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.

June 15, 2023

New sex abuse trial begins for imprisoned ex-London priest

LONDON (CANADA)
London Free Press [London, Ontario, Canada]

June 14, 2023

By Jane Sims

Read original article

Disgraced former Anglican priest David Norton had been “our role model, our guardian, almost like a parent,” to two boys growing up in the Yukon.

Editor’s note: David Norton was found guilty Wednesday of two counts each of indecent assault, sexual assault and sexual interference. He is going to be sentenced Friday. An updated story will be posted later.

To two boys growing up in the Yukon, disgraced former Anglican priest David Norton had been “(their) role model, (their) guardian, almost like a parent.”

But when the brothers read online newspaper stories about Norton’s convictions in 2018 for sexual abusing little boys in the London area, they realized “our story was identical,” one of them testified in a Whitehorse courtroom.

“There were two parts to Dave,” he said. “One was this great role model and the other were the parts we’re talking about today . . . we wanted to get…

View Cache

20 years after Bishop O’Brien’s sex abuse cover-up and deadly hit-and-run, have Catholics in Phoenix healed?

PHOENIX (AZ)
America [New York NY]

June 14, 2023

By J.D. Long-García

Read original article

In the summer of 2003, Bishop Thomas J. O’Brien of the Diocese of Phoenix admitted to transferring priests accused of sexual abuse to other parishes. The parish communities that received these priests did not know about the accusations, and in many cases, the bishop transferred priests to poor, Latino parishes.

By signing a statement admitting the cover-up on June 2, 2003, Bishop O’Brien avoided being prosecuted by Maricopa County. It appeared to onlookers that he would retain his post as the bishop of Phoenix.

But that changed less than two weeks later. On June 14, Bishop O’Brien climbed into his Buick after celebrating a Saturday Vigil Mass. On his way home, his car struck 43-year-old Jim L. Reed, who was jaywalking. Mr. Reed, a six-foot-tall man who weighed around 250 pounds, shattered the bishop’s windshield.

But Bishop O’Brien did not stop driving, and Mr. Reed died. The bishop resigned four days…

View Cache

Jesuits expel prominent priest Rupnik after allegations of abuse against adult women

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

June 15, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

Pope Francis’ Jesuit religious order said Thursday it has expelled a prominent Slovenian priest from the congregation following allegations of sexual, spiritual and psychological abuses against adult women.

A statement from the Jesuits, obtained by The Associated Press on Thursday, said the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik was dismissed from the Jesuit order by decree on June 9 “due to stubborn refusal to observe the vow of obedience.”

Rupnik is one of the most celebrated religious artists in the Catholic Church, whose mosaics decorate churches and basilicas around the world, including at the Vatican.

Late last year, the Jesuits acknowledged he had been accused by several women of sexual, spiritual and psychological abuses over a 30-year period. But he had largely escaped punishment, apparently thanks in part to his exalted status in the church and at the Vatican, where even Francis’ role in the case came into question.

The Jesuit statement said…

View Cache

Trips by Jesuit priest accused of abuse are transgression of restrictions, superior says

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

June 14, 2023

By Almudena Martínez-Bordiú

Read original article

Jesuit priest and artist Father Marko Rupnik, accused of having physically and psychologically abused numerous nuns, continues to travel and carry out art projects despite restrictions imposed by the Society of Jesus.

According to recent information released by the Italian newspaper Domani, the priest, who was also briefly excommunicated for absolving in confession an accomplice of a sin against the Sixth Commandment, traveled this June to the city of Mostar in Bosnia-Herzegovina and to Hvar Island in Croatia to do art projects.

In a statement to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish-language news partner, Father Johan Verschueren, delegate for the Jesuits’ Interprovincial Houses and Works in Rome and the superior of the accused priest, confirmed the veracity of the information and noted that these travels are “a serious transgression of the restrictive measures imposed on Father Rupnik.”

Specifically, Rupnik reportedly visited the city of Mostar as a guest of the Franciscan Order…

View Cache

June 14, 2023

Oblates announce own investigation into Father Rivoire

(CANADA)
Nunatsiaq News [Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada]

June 12, 2023

Read original article

Creation of ‘safeguarding commission’ comes after religious order promised to help with investigation of priest accused of abusing Inuit children

A Catholic missionary group has retained a retired Quebec Superior Court judge to lead an independent review of the sexual abuse allegations against one of its priests, Rev. Johannes Rivoire, who served in Nunavut decades ago.

The Oblates of Mary Immaculate, OMI Lacombe Canada (part of a worldwide congregation of Oblate priests) and the Oblates of the Province of France announced the appointment Monday.

“The Oblates recognize the tragic legacy of clergy abuse and are sincerely committed to support the Inuit Peoples who advocate for truth, justice, healing and reconciliation,” said Rev. Ken Thorson, the head of the OMI Lacombe Canada, in the release.

Rivoire, now in his 90s, spent more than 30 years in Nunavut as a parish priest, mostly in Arviat and Naujaat, between 1960 and 1992.

View Cache

Priest accused of sexual abuse offered plea deal in St. Tammany Parish courtroom

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WVUE - Fox 8 [New Orleans LA]

June 12, 2023

By Rob Masson

Read original article

A priest who has worked for schools and churches across the metro New Orleans area returned Monday (June 12) to a St. Tammany Parish courtroom, where a plea deal was offered. Father Patrick Wattigny could face up to 20 years in prison, but would likely get less for pleading guilty.

It has been three years since Wattigny was arrested and charged with molestation of a juvenile, after a teen boy came forward and claimed the longtime Catholic priest had abused him multiple times when he was 15 years old. Talks between the district attorney’s office, the victim’s family and the priest’s attorney have been lengthy.

“Any negotiations can be tough,” Fox 8 legal analyst Joe Raspanti said. “You have to give the person what the law says, which is between 5 and 10 years in the criminal code.”

Wattigny was re-arrested last October after a second juvenile surfaced, accusing him of…

View Cache

Largest US protestant church has annual meeting after sex abuse report

NASHVILLE (TN)
Scripps News [Atlanta GA]

June 12, 2023

By Amber Strong

Read original article

Jules Woodson remembers the backlash, even after her former youth pastor, who had become a popular megachurch preacher, admitted to the so-called “sexual incident” she experienced when she was a teen.

“I thought, truly, maybe 100 people would read it. But if it helps just one person who had been through what I had been through, then it was worth it to me,” Jules Woodson told Scripps News of her decision to go public about sex abuse she says she endured as a teen.

She blogged about the incident in 2018 at the height of the #churchtoo movement.

“My abuser got a standing ovation for a faux apology you know, that continued to heap shame and blame on me and call for cheap grace for himself,” said Woodson.

It was blame she says she’d felt before recalling a similar response when she told church leaders about the abuse 20 years…

View Cache

Archdiocese: Former Dubuque priest faces additional allegation of sexual abuse

DUBUQUE (IA)
Telegraph Herald [Dubuque IA]

June 12, 2023

By Elizabeth Kelsey

Read original article

Archdiocese of Dubuque officials said today that they have received another allegation of past sexual abuse by a former Dubuque priest. 

The new accusation of past abuse of a minor against the Rev. Leo Riley, who served in the archdiocese from 1982 to 2002, was reported to archdiocesan personnel on May 23, a press release states. That was the same day the archdiocese reported that Riley had been accused of sexually abusing a minor in the 1980s.

Dubuque archdiocesan spokesperson Deacon John Robbins said today that he could not share when and where the most recently alleged abuse happened but emphasized that the investigation is ongoing.

“That investigation includes us publishing the alleged perpetrator’s ministry assignments (in the diocese) rather than focusing on a specific time or location,” he said.

Riley was ordained a priest of the Dubuque archdiocese in 1982. He requested a move to the Diocese of Venice in 2002…

View Cache

Exposé of Blackrock College abuse ‘gave more victims courage to come forward’

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Daily Mail [Dublin, Ireland]

June 14, 2023

By Helen Bruce

Read original article

A documentary exposing the abuse of boys at Blackrock College in ­Dublin has enabled more victims to come forward, as official figures show a significant number of new allegations.

The National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland has produced its annual report, revealing that the number of allegations of abuse made against members of the clergy rose to 251, compared to 178 the previous year.

Teresa Devlin, chief executive of the board, wrote: ‘Many of these relate to boarding schools during a time when they were run by religious orders. The national board has consistently welcomed opportunities that give complainants a voice and a mechanism for sharing what happened to them as children.

‘A series of media releases in the autumn of 2022, following a documentary called Blackrock Boys, provided such an opportunity, not just for victims of abuse in Blackrock College, but in other boarding…

View Cache

Pope Benedict XVI’s cousins stand to inherit his money. None of them want it.

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

June 13, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

The surviving relatives of the late Pope Benedict XVI stand to inherit money from his legacy, according to the executor of his last will and testament. None of these relatives seem willing to touch it.

One cousin has already refused to accept the inheritance; four others have not yet responded. If they are smart, they will turn it down as well.

The problem is that, by accepting the money, an heir also takes over any legal claims against the deceased, according to estate laws in Germany, where the cousins all live. Joseph Ratzinger, as he was known before adopting his papal name, is a defendant in one of the most-watched cases of clerical sexual abuse in the country.

“We didn’t expect this inheritance, and our lives are just fine without it,” said Martina Holzinger, the daughter and legal guardian of a now 88-year-old Ratzinger cousin who has refused the unexpected…

View Cache

Final name stripped from Maryland report on Catholic sex abuse is nun from Philadelphia

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

June 13, 2023

By Jessica Calefati

Read original article

[Video interview with Jessica Calefati about the work she and her colleagues at the Baltimore Banner have done to reveal the names of accused priests redacted from the Baltimore report of the Maryland Attorney General.]

A former nun from Philadelphia who died 31 years ago is the last alleged abuser to be identified among the names concealed in the Maryland attorney general’s report on child sexual abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore, according to census records, obituaries and documents from her religious order.

This story by Jessica CalefatiTim PrudenteLiz Bowie and Dylan Segelbaum continues. Read the rest at The Baltimore Banner: Final name stripped from Maryland report on Catholic sex abuse is nun from Philadelphia

View Cache

Disgraced Michigan priest sentenced to jail, probation in sex abuse case

LANSING (MI)
MLive [Walker MI]

June 13, 2023

By Joey Oliver

Read original article

A former Flint-area Catholic priest convicted of the attempted sexual abuse of a 5-year-old boy in the late 1980s, was sentenced Tuesday to a year in jail and probation.

Vincent DeLorenzo, 84, was sentenced June 13 by Genesee County Circuit Court Judge Brian S. Pickell after previously pleading guilty to a single count of attempted first-degree criminal sexual conduct, a five-year felony.

The sentence followed the framework of the plea, which called for five years probation and one year incarceration at the Genesee County Jail.

“As terribly damaging, harmful and traumatic as all sexual abuse is, (abuse) involving child victims is even more devastating,” Pickell said.

DeLorenzo chose not to speak prior to being sentence.

“Justice did come for the victims in this case,” his attorney, Michael Manley, said.

DeLorenzo was arrested in May 2019 while living in Marion County, Florida. He was…

View Cache

German court orders 300 000 euros payout to priest abuse victim

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

June 13, 2023

Read original article

[Via News 24]

  • The archdiocese of Cologne has been ordered by a German court to pay 300 000 euros in damages to a victim of abuse by a priest.
  • The 62-year-old had been raped more than 300 times as a teenager in the 1970s by a Roman Catholic priest. 
  • The court also ordered that the plaintiff be compensated for any future costs relating to the abuse including therapy fees.

A German court ordered the archdiocese of Cologne on Tuesday to pay 300 000 euros in damages to a victim of repeated sexual abuse by a priest in what was called a potentially landmark case.

