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.

August 24, 2018

Local angles for the ongoing clergy abuse scandal

ST. PETERSBURG (FL)
Poynter

August 23, 2018

By Bill Mitchell

The latest developments in the clergy sexual abuse scandal tee up unusual opportunities for journalists — especially local journalists — to advance the story in significant ways.

The latest developments in the clergy sexual abuse scandal tee up unusual opportunities for journalists — especially local journalists — to advance the story in significant ways.

That’s especially true in two reporting categories: untold stories and watchdog journalism.

Both approaches can help you and your newsroom — whether broadcast, print, digital or all three — to move beyond the too-easy temptation to limit your coverage to showing up at weekend Masses for people-in-the-pew reaction stories.

Some of the ideas listed below have gone untold because, previously, they might have been considered too narrowly focused for a general, secular audience. But the evolution of the story has expanded its readership well beyond Catholics alone.

And Catholic bishops — answerable under Church law only to the Pope — are an ideal target for the sort of watchdog journalism that holds the powerful accountable.

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.

Vatican Continues to Hide Abuse Perpetrators – Anti-Abuse Activist

MOSCOW
Sputnik News

August 22, 2018

Pope Francis has condemned sex abuse and clerical cover-ups in a letter to all Catholics. This comes after a grand jury in the US last week released a report revealing seven decades of abuse by over 300 priests against 1,000 minors in Pennsylvania.

Sputnik discussed this with David Clohessy, former executive director of SNAP — the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

Sputnik: What’s your take on the message shared by the pope recently? What impact can it have on this massive and rather disturbing issue?

David Clohessy: This is the latest of long series of papal apologies and papal pledges to be better and each time a pope comments on this continuing crisis he sounds a little bit more remorseful, a little bit more sincere, but at the end of the day nothing changes, he refuses to take tangible, common sense steps that will expose predators, protect kids and stop this horror.

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.

Hawley to investigate priest sex abuse in St. Louis, asks other dioceses to cooperate

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

August 23, 2018

By Judy L. Thomas

Update: The Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph says it will allow Missouri Attorney Josh Hawley to investigate priest sexual abuse locally.

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley said Thursday that his office is launching a “thorough and robust investigation” of potential clergy sex abuse in the Archdiocese of St. Louis, with full cooperation from church officials, and he encouraged other dioceses in the state to allow similar probes.

“Today, I have received a letter from the archbishop confirming that he and the archdiocese will open to my office their files and will allow us to conduct a thorough, impartial review of potential clergy abuse in the Archdiocese of St. Louis,” Hawley told reporters in an afternoon telephone news conference.

“So we intend to gather extensive evidence from the church, as well as from victims and their families and other persons who are not associated with the archdiocese. At the conclusion of this investigation, my office will issue a formal report setting out our findings. That report will also include any charging recommendations based on the evidence we discover in our investigation.”

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.

Springfield Catholic diocese to move forward with inquiry into clergy abuse

SPRINGFIELD (MO)
Springfield News-Leader

August 23, 2018

By Will Schmitt

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau plans to launch an independent inquiry going back more than five decades in the wake of reported abuse by priests elsewhere in the U.S.

Leslie Eidson, director of communications for the Springfield-Cape Girardeau diocese, said the inquiry was being launched at the direction of Bishop Edward Rice, whom Pope Francis picked to lead local Catholics in April 2016.

A formal canonical decree asking for the independent examination of all personnel files as well as an open letter from Rice to congregants to be read at all Masses this weekend were in the works, Eidson said.

In the letter, Rice says the Springfield diocese is aware of nine inactive priests who have faced previously reported credible allegations of abusing a minor. He also says a pastor was recently placed on administrative leave for “sexual misconduct over the Internet” and says that the diocese is investing a recently reported lawsuit alleging sexual misconduct by a former Springfield diocese employee.

Earlier Thursday, Archbishop Robert Carlson of the St. Louis diocese announced he was cooperating with Attorney General Josh Hawley’s office in a voluntary review of clergy abuse.

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.

Denes McIntosh: Catholic confessional recruiting ground for pedophile priests

GRASS VALLEY (CA)
The Union

August 21, 2018

By Denes McIntosh

Other Voices

As individuals, and as a culture, it wouldn’t hurt to go to confession.

In fact it could help. I’m not advocating that anyone necessarily do the traditional Catholic Church confession, although that is a sound option for some adults, but I am suggesting that confession is a good practice, however one might choose to engage in it.

But I want to illuminate how confession is used in the Catholic Church, secretly, to enable, and perpetuate its long-standing culture of pedophilia. We are all aware of the culture, some more than others. It’s been in the news enough the past few years to allow anyone to be informed who is interested in being informed. But what troubles me is that after all the headlines, the few arrests, the payoffs, the proclamations by the pope, the bishops and the other PR spokespersons for the Church, there has still not been any significant investigation into how such a culture could develop, to become, and remain, ensconced so profoundly in the Church.

It’s as if the public wishes to believe that it’s all cleaned up now, so it is all cleaned up now. But that’s like pretending that after the Major League Baseball steroid scandal, and all the attention paid to it, that there are no longer any more steroids being used in baseball. Actually, we just got tired of the issue.

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.

NY BISHOP JOHN BARRES SLAMMED FOR USING CHOIR BOY TO DEFEND HIMSELF

EAST NORTHPORT (NY)
Church Militant

August 20, 2018

By Stephen Wynne

Rockville Centre bishop implicated in PA grand jury report

Church officials in the diocese of Rockville Centre are circling the wagons in an attempt to defend their embattled local prelate, Bp. John Barres, who as head of the diocese of Allentown, Pennsylvania from 2009–17 did nothing to remove Msgr. Thomas J. Benestad from ministry after credible allegations were filed against him.

In 2011, a man reported that Msgr. Benestad had sexually abused him in the early 1980s, beginning when he was 9 years old.

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.

Wyoming police reopen case in sex abuse claims against former Kansas City priest

CHEYENNE (WY)
The Kansas City Star

August 23, 2018

By Judy L. Thomas

Police in Cheyenne, Wyo., have reopened an investigation involving a former Kansas City priest who went on to become a Wyoming bishop and was later accused of sexually abusing several boys.

In a news release issued this week, the Cheyenne Police Department said it was seeking information regarding sex abuse claims reported to the department as a result of an internal investigation underway by the Diocese of Cheyenne. That investigation is looking into what the diocese says are credible allegations of sexual abuse committed by former Bishop Joseph Hart.

Police did not name the subject of the investigation in their release — only calling him a “church official” — but it is clear that the person they are referring to is Hart. Now 86, Hart served as bishop or auxiliary bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 to 2001. He was a priest in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph from 1956 to 1976.

“With new information, the CPD has reopened an investigation in regards to allegations of abuse taking place in Cheyenne in the 1970s through the late 1990s by a local church official,” the police department said. “However, due to the time that has passed since those events, CPD investigators are seeking additional information from any victims or witnesses.”

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.

‘If it’s painful for you, think what it does to us’

ARDMORE (PA)
Main Line Times

August 23, 2018

By Henry Briggs

“If it’s painful for you, think what it does to us.”

I have heard some versions of that phrase for a number of years now whenever the subject of child rape comes up and not just from Catholics. While the Catholic Church is in the spotlight again this week, and has been on and off for decades, maybe even centuries, it isn’t alone.

A few years ago, my old high school sent a letter to alumni admitting to sexual abuse of students. It wasn’t alone. The Chicago School System had child abuse at its schools, as did LA and other cities. To a lesser or greater extent, so did many other schools, none of them Catholic: St. Paul’s, Choate-Rosemary Hall, Exeter, to name a few. Horace Mann in New York had 62 cases. “Me” and “mini-me,” compared to the Catholic Church, of course, but not in terms of the harm: the non-Catholic kid suffered just as much as the kid in CCD or PSR.

In most cases, people who love those institutions — from school alumni to lay board members — share the “if it is painful for you, think what it is to us” sentiment with outsiders. And then continue with their lives as though nothing had happened.

Child sexual abuse is bad; knowing about it and doing nothing to stop it is horrific.

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 priest at church in Kent accused

GREENSBURG (IN)
The Indiana Gazette

August 23, 2018

By Patrick Cloonan

The pastor of several Fayette County churches has been relieved of his ministry duties by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Greensburg, pending an investigation of charges dating to a period shortly after his tenure at a church in Indiana County.

“Earlier this week, the Diocese received a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Msgr. Michael W. Matusak dating back almost 20 years,” the diocese stated late Wednesday afternoon.

The allegation apparently covers an event that happened after then-Father Matusak left Church of the Good Shepherd in Kent, where he was known as “Father Mike” and was its first pastor from 1989 to 1997.

The diocese also reported that the matter “is now in the hands of law enforcement” in Westmoreland County, where Matusak was serving after his tenure in Kent.

“This is the first and only allegation the diocese has ever received against Msgr. Matusak,” the diocese said. “A credible allegation does not mean it has been substantiated or proven. This announcement in no way implies Msgr. Matusak is guilty.”

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 to Visit Ireland, Where Scars of Sex Abuse Are ‘Worse Than the I.R.A.’

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

August 23, 2018

By Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura

Gortahork, Ireland – If any place illustrates the depth and depravity of child sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church — and why the Irish are so angry about it — it is this unlikely corner of the country, where among rolling hills of wild heather, castles and bucolic fishing villages, predatory priests terrorized children with impunity for decades.

County Donegal, which overlooks the Atlantic in northwestern Ireland, has fewer than 160,000 residents, but it may have the worst record of clerical abuse in the country. According to a watchdog group that monitors the Catholic Church in Ireland, 14 priests have been accused in recent years, four of whom were convicted. They include the Rev. Eugene Greene, one of the nation’s most notorious pedophile priests, who served nine years in prison for raping and molesting 26 boys between 1965 and 1982, though the real figure may be far higher.

Yet this year, when Pope Francis needed someone to head a neighboring diocese, he chose Bishop Philip Boyce, who had been heavily criticized for refusing to defrock Father Greene when the priest was under his management in the late 1990s.

As Francis prepares for a visit to Ireland this weekend — the first by a pope since John Paul II in 1979 — the painful specter of such abuses hangs over his trip, as well as the church’s long history of protecting pedophile priests. It is cases like this one that many faithful say make it incumbent on Francis to give them not just words, but action.

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Residents said Francis’ appointment of Bishop Boyce demonstrated that the church’s record of shuffling along abusers and those who protected them remained unbroken.

Bishop Boyce “was keen to protect the family of the convicted priest from further trauma by not initiating laicization,” the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church found in a 2011 review.

A religious mural near Meenlaragh. As Pope Francis prepares to visit Ireland this weekend, the country’s painful history of clerical sexual abuse hangs over his trip.CreditPaulo Nunes dos Santos for The New York Times
For those in Donegal, Bishop Boyce’s appointment was salt in the wounds. Francis chose him to replace John McAreavey, who resigned as bishop of Dromore after coming under fire for officiating at the funeral of a priest he knew to be a pedophile. It is unclear whether Bishop McAreavey was disciplined by the church.

Bishop Boyce did not respond to requests for comment.

Father Greene, now in his 90s, is thought to be living in a protected home run by an ecclesiastical order in Cork and enjoying a “happy retirement,” said John McAteer, the editor of the weekly Tirconaill Tribune. “I find it shocking,” he 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.

August 23, 2018

Do we owe Sinéad O’Connor an apology for speaking the truth about church child abuse?

