ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

August 5, 2014

Catholic church closures begin

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Tuesday 5 August 2014

TWO churches have been shut within Scotland’s largest Catholic diocese as congregations brace themselves for a wave of parish closures and mergers across the west of the country.

All Saints in Glasgow’s Barmulloch area closed in recent weeks, with a service presided over by the country’s leading Catholic cleric, Archbishop Philip Tartaglia, marking the event.

The church was built in the late 1960s and sits in the shadow of the notorious Red Road Flats, which are earmarked for imminent demolition.

With all but one of the high-rise blocks now empty, numbers attending All Saints have dropped dramatically in recent years.

The closure was preceded by that of St Philips in Ruchazie, in the north-east of Glasgow.

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

Grand Blanc priest accused of inappropriate touching to enter assessment program

MICHIGAN
MLive

By Dominic Adams | dadams5@mlive.com
on August 05, 2014 at 7:50 AM

FLINT, MI – A Grand Blanc priest accused of inappropriately touching two children remains on administrative leave three months after the allegations.

The Rev. Ken Coughlin was accused of inappropriately touching the hands and legs of two students in May at Holy Family Catholic School in Grand Blanc.

Meanwhile, Genesee County Prosecutor David Leyton said he is still reviewing the case before he will decide whether to bring charges.

The Catholic Diocese of Lansing placed Coughlin on paid administrative leave following the allegations.

Coughlin vows his innocence in a letter that was posted on the Holy Family website Friday, Aug. 1, and placed in the parish bulletin.

“As this investigation has progressed, it has become clear that some of my words and actions have upset some people in our parish,” Coughlin said in the statement. “In response to these concerns, Bishop (Earl) Boyea has asked me to consider entering a program of assessment that assists clergy and religious with their ministry. I have agreed to this request.”

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

On the Fatherhood of Bishops With Disposable Priests

UNITED STATES
These Stone Walls

“Father Jim” is a senior priest suspended under terms of the Dallas Charter, barred from ministry and from defending his good name due to a claim from 1972.

Editor’s Note: The following guest post by “Father Jim” was received as a comment on a recent post at These Stone Walls. Due to its length and subject matter, we are posting it as a guest post with Father Jim’s permission, but we have shielded his identity because his case is still pending at the Holy See.

Father Gordon MacRae recently wrote of a terrible tragedy in the post, “Jesus Wept: The Death of Father Kenneth Walker, FSSP” on his blog, These Stone Walls. In that post he asked a truly provocative question. Allow me to respond to it in light of priests falsely accused of sexual abuse, the exact situation that has confined Father Gordon to prison for almost twenty years. His question was:

“Has Catholic culture in America become so comfortable with the notion of the last two decades that its priests should be little more than expendable targets with no ability or right for self-defense?”

I believe most priests in the United States unfortunately know the answer to that question. No one talks about it openly, but it can be sensed in the low morale and anxiety among priests. It can be traced directly to a failure of leadership in the American Catholic episcopacy that places public relations and public respect as higher priorities than the truth and the innocence of many good and faithful priests by their bishops’ wholesale embrace of the Dallas Charter. In effect, our bishops have betrayed their pastoral role in loving and caring for their priests as a father loves and cares for his sons. They have allowed themselves to be intimidated by human opinion and political correctness, placing their trust more in lawyers than the Gospel of Jesus who calls us to lay down our very lives for the ones we love.

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

Defensa de sacerdote John O’Reilly cuestiona credibilidad de madre de las denunciantes

CHILE
Bio Bio

[Summary: After the second day of trial of priest John O’Reilly, the defense questioned the credibility of the testimony given by mother of the girls in the Santiago court. The priest, member of the Legion of Christ, is charged with sexual abuse.]

Tras la segunda jornada de juicio oral en contra el sacerdote John O’Reilly por presuntos abusos sexuales contra dos menores del colegio Cumbres de Las Condes, la defensa cuestionó la credibilidad del testimonio entregado ante el Tercer Tribunal de Juicio Oral en Lo Penal de Santiago por la madre de las niñas.

En su relato de cerca de seis horas, la mujer explicó que cuando su hija mayor le contó de los ilícitos no la llevó al pediatra porque “no podía creer que esto estaba sucediendo” y porque no quería que otras personas se enteraran.

Agregó que tampoco la llevó al Servicio Médico Legal, pese a la recomendación de la Fiscalía y de su marido -ante la denuncia de actos más cercanos a una violación- explicando que “no quería que le hicieran exámenes, sabiendo por lo que tenía que pasar”. Sobre todo, explicó, porque una ginecóloga le había advertido que luego de un tiempo, el tipo de abusos que acusaba la niña no dejaría marcas.

La testigo indicó que también dudó en llevarla al Centro de Atención a Víctimas de Agresiones Sexuales, Cavas, siempre bajo el argumento que le creía a sus hijas.

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

Abuse survivor Louise O’Keefe seeks meeting with Taoiseach

IRELAND
Irish Examiner

By Conor Ryan
Investigative Correspondent

Louise O’Keeffe, who defeated the Irish Government in the European courts, has demanded a meeting with the Taoiseach to discuss her disappointment at the State’s response to the landmark judgment in her case.

In January she was awarded €30,000 by the European Court of Human Rights because the State had failed to protect her from being abused by her primary school principal, Leo Hickey in 1973.

She has now criticised the Government’s newly-published response to the Council of Europe and what she said was a failure to deliver the comprehensive reply that had been promised.

In January Taoiseach Enda Kenny apologised to Ms O’Keeffe for what she had endured at Dunderrow national school, near Kinsale, in 1973.

He also apologised for what she had gone through since then, as she fought a 15-year legal action against the Department of Education to have its culpability in the crimes recognised.

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

Body to scrutinise ‘abuse’ probes

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

05 AUGUST 2014

A national police group is being set up to link child sex abuse investigations involving public figures and institutions such as schools and care homes.

The body, which is set to meet for the first time in September, has asked all 43 police forces in England and Wales as well as the Police Service of Northern Ireland and Police Scotland for details of their ongoing inquiries.

Chief officers and senior investigators have been asked to sit on the group, which could share information between forces where inquiries overlap.

Chief Constable Simon Bailey, who will chair the group, said: “Following a meeting of senior officers in Merseyside in the last few weeks, a stream of work, called Operation Hydrant, was established so as to allow a central strategic co-ordination group to collate and share information, advice and best practice among forces who were investigating allegations of historic child abuse where there were persons of public prominence (PPPs) concerned in the investigation.

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

John Breunig: A diocese sets a new course

CONNECTICUT
News Times

There’s no need to worry if you don’t understand what it means that the Bridgeport Diocese is convening a synod. My entire academic education was in Catholic schools, and I accepted an invitation to have it clarified for me at the Catholic Center in Bridgeport last week. For that matter, church leaders within the diocesan nerve center acknowledge they are still working out the fine details.

If poorly executed, a synod could be perceived as just another closed-door process. So far, this one is being defined by dialogue, by an effort to create transparency through the stained-glass window.

The process is modeled on Pope Francis’ synod on the issue of the family. The Bridgeport Diocese synod began with a listening session at Trinity Catholic High School in Stamford on May 5, with the results to be revealed Sept. 19, 2015 at Webster Bank Arena in Bridgeport. The synod will draw input from clergy, consecrated women, parishioners at the 82 churches in the diocese, teenagers and many others to advise Bishop Frank Caggiano on how to — in his words — “make our Church more responsive to our current needs and to plan our future together.” He has called the dialogue a “freewheeling experience.”

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

The Black Church and Sexual Assault

UNITED STATES
Ebony

Monica Coleman, pastor and founder of The Dinah Project, offers up healing words and a path to progress for church leaders and congregations who want to help rape survivors

Your spiritual home should be a safe haven, a loving community and the ideal space for healing. Sometimes, that’s the case.

But for some survivors of rape or abuse, church is where their pain is minimized or ignored. For others, it’s where they are blamed for their victimization. For still others, it is where sexual violence actually happens.

It’s hard to believe, but pastors are rarely trained to handle the trauma of sexual assault. Of course, there are churches and clergy well prepared to help survivors heal and to deal with sexual violence and its ramifications with spiritual wisdom and compassion. Some churches are actually agents of change, working to transform society and end rape. Yet it’s important to know that if your church isn’t that kind of place, it’s within your power to help change it. If you are seeking spiritual food for your healing journey, there exist churches where you can get it. In either case, Monica A. Coleman is uniquely qualified to guide you in the right direction.

Coleman is a rape survivor, an ordained A.M.E. minister, an associate professor at the Claremont School of Theology and the author of “The Dinah Project: A Handbook for Congregational Response to Sexual Violence.” In 1997, she created a sexual assault ministry at Metropolitan Interdenominational Church, in Nashville, Tenn.

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

‘Monumental shift’ in Rome on clerical child sexual abuse issue

IRELAND
Irish Times

Mark Vincent Healy

Tue, Aug 5, 2014

There ought to have been a sense of huge importance noted about Pope Francis’s first meeting with six survivors of clerical child sexual abuse in Rome on July 7th last. The survivors came from Ireland, the UK and Germany.

Stories of decades of clerical child sexual abuse and cover up were represented in that moment for those nations. I was especially pleased to meet survivors from the UK and Germany. There was an immediate affinity between us, which I hope to one day harness into a council of survivors to give voice to the many issues of survivors from around the world.

My experience of abuse by members of the Holy Ghost Fathers, or Spiritans, informed my message to the pope. I am pressing the State and the Catholic Church for research into self-harming and suicide and the provision of rescue services and safe spaces.

Marie Kane and I would not have been standing in Rome but for those amazing Irish survivors who led the way, supported by people such as the late Mary Raftery and the late Christine Buckley.

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

THE SCANDAL OF CALVARY

UNITED STATES
First Things

by Lauren Ely

Is it possible for a film to capture the horror of the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church while at the same time presenting a case for the necessity of the institutional priesthood? Against all odds, this is exactly what Irish director John Michael McDonagh’s Calvary manages to do. Fr. James (played with magnificent presence by Brendan Gleeson) is a good priest, if a haunted one. He is a widower and an alcoholic with a suicidal daughter and a parish full of troubled townspeople in rural Ireland. One afternoon a parishioner confesses to him that he was serially raped by a now-deceased priest as a child, and as a way of taking revenge, he will kill Fr. James in a week.

What follows is a surprisingly complex, if imperfectly executed, meditation on the nature of sin and mercy, set in the epicenter of the sexual abuse scandal. We are introduced one by one to Fr. James’s parishioners, each with their own set of problems including drug use, adultery, and prostitution to name only a few. Their attitudes toward the parish priest range from begrudging respect to apathy to outright contempt. Every hackneyed anti-Church saying one can think of is used by the townspeople as a taunt against Fr. James: that the Church is only out for money, that priests are control freaks, that Catholicism has no good answer for the problem of evil. By contrast we see Fr. James doing the hard, daily work of the priest with dogged fidelity as he counsels prisoners, administers last rites in the middle of the night, and comforts a young widow. The film paints very clearly the life of the priest in stark relief to the world’s perception of what a priest is, all while allowing Fr. James to retain his spirited, gruff, flawed humanity.

The key difference between Fr. James and his parishioners is that he sees his part in the sinfulness of others—in fact, he sees the role that sin plays in the greater spiritual world at large. When a group of men at the local pub berate Fr. James for going to give spiritual counseling to a child murderer in the local jail, Fr. James points out that the murderer at least sought his help, even if it was with mixed motivations. “We talk too much about sins and not enough about virtues,” Fr. James tells his daughter. “Forgiveness has been highly underrated.” In the face of the mundane callousness of his parishioners, one can see the priest weighing his options—are such people worth ministering to, repenting for, dying for? Exactly what are his obligations to them?

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

Assessing the Catholic Church’s child abuse culpability

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Peter Kirkwood | 05 August 2014

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse now under way around Australia will ensure this issue will have public prominence for the foreseeable future.

Indeed it was the impetus for the authors featured in this interview to write their recently published book, Reckoning: The Catholic Church and Child Sexual Abuse (jointly published by Eureka Street and ATF Press), their own thorough study of this thorny issue in the context of the Australian Catholic Church.

Damian Grace and Chris McGillion are eminently qualified to write on this topic, both with distinguished careers: Grace as an academic specialising in applied ethics and political philosophy, and McGillion as a journalist and author who’s devoted most of his career to writing about religion.

In the interview they talk about what they are trying to achieve with the book, the difficulties in being even handed with this issue, why it has taken the Church so long to come to grips with sexual abuse by clergy, and the effect and significance of the Royal Commission. They conclude in the second part of the interview by looking to the future, discussing how the Church might recover from this, and whether Pope Francis is a sign of hope in dealing with it.

Damian Grace has taught ethics, political philosophy, history of political thought and philosophy of religion over the past four decades. He previously lectured at the University of NSW, and is currently an honorary associate in the Department of Government and International Relations at The University of Sydney.

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

Home Release For Oklahoman Accused Of Misconduct

OKLAHOME
CBS Houston

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A federal judge Monday granted bond to a 19-year-old man charged with sexually abusing boys and girls while volunteering at an orphanage in Kenya but ordered that he remain confined inside his family’s home and avoid contact with children.

U.S. Magistrate Shon Erwin handed down the ruling after a detention hearing for Matthew Lane Durham of Edmond, who is accused of engaging in sex acts with as many as ten children between the ages of 4 to 10 while volunteering at Upendo Children’s Home in Nairobi from April to June 2014. He faces up to life in prison if convicted of engaging in illegal sexual conduct in foreign places, aggravated sexual abuse with children and other charges.

“You’re going to be on 24-hour lockdown,” Erwin told Durham on Monday. He set bond at $10,000 and appointed Durham’s father, Oklahoma City Fire Department Maj. Kyle Durham, as his son’s custodian.

He also ordered that Matthew Durham surrender his passport, refrain from using cellphones and computers and avoid contact with children and any witnesses and alleged victims in the case.
“These are serious, horrific charges involving minor victims,” Erwin said.

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

Salvation Army supports voluntary child sexual abuse compensation plan

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian (UK)

Helen Davidson
theguardian.com, Tuesday 5 August 2014

The Salvation Army would support compensation schemes for victims of child sexual abuse but “would resist having to contribute” to its funding unless it had some authority over staffing, decision making and the ability to question costs.

In its submission to the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse, the organisation said the establishment and operation of a financial redress scheme should be entirely funded by the Commonwealth, with funds contributed by institutions and offenders only going to abuse survivors.

It also suggested an institution should be given the option to “opt in or out” of the scheme, “as a matter of general principle.”

“Liability for such payments should not be apportioned between institutions,” it read. “Each institution should be responsible for their own wrongdoing. Then, such a scheme could operate on a debt-basis.”

In its submission, the Salvation Army also said it believed any final decision about the amount of compensation to be paid to a victim should be made by the institution, although it would support a national “best practice” protocol.

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

Bishop: No new accusations of priest abuse since 1984

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Katie de la Rosa August 4, 2014

No new allegations of sex crimes involving children by Diocese of Lafayette clergy have been made since 1984, Bishop Michael Jarrell told parishioners of St. Edmond Catholic Church in Lafayette on Saturday.

