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.

December 22, 2022

Two more alleged victims of sexual assault at Bangor church, school step forward

PORTLAND (ME)
WCSH - NBC News Center Maine [Portland ME]

December 21, 2022

By Caroline LeCour and Lorraine Muir

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The two new complaints now make a total of 13 complaints by attorneys with the law firm Berman and Simmons against the diocese.

BANGOR, Maine — Two more alleged victims have stepped forward, filing a complaint this week against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland for claims of sexual abuse occurring in Bangor in the 1950s and 1960s. 

The plaintiffs asked to remain anonymous, leaving attorneys Michael Bigos and Timothy Kenlan of the law firm Berman and Simmons to represent them. 

“We intend to hold the church fully accountable for the abuse, fully accountable for the cover-up, and fully accountable for the response our client received as a child,” Bigos said.

The first plaintiff claims at age nine they were sexually assaulted by former priest Reverend Monsignor Edward F. Ward of Saint Mary’s in Bangor, who has since died.

The plaintiff was described as loyal to the church…

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20-year church abuse probe ends with monsignor’s quiet plea

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 21, 2022

By Maryclaire Dale

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Twenty years after city prosecutors convened a grand jury to investigate the handling of priest-abuse complaints within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia, the tortuous legal case came to an end with a cleric’s misdemeanor no contest plea in a near-empty City Hall courtroom.

Monsignor William Lynn, 71, had served nearly three years in state prison as appeals courts reviewed the fiery three-month trial that led to his felony child endangerment conviction in 2012. The verdict was twice overturned, leaving prosecutors pursuing the thinning case in recent years with a single alleged victim whose appearance in court was i n doubt.

In the end, they said Lynn could end the two-decade ordeal by pleading no contest to a charge of failing to turn over records to the 2002 grand jury. A judge took the plea during a short break from her civil caseload last month, and imposed no further punishment.

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Pope denounces psychological abuse as Jesuit case rocks Church

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

December 22, 2022

By Philip Pullella

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Pope Francis on Thursday denounced psychological violence and abuse of power in the Church, as the case of a prominent priest accused of exploiting his authority to sexually abuse nuns has rocked the Vatican.

The 86-year-old pope made his comments in his annual Christmas address to cardinals, bishops and other members of the Curia, the central administration of the Vatican.

Francis has often used the occasion to decry perceived flaws in the top bureaucracy, such as gossip, cliques and infighting.

After mentioning wars, the pope said: “Besides the violence of arms, there is also verbal violence, psychological violence, the violence of the abuse of power, the hidden violence of gossip.”

He added that no one should “profit from his or her position and role in order to demean others”.

Although he did not specifically refer to this, the Jesuit order, of which the pope is a member, has been rattled in…

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December 21, 2022

Peel police charge retired Catholic priest in connection with sexual assault

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

December 17, 2022

By The Canadian Press

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Police believe there may be more victims

A retired priest has been charged in an alleged historical sexual assault that investigators say occurred in the Toronto area four decades ago.

Peel police say in a news release they received information in October that a Catholic priest who practised in the Peel region between 1980 and 1983 allegedly sexually assaulted a boy while he was attending church.

On Thursday, an 84-year-old man of Toronto was arrested and charged with gross indecency and indecent assault on a male.

The force says the priest has been retired from the parish since June 2013, but it believes there may be more potential victims.

The Archdiocese of Toronto says in a statement that the allegations date to when the man was pastor of St. Martin of Tours Parish in Mississauga, Ont., and it also lists parishes where he served in the region going back to 1974.

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Group of clergy abuse survivors says potential legislation won’t help past victims

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBFF - Fox 45 [Baltimore MD]

December 20, 2022

By Chris Berinato

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A group representing clergy abuse survivors says legislation that the Maryland Catholic Conference supports won’t help past victims.

The Maryland Catholic Conference said that it supports legislation that would eliminate the statute of limitations on future civil lawsuits involving child sexual abuse.

The potential legislation would not allow civil claims in previous cases because, “The Maryland Attorney General has concluded, in multiple advice letters, that legislation that seeks to retroactively revive claims currently time-barred in Maryland would be unconstitutional,” according to a statement by the Maryland Catholic Conference.

According to the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, the statement from the Maryland Catholic Conference leaves the impression that the legislation will help past survivors.

“It does nothing for the hundreds of brave victims who have come forward during the Maryland Attorney General’s investigation into historical clergy abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore,” according to SNAP.

These statements come as…

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Rupnik case: Jesuits invite anyone who has suffered abuse to contact them

(ITALY)
General Curia of the Society of Jesus [Rome, Italy]

December 18, 2022

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“Rupnik case: Jesuits invite anyone who has suffered abuse to contact them”
“Structure to handle complaints” says Delegate of Fr. Sosa.

Statement from Fr. Johan Verschueren SJ, Delegate of Fr. General Sosa SJ
and Major Superior for the International Houses

[Note from BA: The Jesuits include a timeline at the end of this statement.]

The last week has seen a focus on two investigations carried on concerning the ministry of Fr Marko Rupnik. One concerned a matter relating to the sacrament of reconciliation; another related to abuse against several women of the Loyola Community by Fr Rupnik. The information shared has provoked many questions and I share below a timeline of the events in the hope of providing some clarity.

My main concern in all of this is for those who have suffered and I invite anyone who wishes to make a new complaint or who wants to discuss complaints already…

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Father Rupnik Case Riddled With Glaring Lapses in Judgment

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

December 20, 2022

By Father Raymond J. de Souza

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COMMENTARY: The response of the Society of Jesus to this distressing issue seems inadequate and dishonest; the conduct of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith curious; and the role of the Pope perplexing.

The sexual misconduct case of Jesuit Father Marko Rupnik is complex and distressing, and invites further questions on a number of aspects. The celebrated Jesuit artist, given many of the most important mosaic commissions over the last 30 years — including the Redemptoris Mater chapel in the Apostolic Palace — has been accused of serial abuse of adults under his pastoral direction.

The response of the Jesuit order seems inadequate and dishonest; the conduct of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) curious; and the role of the Holy Father himself perplexing.

Another Founder Has Fallen

The allegations against Father Rupnik arise from the “Loyola Community” he founded in the 1980s in his native…

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Lame Deer pastor charged with sexual abuse of children

BUSBY (MT)
KTVQ [Billings, MT]

December 21, 2022

By MTN News

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A Lame Deer pastor was arraigned Tuesday in federal court on sexual abuse charges alleged to have occurred on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation, U.S. Attorney Jesse Laslovich said.

Dean Alan Smith, 66, pleaded not guilty to one count of aggravated sexual abuse, one count of abusive sexual contact and three counts of abusive sexual contact by force and of a child. If convicted of the most serious crime, Smith faces a maximum of life in prison, a $250,000 fine and not less than five years of supervised release.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Timothy J. Cavan presided. Judge Cavan continued Smith’s release with conditions, including not being allowed to be around children.

Prosecutors alleged in an indictment filed Dec. 19 that Smith sexually abused four females, three of whom were under the age of 12, between 2017 and 2019 near Lame Deer. In all four cases, prosecutors alleged that Smith forced…

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Vatican’s handling of Jesuit priest shows new dimensions of never-ending abuse crisis

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

December 21, 2022

By Massimo Faggioli

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On Dec. 2, the global Jesuit order confirmed reports made in several conservative Italian Catholic blogs that Slovenian Jesuit Fr. Marko Rupnik, a famous Rome-based artist, had been quietly disciplined for allegedly abusing adult women, and had been barred from hearing confessions or offering spiritual direction.

On Dec. 14, Fr. Arturo Sosa, the Jesuit superior general, revealed more information. Rupnik, known in places across the world for his iconography and for mosaics in several renowned churches and cathedrals, had earlier been convicted by the Vatican’s doctrinal office of having used the confessional to absolve a woman of having engaged in sexual activity with him.

That is one of the most serious crimes in canon law, and incurs an automatic excommunication. Sosa said Rupnik repented, and indicated that the excommunication had thus been lifted.

Recapping the details of the case, some may feel the usual “here…

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Former bishop of French Guyana guilty of sex abuse, Vatican court says

CAYENNE (FRENCH GUIANA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 20, 2022

By Kevin J Jones

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Bishop Emeritus Emmanuel Lafont of Cayenne, French Guyana, has been found guilty of sexual abuse in a canonical court and banned from public ministry, while the country’s civil authorities are investigating charges against him.

“He is under house arrest, in a monastery on mainland France,” the Bishops’ Conference of France told Agence France Presse. He must conduct a life of prayer and repentance. The bishops’ conference confirmed that the bishop faces a civil investigation.

Numerous sources have confirmed to the French newspaper La Croix that the Vatican’s Dicastery for Bishops delivered a guilty sentence against the bishop emeritus in October.

As a consequence of the judgment against him, he may not wear his bishop’s insignia, the miter, or use a crozier. He must avoid contact with acquaintances in French Guyana and also avoid contact with young migrants.

The canonical investigation against the bishop was opened in April 2021 “because of…

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SNAP Has Deep Concerns About Jesuit Priest In Executive Role At Fairfield University

BRIDGEPORT (CT)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

December 20, 2022

By Gail Howard

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Fairfield University recently announced the leadership team for Fairfield Bellarmine. The announcement revealed that Fr. Kevin O’Brien will be working as the vice-provost and executive director of the school, which is scheduled to open in the fall of 2023 in Bridgeport, Connecticut. SNAP has deep concerns over Fairfield tapping Fr. O’Brien for this position.

In May 2021, the Jesuit priest resigned from his position at Santa Clara University after being removed by the USA West Province on March 18, 2021. An investigation found that Fr. O’Brien “engaged in behaviors, consisting primarily of conversations, during a series of informal dinners with Jesuit graduate students that were inconsistent with established Jesuit protocols and boundaries.”

We wonder about the wisdom of the decision to place Fr. O’Brien at a school for “underserved students” when he was unable to maintain appropriate boundaries at Santa Clara. The complaints…

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Worcester woman sues ex-official, diocese over coerced sex allegations

WORCESTER (MA)
Crux [Denver CO]

December 21, 2022

By John Lavenburg

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A woman who earlier this year accused a Diocese of Worcester parish soup kitchen director of coercing her and other vulnerable women into sex has sued the now-former director for his alleged actions, as well as diocesan leadership for alleged failure to act on the complaint in a timely manner.

“This complaint reflects the unlawful actions of the defendants relating to their tortious activity and their duty of care extended to Bell and other similarly situated individuals,” reads the complaint, filed on December 13 in Worcester Superior Court in Massachusetts.

“The defendants engaged in an ongoing course of conduct, acting in concert, to abuse and mistreat [plaintiff Nicole] Bell, and others, then conspired to shield themselves from liability,” it continues. “Based on the foregoing and the allegations that follow, Bell seeks compensatory and punitive damages.”

Bell detailed her allegations against the former St. John’s Catholic Church food for the poor…

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Archbishop Lori, in Sun op-ed: Archdiocese changed handling of abuse allegations 3 decades

BALTIMORE (MD)
Catholic Review - Archdiocese of Baltimore [Baltimore MD]

December 20, 2022

By Catholic Review staff

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Archbishop William E. Lori apologized again to anyone who has been harmed by a representative of the church and said he “will offer this apology as long as it needs to be heard,” in a column published on the Baltimore Sun’s website Dec. 19 and in its print edition the following day.

