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.

September 9, 2024

Slew of new abuse accusations against French charity icon Abbe Pierre

PARIS (FRANCE)
Yahoo! [Sunnyvale CA]

September 6, 2024

By Marine PENNETIER

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At least 17 more people have made accusations of sexual violence against a French monk who became a household name for his charity work, according to a report published Friday, prompting his charities to distance themselves from their founder.

A Capuchin monk since 1932 and an ordained Catholic clergyman since 1938, Abbe Pierre died in 2007 aged 94. 

Born Henri Groues, Abbe Pierre left behind a legacy as a friend to the poverty-stricken and founder of the charities Emmaus and the Abbe Pierre Foundation.

With his once saintly image already shaken by allegations of sexual abuse in July, the latest claims prompted his foundation to announce it will change its name and the Emmaus charity he also founded to announce the permanent closure of a memorial to the priest.

Friday’s allegations range from non-consensual touching of women’s breasts to “kissing by force”, “repeated sexual contact with a vulnerable person”, “repeated…

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A Filipino preacher on the run from sexual abuse charges surrenders

QUEZON CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Associated Press [New York NY]

September 9, 2024

By Jim Gomez

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MANILA, Philippines (AP) — A Filipino preacher accused of sexual abuse and human trafficking in the Philippines and similar charges in the United States surrendered Sunday to authorities in his religious complex in the south and flown to Manila where he was put in police detention, officials said.

Apollo Quiboloy and four other co-accused surrendered in the vast religious headquarters of their group, called Kingdom of Jesus Christ, in Davao city after the police gave a 24-hour ultimatum for them to give up, police said. Interior Secretary Benhur Abalos earlier said Quiboloy was caught by authorities.

Quiboloy and his co-accused were flown on a Philippine air force C-130 plane to the capital Sunday night and locked up in a heavily guarded detention center at the national police headquarters, where their mugshots and fingerprints were taken, police spokesperson Col. Jean Fajardo said in a news briefing.

“The Philippine National Police gave an…

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Back to Ciudad Juárez

CIUDAD JUáREZ (MEXICO)
Los Ángeles Press [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

September 9, 2024

By Rodolfo Soriano-Núñez

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This week Los Ángeles Press goes back to Ciudad Juárez for an interview with a survivor of clergy sexual abuse, Leonardo Escárcega Velázquez.

Leonardo was a student at the Seminary of the Roman Catholic diocese of Ciudad Juárez. There he was victim of a sexual attack from a deacon.

The diocese of Ciudad Juárez provides no information about who was the deacon and what is his current status within the Roman Catholic Church or if they filed a report with the civil authorities or with their leaders in Rome.

Seminaries are places where young Roman Catholic males seek to become priests. To do so, the aspiring priests must do studies of philosophy and theology, roughly six or seven years of training on top of the equivalent to High School in the U.S. or the so called Bachillerato in the Mexican system.

Sadly, besides the formal curriculum there is a “hidden curriculum”,…

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September 8, 2024

Sexual abuse report: Schools were routinely places of brutal, simmering violence

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 8, 2024

By Jennifer O'Connell

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Violent and emotional abuse are part of the dark tapestry of wrongs done to children by the State and its agents

For years afterwards, I thought perhaps I had dreamed it up: the narrow plank of wood, about the length of a metre stick, hacked off at an angle on one end and speared through the middle with a rusty nail. It must have been a leftover from a domestic DIY project that she came across and thought, yes, that will do nicely. And it did: one smart whack on the palm if we were merely bold, two strikes if we were really bad. When her colour was up or she had one of her headaches, you knew it was not going to be a good day.

I have other vivid memories of my early years in school: girls being slammed into the blackboard; girls having their chairs pulled out…

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‘Your voice will be heard’: Over 160 contacts made to gardaí regarding schools abuse inquiry

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 7, 2024

By Sarah Slater

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Det Chief Superintendent Colm Noonan said the crimes are ‘insidious’ and have a ‘lifelong effect’

Gardaí have received over 160 contacts regarding the inquiry into historical sexual abuse in day and boarding schools since they first made an appeal on Wednesday.

Almost 2,400 allegations of sexual abuse made in 308 schools run by religious orders and spanning a 30-year period were disclosed to a Government-appointed inquiry, a damning report published on Tuesday revealed.

The scoping inquiry received information questionnaires from 205 survivors, mostly men, with more than 80 schools run by 24 religious orders named by the participants. Most incidents of abuse took place between the early 1960s and early 1990s, with the highest number of reported incidents occurring in the early to mid-1970s.

An Garda Síochána issued an appeal for anyone to come forward with information and report such crimes and said on Saturday that they…

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Amending law on time limits could assist victims seeking redress over child abuse in schools, says solicitor

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 7, 2024

By Mary Carolan

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Standard of proof for claims for redress is on the ‘balance of probabilities’

An amendment to the law on time limits for legal actions over child sex abuse would assist victims of historic abuse in schools across the State in obtaining redress, a senior lawyer has said.

Solicitor James MacGuill, who has represented several survivors of child sexual abuse, noted the Statute of Limitations (Amendment) Act 2000 previously provided for proceedings over child abuse to be issued within 12 months of the passage of that Act.

If a similar amendment was enacted in the wake of the report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools run by Religious Orders, that would be a practical step in assisting survivors in seeking redress, he said.

The standard of proof for redress is the civil standard of the balance of probabilities and, since 2021, the Department of…

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Will Pope Francis stay silent over child sex abuse scandal when he visits Timor-Leste?

DILI (TIMOR-LESTE)
Euronews [Lyon, France]

September 8, 2024

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In 2002, the head of Timor-Leste’s church abruptly resigned and moved to Mozambique amidst claims he sexually abused young boys over a 20-year period.

Pope Francis has been called on to address child sexual abuse in the Catholic church during his upcoming visit to Timor-Leste.

The request, made by influential non-profit organisation BishopAccountability.org, asked one of the United States’ most significant archdioceses Cardinal Sean O’Malley to persuade the pope to speak out against sexual abuse during his trip.

Two prominent Catholic figures in Timor-Leste have been at the centre of sexual abuse allegations, including Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo, who was previously the head of the country’s Catholic Church. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1996 and is largely celebrated in Timor-Leste for being instrumental in the country gaining independence from Indonesia in 2002.

But Belo abruptly resigned the same year, citing poor health, and was sent to Mozambique…

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East Timor’s president says the pope’s visit isn’t time to dwell on past sins

DILI (TIMOR-LESTE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

September 4, 2024

By Adam Schreck

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The president of East Timor sees Pope Francis’ upcoming visit as a prime opportunity to promote Asia’s youngest country on the world stage, not a time to confront the legacy of abuse by influential members of the clergy in the deeply Catholic nation.

During an interview Wednesday with The Associated Press, President José Ramos-Horta also predicted progress soon on a major energy project with Australia, and urged China and the United States to act as “benevolent superpowers” as they compete for influence in the Southeast Asian country.

The 74-year-old former independence fighter and Nobel laureate returned to the presidency in 2022 with campaign pledges that included tackling poverty, creating jobs and improving political stability.

Francis is due to arrive Monday in the impoverished and youthful nation of 1.3 million people, also known as Timor-Leste, following visits to Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. Walls are still being dabbed with fresh paint and banners and billboards…

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Diocese of Norwich to file Chapter 11 plan: How much is available for abuse survivors

NORWICH (UNITED KINGDOM)
Norwich Bulletin [Norwich CT]

September 7, 2024

By Matt Grahn

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After declaring bankruptcy three years ago due to abuse lawsuits, The Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich has announced a plan for moving forward.

The diocese announced that it’s filing a joint Chapter 11 Reorganization Plan, in agreement with The Association of Parishes of The Roman Catholic Diocese of Norwich and the Catholic Mutual Relief Society of America. The plan includes a $30 million trust for survivors of clerical abuse, while letting the diocese recover from bankruptcy, a Friday press release stated.

The Official Committee of Unsecured Creditors, representing survivors and other creditors, had reached an agreement with the Diocese of Norwich on a reorganization plan over a year ago, but the Committee abandoned and withdrew from that plan in June, and then filed its own plan, which the Diocese claims will “result in years of litigation, substantial legal fees, and uncertainty as to any recovery for the survivors,” the press…

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Child abuse scandals hang over Pope Francis’ East Timor visit

DILI (TIMOR-LESTE)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

September 8, 2024

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When Pope Francis becomes the first pontiff to visit an independent East Timor, he will confront a clergy beset by child abuse scandals that have been largely ignored by the deeply Catholic country’s freedom heroes.

Cases include Nobel-winning Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo, who helped Asia’s youngest nation free itself from Indonesian occupation, but who the Vatican secretly punished over claims he had sexually abused young children for decades.

There are calls for the 87-year-old pontiff to speak out on child abuse when he lands in the former Portuguese colony Monday as part of his Asia-Pacific tour.

“We ask Your Holiness to encourage the leaders and the people of Timor-Leste to take more effective measures to prevent sexual abuse,” the Timor-Leste NGO Forum, a civil society coalition, wrote in a letter Wednesday to Francis.

BishopAccountability.org, a documentation centre on Catholic Church abuse, also called on the Vatican’s sexual abuse commission chief,…

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Woman in France Testifies Against Husband Accused of Bringing Men to Rape Her

AVIGNON (FRANCE)
New York Times [New York NY]

September 6, 2024

By Catherine Porter

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Gisèle Pelicot spoke of the horror of being told by the police that they had evidence her husband had drugged her for years and brought men into their home to join him in raping her.

If the sight of dozens of men accused of raping her, including her husband of many decades, upset Gisèle Pelicot, she did not let it show. She swept into a packed courtroom on Thursday with steely poise, her face composed, her eyes dry beneath sunglasses. Her adult children trailed behind her.

Then, she took the stand and told the court how the life she had built over five decades had quickly unraveled one morning in late 2020, when the police summoned her to a station in southern France. There, they told her that the man she considered the love of her life had been drugging her for almost a decade and inviting strangers to come…

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With Her Father Accused of Raping Her Mother, a Daughter Talks of Torment

AVIGNON (FRANCE)
New York Times [New York NY]

September 6, 2024

By Catherine Porter

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In court, the woman said she was traumatized not only by what prosecutors said happened to her mother but also by fear that she herself might have been abused.

Caroline Darian and her two brothers were frantically moving their mother out of the family house that had effectively become a crime scene when she was interrupted by a call from the police saying they had something to tell her in person. It could not wait.

She was already shattered by the news that the father she always believed was loving and supportive had been arrested on suspicion that he drugged and raped her mother, and that he allegedly brought other men to join him in violating her for almost 10 years.

What, she wondered that day in November 2020, could there be left to learn?

What came next was a new shock, Ms. Darian testified on Friday in her…

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Maine victims, Catholic church wait more than a year for high court ruling on childhood abuse cases

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald [Portland ME]

September 8, 2024

By Emily Allen

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The cases against the Roman Catholic Bishop of Portland are one of many that are taking an unusual length of time to receive a ruling in recent years.

Last fall, more than a dozen people who say they were sexually abused as children by members of Maine’s Catholic Church huddled in a hallway outside a Bangor courtroom.

Their lawyers had just appeared before Maine’s highest court to argue whether their lawsuits against the Roman Catholic Bishop of Portland were constitutional. They began suing after Maine removed all time barriers for civil claims of sexual abuse.