Jarrell addressed parishioners following a week of news reports that St. Edmond Pastor Gil Dutel was accused in legal documents from the 1990s of sexually abusing a boy in the 1970s and making sexual advances to an adult male. The documents only recently were made public in a Minnesota Public Broadcasting investigation of priest sex abuse and cover-ups.

“No additional priests have been accused in recent decades,” Jarrell said in an email response Monday to questions posed Sunday by The Daily Advertiser. “I stand by my 2004 statement: The Diocese knows of no act of abuse by a cleric that may have occurred since 1984.”

Jarrell declined The Daily Advertiser’s request for an interview and did not respond to the newspaper’s second request for the names of 15 priests. Jarrell acknowledged in 2004 that the diocese and its insurers has paid settlements to the sexual abuse victims of those priests.

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

In Twin Cities archdiocese, 103 priests accused of sex misconduct

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

Names of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct made public

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 08/04/2014

Ramsey County District Judge John Van de North on Monday denied a motion by the Diocese of Winona to move the Doe 1 priest sexual abuse trial to another district, saying jurors in Ramsey County would be fair to the defendants.

Attorneys for the diocese had argued that the level of publicity about the case has tainted the views of prospective jurors.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis did not join in the change-of-venue motion.

Also Monday, attorney Michael Finnegan of Jeff Anderson and Associates noted in court that there are now more than 100 priests the archdiocese has named as the subject of allegations. At least 55 of those names remain sealed.

Archdiocese attorney Thomas Wieser included a chart in a June 18 memorandum to the court that listed the number of files it submitted under seal from March 31 through May 23. The number of files totals 103.

The archdiocese has publicly disclosed the names of 48 accused priests since December.

The church argues the rest should remain secret because there have been false and fabricated allegations that would sully the names of respectable priests.

Doe 1 is the pseudonym of a man who sued former priest Thomas Adamson, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona for abuse he says he suffered by Adamson in the 1970s at St. Thomas Aquinas in St. Paul Park. The lawsuit alleges that the archdiocese and diocese created a “public nuisance” by allowing offending priests to remain active and concealing information about their misconduct from the public.

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

Former Bessemer priest under investigation

PENNSYLVANIA
Ellwood City Ledger

By Eric Poole epoole@ellwoodcityledger.com And Kirstin Kennedy Calkins Media

CONWAY — Federal authorities are investigating allegations of sexual abuse against a Catholic priest who worked during the 1990s at a parish in Lawrence County.

The Rev. John Fitzgerald, 66, has been placed on administrative leave from his post as pastor of Our Lady of Peace Church in Conway, Beaver County. Bishop David Zubik of the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese informed parishioners of Fitzgerald’s leave in a letter distributed during Masses on Sunday, according to The Associated Press.

During the leave, Fitzgerald, who has denied the accusations, will not be permitted to perform church sacraments or identify himself as a priest. He has been removed from parish housing and is not permitted to wear clerical clothing, said diocesan spokesman the Rev. Ron Lengwin. The diocese has placed Fitzgerald in temporary housing for the duration of the investigation.

Fitzgerald served as administrator from 1991 to 1995 of St. Anthony Catholic Parish in Bessemer, Lengwin said. St. Anthony merged more than 10 years ago with St. Lawrence Parish in Mahoning Township to form Christ the King Parish.

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

August 4, 2014

Names of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct made public

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 08/04/2014

Plaintiffs’ attorney Jeffrey Anderson released the names of eight priests from the Diocese of New Ulm who had been “credibly accused” of sexual abusing minors.

Six of the names had previously been made public through lawsuits, but two — the Rev. John L. Gleason and the Rev. John M. Murphy — had not. Both men have since died.

The other priests are David A Roney, Francis Markey, Vincent Fitzgerald, William J. Marks, Michael G. Skoblik and Douglas L. Schleisman. Schleisman is the only one believed to still be alive.

Anderson obtained the names through a deposition taken by his co-counsel, Michael Finnegan, of the Rev. Francis J. Garvey, as part of two lawsuits. Garvey served on the priest personnel board of the diocese and was privy to information about offending priests.

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

Bishop reveals make up of advisory panel on child abuse response

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A retired Appeals Court judge and prominent Anglican will chair an independent panel set up to advise the Maitland-Newcastle Catholic diocese on its response to a child abuse inquiry.

The Special Commission of Inquiry into child sexual abuse in the Maitland-Newcastle Diocese was scathing of the Catholic Church’s handling of paedophile priests.

Commissioner Margaret Cunneen described evidence given by two senior Hunter priests Monsignor Allan Hart and Father William Burston as unimpressive.

Bishop Bill Wright stood both men down from advisory roles and said he would set up an Independent Advisory Panel to help him decide whether further action was necessary.

He has today announced retired judge Kenneth Handley QC will chair the panel.

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

Pedophile’s transfer angered priest

MINNESOTA
Mankato Free Press

By Dan Nienaber
dnienaber@mankatofreepress.com

NEW ULM — A former Diocese of New Ulm priest told attorneys he was so angry when he learned a known pedophile priest from Ireland had been sent to Minnesota that he immediately kicked the priest out of a chemical dependency program in Willmar.

The Rev. Francis Garvey was being interviewed by Michael Finnegan, an attorney with the Jeff Anderson & Associates law firm, for a deposition for two lawsuits that have been filed in Brown County. One of the lawsuits accuses the Rev. Francis Markey, who died in 2012 in Ireland while awaiting trial for raping a 15-year-old boy in 1968, of sexually assaulting a Henderson boy while temporarily serving at a church there in 1982.

Markey was serving at churches in the Catholic Diocese of New Ulm while going through a chemical dependency program Garvey oversaw at the former Regional Treatment Center in Willmar, Garvey said during the deposition. Markey and several other priests had been sent to the program from the Servant of the Paraclete facility in New Mexico, where priests were sent to be treated for pedophilia.

Garvey, who was 81 at the time of the January deposition, said Markey was one of about 10 priests he had removed from the program after they were accused of molesting someone in Minnesota. He also told Finnegan officials with the Servant of the Paraclete usually told him about the priests being sent to Willmar who had been treated for pedophilia, but they hadn’t told him about Markey’s background.

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

Just because they shout the loudest, doesn’t mean they’re right

CHICAGO (IL)
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on August 4, 2014

The big discussion at the 2014 SNAP conference was “everybody’s favorite pontiff,” Pope Francis.
Journalist Jason Berry—who faced raised eyebrows for earlier comments criticizing SNAP’s methods and “skillset“—told the group at his conference speech that SNAP should work strategically to “get a place at the table” and negotiate with the Vatican. (Note: Berry did apologize to the larger group and individuals for his July 29 remarks)

As much as I like and respect Jason, I think he is being suckered in by former Fox News journo/now Vatican communications guy Greg Burke’s carefully crafted Papal PR Machine. It’s the machine that always ensures there are plenty of photographers around to take photos of the Pope washing the feet of an Islamic woman, driving a car, living in a small apartment, and personally calling letter-writers. (In case you haven’t noticed, the PR move of calling letter writers was so successful, it’s been copied by Barack Obama, who is facing abysmal favorability poll numbers).

But just because the papal PR machine is shouting the loudest, doesn’t mean it’s right.

Fortunately, survivors ain’t buying it. I, for one, think a few “authentic gestures” are required.

What’s an “authentic gesture,” you ask?

Authentic gestures DO NOT include secret meetings with carefully picked survivors (who are asked to attend Mass and are sworn to secrecy until after the meeting). Authentic measures are NOT apologies, and certainly do not describe the deliberate and criminal cover-up of sexual abuse as “sins of omission.”

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

Investigation Continues After Beaver Co. Priest Accused Of Sexual Abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburgh

[with video]

Lynne Hayes-Freeland

BEAVER COUNTY (KDKA) – Over the weekend, parishioners of Our Lad of Peace in Conway learned their pastor, Rev. John Fitzgerald, was being placed on administrative leave.

It’s because of an ongoing investigation into allegations he sexually abused a minor, almost 20 years ago.

“An allegation had been brought against him, it’s the only allegation, one person and he was removed from ministry temporarily,” said Fr. Ron Lengwin, spokesman for the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese.

That means Fr. Fitzgerald can not wear clerical air or identify himself as a priest as long as he investigation is ongoing. He has denied that the abuse took place.

The diocese is not saying where it happened, but has asked both the Lawrence County and Allegheny County Distrcit Attorneys to investigate.

Fr. Fitzgerald was affiliated with a number of churches throughout the Pittsburgh area. But during the 1990s, which is the focus of the investigation, he was the chaplain at Pittsburgh International Airport.

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

Court document: Number of priests accused child sexual abuse triples

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

Madeleine Baran St. Paul, Minn. Aug 4, 2014

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has acknowledged that at least 103 priests have been accused of child sexual abuse — more than three times the number previously disclosed to the public in December.

Related:
Betrayed by Silence: An investigation in four chapters
Accused priests: Who they are, where they served, what’s alleged
July 22: Ramsey Co. judge rules clergy sex abuse case may go to trial

The total includes the 34 priests “credibly accused” of abuse whose names Ramsey County Judge John de North ordered the archdiocese to release in December.

The disclosure of the full list came in a court document referenced by a victim’s attorney at a Ramsey County District Court hearing today. The total number of archdiocesan priests accused of child sexual abuse had not previously been reported.

For months, lawyers for the archdiocese have argued aggressively that many priests have been falsely accused and that their names should not be released. Van de North agreed last year to place the names of the so-called “non-credibly accused” priests under seal. He appointed a special master to oversee requests to unseal names and address other disputes.

But it remained unclear how many priests’ names had been sealed.

In an interview after the hearing, archdiocese lawyer Tom Wieser declined to explain how the archdiocese determines whether an allegation is credible. He also declined to say whether the archdiocese has reported every allegation to police.

Over the past eight months, the archdiocese has released another 14 names of priests whose abuse allegations it describes as “substantiated.” It’s not clear whether those names are among those sealed by the judge.

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

FATHER FRANCIS GARVEY DEPOSITION: NEW ULM PRIESTS ACCUSED OF SEXUAL ABUSE IDENTIFIED

MINNESOTA
Jeff Anderson & Associates

In a deposition taken on January 24, 2014 Father Francis Garvey identified Diocese of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct. To-date, the Diocese of New Ulm refuses to publicly release its list of priests accused of sexual misconduct, or information about the priests.

Archbishop John Nienstedt served as Bishop of the Diocese of New Ulm from 2001 to 2007 before his appointment as Archbishop of St. Paul-Minneapolis. As Bishop of New Ulm, Nienstedt oversaw the Diocese of New Ulm’s compilation of identities and other information regarding its priests accused of sexual misconduct for the John Jay Study.

New Ulm Priest Photos 8-4-14

Nienstedt John Jay Study statement 2004

List of New Ulm Diocese Priests Accused of Sexual Misconduct

New Ulm Diocese Sexual Misconduct Information

Fr-Garvey-deposition-01-24-14_Redacted

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Conway priest placed on leave after abuse allegations

PENNSYLVANIA
Times Online

Updated: 4:31 pm, Mon Aug 4, 2014.

By Kirstin Kennedy and Eric Poole Calkins Media

CONWAY — Federal authorities are investigating allegations of unspecified sexual abuse against a local Catholic priest steaming back to the late 1990s.

The Rev. John Fitzgerald, 66, was removed from his post as pastor of Our Lady of Peace Church in Conway and has been placed on administrative leave. Bishop David Zubik of the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh informed parishioners of Fitzgerald’s leave in a letter distributed during Masses on Sunday, according to the Associated Press.

During the leave Fitzgerald, who has denied the accusations, will not be permitted to perform church sacraments or identify himself as a priest. He has been removed from parish housing and is not permitted to wear clerical clothing, said diocesan spokesman the Rev. Ron Lengwin. The diocese has placed Fitzgerald in temporary housing for the duration of the investigation.

Fitzgerald served as administrator from 1991 to 1995 of St. Anthony Catholic Parish in Bessemer, Lawrence County, Lengwin said. St. Anthony merged more than 10 years ago with St. Lawrence Parish in Mahoning Township to form Christ The King Parish.

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Scandals causing more Germans to leave Catholic church, cardinal says

GERMANY
National Catholic Reporter

Catholic News Service Aug. 4, 2014

MAINZ, GERMANY

A German cardinal warned that the number of Catholics leaving his country’s church is “alarmingly high” and urged an end to “scandals and vexations” involving clergy.

“There’s no doubt these figures must make us think. We’ve obviously suffered a loss of trust and credibility which has rarely happened so violently,” Cardinal Karl Lehmann of Mainz wrote in a column published in the Aug. 3 issue of Faith and Life, the diocese’s weekly newspaper.

“The church isn’t just another club, and all efforts must now be made to prevent more scandals through repentance and renewal,” wrote Lehmann, a former president of the German bishops’ conference.

The column followed the release of new church data that showed a sharp increase in Catholics removing their names from parish and diocesan membership rolls.

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Home fit for an archbishop ; $1.1 million house is at Assumption Seminary

TEXAS
San Antonio Express-News

BY ABE LEVY : AUGUST 4, 2014

Editor’s note: This article was originally published on June 4, 2009.

For about 30 years, home to three San Antonio archbishops has been an 800-square-foot apartment above administrative offices at Assumption Seminary.

By late summer, the doors will open on a new $1.1 million house for Archbishop José Gomez on the same seminary campus. Called the Good Shepherd Center, the 5,000-square-foot building will be paid for by private donations, San Antonio archdiocese officials said.

Donors described it as a long-awaited upgrade for Gomez and his successors, a reward for his long hours and a tool for future fundraising and improved hospitality of religious and civic dignitaries.

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Accused priest uses pulpit to blame victim

LOUISIANA
The IND

The ugly specter of pedophilia has returned to haunt the Catholic Diocese of Lafayette, yet on Sunday churchgoers seemed unfazed by allegations that a predator may still be lurking in its midst.

The new allegations came from a four-part investigative series by Minnesota Public Radio, which uncovered a recently unsealed federal lawsuit against the diocese. The court files include a victim statement given in 1992 against three priests from the diocese, one being the Rev. Gilbert Dutel of St. Edmond Catholic Church in Lafayette.

The relationship with Dutel, the victim claims, started when he was 9 or 10 years old and lasted for about six years, eventually including two more priests from the diocese, the Rev. David Primeaux and the Rev. Lane Fontenot.

After a week’s worth of local media coverage, Dutel addressed the elephant in the room during Sunday’s services, prompting a standing ovation from churchgoers, according to this report from The Daily Advertiser.

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How Much House Should a Bishop Inhabit?

UNITED STATES
Stocking the Corners

August 4, 2014 by Jennifer Fitz

I live in a relatively small house. Not Third World Shack small, but the square footage per person makes most first-world “Small Houses!” fans gaze longingly at off-site storage options. I have friends who squeeze way more children into way less space, and friends who do it the other away around. We’re happy with where we fall on the real estate spectrum, grateful for what we have and making the best use of it we can.

CNN, on the other hand, is very worried about People Whose Homes Are the Wrong Size. Well, not just any people. They aren’t worried about publishing executives, or journalists, or graphic designers and IT guys. They must already have the right size homes. It’s bishops, don’t you know. So let’s talk about the clerical housing crisis.