A spokesperson for the Cologne regional court told AFP the 62-year-old plaintiff, who said he was raped more than 300 times as a teenager in the 1970s by a Roman Catholic priest, had demanded some 750 000 euros ($809,000).

The court ordered the archdiocese “to pay 300…

View Cache

German court orders Cologne archdiocese to pay clergy abuse victim over $300,000

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 14, 2023

Read original article

Berlin – A court on Tuesday ordered a German diocese to pay 300,000 euros ($323,000) in compensation to a former altar boy who was repeatedly abused by a Catholic priest in the 1970s, a ruling that a victims’ association said was the first of its kind in Germany.

The state court in Cologne ruled in a case in which the plaintiff, a man now aged 62 who was raped and otherwise abused more than 300 times by a now-deceased priest, had sought 750,000 euros from the Cologne archdiocese, German news agency dpa reported. The archdiocese decided against invoking the statute of limitations in the case.

Presiding Judge Stephan Singbartl said that the court hadn’t ordered higher compensation because the victim’s life fortunately hadn’t been destroyed, noting that he had married, had children and been able to work.

The German church has been making voluntary payments to abuse survivors. Victims’ groups…

View Cache

Court orders Cologne Archdiocese pay €300k in abuse damages

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

June 13, 2023

Read original article

It’s the first court-ordered compensation payment in Germany for Catholic Church sexual abuse. Typically, as in this case, the statute of limitations has expired, but the archdiocese waived its right to avoid trial.

A German regional court on Tuesday ordered the Archdiocese of Cologne to pay €300,000 (roughly $325,000) in damages to an abuse victim for crimes committed in the 1970s. 

It’s a far higher sum than Germany’s Catholic Church dioceses have paid in voluntary, symbolic compensation payments in the past. 

The case could only come to court because the Church allowed it to.

Technically, as in most such cases, the statute of limitations had expired on the crimes, but the archdiocese elected to allow a court determine the appropriate compensation. 

Ít also did not contest the allegations of at least 320 instances of abuse by a priest against the plaintiff, 64-year-old Georg Menne, in the 1970s. The priest in question…

View Cache

Events in Bolivia and Brazil may signal a turning point for the Catholic Church’s sexual abuse crisis in Latin America

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
The Conversation [Waltham MA]

June 14, 2023

By Matthew Casey-Pariseault

Read original article

Demonstrations in Bolivia in recent weeks have been directed at a seemingly unusual target: the Catholic Church.

More than three-fourths of the people in this Andean nation are Catholic, and Catholicism remained the religion of the state until 2009. Protests erupted, however, after the publication of diary entries from a deceased Spanish Jesuit priest, which detailed his sexual abuse of dozens of boys while teaching in the Bolivian city of Cochabamba during the 1970s and 1980s.

Meanwhile, in neighboring Brazil, a new book by two award-winning journalists has made the magnitude of the clerical sexual abuse crisis more visible.

Over the past two decades, sexual abuse scandals have rocked the Catholic Church nearly everywhere it has a presence. Latin America, where 4 in 10 of the world’s Catholics live, is no exception. Yet the church’s role in the region is distinct, as are the stakes.

Owing to centuries of Spanish and Portuguese colonization,…

View Cache

June 13, 2023

‘Significant increase’ in Catholic Church abuse allegations

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

June 13, 2023

By Ailbhe Conneely

Read original article

There was a “significant increase” in the number of notifications of allegations of abuse reported to the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland (NBSCCCI) in the past 12 months.

In its latest annual report, the NBSCCCI has said it is clear from the source of the allegations that many
of these relate to alleged abuse in boarding schools run and managed by male and female religious orders.

It is believed that the RTÉ documentary Blackrock Boys, which has resulted in a preliminary inquiry by the Government into the issue of sexual abuse in schools run by religious orders, has contributed to the rise in allegations.

The board received 251 notifications of child protection concerns about clergy and male and female religious between 1 April 2022 and 31 March 2023.

That compares to 178 allegations of abuse against clerics and religious…

View Cache

Abuse survivor shares her story after Catholic priests with Richmond ties were named in abuse investigation

ARLINGTON (VA)
WRIC - ABC 8 [Richmond VA]

June 12, 2023

By Rolynn Wilson

Read original article

An abuse survivor is speaking out after several priests with ties to Richmond were named in an abuse investigation by the Maryland Attorney General.

In April, the Maryland Attorney General released the findings of a four-year investigation into sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Baltimore. The investigation documented abuse of at least 600 children by 156 priests, deacons and other leaders within the Baltimore archdiocese between the 1940s and the early 2000s.

The four priests named in the investigation include Fathers John Bostwick, Francis Bourbon, Charles Jeffries Burton and Henry (John) O’Toole, all of whom served in the Richmond area at some point.

8News spoke with abuse survivor, Becky Iani, who said she was abused by Father William Reinecke between the ages of 8 and 12 years old.

Reinecke was one of several priests credibly accused by the Catholic Diocese of Arlington in 2019. He…

View Cache

Former teacher of North Vancouver’s St. Thomas Aquinas Regional Secondary charged with sexual assault

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
Indo-Canadian Voice [Surrey, British Columbia, Canada]

June 13, 2023

Read original article

A former teacher of St. Thomas Aquinas Regional Secondary School has been arrested for allegations of sexual assault against a student, North Vancouver RCMP announced on Monday.

On May 2, Anthony Vesco was formally charged with sexual exploitation and sexual assault and a Canada-wide warrant was issued. He was arrested on June 6 in Windsor, Ontario, and released on bail.

It is alleged that during his tenure as a teacher at St. Thomas Aquinas Regional Secondary School, Vesco sexually assaulted a student while he was teaching at the school from 2017 to 2019.

Police said they are aware that there has been communication through social media between some individuals who may have been impacted or had knowledge of the incident. Investigators are asking those people to speak with police.

“Our priorities right now are to speak with those who have not yet come forward, to gather all available evidence, and…

View Cache

Abuse survivors, their advocates cast doubt on leadership of Vatican commission

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

June 13, 2023

By Christopher White

Read original article

Leading Catholic sexual abuse experts, survivors and survivor advocates are questioning the suitability of the priest who leads the Vatican’s clergy abuse commission, following an investigation that has raised significant questions about his record of financial transparency and accountability.

Oblate Fr. Andrew Small “should be gone — voluntarily or forcefully,” David Clohessy, longtime executive director of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said in reaction to a May 31 Associated Press report.

The Associated Press investigation revealed that under Small’s leadership as former U.S. director of the Pontifical Mission Societies at least $17 million was transferred from the Vatican’s U.S.-based missionary fundraising entity into an impact investing operation created by Small. The priest continues to run the investment organization while also serving as the No. 2 official at the Vatican’s Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

“What pains me the most is that of all…

View Cache

June 12, 2023

Deacon at North Miami Catholic School Arrested, Accused of Molesting Students

MIAMI (FL)
WTVJ - NBC 6 [Miami FL]

June 1, 2023

By Amanda Plasencia and Brian Hamacher

Read original article

Deacon Carlos Humberto Ramirez, of Miami Gardens, had worked as a teacher and deacon at Holy Family Catholic School on Northeast 12th Avenue in North Miami

A deacon and teacher at a Catholic school in North Miami was arrested after he was accused of molesting two students, police said.

Deacon Carlos Humberto Ramirez, 51, was arrested Wednesday on two counts of lewd and lascivious molestation of a child, an arrest report said.

Ramirez, of Miami Gardens, had worked as a teacher and deacon at Holy Family Catholic School on Northeast 12th Avenue in North Miami.

According to the arrest report, the alleged incidents happened back in March during a Spanish class.

An 11-year-old student was turning in her classwork when Ramirez grabbed her by the waist and then squeezed her rear end, the report said.

She was able to leave class without any issues but another student who witnessed the…

View Cache

Last name stripped from Maryland report on Catholic sex abuse is nun from Philadelphia

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

June 12, 2023

By Jessica Calefati, Tim Prudente, Liz Bowie, and Dylan Segelbaum

Read original article

A former nun from Philadelphia who died 31 years ago is the last alleged abuser to be identified among the names concealed in the Maryland attorney general’s report on child sexual abuse within the Archdiocese of Baltimore, according to census records, obituaries and documents from her religious order.

Catherine A. Hasson joined the Sisters of Saint Francis of Philadelphia in 1943, lived at the group’s headquarters for one year, and taught first grade at St. Katharine School in East Baltimore for one year, the order confirmed. She left religious life in 1945, shortly before she would have professed her vows.

Those details match the report’s description ofthe accused woman listed as No. 149.

Hasson was one of 10 alleged perpetrators and five church officials accused of covering up abuse whose names were stripped from the report for procedural reasons. Survivors of clergy sexual abuse have repeatedly  View Cache

Buffalo priest drops defamation case against accuser alleging sex abuse in 1980s

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

June 11, 2023

By Jay Tokasz

Read original article

Buffalo priest has dropped his defamation lawsuit against a man who claimed he had been sexually abused as a child in the 1980s by the priest.

The Rev. Roy T. Herberger said he couldn’t afford to continue toward a trial after spending $20,000 in legal fees since filing the defamation case in 2020 in State Supreme Court in Erie County.

Herberger consulted with his attorney, Steven K. Long, and decided that pressing further was unlikely to accomplish anything more.

“He asked me what do I want to do, and I said, financially I can’t do it anymore, not after all that money already spent,” Herberger said.

Herberger’s lawsuit is believed to be the first and only defamation case in Western New York alleging that a plaintiff in a Child Victims Act lawsuit was lying about abuse accusations to slander an innocent priest.

The Buffalo Diocese put Herberger…

View Cache

Priest convicted of raping boys claims innocence, stays in prison

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union [Albany NY]

June 11, 2023

By Brendan J. Lyons

Read original article

Gary Mercure is serving up to 25 years in a Massachusetts prison. He has been cast as a serial sexual abuser who victimized numerous boys over decades.

A former priest accused of systematically raping and sexually abusing boys at multiple parishes throughout the Albany diocese was recently denied parole and will remain in a Massachusetts prison, where he is serving a sentence of up to 25 years for raping two altar boys.

Public records indicate that Gary Mercure, 75, was again rejected for parole last month, in part, because he continues to claim he is innocent. He was sentenced in February 2011 after being convicted of raping two boys that he drove from New York into Massachusetts during skiing trips. Mercure stands accused of raping many more boys, but New York’s statute of limitations has prevented his prosecution here.

One of Mercure’s former victims, who said he was in the…

View Cache

In Peru, Latin American religious address persecution, abuse, synod

(PERU)
Global Sisters Report [Kansas City, MO]

June 12, 2023

By Rhina Guidos

Read original article

They called out the names of their friends, sometimes their predecessors, some of them martyred, some having lived long lives, others short, but all rooted in radical closeness to the Gospel. Fr. Jose Luis Loyola gently told them not to worry if tears came. 

But mostly tranquility filled the Mass that closed the 48th board meeting of the Confederation of Latin American and Caribbean Religious, or CLAR, in Lima, Peru. They ended late on June 5, with flags from throughout Latin America and the Caribbean draped over an altar, remembering their fallen friends, giving thanks for their lives.

Women and men religious gathered June 2-5 to tackle some of the toughest issues facing Latin America and the Caribbean or “the night,” as Sr. Liliana Franco, president of CLAR, called the social, ecclesial and other conditions affecting consecrated life in the region. To some, those conditions, such as…

View Cache

Hexham and Newcastle Bishop Robert Byrne put people at risk – report

NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE (UNITED KINGDOM)
BBC [London, England]

June 12, 2023

By Andrew Hartley and Dan Farthing

Read original article

A bishop might have put people at risk by ignoring grooming concerns to promote a priest and being friends with a paedophile, a review has found.