The group expected they would likely be waiting anywhere from a few weeks to six months for a decision.

More than 10 months later, they’re still waiting.

“Today marks 301 days since we were before Maine’s Law Court to defend the constitutionality of the law that provides survivors of childhood sexual abuse with access…

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September 7, 2024

Sex Cults in Seminaries: To Obey or Break Away?

PARTLOW (VA)
Complicit Clergy [Partlow, VA]

September 3, 2024

By Gene Thomas Gomulka

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Professionals who provide deprogramming therapy to victims who have been lured into cults report that cult leaders often use blackmail and extortion to prevent recruits from breaking away from the fold. These cult leaders require members to “confess” their deepest secrets and vulnerabilities as a part of the grooming process and later threaten to use these secrets against those who fail to comply with cult practices.  While cults have fascinated screenwriters and journalists alike, the media has yet to report on what is arguably the largest ongoing sex cult system to date: the web of countless closeted homosexual bishops and priests who recruit, groom, and extort same-sex-attracted seminarians for sexual favors.

While many heterosexual seminarians and priests face reprisals for rejecting sexual advances and reporting abuse by homosexual superiors, an increasing number of homosexually-oriented seminarians are coming forward to describe how gay bishops and seminary leaders try to blackmail them…

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Two More Lawsuits Filed Against Morningstar Ministries for Alleged Mishandling of Sexual Abuse

FORT MILL (SC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

September 7, 2024

By Rebecca Hopkins

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Two victims of alleged child sexual abuse by a MorningStar Ministries volunteer youth leader filed separate civil lawsuits this week, bringing the number of lawsuits alleging MorningStar leaders mishandled reports of sexual abuse to three. A similar lawsuit against Morningstar was filed last month.

On Thursday, Erickson Lee, the youth leader named in the civil lawsuits, failed to show for a court date in South Carolina for criminal sex-abuse charges with four victims, the Herald reported Friday.  When Lee, a former cop, didn’t appear, the judge issued a warrant for Lee’s arrest, the Charlotte Observer reported Thursday.

Lee turned himself in Friday for a now nine-year prison sentence—an additional year from the original plea deal of eight years due to his missed court date Thursday, according to the Herald.

The civil suits allege that leaders of Morningstar mishandled decades of sexual abuse by other…

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Catholic priest denies sexual abuse charges

JERSEY (JERSEY)
Jersey Evening Post [St. Helier, Jersey, England]

September 7, 2024

By Stephen Blease

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A CATHOLIC priest and self-proclaimed exorcist who worked as a youth leader in Jersey has denied ten charges of sexually abusing a child in the Island.

Piotr Antoni Glas (60), who now lives in Southampton, also denied a charge of perverting the course of justice when he appeared in the Royal Court yesterday.

Mr Glas, known as Peter when his Polish name is Anglicised, is alleged to have committed the crimes while he was working for the Catholic Deanery in the Island.

He is said to have placed the child’s feet against his face while he masturbated and placed the child’s feet on his face while holding the child’s head against his erect penis.

He was also accused of two counts of indecent assault on a child by kissing the child on the mouth.

Mr Glas appeared alongside David Richard Hick (69) of David Hick Antiques, who was also charged…

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Philippine telecom CEOs could be prosecuted for allowing child abuse, 1

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
Panay News [Iloilo, Phillipines]

September 3, 2024

By Fr Shay Cullen

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IN THE Philippines and many other countries, children are under attack by the pedophiles and child abusers that use the uncontrolled social media platforms connected to the internet by Internet Service Providers (ISP) owned by the telecommunication corporations (telecoms).

The children are groomed, seduced, lured and entrapped. Many are sexually abused on live shows by video streaming to international customers for money done through the telecoms’ ISP servers. The child abusers are sometimes their own parents.

Many good parents are worried sick and helpless to protect their children from these criminals that are enabled by the telecoms and social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Telegram, X and others. Children are lured by predators or their peer group to watch child sexual abuse images online on a mobile phone connected to the internet via the telecoms. As a result, many 10- and 12-year-old boys have and are sexually abusing girls as…

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Philippine telecom CEOs could be prosecuted for allowing child abuse, 2

CAGAYAN DE ORO (PHILIPPINES)
Panay News [Iloilo, Phillipines]

September 7, 2024

By Shay Cullen

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THE OUTRAGEOUS case now in court against a Catholic priest in Cagayan province is still ongoing. He allegedly videotaped his acts of sex abuse of a minor over whom he had moral ascendancy and blackmailed her into continuing to have sex with him until she broke-down and begged others to help her escape his control over her.

He admitted the several sexual assaults but claims in defense that she gave consent which she repeatedly and vehemently denies. The suspect is in jail and the trial has huge international interest and could last until 2026.

According to the Women and Children Protection Unit, research shows that from2021 to 2022, a shocking 72 percent of all child abuse cases were committed by sexual assault, many initiated by grooming over the internet.

As many as 6,000 abuse cases were recorded in 2021, and in 2022 more than 6,600 cases were recorded. Other research…

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Frustrated Catholics ‘church shopping’ or taking a pause

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB [Buffalo NY]

September 6, 2024

By Daniel Telvock, Luke Moretti

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“The door is always open for them to come back or for new people to join us,” said the Diocese’s director of the office of worship.

In Western New York, there are about 550,000 Catholics, but some are considering taking a pause, or taking their faith elsewhere — at least for now.

The Diocese is in financial crisis, as it navigates bankruptcy to resolve roughly 900 sexual abuse claims.

To achieve its goal, the Diocese is selling property and merging or closing parishes and schools, among other things.

The Diocese faces other challenges: fewer priests, contributions, and parishioners.

These problems are nerve-wracking for some Catholics, who are considering switching to other denominations or pausing their participation with the Diocese, according to a pastor and some Catholics who spoke to News 4.Complete list of Catholic churches Buffalo Diocese plans to close or merge

“I think they’re leaving a church organization…

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Chicago priest removed from parish amid child molestation claims

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago [Chicago, IL]

September 6, 2024

By Todd Feurer, Adam Harrington, Irika Sargent, Megan Hickey

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A priest has been removed as the associate pastor of a Catholic school and church in Lincoln Park, amid an investigation into allegations of child exploitation and child molestation.

Cardinal Blase Cupich sent a letter to St. Josaphat Parish and School at Southport and Belden avenues, informing the parish that he asked Fr. Martin Nyberg to step aside from his duties after the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services opened an investigation into the allegations against him, involving a “public penance service,” or a confession service.

“Father Nyberg, who has served your parish as associate pastor from July 1, 2024, strenuously denies the allegations,” Cupich wrote. “In keeping with our policies, we reported the allegations to civil authorities and offered assistance to the accusers. I asked Father Nyberg to step aside from ministry until civil authorities have completed their investigations and our Independent Review Board has presented its recommendations…

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‘You are not alone, you will be heard’: Gardaí receive 160 reports of alleged sexual abuse in three days

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
EchoLive.ie [Cork, Ireland]

September 7, 2024

By Donal O’Keeffe

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“Any resources required will be made available to support each individual who has or may come forward to report a crime to An Garda Síochána”

In the three days since An Garda Síochána appealed for people to come forward to report crimes relating to historical sexual abuse in schools run by religious orders, they have received more than 160 contacts.

The garda appeal, made on Wednesday, came in the wake of the publication of the Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders.

The investigation, led by senior counsel Mary O’Toole, found almost 2,400 allegations of abuse were made about 884 alleged abusers in 308 day and boarding schools run by 42 Catholic religious orders across the country.

In Cork alone, there were more than 300 allegations of abuse against more than 130 alleged abusers in more than 30 schools.

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At least 17 more people allege sexual violence by French charity icon Abbe Pierre

(FRANCE)
France 24 [Paris, France]

September 6, 2024

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More than a dozen more people have made accusations of sexual violence against the late French humanitarian monk Abbe Pierre, according to a report published Friday. With Pierre’s once-saintly image already shaken by allegations of sexual abuse in July, these latest claims prompted his namesake foundation to announce that it would be changing its name and the Emmaus charity he also founded to announce the permanent closure of a memorial dedicated to him. 

At least 17 more people have made accusations of sexual violence against a French monk who became a household name for his charity work, according to a report published Friday, prompting his charities to distance themselves from their founder.

A Capuchin monk since 1932 and an ordained Catholic clergyman since 1938, Abbe Pierre died in 2007 aged 94. 

Born Henri Groues, Abbe Pierre left behind a legacy as a friend to the poverty-stricken and founder of the charities Emmaus and…

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Emotional week for survivors after report into school abuse

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
RTE [Dublin, Ireland]

September 7, 2024

By Ailbhe Conneely

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When the Series Producer of RTÉ’s Doc on One first sat down to record an interview with Mark Ryan in London two years ago, it was a step into the unknown.

Mark was the first point of contact for Liam O’Brien on a documentary which would be broadcast just months later with the title ‘Blackrock Boys’.

Following his meeting with Mark, it became clear to Mr O’Brien as he started digging that events were occurring “behind the scenes” at a bigger scale in relation to the Spiritans.

Weeks later he interviewed David Ryan who revealed further details and “the depravity of what had occurred”.

“It was almost confessional, they both spoke for an hour, they were ready to tell their story,” he said.

Following the broadcast of ‘Blackrock Boys’, RTÉ’s Liveline programme was inundated with calls.

Victims and survivors of alleged historical abuse at schools around the country told their…

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Victims say childhood ‘stopped the day abuse started’ in Irish Catholic schools

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

September 7, 2024

By Jonathan Luxmoore, OSV

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Ireland will launch a commission to investigate sexual abuse following a report revealing 2,395 abuse claims since the 1960s

The Irish government is to set up an official commission of investigation into sexual abuse at schools run by Catholic religious orders after a preliminary inquiry highlighted widespread complaints over decades.

“This report concurs this isn’t just a church problem, but a society problem — there are wider cultural norms in play, not just religious ones,” said Gerard Gallagher, spokesman for the Dublin-based Association of Leaders of Missionaries and Religious of Ireland, or AMRI.

“But we’ve been dealing with scandals involving the church for the past 30 years, and we’ve always encouraged the fullest cooperation with investigations,” he said.

The lay Catholic was reacting to the government-commissioned inquiry report, detailing 2,395 abuse claims at 308 order-run schools since the 1960s.

In an OSV News interview, he said the association had been…

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Letters: Government ministers can claim to be outraged by Scoping Inquiry report, but action is all that counts

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

September 6, 2024

By Letters to the editor

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Since the publication of the Scoping Inquiry report on abuse in Catholic schools, various ministers have condemned what happened. They have rightfully called on the religious orders involved to pay restitution to their victims.

However, this is the same Government that has done nothing to implement a 2014 ruling from the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) in favour of Irish citizen Louise O’Keeffe, regarding the abuse she suffered at national school.

This brave woman should not have been pushed all the way to the ECHR in a quest for justice. It is another case of deflect and deny by our Government.

Their obligation to the children who attended national schools is no more and no less than that of the religious orders they have now called out.

