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.

April 26, 2022

Powerstories Theatre Shines a Light on the Dark History of the Catholic Church in “Conspiracy of Silence: The Magdalene Laundries”

TAMPA (FL)
Broadway World [New York NY]

April 25, 2022

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We Refuse to Whisper! Powerstories Theatre is confronting the often-shrouded, controversial topic of abuse in the Catholic Church in Ireland with CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE: THE MAGDALENE LAUNDRIES. For twenty-two years, Powerstories has been driven by giving voice to women. Now, more than ever in our history, we refuse to whisper, defying the stigma of talking about abuse in religion. We are the first in Florida to debut this vastly unknown story based on Ireland’s sordid religious history.

CONSPIRACY OF SILENCE: THE MAGDALENE LAUNDRIES is live at the theatre from April 28 to May 15 and live-streamed on April 30, May 7, May 14 and May 15.

Powerstories Theatre Founder Fran Powers learned about the Magdalene Laundries, also known as the Magdalene Asylums, from a tour guide while visiting Ireland. Named after Mary Magdalene, the laundries were meant to be places of reform and repentance where women could wash away their…

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Reckoning continues over Catholic clergy abuse

CAMDEN (NJ)
World News Group [Asheville NC]

April 22, 2022

By Mary Jackson

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A New Jersey diocese’s $87.5 million settlement plan prompts calls for more transparency

A Roman Catholic diocese in New Jersey agreed on Tuesday to pay $87.5 million to resolve clergy abuse claims from some 300 alleged victims. The cash settlement signifies one of the largest payouts involving U.S. Catholic churches accused of mishandling clergy sexual abuse allegations.

If the deal is approved by a U.S. bankruptcy judge, the Diocese of Camden will allot money to alleged survivors—up to $290,000 each, according to victims’ attorneys Jay Mascolo and Jason Amala—through a trust over the course of four years.

Abuse advocates and attorneys said the settlement is a positive step. But the Diocese of Camden has avoided transparency by keeping documents sealed that detail the nature of the accusations and how church leaders handled them. Victims’ attorneys said they expect court challenges to continue since the settlement includes an unusual provision allowing claimants…

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Pope Francis appoints Archbishop Laurent Ulrich to lead Paris Archdiocese

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

April 26, 2022

By Christopher White

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Pope Francis has named Archbishop Laurent Ulrich of Lille as the new head of the Paris Archdiocese, less than five months after his predecessor resigned under fire following a questionable relationship with a woman.

The appointment was published in the Vatican’s daily bulletin on April 26.

Ulrich has led the northern French diocese of Lille since February 2008 and has been a past vice-president of France’s Catholic bishops. The 70-year-old archbishop has been known to be an vocal advocate for migrants, one of France’s most contentious political issues, and has spoken openly about the church’s failings on clergy sex abuse. 

In a 2015 interview ahead of French regional elections, Ulrich said that while the church does not endorse any political party, it was necessary to reject the “hate speech” and “aggressive vindictiveness” being used by the far-right National Front party to demonize migrants.  

“One cannot be…

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April 25, 2022

Peio, Mikel and Jesús Zudaire, together with four other members, with their backs turned, of the Association of Victims of Abuse in Religious Centers of Navarra. Peio, Mikel y Jesús Zudaire, junto a otros cuatro miembros, de espaldas, de la Asociación de Victimas de Abusos en Centros Religiosos de Navarra. Pablo Lasaosa

Navarra will recognize the victims of abuse in the Church already prescribed

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

April 24, 2022

By Julio Núñez

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[Photo above: Peio, Mikel and Jesús Zudaire, together with four other members, with their backs turned, of the Association of Victims of Abuse in Religious Centers of Navarra. Peio, Mikel y Jesús Zudaire, junto a otros cuatro miembros, de espaldas, de la Asociación de Victimas de Abusos en Centros Religiosos de Navarra. Pablo Lasaosa. A Google translation of this article is followed by the Spanish original.]

The draft of the norm, the first of its kind in Spain, contemplates creating a commission that will assess the requests of those affected and will prepare an annual report with the cases committed by its clergy

Navarra will promulgate a law to recognize as such the victims of pederasty in the Catholic Church, clarify the crimes committed by the members of this institution in the community and “contribute to a collective, democratic and critical memory” about the problem. The draft of the norm, to…

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Brooklyn diocese settles sex abuse lawsuit vs Filipino bishop

(NY)
The FilAm [New York NY]

April 23, 2022

By Cristina DC Pastor

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The Diocese of Brooklyn has settled a lawsuit against the late Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez, accused of sexual abuse of a minor when he was a visiting clergy in St. Francis de Sales Church in Belle Harbor in New York in the early 1970s.

According to Road to Recovery, Inc., a non-profit in New Jersey that assists victims of sexual abuse, Father Gutierrez sexually abused a minor child parishioner of St. Francis de Sales Parish on approximately six occasions from around 1970 until 1971 when the boy was about 11 to 12 years old.

Gutierrez became the bishop of Marbel in Koronadal City in South Cotabato from 1982 to 2018. He was born in Romblon in 1939 and ordained as priest at the Immaculate Conception Cathedral of Roxas City, Capiz in 1962. He passed away in 2019.

“That Bishop Dinualdo Gutierrez, a credibly accused sexual abuser, became a leader in the…

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Encourage voices of children: Orissa HC Chief Justice S Muralidhar

CUTTACK (INDIA)
New Indian Express [Chennai, India]

April 25, 2022

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The conference was organised by the State Women & Child Development department and the UNICEF under the aegis of the Orissa High Court.

The Eastern Region Conference on effective implementation of the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection) Act, 2015 ended at the Odisha Judicial Academy here on Sunday. Chairpersons of the Juvenile Justice Committees of the High Courts of the five states – Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhatisgarh, West Bengal and Odisha participated in the conference.

The conference was organised by the State Women & Child Development department and the UNICEF under the aegis of the Orissa High Court.

With special focus on child protection issues in conflict with law and mental health of children during COVID-19 the conference was inaugurated by chairperson, Juvenile Justice Committee, Supreme Court of India, Justice S Ravindra Bhat on Saturday.

Principal Magistrates of Juvenile Justice Boards (JJBs), Presiding Officers of the Children Courts and officials dealing…

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After tense year of debates, US bishops to gather for retreat in June

WASHINGTON (DC)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

April 25, 2022

By Brian Fraga

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The U.S. Catholic bishops will gather for a retreatlike special assembly this summer in San Diego to focus on episcopal unity after a tense year and a half in which deep divisions surfaced among prelates over the issue of denying Communion to pro-choice Catholic politicians — including President Joe Biden.

There will be no public session for the June 2022 meeting of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops because the normal assembly business of committee reports and presentations are being set aside for prayer, reflection and episcopal fraternity, a spokeswoman for the conference told NCR.

Instead, the June 13-17 special assembly will feature spiritual talks given by Archbishop Anthony Fisher of Sydney, Australia, with time for private and communal prayer, Mass, social outings and “fraternal dialogue,” according to a memo sent to the bishops.

“As I mentioned to Archbishop Fisher, although this is not a formal retreat, it is a…

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Pope Francis appoints Dublin priest to senior position dealing with clerical abuse claims

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

April 24, 2022

By Sarah MacDonald

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Pope Francis has appointed an Irish priest to the number two position in the Vatican’s oldest and most high-profile department, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, which was formerly known as the Inquisition for its role in defending the Church from heresy.

Monsignor John Kennedy (53) from Dublin has worked for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) since 2003. He was appointed head of the Disciplinary Section of the CDF, which deals with serious canonical crimes and clerical abuse cases, in 2017.

In his new role as secretary of the CDF, he is now second in command to Spanish Cardinal Luis Ladaria who is due to retire in July as prefect.

Speaking to the Irish Independent from Rome, the priest who was ordained for the Archdiocese of Dublin in 1993, said he was, “very glad” to “play my part in making the Church a better place for…

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Priest shortage brings changes at Warren, Ashtabula Catholic church worship sites

YOUNGSTOWN (OH)
WFMJ-NBC/CW-21 [Youngstown OH]

April 25, 2022

By Mike Gauntner

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Only one new priest is being ordained in the Diocese this year and nine priests are retiring effective July 1, 2022.

Members of two Catholic Parishes in the Youngstown Diocese learned this past weekend where they’ll be attending mass starting this June.

Bishop David Bonnar has confirmed that St. James Church will be the worship site for Warren’s St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish Church, and Our Lady of Mount Carmel Church in Ashtabula will be the worship site for members of Our Lady of Peace Parish.

Parishes throughout the Diocese have been working together to adjust their Mass schedule because there are fewer priests.

Only one new priest is being ordained in the Diocese this year and nine priests are retiring effective July 1, 2022.

According to church law, each priest is not permitted to celebrate more than three Masses on the weekend.

