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.

May 9, 2019

Church of England child sex abuse allegations ‘marked by secrecy’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

May 9, 2019

Prince Charles was photographed with the then Bishop of Gloucester Peter Ball in 1993
The Church of England’s response to child sex abuse allegations was “marked by secrecy”, a report has found.

Former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord George Carey has been criticised for supporting former Bishop Peter Ball.

The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) said Ball “was able to sexually abuse vulnerable teenagers and young men for decades”.

Its report said the support given by the Prince of Wales to the shamed clergyman was “misguided”.

It said his actions “could have been interpreted as expressions of support” for Ball and “had the potential to influence the actions of the church”.

The IICSA described the “appalling sexual abuse against children” in the Diocese of Chichester, with 18 members of the clergy convicted of offences during a 50-year period.

Bishop Peter Hancock, the Church of England’s safeguarding lead, said: “We are immensely grateful to survivors for their courage in coming forward. Their testimonies have made shocking and uncomfortable listening.

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

Pope Decrees First Global Rules for Reporting Abuse

ROME (ITALY)
New York Times

May 9, 2019

By Jason Horowitz

Pope Francis on Thursday introduced the Roman Catholic Church’s first worldwide law requiring fficials to report and investigate clerical sex abuse and its cover-up, issues that have haunted his papacy and devastated the church he has sought to remake.

The new norms, delivered in a Motu Proprio, or law decreed by the pope himself, come into force on June 1 and are experimental, in that they will be re-evaluated after a three-year trial period.

The law, titled “Vos estis lux mundi,” or “You are the light of the world,” obligates bishops or other church officials to report any credible accusation of abuse to their superiors.

Vatican officials and supporters of Francis said that in giving all local churches rules on how to report misbehavior, he was in effect writing accountability for bishops into church law. Until now, reporting and investigation practices have differed widely from country to country, or even diocese to diocese.

The law relates to the sexual abuse of minors under the age of 18, of vulnerable adults who are physically or mentally disabled and of people who are taken advantage of because they find themselves in positions in which they cannot exercise their full autonomy. It also extends to the creation, possession or use of child pornography.

If those crimes are covered up by bishops or other church officials, or if those officials “intended to interfere with or avoid civil investigations or canonical investigations,” Francis writes, then they will also be subject to investigation.

The church’s failure to hold bishops and senior clerics accountable for covering up sexual abuse has fueled enormous frustration and backlash inside and outside the church.

Francis acknowledged that damage in the new law.

To ensure that clerical abuses “in all their forms, never happen again, a continuous and profound conversion of hearts is needed, attested by concrete and effective actions that involve everyone in the Church,” Francis wrote. “Therefore, it is good that procedures be universally adopted to prevent and combat these crimes that betray the trust of the faithful,” he added.

Victims of abuse and their advocates are likely to be underwhelmed by the new norms, which do not address the church trials or penalties for abuse and its cover-up, and instead focus on reporting procedures. For the frustrated faithful and others infuriated by church inaction in addressing abuse, the new law was a modest and long-overdue application of common sense.

But on Thursday, the church’s top investigator of sex crimes, Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta, said at a Vatican news conference that the new law represented a significant step forward. Supporters of Francis said that the law faced much opposition within the Vatican, where many either remain unconvinced that abuse is a widespread problem or believe that it has already been solved.

Archbishop Scicluna said that the new universal law enforced a degree of accountability by obligating the reporting of abuse, including the misconduct of church leaders, and that it provided paths of reporting to make sure the complaints got through to the pope or to the relevant church authorities.

“No one in leadership is above the law, ”Archbishop Scicluna said, adding, “There is no immunity.”

Archbishop Scicluna said that decades of experience had shown a “misplaced interest in protecting the institution,” while the new law established “disclosure as the main policy of the church.”

The law does not require reporting to law enforcement authorities — as many critics, especially in the United States, have demanded — though it allows national bishops’ conferences to enact such policies. Archbishop Scicluna said that “it would be a good thing” for people to go to the police.

Church officials have argued that a universal requirement to do so was unthinkable, because in some parts of the world, reporting child sexual abuse — particularly same-sex abuse — would result in priests being killed.

Archbishop Scicluna said that the universal law had to factor in the vast array of cultures represented in more than 200 countries.

“It can’t be too strict,” he said. “Because otherwise it will be inoperative.”

Soon after he was elected in 2013, Francis suggested that he would remedy the erosion of trust caused by the abuse scandals, but change has been slow. Instead, Francis has occasionally stumbled, saying at times that he believed bishops over victims, pulling the plug on a new church body intended to hold bishops accountable and failing to take decisive action.

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

May 8, 2019

I don’t care if you use my name:’ Survivors of abuse find strength in local group

HARRISONBURG (VA)
Harrisonburg Citizen

May 9, 2010

A local chapter of Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) meets in Harrisonburg, open to anyone who is a survivor of abuse, along with spouses, friends and family members.
Story by Jeremiah Knupp & photos by Holly Marcus, senior contributors

The conversation begins on the condition of anonymity, the topic a deeply personal and painful one for this man – his abuse as a teenager at the hands of a Catholic priest.

He’s come to Harrisonburg to meet with a group of fellow survivors of sexual abuse. The group is part of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests or “SNAP,” a national organization with a mission to “Protect the vulnerable. Heal the wounded. Expose the truth.”

“I couldn’t wait to get here,” the man says of the Harrisonburg SNAP group. “It’s been a lifeline. Literally, a lifeline.”

Founded in 1989 to work with those abused by members of the Catholic Church, SNAP became well known after the Oscar-winning 2015 film Spotlight. The film is about The Boston Globe‘s 2003 Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation into abuse within the city’s Catholic churches, which journalists worked with members of SNAP to report.

Over the last two decades, the organization has opened up to survivors from outside the Catholic faith, including other religious groups and people who suffered abuse in organizations like the Boy Scouts. It now has over 25,000 members worldwide.

“In some ways, from the very beginning, it was always a philosophy of we didn’t check I.D.s at the door. We welcomed all survivors,” said Tim Lennon, president of SNAP’s board of directors. “In the recent period I have talked to people from the gymnast community, Buddhists, victims of Hollywood producers, all in the effort to help them establish their own kind of networks. So it’s pretty broad and we’re pretty welcoming.”

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

A group is fighting for the list of all the names of priests who sexually abused children

RENO (NV)
News 4 & Fox 11

May 7, 2019

By Tony Phan

Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests is a non-profit organization that supports the survivors of clergy sexual abuse.

In an effort to push Bishop Calvo to release the names of seven “credibly accused” priests who came through Reno, the group held a rally in front of the Diocese of Reno building Tuesday.

Patrick Wilkes, a member of SNAP says,

If we don’t speak up this can go on unchecked and many times within the church or other organizations in the past people have been taught not to speak up, not to say anything but to make excuses. We’re saying no, if you see something say something.
Diocese of Reno released twelve names last month but SNAP wants them to provide the public with the seven new names.

According to SNAP here are the list of accused clerics who spent time in Reno:

Theodore W Feeley
Robert Buchanan
Gary M Luiz
Stanley T. Wisniewski
Robert F. Corrigal
John P. Leary
Bertrand Horvath

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

How to Write about Sex Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Commonweal

May 8, 2019

By Paul Elie & Paul Baumann

It’s good to have a response from Paul Baumann to my article in the New Yorker (titled “Acts of Penance” in the April 15 print issue, and “What Do the Church’s Victims Deserve?” online).

Paul is one of the hundred or so people I spoke with while reporting the article. Having served as editor of Commonweal across several recent decades, he is capable of engaging with the conviction about history that I brought to it: namely, that for American Catholics of our era, priestly sexual abuse (and the Church’s efforts to address it) is something other than a crisis—it is an everyday reality that has shaped the life of the church for a third of a century, affecting Catholics as a people and individually, touching on matters of truth that are the basis of the church’s existence.

There’s a personal dimension, too. When Paul was the editor of Commonweal, I told him that I had been violated by a Jesuit priest while I was a student at Fordham. He was the first person I told who was in a public Catholic role. “A priest you probably know,” I told him. At the time, Paul lived during the week in one of the group of apartments on West 98th Street known as the West Side Jesuit Community. That is, he lived in the apartment building where I had been violated, under the auspices of a community whose members included Edward Zogby, SJ, the priest who violated me. That’s one reason I told him. As I recall, Paul’s response wasn’t to ask what had happened or who the priest in question was. He simply said, “Well, if you’re ever interested in writing about it, let me know.”

Paul could have brought a great deal of shared history and common travail to his response. Instead, he took the position, well established at Commonweal, of aggrieved media scrutineer—finding disagreements where there are none, passing over careful distinctions and efforts of balance, and casting aspersions on the New Yorker and its supposedly “jeering readers.”

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

Opinión: Confianza rota

[Opinion: Broken trust]

CHILE
El Mostrador

May 8, 2019

By Edison Gallardo

Fue necesario recordarle al fiscal Abbott que, al momento del abuso, nuestra edad no superaba los 10 años. Agradezco a James Hamilton, Juan Carlos Cruz, José Murillo, Helmut Kramer, Silvana Bórquez y Jaime Concha, porque, a pesar de lo paradójico, lograron ejercer la presión suficiente para que la ya alicaída Fiscalía echara pie atrás en mantener este convenio. ¿Por qué digo paradójico? Porque es sabido que, para nosotros y por el tiempo transcurrido, la justicia nunca llegará, pero aún así se mantienen estoicos para que los niños, niñas y adolescentes de nuestro país ya no estén desamparados.

Hace muy pocos días nos enteramos de un acuerdo de cooperación que el Fiscal Nacional firmó con la Conferencia Episcopal, que, si bien ya fue dejado sin efecto, igual instaló un manto de dudas concerniente al real interés de la Iglesia católica por el esclarecimiento de la verdad, una que ha tenido que ser arrancada por la fuerza jurídica, la misma que se transó al mejor postor con ellos.

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

Ezzati permanece 7 horas en diligencias judiciales por presunto encubrimiento de abusos sexuales

[Ezzati spends 7 hours in judicial proceedings for alleged cover-up of sexual abuse]

CHILE
BioBioChile

May 8, 2019

By Ariela Muñoz and Nicole Martínez

El cardenal Ricardo Ezzati estuvo durante siete horas en la Brigada de Derechos Humanos de la Policía de Investigaciones, en medio de la indagatoria en su contra por eventual encubrimiento de abusos sexuales. Paralelamente, un denunciante de abuso sexual interpuso un recurso de protección contra el Ministerio Público y el fiscal nacional Jorge Abbott por el anulado convenio de colaboración con la Conferencia Episcopal.

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

La historia de cómo se gestó el polémico y fallido acuerdo entre la fiscalía y la Conferencia Episcopal

[History of controversial and failed agreement between prosecution and bishops’ conference]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Emol

By Tomás Molina J.

En la tarde de ayer el fiscal nacional, Jorge Abbott, decidió bajar el convenio firmado hace exactamente una semana, que tuvo su génesis en agosto del año pasado.

El viernes 3 de agosto del año pasado, en Punta de Tralca, se llevó a cabo una reservada asamblea plenaria de la Conferencia Episcopal. Al igual que otras, esta reunión de los obispos chilenos se extendió por cinco días, pero tenía un rótulo especial: se trataba de un encuentro “extraordinario”.

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

La Audiencia de Barcelona rechaza el ingreso en prisión del exprofesor de Maristas condenado por abusos

[Barcelona court does not imprison former Marists teacher condemned for abuse]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

May 7, 2019

By Jesús García

Joaquín Benítez fue condenado a 21 años y nueve meses de cárcel por abusar de cuatro alumnos

La Audiencia de Barcelona ha rechazado el ingreso en prisión de Joaquín Benítez, el exprofesor de los Maristas condenado a 21 años y nueve meses de cárcel por abusar sexualmente de cuatro alumnos. Los magistrados consideran que Benítez debe continuar en libertad provisional hasta que la sentencia sea firme. Señalan que sobre el exprofesor recaen ya fuertes medidas de control -retirada del pasaporte, comparecencias semanales, prohibición de hacer actividades con menores- que ha cumplido sin incidencias.

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

La Fiscalía pide que el pederasta de los maristas entre en prisión por riesgo reincidencia

[Prosecutor requests that Marists pedophile enter prison for risk of recidivism]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

May 7, 2019

Joaquín Benítez fue condenado a 21 años y nueve meses de cárcel por abusar de cuatro alumnos

La Fiscalía ha solicitado este lunes a la Audiencia de Barcelona que decrete ya el ingreso en prisión de Joaquín Benítez, el exprofesor de los maristas de Sants condenado a 21 años y nueve meses de cárcel por abusar sexualmente de cuatro alumnos, al considerar que existe un alto riesgo de reincidencia. La sección 21 de la Audiencia había convocado una vista para decidir si enviaba a prisión al pederasta confeso, cuya sentencia aún no es firme, pero, tras reunirse alrededor de media hora, el exdocente ha continuado en libertad provisional.

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

May 7, 2019

Organization calls on Fresno’s bishop to acknowledge abuse allegations in local Catholic churches

FRESNO (CA)
KFSN TV

May 7, 2019

By Sontaya Rose

With a blanket of the faces of survivors as the backdrop, volunteers with the non-profit Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, asked for acknowledgment and transparency from Bishop Joseph Brennan.

“Instead of protecting and shielding accused serial molesters, he should be thinking about protecting kids,” said Joey Piscitelli.

Piscitelli and two other survivors held signs and pictures of themselves when they were younger. They applauded other victims who have come forward also to reveal a dark secret they carried for years.

Esther Hatfield Miller says she has personally taken calls from several new alleged victims of Monsignor Craig Harrison. Harrison is now on leave from the Bakersfield church he oversaw.

“One is from Bakersfield, one is from Merced, and the other one from Firebaugh and the other surrounding areas,” she said.

Miller says the stories are similar in nature and the number of accusers is growing.

“What they are saying is similar abuse, strategies, tactics and processes and he was Father Craig then,” she said.

The survivors are also asking Bishop Brennan to release the names of those clerics who have served in the Fresno diocese and have been accused of abuse.

“The Catholic Bishops say they are being transparent now more than ever,” said. “Well then we’re calling you out on it. Be transparent.”

Bishop Brennan issued a statement Tuesday, saying in part the diocese is still in phase one of their investigation process and continuing to follow their protocol with the eventual phase to include releasing the names of those accused and categorizing them.

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

Former Massachusetts priest John Sweeney sexually abused teens

BOSTON (MA)
Mass Live

May 7, 2019

Nadine Tifft’s faith has been tested.

The 37-year-old publicly accused a priest on Tuesday of sexually molesting her as a teenager growing up in New England.

“I’m still Catholic,” she said, but adding, “It makes it hard to go to church.”

Two decades ago, Tifft and several friends attended leadership retreats organized through her church for young members. The retreats were held around New England, designed to connect Catholics throughout New England with leaders in the church.

During such events, Tifft alleges she was sexually abused by a former clergyman in Massachusetts, the Rev. John Sweeney, of the “Franciscans of Primitive Observance,” a religious community under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston.

Sweeney would encourage the teens to confess their sins and, after confessionals, told several they were possessed and would perform exorcisms on them, Tifft said.

During a church retreat in 2000, Tifft said Sweeney sexually molested her. In years since, Tiffts said other friends said they were sexually abused by Sweeney as well.

“We were teenagers who trusted that priest,” she said.

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

Former St. Barnabas Church Clergyman Named In Sex Abuse Lawsuit

BERKELEY (NJ)
Patch

May 7, 2019

By Josh Bakan

A clergyman who served at St. Barnabas in Bayville from 1974-75 was named in a lawsuit accusing more than 300 church leaders of sexual misconduct.

John R. Butler was accused of inappropriate conduct with a minor in a Long Island parish in the late ’50s and early ’60s, the Asbury Park Press reported in 2002.

Leaders of the Catholic Church in New Jersey revealed the names of priests “credibly accused” of sexual abuse on Feb. 13. The Church did not include Butler in their announcements.

The law firms of Jeff Anderson & Associates released the report with more than 300 people accused of sexual misconduct in New Jersey. The report contains the names of more than 100 additional clergymen that New Jersey dioceses did not release in February.

