltese the highlight of his papacy was his 27-hour visit to the island on April 17 and 18, 2010.

But, for Grech, the…

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Ex-pope Benedict XVI’s mixed legacy on child sex abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

December 31, 2022

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[Via NDTV]

The German Joseph Ratzinger, who died on Saturday aged 95, was the first pope to meet with victims of abuse and defrocked almost 400 priests in the last two years of his pontificate.

Benedict XVI was the first pope to confront the scourge of clerical sex abuse in the Catholic church, but only after a career in which he himself was accused of covering it up.

The German Joseph Ratzinger, who died on Saturday aged 95, was the first pope to meet with victims of abuse and defrocked almost 400 priests in the last two years of his pontificate.

His actions were a marked change from his predecessor John Paul II, who took decades to respond to what became an avalanche of allegations about paedophile priests around the world, from Australia to Chile, France and the United States.

But his successor Pope Francis has gone much further, raising…

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‘Enough of this silence’ — woman goes public about clergy sexual abuse

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
San Antonio Express-News [San Antonio TX]

December 30, 2022

By Marina Riker and Josie Norris

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[Via MSN]

Gianna Recio “came into this world fighting,” as her mother says in recounting the first moments in the life of her oldest child — born with the umbilical cord wrapped around her neck.

Growing up on San Antonio’s South Side, Gianna wore boy’s clothes. But she always insisted she was a girl, decades before she heard the word “transgender.”

At St. Leo the Great Catholic School, she was teased for her femininity. When a priest told her she was special and loved by God, the words stuck with her. He said he wanted to counsel her to bolster her self-esteem. Their private sessions turned into sexual abuse. It lasted two years.

The priest made Gianna believe that she and her family would burn in hell if she told anyone what was happening, she said. She would hide beneath the church pews, praying that he wouldn’t find her.

For…

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Where is Father Castillo? New Answers on Oakland Priest Who Left Country After Abuse Claims

OAKLAND (CA)
KNTV - NBC Bay Area [San Jose CA]

December 30, 2022

By Michael Bott, Candice Nguyen, Alex Bozovic, and Jeremy Carroll

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Four years after an Oakland priest seemingly vanished after being accused of sexually abusing two minors, NBC Bay Area’s Investigative Unit has new answers on what happened to Fr. Alexander Castillo, in addition to a never-before published letter where the priest professes his innocence and blames another clergy member for his suspension

Oakland priest Father Alexander Castillo seemingly vanished in the months after he was accused of sexually abusing a minor. Yet four years later, the Diocese of Oakland still won’t answer many basic questions about the incident, details about what happened, where Castillo is today, and whether the priest might be a danger to children elsewhere.

While the Diocese remains silent, a letter written by Castillo in the wake of his suspension, and exclusively obtained by NBC Bay Area recently, sheds new light on the priest’s frame of mind just before he left the country. Castillo maintains his innocence…

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He says a Bay Area priest abused him. He finally found him 55 years later

OAKLAND (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle [San Francisco CA]

December 31, 2022

By Joshua Sharpe

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For more than a decade, Ernie Cox went online to search the faces of priests who had been accused of child sexual abuse, looking for one man.

He’d only seen the priest one day in the late 1960s when, the former altar boy alleges, the priest sexually abused him before and after mass at a Contra Costa County church. The boy was 12. The priest was visiting Immaculate Heart of Mary from another parish, and Cox, now 67, didn’t remember his name.

A few weeks ago, a friend who knew of Cox’s experience forwarded him a recent story in The Chronicle about allegations against a priest at the same parish in the small city of Brentwood. When Cox later found the late Father John G. Garcia’s face in an old black-and-white photo on the website of a local newspaper, he said, he was stricken by recognition. No other priest’s picture had…

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The First Afterlife of Pope Benedict XVI

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

January 1, 2023

By Ross Douthat

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The first pope to resign was Celestine V, born Pietro Da Morrone, who was living the life of a pious hermit when he was elevated to the papacy in 1294, in his 80s, to break a two-year deadlock in the College of Cardinals. Feeling overmastered by the job, he soon resigned in the expectation that he could return to his monastic existence. Instead, he was imprisoned by his successor, Boniface VIII, who feared that some rival faction might make Celestine an antipope.

The former pontiff died after about a year in captivity; his successor, one of the most ambitious of medieval popes, eventually fell into a disastrous struggle with the king of France that ended with Boniface temporarily imprisoned in the weeks before his death.

The strange afterlife of Pope Benedict XVI’s pontificate, which ended with his death on Saturday at 95, was not quite so wild or dramatic. But…

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January 1, 2023

While blamed, Benedict fought sex abuse more than past popes

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

January 1, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is rightly credited with having been one of the 20th century’s most prolific Catholic theologians, a teacher-pope who preached the faith via volumes of books, sermons and speeches. But he rarely got credit for another important aspect of his legacy: having done more than anyone before him to turn the Vatican around on clergy sexual abuse.

As cardinal and pope, Benedict pushed through revolutionary changes to church law to make it easier to defrock predator priests, and he sacked hundreds of them. He was the first pontiff to meet with abuse survivors. And he reversed his revered predecessor on the most egregious case of the 20th century Catholic Church, finally taking action against a serial pedophile who was adored by St. John Paul II’s inner circle.

But much more needed to be done, and following his death Saturday, abuse survivors and their advocates made clear they…

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Pope Benedict Was a Law and Order Pontiff, Who Failed As a Reformer

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Daily Beast [New York NY]

January 1, 2023

By Jason Berry

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The 265th pope of the Catholic Church was a hard-line conservative who tried to root out corruption and abuse—but retreated from the battle when it mattered most.

With 1.3 billion followers, the Roman Catholic Church is the world’s largest organization. Islam has 1.97 billion adherents but no comparable infrastructure. Google has greater reach—in cyberspace.