IRELAND
Irish Central

August 19, 2018

By Niall O’Dowd

Following the shocking revelations of 70 years of abuse of children by Pennsylvania priests, we owe Sinead O’Connor an apology.

Her declaration back in 1992 that the Catholic Church was rotten to its core and pedophile priests and their enablers were the real enemy was true.

It caused a massive worldwide reaction when she tore up a picture of the then Pope on Saturday Night Live in October 1992 and declared, “Fight the real enemy.”

We now know that the pedophile scandals were rampant during the era of Pope John Paul, who chose to turn a blind eye. O’Connor was calling out the right person.

Before Spotlight, before the worst of the American and Irish church scandals, O’Connor called it right and only got abuse in return.

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.

No grand jury to investigate church abuse in Kansas

WICHITA (KS)
KAKE

August 22, 2018

By Greg Miller

A Kansas City-area attorney says she’s disappointed that a grand jury won’t be ordered to investigate abuse in Catholic churches in Kansas.

Documents she released on Monday reveal hundreds of allegations of sexual abuse and called for an investigation into the Catholic church.

Kansas attorney general Derek Schmidt has responded, saying “I admire and encourage those victims of childhood sexual abuse who continue to choose to come forward, sometimes after many years have passed.” But he declined to start a grand jury investigation.

“There’s no way to determine the extent and the depth of the abuses that occurred,” said attorney Rebecca Randles. “There has to be some form of law enforcement, executive or police power for an investigation into this and it has to be on a broader scale.”

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.

Prominent Catholics see larger role for laity in church’s abuse response

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

August 23, 2018

By Dennis Sadowski

An independent lay-run board that would hold bishops accountable for their actions, a national day for Mass or prayers of reparation, and encouragement to parishioners to become more involved in their diocese are among steps suggested by prominent lay Catholics to right the U.S. church as it deals with a new clergy sexual abuse scandal.

Those contacted by Catholic News Service said that it was time for laypeople to boost their profile within the church and help begin to dismantle long-standing clericalism that has sought to preserve the reputation of offending clergy at the expense of the safety of children.

“Their credibility is gone and the trust of the faithful is gone,” Francesco Cesareo, chairman of the National Review Board, said of the U.S. bishops as they worked to develop steps to promote greater accountability on abuse.

The National Review Board, established by the bishops in 2002, oversees compliance by dioceses with the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.” It has no role in oversight of bishops.

“The bishops have to put their trust in lay leadership and allow that lay leadership to develop the processes and oversight when these kinds of allegations occur, particularly holding bishops accountable,” Cesareo 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.

The missing part of Pope Francis’ letter: Vatican III

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
La Croix

August 22, 2018

By Terry Laidler

The Church’s understanding of who ministers, how they minister and how it trains and supports a much broader range of people to minister needs a total revamp

The pope’s letter of 20 August 2018, condemning sexual abuse by clergy and its systematic cover-up begins to show real compassion for those abused and some of the bewilderment and exasperation even good people who supported the Church experienced as the crisis continued to unfold unaddressed:

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.

LCWR ‘ashamed of the church we love’ after abuse report

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Global Sisters Report

August 21, 2018

By Dan Stockman

The largest organization of women religious in the United States says the latest clergy sex abuse reports have left it “sickened and ashamed of the church we love, trusted, and have committed our lives to serve.”

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents about 80 percent of U.S. sisters, issued a statement Aug. 20 in response to a grand jury report from Pennsylvania that more than 300 priests sexually assaulted at least 1,000 victims over 70 years, most of which bishops covered up.

“We weep and grieve with all who over the decades have been victimized by sexual predators within the faith community and feel their pain as our own,” the LCWR statement reads. “We recognize that the damage done to many is irreparable.”

The grand jury report has created a national backlash to the abuse scandal, with many calling for major changes in the structure and culture of the church itself.

“We call upon the church leadership to implement plans immediately to support more fully the healing of all victims of clergy abuse, hold abusers accountable, and work to uncover and address the root causes of the sexual abuse crisis,” the statement says. “It is clear that more serious action needs to be taken to assure that the culture of secrecy and cover-up ends.”

Sr. Carol Zinn of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Philadelphia, executive director of LCWR, told Global Sisters Report the response to the statement so far has been gratitude.

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.

Protecting children in the church

VATICAN CITY
LA Croix

August 23, 2018

By Hans Zollner SJ

There is no doubt that the protection of children and youth against sexual violence remains a central problem in the Catholic Church and in society

The issue of sexual abuse of minors committed by clergy is constantly returning to the forefront of media attention. Recently, through various news outlets and publications worldwide, this focus has been particularly sustained for the Karadima case in Chile. It’s hard to say why that has resonated with people around the world more than other cases have.The offer of resignation by all Chilean bishops is a sign of huge importance, which is in line with a development that we have seen over the last years. There is no one turning point — the ship of the church is slowly moving in another direction. It is a huge effort, and change is on the way.For Pope Francis, calling a whole bishops’ conference to Rome has been new. John Paul II and Benedict XVI summoned cardinals and bishops to discuss clerical sexual abuse, but this is new for Francis. He takes the problem seriously.

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.

Survivor of Clergy Sex Abuse Pushes for Transparency in Catholic Church

BOSTON (MA)
NECN

August 20, 2018

By Abbey Niezgoda

A Boston clergy sex abuse survivor and her lawyer are reacting after reading the letter from Pope Francis condemning the abuse and cover-up in the Catholic church. The letter was released by the Vatican Monday following a grand jury report that found more than 1,000 clergy abuse victims in parishes across Pennsylvania.

Alexa MacPherson said she was sexually assaulted for six years as a child by a priest in Dorchester. She said the letter is not just too late, it is not enough.

“There wasn’t anything concrete in that letter,” MacPherson said. “It was just we need to move forward, this is the past, we don’t want this to happen again. What are you doing?”

“With shame and repentance, we acknowledge as an ecclesial community that we were not where we should have been, that we did not act in a timely manner, realizing the magnitude and the gravity of the damage done to so many lives. We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them,” the letter said in part.

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.

Priest on Catholic church sex abuse cover-up: ‘I feel a strong sense of betrayal’

CINCINNATI (OH)
The Enquirer

August 23, 2018

By Kyle Schnippel

Please bear with me for this letter, but I feel this needs to be said and addressed. I have been struggling how to address this topic. Many of my brother priests across the country have addressed the topic homiletically, which I have yet to do. It is sometimes difficult to address the topic when I only preach at one parish on a weekend.

The long and short of it is: I am angry and betrayed at the news and events that have recently been revealed in both Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. I am angry at the shortsightedness of bishops. I am angry at those who knew something about Archbishop McCarrick and did or said nothing. I am even angrier at those who actively sought to bury the information that is now being revealed in the press and in witness statements, etc.

With McCarrick in particular, I feel a strong sense of betrayal. In 2002, he was part of the face of the reforms called for in the wake of the revelations out of Boston and the implementation of the Dallas Charter that called for zero tolerance in the face of credible allegations of abuse against a priest. And he had credible and substantiated cases against him! Cases that were apparently widely known, yet nothing came out against him and he continued to minister “in good standing” while so many priests who had far less credible evidence against them were removed from ministry.

(I want to be absolutely clear here: I 100 percent agree that there is no room in ministry for priests who have engaged in sexual abuse of another. Full stop. My issue is that it is very clear now that Archbishop McCarrick (formerly Cardinal McCarrick) had significant evidence against him, yet he continued in ministry. This is the source of my anger.)

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.

Cheyenne police seek help in church sex abuse investigation

CHEYENNE (WY)
Wyoming Tribune Eagle Via Wyoming News Exchange

August 22, 2018

By Katie Kull

The Cheyenne Police Department is asking for help in the investigation of a local church official accused of sexually abusing at least one boy when he worked there from the 1970s through the 1990s.

Cheyenne Police Department spokesman Officer Kevin Malatesta said detectives are hoping to talk to anyone who has information about the alleged abuse.

“Everybody’s testimony adds to the case, and so if we have other credible witnesses or victims to these crimes, that assists us in the prosecution of this,” Malatesta said.

The news release doesn’t specifically name the person the department is investigating, but it points to a recent announcement by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cheyenne that it found new evidence that Bishop-Emeritus Joseph Hart had abused at least two young boys when he worked there from 1976-2001.

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.

CPD reopens sexual abuse investigation into Catholic Church

CHEYENNE (WY)
KGWN TV

August 22, 2018

By Kayla Dixon

The Cheyenne Police Department is seeking information regarding sex abuse claims that have been reported to the CPD through the Wyoming Catholic Diocese’s internal investigation.

With new information, the CPD has reopened an investigation in regards to allegations of abuse taking place in Cheyenne in the 1970’s through the late 1990’s by a local church official. However, due to the time that has passed since those events, CPD investigators are seeking additional information from any victims or witnesses.

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.

Oklahoma City Archdiocese investigating recent clergy abuse claim dating back to 1980s

OKLAHOMA CITY (OK)
KFOR

August 22, 2018

By Bill Miston

The Archdiocese of Oklahoma City is investigating a report of alleged abuse dating back more than three decades involving a former priest defrocked by the pope in 2011.

Archdiocese officials said Wednesday the Archbishop has ordered an independent investigation of former priest Ben Zoeller, who served in eight parishes in Oklahoma since the 1960s.

According to an archdiocese spokeswoman, a letter August 17 was sent by a former resident reporting abuse at the hands of Zoeller in 1985.

Archbishop Paul Coakley ordered a review of Zoeller’s file, which “found credible allegations of abuse” and ordered an independent investigation, the spokeswoman said.

Zoeller was removed as a priest from the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City in 2002 and defrocked in 2011.

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.

Children’s daycare church worker accused of sexual abuse released from jail

HOUSTON (TX)
Chron

August 22, 2018

By Fernando Ramirez

An Abilene church daycare worker accused of sexually abusing at least five different victims has been released from jail.

Five months after his arrest, 25-year-old Benjamin Roberts posted bail after his bond was reduced from $350,000 to $100,000, reports KTAB/KRBC.

Roberts was originally arrested by the Abilene Police Department in March after his residence was identified as a place where child pornography was being downloaded, according to court documents obtained by Abilene Reporter-News.

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.

Cupich: On abuse, focus should be victims rather than Church’s credibility

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Crux

August 23, 2018

By Elise Harris

Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago is one of the few American prelates making an appearance at this week’s World Meeting of Families in Dublin, after both Cardinals Donald Wuerl of Washington and Sean O’Malley of Boston withdrew due to abuse-related scandals.

Amid fears that after the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report the Church in the United States could face a new eruption of the abuse crisis, Cupich acknowledged that “a lot of damage has been done” to the faith of believers, but the primary focus should be the wellbeing of the victims and not the Church’s reputation.

Speaking to Crux, Cupich said his first concern “is not my credibility or the bishops’ credibility. My first concern is that it’s damaged the faith lives of people.”

“If it’s damaged our credibility, then we have to do something about it, but my major concern is that we need to focus our attention on the damage it does to people’s faith lives. Also, [the focus should be on] the hurt that’s revisited victims as a result of this. This is something we as Church leaders should be concerned about, not our own skin,” he 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.

Missouri must investigate church sexual abuse statewide, advocacy group says

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

August 22, 2018

By Nassim Benchaabane

Survivors of clergy sexual abuse are demanding Missouri’s top prosecutor launch a statewide investigation into alleged sex crimes by Catholic priests.