Bishop Robert Byrne undermined safety in the Hexham and Newcastle diocese, the Catholic Safeguarding Standards Agency (CSSA) said.

He was bishop from 2019 to 2022 but stepped down amid serious concerns over his handling of concerns.

Bishop Byrne told the CSSA he supported keeping people safe.

The CSSA said overall the Roman Catholic diocese was meeting the “minimum standards” of guidelines and was ranked as having made “early progress”.

But auditors heavily criticised the tenure of Bishop Byrne, in particular his promotion of Canon Michael McCoy to Dean of St Mary’s Cathedral in Newcastle and the bishop’s “inappropriate” friendship with Father Timothy Gardner, a priest convicted of child sex offences.

The CSSA said the bishop’s “poor leadership” had “undermined” the safeguarding work of others “to…

View Cache

June 11, 2023

Sexual abuse, women clergy among topics on tap at annual meeting of Southern Baptists

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette [Little Rock AR]

June 10, 2023

By Frank E. Lockwood

Read original article

Sex-abuse response, women ordinations among the issues 

Members of the Southern Baptist Convention are gathering in New Orleans this week to elect a president, determine how to respond to sexual abuse within the church and weigh the fate of congregations that ordain women as ministers.

With more than 12,000 delegates already preregistered for this year’s annual meeting, organizers are anticipating one of the largest turnouts in the past quarter-century.

Arkansas native Bart Barber, who was elected convention president last year, will be nominated for a second one-year term but faces a challenge from Georgia pastor Mike Stone, who narrowly lost a previous bid for the presidency in 2021.

Last year’s proceedings were held in Anaheim, Calif.; this time, the gathering is closer to the denomination’s traditional strongholds.

“It’s going to be a crowd. There’s going to be a lot of people there,” said Craig Jenkins, director of advancement and news…

View Cache

Settlements end $100M clergy abuse lawsuit against Sault diocese

SAULT STE. MARIE (CANADA)
Sault Today [Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, Canada]

June 10, 2023

By Jenny Lamothe

Read original article

The $100M proposed class-action has been discontinued, though the judge in the case has concernsJenny Lamothe
a day ago

A proposed class-action lawsuit launched by sexual abuse survivors on Manitoulin Island has been discontinued after 29 victims reached individual settlements. 

The $100-million claim was filed against the Jesuit Fathers of Upper Canada, also known as the English Canada Province, as well as the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Sault Ste. Marie, the estate of father George Epoch and the estate of Brother O’Meare.

Filed by plaintiffs known only as I.P. and M.P.  in 2015, the lawsuit was proposed on behalf of “all persons who were abused as children by clergy or staff of the Holy Cross Mission in Wikwemikong, as well as all parents, spouses, children and siblings of the abused persons above.”…

View Cache

‘The beatings and abuse were brutal’

(JAMAICA)
The Gleaner [Kingston, Jamaica]

June 11, 2023

By Janet Silvera/Senior Gleaner Writer

Read original article

Former leader at controversial Qahal Yahweh Church shares how he, his pregnant wife and others were beaten into submission

WESTERN BUREAU:
Shane Wise* can clearly remember that day over five years ago when he and his pregnant wife were reportedly brutally beaten when they tried to leave the Qahal Yahweh Church compound in Paradise, Norwood, St James.
In fact, etched in his memory are the many horrible abuses he witnessed during the five years he lived at the controversial church, as the leaders reportedly used brute force and intimidation to brainwash the followers into submission. 
Returning to the island last week to finally report all the horrors that happened at the church during the period he was there, Wise said he is now ready to speak out, no longer afraid, as he sat down with The Sunday Gleaner during an exclusive interview on Thursday.
The Qahal Yahweh Church made headlines last week when it…

View Cache

Will Southern Baptists give abuse survivors stones for bread?

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

June 10, 2023

By David Clohessy and Christa Brown

Read original article

As the annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention approaches next week in New Orleans, one line from the Gospel of Matthew keeps rising in our minds: “Who is there among you, who, if his son asks for bread, will give him a stone?”

It’s so simple and clear. And it’s relevant on this, the one-year anniversary of a long overdue but tragically still unfulfilled promise made by Southern Baptist officials: To create a public database of clergy sex abusers that would include ministers convicted, admitted and credibly accused of child molestation.

Why is such a list important?

Because parents, police, prosecutors and the public can best protect children from predators if they know who and where the predators are.

That’s why every state has an official, online sex offender registry for those with criminal convictions. But of course, criminal convictions are the bare tip of the iceberg.

That’s why Catholic abuse survivors have, for decades,…

View Cache

Man abused by cleric as a child launches health program to turn ‘pain into power’

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

June 9, 2023

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Read original article

Mac McCall’s molestation case led to conviction of Catholic cleric and now he hopes to help children, the elderly and those recovering from substance abuse

After pressing a criminal case which led to the conviction of a Catholic cleric who admitted molesting him as a child, the son of an influential Louisiana politician is trying to convert his “pain into power” by building a physical and mental health fitness program for schoolchildren, the elderly and people recovering from substance abuse.

Mac McCall – whose father, John Young, once ran for lieutenant governor of Louisiana – recently publicly identified himself as the victim of the late Virgil Maxey “VM” Wheeler III, in one of the most contentious cases involving a decades-old clerical molestation scandal in his home town’s archdiocese.

A prominent attorney, Wheeler was friends with McCall’s father – once president of Jefferson parish, with more than 440,000 residents –…

View Cache

Pope Benedict XVI’s cousins stand to inherit his money. None of them want it.

MUNICH (GERMANY)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

June 9, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

Any heir takes over any legal claims against the deceased, according to estate laws. ‘I could get the shakes just thinking about how much I would have to pay out,’ one cousin told Bavarian Radio.

The surviving relatives of the late Pope Benedict XVI stand to inherit money from his legacy, according to the executor of his last will and testament. None of these relatives seem willing to touch it.

One cousin has already refused to accept the inheritance; four others have not yet responded. If they are smart, they will turn it down as well.

The problem is that, by accepting the money, an heir also takes over any legal claims against the deceased, according to estate laws in Germany, where the cousins all live. Joseph Ratzinger, as he was known before adopting his papal name, is a defendant in one of the most-watched cases of clerical sexual abuse…

View Cache

Deceased priest found credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor by Richmond Diocese

ARLINGTON (VA)
Diocese of Arlington VA

June 9, 2023

Read original article

The Catholic Diocese of Arlington has been advised that an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Msgr. Edward P. Browne was determined to be credible by the Diocese of Richmond’s Review Board.  Msgr. Browne died in August 2002; the allegation, which involved an incident that took place prior to the establishment of the Diocese of Arlington in 1974, was reported posthumously.  

Msgr. Browne was ordained as a priest of the Diocese of Richmond in 1951. His assignments in Northern Virginia included St. Charles Borromeo in Arlington (1951-55), St. Rita in Alexandria (1967-72), St. Bernadette in Springfield (1972-86), and St. Michael in Annandale (1986-2000).  He also served at several parishes in the current territory of the Diocese of Richmond.  When the Diocese of Arlington was formed in 1974, he was incardinated as a priest of the Diocese of Arlington.

The Diocese of Arlington encourages anyone who knows of…

View Cache

New York priest accused of repeatedly molesting minor in Fishtown pleads no contest to some charges, others dropped

NEW YORK (NY)
Staten Island Advance [Staten Island NY]

June 9, 2023

By Jesse Bunch

Read original article

The Rev. James Garisto will be sentenced this September.

A Staten Island priest pleaded no contest to corruption of a minor and indecent assault on Friday after prosecutors said he sexually abused an underaged boy in Fishtown during the mid-2000s.

The Rev. James Garisto, 74, faced several related charges after his arrest last year, but those charges were dropped, according to a spokesperson for the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office.

Garisto, who spent nearly 40 years as a priest, teacher, and school administrator in the Archdiocese of New York, has faced multiple allegations of abuse. Church officials placed him on leave in 2019 after receiving a report of sexual misconduct against him.

After a New York man sued Garisto in 2021 over abuse he said he suffered at the hands of the priest as a boy, a Philadelphia man in his 30s came forward to say that Garisto had abused him…

View Cache

Police took tremendous care to be thorough in investigation versus priest who eventually was cleared

DENVER (CO)
Aspen Times [Aspen CO]

June 9, 2023

By Lynda Edwards

Read original article

Aspen Police this week released a redacted report detailing the 500 hours of investigation, including interviews of 86 witness and assistance from the FBI, of an ex-altar boy’s accusations from prison in 2021 of sexual abuse by a priest who had served at St. Mary’s Catholic Church in the mid-2000s.

No corroborating evidence was found, and the 9th Judicial District Attorney’s Office announced in April it would not file criminal charges. The Archdiocese of Denver announced this week that it had concluded its own investigation, and Father Michael O’Brien would return to work July 1 as pastor of two churches in the Julesburg area.

The accuser was Keegan Callahan, now 25, who made his allegations from prison, where he is serving a 14-year sentence for raping a 16-year-old girl off McClain Flats Road. Callahan’s attorney, Steve Eldredge in Denver, told The Aspen Times this week that the…

View Cache

Video: Victims laud ending child sex abuse lawsuits curbs

BALTIMORE (MD)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 9, 2023

By Rodrique Ngowi/Robert Bukaty, AP Video

Read original article

[SEE VIDEO]

Survivors of child sexual abuse in three states are praising opportunities to seek long-delayed justice after lawmakers removed the statute of limitations for such crimes.

(AP Video: Rodrique Ngowi/Robert Bukaty)

View Cache

June 10, 2023

‘The Secrets of Hillsong’ serves as warning to Catholics, too

NEW YORK (NY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

June 10, 2023

By Patty Breen

Read original article

“If you have issues in your life, influence, power and position will exacerbate all of them.”
—Carl Lentz, former pastor of Hillsong New York City

There is no better way to sum up the new FX documentary “The Secrets of Hillsong” than the above quote by former Hillsong golden boy himself, Carl Lentz. The series documents the rise and subsequent public downfall of the “influencer pastor,” but goes well beyond him too, exposing the abusive and toxic history of the church, beginning with founder Frank Houston and continuing through his son Brian Houston.

The series, which is streaming on Hulu, is the latest chapter in a developing story that encircles the well-known nondenominational congregation, originally founded in Sydney but now a worldwide movement. Last year’s “Hillsong: A Megachurch Exposed” on Discovery+ dove into the accusations of child sexual abuse perpetrated by founder Frank Houston, Brian Houston’s alleged cover-up…

View Cache

Not a few bad apples—the barrel is rotten: Tom Doyle on clerical child abuse

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
UK Column [United Kingdom]

May 9, 2023

Read original article

[VIDEO]

Tom Doyle brings a wealth of knowledge, experience of both research and litigation, and a solid integrity to the examination of the abuse of children by clergymen in the Roman Catholic Church.

He speaks on this subject with an honesty, and courage that is peerless. His testimony is precise without being sensational. The analysis he outlines explains the role of church history, church government and church theology in creating this catastrophe.

The response from the bishops and cardinals is one of denial, cover-up, control and outright lies, often under oath. Despite all that has been revealed, they still refuse to address the horror of what has been done to the most vulnerable in society—little children. They do not grasp the lifelong suffering of the victims. Instead spending more time, care and resources on the abusers.

Every time a documentary is shown on TV, more victims come forward. Suicide, substance…

View Cache

Arlington police visit Carmelite nuns who filed charges against Fort Worth Bishop Olson

FORT WORTH (TX)
CBS News [New York NY]

June 7, 2023

By Jason Allen

Read original article

ARLINGTON (CBSNewsTexas.com) – Investigators from the Arlington Police Department visited a monastery Wednesday morning to speak with the nuns involved in a bitter dispute with the Bishop of Fort Worth.