The Church of Rome has a vast network of parishes, schools, colleges, hospitals, and missions. The governing of this global operation in the 107-acre Vatican City has become a narrative of lengthening scandals in recent decades. Pope Benedict XVI, a pivotal figure in this story, wanted national churches in lockstep obedience to Rome on moral teaching.

In 2013, after eight years in the Apostolic Palace, the German-born Joseph Ratzinger became the first Supreme Pontiff in 600 years to retire. The most powerful and controversial theologian of his era became emeritus pope for nine years, until his death at…

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My encounters with Joseph Ratzinger — and Pope Benedict XVI

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

December 31, 2022

By Thomas Reese SJ

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I first met Joseph Ratzinger in June 1994 when he was the cardinal prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. No, I was not being interrogated by the Grand Inquisitor. This was long before I got in trouble with the Vatican as editor-in-chief of America magazine. I was in Rome to interview him and other church officials for my book, Inside the Vatican: The Politics and Organization of the Catholic Church

I almost missed the interview. Cardinal Ratzinger was sick the day of our appointment. When I arrived, I was asked whether I wanted to meet with the congregation’s secretary. I agreed, figuring it was better than nothing. When I was ushered into his presence, I hadn’t gotten a word out before the secretary, Archbishop Alberto Bovone, assaulted me with questions: “Who are you?” “What are you doing here?” “I will…

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Benedict XVI Will Be Remembered as a ‘True Doctor of the Church for Today’

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

December 31, 2022

By Cardinal Gerhard Müller and Edward Pentin

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Speaking with the Register, the German cardinal theologian reflects on the profound legacy of the late Pope Emeritus.

Cardinal Gerhard Müller has paid tribute to the late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, describing him as a “great thinker” and a “true Doctor of the Church for today.”

The prefect emeritus of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith also described the late Joseph Ratzinger, who died at Dec. 31 at 9:34 am in Rome, as a man of great sensitivity, humor, and humility who possessed “deep wisdom as a partaker in God’s love.”

In this interview with the Register, the German cardinal theologian — who founded the Benedict XVI Institute to make available Joseph Ratzinger’s collected works — discusses Benedict XVI’s legacy to the Church, responds to some of his critics, and reflects on how his passing might affect the highly criticized German Synodal Path.

Your Eminence, what is the greatest…

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Death of Pope Emeritus Benedict: His Official Biography

ROMA (ITALY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

December 31, 2022

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Following the announcement of the passing of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI on Saturday at the age of 95, we look back at his long life and its main highlights with the following official biography.

Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Pope Benedict XVI, was born at Marktl am Inn, Diocese of Passau (Germany) on 16 April 1927 (Holy Saturday) and was baptised on the same day.

His father, a Police Commissioner, belonged to an old family of farmers from Lower Bavaria of modest economic resources. His mother was the daughter of artisans from Rimsting on the shore of Lake Chiem. Before marrying, she worked as a cook in a number of hotels.

Joseph spent his childhood and adolescence in Traunstein, a small village near the Austrian border, thirty kilometres from Salzburg. In this environment, which he himself has defined as “Mozartian”, he received his Christian, cultural and human formation.

His youthful years were…

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Former Pope Benedict XVI dies in Vatican monastery aged 95

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

January 1, 2023

By Jack Guy, Valentina Di Donato, Sugam Pokharel, Sharon Braithwaite, James Frater and Allegra Goodwin

Read original article

Pope Francis led tributes to his predecessor on Saturday, after Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI died in a monastery in the Vatican at the age of 95.

“We are moved as we recall him as such a noble person, so kind and we feel such gratitude in our hearts, gratitude to god for giving him to the church, and to the world,” Francis said in Saint Peter’s Basilica while leading traditional vespers ceremony ahead of New Year’s Day.

“Gratitude to him for all the good he accomplished and above all for his witness of faith and prayer, especially in these last years of his life. Only God knows the value of his sacrifices for the good of the church,” Francis added.

Benedict, who was the first pontiff in almost 600 years to resign his position, rather than hold office for life, passed away on Saturday, according to…

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December 31, 2022

Benedict XVI, first pope to resign in 600 years, dies at 95

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

December 31, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, the shy German theologian who tried to reawaken Christianity in a secularized Europe but will forever be remembered as the first pontiff in 600 years to resign from the job, died Saturday. He was 95.

Pope Francis will celebrate his funeral Mass in St. Peter’s Square on Thursday, an unprecedented event in which a current pope will celebrate the funeral of a former one.

Benedict stunned the world on Feb. 11, 2013, when he announced, in his typical, soft-spoken Latin, that he no longer had the strength to run the 1.2 billion-strong Catholic Church that he had steered for eight years through scandal and indifference.

His dramatic decision paved the way for the conclave that elected Francis as his successor. The two popes then lived side-by-side in the Vatican gardens, an unprecedented arrangement that set the stage for future “popes emeritus” to do the same.

A…

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Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who resigned the papacy, dies at 95

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Washington Post

December 31, 2022

By Anthony Faiola, Michelle Boorstein, and Jacqueline L. Salmon

Read original article

‘My strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited’ to the role, German-born Benedict XVI said in 2013, when he became the first pontiff in 600 years to step down

The moment that transformed Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s legacy — and perhaps his church — passed so quietly that it was initially missed.

The pontiff was closing what one reporter described as an “extremely banal,” routine ceremony with Vatican cardinals on Feb. 11, 2013, when he uttered, in Latin, that he had made “a decision of great importance for the life of the church.”

The white-haired, German-born theologian, then 85, said he had “repeatedly examined my conscience before God” and concluded that the modern world, “subject to so many rapid changes and shaken by questions of deep relevance for the life of faith,” required a pope in better physical and intellectual condition. “My strengths, due to an advanced…

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Statement by the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Matteo Bruni, 31.12.2022 | Dichiarazione del Direttore della Sala Stampa della Santa Sede, Matteo Bruni, 31.12.2022

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Holy See Press Office [Vatican City]

December 31, 2022

By Matteo Bruni

Read original article

Testo in lingua italiana

“Con dolore informo che il Papa Emerito, Benedetto XVI, è deceduto oggi alle ore 9:34, nel Monastero Mater Ecclesiae in Vaticano.