The call comes on the heels of a grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania that uncovered the widespread abuse of more than 1,000 children by more than 300 priests. The report alleges that bishops and other leaders of the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania covered up child sexual abuse over a period of 70 years.

“We believe we have exactly the same issues as they do in Pennsylvania,” said Nicole Gorovsky, a former Missouri assistant attorney general, former federal prosecutor and private attorney who specializes in child sexual abuse cases.

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 these victims want the Pope to know

BETHLEHEM (PA)
CNN

August 23, 2018

By Mallory Simon and Erica Hill

Pope Francis is failing the thousands of victims of abusive priests in the US and around the world, survivors told CNN in emotional interviews.

A rare letter of apology and contrition from Francis, and his promised meeting with Irish victims of priestly abuse this weekend has done nothing to ease the ongoing pain of the five people we met in Pennsylvania, where a grand jury concluded earlier this month that hundreds of priests raped, molested and abused boys and girls for decades.

The Pope wrote that the church “abandoned” child victims while the perpetrators were protected. He called for fellow Catholics to fast and pray, but offered no new directions to stop any current or future abuse.

Those were hollow words for these four people abused by priests and a father who lost his son to drugs after his molestation.

This is what they want Francis to know:

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.

Pressure to address sex abuse mounts ahead of Pope Francis’ visit to Ireland

IRELAND
CBS News

August 23, 2018

Pope Francis will arrive in Ireland this weekend for an international Catholic gathering amid intensifying scrutiny over the church’s handling of sexual abuse by priests. The scandal forced two U.S. cardinals to cancel their trips. The pope asked for prayers as he prepares for the first papal visit to Ireland in nearly 40 years and is expected to meet privately with sex abuse survivors.

CBS News’ Jonathan Vigliotti spoke with Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, and Sister Liz Murphy, a leading Irish missionary, who hope Pope Francis can chart a way forward following last week’s Pennsylvania grand jury report, which Cupich called a “catalog of horrors.”

“There is a dysfunction in the family, and we have to address it,” Cupich 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.

Scandale de pédophilie : quelles sanctions ?

FRANCE
ARTE Journal

August 23, 2018

By Fanny Chauvin

Pedophilia scandal: what sanctions?

Disponible du 23/08/2018 au 25/08/2038
Disponible en direct : oui
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Un jury populaire de Pennsylvanie vient de dévoiler un rapport qui accuse 300 prêtres d’abus sexuels. Les faits, dissimulés par les autorités religieuses, se déroulent sur plus de 70 ans. 1000 victimes sont recensées.

Après l’affaire Barbarin en France et ce nouveau scandale aux Etats-Unis, l’Église catholique est de nouveau secouée par les affaires d’abus sexuels. Le Pape a exprimé sa “honte” et condamne “avec fermeté ces atrocités”. Un discours qui ne suffit pas pour les victimes. Mais que peuvent-elles attendre? L’Église catholique est-elle prête à changer ?

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Pa. Catholic church sex abuse report: Look up the churches where hundreds of accused priests worked and lived

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

August 23, 2018

By Nathaniel Lash and Jared Whalen

A state grand jury report released last week revealed decades of allegations of child sex abuse at the hands of more than 300 priests in six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses.

The report presented accounts by victims and actions taken by church officials, and detailed the parish assignments of more than 250 of the accused clergy. This search tool catalogs the thousands of records detailing where they lived and worked in the dioceses, including some in the Philadelphia region.

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Sex Abuse to Cast Shadow Over Pope’s Ireland Visit

VATICAN CITY
The Wall Street Journal

August 23, 2018

By Francis X. Rocca

Pope Francis is under pressure to address a global crisis during weekend in a country scarred by mistreatment of minors

When Pope Francis lands in Ireland on Saturday, he will be visiting a once-devout Catholic society that is increasingly challenging the church’s authority—and where anger is running high over decades of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests.

The pope’s delicate two-day trip comes as clerical sexual abuse scandals unfold in other countries, including the U.S., and many Catholics are criticizing the pope’s response to the crisis as inadequate.

The topic is thus likely to dominate his visit, and his statements and gestures on the subject there will play out to a global audience.

This will be the first visit to Ireland by a pope in nearly 40 years. When John Paul II came in 1979, he drew 1.25 million people to an outdoor Mass in Dublin, more than a third of the country’s population at the time.

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Attorney for Victims Calls on Dayton to Convene Grand Jury to Investigate Alleged Cover-Ups by Bishops

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
KSTP

August 22, 2018

An attorney for victims of clergy sex abuse wants Gov. Mark Dayton to convene grand juries to investigate alleged cover-ups by Catholic bishops in Minnesota.

Attorney Jeff Anderson said Wednesday he was inspired by a grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania that showed about 300 priests in the state had molested more than 1,000 children.

But Minnesota’s statutes on grand juries say nothing about governors having the power to call grand juries. That power resides with county attorneys and district judges.

Through the declaration of bankruptcy by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and by other diocese in the state, Anderson said a lot has been done to bring justice to victims.

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Archdiocese of NY paid nearly $60M to sex abuse victims in two years

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

August 23, 2018

By Tamar Lapin

The Archdiocese of New York has paid out close to $60 million to sexual abuse victims in the past two years, a spokesman told The Post.

So far, 278 victims — including a teen molested by a perverted priest at Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx in the early 1980s — have been paid $59,950,000 through the archdiocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program.

This revelation comes on the heels of a shocking Pennsylvania grand jury report that found that over 300 priests had abused more than 1,000 children for decades in the state — all while being shielded by church officials.

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Former Michigan State gymnastics coach faces charges tied to Larry Nassar investigation

LANSING (MI)
Yahoo Sports

August 23, 2018

By Ben Rohrbach

Former Michigan State gymnastics coach Kathie Klages is the latest person to face criminal charges in the aftermath of disgraced team doctor Larry Nassar’s widespread sexual abuse of countless athletes.

Klages was charged with lying to police during the investigation into the university’s handling of sexual abuse complaints against Nassar — a charge that carries up to a four-year prison sentence — according to the Associated Press. Klages had previously denied that she was informed of Nassar’s sexual abuse as early as 1997 by former Spartan Youth Gymnastics participant Larissa Boyce.

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St. John’s Prep brother on leave, accused of sex abuse

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

August 23, 2018

By Mary Markos

A St. John’s Preparatory School faculty member is on unpaid leave after allegations of sexually abusing a child came to light from when he was in Baltimore in the mid-1980s.

Brother Robert “Bob” Flaherty is no longer on campus and has been banned from active ministry by the Xaverian Brothers, which sponsors the all-boys school in Danvers.

“It’s important for us as a school to celebrate the good things and deal with challenges that confront us. That’s what we’re doing now,” St. John’s Headmaster Edward P. Hardiman told the Herald.

The abuse allegedly occurred before Flaherty’s time at St. John’s. He worked at the Catholic school on the North Shore from 1999 to 2007, and 2010 to Aug. 18.

Flaherty first joined the Xaverian Brothers in September 1979 and took his vows after a year of training in 1980. He taught at Mount St. Joseph in Baltimore from 1980 to 1993, and then again from 2008 to 2010, according to a statement from the Xaverian Brothers.

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Bishop Tobin says he was aware of abuse in Pennsylvania, but didn’t report it

PROVIDENCE (RI)
NBC 10 News

August 22, 2018

Bishop Thomas J. Tobin of the Diocese of Providence said that he was aware of allegations of sexual abuse during his time in Pennsylvania, but could not act on them.

In a statement to the Providence Journal, Tobin said he learned of the allegations while working as an auxiliary bishop, in Pittsburgh, in the 1990s.

However, he said he was unable to take action because he was not responsible for clergy issues.

Tobin said he had an administrative role in the church, such as handling budgets and property.

“My responsibilities as Vicar General and General Secretary of the diocese did not include clergy assignments or clergy misconduct, but rather other administrative duties such as budgets, property, diocesan staff, working with consultative groups, etc. Even as an auxiliary bishop, I was not primarily responsible for clergy issues,? Tobin said in an email to ProJo.

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Providence Bishop Tobin defends his time in Pittsburgh

PROVIDENCE (RI)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

Rhode Island’s Roman Catholic bishop says while he was “aware of incidents of sexual abuse” reported to church officials while working in Pennsylvania it wasn’t his job to deal with them.

Diocese of Providence Bishop Thomas Tobin served as auxiliary bishop of Pittsburgh from 1992 until 1996.

The Diocese of Pittsburgh was one of six Pennsylvania dioceses named in a grand jury report that said hundreds of Catholic priests in the state molested more than 1,000 children dating to the 1940s, and church leaders covered it up.

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The Priesthood of The Big Crazy

NEW YORK (NY)
NYR Daily

August 23, 2018

By Garry Wills

The grand jury report of Catholic priests’ predations in Pennsylvania is enough to make one vomit. The terrifying fact that hundreds of priests were preying upon over a thousand victims in that state alone makes one shudder at the thought of how many hundreds and thousands of abusers there are elsewhere in the nation, elsewhere in the world. It is time to stop waiting for more reports to accumulate, hoping that something will finally be done about this. Done by whom? By “the church”? If “the church” is taken to mean the pope and bishops, nothing will come of nothing. They are as a body incapable of making sense of anything sexual.

A wise man once told me that we humans are all at one time or another a little crazy on the subject of sex. A little crazy, yes. But Catholic priests are charged with maintaining The Big Crazy on sex all the time. These functionaries of the church are formally supposed to believe and preach sexual sillinesses, from gross denial to outright absurdity, on the broadest range of issues—masturbation, artificial insemination, contraception, sex before marriage, oral sex, vasectomy, homosexuality, gender choice, abortion, divorce, priestly celibacy, male-only priests—and uphold the church’s “doctrines,” no matter how demented.

Some priests are humane or common-sensible enough to ignore some parts of this impossibly severe set of rules, which gives them reason to be selective about sexual matters. Since scripture says nothing about most of these subjects, popes have claimed a power to define “natural law.” But the nineteenth-century English theologian John Henry Newman was right when he said, “The Pope, who comes of Revelation, has no jurisdiction over Nature.” That would be true even if the natural law being invoked had some philosophical depth, but Catholics are asked to accept childish versions of “natural law.” For instance, since the “natural” use of sex is to beget children, any use apart from that is sinful, and mortally sinful. Masturbate and you go to hell (unless, of course, you confess the sin to a priest, which gives an ordained predator the chance to be “comforting” about masturbation).

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Providence Bishop Thomas J. Tobin says abuse was outside his responsibility

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

August 21, 2018

Tobin was auxiliary bishop of Pittsburgh at time of incidents covered in grand jury report on the Catholic Church’s cover-up of sexual abuse.

During his earlier years in Pittsburgh, Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas J. Tobin acknowledges he “became aware of incidents of sexual abuse when they were reported to the diocese.”

But in response Tuesday to questions posed earlier about what he knew, when he knew it — and what he did about it, the Providence-based bishop says these allegations were outside his realm of responsibility.

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BP. THOMAS TOBIN PASSES THE BUCK

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Church Militant

August 22, 2018

By David Nussman

Current RI prelate served under Wuerl in Pittsburgh, knew of abuse claims

Bishop Thomas Tobin is disclaiming responsibility for sex abuse matters during his time in the diocese of Pittsburgh under then-Bishop Donald Wuerl.