The conversation was focused on the facts of the initial confrontation with Bishop Michael Olson in April, and his demand for the computers and phone used by the Carmelite nuns, according to their civil attorney Matthew Bobo. 

Bobo said he understood the Tarrant County Sheriffs Department may also be looking at the situation, but a spokesman there Wednesday said Arlington was the lead on any potential case.

No criminal charges have been filed or recommended, however the meeting is the first time police have become involved in the public clash between the two religious entities. A third-party sent a letter to Arlington police chief Al Jones, asking him to look into the situation.

After taking the electronic devices, Olson and…

View Cache

Fort Worth Diocese releases photos allegedly showing drug use at Carmelite monastery

FORT WORTH (TX)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

June 8, 2023

By Peter Pinedo for CNA

Read original article

Charges and countercharges of illegal activity have further escalated a bitter public dispute between the Diocese of Fort Worth and a monastery of Carmelite nuns in Arlington, Texas.

In the latest salvo in what has become a protracted legal and public relations battle was launched by the diocese on Wednesday when it released a pair of photographs that purportedly show cannabis and marijuana products inside the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity.

Diocesan spokesman Pat Svacina said in Wednesday’s release that the diocese “is in communication” with the Arlington Police Department regarding “serious concerns it has regarding the use of marijuana and edibles at the monastery.”

The monastery’s attorney, Matthew Bobo, denied the allegations related to drug use, calling them “absolutely ridiculous” and “without merit.”

The dispute between the monastery and the diocese began in April when Olson launched a canonical investigation into an alleged sexual affair between the monastery’s…

View Cache

Clergy sex abuse is the fault of the institution, not the religion.

WASHINGTON (DC)
America [New York NY]

June 9, 2023

By Arthur McCaffrey

Read original article

Last year, the Southern Baptist Conference was forced to confront its own hidden history of sexual abuse, after the release of an explosive report on how the leadership of that Protestant denomination had ignored and even “vilified” sexual abuse survivors. Sadly, the S.B.C. had only been repeating a familiar pattern of cover-up and institutional protection already observed in the Catholic Church (and still coming to light, as with the recent report on hundreds of cases of sexual abuse by clergy discovered since 1950 in several dioceses in Illinois). The same lack of accountability in both denominations has left them liable to criminal prosecutions and civil lawsuits.

These latest revelations are simply more evidence of a pandemic of child abuse that has infected countries all over the world and can be found throughout the 20th century. I have previously characterized this epidemic as “a war on children” that, unfortunately, has not attracted enough of…

View Cache

Allegations of adultery and abuse of power embroil Texas bishop, Carmelite monastery in complex scandal

FORT WORTH (TX)
Global Sisters Report [Kansas City, MO]

June 9, 2023

By Dan Stockman

Read original article

The allegations are extreme: Adultery, abuse of power, marijuana usage, defamation, lies, theft, scandal and a conspiracy to take valuable monastery land.

The questions are many: What really happened? Has the process been done correctly? What did Vatican officials know, and when did they know it? And why was the bishop at the center of the storm put in charge?

The issues are complex: They involve Texas civil law, criminal law, canon law, papal decrees, congregational constitutions, hierarchical authority and investigatory powers — to name just a few.

And all this over a tiny monastery of 10 Carmelite nuns and the local bishop.

He said, she said accusations

According to court documents, interviews and press reports, the maelstrom began April 24, when Bishop Michael Olson, head of the Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth, Texas, arrived at the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity, home to the Discalced…

View Cache

Delayed justice: 3 states remove all time limits on child sex abuse lawsuits

PORTLAND (ME)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 9, 2023

By David Sharp

Read original article

Ann Allen loved going to church and the after-school social group led by a dynamic priest back in the 1960s.

The giggling fun with friends always ended with a game of hide and seek. Each week, the Rev. Lawrence Sabatino chose one girl to hide with him. Allen said when it was her turn, she was sexually assaulted, at age 7, in the recesses of St. Peter’s Catholic Church.

“I don’t remember how I got out of that cellar and I don’t think I ever will. But I remember it like it’s yesterday. I remember the smells. The sounds. I remember what he said, and what he did,” she said.

Allen, 64, is one of more than two dozen people who have sued the Roman Catholic Diocese of Portland, Maine, over the past year, seeking delayed justice since lawmakers allowed lawsuits for abuse that happened long ago and can’t be…

View Cache

June 9, 2023

Archdiocese of St. Louis settles sex abuse lawsuit for $1 million, one of largest ever here

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

June 9, 2023

By Nassim Benchaabane

Read original article

CHESTERFIELD — The Archdiocese of St. Louis has agreed to pay roughly $1 million to a man who alleged he was sexually abused as a boy by a priest at Ascension Catholic Church in Chesterfield in the 1990s, an attorney for the plaintiff said.

The settlement appears to be the second largest amount the archdiocese is known to have paid one single victim in a sexual abuse claim. Both settlements resulted from lawsuits alleging abuse by the same former priest, Gary P. Wolken, one of the first St. Louis-area clergy to plead guilty to sexual abuse since the crisis shook the Roman Catholic Church two decades ago.

Wolken, now 57 and a registered sex offender, served 12 years in prison from 2003 to 2015 for sexually abusing a Ballwin boy from 1997 to 2000 while babysitting the boy. The archdiocese removed Wolken from ministry in 2002 and in 2004 paid…

View Cache

Archdiocese of St. Louis settles sex abuse suit with alleged victim, agrees to pay $1 million

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK Channel 5 [St. Louis, MO]

June 8, 2023

By Kelsi Anderson and Jacob Kuerth

Read original article

The Archdiocese has agreed to pay $1 million, one of the largest single settlements, to a man who said a former priest abused him in the 1990s.

The Archdiocese of St. Louis on Thursday reached a $1 million settlement with a man who alleged a former priest abused him when he was a boy in the 1990s.

The settlement is one of the largest settlements the Archdiocese has paid to a single victim in its history, and the second suit involving former priest Gary Wolken. 

“We are hopeful that this settlement provides some measure of comfort for the victim and for his family,” the Archdiocese said in a statement. “We continue to pray for all victims of sexual abuse, that they may find comfort and healing.”

Wolken, 57, was previously convicted in 2002 and sentenced to 15 years in prison for first-degree sodomy of a boy over a period…

View Cache

The Archdiocese of St. Louis will pay $1 million to settle a sex abuse lawsuit

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 9, 2023

By Jim Salter

Read original article

The Archdiocese of St. Louis will pay $1 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a man who was sexually abused as a child by a priest

The Archdiocese of St. Louis will pay $1 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a man who was sexually abused as a child by a priest who previously spent 12 years in prison for abusing another boy, an attorney for the victim said Friday.

The plaintiff was an altar boy at Ascension Catholic Church in Chesterfield, Missouri. The suit alleged he was abused by the Rev. Gary Wolken starting in 1993, when the boy was in fourth grade, and continuing through 1995. The lawsuit said the plaintiff repressed memories until he was an adult. The man’s lawsuit, which did not use his name, was filed in 2018.

His attorney, Rebecca Randles, said the settlement was reached this week.

“We applaud our client…

View Cache

In the Name of Ruth Bender

HESSTON (KS)
In Polite Company [sarahstankorb.substack.com]

June 9, 2023

By Sarah Stankorb

Read original article

A long history of abuse at Hesston College demands recognition and answers

In 1930, at a revival meeting, a pastor named Maurice “M.A.” Yoder asked a 27-year-old woman named Ruth Bender to confess her sins. She described what her father D.H. Bender would later admit to as “fornication” with Ruth when she was a teen.

At the time she spoke up, Ruth was teaching French and Latin at Hesston College, a Mennonite school in Kansas. Her father was the founding president of the college.

Yoder went on to make Ruth’s confession public.

D.H. Bender was called before the Mennonite Board of Education, which didn’t buy D.H. Bender’s claim that there was only one rape, “during a Kansas thunderstorm.” The abuse had continued for some time.

In August 1930, Bender lost his ministerial credentials and was excommunicated by Hesston Mennonite Church. But that same day, the congregation heard Bender’s confession and…

View Cache

Former priest facing sex charges appears before judge in Iqaluit

(CANADA)
APTN - Aboriginal Peoples Television Network [Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada]

June 8, 2023

By Kathleen Martens

Read original article

Eric Dejaeger is facing eight counts of historical sexual assault involving six Inuit children.

A defrocked Catholic priest and convicted sex offender made a brief court appearance in Iqaluit Thursday on historical sex charges involving six Inuit children.

Eric Dejaeger, 76, has twice been convicted of sex crimes against Inuit children in Nunavut.

He now faces eight more charges of sexual assault involving six alleged victims, said Sgt. Pauline Melanson of RCMP V Division in Iqaluit.

Dejaeger was shackled at the wrists and ankles while dressed in sweat pants and a sweater. He was seen nodding at defence lawyer Keir O’Flaherty, who requested a publication ban during the bail hearing.

The hearing was put over until June 27.

Dejaeger was flown to Nunavut on Wednesday after being arrested on a Canada-wide warrant in Kingston, Ont.

Melanson said the defrocked priest was living in the Henry Trail Community Correctional Centre –…

View Cache

Baptist official in Louisiana arrested on sex crime charges

(LA)
KSLA, Ch. 12 [Shreveport LA and Texarkana TX]

June 9, 2023

Read original article

GRANT PARISH, La. (KALB/Gray News) -A prominent Louisiana Baptist leader in the central Louisiana area has been arrested, law enforcement said.

Daryl Stagg, 60, of Pollock, was arrested on Thursday and is being held at the Grant Parish Detention Center in Colfax.

The Louisiana Baptist Convention confirmed that Stagg has been the associational mission strategist for the Big Creek and CenLa Baptist associations.

Stagg has been charged with felonies: three counts each of oral sexual battery, first degree rape, aggravated crimes against nature and indecent behavior with juveniles.

Bond has been set at $500,000. He remains in jail at this time.

The Grant Parish Sheriff’s Office said that there will be a press conference on Monday to discuss a recent investigation involving sex crimes with young children as victims.

Sheriff Steven McCain said that he is concerned that there may be other victims related to the…

View Cache

Benedictines’ world leader calls on Chicago-area monks tied to Benet, Marmion high schools to fully report clergy sex abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times [Chicago IL]

June 9, 2023

By Robert Herguth

Read original article

“I think that they should be” posting lists of abusive members “because it’s been actually asked of us by the larger church,” the Rev. Gregory Polan told the Sun-Times.

The Benedictine monastery that founded Benet Academy in Lisle and the one that runs Marmion Academy in Aurora should publish complete lists of their clerics who have been deemed to have been credibly accused of child sex offenses, the top official of the Catholic religious order worldwide is urging.

“I would certainly encourage they be honest about those types of things,” the Rev. Gregory Polan, leader of the confederation of Benedictine groups around the world, told the Chicago Sun-Times.

“I think that they should be” posting such lists of abusive members “because it’s been actually asked of us by the larger church,” Polan said in an interview from Rome, where he is based. “I think we need to do what the…

View Cache

‘Red flags everywhere’: high court asks Catholic church why it didn’t investigate priest’s abuse 50 years ago

LISMORE (AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

June 8, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

Read original article

High court of Australia is considering a NSW court’s permanent stay in a case brought by a woman who alleges she was abused as a 14-year-old

The high court has pressed the Catholic church to explain why it didn’t have an adequate opportunity 50 years ago to investigate the extent of a priest’s abuse of children, given there were “red flags everywhere” about his crimes.

The court on Thursday began hearing a key case about a legal tactic now routinely being employed by the church and other institutions to permanently shield themselves from abuse survivors’ civil claims for compensation.

Institutions are now regularly seeking permanent stays, or a permanent halt to proceedings, by arguing the death of alleged perpetrators and the inability to obtain their response to a survivor’s allegations leaves them unable to receive a fair trial.