He emphasized that the church’s response to sexual abuse “is law-abiding, effective and transparent.”

Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh has asked a Baltimore City Circuit judge for permission to release a 456-page report on sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Baltimore, dating back to the early 1940s.

The archbishop said the archdiocese began to transform its handling of sexual abuse by clergy and employees in the 1990s. “The archdiocese then created the foundation for the most important elements of today’s child protection policies,” he said. “We also have changed how we respond to those courageous enough to…

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Catholics need a restorative justice approach to the church’s sexual abuse crisis

NEW YORK (NY)
American Magazine [New York, NY]

December 20, 2022

By Daniel Philpott

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Wounds remain. This was a chief conclusion of an independent working group on the clerical sex abuse crisis in the U.S. Catholic Church that proposed the following measures last month:

—Develop a national center with experts and practitioners to equip the broader church with practices of restorative justice that would accompany those who have been directly and peripherally harmed by abuse, particularly forums in which victim-survivors tell their stories and receive love, recognition and empathy.

—Establish a national healing garden as a permanent site of healing, prayer and accompaniment for victim-survivors of sexual abuse by members of the clergy and for the broader church.

—Institute an annual day of prayer and penance for healing and reconciliation for victim-survivors of clergy abuse and for broader healing in the church.

—Create trauma-informed training for clergy, seminarians, lay ministers, lay leaders and parish communities to communicate the realities and effects of trauma in order…

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Italy: Parliamentary inquest eyed for missing ‘Vatican Girl’

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

December 20, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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Opposition lawmakers in Italy are seeking a parliamentary commission of inquiry into three cold cases that have consumed the Italian public’s imagination for decades, including the 1983 disappearance of a 15-year-old that was highlighted in the Netflix documentary, “Vatican Girl.”

The aim of the inquest, said Sen. Carlo Calenda, would be to pressure the Vatican to finally turn over everything it knows about Emanuela Orlandi’s disappearance to Italian law enforcement authorities, saying its longstanding official claim of ignorance was “hardly credible.”

“We are a great secular nation that treats the Vatican with respect, but this case certainly cannot be considered closed in this way,” Calenda said Tuesday at a news conference announcing the proposed commission.

Orlandi vanished June 22, 1983 after leaving her family’s Vatican City apartment to go to a music lesson in Rome. Her father was a lay employee of the Holy See.

The Italian media and a…

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Brian Houston believes he did the ‘right thing’ not going to police after father admitted molesting boy

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

December 20, 2022

By Australian Associated Press

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Hillsong founder maintains it was victim’s explicit wish for incident not to be made public or for there to be an investigation, court hears

The Hillsong founder, Brian Houston, believes he did the “right thing” not going to police after his father told him he had molested an underage boy three decades earlier.

Houston maintains it was the victim’s explicit wish not for the incident to be made public or for there to be an investigation by authorities.

Frank Houston admitted abusing a young boy at a home in Sydney’s Coogee in 1970, which he confessed to his son in 1999.

Brian Houston is charged with concealing the crime until his father’s death in 2004, to which he pleaded not guilty.

The 68-year-old told a court hearing on Wednesday he did not believe justice for his father’s criminal act could only be achieved through a police investigation.

Following his father’s…

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December 20, 2022

Woman says Nanaimo priest who abused her in 1970s may have more victims

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

December 20, 2022

By Louise Dickson

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A woman who reached a settlement with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria this month says she was repeatedly sexually assaulted by Father Gerhard Hartmann at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church, beginning in 1976, when she was 10

Warning: This story contains descriptions of child sexual abuse.

A Vancouver Island woman who says she was sexually assaulted as a child by a Catholic priest with a Nazi past is sharing her story because she believes there are other victims.

This month, the woman reached a settlement with the Roman Catholic Diocese of ­Victoria.

Her lawsuit alleges she was repeatedly sexually assaulted and molested by Father Gerhard Hartmann in the confessional at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church in Nanaimo, beginning in 1976, when she was 10, and continuing until 1979, when Hartmann was suddenly moved from the parish.

According to her notice of claim, Hartmann touched, kissed and fondled the girl…

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Former Christian brother jailed for five years for indecently assaulting five boys

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Dublin People [Dublin, Ireland]

December 20, 2022

By Claire Henry

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A former Christian brother who was convicted in October on 38 counts of indecently assaulting young boys has been sentenced to five years in prison.

The man, who cannot be named to protect the identity of his victims, was found unanimously guilty after a jury at Dublin Circuit Criminal Court deliberated for four hours and twenty-six minutes.

The former priest was described by one of the victims in his victim impact statement as “the epitome of evil”.

The court heard that the man was convicted of indecently assaulting five boys in the late seventies, when the boys were then aged nine and ten.

The accused pleaded not guilty to all charges. He has seven previous convictions, all for indecent assault.

Garda Sergeant James Neary told Patrick McGrath SC, prosecuting, that the accused was a Christian Brother who was teaching all five boys at the time of the assaults.

Gda Stg…

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Retired bishop of French Guiana convicted of abuse, banned from ministry

(FRENCH GUIANA)
La Croix International [France]

December 20, 2022

By Héloïse de Neuville

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The Vatican has stripped retired Bishop Emmanuel Lafont of his priestly faculties and ordered him to carry out a life of prayer and penance at a monastery in France

The Vatican has convicted French Guiana’s retired bishop, Emmanuel Lafont, of sexual abuse, banning him from all public ministry and ordering him to stay in a monastery in mainland France to conduct a life of prayer and penance.

Numerous sources have confirmed to La Croix that the Dicastery for Bishops found the 77- year-old prelate guilty this past October, following a canonical investigation that was opened in April 2021. He is forbidden to carry out any pastoral activities, to wear his bishop’s insignia (the mitre, the crozier, etc.), to come into contact with his acquaintances in French Guiana as well as with young migrants.

 “An emotional thought for the presumed victims”

Informed of the canonical decree concerning Bishop Lafont, the Association…

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Priest close to Pope Francis accused of inviting two nuns to take part in a ‘Holy Trinity’ threesome

(SLOVENIA)
New York Post [New York NY]

December 20, 2022

By Isabel Keane

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A Jesuit priest who is reportedly close to Pope Francis has been accused of inviting two nuns to partake in a “Holy Trinity” threesome — and is now facing allegations of sexual and spiritual abuse dating back decades.

A former nun claims that Marko Ivan Rupnik used his “psycho-spiritual” control over her some three decades ago in order to make her watch pornographic films and have group sex sessions that he said would have religious significance.

Rupnik, 68, was a spiritual director of a convent in Slovenia and has created mosaics for churches including a papal chapel at the Vatican.

The former nun told the Italian newspaper Domani that “Father Marko started slowly and sweetly getting inside my psychological and spiritual world, exploiting my uncertainties and fragility and using my relationship with God to push me into sexual experiences with him,” according to the Daily Mail.

She said that during her…

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Tensions rise over Santa Rosa Diocese’s plan to seek bankruptcy protection

SANTA ROSA (CA)
Press Democrat [Santa Rosa CA]

December 19, 2022

By Mary Callahan

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Scores of survivors of clergy abuse — people who had spent decades trying to escape the grief and trauma of childhood sex assault — have come forward over the past three years after deciding now is finally the time to seek justice. 

At least 130 — likely many more, attorneys say — have filed or will file lawsuits against the Santa Rosa Roman Catholic Diocese during a special three-year window that allows adults of any age to file personal injury cases for childhood sex abuse in California. That window closes on New Year’s Eve.

But none of those cases is likely to go to trial.

The diocese announced to the court Nov. 30 that it would seek Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection early next year, a move that will suspend state court proceedings and leave the whole matter in federal bankruptcy court.

In effect, experts and plaintiffs attorneys say, that means…

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Maryland Catholic Conference to support bill eliminating statue of limitations

BALTIMORE (MD)
WJZ-TV - CBS 2 [Baltimore MD]

December 20, 2022

Read original article

The Maryland Catholic Conference will support legislation that could potentially eliminate the statute of limitation in civil lawsuits involving cases of child sexual abuse, the MCC announced Monday.   

The Catholic Church in Maryland will support legislation that may be introduced during the 2023 Maryland General Assembly session that prospectively eliminates the statute of limitation in civil lawsuits involving cases of child sexual abuse.,” the MCC said. 

In their statement, they cite an existing federal law, S.3103, that would have a similar impact to the legislation they expect to be proposed next year.  The federal law allows individuals an unlimited amount of time to file a civil lawsuit in cases of child sexual abuse.    

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Vatican investigator says claims of Jesuit abuse true

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

December 19, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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A Vatican-appointed investigator who helped bring to light decades-old allegations of sexual and spiritual abuse against a famous Jesuit priest is calling for the hierarchs who hid his crimes to “humbly ask the world to forgive the scandal.”

In correspondence obtained Monday, Bishop Daniele Libanori also said the claims of the women about the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik were true and that they had “seen their lives ruined by the evil suffered and by the complicit silence” of the church.

Libanori penned the letter Sunday to fellow priests after a remarkable week in which the Jesuit religious order of Pope Francis admitted that Rupnik, an artist whose mosaics grace churches and chapels around the world, had been excommunicated for having committed one of the most serious crimes in the church: using the confessional to absolve a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual activity.

The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine…

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‘Descent into Hell’: An alleged Rupnik victim speaks out

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

December 19, 2022

By Diane Montagna

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An alleged victim of Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik has detailed the sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse she said she suffered as a religious sister

An alleged victim of Slovenian Jesuit artist Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik detailed on Sunday the sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse she said she suffered as a religious sister, in a new interview with Italian media.

Allegations against the Jesuit priest have become a point of scandal in the Church, after Rupnik was accused of serially abusing Slovenian consecrated women in the 1980s and 1990s.

The allegations were sent to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith in 2021, but have not resulted in canonical prosecution — with Society of Jesus officials saying they were informed that Rupnik would not be canonically prosecuted for the alleged abuse, owing to the canonical statute of limitations.

That claim has sparked controversy in the Church, with journalists and…

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Catholic Church in Maryland concedes to some reforms about priest abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

December 19, 2022

By Tim Prudente and Pamela Wood

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Critics say the proposal falls short, ‘means nothing’

Our nonprofit news organization is made possible by subscribers and donors who value storytelling that impacts and uplifts communities. Thank you for supporting our journalism.

The lobbying arm of the Catholic church in Maryland is making a partial concession to legislative reforms that would help victims of priest sexual abuse sue the church decades later.

The Maryland Catholic Conference, which represents the Archdiocese of Baltimore, the Archdiocese of Washington and the Diocese of Wilmington, Del., announced Monday it will support legislation to erase the statute of limitations for future victims to sue the church. Maryland law requires men and women who are abused as children to file lawsuits by age 38 or within three years of an abuser’s criminal conviction.

The church, however, isn’t budging in its longstanding opposition to a “lookback window.” That would permit lawsuits from victims now older than 38 who…

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Pastor in New Zealand Loses Battle to Keep Sex Offenses Secret

AUCKLAND (NEW ZEALAND)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

December 19, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

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A pastor convicted of sexually assaulting seven young girls over two decades can’t keep his conviction hidden, a New Zealand judge ruled recently.

