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.

November 4, 2023

Clergy abuse victims ask Baltimore bankruptcy judge to reconsider ban on lawsuits against Catholic parishes, schools

BALTIMORE (MD)
Frederick News-Post [Frederick, MD]

November 3, 2023

By Lee O. Sanderlin Baltimore Sun

Read original article

A committee representing clergy abuse survivors is asking a federal bankruptcy judge to reconsider her order barring lawsuits against Catholic schools and parishes as part of the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Parishes and schools are technically not assets of the archdiocese, despite Archbishop William E. Lori having control over whether they can be bought or sold, but were granted protection from lawsuits because the archdiocese insures them.

In early October, U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Michelle Harner issued an interim injunction on lawsuits against entities covered by archdiocesan insurance policies (known as covered parties). Harner determined those policies are assets of the corporation that makes up the archdiocese, meaning any lawsuit would inevitably draw down on insurance monies in order to pay legal fees and settlements.

Whenever any entity files for bankruptcy it is automatically protected from lawsuits so its assets can be preserved to pay creditors. Sometimes those protections can…

View Cache

Legislator wants to change the right of confession to allow priests to disclose child abuse by parishioners

PHOENIX (AZ)
White Mountain Independent [Show Low, AZ]

November 1, 2023

By Howard Fischer, Capitol Media Services

Read original article

A first-term Democratic lawmaker wants to enact an exception to state laws that allow clergy to refuse to disclose what was told to them in confession or similar confidential communication.

But Rep. Stacey Travers of Phoenix has so far run into a procedural wall. Rep. Quang Nguyen, who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, where her bill was assigned earlier this year, refused to even give it a hearing.

And the Prescott Republican told Capitol Media Services that he’s not prepared to allow the bill to proceed in 2024, even if it deals only with cases of child abuse and neglect.

“The seal of confession is a sacred, sacred part of the Catholic church,” said Nguyen who is Catholic.

“The seal of confession is never to be broken,” he said. “And priests will go to jail for it.”

Still, Nguyen acknowledged that there are difficult issues to be addressed. And he…

View Cache

Florida Supreme Court won’t hear South Florida priest abuse case

TALLAHASSEE (FL)
CBS News [New York NY]

November 2, 2023

By CBS News

Read original article

The Florida Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a request by the Archdiocese of Miami to take up a dispute involving allegations that a priest sexually abused a child. 

Justices, as is common, did not explain their reasons for declining to hear the case. 

The archdiocese wanted justices to review a decision by the 3rd District Court of Appeal that allowed the alleged victim to pursue a claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress against the archdiocese. 

The lawsuit alleges that the plaintiff, identified as John Doe 1, was sexually abused dozens of times between 1999 and 2001, when he was 7 to 9 years old, according to a March 22 decision by a three-judge panel of the South Florida appeals court. 

The case names as a defendant the archdiocese and not the priest. 

The appeals court rejected part of the lawsuit alleging negligence by the archdiocese, citing a four-year statute…

View Cache

LOUDfence Wales: Standing with victims and survivors of abuse

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
cbcew.org.uk [London, UK]

November 3, 2023

By CBCEW

Read original article

The Catholic community in Wales has spent a week standing in prayerful solidarity with victims and survivors of abuse at the country’s first LOUDfence event. It took place in Cardiff from 21-28 October 2023.

LOUDfence is a survivor-led initiative, open to everyone, that gives a voice to those who have experienced abuse within a faith-based setting or have been affected by it.

At a Mass to mark the opening of the initiative, on Saturday, 21 October, Archbishop Mark O’Toole, Archbishop of Cardiff and Bishop of Menevia, offered a sincere apology and called for reparation – not just though words but, more importantly, through actions:

“We know of the betrayal of the innocent who have suffered at the hands of those from whom they should have experienced only life and love. If you have suffered in any way like this, within the life of the Church, I offer my profoundest apology……

View Cache

Jesuits say they warned diocese that incardinated Rupnik had complaints against him

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

November 2, 2023

By Almudena Martínez-Bordiú, ACI Prensa Staff

Read original article

Father Marko Rupnik’s former superior in the Society of Jesus, Father Johan Verschueren, denied that the Jesuits facilitated the incardination of the priest, who is accused of sexual abuse, in the Diocese of Koper, Slovenia, and said that the order warned the local bishop about the serious complaints against him.

In a statement to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, Verschueren, delegate for the Interprovincial Houses and Works of the Society of Jesus, assured that in March the Jesuits “exhaustively” informed the bishop of Koper, Jurij Bizjak, about the cases and complaints of abuse against Rupnik.

The Jesuit official revealed that the Slovenian bishop “informed us on his own initiative that he would offer incardination to MIR [Marko Ivan Rupnik] if we would give him the indult to leave the Society of Jesus.” However, the priest was not released but expelled from the Jesuits on June 15.

An Oct. 25…

View Cache

Opinion: The Unholy Cycle of Abusive Pastors’ Cardboard-Thin Contrition

CARRBORO (NC)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

November 2, 2023

By Stuart Delony

Read original article

Christianity has a knack for resurrecting careers that should be as dead as Lazarus pre-miracle. It’s like a magic trick, only the rabbit pulled out of the hat is an abusive pastor. The routine is old but somehow still gets applause: a scandal erupts, the leader puts on a public performance worthy of an Oscar—complete with insincere sobbing and rehearsed humility—and poof! After a “season of healing,” they’re back, front and center.

Mark DriscollPerry NobleMatt ChandlerJohnny HuntCarl Lentz—sounds like a guest list for a Narcissists Anonymous meeting. They’re the beneficiaries of a twisted inheritance from spiritual OG abusers like Jim Bakker and Jimmy Swaggart. In a world where a Google search can immortalize your worst moments, it’s impressive, really, how these guys find their way back to the pulpit and…

View Cache

November 3, 2023

French bishops warned not to fall for suppressed ‘Catholic NGO’

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

November 2, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

Members of the Points-Coeur association still wear habits, live like a religious community and promote vows of consecrated life.

The Vatican’s secretary of state Cardinal Pietro Parolin has warned French bishops that two groups stripped of their canonical status in 2020 are pretending to be Church-approved religious communities.  

Members of the Points-Coeur association, whose male wing is known in English as Heart’s Home and female wing as Servants of the Presence of God, still wear habits, live like a religious community and promote vows of consecrated life, he said in a letter to the French bishops’ conference, but added that this was deceptive.

“They…have no more canonical link to the Church, even if they often continue to work civilly with NGOs,” he said. “This attitude cannot fail to arouse scandal among the faithful and among victims.” 

Parolin’s letter, addressed to the bishops’ conference president Archbishop Éric de Moulins-Beaufort of Reims, Parolin warned bishops…

View Cache

Kanakuk Kamps Sues Insurer for Breach of Contract, Refusal to Defend

BRANSON (MO)
Ministry Watch [Matthews NC]

November 1, 2023

By Kim Roberts

Read original article

The Christian youth camp claims the insurer withheld information during settlement negotiations with sex abuse survivors

Kanakuk Kamps is suing its insurance carrier, ACE American Insurance Company, for breach of contract and fiduciary duty and for bad faith refusal to defend Kanakuk over the lawsuit brought against the camp by a sexual abuse victim.

Kanakuk alleges the insurance carrier withheld information from victims and threatened to deny coverage to the camp during the years immediately following the sexual abuse scandal.

Logan Yandell, a Kanakuk camp sexual abuse victim, filed a lawsuit against the camp in November 2022. The lawsuit asserts a fraud claim against Kanakuk Ministries, Kanakuk Heritage, and Joe White, president of Kanakuk.

In 2010, Yandell agreed to a settlement for an undisclosed amount and signed a nondisclosure agreement, but now claims those were based on false and fraudulent representations by the Kanakuk defendants.

Between 2005 and…

View Cache

French Church ignores reforms, says abuse report author

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

November 3, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

The Sauvé report “proposed structural changes in Church governance” which have not been implemented.

Jean-Marc Sauvé, whose commission estimated 330,000 sexual abuse cases in the French Church – two-thirds by priests – since 1950, said little had been done to prevent further abuse since its report came out two years ago.  

The bishops accepted the report and began compensating victims, he told Le Parisien, but have not implemented the reforms it suggested.

“Maybe the Church considers the work of the Ciase [abuse commission] was both the diagnosis and the remedy,” he said. But the report also “proposed structural changes in Church governance” such as including lay people, especially women, much more in ecclesial decision-making.

Among its reform ideas, it proposed ordaining women as deacons and older married men – the so-called viri probati – as priests.

Sauvé said the bishops’ plenary in Lourdes last spring was the occasion to consider these reforms, but the meeting…

View Cache

New national organization to hold the Roman Catholic church of Canada accountable for sex crimes

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Outrage Canada [London, Ontario, Canada]

November 2, 2023

By Patricia Grell

Read original article

Outrage Canada is a newly formed group of outraged Canadians committed to holding leaders of the Roman Catholic church publicly accountable for sexual abuse crimes past and present.

Sexual abuse within the Roman Catholic church of Canada is well documented with a growing number of civil and criminal cases surfacing each year. Given the response to date however, Outrage Canada believes that the Roman Catholic church is more concerned with avoiding scandal and protecting their reputation than ending sexual abuse and finding justice for victims.

With the launch of their new website on November 2nd, All Souls’ Day, Outrage Canada, a national, secular, non-partisan organization raises the question – Where is the Outrage? – with the intent that like-minded Canadians, including practicing Catholics, will join them in their mission.

Outrage Canada is committed to ensuring justice for victims of abuse and to putting practises in place that will prevent other people from…

View Cache

Advocates of sex abuse victims want SF Archdiocese to sell unused property as reparations

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
KTVU [Oakland CA]

November 2, 2023

By Crystal Bailey

Read original article

Advocates of the victims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church issued a detailed letter to the Archdiocese of San Francisco on Wednesday requesting the Catholic Church sell some unused properties to compensate victims.

The letter, sent by the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, was addressed to Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone on Nov. 1.

The document details the SF Archdiocese’s net worth of more than $6 billion in real estate, some of which could serve as reparations.

The SF Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy on Aug. 21, claiming it was because of the 500 lawsuits stacked against them.

Instead of bankruptcy, they said the Catholic Church could look at its assets, like millions of dollars’ worth of property not in use.

“There’s enough money in the Diocese and enough property for it to continue its mission and still sell property to address the needs of these victims,” said…

View Cache

NSW to consider action over Catholic church abuse legal tactics

ARMIDALE (AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

November 2, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

Read original article

Attorney general Michael Daley requests urgent briefing on high court’s damning judgment on use of permanent stays

The New South Wales attorney general, Michael Daley, has ordered an urgent briefing on the landmark high court decision over the Catholic church’s tactics in abuse cases.

The high court on Wednesday delivered a damning judgment against the church over its use of permanent stays to permanently halt survivors’ claims, finding that such a measure should only be used as a last resort.

The church and other powerful institutions have been using stays routinely where perpetrators have died, or where other witnesses or documentary evidence do not exist, allowing it to defeat active claims before courts or low-ball survivors during settlement negotiations.

The tactic effectively uses a survivor’s delay in coming forward to defeat their claim, an approach criticised as immoral, given the church’s own role in delaying justice and the vast barriers that complainants…

View Cache

November 2, 2023

Here are prominent Boys Town cases of sexual abuse, rape reported over the years

OMAHA (NE)
Des Moines Register [Des Moines IA]

November 1, 2023

By Lee Rood

Read original article

Some decades-old credible accusations of sexual abuse by priests who worked at Boys Town didn’t become public until two years ago.