The approach has infuriated survivors and their advocates,…

View Cache

St. John’s settlement appears near

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
The Catholic Register - Archdiocese of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

June 8, 2023

By Quinton Amundson

Read original article

Survivors of abuse at the Mount Cashel orphanage in the 1940s, ’50s and ’60s, and by clergy from the Archdiocese of St. John’s through the years, are poised to receive a financial settlement from the archdiocese by the end of the year.

Lawyers for survivors, the Episcopal Corp. of St. John’s (RCECSJ) and court monitor Ernst & Young appeared in Newfoundland and Labrador Supreme Court May 30 to declare Global Resolutions Inc., a Toronto-based dispute resolution organization, has been appointed as claims officer.

Reportedly, Global Resolutions Inc. has assigned four of its most senior panel members to adjudicate this process. At the suggestion of survivors’ lawyer Geoffrey Budden, Newfoundland resident Lawrence Hatfield, also a mediation specialist, has been added as a fifth member of this team. 

“There are not a lot of mediators in Canada with the combination of general experience and specific experience assessing or mediating sexual abuse claims,”…

View Cache

Chart gets to ‘meat’ of the settlement in abuse cases

OTTAWA (CANADA)
The Catholic Register - Archdiocese of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

June 8, 2023

By Anna Farrow

Read original article

What is the price of an abusive kiss by a predatory priest? How much should an unwanted fondle fetch to serve justice to the victim? Ask the class-action lawyers.

They and the legal system have developed a grid, or “meat chart” as one Ontario lawyer refers to it, that spells out the dollar value of abuse much as insurance companies codify the value of a lost thumb or the ability to walk. The chart has two distinct components. One section enumerates four levels of the sexual assault. The second section addresses the “harms and effects,” or the knock-on psychological harm or financial losses experienced by those assaulted.

The valuations will come into play now that the large class actions against Roman Catholic dioceses and religious orders in Canada have reached a settlement and damages will soon be disbursed to the claimants.

In April, the Diocese of Chicoutimi in Quebec settled…

View Cache

Settlements end $100M class action lawsuit by alleged Manitoulin Island abuse survivors

SAULT STE. MARIE (CANADA)
CTV Television Network [Toronto, Canada]

June 8, 2023

By Darren MacDonald

Read original article

A $100 million class action lawsuit launched on behalf of alleged victims of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy on Manitoulin Island has been abandoned after the victims reached individual settlements with the church.

All of the 29 alleged victims are from Wiikwemkoong Unceded Territory and attended Holy Cross Mission, run by the Jesuit Fathers of Upper Canada.

The suit was launched in 2015 and named several defendants, including the Roman Catholic Episcopal Corporation of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Sault Ste. Marie, the Estate of Father George Epoch and the Estate of Brother O’Meare.

“The action was brought on behalf of all persons who were abused as children by clergy or staff of the Holy Cross Mission in Wiikwemkoong (and) all parents, spouses, children and siblings of the abused persons,” court documents said.

Two alleged victims – one of Father George Epoch and the…

View Cache

Abuse claims and outrage mount as Jesuit order and church in Bolivia undergo a tectonic shake

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

June 8, 2023

By David Agren

Read original article

Revelations of rampant sexual abuse by deceased Jesuit Fr. Alfonso Pedrajas have prompted dozens of people in Bolivia to come forward with similar accusations of atrocities in the South American country, where the Catholic Church confronts a reckoning over the criminal acts of pedophile priests.

An investigation by Bolivian newspaper Página Siete found more than 170 victims of clerical sexual abuse being raised since early May, when the Spanish newspaper El País published its exposé into Pedrajas — a Spanish Jesuit who kept a record of his abuse of children by writing a diary.

“What El País has achieved has been the victims connecting with each other, interacting with each other, daring to speak out. Many of the victims are more than 50 years old,” Raphael Archondo, an academic and former director of Fides, a news outlet supported by Bolivia’s Jesuits, told OSV News.

“There’s a wave of complaints and…

View Cache

Former Virginia Catholic priest sentenced to 8 years in prison for abusing teenager

(VA)
WRIC - ABC 8 [Richmond VA]

June 8, 2023

By Delaney Murray

Read original article

LOUDON COUNTY, Va. (WRIC) — A former Virginia priest was sentenced to spend eight years in prison for sexually abusing a teenager nearly four decades ago.

Scott Asalone, 66, is a former priest of St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville, Virginia. According to court documents, in 1985, a then-29-year-old Asalone sexually abused a 14-year-old child.

Asolone was removed from public duties in 1993 and dismissed from the Order of Capuchin Friars in 2007.

Asalone was indicted by a grand jury in March 2020 and was arrested from his home in New Jersey shortly afterward. He was then extradited to Virginia and remained on bond until his trial.

In December 2022, Asalone pled guilty using the Alford rule in a Loudon County Circuit Court to felony carnal knowledge of a minor between 13 and 15 years of age. An Alford plea allows a defendant to plead guilty…

View Cache

Instagram Connects Vast Pedophile Network

PALO ALTO (CA)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

June 7, 2023

By Jeff Horwitz and Katherine Blunt

Read original article

The Meta unit’s systems for fostering communities have guided users to child-sex content; company says it is improving internal controls

 Instagram, the popular social-media site owned by Meta Platforms, helps connect and promote a vast network of accounts openly devoted to the commission and purchase of underage-sex content, according to investigations by The Wall Street Journal and researchers at Stanford University and the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

Pedophiles have long used the internet, but unlike the forums and file-transfer services that cater to people who have interest in illicit content, Instagram doesn’t merely host these activities. Its algorithms promote them. Instagram connects pedophiles and guides them to content sellers via recommendation systems that excel at linking those who share niche interests, the Journal and the academic researchers found.

Though out of sight for most on the platform, the sexualized accounts on Instagram are brazen about their interest. The researchers found that…

View Cache

June 8, 2023

After raid found 1000’s of images, former RI priest pleads guilty to child pornography

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal [Providence RI]

June 8, 2023

By Katie Mulvaney

Read original article

Editor’s note: This story includes graphic details some readers may find offensive

PROVIDENCE – A former Providence Catholic priest pleaded guilty Thursday to a federal child pornography charge, days before his case was slated to head to trial.

James W. Jackson, 68, a former pastor at St. Mary’s Church, admitted to a felony count of receiving child pornography before U.S. District Court Judge William E. Smith.

In exchange, Assistant U.S. Attorney John P. McAdams agreed to dismiss a charge of possessing child pornography. His trial had been set to start June 20.

Background on James W. Jackson’s case

Rhode Island State Police arrested Jackson in October 2021 following an investigation into someone sharing child pornography that led to the St. Mary’s Catholic Parish and rectory at 538 Broadway. Investigators executing a search warrant there located more than 12,000 images and 1,300 video files depicting child sexual abuse, with Jackson…

View Cache

Registered sex offender remained an Orthodox Archpriest: SNAP appalled at this incomprehensible decision

DALLAS (TX)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

June 8, 2023

Read original article

(For Immediate Release June 8, 2023) 

A recently deceased Archpriest in the Diocese of the South (DOS), Orthodox Church in America (OCA), apparently continued bear the title of “archpriest,” despite being a registered sex offender. We are absolutely shocked that Archpriest Benjamin Henderson, who was convicted of possessing child pornography, was never defrocked.

We have written to the late Fr. Henderson’s hierarch, Archbishop Alexander Golitzin, asking him to explain how such a travesty came about, despite evidence that the DOS was at least aware that the priest had been charged with this heinous crime

A copy of SNAP’s letter to Archbishop Golitzin is linked here.

Child pornography is NOT a victimless crime. The images of the very real boys and girls who appear in the photos and videos are traded and used indefinitely, leading to a lifetime of victimization. Moreover, studies have shown…

View Cache

Survivor Wins Settlement Against Florida Megachurch & Goes Public with Abuse Story

ORANGE CITY (FL)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

June 7, 2023

By Jessica Eturralde

Read original article

Last year, Chellee Taylor, won an undisclosed settlement from a Southern Baptist megachurch in Florida, which she says silenced her and protected the campus pastor who sexually assaulted her. Now, Taylor is going public with her story, naming the church, Journey Church in Orange City, Fla.

She’s also naming Journey’s lead pastor, James Hilton, who’s also a trustee at Cedarville University—a Southern Baptist school, plagued by a recent sex abuse scandal and allegations of mishandling Title IX cases.

And Taylor is naming her alleged abuser—former Journey Orange City Campus Pastor Tom Wycuff.

Wycuff has since deleted his social media accounts and moved to his wife’s hometown in New Jersey. The Roys Report (TRR) reached out to Wycuff for comment but could not make contact.

Taylor told TRR that when she first disclosed what Wycuff had done, Journey gave her an ultimatum: resign or be fired. Then the…

View Cache

CofE promises improvements to abuse support scheme after cricitism

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

June 8, 2023

Read original article

The Church of England has said that changes are being made to improve a financial support scheme for clergy abuse survivors following heavy criticism. 

A review by the Independent Safeguarding Board said that survivors using the Church of England’s Interim Support Scheme (ISS) were at risk of “repeated re-traumatisation”. 

The review highlighted the experience of one man named only as ‘Mr X’ who was left feeling suicidal after accessing the scheme. 

The ISB said that the Church needed to take a “trauma-informed approach” and act with “urgency” in his case.

In a statement, the ISB said that the Church of England had failed to implement recommendation 7 within the expected timescale.

The recommendation addressed Mr X’s situation specifically and asked that the Church of England’s National Safeguarding Team (NST) convene a meeting within four weeks of the review, dated March 2023, to address his support needs.

“This action is now significantly overdue,”…

View Cache

Priests in Bolivia ‘saints by day, demons by night’: alleged victim

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Yahoo! [Sunnyvale CA]

June 7, 2023

By José Arturo Cárdenas, Agence France-Presse

Read original article

A Bolivian former seminarian who says he was the victim of a vast sex abuse network in the Catholic Church has told AFP of decades of “hell” meted out to children by men of the cloth.

Pedro Lima said not only minors but also adults like himself who were training to become priests were subject to abuse in the South American country, often by clergymen who arrived from Spain.

The 54-year-old, who has lived in Paraguay since 2011 where he works as a blacksmith, returned home last month to give evidence in a vast investigation into child predation at schools countrywide, including a boarding school for poor, rural kids in Cochabamba.

“The children lived through hell,” he recounted of things he said he saw. “These abusive priests were saints by day, demons by night.”

At the center of the latest scandal is a Spanish priest by the name of Alfonso…

View Cache

Defrocked Nunavut priest arrested on historical sexual assault charges

TORONTO (CANADA)
Toronto Star [Toronto, Canada]

June 7, 2023

By The Canadian Press

Read original article

KINGSTON, Ont. – A defrocked Oblate priest and convicted sex offender is facing eight new criminal charges for past sexual assaults he allegedly committed while living in Nunavut.

Iqaluit RCMP said Eric Dejaeger, 76, was arrested on a Canada-wide warrant Wednesday in Kingston, Ont., where he was living. Police said he will be transported to Iqaluit to appear on the charges before the Nunavut Court of Justice.

Police gave no details about when and where the alleged assaults occurred, but said the charges stem from investigations conducted between 2011 and 2015.

Dejaeger, who was born in Belgium and became a Canadian citizen in 1977, has previously been convicted of numerous sexual offences.

He served part of a five-year sentence beginning in 1990 for sexual crimes against children in Baker Lake, Nunavut, committed between 1982 and 1989.

Following his release, he learned RCMP were investigating his activities in Igloolik, Nvt., and…

View Cache

Editorial: Archbishop helped right embattled Catholic Church

SANTA FE (NM)
Albuquerque Journal [Albuquerque NM]

June 7, 2023

By The Albuquerque nournal Editorial Board

Read original article

The right man at the right time. Santa Fe Archdiocese Archbishop Emeritus Michael J. Sheehan was certainly that.