Siosateki Tonga Faletau, a pastor and business owner in Auckland, New Zealand, pleaded guilty to assaulting girls as young as 10 years old from 2001 to 2020, the New Zealand Herald reported. In September, the court sentenced Faletau to two years and three months in jail, but he is appealing, according to news reports.

The court barred news outlets from naming Faletau until an interim name suppression order expired last week, the Herald reported. In certain cases, New Zealand law allows courts to suppress the identity of a defendant, referred to as name suppression.Faletau had reportedly sought permanent name suppression, but a judge denied his motion.

Faletau was also a Justice of the Peace and a foster parent,  View Cache

Report: Vatican investigator says Father Rupnik and hierarchy’s ‘complicit silence’ ruined victims’ lives

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 19, 2022

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The Vatican investigator who uncovered allegations of sexual and spiritual abuse by Jesuit artist Father Marko Ivan Rupnik says the claims are true, according to a letter he sent to Italian priests obtained by the Associated Press.

Bishop Daniele Libanari also said the women Rupnik is alleged to have abused have “seen their lives ruined by the evil suffered and by the complicit silence” of the Church, the AP reported Monday.

He urged the members of the hierarchy who hid his crimes to “humbly ask the world to forgive the scandal.”

Libanori’s letter comes on the heels of revelations in the past week that Rupnik, a Slovenian priest well-known for his mosaics that adorn chapels and churches around the world, had been excommunicated for using the confessional to absolve a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual activity.

The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of…

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December 19, 2022

Lawyers seek Catholic abuse survivors as Maryland lawmakers consider statute of limitations bill

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 19, 2022

By Lee O. Sanderlin

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group of attorneys is gearing up the search for people who were sexually abused as children by Catholic priests in Maryland in preparation for a series of potential lawsuits.

Lawyers Robert Jenner, Barbara Hart, Beth Graham and Suzanne Sangree, who work at different firms, have started taking consultations with Catholic abuse victims to be ready if the Maryland General Assembly passes a law in 2023 lifting the statute of limitations on lawsuits in childhood sexual abuse cases.

“From simply listening to your story without judgment [to] assistance navigating the complexities of compensation programs and statutes of limitations, we are ready to help Baltimore clergy abuse survivors find justice and healing,” reads a landing page for abuse victims on Jenner’s website.

Maryland law gives victims until their 38th birthday to sue their abusers and an abuser’s employer, but a bill filed in the House of Delegates would repeal…

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Victims’ lawyers try to make sense of Bishop Hubbard’s request to be laicized

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

December 19, 2022

By Brian Fraga

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The news, coming through a press release on a Friday evening in mid-November, was unexpected. Bishop Howard Hubbard, the retired leader of the Diocese of Albany, New York, and now under investigation for both allegedly abusing children and covering up abuse done by others, was requesting the Vatican remove his status as a priest, or laicize him.

Among those caught by surprise were Hubbard’s alleged victims, as well as the civil attorneys representing them. They, along with canon lawyers well-versed in the Catholic Church’s disciplinary procedures for clerics accused of sexual misconduct, are struggling to make sense of Hubbard’s request.

Some suspect that Hubbard may be trying to short-circuit a canonical investigation by preemptively assuming the most severe punishment that the church can impose on a cleric. Others think Vatican machinations are at play, and wonder if Hubbard is following the advice of church officials in Rome to…

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Anthony Brown to take over archdiocese case if not resolved before taking office

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBAL-TV, NBC-11 [Baltimore MD]

December 16, 2022

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The man who becomes Maryland’s new attorney general next month is weighing in on the possible release of a report detailing sexual abuse allegations in the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

Attorney General-elect Anthony Brown said he has been monitoring efforts to release the report which names more than 100 priests accused of abuse and more than 600 victims dating back 80 years.

Since it is based on grand jury testimony, current Attorney General Brian Frosh has asked a court to release the report.

Attorneys representing people who wish to remain anonymous have sought to block the report’s release.

Brown said that case will continue under his watch.

Brown takes the oath of office in January.

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Archbishop: ‘We are sorry for not keeping children safe’

PORT OF SPAIN (TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO)
Newsday [Trinidad and Tobago]

December 18, 2022

By Janelle de Souza

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Archbishop Jason Gordon apologises to former residents of the St Dominic’s Children’s Home who were not protected and cared for as they should have been, especially amid reports of decades-long abuses.

He made the statement during his feature address at the home’s 150th anniversary celebrations closing ceremony at St Dominic’s in Belmont on Saturday.

Gordon said as people reflected on the 150 years of unbroken service, they had to consider the thousands of children who were given experiences and opportunities they would not have had if not for the care of the home.

“But the second thing we must also consider, because every anniversary is a milestone where we must reflect, not only on the good that we have done, but we must also consider the children who were not protected in the ways that they ought to have been, and might have been traumatised by their experience. And to…

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Jesuits ask victims to come forward in artist abuse case

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

December 18, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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Pope Francis’ Jesuit order on Sunday asked any more victims to come forward with complaints against a famous Jesuit artist who was essentially let off the hook by the Vatican twice despite devastating testimony by women who said he sexually and spiritually abused them.

The Jesuits asked for new evidence against the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, and offered a timeline about his case in an effort to tamp down the scandal.

The Slovenian priest is relatively unknown among rank-and-file Catholics but is well known in the hierarchy because he is one of the church’s most sought-after artists. His mosaics decorate chapels, churches and basilicas around the globe.

The scandal exploded this past week after the Jesuits admitted he had been excommunicated for having committed one of the gravest crimes in the Catholic Church — using the confessional to absolve a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual activity.

He was…

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Frank Houston was a ‘serial paedophile’ and extent of his crimes may never be known, court hears

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

December 18, 2022

By Australian Associated Press

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Trial hears Frank Houston also told his son Brian, founder of Hillsong, that he was abused by his own grandfather as a child

Hillsong founder Brian Houston has told a court he believes his father was a “serial paedophile” and the extent of his crimes may not be known.

Houston said it was quite likely his father sexually abused multiple children and the number of victims would never be revealed.

Frank Houston confessed to his son about one case of abuse in 1999, which occurred in New Zealand several decades earlier.

After the abuse came to light, Frank Houston was banned from preaching, but the public and authorities were not alerted.

Brian Houston, 68, is accused of covering up his father’s abuse until Frank Houston’s death in November 2004, after learning of the crime when his father confessed to him in 1999.

Houston has pleaded not guilty.

“I have no…

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The Father Rupnik Case: A Timeline

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

December 18, 2022

By Edward Pentin

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A closer look at the sequence of events to-date about the investigation and excommunication of the world-renowned Slovenian priest.

At the start of December, Italian websites published information regarding psychological and sexual abuse allegedly committed in the 1990s by Jesuit Father Marko Ivan Rupnik, a Slovenian priest who is internationally renowned for his mosaics and other artwork.

The Society of Jesus subsequently confirmed that an investigation had been initiated last year into allegations that Father Rupnik had abused several women who were members of a Slovenian religious community he co-founded in the 1980s. But, according to the Jesuit order, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (now DDF, formerly known as the Congregation for Doctrine of the faith, CDF) subsequently ruled that the case would be closed because the allegations fell outside the canonical statute of limitations.

This response by the Jesuits’ leadership appeared to leave many questions unanswered, generating…

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December 18, 2022

‘We have not hidden anything’: Jesuit superior general interviewed on abuse allegations against Marko Rupnik

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

December 9, 2022

By António Marujo

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“Any case like this is very painful, [but]…. we have not hidden anything,” says Arturo Sosa, S.J., the superior general of the Society of Jesus, in a short interview with 7MARGENS and Rádio Renascença, two religious media outlets in Portugal, published on Dec. 7. This represents the first public comments of the superior general regarding the allegations against the Slovenian artist Marko Rupnik, S.J.

Father Rupnik, whose mosaics decorate chapels in the Vatican, all over Europe, in the United States and Australia, has been barred from hearing confessions or offering spiritual direction after what the Jesuits described as complaints about his ministry. The Society of Jesus released a statement on Dec. 2 responding to the allegations of abuse against Father Rupnik and describing the restrictions on his ministry.

Italian news outlets reported the complaints were accusations of spiritually and sexually abusing adult members of a religious order of women in Slovenia. Father…

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Santa Rosa priest is lone accused diocesan official still serving as clergyman

SANTA ROSA (CA)
Press Democrat [Santa Rosa CA]

December 16, 2022

By Mary Callahan

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The former Hanna Boys Center director says the child abuse lawsuit “came as a shot out of nowhere.”

Out of at least 130 child sexual abuse cases currently pending against the Santa Rosa Roman Catholic Diocese, one in particular stands out.

It is a claim involving Monsignor James Pulskamp, 81, and it’s unique because he’s currently serving as pastor at Star of the Valley Catholic Church in Oakmont.

Pulskamp, who served as director of the Hanna Boys Center in Sonoma Valley from 1972 to 1984, is the only accused priest in the diocese so far still serving in a clerical position.

He said he’s completely perplexed by the origin of the case filed against him — he said he doesn’t know the name of the plaintiff — and hasn’t been legally served.

An attorney for the diocese, however, said she had been served because they are a defendant, as well.

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Sentencing date postponed for former priest convicted of child rape

DETROIT (MI)
The Oakland Press [Troy MI]

December 16, 2022

By Aileen Wingblad

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For the third time, the sentencing hearing for a former Catholic priest convicted in October of raping a child in 2004 has been changed.

Joseph “Father Jack” Baker,  60, is now scheduled for sentencing by Judge Bridget Hathaway on Feb. 17, 2023 in Wayne County’s 3rd Circuit Court in Detroit. He’s held in the Wayne County Jail, denied bond.

According to a court spokesperson, sentencing was postponed on request of Baker’s defense attorney.

At the conclusion of jury trial in October, Baker was found guilty of first-degree criminal conduct – sexual penetration with a person less than 13 years old.

The assault happened while Baker was pastor of St. Mary Catholic School in Wayne. His victim was a second-grade student there who came forward a few years ago, saying Baker raped him in the church sacristy.

Baker was pastor of St. Mary in Wayne from 1997 to 2008, and from…

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Vatican admits “dysfunctions” in handling sex abuse cases

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
La Croix International [France]

December 15, 2022

By Loup Besmond de Senneville

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The leaders of the French Bishops’ Conference and three lay experts on abuse issues hold three days of meetings with officials of the Roman Curia

Top officials at the Vatican have admitted that there have been, at times, “dysfunctions” in the way the Holy See has handled the clergy sex abuse cases that local dioceses are obliged to report to Rome.

The admissions were made this week to the top leaders of the French Bishops’ Conference (CEF), who were in Rome for three days of meetings surrounding recent revelations of abuse by a number of their retired confreres and how their cases were managed.

The December 12-14 meetings came a month after the CEF’s most recent plenary assembly, which was consumed with the abuse cases of Cardinal Jean-Pierre Ricard (78) and Bishop Michel Santier (75), and how, in general, the Roman Curia deals with sexual violence in the…

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University Publishes New Study On Abuse In The Diocese Of Trier

TRIER (GERMANY)
Globe Echo [London, England]

December 16, 2022

By David Sadler

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The University of Trier today published its report on sexual abuse in the Diocese of Trier at the time of former Bishop Stein. It was also about his role.