1. Priest & bishops very rarely control where they live.

You get assigned to a job, and the house comes with it. It might be magnificent, it might be horrifying, it might have a deadly elevator. 98% of priests surveyed* report that they’ve had to live someplace very, very tacky. Can you, the current resident, do anything about the situation? Sometimes yes, sometimes no.

2. It’s not “your” house to do with as you please.

Unless they’ve gone and used their personal funds to rent an alternate location, the rectory or bishop’s residence does not belong to the occupants. It’s typically the property of the diocese, and each priest or bishop is just a temporary resident. Your local parish priest probably has to fill out an acre of paperwork just to get new wallpaper in the bathroom, because the diocese wants to make sure that no disastrous DIY horror show is awaiting Father Replacement a year from now. The bishop has to not just consider his own needs, which might be minimal, but also what every bishop for the next fifty years is going to reasonably need.

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Names of New Ulm Priests Accused of Sexual Misconduct Released

MINNESOTA
KSTP

By: Megan Stewart

Attorneys for a man suing the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona have released names of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct.

On Monday, attorney Jeff Anderson released a deposition transcript of Father Francis Garvey, a priest and former top official of the Diocese of New Ulm. Anderson says in his deposition, Garvey identified New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct.

New Ulm had refused to release the list in the past.

Diocese of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct, as identified by Garvey in a Jan. 24, 2014, deposition and civil lawsuits:

* Father David A. Roney
* Father Francis Markey
* Father Vincent Fitzgerald
* Father William J. Marks
* Father Michael G. Skoblik
* Father John L. Gleason
* Father Douglas L. Schleisman
* Father John M. Murphy

Archbishop John Nienstedt previously served as bishop in New Ulm from 2001 to 2007. It is not known if any priest named on Monday served during Niensted’s tenure.

Last week, Nienstedt flatly denied any knowledge of abusive priests during his time in New Ulm. When asked if he had ever knowingly had a priest in the diocese that was accused of sexual abuse during his time as Bishop, Niensted’s said no.

The release of names comes after a hearing in Ramsey County District Court on the Diocese of Winona’s motion to change venue in the Doe 1 vs. Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and the Diocese of Winona.

Judge John Van de North denied the request.

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Child sex abuse inquiry uncovers more victims

UNITED KINGDOM/AUSTRALIA
The Australian

MICHAEL MCKENNA AND AMANDA GEARING THE AUSTRALIAN AUGUST 05, 2014

AN independent commission of inquiry into child sex abuse in Australia and England by one of the Anglican Church’s most powerful clergymen and its subsequent cover-up has been finalised, with the year-long probe uncovering new victims of the serial pedophile.

Archbishop of York John Sentamu said the inquiry confirmed the “seriousness of the crimes’’ committed by the late Robert Waddington, who rose to become the church’s head of education in Britain after serving as a school principal in Queensland during the 1960s.

The inquiry, ordered in May, 2013, after an investigation by The Australian and The Times newspapers exposed Waddington as a pedophile, also led to an ongoing probe into other Anglican clergy who served in the Diocese of York in the past 70 years.

The newspaper investigation revealed English church officials and senior Australian Anglicans failed to report to police the allegations of abuse made in 1999 by a former Queensland student, Bim Atkinson, and similar claims made in 2003 by Manchester choirboy Eli Ward. Archbishop Sentamu is expected to release the inquiry report, by English judge Sally Cahill, next month.

In a statement, Archbishop Sentamu said he hoped the church would learn from the “systemic failure’’ that allowed the child abuse. “Whilst it is never possible to put right the wrongs that have been done, the seriousness of the crimes which have been committed makes us determined both to acknowledge our responsibility and our shame for our failure to protect children in the past, and to respond far more positively to those victims who bravely come forward to share their experience today,’’ he said.

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Outrage over diocese paying for renovations to former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns’ property

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By FIONA HENDERSON Aug. 5, 2014

BALLARAT’S Catholic diocese paid for renovations to former Bishop Ronald Mulkearns’ Great Ocean Road property.

The diocese footed the bill, believed to be about $60,000, for converting the Fairhaven home’s garage into an office after the former Ballarat bishop retired in 1997.

Skipton builder Charlie Robinson, who carried out the works, said the office included a wall of floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and a custom-made desk using American Oak veneers.

Mr Robinson said, from memory, the initial garage conversion cost $40,000, with about $20,000 used to fit it out.

However, due to the length of time that has passed, Mr Robinson does not still have the original documentation.

He also said he was told to give Bishop Mulkearns “whatever he wants” and send the diocese the bill.

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Norwalk pastor goes on trial today for sexual assault

CALIFORNIA
Press-Telegram

By Greg Yee, Press-Telegram

POSTED: 08/04/14

A Norwalk associate pastor accused of molesting as many as 20 female church members over the past eight years is scheduled to stand trial today.

Jorge Juan Castro, 55, was arrested in September after reports of the abuse. He was charged with six felony counts in connection with the alleged sexual assaults of four women between ages 18 and 39 while he worked as an associate pastor and counselor at Las Buenas Nuevas Church, 11910 Alondra Blvd.

The alleged crimes took place between 2004 and 2012.

Although 20 women reported being assaulted by Castro, only four were willing to speak with Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Detectives.

Castro’s alleged victims were primarily Spanish-speaking, undocumented immigrants. He is accused of using this against them, threatening them with deportation.

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‘Trust Us,’ Said The Bishop

LOUISIANA
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • August 4, 2014

A Catholic reader in south Louisiana sent me over the weekend this story about how Bishop Michael Jarrell of Lafayette, La., is refusing to release the names of abusive priests that the diocese settled lawsuits against. In particular, Jarrell won’t release to the local newspaper, the Daily Advertiser, investigation on a diocesan priest who had been accused in the 1990s of sexual abuse, but who was recently discovered by Minnesota Public Radio, in a powerful report about the connection the grotesque 1980s abuse case in Lafayette has to Minneapolis’s current agony, to be pastoring a Lafayette parish. Excerpt:

Jarrell told The Advertiser on Wednesday the allegations against the priest still serving were investigated and found to be unsubstantiated.

The Advertiser asked Jarrell to release the Diocese’s investigation file or report on the priest still serving in order to clear his name and show the public the allegations were investigated properly.

Jarrell responded through [diocesan spokesman Msgr Robert] Greene that retired Bishop Harry Flynn conducted the investigation in 1992 and the police were not involved.

There’s no record that Flynn or any other investigators met with the alleged victim, Greene wrote. There’s very little in the file and no report, he said.

Abbeville attorney Anthony Fontana Jr., who represented some priest abuse victims, told The Advertiser this week that Flynn told him the priest had gone away for treatment and been “cured.” The priest had been accused of sexually abusing a boy and making advances toward adult males.

Greene said in response to our questions that medical information about personnel is confidential, but that the priest “has never been sent by the Diocese for treatment for pedophilia.”

The connection to Minneapolis is that the Vatican sent in Bishop Harry Flynn to clean up the mess in Lafayette. He launched his episcopal career on the reputation he built for taking care of business in Lafayette. He later became archbishop of Minneapolis. According to the MPR report, Flynn’s reputation was a sham, built largely on public relations.

The Catholics of Lafayette have no reason to trust their diocese’s word in this matter. In particular, the MPR report shows why there is absolutely no reason to trust the integrity and truthfulness of Archbishop Harry J. Flynn in the Lafayette matter. More institutional cover-up means an even greater loss of trust. As an outsider, all of this is a fascinating, if troubling, example of how men who run bureaucracies serve to deconstruct their authority, both personal and institutional. It is simply bizarre to me to thing that in 2014, bishops think this kind of thing is going to succeed. But who knows? The reader who sent the item wrote:

I am seeing all the voices of Catholic orthodoxy in Lafayette rally behind Bishop Jarrell, and perhaps there is credible reason to believe in the innocence of the singular priest prompting the Advertiser’s report. Still, this policy of the diocese is indicative of a culture of abuse.

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Court to hear arguments for releasing Twin Cities archdiocese’s priests’ names

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JEAN HOPFENSPERGER , Star Tribune Updated: August 4, 2014

Court hearing to determine legal standard for releasing the names of accused priests.

Which priests accused of sexual misconduct should have their names and files made public?

That’s the question that a Ramsey District Court judge will hear arguments for Monday morning, as part of an ongoing clergy abuse case marking its way through the court.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has argued that the names of priests should only be made public when there is significant evidence that a priest engaged in criminal sexual misconduct or that the accusation was not false.

The names of every priest accused with little evidence should not be made public, its lawyers have said.

Attorney Jeff Anderson, representing an alleged child victim of a priest, has argued that the standard for making the names public should be much broader.

Any priest who poses a risk to children — documented through a psychiatric diagnosis, self-report or other documentation — should be made public, he has argued. Ramsey District Court Judge John Van de North will also hear the archdiocese’ motion to move the high profile sex abuse lawsuit out of Ramsey County because of its widespread publicity.

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Gander priest under RCMP investigation, relieved of duties

CANADA
CBC News

A Roman Catholic priest in central Newfoundland has been relieved of his duties with the church and is under investigation by the RCMP.

Richard Salas, 44, originally from the Philippines, was the parish administrator at St. Joseph’s in Gander.

Church parishioners were told of his removal during weekend services.

The church did not elaborate on why Salas is being investigated by police.

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Priest abuse survivors group marks milestone

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

BY FRANCINE KNOWLES Religion Reporter August 2, 2014

When Barbara Blaine launched a group 25 years ago to help people sexually abused by Catholic priests, the reception was icy.

It was “utter scorn and disbelief for years by parishioners and church officials,” said David Clohessy, national director of the Chicago-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP. “We would hand out leaflets to publicize our support group outside of a church. The police were called. Parishioners would shout at us and sometimes shove us or spit on us.”

And today?

“We have far less of people calling us liars,” said Blaine, who serves as president and was sexually abused as a child by a priest.

“Parishioners come out and take a flier and say, ‘We’re so grateful for you all for being here. Thanks for speaking up.’ We still get people who complain, but many recognize and appreciate that we’re exposing it.”

SNAP is holding its annual conference in Chicago this weekend as it marks its 25th year. What began as a small, informal group of victims has grown into an international network with more than 19,000 members in 65 U.S. cities and 79 countries.

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Cardinal O’Malley calls on Scituate parishioners to end 10-year vigil

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Jeremy C. Fox | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT AUGUST 02, 2014

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley has asked the last Massachusetts congregation holding a vigil in an officially closed Catholic church to accept a Vatican court’s ruling that the Boston Archdiocese may sell or re-use the building, effectively ending the occupation.

In a letter dated July 29, O’Malley asked parishioners at St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church in Scituate to comply with the June denial by the Apostolic Signatura, the church’s highest court, of their final appeal seeking to block the sale, rental, or repurposing of the building.

“Your participation in the appeals process presumed that you would accept the final decision, even if it were not favorable to your desired outcome,” O’Malley wrote. “Now we are simply asking for demonstration of your good faith.”

But a leader of the defiant congregants who formed the nonprofit Friends of St. Frances Xavier Cabrini said Friday that they remained steadfast, and he invited the cardinal to come to Scituate, or any place of his choosing, to sit down with them and find a solution.

“Our whole philosophy’s been the same from the very beginning: It’s either open us back up as a fully functioning parish or sell us the church and set us free,” said Jon Rogers, 55.

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Parishioners Refuse To Allow Scituate Church To Close

MASSACHUSETTS
CBS Boston

By Christina Hager, WBZ-TV Correspondent
August 3, 2014

SCITUATE (CBS) – They refuse to leave. Despite a plea from Cardinal Sean O’Malley, members of St. Frances in Scituate vow they won’t quit the round-the-clock vigil they’ve kept for nearly a decade.

“The people who should be in jail right now are the convicted pedophile priests, not the faithful of St. Frances Cabrini,” says Maryellen Rogers. “So Cardinal Sean, Come and meet us in good faith. Have open and honest dialogue, and don’t use an eight-and-a-half by 11 piece of paper to do your shepherding.”

She’s referring to a letter the Cardinal sent to the group after they lost an appeal to the Vatican’s highest court last month. It urges members to accept the ruling, and leave the building the Church tried to close and sell in 2004 in the wake of the priest abuse scandal. The letter says, “A refusal to accept the judgment of the church in this matter would be contrary to the purpose for which you sought recourse.”

The group held a meeting Sunday morning, saying they have one last prayer to “appeal the appeal.” They say they have new information that shows inconsistencies in the financial records of the Boston Archdiocese.

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Church to ask pope to probe archdiocese $

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Herald

Monday, August 4, 2014
By: Laurel J. Sweet

Iron-willed parishioners of a long-shuttered Scituate church, advised by Cardinal Sean O’Malley it’s time to turn out the lights and move on, voted unanimously yesterday to ask Pope Francis to investigate the Archdiocese of Boston’s finances — even as they gird for the possibility of being forcibly evicted.

“I’m going to lay on the floor. They’re going to have to carry me out,” 88-year-old Evelyn Morton threatened over homemade coffee cake in the vestry of St. Frances X. Cabrini Church on the 3,568th day of the faithful’s vigil.

Calling the Archdiocese a “tyranny,” occupation organizer Jon Rogers told the Friends of St. Frances X. Cabrini, “We all woke up in America this morning. That not only gives us the right to voice our opinion, but to direct our future.”

Canon law consultant Peter Borre of the Council of Parishes, who’s been helping diehard parishioners of deconsecrated Mount Carmel Church in East Boston stave off a wrecking ball, told several dozen supporters — some openly weeping — “the whole rationale for turning this church into condos” is contradicted by the Archdiocese of Boston’s latest public annual report, which he said shows the nonprofit reaped $41 million in surplus revenues in Fiscal Year 2013.

“How do you reconcile the sworn poor-mouthing the Archdiocese uses to justify the selling off of this church with its own numbers?” Borre asked.

Archdiocese spokesman Terrence Donilon responded, “Mr. Borre is misleading people. The $41 million is mostly money raised by parishes for the parishes. So even though it shows up on the combined statements of the archdiocese’s books, it can not be tapped by the archdiocese for any purpose it chooses (i.e., their suggestion to reopen St. Frances). These are the resources of the parishes.

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Newcastle solicitor says national agency needed to compensate child abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

A Newcastle solicitor who has acted for hundreds of child abuse victims is recommending the establishment of a national agency to manage financial compensation, mostly funded by the Catholic Church.

In a submission to the child abuse Royal Commission, solicitor Peter Kelso says there is a need for a national approach to Redress Schemes.

He says current state schemes are ad-hoc with entitlements ranging from a few thousand dollars to hundreds of thousands depending on whether a victim was abused in a church or state-run institution.

He says the taxpayer should not have to foot the bill either.

“It doesn’t take Einstein to work out the Catholic Church is the captain of the team here,” he said.

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Names of New Ulm Priests Accused of Sexual Misconduct to be Released

MINNESOTA
KSTP

[with video]

Created: 08/03/2014 KSTP.com
By: Tim Sherno

Attorneys for a man suing the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and Winona on Monday will release the names of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct, according to the deposition of a retired New Ulm priest.

In a press release, attorney Jeff Anderson announced that following a hearing in Ramsey County District Court Monday morning, his office will “release a deposition transcript of Father Francis Garvey, a priest and former top official of the Diocese of New Ulm. Father Garvey identified Diocese of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct.”