Non appena possibile seguiranno ulteriori informazioni.”

***

Traduzione in lingua francese

«J’ai la douleur de vous annoncer que le pape émérite, Benoît XVI, est décédé aujourd’hui à 9h34 heures, au Monastère Mater Ecclesiae, au Vatican.

D’autres informations vous seront communiquées dès que possible».

***

Traduzione in lingua inglese

“With sorrow I inform you that the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, passed away today at 9:34 in the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery in the Vatican.

Further information will be provided as soon as possible.”

***

Traduzione in lingua tedesca

“Schmerzerfüllt muss ich mitteilen, dass Benedikt XVI., Papst Emeritus, heute um 9:34 Uhr im Kloster Mater Ecclesiae im Vatikan verstorben ist.

Weitere Informationen folgen baldmöglichst.”

***

Traduzione in lingua spagnola

„Con pesar doy a conocer que el Papa emérito…

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Benedict XVI—Priest, Prefect, Pope, Rest In Peace

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

December 31, 2022

By Edward Pentin and Joan Frawley Desmond

Read original article

With Pope Emeritus’ death, the Catholic Church loses one of the greatest minds in its 2,000-year history.

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has died at the age of 95.

The Vatican made the announcement of his death at 10.30 am Rome time on Dec. 31 in a short statement translated into several languages.

“With sorrow I inform you that the Pope Emeritus, Benedict XVI, passed away today at 9:34 in the Mater Ecclesiae Monastery in the Vatican,” Vatican press office director Matteo Bruni said. “Further information will be provided as soon as possible.” 

The Vatican added that from Jan. 2, the body of the Pope Emeritus will rest in St. Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican “for the faithful to bid farewell.” 

Bruni later told reporters in a short press briefing that Benedict XVI’s funeral will be celebrated by Pope Francis at 9.30am on Thursday, Jan. 5, in St Peter’s Square. He also disclosed…

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Benedict XVI, First Modern Pope to Resign, Dies at 95

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

December 31, 2022

By Ian Fisher and Rachel Donadio

Read original article

He defined a conservative course for the Roman Catholic Church, but his papacy was noted for his struggle with the clergy sexual abuse scandal and for his unexpected resignation.

Benedict XVI, the pope emeritus, a quiet scholar of diamond-hard intellect who spent much of his life enforcing church doctrine and defending tradition before shocking the Roman Catholic world by becoming the first pope in six centuries to resign, died on Saturday. He was 95.

Benedict’s death was announced by the Vatican. No cause was given. This past week, the Vatican said that Benedict’s health had taken a turn for the worse “due to advancing age.”

On Wednesday, Pope Francis asked those present at his weekly audience at the Vatican to pray for Benedict, who he said was “very ill.” He later visited him at the monastery on the Vatican City grounds where Benedict had lived since announcing his resignation in February…

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Pope Benedict XVI Dies

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

December 30, 2022

By Jason Horowitz and Elisabetta Povoledo

Read original article

The first pope to step down in six centuries dies in retirement.

Pope Benedict XVI, the eminent German theologian and conservative enforcer of Roman Catholic Church doctrine who broke with almost 600 years of tradition by resigning and then living for nearly a decade behind Vatican walls as a retired pope still clad in white robes, died on Saturday at age 95, the Vatican said.

Just as Benedict’s resignation in 2013 shook the Roman Catholic church to its core, his death again put the institution in little-charted territory.

A pope’s death customarily sets in motion a conclave to choose a new leader of the church, but Benedict’s successor, Pope Francis, was named when Benedict stepped down. It was Francis who on Wednesday announced the news of Benedict’s final decline to the world.

Now, after a life dedicated to maintaining order and tradition in the church, Benedict in death has put it…

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December 30, 2022

Informe. Campeones del abuso: once curas denunciados y protegidos por el Arzobispado de La Plata

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
La Izquierda Diario [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

December 30, 2022

By Daniel Satur, Estefanía Velo

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Casos emblemáticos que sacuden a la Curia de la capital bonaerense. De los cinco del Provolo al suicidado Lorenzo. De Giménez, que zafó por “prescripción” del delito, a Sidders, que espera su juicio “preso” en un campo de su hermana. El excomulgado Yanuzzi y el encumbrado Marchioni. Prontuarios que hablan de un flagelo extendido pero negado por las huestes de Jorge “Francisco” Bergoglio.

Este miércoles 28 la Conferencia Episcopal Argentina, máximo órgano político de la Iglesia católica del país, publicó un saludo de fin de año. Allí los obispos dicen anhelar para 2023 “que podamos renovar las actitudes y las disposiciones para la convivencia democrática, dejando de lado todo lo que acreciente las divisiones” y “postergue la discusión de los temas urgentes”. El texto lo firman los monseñores Oscar OjeaMarcelo ColomboCarlos Azpiroz Costa y Alberto Bochatey.

El último de los firmantes es obispo auxiliar del Arzobispado de La Plata. Discípulo del jubilado Héctor Aguer y actual…

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Residents Fight New Housing for Registered Sex Offenders in South Carolina

CHARLESTON (SC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

December 29, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

Read original article

Residents of Walterboro, a small town west of Charleston, South Carolina, are banding together to stop a new Christian halfway house that would house up to 10 registered sex offenders.

About 970 people have joined Stop Pedofiles on Barracada Road, a new Facebook group designed to resist the facility that Shield Ministries from Charleston would operate.

“How does anyone think this even close to being okay?” asked one person in the group. There is additional worry because the director of the Shield’s program was convicted in 2003 of committing or attempting a lewd act on a child under age 16.

