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.

October 13, 2013

Jesus plätschert nicht in der Designerwanne

DEUTSCHLAND
Stern

Die Kirche bin ich – das selbstbewusste Motto Ludwig XIV. scheint abgewandelt auch für den Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst zu gelten: Kaum saß er in seiner Diözese sicher im Sattel, hat er gehandelt, wie es im behagte, und steht jetzt vor den Trümmern seines Tuns. Ob hier alte Rechnungen beglichen wurden, ob gezielte Indiskretionen aus dem engsten Kreis dem Bischof schaden sollten, ist kirchenintern spannend. Für Kritiker und Gläubige ist das ohne Belang, das Handeln des Bischofs ist nicht zu vermitteln.

Gebäude von Rang
Auch die Frage, ob hier sinnlos geprotzt oder aber ein architektonisches Kleinod geschaffen wurde, löst nicht die Frage der Akzeptanz. Für den Kunstverstand des Bischofs spricht, dass sein Bau Qualität hat, nur rettet guter Geschmack nicht die falschen Entscheidungen. Ob Beratungsgremien getäuscht oder doch einbezogen wurden, ist juristisch bedeutsam. Sollte das der Fall sein, hat der Bischof nicht nur gefehlt, dann hat er sich sogar strafbar gemacht. Ist dies nicht der Fall, kann es den Bischof umgekehrt aber auch nicht retten.

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

Archdiocese paid problem priests thousands in ‘medical retirements’

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert | 10/09/13

The hits just keep on coming … Today, Madeleine Baran of MPR reports: “For decades, the Rev. Robert Kapoun charmed parishioners with his accordion at “polka masses” across Minnesota. Privately, he took young boys to saunas, rectories and a secluded cabin in Cold Spring and sexually assaulted them, according to court testimony. Parents complained but leaders at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis did little to stop him. … An MPR News investigation found that a year after the trial, the archdiocese allowed Kapoun to retire early and sent him funds beyond his pension pay that totaled about $160,000 by 2012. The money was classified as ‘medical retirement.’ Those retirement payments — $957.50 every month — came in addition to regular pension checks of $1,510.50. … Kapoun is one of several accused priests who’ve received payments in addition to regular pension checks, according to two former top church officials.”

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

ROYAL COMMISSION VISITS THE NORTHERN TERRITORY

AUSTRALIA
Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse

The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse has been in the Northern Territory this week meeting with victims of child sexual abuse.

Royal Commission CEO Janette Dines said the Royal Commission has met with members of the Stolen Generation affected by childhood sexual abuse in institutions.

“Around 40 people attended the meetings which were an opportunity for people to speak with trained investigators in an informal setting where they could feel safe.

“The Royal Commission wants to make it easy for as many people as possible to tell their story, and be heard and believed,” Ms Dines said.

Ms Dines explained the Royal Commission will also hold private sessions in Darwin from October 15.

“This is a chance for any Territorian affected by child sexual abuse in an institution to tell a Royal Commissioner what happened to them.

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

Incident Report Provides More Information on HIV Positive Cleveland Priest’s Arrest Over Soliciting Sex in the Metroparks

CLEVELAND (OH)
Cleveland Leader

On Saturday, Rev. James McGonegal, pastor of St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Avenue on Cleveland’s west side, was charged with soliciting sex while being HIV positive after he was busted by a Metroparks ranger on Friday. McGonegal was arrested on Friday afternoon after the incident, which took place at Edgewater Park, and was held overnight in Cleveland City Jail. An incident report was released late Saturday, which revealed that McGonengal offered him $50 to help him “get off”, exposed himself and then masturbated while sitting in his Jeep SUV.

According to the report, McGonegal, 68, had three sex devices in his vehicle at the time of arrest, which occurred at 12:45pm. The report also said that there was a bottle inside the SUV that contained an intoxicant that during questioning after his arrest, McGonegal said he had purchased at a sex shop and smells to get “a buzz.”

The ranger, who was off-duty and wearing civilian clothes, that involved with the incident said that McGonegal made eye contact with him as he drove into a parking lot at Edgewater. The ranger said that he walked to a trail and looked back, noting that the priest had rolled down the driver side window of the vehicle and was tapping on the door frame and waving at him. The ranger said that he kept walking, waited about two minutes, and then headed back. McGonegal was then beginning to pull out to leave the area, but returned to the parking spot when he saw the man returning. The ranger says that when he got near the Jeep, the two began to talk. McGonegal said that he was “cruising.”

According to the report, the ranger asked McGonegal if he wanted to go for a walk, however he refused, stating that he knew of people who’d been arrested in the park by rangers. McGonegal invited the ranger into his Jeep, which he declined, so the priest suggested that the go to his nearby home.

The conversation then moved to what McGonegal wanted, and how much he would pay. McGonegal told the ranger that he wanted “to get off” and would pay him $50. The ranger asked McGonegal if he was a cop, to which the priest replied that he was not. The ranger said that he acted unsure, and asked him to “see it.” The ranger says that McGonegal unzipped his pants, removing his penis, and began to masturbate in front of him. At this point, the ranger says he informed McGonegal that he was a park ranger and that he was under arrest.

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

Catholics incensed as German bishop of Limburg builds palace fit for a pope

GERMANY
The Guardian (UK)

Philip Oltermann in Berlin
theguardian.com, Thursday 10 October 2013

According to the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus advised his followers to “store up for yourselves treasures in heaven”, but an influential German bishop has been accused of storing up treasures in his earthly residence instead.

Senior figures within the Roman Catholic church have called for the resignation of Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, the bishop of Limburg, after it emerged that the cost of a building project on his property in the town has ballooned to 10 times the original estimate.

The new building, described by some newspapers as “palatial”, is expected to cost €31m (£26m) and features a standalone bath worth €15,000.

To add to Tebartz-van Elst’s woes, he is now facing legal procedures for allegedly lying under oath during a legal row with a news magazine.

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

‘Bishop should wait until smoke clears’

GERMANY
Deutsche Welle

The Bishop of Limburg is under criticism for overspending on his new home and for giving a false legal declaration. Church law expert Stephan Haering says things are bad, but he shouldn’t resign yet.

Deutsche Welle: If the reports about what has been happening in Limburg are all true, do you see any other possibility than some sort of resignation by Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst?

Stephan Haering: It’s all speculation so far, since we don’t yet have such a clear picture, but there are other possibilities: for example that a co-bishop could be appointed with special powers, so that he’d have to countersign everything – that’s possible in canon law.

Wouldn’t that be an impossible situation, to have a bishop in office who didn’t have any power?
It would certainly be extraordinary situation, and it could only be temporary.

Can the bishop be dismissed, or does he have somehow to be convinced to submit his resignation?
No, the Holy Father can recall him from office; he can give him another task; he can also dismiss him, so the pope can certainly take the initiative.

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

Pope Francis to discuss German bishop spending row

GERMANY
BBC News

The head of the Catholic Church in Germany is to raise with Pope Francis a row over a bishop accused of lavish spending and lying under oath.

Archbishop Robert Zollitsch said he would meet the pontiff next week to discuss the Bishop of Limburg, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst.

German prosecutors want to fine the bishop for making false affidavits. The bishop has made no immediate comment.

Pope Francis has preached frugality since taking office in March.

The bishop’s name has been plastered across German newspapers all week, the Germany’s international broadcaster Deutsche Welle reports.

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

Opinion: Francis, please take over!

GERMANY
Deutsche Welle

Opinion

The threat of an expedited court reprimand, a construction cost scandal, loss of confidence: If the bishop of Limburg does not resign of his own accord, the pope must take decisive action, says Felix Steiner.

“Those to whom God gives an office, he also gives sense” – it’s an old saying in German among the faithful. Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst is apparently an exception to that sentiment. The bishop of

Limburg has become a burden on the Catholic Church. But thus far, he seems unwilling to vacate an office that he has so massively damaged.

It’s possible that the criticism directed at him for months now initially had elements of being a campaign against him. A campaign by those who lost offices or did not get the ones they desired.

This is normal – especially when a newcomer’s approach differs so substantially from that of his predecessor. That’s certainly true when it comes to Tebartz-van Elst, now decried as “the prince-bishop,” and his retired predecessor, the Franciscan Bishop Kamphaus of Limburg.

Homemade problems

Tebartz has only himself to blame for the problems now making it impossible for him to exercise his office. No one forced him to make a declaration under oath about his trip to India that video evidence then proved to be a clear lie. And why is a bishop’s official administration office unable to provide a transparent accounting of its budget on a construction project within four weeks?

31 million euros ($42 million) is a lot of money and does not cohere with the ideal of a poor church that the new Pope Francis has so vehemently preached about. But other bishops in Germany have built similarly expensive residences in the past without causing a comparable outcry. As any politician knows, it’s often not the problem itself that prevents you from staying in office, but, instead, how you deal with it.

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

Bishop of Limburg in trouble and in court

GERMANY
Deutsche Welle

The Bishop of Limburg is embroiled in controversy and now has to stand trial for giving false testimony in court. For many in the diocese of Limburg, he represents a problem.

German Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst has been under criticism for his sinfully expensive bishop’s seat for a long time. With parishioners he is infamous for his authoritarian leadership. Now, the Bishop of Limburg also has problems with the law.

Tebartz-van Elst allegedly provided false testimony, to the regional court of Hamburg, relating to a lawsuit over his higher than usual expenses. The suit stems from an interview with the German news magazine “Der Spiegel”, in which the bishop claimed to have flown business class on his way to an aid project – a statement he also wanted to defend in court. However, in reality Tebertz-van Elst and his vicar general flew first class.

Collaboration with the bishop has become impossible

For the Association of the German Catholic Youth (BDKJ), Tebartz-van Elst crossed a line. The head of the BDKJ, Dirk Tänzler, is in constant contact with his colleagues from the diocese of Limburg.

“They clearly say that they currently can’t imagine working together with the bishop and that they cannot go along with this any more,” he told DW in an interview. “That charge is one issue, but definitely not the only one.”

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

Locals in Limburg lose faith in ‘luxury bishop’

GERMANY
Deutsche Welle

With Germany’s most profligate bishop now in Rome, where his fate will be decided by Pope Francis, the faithful remain behind in Limburg. The mood at the bishop’s residence is tense, to say the least.

The clouds hang low over Limburg cathedral. In the city of 34,000, the air is still. Like every other day, tourists march up the winding paved road. Cameras click. But these lenses zoom in – not on the seven towers of the late-romantic gothic cathedral that lords so magisterially over Limburg’s old town – but on the bishop’s new home there. Construction costs are said to have swallowed 31 million euros ($42 million).

“Unimaginable,” is how Ortwin Schäfer describes it. The pensioner hails from Lebach, a small German city two hours’ drive from Limburg. A parish board member for 28 years, Schäfer watched over his Catholic community’s finances – and never experienced anything remotely close to the events in Limburg.

“We had to pinch every penny,” he tells DW. “That’s a slap in the face to a common man. What a waste. I think it’s just atrocious.”

The pensioner also wonders where the money came from. The biggest chunk of change is supposed to have come from the Episcopal See’s private holdings, over which the bishop has sole authority.
“That [policy] has to be changed at the highest levels,” Schäfer said.

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

Bishop of Limburg Tebartz-van Elst case referred to the Vatican

GERMANY
Deutsche Welle

Germany’s top archbishop is to take up the controversial case of the Bishop of Limburg with Pope Francis. Bishop Tebartz-van Elst is accused of lavish spending in the renovation of his residence.

While Pope Francis has called for the Catholic church to be “poor and for the poor,” Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst has become known in the German press as “the luxury bishop of Limburg,” or simply the “swanky bishop” over the renovation of his residence in the ancient town of Limburg, near the German financial center of Frankfurt.

Last summer the bishop had estimated the renovation costs at 13.5 million euros (18.2 million dollars). This week they were reported to be 31 million euros.

Diocesan officials have confirmed the costs which include 15,000 euros for a bath installed in the bishop’s residence and 783,000 euros for the gardens. When the project began in 2010, the total costs were put at 5.5 million euros.

Tebartz-van Elst was quoted in the mass circulation Bild newspaper as saying: “I understand that people are taken aback by the figure. But there are 10 separate building projects involved. People who know me know that I don’t need a pompous lifestyle.”

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

German bishop under fire for spending now in Rome

GERMANY
Sacramento Bee

The Associated Press
Published: Sunday, Oct. 13, 2013

BERLIN — A German bishop under fire for lavish spending is in Rome for talks with Vatican officials

A spokesman for the diocese of Limburg, Martin Wind, told the German news agency dpa Sunday that Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst was meeting officials in Rome but gave no further details.

Tebartz-van Elst has been criticized over the construction of a new residence complex and related renovations that his diocese confirms cost around 31 million euros ($42 million). Tebartz-van Elst told the Bild newspaper that it was really 10 projects and there were additional costs because of regulations on buildings under historical protection.

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

Archdiocese insider battles Catholic Church over sex abuse

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

Article by: DAN BROWNING , Star Tribune Updated: October 13, 2013

Jennifer Haselberger was five years into her “dream job” as a canon lawyer for the Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis when she alerted law enforcement officials last spring to what she believed was child pornography on a priest’s discarded computer.

Haselberger soon resigned, saying the church hierarchy ignored her entreaties to notify civil authorities. Today she is a central figure in an investigation that has engulfed the archdiocese anew in the searing issue of clergy sex abuse.