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

AG’s Office: Charges related to Catholic Church investigation could be announced soon

LANSING (MI)
Fox 47 News

May 7, 2019

By Kyle Simon

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel could announce charges related to her office’s investigation into the Catholic Church soon.

Nessel’s spokeswoman, Kelly Rossman-McKinney, tells the Detroit News several assistant attorneys general are assigned to the investigation and have been working long hours on the case.

Rossman-McKinney says the department will be in a position to announce charges related to the investigation “soon.”

The comments come after Nessel shared a photo on social media showing volunteers looking over the thousands of documents. The photo shows boxes piled up near a table where the volunteers are working.

While speaking about the volunteers on Twitter, Nessel says “they get no extra compensation and remain responsible for their regular caseload during the week, but these lawyers are so dedicated to protecting the public that they sacrifice spending time with their families in order to protect yours.”

Many of the documents being reviewed were seized during raids on Michigan’s seven Catholic dioceses last fall.

The simultaneous raids came just a few months after former Attorney General Bill Schuette opened an investigation into sexual abuse complaints within the Catholic church and the church’s handling of the complaints.

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

Lawyer Mitchell Garabedian names 7 Boston Archdiocesan priests accused of sexual abuse who have never been publicly named before

BOSTON (MA)
Mass Live

May 7, 2019

By Noah R. Bombard

An attorney representing sexual abuse victims in the Boston area has released the names of seven priests from the Boston Archdiocesan who have been accused of sexually abusing minors.

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who has famously represented sexual abuse victims in the Boston area during the Catholic priest sexual abuse scandal, including the cases against Paul Shanley, John Geoghan and the Archdiocese of Boston plans to officially announce the names at a press conference at the Hilton Hotel in Boston Tuesday at 11:30 a.m.

Nadine Tifft, a client of Garabedian’s and a sexual abuse victim and survivor, will speak at the event.

The priests Garabedian says he’s adding to his website of priests accused of sexual abuse include the Rev. Gerard D. Barry, the Rev. Walter Casey, the Rev. Richard Donahue, the Rev. Charles McGahey, the Rev. Arnold E. Kelley, the Rev. Edward J. Mc Laughlin and Monsignor Charles J. Ring.

The priests are not named on the Boston Archdiocese website, Garabedian said. All are deceased.

Tifft will speak publicly for the first time about her sexual abuse as a child in Vermont in approximately 2000 by Fr. John Sweeney, of the “Franciscans of Primitive Observance,” a religious community under the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston and Cardinal Sean O’Malley.

The Archdiocese of Boston did not immediately return a call for comment.

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

Victims challenge new Fresno bishop

FRESNO (CA)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

They want him to denounce a lawyer & a priest

SNAP: “He should also tell flock how to act when accusations arise”

Groups urges him to pass out their flier in all parishes

Survivors also disclose 9 publicly accused but ‘under the radar’ clerics

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, two clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will disclose that 9 publicly accused priests spent time in Fresno, but have mostly escaped scrutiny here.

They will also push Fresno’s bishop to
–post his own list of those accused, including nuns, deacons, priests, brothers, bishops, seminarians, and lay and volunteer workers, and
–publicly denounce a local priest and local lawyer who made insensitive remarks concerning a pending abuse case.

WHEN
Tuesday, May 7 at 12:30 PM

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

Additions to the Diocese of Fresno’s List of Accused Clergy

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

May 7, 2019

The below list of accused priests was compiled by SNAP Northern California leader Joey Piscitelli. These are men who worked and spent time in the Diocese of Fresno but are not listed on the diocesan list of accused priests.

Name Source Status

Fr.Willaim Allison BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. Gaspar Bautista Fresno Bee 10/29/18, OCD accused

Fr. Brian Bjorklund BA, OCD accuse

Fr. John Bradley BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. Tod Brown BA, OCD accused

Fr. Stuart Campbell BA , J AA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. Hermy Ceniza BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. James Collins BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. Basil Congro BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr Donlad Farmer BA, OCD arrested

Fr Don Flickinger BA, OCD sued,acc

Fr. Miguel Flores BA, OCD case reopened

Fr. Benjamin Gabriel BA, OCD accused, sued

Fr. Robert Gamel BA, OCD convicted

Fr. Louis Garcia BA, OCD accused

Fr. Craig Harrison BA, OCD accused

Fr. Anthony Herdegan BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. John Lastiri Fresno Bee 10/29/18, OCD accused

Fr. Ricardo Magdeleno Fresno Bee 10/29/18, OCD accused

Fr.Vincent O’ Connell BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr. Joseph Pacheco BA, OCD sued, acc

Fr Thomas Purcell BA, OCD convicted

Fr. Eric Swearingen BA, OCD accused, sued

TOTAL COUNT TO DATE: 23

BA = Bishopaccountability

JAA- Jeff Anderson Associates

OCD = Official Catholic Directory

List compiled by Joey Piscitelli 5-19

Caljoey1@aol.com

925-262-3699

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

SNAP Letter to Archbishop Carlson

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

May 7, 2019

Dear Archbishop Carlson:

As you know, next month you’ll reach the mandatory retirement age for bishops. Unless you do something remarkable in the coming weeks, your legacy and obituary will likely cause you, your loved ones and your flock considerable shame, because it will prominently feature the stunningly embarrassing video deposition in which, according to NBC News, you

–claimed you “didn’t know in the 1980s whether it was illegal for priests to have sex with children,” and
–“responded 193 times that (you) did not recall abuse-related conversations from the 1980s to mid-1990s.”

But this dismal performance need not define your clerical career. You can change this quickly and easily. You can act heroically and voluntarily disclose the names, whereabouts, photos and work histories of the 115 church staff who – by your attorneys’ own admission – are accused of sexually assaulting kids.

You’ve kept their identities secret for more than five years. But you can reverse course.

With such a move, you would become a hero to thousands of abuse victims and their families, and to millions of hurting, betrayed Catholics who long to see a church official truly ‘come clean,’ protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded by revealing the identities of those who have or could hurt children.

With this single, simple step, you would likely go down in history as the prelate who, in one fell voluntary swoop, did more to safeguard the vulnerable than any.

On the other hand, you could play it safe, avoid ‘rocking the boat,’ keep these names secret, and do nothing while more children are likely abused and more Catholics are disgruntled or alienated and while our group continues to ‘out’ more and more of them.

In September, for instance, we “outed” nine publicly accused predator priests who spent time in the St. Louis area.

In November, we outed eight more.

In December, the Jesuits outed 17 more.

In February, we outed five more.

In March, we outed another eight.

And now, in May, we’re outing another eight.

Maybe you don’t care about your legacy or reputation or obituary. If so, we applaud you. There are, of course, far better reasons to disclose these accused predators’ names.

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

More ‘Under The Radar’ Publicly Accused St. Louis Accused Priests

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

May 7, 2019

–Fr. Julian Haas, whose status is listed as “removed from ministry / under supervision” on a list of credibly accused Capuchin Franciscans (based inDenver, 303-477-5436 or jason.faris@capuchins.org, joseph.elder@capuchins.org).

Fr. Haas worked in Rome, Kansas, Pennsylvania, two Colorado cities (Denver and Colorado Springs) and two St. Louis locations: St. Crispin Friary and St. Patrick Friary. He reportedly abused in the 1970s and 1980s and faces more than one accuser.

13 Denver-based Catholic friars with credible sexual-abuse allegations identified

https://www.capuchins.org/documents/PressRelease2019.pdf

–Fr. Benignus Scarry, who was born in 1944, reportedly left the Capuchin Franciscan religious order in 2016. He worked in two Kansas cities (Lawrence and Hays), two in Colorado (Denver and Colorado Springs) and in St. Louis at the St. Crispin Friary.

He reportedly abused in 1980s and is on a list of credibly accused abusers released by the Capuchin Franciscans (based in Denver, 303-477-5436 orjason.faris@capuchins.org, joseph.elder@capuchins.org).

https://www.capuchins.org/documents/PressRelease2019.pdf

–Fr. Perry L. Robinson, who was sent to St. Luke’s Institute in Maryland for treatment twice in the 1980s. He was fired from his long-time high school teaching position in Milwaukee in 1988 for taking nude photographs of students, and was quietly transferred to a parish in Omaha, NE. In 2011, he was removed from ministry in Omaha after a man informed the Omaha archbishop of the earlier allegations against Robinson. The man also stated that Robinson had given him an inappropriate backrub in the early 1980s when he was one of Robinson’s high school students in Milwaukee.

Last year, his name was included in the Midwest Jesuits list of credibly accused clerics.

According to the Official Catholic Directory, from 1972-1973, he was in St. Louis at the Lewis Memorial Jesuit Community.

http://www.bishopaccountability.org/assign/Robinson_Perry_L_sj.htm

http://image.jesuits.org/MIDWESTPROV/media/All_Pastoral_Assignments_of_Jesuits_on_Midwest_Jesuits-12-17-18_List_posted_21_Dec_2018.pdf

–Fr. Timothy F. Keppel is a priest of the Congregation of the Resurrection who worked in the San Bernardino diocese. In 2013, his church supervisors announced that Fr. Keppel allegedly molested a child in the late 1970s in San Bernardino. Following an investigation, both the diocese and the Congregation of the Resurrection concluded that there was reasonable cause to suspect that inappropriate sexual behavior with a child did occur. Consequently, Fr. Keppel was removed from public ministry. His was included in the San Bernardino diocese’s list of clergy credibly accused of child sexual abuse. According to San Bernardino church officials, he is permanently banned from ministry in the diocese.

https://www.sbdiocese.org/documents/latestnews/Priest-List.pdf

From 1982-1983, he was at Our Lady of Loretto Church in Spanish Lake.

— Fr. Marvin Archuleta who, according to the Santa Fe New Mexican, “was sent to the Vianney Renewal Center near St. Louis, which offered ‘rehabilitation and reconciliation’ for priests and was a stopping point for clergy accused of abuse.” He’s now wearing a GPS monitoring bracelet as he awaits trial.

http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2019/01_02/2019_02_16_Press_Judge_of.htm

https://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/legal-options-limited-for-man-who-says-priest-molested-him/article_3a874088-f674-5f6f-a4e2-b1e52aa88345.html

–Fr. Clarence J. Vavra, who in 2003, was named by the St. Paul archdiocese as having a substantiated claim of sexual abuse of a minor.

http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news2013/11_12/2013_11_11_SurvivorsNetwork_SdPredator.htm

He was sent to the St. Michael’s Center here for treatment in 1996. The year before, he admitted sexually assaulting several kids on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. Yet no Catholic official ever told anyone about him.

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SNAP to protest at Fresno Diocese

FRSNO (CA)
Your Central Valley

May 7, 2019

By Kathryn York

Fresno’s new bishop Joseph Brennan is already facing challenges from victims of clergy sex abuse.

Members of SNAP or Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests will be protesting this afternoon at the Fresno Diocese. They want the bishop to post his own list of those accused.

Just last week, the Diocese of Sacramento released the names of child molestors within the
church.

The Fresno Diocese has not done that. An independent on-line archive called Bishopaccountability.org lists 12 clerics from the Fresno Diocese publicly accused of sexual abuse.

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Why we didn’t publish the names of 300 clerics and lay people accused of sexual assault

BERGEN (NJ)
North Jersey Record

May 6, 2019

By Ed Forbes

Another large group of priests and others who served the Roman Catholic Church were accused of sexual misconduct at a Monday press conference in Elizabeth.

Jeff Anderson & Associates, a New York law firm, released the names of more than 300 diocesan priests, religious order priests, deacons, nuns, and religious brothers and sisters. All, the firm said, are accused of sexual misconduct and associated with the Catholic dioceses in New Jersey.

The clerics were named at an Elizabeth press conference at which Anderson also announced that Edward Hanratty, a native of Ridgefield Park, has filed suit against all of New Jersey’s Roman Catholic bishops and the New Jersey Catholic Conference for “maintaining a public hazard by keeping secret the names of all clergy accused of sexual misconduct in New Jersey.”

Why we didn’t publish the names
We have decided not to publish those named in the Anderson firm’s report. Why?

While the firm shared names and assignment histories, no details about credible accusations are included.

Anderson has asked you to believe that these 300 clerics are bad actors at face value. We believe details about accusations are required for New Jersey’s Catholics to make that judgment.

Anderson said its report drew on information “from publicly available sources, claims made by survivors to the dioceses and religious orders responsible for the offenders, and legal settlements made as a result of claims for sexual abuse.” We question why the firm didn’t do more to attribute its information to those publicly available sources.

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Documentary about Sudbury survivor of clerical sexual abuse wins award

SUDBURY (CANADA)
Sudbury Star

May 7, 2019

By Katie Jacobs

A Windsor-based documentary about a survivor’s personal and legal journey exposing his abuse by a Catholic priest received two awards last weekend.

The film Prey focuses on Rod MacLeod — a survivor from sexual abuse by Rev. William Hodgson Marshall — and his quest for justice as he and his lawyer Rob Talach took on the Catholic church in court.

MacLeod was a student at St. Charles College when Marshall, who was teaching there at the time, abused him.

The documentary is a TVO production made by Windsor-born Matt Gallagher, who also reached out to other survivors. This included Patrick McMahon, a Windsor resident who was the first to file a complaint against Marshall.

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Demand for trial against clergy accused of abusing Argentinian deaf kids

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Associated Press

May 7, 2019

By Almudena Calatrava

International and Argentine activists on Monday called on Pope Francis to ensure that his “zero tolerance” pledge against sexual abuses by clergy is enforced in his homeland and demanded a trial for those accused of raping deaf and mute children at a Catholic school.

Prosecutors say that members of the clergy abused at least 20 children at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza province. The case has caused a worldwide uproar and more than a dozen people face charges.

The Argentine group Church Without Abuses and the international organizations Ending Clergy Abuse and BishopAccountability.org met with alleged victims Monday and criticized the lack of justice in a case that began more than two years ago.

At least 20 children say they were abused at the Provolo Institute by priest Nicola Corradi, priest Horaio Corbacho and three other men, who were arrested in 2016.

Dozens of students at another branch of the institute in Italy say they were similarly abused for decades, some allegedly by Corradi.

Both men are facing a preliminary hearing in Argentina, but the activists complain the process is taking too long.

“We came to Mendoza to show solidarity with the Provolo victims and echo their cry for justice,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of the online resource Bishop Accountability.

“Pope Francis owes them a personal apology for his complicity and silence. The Italian victims warned him for years that Corradi and others were working with children in Argentina. The pope did nothing.”

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The unintended consequences of ‘doing good’ laws

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

May 6, 2019

“Doing good” can have serious unintended consequences — especially if you don’t look closely before you act.

State lawmakers, for example, didn’t consider how the new Child Victim Act would impact . . . local schools.

The law opened the door to civil lawsuits over past abuse, effectively extending the statute of limitations in these cases. The Legislature was plainly thinking about the victims in various Catholic Church scandals — but didn’t think about the public schools.

Now, the (Albany) Times Union reports, “Insurance companies are warning that the new law will likely lead to higher insurance rates for the state’s nearly 700 public school districts.”

California passed its own “look back” abuse-lawsuit legislation in 2003. As a result, notes Tom Stebbins of the Lawsuit Reform Alliance of New York, the Los Angeles Unified School District pays out tens of millions a year in abuse settlements — $139 million in the banner year of 2014.

This could eat up all the extra funds lawmakers devoted to education this year.

Another example: When Speaker Corey Johnson led the way to giving free phone calls to detainees and prisoners at Rikers Island, he surely didn’t anticipate the possibility of increased jail violence.

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Activists protest in Mendoza to demand justice in clergy sex abuse case

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Buenos Aires Times

May 7, 2019

International and Argentine activists on Monday called on Pope Francis to ensure that his “zero tolerance” pledge against sexual abuses by clergy is enforced in his homeland and demanded a trial for those accused of raping deaf and mute children at a Catholic school.

Prosecutors say that members of the clergy abused at least 20 children at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza province. The case has caused a worldwide uproar and more than a dozen people face charges.