Tobin, current bishop of Providence, Rhode Island, was vicar general and general secretary of the Pittsburgh diocese in 1990 and was auxiliary bishop from 1992–96.

The Pennsylvania grand jury released August 14 faulted Wuerl for covering up clerical sex abuse and shuffling predator priests among parishes. Of the 301 priests and religious the report accuses of sexually molesting children, 99 were from Pittsburgh.

In a statement distributed to Rhode Island reporters following the release of the grand jury report, Bp. Tobin said that, in his chancery roles, he “became aware of incidents of sexual abuse when they were reported to the diocese.”

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Catholic Church must rethink all-male priesthood

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

August 21, 2018

By Douglas W. Kmiec

No amount of monetary damages can compensate the victims of clerical sex abuse; plus the money wrongly hurts the impressive social justice work of the Catholic Church. No, an appropriate act of contrition requires that the episcopal level of the American Catholic Church submit to the holy father its resignation en masse, allowing Pope Francis, if in prayer he discerns it necessary, to clean house.

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Amid continuing scandal, the Catholic Church loses touch with its flock

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald

August 23, 2018

By Bill Nemitz

The report of widespread abuse by priests in several Pennsylvania dioceses widens the gap between the Church that is and the one Catholics thought they knew.

I recently attended the Roman Catholic funeral for a woman who lived for just over 90 years. The congregation numbered more than 100 – testament to a large, loving family and a circle of loyal friends who’d stayed tethered to her throughout her twilight years.

Heading into a catered lunch after the service, someone commented on the priest’s kind words and asked one of the deceased woman’s sons if she and the priest had been close.

“No,” he replied with a quick shake of the head. “They didn’t really know each other.”

Not even through her attendance at Sunday Mass?

“She hasn’t gone for more than 10 years,” he said. “Not since …”

The church scandal?

“Right.”

It’s been almost 20 years since widespread reports of child abuse by priests surfaced first in Boston and then spread, like a wildfire, across the United States and the rest of the world.

To some, it’s old news – the anguished stories told by victims, many now in their 50s, 60s or older; the stonewalling by bishops who profess sorrow even while they refuse to release offending priests’ names and current locations; the countless sins that somehow never found their way onto criminal dockets.

But it’s not old news. It’s still with us.

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Clergy abuse victims’ lawyer calls for Pennsylvania-style grand jury report in Minnesota

ST. PAUL (MN)
MPR News

August 22, 2018

By Peter Cox

Jeff Anderson, who has sued the Catholic church multiple times over clergy sex abuse, is calling for a grand jury to investigate all of the dioceses in Minnesota.

In Pennsylvania, a two-year investigation by a grand jury identified more than 300 priests credibly accused of abuse and found that there were more than 1,000 victims of priest abuse.

Anderson wants Gov. Mark Dayton to convene a grand jury to investigate, interview and possibly bring charges against priests who abused children or church leaders who helped to cover up those crimes or move known offenders to other churches or parishes.

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Attorney calls for grand jury investigations into priest abuse in Minnesota

ST. PAUL (MN)
KMSP

August 22, 2018

By Tim Blotz

Attorney Jeff Anderson is calling on Gov. Mark Dayton to force criminal grand jury investigations into priest abuse cases across the state.

A grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania last week revealed more than 300 priests who abused children.

Now, Anderson wants Dayton to use a little known state statute to force similar grand jury investigations here.

Surrounded by eight survivors of clergy sexual abuse, Anderson said the time has come for criminal investigations.

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Ex-Michigan State gymnastics coach charged with lying to police amid Larry Nassar investigation

LANSING (MI)
The Associated Press

August 23, 2018

A former gymnastics coach at Michigan State has been charged with lying to police amid the sexual abuse investigation involving former sports doctor Larry Nassar.

The charges against Kathie Klages were announced Thursday by a special independent counsel appointed by the state to investigate the university. If convicted, Klages could face up to four years in prison.

Klages has denied allegations that former gymnast Larissa Boyce told her that Nassar had abused her in 1997, when Boyce was 16. Boyce had been training with the Spartan youth gymnastics team at the time.

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Clergy sex abuse evidence was destroyed, but hotline opened: DA

YORK (PA)
Penn Live

August 22, 2018

By Becky Metrick

Evidence provided to the York County District Attorney’s Office relating to the sexual abuse by clergymen uncovered in the Attorney General’s Grand Jury Report, was destroyed, DA David Sunday Jr., said Wednesday.

In the days following the release of the grand jury report – which specifically mentions at least five clergymen accused of sexual assaults while they worked in York County – Sunday said he would look into the allegations and what his office had information on.

Though the grand jury information on two of the clergymen accused included reports made directly to the District Attorney’s Office, Sunday said evidence and/or reports forwarded to the York City Police Department were destroyed in accordance with “statewide accreditation standards” that govern what happens with investigations where charges aren’t filed.

Additionally, Sunday said “my office does not possess any records concerning subjects of the Attorney General’s Grand Jury report, as any such reports would have been purged in accordance with office record retention policy in matters that are not prosecuted.”

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Former MSU gymnastics coach charged with lying to police about Larry Nassar allegations

LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal

August 23, 2018

By Kara Berg and Matt Mencarini

Former MSU gymnastics coach Kathie Klages has been charged with lying to police about her knowledge of sexual assault complaints about Larry Nassar prior to 2016.

The charges, filed today in 54A District Court in Lansing, make Klages the second person charged as part of the Michigan Attorney General’s Office investigation of Michigan State University’s handling of reports about Nassar.

“Klages denied to Michigan State Police detectives having been told prior to 2016 of Nassar’s sexual misconduct,” according to an AG’s Office news release. “Witnesses have said that they reported Nassar’s sexual abuse to Klages dating back more than 20 years.”

One of those people is Larissa Boyce, a former youth gymnast who said she told Klages about Nassar’s abuse in 1997 when she was 16. Boyce said that Klages cautioned her and another gymnast from filing a formal complaint against Nassar, which Klages has denied.

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Catholics Are Desperate for Tangible Reforms on Clergy Sex Abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Atlantic

August 22, 2018

By Emma Green

Pope Francis says he supports a “zero-tolerance” policy, but some insist those words are not enough.

This week, Pope Francis convenes the World Meeting of Families in Dublin, a massive, triennial gathering of Catholics to celebrate “joy for the world.” The timing could not be more awkward. The event comes in the wake of a terrible period for Catholic families amid revelations about clergy sex abuse, including the release of a massive new report detailing years of misconduct and cover-up in Pennsylvania.

These new findings are the latest entry in a long list of scandals from around the world: reports that Theodore McCarrick, the former cardinal in Washington, D.C., sexually harassed children and adults for decades; the mass resignation of Chilean bishops who mishandled sex-abuse allegations in their country; Cardinal George Pell’s return from Rome to his home in Australia, where he is standing trial on several charges of sexual abuse.

A decade and a half after the first major wave of sex-abuse scandals upended the global Church, clergy, theologians, and lay people are desperately calling on the Church to take concrete steps to prevent abuse or cover-ups from happening again. Some say the greatest problem lies in the hierarchical structure of the Church, and are advocating for more power for lay people and an overhauled seminary system.

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An Indiana priest was attacked by a man yelling, ‘this is for all the little kids’

MERRILLVILLE (IN)
CNN

August 22, 2018

A Catholic priest was beaten while praying at his church in Merrillville, Indiana, and authorities are investigating the attack as a hate crime.

The Rev. Basil John Hutsko told police he was attacked Monday morning inside the St. Michaels Byzantine Catholic Church as he was praying in the sacristy.

The attacker “grabbed him by the neck, threw him down on the floor and immediately started slamming his head against the floor. Both sides, front and back,” Merrillville Police Chief Joseph Petruch told CNN affiliate WBBM.

The assailant left Hutsko battered, bruised and unconscious. And during the assault the attacker yelled, “‘This is for all the little kids,'” Petruch said.

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Saginaw bishop offers ‘thoughts, prayers and sorrow’ for abuse victims

SAGINAW (MI)
MLive

August 22, 2018

By Cole Waterman

In the wake of a federal grand jury naming 301 Catholic priests alleged to have sexually abused children in Pennsylvania, Saginaw Diocese Bishop Joseph R. Cistone has issued a statement offering his thoughts and prayers for all victims of clergy sex abuse.

The statement comes as one of Cistone’s own subordinates awaits trial on charges of sexually assaulting juveniles.

“My thoughts, prayers and sorrow go out to all victims of clergy sex abuse, especially those whose tragic accounts of abuse are detailed in the grand jury report released in Pennsylvania,” Cistone wrote in the Aug. 21 letter published on the Catholic Diocese of Saginaw’s website.

“The numbers in the report are staggering, and the horrific details of alleged child abuse over 70 years is numbing. People of faith and good will are understandably experiencing deep emotions of anger, betrayal, and a sincere desire for justice.

“On behalf of the Diocese of Saginaw,” the letter continues, “I remain fully committed to the safety of children.”

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Latin Americans Know Pope’s Letter Won’t Solve Abuse Crisis. Priesthood Reform Might

MIAMI (FL)
WLRN

August 23, 2018

By Tim Padgett

COMMENTARY

As a Roman Catholic, I’m supposed to be encouraged by the anguished letter Pope Francis issued this week. The one in which he condemns the monstrous and never-ending “atrocities” of sexual abuse of children by priests – and their equally monstrous and never-ending cover-up by bishops.

But I’m not hopeful.

That’s because aside from being a Catholic I’m also a Latin Americanist – and I know how badly Francis, the first Latin American pope, failed Latin America in this crisis. That’s why Latin Americans, particularly South Americans, seem to understand that this criminal tragedy won’t be solved by a papal crackdown on the priesthood. It can only really be addressed by a papal crack-up of that priesthood.

That means turning the Catholic clergy from a celibate, all-male cabal – one that considers its own protection more important than our childrens’ – into a more empathetic society of service by allowing priests to marry and women to be priests.

Many in Latin America have given up on that ever happening. So they’re voting with their feet, especially in the wake of priest abuse scandals like the one Chile is suffering through – and which Francis failed to confront until recently, after he and the Catholic Church had already hemorrhaged their moral credibility in that country.

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New Diocese Head Implicated By Grand Jury

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
The Independent

August 21, 2018

By Rick Murphy

BISHOP JOHN BARRES ALLEGEDLY COVERED UP PRIEST PEDOPHILE SCANDAL

The Diocese of Rockville Centre hoped to further distance itself from the pedophile priest scandal that shook the very foundation of the Catholic Church when it when Bishop John Barres was named to replace the retiring Archbishop William Murphy.

Instead, fresh wounds have opened and the church is under the gun again with revelations that Barres, like Murphy, covered up pedophile crimes committed by priests and protected the accused.

Though Barres said August 15 that a grand jury report issued in Allentown, PA contained “factual errors,” Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro countered that the report is true.

Bishop Murphy was a central figure in the Boston church pedophile scandal — the story was told in The Spotlight, which won the Oscar for Best Picture in 2016.

Newsday reported Murphy, as Cardinal Bernard Law’s top deputy in Boston for almost eight years, was involved in almost one-third of the priest sexual abuse cases at the heart of the scandal there. “Not only did Murphy supervise the assignment of priests, he was privy to all confidential records on accusers’ complaints, treatment, and settlements. He also took care of accused priests’ legal bills and helped arrange housing and jobs for them,” Newsday continued.