Late last week, Archbishop John Nienstedt flatly denied any knowledge of abusive priests during his tenure as Bishop of New Ulm. When asked if he had ever knowingly had a priest in the diocese that was accused of sexual abuse during his time as Bishop, Niensted’s answer was simple and direct: No.

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Scituate parishioners to continue fight against sale of church

MASSACHUSETTS
Wicked Local Scituate

Parishioners vowed Sunday to continue fighting a decade-old battle to keep open the officially-closed Catholic church in North Scituate – despite Cardinal Sean O’Malley’s request that they accept a June ruling by the Vatican’s highest court that the Boston Archdiocese may sell the building.

By Jessica Trufant
The Patriot Ledger
Posted Aug. 4, 2014

SCITUATE – Two days after Cardinal Sean O’Malley asked parishioners to end their decade-long occupation at the closed St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church, parishioners have again vowed not to leave.

In a July 29 letter, Cardinal O’Malley urged parishioners to end their occupation and comply with the Apostolic Signatura’s ruling that the Boston archdiocese may sell the building. The Apostolic Signatura is the Vatican’s highest court.

“The archdiocese did not take any action to disrupt the vigil during the continuance of the canonical appeal process,” Cardinal O’Malley wrote. “We participated in good faith, trusting that you were doing so as well. A refusal to accept the judgment of the church in this matter would be contrary to the purpose for which you sought recourse.”

While the archdiocese has considered St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Church a deconsecrated building since October 2004, parishioners have kept its doors open through a round-the-clock vigil that has gone uninterrupted for 3,575 days.

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‘Conformist’ younger clergy wary of Francis, Archbishop of Dublin warns

IRELAND
The Tablet

04 August 2014 14:54 by Sarah Mac Donald

Pope Francis’ courage is causing disquiet among those with “a very conformist and closed Catholicism” the Archbishop of Dublin has warned.

In a speech given in Melbourne, Archbishop Diarmuid Martin referred to a young curate who recently told his parish priest he was not at all happy with some things the Pope had said.

The young priest felt they “were not in line with what he had learned in the seminary” and he suggested that they were “making the faithful insecure and even encouraging those who do not hold the orthodox Catholic beliefs to challenge traditional teaching.”

The archbishop warned conservative and progressive Catholics against becoming “closed in” within our own ideas. He also acknowledged that Irish Catholicism had a strong tradition of strict teaching.

Responding to the comments, Fr Seamus Ahearne of the Association of Catholic Priests said the Archbishop’s words were “apt” and that the Church in Ireland needs to hear more comments like this.

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Pope reinstates priest involved with Sandinista politics

VATICAN CITY
Gazzetta del Sud

Vatican City, August 4 – Pope Francis has reinstated a South American priest who had been penalized in the 1980s for his political activities, including involvement with the Sandinista movement in Nicaragua. Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockman, 81, had been suspended in by then-pope John Paul II. Among other activities, d’Escoto had publicly expressed his support for the Sandinista National Liberation Front and, after the Sandinistas took office in 1979, d’Escoto became minister for foreign affairs until 1990 under Nicaraguan president Daniel Ortega. After the defeat of the Sandinistas in the 1990 elections, d’Escoto continued to be active politically and in June 2008 was elected president of the United Nations General Assembly.

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Tebartz begnügt sich jetzt mit 180 Quadratmetern

DEUTSCHLAND
Die Welt

Beste Lage, zwei Balkone, toller Blick: Der geschasste Limburger Bischof Tebartz-van Elst zieht in Regensburg in eine Etagenwohnung in einem Gründerzeit-Haus. Führende Priester raten ihm zu Offenheit.

Herrlich liegt das Haus am Rande der Altstadt von Regensburg. Der historische, im Krieg kaum zerstörte Stadtkern ist ein Glanzstück mittelalterlicher Baukunst und gehört zum Welterbe der Unesco.

Von den oberen Stockwerken des frisch sanierten Altbaus aus blickt man auf einen der schönsten gotischen Kirchenbauten nördlich der Alpen, den Regensburger Dom St. Peter. Die alte Römerstadt am nördlichsten Knick der Donau ist tief katholisch geprägt, “kleines Rom” wird Regensburg von Klerikern genannt.

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‘Bling Bishop’ moves into luxury Bavarian flat

GERMANY
The Local

Germany’s bling bishop, who blew €31 million on renovating his headquarters, has been given a luxury apartment in an upmarket area of Regensburg after being forced to resign from his post.

Bishop of Limburg Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst earned his name overseeing a lavish renovation project at his diocese in central Germany. Costs included €213,000 spent on a fish tank, €20,000 on light switches and €350,000 on wardrobes.

He was suspended by Pope Francis in October last year, after details of the spending emerged and he resigned in March.

In June, his diocese said he would move to Regensburg, Bavaria, but according to Welt am Sonntag, the disgraced bishop will not exactly be slumming it.

The 54-year-old is moving into the most upmarket area of the city into a 180m2 apartment, which will be ready for him in four weeks time.

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Vatican bank’s TV investment loss showed cardinal’s power

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

BY PHILIP PULLELLA
VATICAN CITY Mon Aug 4, 2014

(Reuters) – Two years ago, the Vatican bank invested 15 million euros in an Italian television company that makes family movies, including films about popes and a series about a bike-riding country priest who helps police solve crimes.

The Vatican’s then Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone ordered the investment in Lux Vide SpA, which he said shares the Holy See’s “lofty goal of evangelization”.

Bertone, who was the second-in-command to former Pope Benedict, pushed the deal through despite objections from the bank’s director and board members, who thought the expense was too big and not justified for the bank, according to current and former bank executives.

Last month, the Vatican booked a loss for the entire amount spent, as part of a wider review of Vatican finances that has also led to the closure of hundreds of accounts at the Institute for Religious Works, or IOR by its Italian acronym, as the bank is called.

Bertone, who still stands by the decision to invest in the television company, said that when the bank approved the deal it did so with the board’s unanimous consent.

The zeroing of the Lux Vide investment is emblematic of Pope Francis’s effort to loosen ties between the Holy See and Italy’s business and political world, a longstanding network of relations the Argentine pontiff considers improper to the Church’s religious mission.

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UPDATE: Priest Denies Sex Abuse Allegations

LOUISIANA
KATC

Father Gilbert Dutel, the St. Edmond’s Catholic Church priest who is accused of sexually abusing a child back in 1992, denied those accusations in an address to his congregation on Sunday.

According to The Daily Advertiser, the church gave him a standing ovation at the end of his address, in which he apologized for the recent controversy surrounding the case. “I maintained my innocence then, and I maintain my innocence now,” says Dutel. He went on to thank those backing him for their support and phone calls after a Minnesota Public Radio report delved into sex abuse allegations dating back to the 1970’s. He also expressed his gratitude to Bishop Michael Jarrell, whose “willingness to stand” by Dutel “hasn’t been easy.”

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Still No Excuses For Those Who Defend The Society of Saint John

UNITED STATES
Christ or Chaos

THOMAS A. DROLESKEY

As noted six weeks ago in the preface to the posting of the Special Report on the Society of Saint John that I wrote in September and October of 2000, the investigation that I conducted at the behest of two laymen who had served on the Society’s board of advisors before resigning in protest over what they concluded was reckless fiscal mismanagement and a refusal to heed any advice on practical matters. The report was submitted to the Diocese of Scanton and to Father Urrutiogity in the October of 2000, prompting a “Bishop” Timlin to issue a statement to me that is completely laughable in light of all of the evidence that came to light later. Equally laughable is the assertion made on March 22, 2006, by the “papal” nuncio to Paraguay, “Archbishop” Orlando Antonini, to attorney James Bendell that “no trace of this Society remains anywhere in Paraguay.”

Those subsequent events demonstrated that an episode involving “skinny dipping” on the property of the Society of Saint John in Shohola, Pennsylvania, in the summer of 2000, which was disturbing in and of itself, was an indicator of far greater problems. Those problems that could have been forestalled in the 1980s in Argentina if then Father Alfonso de Galaretta of the Society of Saint Pius X, then the Society’s District Superior in Argentina, had not rejected the conclusion reached by the then rector of the Society’s seminary in La Reja, Argentina, Father Andres Morello, Father Urrutigoity had engaged in homosexual behavior as a seminarian.

Alas, Father Alfonso de Galaretta, who was consecrated a bishop by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in Econe, Switzerland, on June 30, 1988, was predisposed to disbelieve Father Morello, who was consecrated a bishop in 2005, because he, Father Morello, was a sedevacantist. In this way, you see, the truth about then seminarian Carlos Urrutigoity was obscured by the resentment of the action taken by “The Nine” in 1983, thus predisposing Bishop de Galaretta at the time to disbelieve the accusations against Urrutigoity and thus recommend this predator to be accepted at Saint Thomas Aquinas in Winona, Minnesota. A summary of this situation can be found at The Early Years of Father Carlos Urrutigoity’s homosexual career.

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The lavish homes of American archbishops

UNITED STATES
CNN

By Daniel Burke, CNN Belief Blog Editor

Clearly, “lifestyles of the rich and religious” doesn’t cut it for Pope Francis.

The pontiff has said it “breaks my heart” to see priests and nuns driving the latest-model cars.

He’s blasted “airport bishops” who spend more time jet-setting than tending to their flocks.

And he’s warned against church leaders who bear the “psychology of princes.”

The Vatican fired one such “prince” last year: German Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst — aka “The Bishop of Bling” — who spent $43 million to remodel his opulent pad.

(Bronze window frames? $2.4 million. Getting on the wrong side of the Pope? Far more pricey.)

“God save us from a worldly Church with superficial spiritual and pastoral trappings!” Francis said in his book-length blueprint for the church.

Say what you will, but this Pope puts his preaching into practice.

The message seems clear, no?

But are American archbishops following Francis’ lead?

A CNN investigation found that at least 10 of the 34 active archbishops in the United States live in buildings worth more than $1 million, according to church and government records.*

That’s not counting hundreds of retired and active Catholic bishops in smaller cities, some of whom live equally large.

Among archbishops, Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York leads the pack with this 15,000-square-foot mansion on Madison Avenue, in one of the priciest corridors of Manhattan.

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Kincora: Westminster probe will see suspects ‘shaking in their boots’

NORTHERN IRELAND
Belfast Telegraph

BY JAMES HANNING – 04 AUGUST 2014

A man who was raped by Kincora housemaster William McGrath has said that a Westminster inquiry into child abuse that includes the notorious boys’ home will have some people in Northern Ireland “shaking in their boots”.

Clint Massey, a former resident, said a local inquiry would not get to the truth of what happened at the east Belfast children’s home in the 1970s.

As recently as a fortnight ago, he self-harmed, at the age of 57, slashing his wrists in frustration after it appeared that the investigation into historic abuse was to be ditched because of a lack of funds.

“It has to be done from Westminster,” said Mr Massey. “If it stays local, a lot of people will be happy. There are too many people in Northern Ireland, predominantly Protestant, who don’t want it looked at.

“But I hope there are people shaking in their boots. They may be old men now but I don’t care. There’s no statute of limitations on this. I think there are lots of people shaking. I hope they’re expecting a knock on the door, but an investigation can’t dig deep here [in Northern Ireland]. At Westminster, they have the authority, and they can do it if they want to.”

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Accused rabbi no longer active in Sharon temple

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Jennette Barnes | GLOBE CORRESPONDENT AUGUST 03, 2014

Rabbi Barry Starr, who in May resigned from his 28-year position with Temple Israel of Sharon amid allegations surrounding an extramarital sexual relationship and payments to an alleged extortionist, remains connected to the congregation “in hearts and minds” but is no longer involved in temple activity, its president says.

Starr has sold his Sharon home and plans to move out of the area as early as this month, temple president Arnie Freedman said in an interview. The Conservative congregation is still reeling from the loss of its beloved religious leader, during whose tenure the congregation had grown, and who had held national and regional leadership positions in Conservative Judaism.

As the investigation into the alleged extortion continues, Temple Israel has been forced to compensate for the void left in synagogue life.

Rabbi Leslie Gordon of Needham has been named interim rabbi on a part-time basis for some services from September through June, including for the High Holidays. She has previously led some of Temple Israel’s parallel High Holiday services — simultaneous services held at the temple, but not in the sanctuary, to accommodate an overflow crowd, she said.

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Maine Voices: Will the Pope Francis of last year please step to the forefront again?

UNITED STATES
Portland Press Herald

BY BILL SLAVICK

Half a century after John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King and John XXIII created a moment of hope, we face environmental doom, nuclear Armageddon, war between the starving masses and corporate greed served by push-button weaponry and mercenary savagery, and conflicts everywhere to control natural resources.

American blacks are again disenfranchised, the rambunctious in jail. And the Catholic Church’s Vatican II re-engagement with the world has been abandoned for doctrinal parsing, celibate hierarchs’ obsession with sex and renewed clerical domination, indifferent to the greatest exodus in 2,000 years – whole generations lost.

Might the charismatic pope lead us out of the wilderness in refocusing the church on living the Gospel? Arguably, Francis’ witness, his challenge to “the idolatry of money” in “Gaudium Evangelii” (“Joy of the Gospel”) and his moves toward collegial governance have been laying a foundation both for essential church reform and a worldwide mobilization to save the race from itself.

But lack of movement raises doubts:

• Francis has not challenged the monarchical structure that encouraged patriarchal domination and clericalism and hid widespread sex abuse. No bishop has been held accountable for complicity in abuse. Dubious censures (targeting U.S. nuns), firings and excommunications continue, still with no vehicle for redressing clerical wrongs.

• Francis speaks of the equality of women but uncritically espouses the theologically flawed, even dishonest, concoctions that argue women are not made to lead: “Jesus did not ordain women” – or men. Women’s patience is waning.

• Church leadership must finally get sex right. They must abandon untenable arguments for clerical celibacy and against contraception and the remarriage of people who have been divorced, and the facile evasion of responsible consideration of lesbian, gay and bisexual sexual orientations, transgender identity and LGBT relationships. Little may come from October’s synod on family, with bishops ignoring mutual love as a goal of marriage to argue against contraception and same-sex unions and the Vatican dismissing the sense of the faithful.

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Pittsburgh diocese suspends Beaver County priest during sex-abuse investigation

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Chris Fleisher
Sunday, Aug. 3, 2014

A Beaver County priest who once served as chaplain at Pittsburgh International Airport and an Air National Guard station has been placed on administrative leave while authorities investigate allegations that he sexually abused a child in the late 1990s.

The Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh said on Sunday it reported the accusations against the Rev. John “Jack” Fitzgerald, 66, pastor of Our Lady of Peace Parish in Conway, to the district attorneys of Allegheny and Lawrence counties, where the incidents allegedly took place.

Fitzgerald denied committing any acts of sexual abuse, the diocese said. He cannot administer the sacraments, dress in clerical attire or identify himself as a priest while he is on leave. The diocese placed him in a temporary residence, and he could not be reached.

“If a determination is made that Father Fitzgerald did what he is accused of, those restrictions will become permanent,” Bishop David Zubik wrote in a letter read to all Masses at Our Lady of Peace this weekend. “If it is determined that the allegation is unfounded, all that is possible will be done to restore Father Fitzgerald’s reputation and return him to ministry.”