Over the years, Boys Town programs have been associated with some high-profile suspected or documented cases of sexual abuse and rape. Here are some cases that have made headlines:

Rape by three youth shuts down New York program

In 2017, Boys Town shut down three large residential programs for youth in California, Texas and New York, announcing in a news release that regulatory and environmental issues made it too difficult for employees to adhere to its model of care.

Those closures came after leaders at the Omaha, Nebraska, headquarters invested millions trying to build up residential programs across the country. But they also came after one of the most alarming cases of rape and employee neglect in Boys Town’s history.

In June 2015, three teens in a…

View Cache

Travers pushing for exception to state laws that allow clergy to hide abuse confessed

PHOENIX (AZ)
Arizona Capitol Times [Phoenix AZ]

November 1, 2023

By Howard Fischer

Read original article

A first-term Democratic lawmaker wants to enact an exception to state laws that allow clergy to refuse to disclose what was told to them in confession or similar confidential communication.

But Rep. Stacey Travers of Phoenix has so far run into a procedural wall. Rep. Quang Nguyen, who chairs the House Judiciary Committee, where her bill was assigned earlier this year, refused to even give it a hearing.

And the Prescott Valley Republican told Capitol Media Services that he’s not prepared to allow the bill to proceed in 2024, even if it deals only with cases of child abuse and neglect.

“The seal of confession is a sacred, sacred part of the Catholic church,” said Nguyen who is Catholic.

“The seal of confession is never to be broken,” he said. “And priests will go to jail for it.”

Still, Nguyen acknowledged that there are difficult issues to be addressed. And…

View Cache

Former North Attleboro altar boy receives settlement after disclosing abuse by Father Porter

FALL RIVER (MA)
The Sun Chronicle [Attleboro MA]

November 1, 2023

By David Linton

Read original article

North Attleboro — A former altar boy at St. Mary’s Church in the 1960s has reached a financial settlement with the Diocese of Fall River for sexual abuse he suffered form now notorious Catholic priest James Porter.

The 72-year-old man, who now lives on the North Shore of Boston, recently reached a financial package in the “mid-five figures,” Boston lawyer Mitchell Garabedian said during a press conference Wednesday.

Garabedian, who has represented more than 30 victims of the disgraced Father Porter and numerous other victims of Catholic priests worldwide, declined to disclose the exact amount of the settlement.

He said the victim was 11 around 1961 when Porter forced him to accompany him from the World War II Memorial Pool to the church rectory, where the boy was sexually abused.

Porter, who admitted to sexually abusing at least 200 children in three states, used the guise of needing to go…

View Cache

Abuse survivor group names patron saints to guide healing, reform

MILWAUKEE (WI)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

November 1, 2023

By Gina Christian

Read original article

An abuse survivor group has just chosen several patron saints as “heavenly friends” and guides on the journey to recovery.

“Many people find great comfort and strength in developing a relationship with particular saints who they turn to for inspiration and intercession,” said Sara Larson, executive director of the independent nonprofit Awake Milwaukee, which works to raise awareness of and heal sexual abuse in both the Milwaukee Archdiocese and the Catholic Church as a whole.

In a message posted to its website Oct. 25, Awake announced it had named as its patrons:

  • St. Charles Lwanga, a 19th-century court page in what is now Uganda, who was martyred for his faith and for defending royal pages from the king’s sexual advances; 
  • St. Catherine of Siena, a 14th-century Italian mystic, church reformer and one of only four female doctors of the church
  • St….
View Cache

Judge offers settlement plan for Long Island Catholic Church, clergy sex abuse survivors

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday [Melville NY]

November 1, 2023

By Bart Jones

Read original article

WHAT TO KNOW

  • A bankruptcy judge has offered a new strategy to reach a settlement between Long Island’s Catholic Church and hundreds of clergy sex abuse survivors.
  • Judge Martin Glenn said he has discussed the possibility of having several clergy sex abuse cases go to trial as “test cases” to help set guidelines for a settlement.
  • Lawyers for the Diocese of Rockville Centre said the church opposes the proposal while attorneys for survivors voiced support.

A bankruptcy judge Wednesday offered a new strategy to reach a settlement between Long Island’s Catholic Church and hundreds of clergy sex abuse survivors, a day after the deadline to resolve the case.

Judge Martin Glenn of U.S. Bankruptcy Court said he has discussed the possibility of having several of the 600 clergy sex abuse cases against the diocese go to trial as “test cases” or “bellwether cases” to help set guidelines for a settlement.

Otherwise, Glenn warned, he might become the first…

View Cache

Communion and Liberation: Former US leader accused of abusing minors

NEW YORK (NY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

November 1, 2023

By Michelle La Rosa

Read original article

The Communion and Liberation ecclesial movement acknowledged on Tuesday that the movement’s former U.S. leader has been accused of sexual and psychological abuse against young adults and minors, and that the movement’s officials initially failed to respond appropriately to allegations. 

“[W]e believe the moment has come for a more public account of a situation that deeply wounded some of our communities,” said an Oct. 31 letter posted to the Communion and Liberation website.

“We sincerely apologize to the victims, families and community members harmed by these evil acts. We are truly grateful to the victims, families and community members who had the courage to bring these events to light.”

The open letter is signed by Fr. Michael Carvill, the North American Responsible for Communion and Liberation, and by Steve Brown, president of the Human Adventure Corporation (HAC), a non-profit which coordinates the activities of CL in the United States.

The…

View Cache

November 1, 2023

Decades-old sex assault claims may soon see their day in Michigan courts

LANSING (MI)
MLive [Walker MI]

November 1, 2023

By Jordyn Hermani

Read original article

Survivors of decades-old sexual assaults may soon get a two-year period to bring civil cases against their alleged abuser while also seeing the actionable window for bringing a claim expanded under moves made by House lawmakers Tuesday.

Members of the House Criminal Justice Committee voted along party lines to advance legislation – HB 4482 through HB 4487, referred to as the “Justice for Survivors” package – which seeks to primarily allow victims of childhood sexual abuse the ability to bring forward their claims long after the act has occurred.

Under the package, the statute of limitations for when a survivor of sexual assault can bring civil action in court would be increased from age 28 to 52 – the average age a sexual assault victim discloses if they’d been sexually abused. It would also, once enacted, allow for a…

View Cache

Survivors challenge Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone’s need to resort to bankruptcy

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

November 1, 2023

Read original article

Survivors and advocates have written to Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone of the Archdiocese of San Francisco, asking him to reconsider bankruptcy. SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, has researched the real estate portfolio of the Archdiocese, and believes that it has ample non-essential assets to care for those survivors who filed lawsuits in the recently closed civil window without resorting to this extreme measure. 

A copy of the letter sent earlier today by email is linked below, as are the attachments to the letter.

CONTACT: Dan McNevin, SNAP Board of Directors Treasurer (dmcnevin@aol.com, 415-341-6417), Melanie Sakoda, SNAP Survivor Support Director (msakoda@snapnetwork.org, 925-708-6175),   Joey Piscitelli, SNAP Northern California (caljoey1@aol.com, 925-262-3699), Mike McDonnell, SNAP Interim Executive Director (mmcdonnell@snapnetwork.org, 267-261-0578), Shaun Dougherty, SNAP Board of Directors President (sdougherty@snapnetwork.org, 814- 341-8386)

(SNAP, the Survivors Network,…

View Cache

Abuse victim asks pope to hear ‘adults who were wronged,’ show ‘the way’ in Rupnik case

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

November 1, 2023

By Paulina Guzik

Read original article

It took 10 months for the Vatican to reopen Fr. Marko Rupnik’s case — from the first reports on the case of Slovenian mosaic artist in December 2022 and the first alleged victims’ testimonies at that time, to dismissal of the priest from the Jesuit order in July, to public outrage after his incardination into a Slovenian diocese.

A victim of another well-known charismatic priest said the reason the church neglected the Rupnik case for so long is simple: It still doesn’t listen to vulnerable adults.

“It didn’t surprise me at all, because that’s how it works. Unfortunately, in the church, where we already have some procedures worked out regarding harmed children, … it feels like we don’t have any procedures worked out regarding adults harmed in the church, and it’s still such a taboo topic,” said Weronika (whose name has been changed to protect her identity), who was repeatedly…

View Cache

Peru Cardinal open to women deacons, wants ‘swift justice’ on abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

November 1, 2023

By Elise Ann Allen

Read original article

Following the close of last month’s Synod of Bishops, a leading Latin American cardinal has signaled openness in some cases to ordaining women deacons and also called for swift justice in sexual abuse cases, including the potential dissolution of a lay community in his own country currently under Vatican investigation.

Cardinal Pedro Barreto made the comments in an Oct. 30 exclusive interview with Crux, prior to leaving for Rome’s Fiumicino airport to return to Peru following the close of the synod.

The Archbishop of Huancayo and President of the Ecclesial Conference of the Amazon (CEAMA), Barreto also spoke of the growing influence of Latin America in the Church and the fact that Catholicism’s center of gravity has shifted from the west to the global south.

On the topic of women, one of the biggest themes of the pope’s Oct. 4-29 Synod of Bishops on Synodality and among the most divisive issues…

View Cache

Two Decades Later, Catholic Bishops Still Breaking Their Most Important Promise

FORT LAUDERDALE (FL)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

October 31, 2023

By Adam Horowitz Law

Read original article

At one end of the spectrum, generally speaking, there’s SafeSport. After just six years in operation, it now lists more than 1,900 child molesters in its disciplinary database. SafeSport deals with abuse cases in Olympic-related sports down to the grassroots level — a scope that covers more than 11 million athletes. At the other end of the spectrum, there’s the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), which promised to set up a public database of abusive preachers almost a year and a half ago but has yet to name even one.

In between are most US Catholic bishops. As a general rule, bishops whose dioceses are in states where victims have some legal rights have posted names of child molesting clerics on their websites. But for the most part, prelates whose dioceses are in states where victims have FEW legal rights…

View Cache

A High Court case gives one woman a green light to sue the Catholic Church — and hope to thousands of sexual abuse survivors

(AUSTRALIA)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation - ABC [Sydney, Australia]

November 1, 2023

By Louise Milligan

Read original article

Imagine that after decades of silence, inspired by a groundbreaking royal commission, you finally pluck up the courage to come forward to tell your story that as a young teenager, you were abused by a priest — a man you then thought to be God’s representative on earth.

Imagine you then go to court to argue that the Catholic diocese should have done more to stop that priest, whom it knew had multiple other victims, from abusing you.

But imagine the diocese then argues because the priest is dead, that places it at a dreadful and inconvenient disadvantage — it can’t ask the priest if he abused you, it says, even though he refused to cooperate in relation to other allegations.

A court finds you shouldn’t even have the right to stand before a judge and make your case. You can’t be heard. What’s known as a permanent stay is granted and your…

View Cache

Midland man, former youth minister, faced with child pornography charges

MIDLAND (TX)
NewsWest9 [Midland, TX]

October 31, 2023

By NewsWest 9

Read original article

Thirty-three-year-old Corey White, who according to members of the congregation was a youth minister at Redeemer Midland, has been charged with access with intent to view child pornographic materials. 

To preface, what’s described can be seen as graphic. 

According to court documents, the charges were stemmed from an investigation in Nassau County. New York. The Nassau County Police Department initiated an investigation after receiving 15 National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) cybertips from 2018 to the present. 

These tips involved the upload of child sexual abuse material (CSAM) videos and images via “Skype” from an IP address in Seaford, New York. 