The retired archbishop’s death Saturday reminds us of one of the darkest chapters in the history of the Catholic Church, and how one man’s integrity and forthrightness helped restore faith in his archdiocese.

Sheehan presided over the Santa Fe Archdiocese for 22 years, from 1993 to 2015. It wasn’t easy from the start as a sexual abuse scandal of epic proportions was beginning to rock the archdiocese. Just three weeks before Sheehan faced a packed room of reporters at his first news conference in Albuquerque in April 1993, former Santa Fe Archbishop Robert F. Sanchez had resigned after five women alleged he sexually molested them as teenagers. Sanchez was one of at least 14 New Mexico priests accused of sexual abuse when Pope John Paul II named Sheehan as acting head of…

View Cache

Defrocked Canadian priest arrested on further sexual assault charges

KINGSTON (CANADA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 7, 2023

Read original article

KINGSTON, Ontario (AP) — A defrocked Canadian priest and convicted sex offender is facing eight new criminal charges for past sexual assaults he allegedly committed while living in northern Canada, authorities said Wednesday.

Iqaluit Royal Canadian Mounted Police said Eric Dejaeger, 76, was arrested on a Canada-wide warrant in Kingston, Ontario, where he was living. Police said he will be transported to Iqaluit, Nunavut, to appear on the charges before the Nunavut Court of Justice.

Police gave no details about when and where the alleged assaults occurred, but said the charges stem from investigations conducted between 2011 and 2015.

Dejaeger, who was born in Belgium and became a Canadian citizen in 1977, has previously been convicted of numerous sexual offences.

He served part of a five-year sentence beginning in 1990 for sexual crimes against children in Baker Lake, Nunavut, committed between 1982 and 1989.

Following his release, he learned police…

View Cache

US lawyer who alerted school to priest’s sexual misconduct seeks damages

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

June 8, 2023

By Ramon Antonio Vargas in New Orleans

Read original article

Richard Trahant, fined $400,000 for alerting high school about priest, accuses law firm of trying to harm his reputation

An American attorney fined $400,000 for alerting a Roman Catholic high school that a priest stationed there admitted fondling and kissing a teenage girl during a previous assignment is seeking damages from church lawyers as he fights the penalty.

The lawsuit filed last week by the Louisiana-based attorney Richard Trahant accuses a law firm representing New Orleans’s archdiocese in a bankruptcy protection case – and administrators of the proceeding – of trying to harm his reputation by widely but improperly publicizing the judicial order behind the fine.

In a statement on Wednesday responding to the suit Trahant and his wife, Amy, filed five days earlier, the Jones Walker law firm said it followed the instructions of the judge who levied the fine. “Mr Trahant and his wife claim that…

View Cache

Opinion: The Boy Scouts’ sexual abuse scandal needs to finally be investigated

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

June 8, 2023

By Cara Kelly

Read original article

Cara Kelly is an editor at the Investigative Reporting Workshop and adjunct professor of journalism at American University.

Last month, the attorney general of Illinois released the results of a years-long investigation into child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy, revealing 348 more abusers in the state than the church had previously disclosed — and nearly 2,000 child victims.

This was the latest of more than 20 similar reports that began with a 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury statement on more than 300 abusive priests and 1,000 child victims. In April, Maryland’s investigation detailed abuse by 150 clergy members against more than 600 victims.

Alarming as they are on their own, these reports also point to another child sexual abuse case that is even bigger — and ongoing — and yet has never been as thoroughly examined.

This one…

View Cache

Media organizations push for release of sealed records of US priest accused of abusing children

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

June 7, 2023

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Read original article

The Guardian, the Associated Press and state prosecutors contend that there’s legitimate public interest in documents dealing with Lawrence Hecker

Two national US media organizations and Louisiana state prosecutors have joined efforts to secure the public release of sealed information that would provide a more complete account of a retired Roman Catholic priest in New Orleans who has been previously accused of molesting several children.

In papers filed late Wednesday at New Orleans’s federal courthouse, the Guardian and the Associated Press contend that there is a legitimate public interest in the contents of the documents dealing with Lawrence Hecker despite archdiocesan claims that the information could be disparaging to the organization.

The Guardian and AP argue that the records were improperly labeled as confidential after the church filed its pending, three-year-old bankruptcy case and are seeking to remove that designation, supporting arguments first advanced by Aaron Hebert, who…

View Cache

Abuse: Traunstein Pope procedure: victim demands 350,000 euros

TRAUNSTEIN (GERMANY)
News in Germany [Berlin, DE]

June 7, 2023

Read original article

A high sum is demanded in the Traunstein Pope trial. The person concerned is not alone with his financial claim. The beginning of a wave of lawsuits against the Catholic Church?

Two weeks before the scheduled start of the civil trial in Traunstein about sexual abuse In the Catholic Archdiocese of Munich and Freising, the amount involved has become known for the first time.

A victim of abuse demands a total of 350,000 euros from the Archdiocese and the heirs of the deceased Pope Benedict XVI This was confirmed by the man’s lawyer, Andreas Schulz, of the German Press Agency.

Previously, “Correctiv”, Bavarian radio and “Die Zeit” reported on the claim and quoted from a corresponding brief. The plaintiff is demanding 300,000 euros from the archbishopric and 50,000 euros in compensation from the heirs of the pope emeritus who died on New Year’s Eve. According to a spokeswoman, the court put the…

View Cache

NOLA District Attorney joins effort to unseal secret Archdiocese records for criminal investigation

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WWLTV [New Orleans, LA]

June 6, 2023

By David Hammer

Read original article

It’s the first time that law enforcement has made moves to expose secret records the Archdiocese has fought to protect for decades.

Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams is urging a federal court to unseal sworn testimony by the Rev. Lawrence Hecker, as well as records held in secret by the New Orleans Archdiocese about Hecker, saying his office needs them to bring potential criminal charges against the accused child molester.

“The continued sealing of the documents in this case serves as a major impediment to a proper investigation,” Williams wrote in a motion filed Tuesday. “Sworn deposition testimony concerning the commission of a crime should not be withheld from a prosecutorial authority merely because reputations may be harmed. Evidence that a crime has been committed should be brought before the proper court.”

It’s the first time that law enforcement has made moves to expose secret records the Archdiocese has…

View Cache

What Should Maine’s Bishop Have Done About Fr. Anthony Cipolle?

PORTLAND (ME)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

June 6, 2023

Read original article

Rarely do we at Horowitz Law take time out to respond to our critics. This is an exception. After we criticized what Maine Catholic officials did and did not do with one particular priest, a reader raised an interesting, legitimate question: “How SHOULD Catholic officials have handled this situation?”

Just to recap- Maine Bishop Robert Deeley ordained Fr. Anthony Cipolle in 2017, despite a troubling past that included multiple career changes, a son, a marriage, and criminal charges, including attempted murder, attempted insurance fraud, and drug possession. After just over a year on the job, he was removed as church officials’ investigated his role in the murder of a woman in 2018. The diocese determined that Fr. Cipolle abused his position as a clergy member, violated the diocesan ‘code of ethics,’ and tried to deceive investigators. More recently, Fr. Cipolle was found working as a chaplain…

View Cache

Sacerdote Eduardo Córdova: iglesia sigue promoviendo el peso de la ley, asegura arzobispo de SLP

SAN LUIS POTOSí (MEXICO)
El Universal [Mexico City, Mexico]

June 4, 2023

By Xochiquétzal Rangel, Samuel Estrada y Nancy Hernánde

Read original article

“Hay que apoyar a las víctimas de estas situaciones graves, tristes y dolorosas”, opina Jorge Alberto Cavazos por casos impunes de violación en manos del religioso

*Segunda parte 

“Hay que apoyar a las víctimas de estas situaciones graves, tristes y dolorosas”, sostuvo el arzobispo de San Luis Potosí, Jorge Alberto Cavazos Arizpe, al respecto de que ya se cumplen nueve años de la denuncia en la que se reveló que decenas de personas durante su adolescencia fueron víctimas de abuso sexual por parte del expárroco 

El máximo jerarca de la iglesia potosina manifestó que para la Diócesis no es un “caso cerrado” y se comparte la postura de las víctimas de que la justicia sólo llegará cuando las autoridades detengan a esta persona y sea juzgada por el poder civil, por lo que incluso refirió que ha hablado del tema con las autoridades correspondientes.

Añadió que tiene conocimiento que desde que…

View Cache

Sacerdote Eduardo Córdova: más de 100 casos de abuso sexual contra menores siguen impunes

SAN LUIS POTOSí (MEXICO)
El Universal [Mexico City, Mexico]

June 2, 2023

By Xochiquétzal Rangel, Samuel Estrada and Nancy Hernández

Read original article

El sacerdote potosino sigue prófugo de la justicia, pese a que su ficha de búsqueda fue girada por la Interpol; víctimas en SLP narran los abusos y el calvario en búsqueda de justicia

*PRIMERA DE DOS PARTES

Acusado penalmente por el abuso sexual de al menos 19 menores de edad, aunque colectivos contra la pederastia le atribuyen más de 100 actos de abuso, el sacerdote potosino Eduardo Córdova ha burlado las leyes por más de 40 años. En 1983, aún sin ingresar al seminario, inició su historial como agresor sexual y aunque fue denunciado ante la cúpula católica, ésta misma le permitió consolidarse como líder religioso y con ello acumular decenas de agravios de este mismo tipo.Sponsored Links5.5% High Interest Savings AccountsStuffAnsweredLearn More

La Iglesia católica y la élite potosina se cimbró cuando se destaparon públicamente en 2014 los múltiples…

View Cache

June 7, 2023

Group says some clergy credibly accused of sex abuse in Illinois live without supervision

CHICAGO (IL)
WGN-TV [Chicago IL]

June 6, 2023

By Courtney Spinelli

Read original article

Advocates, attorneys, and several survivors of childhood sexual abuse at the hands of clergy members are calling for action and increased transparency by the Catholic church.

“The real impact this has is, you have to look at life through a whole different lens. It’s not a fun one,” said Mike, a survivor who said he was sexually abused by a pastor of his parish in Berwyn decades ago when he was only 11.

He believes what isn’t talked about enough when it comes to sexual assault, is the way it impacts how a survivor sees the world.

“You learn to survive; you learn to thrive,” said Mike. “I’ve had a great life. It’s a perspective that’s a bit unusual.”

On Tuesday, Mike joined others at a news conference prompted by a 700-page report released nearly two weeks ago by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul. In it, 451 Catholic clergy members…

View Cache

Catholic Priest Accused of Assaulting 8-Year-Old Girl Released on Conditions

WINNIPEG (CANADA)
BNN [Winnipeg, Canada]

June 6, 2023

By Sakchi Khandelwal

Read original article

Priest released from custody on agreed conditions after allegations of sexual assault on Manitoba First Nation

Arul Savari, a Roman Catholic priest facing accusations of sexually assaulting an 8-year-old girl in a church on a remote Manitoba First Nation, has been released from custody. The 48-year-old appeared via video in a Winnipeg court before a judicial justice of the peace on Monday, where the Crown and his defense lawyer agreed upon a set of conditions for his release.

During the court proceedings, when asked if he agreed with the conditions, Savari responded with “OK.” He is facing five charges, including sexual assault, sexual interference, and forcible confinement.

Savari had been in custody since May 27, following a complaint made by the mother of the 8-year-old girl to the Little Grand Rapids RCMP. According to the RCMP, the girl was alone with the priest when he allegedly touched her inappropriately. The…

View Cache

The remains of five Native American children who died at an Indigenous boarding school are being returned to their tribes over a century later

CARLISLE (PA)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

June 4, 2023

By Alaa Elassar, CNN

Read original article

The remains of five children who died at a Pennsylvania boarding school for Native Americans are going to be exhumed and returned to their families who have waited for their return for more than a century, the Office of Army Cemeteries (OAC) has announced.