The study reveals that 81 priests have been accused of abusing more than 300 children and young people during this period. For this purpose, historians have evaluated almost 500 personnel files from the Diocese of Trier. They have also spoken to many of those affected. Something that Bishop Stein has not done in any of the cases known to him during his term of office.

Secrecy is the top priority for the church

Although canon law also provides for removal from office as a punishment for the sexual abuse of children by priests, Bishop Stein, like his predecessors, only applied this right in individual cases, as diocese records show. Bishop Stein was aware of 17 cases of abuse…

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Catholic Church buys $2.4M Seattle house as finances peak, parishes close

SEATTLE (WA)
Seattle Times [Seattle WA]

December 17, 2022

By Rebecca Moss

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Parishioners are no longer welcome for Mass at St. Mary’s Catholic Church, but it remains a kind of still-life. Only a single bulb glows over the heavy, unlocked doors. Inside, prayer votives are cold and burned low. Gray light casts rows of pews in eerie shadow.

St. Mary’s merged in July with St. Therese, 2 miles away, one of a dozen parishes the Archdiocese of Seattle closed or consolidated to save money and minimize costly repairs to outdated structures.

Yet the archdiocese emerged from the pandemic with its highest financial gains in the last five yearsdespite COVID-19, declining Mass attendance, a small dip in parishioner giving and the ongoing strain of clergy abuse payouts.

Now the archdiocese’s finances have come under renewed scrutiny with the purchase of a home for Seattle’s Catholic leadership, prompting fresh criticism of the church’s transparency and money management. 

The archdiocese last month quietly acquired the…

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Clerical abuse in Ireland ‘an open wound that has never been able to heal’ admits Archbishop Eamon Martin

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

December 18, 2022

By Rodney Edwards

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Church leader supports criminal prosecutions — and church should be open to official inquiries

The leader of the Catholic Church in Ireland has said he is “deeply ashamed” of the horrific sexual abuse inflicted on children by members of the Spiritan Order . More than 300 people have claimed to have been abused by 78 Spiritan priests at Blackrock College and other schools and colleges in Ireland dating back to the 1980s.

In an interview with the Sunday Independent, Archbishop Eamon Martin said clerical abuse in Ireland “is like an open wound that has never been able to heal”.

“There is no doubt, I am ashamed,” he said. “I am horrified because of the impact of that childhood trauma and how it has hugely impacted how people view the church and their own personal faith.”

He said attempts by the church in the past “to avoid scandal by…

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December 17, 2022

Melbourne priest stood down over historical child sex abuse claim

(AUSTRALIA)
The Age [Melbourne, Australia]

December 14, 2022

By Marta Pascual Juanola

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A priest has been stood down after he was accused of sexually abusing a student while he was principal at a Catholic all-boys school in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs in the mid-1990s.

Father Hugh Brown is alleged to have abused the student at Whitefriars Catholic College For Boys in Donvale when he headed the school between 1989 and 1996.

Father Hugh Brown was the principal of Whitefriars College from 1989 to 1996.

Brown denied the allegation, telling The Age he was not aware of the details or the identity of the former student.

“In my personal and professional life I have never abused any person and that especially applies to any minors in my care as a principal,” he said.

“I feel extremely bewildered by the situation and am profoundly saddened for all victims of child abuse.”

Current school principal Mark Murphy said Brown, who belongs to the Carmelite religious order, had been…

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New priest named in latest clerical abuse report

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
B. C. Catholic [Archdiocese of Vancouver, British Columbia]

December 14, 2022

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The latest report on clerical sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Vancouver has been released and names a late priest with an accusation of sexual abuse in 2008.

The Archdiocese of Vancouver has issued its semi-annual update on clerical sexual abuse, releasing the name of a priest who was the subject of sexual abuse allegation received in 2008.

The latest report of the Implementation Working Group, the archdiocesan committee responsible for implementing the approved recommendations received from the 2019 Case Review Committee, was released Tuesday and said an accusation of sexual abuse had been received in April 2008 against Father Georges Chevrier, OMI, pastor of Our Lady of Fatima in Coquitlam from 1971 to 1977.

The individual who reported the abuse has been receiving counselling and other forms of support, said the report, and legal proceedings only started several months ago.

The archdiocese also recently learned that accusations against Father…

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Transparency and the mystery of Ven. Fulton Sheen’s postponed beatification

ROCHESTER (NY)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

December 14, 2022

By Michael R. Heinlein

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The unfortunate absence of transparency from Church leadership on this situation leaves the laity in an awkward situation, if not a scandalous one.

In a recent interview with America Media, Pope Francis — in response to a question about transparency and clergy sexual abuse — remarked: “If there is less transparency, it is a mistake.”

This is a lesson the Church has learned all too painfully, especially since the outbreak of the clergy sexual abuse crisis in 2002 and resurgence in 2018. And the need for transparency emerges in a variety of other areas as well.

One of particular significance is the cause for beatification of Venerable Fulton J. Sheen — a beatification that was scheduled to be held three years ago on December 21, 2019, and which hasn’t happened still.

And, cloaked in confusion and intrigue, there has been…

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Jesuit artist was excommunicated before latest abuse report, superior says

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

December 15, 2022

By Cindy Wooden

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The superior general of the Jesuits confirmed that Father Marko Rupnik, a Slovenian Jesuit and artist in restricted ministry because of abuse allegations, earlier had been excommunicated for what canon law describes as “the absolution of an accomplice in a sin against the Sixth Commandment,” a reference to sex.

Father Rupnik incurred excommunication automatically when he heard the confession and granted absolution, but the excommunication was confirmed by the then-Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, said Father Arturo Sosa, superior general of the order.

At his annual pre-Christmas meeting with reporters Dec. 14, Father Sosa said the excommunication was lifted when Father Rupnik admitted his wrongdoing, repented and wrote a formal request for forgiveness.

Several Italian blogs reported that the case involved a consecrated Italian woman and that the doctrinal office’s investigation of that allegation was conducted from 2019 to 2020.

The Jesuits had confirmed in early December that…

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Mostly members of Catholic Church have lost faith in clergy, church after scandals, according to new survey

BONN (GERMANY)
Anadolu Agency [Ankara, Turkey]

December 15, 2022

By Ayhan Simsek

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About one in four Christians in Germany are considering leaving church due to the sex abuse scandals, a survey revealed on Thursday.

Mostly the members of the Catholic Church have lost faith in the clergy and church after the scandals in recent years, according to the Religion Monitor study of the Bertelsmann Foundation.

Among the Germans who said that they were considering leaving the church, 66% of them were members of the Catholic Church, and 33% were the members of the Protestant Church.

Some 81% of them said they are thinking of leaving the church mainly because they lost trust in these religious institutions. Other respondents criticized them over reluctance to reform and modernize their policies.

About 71% of them also criticized churches for having “too much power and influence” in Germany, and 68% said the current privileges of churches are “unfair in a multi-religious society.”

The survey also revealed that there is an…

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Catholic priest, accuser agree to drop dueling lawsuits involving New Orleans church

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Nola.com [New Orleans, LA]

December 17, 2022

By Stephanie Riegel

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They walk away from the litigation as FBI reviews spending at St. Peter Claver Church

A man who had said he was raped as a 10-year-old boy on an overnight trip by a Roman Catholic priest from New Orleans has reached an agreement to drop his lawsuit, court documents show. The Rev. John Asare-Dankwah, former pastor of St. Peter Claver Church in Treme, has, in turn, agreed to drop a countersuit against the accuser, who is now in his 20s and is identified in court documents only as A.A. Doe.

In a conference Thursday with U.S. District Judge Susie Morgan, attorneys for both sides said they will file a joint motion by Dec. 22 to dismiss the allegations against each other, according to court records. That doesn’t mean the two sides reached a monetary settlement, only that they decided to walk away from the high-profile suits.

The Asare-Dankwah case is significant…

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Ex-seminary professor accused of sexual abuse by student sues SBC for defamation

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

December 17, 2022

By Leah MarieAnn Klett

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A former Southern Baptist Convention seminary professor accused of sexual abuse by a student has filed a defamation lawsuit against the SBC and several other entities, claiming he was an “easy target” and a “bona fide scapegoat” in the sex abuse scandal surrounding the denomination.

David Sills, a former professor of missions and cultural anthropology at Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, and his wife, Mary, filed a complaint on Nov. 21 in the Circuit Court of Mobile, Alabama.

The lawsuit centers on allegations that Sills sexually abused Jennifer Lyell starting in 2004 when Lyell was a student and Sills was a professor.

Lyell, who served as vice president of LifeWay Christian Resources, posted a confession in 2018 claiming how Sills, who has been married for over 30 years, sexually abused her and groomed her. At the time, Lyell  View Cache

Citing pressure on archbishop, Montreal abuse commission co-chair resigns

MONTREAL (CANADA)
The Catholic Register - Archdiocese of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

December 16, 2022

By Francois Gloutnay, Catholic News Service

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The retired judge who has co-chaired the Montreal Archdiocese’s committee to implement abuse procedures has resigned, saying serious problems remain in the application of “regulations, policies and procedures approved by the archbishop.”

“I began my mandate as co-chair with real enthusiasm and the hope that I would be able to make important changes that would make the Catholic Church in Montreal an example of transparency and accountability to victims of abuse,” Pepita G. Capriolo wrote in her resignation letter, dated Dec. 7 and published as an appendix to the Fifth Ombudsman’s Report for the Archdiocese of Montreal. The ombudsman’s report was submitted to Montreal Archbishop Christian Lépine the same day.

She said “the numerous difficulties highlighted in the ombudsman’s last reports” led to her resignation.

Two years ago, Capriolo signed an incriminatory report on the handling of Father Brian Boucher’s case by Montreal archdiocesan authorities and even Vatican officials. Her…

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Cardinal sues for defamation over accusations of sexual assault

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Aleteia [Paris, France]

December 14, 2022

By Cyprien Viet

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Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet is suing a woman for defamation, after she accused him of sexual assault in a class action lawsuit. If he wins, the money will go to Indigenous victims.

“I am taking legal action for defamation before the courts of Quebec in order to prove the falsity of the allegations made against me and to restore my reputation and honor,” said Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet in a statement published on December 13, 2022.

The current Prefect of the Dicastery for Bishops, who was Archbishop of Quebec from 2002 to 2010, was named in a class action lawsuit on August 16, after being accused of inappropriate touching by a former employee of the diocese. He denounced the “slanderous and defamatory accusations” and is now suing the woman, known only as F., for 100,000 Canadian dollars (about 70,000 euros, 74,000 US dollars) in compensatory damages.

“On August 16, 2022, unfounded…

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Alleged Abuse by Catholic Priest Haunting, 50 Years Later

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
The Intelligencer/Wheeling News-Register [Wheeling WV]

December 17, 2022

By Linda Harris

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A Steubenville Catholic Central High School graduate who says he was molested by a priest 54 years ago wants the Diocese of Steubenville to admit “it wasn’t my fault.”

The man, who asked not to be identified, alleges the Rev. Kenneth Bonadies grabbed his “private area” after class and asked some inappropriate questions in the confessional 54 years ago.