With a shared pastor, Blessed Sacrament Parish…

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Explainer: Thorny issues face Boy Scouts bankruptcy judge

DOVER (DE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 21, 2022

By Randall Chase

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More than two years after the Boy Scouts of America sought bankruptcy protection to stave off a flood of lawsuits alleging child sexual abuse by Scout leaders and volunteers, a Delaware judge is weighing whether to confirm the BSA’s reorganization plan.

After a three-week evidentiary hearing and nearly a week of closing arguments, the judge is expected to rule within the next few weeks. The issues facing Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein are controversial and complex. No matter how she rules, the case will head next to a federal district court, with appeals likely to follow. Here is a brief look at bankruptcy case.

THE PLAN

The reorganization plan calls for the BSA and its 250 local councils, along with settling insurance companies and troop sponsoring organizations, to contribute some $2.6 billion in cash and property to a fund for abuse victims.

In return for those contributions, those entities would be…

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Appellate ruling rejects Albany diocese’s efforts to keep pedophile priests’ records secret

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union [Albany NY]

April 24, 2022

By Brendan J. Lyons

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Could potentially affect thousands of child abuse lawsuits pending in New York

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany’s effort to keep secret the psychological treatment records of suspected pedophile priests was rejected Thursday by a state appellate court in a ruling that could affect thousands of Child Victims Act cases in New York.

The appellate panel also upheld state Supreme Court Justice L. Michael Mackey’s decision ordering the diocese to turn over the personnel records of at least 48 priests whom the church determined had been credibly accused of child sexual abuse over a period stretching from 1946 to 1999.

The appellate panel also upheld state Supreme Court Justice L. Michael Mackey’s decision ordering the diocese to turn over the personnel records of at least 48 priests whom the church determined had been credibly accused of child sexual abuse over a period stretching from 1946 to 1999.

The ruling will…

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Court: Albany diocese must release priest treatment files

ALBANY (NY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 24, 2022

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A recent court ruling has opened the door to the release of psychological treatment records of priests in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany accused of child sexual abuse.

The Albany Times-Union reported the ruling came in a lawsuit by an alleged abuse victim from the 1980s who sought records detailing the treatment received by the Rev. Edward Pratt and other priests.

The diocese had argued that the records were subject to patient-physician privilege, but the appeals court wrote last Thursday that the privilege was waived because the priests’ records had been shared with then-Bishop Howard J. Hubbard.

The appellate court also upheld a lower court judge’s decision that ordered the diocese to turn over personnel records of dozens of priests determined to have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse from the 1940s through the 1990s, as well as notes of investigators hired by the diocese…

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April 24, 2022

They were promised an accounting of the sins of priests. Years later, they’re still waiting.

NEWARK (NJ)
Star-Ledger [Newark NJ]

April 24, 2022

By Ted Sherman

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Victims of sexual abuse by members of the clergy say they are still waiting for the state to fulfill its promise of a decades-long lookback investigating allegations of predators in the church. 

Todd Kostrub has been awaiting a reckoning for nearly four years.

New Jersey officials raised his hopes in September 2018, when they announced the creation of a special task force to investigate decades-old allegations of sexual abuse by members of the clergy that had long been kept secret.

Sparked by a Pennsylvania grand jury report that had graphically detailed the abuse by priests who had preyed upon children in that state for decades, then-New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal named former acting Essex County Prosecutor Robert D. Laurino to head the investigation. The task force would be given subpoena power through a grand jury to compel testimony and demand the production of documents from the…

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4-year sex abuse could see Kansas archdiocese liable, state Supreme Court says

TOPEKA (KS)
KSNT-TV [Topeka KS]

April 22, 2022

By Michael Dakota

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The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City could be held responsible for the sexual abuse a child endured in Shawnee County, according to the Kansas Supreme Court.

A lawsuit seeking damages from a priest and the archdiocese that employed the priest from 1980 to 1984 went before the judges, who remanded the case to the district court for further proceedings. A man, only known as John Doe H.B. from Shawnee County, filed the lawsuit seeking damages from abuse that happened when he was nine to 12 years old, from 1980 to 1984. The man said he repressed the memories of his abuse until media reports about abuse started showing up in the news in 2015.

Before the parties went to trial, defendants the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City and St. Matthew Parish in Topeka filed motions saying the claims were time-barred by an eight-year deadline. The district court denied…

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Vatican clears top John Paul II aide on charges of mishandling abuse claim

KRAKóW (POLAND)
Crux [Denver CO]

April 23, 2022

By Inés San Martín

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A former top aide to Pope John Paul II has been cleared by the Vatican of charges that he mishandled sex abuse cases in Poland, with a papal investigation concluding that his actions were “correct” and, as a result, “the Holy See decided not to proceed further.”

Cardinal Stanisław Dziwisz served as John Paul II’s priest-secretary and, later, as Archbishop of Krakow between 2005 and 2016.

The reason for the Vatican investigation of Dziwisz, 82, has never been officially stated, but it’s widely understood that it concerned accusations of negligence in handling abuse cases. The inquiry was led by Italian Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, a former president of the Italian bishops’ conference.

“I think that the Polish society has never believed these accusations,” Dziwisz told Crux. “I am glad and relieved that the statement is final and closes the matter, and that we will not come back to it anymore.”

“I feel…

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Podejrzany o pedofilię ksiądz popełnił samobójstwo. Kościół sprawdza zachowanie biskupa

ELBLąG (POLAND)
Onet [Kraków, Poland]

April 22, 2022

By Łukasz Cieśla

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Podejrzany o pedofilię ksiądz, po tym jak dostał zarzuty w prokuraturze, popełnił samobójstwo na plebanii. Dlatego prokuratura umorzyła sprawę, ale teraz, po 10 latach, wraca do niej archidiecezja warmińska. Po zawiadomieniu jednego z wiernych sprawdza, czy ówczesny biskup elbląski Jan Styrna tuszował sprawę księdza. — Na pierwszy rzut oka niczego sobie nie przypominam — stwierdził w rozmowie z Onetem biskup senior.

  • Skandal wybuchł 10 lat temu. Jak informowały wówczas media, w lutym 2012 r. matka ministranta z parafii w Nowym Stawie pod Malborkiem zawiadomiła biskupa Styrnę, że jeden z księży skrzywdził jej syna. Mimo to ksiądz wikary jeszcze przez trzy miesiące normalnie pracował
  • Nie widząc reakcji biskupa Styrny, matka 9-letniego ministranta poszła do prokuratury. Po trzech miesiącach, w maju 2012 r., ksiądz wikary dostał zarzuty molestowania seksualnego. Wtedy, bez informowania parafian o szczegółach, duchowny został zawieszony przez biskupa
  • — O szczegółach tej historii dowiedziałem się niedawno. Zawiadomiłem prymasa Polski, bo biskup…
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Religious Sect Accused of Condoning Child Marriage

HARARE (ZIMBABWE)
Global Press Journal [Washington D.C.]

April 24, 2022

By Linda Mujuru

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A powerful sect facing allegations of abuse is also under scrutiny for its close political ties, including to the country’s president – whose signature is needed to make a ban on child marriage a legal reality.

When Anna Machaya died while giving birth at the shrine of one of Zimbabwe’s most secretive religious sects, there was outcry across the country.

Anna was only a child, having turned 15 years old a mere 10 days before her July 15, 2021 death. She was carrying the baby of Hatirarami Momberume, her 26-year-old husband. It’s unclear when they married, but it was with the consent of her parents, who belong to the Johane Marange Apostolic Church, a conservative religious sect that has been accused of marrying underage girls to older men. When their daughter died, the parents tried to cover it up, police say.

“The parents openly lied to the police,” says a…

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Archdiocese urges Catholic community to stand up against child abuse

HAGåTñA (GUAM)
Pacific Daily News [Hagåtña, Guam]

April 24, 2022

By Julianne Hernandez

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The Archdiocese of Agana has been encouraging Catholic parishioners throughout the island to wear blue in support of National Child Abuse Prevention Month while participating in special “Blue Novenas” and “Blue Sunday” healing masses.

“Especially with the news now, you’ll always hear something about a child being abused or neglected going on in our islands,” said Tricia Tenorio, the Archdiocese of Agana’s Safe Environment Coordinator. “We pray for those families experiencing that and we all just have to work together and prevent child abuse in our churches, our homes and our island.”

Throughout the month of April, the Archdiocese has been working to raise awareness among Catholic youth with activities done within the 13 Catholic schools and 26 parishes.

Students at some Catholic schools have created art projects that are on display throughout their campuses and churches in a show of support, while other schools had students lead special prayers…

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Lawsuit: Knoxville diocese mishandled sex abuse claim

KNOXVILLE (TN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 22, 2022

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A lawsuit says the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville mishandled a report about allegations that a priest sexually abused a parishioner.