The Argentine group Church Without Abuses and the international organisations Ending Clergy Abuse and BishopAccountability.org met with alleged victims Monday and criticised the lack of justice in a case that began more than two years ago.

At least 20 children say they were abused at the Provolo Institute by priest Nicola Corradi, priest Horacio Corbacho and three other men, who were arrested in 2016.

Dozens of students at another branch of the institute in Italy say they were similarly abused for decades, some allegedly by Corradi.

Too long

Both men are facing a preliminary hearing in Argentina, but the activists complain the process is taking too long.

“We came to Mendoza to show solidarity with the Provolo victims and echo their cry for justice,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of the online resource Bishop Accountability.

“Pope Francis owes them a personal apology for his complicity and silence. The Italian victims warned him for years that Corradi and others were working with children in Argentina. The pope did nothing.”

The Italian Provolo students went public with tales of abuse in 2009 and named names. The Vatican ordered an investigation and sanctioned four priests, but Corradi apparently never was sanctioned.

The Verona diocese apologised to the Italian students in 2012. The students again accused Corradi, who was then living in Argentina, in a 2014 letter to the pontiff and the Verona bishop, but the Vatican still took no action.

In 2016, a Vatican official said Francis wanted to assure the victims that the church was taking measures to protect children and prevent sexual abuse.

Unlike the Verona case, the statute of limitations has not expired for the alleged crimes in Mendoza.

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Bishops criticized for praising sex offender in New Zealand

PARIS (FRANCE)
La Croix International

May 7, 2019

Bishops who attended the funeral of a New Zealand priest accused of child sexual abuse have been criticized for speaking sympathetically of his plight rather than apologizing for his transgressions.

Father Thomas “Tom” Laffey admitted in 2003 that he had molested a teenager at St. Mary of the Angels Church in Wellington.

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N.J. priest sex abuse hotline has generated ‘hundreds of leads,’ AG says. The phones were ‘ringing off the hook.’

NEWARK (NJ)
Star-Ledger

May 7, 2019

By Ted Sherman

A special hotline to report sexual abuse by clergy has generated hundreds of possible leads for criminal investigators, according to New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal, who said the state’s five Catholic dioceses have been cooperating with his office.

At the same time, he said that in some of those cases where the statute of limitations may have run out, his office intends to continue to pursue those who may have facilitated criminal conduct — such as church officials who allegedly did nothing when they learned of sexual abuse.

Grewal made his comments during an editorial board meeting with The Star-Ledger.

New Jersey officials in September set up a special task force to investigate allegations of sexual abuse by members of the clergy within the Catholic dioceses of New Jersey, in the wake of a report by a Pennsylvania grand jury which graphically detailed the abuse by priests who preyed upon children for decades.

“We’re going to be publishing a report similar to the Pennsylvania report,” Grewal said. “The people of this state have a right to know.”

While the attorney general said the calls received so far have generated a number of leads they have been pursuing, he would not disclose whether there are any active criminal cases. So far, only one priest has been charged as a result of a call to the task force.

In January, Rev. Thomas P. Ganley was arrested on sexual assault charges just two days after the victim in the nearly 30-year-old case made a call to the state’s clergy abuse hotline. Ganley, a parochial vicar at St. Philip and St. James Catholic Church in Phillipsburg, later pleaded guilty to the charges.

The state hotline — (855) 363-6548 — has gotten calls regarding other religions, not just Catholics. According to Grewal, the vast majority of the calls have been clergy related.

On Monday, meanwhile, more than 300 New Jersey priests, nuns, monks and other clergy accused of sexual misconduct, including many not included in the Catholic Church’s official list, were named by lawyers representing an alleged victim suing the state’s diocese.

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May 6, 2019

Survivors Network claims five accusing Monsignor Craig Harrison of sexual abuse

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
ABC 23 TV

May 7, 2019

By Josh Sanders

Organizers with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) will be holding a press conference early Tuesday afternoon, calling on the Catholic Diocese of Fresno’s newly appointed bishop, Joseph Brennan to address sexual misconduct allegations made against Monsignor Craig Harrison .

Monsignor Harrison was placed on administrative leave in April pending an investigation surrounding sexual misconduct allegations made by a man who says he was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse. Since then, another victim has come forward , and we’ve learned that a third allegation was made against the monsignor in 1998.

Organizers are also calling on the new bishop to disclose names and information about, 9 publicly accused abusive clerics in the Fresno area. They say recent allegations against Bakersfield Monsignor Harrison are concerning.

SNAP officials say there are five alleged victims accusing Harrison of sexual abuse, however neither the Dioceses nor law enforcement agencies have confirmed the organization’s number.

The press conference is scheduled for Tuesday, May 7 at 12:30 p.m. on the sidewalk outside the headquarters of the Fresno Diocese.

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Five people allege abuse by Monsignor Craig Harrison, advocacy group says

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
Bakersfield Californian

May 6, 2019

By Stacey Shepard

A victims advocacy group has been contacted by five people in the past week who claim to be victims of sexual abuse by Monsignor Craig Harrison, according to a volunteer with the organization.

Esther Hatfield Miller, a native of Bakersfield, who is a volunteer leader for The Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests in California, said she’s spoken directly with four people — one person who claimed abuse by Harrison in Bakersfield and three who say they were abused by Harrison in Merced and surrounding areas.

The fifth accuser contacted another SNAP volunteer on Monday, Hatfield Miller said.

Additional details of the allegations will come out in a news conference the group plans to hold Tuesday morning at the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno.

Teresa Dominguez, communications director the Fresno diocese, said she hopes the victims who’ve contacted SNAP will also contact law enforcement where the abuse took place, and also contact the diocese.

“The Diocese would also appreciate being informed so that we can provide the appropriate outreach,” she said.

SNAP officials and attorneys who work with victims of church sex abuse said they do encourage victims to file reports with police but said some victims feel uncomfortable doing so.

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Abuse victims blast Reno Catholic bishop

RENO (NV)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

His “accused” list is “inaccurate & inadequate,” group says

SNAP: “Seven more names should be added to the church website”

Victims, witnesses & whistle blowers are urged to call law enforcement

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, two clergy se abuse survivors will disclose names and information about seven publicly accused child molesting clerics who spent time in the Reno area but who are absent from the bishop’s list of credibly accused clerics who have spent time in the Reno diocese.

They will also
–prod Reno’s Catholic bishop to add more names to his “credibly accused” clergy list,
–urge victims to “step forward, get help, protect kids and expose perpetrators,” and
–encourage anyone who saw, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes or cover ups in Nevada to contact both the Diocese of Reno and appropriate sources of outside help: law enforcement, therapists and support groups like ours.

WHEN
Tuesday, May 7, at 2:00 p.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the Reno Catholic diocese headquarters (“chancery office”), 290 S. Arlington (corner of Ridge) in Reno NV (775 326 9410)

WHO
One-two abuse victims who belong to a group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org)

WHY
Last month, Reno Bishop Randolph Calvo finally posted names of 12 “credibly accused” abusers on his website. https://www.kolotv.com/content/news/Reno_Catholic_Diocese_names_accused_priests-508185171.html

But SNAP has learned of seven publicly accused clerics who were ‘outed’ elsewhere but who spent time in the Reno as well. They also do not appear on the diocese’s ‘credibly accused’ list.

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Activists protest in Mendoza to demand justice in clergy sex abuse case

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Buenos Aires Times

May 6, 2019

International and Argentine activists on Monday called on Pope Francis to ensure that his “zero tolerance” pledge against sexual abuses by clergy is enforced in his homeland and demanded a trial for those accused of raping deaf and mute children at a Catholic school.

Prosecutors say that members of the clergy abused at least 20 children at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza province. The case has caused a worldwide uproar and more than a dozen people face charges.

The Argentine group Church Without Abuses and the international organisations Ending Clergy Abuse and BishopAccountability.org met with alleged victims Monday and criticised the lack of justice in a case that began more than two years ago.

At least 20 children say they were abused at the Provolo Institute by priest Nicola Corradi, priest Horacio Corbacho and three other men, who were arrested in 2016.

Dozens of students at another branch of the institute in Italy say they were similarly abused for decades, some allegedly by Corradi.

Both men are facing a preliminary hearing in Argentina, but the activists complain the process is taking too long.

“We came to Mendoza to show solidarity with the Provolo victims and echo their cry for justice,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of the online resource Bishop Accountability.

“Pope Francis owes them a personal apology for his complicity and silence. The Italian victims warned him for years that Corradi and others were working with children in Argentina. The pope did nothing.”

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

What to know about the newly released list of priests, others accused of abuse in NJ

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

May 6, 2019

By Candace Mitchell

On Monday, a law firm released a list of names of more than 300 priests and others connected to the church who have been accused of sexual misconduct who have served in New Jersey.

Here’s what you should know about the list.

What does the list include?
The list contains the names of diocesan priests, religious order priests, deacons, nuns, and religious brothers and sisters accused of sexual misconduct and associated with the Catholic Dioceses in New Jersey.

It also includes the cleric’s work history. Attorneys said this was included to help families discern where the “perils have been and where the perils may still be.”

Is it different than the list of names released in February?
Yes, the list released three months ago was released by New Jersey’s Roman Catholic dioceses and named 188 priests and deacons who have been credibly accused of sexually abuse.

They key difference is the word credible. Many of the names on the list are allegations that have not been proven in court.

What’s not on the list?
Unlike the list the New Jersey’s Roman Catholic dioceses released three months ago, this list did not include any details, like number of victims or whether the religious person was laicized.

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‘Riveting and unflinching’ clergy abuse trial film Prey wins $50K Hot Docs audience prize

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Canadian Broadcasting Company

May 6, 2019

Prey, a “riveting and unflinching” account of a sexual abuse survivor’s legal fight against the Catholic Church, has won the top award at the Hot Docs Canadian International Documentary Film Festival.

Directed by Matt Gallagher, Prey was named winner of the $50,000 Rogers Audience Award for best Canadian documentary on Sunday, the final day of Hot Docs, North America’s largest documentary festival.

Immediately after the announcement, organizers held a free encore screening of the film.

Most cases of clergy sex abuse are settled quietly and out-of-court. Gallagher’s film follows a Canadian man who chooses to pursue a public trial in order to shine a light on these cases of abuse and attempt to hold the Catholic Church accountable.

Rod MacLeod, who as a boy was abused for years by a Catholic priest and teacher, enlists civil lawyer Rob Talach, who has filed approximately 400 suits against the church, for the case.

In addition to the audience award, Prey also won a $5,000 special jury prize during an earlier Hot Docs awards ceremony in Toronto on Friday.

Other winners announced Friday include Tasha Hubbard’s Colten Boushie doc nîpawistamâsowin: We Will Stand Up, which opened this year’s edition of Hot Docs.

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What Is Being Done to Prevent More Abusers Being Housed at Gonzaga?

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

May 3, 2019

Some question whether Gonzaga’s president knew about 24 suspended and accused abusive Jesuit priests who were at the school. But the key question is actually “What’s he doing now to punish those who were clearly reckless and reach out to those who may have been hurt?”

We share the view of those who believe GU President Thayne McCulloh knew about the potentially dangerous clerics. The Spokesman Review reports that the clerics sent there “included several notorious Jesuits with long and publicly documented histories of abuse. . .that were reported in the news media and revealed in lawsuits and bankruptcy actions over more than a decade,” and
McCulloh “offered a seemingly contradictory series of assertions about what he knew and didn’t know.”

He himself has said: “At no time during my tenure did the province inform me there were men on safety plans living at Bea House CONTEMPORANEOUS to the time they were living there.

Taking him at his word, it’s clear that McCulloh knew AFTER one or more Jesuits were at his school that they were accused abusers.

But again, the more pressing question is “What is McCulloh doing now to safeguard the vulnerable and heal the wounded?” We see little evidence he’s taking real action.

He should
–immediately commission an independent investigation into this troubling situation,
–publicly expose and harshly condemn, by name, Jesuit officials he suggests deceived he and his staff and his students,
–punish them as best he can, and
–write to all former students and staff who were at Gonzaga when these priests were, begging anyone with information or suspicions about their crimes to call law enforcement, and seek out independent sources of help like police, prosecutors, therapists and support groups like ours.
Last week, McCulloh wrote “We will continue to engage in ways of integrating and more deeply coming to understand how that history should inform our way of moving forward.” That’s gibberish. How to ‘move forward’ is crystal clear – use university resources to identify and expose anyone who acted recklessly and identify and help anyone who may have been hurt.

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Attorneys reviewing ‘massive’ number of documents in Catholic Church investigation

LANSING (MI)
Detroit News

May 6, 2019

By Beth LeBlanc

Attorney General Dana Nessel’s office is working around the clock and then some in its review of thousands of pages of information seized from Michigan’s seven Catholic dioceses.

More than 25 assistant attorneys general are assigned to the investigation, in addition to their other assignments, and several regularly work for free on the weekends to process the “massive” amounts of information, said Nessel’s spokeswoman Kelly Rossman-McKinney.

The department will be in a position to announce charges related to the investigation soon, Rossman-McKinney said.

The volunteers were recognized by Nessel on social media Sunday when she posted a photo of attorneys examining paperwork in a room crowded with boxes and filing cabinets.

“They get no extra compensation, and remain responsible for their regular caseload during the week, but these lawyers are so dedicated to protecting the public that they sacrifice spending time with their families in order to protect yours,” Nessel wrote on Twitter.

Many documents under review were seized during simultaneous raids on Michigan’s seven Catholic dioceses in October, a couple of months after former Attorney General Bill Schuette began an investigation into clergy sexual abuse and the church’s handling of such complaints.

The search warrant for the October raids remains under seal in a Lansing district court “to preserve the integrity of the investigation,” Rossman-McKinney said.

The review started shortly after a grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania found hundreds of abuser priests had molested more than 1,000 children since the 1940s. Michigan’s investigation will investigate cases dating back to the 1950s.

The investigation is expected to last roughly two years. In March, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer asked the state Legislature for a $2 million supplemental allocation for the investigation, money that would come from state settlement funds.

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Demand for trial against clergy accused of abusing deaf kids

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Associated Press

May 6, 2019

International and Argentine activists are calling on Pope Francis to ensure that his “zero tolerance” pledge against sexual abuses by clergy is enforced in his homeland. And they’re demanding a trial for those accused of raping deaf and mute children at a Catholic school.

Prosecutors say that members of the clergy abused at least 20 children at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza province. The case has caused a worldwide uproar. More than a dozen people face charges.

The Argentine group Church Without Abuses and the international organizations Ending Clergy Abuse and BishopAccountability.org met with alleged victims Monday.

It’s part of a campaign urging Francis to visit his homeland to ensure the Roman Catholic Church punishes the crimes and doesn’t protect perpetrators. Francis hasn’t visited Argentina since becoming pope in 2013.

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

Lawyers name more accused New Jersey predator priests

ELIZABETH (NJ)
Associated Press

May 6, 2019

Attorneys for a man seeking to force New Jersey’s five Roman Catholic dioceses to release their clergy abuse records have issued their own list of more than 300 priests accused of child sexual abuse.

More than 100 of the names released by attorney Jeff Anderson Monday were not on the lists of credibly accused priests distributed by New Jersey’s dioceses in February.

Anderson says his release includes religious order priests such as Jesuits as well as priests who are the subject of lawsuits, many of whom were not named by the dioceses.

Anderson represents Edward Hanratty, who alleges he was abused decades ago by a priest he says was still working at a church last year. His lawsuit seeks to force the dioceses to release all files on accused priests.

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El Papa acepta la renuncia del arzobispo de Tarragona

[Pope accepts resignation of Tarragona archbishop]

ROME (ITALY)
El País (Spain)

May 4, 2019

By Lorena Pacho

Jaume Pujol, que alegó motivos de edad, cesó del cargo el pasado febrero en pleno escándalo de abusos a menores

El Papa ha aceptado la renuncia del arzobispo de Tarragona Jaume Pujol Balcells, que presentó su dimisión el pasado mes de febrero, en pleno escándalo de abusos sexuales a menores por parte de sacerdotes que dependen del arzobispado. Aunque Pujol puso su cargo a disposición de Francisco por motivos de edad, como marca el derecho canónico, al cumplir los 75 años y desvinculó su decisión del descrédito que vive la diócesis, el pontífice argentino ha resuelto la salida del arzobispo en un tiempo excesivamente breve para lo que suele ser habitual en estos casos. El sacerdote Joan Planellas Barnosell sustituirá a Pujol al frente del arzobispado de Tarragona, según informó la Santa Sede este sábado a través de un comunicado.