He said he’s looking for “validation from the diocese that it wasn’t my fault, I had nothing to do with that, that the diocese wasn’t doing its job.”

“It really has bothered me,” he said recently. “It changed my life forever, a Catholic priest doing this to me. It made it hard to get along with other people, it made me not trust people — especially priests. Every time I would go to church I would think, ‘I wonder if he’s ever abused anyone?’”

On Thursday, the diocese confirmed that attorneys…

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Baltimore archbishop battled against release of abuse documents for nearly 8 years: ‘I fought the good fight’

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 15, 2022

By Jonathan M. Pitts

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As bishop of Bridgeport, Connecticut, the Most Rev. William E. Lori fought for nearly eight years — all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court — to prevent the wide release of information about the history of child sexual abuse in that branch of the Catholic Church.

The soft-spoken prelate argued in the case two decades ago that what was already publicly known about sexual misconduct by clergy in the diocese was all the information the public needed to grasp the scope of the crisis and understand who was responsible.

Now archbishop of Baltimore, the 71-year-old Lori is facing a tidal wave of criticism — and even calls for his resignation — as the Maryland Attorney General’s Office seeks to release the results of its four-year investigation into the abuse of children by Catholic clergy in Baltimore and nine counties in the state.

Democratic Attorney General…

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Debate on investigation John Paul II

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
CNE (Christian Network Europe) [The Netherlands]

December 16, 2022

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There has been criticism of Dutch journalist Ekke Overbeek’s investigation into the actions of the later Pope John Paul II concerning the abuse of children by Roman Catholic clergy in his homeland of Poland. Overbeek rebounds. “The Polish secret service did not have pure motives but often reported accurately.”

Earlier this month, Overbeek, a journalist from the Netherlands living in Poland, said he had found “concrete cases of priests abusing children in the Archdiocese of Krakow, where the future pope was archbishop. The future pope knew about it and transferred them anyway, which led to new victims.” Overbeek spent years digging through thousands of documents in the archives of the SB, the Polish security service, during the era of communism, which existed until 1990.

However, there is criticism of how Overbeek did his research and presented it, the Dutch Christian daily Nederlands Dagblad writes. “We did research at…

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French Church sets up new national court for canonical crimes

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

December 16, 2022

By Tom Heneghan

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The French Church has opened a National Canonical Criminal Court, a novelty in the Catholic world, to have clerical and lay experts deal with major canonical crimes such as sexual abuse of adults, abuse of authority and financial crimes. 

It takes over from the diocesan or interdiocesan tribunals that used to handle such cases. Lesser cases, such as marriage nullifications, make up the majority of cases at the diocesan level and will continue to be adjudicated there.  

Clerical sexual abuse of minors remains the responsibility of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), as does accusations against a bishop who, since appointed by the Pope, also comes under the Vatican. Rome can refer cases back to the French court but will handle all appeals.

This first national canonical court was created in response to a proposal by the so-called Sauvé report of 2021 into clerical sexual abuse.

It…

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December 16, 2022

The complex case of Fr Marko Rupnik, explained

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

December 15, 2022

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Fr. Marko Rupnik is at the center of a complicated, and still unfolding, set of allegations in Rome. ‘The Pillar’ explains what’s happening.

The global leader of the Jesuit order on Wednesday told journalists that Fr. Marko Ivan Rupnik, SJ, was excommunicated in 2019 — two years before he faced allegations of spiritually abusing religious sisters in the priest’s native Slovenia.

Speaking to journalists Dec. 14, Fr. Arturo Sosa, superior general of the Society of Jesus, said that Rupnik had indeed been excommunicated, but that the penalty was remitted after Rupnik – a well-known Jesuit artist – repented of a serious canonical crime, namely the absolution of an accomplice in a sin against the sixth commandment.

Sosa’s admission brings some clarity to the complicated set of allegations against Rupnik, and confusing statements issued in response to them.

But the allegations against Rupnik are still fairly complicated, and the timeline…

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Glasgow priest Neil McGarrity who touched girls ‘stunned’ by sex assault charges

GLASGOW (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Times/The Sunday Times [London, England]

December 16, 2022

By Connor Gordon

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A priest has told of his shock at being accused of sexually abusing four girls after claims that he hugged inappropriately and touched their waist.

Father Neil McGarrity, 58, is accused of carrying out the crimes in Glasgow at St Thomas the Apostle Roman Catholic church in Riddrie, St Bernadette’s church in Carntyne, and his parish house between December 2018 and February 2020.

McGarrity, of the Germiston area, denied two charges of sexual assault against a girl at his trial at Glasgow sheriff court yesterday. He also pleaded not guilty to a further two charges of sexual assault and engaging in sexual activity with other girls.

McGarrity told the trial in his evidence that he was made aware of the allegations after a phone call from his archbishop in May 2020.

Billy Lavelle, for the defence, asked the priest of 33 years for his reaction to the claims. McGarrity said he…

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Cardinal Ouellet sues for defamation over accusations of sexual assault

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

December 13, 2022

By Kevin Jones, Catholic News Agency

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 Cardinal Marc Ouellet has filed a defamation lawsuit in Quebec courts contending that a woman wrongly accused him of sexual assault in a class-action sex abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec.

“I have never been guilty of these reprehensible behaviors, much less of those alleged against other members of the clergy cited in the class action,” the cardinal said in a Dec. 13 statement accompanying the lawsuit. “This inappropriate association, intentionally constructed and widely spread for improper purposes, must be denounced.”

“Having preliminarily made sure to protect the plaintiff’s anonymity by obtaining an order to that effect, today I am taking legal action for defamation before the courts of Québec in order to prove the falsity of the allegations made against me and to restore my reputation and honor,” Ouellet said.

The 78-year-old cardinal served as archbishop of Quebec from 2002 to 2010. He is currently prefect of the…

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Jesuit case underscores secrecy, leniency for abuse of women

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

December 15, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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Revelations that the Vatican let a famous priest off the hook twice for abusing his authority over adult women has exposed two main weaknesses in the Holy See’s abuse policies: sexual and spiritual misconduct against adult women is rarely if ever punished, and secrecy still reigns supreme, especially when powerful priests are involved.

The Jesuit order, to which Pope Francis belongs, was forced to admit Wednesday that its initial statements about the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, an internationally recognized religious artist, were less than complete. The order had said Rupnik was accused in 2021 of unspecified problems “in the way he exercised his ministry” but that the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith determined the allegations were too old to prosecute.

But under questioning by journalists, the Jesuit superior general, the Rev. Arturo Sosa, acknowledged the Congregation had prosecuted Rupnik for a separate, prior case from 2019 that…

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Catholic church settles lawsuit around historical sex abuse of 10-year-old B.C. girl

VICTORIA (CANADA)
North Island Gazette [Fort Hardy, British Columbia, Canada]

December 15, 2022

By Karl Yu

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Incidents allegedly happened at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church at Nanaimo in 1976

WARNING: This article contains information about allegations of sexual abuse.

A settlement has been reached in a lawsuit involving accusations that a former Catholic priest on Vancouver Island sexually abused a 10-year-old girl during confession decades ago.

The woman, now 57 and whose identity is protected, filed a notice of civil claim in 2020 against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Victoria, in B.C. Supreme Court. She alleges that Father Gerhard Hartmann, who has since died, used his position as an authority figure to take advantage of her when she was a parishioner at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church at Nanaimo in 1976.

Details of the settlement were not available, but the plaintiff and her lawyer Robert Talach told the News Bulletin the matter was settled to everyone’s satisfaction.

Beginning in 1976, Hartmann is alleged to have,…

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We Declare You Restored: How Christian ‘Forgiveness’ Is Deployed to Enable Abuse and Corruption

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Religion Dispatches [Somerville, MA]

December 14, 2022

By Greg Carey

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Popular theology routinely enables powerful men to rehabilitate their public image after their misconduct goes public. This pattern applies especially to men known for their dedication to Jesus. The standard line holds that the man has repented of his sin and found forgiveness. Therefore, just as Jesus no longer holds his sin against him, neither should society. Far too often, the social harms attached to his transaction are ignored, and no transparent process for rehabilitation and reformation occurs. In late November two such cases hit the news, each reflecting how powerful White men protect one another in the wake of moral failure.

Earlier this year allegations of sexual assault surfaced in a report on sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention. The report’s most prominent charge pointed to former SBC president Johnny Hunt, who resigned his Georgia megachurch pastorate. Then, in late November, Hunt was declared restored to ministry by…

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Podcast: What we know (so far) about the abuse case of Jesuit artist Marko Rupnik

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

December 15, 2022

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This week on “Inside the Vatican,” host Colleen Dulle and veteran Vatican correspondent Gerard O’Connell give an update on the new facts that have emerged in the case of the Jesuit artist Marko Rupnik, who was suspended from parts of his ministry in response to allegations of abuse against him.

The facts are difficult to confirm, so this week on the podcast Colleen and Gerry also explain the process they use to determine whether information is credible.

The day after this episode was recorded, Father Arturo Sosa, superior general of the Society of Jesus, confirmed to journalists in response to a question from the Associated Press that in 2019, two years prior to the most recent allegations of abuse, Father Rupnik had been “convicted and sanctioned” by the Vatican for granting absolution in the confessional to a woman with whom he had “engaged in sexual activity.” A priest absolving someone…

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NY GOV. AND AG DOWNPLAY SEXUAL ABUSE

NEW YORK (NY)
Catholic League [New York NY]

December 15, 2022

By Bill Donohue

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Catholic League president Bill Donohue comments on how New York officials are handling accusations of sexual harassment:

When Kathy Hochul succeeded Andrew Cuomo as governor of New York (she was his lieutenant governor), she was asked about the culture of sexual abuse that had arisen under her boss. “Anyone who crosses the line will be addressed by me.” Not true.

Hochul is giving a pass to an accused sexual abuser in her administration,  Ibrahim Khan, the former chief of staff to Attorney General Letitia James: he is accused of sexually harassing a former AG employee, Sofia Quintanar. Hochul said last week that she does not support an investigation of this matter. But when it came to probes of accused priests, she supported all of them.

Attorney General Letitia James was also tough on Cuomo. “Allegations of sexual harassment should always be taken seriously. There must be a truly independent investigation…

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No longer secret – over 300 sexual abuse survivors of upper-class Catholic school speak out

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
IrishCentral [New York NY]

December 15, 2022

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Blackrock College and the Spiritan priests sexual abuse accusations bring Ireland’s Catholic Church to be further exposed, now among the upper classes.

The latest chapter in Ireland’s seemingly perpetual crisis of child abuse in religious institutions is now being written. We have cycled through abuse in orphanages, industrial schools and Magdalene Laundries, only to now contend with abuse at literally the highest order of all.

The name Blackrock College reeks of privilege and upper-class mores. The South Dublin institution was as close to the equivalent of the playing fields of Eton as you could get. Among its alumni are Eamon de Valera, founder of the 26-county Irish state who ruled over Ireland for decades, and Archbishop John Charles McQuade, who almost single-handedly imposed his puritanical control over the Irish church for decades.

Surely, there could be no whiff of pedophile activity in such an established school.