It appears some ministers would like Justice to peek out from under her blindfold to ensure the scales are tilted in their…

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Legal advice puts a stop to religious orders’ help with probes

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

September 7, 2024

By Darren Halley

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Several religious orders have been given “legal advice” to stop participating in reviews by the Irish Catholic Church’s child abuse watchdog, over concerns about “data protection”. The National Board for Safeguarding Children in Ireland (NBSCCCI) believes that the law needs to be changed before religious orders can share personal data with it. It comes after the landmark Scoping Inquiry into historical sexual abuse in religious-run schools this week found that only 13 religious orders have been the subject of reviews of their child safeguarding since 2016. The inquiry looking at religious-run day and boarding schools in Ireland revealed almost 2,400 allegations of abuse, against 884 accused abusers, involving 42 religious orders. The period in question ranged from the 1960s to the 1990s. The wide-ranging 700-page report also examined the existing child safeguarding standards in the Catholic Church. And it has emerged that only 13 reviews have been published by the…

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Catholic boarding school documents staying in Montana

GREAT FALLS (MT)
The Christian Century [Chicago IL]

August 30, 2024

By Renata Birkenbuel

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In a significant turn of events, an array of Catholic Ursuline Boarding School documents related to the boarding school students of several Indigenous nations in Montana and Alaska will remain in Montana. Several U-Hauls loaded with everyday records, photos, ledgers, scrapbooks, and other archives were originally slated to transfer to the Catholic Jesuits in Boston, Massachusetts.

It’s considered win for area tribes whose children attended the former Ursuline Academy starting in 1912, because keeping the archives at home in Great Falls History Museum allows easier access to area descendants researching their family histories.

“The ever-increasing need for research and documentation of our Tribal encounters and associations with others is becoming more urgent each passing year,” Steve Lozar, Confederated Salish, Kootenai and Pend d’Oreille, said in a statement to the museum. “Having a centralized repository with access to family historical records would be of the greatest value to all who desire…

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September 6, 2024

In the Pacific, a ‘Dumping Ground’ for Priests Accused or Convicted of Abuse

SUVA (FIJI)
New York Times [New York NY]

September 6, 2024

By Pete McKenzie

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Over a decades-long period, more than 30 Catholic priests and missionaries moved to remote island nations after they had allegedly abused children in the West, or had been found to do so.

[See also the groundbreaking series Runaway Priests in the Dallas Morning News: Untouchable (links to 18 articles); Safe Harbor (4 articles); In the Shadow of the Vatican (7 articles, including one about Fr. Julian Fox); Too Much Tolerance (3 articles); and 2 Priests, 1 Former Cleric Leave Jobs Abroad.]

Pope Francis will be welcomed by children bearing flowers, a 21-gun salute and a candlelight vigil after he lands in Papua New Guinea on Friday. It will be the first papal visit in three decades to the Pacific Islands, a deeply Christian region — but one that has played a little-known role in the clergy abuse scandal that has stained the Roman Catholic Church.

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Statement following the publication of the Report of the ‘Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders’

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Catholic Bishops Conference [Maynooth, County Kildare, Ireland]

September 5, 2024

By Bishop Kevin Doran

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  • “I am conscious that, behind every paragraph is the experience of real people who, as children, suffered abuse and violence in a place where they should have been safe” Bishop Doran

I have been reading through the Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders. It is not easy reading by any means, but I am conscious that, behind every paragraph is the experience of real people who, as children, suffered abuse and violence in a place where they should have been safe. They have the right to tell their story. The tragedy of the report is not simply that there are so many of them, but that so many of them had to carry their experience alone for so many years, before they felt sufficiently free to tell someone else.
 
While the report relates specifically to Religious-run schools, it would be naive…

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Irish bishop says abuse victims ‘have the right to tell their story’ after latest report issued

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Crux [Denver CO]

September 6, 2024

By Charles Collins

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Bishop Kevin Doran of Ireland emphasized abuse victims “have the right to tell their story” after the publication of a report looking at sexual abuse in schools run by religious orders in the country.

The Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders was released earlier this week, and said there were 2,395 allegations of sexual abuse in respect of 308 schools recorded by the religious orders that ran those schools.

The allegations were made against 884 alleged abusers, around half of whom have died.

Most of the abuse cases occurred between the early 1960s and the early 1990s, with the highest number of reports happening in the early to mid-1970s.

“I am conscious that, behind every paragraph is the experience of real people who, as children, suffered abuse and violence in a place where they should have been safe,” Doran said…

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Irish bishops comment on recently published sexual abuse report

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

September 6, 2024

By Francesca Merlo

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Bishop Kevin Doran, President of the Irish Catholic Bishops’ Conference, has released a statement expressing closeness to victims of sex abuse and stressing that measures have been put in place in Catholic schools to ensure the safeguarding of all children.

The statement, together with a separate statement from the Catholic Education Partnership, followed the publication in Ireland of a Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders.

Actions, not words

In his statement, Bishop Doran emphasises that “real people” endured abuse in places meant to protect them and notes the tragedy that many survivors had to carry their pain alone for years before speaking out.

While the report focuses on religious-run schools, the Bishop warns against being “naive in the extreme” in thinking that child abuse wasn’t also present in other schools across society.

Bishop Dolan also notes that the dioceses…

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Shock in Ireland as inquiry reveals scale of new child sexual abuse cases at Catholic religious schools

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

September 5, 2024

By Declan McSweeney

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Ireland’s Catholic Church and wider society are in shock following revelations on 3 September that an inquiry has uncovered significant numbers of uncovered cases of child sexual abuse in Catholic religious schools.

A total of 2,395 allegations were found relating to 308 schools, involving 884 alleged abusers, over half of whom are now deceased. The inquiry called on the Irish Government to set up a redress scheme and that religious orders should contribute.

Seventeen special schools – schools for children with disabilities or behavioural difficulties – recorded 590 allegations involving 190 alleged abusers, a particularly high percentage.

The cases relate to at least 22 of the Republic’s 26 counties, and involve schools run by 24 religious orders.

Regarding allegations involving the more major orders: there were 820 allegations in respect of 132 schools run by the Christian Brothers; 329 allegations at six schools run by the Spiritans (formerly Holy Ghost Fathers); and 294…

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Editorial: Church must face its reckoning over vile sex abuse of children

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

September 5, 2024

Read original article

Societal shock is useless unless it stimulates the right response. Over three decades we have heard deeply disturbing reports about repulsive abuse by members of the Catholic church.

Restitution or atonement, if they came at all, were nowhere near proportionate to the monstrous harm done. Once again we hear a minister insist that religious orders “must put their hands up and come forward” to play their role in uncovering abuse and dealing with redress for victims. Justice Minister Helen McEntee may mean what she says, but we have been here before.

No matter how despicable the crimes, the outrage, anger, reproach, helplessness and revulsion are nothing new. Even messages of empathy and gestures of contrition, without commensurate follow-through, ring hollow.

We are failing, and will continue to fail, as long as the meaningful acts that might make a difference in putting back together the broken lives of survivors are missing.

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‘They train you to be quiet’: Survivors on why they didn’t disclose school sexual abuse

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
The Journal [Dublin, Ireland]

September 6, 2024

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A NUMBER OF people who gave testimony to the scoping inquiry into sexual abuse in religious schools described how they felt they couldn’t tell anyone what was happening to them when they were children because of the power of the Catholic Church in Ireland at the time. 

In some cases, survivors described being intimidated and threatened to remain silent, including some being told they would go to hell or be killed. 

The scoping inquiry revealed almost 2,400 allegations of sexual abuse of children in schools run by religious orders. There were 844 alleged abusers in over 300 schools run by 42 religious orders across the country.

The report of the scoping review, which was published on Tuesday evening, details the harrowing testimony given by survivors.

The majority of them told the inquiry that they were not able to tell anyone they were being abused due to feelings of shame, thinking…

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Sexual abuse survivors write letter to Pope ahead of Belgium visit

BRUSSELS (BELGIUM)
Brussels Times [Brussels, Belgium]

September 5, 2024

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Just weeks ahead of his visit to Belgium in late September. victim of sexual abuse within the Catholic Church penned a letter to Pope Francis appealing for more to be done for survivors.

Published in Le Soir, the letter urges the Pope to understand the survivors’ pain and outlines their demands. “Despite your clear and convincing approach on this subject, you have never addressed us, the victims, or more precisely all the survivors,” the signatories wrote. “Isn’t it time to send this vital message to the world, which so many shattered lives need, often without realising?”

Pope Francis is set to have a private audience with sexual abuse survivors during his visit to Belgium. “This encounter should not be the end of the story, but rather the beginning of a sorely needed journey of liberation for hundreds of thousands of people,” the letter continued.

The letter further proposes numerous…

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Belgium: Victims of sexual abuse in Catholic Church appeal to Pope Francis for justice

BRUSSELS (BELGIUM)
Peoples Gazette [Abuja, Nigeria]

September 5, 2024

Read original article

The letter was published ahead of Mr Francis’ visit to Belgium in September, where the pope plans to meet with victims of the church.

ultiple victims of sexual abuse committed by the Catholic Church in Belgium have called on Pope Francis to recognise their suffering in an open letter published on Thursday.

“Although you have repeatedly taken up this subject with clarity and force of conviction, you have never addressed us, the victims or more precisely the survivors – as a whole,” said the open letter published by local media.

“Isn’t it time to send the world this precious missive that so many shattered lives need, often without them even knowing it?” the letter said.

Published ahead of the pope’s visit to Belgium later in September, where the pontiff is planning to meet with victims of the church, the letter by six survivors detailed their demands to the pontiff.

The…

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Cardinal Wilton Gregory clears Black deacon accused of child sex abuse in Maryland

WASHINGTON (DC)
Black Catholic Messenger [San Francisco CA]

September 5, 2024

By Nate Tinner-Williams

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The move comes as the civil case remains open on appeal before the Maryland Supreme Court, which is set to hear oral arguments this month.

Lawrence Bell, a Black Catholic deacon in Maryland accused of sexually abusing a child decades ago, has been cleared by the Archdiocese of Washington to return to ministry. He was named in a civil action filed by an anonymous party in October 2023.

Cardinal Wilton Gregory announced the news on July 17 in a letter to parishioners at St. Martin of Tours Catholic Church in Gaithersburg, noting that all canonical and civil procedures were properly followed in the investigation.

“After careful review and consultation, I have not seen any evidence that supports the allegations made in the John Doe lawsuit,” he wrote. “Accordingly, I have made the determination to lift the precautionary restrictions that had been placed on Monsignor Mellone and Deacon Bell, effective…

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Father Thomas Rosica sued for sexual assault in Canada

LONDON (CANADA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

September 5, 2024

By Hannah Brockhaus

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A lawsuit filed in Ontario, Canada, earlier this year accuses Father Thomas Rosica, CSB, a once-prominent media figure, of sexually abusing a younger priest more than two decades ago — an allegation Rosica denies.

Rosica was CEO of the Salt and Light Media Foundation for 16 years and a prominent writer, speaker, and media figure before resigning from a number of senior positions in 2019 following reports that many of his written works contained significant plagiarism.

Rosica was also formerly an English-language spokesman for the Vatican and president of Assumption University in Windsor, Ontario.

In a lawsuit filed in the Superior Court of Justice in London, Ontario, on March 1, the plaintiff claims Rosica “sexually abused, assaulted, and molested” him about 24 years ago while in a position of “authority and trust,” and that Rosica’s religious community, the Congregation of St. Basil, “took no steps to stop the behavior or to…

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Diocese of Scranton removes priest on child sex abuse allegations

SCRANTON (PA)
Times Leader (Wilkes-Barre PA)

September 5, 2024

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The Diocese of Scranton announced on Thursday the removal of the Rev. John Ruth after the Diocesan Review Board concluded that allegations that the priest had inappropriate sexual contact with a minor appeared credible.