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“No voy a parar hasta que renuncie”: Juan Carlos Cruz lanza críticas a Jorge Abbott por convenio

[“I will not stop until you resign:” Juan Carlos Cruz launches criticism of prosecutor Jorge Abbott]

CHILE
BioBioChile

May 3, 2019

By María José Villarroel and Nicole Martínez

La reunión que sostuvieron víctimas de abuso sexual con el fiscal nacional Jorge Abbott -por el controversial convenio de colaboración con la Conferencia Episcopal- tuvo momentos tensos con duras críticas al persecutor. Estos cuestionamientos fueron en especial de parte de Juan Carlos Cruz, uno de los denunciantes del exsacerdote Fernando Karadima, quien participó vía online de la cita.

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Oscar Contardo y denuncia en contra de Renato Poblete: “Ese tipo de violencia sobre el cuerpo de una persona me recuerdan las descripciones de tortura durante la represión en dictadura”

[Oscar Contardo on accusations against Renato Poblete: “That type of bodily violence reminds me of descriptions of torture during dictatorship’s repression”]

CHILE
The Clinic

April 30, 2019

By Alejandra Matus and Benjamín Miranda

El periodista y escritor nacional aborda con The Clinic la última denuncia que remeció a la Iglesia chilena, luego de que Marcela Aranda revelara que durante cerca de ocho años fue abusada sexualmente por el sacerdote jesuita Renato Poblete. En la siguiente entrevista, el autor de Rebaño (2018) analiza el impacto de las acusaciones y explica por qué la congregación logró, hasta este momento, apartarse de la crisis que afecta a la Iglesia local: “Los jesuitas representaban una especie de enclave libre de toda sospecha, pese a tener varias denuncias históricas que se han hecho públicas con mucha dificultad. La opinión pública los juzgaba distinto, pero no lo son. Es la misma iglesia, la misma estructura, la misma crisis”.

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Marcela Aranda acusa a Renato Poblete: “Empezó a abusarme sexualmente con mucha violencia”

[Marcela Aranda’s explosive accusations against Renato Poblete: “He started to abuse me sexually with a lot of violence”]

CHILE
Ahora Noticias

April 29, 2019

La denunciante habló en exclusiva con Ahora Noticias sobre la violencia que padeció de parte del sacerdote jesuita.

AhoraNoticias entrevistó de manera exclusiva a Marcela Aranda, la mujer que denunció abusos sexuales por parte del sacerdote jesuita y excapellán del Hogar de Cristo, Renato Poblete. De este modo, abrió el contenido más íntimo de la denuncia eclesiástica que realizó hace sólo unos meses ante la Comisión de Escucha instalada en Chile por el enviado del papa, monseñor Charles Scicluna.

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Parlamentarios califican de insólito acuerdo entre Fiscalía y la Iglesia por casos de abusos

[Parliamentarians call abuse investigation agreement between Church and prosecutors “unusual”]

CHILE
BioBioChile

May 6, 2019

By Alberto González and Francisca Carvajal

Parlamentarios de la Comisión de Constitución de la Cámara de Diputados calificaron como “insólito” el acuerdo firmado entre la Conferencia Episcopal de Chile y el Ministerio Público, el cual tiene como objetivo el intercambio de información sobre delitos sexuales cometidos por miembros de la Iglesia.

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Arzobispado de Santiago califica de “compleja e inverosímil” denuncia contra Tito Rivera

[Santiago Archdiocese calls accusation against Tito Rivera “complex and implausible”]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Emol

By Tamara Cerna

El abogado de la arquidiócesis cuestionó que el denunciante recuerde los detalles del abuso que habría sufrido si, según él mismo aseguró en la acción que pide $350 millones, fue drogado.

El abogado que representa al Arzobispado de Santiago, Ramón Cifuentes, contestó la demanda civil interpuesta por el ataque que un hombre que habría sufrido en 2015 en la Catedral de la capital por parte de Tito Rivera, cuando este, según asegura, lo drogó y violó. En la contestación a la acción que pide $350 millones, el litigante señaló que, pese a supuestamente haber ingerido involuntariamente una sustancia ilícita “que inhibe la voluntad”, aquella “curiosamente no toca en un ápice ni la conciencia ni la memoria del drogado”. Es por ello, y otras cosas expuestas, que asegura que dicha versión resulta “compleja e inverosímil”.

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Law firm releases 300 names of Catholic priests and others accused of abuse in NJ

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

May 6, 2019

By Monsy Alvarado and Jean Rimbach

Attorneys at a Monday press conference released a list of names of more than 300 priests and others connected to the church, including nuns and deacons, who have been accused of sexual misconduct who have served in New Jersey.

At a press conference, held in Elizabeth, advocates and attorneys from law firm Jeff Anderson & Associate also announced that Edward Hanratty, a Ridgefield Park native, has filed a lawsuit against all of the New Jersey Catholic Bishops and the New Jersey Catholic Conference for “maintaining a public hazard by keeping secret the names of all clergy accused of sexual misconduct in New Jersey.”

“We release this report, the Anderson Report, and what it is is an identification all the clerics who have been publicly accused across the state of New Jersey,” said Jeff Anderson, the law firm’s founder. “We have also included the history, the assignment history of each of those clerics that have been publicly accused because we believe it’s something that needs to be done.

They are demanding that New Jersey Bishops release the identities, background information, and histories on all clergy accused of sexual misconduct with minors, which they say has largely been concealed.

The report, released Monday, contains the names of diocesan priests, religious order priests, deacons, nuns, and religious brothers and sisters accused of sexual misconduct and associated with the Catholic Dioceses in New Jersey.

Those listed worked at churches in the Archdiocese of Newark, the Diocese of Trenton, Camden, Paterson and Metuchen. The information is derived from publicly available sources, claims made by survivors to the diocese and religious orders responsible for the offenders, as well as legal settlements made as a result of claims for sexual abuse, according to the report

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Jesuitas piden tiempo para rmar acuerdo entre Iglesia y scalía por abusos

[Jesuits want more time to consider abuse agreement between Church and prosecutors]

CHILE
La Tercera

May 3, 2019

Al igual que franciscanos y mercedarios, argumentaron que todavía están analizando el documento, suscrito el martes.

“El documento lo estamos estudiando y, además, desde 2018 ya estamos colaborando con la scalía”. Esa fue la respuesta de la Compañía de Jesús ante el requerimiento de La Tercera, respecto de por qué no suscribieron este martes reciente el convenio entre la Fiscalía Nacional y la Conferencia Episcopal (Cech) para denuncias de abusos, al cual estaban convocados. Situación similar a la de otras dos congregaciones: mercedarios y franciscanos.

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Las claves del controvertido convenio de colaboración entre la Fiscalía y el Episcopado ante casos de abusos sexuales

[Keys of controversial agreement between Prosecutor’s Office and bishops’ conference in sexual abuse cases]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Emol

May 3, 2019

By Juan Peña

Favorecer el desarrollo de las investigaciones, denunciar en un plazo máximo de 24 horas y confidencialidad para las víctimas, sostienen el acuerdo que, hasta ahora, tres congregaciones no han firmado.

Favorecer el desarrollo de investigaciones pasadas, en curso o próximas por abusos sexuales. Este es el motivo del controvertido convenio de colaboración que el Ministerio Público y la Conferencia Episcopal firmaron esta semana y al que tres congregaciones religiosas aún no adhieren. Los jesuitas, los mercedarios y franciscanos explicaron que necesitan más tiempo para analizar el documento, que promueve el intercambio de información ante denuncias por delitos de esta connotación.

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Northeastern can’t paper over sex ads in Phoenix, top attorney says

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

May 3, 2019

By Joe Dwinell

One of the city’s leading crusaders against sexual abuse in the Catholic church is calling on Northeastern University to explain to human-trafficking victims why it hosts the archives of the now-defunct Boston Phoenix — an alternative weekly fueled by prostitution ads.

The university addresses those ads by stating on the Snell Library website they were for “romantic mates,” and in a statement sent Saturday to the Herald saying readers need to “learn from and not repeat our mistakes.”

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, widely hailed nationally for exposing rampant sexual abuse in the church, told the Herald Northeastern needs to address the matter further.

“Given society’s attitude in regards to sexual trafficking, Northeastern University has a responsibility to more completely explain why it’s hosting those archives,” Garabedian said. “It’s painful to many victims of sex trafficking, sexual abuse and to society in general.”

Some of the old ads in the Phoenix, according to archived photos, included: “Romantic red head” looking to take a man “to heaven and back … live life at 100 mph,” and “blonde girl with big personality.” Others were more to the point.

In a statement, the dean of the Snell Library, professor Dan Cohen, did not address calls for a forum about why the college hosts the controversial archives.

“Libraries and archives retain the past so that we can strive to learn from and not repeat our mistakes,” he said.

“This often means preserving materials that are troubling and offensive. It is only through honestly studying and understanding the past — including our best and worst selves — that societies can ensure human progress.”

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Letter: Put the number of accused priests in historical context

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Sal Lake City Tribune

May 6, 2019

The April 27 article titled “Archdiocese of New York names 120 priests accused of sexual abuse” in The Salt Lake Tribune’s print edition was shocking.

Could it be, I thought, that these are all priests currently in ministry in New York? So I called a friend who works in the New York archdiocesan offices for some light on the matter.

He told me that the 120 cases go back to 1900; that the total number of priests working in the archdiocese since 1900 was, conservatively estimated, well over 6,000; that no priests on the accused list is currently in ministry; and that at the present time the archdiocese is dealing with no cases of clergy sex abuse of children and minors.

I am not for a moment playing down the disaster of clergy malfeasance in New York or anywhere else, the blot it leaves on the Catholic Church and the horror it has wielded on victims. But I did find it helpful to be able to put the April 27 story in historical and numerical context.

Monsignor M. Francis Mannion, pastor emeritus of St. Vincent Church, Salt Lake City

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Clergy abuse victims are divided on how to secure right to file lawsuits

HARRISBURG (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

May 5, 2019

By Angela Couloumbis and Liz Navratil

When child sexual abuse victims and their advocates reunited on the Capitol steps last month to rally for the right to sue their violators, something didn’t look quite right.

Glaringly absent was state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Reading Democrat who has for years been the Legislature’s loudest advocate for changing the law to give older victims of childhood sexual abuse two more years to bring civil claims. The idea has gained urgency amid the child sexual abuse scandal rocking the Roman Catholic church.

Mr. Rozzi’s absence hinted at a divide that has emerged between the lawmaker and some in the victim community who once considered him their champion. Those victims, advocates, say, now feel betrayed and abandoned by him.

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Call to Action — the ‘loyal left opposition’ — reorganizes amid an uncertain future

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

May 6, 2019

By Heidi Schlumpf

About a mile west of Wrigley Field, in Chicago’s trendy Roscoe Village neighborhood, sits a three-story, yellow-brick building, where those who can’t afford the nearby million-dollar, single-family homes can get a three-bedroom condo for half that. The building’s first-floor commercial occupants are a spiritual giftshop and bookstore run by volunteers and open only on the weekends, and Call to Action, the 40-year-old Catholic church reform organization.

Call to Action purchased the spacious, newly renovated office space — as an investment, some said — just before the recession of 2008. Before that, CTA rented decidedly less swanky digs in the basement of a parish in a predominantly Latino neighborhood.

Now, facing twin challenges of anaging membership and dwindling financial resources and after several changes in leadership, CTA is putting its Roscoe Village office up for sale and has laid off two long-time staff members, “due to declining revenues and increased operating costs,” CTA’s Vision Council announced in a recent email letter.

“These decisions were made in consideration of our anti-racism and anti-oppression principles, with a desire to be the most responsible stewards of our limited resources, in collaboration with those most directly impacted, and after much prayer, conversation and discernment,” the Feb. 20 email said.

Current CTA Executive Director Zachary Johnson, who works from Minnesota where smaller office space has been arranged, told NCR that the Roscoe Village building was too big and “assumed the size of an organization that we’re clearly not.”

Instead, Johnson wants to use Call to Action’s resources to invest in younger leaders for the organization, through an innovative new program called Re/Generation. But those younger leaders may recreate the longtime Vatican II group into something quite different from the organization they have inherited.

Johnson, 30, is hoping his strategy will take Call to Action into the next 40 or 50 years.

“We’re building for a longer-term future,” he said. “I take church reform seriously, and if we’re going to be serious, we’ve got to think in longer, bigger terms.”

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Outrage over senior bishops attending funeral of abusive priest Father Tom Laffey

FAIRFAX (NEW ZEALAND)
Stuff Limited

May 6, 2019

By Tommy Livingston

Survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of clergymen are outraged three senior bishops attended a funeral celebrating the life of an abusive priest.

The requiem mass for Father Thomas “Tom” Laffey was held in Ponsonby, Auckland, on Friday and attended by Bishop of Auckland Patrick Dunn, Bishop Emeritus Dennis Browne and former Bishop of Rarotonga Stuart O’Connell, Stuff understands.

In 2003, Laffey admitted he had sexually assaulted Mike Phillips in the mid 1960s, when Phillips was a 13-year-old altar boy at St Mary of the Angels Church in Wellington.

Laffey’s admission came after Phillips went public with his allegations after being diagnosed with terminal cancer aged 50. Laffey had been playfighting with Phillips when he took advantage of the situation and sexually assaulted him, he alleged.

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California Attorney General to Review How State’s Roman Catholic Dioceses Report Child Sexual Abuse Allegations

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
KQED Radio

May 5, 2019

By Shia Levitt, Vianey Alderete Contreras, KQED Staff

In a long awaited move, California Attorney General Xavier Becerra will review how the state’s Roman Catholic dioceses handled allegations of child sexual abuse.

The Attorney General sent letters to the state’s 12 Catholic dioceses on Thursday. In the letter, Becerra said his office will review whether the archdiocese adequately reported allegations of sexual misconduct as required by state law. Becerra asked the dioceses to preserve all records relating to child sexual abuse, including those in “secret archives.”

Joey Piscitelli, from the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), welcomes the Attorney General’s action. He says asking the diocese to self-report, which has been the protocol until now, hasn’t been working.

“That’s why it’s necessary for the Attorney General to take these steps, so they can be investigated more,” Piscitelli said.

Piscitelli says he and other survivors had a meeting with Becerra and district attorneys across the state last fall. He said they were looking for information on bishops who may have covered up sexual abuse allegations. Becerra’s office confirmed the meeting but not the details of it.

The State Attorney General’s action comes on the heels of a similar action taken by district attorneys in the Central Valley. At least seven county district attorney offices have banded together to audit the Catholic Diocese of Fresno’s archive.

In March, the Fresno Dioceses said it would review its records for cases of possible sexual abuse. In a bid to be more transparent, the dioceses hired Dr. Kathleen McChesney, CEO of Kinsale Management Consulting, to conduct an independent audit of its records.

The Fresno Diocese said it hired McChesney “to ensure that this task is objectively completed in a timely manner.”

Dr. McChesney is a former FBI Executive Assistant Director. According to her LinkedIn profile, she also worked at the US Conference of Catholic Bishops in the early 2000s, where she served as executive director of the Office of Child and Youth Protection.

District attorneys remain skeptical of how transparent the process will be. Madera County DA Sally Moreno, who took office in January, said she sped up the timeline to review church records, after recent allegations were made against a longtime Bakersfield priest Monsignor Craig Harrison.

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DC priest indicted in sex abuse of parishioners — 2 kids and 1 woman

WASHINGTON (DC)
WTOP TV

May 3, 2019

By Neal Augenstein

A D.C. Catholic priest has been indicted on seven counts of sexually abusing two children and a woman who were parishioners. He will plead not guilty, his lawyer told WTOP.