The Rev. Ron Lengwin, diocesan spokesman, said only one person accused Fitzgerald of abuse. Lengwin declined to comment on any specifics of the accusations.

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Truth & reconciliation.

UNITED STATES
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho August 3, 2014

Neither canon law nor civil law processes can help the Catholic Church establish true accountability for the sexual-abuse scandal, argued Jennifer Haselberger during a talk she delivered yesterday at a conference for victims of clerical abuse. Haselberger–former top canonist for the struggling Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis–resigned in protest last year before going public with damning accounts of the way the archdiocese had handled cases of priests accused of sexual misconduct. Noting how difficult it was to acknowledge her role as “a perpetrator”–not of abuse itself but as part of a system that enabled it–she challenged her former colleagues in the Twin Cities and elsewhere to subject themselves to an examination of conscience with respect to their own roles in the scandal.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests held its annual conference in Chicago this weekend, marking the organization’s twenty-fifth anniversary. Speakers included Jason Berry, whose pioneering reporting–much of which ran in the National Catholic Reporter–introduced the scandal to a national audience; historian Garry Wills; Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke, who served as an inaugural member of the U.S. bishops’ National Review Board; and Haselberger.

Responding to Pope Francis’s call for “the whole church to find the grace to weep, to feel ashamed and to make reparation” for the sexual-abuse crisis, Haselberger sought to find “concrete actions” the church might take to establish accountability. But she did not spend much time looking for accountability in canon or civil law, which do not “have anything of significance to offer in this regard.” While canonical procedures can be helpful in clarifying the status of accused clerics and removing them from ministry, “the processes are by their very nature incapable of producing the results sought by Pope Francis, or of reconciling the one abused with the broader faith community.”

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Bishop Michael Jarrell Sees No Reason To Release Names Of Sexually Abusive Priests

LOUISIANA
Inquisitr

Bishop Michael Jarrell, a decade removed from the Diocese of Lafayette and its insurers paying out $26 million to the families of children molested by priests, doesn’t see the point in releasing the names of the guilty.

In a recent post from The Advertiser, it was revealed that the news site had queried for the names, but were rebuffed.

“Bishop Jarrell sees no purpose in such action,” Monsignor Richard Greene, media liaison, wrote in response to The Daily Advertiser‘s request for the priests’ names.

The Advertiser claims that it made the request after sworn statements from the 1990s came to light recently, including allegations by a young man that a priest still ministering in Lafayette sexually abused him. The priest and Diocese have denied the young man’s allegations.

“The obvious purpose is that failing to reveal these names may pose a serious threat or danger to even more innocent children in this diocese than these men have already injured,” Ray Mouton wrote in an email to The Advertiser.

More from the report:

Mouton is the attorney who represented Gilbert Gauthe in the first widely known case of pedophilia by a Catholic priest in the Diocese of Lafayette. Now living in France, Mouton campaigns for the rights of survivors of abuse, co-authored a 1985 report hailed by the media as the most significant document issued in the priest sex abuse scandal, and wrote In God’s House, a novel drawn from his extensive experience dealing with this issue.

In 2004, Jarrell said the Roman Catholic Diocese of Lafayette and its insurers paid about $26 million to 123 victims of priests who served in the diocese between 1950 and 2002.

The names of those priests were never made public despite policies by the Catholic Church to be transparent about child sexual abuse issues.

“It is unconscionable, not to mention unchristian, for a Catholic bishop to shield and protect the identity of men whom he has stated have had credible complaints of sex abuse made against them for which his diocese paid financial settlements for victims, for these men are criminals who have committed heinous sex crimes against children,” Mouton wrote.

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Beaver Co. priest accused of sexual abuse, placed on leave

PENNSYLVANIA
WPXI

CONWAY, Pa. — The pastor of a Catholic church in Conway, Beaver County, has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation into an allegation of sexual abuse.

Father John Fitzgerald, 66, is accused of sexually abusing a minor in the late 1990s.

Officials from the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh reported the allegation against Fitzgerald, who is the pastor of Our Lady of Peace Parish, to the district attorneys of Allegheny and Lawrence counties, where the alleged abuse occurred.

According to the Diocese of Pittsburgh, Fitzgerald has not been previously accused of sexual abuse and denies the accusation. While on leave, he cannot administer the sacraments, dress in clerical attire or identify himself as a priest.

“If a determination is made that Father Fitzgerald did what he is accused of, those restrictions will become permanent. If it is determined that the allegation is unfounded, all that is possible will be done to restore Father Fitzgerald’s reputation and return him to ministry,” Bishop David Zubik wrote in a letter to parishioners of Our Lady of Peace.

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Dutel: Sex abuse allegations are false

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Katie de la Rosa August 4, 2014

The St. Edmond’s Catholic Church priest accused of sex crimes in the 1970s told parishioners Sunday that the allegations that he sexually abused a young boy and coerced young men into having sex with him are false.

“I maintained my innocence then, and I maintain my innocence now,” said the Rev. Gilbert Dutel to a packed sanctuary at the 11 a.m. Mass. The congregation gave him a standing ovation at the end of his five-minute address.

Dutel apologized to his church for having to “forfeit the time” to acknowledge this issue, which was raised last week by an extensive Minnesota Public Radio report that re-explored the widespread sexual abuse within the church in South Louisiana beginning in the 1970s. Similar crimes are alleged to have appeared in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Then-Diosese of Lafayette Bishop Harry Flynn “concluded the accusations weren’t credible,” Dutel said.

Flynn, however, along with predecessor Gerard Frey, has been accused of covering up allegations of priest pedophilia and sex abuse, including transferring accused priests, including the defrocked Gilbert Gauthe, from one church parish to another, The Daily Advertiser reported earlier this week.

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Beaver County priest facing sexual abuse allegations

PENNSYLVANIA
WTAE

CONWAY, Pa. —Father John Fitzgerald of Our Lady of Peace Parish in Conway, Beaver County, is accused of sexually abusing a minor, according to the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh.

Fitzgerald was placed on administrative leave during an investigation by the diocese.

Someone accused Fitzgerald of abusing him during the late 1990s, police said. Fitzgerald denies the claims.

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Bishop puts pastor on leave after ‘90s abuse claim

PENNSYLVANIA
Trentonian

CONWAY, Pa. (AP) — Pittsburgh’s Roman Catholic bishop has put a suburban pastor on administrative leave after receiving an allegation of unspecified sexual abuse against the cleric dating to the late 1990s.

Bishop David Zubik says the church is providing the Rev. John Fitzgerald with temporary housing away from Our Lady of Peace Church in Conway, Beaver County, where he’s on administrative leave as pastor while church and law enforcement officials review the allegations.

Zubik didn’t detail the allegations, but says prosecutors in Allegheny and Lawrence counties have been notified because the alleged abuse occurred in those jurisdictions.

Zubik said in a statement Sunday that the priest “has denied committing any acts of sexual abuse.”

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Priest Placed On Administrative Leave Over Alleged Sex Abuse Claim

PENNSYLVANIA
CBS Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) – A priest in Beaver County has been placed on administrative leave while a claim of sexual abuse is investigated.

According to a statement from the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh, Father John Fitzgerald, 66, is the subject of the investigation.

Fitzgerald is currently the pastor at Our Lady of Peace Parish in Conway.

The investigation stems from the claims that the victim was abused in the 1990s.

Fitzgerald denies the claims and has had no previous allegations of sexual abuse.

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Top Church Official Involved in Clergy Sex Abuse Hearing Set for Tomorrow

MINNESOTA
KAAL

[with video]

Created: 08/03/2014 KAALtv.com

(ABC 6 News) — On Monday, attorneys for a man suing the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis and Winona will release the names of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct, according to the deposition of a retired New Ulm priest.

In a press release, attorney Jeff Anderson announced that following a hearing in Ramsey County District Court Monday morning, his office will, “release a deposition transcript of Father Francis Garvey, a priest and former top official of the Diocese of New Ulm. Father Garvey identified Diocese of New Ulm priests accused of sexual misconduct.”

Late last week, Archbishop John Nienstedt flatly denied any knowledge of abusive priests during his tenure as Bishop of New Ulm. When asked if he had ever knowingly had a priest in the diocese that was accused of sexual abuse during his time as Bishop, Niensted’s answer was simple and direct, “No.”

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Former county priest accused of abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
New Castle News

By Staff
Associated Press

CONWAY — A priest who served in Lawrence County has been placed on leave after a sexual abuse allegation.

Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik has put a suburban pastor on administrative leave after receiving an allegation of unspecified sexual abuse against the cleric dating to the late 1990s. The abuse is alleged to have occurred in both Lawrence and Allegheny counties.

Zubik says the church is providing the Rev. John Fitzgerald with temporary housing away from Our Lady of Peace Church in Conway, Beaver County, where he’s on administrative leave as pastor while church and law enforcement officials review the allegations.

Zubik didn’t detail the allegations, but says prosecutors in both counties have been notified. Anyone with any information is asked to come forward.

Zubik said in a statement yesterday that the priest “has denied committing any acts of sexual abuse.” He said if it is determined that Fitzgerald committed the abuse, the leave would become permanent. But if it is determined that the allegation is unfounded, “all that is possible will be done to restore Fr. Fitzgerald’s reputation and return him to ministry,” he said.

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August 3, 2014

At SNAP conference, debate emerges about what will Pope Francis do

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Aug. 3, 2014 NCR Today

Pope Francis wasn’t present at the annual Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests conference, but on its second day his name created a running subplot to the ongoing survey of the group’s accomplishments in its first 25 years.

Barbara Blaine, SNAP founder and president, pushed back Saturday when she took the podium against earlier speakers who suggested Francis represented a change from previous popes. Change maybe in other areas, she said, but not on addressing clergy sexual abuse of minors.

“Most of us in SNAP are not optimistic about Pope Francis,” Blaine said in the opening to her speech. “He’s made real progress on church governance, he’s made real progress on church finances, but he has paid lip service to children’s safety.”

“We want to give Francis the benefit of the doubt but doing so does a disservice to children. Children need our skepticism; not our complacency. And children need papal action, real prevention steps; not apologies and promises,” she said.

Blaine went on to recap major moments of the scandal during SNAP’s existence — from the 2002 Boston Globe reports and the adoption of the Dallas charter, to grand jury reports out of Philadelphia 2005 and 2011, to the recent hearings of the Vatican before the United Nations — pausing at each relaying her expectations of significant change to follow but reported that none ever did.

thumbnail_ncr-aug-1.jpgTake a look inside our August 1 edition! Watch the video.
“I beg anyone who can show me that there’s been significant change, please do. Tell me how the children are safer,” she said.

At various points Saturday, speakers and conference attendees extended criticism to the media for exalting Francis to rock star status and not challenging or probing his record on abuse.

Earlier in the day, Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke, one of the original members to the lay-led National Review Board, said she looks at Francis “with cautious optimism” largely stemming from him emulating Vatican II principles. Still, she remains “anxious to see more action, particularly regarding the sex abuse scandal.”

Burke acknowledged Francis’ July meeting with abuse survivors at the Vatican and his apology and promises to hold bishops accountable.

“Certainly, this was a nice gesture; it will remain to be seen however whether that is all it was – a nice gesture,” she said.

Burke devoted much of her time to discussing truth and discipleship – what she called “the essential armor of Catholic life” – and urged the audience to remain vigilant in protecting children, regardless of what emerges from Rome and church leadership.

Author and Pulitzer-prize winner Garry Wells reflected Jason Berry from the previous night in believing Francis “is so far proving to be different,” citing as evidence U.S. bishops who have abandoned large mansions and who have mirrored the pontiffs outreach to immigrants.

[Related: “SNAP conference opens by looking back, looking ahead”]

He said the pope’s tone won’t become noticeable at the diocesan level until he appoints a new wave of bishops, which will take time. Additionally, the uniqueness that Francis’ predecessor, Benedict XVI, is alive and living in the Vatican also places the current pontiff “in a very ticklish spot,” Wills said.

“I don’t think we can just give the pope indefinite slack to catch up; on the other hand, we do have to realize No other pope has had his predecessor living, and not only living but living next door. It’s very hard to do something that would be a direct insult to him,” he said.

But a more critical lens of Francis reemerged in the day’s final panel, delivered by Anne Barrett Doyle and Terence McKiernan of BishopAccountability.org.

Barrett Doyle recapped research their organization has done in translating hundreds of court documents and news reports from Argentina about Francis’ record on abuse as cardinal-archbishop of Buenos Aires. She said the documents show that the at-the-time Jorge Mario Bergoglio, “stayed almost totally silent on [the abuse] issue.”

A review of archived homilies and statements from Bergoglio on the Buenos Aires archdiocesan website showed he discussed government corruption and income inequality but remained quiet on clergy sexual abuse, and said he never handled a case of an abusive priest.

Barrett Doyle also announced the website will launch a database of accused priests in the Philippines before the pope’s scheduled January trip.

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Conway priest accused of sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Robert Zullo / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The pastor of a Beaver County Catholic church has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation into allegations that he sexually abused a minor in the late 1990s.

The Diocese of Pittsburgh said in a news release today that the priest, John Fitzgerald, pastor of Our Lady of Peace Parish in Conway, denies “committing any acts of sexual abuse.” The abuse allegedly occurred in Allegheny and Lawrence counties and the allegations have been reported to the district attorney’s offices in those jurisdictions, the diocese said.

“Prior to this, no other allegation of sexual abuse against Father Fitzgerald has come to the Diocese of Pittsburgh,” the news release said.

While on leave, Father Fitzgerald will be unable to administer sacraments, wear clerical attire or identify himself as a priest, Bishop David Zubik said in the news release.

“If a determination is made that Father Fitzgerald did what he is accused of, those restrictions will become permanent. If it is determined that the allegation is unfounded, all that is possible will be done to restore Father Fitzgerald’s reputation and return him to ministry,” Bishop Zubik wrote.

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Police investigate sex claims at Bishops

SOUTH AFRICA
News 24

Cape Town – The police have launched a probe into the complaints of sexual abuse at Bishops Diocesan College in Cape Town.

According to the Sunday Times, police confirmed that the matter would be investigated by a unit that deals with child protection and sexual offences.

The newspaper reported that a senior investigator had met the school’s principal Guy Pearson and with the father of a boy who reported a teacher for inappropriate behaviour in 2009.

However, it is believed that prosecution will happen only if further complaints are lodged.

It emerged late last month that the school has been embroiled in a sex-abuse cover up scandal – involving two separate incidents – that goes back two decades.

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Editorial counterpoint: Archdiocese is working to restore trust, Nienstedt says

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: JOHN C. NIENSTEDT Updated: August 1, 2014

It is clear that we did not always handle abuse complaints as we should have, but I take responsibility for leading our local church to a new and better day.

To say that this has been a difficult year is quite an understatement. Here in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, Catholics have witnessed many troubling media reports, and many of us have had difficult conversations with friends and family about what it means to be Catholic and why we still profess the faith. I, myself, have been the subject of two investigations, which have brought with them more public scrutiny. I have received messages calling me a hypocrite, a domineering boss and a liar. Others have written that I am a courageous moral leader and a true shepherd. I am grateful to everyone who has taken the time to write.

