ABUSE TRACKER

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

May 24, 2023

Survivors of sex abuse by Catholic priests in Joliet diocese react to Illinois AG’s report

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

May 23, 2023

By Sarah Schulte

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[VIDEO – The Illinois attorney general had the sharpest criticism for the Joliet Diocese’s handling of sex abuse investigations, and two survivors experienced that firsthand.]

The sharpest criticism in the Illinois attorney general’s report on sex abuse in the Catholic church in Illinois is for the diocese of Joliet and its handling of reported abuse cases under the late Bishop Joseph Imesch. The report details 69 cases of abuse there.

David Rudofski and Eddie Burkel had never met before Tuesday, but both men are survivors of sexual abuse by different priests in the Joliet diocese.

“As an adult I’ve learned how it affects you and how it just breaks you down,” said Burkel.

Burkel was a 13-year-old altar boy at St. Dominic Catholic Church in Bolingbrook when he was abused by Father James Nowak.

Rudofsi said he was 8 years old when Father James Burnett abused him at St….

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Statement of Bishop Ronald A. Hicks on the Illinois Attorney General’s Report on Catholic Clergy Sexual Abuse of Minors

JOLIET (IL)
Diocese of Joliet IL

May 23, 2023

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The Illinois attorney general’s office today issued a final report on clergy sexual abuse of minors in the six Catholic dioceses in the state. This report is the result of our four years’ cooperation with the Attorney General’s office, beginning in 2019.  The pages of the final report tell a story of pain, grief, shame, betrayal, and anger experienced by innocent individuals because of unspeakable acts by clergy in the Diocese of Joliet. Although the majority of abuse occurred decades ago, many victims/survivors remain haunted to this day.

As the sixth bishop of the Diocese of Joliet, I express profound remorse over any failure of the diocese to respond to an allegation of abuse with prompt and compassionate attention. I pledge to ensure the diocese maintains strict adherence to the safeguards mandated by the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People adopted by the U.S. bishops in 2002. And I…

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Catholic clergy in Illinois sexually abused more than 1,900 minors, state attorney general says in report

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS News [New York NY]

May 23, 2023

By Cara Tabachnick

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An investigation has substantiated child abuse claims against Catholic clergy in Illinois by more than 1,900 victims, state Attorney General Kwame Raoul said in a news conference detailing the findings of the office’s five-year investigation that uncovered hundreds more cases than first reported by the dioceses in 2018.

More than 100,000 pages of diocesan documents and 600 confidential contacts with survivors of child sex abuse helped the state’s office piece together the 696-page report released Tuesday on clergy sexual abuse in all six Catholic dioceses in Illinois, the office said.

“It is my hope that this nearly 700-page report will provide some closure to survivors of child sex abuse by Catholic clerics by shining a light both on those who violated their positions of power and trust, and on the individuals in church leadership who covered up that abuse,” Raoul said in…

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More than 450 Catholic clergymen abused nearly 2,000 children in Illinois, state report says

CHICAGO (IL)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

May 23, 2023

By Virginia Langmaid

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More than 450 adult Catholic clergymen abused nearly 2,000 children in the state of Illinois over a period of almost 90 years, according to a report released Tuesday from Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul.

“This report reveals names and detailed information of 451 Catholic clerics and religious brothers who abused at least 1,997 children across all of the dioceses in Illinois,” Raoul wrote in a message accompanying the report.

The investigation identified 275 allegedly abusive clerics and religious brothers in the Archdiocese of Chicago, 43 in the Diocese of Belleville, 69 in Joliet, 51 in Peoria, 24 in Rockford and 32 in Springfield. Some accused abusers worked in multiple dioceses, equaling a “discrete” total of 451 accused, according to the report.

The report claims to have identified 149 individual perpetrators who were previously undisclosed by the dioceses, and that the dioceses continued to publicly disclose alleged…

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Illinois report details scale of Catholic clergy sex abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
BBC [London, England]

May 23, 2023

By Mike Wendling

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Hundreds of Catholic priests and church officials in the US state of Illinois have been named in a new report detailing sexual abuse by clergy.

The state’s top prosecutor said 451 clergy in Illinois had sexually abused 1,997 children since 1950.

The church had acknowledged only 103 individual abusers before the start of the investigation in 2018.

Nearly every survivor interviewed struggled with mental health issues after being abused, the report said.

Several US states launched investigations into Catholic sexual abuse after a Pennsylvania grand jury report in 2018 found that 300 priests had abused more than 1,000 children over a period of 70 years.

The nearly 700-page report released by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul on Tuesday includes dozens of harrowing stories of rape and sexual abuse, and details how allegations were ignored and abusers were shifted from church to church.

The archbishop of Chicago said he had not…

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Here’s how to force SBC entities to be accountable to people in the pew about their finances

WASHINGTON (DC)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

May 23, 2023

By Mark Wingfield

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Within the past week, Baptist News Global has run two news analysis pieces about Southern Baptist Convention agencies and leaders who are not telling people in the pew the full story of their financial situations.

There are policies in place within the SBC to prevent this from happening, but those policies aren’t always being followed. And in some cases, the existing policies are not strong enough to have any teeth.

This matters not just for the sake of Christian ethics but because of the hundreds of millions of dollars that flow from church offerings to the SBC and its agencies and institutions. The people in the pew — let’s call them donors — deserve a full accounting of how their offerings are spent.

“The people in the pew deserve a full accounting of how their offerings are spent.”

The most notorious offender in this regard is the North American Mission Board, where…

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Duggar documentary producers reveal they uncovered a ‘shocking pandemic of abuse’ while investigating former TLC stars’ ‘cult-like’ church – as Jill gets set to ‘expose secrets’ behind her family’s horrifying fall from grace

BIG SANDY (TX)
Daily Mail [London, United Kingdom]

May 23, 2023

By Raven Saunt for Dailymail.com

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  • The docuseries, titled Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets, airs on June 2
  • It is set to ‘expose the truth… of reality TV’s favorite mega-family’ and its church
  • Executive producers Olivia Crist and Julia Willoughby Nason have spoken out

The executive producers of the new Duggar family documentary have revealed they were stunned by the levels of abuse survivors suffered at the hands of ‘cult-like’ religious teachings.

The show, titled Shiny Happy People: Duggar Family Secrets, is set to ‘expose the truth beneath the wholesome Americana surface of reality TV’s favorite mega-family.’

It will also delve deeper into the Duggars’ controversial church – radical organization The Institute in Basic Life Principles (IBLP), founded by shunned minister Bill Gothard in the 1960s.

Executive producers Olivia Crist and Julia Willoughby Nason have now spoken out about their shock at ‘how far and wide the IBLP ideology went’ and described it as a ‘pandemic of abuse.’

The show, titled…

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Church Suspends Soul Survivor Founder Mike Pilavachi as Public Pressure Mounts

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

May 23, 2023

By Julie Roys

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Soul Survivor Watford has formally suspended Mike Pilavachi, founder of a large Christian youth festival in the U.K., who’s facing allegations he spiritually and sexually abused young men under him. The suspension comes amid revelations that ministry leaders in the U.K. knew about allegations concerning Pilavachi for nearly two decades but did nothing.

The church, which is part of the Church of England, announced in early April that Pilavachi would “step back from all ministry” while the denomination’s National Safeguarding Team investigated the allegations against him. Pilavachi also resigned from the church board and all related charity boards at the time. But Soul Survivor Watford expressly noted that Pilavachi was “not under criminal investigation and has not been suspended.”

However, on Saturday, Soul Survivor Watford released a new statement, saying it had suspended Pilavachi, its associate pastor, “with immediate effect” while the investigation continues. The statement added,…

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May 23, 2023

Catholic dioceses in Illinois under-reported number of abusive priests, state finds

CHICAGO (IL)
Belleville News-Democrat [Belleville IL]

May 23, 2023

By Teri Maddox

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“Decades of Catholic leadership decisions and policies have allowed known child sex abusers to hide, often in plain sight,” Attorney General Kwame Raoul said.

Six Catholic dioceses in Illinois had disclosed the names of 103 priests and other clergy who were “substantiated” as child sex abusers five years ago, when the state began an investigation into the problem, according to Attorney General Kwame Raoul.

A 700-page report that his office released Tuesday, however, lists 451 clergy who allegedly abused 1,997 children in the state.

“This means that our investigation led to the disclosure of 348 more clerics than prior to our investigation,” Raoul said at a press conference in Chicago that also was live-streamed.

Former Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, who held the office for 16 years, had launched the investigation. Raoul promised to continue her work when he took over in 2019.

At the press conference, Raoul attempted to…

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Catholic church in Illinois vastly underreported clergy sex abuse, Kwame Raoul finds

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

May 23, 2023

By Robert Herguth

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At the start of a 5-year investigation by the attorney general, Cardinal Blase Cupich told seminarians the Archdiocese of Chicago had “posted all of the names” of predatory clergy. As the investigation neared its end, Cupich kept adding more names.

[Note from BishopAccountability.org: Click here to see the Illinois Attorney General’s Report on Catholic Clergy Child Sex Abuse in Illinois]

In August 2018, shortly after then-Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced an investigation into whether the Catholic church in Illinois had fully disclosed the scope of child sex abuse by priests and other clergy members, Cardinal Blase Cupich said the church had nothing to hide.

“Our record’s clean,” the top Catholic cleric in Chicago told a closed-door gathering of about 200 men studying at the Mundelein seminary to be priests, according to sources who were there. “I’m confident that, when the attorney general looks in our files . . . that…

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Statement on IL AG Catholic abuse and cover-up report

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

May 23, 2023

By David Clohessy

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David Clohessy, former national director of SNAP (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests)

314-566-9790

davidgclohessy@gmail.com

* * *

It’s tragic that once again, hundreds of church officials concealed thousands of child sex crimes yet none of these ‘enablers’ face any consequences. Illinois lawmakers must pass new laws that help law enforcement pursue those who hid or help child molesters.

Virtually all of the AG’s recommendations are simple common sense steps that any official who genuinely cares about kids would have adopted long ago. 

Here is what the Illinois attorney general will NOT announce today: criminal charges against a Catholic official who hid a predator priest. Not one charge against even one church leader, high or low.

That’s tragic. And that’s because Illinois has old, weak laws that make it tough for law enforcement to pursue employers who ignore or conceal known or suspected child sex crimes.

That must change.

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Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul Releases Clergy Investigation Report; SNAP Reacts

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

May 23, 2023

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(For Immediate Release May 23, 2023) 

On Friday afternoon, all six of Illinois’ Catholic dioceses sent out a sudden press statement, written in concert, that describes the policies and procedures each institution has in place to protect children from abuse. With today’s news, we now know why those Church leaders felt the need to remind parents and parishioners about these policies – because thanks to the work of the investigators at the Illinois Attorney General’s office, it is now apparent to us that those policies are weak, vague, and rarely followed.

In a stunning report, A.G. Kwame Raoul’s office has described the ways that Catholic leaders in every diocese in the state have acted in concert to protect abusive priests, to keep the public from learning about those crimes, and to push back on survivors and their loved ones who came forward in hopes of preventing…

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Bishop McGovern’s Response to The Illinois Attorney General Report

BELLEVILLE (IL)
Diocese of Belleville IL

May 23, 2023

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Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

I am writing this letter in response to the issuance today of the Illinois Attorney General’s Final “Report on Catholic Clergy Sex Abuse in Illinois”. The Diocese of Belleville has cooperated fully during the Attorney General’s five­-year long preparation of this report by providing information about our clergy, living and deceased, and allegations of misconduct with minors that our Diocese has received. While I will need some time to read and fully absorb the AG’s lengthy report, especially the section on the Diocese of Belleville, please permit me to share several important points.