Court records show Urbano Vazquez, who was a priest at Shrine of the Sacred Heart, was indicted on four felony counts — two for second-degree sex abuse with a victim under age 12, and two with a victim under 18. He was also charged with three related misdemeanors.

“Father Urbano intends to contest the charges,” defense attorney Robert Bonsib said.

Vazquez faces a statutory maximum of 30 years, six months in prison.

In March, Vazquez and his attorney rejected a plea offer to reduced charges, in which he could have faced up to 11 years behind bars.

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An Ex-Priest Accused of Sexually Abusing a Teen Will Keep His Job as a Middle School Teacher

NEW YORK (NY)
Jezebel

May 6, 2019

By Emily Alford

An arbitrator in New Jersey has ruled that an ex-priest who was removed from the ministry amid allegations he sexually abused and impregnated a 14-year-old parishioner should keep his teaching job at a middle school because school administration has been aware of the abuse for the past 17 years.

Former Rev. Joseph DeShan left the priesthood in 1989 and has been named on the Diocese of Bridgeport’s list of “credibly accused” sexual offenders. Since 1996, he has worked teaching reading to sixth-graders in New Jersey’s Cinnaminson school district. In 2002, the district learned of the abuse allegations after they were reported in the press but chose not to fire DeShan.

In December 2018, parents asked that their children be removed from his classroom after a 12-year-old student said DeShan’s behavior made her uncomfortable, according to The New York Post:

“‘Look at me,” DeShan allegedly told the girl. “Let me see your pretty green eyes. You don’t see them too much anymore.’

DeShan purportedly made the creepy remark in a “weird voice,” according to the seven-page ruling.”

But an arbitrator has ruled that the student’s allegations are hearsay and DeShan can’t be fired for the 1989 allegations because he hasn’t already been fired for the 1989 allegations:

“And despite the changes in “parental and societal views” that district officials say now make DeShan unfit for a classroom, arbitrator Walt De Treux wrote in his ruling that the teacher cannot lose his job for conduct they’ve known about for 17 years.

“‘The fact that some parents now demand his removal from the classroom does not give the BOE a second opportunity to revisit pre-employment conduct of which it has been long aware.’”

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Pope Francis urged to end clergy sex abuse in Argentina

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Al Jazeera

May 6, 2019

By Daniel Schweimler

Pope Francis is being urged by campaigners to return to his homeland to deal with revelations of child sexual abuse committed by Roman Catholic clergy.

Two international campaign organisations are in Argentina to meet the victims.

They are also calling for clergy involved in abuse to be removed from office and to be prosecuted.

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International Union of Superiors General aims for better formation on abuse issues

ROME (ITALY)
LaCroix International

May 6, 2019
Superior generals need to be trained to better guide women religious who have been victims of sex abuse by priests, the president of the International Union of Superiors General (IUSG), told media in Rome.

“When a superior general feels at ease to speak about the issue with her sisters, they will be able to speak to her with confidence more easily if they have been victims of abuse,” Sister Carmen Sammut, the IUSG president told a Rome press conference ahead of the organization’s triennial conference from May 6-10.

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Here’s how the Catholic Church can move from vague promises to bold action, former federal official says

NEWARK (NJ)
Star-Ledger

May 5, 2019

By Tom Healey

While in some ways a hopeful step, a four-day meeting in Rome earlier this year called by Pope Francis to respond to the sexual abuse crisis that has impacted the lives of countless victims and undermined the moral authority of the Catholic Church was sadly bereft of concrete reform. There is still ample opportunity for the Church to recover from the decades-old scandal and regain the trust of the public, but it will require fundamental reforms in two critical areas that permitted and then covered up those abuses: bishop accountability and Church governance.

To ensure these reforms become reality, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) should name, as soon as possible, twin oversight panels: a Task Force on Recovery to address accountability and a Task Force on Reform to address governance. These task forces should include the participation of laity and clergy and each should be given the necessary funding and resources to fulfill their responsibilities.

Unquestionably, bishops guilty of abusing minors or of negligence in handling abuse cases must be held accountable and punished for their actions. This point was driven home at the Vatican meeting by Cardinal Blase Cupich, Archbishop of Chicago, and a close advisor to Pope Francis, who declared that new structures were needed to report allegations of abuse, investigate them, and remove from positions in the Church any bishops found guilty.

Similar recommendations, and many others aimed at desperately needed Church reform and recovery from the sexual abuse crisis, were announced by the Leadership Roundtable following its two-day Catholic Partnership Summit in Washington, D.C., which brought together Church leaders from around the country, including Cardinals Cupich, Sean O’Malley from the Archdiocese of Boston, and Joseph Tobin from the Archdiocese of Newark.

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May 5, 2019

#MeTooBerks founder offers range of ways to cope with sexual abuse

READING (PA)
Reading Eagle

May 3, 2019

By Karen L. Chandler

Caroline Culverhouse may be in the business of healing, but her life’s journey created a need to seek healing for both herself and others.

Co-founder of the #MetooBerks Movement, Culverhouse, Alsace Township, is a psychotherapist, yoga and meditation instructor, transformational group process facilitator and Health & Wellness columnist.

She spoke about her own trauma and healing at a speaking event at the Reading Area Community College Miller Center for the Arts in late March, one of a series of free workshops.

The #MetooBerks Movement was founded to provide Berks County community members who identify as sexually transgressed, objectified or abused with a free opportunity for healing, awareness and empowerment.

Telling the story of sexual assault inflicted on her by a massage therapist during a recent trip to New York with her husband is visibly difficult for Culverhouse.

“I did not and could not say no,” she said. “I felt violated and ashamed. How could someone who helps others deal with trauma let this happen to me?”

Culverhouse explains that after the incident she immediately began to practice trauma-releasing exercises that she designed herself and reported the assault to the authorities before moving into deep meditation to gain understanding of what occurred.

She believes her meditation called her to action to go home to Berks County and start #MetooBerks.

“For me, #Metoo does not begin and end in New York City,” Culverhouse said.

Culverhouse provides more background to the traumatic event in her column on Page 4 this issue.

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Catholic community needs Archbishop Lori to listen

CHARLESTON (WV)
Gazette Mail

May 5, 2019

By Michael Iafrate and Jeanni Kirkhope

Almost a year before Michael Bransfield’s resignation as bishop of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston (DWC), the Catholic Committee of Appalachia (CCA) wrote a letter to Pope Francis and other Vatican officials to express concerns about our diocese and to share thoughts on the kind of bishop we would like to see follow Bransfield.

Drawing from the Appalachian Catholic pastoral letters and the example of Pope Francis, both of which challenge people of faith to respond to the cry of the poor and the cry of the Earth, our letter requested a bishop who:

-Is committed to ongoing church reform.

–Strives to be a pastor rather than an administrator or politician.

-Listens to and works with laypeople, especially those who are not wealthy or part of industry elites.

– Lives simply rather than princely, and seeks to serve rather than to be served.

– Follows Pope Francis’ commitment to social, economic and ecological justice and encourages priests in the diocese to do the same

– Partners with grassroots organizations to address the root causes of the region’s poverty, unemployment and ecological destruction.

In the year since that letter was sent, Archbishop William Lori was appointed by Pope Francis to oversee the DWC and the church’s investigation of Bransfield for alleged abuse and fiscal improprieties. Lori has publicly promised transparency with the laypeople of the diocese. Yet he never revealed the identities and credentials of his investigative team of laypeople, and the contents of the report were not disclosed. The diocese claimed the investigation discovered no criminal activity, but a former diocesan seminarian recently filed a civil lawsuit against Bransfield, the DWC and 20 unnamed defendants alleging sexual harassment and sexual assault by Bransfield as late as 2014.

Meanwhile, when the DWC published the list of priests they deemed credibly accused of sexual abuse, they claimed to have turned over all relevant documents to West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey. However, last month when Morrisey filed a lawsuit against the DWC, alleging decades of cover-ups of sexual abuse by clergy, he claimed the DWC had objected to two subpoenas for relevant documents.

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Victims of clergy abuse to protest, launch new NGO, outside Metropolitan Cathedral

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Ending Clergy Abuse

May 5, 2019

Groups will visually highlight number of abusive clergy still hidden in Argentine church

Groups estimate number of clergy offenders in Argentina is 1,302

Likely number of victims, they say, is more than 15,000

New victims will tell their stories

Survivors will flyer parishioners with information about reaching out to hidden victims

Who: 10-15 Argentine victims of sexual abuse by clergy, joined by leaders from Ending Clergy Abuse (ECA) and BishopAccountability.org

Where: Metropolitan Cathedral, San Martín 27, C1004 CABA, Argentina

When: 10:00 am Sunday May 5

What: A new NGO of Argentine abuse victims, joined by two global groups, will hold a vigil Sunday to protest the church’s “systemic and widespread concealment” of child sexual abuse by Argentine priests.

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Fatal flaw: Drafting error sinks child sex crime bill

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal

May 5, 2019

By Colleen Heild

New Mexico was poised this year to join a wave of states nationwide that are allowing victims of child sex crimes more time to report their perpetrators for possible criminal prosecution.

A last-minute clerical error derailed that effort – at least for this year.

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said she was forced to veto the legislation last month, because her legal team found a fatal flaw that would have given some victims even less time to report the crime than they have under current law.

The bill cleared its final legislative hurdle on the final day of the session that ended March 16 and was sent on to the governor.

“Nobody caught it before,” said the bill’s sponsor, Sen. Jeff Steinborn, D-Las Cruces. “If we had, it would have been an easy thing to fix.”

The governor’s veto message said she agreed with the premise of SB55, which was intended to extend the deadlines for prosecuting offenders who commit certain sexual assaults of children. But the version approved by the Legislature, Lujan Grisham wrote, “fails to achieve this goal due to what is likely a technical drafting error.”

Under the new legislation, for example, prosecutions for second-degree criminal sexual penetration of a child could have commenced any time until the victim reached age 30 – six years longer than provided by current law.

But the flawed final measure also inadvertently reduced the statute of limitations for prosecuting criminal sexual contact of a minor to within five or six years after the offense. Under current law, the victim could be up to 23 or 24 years old, depending on the degree of felony, before a prosecution is barred by the passage of time.

Steinborn said that in drafting revised legislation, someone forgot to include the offense of criminal sexual contact of a minor, which had been in prior versions. What was missing was the statute number, “30-9-13.”

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Guam priests’ child sexual abuses would have remained a dark secret were it not for 1 man

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

May 5, 2019

Haidee V Eugenio

Back when no one dared to publicly accuse any Guam priest, much less the archbishop, of sexually abusing a child, former Agat resident John Toves did so in 2014.

It was about 12 years after the Archdiocese of Boston’s sex abuse scandal exposed widespread wrongdoing in the American Roman Catholic Church.

“My aunt referred to my brother as the David who slew Goliath,” Noreen Toves-Phillips, of California, said about her brother John

Toves’ call for justice for his cousin, who he said was sexually abused as a child by former Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron, was met with threats of a lawsuit. Toves sparked hope for others who found their courage to tell their stories. Accusers came forward and said Apuron sexually abused, molested and raped them when they were children.

“I’m sure the victims had been living with the pain of his crime, but because of the nature of that kind of trauma, it is not likely that any of it would have come to light if my brother had not brought forth his accusation and had not fought so hard to hold Apuron accountable for his crimes and his sin,” Toves-Phillips said.

Toves died on April 17 in Foster City, California. He was 54. Toves was laid to rest on April 27 in California.

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From champion to … pariah? Pa. lawmaker behind clergy abuse reform on the outs with some victims

HARRISBURG (PA)
PHhiladelphia Inquirer

May 5, 2019

By Angela Couloumbis and Liz Navratil

When child sexual-abuse victims and their advocates reunited on the Capitol steps last month to rally for the right to sue their violators, something didn’t look quite right.

Glaringly absent was State Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Reading Democrat who has for years been the legislature’s loudest advocate for changing the law to give older victims of childhood sexual abuse two more years to bring civil claims. The idea has gained urgency amid the child sexual-abuse scandal rocking the Roman Catholic Church.

Rozzi’s absence hinted at an unspoken divide that has emerged between the lawmaker and some in the victim community who once considered him their champion. Those victims, advocates say, feel betrayed and abandoned by him.

And as the issue has once again landed in the legislature, the question looming is whether the disagreement will hamper victims in their already-uphill push for changes in Pennsylvania’s law.

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Diocese restricts retired priest

ALTOONA (PA)
Altoona Mirror

May 5, 2019

The Altoona-Johnstown Diocese announced Satur­day afternoon that Bishop Mark L. Bartchak has re­stricted a retired priest from carrying out any public ministry.

The Rev. Stephen J. Gergel served as pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Johnstown from Novem­ber 1969 until July 1989. He was then a chaplain in the United States Navy until his retirement in 2005. Since his retirement, he has lived in Georgia.

“This action is in response to alleged misconduct with a young adult that is reported to have taken place while he was pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Johnstown,” a diocesan press release states.

Gergel was ordained a priest in 1962.

A letter from Bartchak will be read at all Masses at St. Francis of Assisi Parish this weekend.

“The Bishop is assuring that faith community of his prayers, and he is asking them to pray for victims of abuse and their families,” the press release stated.

According to diocesan practice, the complaint has been referred to Penn­syl­va­nia ChildLine and the Office of the District Attorney.

Anyone with information regarding possible sexual abuse of minors should contact law enforcement.

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California to review sex-abuse responses of all 12 dioceses

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
Associated Press

May 4, 2019

By Noelle Bellow

The California attorney general’s office will review how all 12 Roman Catholic dioceses in the state handled allegations of child sexual abuse that have resulted in payouts of hundreds of millions of dollars to victims.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra sent out letters to the dioceses on Thursday, requesting that officials preserve documents relating to abuse allegations involving clergy, staffers and volunteers that were received from 1996 to the present.

The attorney general’s office will look into whether the archdiocese properly reported the allegations under California law.

The request could be the first step toward a full investigation of California dioceses, which serve an estimated 10 million worshippers.

Melanie Sakoda with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) says she along with other advocates, feel the Catholic church isn’t transparent enough to do an investigation.

“In general they have underreported. I think they have minimized,” she said. “Until you get all of that information out there, you don’t have a good idea of what happened and you don’t know who knew what, who knew when, and what did they do about it. I think that’s what the attorney general is focusing on.”

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Standing by Monsignor Craig Harrison

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
Bakersfield Californian

May 5, 2019

By Rylee Smith

When I was 9-years-old, someone had to tell me that my aunt, whom I loved more than I can express, passed away. My parents were at a loss. They turned to Monsignor Craig Harrison, then Father Craig.

He sat my sister and me down and told us the news. It went about as well as giving such difficult news can go. He gave us each a copy of a book he wrote called “Angel Girl.” Twelve years later, I teared up while reading the message he wrote inside my book: “Rylee — May the angels above, especially Aunt Shell, bless you. Love, Fr. Craig.”

When I heard that Monsignor Craig was being put on leave, I was devastated. Allegations of this nature are extremely serious, and should be given the attention they deserve by the authorities. Just because allegations are heard, however, does not mean that they can be immediately believed, absent evidence. The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests urged Bishop Joseph V. Brennan of Fresno to prevent the prayer vigil that occurred Wednesday for Monsignor Craig. Its argument was that victims of abuse will be deterred from coming forward in other situations if they see that the community is rallying around a priest accused of sexual assault. This argument makes sense. It is also not fair.

Monsignor Craig is not just a priest accused of sexual assault, acting as a scapegoat for the horrible crimes by members of the global church that have come to light in the past year. He is a member of our community. He is a friend. He is a human being. Just like any person, Monsignor Craig has the right to the presumption of innocence. The burden of proof falls on the prosecution in a court of law for a reason because we as a nation shudder at the idea of an innocent person being wrongfully convicted. The fact that the alleged crime is so heinous should make us cling tighter to the presumption of innocence, not abandon it.

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Pa. Senate must answer to victims of child sexual abuse

EASTON (PA)
Express-Times

May 5, 2019

Last year Pennsylvania took a courageous step toward justice for thousands of victims of child sexual abuse. A grand jury investigation uncovered the crimes of more than 300 priests in the Catholic Church and a hierarchy that gave them cover.