But there is support for Shield’s treatment approach in the South Carolina legal community. “Shield is a faith based and science-based treatment program that requires accountability and leads to real public safety,” said D. Ashley Pennington, recently retired Ninth Circuit Public Defender, in a statement that Shield released.

Recently,  View Cache

Pope Emeritus rested well overnight, health situation stable

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

December 30, 2022

Read original article

In a response to questions from journalists, the Director of the Holy See Press Office, Matteo Bruni, on Friday confirmed that Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s health condition remains stable at this time. He added that yesterday evening Benedict XVI was able to have a good rest, and earlier in the afternoon he participated in the celebration of Mass in his room. 

In related news, at 5:30 pm Rome time on today, Mass will be celebrated at the Basilica of St. John Lateran, remembering in prayer Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI and his health. The Cardinal Angelo De Donatis, Vicar of the Diocese of Rome, will preside over the celebration. 

The Diocese of Rome has encouraged “parish communities, chaplaincies, religious men and women, all the faithful of the diocese and all the men and women of good will who live in Rome,” to gather in prayer for Benedict XVI,  “remembering with gratitude the…

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Rituals for Benedict’s passing could be template for future ex popes

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

December 30, 2022

By Philip Pullella

Read original article

When Pope Gregory XII, the last pope to resign before Benedict, died in 1417, the world was not watching.

Gregory had stepped down two years earlier in 1415 and spent his remaining days in virtual obscurity hundreds of miles from Rome. He was quietly buried in Recanati, a town near the northern Adriatic coast.

It will be vastly different with the passing of ailing 95-year-old Benedict, who the Vatican has said is in a grave but stable condition after a sudden deterioration in his health over Christmas.

The Vatican has painstakingly elaborate rituals for what happens after a reigning pope dies but no publicly known ones for a former pope.

After Benedict dies, the Vatican will be at least partially scripting new protocols. They could be a template for other popes who choose to resign instead of ruling for life, including Pope Francis himself someday, Vatican sources say.

Those for a…

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Ex-Pope Benedict’s failing health presents difficult decisions for Vatican

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

December 29, 2022

By Antoinette Radford and David Ghiglione

Read original article

The Catholic Church has strict protocols in place following the death of its leader, but as ex-Pope Benedict’s health wanes it is unclear whether those same protocols will apply to a retired pope, known as Emeritus.

When Benedict XVI resigned in 2013 citing old age, he became the first pope in 600 years to step down from the role. Born Joseph Ratzinger, the German cardinal was elected in April 2005 and chose to go by the name of Benedict.

For almost a decade there have in effect been two popes living at close quarters in the Vatican, because Benedict has stayed in the Vatican Gardens at the Mater Ecclesiae monastery and appeared occasionally alongside his successor.

“We’ve never had this before where a living pope will help bury a dead pope,” Catholic historian John McGreevy said.

Even the Middle Ages do not provide a template, because when Gregory XII resigned…

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N.M. attorney general announces report on priest abuse, potential prosecution

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe NM]

December 30, 2022

By Daniel J. Chacón

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Outgoing Attorney General Hector Balderas said Thursday his office is in the final stages of completing a sweeping risk report on clergy sex abuse in New Mexico and evaluating possible prosecution of a priest accused of wrongdoing.

“We are advancing a criminal investigation of a [Catholic priest], and we’re finalizing that risk report, and I’ve made that part of my transition briefing to the next attorney general,” he said in an interview with The New Mexican.

Balderas, barred from seeking reelection due to term limits, said he decided to allow the administration of successor Raúl Torrez, who will take office Jan. 1, to finalize the report because of the active criminal investigation.

Balderas declined to identify the priest or the allegations against him, saying it would be unethical and prejudice the investigation.

The update on Balderas’ inquiry into a sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church in New…

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Judge OKs Archdiocese of Santa Fe settlement of $121 million in clergy abuse cases

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe NM]

December 30, 2022

By Phaedra Haywood

Read original article

Years of negotiations between survivors of clergy sex abuse and the Archdiocese of Santa Fe moved toward conclusion this week when claimants and a federal bankruptcy judge approved a proposed $121.5 million agreement that would settle nearly 400 claims made by people who say they were abused by Roman Catholic clergy.

“While I hope and pray that the bankruptcy outcome will bring a measure of justice and relief to the victims … I realize that nothing can ever compensate them for the criminal and horrendous abuse they endured,” Archbishop John C. Wester said in a written statement issued Thursday.

“I pledge that the Archdiocese of Santa Fe will remain vigilant in protecting children and young people from clergy sexual abuse, doing all we can to assure them of a safe and protective environment in the Catholic Church,” Wester wrote.

Attorney Brad Hall, who represents about 140 of the claimants —…

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Catholic Jesuit order hit by priest abuse scandal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

December 29, 2022

By Clément Melki

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The Catholic Jesuit order, of which Pope Francis is a member, has been rocked by claims a prominent priest abused several women, a case raising questions about how the Church sanctions offenders.

Father Marko Rupnik, a 68-year-old Slovenian priest and world-renowned artist, is accused of abusing a number of women at a religious community in Ljubljana in the early 1990s, in what press reports said involved sexual and psychological violence.

The case first emerged in the Italian media, before the Jesuits — one of the main Roman Catholic orders, founded in 1540 — revealed it had sanctioned Rupnik, denying him the right to hear confession.

The Vatican’s dicastery (ministry) for the doctrine of the faith was involved in the case but said it could not put Rupnik on trial because the statute of limitations had expired.

The Jesuits later revealed that, in a separate case, Rupnik had also been convicted…

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December 29, 2022

Former Pope Benedict is ‘lucid and vigilant’ but his condition remains serious, Vatican says

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

December 29, 2022

By Delia Gallagher

Read original article

Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI is “lucid and vigilant” but his condition remains serious, the Vatican said Thursday in an update on the former pontiff’s health.