Ruth, 65, was suspended and removed from ministry as of Sept. 4 due to the sexual abuse claim, which was reported to have occurred from the late 1970s to the mid 1980s.

The Diocese of Scranton said it conducted an investigation and an initial review by the Diocesan Review Board found the claim appeared credible.

“The Diocese of Scranton’s ‘Policy for Response to Allegations of Sexual Abuse of Minors,’ and the United States Conference of Catholic ‘Bishop’s Charter for Protection of Children and Young People,’ both have a zero-tolerance policy for the sexual abuse of a minor and require the removal from ministry of any cleric or other religious, upon determination of a credible claim of…

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September 5, 2024

‘Ferocious violence’ accompanied ‘shocking’ levels of abuse at Ireland’s religious-run schools, report finds

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

September 4, 2024

By Kara Fox

Read original article

[Click on the following links to view the Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders, by Mary O’Toole, SC, June 2024, released September 3, 2024:

Title Page, Acknowledgements, Glossary, Table of Contents

Volume 1: Executive Summary – Introduction – What Survivors Have Told Us

Volume 2: The Extent of Allegations of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools – The Context of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools

Volume 3: Lessons of Past Inquiries into Child Abuse

Volume 4: The Current Child Protection Framework – Implementing Outcomes Sought by Survivors – Recommendations Based on Survivors’ Views

Volume 5: Appendices, including lists of total allegations and total accused persons organized by Religious Order Schools, Special Schools, Community Schools, and Christian Brothers Data.]

Nearly 2,400 allegations of sexual abuse across hundreds of Ireland’s religious-run schools have been documented in…

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‘It felt like a monster behind you’: Survivors of school abuse – in their own words

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Mark Hilliard

Read original article

More than 200 people, mostly men, gave detailed and often graphic accounts of the abuse they suffered and witnessed in more than 80 schools

“When it happened on Monday and Tuesday you knew you were lucky because that meant you were off Wednesday and Thursday,” said one. “But you were probably back on for the Friday … it felt like a monster behind you.”

As part of the Government’s scoping inquiry, 205 people, mostly men, completed questionnaires on their experiences of abuse in more than 80 schools, across at least 22 counties, run by 24 religious orders.

Of those, 149 later gave interviews or written testimonies about the abuse they suffered.

They described being “molested, stripped naked, raped and drugged amid an atmosphere of terror and silence”, the report says, describing the recollections as “distressing and often harrowing to read”.

“He’d get through as many of us…

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Catholic Church sexual abuse victims call on Maryland AG to complete probe into all Maryland churches

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

September 4, 2024

By Mike Hellgren

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Survivors of sexual abuse within the Catholic church are calling on the Maryland Attorney General to complete his investigation into abuses in all Maryland churches.

They also want the church to drop its challenge to a Maryland law that eliminates the statute of limitations for victims. 

The Archdiocese of Washington, which controls several churches in Maryland, is fighting to keep the statute of limitations with arguments before the Maryland Supreme Court scheduled for next week. 

Survivors Speak

“To me, it’s my life goal to protect children from the abuse that I suffered, and we can do that going forward. The church says on one hand they want to support us and with the other hand, they want to take the law away” said Teresa Lancaster, a victim of abuse by Father Joseph Maskell whose story has been highlighted previously on WJZ and nationally in The Keepers, a Netflix…

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‘A burden has been lifted off his shoulders’: Survivors of abuse welcome scoping inquiry report

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 4, 2024

By Sarah Burns

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Calls to establish Commission of Investigation without delay and include all schools

scoping inquiry report into sexual abuse at schools run by religious orders has been welcomed by survivors as they feel they are “not alone and their stories can be believed”, a solicitor representing victims has said.

Avril Scally, who is representing a number of survivors, said the report had been welcomed as “the level of abuse is now out in the open”.

Ms Scally, who is partner at law firm Lavelle Partners LLP, said: “One survivor told me that ‘a burden has been lifted off his shoulders’. The survivor’s voices, long silenced by fear and shame, must now be heard and respected.

“This report is only the beginning of a healing process for them, a necessary journey towards accountability.”

An initial scoping report published this week found a systemic culture of abuse in…

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‘Their childhood stopped the day the abuse started’: Almost 2,400 allegations of abuse in religious run-schools

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Fiachra Gallagher

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Testimony from victims details instances of abuse in 308 schools, including special education facilities, spanning 30-year period

Almost 2,400 allegations of sexual abuse made in 308 schools run by religious orders and spanning a 30-year period have been disclosed to a Government-appointed inquiry, a damning report published on Tuesday revealed.

In the scoping inquiry’s report, which detailed a systemic culture of abuse in religious-run day and boarding schools throughout the country, 2,395 allegations of abuse were reported against 884 people. Of those accused of abuse, less than half are still alive, according to the report.

It is likely that the true number of allegations made is much higher, the report noted, given the level of underreporting of childhood sexual abuse.

The inquiry also revealed that a high number of allegations are concentrated in special education schools, where there were 590 allegations recorded in 17 institutions involving 190 alleged…

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A SNAP news conference on Wednesday, September 4, 2024, outside the Maryland attorney general's Baltimore office, including David Schappelle (speaking), and to his left, Teresa Lancaster, David Lorenz (SNAP's Maryland Director), and Betsy Schindler.

Survivors of clergy abuse push for results in AG investigation into 2 dioceses serving Maryland

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

September 4, 2024

By Tommie Clark

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[Photo above: A SNAP news conference on Wednesday, September 4, 2024, outside the Maryland attorney general’s Baltimore office, including David Schappelle (speaking), and to his left, Teresa Lancaster, David Lorenz (SNAP’s Maryland Director), and Betsy Schindler.]

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests‘ Maryland chapter wants to see results from the state attorney general’s investigation into two dioceses.

“The truth will come out, that is my goal. That is why we’re all here, is so that the truth can come out,” survivor David Schappelle said at a news conference Wednesday outside the attorney general’s Baltimore office.

Schappelle, who grew up in Gaithersburg in the Archdiocese of Washington, D.C., shared his experience as a victim of child sexual abuse at the hands of the Catholic Church.

“In the report on the Archdiocese of Baltimore, my abuser was called out in a footnote, and so it brought a…

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Ireland to set up inquiry into sexual abuse at religious schools following ‘harrowing’ report

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Euronews [Lyon, France]

September 4, 2024

By Katy Dartford

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The government’s scoping inquiry found almost 2,400 allegations of historical sexual abuse by hundreds of schools run by religious orders across Ireland.

A commission is set to investigate sexual abuse at Irish schools run by Catholic religious orders after a preliminary probe found almost 2,400 allegations of historical abuse, the government said.

Education Minister Norma Foley described the preliminary investigation’s report on Tuesday as a “harrowing document, containing some of the most appalling accounts of sexual abuse”.

The inquiry found there were 884 alleged abusers in 308 schools across all parts of the country between the years 1927 to 2013. More than half of the people accused of abuse are now dead.

Most of these allegations were reported by 42 orders which formerly ran schools or still do across Ireland, and 17 special schools also recorded 590 allegations involving 190 alleged abusers.

The scoping inquiry heard interviews or received written…

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How abuse in Brothers of Charity special needs schools was exposed – and ignored – 21 years ago

CORK (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 5, 2024

By Patsy McGarry

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Inquiry disclosed a disproportionately large number of allegations at these institutions

One of the most disturbing findings in the scoping inquiry report in religious-run schools, published on Tuesday, was that a quarter of the 2,395 abuse allegations made by survivors of 308 schools originated in just 17 special needs schools.

A total of 590 allegations involving 190 alleged abusers were made by victims from the 17 schools, a disproportionately large number among the total 884 accused from all 308 schools.

The single highest incidence of abuse reported to the inquiry concerning a single institution was at Lota, a special school run by the Brothers of Charity at Glanmire, Co Cork. There were 166 allegations of abuse made against 50 alleged abusers by people who were at the school.

Dr Margaret Kennedy, a consultant on disability, abuse and child protection who is familiar with…

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Nose to ground: Identifying the ‘root cause’ of sexual abuse in the church

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

September 4, 2024

By Elizabeth Scalia

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The subject always deserves consideration, but two recent articles on sex abuse within the church are worth discussion. The first, published by Crux, declares — sadly, to the surprise of no one — “Abuse crisis in the Catholic Church shows no signs of abating.” The second came via OSV News: Catholics in the Sicilian city of Enna are protesting a diocesan cover-up of abuses against minors, committed by a local priest while he was still a seminarian, between 2009 and 2013.

The Italian court found Father Guiseppe Rugolo guilty of “the sexual abuse of two young teenagers … fully aware that he could count on the support of the religious leadership,” adding that Bishop Rosario Gisana of the Diocese of Piazza Armerina was “well aware for many years of the reports made concerning the abuse suffered by [these victims].” Damningly, audio recordings entered into evidence at Rugolo’s trial revealed the…

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Religious orders under pressure to contribute to redress funding, but potential costs unknown

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 5, 2024

By Pat Leahy

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On a previous occasion, orders pledged half but costs spiralled and the State’s share rose

As the country comes to terms with the illumination of yet another dark chapter from its past, several decisions await the Government – or more likely, say insiders, the next one – which will be closely watched by abuse survivors but will also have far-reaching financial implications for the State.

Minister for Education Norma Foley has said that a group of senior officials will now consider the report and recommend how the Commission of Investigation should proceed. Senior sources involved in preliminary discussions on the issue say the senior officials’ group will also consider the nature and scope of any redress scheme that will see victims receive compensation payments. But while few dispute the necessity for a redress scheme, there is growing alarm across Government at the potential costs…

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Schools abuse redress: Concern in Government over costs running into billions

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 5, 2024

By Pat Leahy and Jack Power

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A redress scheme for victims of sexual abuse in schools cannot wait until a full inquiry is completed, the Taoiseach Simon Harris said yesterday, suggesting an acceleration of compensation proposals which have not yet been agreed by Government.

While there is general agreement in Government that a redress scheme for victims will be necessary, there is growing concern at the potential costs which some senior figures fear could run into the billions.

Senior sources pointed out that the Government has not decided on a redress scheme and a senior officials group will have to make recommendations on the Commission of Investigation before any plan for compensating victims is agreed.

But the Taoiseach’s comments suggested impatience with a more cautious approach when he told reporters in Kyiv, Ukraine, that compensation for those abused in religious-run schools could not be “parked” until after a full statutory inquiry into the abuse…

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Schools abuse: Sorrow of religious orders just ‘hollow words’ if redress funding doesn’t follow, says Harris

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 4, 2024

By Jack Power, Ronan McGreevy, and Jack Horgan-Jones

Read original article

An Garda Síochána appeals to victims to come forward but says there may be limitations as to the action it can take in some cases

Statements expressing sorrow from religious orders who ran schools implicated in past child sexual abuse will be “hollow words” if they are not followed by commitments towards redress for survivors, Taoiseach Simon Harris has said.

Compensation and redress for those abused in religious-run schools could not be “parked” until after a full statutory inquiry into the abuse was completed, Mr Harris said.

An initial scoping report by Mary O’Toole SC, published this week, found a systemic culture of abuse in religious run day and boarding schools, uncovering thousands of cases where children were allegedly sexually abused by those in positions of power.