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The Hidden Devastation of Priestly Pedophilia: Suicide

AUSTRALIA
Patheos

August 22, 2018

By Rick Snedeker

No matter how appalling you think the ever-worsening scandal is regarding Catholic clergy’s relentless global sexual assaults against children, it’s worse.

Far worse.

On Monday, a reader of my blog named Jim Jones (@Jim_Jones_1) commented on my August 18 post, titled “Outrage Over Latest Catholic Sex Scandal Misses Point.” Contending that the scandal is far more widespread and destructive that most people are aware, he provided a trove of links to priestly pedophilia atrocities just in Australia.

The most jarring fact in the lot were the unnervingly common suicides among abuse victims from a single church-affiliated school.

Philip Nagle, a 1974 student at St. Alipius Primary School in Ballarat, Australia, the epicenter of some of the worse clergy abuse in Australian history, was the first witness to give evidence when the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse began hearings in May 2015. The hearings focused on defining the impact of abuse on survivors, their families and the community of Ballarat.

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Editorial: The Failure Of Leadership From Hotchkiss To The Catholic Church

HARTFORD (CT)
Hartford Courant

August 23, 2018

Reports that leaders of prominent institutions actively concealed — or failed to address — allegations of sexual abuse serve as a sad reminder of the lengths some people will go to protect the reputations of institutions at the expense of the safety of their members.

The Hotchkiss School in Salisbury released an internal investigation Friday that detailed allegations that seven former faculty and staff members had sexually abused students — and that school officials covered it up.

School administrators “inadequately responded to sexual misconduct by faculty members,” the report states, in the name of protecting the school’s reputation.

The victims include 16 students, some of whom endured years of abuse. The scope of it is shocking.

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Ohio State is a disgrace, but also a symptom and definitely not a surprise

COLUMBUS (OH)
For the Win

August 23, 2018

By Chris Korman

What happened at Ohio State Wednesday, with Urban Meyer receiving a piddling three-game suspension for clearly and deliberately trying to cover for an assistant coach intent on committing violence against his wife, was disgusting. Even if you’re someone who pays close attention to how sordid college sports can be, it felt like a previously undiscovered and particularly excrement-loaded layer of muck.

There’s not much need for me to tell you how ridiculous this whole thing is. USA TODAY’s Christine Brennan did that already. As did George Schroeder (and there’s a video of Dan Wolken in there, too.) So did Yahoo’s Pat Forde. And ESPN’s Heather Dinich. And this piece — This Is How You Erase A Woman From Her Own Story — from Deadspin’s Diana Moskovitz, is essential. Please read it.

But also know that all of this — and all of its corollaries, like what happened at Baylor and Penn State and all the other places where the misdeeds are spread apart just enough so that the pattern goes unnoticed — is born from a system of college sports that has been rotting from the inside for decades. When you build a multi-billion dollar empire on the backs of unpaid labor and then market it all as not just an extension of what your schools stand for but what your schools actually stand for you end up twisting and twirling the way Ohio State’s leadership did yesterday, and you claim to the public that one of the most ruthlessly efficient coaches in the history of sports is actually a guy who quivers in difficult moments and can be more than a bit forgetful.

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We ask the 5 candidates for state AG: Would you investigate dioceses?

BUFFALO (NY)
The Buffalo News

August 22, 2018

By Dan Herbeck and Jay Tokasz

New York’s next attorney general could determine whether six Catholic dioceses and one archdiocese in this state face a sweeping investigation into clergy sexual abuse similar to one that exposed a massive cover-up of abuses in Pennsylvania.

Five candidates are vying to be elected in November to the state’s highest-ranking law enforcement post.

The Buffalo News this week asked each of the candidates how they will proceed on the issue of clergy sexual abuse if elected to the state’s highest-ranking law enforcement post. Two of the candidates said they would investigate, while the other three said they would collaborate with local district attorneys on any investigation.

The News also asked if the candidates supported passage of the Child Victims Act – which would extend the time that civil lawsuits and criminal charges could be brought in cases of child sexual abuse – and all but one said yes. Democrat Leecia Eve of Buffalo said she had yet to take a position on the legislation.

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7 I-TEAM: Buffalo Bishop Malone returned priest to ministry after allegations involving a child

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

August 22, 2018

By Charlie Specht

Editor’s Note: In March 2018, the Diocese of Buffalo released a list of 42 priests accused of abuse. 7 Eyewitness News has learned that two priests who were in ministry at that time were originally considered for inclusion on that list, but were removed before the list was made public.

This is the first part of a two-part investigative series on Bishop Richard J. Malone’s handling of those priests. Part two will be released on-air and online on Thursday.

The last six months have been perhaps the most turbulent in the 171-year history of the Diocese of Buffalo.

After years of suffering and silence, victims have come forward with horrific accounts of sexual abuse or misconduct at the hands of 82 priests and nuns, and the 7 Eyewitness News I-Team has exposed a pattern of how the Catholic Church in Buffalo treated allegations of sexual abuse.

Bishop Richard J. Malone has described the problem as one he inherited, stressing that there’s nothing being hidden in Buffalo anymore.

But a 7 Eyewitness News Investigation based on hundreds of internal church documents shows that in the case of one accused priest, Bishop Malone, between 2012 and this year:

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New sexual misconduct allegations levelled against Halifax-based Buddhist leader

HALIFAX (CANADA)
The Canadian Press

August 23, 2018

New allegations have surfaced against the spiritual leader of one of the largest Buddhist organizations in the western world, including fresh claims of sexual misconduct and financial coercion.

A report by Buddhist Project Sunshine released Thursday details new accusations against Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche, leader of the Halifax-based Shambhala International community.

He stepped back from his duties last month pending the outcome of a third-party investigation into an alleged pattern of sexual misconduct highlighted in previous reports by former Shambhala community member Andrea Winn.

Winn says the third report brings to light more complainants and new claims that are “more serious in nature,” which may be brought to police.

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Catholic brother accused of abuse barred from ministry

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

By David Mcfadden

A Roman Catholic brother accused of sexually abusing a youngster decades ago in Maryland has been barred from his religious order’s ministry and placed on administrative leave from a teaching job in Massachusetts while authorities investigate, officials said Wednesday.

The Xaverian Brothers, a lay religious order headquartered in Baltimore that sponsors about a dozen schools across the United States, has identified the accused man as Brother Robert Flaherty. They say Baltimore police recently informed them that Flaherty is being investigated for an allegation of sex abuse from the mid-1980s, a time that coincides with his tenure teaching at an all-boys Catholic school in Baltimore.

Flaherty worked at Baltimore’s Mount St. Joseph preparatory high school from 1980 to 1993, and again from 2008 to 2010, according to the religious order.

Brother Edward Driscoll, general superior of the religious order, said the Xaverian Brothers were cooperating fully with investigators from the State’s Attorney’s Office in Baltimore. He said they have removed Flaherty from ministry pending the investigation’s outcome.

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Names Of Accused Bishops To Be Removed From Buildings At 2 Catholic Pa. Colleges

SCRANTON (NJ)/WILLKES-BARRE (PA)
NPR

August 22, 2018

By Bobby Allyn

Officials at the University of Scranton and King’s College in Wilkes-Barre, Pa. have announced that buildings once honoring now-disgraced bishops will be renamed and that the bishops’ honorary degrees will be revoked.

The move is part of the continuing fallout in the state and across the country from last week’s massive report on clergy sex abuse. As the full effect of the sweeping grand jury report comes into view, many Catholic schools and universities feel as if they are in the eye of the storm and are taking steps to separate themselves from the havoc that the report has spread.

Two other Pennsylvania schools are also considering renaming campus sites dedicated to bishops accused of systemically concealing decades of abuse.

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The Latest: Pastor removed after diocese received allegation

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

The Latest on the Roman Catholic Church child sex abuse scandal in Pennsylvania (all times local):

2:55 p.m.

The Roman Catholic pastor of a southwestern Pennsylvania parish has been removed from ministry after the local diocese received what it calls a credible allegation of the sexual abuse of a minor.

Wednesday’s revelation by the Greensburg Diocese comes amid growing fallout from a state grand jury report that accused a succession of church leaders of covering up abuse by 300 Catholic priests in Pennsylvania since the 1940s.

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Catholic Dads Must Go to Church to Prevent Sex Abuse By Clergy

UNITED STATES
Fatherly

August 22, 2018

By Patrick A. Coleman

In light of a Pittsburgh grand jury report which shined a light on hundreds of Catholic predator priests, involved Catholic dads may help protect kids and hold the church accountable.

The Catholic community, in America and abroad, has spent the last week grappling with the horrific details put forth in a Pittsburgh grand jury report detailing the sexual abuse of thousands of children by hundreds of Pennsylvanian priests. The report identifies over 1,000 victims of rape and sexual predation, all of whom were ignored or silenced by church leaders, many of whom sheltered the perpetrators of awful crimes. While the grand jury report is devastating in its details, it is not shocking. The Catholic clergy has a history of raping kids and the church has a history of covering it up.

The practical question the report forces Catholic parents of young children to answer is one parents in the church have faced before: Does my family’s participation in church life jeopardize the safety of my kids? Given that the report out of Pittsburgh follows revelations of a similar nature in Boston, Ireland, Kenya, the Philippines, and Croatia, we must entertain the notion that the answer is “yes.”

As such, many Catholic parents like myself are reconsidering how they engage with churches and religious institutions. Some will walk away. I will not. Instead, I will double down on my involvement in church matters because I’m aware that the presence of a father tremendously diminishes the likelihood of harm befalling a children. Pedophiles disproportionately targeted children with absent fathers. This seems to be particularly true of priests. As such, I see my consistent presence as a prerequisite for my children’s involvement in church life.

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UVU asks judge to throw out suit from former Title IX director

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Deseret News

August 22, 2018

By Annie Knox

Utah Valley University has asked a judge to toss a whistleblower lawsuit from its former Title IX director.

Attorneys for the school argue in Tuesday court filings that Melissa Frost could not have been fired for alleging potential violations of federal antidiscrimination law, because administrators didn’t know she was gathering information about them at the time.

The university also claims that Utah law protecting whistleblowers doesn’t apply to Frost because the actions she took against her employer fell under the scope of her job responsibilities. As a Title IX coordinator, she was charged with investigating sexual assault and harassment, and making sure the university complies with federal law against gender discrimination.

Frost, who was hired to head UVU’s new Title IX office in 2014 and fired in June 2017, sued the school in 3rd District Court in May. She alleged school officials were slow to refer students the Title IX office and that a sexual assault case involving athletes dragged on for more than a year. In addition, she claimed campus police took gay male students’ sexual assault complaints less seriously and said administrators were reluctant to hold trainings to make clear that sexual orientation and gender identity are protected from discrimination.

A week after her firing, Frost filed a complaint against the university with the U.S. Department Education’s Office for Civil Rights, alleging Title IX violations and retaliation for her voicing her concerns about compliance. A federal civil rights probe is pending.

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Ohio State office to respond to sexual violence, harassment

COLUMBUS (OH)
CNN

August 22, 2018

By Madison Park

University has been mired in multiple scandals

As it faces several scandals and a federal investigation, Ohio State University announced Tuesday that it will create a new office to respond to sexual and gender harassment, violence and other forms of discrimination.

The new centralized office will help people at the university who’ve experienced, witnessed or have become aware of sexual misconduct — or those who are seeking resources and other reporting options, it said in a statement. The university has yet to finalize a name for the new office.