The children died between 1880 and 1910 while attending the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, a boarding school for Native American children known for physical and sexual abuse, the US Department of Interior detailed in a 2022 report.

They were forced to assimilate into White society, stripped of their Indigenous names and banned from speaking their languages. If they resisted, they were punished, often violently, according to the report.

The names of the children who are being repatriated to their tribes, the OAC announced May 24, are: Edward Upright…

View Cache

Michigan lawmakers renew effort to give sex abuse victims more time to sue

LANSING (MI)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 6, 2023

By Joey Cappelletti

Read original article

Michigan lawmakers introduced bipartisan legislation Tuesday that would give victims of sexual abuse more time to sue for damages as the state again looks to overhaul laws following multiple sexual abuse scandals.

The legislation, which appeared before a committee Tuesday afternoon, would expand the civil statute of limitations for sex abuse victims from age 28 to 52. If enacted, victims would also have a two-year window to sue retroactively, regardless of the time limit.

The new measures would allow victims of the late Dr. Robert Anderson at the University of Michigan and others additional time to bring lawsuits that have previously been barred by the statute of limitations. Government entities could not use the immunity defense if they knew or should have known of an accused’s prior sexual misconduct and failed to intervene.

In 2018, Michigan increased the statute of limitations to 28 years old following the conviction of Larry Nassar, who…

View Cache

In head-scratching cases, “It’s the transparency, stupid”

FORT WORTH (TX)
Crux [Denver CO]

June 6, 2023

By Chris Altieri

Read original article

The case of the Carmelite nuns in Fort Worth, Texas, has been a head-scratching one since the moment it made the papers about a week ago. It had all the elements of a sensational story – and a salacious one, to boot – even before the Vatican intervention, but very little is known for certain.

The barest bones of the story are that the Bishop of Fort Worth, Michael Olson, opened an investigation in April into at least one unspecified allegation of sexual misconduct against the superior of the Carmelite monastic community in Arlington, Tx., Mother Teresa Agnes (Gerlach) of Jesus Crucified, and last week summarily dismissed her not only from the leadership of the monastery but from the Carmelite Order.

The Diocese of Fort Worth has claimed Gerlach admitted to some sexual misconduct, but the sisters say their erstwhile superior was questioned while in a post-operative stupor.

In fact,…

View Cache

Carmelite nun files defamation claim against US bishop

FORT WORTH (TX)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

June 6, 2023

By Maria Wiering, OSV News

Read original article

Bishop Michael F. Olson of Fort Worth was investigating nun’s ‘admitted-to violations’ of Sixth Commandment and chastity vow

A Carmelite religious sister added a defamation claim to her lawsuit against Bishop Michael F. Olson of Fort Worth, Texas, June 2, the day after he used newly granted authority from the Holy See to decree her dismissal from the Carmelite order.

Reverend Mother Teresa Agnes of Jesus Crucified Gerlach and fellow Discalced Carmelite nuns of the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity in Arlington, Texas, claim that Bishop Olson’s public statements about the mother superior “are patently false and defamatory.” The diocese has made several public statements alleging that Mother Teresa Agnes is guilty of sexual misconduct with a priest from outside the Diocese of Fort Worth.

The statements are related to an investigation the bishop launched into the nun and her religious community in late April, during which he and…

View Cache

Partisan stalemate keeps child sexual assault lawsuit window from advancing in Pennsylvania

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

June 5, 2023

Read original article

Child sexual abuse survivors pressed Pennsylvania lawmakers Monday to move ahead with opening a two-year window for them to file otherwise outdated lawsuits over their claims, but a partisan fight in the Legislature kept the proposal bottled up with no resolution in sight.

Amid the stalemate, survivors renewed calls for the Legislature to pass either version of the measure — one that would give voters final say on the window in the form of a constitutional amendment, the other legislation that would also need Democratic Gov. Josh Shapiro’s signature.

Speaking at a rally on the Capitol’s exterior front steps, Amish, Mennonite and Plain people were among those who recounted abuse they had endured and urged passage of the window.

“Here we are again fighting for our rights as victims and survivors of childhood sexual abuse who have been waiting many, many years for the opportunity for justice, to find out…

View Cache

Pope to meet clergy sexual abuse victims in Portugal

LISBON (PORTUGAL)
Reuters [London, England]

June 6, 2023

By Catarina Demony

Read original article

Pope Francis plans to meet victims of clergy sexual abuse during his five-day visit to Portugal in August to coincide with World Youth Day, Lisbon assistant bishop Americo Aguiar said on Tuesday.

Francis, who is 86, will travel to Portugal from Aug. 2-6 to attend the global gathering of young Catholics held for the first time since 2019 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

He will attend over 15 events, including a mass, a vigil, meetings with youngsters and politicians and a visit to the Fatima sanctuary.

Francis’ agenda was released on Tuesday and at the event Aguiar said the pontiff would meet victims of sexual abuse committed by members of the Portuguese Catholic Church.

A Portuguese commission investigating the issue said in February at least 4,815 children were sexually abused by clergy members in the country – mostly priests – over 70 years.

The date and location of the meeting was not…

View Cache

Chi Alpha ‘Mentor’ Daniel Savala Arrested on Sex Abuse Charges

HOUSTON (TX)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

June 2, 2023

By Josh Shepherd

Read original article

Daniel Savala, who’s accused of sexually abusing multiple men in the Assemblies of God’s Chi Alpha Campus Ministries, has been arrested in Houston on sex abuse charges involving minors.

On Friday morning, Savala, 67, was arrested by the U.S. Marshals Lone Star Fugitive Task Force at his residence in downtown Houston and booked at the Fort Bend County Jail in Richmond, Texas. He was charged with continuous sexual abuse of a child under age 14, a first-degree felony in Texas, in a warrant that originated from Waco Police Department. 

It’s the second arrest in an investigation started in April by Waco Police Department’s Crimes Against Children Unit. On May 23, Chris Hundl, former leader of the Chi Alpha chapter at Baylor University and pastor of Mountain Valley Fellowship in Waco, was arrested on identical charges in Waco. 

According to police records, Hundl drove two boys to Savala’s residence in Houston where…

View Cache

Former Purcellville Priest Sentenced to Prison for Child Sexual Abuse

PURCELLVILLE (VA)
Loudoun Now [Leesburg, VA]

June 6, 2023

By Norman K. Styer

Read original article

Rejecting a probation-only recommendation derived from the commonwealth’s sentencing guidelines, Circuit Court Judge James E. Plowman today sentenced a former priest at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church in Purcellville to eight years in prison for the 1985 sexual assault of a teen at his parish.

Scott Asalone, 66, was 29 years old when he was a Capuchin friar working at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church and befriended the 14-year-old victim. That their relationship included sexual conduct came to light in 1992, when the victim wrote a letter to Asalone detailing the impact that abuse had on his life, including substance abuse and a lasting distrust of others. 

After that letter, Asalone was transferred from the parish and the victim was awarded a civil settlement. According to a 2019 report of past sexual abuse allegations released by the Diocese of Arlington, Asalone was ordained in 1983, removed from public ministry…

View Cache

June 6, 2023

IL church & elected officials must do more for kids’ safety

CHICAGO (IL)
DavidClohessy.com [St. Louis MO]

June 1, 2023

By David Clohessy

Read original article

The top law enforcement authority in Illinois says there are 149 credibly accused child molesting clerics who are basically still being protected, even now, by Catholic bishops.

To these bishops, this is apparently some kind of minor bureaucratic squabble. To us, however, it’s an urgent public safety concern.

Bishops are essentially ignoring these 149 offending clerics. They’re essentially saying ‘We’re better at figuring out who’s dangerous than the Illinois Attorney General is.’

 Catholics should be outraged by their arrogance and recklessness. Catholics should insist that every single one of these predators be added to diocesan lists of those facing substantiated abuse reports.

 This self-serving refusal by bishops to be honest about the men who assaulted youngsters is dangerous.

 But another self-serving refusal by bishops is also dangerous. It’s their refusal to warn the public about the predator priests who walk freely – unmonitored and unsupervised – across Illinois right now.

 Catholics…

View Cache

Exactly 30 Years Before Illinois Ag’s Devastating Sexual Abuse Report, A Plan for Prevention Was Implemented, Then Scrapped

BELLEVILLE (IL)
Religion Dispatches [Somerville, MA]

June 1, 2023

By David Clohessy

Read original article

“Way too damned little and way too damned late.”

That’s what one life-long Illinois Catholic woman I’ll call “Margaret” told me last week when the state’s attorney general released a nearly 700-page report, based on a five-year investigation, that concluded at least 2,000 kids were sexually abused by 451 priests.

But what has many both outside and inside the church so infuriated is the even-more-shocking charge being leveled by the attorney general that six Illinois bishops are refusing, even now, to post, on their diocesan websites, the names of some 149 clerics accused of sexually abusing children who are or have been in Illinois.

And why, apart from the fact that it’s obviously the right thing, should the bishops do this? Because, as the state’s top law enforcement authority stresses, each of these men is already listed on official public church websites elsewhere and is deemed “credibly” accused by official church prelates…

View Cache

Loudon County Priest convicted of sex crime

(VA)
WDBJ-TV, CBS-7 [Roanoke VA]

June 6, 2023

By Kaitlyn Dillon

Read original article

Scott Asalone, a former priest of St. Francis de Sales Catholic Church was sentenced to eight years in prison for carnal knowledge of a 14 year-old child.

In addition to the prison sentence, Asalone is required to register as a sex offender for the rest of his life and have no contact with the victim.

The incident occurred in 1985 when Asalone was 29 and the victim was 14. According to court documents, “Asalone was removed from public duties in 1993 and dismissed from the Order of Capuchin Friars in 2007.”

Asalone was initially arrested in New Jersey March 2020 and plead guilty after being extradited to Virginia in December 2022.

Copyright 2023 WDBJ. All rights reserved.

View Cache

El milagro de la Iglesia española con los abusos: de cero a mil víctimas en dos años

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

June 2, 2023

By Íñigo Domínguez

Read original article

La Conferencia Episcopal sigue perdiendo tiempo con el escándalo de la pederastia. Su primer informe es opaco e insuficiente, y hace equilibrios para contar afectados declarando al mismo tiempo que eso no implica que les crea

EL PAÍS puso en marcha en 2018 una investigación de la pederastia en la Iglesia española y tiene una base de datos actualizada con todos los casos conocidos. Si conoce algún caso que no haya visto la luz, nos puede escribir a: abusos@elpais.es. Si es un caso en América Latina, la dirección es: abusosamerica@elpais.es.

La Iglesia española sigue perdiendo tiempo con el escándalo de la pederastia en el clero. Al menos ya se mueve, pero tarde y lentamente. En dos años ha dado un giro notable, de la negación a la admisión. Este jueves la Conferencia Episcopal (CEE) ha presentado por primera vez un informe: reconoce 728 acusados y casi…

View Cache

The Disturbing Truth: Illinois Bishops Still Hiding Child-Molesting Clergy

CHICAGO (IL)
Religion Unplugged - The Media Project - Institute for Nonprofit News [Dallas TX]

June 6, 2023

By David Clohessy

Read original article

(OPINION) Though I’m no longer a believer, in the wake of yet another jaw-dropping Catholic scandal, two Biblical passages have coursed through my mind recently. 

The first verse is John 8:32: “Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.”

Illinois’ six bishops are no doubt familiar with it. Like many profound bits of wisdom, it’s short and sweet, with absolutely no qualifiers, exceptions or excuses.