The grand jury, led by Attorney General Josh Shapiro, didn’t simply pry open the past. It looked to the future, recommending laws that would help people get long-sought relief from the courts, tighten reporting standards for suspected abuse, and create a society in which children would be better protected, if not totally shielded, from predators.

Well, the future is now.

The Pennsylvania Legislature tried last year to assemble a package of reforms recommended by the grand jury, but failed when the House and Senate couldn’t agree. Some lawmakers thought the Catholic Church’s program to settle with victims out of court should be allowed to play out, in lieu of changing the statute of limitations to give long-ago victims a limited “window” to sue.

Liberalizing the statute of limitations is still a major sticking point — a shameful one — but at least the House of Representatives has taken the initiative to address other changes.

In bills approved last month and sent to the Senate, the lower house clarified that nondisclosure agreements with child sex abuse victims do not prevent them from speaking with with police about suspected criminal activities. The grand jury reported that church officials often employed such agreements to try to keep victims quiet.

Another House bill would increase the penalties for mandated reporters who fail to contact law enforcement about suspected abuse.

Also, the House overwhelmingly agreed to enumerate the rights of crime victims in the state constitution, and to revoke the pension benefits of public officials and workers convicted of sexual offenses.

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May 4, 2019

Will new criminal investigation expose church leaders in sex abuse scandal?

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

May 5, 2019

By Richard Winton

A new investigation into how the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and California’s 11 other Roman Catholic dioceses handled sex abuse cases could uncover more disturbing details of misconduct and institutional failures. But it’s an open question whether it would lead to more criminal charges.

News of the statewide investigation brought new hope for some victims of abuse, along with caution.

The California attorney general’s office this week asked church officials at each of the dioceses to preserve an array of documents related to clergy abuse allegations. Among other things, prosecutors are examining whether church officials adequately reported allegations of sexual misconduct, as required under California’s Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act.

Former L.A. County District Attorney Steve Cooley, who as the county’s top prosecutor charged two dozen priests and used a grand jury to extract records from the archdiocese, said the probe may generate more information, but criminal charges are much harder to lodge against the church hierarchy.

Cooley said that because the Los Angeles Archdiocese delayed and blocked disclosure, the efforts to hold church officials accountable have been stymied.

“Conspiracy charges are based on the last overt act. The statute for conspiracy is based on the underlying crime,” Cooley said. “Here that could be obstruction of justice, and that is just a few years.”

The L.A. Archdiocese has paid a record $740 million in various settlements to victims and pledged to better protect its members. Archbishop Jose H. Gomez succeeded longtime Cardinal Roger M. Mahony, who faced strong criticism for his handling of the scandal that undercut his moral authority as one of America’s most important Catholic leaders. In the wake of the settlement, the church imposed a series of reforms.

For nearly two decades, the archdiocese has been roiled by allegations that church leaders mishandled abuse cases, sometimes moving clergy suspected of wrongdoing to other parishes rather than punishing them and informing law enforcement. Individual priests have been criminally prosecuted, but investigations of church leaders ended without charges.

Attorney Anthony De Marco, who helped secure the $740 million in settlements, said it’s encouraging that the attorney general is investigating but too soon to tell what will come of it.

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Bill extending statute of limitations on child sexual abuse crimes likely to become law

NASHVILLE (TENNESSEE)
Nashville Tennessean

May 4, 2019

By Holly Meyer

A group of about 30 Catholic laypeople created a legislative wish-list that included tearing down the statutes of limitations for felony sex abuse crimes.

A bill that would extend the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse crimes in Tennessee is headed to the governor’s desk.

The Tennessee General Assembly passed the legislation Thursday, the final day of this year’s legislative session. It is expected to become law since Gov. Bill Lee said Thursday evening during a news conference that he has no plans to veto any bills that made it out of the state legislature.

Criminally, the changes to the statute of limitations include, among others:

The statute of limitations is eliminated if the victim is under 13 years of age at the time of the offense.

The statute of limitations is eliminated if the victim is between the ages of 13 and 17 at the time of the offense and reports the abuse within five years of turning 18.
If the 13- to 17-year-old victim does not report the abuse within five years of turning 18, the statute of limitations is extended to 25 years after they turn 18 years old. If the 25-year deadline passes, the prosecution must produce “admissible and credible evidence.”

The legislation also stiffens the penalties for those who intentionally fail to report them.

On the civil side, the legislation would extend the statute of limitations to 15 years after the victim turns 18.

The bill also would require admissible and credible evidence for civil actions filed against someone other than the accused if it is brought more than one year after the victim turns 18.

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Activists demand Pope Francis ensure ‘zero tolerance’ in Argentina

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Buenos Aires Times

May 4, 2019

Local group Church Without Abuses (“Iglesia sin Abusos”) and the global organisations Ending Clergy Abuse and BishopAccountability.org joined forces in Buenos Aires on Thursday to urge Francis to return to his homeland of Argentina – which he hasn’t visited since becoming pope in 2013 – to ensure the Catholic Church punishes these crimes and does not protect perpetrators.

“If the Pope cannot end abuses and cover-ups in Argentina, he will not be able to do it anywhere else. This is where he has more power, influence, it is symbolically the most important country in the fight against abuse in the world,” Peter Isely, the co-founder of Ending Clergy Abuse and abuse victim, told The Associated Press news agency.

Isley and representatives of other activist groups gathered near the Monsignor Mariano Espinosa Home for Priests (El Hogar Sacerdotal Monseñor Mariano Espinosa) in Caballito, displaying signs calling for zero tolerance for sex abuses. A local priest accused of committing abuse had previously been housed there.

Pope Francis is on record as describing abuse as a “monstrosity” and previously vowed to tackle the problem “with the utmost seriousness.” Isley said he was not doing enough.

“In February, the Pope declared a war against abuses to be open, calling the abusive priests ‘bloodthirsty wolves.’ But what is happening in his own country?” Isley added, saying the pontiff “has not been on the side of the victims.”

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the online resource Bishopaccountability.org, said that while in other countries thousands of cases of abuse have been detected, in Argentina almost no criminal investigations or litigation have been seen. There is no official registry collating judicial complaints about abuses committed by members of the clergy in Argentina.

“In his 14 years as archbishop of Buenos Aires he only sent two allegations to the Vatican regarding sexual abuse in his diocese,” said Barrett Doyle.

“We ask the Church to stop covering up [the crimes], and to turn them [the perpetrators] over to justice,” said the co-founder of Church Without Abuses, Julieta Añasco, 47, who abused in her childhood by a priest.

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Abuse survivors in Chile blast deal between Church and prosecutor

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Crux

May 4, 2019

By Inés San Martín

A recently signed agreement between the Catholic Church in Chile and the local prosecutor’s office has caused uproar, with critics charging that it unduly provides protections and privileges to the Church.

The agreement was signed on Tuesday by the national prosecutor, Jorge Abbott, and the secretary general of the Chilean bishops’ conference, Bishop Fernando Ramos, who’s one of ten bishops called to testify facing allegations of having covered up cases of abuse.

The “Collaborative Framework Agreement with the Public Prosecutor’s Office” signed this week seeks to promote the exchange of information between the Church and the prosecutor regarding allegations and investigations of sexual crimes committed by clerics, protecting the confidentiality of whistleblowers who request it and respecting current legislation.

“The present agreement is founded and sustained by good faith that all sides declare and commit to sustain,” says the text, which asserts that interaction between the Catholic Church and the prosecutor’s office from now on will be “amicable” and carried out through direct negotiations.

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The triumph of New Orleans, the tragedy of the Catholic Church.

LAFAYETTE (LA)
The Current

April 24, 2019

By Christiaan Mader

By the mid-1990s, journalist Jason Berry wanted to move on from writing about the Catholic Church. His landmark book, Lead Us Not Into Temptation, published in 1992, was an incendiary act of reporting, breaking wide open a clergy sex abuse scandal that has embroiled the church ever since. In his bid to move on, he turned his attention to New Orleans, his hometown and the other work-defining subject of his literary life, for a new focus in his career, beginning a history that would take him years to complete. When the Boston Globe published a landmark series in 2002, hanging the sex abuse scandal back on the national conscience, Berry was whisked once again into the throes of reporting that he began in and around Lafayette in 1985, writing on special assignment for The Times of Acadiana.

“I could have continued to write about the Catholic Church for the rest of my life,” he tells me. After another decade exploring the secrecy and politics of Rome, Berry returned to chronicling New Orleans. In 2018, just in time for the city’s tricentennial, he published City of a Million Dreams: A History of New Orleans at Year 300. A history teeming with life and detail, City of a Million Dreams contemplates the productive tension between extroverted African cultures and staid, orderly European society. New Orleans, in Berry’s telling, is defined by that grappling — between hedonic pleasure and Old World pieties, the black spirit and the yoke of white supremacy. He’s also working on a documentary of the same name, which will hit the film festival circuit in 2020, coincidentally the 15th anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.

Berry will make a pair of appearances discussing City of a Million Dreams in Lafayette this week. On Thursday, he’ll speak at an event hosted by UL Lafayette’s Center for Louisiana Studies at 3:30 p.m. On Friday, he’ll deliver an address at a luncheon organized by Friends of the Humanities, at The Petroleum Club of Lafayette at 11:30 p.m.

We spoke by phone on Easter Sunday. The interview has been edited for brevity and clarity.

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Baptists and Methodists to be probed in new strand of child abuse inquiry

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Premier Christian Media

May 3, 2019

Religious organisations across England and Wales are set to be investigated by the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA).

Faiths including Buddhism, Jehovah’s Witnesses and Baptists and religious settings such as mosques and synagogues will all fall within the scope of the newly announced probe.

The investigation into child protection in religious organisations and settings is the inquiry’s 14th strand.

The IICSA said more than one in ten survivors of child sexual abuse who shared their accounts with the inquiry’s Truth Project reported sexual abuse in a religious institution.

Of these, almost a quarter said they were abused in institutions in the scope of the new investigation.

Independent Inquiry in Child Sexual Abuse

The IICSA said the latest strand will review the current child protection policies, practices and procedures in religious institutions in England and Wales.

Other organisations falling under the remit of the investigation will include non conformist Christian denominations, Methodists, Islam, Judaism, Sikhism and Hinduism.

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Church sex abuse scandal prompts podcast

LEHMAN TWP. (PA)
Citizens Voice

May 4, 2019

Paul and Kristen Ciaccia remember the news that sparked their anger.

In 2013, they learned their sons had served as altar boys with a priest who had just been arrested on charges that he had oral sex with a minor.

“That was the first ‘What?’ moment. My kids were with this priest for a couple years. And I thought ‘Thank God it didn’t happen to any of my kids,’ but as that thought went through my head, I thought ‘Wait a minute, what about these other kids this happened to? Somebody’s got to do something,’” Paul Ciaccia said. “The only way I could think of to make a change, to correct things in the church, was to talk about it in public.”

Another moment came with the August 2018 release of the attorney general’s grand jury report into sexual abuse of children in six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses.

They followed the Catholic Church’s response to sexual abuse scandals that came to light in 2002, but the issue was suddenly back in the news.

The couple decided to take their complaints to a public forum. Earlier this year, they started a podcast. They named it “The Angry Catholic.”

The Ciaccias have discussed all sorts of issues related to the Catholic Church on their show.

In a recent episode, they spoke to Doug Barry, a Catholic speaker whose “Radix — Battle Ready” movement encourages followers to strengthen themselves against the world’s temptations. They have also discussed how Church leadership chooses cardinals, preparing for marriage, and the grand jury investigation. They frequently speak with an unnamed priest who goes by the moniker “Father Anonymous” and offers insider perspectives on the discussion topics.

The project gives the Ciaccias the ability to guide the dialogue in a discussion that is important to them. They usually add an episode each week. The podcast is currently offered at their website, and the Ciaccias plan to make it available on other platforms, such as iTunes and iHeartRadio.

The Ciaccias say they are not theologians, journalists or radio professionals.

“I’m just an average Catholic that’s angry about what is going on in the Church and doesn’t know what to do about it,” Paul Ciaccia said.

The Ciaccias have an open letter to Joseph Bambera, Bishop of the Diocese of Scranton, on their website, www.theangrycatholic.com.

They have not been satisfied with the public responses from the diocese or from a letter Bambera wrote in response to their questions regarding specific allegations from the grand jury report and how diocese officials responded.

“You’re getting canned PR statements. We call it ‘Bishop-speak’ now,” said Kristen Ciaccia.

In his letter, Bambera pointed out that he has repeatedly, publicly acknowledged the diocese’s failures in the past, but also said that the organization has continuously improved on the issue in the last 25 years.

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My priest was an accused abuser: The Catholic sexual abuse story gets personal

NEW YORK (NY)
Salon

MAY 4, 2019

By Mary Elizabeth Williams

In the photograph, I am smiling brightly, and so are the two men I am standing next to. One is the future father of my children. The other is currently accused of sexual abuse involving “multiple” victims: his name is Robert Chabak. That’s how he signed my marriage certificate. We called him Father Bob.

I’ve wondered over the last several years, of course, about the priests of my youth. As revelation upon revelation of sexual abuse in the Catholic church has emerged, I asked myself if I had known any of the men involved, if the cash I’d faithfully tucked into my collection plate envelopes had gone toward settlements with victims. I’ve talked to survivors — including a family friend whose courage in coming forward was a key part of the Boston Globe’s breakthrough Spotlight investigation of the early 2000s. But perhaps I couldn’t fully face learning the names of the men in my own own parishes until I’d truly left the church for good. And sure enough, there he was.

Over the past weekend, the archdiocese of New York released a list containing the names of 120 men. In his accompanying statement, Cardinal Dolan said they were of “archdiocesan clergy found credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor, or any clergy who were the subject of a claim, found eligible for compensation, made to the archdiocese’s Independent Reconciliation & Compensation Program.” He also asked for “forgiveness again for the failings of those clergy and bishops who should have provided for the safety of our young people but instead betrayed the trust placed in them by God and by the faithful.” None of the accused are currently in ministry.

Acknowledging the abuse of the past and setting a course to prevent it in the future is, I have no doubt, a painful task for the sincerely faithful trying to right decades of deep institutional wrongs. But there was also something a touch self-congratulatory in the communication too. The pastoral letter noted that “The Archdiocese of New York has vigorously implemented the requirements of the Charter and, in fact, has adopted policies that are above and beyond the Charter” and included specifics of “How We Have Helped Survivors of Abuse.” Transparency is great, but maybe don’t pat yourselves on the back too hard here, guys.

Seeing the New York list made me finally ready to look at my own. In a letter this past February, Newark Archbishop Cardinal James Tobin published 188 names of “diocesan clergy credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors in the Archdiocese of Newark,” adding that “All names were previously reported to law enforcement agencies.”

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Latter-day Saint spokesman denounces news story about church’s sexual abuse response

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Desesret News

May 3, 2019

By Tad Walch

In a rare action, a spokesman for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints denounced a news story reported by Vice News, saying Friday that the media outlet irresponsibly mischaracterized the faith’s response to sexual abuse.

“In short, Vice News chose to misreport this story,” said Eric Hawkins, the church’s director of media relations. “Abuse is a matter taken very seriously by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,” he added. “It is not tolerated, and the church has invested heavily in resources and training, including the help line, to prevent, combat and address abuse.”

On Thursday night, HBO’s Vice News Tonight aired a story about the ongoing pain and suffering of Christopher Michael Jensen’s sexual abuse victims and their families in West Virginia. A print version was published Friday on the Vice News website. Both versions incorrectly reported the church’s name multiple times.

Jensen was sentenced in 2013 to 35 to 75 years in prison for sexually abusing two children while babysitting as a teenager. Vice News interviewed the attorney and two of five families who sued the church in 2013 regarding the Jensen cases, alleging the church acted improperly in its response to Jensen, a church member.

The families and church settled the suit last year. The church, which excommunicated Jensen in 2013, denied any wrongdoing and the settlement amount is confidential.

The Vice News story focused in part on the 24-hour abuse help line the church makes available to its approximately 30,000 bishops and 3,000 stake presidents. Those leaders, who are not professional clergy, are instructed to call the hotline promptly about every situation they believe includes abuse or neglect or risk for either, Hawkins said. The goal, he said, is to prevent abuse and advise bishops about compliance with local abuse reporting laws.