Think again, sadly.  Thanks to…

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December 15, 2022

Closing of Jesuit abuse case left victims feeling betrayed, expert says

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

December 14, 2022

By Philip Pullella

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One of the Catholic Church’s top sexual abuse experts has called for a review of how his own Jesuit order and the Vatican handled allegations against an internationally known priest and artist.

The case of Father Marko Ivan Rupnik has rattled the Jesuit order, of which Pope Francis is a member, and prompted criticism of the Vatican doctrinal department for not pursuing it further.

“I can understand how victims feel betrayed,” Father Hans Zollner, a member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors and the head of Rome’s Gregorian University Centre for the study of abuse, told Reuters.

Following Italian media reports that Rupnik had sexually and psychologically abused nuns when he was their spiritual director in his native Slovenia three decades ago, Jesuit headquarters issued a statement on Dec. 2 saying he had been disciplined.

It said it had commissioned an unnamed, non-Jesuit to investigate Rupnik, 68,…

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B.C. woman settles lawsuit over alleged childhood sexual abuse by Catholic priest during confession

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

December 15, 2022

By Bethany Lindsay

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Father Gerhard Hartmann served with the Hitler Youth before his career in the church on Vancouver Island

WARNING: This story contains an account of sexual assault.

A Vancouver Island woman who says she was sexually abused as a child by a former Nazi turned Catholic priest has settled her lawsuit against the church.

Father Gerhard Hartmann repeatedly sexually assaulted and fondled the victim over a period of three years at St. Peter’s Roman Catholic Church in Nanaimo, B.C., beginning in 1976, when she was just 10 years old, according to the notice of claim.

“It happened during confession, which for a Catholic is a sacred time,” the plaintiff said. Because she is a victim of alleged sexual abuse, CBC has agreed to refer to her by her initials, S.P.

“I was in a very vulnerable position and I was just a young child. It’s such an abuse of power on so many…

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Jesuit superior says that Fr. Marko Rupnik was excommunicated in 2019

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 14, 2022

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The Jesuit Superior General, Father Arturo Sosa, has confirmed that Jesuit artist Father Marko Rupnik incurred an automatic excommunication in 2019 for absolving a woman he had sex with, a fact his religious order was aware of but did not disclose until now.

According to a report by the Associated Press, Sosa disclosed this new information Wednesday in a briefing with journalists in Rome.

Abusing the sacrament of confession in this manner is one of the most serious crimes in the Catholic Church.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith “said it happened, there was absolution of an accomplice,” Sosa said. “So he was excommunicated. How do you lift an excommunication? The person has to recognize it and has to repent, which he did.”

Sosa also contradicted the Jesuits’ earlier statement and said the restrictions on Rupnik’s ministry, which remain in effect, dated from this earlier conviction,…

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Jesuits admit artist excommunicated before new abuse claims

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

December 14, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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The head of Pope Francis’ Jesuit religious order admitted Wednesday that a famous Jesuit priest had been convicted of one of the most serious crimes in the Catholic Church some two years before the Vatican decided to shelve another case against him for allegedly abusing other adult women under his spiritual care.

The Rev. Arturo Sosa, the Jesuit superior general, made the admission during a briefing with journalists that was dominated by the scandal over the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik and the reluctance of both the Vatican and the Jesuits to tell the whole story behind the unusually lenient treatment he received even after he had been temporarily excommunicated.

Rupnik is unknown to most Catholics but is a giant within the Jesuit order and the Catholic hierarchy because he is one of the church’s most sought-after artists. His mosaics depicting biblical scenes decorate the basilica in Lourdes, France, the…

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December 14, 2022

Officials at Archdiocese of Montreal meddled in abuse investigations, ombudsman says

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

December 12, 2022

By Leah Hendry

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High-ranking official leaked confidential information about abuse complaints, according to new report

The lawyer appointed to help make the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Montreal more transparent in the way it handles allegations of abuse against clergy says her job is being undermined by those inside the church.

In a report made public Monday and obtained in advance by CBC News, Marie Christine Kirouack, the church ombudsman, said she discovered a high-ranking clergy member was leaking information about abuse complaints, and in some cases, actively discouraging complainants from contacting her.

“I was totally flabbergasted,” Kirouack said in an interview. The lawyer was appointed to her role by the archdiocese  in the spring of 2021 to deal with complaints of abuse and other inappropriate conduct.

Although the complaint process is supposed to be confidential, Kirouack said the priest, who is not named in her report, was sharing emails with a person outside the…

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Letter to Bishop Michael Barber-Diocese of Oakland-SNAP has identified 227 publicly accused perpetrators

OAKLAND (CA)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

December 13, 2022

By Dan McNevin

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December 13, 2022

SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

PO Box 16376

Chicago, IL, 60616

Most Reverend Michael C. Barber, SJ

Diocese of Oakland

2121 Harrison Street, Suite 100

Oakland, CA 94612

Dear Bishop Barber,

We are writing to you because, so far, SNAP has identified 227 publicly accused perpetrators associated with the Diocese of Oakland, a stark contrast from your current list which only includes 65 names. Our list has been created through careful study of documents in the public domain, including culling the lists released by other Catholic dioceses and religious orders. We are sending you this complete list and ask that you take our research and use it to update your own list.

While we have strived very hard for accuracy, as you review our list if you find we have mistakenly included a name, please let us know why you believe we have erred. We will then modify our list…

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Advocates Demand Oakland Bishop Add 100+ Priests to List of Alleged Abusers

OAKLAND (CA)
NBC News [San Francisco, CA]

December 13, 2022

By Candice Nguyen, Michael Bott and Mark Villarreal

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Leaders representing the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) unveiled a list of East Bay church officials, mostly priests, they say have been accused of sexual abuse. Standing at 227 names, SNAP says its list is more than three times longer than the list released by Oakland Bishop Michael Barber in 2019.

Advocates from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests gathered Tuesday at the doorstep of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Oakland to unveil a list of East Bay priests they say have been accused of sexual abuse, mostly against children. 

“We’ve painstakingly gone through all the records we could find,” said Dan McNevin, a survivor of clergy abuse and one of the architects behind SNAP’s list, detailing his process of combing through court filings, news reports and other publicly available sources for bits of new information.

Currently standing at 227 names, the list just published by…

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SNAP to share its list of those publicly accused of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Oakland

OAKLAND (CA)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

December 12, 2022

By Dan McNevin

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At a sidewalk press conference outside the Cathedral of Christ the Light in Oakland, SNAP will share its list of those publicly accused of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Oakland

Following the press conference, SNAP will hand deliver a letter and a copy of its list to Bishop Michael Barber, asking him to expand his list

The list published by the Diocese of Oakland contains 65 names

SNAP’s list is currently at 227, with more names anticipated to be added before the 3-year civil window opened by California Assembly Bill 218 closes at the end of the month

WHEN

Tuesday, December 13, 2022, at noon

WHERE

On the public sidewalk outside of the Cathedral of Christ the Light, 2121 Harrison St. in Oakland, CA

WHO

5-6 survivors of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Oakland, supporters and advocates

WHY

The Diocese of Oakland released its own list of abusers in 2019. That list…

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‘No place was safe’; Advocates demand names of abusive priests from the Diocese of Oakland

OAKLAND (CA)
CBS News [New York NY]

December 14, 2022

By Betty Yu

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The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, has called for the Diocese of Oakland to publicly released the full list of alleged abusive priests in the Catholic church. 

One survivor of abuse is encouraging victims to come forward before the window to file a civil suit closes at the end of the year. 

Joey Piscitelli claims he was first molested when he was playing pool at a Catholic school in Richmond when he was 14 years old. He said the abuse by a priest went on for more than a year and a half.  

“I think the most promiment side effect I deal with is chronic insomnia and triggering, flashbacks, nightmares, and dissociation. I still seek help for that,” Piscitelli said. 

Piscitelli may now be 66 years old, but his memories of sexual abuse remain painful and vivid. As the Northern California leader of SNAP, he…

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Diocese of Worcester Priest Accused of Sexual Abuse of a Minor

WORCESTER (MA)
This Week in Worcester [Worcester, MA]

December 13, 2022

By Tom Marino

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The Diocese of Worcester announced that Bishop Robert McManus has determined a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor exists against Reverend Alan J. Martineau and he will remain on leave from his pastoral duties. Martineau was first placed on leave in January.

In a statement issued on Monday, the Diocese said that it scheduled Martineau for transfer to a new parish in January due to “concerns over boundary issues with a minor.” Additional information reported to the Diocese before that transfer took place led McManus to put Martineau on leave.

An independent investigation into the allegations, completed recently, led to McManus making the determination that the allegation are credible.

The Diocese says it notified the Massachusetts Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement about the allegations in early February. It also notified the Vatican and began a canonical process to adjudicate the allegation, according to hits…

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Former Virginia priest convicted of 1985 sex assault on teen

LEESBURG (VA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 12, 2022

By AP News staff

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A former priest in northern Virginia pleaded guilty Monday to sexually assaulting a 14-year-old boy more than 35 years ago.

Scott Asalone, 65, the former priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville, pleaded to a single count of felony carnal knowledge of a minor. He faces up to 10 years in prison when he is sentenced in April.

The victim in the case is former D.C. Council member David Grosso, who publicly identified himself as Asalone’s victim when the charges were filed in 2020.

Grosso, in a phone interview Monday, said he wrote a letter in 1992 to Asalone, and the priest responded by admitting his misconduct.

Grosso said the letter served as evidence to convict Asalone in a case that stretched back 37 years, to 1985.

“I love the fact that justice never stops in Virginia,” Grosso said.

Asalone, who now lives in Asbury Park, New…

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Cardinal Ouellet announces lawsuit against woman who claimed assault

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

December 13, 2022

By Cindy Wooden for Catholic News Service

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Canadian Cardinal Marc Ouellet announced he is filing a defamation lawsuit in Quebec against a woman who accused him of sexual assault.

“Having preliminarily made sure to protect the plaintiff’s anonymity by obtaining an order to that effect, today I am taking legal action for defamation before the courts of Quebec in order to prove the falsity of the allegations made against me and to restore my reputation and honor,” the cardinal said in a statement Dec. 13.

The woman accused the cardinal of inappropriately touching her at a meeting of the Quebec archdiocesan staff in 2008, when he was archbishop, and kissing her, pressing against her and making inappropriate comments at other gatherings.

“I have never been guilty of these reprehensible behaviors, much less of those alleged against other members of the clergy cited in the class action” lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Quebec and involving more than…

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German bishops’ VP faces ‘Vos estis’ complaint over abuse cases

OSNABRüCK (GERMANY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

December 12, 2022

By Luke Coppen

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Bishop Franz-Josef Bode has said he now expects to face a Vatican investigation over his handling of abuse cases in the Diocese of Osnabrück.

The Vatican has received a canonical complaint against Bishop Franz-Josef Bode, the vice president of the German bishops’ conference, concerning the bishop’s handling of abuse cases in the Diocese of Osnabrück. The bishop has said he now expects to face a Vatican investigation.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of Hamburg confirmed that Archbishop Stefan Hesse received the complaint against Bode on Dec. 8, reported Katholisch.de, the German Church’s official website.