In response to the scoping report the Government has committed to establish a full Commission of Investigation into past…

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Survivors call for expediency in sex abuse investigations of Washington, Wilmington Catholic dioceses

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

September 4, 2024

By Alex Mann

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Survivors of child sexual abuse in Maryland on Wednesday demanded expediency from the state attorney general in its investigations of the Catholic dioceses of Washington and Wilmington, Delaware.

Members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, told reporters at a news conference that they hoped the Maryland Office of the Attorney General would release a report soon on child sexual abuse committed within the Archdiocese of Washington and the Diocese of Wilmington, both of which operate in several Maryland counties.

David Lorenz, Maryland director of SNAP, said he hoped the attorney general’s report on the abuse in those outposts of the Catholic Church would resemble the report that office released on abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore. Released last April, that document spanned more than 400 pages, detailing the abuse of more than 600 children by 156 clergy and others in the church, dating to the…

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September 4, 2024

Dementia diagnosis could delay trial of New Orleans priest accused of rape

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Guardian [London, England]

September 3, 2024

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Read original article

Attorneys for Lawrence Hecker, charged with raping teen in 1975, urge judge to declare him incompetent to stand trial

The retired Catholic priest and self-acknowledged child molester Lawrence Hecker’s trial on rape and kidnapping charges – scheduled for 24 September – could be significantly delayed yet again after a medical report on the 92-year-old’s mental health has been filed in court.

A court-ordered psychiatric evaluation diagnosed Hecker with dementia, saying he has “good days and bad days”, according to a statement from his defense team. The defense attorneys Matthew McLaren and Eugene Redmann issued a statement Tuesday urging judge Benedict Willard to declare Hecker incompetent to stand trial.

Willard has not determined whether Hecker can be competently tried.

The report by the doctors Sarah Deland and Janet Johnson was filed in the court record on Tuesday but was not immediately available. McLaren and Redmann said the definitive dementia diagnosis “will…

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Catholic representative body says it is ‘deeply sorry’ as report reveals scale of abuse allegations at over 300 religious-run schools

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Ellen Coyne, Philip Ryan and Senan Molony

Read original article

[Click on the following links to view the Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders, by Mary O’Toole, SC, June 2024, released September 3, 2024:

Title Page, Acknowledgements, Glossary, Table of Contents

Volume 1: Executive Summary – Introduction – What Survivors Have Told Us

Volume 2: The Extent of Allegations of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools – The Context of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools

Volume 3: Lessons of Past Inquiries into Child Abuse

Volume 4: The Current Child Protection Framework – Implementing Outcomes Sought by Survivors – Recommendations Based on Survivors’ Views

Volume 5: Appendices, including lists of total allegations and total accused persons organized by Religious Order Schools, Special Schools, Community Schools, and Christian Brothers Data.]

Almost 2,400 allegations of sexual abuse were recorded by 308 schools run by religious orders

The…

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Irish inquiry finds ‘truly shocking’ level of sexual abuse at church-run schools

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Reuters [London, England]

September 3, 2024

By Reuters

Read original article

An Irish state inquiry uncovered a “truly shocking” level of sexual abuse at religious schools, primarily those run by the Catholic Church, over nearly a century with 2,395 allegations, the government said on Tuesday.

The preliminary “scoping inquiry” found 884 alleged sexual abusers at more than 300 schools across the country between 1927 and 2013. Most of the cases occurred from the 1960s to the 1990s, the government said.

This step will be followed by a commission of investigation that is likely to find additional cases, Education Minister Norma Foley told a news conference.

“The level of abuse is shocking. It is truly shocking, and so is the number of alleged abusers,” Foley said.

The preliminary inquiry was based on records held by religious institutions and the testimony of victims. It is the latest in a series of reports in recent decades into allegations of abuse and mistreatment by priests and…

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Ireland to set up inquiry into sexual abuse at schools run by religious orders

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
The Guardian [London, England]

September 3, 2024

By Shane Harrison

Read original article

Inquiry to follow preliminary investigation unearthing 2,400 allegations of historic abuse

The Irish government is to set up a statutory commission of inquiry into sexual abuse at schools run by Catholic religious orders after a preliminary investigation found almost 2,400 allegations of historic abuse.

The investigation, led by a leading barrister, Mary O’Toole, documented 844 alleged abusers in 308 schools run by 42 religious orders across the Republic of Ireland.

One hundred and thirty seven people who participated in her inquiry completed in-person interviews and 12 provided written submissions.

Most of those who took part were men in their 50s and 60s.

The Irish education minister, Norma Foley, described the report as a “harrowing document, containing some of the most appalling accounts of sexual abuse”.

The inquiry was launched in 2022 after an RTÉ radio documentary highlighted historic sexual abuse at the fee-paying Blackrock College, a Dublin school associated with…

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Catholic representative body is ‘deeply sorry’ for abuse in religious schools

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
BreakingNews.ie [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Cate McCurry, PA

Read original article

The representative body for Catholic orders across Ireland said it is “deeply sorry” that victims experienced abuse in religious-run schools.

The Association of Leaders of Missionaries and Religious in Ireland (AMRI) said it “welcomes” the publication of the Scoping Inquiry Report into historical sexual abuse in Catholic-run schools from 1927 to April 2023.

The report reviewed allegations of historical child sexual abuse, made against religious, lay staff, and clergy.

In a statement, a spokesperson for AMRI said: “We acknowledge the courage and bravery of the victims and survivors.

“We are deeply sorry that they experienced abuse in religious-run schools.

“We are acutely aware that sharing personal, sensitive, and traumatic experiences can cause additional pain and suffering.

“We recognise that we can never know the depth of the pain and suffering survivors have endured and continue to endure.

“AMRI actively worked with those of its members who are involved in running schools to facilitate…

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Rape-accused Pakistani priest arrested for intimidating bishop

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

September 3, 2024

By Kamran Choudhry

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Father Naveed Thomas was removed from pastoral responsibilities following allegations of rape

A rape-accused Catholic priest, who was removed from pastoral duties in Pakistan, has been arrested on charges of criminal intimidation after he allegedly threatened to kill Bishop Indrias Rehmat of Faisalabad.

Father Naveed Thomas was arrested on Aug. 31 after additional district and sessions judge Amjad Ali Bajwa canceled his bail over a case filed by Adil Masih, a security guard at the Faisalabad Bishop’s House, on Aug. 14.

The priest was taken into custody from the court, said the Faisalabad Bishop’s House media coordinator Ijaz Bhatti.

On Aug. 9, when denied permission to enter the bishop’s house, Thomas became angry and “started hurling abuse at the bishop, took out a pistol and threatened to kill him,” Masih said the complaint filed at Rail Bazar police station in Faisalabad.

Thomas demanded about US$12,500 and later uploaded a…

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Rick Joyner Says Evidence is ‘Mounting’ Against Chris Reed, While Justin Perry Challenges Morningstar’s Timeline

FORT MILL (SC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

September 3, 2024

By Rebecca Hopkins

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MorningStar Ministries president Rick Joyner said that “evidence is mounting” that the South Carolina prophetic ministry’s former president Chris Reed engaged in physical sexual misconduct in a statement to the ministry’s congregation Sunday.

“There’s a lot of evidence and it’s mounting that, yes, there was physical stuff that happened,” Joyner said. “Evidence is mounting, and I don’t know where it’s going to lead, but we’re not going to cover up anything.”

Joyner also admitted Sunday that he allowed Reed to be acting president of MorningStar during a “restoration” process for Reed’s 2021 misconduct with an adult student.

Also, on Saturday, Justin Perry, a former MorningStar pastor and leader, said in a public statement  that Reed became acting Morningstar president just a couple months after Morningstar’s board learned of Reed’s misconduct. Perry said that’s why he resigned from Morningstar in 2022, after 20 years of involvement with…

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Pope Francis Must Talk About Sexual Abuse Allegations in Timor-Leste

(TIMOR-LESTE)
The Diplomat [Arlington VA]

September 4, 2024

By David Hutt

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The deeply Catholic country is struggling to come to terms with historic cases of child rape by Catholic clergy.

This week, Pope Francis embarked on an 11-day trip to Asia, which will include visits to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, Timor-Leste, and Singapore. For the past year, there have been rumors that he might add a visit to Vietnam following significant diplomatic efforts by the Vatican and Hanoi. The Communist Party of Vietnam has managed the not-too-difficult task of securing the Vatican’s silence over its repression of religionists, but it seems that Francis’ entourage deemed a trip to a communist state a little too much for the aging pope.

We’ll see if he confronts a far more difficult issue when he lands in Dili. In September 2022, Dutch journalist Tjiyske Lingsma published an article in De Groene Amsterdammer detailing how Nobel Peace Prize-winning East Timorese independence hero Bishop Carlos Ximenes Belo…

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September 3, 2024

Crocodile tears: How East Timor became an unlikely Catholic stronghold

DILI (TIMOR-LESTE)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

September 3, 2024

By Filipe d’Avillez

Read original article

As part of his long trip to Asia and Oceania, Pope Francis will be visiting the small nation of East Timor from September 9 to 11 — the second visit of a pope to the territory, but the first since East Timor was formally recognized as independent in 2002. 

While small as a nation, East Timor is in fact the most Christian country in Asia, with around 90% of the population professing Catholicism (the Christian population of the Philippines is bigger in real terms, but lower in percentage), which could explain the pope’s trip. 

But a look at the recent history of the region shows that the connection between the Church and the East-Timorese goes much deeper than simple demographics.

In 1930 the population of East Timor was around 4% Catholic. By the 1970s, after the Church invested heavily in education and mission, that increased to about 30%. Then, in…

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2,395 allegations of sexual abuse at religious schools – inquiry finds

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
RTÉ - Raidió Teilifís Éireann [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Ailbhe Conneely

Read original article

[Click on the following links to view the Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders, by Mary O’Toole, SC, June 2024, released September 3, 2024:

Title Page, Acknowledgements, Glossary, Table of Contents

Volume 1: Executive Summary – Introduction – What Survivors Have Told Us

Volume 2: The Extent of Allegations of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools – The Context of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools

Volume 3: Lessons of Past Inquiries into Child Abuse

Volume 4: The Current Child Protection Framework – Implementing Outcomes Sought by Survivors – Recommendations Based on Survivors’ Views

Volume 5: Appendices, including lists of total allegations and total accused persons organized by Religious Order Schools, Special Schools, Community Schools, and Christian Brothers Data.]

The scoping inquiry into allegations of abuse at schools run by religious orders has…

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Minister for Education announces Commission of Investigation to be set up and Report of Scoping Inquiry to be published

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Government of Ireland [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

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Minister for Education Norma Foley has announced that a Commission of Investigation is to be established, following a recommendation in the Report of the Scoping Inquiry set up to examine historical sexual abuse in day and boarding schools run by religious orders.

The Scoping Inquiry has been told of some 2,395 allegations of historical sexual abuse, involving 884 alleged abusers in 308 schools across all parts of the country between the years 1927 to 2013. Most of these allegations have been reported from the records of some 42 religious orders who currently or previously ran schools in Ireland.

The establishment of a State inquiry into historical sexual abuse is one of a number of recommendations made by Senior Counsel, Mary O’Toole in her report to the Minister.

The Scoping Inquiry organised a Survivor Engagement process where those who had experienced sexual abuse in day and boarding schools run by religious…

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‘Shocking’ abuse in Ireland’s religious schools

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
BBC [London, England]

September 3, 2024

By Chris Page

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There were almost 2,400 allegations of sexual abuse in more than 300 schools run by religious orders in Ireland, according to a report commissioned by the Irish government.