The university had dissolved its former Sexual Civility and Empowerment unit earlier this year, CNN affiliate WBNS reported.

“The immediate focus will be on enhancing the university’s Title IX resources for intake and assessment,” according to the university statement. Coordinators will help students, faculty and staff understand their rights, options, services, and to help them report concerns and file required reports to police other others, the school said.

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Ohio State announces new office to replace troubled Sexual Civility center

COLUMBUS (OH)
The Columbus Dispatch

August 21, 2018

By Jim Woods

Ohio State University announced Tuesday the creation of a new centralized office to address issues involving sexual misconduct and gender harassment.

The school promised in June that it would create a new office by the start of fall semester, after closing its troubled Sexual Civility and Empowerment Center and eliminating four positions. The closure followed an independent review that found the center had failed to properly report and handle some students’ sexual-assault complaints.

Ohio State says the new centralized office — which has yet to be given a formal name — will respond to sexual and gender-based harassment, violence and other forms of discrimination and harassment.

“The university will continue to focus on advancing our efforts in this vital area,” President Michael V. Drake said in a prepared statement.

Ohio State has been under scrutiny for its practices concerning compliance with federal Title IX, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of gender and also deals with issues concerning sexual harassment and sexual assault. A university that receives federal funds could be held legally responsible when it knows about or ignores such complaints.

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Washington lawmaker fired from job as college professor for alleged sexual misconduct with students

ELLENSBURG (WA)
Fox News

August 23, 2018

By Kaitlyn Schallhorn

A Washington state lawmaker was fired from his job as a university professor last week amid allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior directed at female students.

State Rep. Matt Manweller, a Republican, was terminated from his position as a political science professor at Central Washington University on August 14.

A report from an investigator hired by the public university said it found a “preponderance of the evidence supported a finding that Manweller engaged in a pattern of unprofessional and inappropriate behavior with gender-based and sexual overtones with female students and former students from 2004 to 2017.” The report was published by The Seattle Times.

Manweller is accused in the report of asking inappropriate and personal questions, physical touching, communicating with students with “sexual or romantic overtones” and “offering an educational benefit in exchange for sex.”

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Abuse Survivor Comes Forward — Again

BRADFORD (PA)
WESB

August 21, 2018

By Anne Holliday

Bradford native and priest abuse survivor Jim VanSickle was in Bradford today to meet with Father Ray Gramata, pastor of St. Bernard Church. After that, he held a joint news conference with another survivor from Bradford.

Ed Rodgers’ alleged abuser, Rev. Desmond McGee, was not named in the grand jury report but, after speaking with attorney general Josh Shapiro and other investigators in Shapiro’s office, Rodgers and VanSickle believe his name will eventually be made public again.

Rodgers’ did accuse McGee more than 20 years ago but, for all intents and purposes, no one believed him. Although that was painful, he says he came forward this time and the last time because he was concerned that there may be other victims.

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Irish Catholics keep the faith ahead of Pope’s visit

KNOCK (IRELAND)
Reuters

August 22, 2018

By Clodagh Kilcoyne

Bernie and Tom Byrne can barely conceal their excitement as they prepare for a visit to Ireland by Pope Francis that they hope will bring back the young believers that have deserted the Catholic church after decades of scandal.

Their grandfather Dominic was one of at least twenty-two people that claimed to see Mary, Joseph and John the Evangelist hovering near the gable end of the local church in the western Irish village of Knock on a rainy evening in August 1879.

Francis will pray at the Knock shrine as part of his two-day visit to Ireland this week, the first by a Pope in almost 40 years that have transformed the once staunchly Catholic country into a far more secular and liberal society. tmsnrt.rs/2N95yFI

“Houses are being painted and streets are being scrubbed… trying to get everything ready for him, even though it’s only a short visit,” said Bernie, 74, who like his brother Tom, runs a small shop selling religious goods to the 1.5 million pilgrims that come to Knock each year.

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Irish church’s fall from grace haunts pope’s Ireland trip

BLESSINGTON (IRELAND)
The Associated Press

August 23, 2018

By Nicole Winfield and Pietro de Cristofaro

When St. John Paul II visited Ireland in 1979, the Catholic Church wielded such power that homosexuality, divorce, abortion and contraception were barely spoken of, much less condoned. Catholic bishops had advised the authors of Ireland’s constitution, and still held sway.

Today, as Pope Francis prepares to visit, the Catholic Church enjoys no such influence.

As once-isolated Ireland experienced a tide of secularism and economic boom that opened it to the world, the church largely lost its centrality in Irish life.

Then the church — while still maintaining a stronghold on education and health care in Ireland — lost its moral credibility following revelations of the widespread sexual abuse of children in its churches, the physical torture of youngsters in its schools and the humiliation of women in its workhouses.

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Missouri victims seek wide-scale clergy abuse investigation

ST. LOUIS (MI)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

By Jim Salter

Victims of clergy sexual abuse are calling for a wide-scale investigation of sex crime allegations against Catholic priests in Missouri, and whether the church participated in a cover-up.

One victim, a woman whose son killed himself after being abused as a teenager, and an attorney for abuse victims spoke Wednesday outside the St. Louis office of Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley. They urged a statewide investigation similar to one in Pennsylvania that uncovered more than 1,000 cases of abuse.

David Clohessy, 61, of St. Louis is a longtime victims’ rights advocate who was abused as a child. He said more than 170 priests in Missouri have been accused in recent decades, but few have been convicted. He blamed prosecutors who aren’t “assertive or creative enough in exposing and pursuing these wrongdoers.”

Hawley’s office has said it can help local prosecutors, but it doesn’t have jurisdiction to launch its own investigation.

But St. Louis attorney Nicole Gorovsky, who represents sexual abuse survivors in civil cases, said Hawley, a Republican, could take steps such as a civil lawsuit or coordinating with federal and local prosecutors.

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Survivors of clergy sex crimes call for statewide grand jury-style investigation

KANSAS CITY (MO)
FOX4KC

August 20, 2018

By Stephanie Graflage

Local attorney, Rebecca Randles, hosted a news conference Monday afternoon at her office to announce launch a statewide grand jury-style investigation into clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

Randles touts that she is Missouri’s most experienced attorney representing victims of sexual abuse.

According to Randles, 228 Catholic priests across Missouri and the Archdiocese of Kansas in Kansas City have been accused of molesting kids.

Randles said last week’s grand jury report regarding sex abuse at Catholic Churches in Pennsylvania prompted Monday’s call to action.

“So it details that there is an even greater issue in the Kansas City, St. Louis, Missouri and the Archdiocese of Kansas than what we’re seeing out of the grand jury report out of Pennsylvania,” Randles said.

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Pittsburgh Diocese receives about 50 new abuse claims after grand jury report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 22, 2018

By Adam Smeltz

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh has fielded about 50 allegations of abuse over the past week, after a grand jury report drew international attention to child sexual abuse by Pennsylvania priests, the diocese said Tuesday.

The claims appear to be new and came “from people who had not previously contacted us,” delivered through an abuse hotline established by the church and via email, said the Rev. Nicholas S. Vaskov, a diocese spokesman.

“All of the allegations are from prior to 1990 and go back as far as the 1940s,” Father Vaskov said in a statement. “We are taking all of them seriously and following our regular process for responding to them.”

That protocol includes pulling accused clergy from ministry if they’re still on the job. The diocese didn’t immediately say whether the new reports involve active clergy, but each allegation will be turned over to prosecutors in the county where the abuse is alleged, Father Vaskov said.

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Survivors say Pope letter is ‘just words’

BALLARAT (AUSTRALIA)
The Courier

August 21, 2018

By Leanne Younes

A Ballarat clergy abuse survivor agrees that Tuesday’s unprecedented letter of apology from Pope Francis is too little too late.

In a letter to the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics, Pope Francis said no effort must be spared to prevent child abuse and the possibility of the crimes being covered up.

Pope Francis has vowed there will be no more cover-ups of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church but church abuse victims’ advocacy group Broken Rites president Chris MacIsaac described the letter as “all too little, too late”.

“Words are nothing without action,” Mr Sculley said. “The facts of the matter are that it changes nothing.”

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School drops archbishop’s name amid sex abuse report fallout

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

By Marc Levy

A Roman Catholic high school will shed the name of Washington’s archbishop, who was cited in a sweeping grand jury report as having allowed priests accused of sexually abusing children to be reassigned or reinstated while he was Pittsburgh’s bishop.

The Diocese of Pittsburgh said Wednesday that Washington Cardinal Donald Wuerl made the request to remove his name from Cardinal Wuerl North Catholic High School and that school and diocese officials accepted it.

The sign in front of the suburban Pittsburgh school was discovered vandalized Monday, with red spray paint obscuring Wuerl’s name, as some Catholics called for his resignation or ouster and a petition circulated to remove his name from the school.

The 77-year-old Wuerl has defended himself, saying he acted to protect children, promptly investigate allegations and strengthen policies as understanding of child abuse evolved. He has said he will not resign.

Dropping his name from the school is part of the growing fallout from a grand jury report that accused a succession of church leaders of covering up the abuse of more than 1,000 children or teenagers by about 300 Catholic priests in Pennsylvania since the 1940s.

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China investigates top Buddhist monk for sexual assault

CHINA
DW

August 23, 2018

Police in China are investigating one of the country’s most prominent monks over allegations he sexually assaulted nuns at his monastery in Beijing. The case has galvanized China’s fledgling #MeToo movement.

Chinese police have opened a criminal probe into sexual misconduct claims against high-profile Buddhist monk Xuecheng, China’s top religious authority said Thursday.

A statement from the State Religious Affairs Administration said he is also facing censure from the official government-run Buddhist Association on suspicion of “violating Buddhist precepts.”

The 51-year-old stepped down as head of the association earlier this month after fellow monks accused him of sending explicit text messages and demanding sexual favors from nuns at his monastery in Beijing’s northwestern suburbs. They also said he had embezzled funds. Xuecheng denies the charges.

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Police probe sexual misconduct claims against Chinese monk

BEIJING (CHINA)
The Associated Press

August 23, 2018

Chinese police have opened an investigation into sexual misconduct allegations against one of the country’s best-known Buddhist monks whose case has highlighted the growth of the #MeToo movement in China.

A statement issued by the State Religious Affairs Administration on Thursday said police were investigating claims of sexual assault by Xuecheng. It said he also faces censure from the official government-backed Buddhist Association on suspicion of “violating Buddhist precepts.”

Xuecheng has denied the claims but earlier this month resigned as head of the Buddhist Association.

Fellow monks accused him of harassing and demanding sexual favors from nuns at his monastery in the outskirts of northwestern Beijing, as well as embezzling funds. Their accusations, including testimony from alleged victims, were posted online, prompting a public outcry and unusual coverage by state media.

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One priest was arrested for soliciting sex, but his diocese just moved him again

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 22, 2018

By Candy Woodall

The Rev. Francis Bach had several warning signs in his past, but that didn’t stop a diocese from assigning him to multiple churches in central Pennsylvania.

In 1967, he was “relieved of his duties” with a young adult ministry in Harrisburg.

That was a few years after he served at St. Patrick Catholic Church in York, a city of about 45,000 residents 80 miles west of Philadelphia where a man in 2016 said Bach abused him as an altar boy in 1960 when Bach was a seminarian.

Ten years later, Bach had more blemishes on his employment history. He’s one of several examples in central Pennsylvania of the diocese shuffling predator priests, called “passing the trash,” according to a state grand jury report released last week on priest sex abuse.