The lawsuit filed in Sevier County says Father Antony D. Punnackal locked an adult female plaintiff in a room on Feb. 17, 2020, and fondled her, the Knoxville News Sentinel reported. Police allegedly informed the diocese about the allegations against Punnackal before he was indicted by a grand jury, but no action was taken until the indictment, the complaint states.

The woman “rebuffed Punnackal but he continued his assault,” until he unlocked the door, according to the complaint filed in March, but sealed until recently.

Punnackal was suspended from his role as pastor of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Gatlinburg after being indicted in January on charges of sexual battery and sexual battery by an authority figure, according to records included with the lawsuit.

The diocese declined…

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Expert says too many laity ignore abuse crisis because ‘it doesn’t affect them’

(ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

April 23, 2022

By Inés San Martín

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When it comes to addressing the clerical sexual abuse, the role of the laity is central, according to experts.

However, according to one of the Colombian lay women at the center of the country’s bishops’ response, too many people avoid addressing it, because they don’t think it is a problem that affects them.

Ilva Myriam Hoyos, former Colombian attorney general for children, adolescents and family, is the head of the bishops’ working group for the protection of minors.

“We are obliged to act when we have knowledge of violence against a minor, but the reality is that there is still a certain indifference, an attitude of leaving the problem to someone else because the issue ‘does not touch me directly’,” she told Crux.

Crux spoke with Hoyos about what the church in Colombia is doing to address the clerical abuse crisis, including the errors made by the bishops, the laity, and the…

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DA will not file charges against Topeka priest accused of child sex crimes

TOPEKA (KS)
WIBW [Topeka KS]

April 23, 2022

By Sarah Motter

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The Shawnee Co. District Attorney said he will not file charges against a Topeka priest who had been accused of child sex crimes.

The Kansas Bureau of Investigation says it has completed its investigation in the case against Father John Pilcher for alleged sexual abuse of a minor and has submitted the findings to the Shawnee County District Attorney’s Office.

The findings were given to District Attorney Mike Kagay’s Office in February, however, the office made the decision to not file charges in April.

The DA said after a complete review of the investigation’s findings, his office decided not to charge Pilcher.

Pilcher was suspended from his post at Mater Dei Parish in late September after charges were filed pending the results of the investigation.

Copyright 2022 WIBW. All rights reserved.

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April 23, 2022

Confirmaron la condena de 12 años por abuso al cura Rosa Torino

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Nuevo Diario de Salta  [Salta, Argentina]

April 23, 2022

By Agustín Rosa Torino

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La Sala III del Tribunal de Impugnación no hizo lugar a los recursos de casación contra la sentencia que condenó a doce años de prisión efectiva al sacerdote Rubén Agustín Rosa Torino como autor responsable del delito de abuso sexual gravemente ultrajante agravado por ser el autor ministro de culto.

El sacerdote condenado se desempeñaba como responsable del instituto religioso denominado de los Hermanos Discípulos de Jesús de San Juan Bautista. Los abusos se concretaron en ese instituto del cual era fundador.

Para imponer la condena, el tribunal juzgador consideró probados el perjuicio físico, psíquico, moral y espiritual que los hechos causaron por tratarse del fundador y superior del instituto religioso destinado a formar a las personas en temas atinentes a la fe católica.

Puntualizaron los jueces Pablo Mariño y Rubén Eduardo Arias Nallar que en uno de los abusos el condenado actuó sobre el cuerpo de la víctima “sin su consentimiento y en…

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Dispute Over ‘BLM’ and ‘Pride’ Flags at Mass. Jesuit School Highlights Need to Communicate Catholic Identity

WORCESTER (MA)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

April 22, 2022

By Matthew McDonald

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A dispute in central Massachusetts between a bishop and a Jesuit school that is flying the “Black Lives Matter” flag and a rainbow flag is an example of how dioceses would benefit from developing and publicizing detailed policies about what Catholic institutions can and can’t do, an expert on Catholic education said.

“I try to look at these issues from both sides. And I think the only way we’re going to resolve the growing distance between our Catholic culture and what the Church believes is if our Catholic schools are much more clear as to what the beliefs are that they should hold to and what the policies are that they should follow,” said Patrick Reilly, president of the Cardinal Newman Society, a Virginia-based organization that promotes and defends what it calls “faithful Catholic education.”

Reilly told the Register people who run and work at Catholic institutions need to know…

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Opinion: Are lay cardinals next?

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

April 21, 2022

By Phyllis Zagano

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Pope Francis’ reforms raise the question of reviving the tradition of lay cardinals with women in the mix.  

Pope Francis is reorganizing the Vatican Curia — the church’s administrators and his senior staff — and may name new cardinals in June. 

Francis’ new apostolic constitution, “Praedicate Evangelium” (“Preach the Gospel”), issued last month, noted that the heads of dicasteries and other offices that manage the church need not be ordained. This highlighted Francis’ stated aim to give “more space” to women in the church.  

Most of the important dicasteries are as a matter of fact headed by cardinals. But if any Catholic can head a curial office, the question becomes, does the title come with the job? More importantly, is the title needed to do the job?

If the main duty of a cardinal is to be an adviser to the pope, and there is no ordination…

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After Backlash, German Diocese Stops Working with Planned Parenthood Affiliate

WüRZBURG (GERMANY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

April 21, 2022

By CNA Staff

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Following complaints by survivors of sexual abuse, a German diocese has announced it will no longer cooperate with a Planned Parenthood-affiliated organization, given accusations of “spreading pedophile-friendly views” in previous decades.

As CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner, reported, the Diocese of Würzburg announced on Wednesday it would cease its cooperation with the abortion-supporting organization that calls itself Pro Familia as “soon as possible.”

Bishop Franz Jung had announced this affiliation in March 2022, saying his diocese had asked the organization to “offer a first point of contact outside church structures for those affected [by sexual abuse] and their relatives.”

In a statement released April 20, the diocese cited concerns raised by the abuse survivors’ council, or Betroffenenbeirat. The body had pointed out that Pro Familia not only has a pro-abortion stance, but also stood accused of pushing for a “decriminalization of pedosexuality” in previous decades.

The German newspaper Tagesspiegel, in…

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Celebrity L.A. cantor Nathan Lam finds a soft landing after sexual misconduct allegations

BEVERLY HILLS (CA)
The Jewish News of Northern California [San Francisco, CA]

April 22, 2022

By Arno Rosenfeld, Forward

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When Nathan Lam was installed as the new cantor of Beverly Hills Temple of the Arts last month, he framed the move as an unexpected interruption of his retirement. It had, after all, been only a few months since Lam, 75, said publicly that he was anticipating “a long sabbatical” after leaving his high-profile posts as dean of a local seminary’s cantorial program and senior cantor at Stephen Wise Temple.

It turns out that Lam, who rose to prominence as a celebrity voice coach, had in fact left those posts under pressure following an accusation of sexual misconduct by a female rabbi and cantor who was once his student. Yet Temple of the Arts, an independent congregation with ties to billionaire Haim Saban, hired him despite knowing of investigations that found he’d violated the policies of both Wise Temple and the seminary, the Academy for Jewish Religion California.

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Kansas High Court refuses appeal of case accusing former Topeka priest of sexual misconduct

TOPEKA (KS)
WIBW [Topeka KS]

April 22, 2022

By Sarah Motter

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The timeline of alleged abuse by a Topeka priest at St. Matthew’s parish in the 1980s could have a significant impact on an ongoing child sexual abuse case.

In the matter of Appeal No. 121,768: John Doe H.B., an individual v. M.J., Individually and in His Capacity as a Priest at St. Matthew Parish, and The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas, a Kansas Not for Profit Corporation,the Kansas Supreme Court says it will try the archdiocese in the case but denied a motion for summary judgment by the defendant. Further, it said it would need the discovery to establish a timeline of the crimes which would decide what crimes could be tried due to Kansas law.

Court records indicate H.B. filed a lawsuit in August 2017 which alleged a priest – M.J. – sexually abused him in Shawnee County when he was a child – over 30 years…

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April 22, 2022

Vatican clears aide to John Paul II of negligence claims

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

April 22, 2022

By Nicole Winfield

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A Vatican investigation into allegations that the former top aide to St. John Paul II was negligent in handling sex abuse claims in his native Poland has cleared him of wrongdoing, the Vatican’s embassy in Poland said Friday.

A statement from the embassy, or nunciature, said the investigation conducted by a Holy See envoy determined that Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz’s actions were “correct, and therefore, the Holy See decided not to proceed any further.”

The Vatican sent Italian Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco to Poland in June 2021 to gather evidence and documentation into allegations of negligence while Dziwisz was archbishop of Krakow, Poland, from 2005 to 2016. A priest had said he gave Dziwisz a letter detailing allegations of abuse against another priest, and the presumed victim said he never heard back about what came of the case.