St. Paul police have said they saw no child porn among the more than 2,000 images they reviewed, leading a lawyer for the archdiocese to characterize Haselberger as “imprudent and unsophisticated.”

But those who know the 38-year-old whistleblower say she is anything but that. They describe Haselberger as savvy and fearless.

“Whoever said that about her is either a barefaced liar or they’ve never met Jennifer Haselberger. There’s nothing unsophisticated about that woman at all,” said Larry Frost, a retired Army intelligence operative turned lawyer who squared off with her in mediation over a client’s employment dispute with the church.

“My sense of her was, this was a solid, believing Catholic who had a moral compass.”

Haselberger was traveling in Asia last week and unavailable for an interview.

People who have known Haselberger since she was a teenager agree that she is a formidable intellect. Some said they were not surprised that she became the rare church insider to inspire a clergy misconduct investigation.

Although Haselberger grew up in a family with deep roots in the church, her father said she didn’t show much interest in religion until after she enrolled as an English major in what was then the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul.

The Haselbergers belonged to St. Odilia’s parish in Shore­view. Two siblings of her mother, Joanne, took religious vows. The Rev. John Maslowski had been pastor of the Church of St. Casimir in St. Paul, which ministered to local Polish immigrants, but he died before Jennifer was born. Sister Mary Joanne Maslowski, a member of the Felician Sisters in Chicago, maintained a close relationship with the family.

Jennifer’s father, Ken Haselberger, said his family dressed up and attended St. Odilia’s every Sunday, then went out to breakfast. But after Jennifer was confirmed, he said, she declared that she’d had enough and was never going to church again. “Of course, she kept going,” he added.

Outspoken at St. Catherine’s

Ken Haselberger became estranged from his family for a number of years after a bitter divorce in 1990, when Jennifer was a freshman at Mounds View High School. He remembers her as “extremely bright — always at the top of her class kind of thing,” and as a “tremendous athlete” who competed in cross country, nordic skiing and track.

“She was very competitive and very hardworking, both in school and in athletics,” her father said.

Haselberger’s sophomore year in college seems to mark a turning point for her. She told a reporter for a campus newspaper in 2009 that she had been counseled by Sister Ann Thomasine Sampson, then 82, that a person must act on her beliefs.

Haselberger, opposed to the death penalty, began writing to a death row inmate at the Louisiana State Prison in Angola and eventually became his spiritual adviser and a regular visitor to the prison.

Anne Maloney, an outspoken Catholic feminist who heads the philosophy department at what is now St. Catherine University, said she became Haselberger’s mentor after she added philosophy as a second major in her junior year.

“She was one of the smartest students I’ve ever had. The world was her oyster,” Maloney recalled.

She said Haselberger loved children and entered college wanting to be a kindergarten teacher. Maloney and her husband, Stephen Heaney, a philosophy professor at the University of St. Thomas, hired Haselberger as a nanny for their children. “They adored her,” Maloney said.

The first inkling she got that Haselberger was a committed Catholic came in the wake of a controversy that involved then-Archbishop Harry Flynn. Though she says she has forgotten what it was about, a flurry of news reports from the period say that he had initially agreed to say mass in St. Paul for a meeting of a group opposed to abortion, but backed out after learning that its founder had made what many considered anti-Semitic statements.

Maloney was identified as a Flynn supporter, and Haselberger told her that her grandmother applauded her for supporting him. Shortly after that, Maloney said, Haselberger asked for her counsel in restarting the Students for Life club on campus.

Campus news reported tensions between an abortion opposition group under Haselberger’s leadership and Women Oriented Women, a lesbian group, in 1999. Hasselberger, a senior, jousted with critics in opinion pieces.

Maloney said Haselberger was willing to take risks to get things done. She even got Flynn to say mass at Our Lady of Victory Chapel on campus. “She was fearless,” Maloney said. “She knew what she believed.”

Stephanie Klenk, who worked in the alumnae office at the time, didn’t share Haselberger’s views. But she remembers Haselberger as a well-spoken “force on campus” who was “willing to go to the media at any point.”

“On the one hand she was a pain, and on the other hand, we are very proud of her,” Klenk said.

World travels

Haselberger went on to get a doctorate in philosophy from the University of London, then pursued more graduate work at the University of Leuven in Belgium. Her father said she won an academic award there that came with some money, and she used it to begin seeing the world. Her church biography notes that she has lived in four countries, including China and Africa, and has visited at least 50.

In 2002, while still pursuing her doctorate, Haselberger wrote an article for the American Feminist about systematic employment and education discrimination against women in Canada, Europe, Asia, Russia and the U.S. She concluded the article by noting that although the conditions in America differ from those in places like Afghanistan, much work remains to be done.

She went on to obtain a licentiate in canon law from Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium. Her thesis was titled “Sources of legitimization of the Rent-A-Priest movement. An examination into the issue of ‘married’ priests administering the sacraments.” She stirred a minor controversy by concluding that “the faithful have the right to approach ‘suspended’ priests for the sacraments” and that so-called Rent-A-Priests were acting within church law by ministering to them.

Scott Bergstrom, a cousin who lives in Denver, said he saw her at a funeral about that time. He recalled that she had developed “an acute interest in women’s and children’s issues.” She was trying to resolve feminism with Catholicism, he said, “and that’s a bit of an intellectual journey, I think.”

Bergstrom said his cousin could do it if anyone could.

“She was a very tough girl growing up,” he said. “Very strong, very willful. And she seems to me the kind of person that would, if she were confronted with a very difficult moral choice, she would have no difficulty making the right decision regardless of its personal cost to her own career.”

Pursuing ‘safe environment’

After earning her degree in canon law, Haselberger went to work as chancellor and director of the tribunal for the Diocese of Crookston, where she also was director of “Safe Environment.” Bishop Victor H. Balke appointed her to investigate allegations that a priest named Joseph Palanivel Jeyapaul had sexually abused a girl. Haselberger concluded the allegations had substance, and Jeyapaul returned to India before criminal charges were filed in 2006. He has denied the allegations and had been in active ministry in India working with children for years, according to reports. He was arrested in March 2012 and his extradition is pending.

Haselberger went to work for the Fargo diocese in 2006. She became the bishop’s delegate in canon law — a position usually filled by priests or nuns — in December 2007. She took the same job in the Twin Cities in October 2008.

Two years later, Haselberger spoke at the University of St. Catherine and told a school publication that she’d made a big find in the archdiocese archives — an autographed photo of the novelist Oscar Wilde addressed to Archbishop John Ireland.

Ireland met Wilde, an Irish writer who was imprisoned on sodomy charges in the late 1800s, while traveling after his retirement. Haselberger said she hung the picture in her office.

Several years later she made another discovery in a church vault while she was reviewing files on a Mahtomedi priest seeking a new post. That’s when she ran across the alleged pornography that had been copied from one of the priest’s computers in 2004. Haselberger tried to persuade her superiors to report the matter to police, but they said the matter had been investigated before and told her to return the materials to the vault.

Haselberger reported the incident to the Ramsey County Attorney’s office and resigned in April 2012, then spoke publicly about the issue with reporters from Minnesota Public Radio. St. Paul police initially had closed the case without filing charges. But they reopened it last week after the matter became public and new evidence surfaced. Prosecutors in Ramsey and Washington counties say they will consider criminal charges if the investigation warrants them.

“She has either done a very stupid thing or a very brave thing, and I’d like to believe it’s the latter,” said Steve Cribari, a law professor at the University of Minnesota who is believed to be the first American lay person to obtain his licentiate in canon law, in 1977. But as a former federal public defender, he cautioned that there are more allegations against priests that are unfounded than one might think.

“We’re in a kind of reverse inquisition, aren’t we, in a lot of this,’’ Cribari said. “If the hierarchy doesn’t demonstrate it is pure, clean and absolutely altruistically motivated, then we all … vilify them. And I’m not sure that’s right,” Cribari said. “This is still the United States and you are still innocent until proven guilty in our courts.”

‘Set loose a … lioness’

Ken Haselberger said he patched things up with Jennifer after she returned to the United States and agreed to talk so people would understand his daughter’s act of conscience.

When Jennifer went to Crookston, he said, she was told to provide a safe environment for parishioners, “which meant getting rid of priests that should not be priests.”

“So the archdiocese set loose a lion — no, a lioness — and trained her to do the job,” he said.

In the end, he said, his daughter was torn between the church she loves and the job she loved.

“She trained for this for so many years, and now she probably will never have another job within the Catholic church,” he said ruefully.

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

Ruben Rosario: Playing catch-up with the stowaway boy and keepaway church

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Ruben Rosario
POSTED: 10/13/2013

In the words of the immortal Jimmy Cannon, nobody asked me, but …

I leave town for a while and all heck breaks loose in the Twin Cities. A 9-year-old Minneapolis boy evades airport security and winds up on a flight to Sin City. Speaking of sin, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is once again in hot water and CYA mode over its mishandling of two clergy sexual misconduct cases. …

MEA CULPA, MEA CULPA

I also don’t know where to begin with this latest scandal involving my church. This stuff has been dominating headlines for decades. If not for courageous victims and lawyers such as St. Paul’s Jeff Anderson, we would still have church officials transferring child predators from one parish to another and paying off victims, accountable to no one but themselves.

Numerous panels have been formed at the local and national levels to come up with policies and other steps to curb the sexual abuse of children and related misconduct by members of the clergy.

So it saddens me again to read that in one case, top archdiocese officials never contacted police and hid pornographic images found on a priest’s laptop computer for nearly a decade. In a letter written but never sent to the Vatican, Archbishop John Nienstedt wrote about pornography that contained images and was “borderline illegal due to the apparent age of those photographed.”

But instead of lamenting the plight of those boys and others in the images, Nienstedt instead expressed concern that “the images in the (priest’s) personnel file could expose the Archdiocese, as well as myself, to criminal prosecution.”

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

Pastor of West Side Cleveland church charged with soliciting sex while being HIV-positive

CLEVELAND (OH)
The Plain Dealer

By Ron Rutti, The Plain Dealer
on October 12, 2013

UPDATED AT 6:40 P.M.

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Rev. James McGonegal, pastor of a West Side Cleveland Catholic church, was charged today with soliciting sex while being HIV-positive. He had been arrested Friday in Edgewater Park.

In the incident report released today, an off-duty Cleveland Metroparks ranger said McGonegal offered the ranger $50 to help him “get off,” then exposed himself and masturbated, all while sitting inside his late-model Jeep SUV.

The report said McGonegal had three sex devices in his Jeep when he was arrested around 12:45 p.m.

The priest, 68, was released on personal bond from Cleveland City Jail this morning other media reports said. He has not been arraigned as the charges were not filed until around noon.

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

Cipriani por exobispos: “Se está haciendo un circo político y mediático”

PERU
Peru 21

[Summary: Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani said the situation in Peru is becoming a poltical and media circus regarding the cases of former Bishops Guillermo Abanto Guzman and Gabino Miranda. The first faces a paternity suit and the second is accused of pedophilia. In his Saturday radio program, the Archbishop of Lima said the issue of both priests is closed even thought there are judicial proceedings.]

Sigue con poca autocrítica. El cardenal Juan Luis Cipriani afirmó hoy que “se está haciendo un circo político y mediático” con los casos de los exobispos Guillermo Abanto y Gabino Miranda. El primero afronta una demanda por la paternidad de una niña de dos años y, el segundo, es acusado de pedofilia.

En su programa radial de los sábados, el arzobispo de Lima afirmó que, para él, el tema de ambos sacerdotes “está cerrado” –pese a que están en procesos judiciales pendientes, como lo resaltó hoy la ministra Ana Jara– y pidió a Dios “que nos ayude a todos ser mejores y comprensivos”.

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

Local Catholics Gather In Celebration Despite Controversies

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) Thousands of people showed up before sunrise for a day-long celebration of Catholicism in the Twin Cities Saturday.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis hosted the “2013 Rediscover” event at the RiverCentre in St. Paul, described as a celebration of “the depth and beauty” of the Catholic faith.

The event, headlined by Archbishop John Nienstedt, was held in the midst of controversy after a priest pleaded guilty to sexual misconduct, child pornography was discovered on a reverend’s laptop and the diocese announced they were creating a taskforce to investigate the way church officials handled accusations.

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

Según ex obispo castrense, su hija no lleva su apellido por acuerdo con la madre

PERU
La Republica

[Summary: Bishop Guillermo Abanto Guzman, former military bishop, voluntarily resigned in mid-year. He spoke with La Republica and said information about his private life that have been publicly aired do not reflect the truth. He said he had no desired to evade or deny responsibility for the daughter born to him and a young woman in June 2011.]

Consuelo Alonzo.

Tras varias semanas en silencio, Guillermo Abanto Guzmán, el ex obispo castrense de Ayacucho que renunció a su cargo de manera voluntaria a mediados de este año, conversó con La República y sostuvo que los hechos de su vida privada que han sido ventilados en la opinión pública “no obedecen a la verdad”.

El sacerdote afirma, por ejemplo, que no se negó a reconocer a la niña que tuvo con Daniela Alexandra de la Lama Luna en junio de 2011.

Si bien no ofreció detalles, al ser consultado sobre el motivo por el cual la menor no lleva hoy sus apellidos, el ex religioso solo indicó que “ello no fue una decisión de una sola persona, sino de dos personas”.

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Brown vetoes bill that would extend time to file sexual abuse suits

CALIFORNIA
Orange County Register

By SCOTT M. REID / ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER

Gov. Jerry Brown on Saturday vetoed a bill that would have extended the statute of limitations for civil childhood sexual abuse cases, the Orange County Register has learned.

Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, the bill’s sponsor, said Brown’s office would not give him a reason for the governor’s decision when a Brown aide called Beall on Saturday afternoon to inform of the veto.

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Brown vetoes bill giving sex abuse victims more time to file lawsuits

CALIFORNIA
Los Angeles Times

[Gov. Brown’s statement]

[Statement from the California Catholic Conference]

By Ashley Powers and Melanie Mason
October 12, 2013

SACRAMENTO — Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill that would have given some childhood sex abuse victims more time to file lawsuits, after a heated opposition campaign led by the Catholic Church that stretched from Capitol hallways to Los Angeles church pews.

In an unusually detailed three-page veto message released Saturday, the Democratic governor, a former Jesuit seminarian, said the bill raised questions of equal treatment of public and private employers. Pointing to a centuries-long tradition of limiting the period when legal claims can be filed, Brown said institutions should feel secure that “past acts are indeed in the past and not subject to further lawsuits.”

He also argued that the legislation, which would have in part lifted the statute of limitations on sexual abuse claims for one year to allow some childhood victims to file lawsuits, was “unfair” because it singled out private organizations, such as Catholic dioceses and the Boy Scouts. Public schools would not have been affected by the bill, something Brown called “a significant inequity.”

“The children assaulted by Jerry Sandusky at Penn State or the teachers at Miramonte Elementary School in Los Angeles are no less worthy because of the nature of the institution they attended,” Brown wrote, referring to two recent abuse scandals at public institutions.

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SEX ABUSE: Governor vetoes bill

CALIFORNIA
The Press-Enterprise

[Gov. Brown’s statement]

BY JIM MILLER SACRAMENTO BUREAU October 13, 2013

SACRAMENTO — Calling the proposal “unfair and open-ended,” Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed legislation Saturday, Oct. 12, that would have allowed more victims of childhood sexual abuse to pursue lawsuits against the Catholic Church, Boy Scouts and other private groups that had overseen the abuser.

The measure would have created a one-year legal window for people who suffered sexual abuse many years earlier but who have been prevented from pursuing lawsuits under a landmark 2002 law because of a California Supreme Court ruling a decade later.

In a lengthy veto message that cited Roman law and included a detailed history of California’s rules on sex-abuse litigation, Brown complained that the legislation applied only to private institutions, such as the Catholic Church, and not schools and other government entities.

The church has paid out an estimated $1.2 billion since 2002. Lawmakers approved a bill in 2008 clarifying that the 2002 law also applied to government agencies. That change, though, did not allow lawsuits in cases where the statute of limitations had expired, Brown noted in his veto of Senate Bill 131.

“What (SB 131) does do is go back to the only group, i.e. private institutions, that have already been subjected to the unusual ‘one year revival period’ and makes them, and them alone, subject to suit indefinitely,” Brown wrote in his veto message.

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What Can You Personally Do About The Priest Sex Abuse Scandal?

UNITED STATES
Why I Am Catholic

October 12, 2013 By Frank Weathers

This message is for most of us who aren’t directly involved in any of the ongoing scandals that continue to percolate to the surface these days, like in Newark, Minneapolis-St. Paul, and the latest scandalous news coming out of Cleveland, but who understand that we need to do something.
It’s time to break out the big guns of prayer and fasting, is all I can figure. How to do that? Check this out.

Even after a decade of so-called reform, many bishops continue to enable a clerical culture in which children are put at risk. Stories of abusive priests, and what seems to be the deliberate cultivation of an environment conducive to abuse, continue to shock and appall Catholics of all walks of life. Those outside the Church may be drawing the impression that this is what the Church is and that Catholics don’t care.

But Catholics do care. And this is not what the Church is – or at least what God wants it to be. This is not how those who call themselves Christians should behave – whether they be lay, deacons, priests or bishops. It is scandalous and deeply offensive; it is a terrible witness, and it is crippling any true attempt to evangelize the culture at large.

And while both lay and clergy are not in a position to change the lack of faith and malfeasance in the Church that has led to this, there are at least three things we can do.

Praying and Fasting: making Reparations for the sins of the abusers and their enablers.

Living Lives of Personal Holiness: If our leaders won’t lead as true Christians, pray that God give us the grace to live as such, primarily by “loving one another” (John 13:34-35), which includes reaching out to victims, to abusers, and to those who are in a position to protect potential victims and abusers. Someone has to set a Christian example. If priests and bishops won’t do it, the laity will.

Always Calling for the Truth to be Revealed – Despite Resistance and Persecution. Realize that, as Jesus told us, “The truth will set you free” (John 8:32), and that He is “the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6). Therefore, the more the truth comes out about abusers and their enablers, the more readily will healing come to their victims, and the more possible it will be for this rot and corruption be purged from the Body of Christ.

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Palma sex abuse lawsuits may not go forward after Brown vetoes bill

CALIFORNIA
Monterey Herald

By PAUL ELIAS
Associated Press
POSTED: 10/12/2013

SAN FRANCISCO — Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill Saturday that would have allowed some sex abuse victims who are now barred by the statute of limitations to file lawsuits against private institutions that employed their abusers.

Nine people who say they were abused by priests while attending Palma High School in Salinas were among those who planned to sue if the bill had gone into effect.

Brown said he vetoed Senate Bill 131 because it unfairly expanded on a similar measure passed in 2002 amid the Catholic Church sex-abuse scandal.

The current bill from Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, would have lifted the statute of limitations for a group of alleged victims who are 26 or older and missed the previous window to file lawsuits because of time and age restrictions.

Catholic Church leaders, including the Diocese of Monterey, and representatives of other organizations in opposition, such as private schools and the State Alliance of YMCAs, said the proposal to allow claims is unfair because it does not allow accusers to sue public institutions. Brown agreed.

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October 12, 2013

Pope Francis Earns Low Grades On Reform So Far

UNITED STATES
Christian Catholicism

Jerry Slevin

No international decision makers today would elect someone over 75 years old as chief executive. The lone exception is the Catholic Church’s Cardinals in their desperate struggle to salvage the world’s oldest absolute monarchy. Its patriarchical positions have provided the Cardinals and their predecessors with a lifetime of unaccountable power and wealth for almost 1700 years. That is about to end, with or without Pope Francis’ help.

Bishops normally retire at 75 years old. Indeed, Thomas Aquinas, who passed on hierarchical ambition and criticized absolute monarchs, retired at 49 years old! Pope Francis will be eighty in a few years, but evidentally couldn’t resist taking the top spot, likely an imprudent choice at best.

Francis’ apparently lifelong pattern of being ambitiously authoritarian, disguised often by his friendly and presumably well-intentioned style, appears ascendant as he ages rapidly. Ex-Pope Benedict has shown that this ambition can be hazardous to one’s health.

Francis’ basic choice upon election was either (1) to announce promptly a specific and transparent offensive reform strategy and pursue it expeditiously or (2) to continue his two predecessors’ flawed and secretive defensive strategy, enhanced with tighter hierarchical discipline, softer public relations’ tactics and a better executed geo-political policy. He so far has mainly chosen the defensive strategy, imprudently and unfortunately.

Given his age and the hierarchy’s escalating scandals, especially in Latin America, he will likely fail. That is, unless he promptly faces the multiple challenges more effectively and honestly than he has so far. In a world of Internet linked democracies with women having voting rights, authoritarian patriarchs are doomed to fail, including Francis and any papal patriarch who may succeed him in a few years.

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Gov. Brown vetoes sex abuse lawsuit bill

CALIFORNIA
U-T San Diego

By PAUL ELIAS, Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed a bill Saturday that would have allowed some sex abuse victims who are now barred by the statute of limitations to file lawsuits against private institutions that employed their abusers.

Brown said he vetoed Senate Bill 131 because it unfairly expanded on a similar measure passed in 2002 amid the Catholic Church sex-abuse scandal.

The current bill from Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, would have lifted the statute of limitations for a group of alleged victims who are 26 or older and missed the previous window to file lawsuits because of time and age restrictions.

“It was unfair to the vast majority of victims and unfair to all private and nonprofit organizations,” said the Rev. Gerald Wilkerson, president of the conference. He said the church has paid $1.2 billion to settle more than 1,000 cases.

The National Center for Victims of Crime, which sponsored the bill, and other supporters say victims might take years to acknowledge they were molested.

The Consumer Attorneys of California organization said it was “disappointed” with the veto.

“This measure was narrowly tailored and would have greatly helped victims of childhood sexual abuse who need and deserve to have their day in court,” said the group’s president, Brian Kabateck.

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Savile NHS scandal grows

UNITED KINGDOM
Sunday Times

David Leppard Published: 13 October 2013

THE scope of the Jimmy Savile sex-abuse scandal has expanded with fresh evidence that the disgraced former BBC presenter abused children at more hospitals than was previously thought.

Tomorrow, the health secretary, Jeremy Hunt, will tell MPs that a report on inquiries into abuse on NHS premises will be delayed by new victims coming forward with additional hospitals. Hunt now oversees three separate inquiries into Savile’s sex offences at Stoke Mandeville, Leeds General and Broadmoor hospitals.

Until today it had been thought Savile had also committed offences at a further 10 hospitals (13 in total), but police have now been told he abused children and other patients at an even greater number.

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Statement from Gov. Edmund G. Brown on SB 131

CALIFORNIA
Office of the Governor

To the Members of the California State Senate:

I am returning Senate Bill 131 without my signature.

This bill makes amendments to the statute of limitations relating to claims of childhood sexual abuse. Specifically, it amends and significantly expands a 2002 law to “revive” certain claims that previously had been time barred.

Statutes of limitations reach back to Roman law and were specifically enshrined in the English common law by the Limitations Act of 1623. Ever since, and in every state, including California, various limits have been imposed on the time when lawsuits may still be initiated. Even though valid and profoundly important claims are at stake, all jurisdictions have seen fit to bar actions after a lapse of years.

The reason for such a universal practice is one of fairness. There comes a time when an individual or organization should be secure in the reasonable expectation that past acts are indeed in the past and no subject to further lawsuits. With the passage of time, evidence may be lot or disposed of, memories fade and the witnesses move away.

Over the years. California’s laws regarding time limits for childhood sexual abuse cases have been amended many times. The changes have affected not only how long a person has to make a claim, but also who may be sued for the sexual abuse. The issue of who is subject to liability is an important distinction as the law in this area has always and rightfully imposed longer periods of liability for an actual perpetrator of sexual abuse than for an organization that employed that perpetrator. This makes sense as third parties are in a very different position than perpetrators with respect to both evidence and memories.

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Bishops Express Appreciation for Veto of SB 131

CALIFORNIA
California Catholic Conference

[Gov. Brown’s statement]

ON 12 OCTOBER 2013.

The Most Rev. Gerald Wilkerson, Auxiliary Bishop of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and President of the California Catholic Conference (CCC), released the following statement today following Gov. Jerry Brown’s veto of SB 131 (Beall). The bill would have reopened the statute of limitations against private employers for child sex abuse for a period of 1 year, but would have forbidden lawsuits against public schools, other government agencies and the actual perpetrator of the abuse:

“We are grateful that Gov. Brown chose to veto SB 131. It was unfair to the vast majority of victims and unfair to all private and non-profit organizations.

“The fact SB 131 discriminated against victims clearly played a major role in prompting a veto, but at the same time, we hope the way the Catholic Church in California has responded to the abuse crisis over the last 10 years, and ‘walked the walk’ with respect to protecting young people and reporting allegations to law enforcement helped play a role, too.

“The Church’s reaction has gone way beyond settling more than 1,000 cases and paying $1.2 billion in settlements. It’s changed how we operate as a church. Millions of children and tens of thousands of church workers have received ‘Safe Environment’ training to learn how to keep children safe and spot potential abuse. Hundreds of thousands of workers and volunteers have been fingerprinted and background checked to screen them for red flags in their background. We continue to provide counseling to anyone who comes forward and we actively work with law enforcement to report allegations immediately and suspend anybody, clergy or otherwise, suspected of abuse.

“In the end, however, all we know for sure is that there can be no half-measures where victims are concerned and that the way SB 131 discriminated and treated victims unequally was impossible to morally or legally justify.”

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Brown vetoes sex abuse bill

CALIFORNIA
News 10

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) – California’s governor has vetoed a bill that would have allowed some sex abuse victims who are now barred by the statute of limitations to file lawsuits against private institutions who employed their abuser.

Gov. Jerry Brown said he vetoed the bill because it unfairly expanded on a similar measure passed in 2002 amid the Catholic Church sex-abuse scandal.

The current bill from Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose would have lifted the statute of limitations for a group of alleged victims who were 26 and older and missed the previous window to file lawsuits because of time and age restrictions.

Catholic Church leaders and representatives of other organizations in opposition said the proposal to allow claims is unfair because it does not allow those accusers to sue public institutions. Brown agreed.

“We are grateful that Gov. Brown chose to veto SB 131. It was unfair to the vast majority of victims and unfair to all private and non-profit organizations,” President of the California Catholic Conference Rev. Gerald Wilkerson said in a statement.

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Jerry Brown invokes Roman law…

CALIFORNIA
Sacramento Bee

[Gov. Brown’s statement]

October 12, 2013

Jerry Brown invokes Roman law, vetoes statute of limitations bill for sex abuse victims

Invoking a legal tradition of “fairness” dating back to Roman law, Gov. Jerry Brown on Saturday vetoed legislation that would have extended the statute of limitations for some sex abuse victims.