The Harrisburg Diocese, which covers 15 counties in southcentral Pennsylvania, knew that Bach broke his priestly celibacy vows in the mid-1970s: “Inappropriate behavior with adult at seminary.” Diocese officials moved him a month later.

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Bishop Zubik hopes Pope Francis allows him to continue leading diocese, help with healing

ALLEGHENY (PA)
Trib Live

August 22, 2018

By Deb Erdley

Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik was stunned when a group of abuse survivors demanded he resign over his handling of child sexual abuse complaints as detailed in a recent grand jury report.

“I was surprised that people would ask me to resign. First of all, resignations are something that are decided by the pope,” Zubik said. “But since becoming bishop of Pittsburgh since 2007, I’ve been very responsive. … And I want to still continue to lead the people to help with their healing.”

A recent flurry of complaints to diocesan officials in Greensburg and Pittsburgh as well 544 calls to a sexual abuse hotline run by the state Attorney General’s office in the week since the public release of a stunning grand jury report on clergy abusing minors across Pennsylvania suggests that it could take some time as the Catholic church attempts to deal with an international plague of complaints and allegations of cover-ups that triggered recent high-profile resignations.

Among those to resign as Pope Francis bemoaned the scandal that has ripped the church across several continents are Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, D.C., an archbishop in Australia, and five bishops in Chile.

Judy Jones, the Midwestern director of SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests) last week called on Zubik and his predecessor Cardinal Donald Wuerl, archbishop of Washington, D.C., to resign, saying the report suggested they were more interested in protecting priests than children.

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The Asia Argento News Is Upsetting, But Could It Be Good For #MeToo?

UNITED STATES
Refinery29

August 21, 2018

By Ludmila Leiva

On Sunday night, the New York Times dropped a bombshell report that Asia Argento, — the Italian actress, director, and activist who lead the charge against Harvey Weinstein and became a leading voice for #MeToo movement — quietly settled claims that she had sexually assaulted a then 17-year-old boy. On Tuesday morning, Argento made a public statement denying the allegations and saying that her then-boyfriend Anthony Bourdain had paid off Bennett, who she said had harassed the couple.

These unsettling allegations are already creating rifts among supporters over the purpose of #MeToo and the future of the movement. With Harvey Weinstein’s trials looming in the near future, the claims have prompted speculation about the veracity of Argento’s allegations against him. And, with prominent #MeToo voices, including Tarana Burke, already distancing themselves from Argento, many question whether these developments undermine the movement as a whole.

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Deputy AG questions firm’s report amid criminal probe of St. Paul’s

CONCORD (NH)
Concord Monitor

August 22, 2018

By Alyssa Dandrea

Former St. Paul’s School students interviewed as part of an independent investigation into faculty sexual abuse remembered ex-humanities teacher David Pook for the wet willies he gave girls and his frequent, unannounced visits to girls’ dorms.

One student recalled how Pook put his tongue close to her face and ear to demonstrate a “moral dilemma” in a religious studies class.

Another remembered how Pook recommended a novel about a literature professor who becomes “sexually involved” with a 12-year-old girl and a book about a high school student who marries her teacher.

The allegations are detailed in a supplemental report released by the Boston-based law firm Casner & Edwards, which St. Paul’s commissioned in 2016 to look into claims of faculty-student abuse. The most recent interviews with former students took place at the same time the New Hampshire attorney general’s office continues its criminal investigation into the school’s handling of sexual abuse and misconduct allegations.

Deputy Attorney General Jane Young told the Monitor that the school notified the office Tuesday that Casner & Edwards was going to release a 42-page supplemental report that night, but did not provide an advanced copy. The latest report substantiates claims against 10 former St. Paul’s faculty and staff, three of whom are named for the first time, including Pook.

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Recent editorials from Texas newspapers

HOUSTON (TX)
The Associated Press

August 20, 2018

Here are selections from recent editorials in Texas newspapers:

Houston Chronicle. Aug. 20, 2018.

An international search for a Dallas priest accused of molesting three teenage boys is a stark reminder that Texas should be as concerned as other states about the child sexual abuse allegations that have shaken faith in the Catholic Church.

Father Edmundo Paredes, pastor for 27 years of St. Cecilia Catholic Church, was reported missing Sunday and suspected of fleeing to the Philippines, his native country. The Diocese of Dallas reportedly notified police in February that Paredes was suspected of abusing children, but did not let his parishioners know until Saturday.

Such delays have led to widespread condemnation of the Catholic Church’s handling of child sexual abuse allegations. A Pennsylvania grand jury report last week documented abuse by 300 priests of more than 1,000 victims over a period of 70 years in that state. Most of the abusers were allowed to remain in the ministry as priests.

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Priest charged with indecent assault, sending nudes to 17-year-old parishioner

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Lehigh Valley Live

August 21, 2018

By Steve Novak

A 30-year-old priest is accused of sending nude photos of himself to a 17-year-old girl he met through his work at an Allentown parish.

The criminal charges come one week after the Pennsylvania attorney general released an 884-page grand jury report detailing decades of sexual abuse and coverups across six dioceses, including the Diocese of Allentown.

In a crowded news conference, Lehigh County District Attorney Jim Martin said the latest charges levied Tuesday are not related to the grand jury investigation.

Kevin Lonergan, of Pottsville, is charged with one count each of corruption of minors and indecent assault. He could face a maximum of nine years in prison if convicted of both counts.

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A Pennsylvania university scrubs the names of three bishops from buildings after the clergy sex abuse scandal

SCRANTON (PA)
CNN

August 21, 2018

The University of Scranton, a Jesuit university in Pennsylvania, is removing the names of three bishops from school buildings in response to an ongoing sexual abuse investigation involving several Catholic leadership figures from the state.

They are scrubbing the names of Bishops Jerome D. Hannan, J. Carroll McCormick, and James C. Timlin from campus buildings, and will also be rescinding the bishops’ honorary degrees.

Hannan, McCormick and Timlin were named in a stunning grand jury report detailing the coverup of credible sexual abuse accusations against more than 300 state priests and encompassing more than 1,000 child victims. According to the University, “these Bishops covered up the crimes and misdeeds of men who were under their jurisdiction and placed children in harm’s way.”

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Knights of Columbus leader urges church reforms after abuse

HARTFORD (CT)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

By Dave Collins

The leader of the world’s largest Roman Catholic fraternal group is condemning clergy sex abuse and calling for reforms in the church, including a renewed commitment to celibacy by priests.

Carl Anderson, supreme knight of the New Haven, Connecticut-based Knights of Columbus, made the comments in what appeared to be an unusual letter to the group’s nearly 2 million members on Tuesday.

“These sins of commission and omission have sent the Church we love, the Church we serve and the Church that Jesus Christ established into convulsions,” Anderson wrote. “Sadly, the disgrace not only is borne by the perpetrators, it hurts us all, as does the silence of shepherds who have ignored the cries of their flocks.”

To be sure, the Knights of Columbus hasn’t been inoculated from the sex abuse scandal that’s rocked the global Catholic Church in recent years.

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Women as priests? Some say it’s time but admit it’s unlikely

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

August 23, 2018

By David Crary

Advocates of ordaining women as Roman Catholic priests cite the church’s unfolding sex abuse scandals as powerful arguments for their cause, while acknowledging the high unlikelihood of achieving their goal anytime soon.

Even with extensive grassroots support for letting women become priests, Pope Francis and the Vatican’s male-dominated hierarchy have stressed repeatedly that a men-only priesthood is a divine mandate that cannot be changed.

“I don’t see any movement to ordain women on the horizon, although I wish I did,” said Margaret McGuinness, a religion professor at La Salle University in Philadelphia. “The people in power aren’t going to look at this as a solution.”

In the United States, an organized campaign advocating for female priests dates to the 1970s, and its leaders have seized on the new sex abuse scandals — in which the alleged perpetrators are male clergy — to help make their case.

The most notable scandals: allegations that ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick molested at least two minors, as well as adult seminarians, and a Pennsylvania grand jury report alleging that about 300 priests sexually abused at least 1,000 children in six dioceses since the 1940s.

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L.A. district attorney reviewing second sexual assault case involving Kevin Spacey

UNITED STATES
Yahoo Celebrity

August 22, 2018

By Taryn Ryder

A new sexual assault case involving Kevin Spacey has been turned over to the Los Angeles district attorney’s office, Yahoo Entertainment has confirmed. It’s the second case in L.A. that will be reviewed involving the actor, although over a dozen men have come forward accusing Spacey of inappropriate behavior.

Specifics of the case that the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department presented to the D.A.’s office Tuesday have not been made available.

In April, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department turned over a sexual assault case involving the actor to the D.A. that was ultimately rejected as the statute of limitations had expired. The incident between Spacey and an unknown adult male allegedly occurred in October 1992. Spacey is currently under investigation in the U.K. for similar alleged crimes as six men have come forward accusing him of sexual assault.

The two-time Oscar winner has disappeared from the spotlight since last year’s allegations — and it doesn’t seem like audiences are ready to embrace him anytime soon.

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Simone Biles outperforming USA Gymnastics

UNITED STATES
SFGate

August 22, 2018

By Ann Killion

Did you witness that beautiful story of strength and surviving? A tale that came wrapped in one of the tiniest packages in sports?

After Simone Biles’ tour-de-force performance at the 2016 Rio Olympics, where she won four gold medals and established herself as the greatest gymnast in the world, she took almost two years off.

Last weekend, the 4-foot-8 powerhouse returned to the spotlight, sweeping all four individual events at nationals.

But in those two years, her entire world was rocked. USA Gymnastics was embroiled in a horrifying sexual-abuse scandal. Earlier this year, Biles, 21, came forward to say that she, too, had been sexually abused by team doctor Larry Nassar.

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Ex-youth pastor attacked during sentencing on sex abuse plea

MEDFORD (OR)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

A former youth pastor was attacked in federal court during his sentencing Wednesday on a sex abuse charge by an unknown man who lunged over the railing from the gallery.

Donald Courtney Biggs was being sentenced in U.S. District Court in Medford after admitting earlier this year to taking a 14-year-old girl on a church trip to Southern California with the intent to film her exiting the shower. Authorities previously said an investigation revealed he had hidden camera recordings involving dozens of victims.

The Mail Tribune, which was covering the hearing, said police Lt. Justin Ivens told reporters outside the courthouse that Biggs was transported to a local hospital to be checked for injuries after being punched once in the face.

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Missouri victims seek wide-scale clergy abuse investigation

ST. LOUIS (MI)
The Associated Press

August 22, 2018

By Jim Salter

Victims of clergy sexual abuse are calling for a wide-scale investigation of sex crime allegations against Catholic priests in Missouri, and whether the church participated in a cover-up.

One victim, a woman whose son killed himself after being abused as a teenager, and an attorney for other abuse victims spoke Wednesday outside the St. Louis office of Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley. They urged a statewide investigation similar to one in Pennsylvania that uncovered more than 1,000 cases of abuse.

David Clohessy, 61, of St. Louis, a longtime victims’ rights advocate who was abused as a child, said more than 170 priests in Missouri have been accused in recent decades, but few have been convicted. He blamed prosecutors who aren’t “assertive or creative enough in exposing and pursuing these wrongdoers.”