A search warrant was executed which resulted in the seizing of this material from electronic devices. Upon further investigation, a New York man had been communicating with numerous adults and minors using the video chat site “Omegle”. During these interactions, the New Yorker used a screen sharing…

View Cache

Alleged victims of Rupnik have hopeful expectations of Pope Francis’ decision

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

October 31, 2023

By Almudena Martínez-Bordiú, ACI Prensa Staff

Read original article

A group of alleged victims of Father Marko Rupnik said Monday that Pope Francis’ decision to lift the statute of limitations on the case and order the opening of a new process against the priest accused of sexual abuse “is an appropriate step for the truth to be recognized.” 

Gloria Branciani, Mirjam Kovač, Vida Bernard, Mira Stare, and Jožica Zupančič are the authors of a news release shared with ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, commenting that they were “very surprised” by the statement from the Holy See.

The five women, former sisters of the Loyola Community, were referring to the Oct. 27 statement by the Holy See Press Office that reported that Pope Francis had decided to lift the statute of limitations on the Rupnik case, allowing a canonical process to take place. The priest is accused of having sexually abused women for decades.

According to the Holy See,…

View Cache

Another Southern Baptist Betrayal

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Christianity Today [Carol Stream IL]

October 31, 2023

By Chris Davis

Read original article

Revelations of a scandalous amicus brief raise the question: Who’s driving the SBC?

here’s a story my family has told since before I was born about my great-uncle Johnny. When his four daughters were teenagers, the family took a long trip in which they had to stop in a familiar town for dinner.

About 30 minutes out, Aunt Betty Jane and the girls started talking through the variety of eating options and, after 10–15 minutes of deliberation, they agreed upon the best restaurant. But when they arrived in town, Uncle Johnny, who hadn’t said a word, pulled into a different restaurant, got out of the car, and walked silently inside, leaving five dumbfounded women looking at each other and wondering what had just happened.

That story—at least, a sinister reading of it—came to mind as I tried to process last week’s revelation of View Cache

How to find the trustees of the SBC entities behind the amicus brief

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

October 30, 2023

By Mark Wingfield

Read original article

Who’s actually responsible for the positions and actions taken by entities of the Southern Baptist Convention?

This is a pressing question now, as controversy flares over the SBC and three of its entities signing an amicus brief in a Kentucky Supreme Court case, taking a position against a sexual abuse survivor who was, herself, a member of a Southern Baptist church and whose youth pastor allegedly did not report her abuse.

Abuse survivors and advocates were outraged to learn the SBC, the SBC Executive Committee, Lifeway Christian Resources and Southern Baptist Theological Seminary all signed the friend of the court brief against abuse victim Samantha Killary. Their brief urges the state Supreme Court not to allow a retroactive expansion of the statute of limitations for filing sexual abuse claims and not to allow third parties to be held liable for knowing about abuse but not acting.

Trustee officers of the Executive Committee have said…

View Cache

Women Claim Hillsdale College Silenced and ‘Blamed’ Them for Their Rapes in Lawsuit

HILLSDALE (MI)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

October 31, 2023

By Liz Lykins

Read original article

Two women are accusing Hillsdale College, a private Christian school in Hillsdale, Mich., of silencing them and “blaming” them for their rapes, instead of their assailants, according to a lawsuit filed last week.

The women, Grace Chen and Danielle Villarreal, told USA Today they began attending Hillsdale because they thought it would be safe. But their suit, filed in the Western District of Michigan, claims that Hillsdale “fostered a campus environment that exposes students to an unacceptable and unusually high risk of sexual assault.”  

The suit adds, “When brave students report their experiences of sexual assault to school officials, they are met not with support, but with sham investigations, arbitrary decisions, and punishments,” the lawsuit said. “In response to calls for transparency and accountability, Hillsdale instead silences and threatens survivors, blaming them, not their assailants for their assaults.”

The suit claims Hillsdale failed to respond appropriately…

View Cache

Catholic church loses landmark case over tactics that shield it from Australian abuse claims

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 31, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

Read original article

Guardian investigation found the church routinely uses deaths of paedophile priests to avoid paying or to reduce amount of settlements

The Catholic church has lost a landmark case over its controversial use of the deaths of paedophile priests to thwart survivors’ attempts at justice.

The high court on Wednesday delivered a significant blow to the church’s use of permanent stays in historical abuse matters, where it has sought to argue that delay, the death of perpetrators, and the loss of records render it unable to receive a fair trial.

Earlier this year, a Guardian investigation found that the church was now routinely using permanent stays in cases where perpetrators have died, either to defeat active claims before the courts or to low-ball survivors in settlement negotiations. The tactic is causing profound harm to an already vulnerable group.

Critics say the tactic is immoral, given the church’s own role in delaying justice…

View Cache

Former SJJ faculty member accused of sexual abuse in 1999-2000

TOLEDO (OH)
WTVG [Toledo OH]

October 31, 2023

By WTVG staff

Read original article

A former priest at St. John’s Jesuit High School has been added to a list of those with established allegations of sexual abuse toward minors.

According to a statement from SJJ, Father Francis Canfield died in May of 2023. He was a faculty member at St. John’s from 1990 to 2005.

The school said in a statement that a former student told the Church in 2002 about alleged sexual abuse that occurred during the 1999-2000 school year. The claim was investigated by the Church and determined to be “established”.

The full list kept by the Jesuit Midwest Province can be found here. Read the full statement from the school leadership below:

St. John’s Jesuit High School has been notified by the Midwest Province of the Society of Jesus that Fr. Francis E. Canfield, SJ has been placed on the public list of Jesuits with an established allegation…

View Cache

Spanish bishops apologize for abuse, dispute media figures

(SPAIN)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

October 31, 2023

By Vatican News

Read original article

Following the publication of an ombudsman’s report on sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in Spain, the country’s bishops renew their apology to abuse victims, saying some media estimates are not true and affirming that the “shadow of suspicion” should not extend to all clergy and religious.

On Tuesday, the Spanish Bishops’ Conference (CEE) held a press conference on the Extraordinary Plenary Assembly that took place on 30 October to discuss an official public report released last week on sexual abuse in the Church in Spain.

The “Gabilondo Report”

The report is the result of an investigation conducted by Ombudsman Ángel Gabilondo, and was presented to the Spanish Congress of Deputies on Friday, 27 October.

Included in the report is a survey based on 8,000 phone and online responses. The poll found that 1.13% of the Spanish adults questioned said they were abused as children either by priests or lay…

View Cache

Former St. John’s teacher added to list of priests with ‘established allegations’ of abuse

TOLEDO (OH)
WTOL11 [Toledo, OH]

October 31, 2023

By WTOL newsroom

Read original article

Father Francis Canfield, who died in May, was accused last year by a former student who said the abuse happened during the 1999-2000 school year.

A priest who taught at St. John’s High School in the 1990s and early 2000s has been added to the list of Jesuits with “established allegations” of sexual abuse of a minor, according to a letter from the school.

St. John’s officials said Father Francis E. Canfield, who died in May, was accused by a former student who said the abuse happened during the 1999-2000 school year.

The former student reported the abuse in 2022, the school’s letter said. School officials then notified civil authorities, the letter said.

While no criminal charges were filed the Midwest Province of the Society of Jesus conducted its own investigation.

“Following required ecclesiastical procedures, the Midwest Jesuits engaged the services of an independent firm to investigate…

View Cache

October 31, 2023

Synod synthesis shows agreement, divergences, including on ‘synodality’

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

October 30, 2023

By Cindy Wooden

Read original article

A report summarizing discussions at the assembly of the Synod of Bishops said the church may need more welcoming pastoral approaches, especially to people who feel excluded, but also acknowledged fears of betraying traditional church teachings and practices.

Among the topics addressed in the report were clerical sexual abuse, women’s roles in the church, outreach to poor and the concept of “synodality” itself.

The assembly, with 364 voting members — 365 counting Pope Francis — met in working sessions six days a week Oct. 4-28 after a three-day retreat outside of Rome. They were scheduled to join the pope Oct. 29 for the assembly’s closing Mass.

After the voting on the synthesis concluded, the pope said he wanted to remind everyone that “the protagonist of the synod is the Holy Spirit.” He briefly thanked the synod officers and joined members of the assembly in giving thanks to God.

The assembly’s…

View Cache

A ‘retired priest’ who was once defrocked for child sexual abuse allegations is now accused of molesting a 15-year-old cancer patient during an ‘unconventional’ blessing

HARRISBURG (PA)
Law & Crime [New York NY]

October 30, 2023

By Colin Kalmbacher

Read original article

A former priest who was formally relieved of his clerical status decades ago was recently arrested for allegedly molesting a 15-year-old cancer patient during an unsanctioned blessing ceremony in Ohio.

Luis Jesus Barajas, 76, stands accused of one count of gross sexual imposition, according to the Westlake Police Department.

Authorities say it’s not the first time the former man of the cloth has been accused of child sexual abuse – not by a long shot.

The underlying alleged incident occurred on Oct. 10, when the defendant was driven to a home in Westlake – a large suburb of Cleveland located in Cuyahoga County – in order to pray with the girl at her family’s request because she was suffering from cancer and her concomitant chemotherapy treatment, police say. The girl’s family had previously heard about Barajas because he was visiting the…

View Cache

What Archdiocese of Baltimore bankruptcy proceedings mean for survivors of abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
WRC-TV, NBC 4 [Washington DC]

October 30, 2023

By Tracee Wilkins

Read original article

Attorneys for the Archdiocese of Baltimore and abuse survivors are expected back in court next week as the church’s bankruptcy proceedings unfold. Meanwhile, survivors say they’re eager for answers about how they’ll find justice amid the bankruptcy process.

The archdiocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in late September, just days before the start of a new Maryland law that allows survivors of child sex abuse to sue their perpetrators or responsible parties, no matter how long ago the abuse took place. But the church’s move, filed in federal court, immediately halted church abuse survivors from filing civil claims against both the church and its parishes in state courts.

The bankruptcy proceeding is still in the early stages, but so far, the court has appointed what’s called a creditors committee made up of seven survivors and their attorneys that will serve as representatives for all survivors expected to come forward in…

View Cache

Spain’s Catholic Bishops Apologise After Report of 200,000 Abused

MADRID (SPAIN)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

October 30, 2023

Read original article

Spain’s bishops apologised on Monday after a report estimated more than 200,000 minors had been sexually abused by the country’s Roman Catholic clergy since 1940.

But the Spanish Episcopal Conference said the numbers mentioned in the report, by an independent commission, “do not correspond to the truth”.

The paper published Friday did not give a specific number of abuse victims but said a poll of more than 8,000 people found that 0.6 percent of Spain’s adult population said they had suffered sexual abuse by members of the clergy when they were children.

With a population of about 39 million people, that would make about 230,000 victims.

In a statement issued after an extraordinary assembly held to assess the report, the conference said: “The bishops present have expressed their pain for the damage caused by some members of the Church with sexual abuse and reiterate their request for forgiveness from the…

View Cache

Sexual abuse survivors question why Pope took so long to stop protecting Rupnik

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

October 30, 2023

Read original article

Sex abuse survivors groups are asking why Pope Francis took so long to waive a statute of limitations to permit the possible prosecution of Slovenian priest-artist Father Marko Rupnik.

Victims “need justice, not talk,” said Irish abuse survivor Marie Collins (pictured), a former member of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors (PCPM) who resigned in protest in 2017.

For over a year, the furore surrounding Rupnik, perhaps contemporary Catholicism’s most famed muralist, who has been accused of sexually assaulting around 25 adult women over a 30-year period, has plagued the Church, in part due to several question marks over the handling of the case.

The Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) initially declined to open canonical proceedings, citing a canonical statute of limitations for the abuse of adults, which had previously been waived in other cases, making the Pope’s announcement on Friday a seemingly complete…

View Cache

October 30, 2023

Man’s abuse of boys at school in Kilkenny and Offaly continues to cast shadow over many lives

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Kilkenny Live [Kilkenny, Ireland]

October 28, 2023

By Declan McSweeney

Read original article

Nearly 25 years since the Portarlington paedophile Donal Dunne was jailed for offences against young boys, his deeds continue to cast a shadow over many lives.

He had a 45 year teaching career and left the Christian Brothers in 1957, his abuse of boys having spanned both his time in the order and subsequently.

He began his teaching career in Dublin in 1940 at Scoil Mhuire in Dublin’s Marino and he held posts in a total of ten schools before retiring from the Sacred Heart School in Tullamore. At the age of 78, he received a two year prison sentence at Tullamore Circuit Court in 1999.

Dunne’s abuse of boys came to light after incidents relating to a neighbour’s child led to a Garda investigation into his teaching career. This included the three years he spent as principal of Walsh Island NS, one of at least six schools where he…

View Cache

Vatican still a patriarchy but getting better, nun leaders say

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

October 25, 2023

By Alvise Armellini

Read original article

The Catholic Church is dominated by men but is making progress on giving a stronger voice to women, representatives of the International Union of Superiors General (UISG), an umbrella group of Catholic nuns, said on Wednesday.

Pope Francis has appointed a few women in senior Vatican managerial positions, and has for the first time given them voting powers in this month’s synod, a bishops’ summit discussing church reforms.

At the same time, Francis has ruled out opening up the priesthood to women.

The Church is “by and large fully led by a male hierarchy”, and “if you ask if I have felt frustrated, yes I have felt frustrated,” Sister Mary John Kudiyiruppil, UISG Associate executive secretary, said.

“But I really think we are making progress,” the Indian-born nun added, speaking at the Foreign Press Association in Rome.

Sister Maamalifar Poreku, a missionary nun from Ghana who co-chairs a UISG panel on…

View Cache

Catholic church company winding down due to high payouts

(AUSTRALIA)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation - ABC [Sydney, Australia]

October 29, 2023

By Loretta Lohberger

Read original article

[Video of report posted yesterday in Abuse Tracker, with brief interviews of survivor Paul O’Halloran and attorney Angela Sdrinis, who represents survivors.]

The Catholic Church-owned insurance company [Catholic Church Insurance] that insures Catholic organisations is struggling to keep up with demand for payouts relating to historical child sexual abuse.

View Cache

Ontario court approves $13.5 million settlement in clergy abuse case

KENORA (CANADA)
Anglican.ink - AnglicanTV Ministries [Webster FL]

October 29, 2023

By George Conger

Read original article

A Thunder Bay court approved a proposed settlement agreement between abuse victims of Ralph Rowe, a former Anglican priest and scout master. On 27 Oct 2023 Justice Bonnie Warkentin approved a proposed settlement agreement in the class action lawsuit against Ralph Rowe, Scouts Canada, and the Diocese of Keewatin to compensate victims of abuse.

The class action suite was filed in 2017 and sought $110 million in damages for numerous incidents of sexual abuse committed by Rowe between 1975 and 1985 when he was a priest and Scout leader in the geographic boundaries of the Diocese of Keewatin in Northern Ontario.

Since 1988 Rowe has been found guilty of over 50 counts of abuse and sexual assault involving dozens of young boys. He has served less than five years imprisonment for his crimes. 

The settlement will see the diocese, Scouts Canada and the Anglican Church of Canada pay $13.25 million…

View Cache

Retired priest investigated for child sexual abuse allegation at Hickory Hills church

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

October 29, 2023

By Rebecca Johnson

Read original article

A retired priest has been removed from ministry pending an investigation into an allegation of child sexual abuse, according to the Archdiocese of Chicago.

Cardinal Blase Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, asked the Rev. William Killeen to “step aside” after learning of the allegation last week, according to a Saturday evening news release. The abuse allegedly happened about 40 years ago at St. Patricia Parish in Hickory Hills. Killeen denies the allegation, according to the statement.

Killeen declined to comment on the investigation when reached by phone Sunday afternoon.

The archdiocese said it notified civil authorities, and that the person who made the allegation was offered services of the archdiocese’s victim assistance ministry.

Retired since 2019, the archdiocese said Killeen occasionally celebrates Mass at St. Francis Xavier Parish and St. Cletus Parish, both in La Grange, and St. John of the Cross Parish in Western Springs.

Cupich notified eight parishes that…

View Cache

October 29, 2023

Global survivors respond to Pope’s reversal on Rupnik case

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

October 27, 2023

Read original article

Case shows why Zero Tolerance must be mandated by canon law

After sustained pressure over the past year, the Pope announced earlier today that he is finally waiving the statute of limitations in the case against Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, a statute that he has previously stated he “always” waives in cases of minors or “vulnerable adults.”  

ECA has long contested current Vatican policy that requires the Pope’s intervention to waive the statute of limitations on an individual basis. Earlier this month, ECA released the text of our newly proposed Zero Tolerance law, legislation that would mandate permanent removal from the priesthood for any cleric found guilty of abusing a child or vulnerable adult, as well as any bishop found to have institutionally concealed such abuse. Furthermore, this Zero Tolerance law exempts any instance of sexual abuse from a statute of limitations.

In our latest press release, sent prior to…

View Cache

‘Priest’ arrested, accused of molesting 15-year-old cancer patient in Westlake

CLEVELAND (OH)
WJW-TV, Fox - 8 [Cleveland OH]

October 24, 2023

By Justin Dennis

Read original article

WESTLAKE, Ohio (WJW) — City police arrested a 76-year-old Colombian man who claimed to be a retired Catholic priest, after he was accused of molestation while “blessing” a 15-year-old girl suffering from cancer.

A local priest reported the “disturbing incident” to city police just before 2 p.m. on Friday, Oct. 20, according to a Tuesday news release from police Capt. Gerald Vogel.

The man, whom police identified as Luis Jesus Barajas, a Colombian national, has been staying with local families in Lorain County for months, “performing spiritual ceremonies to the nearby Spanish-speaking population,” reads the release.

On Friday, he was driven to Westlake to pray with a 15-year-old girl who had been diagnosed with cancer and was undergoing chemotherapy, according to the release.

“According to witnesses, Mr. Barajas touched the juvenile inappropriately during the blessing,” Vogel wrote….

View Cache

Former priest accused of molesting 15-year-old Westlake girl suffering from cancer to face judge

CLEVELAND (OH)
WOIO - CBS 19 [Cleveland OH]

October 29, 2023

By Julia Bingel

Read original article

CLEVELAND, Ohio (WOIO) – A 76-year-old former priest accused of “inappropriately touching” a 15-year-old Westlake girl sick with cancer while giving her a blessing is scheduled to appear in Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas Monday.

Luis Jesus Barajas will face a judge for an initial appearance. He is being held on a $500,000 bond at the Cuyahoga County Justice Center.

Westlake police arrested Barajas on Oct. 23 and charged him with gross sexual imposition.

According to police, the Columbian national has been staying with local families in Lorain County for several months.

On Oct. 10, he was driven to Westlake to pray with the teenager and her family.

Witnesses told police Barajas used blankets and clothing to to hide his actions and his movements during the blessing were “unconventional.” Another Catholic priest learned of the incident and reported it to police on Oct. 20.

Barajas was accused of sexual…

View Cache

Former priest arrested in Westlake, accused of molesting teen with cancer

CLEVELAND (OH)
Cleveland.com [Cleveland, OH]

October 24, 2023

By Molly Walsh | mwalsh@cleveland.com

Read original article

A former priest was arrested Monday and accused of molesting a 15-year-old girl who is ill with cancer.

A local Catholic priest called Westlake Police Department to report “a disturbing incident” involving Luis Jesus Barajas, 76, who was visiting the area and performing spiritual ceremonies in Spanish for Hispanic residents in the area.

Barajas, who has been staying with families in Lorain County, was driven to a home in Westlake on Oct. 10 to bless a 15-year-old girl who is undergoing chemotherapy.

Witnesses told police Barajas touched the girl inappropriately during the blessing, police said.

“Mr. Barajas’ used blankets and clothing to hide some of his actions from witnesses, but his touching made several uncomfortable. Witnesses said Barajas’ movements were ‘unconventional’ compared to past blessings they had seen,” a police report said.

Barajas, from Colombia, had been accused in the past of sexual misconduct…

View Cache

Investigation estimates that there are more than 440,000 living victims of sexual abuse that took place within the Spanish Catholic Church

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

October 28, 2023

By ÍÑIGO DOMÍNGUEZ and JULIO NÚÑEZ

Read original article

The historic report released by Spain’s ombudsman details the abuses committed by clergy members, calling out the religious institution in harsh terms. According to the figures released, Spain is the country with the highest official projection of victims

Spain has become a global exception among majority-Catholic countries. It went from having no officially recognized cases of pedophilia within the Catholic Church to being the country with the highest number of victims in the world. It is estimated that 1.13% of the current adult population has suffered abuse in the religious sphere. This is according to a large-scale survey, the first of its kind in the country, carried out by Ombudsman Ángel Gabilondo.

The ombudsman avoided making the calculation in round numbers during his appearance in the Congress of Deputies on Friday, October 27. His final report also doesn’t offer such figures. However, according to calculations by EL PAÍS, that 1.13%…

View Cache

President of Spanish Episcopal Conference rejects report on pedophilia: ‘The figures extrapolated by some media outlets are lies’

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

October 29, 2023

By JULIO NÚÑEZ and ÍÑIGO DOMÍNGUEZ

Read original article

Cardinal Omella took 24 hours to react to the report that was commissioned by Spain’s ombudsman. He dismissed the study that estimates that 1.13% of the country’s population — approximately 440,000 people — have suffered childhood sexual abuse in religious environments

Cardinal Juan José Omella — president of the Episcopal Conference of Spain and archbishop of Barcelona — has rejected the conclusions of one of the pillars of the recently-released report on pedophilia in the Catholic Church of Spain.

The report — commissioned by Ombudsman Ángel Gabilondo — was presented to Spain’s Congress on Friday, October 27. It entailed a demographic survey of more than 8,000 adult Spaniards. Based on the results of said survey, it is estimated that 1.13% of Spain’s adult population — more than 440,000 people between the ages of 18 and 90 — have suffered abuse in religious environments in Spain. Approximately…

View Cache

Spain ombudsman report on Catholic Church reveals more than 1 in 200 faced sexual abuse

MADRID (SPAIN)
Jurist [Pittsburgh PA]

October 29, 2023

By Amora Evans | U. Reading School of Law, GB

Read original article

report released by Spanish Ombudsman Ángel Gabilondo on Friday found that priests within the Catholic Church have abused more than 1 in every 200 Spaniards. The report was presented to the Spanish Parliament on Friday and aimed to ensure that the perpetrators are held responsible and accountable for their actions. The ombudsman also sought to create greater awareness about the issue of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

The report detailed that, out of 8,000 interviewees, 11.7 percent were victims of sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic priests during their childhood or adolescence. Additionally, the report revealed that more women than men were abused and how many now suffer from mental health issues or have contemplated committing suicide.