The Education Minister Norma Foley said it was the first time the scale of abuse had been disclosed, and it was “truly shocking”.

The Irish cabinet has agreed to establish a full statutory investigation, following the findings of the “scoping inquiry report”, which was published on Tuesday evening.

At a news conference, Ms Foley said the report found there were 884 alleged abusers in 42 orders which formerly ran schools or still do.

‘Real number of allegations likely to be more’

The primary source of data on allegations of sexual abuse was the religious orders and the schools themselves, the report said.

There were 2395 allegations of sexual abuse recorded in respect of 308 schools, though the report warns that the real…

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Editorial about the scoping report on religious schools: a shocking outline of widespread abuse

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

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The Government has accepted the recommendation to establish a commission of inquiry while a redress scheme for survivors will also be required

The survivors of horrific sexual abuse at schools run by religious orders have made it clear what they want from the Government – a statutory inquiry and a redress scheme.

They left the decision as to exactly what shape the inquiry, and the scheme, should take to the scoping inquiry chaired by Mary O’Toole SC. Its report, published on Tuesday, said it was aware of 2,395 abuse allegation in 308 schools run by religious orders and fears that many more remain unreported. Some 182 survivors spoke in detail to the inquiry about what happened to them between the early 1960s and the early 1990s.They told of their strong belief that this could not have gone unnoticed by staff and other members of the…

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Schools abuse: Almost 2,400 allegations at more than 300 religious-run institutions disclosed to inquiry

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Fiachra Gallagher and Harry McGee

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[Click on the following links to view the Irish Report of the Scoping Inquiry into Historical Sexual Abuse in Day and Boarding Schools Run by Religious Orders, by Mary O’Toole, SC, June 2024, released September 3, 2024:

Title Page, Acknowledgements, Glossary, Table of Contents

Volume 1: Executive Summary – Introduction – What Survivors Have Told Us

Volume 2: The Extent of Allegations of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools – The Context of Sexual Abuse in Irish Schools

Volume 3: Lessons of Past Inquiries into Child Abuse

Volume 4: The Current Child Protection Framework – Implementing Outcomes Sought by Survivors – Recommendations Based on Survivors’ Views

Volume 5: Appendices

  1. Survivor Engagement Guide to Potential Government Responses

2. About the Survivor Engagement Process

3. Survivor Engagement Participant Information Booklet

4. Report on Child Protection for the Scoping Inquiry by Dr. Helen Buckley

5. Report on…

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Statutory inquiry into sexual abuse of children at day and boarding schools agreed at Cabinet

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Pat Leahy

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Work on preparations for the inquiry by officials, including legislation to be brought before the Oireachtas, will begin shortly

The Government has formally agreed to establish a statutory inquiry into the sexual abuse of children at day and boarding schools.

Work on preparations for the inquiry by officials, including legislation to be brought before the Oireachtas, will begin shortly and there is also expected to be extensive consultations with survivors of abuse.

The proposals were brought to the Government on Tuesday morning by Minister for Education Norma Foley following agreement among the three Coalition party leaders on Monday night.

It is understood that the Government intends to set up a Commission of Investigation, in line with the report’s recommendations. Discussions on the terms of reference will take place over the coming weeks, it is expected, but the recommendation from the scoping report is that all types of school should be…

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Bankrupt Dioceses Need to Fail

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Crisis Magazine [Manchester NH]

September 3, 2024

By Matt Kappadakunnel

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Dioceses that are currently in or heading toward financial bankruptcy have already suffered from decades of moral bankruptcy that led to these monetary woes.

Recently, a friend expressed his frustration with the Justice for Survivors Act signed in the California legislature in 2023. This Act ends the civil statute of limitations for minors who have experienced sexual abuse. While my friend vehemently agrees that abusers ought to get their reckoning, he took issue with the preponderance of claims related to clergy who were long deceased. The result of this preponderance is the necessity for several dioceses in California to file for bankruptcy, while more teeter on financial turmoil. In his mind, why should the Archdiocese of Los Angeles be under financial strain due to the actions of priests who passed away decades ago?

My friend posed an interesting topic for me to reflect on. Being a financial professional who has worked in…

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At St. Paul seminary, ‘process groups’ promote human flourishing

SAINT PAUL (MN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

August 31, 2024

By Michelle La Rosa

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When people think about seminary formation, they may think primarily about classes in theology and philosophy – along with, perhaps, some basics in canon law, and practical classes like how to deliver a good homily.

But in the Archdiocese of St. Paul-Minneapolis, there’s another element to seminary formation worth mentioning.

Three years ago, The Saint Paul Seminary introduced what it calls “process groups” as part of its propaedeutic year – the first year of seminary formation, which is dedicated to prayer rather than academics.

During the propaedeutic year, the seminarians do not take classes. They undergo an intense process of discernment, fasting from media and computers.

And at The Saint Paul Seminary, they also participate in process groups, consisting of about eight seminarians each, and which are focused on talking through challenges the men experience in their lives – including relationships and mental health, along with struggles in studies or…

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Full-scale inquiry on the way into school sex abuse by Catholic clergy across Ireland

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

September 3, 2024

By Senan Molony

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A statutory inquiry is to be set up in sexual abuse by Catholic clergy at some of the top schools in the country.

Blackrock College and Belvedere College have been rocked by admitted allegations of sexual abuse that was not tackled by management.

Cabinet decided today to establish the investigation, which is short of a a public inquiry.

A report is going out to survivors today, former teenage pupils who are now in their late 50s and 60s.

The terms of reference are to be drawn up for the inquiry which officials stressed will have strong powers, with representatives of the Spiritan order, which ran Blackrock, and the Jesuits, controlling Belvedere, expected to fully cooperate.

A scoping report that went to Cabinet made harrowing findings, sources said, with many other religious-run schools also the subject of allegations.

The scale of the alleged abuse opens a new front from Diocesan sexual…

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September 2, 2024

Upcoming Maryland Supreme Court Hearing on Constitutionality of Historic Child Victims Act of 2023 (CVA) Focus of Thursday, September 5th News Conference-Litigation Update

BALTIMORE (MD)
GlobeNewswire [Los Angeles CA]

August 31, 2024

Read original article

[Includes link to brief trailer with clips of statements by survivors David Schappelle, David Lorenz, and Eva Dittrich.]

Survivors, Advocates Join Legal Team Before September 10th Arguments

Summary

The consortium of Greater Baltimore law firms comprised of civil rights litigators from Jenner LawGrant & Eisenhofer, and Baird Mandalas Brockstedt & Federico will hold a comprehensive litigation update-news conference on September 5th prior to the upcoming (September 10th) Maryland Supreme Court arguments on the constitutionality of the Child Victims Act of 2023 (CVA). Joined by several survivors-plaintiffs, advocates and the team will review the history of the legislation, and litigation (in state and federal courts), and the devastating impacts on generations of childhood sexual abuse survivors. They will also present the inaugural screening of Survivors Stories: At the Crossroads of Justice,” a video featuring several leaders in the fight…

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Italian priest’s exit for wife, unborn child renews celibacy debate

ALBA (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

September 2, 2024

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A Slovakian priest who’s spent the last twenty years in Italy has announced that he’s leaving the priesthood in order to marry a woman with whom he said he’s “madly” in love, and with whom he’s expecting a child who’s been diagnosed with a serious heart condition.

The decision, which was announced Sunday by Bishop Marco Brunetti of the northern Italian diocese of Alba, who praised the “great transparency and sense of responsibility” of 44-year-old Father Tomas Hlavaty, who will now be formally removed from the priesthood and returned to the lay state.

The case has renewed debate over priestly celibacy, in part because, by all accounts, Hlavaty was a popular pastor whose departure has been publicly lamented by Catholics in the six small towns he served, including the mayor of one of those communities.

In an interview with La Repubblica, Italy’s most widely read daily newspaper, Hlavaty described the circumstances…

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Farewell to a theologian whose mind and heart alike were always trained on Christ

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

September 1, 2024

By John L. Allen Jr.

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Any journalist who’s ever worked a beat cultivates as many contacts as possible, but usually there’s that one source you rely on more than others – the figure whose intelligence, integrity and reputation mean that when the chips are down, it’s the voice you always want front and center.

For the first fifteen years or so of my career covering the Vatican, for me that go-to figure, especially on anything involving Catholic theology, was Jesuit Father Gerald O’Collins, who became not just a valued source but a good friend.

His Aug. 22 death at the age of 93, therefore, left me profoundly sad. More than that, it leaves the entire Catholic Church impoverished, at a time when his sanity, balance, and lack of rancor will be especially missed.

I first met O’Collins in the mid-1990s, when he was already two decades into his 33-year run on the theology faculty of…

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Rev. Frank D. Almade, Baltimore-trained priest known for his social ministering, dies

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

August 31, 2024

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Father Frank D. Almade had just a smidge of the maverick about him.

A thought leader and pastor in the Catholic Church, he was focused less on giving sermons and more on taking up the mantle for the vulnerable, the hungry and for the alleged victims of sexual abuse by members of the Catholic clergy.

Since his ordination in 1978, Father Almade was best known for his social ministering, as a co-founder of the Jubilee Soup Kitchen in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, author of “Just Wages for Church Employees,” a book borne of his Ph.D. thesis, and as a board member at Catholic Charities for more than 35 years.

He had, as Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik put it, “a unique ability to see things as they truly were.”

Before his retirement last summer, Father Almade served in many parishes over the years, overseeing mergers in places like St. John Fisher in…

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Women want Francis to tackle sex abuse in Indonesian Church

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

September 2, 2024

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Many dioceses have failed to follow Jakarta archdiocese in implementing a protocol to protect vulnerable people

Catholic women activists want Pope Francis to address sexual violence within the Church during his four-day visit to Indonesia, where many dioceses have not implemented steps to deal with such crimes.

Pope Francis’ arrival in Indonesia on Sept. 3 should “strengthen the Church’s resolve on protecting women and children,” said Theresia Iswarini, a Catholic activist and the commissioner of the state-run National Commission on Anti-Violence Against Women.

During his pontificate, Francis initiated several policies to prevent sexual violence in the Church. However, many dioceses in Indonesia have failed to implement them, Iswarini noted during a discussion on “Voices of Catholic Women Activists Ahead of Pope Francis’ Arrival” on Aug. 30.

“They [dioceses] must immediately draft and implement protocols to boost the protection of women and children from sexual violence,” Iswarini demanded.

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Catholics face a shortage of priests. But one Indonesian seminary is overwhelmed with applicants

MAUMERE (INDONESIA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

August 31, 2024

By Niniek Karmini

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Arnoldus Yansen thought for certain he was going to become a Catholic priest, just like his older brother, cousin and uncle.

He attended St. Peter Major Seminary, a bastion of priestly vocations located in the middle of a jungle on Flores, a predominantly Catholic island in Muslim-majority Indonesia. Known familiarly as Ritapiret Seminary, St. Peter Major has produced 13 bishops, more than 580 diocesan priests and 23 deacons in nearly 70 years of existence.

But Yansen won’t be among them. He tried to shake off what he thought were last-minute jitters before entering the priesthood. Instead, Yansen took off his clerical robes for good and joined the hundreds of prospective priests who resign or fail to take up Catholic vocations every year in Indonesia.