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August 22, 2018

Camden Diocese offers $20,000 to Cape woman amid clergy abuse claim

CAMDEN (NJ)
Press of Atlantic City

August 22, 2018

By John DeRosier

The Diocese of Camden has offered a settlement to the daughter of a man who claimed he was sexually abused by the Rev. Richard Gerbino, who in 1961 was the first pastor assigned to St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Vineland.

The settlement, which was offered in April, is for $20,000 between the diocese and Annette Nestler, 54, of the Villas section of Lower Township. Nestler’s father, Mike Kissell, said he was repeatedly sexually abused by Gerbino in the 1960s and died by suicide Dec. 31, 1970.

Mike Walsh, a spokesman for the diocese, confirmed the proposed deal and said settlements in general are offered by the diocese after they are vetted for credibility.

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Clergy sex abuse crisis ‘devastating’ for the church, cardinal says

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

August 22, 2018

By Junno Arocho Esteves

The scandal of clergy abusing minors and vulnerable adults has overwhelmed the Catholic Church and its mission to preach the Gospel, said the Vatican secretary of state.

“It is not easy to say, because this scandal of clerical sexual abuse has really affected and continues to affect us — everybody — and it has a devastating effect on the life and on the witness the church is going to give to the world,” said Cardinal Pietro Parolin.

In an interview Aug. 22 with the English edition of Vatican News, Parolin said the pope’s visit to Ireland is a journey of hope to help the church and families in the country build a society in which children and the vulnerable are safe and secure.

During his trip to Ireland Aug. 25-26 for the World Meeting of Families, Pope Francis will meet with survivors of sexual abuse, the Vatican confirmed Aug. 21, but without disclosing the date, time or location.

The pope, Parolin said, has consistently reminded the church that “our first duty is to take care of the people who have been affected — the victims of this tragic phenomenon,” and he believes “the church in Ireland has continued its efforts to address and prevent sexual abuse.”

“I believe that the church in Ireland has recognized its shortcomings, its mistakes, its sins and at the same has also provided measures that can prevent these atrocities, these horrors from being repeated,” the cardinal said in a separate interview with the Italian edition of Vatican News.

The church, he added, remains close to those who suffered abuse by the clergy and is committed “to help them so they can rebuild their lives.”

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Cheyenne Police re-open Catholic Church sex abuse investigation

CHEYENNE (WY)
News Release/KNEP

August 21, 2018

New information has prompted Cheyenne police to reopen an investigation into allegations of abuse by a Catholic Church official in Cheyenne in the 1970’s through the late 1990’s.

By Wyoming statute, law enforcement can’t name a suspect in the case, however, they did cite an internal investigation by the Wyoming Catholic Diocese as the reason for a new examination of the facts.

That investigation by an outside investigator found credible evidence that Bishop Emeritus Joseph Hart sexually abused two boys while in Wyoming. He served as Auxiliary Bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 through 2001.

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Pennsylvania abuse report shows that the church requires dramatic change

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

August 21, 2018

By Pat Perriello

Despite my obsession with President Trump, the Pennsylvania grand jury report cries out for comment. The report conservatively tells us that 300 priests were involved in the sexual abuse of at least 1000 kids. Of course, we are not surprised — we’ve seen this movie before. We know about Boston. We know a bit about Ireland. We need to acknowledge that if an in-depth investigation has uncovered such activity in Pennsylvania, there is no reason to believe that the same kind of data would not be uncovered in Chicago, Los Angeles, Atlanta or any other area of the country. There is some talk that Attorney General Brian Frosh in Maryland is being asked to conduct such an investigation.

The first thing the church must do is accept the reality that there is a problem. Yet bishops and clergy are still attempting to say that the problem was in the past and everything is OK now. Greg Burke, Vatican spokesman, notes that most incidents occurred prior to 2002. Bishop David Zubik of Pittsburgh says: “The Diocese of Pittsburgh today is not the church that is described in the grand jury report … we have learned from the past.”

We all hope the church has learned from the past, and they do appear to be doing more to hold bishops accountable for being complicit in the scandal. What is needed, however, is a level of humility that is yet to be seen. Something is wrong at a fundamental level and the church cannot continue to conduct business as usual.

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Reactions to church sex abuse report mixed as Catholics return to Mass

PITTSTON (PA)
Times Leader

August 19, 2018

By Geri Gibbons

Former Luzerne County judge Joe Musto issued many rulings during his career, but when it comes to the recent scandal regarding Catholic clergy, he is reluctant to judge.

And, he is adamant that details of abuse alleged in the grand jury report released Tuesday will not shake his faith in God or the church.

“I believe priests are human, and we all have to keep them in our prayers,” he said as he made his way out of St. John the Evangelist Church following Sunday Mass. “We are a people that believe in forgiveness.”

Musto’s wife, Fortunata Musto, shares her husband’s deep faith, but she’s angry that the Catholic Church would allow children to be abused, while defending priests charged to protect them.

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Kansas City attorney says sexual abuse inside the catholic church is happening in our area

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KMBC

August 20, 2018

Her clients are calling for an investigation

More people are calling for a high-ranking Cardinal in the Catholic Church to resign.

A grand jury report accuses Cardinal Donald Wuerl of protecting priests who abused children while he was Bishop of Pittsburgh.

He’s accused of allowing accused priests to be reassigned or reinstated.

In a statement, Wuerl denies any wrongdoing and says he has no plans to step down.

In a public letter, Pope Francis says the church must acknowledge and condemn abuse adding, “We showed no care for little ones…we abandoned them.”

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Cardinal O’Malley: ‘I accept responsibility’ for aide not showing me letter accusing colleague of abuse

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

August 21, 2018

By Jules Crittenden

Sean Cardinal O’Malley, facing accusations of ignoring a priest’s letter that warned him three years ago about an allegedly predatory fellow cardinal, yesterday issued a statement saying it was an oversight by his secretary.

Ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, 88, was stripped of his title in June after the Vatican found sex abuse allegations against him to be credible.

“In June of 2015 Rev. Boniface Ramsey sent a letter that was received at my office at the Archdiocese of Boston’s Pastoral Center. Rev. Robert Kickham, my Priest Secretary, received the letter on my behalf, as he does much of the correspondence that comes to my office at the Pastoral Center,” O’Malley wrote in a statement released by the Archdiocese of Boston yesterday.

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Opinion: In revealing Catholic Church sex abuse, we can thank the law – and not the Men of God

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Philadelphia Inquirer

August 20, 2018

By Maria Panaritis

Thank God for church records. For they shall guide us all toward truth.

Thank God for the criminal investigators and prosecutors.

Thank God for the grand jury subpoenas. For they extracted – like rotting teeth – clergy-abuse personnel files in unreachable corners of six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses serving 1.7 million people.

Thank God for the courage of the victims. For without them, Attorney General Josh Shapiro and his team would have had no real cause to root out and unveil decades of depravity and systemic abuse by clergy, overseen by complicit superiors.

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Bishop Morlino’s abuse response showcases the church’s true problem: Itself

MADISON (WI)
The Cap Times

August 21, 2018

By Andrew L. Seidel

Blame the gays. That appears to be the strategy of Bishop Robert Morlino of the Diocese of Madison, who penned a letter to his flock. “Until recently, the problems of the church have been painted purely as problems of pedophilia, this despite clear evidence to the contrary,” wrote Morlino, essentially arguing that homosexuality, not priests preying on children, was the problem: “There is a homosexual subculture within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord.”

This is a disgusting attempt to paint LGBTQ Americans, who have made great strides toward acceptance and equality despite the best efforts of the Catholic Church, as “disordered,” “deviant,” and “ in violation of the natural moral law.” As the tidal wave of this scandal again crashes down on his church, Morlino is trying to shift the blame.

Morlino is wrong. There is not now, nor has there ever been, a link between homosexuality and pedophilia. This myth, bred of ignorance, has been debunked countless times. For those of us who dwell in the world of facts and reality, the research is clear: Most sexual abuse is committed by heterosexual males.

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Action needed from Francis, not pious words

MUMBAI (INDIA)
La Croix

August 22, 2018

By Virginia Saldanha

Pope’s letter on sexual abuse is welcome but victims deserve stern measures to stop this evil

While the People of God across the globe thank Pope Francis for finally expressing himself in his Aug. 20 letter on the issue of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, many feel it brings little comfort.

Many pious platitudes have already been expressed toward survivors of abuse, but it has not brought about any change in their reality because many abusers continue to be clerics. Sadly, the pope’s letter does not say anything concrete about actions to make bishops accountable.

We have heard of commitments to put policies in place, but to date nothing seems to have worked.

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She accused a Mishawaka priest of sexual abuse. She got Bishop Rhoades’ attention.

MISHAWAKA (IN)
South Bend Tribune

August 22, 2018

By Caleb Bauer

When Bishop Kevin Rhoades announced his plan to release names of priests in the Fort Wayne-South Bend Diocese accused of abuse, he said the revelations of rampant abuse in Pennsylvania weren’t the only factor in his decision.

He also credited a woman who had reported sexual abuse to the diocese — and had urged him to release the name of her abuser.

“I was so conflicted,” Rhoades said at a news conference Friday. “She was asking me to release the name. So to be honest, this whole issue of releasing names is something that even before the Pennsylvania grand jury report I’ve been considering.”

Carolyn Andrzejewski-Wilson watched the live broadcast of the news conference on her computer at her North Carolina home. She knew Rhoades was talking about her.

Almost two years ago, the former Mishawaka resident met with Rhoades to relay her story about abuse at the hands of the Rev. Elden Miller, a former priest at St. Joseph Church and Queen of Peace Church in Mishawaka.

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How The Catholic Church Trains Its Own About Abuse

UNITED STATES
NPR

August 18, 2018

By Jennifer Ludden

Length: 7:22

TRANSCRIPT

How does the Catholic Church prepare its seminarians to deal with questions of sexual abuse and celibacy? NPR’s Jennifer Ludden talks to Paul Blaschko, who attended seminary from 2008 until 2011.

JENNIFER LUDDEN, HOST:

This week, a grand jury report found hundreds of Catholic priests in Pennsylvania abused more than 1,000 children over a period of 70 years. The Vatican released a strongly worded statement condemning the behavior of the clergymen and the system that enabled them to act with impunity. But this is just the latest episode in a scandal that stretches across the U.S. and around the world. We wondered. How does the Roman Catholic Church prepare its men in seminary to deal with such cases of abuse? And what training does it provide on issues of celibacy, sexuality and ethics? Paul Blaschko attended the St. John Vianney College Seminary at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota from 2008 to 2011. He wrote about his experience there for the magazine Commonweal. I asked him about his first exposure to this type of training.

PAUL BLASCHKO: One of the workshops that was put on during my first year there was a workshop that was called the Freedom And Victory Workshop. It was put on by an outside organization. You know, we started off by having kind of an open mic, where seminarians were encouraged to get up in front of like a hundred of their peers and kind of detail past indiscretions and their sexual history or things that they currently struggled with sexually. And that sort of gave me the wrong vibe from the outset. But I became even more concerned when I attended one particular session. It was called Discerning Psycho-Spiritual Dynamics In Sexual Compulsion. And at the outset, we were given a list of the names of particular demons and the ways in which they were supposed to try to influence priests, in particular, to behave in sexually immoral ways. And things really got weird when we participated in this – what they called a group psycho-drama. And each of us were assigned the names of one of these demons. And we were supposed to, like, act out this role and tempt, like, one of the other role-playing seminarians into, you know, sexual immorality. And it was just very bizarre and kind of disturbing.

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