“He is absolutely lucid and vigilant and today while his condition remains serious, the situation at the moment is stable,” Vatican press office director Matteo Bruni said in a statement.

“Pope Francis renews his invitation to pray for him and accompany him in these difficult hours.”

Pope Francis announced Wednesday that his 95-year-old predecessor was “very sick” after a deterioration in his health.

“I want to ask you all for a special prayer for Pope Emeritus Benedict who sustains the Church in his silence. He is very sick,” Francis said during his general audience at the Vatican on Wednesday. “We ask the Lord to console and sustain him in this witness of love for the Church to the…

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The Rupnik affair is a microcosm of Church’s leadership crisis

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

December 28, 2022

By Christopher R. Altieri

Read original article

All the laws in all the world, all the paper reforms and speeches and exhortations and pleas and promises are worth exactly as much as those in charge are willing to put behind them in dollars and cents, to show their earnest and make them stick.

This Rupnik business is very bad. There’s no telling how bad it will be for Pope Francis, the Vatican, the Jesuits, or the Slovenian bishops. There’s plenty of bad to go around.

Rupnik’s art is to be found in shrines and chapels all over the world. That’s what makes this Rupnik business appear to be a world-in-a-nutshell instance of the Church’s leadership crisis and the effect of it on the institution and the faithful worldwide.

The Inescapable Rupnik

There is no escaping it. Lourdes. Fatima. Padre Pio’s crypt in San Giovanni Rotondo. Pope St. John Paul II’s shrines in Krakow and Washington, DC. Madrid’s…

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Priests on Screen in Multi-Ethnic America

HOUSTON (TX)
Patheos [Englewood CO]

December 29, 2022

By Philip Jenkins

Read original article

Through the years, I have worked a lot on how media portrayals reflect changing attitudes towards religion, and in turn do a great deal to shape those attitudes. In fact, I have a piece in the current Christian Century on “Priests on Screen,” looking at some recent European representations of clergy. Given that background, I was very struck by one American production this past year, from a surprising source.

The TV series in question was Mo, starring comedian Mohammed Amer, who also created and produced the show, drawing heavily on his own experiences. Mo (available on Netflix) has been widely praised for its portrayal of immigrant life in Alief, a very multi-cultural working class suburb of Houston. Texas references and in-jokes abound. The show is very good on issues like the use of language, such as the blend of…

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Only affection and respect for accused priest

VICTORIA (CANADA)
Vancouver Island Free Daily [Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada]

December 28, 2022

By Cathy McKinney

Read original article

Re: Catholic church settles lawsuit around historical sex abuse of 10-year-old B.C. girl (Online, Dec 15)

1. The confessional at St. Peter’s Catholic Church in Nanaimo is now, and in 1976, divided by a wall so that the pastor and penitent are in separate rooms.

2. Father Hartmann wrote three books about his life. There were no letters of criticism or claims of abuse, only affection and respect for his career as a priest.

3. Father Hartmann spoke of his experiences fleeing the Nazis and the Russians. He tried to escape several times and finally succeeded.

4. The article said a complaint was dismissed in 2000. The Dec. 15 news article states that the allegations were not proven in court. When a man is dead and can no longer defend himself, why has the Victoria diocese decided to condemn him?

5. In the absence of evidence to support…

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The National Survey of Priests suggests a deep crisis in Catholic theology

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

December 28, 2022

By Msgr. Thomas G. Guarino

Read original article

Given their abrupt suspension of accused priests, the bishops have eroded the theological density of the sacrament of Holy Orders. By so doing, they have undermined the very deposit of faith they seek to protect and transmit.

A few weeks ago, the Catholic Project at The Catholic University of America released the results of a massive survey of Catholic priests in the United States. Priests interviewed numbered 3,500 from 191 American dioceses.

Predictably—at least for those who have been paying attention—the results constitute a biting indictment of the American episcopacy. The most prominent finding of the survey is that a majority of priests do not trust their own bishops—and, shockingly, only 24% of priests trust the US episcopacy in general. In other words, the bond between priests and their putative “fathers” and “brothers” is badly corroded. Even worse, bishops are largely unaware of the decay, with over 90% claiming they are…

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Paedo priest who abused vulnerable boys for 20 years avoids jail after breaching court order

BELFAST (UNITED KINGDOM)
Sunday World [Dublin, Ireland]

December 29, 2022

By Paul Higgins

Read original article

A paedophile priest who abused young vulnerable boys for almost 20 years was handed a suspended sentence on Thursday after he breached a court order.

Imposing a three month jail sentence on disgraced priest Daniel Gerard Curran but suspending it for three years, District Judge Steven Keown said the pre-sentence probation report illustrated a “depressing lack of insight and minimisation of his behaviour.”

He warned the 72-year-old if he breached his Sexual Offences Prevention Order again in that time “you will be facing custody.”

Curran, from Bryansford Avenue in Newcastle, had earlier entered a guilty plea to breaching his lifelong SOPO on 12 August this year in that without reasonable excuse or permission from his designated risk manager, he “remained or loitered at Tullymore National Activity Centre which by its nature is likely to attract or be frequented by children.”

A prosecuting lawyer told Downpatrick Magistrates Court how Curran had…

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New report on clergy abuse during John Paul II’s tenure in Poland sparks intense debate

KRAKóW (POLAND)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

December 29, 2022

By Jonathan Luxmoore

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When a Dutch journalist claimed to have found documents indicating that Pope John Paul II covered up clergy sexual abuse while serving as the archbishop of Krakow, Poland, in the 1960s and ’70s, it sparked a predictable media frenzy in Europe’s most Catholic country.

With some urging a consideration of the evidence, and others dismissing the claims out of hand, the incident appears to highlight a continuing gulf between the Polish church and its Western neighbors.