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Catholic priest sex abuse scandal hits home, with more pain sure to come

CHICAGO (IL)
Sun Times

May 4, 2019

By Laura Washington

“What’s next?” Roman Catholics worldwide are asking as their church reels amid explosive revelations of sexual assault and abuse of minors by priests.

It certainly has hit home for me. During Mass in January, a representative of the Archdiocese of Chicago announced that the beloved pastor of my church had been accused of sexual abusing a minor in 1979, while serving in a south suburban parish.

After the Mass ended, I sat in the pew in stunned silence.

The headlines of rampant abuse and cover-ups in the church are horrific enough. This was surreal. My pastor has been removed from the parish, pending the outcome of an investigation. Like many fellow parishioners, I am adamantly confident he will be cleared.

That will be small solace. Former Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan can tell you why.

Madigan spoke recently at the Public Affairs Roundtable, hosted by attorney Ron Miller of Miller, Shakman & Beem. Miller regularly invites friends and colleagues to hear prominent figures lead luncheon discussions of local and national issues.

Madigan left office in January after serving four terms and is currently teaching at the University of Chicago Law School.

Last summer, in the twilight of her tenure, Madigan read a report from a grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania. It found that more than 300 Catholic priests there had sexually abused 1,000 children over seven decades.

“If you have kids, it’s a tough read. If you are Catholic, it’s a tough read,” she told the group. “It made me exceptionally angry, physically revolted.”

The report “made clear that this was the M.O. of the Catholic Church. Not just in Pennsylvania,” she added.

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May 3, 2019

California to review LA archdiocese’s sex-abuse response

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Associated Press

May 4, 2019

The California attorney general’s office will review how all 12 Roman Catholic dioceses in the state handled allegations of child sexual abuse that have resulted in payouts of hundreds of millions of dollars to victims.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra sent out letters to the dioceses on Thursday, Sacramento diocese spokesman Kevin Eckery told the Sacramento Bee.

The letters ask dioceses to voluntarily preserve documents relating to abuse allegations involving clergy, staffers and volunteers that were received from 1996 to the present. The attorney general’s office will look into whether the archdiocese properly reported the allegations under California law.

The request could be the first step toward a full investigation of California dioceses, which serve an estimated 10 million worshippers.

“We intend to comply with both the spirit and the letter of what they’re asking for,” Eckery said.

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles announced it will cooperate.

Both dioceses said they have taken steps to ensure that suspected sex abuse is reported to law enforcement by priests, teachers and other employees.

“Even those who are not mandated reporters are reminded of the moral obligation to be aware for the signs of child abuse and to report it when there is a reasonable suspicion an abuse has occurred,” Sacramento Bishop Jaime Soto said in a statement Friday.

“The Archdiocese of Los Angeles is committed to transparency and has established reporting and prevention policies and programs to protect minors and support victim-survivors in our parishes, schools and ministries,” the archdiocese said in a statement.

Last November, Becerra asked victims of clerical sex abuse to submit complaints to his office.

Many dioceses around the country have been hit with lawsuits and accusations that sex abuse by clergy and others was ignored or swept under the rug.

The Los Angeles archdiocese, which covers Santa Barbara, Ventura and Los Angeles counties, has paid a record $740 million in settlements to victims. In April, the archdiocese announced an $8 million settlement for a former Catholic school student who was molested by a coach.

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NJ arbitrator saves job of teacher who fathered a child when he was a priest 29 years ago

NEW YORK (NY)
Fox News

May 3, 2019

By Robert Gearty

An arbitrator has refused to fire a New Jersey sixth-grade teacher who fathered a child with a teenage girl nearly three decades ago when he was a parish priest.

Joseph DeShan was a Roman Catholic priest in Connecticut when the baby was born in 1990. The girl was 15 when she became pregnant. He was never reported to cops for having sex with an underage girl and he stopped being a priest in 1994. Two years later he became a teacher in Cinnaminson, N.J.

His termination was being sought by the Cinnaminson school board for fathering the child as a priest and for a recent comment he was accused of uttering to a young female student about her green eyes in a “weird voice,” according to the New York Post.

But the arbitrator ruled in a seven-page decision that DeShan couldn’t be fired on either basis because the comment to the young student was hearsay, and because the board had known about the teen and the child for 17 years.

“The BOE has not alleged that respondent engaged in any inappropriate conduct while holding public employment,” arbitrator Walt De Treux wrote in an April 2 decision, the Post reported Friday. “The fact that some parents now demand his removal from the classroom does not give the BOE a second opportunity to revisit pre-employment conduct of which it has been long aware.”

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Polish Bishop: The Jews Plotted to Divide the Christians, Smear Priests as Pedophiles

Jewish Post
May 3, 2019 0

By David Israel –

Bishop Andrzej Jeż of the city of Tarnów, southeast of Kraków, Poland, last Easter gave a sermon in the style of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, in which he accused the Jews of using the Zionist Congress more than a century ago to plot a conspiracy against Christianity and to denounce the Catholic Church, Kan 11 reported Thursday night, at the end of Holocaust

Citing an anti-Semitic article from 1937, the Bishop claimed these anti-Christian plots had been conceived in the congress of a nation whose name he cannot mention for fear of getting in trouble – referring to the Tenth Zionist Congress of 1911 which assembled in Basel, Switzerland.

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Amid new document, Buffalo Diocese seminary cracks down on seminarians who blew whistle on ‘pornographic’ priest party

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW TV

May 3, 2019

By Charlie Specht

A confidential investigative report obtained Friday by 7 Eyewitness News from Christ the King seminary confirms multiple seminarians came forward recently to report misbehavior by Diocese of Buffalo priests .

Reeling from the fallout, officials at the seminary have undertaken a full-scale “leak investigation” that involves interrogations of the same seminarians who came forward to report wrongdoing.

That’s according to multiple sources who spoke with 7 Eyewitness News on the condition of anonymity, because they feared retribution from the seminary and diocese. The sources say the intent of the crackdown is finding out who provided documents to 7 Eyewitness News.

The report — authored by Michael J. Sherry, a retired Orchard Park police chief who now works at the seminary — contains many of the graphic sex-related details that were revealed Monday by 7 Eyewitness News.

But for the first time, it makes clear at least five seminarians came forward to make their claims about what happened at SS. Peter & Paul Church rectory on April 11 that led to the suspensions of Rev. Art Mattulke, Rev. Robert Orlowski and Rev. Patrick O’Keefe.

The report states 14 seminarians in total — and five priests, including the suspended priests as well as Fr. Bryan Zielenieski and Fr. Cole Webster — attended the “pizza party” which reportedly devolved into “vulgar” conversations about the sex lives of priests, seminarians and parishioners.

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Victim’s group praises indictment of Houston-area priest

HOUSTON (TX)
Associated Press

May 3, 2019

By Juan A. Lozano

A victim advocacy group says the indictment of a Houston-area Roman Catholic priest on child indecency charges sends a message that “those who hurt children can and will be held accountable.”

Manuel La Rosa-Lopez was indicted Thursday on two of four counts that had led to his Sept. 11 arrest.

The two counts arise from allegations made by a female parishioner who accused La Rosa-Lopez of courting her for sex and groping her in 2000 when she was a teenager.

Tyler Dunman, chief of the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office Special Crimes Bureau, says he expects more indictments “relatively soon.”

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, said Friday it hopes the indictment encourages other victims to come forward.

La Rosa-Lopez’s attorney, Wendell Odom, says his client maintains his innocence.

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What part of the church’s healing are we each responsible for?

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

May 2, 2019

In the final episode of Deliver Us, we ask: What’s mine to do and not somebody else’s? What part of the church’s healing are we each responsible for?

To grapple with these questions, we spoke to people who have responded to the sex abuse crisis in different ways. Geoff Boisi and Kerry Robinson talk about why they formed Leadership Roundtable, an organization which brings best business practices to church leaders and which has convened experts to discuss the church’s future. Leadership Roundtable has made it a priority to address the “twin crises” of the abuse crisis—one being the sexual abuse of children and vulnerable adults, and the other being the leadership failures in the church that have led to distrust.

Donna Doucette of Voice of the Faithful also joins the episode to offer her take on how lay people can contribute to healing, and Monica LaBelle offers her experience of setting up listening sessions in her parish.

We also hear from you, our listeners, in this final episode. You tell us what you’ve been doing to help the church move forward.

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Years of priest abuse allegations have caught up with Los Angeles Archdiocese

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

May 03, 2019

The California attorney general’s investigation into how the Los Angeles Archdiocese — and potentially other dioceses in California — handled abuse allegations over the years is a major step for prosecutors.

The priest scandal has resulted in record financial settlements for victims as well as criminal charges against individual priests. But this investigation looks at how the institution as a whole has handled the allegations of sexual abuse.

The L.A. Archdiocese was dogged for years by allegations of covering up the sexual misconduct of priests. The church is accused of transferring priests who molested children to other parishes rather than removing them from the priesthood and alerting authorities.

The church also fought for years to keep files about priest abuse secret.

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Activists demand pope ensure ‘zero tolerance’ in Argentina

BUENOS AIRES (AGENTINA)
Associated Press

May 2, 2019

Activist groups are calling on Pope Francis to guarantee the implementation of the Vatican’s “zero tolerance” for sexual abuses by clergy in Argentina, where they say the policy has not been carried out.

The Argentine group Church Without Abuses and the global organizations Ending Clergy Abuse and BishopAccountability.org on Thursday urged Francis to return to his homeland of Argentina, which he hasn’t visited since becoming pope in 2013, to ensure the Roman Catholic Church punishes these crimes and does not protect perpetrators.

“If the pope cannot end abuses and cover-ups in Argentina he will not be able to do it anywhere else. This is where he has more power, influence, it is symbolically the most important country in the fight against abuse in the world,” Peter Isely, co-founder of Ending Clergy Abuse, told The Associated Press.

Isley and representatives of other activist groups gathered near the Monsignor Mariano Espinosa Home for Priests in Buenos Aires, displaying signs calling for zero tolerance for sex abuses.

Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of the online resource Bishopaccountability.org, said that while in other countries thousands of cases of abuse have been detected, in Argentina almost no criminal investigations or litigations have been seen.

In Argentina there is no official registry of judicial complaints about abuses committed by members of the clergy.

The AP compiled a list of 66 priests, nuns and other religious workers who, between 2001 and 2017, were accused of abusing dozens of people, most of them children. The figure was obtained from victims’ testimonies, judicial and ecclesiastical documents, and local media reports corroborated with the BishopAccountability.org database. In several cases there were no canonical or judicial investigations.

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Lawyers clash over Nebraska Catholic sex abuse records; A.G. says not all documents turned overhttps://bit.ly/2UZ1drI

OMAHA (ME)
Omaha World-Herald

May 2, 2019

By Christopher Burbach

Catholic officials in Nebraska have not turned over all sexual abuse records demanded two months ago by sweeping subpoenas, although the vast majority of Catholic institutions in the state have complied, the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office said in court Thursday.

The records not turned over, according to church attorneys, include psychiatric evaluations of perpetrators, medical records of priests and victims and confidential settlement agreements. The Archdiocese of Omaha says it is prohibited by law from releasing those records, and will turn them over only if a court orders it to do so.

“Those are the only things we have not turned over,” said Deacon Tim McNeil, chancellor of the Omaha Archdiocese.

The Attorney General’s Office issued the subpoenas in late February to Nebraska’s three Catholic dioceses and nearly 400 churches, schools and other institutions across the state.

That followed Attorney General Doug Peterson’s request that the dioceses voluntarily turn over 40 years of records on sexual abuse by priests or other employees.

The dioceses of Omaha and Lincoln filed suit in Lancaster County District Court in March to quash the subpoenas.

The dioceses said they wanted to comply and were trying to do so, but asked the court to quash the subpoenas, saying they carried an impossible-to-meet deadline of three days, were overly broad and could potentially cost millions of dollars to fulfill.

The court case had been on hold, and a hearing twice postponed, while the two sides agreed to work out their differences.

In a hearing Thursday, Assistant Attorney General Ryan Post said many records are being turned over, and he asked for the lawsuit to be dismissed so the parties could continue to work things out.

Post said the Attorney General’s Office had issued the subpoenas only when, six months after its request for records to be voluntarily turned over, it became clear that not all records were being turned over and that some were redacted.

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Prominent Sex Abuse Lawyer Mitchell Garabedian Targeted in Philly-Based Lawsuit

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Magazine

May 3, 2019

By Victor Fiorillo

Mitchell Garabedian is easily one of the world’s most well-known attorneys when it comes to suing men accused of sexual abuse.

Garabedian was the lawyer at the center of the notorious Boston clergy abuse scandal — Stanley Tucci played him in the Oscar-winning movie Spotlight — and reportedly obtained a large settlement on behalf of 86 people who claimed they had been abused by one particular Boston priest. He’s called the Catholic church a “corrupt criminal entity” and has said that Catholic priests have “been raping kids at a wholesale pace for centuries.”

When a woman came forward in 2017 with accusations that actor Kevin Spacey had sexually abused her underaged son, it was Garabedian who was sitting next to her at the press conference.

And the horrific Boy Scouts sexual abuse story that broke recently? Garabedian is representing more than 25 accusers, and he’s been all over the news for that.

But now Garabedian finds himself the target of a lawsuit filed by prominent Center City lawyer Jim Beasley on behalf of a Hill School employee who says that Garabedian ruined his reputation by asserting false sexual abuse claims made by a former student. That employee, whose identity is not revealed in the John Doe lawsuit, is currently on leave, says a Hill School spokesperson. Garabedian did not comment for this story.

According to the lawsuit, filed in Philadelphia’s federal court, the employee in question has held a number of positions at the Hill School over the last 25 years, including coach, dorm parent, administrator and teacher. He “earned and maintained the highest esteem, respect and gratitude of his supervisors, colleagues, students and alumni,” reads the suit.

But that all changed in 2018.

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Former AAU coach sentenced to 180 years for sex abuse, child porn involving more than 400 boys

CEDAR RAPIDS (IA)
Yahoo Sports

May 3, 2019

By Jason Owens

A judge sentenced an influential AAU coach to 180 years in prison Thursday after he pleaded guilty to sexual exploitation charges involving more that 400 boys under his watch.

Former Iowa Barnstormers youth basketball coach Greg Stephen received the maximum sentence from U.S. District Judge C.J. Williams, who said that Stephen deserved to spend the rest of his life in prison.

“The harm the defendant caused to the children is incalculable and profound,” Williams said in a Cedar Rapids, Iowa court, per the Associated Press.

Stephen, 43, faced a minimum of 15 years in prison and saw his pleas for leniency unanswered.

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Buffalo suspends priests after seminarians’ complaint of lewd comments

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Cathiloc Reporter

May 3, 2019

by Peter Feuerherd

Bishop Richard Malone of Buffalo, New York, has suspended three priests after seminarians complained about lewd comments allegedly made by the clergy at an April 11 party at Saints Peter and Paul Rectory in Hamburg, New York.

In announcing the suspensions, the diocese issued a statement indicating that the suspended priests participated in “unsuitable, inappropriate and insensitive conversations.”

The three suspended priests are Fr. Arthur Mattulke, pastor of Saints Peter and Paul, who is also a spiritual director for seminarians; Fr. Patrick O’Keefe, parochial vicar of Saints Peter and Paul; and Fr. Robert Orlowski, pastor of Our Mother of Good Counsel in Blasdell, New York. Two other priests present at the party were reprimanded by the diocese for not putting an end to the allegedly objectionable discussions.

The suspended priests will undergo psychological evaluation and retraining in sexual harassment concerns, the diocesan statement said.

Buffalo television station WKBW reported that the lewd remarks directed to seminarians included a priest describing overhearing the parents of one of the seminarians having sex on a diocesan retreat, the description of a priest of the diocese pursuing sex at truck stops, and a priest questioning a woman on the phone in front of the seminarians, asking if she wanted to have sex with them. WKBW declined to air many of the specific complaints as the statements were considered too graphic for broadcast television.