It is crucial you understand that nothing is more important to us than the welfare of the youth entrusted to our care. The Diocese of Belleville takes all allegations of inappropriate or sexual misconduct seriously and encourages anyone who feels they have been harmed by a priest, deacon, religious or lay employee,…

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Statement of Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, in Response to the Illinois Attorney General Report

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

May 23, 2023

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Video links:

English: https://youtu.be/bpAPX__sSJY

Spanish: https://youtu.be/w9pJLDIaq5M

Today, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul published a report (the Report) on his office’s investigation of allegations of child sexual abuse against clergy in the six Illinois Catholic dioceses over a period of nearly 90 years. The Report addresses both how dioceses responded to such allegations in decades past and current policies that help ensure the safety of children and support the healing of survivors. We have not studied the report in detail but have concerns about data that might be misunderstood or are presented in ways that could be misleading. It is therefore important that we state what we know to be true. For example:

The 451 names “disclosed”:

  • 451 is all 6 dioceses and includes religious order priests
  • 451 includes the priests already on the 6 web sites
  • ALL were reported to civil authorities, none were undisclosed,…
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Report: Nearly 2,000 children abused by more than 450 Catholic leaders in Illinois

CHICAGO (IL)
Rockford Register Star

May 23, 2023

By Andy Carrigan

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A multi-year investigation into child sex abuse by members of the Catholic clergy in Illinois found at least 1,997 children across the state were sexually abused between 1950 and 2019.

Attorney General Kwame Raoul Tuesday released a comprehensive report detailing decades of child sex abuse by members of the Illinois Catholic dioceses, which includes Belleville, Chicago, Joliet, Peoria, Rockford, and Springfield.

The nearly 700-page report features detailed narrative accounts of child sex abuse committed by Catholic clerics.

Many of the narratives were written in consultation with survivors, are based upon their experiences, and told from the survivor’s point of view.

“I was raised and confirmed in the Catholic church and sent my children to Catholic schools. I believe the church does important work to support vulnerable populations; however, as with any presumably reputable institution, the Catholic church must be held accountable when it betrays the public’s trust,” Raoul…

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Extensive report details decades-long child sexual abuse among Illinois’ Catholic clergy

CHICAGO (IL)
WPSD Local 6 [Paducah, KY]

May 23, 2023

By Charity Blanton

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CHICAGO, IL  — Illinois’ attorney general Kwame Raoul released a nearly 700-page-long report Tuesday morning detailing child sexual abuse by members of the Catholic clergy in Illinois, stretching back to 1950.

According to the report, investigators found that 452 clergy members allegedly sexually abused nearly 2,000 children in those years — much more than the church named when the state began investigating in 2018. 

Raoul announced the findings at a news conference in Chicago Tuesday morning.  

The report contains detailed narratives of the abuse, which Raoul said were written with the help of survivors and are told from their point of view. And it contains recommendations from the office on how the dioceses should handle future investigations. 

It also details how the total number of publicly disclosed “substantiated child sex abusers” across the Illinois Dioceses is much higher than what was disclosed by the church prior to the Attorney General’s investigation. 

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Child sex abuse by Illinois Catholic clergy spans state and decades, AG investigation finds

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

May 23, 2023

By Jessica D'Onofrio, Chuck Goudie, and Barb Markoff and Christine Tressel

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Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s report on Catholic priest child sexual abuse details hundreds of cases across the state.

CHICAGO (WLS) — A long-awaited five year investigation has turned up hundreds of new horror stories of child sexual abuse at the hands of Catholic priests in Illinois, the attorney general alleged on Tuesday morning.

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s “Report on Catholic Clergy Child Sex Abuse in Illinois” is 696 pages long was was unveiled at a downtown Chicago briefing with reporters.

The report focuses on decades of old and new abuse cases in the state’s six dioceses: Belleville, Joliet, Peoria, Rockford, and Springfield and Chicago, which is known as an Archdiocese due to its large size.

Nearly 2000 survivors of Catholic church sexual abuse in Illinois were documented by state investigators, according to the attorney general.

Nearly every survivor exhibited “some form of mental health challenge in the years after…

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Illinois AG probe: Catholic clergy sexual abuse of kids was far more common than church acknowledged

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 23, 2023

By Kathleen Foody and Michael Tarm

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Illinois’ attorney general released the results of a sweeping investigation into allegations of sexual abuse by Catholic clergy on Tuesday, saying investigators found that 451 clergy sexually abused nearly 2,000 children since 1950 — far more than the 103 individuals the church had named when the state review began in 2018.

At a news conference announcing his office’s findings, Attorney General Kwame Raoul credited accusers for making the review possible. He said state investigators found that 1,997 children across the state were abused by clergy between 1950 and 2019.

“It is my hope that this report will shine light both on those who violated their positions of power and trust to abuse innocent children, and on the men in church leadership who covered up that abuse,” Raoul said. “These perpetrators may never be held accountable in a court of law, but by naming them here, the intention is to provide…

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Sex Abuse in Catholic Church: Over 1,900 Minors Abused in Illinois, State Says

CHICAGO (IL)
New York Times [New York NY]

May 23, 2023

By Ruth Graham

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[Click here to see the Illinois Attorney General’s Report on Catholic Clergy Child Sex Abuse in Illinois]

A new report by the attorney general of Illinois covering decades names more than 450 credibly accused sexual abusers, including priests and lay religious brothers.

More than 450 credibly accused child sex abusers have ministered in the Catholic Church in Illinois over almost seven decades, the office of the state’s attorney general, Kwame Raoul, said Tuesday in an investigative report. That is more than four times the number that the church had publicly disclosed before 2018, when the state began its investigation.

The 696-page report found that clergy members and lay religious brothers had abused at least 1,997 children since 1950 in the state’s six dioceses, including the prominent Archdiocese of Chicago.

The report adds 149 names to lists of child sex abusers whom the dioceses themselves had publicly identified before…

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Illinois attorney general to discuss investigation of Catholic clergy sexual abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 23, 2023

By Kathleen Foody

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Illinois’ attorney general on Tuesday will discuss his office’s more than four-year investigation into the alleged sexual abuse of children by Catholic clergy in the state going back decades — a probe launched by his predecessor after she found the church’s own investigation to be seriously lacking.

Kwame Raoul continued Lisa Madigan’s investigation after he took over from her as the state’s top law enforcement official in 2019. Madigan issued a blistering preliminary report on the state’s investigation in 2018 just before she left office, saying Catholic dioceses in Illinois had not released the names of at least 500 clergy who had been accused of sexually abusing children.

The preliminary report found that the church’s six dioceses had done a woefully inadequate job of investigating allegations, and in some cases didn’t investigate them at all or notify the state’s child welfare agency. The abuse claims dated back decades and were made…

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AG Kwame Raoul to give update on Catholic Church priest sex abuse investigation

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

May 23, 2023

By Jessica D'Onofrio

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Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul is expected to update his investigation into sex abuse allegations in the Catholic Church Tuesday.

His office says he’ll provide a “significant update” on the investigation.

This investigation started years ago, by the state’s former Attorney General Lisa Madigan.

In 2018, Madigan announced her investigation found child sex accusations against at least 500 priests and clergymen in Illinois. That report has never been made public, but Raoul promised to continue Madigan’s work.

Last week Cardinal Blase Cupich spoke exclusively to Eyewitness News after the Illinois Catholic Archdiocese published a summary of their process for handling allegations of sexual abuse.

“I make a commitment as well, personally, that anyone who has come to us with an accusation of abuse, and especially if it is substantiated, I will meet with them personally,” Cardinal Cupich said. “And I know the bishops in Illinois also make that same commitment…

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Archdiocese of Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley is sued by 3 alleged sexual abuse victims who claim Arlington Catholic’s former vice principal assaulted them

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald [Boston MA]

May 22, 2023

By Rick Sobey

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Archdiocese of Boston Cardinal Sean O’Malley has been sued by three alleged sexual abuse victims who claim that Arlington Catholic High School’s former vice principal assaulted the teens last decade.

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who has represented clergy sexual abuse victims for decades, on Monday said he filed a civil lawsuit on behalf of the three alleged childhood sexual abuse victims against O’Malley, Bishop Robert Deeley, and Bishop Peter Uglietto.

The three victims allege that they were sexually abused by Steven Biagioni while he was vice principal and an administrator at Arlington Catholic.

The alleged sexual abuse took place at the high school from about 2011 to 2016, when the victims were between 15 and 17 years old.

“Significantly, given that years of the alleged sexual abuse are recent, it is apparent that the Archdiocese of Boston and the Catholic Church are still allowing the sexual abuse of innocent children,” Garabedian…

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3 people sue cardinal, bishops, over alleged sex abuse by Arlington Catholic High ex-principal

BOSTON (MA)
WBUR [Boston MA]

May 22, 2023

By Simón Rios and Lisa Creamer

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Three people who claim they were sexually assaulted by a former vice principal at Arlington Catholic High School have filed a civil lawsuit against Cardinal Seán Patrick O’Malley, leader of the Archdiocese of Boston.

The lawsuit alleges that Stephen Biagioni abused the plaintiffs, known as John Doe I, II and III, between 2011 and 2016. The former students were between the ages of 15 and 17 at the time, attorney Mitchell Garabedian told reporters Monday.

The civil suit names O’Malley and two of his top lieutenants — Bishop Robert Deeley, currently head of the Diocese of Portland, Maine, as well as Bishop Peter Uglietto, an auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston. The three allegedly “knew, or were negligent in not knowing” that Biagioni, who is not a priest or church leader, posed a danger to children at the high school, the suit claims.

“Once…

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Carmelite priest, others arrested in Bolivia on sex abuse charges

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 22, 2023

By Abel Camasca

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In the midst of allegations of sexual abuse against Jesuit priests in Bolivia, a Carmelite priest was arrested recently by the authorities, and accusations against another Carmelite and a Franciscan have come to light.

In a statement to the Bolivian newspaper Página Siete, a former seminarian of the Carmelite order reported in 2014 that he was sexually abused by Father Milton Murillo when the priest was the administrator of the formation house in La Paz. According to the complainant, Murillo allegedly pressured seminarians to let him give them a medical examination in which inappropriate touching occurred. Whoever refused, the complainant said, was exposed to reprisals or being expelled from the community.

The former seminarian said a group of seminarians tried to inform the then Carmelite superior, Father Garvin Grech, about what was happening without getting any results.

Página Siete noted that Grech was also reported for alleged abuse by a…

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Catholic abuse survivors face long road, tough memories and constitutional challenges as they prepare to sue the Baltimore Archdiocese

BALTIMORE (MD)
WYPR - National Public Radio [Baltimore MD]

May 22, 2023

By Scott Maucione

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It’s still about four months before victims of sexual abuse at the hands of the Baltimore Catholic Archdiocese will be able file civil suits against the church. However, the wheels are already in motion for what could be a monumental payout to survivors. Meanwhile, the Archdiocese is likely to drag out the suits by challenging the constitutionality of the cases and possibly bringing them to trial.

A recent Maryland Attorney General’s Office report implicated 156 priests and church employees in abusing at least 600 children over the last 80 years, but experts in the field and legal analysts think it could actually be thousands of people who suffered at the hands of the Archdiocese.

“The Archdiocese of Baltimore, is the first archdiocese in the new world,” said Suzanne Sangree, senior counsel with Grant and Eisenhofer, a firm representing victims in Maryland. “It certainly was the first cathedral here….