Bagnasco’s investigation did not consider Dziwisz’s tenure while he was at the Vatican and…

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Vatican clears Polish Cardinal Dziwisz of abuse cover-up allegations

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Pilot - Archdiocese of Boston [Boston MA]

April 22, 2022

By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

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The Vatican has wrapped up its own investigation and dismissed allegations that Polish Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz had covered up cases of the sexual abuse of minors by clergy in his archdiocese.

In a written statement released April 22, the Apostolic Nunciature in Poland said the Vatican found the cardinal had been “correct” in his actions after it examined the findings of an investigation led by Italian Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco.

Following a request by the Vatican, Cardinal Bagnasco, the retired archbishop of Genoa, was in Poland June 17-26, 2021, “to verify certain cases related to the actions of Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz” while he was archbishop of Krakow from 2005 until his retirement in 2016, the statement said.

“The analysis of the collected documentation made it possible to assess these actions of Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz as correct and, therefore, the Holy See decided not to proceed any further,” it said.

In his…

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BISHOP CHRISTOPHER COYNE NOW FOLLOWING IN THE STEPS OF BOSTON CARDINAL LAW’S CORRUPT FOOTPRINTS

BOSTON (MA)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

April 21, 2022

By Admin

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Bishop Christopher Coyne –– The Mouthpiece for Boston’s Cardinal Law. Shouldn’t We Expect More From Him?

For three tumultuous years (2002-2005), Fr. Christopher Coyne was Boston Cardinal Bernard Law’s hand-picked spokesman. Cardinal Law, in case memories have faded, has been the most notoriously corrupt and complicit Catholic official in the US, responsible for ignoring or hiding the crimes of hundreds of predatory clerics.

In that role, Coyne talked with hundreds – perhaps thousands – of journalists about clergy sex crimes and cover-ups. Surely, one would expect, Coyne would have learned painful lessons about how crucial it is to be open about these horrors. But sadly, that doesn’t seem to be the case. Because now, Fr. Coyne is Bishop Coyne, head of the Diocese of Burlington Vermont.

And in that role, like most of his brother bishops, Coyne is being less than fully transparent about child-molesting priests, nuns, seminarians, brothers, and…

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Vatican Big Brother

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Open Tabernacle

April 22, 2022

By Betty Clermont

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“Everyone was spied on in the Vatican,” Ignazio Ingrao, Panorama magazine’s Vatican expert, declared in a telegraph.co.uk report dated March 1, 2013. He said the efforts “seemed eerily like a Vatican Big Brother,” a reference to the motto “Big Brother is watching you” in George Orwell’s dystopian novel 1984.  

Recent testimonies in a Vatican financial crimes investigation and trial indicate the spying is ongoing.  

Msgr. Mauro Carlino gave his testimony in a Vatican courtroom this past March. As a former official in the Secretariat of State, he said he passed the Vatican Bank director’s phone number to a security expert hired by a Secretariat official “suggesting the phone was subsequently hacked,” The Pillar wrote.

Carlino said the Secretariat’s second highest official “authorized the action” because the bank director denied a loan to the Secretariat to cover their losses in the purchase of a London property, The Pillar reported on March 30.

Archbishop Edgar Peña Parra,…

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Lecture brings awareness to faith-based abuse in Africa

ABUJA (NIGERIA)
The Ithacan [Ithaca, NY]

April 5, 2022

By Olivia Stanzl — Assistant News Editor

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The Department of Politics hosted a presentation April 4 to bring awareness to abuse found in faith-based higher education in Africa.

Lady Ajayi, visiting assistant professor in the Department of Politics and a 2021–22 American Association of University Women International Fellow, created the presentation from research she conducted centered around faith-based abuse in Nigeria. About 15 people attended the event, including professors and students.

Ajayi said her research process has consisted of observing and monitoring the progress of institutions she and her colleagues work in. Ajayi said that interviewing survivors is the next phase of her research and that she recognizes that may be difficult. 

1-in-3 women globally will experience sexual or physical violence from an intimate partner or sexual violence from a non-partner, according to a 2021 World Health Organization study. The study also found that by the time women are 24, 1-in-4 who have already been in a relationship will have experienced violence…

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Canada’s first national indigenous Anglican archbishop resigns over sexual misconduct

TORONTO (CANADA)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

April 21, 2022

By Leonardo Blair, Senior Features Reporter

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Mark MacDonald, Canada’s first national indigenous Anglican archbishop, resigned from his post over “acknowledged sexual misconduct,” the church announced Wednesday.

In a statement providing few details of the misconduct committed by MacDonald, the Anglican Church of Canada said the 68-year-old married father of three, who assumed the post of bishop in 2007 before he was promoted to archbishop in 2019, “formally relinquished the exercise of the ordained ministry pursuant to Canon XIX, effective April 20, 2022.”

“Archbishop Mark MacDonald has resigned as National Indigenous Anglican Archbishop and has relinquished the exercise of ministry due to acknowledged sexual misconduct,” The Most Rev. Linda Nicholls, archbishop and primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, wrote in an open letter.

“This is devastating news. The sense of betrayal is deep and profound when leaders fail to live up to the standards we expect and the boundaries…

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Archbishop resigns from Anglican Church of Canada over sexual misconduct

TORONTO (CANADA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

April 21, 2022

By Kathryn Post, Religion News Service

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An archbishop in the Anglican Church of Canada has resigned due to “acknowledged sexual misconduct,” according to a letter from the denomination’s top official.

“With regret and sorrow, the Church announces receipt of allegations of sexual misconduct concerning Archbishop Mark MacDonald,” the April 20 announcement said, noting his resignation was effective immediately.

“This is devastating news,” the letter said. “The sense of betrayal is deep and profound when leaders fail to live up to the standards we expect and the boundaries we set.”

MacDonald had been national Indigenous Anglican archbishop of the ACC since 2019. He became the denomination’s first national Indigenous Anglican bishop in 2007, giving him oversight of Indigenous members of the denomination. He was previously bishop of Alaska in the Episcopal Church, from 1997-2007, and is known for his climate justice advocacy.

In March, MacDonald was awarded a Cross of St. Augustine by…

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Vatican clears Cardinal Stanisław Dziwisz of negligence in Polish abuse cases

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

April 22, 2022

By Hannah Brockhaus

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The Vatican has ended an investigation into allegations that Polish Cardinal Stanisław Dziwisz failed to investigate claims of clerical sex abuse when he was archbishop of Krakow, saying his actions were “correct.”

“The analysis of the collected documentation made it possible to assess these actions of Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz as correct and, therefore, the Holy See decided not to proceed any further,” the apostolic nunciature in Poland announced on Friday.

Dziwisz, 82, was archbishop of Krakow from 2005-2016, after more than three decades as the personal secretary of St. Pope John Paul II. 

According to the nunciature’s statement, Italian Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, archbishop emeritus of Genoa, visited Poland from June 17-26, 2021, to carry out an investigation on behalf of the Holy See.

Dziwisz, in his own statement on April 22, said he is “grateful to the Apostolic See for having judged the case fairly.”

Bagnasco, he said, “made every effort…

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More Indigenous Canadians meet with Pope Francis, amid talk of papal visit

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

April 21, 2022

By Kevin J. Jones

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As the Catholic Church continues to engage Canada’s Indigenous people and questions of historical abuse, Pope Francis met with a delegation of Metis people from Manitoba on Thursday.

The April 21 meeting with the pope was “a touching moment for many” and “tears were shed,” said David Chartrand, president of the Manitoba Métis Federation, the National Government of the Red River Métis.

He told CBC News that the delegation spoke about “the importance of hope and revitalization,” the need for churches to be a living part of their communities, the need for more priests, and the need for Catholic churches still to play a role.

A victim of clergy sexual abuse also spoke to the pope.

“That was very touching. I think everybody shed a tear,” Chartrand told CBC News. “The pope was very attentive. He watched very carefully. You could see the emotion in his face.”

Thursday’s visit was…

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Knoxville Catholic diocese, Gatlinburg Catholic priest sued over sexual assault allegations

GATLINBURG (TN)
Knoxville News Sentinel [Knoxville TN]

April 21, 2022

By Liam Adams

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A Sevier County lawsuit alleges the Catholic Diocese of Knoxville mishandled a report about a priest sexually assaulting a parishioner two years ago.

Father Antony D. Punnackal, the priest who is also a defendant in the suit, is on suspension from his role as pastor of St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Gatlinburg after a grand jury indicted him in January on charges related to the same incident. 

The lawsuit is the third ongoing civil case in the state against the Catholic Church for abuse related incidents. The other two are against the Knoxville diocese and the Diocese of Nashville for incidents in Knoxville and Murfreesboro, respectively. 

Plaintiffs in all three cases are unnamed. 

A spokesperson for the diocese declined to comment on the substance of the lawsuit.

“It would be inappropriate for the diocese to comment on allegations raised in an ongoing civil lawsuit,” spokesperson Jim Wogan said. 