“We face serious problems here whenever issues like this arise, since it’s impossible to have any serious debate about the pope,” Malgorzata Glabisz-Pniewska, a senior Catholic presenter with Polish Radio, told NCR.

“Some people, partly for political reasons, attack him, hoping to discredit his claims to sanctity, while others insist any criticism is inherently satanic,” she said. “It’s a situation St. John Paul himself would not have appreciated.”

Claims about diabolical motives were made…

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Survivors of priest abuse OK settlement from Archdiocese

SANTA FE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque NM]

December 28, 2022

By Colleen Heild

Read original article

Child sex abuse survivors have overwhelmingly approved a $121.5 million plan in a crucial step toward resolving the long-running Archdiocese of Santa Fe bankruptcy reorganization, which was aimed at stemming the church’s financial losses while atoning for wrongs of the past.

Aside from providing monetary payments to nearly 400 abuse claimants, the terms of the settlement require the establishment of an “unprecedented” public archive of documents showing how “decades of widespread abuse occurred” in New Mexico and to prevent such abuse by clergy in the future.

A formal confirmation order is expected to be signed by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma of Albuquerque on Thursday. Payouts in the case could begin in the coming months.

The reorganization plan is the product of years of legal wrangling that involved three mediators and effectively halted more than three dozens civil lawsuits in state court that alleged abuse of children by clergy…

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Benedict XVI’s health ‘serious’ but ‘stable,’ Vatican says

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Washington Post

December 29, 2022

By Chico Harlan

Read original article

Benedict XVI has lived longer than anybody else who’s ever been pope.

Most Catholics can’t remember a world without him. Even his final chapter — as a retiree — has extended so long that many in Rome have grown accustomed to having a Catholic Church with two men in white, Benedict, 95, living quietly in a Vatican convent.

“We’ve had him like a grandfather living behind the church,” said Mountain Butorac, an American who lives in Rome and guides Catholic pilgrimages. “And now we’re about to lose him.”

The Vatican’s announcement Wednesday that Benedict’s health had worsened put the church on alert, and Catholics are bracing for the first papal death since 2005. Because Benedict is not a sitting pope, his death won’t lead to a conclave and won’t cause the same immediate upheavals. But it has become a moment for Catholics to reflect on a figure who has had…

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December 28, 2022

Catholic hospital in Colorado faces class-action lawsuit after police allege nurse spent years recording himself sexually abusing unconscious patients

PUEBLO (CO)
Insider [New York NY]

December 27, 2022

By Katherine Tangalakis-Lippert

Read original article

  • A former nurse at St. Mary’s Medical Center was accused by coworkers of abusing unconscious patients.
  • Christopher Lambros was arrested on charges of sexual assault.
  • In a class action suit, lawyers allege the hospital allowed Lambros access to patients for 10 years.

A Colorado hospital is facing a class-action lawsuit after police alleged a former nurse recorded himself sexually abusing unconscious patients. 

The Grand Junction Police Department confirmed in a statement emailed to Insider that Christopher Lambros, a 61-year-old former nurse, was arrested on October 25 on three felony counts of sexual assault and was remanded to the Mesa County Detention Facility. 

According to the arrest warrant, his bail was set at $250,000. The police department confirmed Tuesday he remains in custody.

Lambros was caught by another hospital staff member in July in a patient’s room at St. Mary’s Medical Center, according to the arrest warrant, having apparently exposed…

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Women sexually abused by ICU nurse sue Colorado hospital

PUEBLO (CO)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 21, 2022

By Colleen Slevin

Read original article

Two women who say a nurse sexually assaulted them while they were unconscious in intensive care filed a lawsuit Tuesday against the Colorado hospital where they were being treated, alleging the hospital’s management didn’t do enough to prevent the abuse.

The lawsuit — which is proposed as a class action suit — alleges St. Mary’s Hospital in Grand Junction and SCL Health and Intermountain Healthcare, the companies that ran the hospital, knew or should have known about the actions of the nurse, Christopher Lambros, who has been arrested and charged with sexual assault. Police say Lambros would record himself sexually abusing female patients while they were unconscious or incapacitated.

According to his arrest affidavit, on a day in June when Lambros made five videos of himself abusing a patient, he whispered to the camera saying “don’t ever get rid of these videos” and “you need to keep them forever ……

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Archdiocese far from transparent on sexual abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 28, 2022

By David Anthony Lorenz

Read original article

A few observations regarding Archbishop William Lori’s recent commentary (”Baltimore archbishop: ‘The Church of today is not the Church described by the attorney general.’ Here’s what’s changed.” Dec. 20). First, providing thousands of pages of documents to the Maryland attorney general because of a subpoena does not make you transparent; it makes you not wanting to go to jail. Providing those documents to the public years ago when you first took office would have made you transparent.

Second, he makes show of the fact that he will not oppose the statute of limitations reform bill currently before the Maryland General Assembly, after having opposed it for years using high-priced lobbyists. Yet he neglects to mention the fourth paragraph of his own news release where he indicates that a huge part of the bill is believed to be unconstitutional. He is clearly laying the groundwork for how the…

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As deadline looms, California’s institutions face thousands of childhood sexual abuse claims

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Los Angeles Times [Los Angeles CA]

December 28, 2022

By Laura J. Nelson

Read original article

The lawsuits are stacking up in courthouses across the state, sometimes dozens per day, identifiable by their unusual names: Jane Doe vs. Doe Archdiocese. M.L., an individual, vs. Doe 1, a California organization. John Doe #1 vs. Roe 2, a California entity.

In the waning days of a three-year window that gave adults more time to file lawsuits over childhood sexual abuse, California is seeing a flood of new litigation.

Spurred by a 2020 change in state law, thousands of lawsuits alleging abuse as far back as the 1940s have been filed against dozens of organizations, including religious groups, private and public schools, sports groups and nonprofit organizations. In some cases, the alleged perpetrators have been dead for decades.