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French abuse victims bitterly criticize new clergy identity cards

PARIS (FRANCE)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

May 19, 2023

By Jonathan Luxmoore

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Victims of clerical sex abuse have bitterly criticized plans by France’s Catholic bishops for all clergy to include a scannable QR code on their identity cards certifying whether they face restrictions for crimes or misdemeanors.

“If this move is aimed at regaining public trust, I don’t think it’ll prove effective,” said François Devaux, co-founder of the Parole Libérée (Liberated Word) association, formed in 2015.

“Meanwhile, if the church is professing greater transparency, this merely shows its leaders have understood nothing. An independent report in 2021 (published in France) made 45 recommendations for countering abuse — I think the church should implement these before it adds a 46th.”

The lay Catholic, who was one of dozens abused as children by a currently jailed Lyon-based priest Fr. Bernard Preynat, was reacting to plans by the bishops’ conference in France for priests’ traditional accreditation documents, or “celebrets,” to be replaced by digital cards…

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Pope sends Vatican official to Bolivia as abuse allegations escalate

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 22, 2023

By Carlos Valdez

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Pope Francis has sent one of his top sex crimes investigators to Bolivia at a time when the Andean nation is being shaken by an escalating pedophilia scandal involving priests.

Monsignor Jordi Bertomeu, a leading member of the church’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, arrived in Bolivia on the same day as a former Jesuit seminarian landed in the country vowing to reveal more information about alleged cases of abuse.

The Bolivian Episcopal Conference said Bertomeu’s visit is not directly related to the recent sex abuse allegations but had been planned earlier to analyze “the progress made in the field of the culture of prevention” promoted by the Vatican.

Bertomeu arrived in Bolivia from Paraguay, where he had been investigating similar accusations against church officials and in 2018 he led the investigation into abuses committed by priests against minors in Chile.

The meetings in Bolivia “will be conducted in…

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Tylko w “Rzeczpospolitej”: Lista księży podejrzanych i skazanych za przestępstwa seksualne w czasach PRL

WARSAW (POLAND)
Rzeczpospolita [Warsaw, Poland]

May 18, 2023

By Tomasz Krzyżak and Piotr Litka

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Ponad tysiąc dzieci zostało seksualnie wykorzystanych przez duchownych i świeckich pracujących w Kościele katolickim w Polsce w latach 1944-1989. Oto lista 121 zidentyfikowanych przez naszych dziennikarzy przypadków i ich sprawców.

W czasach Polski Ludowej (1944–1989) władze państwowe zajmowały się co najmniej 121 przypadkami wykorzystywania seksualnego, w których doszło lub mogło dojść do wykorzystania seksualnego małoletnich przez osoby związane z Kościołem – wynika z pionierskiej kwerendy archiwalnej, którą przeprowadzili dziennikarze „Rzeczpospolitej”.

Za 121 przypadkami kryje się w sumie 117 księży i dwie osoby świeckie (organista i kościelny). Aż 72 sprawy zakończyły się wyrokami skazującymi, w 24 doszło do wątpliwych umorzeń. Tylko 11 skończyło się bezdyskusyjnym umorzeniem lub uniewinnieniem podejrzanego. W 14 sprawach nie udało nam się odnaleźć informacji o zakończeniu postępowania.

Od kilku lat dane statystyczne zbiera Episkopat Polski. Wynika z nich, że aż 177 przypadków wykorzystania seksualnego małoletnich miało miejsce przed rokiem 1990. Z danych tych nie da…

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May 22, 2023

Journalistic Investigation Shows Polish Church Under Communism Was Plagued By Clerical Sexual Abuse

WARSAW (POLAND)
Our Sunday Visitor [Huntington IN]

May 20, 2023

By Paulina Guzik

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(OSV News) — The number of victims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in Poland between 1944 and 1990 may be close to 1,100, with the number of abusers close to 300.

Those are, however, not the official findings of the church in Poland. On March 15, the bishops announced they will create a commission of experts to investigate past cases of abuse of minors by clergy in the country.

The numbers come from two journalists with Poland’s Rzeczpospolita journal, Tomasz Krzyzak and Piotr Litka, that published an investigation May 18 on the scale of sexual abuse in the church in Poland between 1944 and 1989.

“We did a very simple thing that is easily accessible to any public institution in the country — we looked at the state archives of communist-ruled Poland that are stored today in the Institute of National Remembrance and the so-called ‘New’ National Archives,”…

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‘Pastor Johnny’ is the head of a family empire that feeds off the SBC

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

May 22, 2023

By Maina Mwaura, Jon Bullock and Mark Wingfield

Read original article

In modern terms, Johnny Hunt is an “influencer.”

Over the last 40 years, he has become someone with the ability to influence thousands of other pastors and even an entire denomination.

Perhaps that’s why his naming in the 2022 Guidepost Solutions report on sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention sent shockwaves across the SBC. “Pastor Johnny,” as he likes to be called, is not just any pastor.

He is one of the most influential and affluent pastors in the SBC. Dozens if not hundreds of pastors owe their jobs to his recommendation. And he has built a vast empire of side businesses that support him and his family and friends through a web of connection with other pastors, churches and denominational agencies — all while marketing his brand.

But it wasn’t always this way. This is a rags-to-riches story, and a story of how to get rich by double- and triple-dipping…

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Diocese of Sacramento once again quietly removes priest for ‘inappropriate conduct.’ SNAP Responds

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

May 22, 2023

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(For Immediate Release May 22, 2023) 

On May 19th, the Catholic Diocese of Sacramento once again quietly announced on its website the removal of a cleric for “inappropriate conduct.” Bishop Jaime Soto said that  Fr. Sijo Chirayath was found to have “violated diocesan policy regarding clergy conduct” with an adult man.  The priest no longer has an assignment nor does he have faculties in the Diocese, and he was asked to return to his order, the Carmelites of Mary Immaculate (CMI) in India, on Friday.

We applaud the Diocese for removing Fr. Chirayath and for posting this information on its website. We hope that the parents of students at St. Patrick-St. Vincent High School in Vallejo, where the priest worked as a chaplain, was immediately alerted when the accusations were first received on April 26th, and have now been apprised of the outcome of the investigation.

However, we notice that the priest’s name…

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Fact check: What the Baltimore Catholic archdiocese is saying about the Maryland attorney general’s report

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

May 22, 2023

By Lee O. Sanderlin

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Archdiocese of Baltimore officials, particularly Archbishop William Lori, have responded in recent weeks to a report by the Maryland Attorney General’s Office on child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church with interviewsan FAQ and messages to parishioners across Central and Western Maryland.

After a similar report was published in 2018 by the Pennsylvania attorney general into church abuse in that state, Maryland’s attorney general started an investigation here. It ran four years, culminating in November in a 463-page document that detailed how clergy, nuns and teachers tormented more than 600 children and young adults in the archdiocese, dating back to the 1940s. The report was released publicly April 5.

The Baltimore Sun fact-checked the archdiocese’s talking points about the findings of the report and church officials’ responses to survivors of abuse, the media and elected officials.

Cooperation with investigators

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Ousted Caritas chief denounces Vatican ‘power grab’

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

May 9, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

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The Vatican’s main charitable organization, Caritas Internationalis, is hoping to open a new chapter this week after Pope Francis fired top managers over bullying complaints. But the recently ousted head is fighting back, claiming the Vatican engaged in a “brutal power grab” fueled by a “colonialist” attitude.

The drama is playing out as the Caritas General Assembly meets May 11-16 to elect new leaders following more than a decade of turmoil and a damaging sex abuse scandal in central Africa. The gathering is a key step in Francis’ efforts to renew the Vatican-based confederation of 162 national chapters that is one of the most visible aid groups in the world.

In an extraordinary display of papal power, Francis last November fired the Caritas secretary general, Aloysius John; the Caritas president, Filipino Cardinal Antonio Tagle; and Tagle’s vice presidents, the treasurer and ecclesiastic assistant. The Holy See said an outside investigation had…

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‘Pure evil’: Nuns file lawsuit against Catholic bishop

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

May 19, 2023

By Jason Allen

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Arlington TX – A Catholic bishop took actions of “pure evil” according to a lawsuit filed against him by a small order of nuns in Arlington.

The suit says Bishop Michael Olson of the Fort Worth Diocese seized computers and a phone from the Discalced Carmelite Nuns, interrogated the sisters and claimed the monastery was shut down. 

He has stopped priests from performing daily mass at the Monastery of the Most Holy Trinity and barred as many as 50 to 60 parishioners from regular attendance. The dispute, which started April 24, has caused emotional trauma and psychological distress, according to an affidavit from Reverend Mother Teresa Agnes.

This week, the Diocese of Fort Worth posted a statement on its website, saying the Reverend Mother had “violated her vow of chastity with a priest from outside the Diocese of Fort Worth.” 

A spokesman for the Diocese had no further comment when…

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José Antonio Villena: el cura de la clase alta granadina expulsado por el Vaticano de la Iglesia

GRANADA (SPAIN)
Religión Digital [Spain]

May 19, 2023

By Jesús Bastante

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El ex sacerdote era conocido por su gran carisma y por sus vínculos sociales

Fuentes eclesiásticas consultadas por RD confirman que, “desde hace años” habían llegado “rumores, incluso alguna comunicación escrita al anterior arzobispo (Javier Martínez)” sobre posibles abusos sexuales y de poder cometidos por Villena desde su puesto como delegado de Pastoral Universitaria

Incluso, afirman otras fuentes, antes de su ordenación, el entonces arzobispo de Granada, Antonio Cañizares, “fue advertido” por algunos formadores del seminario sobre el “carácter difícil” del religioso

Fuentes de la diócesis señalan al acusado como ‘el cura de la alta sociedad’ granadina, con fuertes contactos entre notarios, políticos, jueces y registradores de la propiedad, a los que casaba, presidía la Primera Comunión de los hijos o llevaba de ejercicios con cierta regularidad. De hecho, alguno de los que entraron (y salieron) del seminario eran hijos de algunos de los personajes con más renombre en la…

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Bolivia Jesuits ask victims of two priests implicated in scandal to make formal complaint

COCHABAMBA (BOLIVIA)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

May 20, 2023

By Diego Lopez Marina for CNA

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In the developing sexual abuse of minors scandal involving Jesuits in Bolivia, a May 13 article in the Spanish newspaper El País implicated two other priests, Francesc Peris and Carlos Villamil, and also published the testimonies of eight alleged victims.

The Jesuits asked the victims to make a formal complaint with the Society of Jesus and offered their assistance in filing a complaint with the public prosecutor.

El País broke the initial story on the scandal April 29 in a report titled “Diary of a pedophile priest,” stating that Jesuit priest Alfonso Pedrajas Moreno, who died in 2009, sexually abused as many as 85 minors in Bolivia, based on admissions found in his own diary.

Peris, known as “Checho,” and Villamil, nicknamed “Vicu,” allegedly committed the abuse in the 1980s when both priests worked at the John XXIII school in Cochabamba, where Pedrajas also worked.

Villamil was a colleague of…

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Bolivia church abuse case sparks wave of complaints, investigation

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Reuters [London, England]

May 22, 2023

By Monica Machicao

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Bolivian authorities are investigating whether any Catholic Church officials in the country should be held accountable following the publication of a diary of a late Jesuit priest that contained multiple confessions of child abuse.

The case has triggered complaints from former students about other abuse in religious-run schools in Bolivia, including those of Jesuits, but also Dominicans, Franciscans, and other orders.

The revelations, first published by Spanish newspaper El Pais in April, documented abuse by Alfonso Pedrajas, known as Father Pica, a Spanish priest who lived for years in Bolivia where he ran schools for marginalized communities.