Last year, the Spanish Parliament agreed to create an independent body to investigate the increasing cases of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. After 1,237…

View Cache

Sisters of Bethlehem: Secrets of their founder revealed in investigation

LE HAVRE (FRANCE)
La Croix International [France]

October 23, 2023

By Céline Hoyeau

Read original article

Four former members of the Monastic Family of Bethlehem denounce excesses of founder Odile Dupont, which they claim led to a system of control in the name of unreasonable obedience to the Virgin Mary

In January 2021, the Monastic Sisters of Bethlehem opened a complaints center to hear from alleged victims of abuse in their community since its founding in the 1950s. Far from “carrying out justice and reparation” as announced, this center has been seen by former members, who have been trying to alert the Church for nearly 15 years, as a “smokescreen” and a new attempt to discredit their testimony. 

Therefore, they entrusted their testimonies and the task of investigating the alleged dysfunctions of the Monastic Sisters of Bethlehem since its origins, to Blandine de Dinechin, a former journalist who worked on spiritual abuse. According to them, these issues stem from the excesses of the founder, Odile Dupont…

View Cache

Catholic Church-owned insurer says ‘high volume’ of abuse claims is putting it out of business

(AUSTRALIA)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation - ABC [Sydney, Australia]

October 28, 2023

By Loretta Lohberger

Read original article

  • The Catholic Church-owned insurance company that insures Catholic organisations is struggling to keep up with demand for payouts relating to historical child sexual abuse.
  • The company, established in 1911, stopped issuing new policies in May but says it’s still having financial difficulties.
  • What’s next? Catholic organisations need to find insurance elsewhere, but there are concerns they’ll struggle to get cover for abuse claims and smaller organisations won’t have the money to fund future claims.

Paul O’Halloran went to Marist College in north-west Tasmania the 1960s.

In recent times, he’s seen six former staff members from the Burnie Catholic school jailed for historical child sexual abuse.

Allegations have been made against another five, who have since died.

“It’s unimaginable, I think, the damage that’s been done to this community through the abuse on the scale that it was,” said Mr O’Halloran, a former Tasmanian Greens state MP.

Mr O’Halloran and his brother both allege they…

View Cache

The Synod and the Rupnik scandal

(ITALY)
La Croix International [France]

October 26, 2023

By Katie Prejean McGrady

Read original article

Are the commitments for a synodal Church credible when a priest accused of repeated sex abuse finds a new diocese?

Most mornings, on the drive to school, my daughters wave at the Catholic Church we drive by and say, “Hi, Jesus!” It’s a small gesture of their deep faith, and one that gives me great hope. Even at just six and three, they know the Lord is there, Jesus present in the Eucharist, inside the tabernacle, set behind the altar, in the Church we drive past.

But some mornings, like the morning of October 25, that great hope in their young faith and my love of the Church was short lived. Because sometimes, the Church lets me down, and even the burgeoning faith of my two little girls can’t seem to buoy it back up.

I hoped my Wednesday would be spent reading the Letter from the Synod of Bishops…

View Cache

La búsqueda de la verdad continúa

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

October 29, 2023

By SOLEDAD GALLEGO-DÍAZ

Read original article

El informe del Defensor del Pueblo, que constata los abusos sexuales ocurridos en el clero, resalta la falta de colaboración de la Iglesia católica

El informe presentado este viernes por el Defensor del Pueblo no cierra, desgraciadamente, la investigación sobre los abusos sexuales ocurridos en el ámbito de la Iglesia católica española durante décadas porque no incluye la plena admisión de responsabilidad por parte de la jerarquía de esta institución ni su compromiso efectivo de poner en marcha los mecanismos necesarios, no solo de reparación por lo ocurrido hasta ahora, sino también, y sobre todo, los recursos de prevención que permitan controlar en el presente y en el futuro hechos parecidos en colegios e instituciones dependientes de la Iglesia católica.

Los periodistas que abrimos esa investigación en el diario El PAÍS, en septiembre de 2018, lo hicimos conscientes…

View Cache

Retired Priest, Father William Killeen removed from ministry pending investigation of a 40-year-old allegation

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

October 28, 2023

Read original article

Today, Cardinal Blase Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, notified eight parishes that he had asked Fr. William Killeen to step aside pending investigation of an allegation of child sexual abuse received this week. Father Killeen denies the allegation. The abuse is alleged to have occurred approximately 40 years ago at St. Patricia Parish in Hickory Hills.

The parishes are: St. Alexander in Palos Heights, St. Patricia in Hickory Hills, St. Michael in Orland Park, St. Christopher (now St. Augustine) in Midlothian, Infant Jesus of Prague (now St. Veronica) in Flossmoor, St. Francis Xavier in La Grange, St. Cletus in La Grange, and St. John of the Cross in Western Springs.

Retired since 2019, Killeen celebrates Mass occasionally at St. Francis Xavier Parish and St. Cletus Parish, both in La Grange and St. John of the Cross Parish in Western Springs. Civil authorities have been notified, the person making the allegation has…

View Cache

Retired Priest William Killeen being investigated for alleged sex abuse at Hickory Hills church

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS - ABC 7 [Chicago IL]

October 28, 2023

Read original article

Retired Archdiocese of Chicago Priest William Killeen is being investigated for alleged sex abuse at Saint Patricia Parish in Hickory Hills.

A retired priest with the Archdiocese of Chicago is under investigation for alleged child sexual abuse.

Cardinal Blase Cupich notified eight parishes about the allegation on Saturday.

Father William Killeen has been asked to step aside after the allegation was received earlier this week.

The accuser says the abuse happened 40 years ago at Saint Patricia Parish in Hickory Hills. Killeen denied any wrongdoing.

Retired since 2019, Killeen celebrates Mass occasionally at St. Francis Xavier Parish and St. Cletus Parish, both in La Grange and St. John of the Cross Parish in Western Springs, the archdiocese said.

View Cache

Fallout from the Pope’s ‘October Surprise’ on the Rupnik case

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

October 29, 2023

By John L. Allen Jr.

Read original article

ROME – Back in 1980, William Casey, then the campaign manager for candidate Ronald Reagan, coined the phrase “October surprise” to refer to the possibility that incumbent President Jimmy Carter might try to do something dramatic, such as freeing the American hostages in Iran, to boost his prospects ahead of the November elections.

In the end it never happened, and Reagan cruised to victory. Ever since, however, the term “October surprise” has endured in American politics as a metaphor for trying to change the political landscape with some sort of bombshell at the last minute.

On Friday, Pope Francis delivered his own “October surprise” by announcing that he had lifted the statute of limitations in canon law in order to allow prosecution of Father Marko Rupnik, the most famous – or, perhaps more accurately, the most infamous – accused sexual abuser in the Catholic Church at the moment.

The decision…

View Cache

What does the Synod on Synodality document say about ‘controversial’ issues?

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

October 28, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

The Synod on Synodality, the monthlong assembly convened by Pope Francis at the Vatican, released its final document containing the discussion of several hot-button issues which it calls “controversial”: the idea of women deacons, optional priestly celibacy, and the accompaniment of people struggling with their gender or sexual identity.

The 42-page report, published in Italian Oct. 28, divides topics into “convergences,” “matters for consideration,” and “proposals.”

Among the proposals made by the Synod, held Oct. 4-29 at the Vatican, was the request for continued theological study of the possibility of women deacons, and for the results of such a study to be shared at the next session of the Synod on Synodality, to be held in October 2024.

For the first time in a Synod of Bishops, laypeople, including women, took part in the vote on the final document.  

The document also acknowledged that there were differing views…

View Cache

October 28, 2023

El presidente de los obispos rechaza el informe del Defensor: “Las cifras extrapoladas por algunos medios son mentira y tienen intención de engañar”

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

October 28, 2023

By JULIO NÚÑEZ and ÍÑIGO DOMÍNGUEZ

Read original article

El cardenal Omella, que ha tardado 24 horas en reaccionar al estudio de Gabilondo, desdeña la encuesta que estima que el 1,13% de la población, 440.000 personas, ha sufrido abusos en la infancia en entornos religiosos

─────────

El presidente de la Conferencia Episcopal Española (CEE) y arzobispo de Barcelona, el cardenal Juan José Omella, rechaza las conclusiones de uno de los pilares del informe sobre pederastia en la Iglesia que el Defensor del Pueblo, Ángel Gabilondo, presentó el viernes; una encuesta demoscópica a más de 8.000 personas que estima que el 1,13% de la población, más de 440.000 personas, ha sufrido abusos en entornos religiosos en España (de ellas, un 0,6%, más de 233.000 personas, a manos de un sacerdote o religioso). En su cuenta de X, ha declarado la mañana de este sábado que “las cifras extrapoladas por algunos medios son mentira y tienen…

View Cache

Belgian TV series prompts inquiries into bishops’ abuse failings

BRUGES (BELGIUM)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

October 27, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

Besides uncovering Church failings to address the abuse scandal, the inquiries could also discuss ending its state subsidies.

The Belgian federal parliament and the regional Flemish assembly have decided to review how the Catholic Church has dealt with cases of clerical sexual abuse after a television documentary recounted its failures to follow up on initial investigations.

The broadcast of the mini-series Gotvergeten (“Forgotten by God”) by Flemish television last month revealed that alleged victims felt ignored, leading to a public outcry over the Church’s slow response.

The two inquiries, which follow politicians questioning the Church’s long-standing state subsidies, will now review how the bishops have handled the scandal since it broke in 2010.

The former Bishop of Bruges Roger Vangheluwe admitted in 2010 to having sexually abused a nephew, and later said he abused a second nephew.  A Church commission revealed five months later that abuse was widespread in Catholic institutions in the…

View Cache

Sexual abuse by two Burnaby priests alleged in lawsuit

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
Burnaby Now [Vancouver, BC, Canada]

October 27, 2023

By Jeremy Hainsworth

Read original article

The plaintiff said one Christain Brother took him on a tour of Newfoundland’s Mount Cashel orphanage.

A B.C. man alleging sexual abuse by priests is suing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver and the Burnaby Catholic school where he alleges the abuse occurred.

The man, identified as A.B. in the Supreme Court of B.C. notice of civil claim filed Oct. 23, alleges Alfred Patrick Quigley and the late Brother Dominic William Pike, both members of the Congregation of Christian Brothers, abused him.

Named as defendants in the case filed by lawyer Sandra Kovacs are the two men; St. Thomas More Collegiate Ltd.; The Roman Catholic Archbishop of Vancouver, a Corporation Sole; and The Catholic Public Schools of the Archdiocese of Vancouver.

  • Pope orders Vatican to reopen case of priest accused of adult abuse but allowed to keep ministering
  • Pope accepts resignation of bishop of Polish diocese where gay orgy scandal…
View Cache

Buffalo Diocese goes to court to try to block access to sex abuse records requested by The Buffalo News

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

October 27, 2023

By Jay Tokasz

Read original article

The Buffalo Diocese has asked a state court to stop the public release of documents subpoenaed by the State Attorney General’s Office during its investigation into the diocese’s handling of childhood sex abuse allegations against clergy.

The diocese – despite repeated promises of greater transparency in its efforts to overcome a major sex abuse scandal – argued in court papers Friday that a release of the files to The Buffalo News under the state’s Freedom of Information Law would undermine confidentiality in its Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceedings and threaten ongoing efforts to reach a mediated settlement with approximately 850 sex abuse claimants.

The diocese’s lawyers filed an Article 78 petition in New York County State Supreme Court to block The News from obtaining 25,000 pages of documents about how church leaders responded to and concealed abuse allegations.