Senate Bill 131, by Sen. Jim Beall, D-San Jose, would have opened a yearlong window for sex abuse victims who were excluded from a 2003 law that extended the statute of limitations.

Opponents painted the bill as an attack on the Catholic Church, and the church’s political arm called it a money grab by trial lawyers.
Brown, a former Catholic seminarian, issued an unusually lengthy, three-page veto message.

“Statutes of limitation reach back to Roman law and were specifically enshrined in the English common law by the Limitations Act of 1623,” he wrote. “Ever since, and in every state, including California, various limits have been imposed on the time when lawsuits may still be initiated. Even though valid and profoundly important claims are at stake, all jurisdictions have seen fit to bar actions after a lapse of years.”

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Cleveland Priest Charged with Soliciting

CLEVELAND (OH)
Fox 8

October 12, 2013, by Monica Volante

CLEVELAND — A Cleveland priest arrested Friday afternoon, accused of soliciting sex at Edgewater Beach, was released Saturday, according to officials with the Cleveland Municipal Court.

Rev. James McGonegal, a priest at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Ave. in Cleveland, was arrested after he allegedly signaled over a man to his car and offered him $50 for oral sex, according to Cleveland Metroparks Rangers.

That man turned out to be a ranger in plain clothes.

Following his arrest, McGonegal admitted to authorities that he is HIV positive.

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High-Rolling Catholic Bishop Spends $475,000 on Wardrobes

GERMANY
Styleite

by Hannah Ongley | 1:36 pm, October 11th, 2013

Move over, Anna Dello Russo — there’s another heavily embellished fashion plate on the block.

But we’re not talking about a magazine editor or socialite-slash-DJ. Rather he’s one bishop of Limburg,

Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, who is being criticized for spending $42m on his new headquarters in west Germany, The Local is reporting.

Today it was revealed that the Karl Lagerfeld of the Catholic church had not only let costs overrun ten times the initial estimate, but had allocated the funds thusly: A little over $1m on a garden, $34,000 on a table, $20,000 on a bathtub and a truly mind-boggling $475,000 on walk-in wardrobes.

The church is paying, but the bishop is being criticized for setting a bad example. He has also apparently kept his financial council in the dark about mounting costs. “Those who know me, know that I don’t need any kind of grandiose lifestyle,” the swanky suffragan told Bild newspaper, presumably while ensconced inside his wardrobe selecting vestments from a computer screen Cher Horowitz-style.

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Catholics Furious As Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-Van Elst’s Residence Renovation Cost $42 Million

GERMANY
Opposing Views

By Andy Kossak, Fri, October 11, 2013

Apparently one German bishop wasn’t too worried when it came to the cost of renovations at his residence, but Catholics are angry about the price tag that continued to increase and are seeking the bishop’s resignation.

The cost of Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst’s renovation project on his property skyrocketed to $42 million. The new building has been described some by some media outlets as “palatial” and senior members within the Roman Catholic church are calling for the bishop to resign.

Robert Zollitsch, the chairman of the German episcopal conference, said he would discuss the high cost of the building project with Pope Francis next week.

“I am as surprised by these figures as you,” Zollitsch said. “I am mystified by these figures and will say so to the holy father.”

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Time to Open Books on Non-Profits

MINNESOTA
MN Progressive Project

by GRACE KELLY on OCTOBER 9, 2013

We, taxpayers, support non-profits by basically paying for their share of all government services. I think that in exchange we ought to at least require complete open financial books.

The latest outrage is of course, the Catholic church. MPR news does a great job of describing how the Catholic Rev. Robert Kapoun was convicted of sex abuse, that was later overturned on appeal because of the statue of limitations. Not only does Kapoun get to retire with priestly privileges, he receives extra money! Kapoun receives an extra $957.50 every month, in addition addition to regular pension checks of $1,510.50. In what universe, would you not call that a reward?

In the Catholic church archdiocese, the Archbishop is all powerful, except for the pope. If the Archbishop Nienstedt did not know, it was because he did not want to know. This is same Archbishop Nienstedt who spent church funds on politically opposing marriage for gay people and opposing the right for women to control their own bodies. There seems to be a pattern for the Catholic church wanting to get involved into anything sexual. Remember Archbishop Nienstedt has also not made public the list of 33 priests accused of sexual abuse involving minors.

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German Outrage Swells Over a Bishop’s Spending

GERMANY
The New York Times

By ALISON SMALE
Published: October 12, 2013

BERLIN — Since being elected in March, Pope Francis has quickly made a mark with his displays of modesty, eschewing lavish papal apartments for a spartan guesthouse in Vatican City, wearing simple vestments, carrying his own bag and preaching against a Roman Catholic Church hierarchy that he said was overly insular and too often led by “narcissists.”

Apparently, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, 53, the bishop of Limburg, Germany, for almost six years, is not on the same page as his new boss.

Roman Catholic bishops rarely serve as Page 1 tabloid fodder or top the national television ratings. But the prelate of Limburg earned this dubious distinction in 24 hours last week as outrage swelled after the news media reported the cost of the renovation of his residence, about $42 million, and a state prosecutor in Hamburg charged him with lying in a legal case.

The bishop ordered up a palatial living room, and his apartment alone cost $3.9 million, according to Jochen Riebel, the spokesman for the body administering church property in Limburg. Mr. Riebel said the bishop lied last summer when confronted over the cost, estimating the renovation at just $13.5 million.

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Kirchen: Limburger Bischof legt Amt in Papst-Hände

DEUTSCHLAND
Sueddeutsche

[Summary: The controversial Limburg bishop, Franz-Peter Tebartz van Elst has put his future in the diocese into the hands of Pope Francis. The bishop is concerned about escalation about the current discussion about how he has handled finances and the Hamburg prosecutor believes he may have committed perjury. A spokesman for the diocese said the bishop is not offering a resignation but said the letter was a neutral statement.]

Limburg/Berlin (dpa) – Der heftig umstrittene Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst legt seine Zukunft im Bistum Limburg in die Hände von Papst Franziskus.

«Der Bischof ist betroffen über die Eskalation der aktuellen Diskussion. Er sieht und bedauert, dass viele Gläubige im Bistum und darüber hinaus unter der gegenwärtigen Situation leiden», hieß es in einem Schreiben des Bistums vom Samstag. Es sei für den Bischof selbstverständlich, «dass die Entscheidung über seinen bischöflichen Dienst in Limburg in den Händen des Heiligen Vaters liegt, von dem er in die Diözese gesandt wurde».

Ein Bistumssprecher betonte am Abend, dies sei kein Angebot zum Rücktritt des Bischofs, sondern eine «neutrale Aussage». Der Bischof wolle im Vatikan die Situation darstellen. «Daraus wird eine Entscheidung entstehen», betonte der Sprecher. Ein Bischof der römisch-katholischen Kirche kann nicht selbst zurücktreten, laut Kirchenrecht kann er dem Papst aber seinen Amtsverzicht anbieten. Tebartz-van Elst wird Verschwendung vorgeworfen, zudem hat die Hamburger Staatsanwaltschaft einen Strafbefehl wegen falscher Versicherung an Eides Statt beantragt.

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Ministra Jara: Iglesias deben instar a miembros a someterse a justicia

PERU
RPP

[Summary: Ana Jara, minister for women and vulnerable populations, has asked religious denominations in the country to track its members and help bring them to justice when they break the law. She referred to the cases of former Bishop Guillermo Abanto Guzman of Lima, who is facing a paternity suit, and former Ayacucho Auxiliary Bishop Gabino Miranda, who is accused of pedophilia. The laws of Peru must be respected and observed by all Peruvians without distinction of religious denomination or socioeconomic status, she said. She added this also means clergy of Catholic and Protestant churches are obliged to obey the law.]

La ministra de la Mujer y Poblaciones Vulnerables, Ana Jara, invocó a las confesiones religiosas del país a encaminar a sus miembros a someterse a la justicia y ejercer el derecho a la legítima defensa en caso tengan problemas con la ley.

Al referirse al caso del exobispo emérito castrense Guillermo Abanto Guzmán, sobre quien pesa una demanda por paternidad, y del exobispo de Ayacucho, Gabino Miranda, acusado de pedofilia, Jara Velásquez sostuvo que someterse al debido proceso le sirve a toda persona para demostrar que no es culpable de lo que se le imputa, en caso así sea.

“Las normas en el Perú deben ser acatadas y cumplidas por todos los peruanos y peruanas sin ninguna distinción de confesiones religiosas, cargos o situación socioeconómica. De manera que el clero de la iglesia católica o protestante está obligado a sujetarse a las mismas”, declaró a la agencia Andina.

“Es lo menos que se puede hacer para no seguir abonando a favor de la impunidad”, agregó.

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Monsignor Labaki’s Family Urges Christian Interference with Vatican, Appeal in Sexual Abuse Case

LEBANON
Naharnet

The family of Monsignor Mansour Labaki urged on Saturday Christian figures in the country to intervene with high authorities at the Vatican to allow an appeal in the case of the Maronite father.

Labaki was charged by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith at the Vatican with sexually abusing several minors, LBCI television reported on Tuesday, quoting the French magazine La Croix.

“We urge Maronite Patriarch Beshara al-Rahi, Beirut Maronite Bishop Boulos Matar, the Maronite Bishops council and all bishops and monks to intervene with Vatican authorities,” the family of Labaki urged at a press conference.

“We call on them and on the colleagues of Labaki and his students to get Pope Francis’ blessings to allow an appeal in the case.”

According to the French magazine’s report, the Vatican’s office charged Labaki on June 19 after a two-years investigations.

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Clergy Abuse Scandal Reaches Minnesota Archdiocese

MINNESOTA
ABC News

MINNEAPOLIS October 12, 2013 (AP)

By AMY FORLITI and RACHEL ZOLL Associated Press

Attorneys for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis were seeking to put out a fire, not start a new one, when they asked a judge this month to keep private a list of Roman Catholic clergy believed to have molested children.

The court proceeding produced no definitive ruling on whether that document would be released, as victims are seeking, but it did reveal new details that intensified the crisis.

A judge entered into the public record a police report church attorneys had cited about a priest’s cache of porn kept in church archives for eight years, unleashing a cascade of new revelations about how the archdiocese responded when confronted with allegations of sexual misconduct.

In the days leading up to the Oct. 3 hearing, church officials already were fending off a canon lawyer who quit the archdiocese and was now accusing administrators of ignoring warnings in the last several years about at least two priests.

But with the latest disclosure, local police are investigating, prosecutors are getting involved, the top aide to Archbishop John Nienstedt has resigned from his leadership post, and the actions of a longtime high-ranking church administrator and a former archbishop are being called into question. Nienstedt set up a committee to conduct a review he hopes will restore trust that the archdiocese is following the U.S. bishops’ 2002 toughened policy on abuse.

“I think what it shows is how structural the problem is — that the problem does really go beyond something that is easily fixed simply by resolutions and handling things in a different way,” said David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes Against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire, who has advised church officials in Boston and elsewhere on stopping clergy abuse.

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After Y.U. Drama, What About Other Jewish Groups Where Akiva Roth Worked?

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

By Paul Berger
Published October 12, 2013.

The revelation that Yeshiva University hired a convicted sex offender even while facing charges that it covered up decades of sexual abuse has raised questions about the policies of other Jewish institutions at which he previously worked.

The Jewish Theological Seminary, which employed the man a decade ago, says it did not know then about his criminal conviction. But it does not, to this day, conduct criminal background checks before it hires staff, said JTS spokeswoman Elise Dowell.

JTS today asks job applicants whether they have a criminal record, said Dowell. But, unless the applicant works on the seminary’s supplemental program for high school students, JTS does not follow up with a criminal background check, she said.

JTS hired the convicted man, Akiva Roth, to teach a summer program for post-college students preparing for rabbinical school from 2000 until 2003. Roth remained on criminal probation at the time, just three years after his 1997 conviction.

Roth, 42, was recently let go from his Yeshiva College position after the Forward published details of his conviction. The school said it had “erred” in hiring Roth by “permitting the new hire to begin teaching before the screening process had been completed.”

Yeshiva University faces a $380 million lawsuit for allegedly covering up decades of child sexual abuse by faculty at its Manhattan high school.

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Dissident Catholic priest network pushes for grass-roots Church reforms

Reuters

By Michael Shields OCTOBER 12, 2013

A new international network of reformist Roman Catholic priests is pushing to give lay people a bigger role in a Church that Pope Francis wants to bring closer to grassroots members.

Speaking as dissidents from six countries met in Austria on Friday for the first time, clergyman Helmut Schueller said the Church should draw on people in local parishes that are under threat of vanishing as the ranks of the priesthood dwindle.

The outspoken views of Schueller, head of a group of Austrian priests who openly challenge Church positions on taboo topics such as priestly celibacy and ordaining women, drew a rebuke last year from Pope Benedict, who resigned in February.

Church liberals are now placing their hopes in his successor Pope Francis, the first non-European pontiff in 1,300 years and the first ever from Latin America.

“We want to address the most burning issue: the future of the communities. We want to be there for them, and their future is in danger from the shortage of priests,” Schueller, 61, said in a telephone interview from the western town of Bregenz.