The number of lawsuits is expected to rise sharply before the Dec. 31 filing deadline. After that, people older than 40 will once again be barred from suing over abuse suffered in…

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Former Pope Benedict is ‘very sick’, Pope Francis says

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

December 28, 2022

By Delia Gallagher and Rob Picheta

Read original article

Pope Francis has said that his predecessor Pope Benedict, the 95-year-old former pontiff who resigned from the post nine years ago, is “very sick” after a deterioration in his health on Wednesday.

“I want to ask you all for a special prayer for Pope Emeritus Benedict who sustains the Church in his silence. He is very sick,” Francis said during his general audience at the Vatican on Wednesday.

“We ask the Lord to console and sustain him in this witness of love for the Church to the very end.”

A Vatican spokesman later confirmed that “in the last few hours there has been a deterioration due to the advancement of (Benedict’s) age.”

“The situation at the moment remains under control and continually monitored by his doctors,” the spokesman, Matteo Bruni, said, adding that Francis visited his predecessor at the Mater Ecclesiae monastery in Vatican City after his general audience.

In…

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Paedophilia in the Catholic Church: Investigation into a €10,000 rape in Congo

MAKOUA (REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO)
The Africa Report [Paris, France]

December 28, 2022

By Mathieu Olivier

Read original article

Is the Catholic Church about to face a new paedophilia scandal linked to Africa? From Makoua to Namur, we investigated the charges of the alleged rape of a teenager in Congo-Brazzaville by a Belgian priest. 

  • We have investigated the rape of a Congolese teenager in the late 1990s in Makoua, Congo-Brazzaville. 
  • This sexual abuse – similar to the cases we denounced in Gabon – were allegedly committed by a Belgian priest, now working in the diocese of Namur, Belgium, and whose canonical trial could begin soon.  
  • The facts also bring to light the practices of the Belgian Church, which has a very official price list – ranging from €2,500 to €25,000 – for making financial agreements with victims.  

Joseph has trembling hands and tears in his eyes. Two decades after the events, he has not told his story to anyone close to him. His family knows nothing. Nor do his neighbours….

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December 27, 2022

Why Italy’s Catholic Church Still Won’t Face Its Own Sex Abuse Scandal

(ITALY)
World Crunch [Paris, France]

December 27, 2022

By Francesco Peloso

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[Translated from L’Essenziale]

Two decades after the U.S. Catholic Church finally began to confront priest abuse of minors, and many other countries followed suit, Italian bishops who live with the Vatican in their midst are reluctant to break the church’s vow of silence and answer to victims.

It was in 2002 that the scandal of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests erupted in the United States, prompting the country’s conference of bishops to draft the first Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People in the Church.

The charter allowed guilty clergy members to be removed, and dioceses — the group of churches that a bishop supervises — were asked to cooperate with civil authorities in cases of violence against minors in the name of transparency.

But 20 years later, the scandal, which has since spread to many other countries, is far from over.

In the meantime, things…

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Rupnik’s victim, a former religious sister, speaks out

LJUBLJANA (SLOVENIA)
Il Sismografo [Rome, Italy]

December 20, 2022

By Federica Tourn

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[From Domani (Rome, Italy); translated by The Pillar]

“The first time he kissed me on the mouth telling me that this was how he kissed the altar where he celebrated the Eucharist, because with me he could experience sex as an expression of God’s love.” This is the beginning of the detailed account of the sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse that Anna (not her real name), 58, a former Italian religious sister of the Loyola Community, suffered for nine years at the hands of Jesuit Father Marko Ivan Rupnik.
As Domani has reported in recent days, Rupnik, a world-renowned theologian and artist, is now at the center of a scandal based on accusations that he abused several religious sisters. Anna, who came close to suicide because of the suffering caused by the Jesuit’s delusion of omnipotence and sexual obsession, denounced her abuser several times over the years but the Church has…

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Falsehoods, Persecution, and Forgiveness

(AUSTRALIA)
European Conservative [Budapest, Hungary]

December 22, 2022

By Filip Mazurczak

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Pell’s Prison Journal provides an inspiring example of how to endure attacks while loving our persecutors. Perhaps his serene approach can show our post-Christian civilization the beauty of Christian love and forgiveness.

rom 2019 to 2020, Cardinal George Pell, the retired Catholic archbishop of Melbourne (1996-2001) and Sydney (2001-2014), spent almost 14 months in solitary confinement after being falsely accused for sexual assault. He was finally released after his unanimous acquittal by Australia’s High Court. The journal Pell kept in prison has now been published in three volumes under the title Prison Journal. They reveal an inspiring lack of rancor and give us insight into an astute, conservative social observer. Considering both the viciousness of the campaign against him and a conviction based on flimsy and contradictory evidence alongside his decidedly politically incorrect views on political issues such as Brexit and global warming, on full display in the three-volume journal, raises the question of…

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A screen grab shows Jesuit Father Marko Rupnik, an artist and theologian, giving a Lenten meditation from the Clementine Hall at the Vatican in this March 6, 2020, file photo. Father Rupnik, whose mosaics decorate chapels in the Vatican, all over Europe, in the United States and Australia, is under restricted ministry after being accused of abusing adult nuns in Slovenia. (CNS photo)

Statement about Fr. Rupnik from the Diocese of Rome raises more questions

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

December 23, 2022

By Christopher R. Altieri

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[Photo above: A screen grab shows Jesuit Father Marko Rupnik, an artist and theologian, giving a Lenten meditation from the Clementine Hall at the Vatican in this March 6, 2020, file photo. Father Rupnik, whose mosaics decorate chapels in the Vatican, all over Europe, in the United States and Australia, is under restricted ministry after being accused of abusing adult nuns in Slovenia. (CNS photo)]

Released on Friday afternoon right before Christmas, the statement describes Fr. Rupnik as a man who “had provided numerous and precious services” to the Rome diocese through the years, and had been “made blameful for heavy abuses of various kinds” especially by reports in the media.