After his death in 2009, his nephew found a 300-page diary on his computer where Pedrajas confessed to the sexual abuse of dozens of minors around the 1970s, according to El Pais.

In the diary, Pedrajas wrote that he had spoken to superiors about what he had done but they did…

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May 21, 2023

Morristown Catholic school sheds bishop’s name

BURLINGTON (VT)
VTDigger [Montpelier VT]

May 19, 2023

By Tommy Gardner

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The Catholic school in Morristown named after a bishop who oversaw the church in Vermont for 20 years is changing its name, partly because of the “unthinkable” alleged sexual abuse of children by priests under his leadership.

Bishop John A. Marshall School will change its name to All Saints Catholic Academy starting July 1. The change comes as the school prepares to mark its 25th anniversary.

“While we did not discuss this with the students, we would be remiss not to acknowledge that part of our motivation to rename the school relates to the unthinkable abuse of children by priests who were under the leadership of the school’s namesake, Bishop John Marshall,” head of school Carrie Wilson wrote in a May 8 letter to parents. “While our school is not responsible for what transpired — nor can we change what happened years before the school was even built — we…

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Survivor Tom Wall with his archive of documents from the Glin Industrial School.

Christian brothers accused of engaging in ‘slave trade’

LIMERICK (IRELAND)
BBC [London, England]

May 21, 2023

By Shane Harrison

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[Photo above: Survivor Tom Wall with his archive of documents from the Glin Industrial School.]

A 74-year-old County Limerick victim of child sex abuse by Christian Brothers has accused the congregation of having been engaged in the “slave trade”.

Tom Wall was just three when he was sent by court order to an industrial school in the village of Glin after his unmarried mother left a mother-and-baby home in nearby Newcastle West.

Industrial schools were established in the mid-19th Century and often run by religious orders to care for neglected, orphaned or abandoned children.

The Christian Brothers opened their first school in 1802 to provide education and help the poor.

In 2009, they issued an apology, following a damning public inquiry into child abuse in Catholic-run institutions in the Republic of Ireland.

The congregation said it accepted the findings of the Ryan Commission “with shame” and was “deeply sorry for…

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Don’t label serious journalism as anti-Catholic

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

May 20, 2023

By Edward McCarey McDonnell

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Anti-Catholicism existed in this land prior to the establishment of the Republic and is a relatively weak force in today’s world. A recent letter writer criticizes the extensive coverage by The Baltimore Sun on the very serious issue of abuse and cover-up but provides no example of poor or incorrect reporting (”Has The Baltimore Sun turned anti-Catholic?” May 16).

The writer claims that Catholic authorities and “others” have advised him that “today’s instances of abuse are almost zero.” Almost? The implication is that the “authorities” have been successful in reducing the number of abusers and cases of abuse but that abuse has not been eliminated. Is this satisfactory? I am stunned that the writer shows absolutely no concern for the victims and their families.

Apparently, the writer just wants this story to go away. Had the Archdiocese of Baltimore handled this crisis in a truly pastoral and honest manner,…

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Church Abuse Failures Put All Ages At Risk

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change [Philadelphia PA]

May 12, 2023

By Kathy Kane

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As a student at a Catholic college in the 1ate 1980’s I wrote a paper for an English Comp class on the downfall of the televangelists. Many will remember that era as a time when one sexual scandal after another seemed to rock the televangelist world. Sexual assaults, “consensual” sex with congregants, hiring prostitutes, the preachers did it all. It wasn’t so shocking that these dramatic men preaching the Gospel, while having their hand out for donations, turned out to be frauds. What shocked me was the loyalty of their congregation. They looked at the media as “attacking Jesus, attacking people of faith.” In reality they were just exposing con men who used religion as their draw.

I’m sure the paper that I wrote was tinged with sarcasm at the naiveness of the congregants. Even when the cold hard facts were presented, they just couldn’t see it. I was so…

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Utah man alleges sexual abuse by Boys Scouts, church staff

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
KSTU-TV, Fox-13 [Salt Lake City UT]

May 19, 2023

By Lucy Nelson

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A Sunset man is suing the Boy Scouts of America and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, alleging sexual abuse by staff members.

“I told myself, just hold these cards to your chest one day,” said Van Medeiros. “One day, maybe you’ll be able to put them on the table.”

Since he was 7 years old, Medeiros said he has held on to secrets from the past he said ruined his childhood in 2009.

“From ages 7-to-13, I was routinely sexually abused by several members of the church,” he claims. “I never was able to tell my story because I was threatened essentially, that would ruin not just my life, but my mother’s life.”

The lawsuit states that “counselors, teachers, trustees, directors, officers, employees, agents, servants and/or volunteers,” of the local Crossroads of the West Council of Boy Scouts of America, “sexually assaulted, sexually abused, and/or had sexual…

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May 20, 2023

Nun sues Fort Worth Catholic diocese after bishop accuses her of violating chastity vow

FORT WORTH (TX)
Fort Worth Star-Telegram [Fort Worth, TX]

May 19, 2023

By Elizabeth Campbell

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A reverend mother who oversees cloistered nuns at an Arlington monastery is in a legal battle with Bishop Michael Olson and the Fort Worth Catholic Diocese after he launched an investigation into allegations she violated her chastity vows with a priest.

Reverend Mother Superior Teresa Agnes Gerlach has sued Olson and the diocese, seeking more than $1 million in damages. She accuses the bishop of abuse of power and overstepping his authority.

Gerlach, along with Sister Francis Therese, filed the lawsuit May 3 in Tarrant County district court. The dispute is playing out in court and with canonical lawyers who handle ecclesiastical matters.

Matthew Bobo, an attorney representing the nuns, said the accusations are “absolutely false and have no basis.”

“Per canon law, he doesn’t have the authority to start an investigation or take any action. This is an independent religious organization which answers directly to the…

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Carmelite nuns sue Fort Worth bishop over ‘grave misconduct’ in investigation of mother superior

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 19, 2023

By Tyler Arnold

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Nuns from an Arlington, Texas, Carmelite monastery are suing the Diocese of Fort Worth and the bishop for $1 million for alleged violations of privacy and harming the physical and emotional well-being of the sisters.

The lawsuit stems from interactions related to a diocesan investigation of the Reverend Mother Superior Teresa Agnes Gerlach. The diocese has said it was investigating “grave misconduct” based on a report that she “committed sins against the Sixth Commandment and violated her vow of chastity with a priest.”

Although the diocese alleges that Gerlach admitted to violations of the Sixth Commandment, her attorney Matthew Bobo said in a statement provided to CNA that she was “under heavy medication from a procedure” and does not recall what she admitted.

“They are making it sound like she had some sexual liaison affair with another priest and that did not happen,” Bobo said.

The lawsuit claims that Bishop…

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Church was “naive” over child sex abuse, says Polish bishop after report indicates 1,000 victims

KRAKóW (POLAND)
Notes from Poland [Kraków, Poland]

May 19, 2023

By Daniel Tilles

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One of Poland’s most senior bishops has apologised for neglect in how the country’s Catholic church dealt with child sex abuse by priests in the past, after a new report indicated over 1,000 victims during the communist period

Wojciech Polak – who is archbishop of Gniezno and primate of Poland – claimed that the church had “often been naive in dealing with these crimes”. However, he also noted that the communist authorities exploited the issue to blackmail priests into collaborating.

Yesterday, Rzeczpospolita, a leading newspaper, published what it claimed to be the first research of its type looking at reports of abuse linked to the church in communist-era archives.

Its findings pointed to over 1,000 children being abused by members of the clergy or lay employees of the church in the period 1944-1989. The newspaper notes that this number is just the “tip of the iceberg” because only a small proportion…

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Attorney: Illinois Diocese new sexual abuse procedures ‘50 years too late’

ROCKFORD (IL)
WIFR-TV, Ch. 23 [Rockville IL]

May 18, 2023

By Anthony Ferretti

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“Decades too late.” That’s how one person describes the recent efforts from the six Illinois Catholic Dioceses to streamline their process for handling allegations of sexual abuse by a member of the clergy.

These new procedures are meant to give people a better understanding of how the diocese will handle allegations of sexual abuse, but survivors and advocates say church leaders need to do more.

Marc Pearlman is an attorney who represents survivors of sexual abuse in Illinois. He’s covered hundreds of cases; he says nearly 90% of those involve one of the six Illinois dioceses.

“The catholic church is arguably more responsible for more child sex abuse than any institution in the world,” says Pearlman. “Rockford has a notable history of child sex abuse and equally bad, if not worse, is the cover-up of that sex abuse.”

The Illinois Attorney General’s Office was first made aware of priests allegedly…

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Catholic dioceses of Illinois put in writing how it deals with sex abuse allegations

PEORIA (IL)
25 News Now [Peoria, IL]

May 19, 2023

By Howard Packowitz

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All six of the dioceses of the Catholic Church in Illinois have released a public statement detailing what the church does when allegations are made involving sexual abuse against minors.

The seven-page news release from dioceses in Peoria, Springfield, Rockford, Chicago, Joliet and Belleville breaks down the procedures to protect children.

“By issuing this joint public statement, the Illinois dioceses hope to enhance the public’s understanding of how they handle allegations of sexual abuse involving minors,” the dioceses said.

The entire statement can be found on the Catholic Diocese of Peoria’s website.

The church developed these policies after decades of allegations in criminal and civil court that priests were molesting minors.

The state’s dioceses say they’ve been working with the Illinois Attorney General’s Office to “improve the transparency and effectiveness” of the policies.

“Prompted by the Attorney General’s investigation, the dioceses have critically reviewed current policies and…

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Christian School in Michigan Sued for Alleged Failure to Prevent Student’s Abuse

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

May 18, 2023

By Josh Shepherd

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A female student has sued the Christian school she attended in western Michigan over its leaders’ alleged failure to prevent her sexual abuse by an art teacher and an older student.

The lawsuit was filed March 31 in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Michigan and seeks $25,000 in damages. It alleges that The Potter’s House, a preschool through 12th grade private school in Grand Rapids, Mich., and its leaders failed to comply with Title IX policies and “inflicted emotional distress” on the alleged victim, “Jane Doe.”

In January 2016, when Doe was in fifth grade, James “Jamie” Treadwell, 64, was an “artist in residence” at the school and rented a basement studio at a school-owned building adjacent to the school. The itinerant artist was then affiliated with a celibate religious brotherhood called The Servants of the Word, which subsequently broke…

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Carl Lentz calls abuse allegations ‘categorically false’ in new Hillsong documentary

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

May 19, 2023

By Roxanne Stone

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For the Hillsong lovers, Hillsong haters and those who love to hate Hillsong, the latest documentary treatment of the global megachurch’s descent into scandal is here and available to stream beginning Friday (May 19).

“The Secrets of Hillsong,” a four-part series that will air on FX and Hulu, purports to be the first time Carl Lentz, the fallen celebrity pastor, one-time “hype priest” and former spiritual mentor of Justin Bieber, has spoken publicly about allegations that he had sexual affairs, including allegations of sexual abuse toward his family’s nanny, Leona Kimes, though pieces of his personal defense have been leaking out in news stories and Instagram posts since Lentz was fired in November of 2020.

In the new docuseries, produced in partnership with Vanity Fair and based on their early reporting of scandals at Hillsong’s Manhattan branch, Lentz reportedly acknowledges a power dynamic at play in his relationship with Kimes…

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Former Texas youth minister admits to sexual contact with children

MAGNOLIA (TX)
Baptist Press [Nashville TN]

May 18, 2023

By Diana Chandler

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Editor’s Note: In support of the sixth strategic action of Vision 2025 adopted by messengers to the 2021 SBC Annual Meeting, Baptist Press will continue to report every instance of sexual abuse related to Southern Baptist churches, entities, institutions or leaders of which we are made aware.