Second lawsuit against Knoxville diocese:

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Defrocked priest formally charged with felony manslaughter for Rossmoor crash

ROSSMOOR (CA)
Danville San Ramon [Danville, CA]

April 21, 2022

By Bay City News Service

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A former Catholic priest removed from the clergy in a sex abuse scandal was charged Wednesday with gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated in Rossmoor by the Contra Costa County district attorney.

Walnut Creek police said 75-year-old Stephen Kiesle, of Rossmoor, was behind the wheel of a vehicle at about 9:15 p.m. Saturday night that struck a couple walking on the sidewalk on Tice Creek Drive near Fairlawn Court in Rossmoor. The collision killed 64-year-old Curtis Gunn and caused minor injuries to his wife, Laurelyn Gunn, both of Rossmoor.

Kiesle, who police said also suffered minor injuries, was extricated from his vehicle by the fire department and later arrested.

According to a news release issued Wednesday from the office of District Attorney Diana Becton, Kiesle was also charged with driving under the influence of alcohol and other special allegations for prior felonies.

Kiesle has a lengthy criminal history and is being…

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Judge rejects plea deal for suspended Indianapolis priest in minor sex abuse case

NOBLESVILLE (IN)
WRTV-TV, ABC-6 [Indianapolis IN]

April 21, 2022

By Vic Ryckaert

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A Hamilton County judge on Thursday rejected a plea deal for a suspended Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing a teenage boy in 2016.

Hamilton Superior Judge Michael Casati rejected the agreement that would have allowed David Marcotte to plead guilty to one count of dissemination of matter harmful to minor, a level 6 felony.

Indianapolis priest in minor sex abuse case Fr. David Marcotte

Photo by: ProvidedFr. David Marcotte, 32, pleaded guilty to one count of dissemination of matter harmful to minors, a level 6 felony.By: Vic RyckaertPosted at 3:30 PM, Apr 21, 2022 and last updated 3:41 PM, Apr 21, 2022

HAMILTON COUNTY — A Hamilton County judge on Thursday rejected a plea deal for a suspended Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing a teenage boy in 2016.

Hamilton Superior Judge Michael Casati rejected the agreement that would have allowed David Marcotte to plead guilty to one count of…

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Judge rejects sex abuse plea deal for suspended Indy priest

NOBLESVILLE (IN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 21, 2022

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A judge rejected a proposed plea agreement for a suspended Catholic priest accused of sexually abusing a teenage boy in 2016 and instead set a trial date for the cleric Thursday.

Hamilton County Superior Court Judge Michael Casati threw out the deal that would have allowed David Marcotte to plead guilty to one count of dissemination of matter harmful to minor in exchange for the state dismissing charges of child solicitation and vicarious sexual gratification.

Casati scheduled a jury trial for Oct. 10 on the three felony counts, WRTV-TV reported.

The boy was 14 and 15 when Marcotte allegedly texted him inappropriate photos and engaged in sexual conduct via social media platforms, court documents state.

Marcotte met the boy in 2016 when he worked at St. Malachy Church and School in Brownsburg. The abuse allegedly happened in 2017 and 2018, according to a probable cause affidavit.

At…

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Greenfield pastor pleads guilty to assaulting teen girl he was counseling

GREENFIELD (NH)
WMUR-TV, ABC-9 [Manchester NH]

April 20, 2022

By Tim Callery

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Christopher Lawton faces sentence of several years in prison

A pastor from Greenfield who provided Christian counseling has pleaded guilty to dozens of counts of sexual assaulting a teenage girl.

Christopher Lawton was indicted by a grand jury on charges of sexually assaulting a child under the age of 18. He is now facing several years in prison.

Lawton entered guilty pleas Wednesday afternoon to more than a dozen counts of aggravated felonious sexual assault. According to court documents, between February 2015 and June 2016, Lawton sexually assaulted a teenage girl he was counseling.

The victim was older than 13 and younger than 18 at the time, prosecutors said. Officials said Lawton was providing pastoral counseling to the victim and used his power of authority to coerce her into sexual acts on at least 16 different occasions.

“They occurred in the home. They occurred in cars,” Assistant Hillsborough County Attorney…

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April 21, 2022

Diocese of Camden to Pay Out $87.5 Million for Sexual-Abuse Claims

CAMDEN (NJ)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

April 20, 2022

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The amount, with the average amounting to about $300,000 per person, is one of the largest by a U.S. diocese.

The Diocese of Camden, New Jersey, will pay $87.5 million to approximately 300 alleged sexual-abuse victims, under a settlement reached Tuesday.

The payout, one of the largest by a U.S. diocese, would surpass the Archdiocese of Boston’s historic 2003 settlement of almost $85 million, The Associated Press reported. The Archdiocese of Los Angeles has the largest settlement to date, $660 million.

A U.S. Bankruptcy Court judge in Camden still must approve the settlement. 

Payments of the funds will roll out over a four-year period into a trust. The agreement also requires the diocese to keep “maintaining or enhancing” child-protection protocols.

The New York Times reported that payments will differ for each of the plaintiffs, with the average amounting to about $300,000 per person.

The settlement still allows the alleged victims to…

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Anglican archbishop resigns over sexual misconduct allegations

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Global News [Toronto, Canada]

April 20, 2022

By The Canadian Press

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The Anglican Church of Canada says an archbishop has resigned over allegations of sexual misconduct.

Mark MacDonald was the first national Anglican archbishop responsible for representing Indigenous church members when he was appointed in 2007.

In a letter posted on the church’s website, Rev. Linda Nicholls, who is primate of the Anglican Church of Canada, says prayers should be directed to the complainant.

The church says the resignation was tied to an independent investigation.

It did not provide further details on the allegations.

MacDonald was appointed to the position as part of the church’s effort to heal a long-standing rift with Indigenous people.

“The ripple effects will be felt throughout the Church both in Canada and internationally, but most especially within the Sacred Circle and Anglican Council of Indigenous Peoples,” Nicholls wrote.

MacDonald is originally from Duluth, Minn., and also served as bishop of the U.S. Episcopal Diocese of Alaska.

Bishop Sidney…

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Who is the bishop who wants the head of Catholic Charities Fort Worth to resign and why?

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

April 20, 2022

By Brayden Garcia

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Bishop Michael Olson of the Catholic Diocese of Fort Worth requested the resignation of the head of Catholic Charities Fort Worth earlier this month.

Olson, who’s served as bishop since 2014, called for the resignation of the chief executive officer, Christopher Plumlee, in a letter dated April 4. In the letter, Olson says he has a “sincere and deep lack of confidence” in Plumlee, stemming from an April 1 meeting about a women’s summit.

Plumlee told the Star-Telegram on Wednesday that stepping down would indicate that he’s done something wrong, which he hasn’t.

“I have no intention of resigning,” Plumlee said. “If I resigned, it would have intimated that I’ve done something that I should have resigned over. And I haven’t.”

This isn’t the first time the bishop has made headlines on personnel changes under his supervision. Here’s what we know about Bishop Michael Olson:

WHO IS BISHOP…

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Widow Slams Pedo Priest Accused in Drunken Car Crash That Killed Her Husband

WALNUT CREEK (CA)
Daily Beast [New York NY]

April 19, 2022

By Justin Rohrlich

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‘SENSELESS’

Stephen Kiesle, a disgraced former Roman Catholic priest in Oakland, now faces charges for allegedly killing a retiree while drunk driving.

Laurelyn Gunn and her husband, Curtis, loved trivia.

“Between the two of us, we had a lot of otherwise useless knowledge,” Gunn, 63, told The Daily Beast.

On Saturday night, the couple, who lived at Rossmoor, a 55-plus retirement community in Northern California, spent a few hours participating in a monthly trivia event held at the nearby clubhouse.

“A friend of ours put together a pretty strong team, and one of the guys on our team was this guy named Steve. I never knew his last name,” Gunn said. “And we were walking home from the trivia game when Steve, who was sitting across the table from us, killed Curt.”

“Steve” turned out to be Stephen Kiesle, a disgraced former Roman Catholic priest in Oakland who in 2004…

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Catholic diocese in New Jersey reaches $87.5M settlement with hundreds of sexual abuse victims

CAMDEN (NJ)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

April 19, 2022

By Liam Reilly

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A multimillion-dollar settlement between the Roman Catholic Diocese of Camden, New Jersey, and victims of child sexual abuse by members of the clergy has been announced by the diocese and a survivors committee.

About 300 victims who experienced child sexual abuse will share an $87.5 million trust established by the diocese and related Catholic entities, Jeff Anderson, who represents some of the survivors, told CNN.

The settlement will be funded over four years, and victims each will get their disbursements from an allocator, he said.

While both the Camden diocese and the survivors’ attorneys announced they have agreed to the terms, the official settlement is still a few weeks out, Anderson said. The parties are seeking court approval by early June, after bankruptcy lawyers draft official language and submit it the survivors for their assent.