Bode has led the Osnabrück diocese since 1995, is Germany’s longest-serving diocesan bishop, and was elected deputy chairman of the German bishops’ conference in 2017.

As the metropolitan archbishop, Archbishop Heße is responsible for forwarding reports to the Holy See under the 2019 motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi, promulgated by Pope Francis after a global summit of…

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The unsung committee shaping the USCCB

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

December 13, 2022

By JD Flynn

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New USCCB president Archbishop Timothy Broglio explains how its most powerful, yet underappreciated, committee works.

When Archbishop Timothy Broglio was elected president of the U.S. bishops’ conference last month, media attention landed on the bishop’s history in the Vatican, his views on sexuality and clerical sexual abuse, and whether he could be considered “anti-Francis” — a charge the archbishop has laughed off.

Amid the commentary on theological and political questions, very little attention was given to what happened after Broglio was elected — and what it demonstrated about the most powerful, yet underappreciated, committee in the U.S. bishops’ conference.

But the bishops’ Committee on Priorities and Plans shouldn’t be overlooked — if you want to understand where conference leadership comes from, or how the conference spends its money and allocates staff hours, you’ve got to understand the central role of the USCCB’s central planning committee.

While customarily the USCCB’s vice-president…

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Investigation Finds Author, Pastor Dane Ortlund Likely Retaliated Against Church Employee

CHICAGO (IL)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

December 13, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

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Best-selling author and Chicago-area pastor Dane Ortlund may have fired a church employee in retaliation for complaining of bullying and discrimination, an Illinois state investigation has found.

Ortlund is the author of “Gentle and Lowly” and pastor of Naperville Presbyterian Church (NPC). The Illinois Department of Human Rights (IDHR), which handles charges of employment discrimination, investigated and found “substantial evidence” of retaliation in the firing of NPC’s former operations director.

Christianity Today first reported the investigation’s finding this week. The outlet noted that this type of finding is rare, both at the state level and nationally.

A copy of the finding obtained by The Roys Report (TRR) shows Emily Hyland had been a longtime church member. In 2013,  the church  hired her as the church’s operations director. Ortlund fired her in March 2021 nine days after she complained of sex-based discrimination to the church’s elders, according to the…

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Surviving Hillcrest

JOS (NIGERIA)
The Christian Century [Chicago IL]

December 13, 2022

By Dawn Araujo-Hawkins

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Letta Cartlidge created a group for missionary kids who’d attended her boarding school in Jos, Nigeria. The stories of abuse poured in.

It was on a Friday in spring 2021 that Letta Cartlidge decided she had seen enough.

In her backyard in a suburb of Denver, Colorado, a stack of bangles on her arm and an oversized cardigan draped around her shoulders, Cartlidge explained to the Century how on April 15, 2021, James McDowell, a former principal at Hillcrest—a boarding school primarily for the children of missionaries in Jos, Nigeria—admitted in a private Facebook group for Hillcrest alumni that he had “molested” two students during his tenure.

In his post, McDowell, who was at Hillcrest from 1974 to 1984, said he’d already apologized to the two students and offered restitution. But he also wanted to apologize to the wider Hillcrest community for “this breach of trust which these days is considered criminal.”

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December 13, 2022

Over 300 abuse allegations to date against Spiritan priests

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

December 13, 2022

By Patsy McGarry

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Catholic bishops believe a ‘reckoning’ has yet to take place regarding sexual abuse in the church in Ireland

Over 300 people have made abuse allegations against at least 78 Spiritan priests, a spokesman for the religious congregation has said. He also said the latter figure may increase slightly when all recent contacts have been fully processed.

Some people making allegations have done so directly to the Spiritans, while others may have gone to the gardaí, “and we know that a number have gone initially to the independent expert on Restorative Justice, Mr Tim Chapman”, the spokesman said.

Allegations have not been broken down by the school or College where the alleged abuse took place, whether in Ireland or abroad, but the majority are understood to relate to Blackrock College /Willow Park in Dublin, he said.

No allegation about abuse abroad involving Spiritans had been made to the congregation in recent…

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Fr. Martineau on Leave for Credible Allegation of Abuse of a Minor

WORCESTER (MA)
Diocese of Worcester [Worcester MA]

December 12, 2022

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Following an independent investigation, and subsequent recommendation by the Diocesan Review Committee, Most Reverend Robert J. McManus has determined that there is a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor by Reverend Alan J. Martineau.  Fr. Martineau has been on administrative leave since January, 2022 and will remain on leave and cannot present himself as a priest.  The Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement authorities have been notified in a timely manner and a canonical process, including notice to the Vatican, has been initiated to adjudicate the allegation.

In late January of this year Fr. Martineau was scheduled to be transferred to a new parish to benefit from the tutelage of a seasoned pastor because of concerns over boundary issues with a minor, and for other pastoral issues.  Before that assignment took place, additional information was reported to the Diocese that prompted Bishop McManus to place Fr….

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‘Mishandling and delays’ of Montreal archdiocese abuse complaints: ombudsperson

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Global News [Toronto, Canada]

December 12, 2022

By Sidhartha Banerjee, The Canadian Press

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The ombudsperson of Montreal’s Roman Catholic archdiocese is highlighting the “mishandling and delays” of abuse cases against the church and says she hopes that by speaking out, it will jolt the organization to act.

Lawyer Marie Christine Kirouack says in her new report that since June, delays in some files have become “interminable” and are causing complainants to lose faith in the process.

In an interview Monday, she said the problems began when she started reviewing older complaints.

“I feel that we’re in the midst of a storm right now,” she said. “Is it linked to the fact that I started working in late May and June into the old files?” Kirouack suggested some of the “old guard” at the archdiocese don’t want it made public that they didn’t act on abuse claims.

In the report — her fifth since being named to the role in 2021 — Kirouack described the case…

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Rochester Church of Latter-day Saints member speaks out on church’s abuse issues

KASSON (MN)
Rochester Post Bulletin [Rochester MN]

December 13, 2022

By Mark Wasson

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Michael Benjamin said his testimony led local LDS Church leaders to “attempt to silence me from being vocal about the sex abuse case that the local leaders were involved in.”

Michael Benjamin has been involved with the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints most of his life.

Baptized at age 8, he has served in several callings, or leadership assignments, over the years, including branch president, elders quorum president, Sunday school president, ward mission leader, Sunday school teacher, counselor in the bishopric, and stake young men’s counselor.

The LDS church has influenced almost every aspect of his life, from how he spent his time, where he could marry, how to raise his children, where he went to college — Brigham Young University — and what foods and drinks he could or could not consume.

“It has helped shape the values I have including service, love, kindness, compassion, hard work,…

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Claim of sexual abuse of minor against Father Alan J. Martineau ‘credible,’ says Bishop McManus

WORCESTER (MA)
The Republican - MassLive [Springfield MA]

December 12, 2022

By Tom Matthews

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Bishop Robert J. McManus has determined that an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor levied against a Diocese of Worcester priest is credible.

The diocese announced Monday that the allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Father Alan J. Martineau is credible. Martineau has been on administrative leave since January. He will remain on leave and cannot present himself as a priest, the diocese said in a release Monday.

“The Department of Children and Families (DCF) and law enforcement authorities have been notified in a timely manner and a canonical process, including notice to the Vatican, has been initiated to adjudicate the allegation,” the diocese said.

Martineau was scheduled to be transferred to a new parish to “benefit from the tutelage of a seasoned pastor because of concerns over boundary issues with a minor, and for other pastoral issues,” according to the…

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Pastors guilty of sexual abuse should never be restored to ministry

NASHVILLE (TN)
PremierChristianity.com [London, UK]

December 9, 2022

By Beth Allison Barr, Professor of History

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High profile US pastor Johnny Hunt was restored to ministry despite serious allegations of sexual misconduct. What happened to permanent disqualification, asks Beth Allison Barr. And what does it say to the women in their congregations?

Actions speak louder than words.

Last year, the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) approved a resolution to “permanently” disqualify perpetrators of sexual abuse from holding the office of pastor.

“It’s very important for Southern Baptists to speak unequivocally and in a way that everyone can understand”, said Nathan Finn, the vice chair of the 2021 SBC resolutions committee. “We believe that sexual abuse is a disqualifying factor for anyone who would serve in church leadership.”

THE CASE OF JOHNNY HUNT

Yet, less than two weeks ago, four pastors (including two from within the SBC) declared that Johnny Hunt, a well-known speaker, leader, veteran pastor, and former SBC president, as fully qualified to resume his ministry. Last May, Hunt…

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Your words are not enough, Beth Allison Barr tells male SBC pastors on sexual abuse after Johnny Hunt’s ‘restoration’

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

December 12, 2022

By Mark Wingfield

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Pastors guilty of sexual abuse never should be restored to ministry, Baylor University professor and author Beth Allison Barr wrote for a news service in the United Kingdom Dec. 9.

The opinion piece published by Premier Christianity addresses the case of Johnny Hunt, the former Georgia pastor and former executive vice president of the Southern Baptist Convention’s North American Mission Board. Six months after Hunt was named as a perpetrator in a public investigation of sexual abuse in the SBC, a group of four male pastors issued a video declaring him “restored” to ministry under their unlicensed care.

That drew a sharp retort from current SBC President Bart Barber, who said if it were up to him he would permanently defrock Hunt, a previous SBC president.

Barr, professor of history at Baylor and author of the bestselling The Making of Biblical Womanhood, noted messengers to the SBC annual meeting last year adopted a resolution…

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December 12, 2022

More sex abuse lawsuits filed against Catholic Diocese of Portland, bringing total to 11

PORTLAND (ME)
WCSH - NBC News Center Maine [Portland ME]

December 12, 2022

By Vivien Leigh

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Three men claim they were sexually abused by a deceased priest, John Curran.

AUGUSTA, Maine — Three new lawsuits were filed against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland in Cumberland County Superior Court on Monday. 

Three men claim the Rev. John Curran, a former priest who has since died, sexually abused them between the ages of 11 and 14 in the early 1960s. 

Eleven lawsuits have been filed seeking civil relief under a new law that removed the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse. 

The law that went into effect in 2021 lifted a statute of limitations, allowing Maine survivors of childhood sexual abuse to file a civil claim against their abusers, no matter when the abuse allegedly occurred. 

Previously, claims could only be pursued for cases dating back to 1987.

NEWS CENTER Maine is not identifying two alleged victims, but one of the plaintiffs, Andre Fortin, alleges Curran groomed him….

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Attorney General Miyares Announces Guilty Plea in Loudoun Clergy Sexual Assault Case

ARLINGTON (VA)
Attorney General of Commonwealth of Virginia

December 12, 2022

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Commonwealth of Virginia
Office of the Attorney General

Jason S. Miyares
Attorney General

The Office of the Attorney General successfully prosecuted a 37-year-old Child Sexual Assault case  

RICHMOND, VA — Attorney General Jason Miyares announced that Scott Asalone, 65, a former priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville, Va.,was convicted today in Loudoun County Circuit Court of felony carnal knowledge of a minor between 13 and 15 years of age. The abuse occurred during the summer of 1985 when Asalone was 29 and the victim was a minor.   