A former Texas youth minister remained in jail May 18 after telling the Magnolia Police Department he sexually touched teenage boys while working in youth ministry at First Baptist Church of Magnolia.

Michael Anthony Romero, 51, was arrested May 12 on one count of sexual indecency with a child, a second-degree felony, Montgomery County Court records show.

The arrest occurred, according to court records accessed by KHOU.com, five months after Romero voluntarily approached the police department and told officers he touched teenage boys during youth group retreats, a Christian church camp and sleepovers at his lake house between 2002 and 2012. He named five…

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Bolivian Catholic priest accused of abusing seminary students

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 19, 2023

By Paola Flores

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A Bolivian priest has been detained on suspicion of abusing seminary students a decade ago in a case that emerged after news broke earlier this month of a pedophilia scandal involving a late Jesuit priest in the Andean country.

Milton Murillo, a Catholic parish priest at the Church of San Roque in the southern region of Tarija, was sent to pre-trial detention for three months during a hearing late Thursday, regional prosecutor Sandra Gutiérrez Salazar said.

“With this, we want to express that the Public Prosecutor’s Office is taking stern action to ensure these crimes are punished,” she told reporters Friday.

The Murillo case came to a head in part because of the scandal that erupted earlier this month over Spanish Jesuit Alfonso Pedrajas. Pedrajas died of cancer in 2009 and left behind a personal diary in which he confessed to having abused around 85 minors in Bolivia during the…

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May 19, 2023

Polish church under communism was plagued by clerical abuse

WARSAW (POLAND)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

May 19, 2023

Read original article

Two journalists with Poland’s Rzeczpospolita journal published an investigation on the scale of abuse between 1944 and 1989

The number of victims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in Poland between 1944 and 1990 may be close to 1,100, with the number of abusers close to 300.

Those are, however, not the official findings of the church in Poland. On March 15, the bishops announced they will create a commission of experts to investigate past cases of abuse of minors by clergy in the country.

The numbers come from two journalists with Poland’s Rzeczpospolita journal, Tomasz Krzyzak and Piotr Litka, that published an investigation May 18 on the scale of sexual abuse in the church in Poland between 1944 and 1989.

“We did a very simple thing that is easily accessible to any public institution in the country — we looked at the state archives of communist-ruled Poland that…

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Thanks to a Calvert Hall teacher who stood up to child abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

May 18, 2023

By Steve English

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The Sun recently ran an article about child sexual abuse in the Baltimore archdiocese that quoted Charles LoPresto (”Report on sexual abuse by priests details horrors of life in hardest-hit Catholic parishes, schools,” April 7). While teaching at Calvert Hall College High School in the 1970s, he learned that a student had been abused by a priest at the school. He could have lied, covered up or looked the other way as so many of his contemporaries and superiors did. Instead, he went to the administration and threatened to quit if the priest wasn’t removed. The priest was gone the next day.

That was an oasis of heroism in the midst of a moral desert, made all the more remarkable by the fact that we were in a recession (aren’t we always?) and I happen to know he couldn’t afford to lose his job.

So I’d like…

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‘Reasonable doubt’ Catholic brother abused student

(AUSTRALIA)
Australian Associated Press [Sydney, Australia]

May 18, 2023

By Miklos Bolza

Read original article

[Via Canberra Times]

A former Catholic student’s allegations he was sexually abused four decades ago may have been made against the wrong person.

Brother Daniel Slattery taught at Kendall Grange School and faced 13 counts of historical sexual abuse against three young boys aged between nine and 13 years who were students in 1980.

Kendall Grange on the shores of Lake Macquarie was run by the Order of the Hospitaller Brothers of St John of God, a religious order of the Catholic Church.

Boys with intellectual and behavioural difficulties were enrolled at the school and were frequently exposed to sexual or violent acts by the Brothers there.

In July 2018, Slattery was accused of committing a number of sexual acts on the three boys at various locations around the school including in his bedroom and their dormitory.

Diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease and deemed unfit to stand trial, he was found…

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Illinois Catholic Dioceses publish processes document on handling allegations of sexual abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
WREX [Rockford IL]

May 18, 2023

By Nick Landi

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All Illinois Catholic dioceses issued a summary of their common processes for handling allegations of sexual abuse of minors against any Catholic cleric who has ministered within their respective boundaries.

The Catholic Church in the United States set in motion similar processes in response to a growing understanding that, over its history, church clerics and other personnel had sexually abused children in their care and that the response to these crimes had been insufficient.

While most processes have been in place for a while, Illinois dioceses have either described or applied them in different ways.

Each Illinois diocese has continually improved its policies to conform to national standards and as a result of its experiences.

In 2019, Pope Francis issued the decree entitled, Vos Estis Lux Mundi, mandating a world-wide system for the reporting, investigating, and resolving allegations against bishops, both of participating in an act of abuse, and of failing…

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Cardinal Cupich details streamlining process to handle sex abuse allegations in Catholic church

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

May 18, 2023

By Cate Cauguiran

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Cardinal Blase Cupich spoke with ABC7 Chicago exclusively Thursday about how all six Illinois Catholic dioceses are now streamlining their process for handling allegations of sexual abuse by a member of the Catholic clergy.

The hope is to give people a better understanding of how the Illinois Catholic dioceses handle allegations of sexual abuse of minors, but survivors have said church leaders need to do more.

“We wanted to make sure that we followed the same kind of format and the ways that we communicate information,” Cupich said.

On Thursday, the six dioceses in the state released a joint statement detailing the process of reporting and investigating each case, including the publication of names of clerics “credibly accused” of sexual abuse.

“The way that we communicated information to people, especially through our websites, had some variations, and so we tried to tighten that up as a means of making sure…

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Illinois Catholic Dioceses Publish a Statement and Summary of their Processes for Handling Allegations of Sexual Abuse of Minors Against Clerics

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

May 18, 2023

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All Catholic dioceses in Illinois today issued a statement and summary of their common processes for handling allegations of sexual abuse of minors against any Catholic cleric who is ministering or has ministered within their respective boundaries.

The six Catholic dioceses of Illinois include the Archdiocese of Chicago, and the Dioceses of Belleville, Joliet, Peoria, Rockford, and Springfield.

The complete statement and summary can be found here

Archdiocese of Chicago Key Points are as Follows:

For more than 30 years, the Archdiocese of Chicago has been at the forefront of developing and continually improving policies and programs to address the scourge of child sexual abuse and to support survivors.

  • Assistance Ministry: Since 1991, we have maintained one of the first and largest survivor assistance programs in the nation, providing pastoral assistance to anyone making an allegation, regardless of when the abuse is alleged to have occurred and whether or not the allegation is eventually substantiated.
    • The Office of Assistance…
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May 18, 2023

Bill inspired by sexual abuse allegations at Kanakuk Kamps dies in Missouri legislature

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

May 18, 2023

By Clara Bates

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The legislation would have extended the civil statute of limitations for survivors of childhood sexual abuse

A legislative push to extend the statute of limitations for survivors of childhood sexual abuse to file civil action failed this year — despite mounting evidence in Missouri and nationally that abuse can take years to come to light. 

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Brian Seitz, R-Branson, would have extended the amount of time survivors have to file civil action against a perpetrator from age 31 to age 41.

But it stalled in the legislative process. 

The bill was heard in committee in February and passed out of committee unanimously in April. It didn’t get a vote in the House until session was nearly over. It won unanimous approval from the House earlier this month but never got a committee hearing in the Senate.

Seitz attributes the bill’s limited traction this session…

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Ex-New Bedford priest who also served in Attleboro area settles sexual abuse lawsuit

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

May 17, 2023

By David Linton

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A former New Bedford priest who served at churches in Attleboro, North Attleboro and Easton has settled a sexual abuse lawsuit with a former altar boy at his parish in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

Richard Degagne, who was a priest at St. Anthony of Padua Church in New Bedford when the alleged abuse occurred, settled the lawsuit with a payment “in the low to mid six figures,” the plaintiff’s lawyer, Mitchell Garabedian of Boston, told the New Bedford Standard Times.

The plaintiff, Jason Medeiros of Acushnet, was an altar boy at St. Anthony of Padua Church in New Bedford, and participated in a Catholic youth group.

In the lawsuit filed in Bristol County Superior Court, Medeiros alleged he was sexually abused by Degagne at various times between 1988 and 1991 when he was 13 to 15 years old.

The alleged abuse occurred in Degagne’s bedroom in the rectory…

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Abuse victims share ‘wounded heart’ with Pope Francis after bike trek from Germany

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

May 17, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

Pope Francis on Wednesday met briefly with a group of abuse victims who undertook a bicycle pilgrimage from Germany to Rome this month to ask the pope to do everything in his power to heal and prevent abuses in the Catholic Church.

The group, from the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising, also delivered a letter to the Holy Father following his weekly general audience and presented him a gift: a sculpture of a heart by artist Michael Pendry.

“The work does not show a usual, romantic heart,” the group explained in its letter to the pope. “The heart has many open parts, allows introspection, it is angular and wounded. We as people who have been abused can easily find ourselves in this depiction. It is also so in our inner selves, in the center of our being, in the center of our heart!”

In all, 15 abuse victims arrived in…

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Former Catholic Teacher Named in Sex Abuse Report Dies in Prison

BALTIMORE (MD)
Patch [New York City NY]

May 17, 2023

By Megan VerHelst

Read original article

John Merzbacher, a former Baltimore Catholic school teacher, was convicted of rape in 1995. He was serving four life sentences.

John Merzbacher, a former Catholic school teacher and convicted child rapist who was named in a grand jury report detailing allegations of sexual abuse within the Baltimore Archdiocese, died in prison last week, according to reports citing the state’s corrections department.

Merzbacher, 81, was serving four life sentences at the Eastern Correctional Institution in Westover after being convicted of rape in 1995, the Baltimore Sun reported. He died of natural causes, according to the Associated Press.

Merzbacher was among nearly 160 priests and other church members named in a 463-page report released in April by Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown, which identified Merzbacher as “the most obvious example of systemic abuse” among non-clergy members.

The report, which a judge ordered released to the public in…

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French Catholic priests forced to wear QR codes for sex offender status

PARIS (FRANCE)
New York Post [New York NY]

May 17, 2023

By Natalie O'Neill

Read original article

Catholic priests in France will be forced to wear scannable QR codes to signal whether they are sex offenders as part of a national crackdown on abuse, according to church officials.

Under the new system, people can scan the wallet-size cards with their smartphones to receive one of three color codes revealing the clergy member’s “status,” according to the Bishops’ Conference of France.

Red shows that the priest has been stripped of his clerical position potentially due to child sex abuse, though the nature of the sanction is not specified.

Green is a sign that the priest is in good standing, while orange indicates he’s not yet fully qualified to lead Mass.

The system  — announced May 10 in an effort by the church to appear more “transparent” — also applies to bishops and deacons, France 24 reported.

The Catholic Church hailed the program as an efficient way to…

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New accusations of sexual abuse against Jesuits in Bolivia

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 17, 2023

By Julieta Villar

Read original article

Following the publication of a report by the Spanish newspaper El País that documented the serial sexual abuse of 89 victims committed in Bolivia by a Jesuit priest, new accusations have been made against other priests.