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El Vaticano debe pronunciarse por Obispo Gabino Miranda

PERU
La Primera

[Summary: The pedophilia case that caused removal of Gabino Miranda Melgarejo as auxiliary bishop of Ayacucho will go unpunished if the Vatican decides not to give information required by the Ayacucho prosecutor. Prosecutor Garry Chavez Valdivia said without the testimony the prosecutor has no basis to act and the case could go unpunished.]

El caso de pedofilia que originó la destitución del obispo auxiliar de Ayacucho, Gabino Miranda Melgarejo, podría quedar en la impunidad si el Vaticano decide no darle la información que requiere el fiscal de Ayacucho, Garry Chávez Valdivia, para profundizar las investigaciones del caso.

“Sin los testimonios la denuncia fiscal no tendrá fundamentos y el caso podría quedar en la impunidad”, dijo el periodista Pedro Salinas, quien considera que el Vaticano tiene que ser consecuente con la “Tolerancia cero” que pregona bajo el mando del papa Benedicto XVI y demostrar a la Iglesia peruana que sí quiere investigar y sancionar este tipo de delitos.

El fiscal Chávez Valdivia hizo el pedido a través de la Fiscalía de la Nación, que a su vez debe hacer el trámite por intermedio del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, a fin de que la Santa Sede colabore con la justicia peruana.

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Erzbischof Müller verteidigt Limburger Bischof

DEUTSCHLAND
Balaton Zeitung

[Summary: Archbishop Gerhard Ludwig Mueller, who heads the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, has defended Limburg Bishop Franz-Peter van Elst Tebartz, He said the allegations against the bishop are an invention of journalists and are media campaign. Mueller said high construction costs of the bishop’s new house were due to employees rather than the bishop. Tebartz van Elst wanted to fly to Rome on Saturday to forestall a visit by Archbishop Robert Zollitsch, who chairs the German Bishops Conference. Zollitsch intends to meet with Pope Francis about the situation in the Limburg diocese.]

Der Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation, Erzbischof Gerhard Ludwig Müller, hat dem umstrittenen Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst den Rücken gestärkt. Während einer Messe in der Kirche des römischen Campo Santo Teutonico über das Evangelium und die Dämonen sagte Müller am Freitagabend, dass es sich bei den Vorwürfen gegen den Bischof um eine “Erfindung von Journalisten” und eine “Medienkampagne” handle. Das berichtet die Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung (F.A.S.).

Für die hohen Baukosten für das Bischöfliche Haus in Limburg sei nicht der Bischof verantwortlich, die Verantwortung liege vielmehr bei dessen Mitarbeitern. Tebartz-van Elst will noch an diesem Samstag nach Rom fliegen, um dem Vorsitzenden der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz, Erzbischof Robert Zollitsch, zuvorzukommen. Zollitsch will Papst Franziskus im Laufe der Woche über die Vorgänge im Bistum Limburg informieren, die er selbst als untragbar erachtet. Nach F.A.S.-Informationen hält Zollitsch ungeachtet der neueren Entwicklungen an seinem Besuchsprogramm fest, das am Montag beginnt. Der Erzbischof wolle sich nicht unter Druck setzen lassen, erfuhr die F.A.S. aus Kirchenkreisen. (dts Nachrichtenagentur)

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Tebartz-van Elst fliegt doch nicht nach Rom

DEUTSCHLAND
SWR

[Summary: Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz van Elst had planned to fly to Rome in a move to meet with Pope Francis but has cancelled the trip. According to Bild, he did not want a media frenzy.]

Der Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebart-van Elst ist offenbar doch nicht nach Rom geflogen: Einem Bericht der “Bild”-Zeitung zufolge hat der umstrittene Geistliche seine Reise zu Papst Franziskus storniert. Offenbar habe er so einem Medienrummel entgehen wollen, heißt es.
Der Limburger katholische Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst und der Vorsitzende der katholischen Deutschen Bischofskonferenz Erzbischof Robert Zollitsch (Freiburg)

Die “Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung” (FAS) hatte zuvor berichtet, Tebartz-van Elst wolle um 16.35 Uhr vom Frankfurter Flughafen nach Rom fliegen. Offenbar wollte der Limburger Oberhirte dafür sorgen, dass im Vatikan mit ihm statt über ihn gesprochen wird – denn in der kommenden Woche will Erzbischof Robert Zollitsch das Problem mit dem Papst erörtern. Damit wären Tebartz-van Elst und der Vorsitzende der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz, Zollitsch, zeitgleich in Rom gewesen.
Zollitsch hatte angekündigt, bei seinem Besuch mit Papst Franziskus über die Situation im Bistum Limburg sprechen zu wollen. Gleichzeitig hatte er sich ungewöhnlich deutlich von Tebartz-van Elst distanziert; falls gegen diesen ein Strafbefehl wegen Falschaussage erginge, sei das ein Wendepunkt. Gefragt, warum er dem Limburger Bischof noch keinen Rückzug nahegelegt habe, erklärte Zollitsch am Donnerstag: “Ich bitte um Verständnis, dass ich das, was ich dort (in Rom; Anm. d. Red.) vorschlagen werde, nicht vorher über die Presse sage.”

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So lacht das Netz über den Bischof

DEUTSCHLAND
Stern

Er kann einem fast schon Leid tun. Im Minutentakt laufen auf dem Kurznachrichtendienst Twitter Schmähungen und Beschimpfungen gegen den Limburger Bischof Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst ein. Unter den Hashtags #Tebartz, #Prassprediger oder #Protzbischof machen die User in tausenden Kommentaren ihrem Unmut über den 31 Millionen teuren Neubau des Bischofssitzes, den prunkvollen Lebensstil und die Uneinsichtichkeit des Kirchenmannes Luft. Noch am harmlosesten sind Bezeichnungen wie “Lügner” oder “kranker Mann”. Der Bischof ist zur Hassfigur geworden.

Doch neben vielen Beleidigungen und Rücktrittsforderungen sind es vor allem bissige und satirische Kommentare, die unter Nutzern die Runde machen. Vor allem die extravagante Inneneinrichtung seines Privathauses ist Anlass für Hohn und Spott. Mal wird über die 15.000 Euro teure Badewanne gelästert, in die der katholische Bischof alleine steigen muss, mal wird ihm vorgeschlagen, das Bernsteinzimmer zur Vervollständigung seiner Inneneinrichtung aufzukaufen. Die “FAZ”-Charikaturisten Greser&Lenz mutmaßen sogar über eine Kegelbahn im Limburger Domberg.

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Catholic bishop spends €350,000 on wardrobes

GERMANY
The Local

The lavish lifestyle of a bishop who is spending €31 million on building a new headquarters in west Germany was exposed on Friday, when it emerged he has spent €783,000 on a garden, €25,000 on a table and €15,000 on a bath tub.

The bishop of Limburg, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, has been heavily criticized for the luxurious complex being built next to Limburg Cathedral in the state of Hesse. Earlier this week it emerged the costs had overrun by ten times the initial estimate from around €3 million to €31 million.

And on Friday Bild newspaper published a breakdown of the costs of the pricey project. They include €350,000 on built-in-wardrobes, €25,000 on a conference table and €783,000 on a garden.

His own apartment in the complex is costing €3 million with €478,000 going on furnishings. Guest rooms will cost €1.1 million and the new chapel €2.67 million.

The Nassauische Neue Presse newspaper also reported on Wednesday that the bishop’s bathtub cost €15,000.

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Cleveland Catholic Diocese Issues Statement Regarding Arrest of Priest Caught Soliciting Gay Sex at Park

CLEVELAND (OH)
Cleveland Leader

Published by Julie Kent on October 12, 2013

On Friday afternoon, a Cleveland priest was arrested after he was caught soliciting a plain clothed ranger at Edgewater Park for sex. The Cleveland Catholic Diocese issued a very brief statement following news of Rev. James McGonegal’s arrest, which read:

“Diocesan authorities have a policy of cooperating with civil authorities in these kinds of matters and will do so in this matter.”

McGonegal, 68, allegedly signaled a man over to his car and offered him $50 for oral sex, not knowing that the man was a Metroparks ranger in plain clothes. He also admitted to authorities that he is HIV positive.

McGonegal is a priest at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Ave. in Cleveland, and now faces felony charges.

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Francis appoints a Brazilian to the “bishop factory”

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Insider

The Pope has chosen a new Secretary for the Congregation for Bishops: Monsignor Ilson De Jesus Montanari who up until now has been the Congregation’s minute taker

ANDREA TORNIELLI
VATICAN CITY

Francis’ game of musical chairs continues: the face of the Roman Curia is slowly changing under the new pontificate. A week or so ago the Pope transferred the Secretary of the Congregation for Bishops, Lorenzo Baldisseri, to the General Secretariat of the Synod and is replacing him with Mgr. Ilson De Jesus Montanari from the Diocese of Riberaõ Preto. Until today Montanari had played a secondary role in the dicastery that oversees Episcopal nominations. The prelate, whom Pope Francis has known personally for about a year now, will now become Titular Archbishop of Capocilla and elevated to the dignity of archbishop.

With today’s nomination – a choice which has Francis written all over it – one of the minute takers of the dicastery led by Canadian cardinal Marc Ouellet is promoted to number two position. Although in the last ten years apostolic nuncios tended to be chosen for the role, it has recently often been the case that the Congregation’s new Secretary did not hold the title of bishop at the time of his nomination. For example, Ernesto Civardi (the dicastery’s number two man from 1967 to 1979) and Battista Re (Secretary from 1987 to 1989 and Prefect in 2000) were not bishops when they were appointed to the position.

Montanari is not the first Brazilian clergyman to be given a top position in the Congregation for Bishops: Lucas Moreira Neves was Secretary between 1979 and 1987 and then after a decade as Archbishop of San Salvador de Bahia he returned to the Vatican as the “bishop factory’s” Prefect. Mgr. Montanari left Brazil and was called to work in the Congregation in the final years of Cardinal Re’s prefecture, continuing under Ouellet, Re’s successor.

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OHIO PRIEST CHARGED WITH SOLICITING SEX

OHIO
The Press-News

October 12, 2013

CLEVELAND (AP) — A Catholic church’s pastor has been arrested in Cleveland for allegedly soliciting sex in a park.

The Plain Dealer of Cleveland reports (http://bit.ly/1gy9F96 ) that the Rev. James McGonegal (Muh-GAHN’-ee-gul) approached a park ranger who was in plainsclothes at Edgewater Park on Friday.

Cleveland Catholic Diocese records show the 68-year-old McGonegal has been at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church since the 1980s, and has been a priest since 1971. He is the church’s pastor.

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Case of priest Labaki to be handled by Vatican

LEBANON
The Daily Star

October 12, 2013
The Daily Star

BEIRUT: The Beirut Maronite Diocese said the case of priest Mansour Labaki was an “ecclesiastical” one to be handled by the Vatican.

In a statement issued Friday, the Diocese also urged media professionals to report on the issue “responsibly” and respect the authority of the Vatican.

News emerged this week that Labaki, 73, was convicted by the Vatican of molesting more than three children and for soliciting sex.

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HIV Positive Cleveland Priest Busted for Soliciting Gay Sex at Metroparks

CLEVELAND (OH)
Cleveland Leader

Published by Julie Kent on October 11, 2013

Cleveland Metroparks rangers report that a Cleveland priest was arrested on Friday afternoon after he allegedly solicited gay sex at Edgewater Beach.

The suspect, Rev. James McGonegal, reportedly signaled a man over to his car and offered him $50 for oral sex. As it turns out, the man he signaled to his car was a ranger in plain clothes. McGonegal is also said to have admitted to authorities that he is HIV positive.

McGonegal, 68, is a priest at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Ave. in Cleveland that was originally slated by Cleveland Catholic Diocese Bishop Richard Lennon to close. However, the church fought the decision from the start, and eventually was successful it its appeal to remain open.

McGonegal now faces felony charges.

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Priest accused of offering Cleveland Metroparks ranger $50 for sex

CLEVELAND (OH)
newsnet5

By: Jen Steer, newsnet5.com

CLEVELAND – A man was arrested for soliciting sex at Edgewater Park on Friday.

James McGonegal offered a Cleveland Metropark ranger $50 for sex, said park spokeswoman Sanaa Julien. The ranger was not on detail and was in plain clothes at the time.

McGonegal was charged with a third-degree felony because he also admitted he knows he has HIV, Julien said.

McGonegal is a pastor at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church in Cleveland. The Cleveland Catholic Diocese released this brief statement Friday night:

“Diocesan authorities have a policy of cooperating with civil authorities in these kinds of matters, and will do so in this matter.”

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Cleveland Priest Arrested, Accused of Offering $50 For Sex

CLEVELAND (OH)
Fox 8

October 11, 2013, by Kara Sutyak

CLEVELAND– A Cleveland priest was arrested Friday afternoon, accused of soliciting sex at Edgewater Beach, according to Cleveland Metroparks Rangers.

Spokesperson Monica Banks Hines told FOX 8 that the suspect signaled over a man to his car and offered him $50 for oral sex.

That man turned out to be a ranger in plain clothes.

Banks Hines told FOX 8 the suspect is Rev. James McGonegal, a priest at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Ave. in Cleveland.

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Pastor of St. Ignatius of Antioch Catholic Church arrested for soliciting sex at Edgewater Park

CLEVELAND (OH)
The Plain Dealer

By Ron Rutti, The Plain Dealer
on October 11, 2013

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The Rev. James McGonegal was arrested Friday after he approached a park ranger for sex at Edgewater Park, according to park officials. The pending charge against the pastor of St. Ignatius of Antioch Church is a felony, since he told rangers later that he is HIV-positive, officials said.