The News plans to submit a brief to the court arguing that the…

View Cache

Group urges Missouri lawmakers to change laws following Agape wrongful death lawsuit

SPRINGFIELD (MO)
KY3 [Springfield, MO]

October 24, 2023

By Lauren Schwentker

Read original article

Tuesday, a handful of people gathered at the Springfield Federal Courthouse for a moment of silence.

A mother is suing a shuttered Christian boarding school in Missouri, blaming her son’s death on a gang rape and other abuse he endured there.

Agape Boarding School has been subjected to a wave of litigation as a series of abuse allegations emerged. The case filed this month and amended Monday in federal court by Kathleen Britt is believed to be the first wrongful death suit.

Tuesday, a handful of people gathered at the Springfield Federal Courthouse for a moment of silence.

At the same time, they’re asking lawmakers to listen and make changes to help abuse victims.

“Hundreds, perhaps thousands of people who are sexually violated in institutional settings, don’t survive and end up taking their own lives,” said survivors group known as SNAP member David Clohessy. “He was younger when he was sent…

View Cache

Fr. Marko Rupnik incardinated; survivors group labels this “madness”

KOPER - CAPODISTRIA (SLOVENIA)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

October 25, 2023

Read original article

Fr. Marko Rupnik, the former Jesuit priest who was expelled from that religious order in June  for “disobedience” in the wake of multiple accusations that he abused adult women over a thirty-year period, has apparently found a new home.  Fr.. Rupnik was incardiated in August by the Diocese of Koper in Slovenia. When questioned about this reception, the Diocese responded that the priest was “presumed innocent” until proven guilty.

We call this decision absolute madness. The Church has complete control over who does and who does not work as a Catholic clergyman. A conviction for a penal offense has never been required for removal from ministry. 

The incardination of Fr. Marko Rupnik is to us a telltale sign that while the Church continues to say they have changed, their actions belie it. It also reinforces that we need to continue our fight for justice and accountability. Catholic officials…

View Cache

SBC legal brief sparks crisis of confidence in denomination over abuse response

NASHVILLE (TN)
Tennessean [Nashville TN]

October 27, 2023

By Liam Adams

Read original article

  • Kentucky Supreme Court case to decide whether 2021 law against “non-perpetrators” in abuse claims can apply retroactively.
  • SBC, Southern Seminary and Lifeway filed amicus brief in April saying Kentucky 2021 law shouldn’t apply retroactively. Courier Journal article in October puts attention on brief.
  • Abuse survivors and leaders in SBC abuse response issue joint statements denouncing SBC’s brief.

A six-month-old legal brief has sparked uproar and confusion throughout the Southern Baptist Convention over contradictions between the denomination’s professed stance on abuse versus its legal position.

SBC Executive Committee members, the former chairs of SBC abuse response task forces and abuse survivors have denounced an amicus brief as evidence of the Nashville-based denomination seeking to avoid accountability.

The SBC, SBC Executive Committee, Brentwood-based Lifeway Christian Resources and Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville filed the April brief in a case unrelated to abuse in the SBC or one of its churches, though the legal maneuver…

View Cache

Prepared to Be Shocked by New Orleans Church Officials

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

October 21, 2023

By Adam Horowitz Law

Read original article

Wow. That’s the reaction here at Horowitz Law to the latest revelations in Louisiana’s largest and deeply troubled Catholic diocese: The Archdiocese of New Orleans. In just one news story, allegations that detail almost all of the irresponsible and heinous behaviors exhibited by clerics who commit and conceal child sex crimes are laid bare. We acknowledge that most of what follows are accusations yet to be proven or disproven. However, at the same time, it’s important to note that the predator in this case pleaded guilty in criminal court. Some of it is based on recordings of phone conversations and official police documents, which also lends credibility to the startling allegations. But if even a few of the accusations in The Guardian’s article this week are deemed valid, it will be a huge blow to an already-embattled prelate, Archbishop Gregory Aymond.

That story accuses Catholic officials in New Orleans…

View Cache

Spanish Church sexual abuse affected 200,000 children, commission finds

MADRID (SPAIN)
BBC [London, England]

October 27, 2023

By Kathryn Armstrong

Read original article

More than 200,000 children are estimated to have suffered sexual abuse from Spain’s Catholic clergy, an independent commission has found.

The details emerged from an unprecedented public investigation by Spain’s ombudsman, who spoke of the “devastating impact” on victims.

Angel Gabilondo also criticised the Church for its inaction and attempts to cover up or deny the abuse.

“What has happened has been possible because of that silence,” he said.

The 700-page report, which was ordered by Spain’s Congress last year, reveals the result of a survey that the commission carried out on 800,000 members of the public.

It found that 0.6% of the country’s adult population, roughly 39 million people, said that they had suffered sexual abuse as children by members of the clergy.

That percentage rose to 1.13%, more than 400,000 people, when including alleged abuse by lay people in institutions overseen by the Church.

Mr Gabilondo said the…

View Cache

Spain’s report on Catholic Church sex abuse estimates victims could number in hundreds of thousands

MADRID (SPAIN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 27, 2023

By CIARÁN GILES

Read original article

Spain’s first official probe of sex abuse by clergy members or other people connected to the Catholic Church in the country included a survey that indicated that the number of victims could run into hundreds of thousands.

The survey was part of a damning report by the office of Spain’s ombudsman, or “defensor del pueblo,” following an 18-month independent investigation of 487 cases involving alleged victims who spoke with the ombudsman’s team.

Ombudsman Ángel Gabilondo criticized the church’s response to sex abuse scandals, saying it had often been to minimize if not deny the problem. He presented the nearly 800-page report to the speaker of the Spanish parliament’s lower house Friday and then to reporters.

“This is a necessary report to respond to a situation of suffering and loneliness that for years has remained, in one way or another, covered by an unfair silence,” Gabilondo…

View Cache

One in 200 Spaniards may have been abused by Catholic priests, rights ombudsman reports

MADRID (SPAIN)
Reuters [London, England]

October 27, 2023

By Charlie Devereux and Emma Pinedo

Read original article

More than one in 200 Spaniards may have been sexually abused by Catholic Church priests, a survey released on Friday suggested, pointing to a far greater number of victims nationwide than previous similar investigations.

The survey by Spain’s human rights ombudsman, part of a report presented to parliament on Friday, questioned just over 8,000 people. The document criticised the Church for not cooperating more fully with the investigation and seeking to “minimise the phenomenon”.

Ombudsman Angel Gabilondo said 0.6% of the survey sample said they had been abused by a priest, a figure that rose to around 1.1% when including abuse by lay people such as teachers at Church institutions.

“By being able to quote 0.6% you can see the magnitude of what it can mean in terms of overall abuse,” he told a press conference after delivering the report. Spain’s population is around 48 million.

A spokesperson for the…

View Cache

Pope lifts statute of limitations to allow Rupnik prosecution

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

October 27, 2023

By Crux staff

Read original article

In response to a complaint from his own anti-abuse panel about “serious problems” in the handling of a case involving a prominent Slovenian artist and priest, Pope Francis has decided to lift the statute of limitations in Church law which, up to this point, had barred a canonical prosecution.

The Vatican made the announcement in a brief statement Friday, roughly 48 hours after news broke that Father Marko Rupnik had been accepted back into his home diocese in Slovenia as a priest in good standing. The 68-year-old cleric and artist had been expelled from the Jesuit order in June, after an internal investigation found a high degree of credibility to charges of sexual and other forms of abuse against adult women.

Friday’s announcement also came in the wake of a couple of high-profile developments last month, which, taken together, suggested to some observers that Rupnik was being virtually rehabilitated.

According…

View Cache

Pope Francis waives statute of limitations in Rupnik case

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

October 27, 2023

By The Pillar

Read original article

The mosaic artist Fr. Marko Rupnik will face a canonical process over allegations of sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse against women religious, the Vatican announced Friday, in an apparent about-face.

The Vatican has not formally specified the charges Rupnik will face, and the Vatican’s press office has declined questions on its statement.

The Holy See press office said Oct. 27 that the process would take place after Pope Francis decided to waive the statute of limitations on the claims, amid a worldwide outcry after it emerged this week that Rupnik had been accepted into a diocese in his native Slovenia after being expelled from the Jesuit order.

The press office said that in September the pope had been informed of “serious problems” in the Vatican’s handling of the case by the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, a Vatican body dedicated to the safeguarding of minors and vulnerable adults. 

View Cache

Aftershocks of the Latest Father Rupnik Earthquake

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

October 27, 2023

By Father Raymond J. de Souza

Read original article

With the world media in Rome to cover the signature synodality initiative of Pope Francis, a stomach-churning Jesuit scandal returned to dominate the news.

To the outrage of victims, the shock of the assembled synod delegates, the bewilderment of bishops and the shame of the Holy See, it turned out that the world’s most infamous Jesuit abuser, Father Marko Rupnik, had been returned to ministry in a Slovenian diocese. The news rocketed around Rome on Wednesday evening.

On Friday, with the Vatican engaged in intense damage control, the Holy Father reversed himself in the face of a media outcry. He directed that the Rupnik case be reopened at the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), and lifted the statute of limitations to that effect. The Holy See press office stated that it was an example “[listening] attentively and compassionately to those who are suffering.”

Father Rupnik has been for generations…

View Cache

Chaos Erupts Over SBC Legal Filing in Louisville Abuse Lawsuit

LOUISVILLE (KY)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

October 26, 2023

By Bob Smietana

Read original article

Abuse survivors, along with some members of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee and the SBC’s abuse reform task force, have denounced a Kentucky court filing by Southern Baptist entities aimed at limiting their liability for sexual abuse claims.

A brief filed earlier this year by lawyers for the Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and Lifeway, an SBC publisher, argues that a Kentucky law that changed the statute of limitations for making civil claims over abuse — and allowing survivors to sue third parties such as churches or police — should not be applied retroactively.

“There are no mincing of words here. No holding back. This is disgusting,” abuse survivors Megan Lively, Jules Woodson and Tiffany Thigpen said in a statement released Wednesday.

A group of Southern Baptist leaders working on abuse reforms also criticized the brief, saying the filing was “a choice to stand against every…

View Cache

October 27, 2023

La investigación del Defensor del Pueblo estima en 440.000 las víctimas de pederastia en la Iglesia española

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

October 27, 2023

By ÍÑIGO DOMÍNGUEZ and JULIO NÚÑEZ

Read original article

The historic report on abuses in the clergy, very harsh on the institution, makes Spain the El histórico informe sobre los abusos en el clero, muy duro con la institución, convierte a España en el país con la proyección oficial de víctimas más alta. Se basa en una encuesta a 8.000 personas que cifra los afectados en un 1,13% de la población. Recomienda que el Estado también asuma su indemnización

España pasa hoy de ser una excepción mundial entre los países católicos, sin casos de pederastia en la Iglesia reconocidos oficialmente, a ser el país con el cómputo de víctimas más alto del mundo: un 1,13% de la población adulta actual ha sufrido abusos en el ámbito religioso, según una encuesta a gran escala, la primera de este tipo en el país, que ha realizado el defensor del pueblo, Ángel Gabilondo. El Defensor ha eludido hacer el cálculo en números…

View Cache

Louisiana pastor charged with sexual abuse of teenage girl

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

October 26, 2023

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Read original article

Milton Martin, 56, of First Pentecostal Church of Chalmette, accused of abuse of girl, now 28, who was member of congregation

Authorities in Louisiana have charged a Pentecostal pastor with sexually molesting a teenage girl who was a member of his church.

Milton O Martin III, 56, faces one charge each of felony carnal knowledge of a juvenile – colloquially referred to as statutory rape – and of indecent behavior with a minor, records obtained by the Guardian show.