The scandal came to light when the nephew of the deceased Spanish Jesuit priest, Alfonso Pedrajas Moreno, found a diary among his personal effects that reveals the acts of abuse. The diary also showed that the Jesuit authorities were aware of the abuse and covered it up.

Both the Society of Jesus and the Bolivian government are pursuing the new cases.

In the last week, a complaint of abuse and rape was filed with the Bolivian public prosecutor’s office against Jesuit Father Luis María Roma Padrosa while Archbishop Alejandro Mestre, also a Jesuit, was accused of sexual abuse in a second complaint.

Both complaints were filed by former Jesuit provincial Osvaldo Chirveches.

“There are…

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May 17, 2023

Will a Church-issued scannable ID help rid France of abusive priests?

PARIS (FRANCE)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

May 15, 2023

Read original article

The French Bishops’ Conference has just introduced its “in-house” scannable ID card which will replace the “celebret”, a paper document proving the holder’s credentials.  The card provides color-coded background information on priests’, bishops’ and deacons’ suitability to perform their duties or hear confession.  While green and orange indicates the holder is fully or partially qualified, the main goal is to wave a red flag at those who are no longer allowed to officiate.  

The Conference has finessed the context for this move by not spelling out the possible reasons for a red flag. However one can assume that the goal of this attempt at greater transparency is to weed out impostors and better keep track of those found guilty of sexual abuse – folks who often manage to evade detection and continue their criminal activities unabated. 

Culturally speaking this initiative reflects an acceptance in France of an Identification…

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FROM A HESSTON COLLEGE SURVIVOR: TO PRESIDENT MANICKAM

HESSTON (KS)
IntoAccount [Lawrence KS]

May 11, 2023

Read original article

Over the past six months, I have had the pleasure of working with this student. She has spent years giving her passion, creativity, and time to Hesston College. And recently, she has been a part of the student organizing that has led to administration promising change. But like many survivors before her, she has had to end her time at Hesston unceremoniously. Before packing and leaving, she wrote this to President Manickam. Even from her place of being abused, ignored, and silenced by administration, she has hopes that they can transform into the leadership they aspire to be, or even think they already are. As Mariame Kaba says, “Hope is a discipline,” and this, dear readers, is a survivor with deep discipline.

— Erin Bergen, Director of Student Advocacy

Click here to read law firm Cozen O’ Connor’s 2023 report on Hesston College’s numerous Title IX…

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Abuse victims meet pope after Munich to Rome bike trek

(ITALY)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

May 17, 2023

Read original article

Victims who were sexually abused within the Catholic Church have cycled hundreds of kilometers from the Bavarian capital to Rome together. They had a meeting with Pope Francis at the Vatican to hand over their message.

A group of victims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church had an audience with Pope Francis on Wednesday, after reaching the goal of their bicycle challenge.

The initiative — the stated aim of which is to be seen and heard — was organized by victims groups in the Munich and Freising archdiocese under the motto “We’re leaving! Church, are you with us?”

What did the journey entail?

The group of nine abuse victims, along with their riding companions, traveled 715 kilometers (about 450 miles) in ten stages over as many successive days. 

To symbolize their emotional state, they also took along stones bearing words to reflect their thoughts and feelings.

Among them were anger, shame, worthlessness,…

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List Of Native Boarding Schools ‘Powerful Step’ In Healing ‘Intergenerational’ Abuse Trauma, Say Compilers

WASHINGTON (DC)
Our Sunday Visitor [Huntington IN]

May 13, 2023

By Gina Christian - OSV News

Read original article

A new resource for tracking Native residential schools affiliated with the Catholic Church marks a major advance toward healing the wounds of systemic abuse, said one project organizer.

“While there are more steps for the Catholic Church to take to move toward truth, healing and reconciliation, this list is a powerful step forward,” said Maka Black Elk, executive director for Truth and Healing at Red Cloud Indian School on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota.

On May 9, Black Elk and a group of archivists, historians, tribal members and other supporters unveiled a list of some 87 Catholic-run Native boarding schools that had operated in 22 U.S. states prior to 1978. The schools were among more than 400 overseen by the U.S. federal government in the 19th and 20th centuries, with many sites operated by Christian churches and organizations.

The list, accessible online at http://ctah.archivistsacwr.org,…

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Rome starts fresh probe into missing Vatican teen

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

May 16, 2023

By AFP, Rome

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The Vatican has been accused of obstructing investigation efforts into the disappearance of Emanuela Orlandi in 1983

Rome prosecutors have opened a fresh investigation into the disappearance of a teenager 40 years ago, and are calling for full collaboration from the Vatican, Italian media reported Monday.

Emanuela Orlandi, the 15-year-old daughter of a Vatican employee, was last seen leaving a music class in Rome on June 22, 1983.

Decades of speculation followed over what happened to her, with suggestions that mobsters, the secret services or a Vatican conspiracy were to blame, theories which sparked a hit Netflix series.

The Orlandi family’s lawyer Laura Sgro told AFP Monday she had learned of the fresh probe through Italian media reports, and “it would certainly be welcome news”.

The family has campaigned tirelessly for the truth, and it was their demands which led in part to the Vatican launching an inquiry into its…

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Carl Lentz Denies Sexual Misconduct with Church Member was Abuse in New Docuseries; Says He was Abused as Child

NEW YORK (NY)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

May 16, 2023

By Josh Shepherd

Read original article

Despite prior admissions that he engaged in “manipulated intimacy” with a church member and employee, disgraced former Hillsong NYC pastor Carl Lentz strongly denies his misconduct was abuse in a new docuseries releasing this week.

In the docuseries, The Secrets of Hillsong, Lentz describes his years-long sexual misconduct with Leona Kimes, his nanny and a member of Hillsong NYC, as “an inappropriate relationship,” according to a preview in People. But Lentz argues “any notion of abuse is categorically false.”

Lentz also disclosed in the docuseries he was “sexually abused as a child by a family friend,” which has not been previously disclosed, People reported.

The four-part docuseries releases Friday on FX and is the only Hillsong exposé to feature interviews with Lentz and his wife, Laura, since their firing from Hillsong in 2020 after Carl’s admission of infidelity.

Hillsong later determined that Carl Lentz had inappropriate relationships with three women, including Kimes. In…

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Jury awards $95M to man who accused Rochester-area priest of child abuse

ROCHESTER (NY)
Democrat and Chronicle [Rochester NY]

May 11, 2023

By Gary Craig

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A jury Wednesday awarded $95 million to a local man who alleged he was sexually abused in 1979 by a former Rochester-area priest who also has been accused by others of sexual assaults.

The local man alleged that the former priest, Rev. Foster P. Rogers, sexually abused him in Rogers’ car in July 1979.

The victim was then 15. Rogers now has limited income, according to letters he wrote the court, and the local man awarded the $95 million is unlikely to see even a tiny sliver of the award.

The award is one of the largest in New York since the Child Victims Act, which opened a window for lawsuits from past child victims of sexual abuse. Earlier this month an Erie County woman was awarded $100 million under the Child Victims Act, or CVA. That was thought to be the largest CVA award in New York.

In 1979 Rogers…

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Editorial: Knoxville Catholics deserve an update on Vatican’s investigation of Bishop Stika

KNOXVILLE (TN)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

May 17, 2023

By NCR editorial staff

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There are relatively few positions in the country that have the job security of a Catholic bishop. In his diocese, as the church’s Code of Canon Law puts it, the bishop has “all ordinary, proper, and immediate power.” No one there can contravene his orders or force his removal from office. Neither can the national conference of bishops, nor can any regional ecclesial entities. 

Even Elon Musk, the new lord of Twitter and aspiring president of Mars, ultimately reports to various boards of directors. Catholic bishops report to the pope directly, and only he can choose to remove them.

Given that organizational reality, one can understand the dilemma of a Catholic in the Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee. As NCR staff reporter Brian Fraga highlights in a thorough and wide-ranging investigation, many parishioners there are feeling demoralized and unsure what power they have to effect…

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Hold the Church to account for abuse – separate it from the state

WITNEY (UNITED KINGDOM)
National Secular Society [London, England]

May 16, 2023

By Megan Manson

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The Church of England’s increasingly dire record on safeguarding should have consequences for its established status, says Megan Manson.

It didn’t take long for the glitz and glamour of the coronation to fade, and for the Church of England to find itself back in the quagmire of abuse scandals.

Within days of their Westminster Abbey extravaganza, the UK’s established Church found itself having to answer to damning findings of an independent review into the case of Trevor Devamanikkam, a CofE priest who raped Matthew Ineson in the 1980s. Ineson was just 16 years old.

Days later, victims of alleged abuse at the hands of CofE preacher Mike Pilavachi called for an independent investigation into his actions, as they don’t trust the Church’s own internal inquiry.

Pilavachi’s victims and survivors have every right to be sceptical of the Church’s ability, in their words, to “mark its own…

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Baltimore archbishop pushes back against Maryland sex abuse report

BALTIMORE (MD)
Crux [Denver CO]

May 16, 2023

By John Lavenburg

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Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore has spoken out against headlines related to a recent Maryland Attorney General report on clergy sex abuse, saying many of the news stories don’t “provide a full or completely accurate picture” of the “30-year history of the Archdiocese’s accountability and enforcement efforts.”

The 454-page report, published April 5, details more than 600 instances of child sex abuse by 156 abusers from the archdiocese. According to the report, the majority of the abuse took place between the 1940s and 2002 – the year the U.S. Bishops implemented the Dallas Charter, establishing a set of procedures dioceses must follow to address allegations of sexual abuse.

Secular and Catholic media outlets alike, including Crux, reported the details of the report when it was published by the Maryland Attorney General’s Office. However, in recent weeks, several Baltimore media outlets revealed the supposed identities of several priests and church officials whose…

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I survived Baltimore’s Catholic Church sex ring – a nun was murdered after a fellow victim told her about priest’s abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
The U.S. Sun [New York NY]

May 16, 2023

By Rachel Dobkin

Read original article

A SEX abuse survivor has spoken out against Baltimore’s Catholic church, saying that a fellow victim reached out to a nun for help who then turned up dead.

Teresa Lancaster, 69, is now an advocate for victims like her, after being forced into the Archdiocese of Baltimore‘s “sex ring” while attending Archbishop Keough High School in Maryland during the late 1960s to early 1970s.

“I went to the counselor at Archbishop Keogh to get some advice about some problems at home,” Lancaster exclusively told The U.S. Sun.

Her counselor, Father Joseph Maskell, was a Catholic priest who allegedly sexually abused multiple girls at the high school during this time – but denied any accusations until his death in 2001 and was never criminally charged.

“When I went in there, he closed the door and took all my clothes off, and sat me in his lap within five or 10 minutes,” Lancaster said.

Another girl…

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Baltimore Catholic Church priest Joseph Maskell who ‘abused boys & girls’ kept a gun on his desk, says survivor

BALTIMORE (MD)
The U.S. Sun [New York NY]

May 16, 2023

By Rachel Dobkin

Read original article

A SURVIVOR of a Baltimore Catholic Church priest’s sexual abuse has spoken out about the horrific way he would silence his victims.

Father Joseph Maskell was a counselor and Catholic priest at Archbishop Keough High School in Maryland who abused girls like Teresa Lancaster, who attended in the late 1960s to early 1970s

Lancaster, now 69, is an advocate for sex abuse survivors after building up the courage to break her silence about the abuse she faced at the hands of Maskell.

“I went to the counselor at Archbishop Keogh to get some advice about some problems at home,” Lancaster exclusively told The U.S. Sun.

“When I went in there, he closed the door and took all my clothes off, and sat me in his lap within five or 10 minutes,” Lancaster said.