The settlement follows numerous allegations made against other Catholic…

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Defrocked priest charged for DUI, vehicular manslaughter, lewd and lascivious acts on a child

WALNUT CREEK (CA)
KRON-TV [San Francisco CA]

April 19, 2022

By Alex Baker

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A defrocked Catholic priest who served time in prison for molestation has been charged by the Contra Costa District Attorney on three counts of gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated, driving under the influence of alcohol, and special allegations for prior felonies, according to a release from the Costa Contra County District Attorney’s Office.

Walnut Creek Police say that 75-year-old Stephen M. Kiesle, who has resided in Rossmoor since 2010, was driving in Rossmoor on the night of April 16 when he struck 64-year-old Curtis Gunn and his wife Laurelyn on a sidewalk. The couple was walking near their home on Tice Creek Drive near Fairlawn Court around 9:15 p.m. when Mrs. Gunn said a vehicle veered on to the sidewalk, striking her husband and sideswiping her.

When officers arrived, they found Mr. Gunn with life-threatening injuries and Mrs. Gunn with minor injuries. The vehicle was on its side and…

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Why sexual abuse mostly goes unreported in Africa

KINSHASA (DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF THE CONGO)
La Croix International [France]

April 20, 2022

By Lucie Sarr

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Exclusive interview with Sister Josée Ngalula, internationally recognized theologian who has spent the past 20 years offering pastoral assistance to sex abuse victims in Africa

St. Andrew’s Sister Josée Ngalula says there are at least “eight main reasons” why it is difficult for people in Africa to denounce sexual abuse, mostly due to cultural norms on the vast continent.

The 62-year-old Congolese religious sister last year became the first African woman ever to be named a member of the International Theological Commission (ITC), a body under the aegis of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Sister Josée teaches dogmatic theology at several theological institutes in Africa. And she has also spent the past 20 years providing pastoral assistance to sex abuse victims and the institutions that support them.

She has just compiled a report based on her work in this area. She spoke about it in this exclusive…

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An Island Retreat: Sin, Secrecy, and the Offshoring of Sexually Abusive Priests

ST. LOUIS (MO)
John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics - Washington University [St. Louis MO]

April 18, 2022

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[See video of a public lecture by Professor Kevin Lewis O’Neill.]

Between 1952 and 1968, a Roman Catholic religious order known as the Servants of the Paraclete sought, bought, and finally sold several small islands in the Caribbean for priests unable to stop “sin[ning] repeatedly with little children.” This talk details the Servants of the Paraclete’s mid-twentieth-century efforts at offshoring sexually abusive priests. It is an historical account that encourages scholars and activists alike to rethink the geography of clerical sexual abuse: though there is a generally agreed upon history that bishops throughout the United States transferred priests between parishes to evade suspicion and at times prosecution, this provides a previously untold account of how the U.S. Church leveraged developments in moral theology, pastoral psychology, and free market capitalism to secure transnational lines of flight for some of its most incorrigible abusers. 

Kevin Lewis O’Neill is the Director of the View Cache

April 20, 2022

$87.5 Million Settlement Reached with Diocese of Camden

CAMDEN (NJ)
Jeff Anderson and Associates

April 19, 2022

By Trusha Goffe

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Deal Allows Survivors to Pursue Insurance Coverage and Provides a Pathway to Enhanced Child Protection in the Diocese

Today, a partial settlement is being announced with the Diocese of Camden and survivors of sexual abuse who courageously filed lawsuits under the New Jersey Victims’ Rights Bill. In addition to the $87.5 million provided by the diocese, survivors and their attorneys still have the opportunity to take legal action against insurance companies that represent the diocese. Thus far, the insurance companies have played hardball and refused to meaningfully honor their insurance obligations. Furthermore, the settlement will include several child protection measures that are still being finalized. This will require the diocese to publicly disclose the history of abuse in the diocese.

“This day, this settlement with the Bishop of Camden is a powerful advance in accountability. The credit goes to the survivors for standing up for themselves and the truth. It…

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New Jersey Diocese Agrees to Settle Sex Abuse Claims for $87.5 Million

CAMDEN (NJ)
New York Times [New York NY]

April 19, 2022

By Ed Shanahan

Read original article

The settlement with the Camden diocese is among the largest such agreements involving the Catholic Church in the United States.

The Diocese of Camden, N.J., said on Tuesday that it had agreed to pay $87.5 million to settle claims made by hundreds of people who accused clergy members of sexually abusing them, one of the largest such settlements involving the Catholic Church in the United States.

In what may be a first for such litigation, the ultimate payout to the plaintiffs could be substantially higher, lawyers representing them said, because the settlement allows for further litigation against insurance companies for the diocese and related entities like parishes and schools.

“This is a triumph of courage, with all credit to the survivors for staying unified and strong,” Jeff Anderson, a lawyer for about a quarter of the roughly 300 plaintiffs, said.

In a statement announcing the settlement, Bishop Dennis J….

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Josh and Leona Kimes, who accused Carl Lentz of abuse, resign from Hillsong Boston

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

April 18, 2022

By Roxanne Stone

Read original article

Josh and Leona Kimes, the co-pastors of Hillsong Boston, announced on Monday (April 18) that the two have “made the difficult decision to resign.” The announcement of their departure comes a week after the results of an investigation into Hillsong New York City, where the couple worked previously, were leaked to a Christian online news outlet.

The Kimes’ departure is the most recent in a slew of upheavals at the global megachurch and multimedia empire, including the resignation two weeks ago of its global senior pastor Brian Houston after allegations of sexual misconduct. Co-founded by Houston in Australia nearly 40 years ago, the church had grown to some 30 locations before scandals closed three of its U.S. churches.

The couple, who helped launch Hillsong NYC under now-disgraced former pastor Carl Lentz before planting the Boston campus, were “ready for a fresh start,” Kimes said in an Instagram post featuring photos of…

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EXCLUSIVE: John MacArthur Covered Up Pastor’s Sexual Abuse, Witnesses Say

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

April 19, 2022

By Julie Roys

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In August 1979, Wendy Guay told her best friend that her father, Paul Guay—then a pastor at John MacArthur’s Grace Community Church—was regularly molesting her.

Her friend, Lisa (Tucker) Ward, told The Roys Report (TRR) that when she’d sleep over at Wendy’s house, Wendy would insist that they both go to bed fully clothed. Sometimes, Paul Guay would come in Wendy’s room in the middle of the night and would “hover over us,” Ward said.

But one night, the girls woke up and Guay was rubbing their backs. “Wendy woke up, freaked out, and grabbed me,” Ward said.

Soon afterward, Wendy divulged her secret to Ward. They then told Ward’s dad, John Tucker, a former missionary and then-member of Grace Community Church (GCC), about the abuse.

This began a process that led Paul Guay to confess his abuse directly to John MacArthur weeks later, according to Tucker, an alleged eyewitness to the…

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Ex-Jacksonville pastor appears in court on child sex abuse charges

JACKSONVILLE (FL)
WJAX-TV [Jacksonville, FL]

April 18, 2022

By ActionNewsJax.com News Staff

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Paul Dyal will be back in court on Wednesday to discuss his personal belongings.

A former Jacksonville pastor accused of sex crimes will remain in jail.

Action News Jax first told you in March when police linked Paul Dyal to physical and sexual abuse that happened over decades.

A judge ruled Monday that Dyal will be back in court Wednesday.

It’s for a potential bond setting and hearing, to talk about his personal belongings.

Investigators say Dyal along with two other men, Vernon Williamson and Jerome Teschendorf, abused children at the Jacksonville Assembly of the Body of Christ Church.

JSO said it has identified and spoken with numerous victims and witnesses and said it believes there are additional suspects, victims and witnesses.

Anyone with any information is asked to contact JSO at 904-630-0500 or to remain anonymous, contact Crime Stoppers at 1-866-845-TIPS.

If you or someone you know…

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Trial begins for former north AL pastor in sexual abuse case

FLORENCE (AL)
WDHN.COM [Dothan, AL]

April 18, 2022

By Kait Newsum

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The first day of a jury trial in a high-profile sexual abuse case in Lauderdale County is set to begin Monday morning.

The former pastor of Lighthouse Baptist Church in Florence, John Thomas Martin, admitted in a June 2019 pulpit confession that he had inappropriate relationships with young men, according to the Assistant District Attorney in Lauderdale County, Coty Hand.

According to the church’s website at the time, Martin had been the pastor since 2010. He immediately resigned from his role following the confession.

Less than a week after his confession, he was arrested and taken to the Lauderdale County Detention Center and placed on a $60,000 bond. In all, Hand said Martin admitted to four counts of sexual abuse of a child – those charges involve a victim younger than 16.