A grand jury in the New Orleans-area community of St Bernard parish indicted Martin on Tuesday, about seven months after he had been arrested in connection with the allegations and had made bail.

Scott Rodrigue, the state police detective who helped obtain the indictment against Martin, also investigated the retired New Orleans Catholic priest Lawrence Hecker, who years ago secretly admitted to church leaders that he sexually molested…

View Cache

Father Marco Rupnik, Accused of Abuse and Returned to Ministry: A Timeline

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

October 26, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

In August, Father Rupnik was accepted for priestly ministry in the Diocese of Koper in his native Slovenia.

The news of Father Marko Rupnik‘s return to priestly ministry despite having been accused of sexual abuse interrupted the bishops’ Synod on Synodality as it was completing its final week of meetings.

The Society of Jesus had dismissed the Jesuit priest and artist last June after admitting to knowing of abuse accusations against Rupnik for years.

Here’s a timeline of known facts about what the Jesuits knew and when they knew it in the Father Rupnik case, what actions the order took, and how he was returned to priestly ministry.

2018

October: Jesuit Father Juan Antonio Guerrero Alves, Father Rupnik’s superior, receives allegations of sexual misconduct on the part of Father Rupnik, and an allegation that Rupnik gave absolution in confession to an accomplice in a sin against the Sixth Commandment. A preliminary…

View Cache

Report reveals widespread sexual abuse in Spain’s Catholic Church

MADRID (SPAIN)
La Prensa Latina [Memphis TN]

October 27, 2023

By EFE

Read original article

Madrid, Oct 27 (EFE).- Over 230,000 people in Spain were abused by Catholic priests as children, according to a report by the Spanish Ombudsman that was published on Friday.

The investigation on sexual abuse in the country’s Catholic Church, commissioned by the Spanish parliament, brings together the testimonies of 487 alleged victims.

The report was delivered by Ángel Gabilondo to the president of the Congress of Deputies Francina Armengol on Friday, one year and a half after it was ordered.

The over 700-page document urged the creation of a state fund to compensate the alleged victims and accuses the Catholic Church’s hierarchy of having denied and concealed these crimes for decades.

While the investigation did not provide the total number of potential victims of abuse, it revealed that 0.6% of Spain’s 39 million-strong population have allegedly suffered sexual abuse by a priest before turning 18.

That translates to an estimated…

View Cache

Spanish probe estimates more than 200,000 children abused by Roman Catholic clergy

MADRID (SPAIN)
France 24 [Paris, France]

October 27, 2023

By Agence France-Presse

Read original article

Over 200,000 minors are estimated to have been sexually abused in Spain by the Roman Catholic clergy since 1940, according to an independent commission published Friday.

The report did not give a specific figure but said a poll of over 8,000 people found that 0.6 percent of Spain‘s adult population of around 39 million people said they had suffered sexual abuse by members of the clergy when they were still children.

The percentage rises to 1.13 percent — or over 400,000 people — when including abuse by lay members, Spain’s national ombudsman Angel Gabilondo told a news conference called to present the findings of the report.

The revelations in Spain are the latest to rock the Roman Catholic Church after a series of sexual abuse scandals around the world, often involving children, over the past 20 years.

But unlike in other nations, in Spain — a traditionally Catholic country that has become…

View Cache

Pope orders Vatican to reopen case of priest accused of adult abuse but allowed to keep ministering

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

October 27, 2023

Read original article

Pope Francis has ordered the Vatican to reopen the case of a well-known priest-artist accused of sexually, psychologically and spiritually abusing adult women, and removed the statute of limitations on their claims, the Vatican said Friday.

The announcement marked a major turnaround for the Holy See and followed an outcry among victims and their advocates over the handling of the case of the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, a former Jesuit whose mosaics grace churches and basilicas around the world.

The scandal has been a headache for the Jesuits, the Vatican and Francis himself due to suspicions that Rupnik received favorable treatment from the Holy See, where a Jesuit is pope and other Jesuits head the sex crimes office that investigated Rupnik and declined to prosecute him because the claims against him were deemed too old.

A Vatican…

View Cache

Pope Francis requests review of Rupnik case

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

October 27, 2023

Read original article

Pope Francis lifts the statute of limitations in the case of Fr. Marko Rupnik to allow a canonical procedure to take place regarding allegations against the former Jesuit.

Pope Francis has asked the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith to review the case of former Jesuit artist, Fr. Marko Rupnik, who was accused of psychological and sexual abuse by some consecrated women with whom he worked. He was expelled from the Society of Jesus in June.

A Holy See Press Office statement on Friday said, “In September, the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors brought to the Pope’s attention that there were serious problems in the handling of the Fr. Marko Rupnik case and lack of outreach to victims.”

“Consequently,” it added, “the Holy Father asked the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith to review the case, and decided to lift the statute of limitations to allow…

View Cache

Spain Report On Church Sex Abuse Due Out Friday

MADRID (SPAIN)
Barron's [New York NY]

October 26, 2023

By Diego Urdaneta, Agence France-Presse

Read original article

Spain will on Friday learn the results of the country’s first independent probe into the abuse of minors within the Catholic Church, long accused by survivors of stonewalling and denial.

Unlike in other nations like France, Ireland and the United States, in Spain — a traditionally Catholic country that has become highly secular —  clerical abuse allegations are only now gaining traction.

Spain’s parliament in March 2022 overwhelmingly approved the creation of an independent commission led by the country’s ombudsman to “shed light” on allegations of sexual abuse of “defenceless boys and girls” within the Catholic Church.

The commission’s final report is scheduled to be delivered to parliament at 11:30 am (0930 GMT) by Spain’s national ombudsman Angel Gabilondo, a former education minister.

Spain’s Catholic Church, which for years flatly refused to carry out its own probe, declined to take part in the independent investigation, although it did cooperate by providing documents on…

View Cache

Letters to the Editor: O.C.’s late Bishop Tod D. Brown and the double standard on clergy sex abuse

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

October 27, 2023

Read original article

To the editor: Columnist Gustavo Arellano highlights former Diocese of Orange Bishop Tod D. Brown’s complicity in concealing and enabling Catholic clergy child abuse. He makes an important contribution to the struggle for equality: the equality of believers and nonbelievers.

Since major stories about clergy abuse broke around the beginning of this century, the church has attempted to obstruct full accountability for the crimes of its priests.

The underlying theme of Catholic efforts to escape full reckoning is that since the church is God’s true religion, its wrongdoers deserve more lenient treatment than other child rapists.

The 1st Amendment requires that believers and nonbelievers be equal before the law. Any lesser penalties, or allowing concealment of heinous crimes just because the perpetrators are clergy, violates this principle of equality. There should be no difference in how the law treats any child abuser and in how it deals with any institution that…

View Cache

The Duplicity of an SBC Amicus Brief

LOUISVILLE (KY)
In Solidarity with Christa Brown

October 26, 2023

By Christa Brown, David Clohessy & Dave Pittman

Read original article

… and what will SBC officials do about it now?

In keeping with nationwide trends, the Kentucky legislature extended the time period in which child sex abuse survivors can bring civil lawsuits and allowed that their lawsuits can be asserted, not only against perpetrators, but also against institutions that fail to protect children.

Under these new laws, Samantha Killary pursued her lawsuit for childhood sexual abuse against a Louisville police officer and also against Louisville Metro for “employing and empowering” him.

The case is now pending before the Kentucky Supreme Court, with arguments about the validity of the new laws.

Into this case, the Southern Baptist Convention decided to insert itself, even though the SBC is not a party and the case has nothing to do with the SBC.

Together, the Southern Baptist Convention, the SBC Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Lifeway Christian…

View Cache

October 26, 2023

Papal commission reaches out to Fr. Rupnik’s known victims

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

October 26, 2023

By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

Read original article

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors has reached out to known victims of Slovenian Fr. Marko Rupnik, asking to meet with them.

The purpose of the invitation, written by a member of the 19-member papal body, was to examine and study how the victims were treated by the church, specifically the Jesuits — the religious order Rupnik was expelled from in June — and the Vatican, Il Sismografo, an Italian blog that closely follows the Vatican, reported Oct. 25.

Catholic News Service confirmed the invitation Oct. 26.

The mission of the papal body includes evaluating the church’s response to victims and abuse allegations and ensuring that “robust policies and practices for the prevention and management of all forms of abuse are in place,” according to the commission’s strategic plan 2022-2027.

Its three-point mandate includes improving church practices by identifying and detailing gaps and ongoing concerns in current prevention…

View Cache

Australian Catholic church’s insurer launches court bid to cover smaller share of abuse compensation

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 26, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

Read original article

Scandal-plagued PwC would determine payout rates under scheme proposed by Catholic Church Insurance in effort to avoid insolvency

The Catholic church insurer wants to establish a scheme that would stave off its own insolvency by paying church bodies only a fraction of the money owed to abuse survivors, at rates to be determined by scandal-plagued consultancy PwC, documents show.

Catholic Church Insurance is facing significant financial turmoil due to the rising volume of abuse claims, estimating it has $381m in liabilities relating to professional standards payouts to various church entities, including dioceses and church-aligned charities.

In an attempt to protect itself financially, CCI is asking the federal court to approve a legally binding scheme that, if it comes close to insolvency, would trigger a reduction in abuse payouts to church bodies. The scheme would allow the insurer to pay out only a yet-to-be-determined percentage of what is owed to survivors.

View Cache

Father Marko Rupnik, disgraced former Jesuit, incardinated in Slovenian diocese

(ITALY)
America [New York NY]

October 25, 2023

By Gina Christian, OSV News

Read original article

(OSV News) — A former Jesuit priest dismissed by the order for sexual abuse has apparently been incardinated in a diocese in his native Slovenia, according to multiple media reports.

Father Marko Ivan Rupnik—a renowned mosaic artist who was expelled from the Society of Jesus in June for refusing to comply with ministry restrictions after credible abuse accusations—has been accepted into the Diocese of Koper, which is headed by Bishop Jurij Bizjak.

The news was first reported Oct. 25 in Italian and German media reports, and confirmed to media in a statement from diocesan vicar general Msgr. Slavko Rebec.

Father Rupnik has been accused of sexually, spiritually or psychologically abusing some 2 dozen women and at least one man over a 40-year period.

He had been briefly excommunicated in 2020 for granting absolution to a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual relations. Among his accusers were several members…

View Cache

The Rupnik affair goes from scandalous to contemptible

(ITALY)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

October 25, 2023

By Christopher R. Altieri

Read original article

It is impossible to absolve Pope Francis of ultimate responsibility for the farcical management of the Rupnik business. Whether by act or omission, he is the author of it.

A disgraced former Jesuit accused of heinous sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse allegedly perpetrated against well more than a dozen victims – most of them women religious – over some three decades, Fr. Marko Rupnik, is now a priest of Koper diocese in his native Slovenia.

Koper’s vicar general told The Pillar that Bishop Bishop Jurij Bizjak agreed to give Rupnik a chance since “Rupnik had not been sentenced to any judicial sentence.”

Rupnik has never been tried for his alleged crimes of abuse. That is because the Vatican department responsible for investigating and prosecuting the crimes of which Rupnik stands accused decided not to waive the statute…

View Cache

Priest kicked out of Jesuits for alleged abuse of women welcomed into Slovenia diocese

(ITALY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 26, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

A famous priest-artist who was thrown out of the Jesuits after being accused of sexual, spiritual and psychological abuse of women has been accepted into a diocese in his native Slovenia, the latest twist in a case that has implicated the pope and laid bare the limits of the Vatican’s in-house legal system.