Lancaster called Maskell a “serial rapist” who abused multiple children, not just girls, but boys too, calling the cycle…

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May 16, 2023

Ohio priest convicted of sexual abuse of minors

TOLEDO (OH)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 15, 2023

By Peter Pinedo

Read original article

Parish priest Michael Zacharias, 56, was convicted on five counts of sex trafficking by a federal jury in the Northern District of Ohio last Friday.

Zacharias has been on administrative leave from the Diocese of Toledo since he was arrested on August 18, 2020. His crimes, committed between 1999 to 2020, involved three victims, two of whom were still minors when Zacharias began abusing them.

The former pastor now faces a minimum sentence of 15 years and a maximum of life in prison.

His sentencing hearing has not yet been scheduled.

According to court documents, Zacharias used psychological coercion, threats, and money to force his underage and adult victims to perform sexual acts with him. The two underage victims told investigators that they were addicted to drugs and needed the money.

Zacharias was ordained a priest in 2002 and was the pastor of St. Michael the Archangel…

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‘What did the pope know?’: Poles divided over John Paul II abuse cover-up claims

KRAKóW (POLAND)
The Guardian [London, England]

May 16, 2023

By Shaun Walker and Katarzyna Piasecka

Read original article

With under six months to go before a parliamentary election that is expected to be closely fought, a surprise figure has entered the Polish political field, despite the fact he died in 2005: Pope John Paul II.

The legacy of John Paul II, who was born Karol Wojtyła and was archbishop of Kraków before becoming pope in 1978, is under scrutiny after a recent book and television documentary accused him of covering up for paedophile priests before he became pontiff.

Poland, historically staunchly Catholic, has slowly been coming to terms with the scale of historical sexual abuse in the church, but until recently the figure of John Paul II, whom many Poles revere for his role in the ending of communist rule in the country, has remained untouchable.

That convention has been upturned by allegations in a documentary aired on Polish television station TVN earlier this year, and a concurrent…

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Oakland diocese files for bankruptcy following sexual abuse lawsuits

OAKLAND (CA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 15, 2023

By Joe Bukuras

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The Diocese of Oakland, in California, has filed for bankruptcy protection, Bishop Michael Barber announced May 8. 

The filing comes less than a month following Barber’s announcement that the diocese was strongly considering the legal maneuver due to hundreds of expected child sexual abuse lawsuits brought after the statute of limitations expired at the end of a three-year legal window.

In 2019, the state of California passed legislation that granted a three-year exemption to the statute of limitations on child sexual abuse lawsuits. The legal window began Jan. 1, 2020, and ended Jan. 2, 2023.

In letter to the people of his diocese, Barber said there are more than 330 child sexual abuse claims, with the majority alleging assaults occurring between 1960 and 1989.

The diocese’s website said that three of the accusations claim the abuse occurred within the last two decades….

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Pope Francis plans to ask embattled Knoxville, Tenn., bishop to resign

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Catholic Review - Archdiocese of Baltimore [Baltimore MD]

May 16, 2023

By Gina Christian

Read original article

Pope Francis plans to ask Bishop Richard F. Stika of Knoxville, Tenn., to resign in response to a Vatican-ordered investigation of sexual abuse cover-up and financial mismanagement, according to a report by The Pillar.

In a May 13 article, The Pillar cited unnamed sources “close to the Vatican’s Dicastery for Bishops,” who indicated that Pope Francis came to a decision on the embattled Tennessee bishop in April.

Appointed by Pope Benedict XVI in 2009, Bishop Stika has been the diocese’s longest-serving ordinary, but his tenure has been a troubled one.

The bishop has been accused of sheltering and financing former seminarian Wojciech Sobczuk, who allegedly raped a parish organist. In May 2021, Bishop Stika confirmed to The Pillar he had removed an investigator appointed to the case by the diocesan review board, saying the former law enforcement professional was “past his prime” and declaring Sobczuk’s innocence. The organist has since…

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Mike Pride, Who Proved a Regional Newspaper Could Work, Dies at 76

MANCHESTER (NH)
New York Times [New York NY]

May 12, 2023

By Sam Roberts

Read original article

Mike Pride, who transformed the New Hampshire newspaper The Concord Monitor into a prizewinning paragon of regional journalism, mentoring generations of reporters and editors, defying the trope about the dying small-town newspaper and exerting an outsize impact on his profession, died on April 24 in a hospice in Palm Harbor, Fla. He was 76.

The cause was myelofibrosis, a rare type of blood cancer, his son Dr. Yuri Pride said.

As The Monitor’s managing editor from 1978 to 1983 and its editor until he retired in 2008, Mr. Pride won the National Press Foundation’s Editor of the Year Award in 1987 for overseeing The Monitor’s eloquent coverage of the death of a hometown heroine, the astronaut and teacher Christa McAuliffe, in the explosion of the space shuttle Challenger.

And he presided over a newspaper that was regarded as a model of objective reporting — in contrast to the strident front-page editorials…

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Catholic priest convicted on 5 counts of sex trafficking

TOLEDO (OH)
KSBY [San Luis Obispo CA]

May 15, 2023

By Justin Boggs

Read original article

A Catholic priest in Ohio is the latest to be convicted as the church continues to encounter allegations of sex abuse against its priests.

A jury has convicted an Ohio Catholic priest on five counts of sex trafficking, the Department of Justice announced. 

The Department of Justice said Michael J. Zacharias trafficked three victims, two of whom were children who he continued to traffic as adults. The DOJ said it had evidence that Zacharias paid the victims to engage in sex acts with him. 

The DOJ said he began grooming the victims when they were young boys while serving at St. Catherine’s Catholic Parish school in Toledo, Ohio. Prosecutors said he integrated himself into the boys’ families “as a trusted friend, mentor and spiritual counselor.”

“The defendant overcame the victims’ resistance to his eventual commercial sex overtures by gradually sexualizing conversations and conduct with them. At the same time, the…

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Third alleged sex abuse victim from one priest’s time in Ohio Valley comes forward

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
WTRF-TV [Wheeling WV]

May 15, 2023

By D.K. Wright

Read original article

He was allegedly sexually abused about 53 years ago as he attended Central Catholic High School in Steubenville.

This man, whose name is not being disclosed, has joined two other former students in revealing what he says was sexual abuse by a priest at the school, Father Kenneth Bonadies.

A news conference Monday in Steubenville, held by Road To Recovery Inc., detailed that man’s story.

While that man did not comment during the news conference, another one did speak via Zoom, saying Father Bonadies allegedly sexually abused him in stairwells and classrooms, causing him lifelong trauma.

An attorney representing all three men, Mitchell Garabedian, claims Bishop Jeffrey Monforton has been covering up what happened, and has refused to release the contents of files.

He said the victims have waited a long time and have gotten no response in civil court.

Dino Orsatti, Director of Communications for the Diocese of Steubenville,…

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May 15, 2023

Celebret card of Bishop Alexandre Joly

French Catholic priests will be forced to wear scannable QR code so the public can identify if they are a sex offender

PARIS (FRANCE)
Daily Mail [London, United Kingdom]

May 14, 2023

By James Reynolds

Read original article

[Photo above: Celebret card of Bishop Alexandre Joly]

  • Priests in France will be required to carry traffic-light coded identification cards
  • The cards signal whether the holder has been stripped of their clerical status 

Catholic priests in France will be made to wear traffic-light coded identification tags to allow the public to check whether they may have faced sexual abuse charges.

Cards will feature a QR code, scannable by mobile phone, that will flag a red, orange or green light depending on whether its holder had been stripped of clerical status.

The scheme, announced by the Bishop’s Conference of France on Wednesday, will allow easier identification of priests able to lead mass and hear confessions.

But it also aims at protecting worshippers from sexual abuse, an issue made more pressing by revelations in November that 11 former or serving French bishops had been accused of abuse or had failed…

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John Merzbacher, ex-Catholic schoolteacher who abused dozens of Baltimore children, has died

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

May 14, 2023

By John-John Williams IV and Kaitlin Newman

Read original article

John Merzbacher, a former teacher at Catholic Community School of Baltimore, who victimized dozens of Baltimore children in the 1960s and ’70s, has died in prison, where he was serving four consecutive life sentences. He was 81.

Early Sunday morning, the Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services notified one of the survivors of Merzbacher’s abuse of a “change in status” as of Saturday. “This is not an emergency; the offender is deceased,” the email stated.

Merzbacher died Friday in the infirmary at Eastern Correctional Institution in Westover. There was no sign of foul play. His death certificate states that he died from natural causes, according to Latoya Gray, spokeswoman for Maryland Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services.

When prosecutors brought charges against Merzbacher in the 1990s, they said at least 40 former students alleged they had been raped or otherwise abused by him. The former teacher allegedly…

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I survived Baltimore’s Catholic Church sex ring – a nun was murdered after a fellow victim told her about priest’s abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
The U.S. Sun [New York NY]

May 14, 2023

By Rachel Dobkin

Read original article

A sex abuse survivor has spoken out against Baltimore’s Catholic church, saying that a fellow victim reached out to a nun for help who then turned up dead.

Teresa Lancaster, 69, is now an advocate for victims like her, after being forced into the Archdiocese of Baltimore‘s “sex ring” while attending Archbishop Keough High School in Maryland during the late 1960s to early 1970s.

“I went to the counselor at Archbishop Keogh to get some advice about some problems at home,” Lancaster exclusively told The U.S. Sun.

Her counselor, Father Joseph Maskell, was a Catholic priest who allegedly sexually abused multiple girls at the high school during this time – but denied any accusations until his death in 2001 and was never criminally charged.

“When I went in there, he closed the door and took all my clothes off, and sat me in his lap within five or 10 minutes,” Lancaster said.

Another girl…

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Well-known Catholic school abuser died in prison over the weekend

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBAL NewsRadio [Baltimore MD]

May 15, 2023

By Bill Vanko

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One of Maryland’s most infamous sex offenders has died in prison. 

John Merzbacher was serving four life sentences after being convicted in 1995 of raping a student in the 1970s at the catholic school in south Baltimore where he was a teacher. 

He was also accused of abusing at least 13 other young victims, sometimes using a gun in the abuse, but those charges were dropped when Merzbacher was sentenced to life.  

State corrections officials said Merzbacher was 81 when he died of what prison officials said were natural causes at a prison on the Eastern Shore. 

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Priest Removed From Assignments in 3 RI Communities — Now Giving Mass at Notorious Parish

PROVIDENCE (RI)
GoLocalProv [Providence RI]

May 15, 2023

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Diocese of Providence Priest Eric Silva — who has been removed from diocesan assignments at Catholic schools and parishes in Cranston, Barrington and Narragansett — now has a new home.

Silva had been removed for asking children “inappropriate questions” about sex.

Demers, Haiti, and St. Joseph’s Church

Now, Silva is assigned to St. Joseph Church on Hope Street — the parish associated with one of the most infamous Catholic priests — Priest Norman Demers. 

Silva’s name does not appear on the St. Joseph website, or weekly handout, nor does he introduce himself when giving mass.

Demers was assigned to St. Joseph from 1974 to 1990 — it was his longest assignment during his 42-year career in the priesthood. And it was at St. Joseph that he was involved with the parish’s Haiti project and allegations of sexual abuse came to light.