In the end, it comes down to this: Eighteen years ago, Pope John Paul II chose me to serve the church as a bishop, an authentic successor of the Apostles. A bishop’s role is more like that of a father of a family than that of a CEO. I am bound to continue in my office as long as the Holy Father has appointed me here. I have acknowledged my responsibility in the current crisis we face, and I also take responsibility for leading our archdiocese to a new and better day.

I can only speak for myself and my actions, not the words or actions of others. Over the last year, I have re-examined the words I have spoken and the actions I have, or have not, taken, and I want to share this:

(1) I have created a new leadership team that operates under the philosophy of “Victims First.”

I have empowered a new team of bishops, parish and religious order priests, archdiocesan employees, lay Catholics and non-Catholics to assist me and provide consultation. They continually operate from the perspective of how we can best help victims of sexual abuse and their families. To make sure we retain this focus, I am hiring a new victims’ liaison, a lay professional who will serve as a continuous voice for victims on my consultation team. We have reached out to survivors of sexual abuse and have asked them to share their advice and insight as we continue addressing the recommendations made by the Safe Environment and Ministerial Standards Task Force. “Victims First” has become more than a philosophy; it has become standard operating procedure.

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Protecting children in the place they should be safest

UNITED STATES
World

By DICK PETERSON
Posted Aug. 2, 2014

Seven years ago, when a new member to Crossroads Community Church in Summerville, S.C., self-identified as a registered child sex offender, the pastor and elders saw it as a God-ordained call to action to examine their church policies to protect children. That new member steered clear of children in the church, but the church leadership wanted to ensure those working with children didn’t haven’t any wrong intentions.

“Many pastors fear volunteer child workers quitting because they are required to do training and background checks,” said David Branton, an elder and AWANA International board chairman. “But most teachers of children are dedicated workers who put children first. To be asked to do something that might protect a child shouldn’t be a problem.”

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Former youth pastor found guilty on sexual battery charges

FLORIDA
Daily Commercial

Posted: Saturday, August 2, 2014

Millard K. Ives | Staff Writer millardives@dailycommercial.com

A former Eustis youth pastor initially jailed in 2012 on allegations of sexually assaulting two developmentally disabled people at a group home and a child at a day care center has been found guilty.

In the three-day trial at the Lake County Courthouse, it took a jury about one hour on Thursday to bring back guilty verdicts for Kenneth Mar Hagins, 42, on one count each of sexual battery of a mentally defective person and lewd and lascivious molestation, according to the State Attorney’s Office.

Hagins remains at the Lake County jail and will be sentenced at a later date. Hagins faces 35 years in prison on the convictions, said Walter Forgie, the supervising assistant State’s Attorney at the Lake County office.

Hagins, of Tavares, was a youth pastor at a Eustis church and simultaneously worked for Pat’s Kidz World Development Center in Eustis and at an adult group home for SunriseArc, which serves developmentally disabled people, when the Lake County Sheriff’s Office and the Department of Children and Families initiated a joint investigation of him in July 2012.

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On Movies: Thrill of violence, soul of love

UNITED STATES
Philadelphia Inquirer

STEVEN REA, INQUIRER MOVIE COLUMNIST AND CRITIC
POSTED: Sunday, August 3, 2014

It’s the picture of innocence: a country priest in billowing cassock, strolling a rural road in Ireland’s windswept West, encountering a young girl, chatting with her about this, about that.

But then her father pulls up in a car, and angrily summons her. With an utterly vilifying look, he warns the cleric off.

“That scene encapsulates everything the movie is about,” says Brendan Gleeson, the Irish actor who plays Father James, a good priest in a bad world, in John Michael McDonagh’s stormy tale of reckoning, Calvary.

“It’s a powerful, troubling, funny moment,” says Gleeson, a familiar face in big Hollywood pictures (Edge of Tomorrow, the Harry Potters) and small British and Irish independents alike. “You can’t even talk to a child anymore. I mean, it’s not merely priests – I think any man, at this point, has to think twice about talking to children on the road.

“There’s something fundamentally broken when that’s the way things are.”

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August 2, 2014

SNAP conference opens by looking back, looking ahead

CHICAGO (IL)
National Catholic Reporter

Brian Roewe | Aug. 2, 2014 NCR Today

The 25th anniversary conference for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests opened here as you would expect for any organization reaching a milestone. Leading members highlighted moments for retrospection and besto

“You have all chosen to put yourself out there … you take risks,” said David Clohessy, the group’s executive director at the opening session Friday night.

He said what SNAP does – protect the vulnerable … — is “not rocket science … more precious and rare than genius, it takes courage, it takes passion, it takes commitment.”

The conference brought together 350-plus people for a three-day conference that will see SNAP leaders like Clohessy, its president and founder Barbara Blaine and Peter Isely, but also Fr. Tom Doyle, attorney Jeffrey Anderson, Illinois Supreme Court Justice Anne Burke (an original member of the U.S. bishops’ National Review Board), and Jennifer Haselberger.

Those outside of SNAP who spoke Friday night also offered praise for its efforts of the past quarter century, but more than that posed a question: how will those efforts look in the years ahead?

Pointing to an increasing awareness of the abuse issue in other parts of the globe, in part because of SNAP’s efforts, journalist Jason Berry said as “this critical mass will keep building,” it’s important for the group to think about its long-term plan.

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Sect ‘cannot possess the seminary’: Priest explains about Neocatechumenal Way

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Written by
Gaynor Dumat-ol Daleno
Pacific Sunday News

An attempt to transfer the title of one of the Guam Catholic Church’s largest real estate assets, the former Accion Hotel in Yona, has become a focal point in recent discussions about the local church’s financial transparency and leadership shakeup.

The controversy started weeks ago when an anonymous group of Guam Catholics issued a public challenge for Archbishop Anthony Apuron to release audited statements of the Church’s income, liabilities and assets, particularly the state of ownership of the former Accion Hotel.

The 100-room, oceanside hotel was bought more than a decade ago for $2 million, and could be worth $35 million to $75 million depending on estimates. It now is being used to host the Redemptoris Mater Seminary and a theological institute.

Monsignor James Benavente, who was recently fired from being the rector of the Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica, was one of several directors on the Archdiocesan Finance Council who were fired in 2012 after they voted against the proposed transfer of title to the property, documents state. Archbishop Anthony Apuron had written a letter to the council advocating the title change, documents state.

Businessman Richard Untalan, Sister Mary Stephen Torres and former government of Guam budget official Joe Rivera were the finance council officials who were fired.

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‘Tortured’ city priest sends SOS to Vatican

INDIA
Mumbai Mirror

By Yogesh Sadhwani & BAPU DEEDWANIA, Mumbai Mirror | Aug 2, 2014

Fr Conrad Saldanha was asked to spend a year at a Goregaon seminary after he was found guilty of misconduct. Over two years later, he continues to languish in deplorable conditions.

A Mumbai priest has written to the Vatican alleging “harassment and torture” at a Goregaon seminary after he “voiced concerns against wrongdoings within the system.”

Fr Conrad Saldanha, who was asked to spend a year at Archdiocesan Seminary in Goregaon East after he was found guilty in a complaint of misconduct by two female parishioners, alleged he has not been given a posting in any church and forced to live in deplorable conditions even 2 years after the ruling.

Fr Saldanha, who was a priest for 12 years and was last posted at the Sacred Heart Church in Santa Cruz, immediately challenged the order with the Vatican, saying it was “vitiated” and that he was “not given an opportunity to defend himself.”

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The Strange Silences of a Very Talkative Pope

VATICAN CITY
Chiesa

Not a word for the abducted Nigerian schoolgirls, nor for the Pakistani Asia Bibi, sentenced to death on the charge of having offended Islam. And then the audiences denied to former president of the IOR Gotti Tedeschi, driven out for wanting to clean house

by Sandro Magister

ROME, August 1, 2014 – On the feast of Saint Anne, patron of Caserta, Pope Francis made a visit to this city. Everything normal? No. Because just two days later Jorge Mario Bergoglio returned to Caserta on a private visit, to meet with an Italian friend he got to know in Buenos Aires, Giovanni Traettino, pastor of a local Evangelical church.

Initially Francis’s intention was to go only to visit his friend, with the bishop of Caserta left completely in the dark, and it took some doing to convince the pope to expand his schedule in order not to overlook the sheep of his fold.

In Francis the collegiality of governance is more evoked than practiced. The style is that of a superior general of the Jesuits who in the end decides everything on his own. This can be grasped from his actions, his words, his silences.

For example, Bergoglio has spent weeks behind the scenes cultivating relationships with the heads of the powerful “Evangelical” communities of the United States. He has spent hour after hour in their company at his residence in Santa Marta. He has invited them for lunch. He immortalized one of these convivial moments by giving a high five, amid raucous laughter, to Pastor James Robinson, one of the most successful American televangelists.

When no one knew anything about it yet, it was Francis who alerted them about his intention to go visit their Italian colleague in Caserta, and explained the reason: “To extend the apologies of the Catholic Church for the da

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Book author surprised to receive letter from the Vatican

CANADA
Nova News Now

By Tina Comeau
THE VANGUARD
www.thevanguard.ca

When Del Boudreau picked up his mail, the last thing he expected to see was a letter from the Vatican.

“His Holiness Pope Francis has received the kind gift sent for his acceptance,” reads the letter. “He appreciates the respectful sentiments which prompted this presentation.”

Boudreau had sent Pope Francis a copy of the book he recently wrote entitled Deliver Us From Evil. The book outlines the sexual abuse Boudreau suffered as an alter boy at the hands of a catholic priest.

He was around 11 years old when the abuse began but he wasn’t able to share his experience with others until he was 65 years old. He broke his silence in 2009. Finally sharing his story lifted a huge weight from his shoulders, he said.

Boudreau says the abuse was committed by Father Adolphe LeBlanc. Several others have also accused this priest of having abused them as young boys. Father LeBlanc died in 1971.

When his book first came out it was suggested to Boudreau that he should send a copy of it to the Pope. After some consideration he did.

“I mailed it. The postmistress said, ‘It’s been 33 years, I never mailed something to the Vatican, but there’s always a first time,’” Boudreau says.

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Archbishop Nienstedt says predecessor assured him sex-abuse complaints were resolved

MINNESOTA
Catholic Culture

Catholic World News – August 01, 2014

Having rejected calls for his resignation, Archbishop John Nienstedt of St. Paul-Minneapolis has said that he made a mistake in assuming that his predecessor had dealt properly with sex-abuse allegations against archdiocesan priests.

Archbishop Nienstedt told an interviewer that when he arrived in Minnesota, he was assured by his predecessor, Archbishop Harry Flynn, and by the vicar general, Father Kevin McDonough, that sex-abuse problems had been resolved. He said that he accepted their assurances because of their “national reputations for being experts in this area.” (Archbishop Flynn had chaired the US bishops’ committee on sexual abuse.) “But I think that I know now I could have asked more probing questions,” Archbishop Nienstedt said.

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In remembering Bishop Donnelly, we are reminded of our imperfection

OHIO
Toledo Blade

BY TK BARGER
BLADE RELIGION EDITOR

I heard many nice things about Bishop Robert W. Donnelly since his death July 21. “He was a regular fixture in the neighborhood,” Msgr. Michael Billian, the priest of his home parish, Most Blessed Sacrament, said. That was the neighborhood where he grew up and where he returned when he retired, living first in the rectory with his brother, the Rev. Martin Donnelly, who was Blessed Sacrament’s priest, and then in a house the Donnelly brothers bought. “Even at the end, when he was a little confused about life, it was everybody’s job in the neighborhood to keep an eye out, and they did a beautiful job of doing that.”

At Blessed Sacrament after he died the talk “was very loving, more than anything about his gentleness; when he celebrated the sacraments; when he visited with people,” Msgr. Billian said. “That was just a great, strong impression. The soft gentleness was a strength of his and it opened him up to people, and they felt very welcomed in his life.”

“In the 65 years of my friendship with Bob Donnelly, never once, in no instance, did he ever say a bad word about anybody,” the Rev. Raymond Sheperd said in his homily during the bishop’s vigil on Monday. “He knew how to say good things or say nothing.”

The only bad in his life, it seems, might have been his saying nothing and being protective of colleagues during the church abuse scandal.

Claudia Vercellotti, a Toledo member of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, urged me to watch a 2006 documentary, Twist of Faith. The bishop is in about five minutes of the film and is accused of not acting on his knowledge in 1986 that a priest had sexually abused Central Catholic High School students. Ms. Vercellotti also criticized Bishop Donnelly for the diocese’s supporting and defending Gerald Robinson, the priest who died in prison July 4, convicted in 2006 of the 1980 murder of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl.

SNAP, now a 25-year-old organization, is a group of people who themselves suffered and still feel great hurt by acts of church leaders, and they continue to call on the hierarchy to tell the whole stories. We cannot forget why they speak out.

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Uprooting New Shoots in Paraguay, The Rude Diss, The St. Louis Proposal, and The Fault of Default.

UNITED STATES
Pewsitter

By Frank Walker
Pewsitter.com

The clergy of the Diocese of Ciudad del Este have made a powerful defense of their suspended Bishop, Rogelio Livieres, and popular yet removed Vicar General ,Fr. Carlos Urrutigoity, who, despite being released by a review board in the U.S., was recommended to del Este by none other than Cardinal Ratzinger. As the facts and accusations continue to play out, it appears we may have an ideological persecution on our hands. After years of successfully rebuffing attacks from the liberal majority bishops in the region and building a faithful enclave with the backing of Rome, the ecclesial adversaries will finally have their day.

**********************************************************************

Sandro Magister has a blockbuster expose out that reveals the extensive outreach and collaboration going on between the Pope and powerful Evangelicals in the U.S. and worldwide. It describes the actual time they’ve spent working together and contrasts this with the Pope’s relative shut-out for certain cardinals, faithful nuns, bishops, townspeople, and key leaders at the Vatican Bank. Once again, Magister notes the democratic ‘synodal’ rhetoric and compares that to the autocratic rule, the rude excuse, and cruel snub.

**********************************************************************

The SSPX outlet DICI has a lengthy discussion of the Pope’s “not feeling well” last-minute excuses and how frequently they are used. They also list the comments of health experts who are familiar with the Pope or some of his physical ailments, but as they discuss Antonio Mastino’s, “The Soap Opera of the Pope’s Health,” they reveal a pattern.

“Time again, Cardinal Angelo Scola, his direct rival at the conclave, is the one who suffers the consequences of Bergoglio’s ‘mild indispositions’. Twice already last year, after he had obtained an audience with Francis, ‘at the last minute’ he had someone tell him that he had ‘a mild indisposition’. An indisposition that some people by now think concerns Scola.”

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Church choirmaster jailed for six years for abusing boys

UNITED STATES
Northern Echo

By Neil Hunter

A CHOIRMASTER who used his respected church links as “a cloak” to groom and abuse boys was last night (Friday) starting a six-year prison sentence.

Robert Lambie, now 77, treated his two victims to days out and made them feel special before persuading them to be photographed in their underwear.

The former music teacher moved on to abusing them once their complete trust had been won, a judge at Teesside Crown Court said yesterday.

Lambie lived in Darlington and was highly thought-of within the church and the community – but led a secret double-life only his victims knew about.

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Should churches, denominations bear responsibility for unethical clergy?…

UNITED STATES
Associated Baptist Press

Should churches, denominations bear responsibility for unethical clergy? Some ethicists say yes.