The Diocese of Koper confirmed in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Thursday that the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik was accepted as a priest there in August.

Rupnik was taken in because he had been expelled from the Jesuits and because the diocese hadn’t received any documents showing that Rupnik had “been found guilty of the alleged abuses before either an ecclesiastical tribunal or civil court,” it said.

The statement cited the Universal Declaration on Human Rights’ provision on the presumption of innocence and right to a defense for anyone accused of…

View Cache

In unprecedented letter, synod urges more synodality

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

October 25, 2023

Read original article

An unprecedented letter published by the synod on synodality Wednesday said that the Church should focus more on the idea of synodality ahead of the October 2024 final session of the Church’s years-long consultative process. 

The Oct. 25 text also emphasized discipleship of Jesus Christ, and commitment to both service of the poor and protection of the environment.

“We hope that the months leading to the second [Vatican] session in October 2024 will allow everyone to concretely participate in the dynamism of missionary communion indicated by the word ‘synod,’” said the  letter, which was addressed to Catholics around the world.

“This is not about ideology, but about an experience rooted in the apostolic tradition,” the letter added.

The letter was published Wednesday afternoon, as more than 300 of the synod on synodality’s delegates deliberate on an interim report they’ll publish later this week. The aim of the synod on synodality is…

View Cache

Rupnik returns to priestly ministry in Slovenian diocese despite accusations of sexual abuse of over 20 nuns

(ITALY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

October 25, 2023

By Thomas Colsy

Read original article

Marko Ivan Rupnik, a former Jesuit who has been at the centre of controversy amidst accusations of spiritual and sexual abuse, has been granted permission to return to priestly ministry in the Diocese of Koper in his native Slovenia.

The decision follows consultations by Bishop Juri Bizjak with senior prelates from Rome– alongside a report released in September on the Aletti Center, the artistic institute founded by Rupnik, after a canonical visitation investigating the accused priest’s dealings.

It is understood that Bishop Bizjak, who heads the Diocese of Koper where Rupnik has been incardinated, discussed the course of action with Slovenia’s apostolic nuncio Bishop Jean-Marie Speich, canon lawyer Giacomo Incittii, and Cardinal Angelo De Donatis who serves as the vicar of the Diocese of Rome.

Nuncio Speich lauded the decision to incardinate Rupnik in Slovenia with encouragement and approval, calling it an “excellent solution” and foreseeing no additional trouble “because there…

View Cache

Why Has the Vatican Restored Father Rupnik?

(ITALY)
National Review [New York NY]

October 25, 2023

By MICHAEL BRENDAN DOUGHERTY

Read original article

Father Marko Rupnik was released by the Jesuits after an investigation credibly showed that he had abused his authority over a group of Slovenian nuns for years. In the 1990s this included his forcing them to commune his ejaculate from chalices used for Mass. The Jesuits investigated these crimes but found them outside the statute of limitations. Rupnik went on to Rome to found the Aletti Center, where he could practice as an artist and teach Ignatian spirituality. In 2016, Rupnik committed one of the gravest canonical crimes: He affected to use his power as a priest to absolve a woman of a sexual sin she had committed with him. This crime comes with a penalty of automatic excommunication. In January 2020, an investigation confirmed that Rupnik had committed the crime. In May of the same year, the conviction and verdict were reaffirmed unanimously and formalized after an investigation by…

View Cache

UPDATE: Rupnik ‘presumed innocent’ until proven guilty, says diocese that welcomed him

(ITALY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

October 25, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

Father Marko Rupnik, the former Jesuit priest and mosaic artist accused of serious abuses against women, has been accepted for priestly ministry in a diocese in Slovenia.

In a statement to CNA on Wednesday, the Diocese of Koper confirmed earlier Italian and German media reports that Rupnik was now incardinated there.

The statement said that Rupnik was received into the diocese at the end of August.

The local bishop accepted Rupnik’s request to be received into the diocese “on the basis of the decree on Rupnik’s dismissal from the Jesuit order” and “and on the basis of the fact that no judicial sentence had been passed on Rupnik,” according to an English translation of the statement, written in Slovenian, issued by diocese’s vicar general, Slavko Rebec.

Rebec went on to cite Article 11.1 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states:…

View Cache

Fr Marko Rupnik incardinated in Slovenian diocese

(ITALY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

October 25, 2023

By Luke Coppen

Read original article

The influential mosaic artist Fr. Marko Rupnik has been incardinated into a diocese in his native Slovenia.

Msgr. Slavko Rebec, vicar general of the Diocese of Koper, said in an Oct. 25 statement to The Pillar: “In response to the question whether the priest Marko Ivan Rupnik has been received (incardinated) into the Diocese of Koper, we answer that the said priest was received into the Diocese of Koper at the end of August 2023.”

“The Bishop of Koper admitted him on the basis of the decree of Rupnik’s dismissal from the Jesuit order and on the basis of Rupnik’s request for admission to the Diocese of Koper, and on the basis of the fact that Rupnik had not been sentenced to any judicial sentence: ‘Everyone who is accused of a criminal offense has the right to be presumed innocent until he is found guilty according to law, in a…

View Cache

Rupnik Ha Trovato Accoglienza. Ora È Libero. Il Nunzio: “Non Ci Sono Condanne”.

(ITALY)
Silere Non Possum [Italy]

October 25, 2023

Read original article

Marko Ivan Rupnik was received in a Slovenian diocese. He can now exercise his priestly ministry freely.

Quando si gode di una copertura ai massimi livelli non vi è nulla da temere. Con questa convinzione si è sempre mosso Marko Ivan Rupnik, l’ex gesuita sloveno che è stato dimesso dalla Compagnia di Gesù a seguito della fuoriuscita di notizie in merito a delitti canonici che sono stati trattati in modo “anomalo”, si fa per dire.

Il 1 dicembre 2022 Silere non possum rendeva noto che l’artista aveva subito una condanna per aver assolto la complice nel peccato contro il sesto comandamento. Venne così appurato dalla Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede che il sacerdote era incorso nella scomunica latae sententiae. Dopo pochi giorni, Papa Francesco ha revocato la scomunica senza spiegare il perché. Poco tempo dopo giunsero al dicastero ulteriori denunce in merito ad abusi commessi da Rupnik. Il procedimento, anche in quel…

View Cache

October 25, 2023

Church Volunteer Faces Child Porn Charges

OCEAN SPRINGS (MS)
Ministry Watch [Matthews NC]

October 24, 2023

By Steve Rabey

Read original article

Pastor defends computer expert who had 9,900 sexually explicit images of children

A Mississippi man who volunteered for his church’s media ministry is now facing two charges of possessing and distributing child sexual abuse images after federal officials found 9,900 sexual images of children on his personal computer, according to The Sun Herald in Biloxi.

A judge denied the man bail and had him immediately jailed, saying he was a flight risk and a potential danger to the safety of the community. Meanwhile, a church leader and family members maintain his innocence.

Cameron “Cam” Cotrill, 66, of Vancleave used his computer expertise to volunteer at Center Pointe Church in Ocean Springs, Mississippi.

The district judge handling the case denied Cotrill bail, as he awaits trial in January. The judge cited substantial evidence against Cotrill, his potential threat to the community, his significant wealth, and his many…

View Cache

I can’t stop dreaming about our clergy pedophile, but maybe this will help

MOSS BLUFF (LA)
Baptist Press [Nashville TN]

October 24, 2023

By Tommy Mouton

Read original article

Just a few days after my 45th birthday, I had another dream about my childhood pastor.

This final dream was the coup de grâce: My great-grandparents’ home was ablaze. It was dark. Early morning still, and I was standing outside, talking on the telephone with him, and he essentially told me he was washing his hands of me and that, whether I believed it or not, he wasn’t the only abuser out there. That there were others. That I could go on and do what I needed to do. It was water under the bridge to him.

Before hanging up the phone, he told me he wouldn’t gift us the $10,000 we needed to rebuild. I never had asked him for any money. I am not asking for any now.

I awoke. Showered. Carried my kids off to school. Then stumbled onto an Ohio Capital Journal article published Aug. 17 about child sex abuse…

View Cache

Philadelphia priest pleads guilty to sexually abusing 13-year-old altar server, victim calls the abuse a “nightmare”

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

October 24, 2023

Read original article

A Catholic priest from Philadelphia was convicted today of sexually abusing a 16-year-old girl in 2014. The victim described the assault as a “nightmare” in court. We applaud this brave survivor for reporting the cleric despite her suffering. Her bravery has helped to ensure that Catholic children and the public are safer. We hope that the cleric will receive the stiffest sentence possible for his crime.

 Fr. Armand Garcia pleaded guilty to corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor stemming from the assault on this now-25-year-old woman. The priest was initially charged with rape, but agreed to a plea bargain taking that charge off of the table. The victim was an altar server at the Immaculate Heart of Mary parish in the Andorra neighborhood at the time of the crime. The survivor had known the clergyman since she was 13 and he was a friend of her father’s. She…

View Cache

Philadelphia priest, on leave since 2018, pleads guilty to sexual abuse of teen girl

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

October 24, 2023

By Gina Christian, OSV News

Read original article

A Philadelphia priest has admitted to sexually abusing a teen girl who was once an altar server at his parish.

Fr. Armand D. Garcia appeared in a Philadelphia courtroom Oct. 23 to plead guilty to corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor. He will be sentenced in January 2024.

The abuse took place while Garcia was a parochial vicar at Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish in Philadelphia from 2014-2017.

The priest had initially been charged with rape; photographing, filming and depicting on a computer sexual acts; sexual assault; and corruption of a minor. According to the criminal docket, the first three charges were dropped, while Garcia entered a non-negotiated guilty plea for corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor.

The victim, who was a 13-year-old student at the parish school when she met the priest, delivered an impact statement at the hearing, noting the…

View Cache

Mother files wrongful death lawsuit against now-closed Christian boarding school in Missouri

MISSION (KS)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 23, 2023

By Heather Hollingsworth

Read original article

A mother is suing a shuttered Christian boarding school in Missouri, blaming her son’s death on a gang rape and other abuse he endured there.

Agape Boarding School has been subjected to a wave of litigation as a series of abuse allegations emerged, but the case filed this month and amended Monday in federal court by Kathleen Britt is believed to be the first wrongful death suit.

The suit said that mental health problems plagued Britt’s son, Jason Britt, after he left the private school, where several staffers subsequently were charged. The suit said he lifted weights obsessively and ingested copious steroids so he would become so strong that he never would be victimized again.

He grew so despondent that he wrote a suicide note. But heart and kidney failure were what claimed his life in February 2022.

“The saddest part of his case is…

View Cache

Pope Francis accepts resignation of bishop from troubled Polish diocese

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

October 24, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

Pope Francis accepted the resignation of 59-year-old Polish Bishop Grzegorz Kaszak on Tuesday following public calls for him to step down over poor management of scandals involving priests in his diocese.

Kaszak, who had led the southern Polish Diocese of Sosnowiec since 2009, had recently faced blowback from local media for his response to a priest of his diocese allegedly being caught hosting an orgy with a male prostitute at the end of August.

In a letter posted to the diocese’s website Oct. 24, Kaszak said he requested his resignation from Pope Francis on Sept. 29.

“I also ask everyone to forgive my human limitations. If I have offended anyone or neglected anything, I am very sorry for it,” the bishop said.

The diocese said in a Sept. 22 press statement that it had become aware from media reports of an orgy held the night of Aug….

View Cache