“The complaints about Father Demers were raised…

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May 14, 2023

Assassins of the Soul

LA PAZ (BOLIVIA)
Where Peter Is [Beltsville MD]

May 10, 2023

By Mike Lewis

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Last night I read a longform article in the English edition of the Madrid-based newspaper El País about a Spanish-born Jesuit priest named Alfonso Pedrajas. After Pedrajas died in 2009, he left behind a diary that filled 383 printed pages, comprised of 350 entries chronicling his life and career as a priest. El País compared his diary to “a map charting a long and sinuous road,” explaining that “the priest’s diary follows his life from 1960, the year when he entered the Jesuit order as a novice, to 2008, the year he stopped writing after succumbing to exhaustion and illness.”

In his diary, Pedrajas acknowledged that he was a serial sexual predator. El País reported that it was filled with statements such as, “My biggest personal failure: without a doubt, the pederasty.” In one entry, he even estimated how many he had abused, writing, “I hurt so many people (85?)….

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‘We got hit all the time’: Human Rights Tribunal hears of abuse at Catholic day school

PRINCE GEORGE (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

May 12, 2023

By Kate Partridge

Read original article

Complainants call for apology from RCMP, compensation for former Immaculata students who experienced abuse

ichard Perry, 65, still has scars from abuse he said he suffered at the Immaculata Elementary day school more than 50 years ago — abuse he alleges the RCMP failed to fully investigate because he is Indigenous.

“We got hit all the time for not talking ‘right’, not doing things right,” he told the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal this week at a hearing in Burns Lake, B.C., more than 900 kilometres north of Vancouver and 220 kilometres northwest of Prince George.

The panel was in the community from May 1-12 to hear testimony from Perry and other former students, who recounted stories of physical and sexual violence and who said, decades later, that the RCMP failed to properly investigate their stories.

Six of the survivors launched a human rights complaint against the RCMP in 2017. They want…

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Ohio priest convicted of sex trafficking minors

TOLEDO (OH)
WCCO [Minneapolis MN]

May 13, 2023

By Lauren Barry

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A federal jury has convicted an Ohio Catholic priest accused of grooming young boys of five counts of sex trafficking, the U.S. Department of Justice said Friday.

According to the department, evidence presented to jury demonstrated how that Michael J. Zacharias first met the victims when they were young boys, and he was a Seminarian at St. Catherine’s Catholic Parish school in Toledo, Ohio, and began grooming them for commercial sex acts.

“The charges related to three victims, two of whom Zacharias trafficked when they were minors and as adults,” said the DOJ. “The evidence presented to the jury detailed how Zacharias paid the victims to engage in sex acts with him using the victims’ fear of serious harm to compel their compliance.”

In 2002, a report in the Boston Globe opened a floodgate of revelations about sex abuse cases in the Catholic church. By…

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Priest convicted of sex trafficking for abusing 3 victims as minors, later adults

TOLEDO (OH)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 13, 2023

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A Roman Catholic priest was convicted of five sex-trafficking charges in the molestation of three boys who prosecutors say he met at a Toledo preschool and coerced to continue sexual activity as adults.

Rev. Michael Zacharias was convicted by a federal jury on Friday of sexual trafficking of a minor, two counts of sexual trafficking of a minor by force, fraud, or coercion, and two counts of sexual trafficking of an adult by force, fraud, or coercion.

Prosecutors said Zacharias “paid the victims to engage in sex acts with him using the victims’ fear of serious harm to compel their compliance.” They also said the three victims were developing serious drug addictions and the priest “waited to propose commercial sex” until they were heavily involved in drug abuse.

The Toledo Blade reports that Zacharias, 56, was led out of the courtroom in handcuffs and taken to the Lucas…

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French Catholic Church to provide clergy with scannable IDs to battle sexual abuse

PARIS (FRANCE)
France 24 [Paris, France]

May 13, 2023

By Aude Mazoue

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Rattled by repeated cases of sexual abuse over the years, the French Catholic Church will soon provide digital ID cards with scannable QR codes that will offer colour-coded background information – ranging from green to orange to red – on bishops, priests and deacons. But the new measure is raising eyebrows.      

Old sins cast long shadows. After centuries of secrecy, the French Bishop’s Conference (CEF) has decided it will be more transparent by equipping priests, bishops and deacons with digital, scannable identification cards. No bigger than a bankcard, the IDs will certify whether or not its holder is fit to perform a sermon or has the right to hear confession. 

Essentially, the cards identify whether or not the Church member is facing a sexual abuse charge. 

When the announcement dropped on Wednesday 10 May, it sparked a mini revolution within the French Catholic…

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Ohio Catholic priest convicted of sex trafficking, abusing churchgoing minors into adulthood

TOLEDO (OH)
WHIO-TV [Dayton OH]

May 14, 2023

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A Catholic priest in Ohio was convicted Friday on five counts of sex trafficking charges related to three victims, two of whom were minors when first sexually abused.

Michael Zacharias, 53, of Findlay, was charged with coercion and enticement, sex trafficking of a minor, and sex trafficking of an adult by force, fraud, or coercion, News Center 7 previously reported.

Zacharias was arrested without incident at his home in Findlay by members of the Northwest Ohio Child Exploitation and Human Trafficking Task Force. Zacharias, the pastor at St. Michael the Archangel parish in Findlay, was then placed on administrative leave due to his arrest.

A trial went underway that presented evidence of Zacharias paying victims to engage in sex acts with him, using the victims’ fear of serious harm to compel their compliance. The evidence showed Zacharias first meeting his victims when they were young boys, and he was a…

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Vatican to ask Stika for resignation

KNOXVILLE (TN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

May 13, 2023

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The embattled Bishop Rick Stika will be asked by Vatican officials to resign as Bishop of Knoxville, after more than two years of scandal over the bishop’s leadership of his eastern Tennessee diocese.

According to sources close to the Vatican’s Dicastery for Bishops, Pope Francis decided last month to request Stika’s resignation, after reviewing the results of a Vatican-ordered investigation into the bishop’s management.

Stika is accused of protecting Wojciech Sobczuk, a seminarian accused multiple times of sexual assault. Stika last year admitted to The Pillar that he interfered with a diocesan review board investigation into the allegation that Sobczuk raped a parish organist, telling The Pillar that the seminarian was the victim of the alleged sexual assault, not the aggressor.

The bishop is also accused of mishandling other sexual misconduct allegations in the diocese, and has been accused by his presbyterate of bullying and harassment. 

It is not clear whether Stika will agree…

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May 13, 2023

Effort to define safeguarding body has been ‘slow’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

May 13, 2023

By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

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The papal commission to protect minors began in 2014 as an independent body that reported directly to the pope

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors has been trying to define more clearly its relationship with the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, but those efforts have been “slow,” said its president, Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley of Boston.

“Draft statutes for the commission were submitted to the Secretariat of State late last year reflecting the new mandate” of the commission, he told commission members May 4, opening their plenary assembly in Rome. The commission published his address on its website at tutelaminorum.org May 12.

While the Secretariat of State sent comments on the draft statutes earlier this year, they “offered little by way of substantive clarity on the nature of the working relationship between the DDF and the commission,” the cardinal said.

Pope Francis’ 2022 apostolic constitution, “Praedicate…

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Court documents reveal coach accused of raping former Melbourne player Daniel Hayes was a long-time AFL employee who coached Sydney Swans academy teams

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

May 12, 2023

By Russell Jackson and Bec Symons

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A former elite junior football coach has been accused by former AFL player Daniel Hayes of rape back in 2005 and a writ has been lodged in the Victorian Supreme Court seeking damages.

Key points:

  • Mark Patrick Heaney has denied allegations he raped former AFL player Daniel Hayes
  • Heaney worked at schools and helped set up a Swans academy while serving as the AFL’s regional manager for northern NSW
  • In 2014, Heaney was jailed after pleading guilty of one count of using a carriage service to groom a person under 16 years

Mark Patrick Heaney was a senior AFL employee who played a crucial role in the code’s expansion into New South Wales and coached Sydney Swans academy teams for three years.

Heaney, who was the AFL’s Northern New South Wales regional manager between 2009 and 2013, lost his job with the league in 2014 when he was convicted and…

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Tibetans and Buddhists say Dalai Lama controversy comes down to ‘unfortunate mistranslation’

DHARAMSHALA (INDIA)
Broadview [Toronto, Ontario, Canada]

May 12, 2023

By Sherlyn Assam 

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One community leader on how observers can look at the situation

A viral video of the Dalai Lama kissing a young boy sparked accusations of sexual abuse and pedophilia, but some members of the Tibetan and Buddhist communities say the spiritual leader did not cause harm. The video, taken in Dharamsala, India in February, shows the Dalai Lama, 87, kissing the boy and asking him to suck his tongue. Outrage on social media last month led the Dalai Lama to issue an apology on Twitter. Some consider the concern over the interaction as a cultural norm that was lost in translation. 

“In Tibetan culture, the grandparents and elders are very close to children. It is a very common custom to kiss anybody on the mouth, especially children, for which there is a kind of understood innocence both ways,” says Angela Sumegi, an associate professor of humanities and religion at Carleton…

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Archdiocese of Baltimore pushes back on reports claiming abusive priests still working

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBAL-TV, NBC-11 [Baltimore MD]

May 12, 2023

By UnknownThe Archdiocese of Baltimore is pushing back on reports that named child sexual abusers continue to work in the archdiocese. Video above: Attorneys to sue archdiocese over child sex abuse

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The Archdiocese of Baltimore is pushing back on reports that named child sexual abusers continue to work in the archdiocese.

Video above: Attorneys to sue archdiocese over child sex abuse

In a new letter sent Friday to members of the archdiocese, Archbishop William Lori pushed back against recent reports that priests named in the report on clergy child sexual abuse are still working in the archdiocese.

Lori wrote, in part: “Some members of the clergy whose names have been tied more recently to media coverage focusing on the coverup are, in fact, some of the very people who helped force a culture change that rooted out evil and shut out attempts to conceal the failures or hide abusers.

“How is it a coverup if you report everything to law enforcement?”

Survivors of clergy abuse have called on Lori to step down. Earlier this week, they asked the archdiocese to release…

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Lingering Vatican investigation of Tennessee bishop leaves diocese demoralized

KNOXVILLE (TN)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

May 11, 2023

By Brian Fraga

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Lay Catholics say the Knoxville Diocese is a ‘hot mess.’ Bishop Richard Stika tells NCR he plans to ‘move forward.’

Some priests in the Diocese of Knoxville have retired early or left active ministry. Others are considering leaving the priesthood. Groups of lay Catholics in the East Tennessee area say they are demoralized and frustrated.

“We are just really a hot mess,” said Susan Vance, a leader of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests in Tennessee.

Vance and other local Catholics blame Bishop Richard Stika, who became the diocese’s third bishop in 2009, for the turmoil in their local church. In two lawsuits, the diocese is accused of allegedly obstructing investigations into clergy sex abuse and intimidating people who reported they were abused. An apostolic visitation is investigating concerns about Stika’s leadership raised by laity and clergy.

“This man is not a leader. A leader looks after his…

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Additional Criminal Charges Against Catholic and Private School Teacher

MIAMI (FL)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

May 11, 2023

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A 29-year-old teacher — who was working at a Jewish private school when police officers arrested him for child sex crimes at a private Catholic school and a charter school — is facing more charges on Wednesday in Miami-Dade County. Eric Bernard Givens, also known as “Mr G.”, has been at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center since Friday without bond. County jail and court records show that on Wednesday he was facing charges in cases involving three girls.

According to court records, the additional criminal cases involve two other girls who said Givens abused them while he was their teacher at St. Mary Cathedral School and a girl who met Givens while he was her teacher at the Theodore R. and Thelma A. Gibson Charter School in Miami’s Overtown district.

For many, hearing and sharing stories can play a vital role in their recovery from…

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