By Vicki Brown

Ministers are responsible for their actions as individuals, sometimes by civil authorities and ultimately by God. But what responsibility, if any, should the local church and the denomination bear for unethical behavior of their pastors and other church ministers?

That question is difficult for religious bodies that follow a congregational form of governance and that stance has become the primary basis for refusal by many groups, including many Baptist denominations, to compile lists of ministers caught in unethical or immoral behavior, particularly sexual misconduct.

Establishing an organization-wide procedure is more difficult for denominations without a hierarchical structure, says ethicist Joe Trull. “As Baptists, we want to maintain our belief in local church autonomy and are hesitant to be viewed as telling churches what to do,” said the retired professor of Christian ethics at New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary and former editor of Christian Ethics Today magazine. “I think denominations could do more but they are so afraid of someone accusing them of exerting control.”

Healthy accountability structures within the local church are a way to minimize the possibility of clergy misconduct, says Daniel Darling, vice president for communications at the Southern Baptist Convention’s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission. The pastor is placed under that accountability as a form of service to the congregation, Darling noted.

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When sex offenders confess to clergy: Three mistaken beliefs

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

Boz Tchividjian | Aug 1, 2014

This past week, a Florida pastor was arrested for failing to report the suspected sexual abuse of a child. Over a year ago, one of the three young victims informed the pastor of the ongoing abuse. Though he provided the victim with counseling, the pastor never reported the crime to the police because he “didn’t have proof”.

How does a pastor respond when informed of allegations concerning child sexual abuse? All too often the responses by pastors are too little too late. Here is a simple rule that should be followed by pastors and everyone else: Immediately report allegations of child sexual abuse. Not only will you potentially save the life of a child and stop the heinous acts of a predator, but you will also most likely be following the law.

Approximately 27 states specifically designate members of the clergy (pastors) as mandated reporters. Another 18 states designate all adults to be mandated reporters of suspected child abuse. This means that in almost every state of the country, pastors are mandated by law to report suspected child abuse or face criminal prosecution. Even in those limited circumstances when a pastor is not a mandated reporter, nothing prevents him/her from voluntarily reporting suspected abuse to the authorities.

Perhaps the most confusing issue for most pastors related to reporting child sexual abuse is what to do when a perpetrator is the one who discloses the abuse. If a perpetrator confesses to sexually abusing a child to a pastor, every effort should be made by the pastor to insure that the offender immediately reports his/her crime to the authorities. This should certainly be the expectation if the perpetrator has expressed a desire to demonstrate repentance. Expressing repentance for a crime without voluntarily submitting to the civil authorities is manipulation, not repentance. The dark reality is that most offenders who confess abuse to a pastor won’t report themselves to the authorities. In those circumstances, the pastor has a fundamental decision to make; remain silent and protect a perpetrator, or report the abuse and protect a vulnerable child.

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Affidavit: Cowboy pastor told abuse victim that he was ‘relieving stress’

TEXAS
Fort Worth Star-Telegram

BY DEANNA BOYD
dboyd@star-telegram.com

FORT WORTH — A pastor at Cowboy Way Church in Alvarado, who is accused of molesting a teen boy several years ago, allegedly told the victim that it was his way of relieving stress “which helped him be a stronger pastor thereby bringing God to more people,” according to an arrest warrant affidavit.

The encounters, the affidavit states, occurred at the Fort Worth home that Dan Haby Jr., then pastor of the now defunct Stockyard Community Church, shared with two ministers from that church.

The alleged victim, who police have said was 15 when the alleged abuse began, had volunteered at Haby’s church and frequently spent weekends at Haby’s home along with two other teen friends.

He told police that, at that time, he planned on becoming a minister himself and that Haby mentored him.

But while the other two teens would sleep in the living room, Haby soon invited the alleged victim to sleep in his room on a mattress he had put on the floor next to his bed, the affidavit states.

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The intertwined history of SNAP and NCR

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Dennis Coday | Aug. 1, 2014 NCR Today

I hope you take the time to read David Gibson’s article on the 25th anniversary of the Survivor’s Network for those Abused by Priests, or SNAP. The history of that organization and its battle to defend victims of sexual abuse from priest abusers and ecclesial cover ups is an important chapter in the larger history of the Catholic church.

That history is also intrinsically intertwined with the history of NCR, something that I have been rediscovering in my preparations for NCR’s 50th anniversary, which is Oct. 28. Readers of our print publication will know that I have been writing a history column, highlighting significant events and personalities NCR has reported on over the last 50 years. Here is an excerpt from a column I did in June, looking back 29 years:

Issue of June 7, 1985, Vol. 21, No. 32

Priest child abuse cases victimizing families; bishops lack policy response
Two articles totaling 11,000 words, spread over eight pages of this 24-page issue, were NCR’s entry into covering the sexual abuse of minors by clergy and the subsequent failure of bishops and chancery personnel to address these crimes.

Jason Berry gives a detailed account of Fr. Gilbert Gauthe, a priest of the Lafayette, La., diocese who in the fall of 1985 would stand trial for the sexual abuse of at least a dozen boys. The diocese had already paid out $4 million in settlements trying to keep the case out of court and families of victims silent.

Arthur Jones’ article — a roundup of cases that were beginning to emerge in Los Angeles, Portland, Ore., San Diego, New York, Newark, N.J., Providence, R.I., and Pittsburgh — would find the patterns of the Gauthe case repeated across dioceses.

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Abogado defensor: “John O’Reilly no es Karadima”

CHILE
Cooperativa

Este viernes comenzó en el Tercer Tribunal Oral de Santiago el juicio en contra del sacerdote de los Legionarios de Cristo John O’Reilly.

O’Reilly, acusado de presuntos abusos sexuales contra dos menores entre los años 2007 y 2012, se ha mostrado tranquilo en la audiencia, pero cabizbajo. Consultado por el tribunal si es que iría a declarar, respondió que por ahora no lo hará.

El abogado defensor Luis Hermosilla planteó ante la Corte las dudas por las cuales –en su opinión- el tribunal debería desestimar la acusación completa, aludiendo al bullado caso del sacerdote Fernando Karadima.

“John O’Reilly no es Karadima, y no lo es tanto con lo que hizo como lo que no hizo”, dijo el jurista.

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Hoy comienza juicio en contra del sacerdote John O’ Reilly por presuntos abusos sexuales

CHILE
La Tercera

por Constanza Cortés Miquel – 01/08/2014

Desde las 9.00 horas de hoy se llevará a cabo en el Tercer Tribunal Oral en lo Penal, el juicio en contra del sacerdote John O’Reilly, acusado de cometer presuntos abusos sexuales -de forma reiterada- en contra dos ex alumnas del Colegio Cumbres que habrían ocurrido entre 2007 y 2012.

Se espera que en el proceso, que durará cerca de dos meses, participen 97 testigos, de los cuales, seis lo harán en calidad de protegidos.

Junto a esto, la Fiscalía solicitó que las presuntas víctimas declaren desde una sala especial, para no tener contacto con el eclesiástico.

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Trial Regarding O’Reilly Sexual Abuse Charges are Underway:

CHILE
I Love Chile

The 4th Court of Santiago will hear from John O’Reilly, the former priest who is accused of committing sexual abuse against two underage students at Colegio Cumbres, where he performed functions as member of the Legionaries of Christ congregation for over a decade.

Charges were reported in August of last year, but formalized in 2014: O’Reilly has pleaded not guilty to the accused charges between 2007 and 2012. He has been suspended for the last 14 months.

An influential Irish priest amongst Santiago’s elite community in Las Condes, the 66-year-old was also the face, and principal collector, of the Legionaries of Christ in Chile.

In a 2012 interview with the Clinic, O’Reilly describes his persecution and subsequent future as a “dead man walking.”

The trial is expected to run for at least two months, with approximately 92 witnesses declaring statements.

In addition, the Court has resolved the request to take statements in the separate room of the Second Gesell Oral Criminal Court, per the public prosecutor and two complainants’ requests, which would allow testimony to take place without exposing the accused to the alleged victims.

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‘Calvary’ Review: Film Offers No Redemption Despite Perfect Opportunity and Title

UNITED STATES
Christian Post

BY SAMI K. MARTIN , CHRISTIAN POST REPORTER
August 1, 2014

“Calvary” (rated R) opens in theaters Friday, August 1 and offers the unpredictable story of a man abused by a priest in the Catholic Church and how his experience affects a so-called “good” priest in Ireland.

There’s a hymn by William R. Newell, “At Calvary,” that has the following refrain: “Mercy there was great and grace was free; pardon there was multiplied to me; there my burdened soul found liberty at Calvary.” Many may be familiar with this hymn and perhaps the film brought it to mind, but there is no mercy or grace to be found in “Calvary.”

The film focuses on the life of Father James, portrayed by Brendan Gleeson after he is threatened by a member of his congregation who confesses that he was sexually abused by a priest for five years and intends to kill James, a “good priest” in retribution. The intended assailant’s identity is known only to Father James, but those who watch ‘Calvary’ may recognize the voice.

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Criminal Charges Dismissed Against Father Philip Altavilla

PENNSYLVANIA
PA Homepage

A judge has dismissed criminal charges against a well-known priest from the Diocese of Scranton.

Father Philip Altavilla was charged in April with having inappropriate contact with a 13-year-old girl back in 1998.

The case was thrown out Friday morning because of a statue of limitations issue.

Father Altavilla’s accuser says the contact happened in 1998 but she did not come forward until this April (2014).

In dealing with a case like this, state law from 1998 dictates how long she legally had to come forward for criminal charges to be filed.

After examining the issue, a Lackawanna County judge said that time had passed and the District Attorney’s Office now agrees, saying they don’t plan to appeal.

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Chancery Court Removes Trustees From Sex-Abuse Victim’s Fund

DELAWARE
Delaware Law Weekly

August 1, 2014

A Catholic priest sexual-abuse victim’s relatives must be removed from overseeing a trust created to manage his settlement money after they spent most of the $345,676 to purchase themselves cars, jewelry and home renovations, the Delaware Court of Chancery has ruled.

Duane C. Hardy received a large cash settlement as a member of a class action lawsuit that filed sexual-abuse charges against the Catholic Diocese of Wilmington. He suffers from alcoholism, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder and told his attorney at the time that he thought others would better manage his settlement proceeds, according to court documents. Hardy’s older sister, Sherry Hardy, and her adult son, Michael Hardy, were appointed as the co-trustees.

Under the trust agreement, Sherry and Michael Hardy have “sole and uncontrolled discretion” to distribute or apply the funds “for the care, comfort, welfare, education or training” of Duane Hardy.
Duane Hardy received the initial payment of his proceeds in October 2011 and he split the amounts into two separate accounts at Wilmington Savings Fund Society. The two deposits totaled $9,000 less than the settlement’s total of $345,676. Roughly one week later, the first significant withdrawals from the trust accounts occurred. A $15,000 check written out to cash and a $21,700 debit withdrawal four days later were used to provide various gifts to Duane Hardy’s family and friends, according to court documents. However, Hardy denies that he authorized the withdrawals and contended that he only approved two gift payments totaling $3,000.

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Appeal result due next year

IRELAND
The Corkman

MARIA HERLIHY
Published 31/07/2014

A RETIRED priest who was found guilty of the serial sexual abuse of minors and teenagers by a secret Church court in March 2013 immediately appealed the decision – the result of that appeal is now expected early next year.

After the canonical decision, delivered in 2013, Dan Duane (76) immediately appealed the decision to the Apostolic Signature and the Pope, as he believed that his defence was not properly taken into account.

At Cork Circuit Criminal Court in 2011, Dan Duane denied a charge of indecently assaulting a woman, who is now middle aged, at an address in Cork in the Summer of 1980 when she was a teenager.

Mr Duane, of the Presbytery, Cecilstown, Mallow insisted that the woman’s allegations were “invented.” He was found not guilty at Cork Circuit Criminal Court three years ago. Judge Sean O’Donnabhain directed that he be found not guilty of indecently assaulting the teenager and he made the direction on the grounds of the 30-year delay in making the complaint.

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Bishop: ‘No purpose’ in releasing names of abusive priests

LOUISIANA
The Advertiser

Claire Taylor August 1, 2014

Ten years after admitting the Diocese of Lafayette and its insurers paid more than $26 million to the families of children molested by priests, Bishop Michael Jarrell this week refused to release the names of those priests.

“Bishop Jarrell sees no purpose in such action,” Monsignor Richard Greene, media liaison, wrote in response to The Daily Advertiser’s request for the priests’ names.

The Advertiser made the request after sworn statements from the 1990s came to light recently, including allegations by a young man that a priest still ministering in Lafayette sexually abused him. The priest and Diocese denied the allegations.

“The obvious purpose is that failing to reveal these names may pose a serious threat or danger to even more innocent children in this diocese than these men have already injured,” Ray Mouton wrote in an email to The Advertiser.

Mouton is the attorney who represented Gilbert Gauthe in the first widely known case of pedophilia by a Catholic priest in the Diocese of Lafayette. Now living in France, Mouton campaigns for the rights of survivors of abuse, co-authored a 1985 report hailed by the media as the most significant document issued in the priest sex abuse scandal, and wrote “In God’s House,” a novel drawn from his extensive experience dealing with this issue.

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Charges against Scranton priest dismissed

PENNSYLVANIA
Citizens Voice

TERRIE MORGAN-BESECKER, STAFF WRITER
Published: August 2, 2014

All charges against a suspended Diocese of Scranton priest accused of inappropriately touching a teenage girl were dismissed Friday.

Judge Michael Barrasse ruled the statute of limitations had expired on charges of indecent assault, corruption of a minor and criminal attempt at indecent assault against the Rev. Philip Altavilla.

Police charged the Rev. Altavilla, 48, former pastor at St. Patrick’s Parish in Scranton, in April after a woman came forward accusing him of indecently assaulting her in 1998.

The woman, then 13, claimed the priest gave her alcohol following a midnight service, then drove her home. Once in the car, he pulled her legs on his lap and began touching her feet and moving his hands up her leg.

Search warrants filed in the case revealed additional disturbing details as two city detectives said the Rev. Altavilla told them he searched the Internet for depictions of women being smothered with chloroform, strangled and sexually assaulted.

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August 1, 2014

Grand Blanc priest accused of inappropriate touching enters special program

MICHIGAN
MINBC News

GRAND BLANC — After being on paid administrative leave since May, Fr. Ken Coughlin, pastor of Holy Family Church, is taking a leave of absence. Fr. Coughlin faces allegations of inappropriate touching of students.

In a letter to parishioners today, Fr. Coughlin continued to claim his innocence, saying, “My hope is that the investigation will prove what I know to be true, that I am innocent of anything criminal.”

In the letter he also says the Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Lansing has asked him to, “Consider entering a program of assessment that assists clergy and religious with their ministry.”

Coughlin says he has agreed to the request.

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Charges dismissed against priest in assault case

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 27

SCRANTON, Pa. (AP) – A northeastern Pennsylvania judge has dismissed charges against a priest accused of plying a 13-year-old girl with alcohol and touching her inappropriately after a midnight Christmas Mass in 1998.