Following Martin’s confession, members of the church immediately contacted One Place of the…

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Mega dance company bred culture of sex, silence, dancers say

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 20, 2022

By Juliet Linderman, Martha Mendoza and Morgan Bocknek

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Every year, one of the world’s leading dance competition companies sells the dream of Hollywood fame to hundreds of thousands of ambitious young dancers hoping to launch careers on television, in movies and on stage.

But behind the bright lights and pulsing music, some dancers say they were sexually assaulted, harassed and manipulated by the company’s powerful founder and famous teachers and choreographers, according to a joint investigation by The Associated Press and the Toronto Star.

The problems date back to the founding of Los Angeles-based Break The Floor Productions; as the company has grown into an industry powerhouse, its leaders perpetuated a culture of sex and silence, according to interviews with dozens of former and current staff and students.

Break the Floor’s reach extends across the entertainment industry to some of the biggest names in music, television and social media. Alumni and faculty have danced on stage with Lady…

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U.S. Reform Movement Criticized Over Response to Historical Abuse Report

TEL AVIV-YAFO (ISRAEL)
Haaretz [Tel Aviv, Israel]

March 22, 2022

By Allison Kaplan Sommer

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Protest letter signed by hundreds of Reform Jews urges immediate action for greater accountability and transparency, following a report about alleged sexual misconduct in the movement in past decades

Nearly 500 past and present staff members of the Union for Reform Judaism are demanding “a concrete plan and public timeline for institutional review and reform” following a damning investigation released last month uncovering numerous instances of sexual misconduct, sexual assault and tolerance of a “sexualized culture” in the movement’s summer camps, Israel trips and youth movement activities over the past 50 years.

A protest letter carrying the signatures of both employees and volunteers at institutions run by the Union for Reform Judaism, including senior rabbis in the movement over the years, was delivered late last week to the URJ’s leaders. 

The letter urged immediate action for greater accountability and a clearer path to address the flaws in…

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Leaked Hillsong NYC report says sexual misconduct, abuse went beyond Carl Lentz

NEW YORK (NY)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

April 11, 2022

By Roxanne Stone

Read original article

Details from the leaked report paint a picture of a church leadership rife with abuse, sexual misconduct and secrecy.

The results of an investigation by an independent law firm into the culture of Hillsong NYC, the Manhattan site of the global megachurch, have been leaked to The Christian Post, and its reported contents paint a picture of a church leadership rife with abuse, sexual misconduct and secrecy.

Among the details reported by the Washington, D.C.-based news outlet include several extramarital affairs by the New York church’s former pastor Carl Lentz and spiritual abuse of volunteers and staff, as well as “multiple incidents of consensual or non-consensual sexual interaction between church leaders and congregants, staff, volunteers, or non-churchgoers,” according to the article published Monday (April 11).

The publication’s summary of the report also furthers details of the relationship between Lentz and his former nanny, Leona Kimes, who alleged in May 2021 that…

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Oakland priest convicted of child molestation allegedly kills federal worker while driving drunk

OAKLAND (CA)
San Francisco Gate [San Francisco, CA]

April 19, 2022

By Joshua Bote

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A defrocked Bay Area Catholic priest convicted of child molestation and accused by multiple families of sexual abuse and assault during his decades-long tenure has now been arrested for allegedly killing a man while driving drunk in a gated community.

Stephen Kiesle, the 75-year-old who was at the center of an Associated Press exposé on Pope Benedict, was arrested Sunday morning on suspicion of gross vehicular manslaughter and driving under the influence, Walnut Creek police told Rossmoor.com.

The crash took place at around 9:15 p.m. in the “active adults 55+” gated community of Rossmoor, Rossmoor.com reported, when Curtis and Laurelyn Gunn were walking home from an event at the nearby Gateway Complex. While approaching an intersection, a car going above the 25 mph speed limit hit the Gunns while driving on the curb, striking Curtis head-on and scraping Laurelynn. Curtis Gunn was pronounced dead at the scene, the news site said.

Kiesle…

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April 19, 2022

NJ diocese agrees to $87.5M deal to settle sex abuse suits

CAMDEN (NJ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 19, 2022

By Mike Catalini

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A New Jersey Catholic diocese has agreed to pay $87.5 million to settle claims involving clergy sex abuse with some 300 alleged victims in one of the largest cash settlements involving the Catholic church in the United States.

The agreement between the Diocese of Camden, which encompasses six counties in southern New Jersey on the outskirts of Philadelphia, and plaintiffs was filed with U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Camden on Tuesday.

The settlement must still go before a U.S. bankruptcy judge. If approved, the settlement would exceed the nearly $85 million settlement in 2003 in the clergy abuse scandal in Boston, although it’s less than other settlements in California and Oregon.

“I want to express my sincere apology to all those who have been affected by sexual abuse in our Diocese,” Bishop Dennis Sullivan said in a statement. “My prayers go out to all survivors of abuse and I pledge my…

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Montreal Catholic Church ombudswoman details delays, resistance to complaint process

MONTREAL (CANADA)
Toronto Star [Toronto, Canada]

April 19, 2022

By Morgan Lowrie, The Canadian Press

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An independent ombudswoman hired by the Catholic Church of Montreal said Tuesday she’s encountering delays and resistance to her efforts to address complaints, warning that the process to tackle abuse and misconduct risks becoming a “smokescreen.”

The third quarterly report published Tuesday by Marie Christine Kirouack said that in recent months she’s faced a number of problems, including non-compliance with deadlines, delays and a failure by church officials to follow up with people who are subject to complaints.

Kirouack, who was hired in May 2021, noted that addressing abuse and other complaints requires a “major culture change” that will only happen if it comes “clearly and unequivocally directly from above.”

“It is only in this way that people reluctant to change will follow in the footsteps of this reform,” she wrote. “Thus and only thus, will they be able to grasp that their future and the future of their church…

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AG Kaul Releases Update in Advance of One-Year Anniversary of Clergy and Faith Leader Abuse Initiative

MADISON (WI)
Wisconsin Department of Justice [Madison WI]

April 19, 2022

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Over 200 completed reports of over 150 abusers, 51 reporting for the first time

As Wisconsin approaches the one-year anniversary of the launch of Wisconsin’s Clergy and Faith Leader Abuse Initiative, AG Kaul is releasing additional information and highlighting the successes.

“In the year since we launched the Clergy and Faith Leader Abuse Initiative, over 200 people have reported information, and a District Attorney has criminally charged a defendant in a previously unreported case,” said AG Kaul. “We continue to encourage anyone with information about clergy and faith leader abuse to report that information.”

Wisconsin DOJ Takes Every Report Seriously

Shortly after launching the initiative, DOJ organized training for victim advocates in Wisconsin so that they would be prepared to support survivors of sexual abuse by clergy and faith leaders. The training offered live presentations by national experts on working with survivors of clergy sexual abuse. Victim advocates at DOJ…

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Details lacking in Kaul clergy sex probe

MADISON (WI)
APG Media of Wisconsin [Ashland WI]

April 19, 2022

By Benjamin Yount

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Wisconsin’s attorney general said his investigation into clergy sex abuse across the state has resulted in 1,000 calls to his tipline, 204 reports, and one criminal case. But there are some questions the AG is not answering.

Kaul launched his investigation into the Catholic Church in Wisconsin one year ago. On Tuesday, he provided an update on his progress.

“As of April 18, the Wisconsin Department of Justice Clergy and Faith Leader Initiative has received a total of 204 completed reports to the toll-free tip line and the online reporting tool accusing more than 150 individuals of abuse. Over 1,000 calls have been made to or from the tip line, including repeat calls from survivors who remember additional information or are looking for follow up information,” Kaul said in a statement.

Kaul said his office also received what he calls a “significant number of reports from…

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Kaul’s clergy abuse generates 200 reports in 1 year

MADISON (WI)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 19, 2022

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Attorney General Josh Kaul’s investigation into clergy abuse has generated about 200 reports and one criminal case in the year since it was launched, state Department of Justice officials said Tuesday.

Kaul began the investigation in April 2021, saying he wanted to develop a full picture of clergy sexual abuse over decades. He has encouraged victims to contact the Justice Department and tell their stories.

As of Monday, the agency had received 204 reports accusing more than 150 people of abuse. The investigation has resulted in one criminal case so far against a church camp counselor accused of touching a 10-year-old’s genitals in Waushara County in 2009. That case is still pending.

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One year into clergy investigation, state has received more than 200 reports of abuse

MADISON (WI)
Journal Sentinel [Milwaukee WI]

April 19, 2022

By Laura Schulte

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A year after Attorney General Josh Kaul announced a formal investigation into abuse by members of the clergy in Wisconsin, more than 200 reports have been made to the Department of Justice. 

Those include more than 150 individuals accused of abuse, and 51 people were reporting an instance of abuse to law enforcement for the first time, according to a Tuesday morning press release.  

Kaul said in an interview that the number of survivors who reported to the department for the first time signals their trust. 