Asalone, of Asbury Park, NJ, was indicted by a multi-jurisdiction grand jury in March 2020 following an investigation by the Office of the Attorney General. He was arrested in New Jersey on March 14, 2020, extradited to Virginia, and remained on bond pending trial. Asalone, was removed from public duties in 1993 and dismissed from the Order of Capuchin Friars in 2007.

“Every victim…

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Former Catholic priest convicted of child sex abuse that happened in Virginia in 1985

ARLINGTON (VA)
WUSA - ABC 9 [Washington, DC]

December 12, 2022

By Alanea Cremen

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According to a release from the Office of Attorney General Jason Miyares, Scott Asalone was previously the priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church.

A 65-year-old former priest of a Purcellville church was convicted Monday for sexually abusing a minor during the summer of 1985 when the former priest was 29 years old. 

According to a release from the Office of Attorney General Jason Miyares, Scott Asalone was previously the priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church.

Asalone was arrested in New Jersey on March 14, 2020, and he was extradited to Virginia where he was indicted by a multi-jurisdiction grand jury for felony carnal knowledge of a minor between 13 and 15 years of age. The abuse happened during the summer of 1985 when Asalone was 29 and the victim was a minor.  

“Every victim deserves to be heard. My office is dedicated to…

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Former Catholic priest convicted in 1985 sex assault in Loudoun

ARLINGTON (VA)
Washington Post

December 12, 2022

By Tom Jackman

Read original article

Scott A. Asalone, a rector in Purcellville, was removed from his church in 1993, but not arrested until 2020. The victim went on to become a D.C. councilman.

A former Catholic priest from Loudoun County, who was quietly discharged from his parish after abuse allegations in the 1990s, was convicted Monday in Loudoun circuit court of felony carnal knowledge of a minor for abusing a boy who would go on to become a D.C. councilman.

Scott A. Asalone, 66, who worked as a stockbroker and consultant in New Jersey for nearly three decades after leaving his parish, was arrested in March 2020, and released on bond during the pandemic. Jury selection for his trial was scheduled to begin Monday when Asalone decided to enter an “Alford” plea, in which a defendant doesn’t admit guilt but admits the prosecution has enough evidence to convict. Loudoun Circuit Court Judge James E. Plowman…

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Maryland state senator signals support for bill Catholic church lobbied against, giving hope to childhood abuse survivors

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

December 12, 2022

By Lee O. Sanderlin and Hannah Gaskill

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Legislation that would give childhood victims of sexual abuse a chance to sue their abusers, regardless of when it happened, has the support of a key Maryland state senator.

Sen. Will Smith, the Democratic chair of the Judicial Proceedings Committee, told The Baltimore Sun he would support what’s previously been known as the “Hidden Predator Act,” which would create a “look-back window,” where survivors would have two years from the act becoming law to file a lawsuit regardless of when the abuse happened.

Under existing state law, childhood sexual abuse survivors have until their 38th birthday to file a lawsuit or three years after their abuser was convicted in criminal court, whichever is later.

Regularly sponsored by Del. C.T. Wilson, a Charles County Democrat who is a survivor of childhood abuse, the bill has been passed repeatedly by the House of Delegates only to die in Smith’s committee. Wilson said…

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Bishop McManus: Sex abuse allegations against priest are credible

WORCESTER (MA)
Worcester Telegram & Gazette [Worcester MA]

December 12, 2022

By Mike Elfland

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The Rev. Alan J. Martineau, most recently of parishes in Warren, will remain on administrative leave after an investigation sought by the Diocese of Worcester deemed an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor to be credible.

Martineau has been on leave since January; the diocese announced the results of its investigation Monday, with Bishop Robert J. McManus ruling on the case.

Martineau, a former associate pastor at St. Anne’s of Shrewsbury, was most recently the administrator of St. Paul Parish and St. Stanislaus Parish in Warren. He grew up in Spencer and graduated from St. John’s High School, the diocese said in 2018, when Martineau was ordained.

The diocese gave the following account of the case: “In late January of this year Fr. Martineau was scheduled to be transferred to a new parish…

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The Aftermath

BOSTON (MA)
Boston University [Boston MA]

December 12, 2022

By Sukanya Mitra

Read original article

[VIDEO]

The Aftermath looks into how victims of clergy abuse are dealing with the abuse endured and steps taken by the Catholic Church to prevent such abuse from happening.

The full documentary is 14 minutes long and looks into the perspectives of five subjects.

See trailer.

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Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse Have Until December 31 to File a Lawsuit

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Jeff Anderson and Associates

December 12, 2022

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Today, the law firms of Jeff Anderson & Associates and Greenberg Gross revealed that 44 Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) employees have been identified in 69 lawsuits filed under the California Child Victims Act and are accused of child sexual abuse. The public data collected is believed to be a small portion of what attorneys and advocates anticipate the final number of cases identifying LAUSD to be.

“Los Angeles Unified School District has a notorious history of hiring, and harboring perpetrators of child sexual abuse,” said Brian Williams of Greenberg Gross. “We hope by exposing perpetrators in lawsuits filed under the California Child Victims Act, children and students who participate in LAUSD will be protected in the present and future.”

Included below is a list of LAUSD employees accused of child sexual abuse and identified in lawsuits available to the public. The current whereabouts of some of these alleged perpetrators and…

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Lawsuit Deadline for Older California Childhood Sex Abuse Cases is December 31, 2022

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Los Angeles Legal Examiner - Saunders & Walker [Pinellas Park FL]

December 12, 2022

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The three-year window established by California’s Child Victims Act – also known as Assembly Bill 218 (AB 218) – which temporarily set aside the statute of limitations for childhood sexual abuse victims to file claims, will close on December 31, 2022. This “lookback window” opened a three-year window for those of any age to revive past claims that may have been prohibited from being filed as lawsuits because the legal time limit to bring such claims, known as the statute of limitations, had run out.

Since AB-218 was signed into law in 2019 over 1000 victims of sexual abuse have brought lawsuits against large organizations such as the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts of America. Victims were able to seek recompense in cases dating back decades. According to a list of settlements compiled by the website Bishop Accountability, California Catholic churches have paid among the highest dollar amounts for sex abuse settlements of…

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German bishop must face Vatican investigation, abuse council demands

OSNABRüCK (GERMANY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

December 12, 2022

By AC Wimmer

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An advisory body of sexual abuse survivors on Monday called for canonical procedures against the vice president of the German Bishops’ Conference.

Bishop Franz-Josef Bode should be charged under canon law for his handling of abuse cases, the advisory council said in a statement sent to media Dec. 12, reported CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner.

The advisory body represents those affected by sexual abuse for the metropolitan archdiocese of Hamburg and the dioceses of Hildesheim and Osnabrück.

Under pressure for months to resign following the findings of a study that he has mishandled cases of sexual abuse, Bode has so far refused to step down.

The 71-year-old bishop of Osnabrück in northwestern Germany has been vice president of the German bishops’ conference since 2017. He is also vice president of the German Synodal Way.

On Monday, the victims’ advisory council said it had filed an official complaint and referred to…

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Versäumnisse bei Missbrauch: Betroffenenbeirat zeigt Bischof Bode an

OSNABRüCK (GERMANY)
Katholisch.de [Bonn, Germany]

December 12, 2022

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Anzeige Gemäss Kirchenrecht Bei Erzbischof Hesse

[PHOTO: Obwohl ihm eine Studie der Uni Osnabrück Versäumnisse im Umgang mit Missbrauch attestierte, will Bischof Bode nicht zurücktreten. Sein Betroffenenbeirat hat jetzt Anzeige gemäß Kirchenrecht erstattet – nun sind Erzbischof Heße und der Vatikan am Zug.]

Der Betroffenenbeirat der Bistümer Hamburg, Hildesheim und Osnabrück hat gegen den Osnabrücker Bischof Franz-Josef Bode kirchenrechtlich Anzeige wegen seines Umgangs mit sexuellem Missbrauch gestellt. Am Montag teilte der Betroffenenbeirat mit, dass er bereits am Donnerstag Anzeige beim zuständigen Erzbischof von Hamburg, Stefan Heße, erstattet hat. “Bischof Bode hat entgegen klaren päpstlichen Vorgaben gehandelt und bspw. sexualisierte Gewalt gegen Minderjährige noch in diesem Jahr als ‘Beziehung’ deklariert”, heißt es in der Pressemitteilung des Beirats zur Begründung. In der Gesamtschau zeige sich ein klares kirchenrechtliches Fehlverhalten Bodes, “der zum einen die Schilderungen der Betroffenen zum Sachverhalt gänzlich falsch eingeschätzt hat, und zum anderen die Anzeige nach Rom verzögerte,…

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Study of moral injury measures ‘added weight’ of clergy sexual abuse and its concealment

CINCINNATI (OH)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

December 12, 2022

By Katie Collins Scott

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A research team from Xavier University in Cincinnati has created a tool that measures the “moral injury” caused by clergy sexual abuse and its concealment by officials in the Catholic Church.

In a report on the pilot study, released Dec. 12, moral injury is described as persistent psychological and emotional distress, spiritual anguish, moral confusion, social isolation, and distrust for institutions. It results from a betrayal of trust or violation of deeply held moral values.

“When the perpetrator of sexual abuse is a priest — someone ordained in persona Christi — and represents the holy, the sacred or the entire church or even God, the trauma of abuse takes on an added weight,” said Marcus Mescher, a principal investigator for the study and professor of Christian ethics at Jesuit-run Xavier. “I thought the concept of moral injury would be a helpful hermeneutical lens for understanding the many…

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Jesuits unlikely to be prosecuted over sexual abuse of Limerick students

LIMERICK (IRELAND)
Limerick Post [Limerick, Ireland]

December 10, 2022

By David Raleigh

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GARDAÍ are unlikely to prosecute any members of the Jesuits over the religious order’s handling of historic allegations of child sexual abuse by one of its priests Fr Joseph Marmion.

Garda sources said that enquires into allegations against Marmion of abusing pupils at Belvedere College, Clongowes Wood College and the former Crescent College in Limerick City have also run cold because Marmion died in 2000 at the age of 75.

In 1977 a number of pupils at Belvedere, where Marmion taught from 1969 to 1978, made disclosures to senior Jesuits of sexual abuse by Marmion.

The Jesuit Order dealt with the matter in-house, and Marmion was never questioned by the civil authorities.

A Garda spokesman told the Limerick Post that “while it is our intention to effectively deal with all complaints and information received, there will be limitations as to the action we can take in some cases due to…

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California and Confession. 1. A Catholic Victory—Which Did Not Solve All Problems

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Bitter Winter - Center for Studies on New Religions [Torino, Italy]

December 12, 2022

By Massimo Introvigne

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In 2019, Catholics managed to stop a draft law that would have opened a breach in the confessional privilege. But they left a problem unsolved.

Article 1 of 4.

The confessional privilege is the legal protection of the secret of the confession in the Catholic Church and of similar practices in other religious bodies. A Catholic priest should not reveal to anybody, including law enforcement officers or courts of law, what has been told to him in confession, under penalty of excommunication.

As Bitter Winter reported in a previous series, this privilege has been historically protected by both statutes and common law in most countries, and extended to confessional practices of other religions. In recent years, however, the sad tragedy of sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests has induced some jurisdictions, including Ireland, most states and territories of Australia, and some U.S. states, to pass laws introducing…

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