“I felt like I didn’t fit in anymore and that I would be able to do more if I left,” said Yansen, 26, who is now…

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Court’s Error Puts SBC’s Culture of Cruelty on Display

FORT WORTH (TX)
In Solidarity with Christa Brown

September 2, 2024

By Christa Brown

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… and it’s about more than Paige Patterson

The Texas Supreme Court erroneously released a massive trove of “highly confidential” documents that were filed in a sexual abuse case against Paige Patterson and Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.

The documents—some 10,000 pages that had been filed under seal—were visible on the court’s website for about three days, after which the court took steps to remove them from public view. I have not seen the actual documents, but have reviewed Baptist News Global’s stunning reporting on them.

Included in the documents were the psychiatric records of the alleged sexual assault survivor, a former seminary student who uses the pseudonym of Jane Roe, along with police reports of her alleged assaults, sealed testimony, and confidential communications implicating dozens of individuals with a relationship to the case.

Obviously, this was an egregious mistake on the court’s part. As someone who, decades ago, worked as an attorney…

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September 1, 2024

Canadian bishop faces probe over Rosica assault allegations

TORONTO (CANADA)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

August 31, 2024

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A Canadian bishop is facing a Vatican-ordered probe, on charges that he failed to act when informed about an allegation of sexual assault against once-popular media personality Fr. Thomas Rosica. 

Sources say that in March, a priest who was allegedly assaulted by Rosica filed a complaint charging that when he informed Bishop Ronald Fabbro that Rosica had sexually assaulted him, the bishop was unwilling to listen, and did not apparently address the allegations, or forward them to Rosica’s religious superior.

The complaint was filed through a system devised by Canada’s bishops to receive reports of sexual abuse or cover-up by bishops. The system was launched after Pope Francis promulgated in 2019 Vos estis lux mundi, a set of procedures designed to investigate allegations of episcopal sexual abuse or negligence in bishops’ duties regarding abuse.

The complaint was forwarded to the Archdiocese of Toronto, and according to sources close to the case,…

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Robert Morris’ church loses thousands of members amid child sex abuse scandal

HOUSTON (TX)
MSN [Redmond WA ]

August 31, 2024

By Eric Killelea, Chron

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Gateway Church in North Texas has reportedly lost nearly 20 percent of its weekend services attendance since founding pastor Robert Morris resigned two months ago amid accusations of sexually abusing a child.

The nondenominational megachurch based in the Dallas Fort-Worth suburb of Southlake on Wednesday told CNN’s Nicole Chavez that between 17 percent and 19 percent of its weekend services at nine locations in Texas and two others in Missouri and Wyoming. That means roughly 20,000 of the congregation’s 100,000 attendees stopped going to Sunday services.

Gateway critics shared the story on social media and accused the church of low-balling the estimate of lost attendees, and suggesting it might be closer to 30 percent. Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s Mac Engel this month reported the church has experienced an exodus of roughly half of its congregation in Southlake. Gateway…

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Pope embarks on longest, farthest and most challenging trip to Asia, with China in the background

(INDONESIA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

August 31, 2024

By Nicole Winfield

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VATICAN CITY (AP) — If any evidence were needed to underscore that Pope Francis’ upcoming trip to Asia and Oceania is the longest, farthest and most challenging of his pontificate, it’s that he’s bringing along his secretaries to help him navigate the four-country program while keeping up with work back home.

Francis will clock 32,814 kilometers (20,390 miles) by air during his Sept. 2-13 visit to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore, far surpassing any of his previous 44 foreign trips and notching one of the longest papal trips ever, both in terms of days on the road and distances traveled.

That’s no small feat for a pope who turns 88 in December, uses a wheelchair, lost part of a lung to a respiratory infection as a young man and had to cancel his last foreign trip at the last minute (to Dubai in November to participate in the U.N….

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Senior Jesuit at prestigious Sydney school jailed for historical child sex abuse

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

September 1, 2024

By Clare Sibthorpe

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A former senior Jesuit brother at prestigious Sydney Catholic school St Ignatius’ College Riverview has been jailed for the historical abuse of a student.

Laurence Leonard was found guilty in June of two counts of indecent assault against a 12-year-old pupil in 1974. He was aged 30 at the time.

The 80-year-old was last week sentenced to nine months’ prison with a three-month non-parole period, with Judge Ian Bourke condemning the “extremely serious breach of that trust and a grave abuse of his position of authority”.

According to a summary of facts outlined in NSW District Court documents, Leonard called the boy over to him while he was playing on the basketball courts during lunch or recess at the lower north shore school.

He said he would tuck his shirt in for him but then proceeded to assault the boy twice, causing him to feel “shocked and frozen”.

Once the…

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Jehovah’s Witnesses must pay $48k in court costs for failed bid to be excluded from abuse inquiry

WELLINGTON (NEW ZEALAND)
Radio New Zealand [Wellington, New Zealand]

September 1, 2024

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The Jehovah’s Witnesses must pay $48,000 in court costs to the Crown for a string of failed cases brought against the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care.

The Christian Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses Australasia sought a judicial review in 2023 in a bid to get out of being part of the inquiry.

The legal action was launched after three years of legal wrangling with the inquiry behind the scenes to avoid its scrutiny.

The bid was declined and the faith appealed the decision, but in April the Court of Appeal dismissed its argument.

The church has agreed to pay $32,321 in court costs to the Crown for the high court judicial review and $13,212 for the claim made to the Court of Appeal, according to Crown Law documents released to RNZ under the Official Information Act.

The faith has since applied for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court,…

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‘Must-see’ doc breaks new ground in Canadian residential schools story

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
Vancouver Sun [Vancouver, British Columbia]

August 20, 2024

By Shawn Conner

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Sugarcane weaves together the history of St. Joseph’s Mission residential school in Williams Lake with the story of NoiseCat’s own family.

Sugarcane

When: Aug 23-27, 30, and Sept. 1

Where: VIFF Centre, 1181 Seymour St., Vancouver

Tickets & info: viff.org

A new made-in-B.C. documentary that The New York Times is calling a “must-see film about a terribly difficult subject” isn’t getting as wide a reception at home as it is in the U.S.

“In Canada, it seems like the cultural gatekeepers are tired of the residential school story and history,” said Julian Brave NoiseCat, co-director of the doc, Sugarcane.

“As much as our film can be a proxy for any of these sentiments, we’ve seen more engagement and excitement about our film in the U.S. It’s weird, but it goes back to why the discovery of potential unmarked graves in Canada was covered in the U.S. — it was…

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Rosica, Basilians argue church, not the state, should adjudicate priest’s sex abuse claims

TORONTO (CANADA)
OSV News [Huntington IN]

September 1, 2024

By Gina Christian

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(OSV News) — A high-profile priest at the center of a Canadian sexual abuse lawsuit and his religious order have told the court that the plaintiff — a young priest at the time of the alleged abuse — should have his case first heard by the church, not the state.

A March 1 filing with the Ontario Superior Court of Justice — the documents for which OSV News has obtained — also alleges that Basilian Father Thomas Rosica, a Vatican media expert, founder of a prominent Canadian national Catholic television network and organizer of the 2002 Toronto World Youth Day, used his “positions of priest, teacher and guidance counselor” to “exert total control over … prey upon … and sexually abuse” a young Canadian priest for several months in 2000.

“It’s in the legal hands and I cannot comment,” Father Rosica told OSV News Aug. 30 when asked about the…

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‘Between the Temples’ needs to get its head on straight about clergy misconduct

BUFFALO (NY)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

August 30, 2024

By Michael Woolf

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Grieving clergy deserve grace, but even the grieving need to respect the dangers of spiritual power.

(RNS) — The new movie Between the Temples,” billed as a black comedy, gets the comedy right — there are plenty of laughs along the way — while the “black” part comes with the movie’s examination of the completely destabilizing nature of grief. “Between the Temples” follows the supposed resurrection of Ben, a cantor at a synagogue in upstate New York, whose wife died a year before. After visiting a congregant who has had a stroke, Ben is asked whether he ever feels like his brain is having a heart attack, and he responds, “All the time.”

Under the spell of grief, Ben abandons his duties at the bimah, makes awkward small talk with the women his two moms set him up on dates with, falls down while running drunkenly and gets into fights in…

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Jury trial set for Mobile-area pastor charged with rape, sodomy and sexual abuse

MOBILE (AL)
WALA-TV, Fox 10 [Mobile AL]

August 31, 2024

By Ashlyn Mitchell

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Jail records show Vail bonded out of Metro Jail in July. His jury trial is set for October 28.

MOBILE, Ala. (WALA) – Court records show a jury trial has been set for Bradrick Vail, a Mobile-area pastor charged with rape, sodomy and sexual abuse.

In June, Vail pleaded not guilty to those charges.

Court documents show Vail was in court on Tuesday for a status hearing. Vail’s request to reset his jury trial to October 28 was granted.

In the meantime, jail records show Vail was released from Metro Jail on July 9 on a $445,000 bond. In May, police say an extensive sexual assault investigation showed Vail’s alleged victims were in Mobile and Prichard.

Investigators say several victims came forward and that Vail allegedly contacted some of them through a church in Mobile.

On Saturday, FOX10 News rode out to Vail’s…

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August 31, 2024

Youth pastor assaulted teens, charged with 30 counts of sexual battery, NC cops say

HIGH POINT (NC)
Charlotte Observer [Charlotte NC]

August 30, 2024

By Natalie Demaree

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A youth pastor in North Carolina was charged with 30 counts of sexual battery after a “months-long” investigation involving teenagers, police said.

Detectives arrested James R. Murphey, a former church employee, at a home in High Point around 7:30 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 29, according to a news release from the city’s police department.

Throughout the investigation, which began in January, the High Point Police Department’s Special Victims Unit identified several individuals between the ages of 16 and 19 who were allegedly assaulted in 2023, police said.

Murphey, 44, who goes by his middle name Robert, was working at Oak View Baptist Church in High Point during this time, Chris Martin, the church’s safety director, told McClatchy News.

Murphey was a youth pastor at the church for almost 24 years, Martin said.

“He was in charge of all youth activities,” he said. “Bible Study on Wednesday night, youth…

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North Carolina Supreme Court could seal fate of hundreds of child sex abuse lawsuits

(NC)
Charlotte Observer [Charlotte NC]

August 30, 2024

By Virginia Bridges

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Nearly five years after the General Assembly passed landmark legislation allowing lawsuits for decades-old child sex abuse claims, North Carolina’s Supreme Court is set to consider challenges that have left hundreds of plaintiffs in legal limbo.

Dusty McKinney will be watching the scheduled Sept. 18 Supreme Court hearings, which will determine whether he and hundreds of others can sue people they accuse of abusing them and their employers.

McKinney and two other East Gaston High wrestlers filed a lawsuit against the Gaston County Board of Education. The board had received numerous complaints about wrestling coach Garry Scott Goins’ physical and sexual abuse, but dismissed them after minimal investigation, leaving other children vulnerable to his unsupervised access to them in the 1990s and 2000s, the lawsuit says.

McKinney reporting the abuse resulted in Goins being convicted in criminal court in 2014 of 17 related charges and sentenced to 34 years…

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Alleged victims of former volunteer at Juneau’s Echo Ranch Bible Camp are suing

JUNEAU (AK)
Chilkat Valley News [Haines, AK]

August 29, 2024

By Yvonne Krumrey - KTOO

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Juneau’s Echo Ranch Bible Camp is among the places where a California man allegedly abused boys over the span of decades. Now, the people who say they were victims of Bradley Earl Reger are trying to hold the institutions where they say the abuse took place accountable. 