Why then do these well-educated prelates apparently think the actual wording is “Some of the truth shall set you free, but you get to determine how much and when and how to reveal it?”

That’s the only rational conclusion that explains why, after decades of horrific, widespread, well-documented child sex crimes and cover-ups, these bishops still refuse to come clean about child-molesting clergy.

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul impressively documented this continuing duplicitousness in his 696-page, just-released report on…

View Cache

Ex-Maryland state Sen. Robert ‘Bobby’ Zirkin advertises legal assistance under Child Victims Act, which he once testified against

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

June 5, 2023

By Hannah Gaskill

Read original article

Former Maryland state Sen. Robert “Bobby” Zirkin, a personal injury lawyer, has joined the growing and pervasive number of law firms advertising services to abuse survivors under the Child Victims Act.

Zirkin once testified in opposition to the law on behalf of the Catholic Church, but now finds himself in a position to bring in business because of it.

“The law had been determined by The Attorney General for many years to violate the Maryland Constitution and Declaration of Rights. Nevertheless, the General Assembly passed the legislation,” read an email from his law firm, Zirkin & Schmerling Law.

After four hard-fought legislative sessions, the Maryland General Assembly in 2023 passed the Child Victims Act, which eliminates the statute of limitations for survivors of childhood sexual abuse, allowing them to sue their perpetrators and the institutions that their abusers worked for.

According to CHILD USA, a national think tank…

View Cache

Church, civil laws must hold priests accountable for child abuse

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

June 5, 2023

By Father Shay Cullen

Read original article

It is that terrible time again for devout Catholics and Christians everywhere when the evil of clerical child sex abuse is revealed once again on the international stage.

An investigative report on clerical child abuse released May 23 by the US Attorney General named six Catholic dioceses in Illinois and declared that clerical child abuse is as rife today as in the past.

The sacred trust that the people of God, followers of Jesus have in the clergy is challenged by the truth about clerical abuse of children.

If they have true faith in Jesus of Nazareth and his teaching that goodness, truth, justice, and love of neighbor and children will one day overcome and defeat evil, their faith will not be shaken. They will stand firm and welcome the truth that is cleansing the institutional Church.

In the Philippines, the cleansing has not yet happened. Child abuse cases involving…

View Cache

Buffalo Diocese seeks updated value of 37 properties as it looks to settle abuse claims

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

June 5, 2023

By Jay Tokasz

Read original article

More than three dozen Buffalo Diocese properties could soon be appraised for current values that ultimately may factor heavily into a settlement with sexual abuse claimants in the diocese’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy case.

Lawyers for the diocese are asking a federal judge to approve a request to hire KLW Appraisal Group to come up with valuations for 37 properties spread across six counties.

The properties vary from 15 acres of vacant land in the Town of Hamburg near the Erie County Fairgrounds to a historically significant four-story office building in the heart of Buffalo’s medical corridor. They also include six school buildings, two retirement homes for priests, St. Joseph Cathedral, and the former Christ the King Seminary in Aurora.

They were estimated collectively to be worth $16 million in 2020 when the diocese first sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in response to more than 200 Child Victims Act lawsuits alleging…

View Cache

Carmelite nuns file new theft and defamation charges against Fort Worth Bishop Olson

FORT WORTH (TX)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

June 5, 2023

By Peter Pinedo for CNA

Read original article

Carmelite nuns of the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity in Arlington, Texas, filed new theft and defamation charges Friday against Bishop Michael Olson of Fort Worth.

The nuns’ new charges were filed in a district court for Tarrant County, Texas, the day after Olson dismissed the monastery’s prioress, Reverend Mother Teresa Agnes Gerlach, from religious life on the grounds that she had a sexual affair with an unnamed priest.

In a Thursday decree, Olson announced he had found Gerlach, prioress of the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity in Arlington, “guilty of having violated the sixth commandment of the Decalogue and her vow of chastity with a priest from outside the Diocese of Fort Worth.”

The new charges levied by the monastery are in addition to a lawsuit filed on May 3 that seeks $1 million in civil damages and asks the court to block the…

View Cache

‘That’s when he raped me’: Survivors of clergy abuse in Missouri screen documentary

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Missouri Independent [Jefferson City MO]

June 6, 2023

By Sam Bailey

Read original article

OVERLAND PARK, Kansas — When Joe Eldred was a child, he was sexually abused by three Catholic priests while attending Nativity of Mary Catholic Church and the accompanying elementary school in Independence, Missouri.

Eldred told his story in “Procession,” a documentary directed by Robert Greene that tells the story of six men who were abused by priests in the Catholic church. The documentary starts in Kansas City, Missouri, where much of the abuse occurred, and follows the survivors as they face their trauma and work to heal together.

Most of the abuse Eldred discussed in the film occurred at Lake Viking, a private, man-made lake in northwest Missouri. There, a priest introduced him to Thomas Reardon.

“I remember Father Reardon saying, ‘Come on, let’s show them how much fun this can be.’ And that’s when he raped me,” Eldred said in the documentary.

Through the filming process, Eldred was able…

View Cache

Indian bishop resigns 16 months after rape trial

(INDIA)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

June 2, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus, CNA

Read original article

The Vatican did not indicate whether it carried out its own investigation into the accusations against Mulakkal.

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of an Indian bishop who was cleared last year of charges of raping a religious sister in his diocese.

The resignation of the 59-year-old Bishop of Jalandhar, Franco Mulakkal, comes 16 months after his acquittal by a court in India’s Kerala state in January 2022.

The judge in the case found that “the prosecution failed to prove all the charges against the accused”.

The Vatican did not indicate whether it carried out its own investigation into the accusations against Mulakkal, who has denied the claims and contends he was falsely accused after he questioned alleged financial irregularities at his accuser’s convent.

A religious sister with the Missionaries of Jesus accused the bishop of raping her in May 2014, during a visit to her convent in Kuravilangad, Kerala….

View Cache

SSPX priest sentenced to 20 years for abuse

LA ROCHE-SUR-YON (FRANCE)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

June 6, 2023

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

The sentence is one of the most severe penalties for clerical sexual abuse handed down in France.

A priest of the Society of Saint Pius X (SSPX) has been sentenced by a French court to 20 years in prison for the rape and sexual assault of 27 minors – 16 boys and 11 girls between 12 and 15 years old at the time.

Some of Fr Pierre de Maillard’s victims were from the same family, sometimes abused in their parents’ homes, the jury trial in La Roche sur Yon, capital of the Vendée department of western France, was told.

Before the jury retired to consider its decision, the 55-year-old priest said: “Excuse me, I’m sorry, excuse me, I’m sorry.”

The sentence on 2 June was one of the most severe penalties for clerical sexual abuse handed down in France, where the Catholic Church has been haunted by the scandal for…

View Cache

Una familia acusa a la Iglesia de proteger a un cura que abusó de su hija en Juárez

CHIHUAHUA (MEXICO)
Sinembargo.mx [Mexico City, Mexico]

May 31, 2023

By Sugeyry Romina Gándara

Read original article

Jorge Ordoñez es un padre que por tres años ha estado en busca de justicia para su hija, quien fue víctima de abuso sexual por parte de un sacerdote en Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua. Sin embargo, a lo largo de este tiempo, se ha encontrado con obstáculos, negación y presunto encubrimiento por parte de la Iglesia.

Ciudad de México, 31 de mayo (SinEmbargo). – Jorge Ordoñez emprende desde hace tres años una de las batallas más complicadas: buscar justicia para su hija, quien cuando tenía 10 años fue víctima de abuso sexual por parte de un sacerdote en Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua.

Jorge Ordoñez, el padre de la menor, denunció en entrevista con SinEmbargo, que luego de acusar formalmente a un sacerdote que abusó de la pequeña en una reunión a la que acudió con su madre en el año 2020, hasta la fecha no solo ha encontrado falta de justicia, sino obstáculos, negación por parte de…

View Cache

June 5, 2023

Church in Spain collects almost 1,000 complaints of sexual abuse since 1945

MADRID (SPAIN)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

June 2, 2023

By Nicolás de Cárdenas

Read original article

The Catholic Church in Spain on June 1 presented the report “To shed light,” which tallies 927 complaints of alleged sexual abuse of minors under 18 years of age or vulnerable people that occurred from 1945 to 2022.

The report does not include situations involving the abuse of conscience and power or committed against adults.

The report was “prepared from the testimonies that have been collected in the offices [of the protection of minors and abuse prevention], without assuming or proving innocence or guilt.”

The Spanish Bishops’ Conference (CEE) also acknowledged that in the account it presented “it’s possible that there are some duplications of testimonies.”

The complaints indicate 728 alleged perpetrators including 170 diocesan priests and 208 ordained religious, 234 non-ordained men and women religious, one deacon, 92 laypeople, and 23 people whose state is unknown.

Most abuse was of homosexual nature

According to the data provided by the…

View Cache

Report: IL Megachurch Pastor Likely Misused Position to Cover Up Son’s Alleged Sexual Misconduct

NORMAL (IL)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

June 5, 2023

By Rebecca Hopkins

Read original article

An Illinois megachurch pastor likely misused his position in 2016 to cover up credible sexual misconduct allegations concerning his son, a former pastor at the church, an independent investigation has found.

Mike Baker, former senior pastor at Eastview Christian Church (ECC), “more likely than not” withheld information from staff and church elders about sexual misconduct allegations made about his son, Caleb Baker, in 2016, the report by Wagenmaker and Oberly found. The report also found that Caleb Baker likely used his pastoral role at ECC to “persuade women to engage in sexual activity,” confirming prior reporting by The Roys Report (TRR).  

The report also determined that Mike Baker likely didn’t share the extent of the allegations against his son with the pastor who hired Caleb subsequent to his firing at ECC—Pastor Cal Jernigan of Central Christian Church in Arizona. Jernigan said last February that Mike Baker had told…

View Cache

Connecticut priest accused of sexual assault

HARTFORD (CT)
WTNH-TV, ABC-8 [New Haven CT]

June 1, 2023

By Brittany Schaefer

Read original article

HAMDEN, Conn. (WTNH) — A priest that served in Waterbury, Torrington and Hamden in the last five years is now the center of a sexual assault lawsuit.

“When we see a priest or anybody working for the diocese transferred quickly over a short period of time that’s concerning and that’s a red flag for us,” said Mike McDonnell with the Survivor’s Network of Those Abused by Priests. “Out of sight, out of mind. Let the dust settle.”

Reverend Mauricio Galvis joined Saint John Paul Roman Catholic Church in Torrington in 2019. A year later, the alleged victim says she developed trust, respect and reliance for the Reverend, which then led to manipulation and various sexual acts without her consent.

The alleged incident happened in Torrington in September 2020.

According to court documents the victim allegedly continues to suffer from physical injuries and emotional distress.

News 8 did reach out to…

View Cache

Illinois AG clergy report lists Troy priest as failing to disclose abuse

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
The Troy Times Tribune [Troy IL]

May 30, 2023

By Pat Pratt

Read original article

The parish priest of St. Jerome’s in Troy is named in the state’s recent sex abuse in the Catholic Church report, which alleges he lied to help a pedophile cohort get a teaching job years ago at a community college in Florida. 

Rev. Kevin Laughery during weekend mass acknowledged giving a job reference in the early 1990s for Walter Weerts, a known pedophile priest with 22 victims who served in several Metro East parishes, but said he “did not lie” in doing so.

The Office of the Illinois Attorney General’s “Report on Catholic Clergy Child Sex Abuse in Illinois,” issued last week lists 451 Catholic religious figures who over a span of about 70 years abused at least 1,997 children across dioceses in Illinois. 

Included in the report is Weerts, who following his ordination in 1960, served in Edwardsville, Granite City and Highland and befriended parishioners in an effort to gain access to their children. In 1986,…

View Cache