The suspensions come after a series of sexual abuse concerns raised in the past year in the Diocese of Buffalo. In the past year, the diocese released a list of 42 priests accused of abuse, only to raise that number to 176 in subsequent revisions. A report on CBS’ 60 Minutes featured Malone’s former administrative assistant, who accused the diocese of covering up sex abuse cases.

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‘House of Horrors’ child abuse cases reveal how offenders nationwide use homeschooling to hide their crimes

NEW YORK (NY)
Fox News

April 29, 2019

By Elizabeth Llorente

The children suffered in silence, their cries and pleas unheard and their injuries unseen beyond the walls of their homes, which the adults responsible for them had turned into torture chambers.

There was the Wisconsin father recently accused of turning a blind eye while his oldest sons sexually abused the younger siblings for years; the California couple who starved and shackled 12 of their children, feeding them once a day and allowing them to shower once a year; a Michigan mother who held her children captive at home, beat them and killed two of them months apart, keeping their bodies in freezers for years.

What they and scores of other children with similar fates have in common is that their abusers kept their crimes against them secret by keeping them out of school – where bruises, wounds or other signs of mistreatment likely would have drawn someone’s attention. The abusers kept authorities at bay by claiming that their children were being homeschooled.

Homeschooling in much of the nation tends to be loosely regulated. Nearly a dozen states have no real regulatory system in place, including no requirement that parents who decide to homeschool their children even inform anyone.

Most of the roughly 2 million children estimated to be homeschooled in the United States are properly educated and cared for by their parents or guardians, experts on the subject say.

But homeschooling unwittingly also provides a convenient and legal cover for families where children are living in squalor or are being neglected and abused.

The Coalition of Responsible Home Education, a national nonprofit, told Fox News that it has tracked nearly 400 cases that have drawn public attention – often through news outlets – since the year 2000. The cases tracked had children whose parents reported them as homeschooled but who were fatally abused or had survived severe abuse and neglect.

Because of the lack of oversight in much of the country, experts say, the scope of abuse and neglect among children who are listed as homeschooled is unknown.

After the 2017 death of an autistic teenager, Matthew Tirado, who suffered starvation, dehydration and injuries — weighing 84 pounds when he died at the age of 17 — the Connecticut Office of the Child Advocate analyzed data of families that had records of child abuse and cross-checked them with homeschool data. The agency found that more than one-third of the children who were taken out of schools purportedly to be homeschooled were from homes that had been investigated by child protection officials.

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State attorney general investigating L.A. Archdiocese’s handling of sex abuse cases

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

May 3, 2019

By Teresa Watanbe

The California attorney general’s office will review how the Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles has handled sexual abuse allegations, including whether it followed mandatory reporting requirements to law enforcement, according to a letter reviewed by The Times.

The letter, dated Thursday, from Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra to Archbishop Jose Gomez, requests that church officials preserve an array of documents related to clergy abuse allegations.

The investigation marks a major escalation in the abuse scandal, which has resulted in massive settlements for victims and criminal charges against individual priests but not the larger institutions.

It’s unclear whether Becerra’s office is also seeking records from other California dioceses. But one source told The Times that other dioceses were being contacted by the attorney general.

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Ex Bridgeport Priest Accused Of Sex Abuse To Keep Teaching Job

BRIDGEPORT (CT)
Patch

May 3, 2019

By Rich Scinto

A former Diocese of Bridgeport priest who reportedly impregnated a 16-year-old student in the late 1980’s will keep his job as a New Jersey teacher after a state arbitrator ruled in his favor.

Joseph DeShan was removed from the ministry in 1999 after becoming a priest just two years prior, according to Diocese records. He was laicized in 1999. He began teaching in Cinnaminson Public Schools in 1996.

“We are disappointed in the ruling, and we are currently evaluating what options we have moving forward,” Cinnaminson Superintendent of Schools Stephen Cappello said.

He wasn’t charged with any crimes because the woman told her story after the statute of limitations in Connecticut had expired, according to the Harold J. Gerr Law Firm.

Once the alleged pregnancy story became public, he was placed on administrative leave by the Cinnaminson Public School District Board of Education for about three weeks before being allowed to return to work, according to court records.

Sixteen years later, the school district filed tenure charges asking for DeShan’s removal for conduct unbecoming a staff member. The complaint specifically relates one instance in which DeShan told a female student, “Look at me. Let me see your pretty green eyes. You don’t see them too much anymore.”

The student reported that the comment made her feel uncomfortable, and that DeShan made the comment in a “weird voice.”

The complaint also claims many parents are asking for their students to be removed from his class, calling him a “rapist,” a “pedophile” and asking the district to “please protect our children.”

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Editorial: George Weigel, wrong then, wrong now

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

May 3, 2019

The Catholic University of America decided to give the final guest speaker spot in its commendable series of four programs examining the priest sex abuse crisis to George Weigel. That was unfortunate, because his long-discredited narrative about the causes of the scandal and his illusory ideas about how to deal with it do a great disservice to the Catholic faithful in this moment when so much of the church is finally squaring up to the awful truth.

Weigel has for decades pushed a script, embellished from time to time, that defies logic, that at a minimum misrepresents data, that distorts and even falsifies verifiable history, and that engages in shameless deception to protect his principal enterprise — a gilded portrayal of the hastily sainted Pope John Paul II.

If the case he makes is so flawed, why bother spending any time on it? Precisely because Weigel can still command center stage at signature Catholic settings. He has long been an unabashed apologist not only for a pope but for the clerical and hierarchical culture now under scrutiny. He has an important perch as Distinguished Senior Fellow and William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies at the conservative Ethics and Public Policy Center, and a pulpit at First Things, a magazine that initially helped fashion his misconceptions. He is a regular traveler with Timothy Busch’s Napa Institute, an organization espousing extreme libertarian views and increasingly a gathering point for those opposed to Pope Francis. This year’s Napa Institute main speaker is Cardinal Raymond Burke, a leader of the Francis opposition.

Weigel has been preening hierarchical feathers for years. He is backed by big money. He is a Catholic to be reckoned with.

And so it is imperative that one also reckon with the fact that on the clergy sex abuse crisis, his analysis is terribly defective.

It is an important reckoning, too, because after nearly three and a half decades of public scandal, some at the highest levels of church leadership as well as Catholic lay leaders — some of whom were also represented on the CUA stage — have finally come to accept the truth. This is no time to turn back.

Weigel has most recently targeted, as a way of calling into question the matter of the wide culpability of church leaders, Pennsylvania attorney general Josh Shapiro and, by extension, all other attorneys general and the growing number of state investigations underway into the church’s handling of abusive priests. The church is being unfairly attacked, Weigel argues. The events of decades are being “telescoped” to appear that all of the abuse is occurring in the present, he says. And the oldest deflection: abuse is happening everywhere else, so why is the church being singled out?

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How will church handle legacies of legendary Staten Island priests on sex-abuse settlement list?

STATEN ISLAND (NY)
Staten Island Advance

May 3, 2019

By Maura Grunlund

Now that the reputations of more than 30 Staten Island priests have been tarnished in the Roman Catholic Church sex-abuse scandal, should their legacies be trashed as well?

Should the accused in effect be erased?

The names of more than 30 Island clergy were released by the Archdiocese of New York last week on a list of 120 bishops, monsignors, priests and deacons whose alleged actions resulted in payouts to victims. Included on the roster are many of the spiritual founders, builders and reformers who, over the past century, shaped the Roman Catholic Church into what it is today on Staten Island.

The names of some of these priests grace churches, schools and other religious facilities throughout the borough. Ground-breaking programs, scholarships and awards are their legacies.

Should their names, images and historical mentions be relegated — literally or figuratively — to the dumpster and effectively erased as the Archdiocese attempts to dismantle the scandal of priestly sex-abuse and rebuild its church on the Island?

Complicating the issue is the fact that the list has its own shades of gray in terms of culpability.

Although payouts were made to alleged victims, at least 58 of the accused clergy throughout the Archdiocese appear on a portion of the list devoted to priests who did not have the opportunity to defend themselves because they had died or left the ministry before being accused.

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Alliance Against Family Violence and Sexual Assault in Bakersfield speaks about sexual abuse

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
KGET TV

May 2, 2019

By Amber Frias

Wednesday, in our continuing coverage of sexual abuse allegations facing Monsignor Craig Harrison, we took you to Long Beach for a reaction from a prominent accuser in a separate and unrelated case settled years ago.

We gave you a look at “SNAP” the “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests” and told you that the Alliance Against Family Violence and Sexual Assault in Bakersfield hadn’t commented yet on Harrison’s allegations.

That changed Thursday.

“People are hurting, we’re seeing it in a lot of different forms and people have very different feelings come from personal experiences, some from caring for the people who have gone through it,” said Louis Gill, CEO for Alliance Against Family Violence and Sexual Assault. “It’s emotional chaos for individuals trying to make sense of the information they can’t comprehend.”

The sexual misconduct allegations against Harrison stunned the community. Whether you believe the Monsignor who’s impacted so many lives in Kern County, or the accusers as all allegations of sexual assault should be taken seriously, this is perhaps one of the most polarizing issues we’ll see here, as some struggle with which side to believe.

“I think anytime a community receives shocking news they go into shock and people respond differently,” said Gill. “Some people get angry, some people get sad. Right now everyone is hurting. What we need to do as a community is not rush to anything other than people are hurting and they need to be loved and cared for.”

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Calif. AG Opens Investigation Into LA Archdiocese Over Handling Of Sex Abuse Allegations

LOS ANGELES (CA)
CBS LA

May 3, 2019

The California attorney general’s office will review how the Archdiocese of Los Angeles has handled sexual abuse allegations.

In a letter from state Attorney General Xavier Becerra to Archbishop Jose Gomez dated Thursday and obtained by the Los Angeles Times, church officials are asked to preserve an array of documents related to clergy abuse allegations.

It’s unclear whether Becerra’s office is also seeking records from other California dioceses. Officials from the archdiocese and the attorney general’s office could not be reached for comment Thursday night.

“The California Department of Justice is conducting a review of your archdiocese’s handling of sexual misconduct allegations involving children, including whether your archdiocese has adequately reported allegations of sexual misconduct, as required under California’s Child Abuse and Neglect Reporting Act,” the letter stated, according to the Times.

For nearly two decades, the archdiocese has been roiled by allegations that onetime church leaders mishandled clergy abuse cases, sometimes moving clergy suspected of wrongdoing to other parishes rather than punishing them and informing law enforcement.

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May 2, 2019

Lincoln couple removes child from Catholic school amid allegations, Diocese in court

LINCOLN (NE)
KLKN TV

May 2, 2019

By Bayley Bischof

The Lincoln and Omaha diocese went before a district court judge pleading for more time to comply with an expansive subpoena of their history.

In the audience were Kyle and Lauren O’Donnell, a Lincoln couple raised catholic.

“I trusted them,” Kyle said.

They don’t, anymore. Kyle said even going to Sunday mass like he’s done his entire life is painful.

Lauren said while their faith in Christ remains strong, their faith in the church is crumbling, and they’re not going to shove it under the rug.

“We have a personal responsibility to make sure justice is served, that victims get the justice they deserve and people know the truth,” she said.

The truth, the Diocese say is impossible to release in the amount of time the Attorney General gave them.

Attorney General Doug Peterson ordered Nebraska churches to hand in decades worth of history regarding sexual assault, child abuse and misconduct on March 1, 2019. He gave the churches three days to comply.

The subpoenas came after Peterson asked the churches to voluntarily comply in September 2018.

An attorney with Peterson’s office asked the judge to dismiss the Diocese’s claims, saying they’ve had enough time.

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Grand jury indicts former Conroe priest on child sex abuse charges

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

May 2, 2019

By Nicole Hensley

A grand jury on Thursday indicted a former Conroe priest on charges stemming from child sex abuse allegations, according to court records.

Manuel La Rosa-Lopez was indicted on two of the four counts of indecency with a child that led to his Sept. 11 arrest, records show. The two charges stem from incidents alleged to have happened to a female parishioner on April 9, 2000, while the cleric was assigned to Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Montgomery County.

The document from the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office made no mention of the two other indecency with a child charges that La Rosa-Lopez was facing in connection with allegations from a male parishioner.

Prosecutors handling the case did not respond to requests for comment.

The female accuser, now an adult, came forward to police a month before La Rosa-Lopez’s arrest that in 2000, while her family attended the parish, the priest was grooming her for a sexual relationship, according to a sworn statement from a Conroe Police Department detective. On April 9 of that year, La Rosa-Lopez brought the girl to his office after confession, took off his clerical collar and kissed her, the investigator wrote.

The priest groped her two days later in the church kitchen after practice for a Passion of the Christ play, the statement read.

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Steve Israel: Real heroes of archdiocese sex abuse scandal — the victims

MIDDLETON (NY)
Times Record Herald

May 2, 2019

By Steve Israel

Imagine that you’re just a child, maybe 11, 12, 13 years old. You’re sexually abused by the man your family reveres so much — a priest — that they want you to be a priest like him. They’ve invited him for dinner, let him take you to Rye Playland and even let you spend the night at the rectory — where the priest abuses you.

For years you keep that terrible secret bottled up. After all, who’s going to take the word of a kid over the word of a priest?

But you start hearing that other priests are abusing other kids. They’re kids with families for whom the priests are such a big part of their lives that they let them take their sons on overnight trips to the Jersey shore. One family even gives one of those abusive priests a T-shirt that says “Trust Me, I’m a Father.”

You finally get the courage to speak the truth and face one of the most powerful institutions around, the Archdiocese of New York. You say that one of its priests is sexually abusing you.

The priest denies it, stands behind his white collar and says, “You’re ruining my life as a priest.” You don’t yet know that he’s been accused of abuse by other boys in other parishes. You don’t yet know what you and your family will soon learn — just by asking other boys — that he’s abused others in your parish and the Catholic school where he teaches.

You just know that church officials say it’s your word against his.

“And who’s going to believe you? He’s a priest and I’m just a kid,” says Port Jervis’ Patrick Westfall, who was abused in the 1970s by the late former priest Francis Stinner.

When word gets out that you’re accusing the priest of abuse, other church members don’t believe you. They accuse you and your family of attacking the church they love and where your family has worshiped for years.

This is what happened to Westfall. He was one of dozens of local boys who were victims of former priests like the late Edward Pipala and Stinner of Orange County — priests who were defrocked years after the abuse was first reported only because these boys and their families had the courage to speak out.

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Buffalo Diocese replaced one pedophile priest with another, lawsuit alleges

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW TV

May 2, 2019

By Charlie Specht

When Niagara Falls attorney Paul K. Barr was sexually abused by the Rev. Michael Freeman in 1980, the Diocese of Buffalo quietly transferred the priest.

Diocesan leaders chose the Rev. Bernard M. Mach as his replacement — but Mach was a pedophile, too.

And when Barr confided in another church leader — a youth minister at Sacred Heart Church — about the abuse, Barr had no idea of knowing he was talking to someone who would also go on to be accused of sexually abusing minors.

Those allegations are laid out in a lawsuit filed on behalf of Barr this week in State Supreme Court in Niagara County. Click here to view a copy of the lawsuit. The Buffalo News first reported the filing of the lawsuit.

In an interview with 7 Eyewitness News, Barr confirmed he rejected the diocese’s previous settlement offer of $45,000.

“I rejected the offer from the diocese because I wanted to show my support for other people who had been abused, either by clergy or other institutions,” Barr said.

The suit was filed by a New York City law firm, but Barr has plenty of experience as a litigator dealing with issues relating to the Catholic Church. He said he is serving as legal counsel to multiple victims of child sexual abuse in the Buffalo Diocese.

“It’s such an important issue,” Barr said. “I can’t tell you how many of the new cases I got who tell me, I’m the first person they’ve ever told about this.”

The lawsuit states Freeman “carefully groomed” Barr in 1980 while the boy was preparing for confirmation. One evening at Sacred Heart, the priest warned Barr about a supposed medical “condition” that caused sterility and was common among athletes. The priest told Barr he was trained as an Air Force chaplain to detect the condition.

After ordering him to pull down his pants, Freeman “massaged and manipulated” his penis, the lawsuit states.

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