The (Scranton) Times-Tribune reports (http://bit.ly/1uPRgyh ) that Lackawanna County Judge Michael Barrasse dismissed charges against the Rev. Philip Altavilla. The judge ruled Friday that the statute of limitations had expired.

Altavilla had been charged with indecent assault and corruption of minors.

The accuser testified in May that Altavilla rubbed her feet and thigh. Defense attorney Paul Walker questioned whether the touching constituted indecent contact and also argued that the statute of limitations had run out.

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Vatican bank denies new chief has conflict of interest

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

Agence France-Presse August 1, 2014

The Vatican bank on Friday denied that its new chief executive faces a conflict of interest as his son works for a company brought in to audit the scandal-hit institution’s accounts.

Italian magazine L’Espresso reported that Jean-Baptiste de Franssu’s son works for Promontory Financial Group, which is conducting a forensic investgation into the bank and its client relationships.

Louis-Victor Douville works as a London-based analyst for the US company, according to its website.

“The question of a conflict of interest is not an issue for us because, by law, the AIF (the Vatican’s financial watchdog), has approved the appointment of our president,” bank spokesman Max Hohenberg told AFP.

The issue is the latest scandal to hit the Vatican bank, also known as the Institute for Religious Works (IOR), after a year of internal investigations led to the closure or suspension of thousands of suspicious, ineligible or inactive accounts.

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Amid resignation calls, Minn. archbishop says he will stay

MINNESOTA
Catholic News Agency

Minneapolis, Minn., Aug 1, 2014 / 12:30 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Archbishop John Nienstedt of Saint Paul-Minneapolis, facing calls for his resignation amid legal battles over the local Church’s handling of clerical sex abuse, apologized Wednesday but refused to resign.

“It comes down to this: 18 years ago, Pope John Paul II chose me to serve the Church as a bishop, an authentic successor of the apostles,” he wrote in a July 30 column at The Catholic Spirit.

“A bishop’s role is more like that of a father of a family than that of a CEO. I am bound to continue in my office as long as the Holy Father has appointed me here.”

“I have acknowledged my responsibility in the current crisis we face, and I also take responsibility for leading our archdiocese to a new and better day.”

The column began noting that “to say this has been a difficult year is quite an understatement.”

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SUPPORT TO BISHOP LIVIERES

PARAGUAY
Roman Catholic Diocese of Ciudad del Este

[RESUMEN EXPLICATIVO DE LA SITUACIÓN]

THE APOSTOLIC VISIT

The chapters in this story
1. LUGO AND LIVIERES
2. «ECCLESIAL COMMUNION»
3. RELIGIOUS PEOPLE
4. THE CLERGY
5. NEW SEMINARS FOR THE THIRD MILLENNIUM
6. STONE OF SCANDAL
7. FATHER CARLOS URRUTIGOITY
8. MONSEGNIOR PASTOR CUQUEJO
9. NEW COMMUNITIES
10. ECONOMIC ISSUES
11. JAVIER MIRANDA
12. LET’S NOT REPEAT THE STORY

Officially, the Apostolic Nuncio in Paraguay, in a public conference of 2 July 2014, announced that the Diocese of Ciudad del Este would receive an imminent Apostolic Visitation i«n order to offer an assistance for the good of that particular church» informally, the mass media said it was about a true «intervention to the Diocese» i.e. of a process that would end up, either with the resignation or with the deposition of our Bishop, and the stop to the work which has been going on.

We present now, an explicative summary that frames the milestone of this juncture with its facts and supporting documents. We do it in a plane and direct style of God’s People, and with the transparency and honesty to which Msgr. Rogelio accustoms us.

1. LUGO AND LIVIERES

The most famous Paraguayan bishop, with no doubt, is the «father-Bishop» Fernando Lugo, the Republic’s ex-president. He took on the presidency on august of 2008, after being dispensed of obligations as a consecrated bishop and reduced to the laical state.

He was deposed in 2012, after a political judgment in the Congress.

Lugo and the minuscule but intelligent left of the country would have never reached power and overridden the Red Party without alliance with the strongest minority of the country, the Liberal Party, and the massive support (expressed or tacit) of the hierarchical church. From decades, in Paraguay, there has been a systematically assignments as bishops with certain anti-red party tendencies and, moreover, soaked up in a blurry formation on the derived ideologues of the theology of liberation. …

7. FATHER CARLOS URRUTIGOITY

A separate chapter in this history of opposition to our bishop Livieres and to the new seminary in Ciudad del Este is, without a doubt, the attack against Father Carlos Urrutigoity. He arrived to the diocese in 2005 together with other priests and laymen who would later on establish the Priestly Communities of Saint John. Father Urrutigoity came to the diocese recommended by some cardinals with roles in the Vatican (one of whom was elected pope Benedict XVI a few days later). Father Carlos brought with him a long and harsh defamation campaign in the U.S. Full of calumnies, about which Msgr. Livieres wrote a detailed letter clarifying matters.

From the beginning, Father Carlos proved to be a close collaborator of the bishop, and due to this his case was used as a battle cry to question everything the bishop achieved pastorally in the diocese, specially concerning the formation of a new clergy. This was specially so because Father Carlos was intimately involved in the formation of the new seminary. He later left this activity to help with the diocesan curia.

The bishop’s continual refutations notwithstanding, a repetitive and self referential press continued to quote itself again and again, on matters of alleged “accusations of pedophilia” which, in reality, never existed. These defamation campaigns have been generally headed in Paraguay by the same newspaper that, prior to this time, had forced the resignation of another Bishop with the surname Livieres. (The courts of justice in that case showed as well the falsity of the accusations, all made by paid witnesses involved in a political maneuver to force the resignation of the bishop). At the same time, the press has been fueled by the same Paraguayan ecclesiastical opponents already mentioned above, who have influential contacts in the U.S. And in Rome, and with whom they share identical lobbies and political tendencies.

These sources came up with all sorts of things, except, of course, proofs of pedophilia. This was due to the simple fact that there were no accusations from any victims at all. All that could be repeated was a rehashed series of calumnies made by interested third parties. Consequently, there was no criminal process, nor any condemnatory judgments in any court of law whatsoever of any country, nor of the Holy See. To top it all off, Father Carlos’ heterosexuality was confirmed professionally by two independent psychological evaluations, one of which was in the U.S. and the other in Canada. These evaluations discarded any possibility of psychopathies or personality disorders.

Neither was it true that new accusations came up over time (always without any proof). All accusations made may be reduced to a stubborn and evil repetition of those invented years ago, not by alleged victims, but by two ideological persecutors of Father Carlos. These separately acted from their respective countries, fueling different campaigns at different times: one sustained a “cloister” campaign and the other a cybernetic and mass media campaign. The first persecutor was a “sedevacantist” Argentine priest who is of the opinion that no pope since John XXIII has been legitimately a pope, and who, in addition, had himself “consecrated as a bishop” outside of the legitimate Catholic hierarchy. The second detractor is an American man, a disgruntled ex-employee of the religious community founded by Father Carlos. He was disgruntled because he was disaffected from an educational project by Msgr. Timlin, bishop of the Diocese of Scranton, after the employee tried to illegally take over the project for his own purposes.

The sole accusation presented against Father Urrutigoity before the criminal courts of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in the U.S. (under the name of an adult by the name of Michael Prorock) was dismissed in limine (from the beginning) by two independent investigations by two state district attorneys in two separate counties of the State of Pennsylvania.

From the above two things appear as strikingly clear: First, that the accusations against Father Carlos Urrutigoity did not imply cases of pedophilia, since in the year 2000, the year of the alleged acts, the accuser was an adult; and second, that due to the district attorneys’ dismissal of any charges against Father Carlos, there was never a criminal indictment in the U.S. With respect to the Church’s canonical tribunals, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith denied any possibilities of starting a criminal process against Father Carlos for the same reason: there were no existing accusations of pedophilia.

This failure before the criminal courts seriously damaged the detractors’ lawyers’ case before the civil courts, diminishing any chances to obtain a judgment granting them a large monetary compensation, as is usual in American courts. These detractors began a civil case against the Society of Saint John, founded by Father Carlos, but in it they included for good measure and to assure deep pockets, the Bishop of Scranton, the Diocese of Scranton, the Fraternity of Saint Peter and the Academy of Saint Gregory.

To those not familiar with the ins and outs of legal cases in the U.S., it should be noted that in that country one may initiate at the same time and for the same cause a case before the criminal as well as the civil courts. Success in civil court means large monetary judgments to be paid by the defendant. Such success is substantially diminished where the criminal courts dismiss the complaints as without merit to be judged criminally. Yet, in the United States, it is still worth pursuing a civil case, even if in the criminal courts the parties have not reached the stage of trial due to lack of relevant facts or proofs. There, the possibilities to obtain monetary damages in a civil trial remain high. The cost of defending one self and going to civil trial is so high that many times complainants continue the case to force a large monetary settlement. In average, a diocese may spend over US $2,000,000 in attorneys and costs to defend a case all the way to the end. It remains typical in the system that parties, in order to avoid these large defense costs, reach an early monetary settlement with the judge’s approval.

The Society of Saint John, refused, on principle, to negotiate a settlement. Yet, it was forced to join as a party to a settlement agreement entered into by Msgr. Martino, the new bishop of the Diocese of Scranton, for a total of US $450,000. Of that amount the Society of Saint John had to contribute only US $55,000, an insignificant amount considering the usual amounts paid in these types of cases. This is explained by the fact that the accusing attorneys lacked any minimally solid proofs against the Society in order to demand any more from them, or to refuse a settlement and try to go to trial in civil court.

The Society of Saint John imposed as a condition to sign the settlement agreement that it be stated in writing that the accused were innocent of all charges and the accuser, for his own part, would renounce to any other posterior campaign of accusations or to any other civil action.

It seems that it holds true everywhere that “money talks,” without any concern about deceiving the public nor discrediting innocent people. Coming back to our actors of Ciudad del Este, on the 23rd of this month of July, 2014, in case 2014-6130 before the Juzgado Penal de Garantias No. 6 (Criminal Court No. 6) of the department of Alto Paraná, the district attorney in charge, Ms. María Graciela Vera Colman, requested the total and complete dismissal and filing away for lack of any proofs, of the accusations “filed” before such a court by a radio in Asunción, Paraguay, against Father Urrutigoity, by telephone, of all means! The accusations were the old “alleged sexual abuse of children, not mentioning any names of victims… on top of not identifying…. address and/or date or place in which such deeds allegedly occurred.” All accusations began from the diatribes made – and recorded – in a radio program of Radio Unión from Asunción, by the well known serial accuser Javier Miranda, who, when cited by the district attorney to appear in court to give his “sworn declaration,” never appeared but rather, valiantly disappeared stage left, showing his clear acting conditions.

Being a shepherd and not a mercenary who flees from the wolves, Bishop Livieres always remained adamant in defending the innocent. In the case of Father Carlos, Msgr. Livieres did the same even against those who, while recognizing the justice of the case, still found it imprudent to receive father Carlos in the Diocese and then to promote him to various positions, arguing that such actions may compromise the Bishop’s own image and his “ecclesiastical career”. However, Monsignor judged it healthier and more realistic to take advantage of the concrete human resources that Providence placed in his hands.

Despite the occasional media uproar and clerical protest, the Vatican respected the decision of the Bishop. After a prudent waiting time and accumulation of experience in the new Diocese, the Vatican authorized through the Apostolic Nuncio, and with the consent of the excardinating bishop, the incardination in Ciudad del Este of Father Carlos. That same year, the Vatican issued the laudatory letter consenting to the elevation as a Society of Apostolic Life the Priestly Communities of San Juan. Meanwhile, seminarians, priests, religious and laity of the Diocese, in their vast majority supported and continue to support the bishop and Father Carlos because they are witnesses to their ministry in the Diocese and to their human qualities and moral honesty. These supporting statements are not assumed. They are clearly manifested in written and signed statements available for anyone who wants to see. And when it came time to appoint a new Vicar General for the Diocese, consulted priests and lay leaders almost unanimously proposed father Carlos as the candidate of their choice.

It should finally be noted that when Bishop Livieres faced real corruption or violations of priestly celibacy, in any form, he did not hesitate to proceed, even facing high pressures, according to canon law, and to proportionally and medicinally punish the guilty.

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Paraguay: diocese defends bishop, says Cardinal Ratzinger recommended accused priest

PARAGUAY
Catholic Culture

[RESUMEN EXPLICATIVO DE LA SITUACIÓN – Ciudad del Este diocesis]

Catholic World News – August 01, 2014

The Diocese of Ciudad del Este, Paraguay, has published an aggressive defense of the leadership of Bishop Rogelio Livieres Plano, claiming that a priest who had been accused of abuse in the US was placed in ministry on the recommendation of then-Cardinal Ratzinger.

Bishop Livieres incardinated Father Carlos Urrutigoity, who had been accused of sexual abuse in Pennsylvania, into his diocese in 2005. The diocese stated that the priest “came recommended by some cardinals with functions in the Holy See (one of them, elected a few days later Successor of Peter).” In 2005, Bishop Joseph Martino of Scranton suppressed the Society of St. John– which had been known for its promotion of the extraordinary form of the Mass, but also criticized for reports of lavish spending– following accusations of sexual abuse against its founder, Father Urrutigoity. Bishop Martino’s predecessor, Bishop James Timlin, had suspended Father Urrutigoity’s faculties after a diocesan review board found an abuse allegation credible. In defending Bishop Livieres, the
Paraguayan diocesan website stated:

* In 2004, Paraguay’s bishops wrote to Pope St. John Paul II to protest his appointment of Father Livieres, a priest of Opus Dei, to the diocese, but the Holy See held firm.

* Bishop Livieres was the only bishop who publicly opposed the presidential candidacy of former bishop Fernando Lugo, who governed the nation from 2008 to 2012.

* Opposition to Bishop Livieres among religious orders intensified when he forbade the “political or ideological instrumentalization” of their work and when he called for the proclamation of the Gospel to indigenous peoples.

* Ten priests from his diocese, and 150 from across the nation, urged Pope Benedict XVI to remove the bishop after he sought to “renew ecclesial discipline.” Today, however, the vast majority of the diocese’s “young and numerous” clergy support him.

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Editorial: It’s time Nienstedt resigns for the church

MINNESOTA
West Central Tribune

By Tribune Opinion

Archbishop John Nienstedt said Wednesday that he plans to remain as the head of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

This is unfortunate that Nienstedt is putting his own wishes ahead of the church. It is time that the interest of the Twin Cities archdiocese and the state of Minnesota become paramount for the
The best thing is for Nienstedt to end his service to the Twin Cities archdiocese.

Nienstedt has been under fire for months for his handling of clergy sex abuse cases.

“I have, however, been too trusting of our internal process and not as hands-on as I could have been in matters of priest misconduct,” he wrote in the Catholic Spirit this week.

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Charges Against Priest Dismissed

PENNSYLVANIA
WNEP

SCRANTON — Charges were dismissed in Lackawanna County court against a priest accused of improper acts with a teen girl.

A judged dismissed the charges Friday morning against Fr. Phillip Altavilla, a well-known priest who held one of the most prominent positions in the Diocese of Scranton.

Fr. Altavilla was charged in April with child sex abuse charges, along with furnishing alcohol to minors after alleged contact with a 13-year-old parishioner in 1998.

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