McGonegal, 68, has been pastor at the Catholic church at Lorain Avenue and West Boulevard since into the 1980s, according to records of the Cleveland Catholic Diocese. He has been a priest since 1971.

Monica Banks Hines, a Cleveland Metroparks spokeswoman, said the ranger was off-duty and in civilian clothes. The Metroparks recently took over operations at Edgewater Park from the state.

Hines said McMonegal was being held overnight in Cleveland City Jail.

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Priest arrested for soliciting sex from ranger at Edgewater Park

OHIO
WKYC

[with video]

CLEVELAND — A man was arrested at Edgewater Park Friday afternoon after he allegedly solicited an off-duty plainclothes Metroparks ranger for sex.

According to rangers spokeswoman Monica Banks Hines, James McGonegal offered the ranger $50, then admitted he was HIV positive.

According to sources with the Cleveland Metroparks, McGonegal is a priest at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Avenue.

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Clearing the record

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

POSTED: October 11, 2013

A news item Wednesday about a bail reduction for the Rev. Robert L. Brennan, accused of sexually molesting an altar boy, incorrectly described the conditions of retirement imposed by the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. The archdiocese did not require Brennan to live in Maryland.

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New Curia Will Serve Both Pope and Local Churches, Say Cardinals

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

by ELISE HARRIS/CNA/EWTN NEWS 10/10/2013

VATICAN CITY — After the conclusion of their meetings, two cardinals from Pope Francis’ group of eight have revealed that Curia reform will largely focus on service to Pope Francis and the universal Church in its various locales.

“We want to change the look — that the Curia be at the service of the Pope and also at the service of the local Churches, the universal Church and the episcopal conferences,” Cardinal Oswald Gracias of India said.

Cardinal Gracias was appointed by Pope Francis as one of the eight members to the council of cardinals instituted by the Holy Father in April to advise him on matters regarding Church reform and governance.

“The vision of the Pope is an open and merciful Church,” Cardinal Gracias said, also touching on the upcoming Synod of Bishops slated to take place in October 2014.

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Debate over reforming synod of bishops stretches back decades

VATICAN CITY
Headlines from the Catholic World

Vatican City, Oct 11, 2013 / 12:10 am (CNA/EWTN News).- The vision of reforming the synod of bishops, an effort undertaken by Pope Francis, goes back to at least Pope Paul VI, who had even broader ideas for the synod, according to a leading Vatican analyst.

The synod of bishops, which acts as an advisory body to the Pope, was established by Paul VI in 1965 by the motu proprio Apostolica sollicitudo to “strengthen (the Pope’s) union” with other bishops and to “establish even closer ties” with them.

The synod consists of a group of bishops from around the world who meet at fixed times “to foster closer unity between the Roman Pontiff and bishops, to assist the Roman Pontiff with their counsel … and to consider questions pertaining to the activity of the Church in the world,” according to canon law.

Members of the synod are for the most part elected by their brother bishops for a three-year term.

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Cleric Sex Allegations

PENNSYLVANIA
ABC 23

The settlement talks continue between the alleged victims of a former Bishop McCort trainer and the Altoona Johnstown Catholic Diocese. Bishop Mark Bartchak says the Diocese is working with Attorney Richard Serbin on resolving the claims from several men who said that they were abused, by Brother Stephen Baker in the 1990’s. A Judge recently ruled that Attorney Serbin needs to file formal complaints in the next thirty days for the cases to stay active.

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Abuse deals near

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Democrat

Kathy Mellott
kmellott@tribdem.com

— Out-of-court settlements in civil action by former Bishop McCort High School students who allege sexual misconduct by a former teacher are pending in a number of cases, while notice of lawsuits in others have not been filed.

Altoona attorney Richard Serbin told The Tribune-Democrat Friday that some of the seven lawsuits he has filed in Blair County court regarding Brother Stephen Baker likely will not require the filing of full civil complaints.

“We are in discussions. The defendants would prefer to resolve these rather than litigate them,” he said.

Three or four cases are in the works and notices of pending lawsuits have not been filed, Serbin said.

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Bishop: Diocese working toward resolving suspected abuse claims

PENNSYLVANIA
Altoona Mirror

October 12, 2013

By Kay Stephens ( kstephens@altoonamirror.com ), The Altoona Mirror

HOLLIDAYSBURG – Efforts are being made to resolve pending cases of suspected child abuse involving the late Brother Stephen Baker, the Altoona-Johnstown Catholic Diocese said Friday.

In response to Judge Jolene G. Kopriva’s recent order giving Altoona attorney Richard Serbin 30 days to file complaints detailing the allegations, Bishop Mark L. Bartchak revealed the ongoing effort.

“The parties believe that it would serve everyone’s interest to devote time and resources to resolving the claims as opposed to engaging in formal litigation,” Bartchak said. “We are optimistic that we can continue to work together to reach a fair and appropriate resolution.”

The pending lawsuits stem from alleged abuse at the hands of Baker, who served at Johnstown’s Bishop McCort High School as an athletic trainer in the 1990s. Baker was a Franciscan friar who was living at St. Bernardine Monastery in Hollidaysburg when he committed suicide Jan. 26.

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Crackdown on the ‘bank of popes’

VATICAN CITY
Christian Science Monitor

By Nick Squires, Correspondent / October 11, 2013

Its entrance is watched over by pantaloon-wearing soldiers from the Swiss Guard, its cash-dispensing machines give instructions in Latin, and its headquarters are in a 15th-century tower that was once used as a papal prison.

But seven months into the papacy of Pope Francis, it is clear that the imposing stone walls of the Tower of Pope Nicholas V are no match for the South American pontiff’s determination to clear up the Vatican bank’s finances after years of scandal and allegations of impropriety.

The pope, who has criticized the iniquities of the international banking system since he was selected in March, has embarked on a campaign to dramatically improve the transparency and accountability of an institution that Forbes last year called “The Most Secret Bank in the World.” The bank manages funds and accounts held by the Holy See, as well as Catholic charities and orders around the world, and individual cardinals, priests, and nuns.

The latest initiative came this week, when the Vatican passed a new law designed to improve financial transparency, enhance cooperation with other countries and law enforcement agencies, and prevent money laundering and tax evasion.

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Obispo Abanto: “Nunca he negado que esa niña es mía”

PERU
Religion Digital

[Summary: Former Auxiliary Bishop Guillermo Abanto Guzman met the little girl who was conceived with a young psychologist after a week of scandal and harsh criticism of the Peruvian Catholic church. The former bishop said he has never denied he was father of the girl.]

El ex obispo habla de su “pecado” con un canal de televisión peruano

Redacción, 12 de octubre de 2013

El exobispo auxiliar de Lima, Guillermo Abanto Guzmán, se reunió con la pequeña niña que concibió con la joven psicóloga Alexandra de la Lama Luna, tras una semana cargada de escándalo y duras críticas a la Iglesia Católica Peruana. Lo cuenta Periodismoenlínea

Según un avance de Punto Final, Abanto hace un mea culpa y asegura que nunca le negó la paternidad a la menor en entrevista exclusiva con el espacio dominical que difundió el caso.
Asimismo se difundieron fotografías de Abanto cargando a su hija. “Yo nunca he negado que esa niña es mía, yo nunca me he resistido a firmarla”, exclamó.

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Negotiations continue with friar’s alleged victims

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

Updated: Friday, October 11 2013

BLAIR COUNTY, Pa. — The bishop of the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese has responded to a judge’s call for lawsuits to be filed in a child sex abuse case involving a Franciscan friar.

Last week, a Blair County judge called on Altoona lawyer Richard Serbin to file complaints in the Brother Stephen Baker case within 30 days. Baker was a Franciscan friar and a former athletic trainer at Bishop McCort High School.

The subject of child abuse investigations in Ohio, Minnesota and Pennsylvania, Baker lived at St. Bernadine Monastery in Hollidaysburg when he committed suicide on Jan. 26.

Earlier this year, Serbin filed notices of pending lawsuits in at least seven cases of suspected child abuse involving Baker. But it’s been more than 120 days, and still no formal lawsuits have filed.

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October 11, 2013

Sex Abuse Victim Sues Td Church

OREGON
The Dalles Chronicle

By RaeLynn Ricarte
As of Friday, October 11, 2013

First Christian Church in The Dalles is being sued for millions by the female victim of a former youth minister who pleaded guilty to sex abuse in May 2013.

“I am no longer afraid and don’t want to hide, said Lindsay Carlin, 22, of The Dalles, the plaintiff in the case. “The trust I placed in my pastor and my church had a significant impact on my life, and I want to make sure the church is held accountable. Hopefully my actions will prevent this kind of thing from happening to other young people.”

Administrative staff at First Christian were called by a reporter Thursday but declined to talk about the pending legal matter. Daniel Chamberlin, 38, admitted to second-degree sexual abuse and third-degree sodomy, both Class C felonies, in March and waived his right to a trial.

He was ordered to spend 30 days in the regional jail, followed by 36 months of probation and registration as a sex offender. He cannot frequent places where children congregate but is allowed to be around his own three children without restriction.

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Former Lander youth leader faces new charge alleging sexual abuse of a minor

WYOMING
County 10

(Lander, Wyo.) – A former youth leader at a Lander church, Zachary Fuhriman, faces a new charge of third degree sexual abuse of a minor.

In April, the 29-year-old was charged with sexual exploitation of children. That charge was dismissed by the Ninth District Court of Wyoming on October 3.

The new charge carries slightly stiffer penalties than original charge. Fuhriman is facing up to 15 years in prison if he is convicted of the crime. The previous charge was punishable by 5 to 12 years in prison and/or fines up to $10,000.

According to the new information filed, it is alleged that Fuhriman “knowingly took immodest, immoral or indecent liberties” with a 16-year-old female victim.

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Youth Pastor Accused of Sexual Abuse

WYOMING
Riverton Radio

Submitted by rebecca on October 11, 2013

(Lander) – A 29-year-old former church youth counselor in Lander has been charged with third-degree sexual abuse of a minor.

Zachary Fuhriman is accused of having sexual relations with a person he knew to be sixteen years old on occasions in December of last year and the first few months of this year.

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Pope names auxiliary bishop for St. Paul and Minneapolis

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Tim Nelson, Minnesota Public Radio
October 11, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Pope Francis has appointed a new auxiliary bishop for the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The Vatican said in a release Friday morning that the Pope had named Andrew Cozzens to the high-ranking administrative post in St. Paul. The announcement said Cozzens has been an assistant professor at the St. Paul Seminary, where he has been since 2006. He is a Connecticut native and was ordained a priest for the archdiocese in 1997.

The archdiocese previously only had a single auxiliary bishop, Lee Piche. The Vatican didn’t say why it was appointing Cozzens or what role Piche may have going forward.

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Blogger: SBC leaders ignoring abuse decree

UNITED STATES
Associated Baptist Press

Georgia pastor Peter Lumpkins says SBC agency heads “cannot and should not” align with individuals or organizations in ways that harm the reputation of all Southern Baptists.

By Bob Allen

A Georgia pastor and blogger says denominational officials are ignoring a resolution adopted at this year’s Southern Baptist Convention calling for a zero-tolerance policy toward the sexual abuse of children in churches.

Peter Lumpkins, who blogs at SBC Tomorrow, proposed the 2013 SBC resolution on sexual abuse of children and amended a committee-drafted version from the floor urging denominational leaders and employees to “utilize the highest sense of discernment in affiliating with groups and or individuals that possess questionable policies and practices in protecting our children from criminal abuse.”

In comments posted Oct. 10, Lumpkins said high-profile SBC leaders are carrying on with business as usual in the kind of practices that first prompted his concern.

He criticized Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary President Danny Akin for promoting an upcoming collegiate conference featuring C.J. Mahaney, the former head of Sovereign Grace Ministries named in a lawsuit alleging what some call the biggest evangelical sex-abuse scandal to date.

He also lamented that others appearing on the same program include Russell Moore, the recently elected president of the SBC Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission.

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Pope signals start of new war on Vatican corruption

VATICAN CITY
The Independent (UK)

MICHAEL DAY
FRIDAY 11 OCTOBER 2013

In a clear sign that he wants to be seen to be tackling endemic corruption at the Vatican, Pope Francis welcomed the Church’s highest-ranking whistleblower to a special audience today.

The Pontiff tonight met Monsignor Carlo Maria Vigano, the Holy See’s ambassador to the US, whose letters provided the most explosive evidence to emerge from the Vatileaks scandal. Mgr Vigano’s correspondence with former Pope Benedict XVI and his No 2, the Vatican Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, suggested that he was effectively exiled in the US after attempting to lift the lid on rampant corruption in the Holy City.

Mgr Vigano served as the second-ranked administrator in the Curia – the body responsible for the administration of the Vatican – under Benedict’s reign, from July 2009 to September 2011, before his transfer to America.

His letters, leaked to the press by Benedict XVI’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, in the Vatileaks scandal, revealed how he had begged not to be transferred to the US after accusing fellow administrators of arranging corruption contracts that may have cost the Vatican millions of euros.

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T-minus 2 for SB 131

CALIFORNIA
The Worthy Adversary

Posted by Joelle Casteix on October 11, 2013

As of this writing, there is no new new news on SB 131. California Governor Jerry Brown has until Sunday to sign the bill, veto it, or do nothing. If he signs the bill or does nothing, SB 131 will become law on January 1, 2014

Let’s keep our fingers crossed for victims—all victims. Why? Because ALL victims will benefit if SB 131 becomes law.