Reger was affiliated with Juneau’s Echo Ranch Bible camp for about 30 years. In the 1970s, the California resident volunteered as a nurse there. He also brought minors on trips to the camp from his home in California as recently as the early 2000s. Multiple men have accused Reger of abuse at the camp, under the guise of medical care.

Reger was already criminally indicted on federal sexual abuse charges last year. But a recent lawsuit, which names Echo Ranch’s owner, Avant Ministries, targets the organizations where he volunteered.

California resident Zack Winfrey, the lead plaintiff in the recent suit, attended Reger’s home church…

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Former youth pastor sentenced on child pornography charge

BUFFALO (NY)
US Attorney's Office [Western District of NY]

August 29, 2024

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U.S. Attorney Trini E. Ross announced today that Nathan L. Rogers, 40, of East Aurora, NY, who was convicted of attempted receipt of child pornography, was sentenced to serve 84 months in prison by Senior U.S. District Judge William M. Skretny.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul E. Bonanno, who handled the case, stated that in July 2019, at Darien Lake Park in Genesee County, NY, Rogers, a church youth pastor, set up iPhones in his camper to surreptitiously record, for the purposes of his own sexual gratification, nude images of a minor victim. Shortly after setting up the phones, Rogers invited the minor victim to change out of her bathing suit in his camper. She agreed and, as she changed, the iPhones recorded nude images. After changing, the minor victim noticed the phones recording her, she attempted to delete the videos, and then reported the incident to authorities. Responding law enforcement…

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New Brunswick pastor charged with sexually assaulting child, prosecutor says

NEW BRUNSWICK (NJ)
MyCentralJersey.com

August 30, 2024

By Suzanne Russell

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A 61-year-old pastor at a Throop Avenue church has been charged with sexually assaulting a child.

Roby D. Cruz-Hernandez, of the Somerset section of Franklin, a pastor at Iglesia Pentecostal El Mesias, was arrested at his home and charged with sexual assault, a second-degree crime, and endangering the welfare of a child, a third-degree crime, Middlesex County Prosecutor Yolanda Ciccone and New Brunswick Police Chief Vincent Sabo announced.

On Aug. 28 Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office Detective Daniela Castro, who works in the Special Victims Unit, and New Brunswick Detective William Coleman began investigating allegations a juvenile had been sexually assaulted by Cruz-Hernandez, according to the prosecutor’s office.

The pastor was arrested following the investigation.

Anyone with information about the case is asked to contact Detective Castro at 732-745-3652 or Detective Coleman at 732-745-5222.

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‘Wall of Silence,’ a Podcast About Abuse in ACNA, Was Silenced. Now, It’s Back.

PEORIA (IL)
Word and Way [Jefferson City, MO]

August 30, 2024

By Kathryn Post

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In April, the Rev. Chris Marchand, an Anglican priest in Peoria, Illinois, launched “Wall of Silence,” a podcast about church abuse and cover-up in the Anglican Church in North America.

Two months later — at his bishop’s request — the podcast was abruptly suspended. “Yes, the Wall of Silence is being silenced,” Marchand wrote on Twitter.

The news came at a busy time for the denomination, which in June elected its next archbishop and voted on changes to its abuse protocols. For years, the young denomination has faced controversy for perceived shortcomings in its protocols on safeguarding for congregations and clergy and lay leader misconduct.

On Wednesday (Aug. 28), Marchand’s podcast resumed with a 13-minute episode explaining the project’s sudden return, without being able to fully explain where the calls to stop the podcast were coming from.

Though his bishop, Alberto Morales of the Diocese of Quincy, hasn’t granted him permission to resume…

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Priest In Puchong Arrested For Alleged Sexual Assault On Minor

PUCHONG (MALAYSIA)
The Rakyat Post [Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia]

August 14, 2024

By Natalie Haschinta

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Local authorities have apprehended a 27-year-old priest in connection with the alleged sexual assault of a 13-year-old boy.

According to Assistant Commissioner Wan Azlan Wan Mamat, Chief of the Subang Jaya District Police, the arrest was made following a report filed by the victim on 12 August at approximately 10:09 PM.

The suspect was taken into custody the following day at a restaurant in Puchong.

“The complainant, a 13-year-old boy, alleged that he experienced physical and sexual harassment by the suspect in a room within a church located in Bandar Bukit Puchong,” stated AC Wan Azlan in an official release.

The case is currently being investigated under Section 14(a) of the Sexual Offences Against Children Act 2017.

The suspect has been remanded for four days, until 17 August, to assist with further investigations.

AC Wan Azlan has urged members of the public with any relevant information to contact the Subang…

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President of MorningStar Resigns, Then Admits Sexual Misconduct

FORT MILL (SC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

August 29, 2024

By Rebecca Hopkins

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Chris Reed, CEO and president of the prophetic ministry MorningStar, resigned Tuesday, telling The Roys Report (TRR) it was because he’s “standing on the side of victims,” who are suing the ministry. But Wednesday, after TRR confronted him with allegations he pursued a woman sexually in 2021, Reed admitted sending the woman “terrible” sexual texts and kissing her.

Reed still maintains he resigned because of the lawsuit filed August 7 against MorningStar, alleging that the ministry mishandled child sex abuse by a former volunteer leader, Erickson Lee. The alleged abuse occurred before Reed became MorningStar CEO. And Reed said he doesn’t want to be “the face of” a ministry engaged in a legal battle.

However, in the wake of the resignation, TRR learned of the allegations of sexual misconduct in 2021 and was able to contact the woman involved. At the time of the misconduct, Reed, who’s married and has six children, was the…

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August 30, 2024

Sister Theresa Kane, 87, Dies; Challenged Pope on Ordaining Women

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times [New York NY]

August 28, 2024

By Clay Risen

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A progressive nun, she used a welcome address before Pope John Paul II in 1979 to call for equality in the ranks of the Roman Catholic Church.

Sister Theresa Kane, a Roman Catholic nun who called on her fellow sisters to push for ordination, and who led by example when, while introducing Pope John Paul II during his 1979 visit to the United States, she publicly challenged him to let women serve as priests, died on Aug. 22 in Watchung, N.J. She was 87.

A representative of her order, the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas, confirmed her death, at a hospice facility, adding that she had been in failing health.

As the president of both the Sisters of Mercy of the Americas and the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, an umbrella group representing American nuns, Sister Theresa was chosen to give a welcome address for Pope John Paul II…

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Sexual abuse of children in Enna, demonstration against the diocese and Giuseppe Rugolo, priest convicted of raping minors

(ITALY)
Decripto.org [Naples, Italy]

August 23, 2024

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A group of Enna citizens, many of them practising Catholics, organised a silent protest in response to the Piazza Armerina diocese’s handling of the case of priest Giuseppe Rugolo, convicted of aggravated sexual assault on minors. The demonstration took place inside two churches in Enna, San Giuseppe and the sanctuary of Valverde, during celebrations officiated by two prelates involved in the affair, and outside the Piazza Armerina cathedral.

Faithful leave the church during the service

Giuseppe Rugolo, a priest of the diocese of Piazza Armerina, was sentenced to four and a half years in prison for aggravated sexual violence against minors. According to the grounds for the sentence, the diocese allegedly covered up the abuse, causing a wave of indignation among the faithful. The protesters, many of whom were present to attend mass, chose a particularly symbolic way of protest. When the priests arrived at the churches of St Joseph and…

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Questions on abuse claims remain after bankruptcy judge rules against survivor

SANTA FE (NM)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

August 29, 2024

By Elizabeth Hardin Burrola

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When a New Mexico bankruptcy judge ruled against a clergy sex abuse claimant earlier this summer in her legal dispute with the Archdiocese of Santa Fe, he may have issued more than a routine legal opinion and order.

Judge David Thuma’s decision may now serve as a cautionary warning to attorneys in other church bankruptcies — attorneys for both church entities and abuse claimants — about the challenges of enforcing provisions in reorganization plans and settlement agreements, especially the legal pitfalls posed by ambiguous language in those documents.

“The Court has reviewed the covenants, the confirmed plan, and related documents and has heard oral argument on the dispute,” Thuma explained in his opinion on June 21, which was accompanied by a court order denying a motion by Mela LaJeunesse, an abuse claimant.

LaJeunesse’s motion, filed by attorney Levi Monagle, was centered on a 142-word non-monetary covenant,…

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Abuse and Internal Politics in the Archdiocese of St. Louis

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KLJY - NewsTalk STL [St. Louis MO]

August 27, 2024

By Jamie Allman

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[In this 16-minute video of a broadcast on a St. Louis talk radio station, Jamie Allman describes his experience at the headquarters of the Archdiocese of St. Louis, where he worked as communications director during a brief 2004-2005 sabbatical from his career in radio.

Allman describes the internal politics among allies of Cardinal Rigali when now-Cardinal Burke succeeded Rigali as archbishop, and he goes public about two documents relating to Fr. Robert F. Johnston, who was recently named in a lawsuit. When Allman was working at the archdiocese, Johnston had admitted sodomizing a young boy, and Allman discovered that an internal document to which he had access showed that Johnston had worked at many more parishes than the archdiocese had publicly disclosed.

Allman then saw another document in which then-Msgr. Richard F. Stika, now the disgraced former Bishop of Knoxville, had directed that Johnston’s salary be increased from $1,000…

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Cleric behind Toronto WYD accused of abusing young priest

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

August 30, 2024

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Father Thomas Rosica faces a lawsuit alleging sexual assault of a young priest before World Youth Day 2002

A lawsuit launched in March has accused Father Thomas Rosica, the national director of World Youth Day 2002 in Toronto, of sexually assaulting a young priest in the lead-up to the event.

Father Rosica, who served as a communications liaison at the 2019 summit on sexual abuse convened by Pope Francis, maintains the allegations should be handled by a church — not secular — court.

The suit, according to the online news agency The Pillar, which broke the news on Aug. 28, alleges Father Rosica developed a mentoring relationship with the plaintiff, a newly ordained Canadian priest, in the 1990s. The priest was in graduate studies at the time and was invited to assist Father Rosica in preparing for World Youth Day, which drew an estimated 800,000 pilgrims to Toronto in the summer…

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August 29, 2024

Catholic Church in Hong Kong introduces major initiatives to combat child abuse

(HONG KONG)
Herald Malaysia [Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia]

August 29, 2024

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The Diocese of Hong Kong is taking a significant step towards enhancing child protection mechanisms with the establishment of the Diocesan Safeguarding Minors and Vulnerable Persons Office – St. Goretti’s Centre, set to be operational in 2025.

HONG KONG: This initiative aligns with global Church efforts to fortify safeguards for children and vulnerable individuals, according to Sunday Examiner, the official news service of the Bishop of Hong Kong.

On August 25, the Diocesan Catechetical Centre hosted a training seminar at St. Jude’s parish in North Point, specifically designed for Sunday school teachers and catechists.

The training focused on creating a secure and supportive environment for children and vulnerable members of the community.

Fr. Dominic Lui Chi-man said the initiative adheres to both Hong Kong law and Church regulations to bolster current systems. “We invite you to join us as guardians of the children and the vulnerable,” he added.

The choice of St. Maria…

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