The Diocese of Rome has issued its own statement regarding Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik, SJ, the world-famous Jesuit artist-priest accused of serial sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse of at least nine women over a period of several years.

CWR has its translation…

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As Dallas charter turns 20, abuse has become issue for much of society

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

December 26, 2022

By Mark Pattison

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[Via Catholic Spirit, Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis]

Twenty years ago, in 2002, the revelations of clergy sexual abuse and its cover-up in the Archdiocese of Boston were the metaphorical bombshell that fell on the Catholic Church in the United States.

The U.S. bishops, when they met that June in Dallas, approved the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” a comprehensive set of procedures for addressing allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy.

Its one-strike-and-you’re-out policy did just that — permanently removing from public ministry those priests against whom abuse allegations were substantiated.

Twenty years later, at their assembly in Baltimore Nov. 14-17, the bishops acknowledged the charter’s anniversary and said that they have made steps in addressing clergy sexual abuse and would continue to listen, care for and walk with survivors.

Over the past 20 years, the fallout from the Boston revelations has…

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Francis Spellman, in 1946 (Wikimedia Commons)

Master Builders

NEW YORK (NY)
Commonweal [New York NY]

December 26, 2022

By Paul Baumann

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Cardinal Spellman and my cousin

I recently spent too many hours plowing through John Cooney’s four-hundred-page 1984 biography, The American Pope: The Life and Times of Francis Cardinal Spellman. Spellman was archbishop of New York from 1939 to 1967. He was notorious for his autocratic style and the power he exerted both inside and outside the Church. He was also known for his political conservatism, rabid anticommunism, American jingoism, unstinting support for the war in Vietnam, love of pomp, and financial acumen. He seems to have been almost a caricature of what Protestants long feared about Catholic clerical authoritarianism.

During his nearly thirty years of near dictatorial rule in New York, the cardinal’s residence became known as “The Powerhouse.” He raised and spent hundreds of millions on new schools, churches, and hospitals. Mayors, governors, senators, and presidents paid homage. Spellman counted J. Edgar Hoover and Roy Cohn as friends and collaborators….

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Trinidad private school teacher accused of abusing students

TRINIDAD (CO)
KRDO [Colorado Springs CO]

December 26, 2022

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A Catholic High School teacher in Trinidad is facing harassment and child abuse charges after students told police she would strike them with various objects. 

Andrea Jimenez, a 63-year-old teacher at Holy Trinity Academy in Trinidad, is due in court for her first appearance on Jan. 5th after she was issued a summons last month.  

On Oct. 31, Trinidad Police began their investigation into possible harassment involving a teacher at Holy Trinity Academy School, a Catholic private school that teaches students from Kindergarten through the 12th grade. Multiple students and parents pointed to Jimenez as the primary concern. 

According to one of the student’s statements to investigators, Jimenez got extremely close to her face and body after getting upset over finding laptop charging cables on the ground.

Jimenez began smacking them in the face and on her body with the charging chord according to the student’s statements to investigators. 

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December 26, 2022

2022 saw opposition to Pope Francis, plus intellectual and ecclesial shifts

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

December 26, 2022

By Michael Sean Winters

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The year 2022 in the Catholic world was dominated by significant shifts in the intellectual and ecclesial landscape, accompanied by shockingly few shifts among key personnel in the Vatican Curia and at the headquarters of the U.S. bishops’ conference. Pope Francis continues to invite the church to try new approaches with the goal of retrieving our tradition more fruitfully, even while here in the United States he encounters a great deal of opposition.

Synodality was the biggest story of 2022 — or it might be. The process has begun and no one is sure how it will end, but already we are seeing signs of its effect.

As NCR board member Jim Purcell, who was heavily involved in the synodal process in his parish and diocese, noted, “I have witnessed again and again the animating power of the Holy Spirit that is at the…

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Terry Hall, a Face of Britain’s Ska Revival, Is Dead at 63

COVENTRY (UNITED KINGDOM)
New York Times [New York NY]

December 25, 2022

By Alex Williams

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The son of Coventry factory workers, he overcame a traumatic childhood to find fame in the Thatcher years as the frontman of the Specials.

Terry Hall, the frontman of the Specials, the British ska band that blended pub-fight energy with socially conscious lyrics that explored the political and racial tensions of Britain in the late 1970s and early ’80s, died on Dec. 18. He was 63.

The cause was pancreatic cancer, his former bandmate Horace Panter announced on Facebook. The announcement did not say where he died.

After enduring a traumatic childhood, Mr. Hall went on to enjoy a chart-topping music career.

He forged his most lasting legacy as a face of the revival of ska — the pop genre that emerged in Jamaica in the 1960s, blending Caribbean styles like calypso with rhythm and blues — that shook the British music scene during the early, convulsive Margaret…

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Seattle archbishop’s new residence is an insult to the Catholic community

SEATTLE (WA)
Seattle Times [Seattle WA]

December 26, 2022

By Clark Kimerer, Colleen Kinerk and Terrence A. Carroll

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One might assume that, at first blush, spending $2.4 million (plus remodeling costs) is not a huge outlay for a luxury view home in Seattle — at least for the privileged few who can afford it. Yet, the recent purchase of such a home by the Seattle Archdiocese for Archbishop Paul Etienne has caused serious concern among many clergy and lay Catholics.

When he first arrived in Seattle in 2019, the archbishop declared, “I am a Pastor, not a Prince’’ in renouncing residence at a mansion on First Hill in Seattle that had been purchased by contributions from the laity more than a century earlier.  He further claimed that the proceeds from the sale of the mansion would be used by the church for its social services. In recognition of that apparent austerity, the archdiocese renovated for $160,000 the rectory at St. Peter’s Church in the working class neighborhood of Beacon Hill.

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