According to Brown’s website, here is the status of many of the bills that have crossed his desk:

• AB 218 by Assemblymember Roger Dickinson (D-Sacramento) – Employment applications: criminal history.
• AB 256 by Assemblymember Cristina Garcia (D-Bell Gardens) – Pupils: grounds for suspension and expulsion: bullying.
– See more at: http://theworthyadversary.com/2306-t-minus-2-for-sb-131#sthash.egsNDc6B.dpuf

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Associate seminary professor named auxiliary for Minnesota archdiocese

MINNESOTA
Catholic Sentinel

Catholic News Service

WASHINGTON — Pope Francis has appointed Father Andrew Cozzens, an associate professor at St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity in St. Paul, Minn., as auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

Bishop-designate Cozzens, 45, was ordained a priest of the archdiocese in 1997. He has been on the faculty of St. Paul Seminary since 2006.

The appointment was announced Oct. 11 by Msgr. Angelo Accatino, charge d’affaires at the apostolic nunciature in Washington.

The newly named bishop’s ordination Mass will be celebrated at the Cathedral of St. Paul Dec. 9, which is the feast of the Immaculate Conception.

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Panel to review archdiocesan policies on all issues related to abuse

MINNESOTA
National Catholic Reporter

Catholic News Service | Oct. 11, 2013

ST. PAUL, MINN. A newly formed Safe Environment and Ministerial Standards Task Force will conduct a full review of the archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ policies and practices and “any and all issues” related to clergy sexual misconduct.

This includes examining how allegations of clergy sexual misconduct have been handled and what must be done to address any gaps in the process.

The findings and recommendations of the independent lay group will be released publicly when its final report is complete, according to an Oct. 6 archdiocesan statement.

The creation of the task force comes amid sexual misconduct allegations in the media concerning certain priests in the archdiocese and how their cases were handled by archdiocesan officials.

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La Corte confirmó …

CHILE
Soy Chile

La Corte confirmó la condena de 10 años y un día para el cura acusado de abuso en Cunco

[Summary: A criminal court convicted priest Orlando Rogel Pinuer of repated sexual abuse of four minors in Cunco in the Araucania region. He must served 10 years and one day in prison.]

La Corte de Apelaciones de Temuco confirmó la sentencia de 10 años y un día de presidio para el sacerdote Orlando Rogel Pinuer (53), condenando por abuso sexual reiterado en contra de cuatro menores de edad en Cunco, región de La Araucanía.

El Tribunal de alzada de La Araucanía rechazó el recurso de nulidad presentado por la defensa del religioso y declaró firme la condena decretada por el Tribunal del Oral en lo Penal de Temuco.

El cura de Cunco fue condenado por los delitos cometidos en contra de cuatro adolescentes ocurridos entre 2006 y 2011, cuando las víctimas tenían entre 14 y 17 años y vivían en un internado que era administrado por Rogel.

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Yeshiva University hires teacher convicted of child abuse at Solomon Schechter in West Orange

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Alex Napoliello/NJ.com
on October 11, 2013

Yeshiva University is facing scrutiny for hiring a teacher convicted of child molestation at a West Orange private school.

Akiva Roth, 42, started at the school’s Yeshiva college unit in Washington Heights at the beginning of the academic year, according to a report from The New York Post.

In 1996, Roth was arrested for exposing and touching himself to 11 – and 12-year-old boys at Solomon Schecter, the report said. He pleaded guilty to four counts of lewdness against several male students, and received 10 years probation as a result.

At the time, Roth blamed the children he abused for “enticing him into this behavior,” adding he “has very little empathy for his victims,” according to the report.

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When Will Y.U. Learn?

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

Editorial

When will Yeshiva University ever learn? When will modern American Orthodoxy’s flagship institution learn to own up to its mistakes, genuinely reform its procedures, live out its values and, above all, provide a safe and honest environment for its students?

The latest revelation, that Y.U. hired a new faculty member who had been convicted of inappropriate sexual behavior with boys, starkly illustrates the gross mismanagement and hypocrisy of the university’s current administration.

Here we have an institution reeling from allegations that for decades — decades — its leadership ignored the sexual abuse of students at the hands of at least two of its most prominent staff members.

Here we see an institution that covered up the abuse, allowed the offending rabbis to take jobs working with children elsewhere in the Jewish community and, even after the Forward uncovered this sorry and painful story, refused to acknowledge its own complicity and grasp the opportunity to help with the healing process.

Instead, Y.U. spent $2.5 million on an investigative report that its own top officials then sought to largely suppress, emphasizing instead that it is reforming its policies and procedures to prevent abuse and deal with it forthrightly if and when it occurred.

Zero tolerance was promised.

Zero tolerance was not delivered.

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Yeshiva U. Cuts Loose Hebrew Teacher Akiva Roth Over Criminal Record With Boys

NEW YORK
The Jewish Daily Forward

By Paul Berger

Yeshiva University has let go a recently hired Hebrew teacher following a Forward report that the teacher, Akiva Roth, had previous convictions for sexually inappropriate behavior with boys.

Y.U. said it had “erred” in hiring of Roth by “permitting the new hire to begin teaching before the screening process had been completed.”

Y.U. would not clarify whether Roth, 42, resigned or whether he was fired. Nor would the university clarify whether Roth had told administrators of his previous convictions when he was hired as a member of Yeshiva College’s Hebrew faculty at the end of this summer.

“While all appointments are subject to thorough background checks, the University erred in this case, permitting the new hire to begin teaching before the screening process had been completed,” a Y.U. spokesman, Matt Yaniv, said in a statement, released October 11. “Yeshiva University will continue to re-evaluate its hiring processes and work to close any gaps in our procedure.”

“After an extensive review of this matter, Mr. Roth is no longer employed by the University,” Yaniv added. “To our knowledge, he has not engaged in any inappropriate conduct during his time at Y.U.”

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Abuse Scandal Shakes Yeshiva U.

NEW YORK
The American Conservative

By ROD DREHER • October 11, 2013

The Jewish Daily Forward has for the past 10 months or so been writing that the senior leadership of Yeshiva University, a major institution of Orthodox Judaism in America, covered up sexual abuse for decades. The paper now reports that Yeshiva is in serious financial trouble because of a huge lawsuit abuse victims are filing against it. And the editorial page blasted the university for its recent hire of Akiva Roth, a teacher who in 1997 pled guilty to four counts of lewdness with boys he was preparing for bar mitzvah. From the editorial:

When will Yeshiva University ever learn? When will modern American Orthodoxy’s flagship institution learn to own up to its mistakes, genuinely reform its procedures, live out its values and, above all, provide a safe and honest environment for its students?

The latest revelation, that Y.U. hired a new faculty member who had been convicted of inappropriate sexual behavior with boys, starkly illustrates the gross mismanagement and hypocrisy of the university’s current administration. Here we have an institution reeling from allegations that for decades — decades — its leadership ignored the sexual abuse of students at the hands of at least two of its most prominent staff members. Here we see an institution that covered up the abuse, allowed the offending rabbis to take jobs working with children elsewhere in the Jewish community and, even after the Forward uncovered this sorry and painful story, refused to acknowledge its own complicity and grasp the opportunity to help with the healing process.

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YU employee with abuse conviction no longer at university

NEW YORK
JTA

October 11, 2013

NEW YORK (JTA) — Yeshiva University has terminated Akiva Roth, 42, after past sexual misconduct came to light.

Roth, who had been hired as a Hebrew teacher at Yeshiva College, had pled guilty to four counts of abuse against boys he tutored for their bar mitzvahs in 1997. He received ten years of probation.

“Mr. Roth is no longer employed by the University,” said a statement released Friday. To the university’s knowledge, “he has not engaged in any inappropriate conduct during his time at YU.”

The university admitted that it had “erred” by allowing Roth to begin teaching before his background check was completed.

The university has been at the center of a recent firestorm of controversy after alumni filed a lawsuit alleging years of abuse from multiple faculty members.

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MN – New assistant MN bishop isn’t reform, SNAP says

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 11, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 862 7688 home, 314 503 0003 cell, SNAPdorris@gmail.com )

The St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese is getting a new assistant bishop, Fr. Andrew H. Cozzens. This isn’t reform.

Catholic bishops and church lawyers are causing this scandal. So this week, the archdiocese is getting an extra bishop and more church lawyers. (The head of the new abuse ‘task force’ is a lawyer, as are several members of the panel. The person Archbishop John Nienstedt picked to pick the ‘task force,’ Fr. Reginald Whitt, is also a lawyer.)

The church faces a clergy sex crime and cover up crisis, and has for decades. As best we can tell, Bishop Cozzens has done virtually nothing in his clerical career to deal with this crisis. So in our desperation to see things improve, let’s not leap to optimistic conclusions that have no basis in reality.

It’s also discouraging that he’s a local guy. If anything can be done internally to expose and punish wrongdoers, it will take a courageous outsider, not a popular insider.

When predator priests are in trouble, bishops often shuffle him elsewhere. And when a complicit bishop is in trouble, often other church staff and titles and offices get shuffled. That’s what’s happening here. So this move in no way represents progress.

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New auxiliary bishop named for St Paul-Minneapolis

MINNESOTA
The Mankato Free Press

ST. PAUL (AP) — The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is getting a new auxiliary bishop.

The Vatican announced Friday that Pope Francis has appointed Andrew Cozzens to the high-ranking administrative post.

Minnesota Public Radio News reports Cozzens has been an assistant professor at the St. Paul Seminary since 2006. He is a Connecticut native and has been a priest since 1997.

The archdiocese has previously had a single auxiliary bishop, Lee Piche. It’s unclear why Cozzens is being appointed or what role Piche might have going forward.

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MN – Child molesting cleric gets monthly bonus

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, October 11, 2013

Statement by David Clohessy, Executive Director, SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, 7234 Arsenal Street, St. Louis MO 63143 ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

A priest who was found guilty of child sex abuse by a jury is still a priest, is unsupervised, lives in a $500,000 lakeside home and gets extra payments above his retirement.

Minnesota Public Radio disclosed that Fr. Robert Kapoun, who was found guilty of abuse in 1996, also spends half of each year living in Florida.

[Minnesota Public Radio]

Archbishop Nienstedt’s action in this case is the perfect storm of recklessness callousness and deceit.

It’s reckless to let a proven serial predator priest live unsupervised.

It’s callous to give a proven serial predator priest bonus pay.

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Francis’ ‘older son’ problem; red herrings; and pingpong on financial reform

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Reporter

John L. Allen Jr. | Oct. 11, 2013 All Things Catholic

If a Las Vegas casino had opened a betting line eight months ago on the likelihood that within a year the most popular figure on the planet would be the pope, one has to imagine the odds would have been awfully long.

Yet that’s basically today’s situation, as Francis continues to garner acclaim and admiration from almost every quarter, most recently for a moving Oct. 4 visit to Assisi and for confirming his desire to reach out to divorced and remarried Catholics by announcing a Synod of Bishops in October 2014 dedicated to the family and marriage.

The “almost” in that sentence, however, is important because while Francis remains a smash hit overall, he’s also got a budding “older son” problem.

The reference is to the parable of the prodigal son, a template many observers are now applying to Catholic reaction to the new pope. Over his first eight months, Francis basically has killed the fatted calf for the prodigal sons and daughters of the post-modern world, reaching out to gays, women, nonbelievers, and virtually every other constituency inside and outside the church that has felt alienated. …

I’ve said before that tracking the story of financial reform in the Vatican is often like watching a pingpong match. For every sign of progress, there’s usually also a reminder of the work left to be done.

So it was again this week, as the Vatican under Francis adopted a tough new anti-money-laundering law and continued to promote change at the Vatican bank at the same moment that Italian prosecutors continued to garner stories of corruption and shady practices from a former Vatican accountant.

The new law, formally “Law N. XVIII of the Vatican City State on the Matter of Transparency, Vigilance and Financial Information,” was adopted Tuesday and announced Wednesday. In essence, it establishes the Financial Information Authority, a watchdog unit created under Benedict XVI, not only as the Vatican’s financial intelligence unit with the power to flag suspect transactions, but also as its “prudential supervisor,” which means anybody who wants to conduct financial operations in the Vatican needs its approval.

The law also creates a sanctions regime for violation of anti-money-laundering protocols in an effort to bring the Vatican’s legislation in line with internationally accepted standards.

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Saint Paul / Minneapolis gets new auxiliary bishop

MINNESOTA
National Catholic Reporter

Pope Francis has named Fr. Andrew H. Cozzens new auxiliary bishop of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis.

Cozzens was assistant professor at St. Paul Seminary School of Divinity in Saint Paul, Minnesota, according to Vatican radio.

The appointment comes as Archbishop John Nienstedt is under fire for the way his archdiocese handled an alleged pornography cover-up inside his chancery. The archdiocese has been accused of withholding from police images of child pornography that were on a priest’s laptop, deciding instead to place the evidence in a church-owned vault.

Nienstedt’s top deputy resigned abruptly last week in response to the allegation that he covered up evidence of the child pornography.

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OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 11 October 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father: …

– appointed Rev. Andrew H. Cozzens, U.S.A., as auxiliary of Saint Paul and Minneapolis (area 17,225, population 3,231,000, Catholics 839,000, priests 444, permanent deacons 214, religious 777), U.S.A. The bishop-elect was born in Stamford, U.S.A. in 1968 and was ordained a priest in 1997. He holds a doctorate in dogmatic theology from the Pontifical University of St. Thomas Aquinas (Angelicum) and has served in a number of pastoral and roles, including parish vicar at the Cathedral of Saint Paul and in the parish “Sacred Heart-Saint Lawrence-Immaculate Conception” at Faribault, chaplain for the Missionaries of Charity in Rome, and assistant director of the archdiocesan Office of Worship. He is currently assistant professor, formator and director of worship at the Saint Paul Seminary School of Divinity, Saint Paul, member of the Mission Advisory Council and Corporate Board of the Institute for Priestly Formation in Omaha, and of the St. Paul’s Outreach Board of Directors at Saint Paul, and co-chaplain of the Twin Cities Serra Club. He is a founding member of the diocesan priestly association “Companions of Christ”.

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U.S. Bishops To Meet November 11-14 In Baltimore, Hear Addresses By Cardinal Dolan, Nuncio

UNITED STATES
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops

October 1, 2013

Bishops will vote for new president, vice-president, chairmen and board members
Votes on Spanish and English liturgical items on agenda
Will also hear proposal for formal statement on pornography

WASHINGTON—The annual fall General Assembly of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) will be November 11-14, at the Baltimore Waterfront Marriott Hotel. During the meeting, the bishops will hear addresses by Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, president of USCCB, and Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, apostolic nuncio to the United States.

The bishops will also hear a report from the National Advisory Council and a report on the status of their strategic/pastoral plan, The New Evangelization: Faith, Worship, Witness. They will elect the next president and vice president of USCCB, the chairman of the USCCB Committee on Catholic Education, the chairmen-elect of five other USCCB committees, and members of the Catholic Legal Immigration Network Incorporated (CLINIC) and Catholic Relief Services (CRS) boards.

Other agenda items include:
• Discussions and votes on the 2014 Conference budget and 2015 diocesan assessment
• Consultation on the sainthood cause of Mary Teresa Tallon, Servant of God
• Discussions and votes on the Misal Romano, the Spanish translation of the book of prayers at Mass, and adaptations to it for use in the United States
• Discussions and votes on the draft translations of the Order of Celebrating Marriage and the Order of Confirmation, as well as proposed adaptations for the Order of Celebrating Marriage
• An update by Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone of San Francisco, chairman of the USCCB Subcommittee on the Promotion and Defense of Marriage
• Presentation for a proposal to develop a formal statement on pornography
• Presentation by Bishop Gerald R. Kicanas of Tucson, Arizona, chairman of CRS, and Carolyn Woo, CRS president, on the work and strategic priorities of CRS
• An update and discussion on the Call to Prayer for Life, Marriage and Religious Liberty
• Discussions and votes on proposed revisions to the USCCB handbook and regulations

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The Elephant in the Room is Back

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON OCTOBER 09, 2013

One big meeting of Catholic officials has ended. Another meeting takes place next month. And at both, a huge “the elephant in the room” was ignored.

Last week in Rome, the new “Council of Cardinals” met with Pope Francis for three days. According to papal spokesman Fr. Frederico Lombardi “the sex abuse issue did not come up during the G-8 meeting.”

[National Catholic Reporter]

Next month, hundreds of US bishops gather in Baltimore. Here’s their agenda:

[United States Conference of Catholic Bishops]

Again, there will be no mention whatsoever of clergy sex crimes and cover ups.

At least there will a “changing of the guard” at the top of the USCCB next month. Cardinal Timothy Dolan’s term as president expires. In recent years, he has been awful on abuse and cover up in his archdiocese.

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In Rome, hopeful signs. In the US, not so much

UNITED STATES
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

David Clohessy

Last week, while many Catholic eyes were focused on new and hopeful moves to streamline the home office, the supervisors in the field offices were focused on very old and depressing moves to do what’s long been done: ignore, conceal, and “spin” child sex crimes and cover-ups.

And while in Rome all seems to have gone swimmingly, in US chancery offices all hell was breaking loose.

In St. Paul, a police report surfaced saying that St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese staff withheld evidence of likely child porn and now the alleged sex offender can’t be criminally charged. (And in the wake of a different but new child sex scandal there, the vicar general also stepped down this week.)

In Trenton, Bishop David O’Connell essentially admits that, for months, he has hidden the fact that one of his priests sent 1,200 inappropriate sexual text messages to what he thought was a teenaged boy and had sexually harassed at least five teenagers and young men, some of whom were seminarians.

In Chicago, a suspended and credibly accused archdiocesan priest who faces three allegations has taken a secular job counseling grieving families, and Cardinal Francis George claims he’s powerless to stop this.

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Robber admits false claim

OREGON
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 10, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

We are appalled that this criminal would pretend to have been victimized. Shame on him. We are grateful he was caught.

[Claims Journal]

Thankfully, the rate of wrongful allegations against clerics continues to be extraordinarily low:

[BishopAccountability.org]

We hope this sad crime won’t deter others who were indeed sexually assaulted as kids from coming forward, getting help, protecting children, exposing wrongdoers and beginning to heal.

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Father Eugene Sullivan, educator and pastor granted senior priest status

MASSACHUSETTS
The Pilot

Cardinal Seán O’Malley has granted senior priest/retirement status to Father Eugene P. Sullivan. Until July 1, 2013 he had been pastor at St. Francis Xavier parish in Weymouth.

Eugene Sullivan was born in Boston’s Brighton section on May 3, 1936; his parents were the late Jeremiah and Mary Sullivan who raised their family in St. Columbkille parish. Young Gene completed his elementary school studies at the parish school (1949) under the watchful eye of the Sisters of St. Joseph. He went across the city to Boston College High School (1953) and returned to the easier commute at Boston College graduating in the class of 1957. He received an M. Ed. from Boston State College in 1958 on for the next five years taught in the Woburn Public Schools (1958-1963).

He entered St. John’s Seminary in the fall of 1963, a member of the class of 1968. Following his ordination by Cardinal Cushing at Holy Cross Cathedral on May 29, 1968 he was appointed assistant at St. Joseph Parish in Holbrook, serving there until 1971.

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Catholic priest defends himself against molestation allegations

CALIFORNIA
Appeal-Democrat

October 10, 2013

By Monica Vaughan/A-D Reporter

A Catholic priest from Colombia charged with misdemeanor counts of sexual battery and child molestation of a 16-year-old Yuba City girl took the stand on Thursday in Sutter County Superior Court to testify in his own defense.

Defense attorney Markus Dombois said in his closing statement the incident is a cultural misunderstanding and that the girl is lying about the night of the incident for attention.

“I believe she lied. One little lie can snowball and knock down a chalet,” Dombois said.

Prosecutor Deputy District Attorney Anu Chopra said the defendant is using his culture and language as a crutch and that he knows what he did was wrong.

“No priest in any country should ever touch a child the way this man touched (her),” Chopra said.

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Catholic church ‘ignored claims’ about ex-Maidstone priest Phillip Challis jailed for raping and molesting young boys

UNITED KINGDOM
Kent Online

by Anna Young
ayoung@thekmgroup.co.uk

A former Maidstone priest has been jailed for raping and molesting two boys – nine years after his secretary first alerted police.

Sarah Haines has spoken of the shock and sadness of discovering her former boss and trusted family friend had been sentenced to 13 years in prison after admitting 17 sex attacks.

He is Phillip Challis, 52, who served at Holy Family Catholic Church, in Park Wood, from 1996 to 2003.

Now his former assistant has lashed out at the authorities, who failed to act when she first raised concerns.

She said: “The church did not help me. They swept it under the carpet. No one took me seriously.

“He was a family friend, he babysat my children and came to family parties.”

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Priest sex abuse survivor rails against church

MINNESOTA
KARE

[with video]

Allen Costantini

SAINT PAUL, Minn. – The Survivors Network of those abused by Priests (SNAP) held an emotional news conference in front of the Chancellory of the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis Thursday. Alleged priest sex abuse victim Dale Scheffler spoke passionately about the man he says abused him when he was 10 or 11 years old.

The man is still a priest and reportedly living comfortably, according to Minnesota Public Radio, with a pension and bonus payments, which Sheffler regards as an outrage. The man was convicted of abusing Scheffler in the 1990’s, but the conviction was overturned on appeal because of a legal technicality.

“How can you allow this to happen?” called Scheffler. “How does he feel that he does not have to register? Does not the law state you have to register?”

The priest has not had to register as a sex offender because he was convicted in civil court, not criminal court and the case was overturned.

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Woman says Maplewood priest led her into sexual relationship

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/10/2013

A woman parishioner told Maplewood police that she was “led into” a sexual relationship with her pastor while seeking religious and spiritual guidance from him, according to a search warrant affi-davit.

The Rev. Mark Huberty, a priest at the Church of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, met the woman in 2008, and she later went to him for counseling, she told police, according to an affidavit for a search warrant filed Thursday in Ramsey County District Court in Maplewood.

Huberty, 43, has not been charged with a crime.

It is a felony for members of the clergy to have a sexual relationship with a person they are counseling or to whom they are providing spiritual advice.

The search warrant sought files and documents related to Huberty at the 226 Summit Ave. offices of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and from archdiocese attorneys with the law firm Meier, Kennedy & Quinn, on Wednesday.

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Critics Skeptical of Church Sex Abuse Task Force

MINNESOTA
KSTP

[with video]

A day after the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis announced creation of a task force to review policies regarding child sex abuse by priests, critics protested outside church headquarters. Members of SNAP, “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests,” organized the protest by a handful of supporters.

Among them was Dale Scheffler, a 46-year old man who won a civil suit against the archdiocese in 1996 but had his $1 million judgment reversed by an appeals court.

“Why are they saying they’re going to form another board?” Scheffler asked. “I’ve heard so much about these boards it’s sickening.”

Scheffler was abused by a priest more than 30 years ago. He says the only answer is for the church to turn over all of its records about allegations against priests to law enforcement.

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POOLSE BISSCHOPPEN NEMEN MAATREGELEN TEGEN MISBRUIK

POLEN
KerkNet

BRUSSEL (KerkNet/Kathpress) – De Poolse bisschoppen keurden deze week tijdens hun overleg een omvattend programma met een serie maatregelen voor de bestrijding van seksueel misbruik goed. De maatregelen hebben betrekking op de bijstand voor slachtoffers en de bestraffing van geestelijken die zich aan seksueel misbruik van minderjarigen hebben schuldig gemaakt. Slachtoffers kunnen niet enkel aanspraak maken op geestelijke bijstand, maar indien zij dat wensen ook op gratis therapeutische hulp.

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Archbishop apologises for ‘slip of the tongue’ claims that paedophilia is caused by divorce

POLAND
Daily Mail (UK)

The top Catholic bishop in Poland has apologised for blaming divorce for encouraging paedophilia in comments that the church have described as ‘a slip of the tongue’.

Archbishop Jozef Michalik sparked outrage when he said earlier this week that sex abuse was the result of people ‘looking for love’, and appeared to suggest that divorce could be just as harmful to children as paedophilia.

But he has since apologised for the anger caused by his comments and claimed that they were taken out of context.

After his comments sparked fury among Polish social media users, the episcopate called a press conference in a bid to try and calm the situation.

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Pope meets envoy at centre of Vatileaks furore

VATICAN CITY
Gazzetta del Sud

(By Denis Greenan). Vatican City, October 10 – In another sign that he is taking energetic steps to change the governance that at times seemed to baffle his predecessor, Pope Francis on Thursday conferred with the Vatican official whose allegations led to the Vatileaks scandal. There was no official statement after Francis received the Apostolic Nuncio to the United States Carlo Maria Vigano’, but Vatican watchers saw the talks as part of a shake-up including stopping cronyism and lobbies – including a gay one – and cleaning up the scandal-plagued Vatican Bank, IOR. Vigano’ was formerly the second-ranked administrator to Pope Benedict XVI, serving as secretary-general of the governatorate of Vatican City State from July 2009 to September 2011. In letters to Benedict XVI and to Vatican Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, Vigano’ begged not to be transferred to the US for blowing the whistle on alleged corruption that may have cost the Vatican millions of euros in inflated procurement contracts. Vigano’s correspondence was stolen and leaked to the press by Benedict XVI’s butler, Paolo Gabriele, giving rise to the Vatileaks scandal that reverberated around the world amid a media feeding frenzy. The Vatican court sentenced Gabriele to 18 months in prison for theft in October 2012. Pope Benedict XVI pardoned the former butler in December 2012.

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Fiscal de Ayacucho pidió al Vaticano el expediente del ex obispo acusado de pedofilia

PERU
La Republica

Precisiones. Señaló que hasta el momento no hay elementos suficientes ni indicios para el esclarecimiento de este caso. Por otro lado, el cardenal Cipriani instó al ex obispo Guillermo Abanto que reconozca a su hija.

Elías Navarro.
Ayacucho.

Con el fin de conocer con precisión los hechos que motivaron la destitución del obispo auxiliar de Ayacucho, Gabino Miranda Melgarejo, el fiscal de Ayacucho, Garry Chávez Valdivia, ha solicitado al Vaticano la remisión de copias certificadas del expediente sobre su caso.

El pedido de Chávez se efectuó a través de la Fiscalía de la Nación, instancia que deberá tramitarla por intermedio del Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, a fin de que la Santa Sede colabore con la justicia peruana.

De esa manera, podría conocerse quién o quiénes son los agraviados, y en mérito a ello profundizar las investigaciones preliminares necesarias antes de emitir un pronunciamiento.

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