“One of our goals when we launched this was to provide a safe and trusted place for survivors to support,” he said. “Having 51 people come forward and report information who had never previously reported to law enforcement or religious authorities, to me, indicates that we have succeeded in providing a place where survivors trust the process and know they will be treated with dignity…

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Notorious Oakland Pedophile Priest Charged With Killing Pedestrian While Driving Drunk

WALNUT CREEK (CA)
KNTV - NBC Bay Area [San Jose CA]

April 19, 2022

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[VIDEO]

A notorious defrocked Oakland priest accused of sexually abusing dozens of children was arrested Saturday night after allegedly hitting and killing a pedestrian while driving drunk in a Walnut Creek retirement community, NBC Bay Area’s Investigative Unit has confirmed.

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Buffalo priests accused of sexual abuse suing Diocese

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB [Buffalo NY]

April 18, 2022

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Two priests who are accused of sexual abuse are suing the Buffalo Diocese.

Fathers Arthur Smith and Pat Ipolito claim the Diocese cut their pensions.

Both men receive about $2,000 a month. The lawsuit says the priests did not take part in a monitoring program, which lead to them losing all or part of their pensions.

The Diocese responded to the lawsuit tonight, saying in part, “Failure to comply entails the potential forfeiture of Diocesan financial support and/or pension benefits, as outlined by Bishop Fisher in October 2021.”

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The Cover-Up Continues

()
Crisis Magazine [Manchester NH]

April 19, 2022

By Janet E. Smith

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Those who have become familiar with the fate of persons sexually abused by priests know that victims experience the indifference (or worse) of Church authorities to their abuse as a tremendous betrayal—something that does more harm than the abuse itself. They experience the Church more as Judas than the Bride of Christ. Indifference, dismissal, cover-up, and protection of the predator are common. Many books, such as Leon Podles’ Sacrilege, document that such has been the response to victims of priestly sexual abuse for nearly a century and perhaps longer.

Sadly, these deplorable responses are still with us, and even the involvement of lay people in the process has not led to the changes that are absolutely necessary for a Church that claims to be Christ’s Church.

For over a year, I have been working closely with a woman (I will call her Kate) who back in the early seventies, when she was 9 and…

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Suspended Carmel priest sues man who brought allegations of grooming forward

CARMEL (IN)
Indianapolis Star [Indianapolis, IN]

April 19, 2022

By MJ Slaby

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The Carmel priest who was “suspended from public ministry” in March, is suing a man who came forward with allegations about the priest’s behavior. 

James De Oreo, who was an associate pastor at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, was suspended March 11 after allegations of “inappropriate conduct with a minor.”

The priest filed a lawsuit April 4 against the man who wrote two letters in 2021 to the Diocese of Lafayette-in-Indiana about De Oreo’s behavior toward him when he was a teen attending St. Alphonsus Liguori Catholic Church in Zionsville. IndyStar is not naming the man because he was a minor at the time of the alleged abuse.

The man said he was considering becoming a priest, and De Oreo used his position of power to emotionally abuse, sexually harass and groom him for sexual abuse. This led to an eating disorder and PTSD as well…

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Christian Brothers Minimize Clergy Abuse by Omitting Pertinent Details of Predatory Brothers

CHICAGO (IL)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

April 7, 2022

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Last year, we pointed out that a Catholic religious order, the Christian Brothers, posted the worst list of child molesting clerics we have ever seen. They listed predators only because they had to. They provided ZERO information about the accused: not where they are or were, not when they were ordained, not whether they pled guilty or admitted guilt or if they were sued dozens of times. . .NOTHING. They also restricted their list to just those clerics who faced two or more abuse reports. We are happy to report that a little more light has been shone upon this secretive outfit. But the new information has surfaced not because of, but in spite of, the order’s top officials.

It comes via the same source which has done so much to protect kids and expose criminals: the secular, mainstream media. Specifically, in a series of articles over…

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Andrew Shubin: Statute of limitations reform will enable justice to be served

HARRISBURG (PA)
Tribune-Review [Pittsburgh PA]

April 18, 2022

By Andrew Shubin

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Thank you, Gov. Tom Wolf, for pressing the Pennsylvania Legislature to immediately enact civil child sexual abuse statute of limitations reform so that thousands of middle-aged and older survivors can bring predators and their institutional enablers to justice.

For far too long, perpetrators and the religious institutions, schools, summer camps, athletic organizations, and medical and child care providers that enabled their abuse found refuge in an inadequate statute of limitations that rewarded them for running out the clock on victims who often need decades to come to terms with their abuse and the forces that have silenced them.

Credible statute of limitations reform must include providing a “window” to all sexual abuse survivors, no matter their age, to file civil claims against their abusers and the organizations that enable the abuse. Victims, no matter their age, must have access to justice and the right to demand accountability for…

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Josh and Leona Kimes, who accused Carl Lentz of abuse, resign from Hillsong Boston

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

April 18, 2022

By Roxanne Stone

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In May of last year, Leona Kimes accused former lead pastor of Hillsong NYC, Carl Lentz, of sexually abusing her while she was working as a nanny for Lentz’s children.

Josh and Leona Kimes, the co-pastors of Hillsong Boston, announced on Monday (April 18) that the two have “made the difficult decision to resign.” The announcement of their departure comes a week after the results of an investigation into Hillsong New York City, where the couple worked previously, were leaked to a Christian online news outlet.

The Kimes’ departure is the most recent in a slew of upheavals at the global megachurch and multimedia empire, including the resignation two weeks ago of its global senior pastor Brian Houston after allegations of sexual misconduct. Co-founded by Houston in Australia nearly 40 years ago, the church had grown to some 30 locations before scandals closed three of its U.S. churches.

The couple,…

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Diocese moves to reinstate freeze on cases

ROCHESTER (NY)
Rochester Beacon [Rochester NY]

April 18, 2022

By Will Astor

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In a bid to keep parishes and officials, including Bishop Salvatore Matano, from answering scores of sexual-abuse allegations against church officials in state court, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester has asked for a Bankruptcy Court trial.

Known as adversarial proceedings or APs for short, such trials look to have a bankruptcy judge resolve differences between parties in a case. Parties not satisfied with a bankruptcy judge’s ruling can appeal the ruling to a federal district court.

As the Rochester Beacon previously reported, the expiration of a Bankruptcy Court stipulation putting the state court sexual-abuse claims against the church on hold came after one of the two parties who struck an agreement some two years ago to halt the state court cases declined to renew the pact. 

Previously, parties to that pact—the bankruptcy’s official creditors committee and the diocese—had renewed the March 2020 agreement 11 times. Late last month, one…

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April 18, 2022

2 accused priests sue Buffalo Diocese after their pensions are cut

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

April 18, 2022

By Jay Tokasz

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Two retired Buffalo priests accused of sexually abusing minors are suing the Buffalo Diocese to restore their pensions, which were reduced or eliminated after the priests refused to submit to a monitoring program pushed by the State Attorney General’s Office.

The Rev. Arthur J. Smith and the Rev. Pascal D. Ipolito maintain that they are not child molesters and haven’t had a fair hearing to defend themselves against the accusations. They also said they earned the pensions that were promised to them when they became priests decades ago and when they retired a few years ago.

“Our position is that the (pension) contract clearly lays out that they have a vested right. It cannot be amended, modified, whatever it may be,” said attorney Mark J. Byrne, who filed a lawsuit Sunday in Erie County State Supreme Court.

The lawsuit might be the first of its kind in the country of…

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Bishops from four continents express concern about Germany’s Synodal Path

WASHINGTON (DC)
Crux [Denver CO]

April 13, 2022

By Greg Erlandson, Catholic News Service

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In an open letter, 74 bishops from North America, Africa, Italy and Australia have expressed their “growing concern” about the German Synodal Path process and content, warning about its “potential for schism.”

Joining recent letters of concern by the Nordic and Polish bishops, the “fraternal open letter to our brother bishops in Germany” said “the Synodal Path’s actions undermine the credibility of church authority, including that of Pope Francis.”

“By its destructive example, it may lead some bishops, and will lead many otherwise faithful laypeople, to distrust the very idea of ‘synodality,’ thus further impeding the church’s necessary conversation about fulfilling the mission of converting and sanctifying the world,” the letter concluded.

Signatories included Nigerian Cardinal Francis Arinze, South African Cardinal Wilfred Napier, Australian Cardinal George Pell, and U.S. Cardinal Raymond L. Burke.

All told, 49 bishops from the U.S., four from Canada, 19 Africans, one Italian and one Australian…

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The war has helped to resurrect Poland’s Catholic church

WARSAW (POLAND)
The Spectator [London, England]

April 16, 2022

By Luke Coppen

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In my wife’s home city of Wroclaw, there’s a luxury hotel named after John Paul II. It has always seemed strange that the Catholic church sanctioned this. Giant chandeliers and glitzy bathrooms weren’t really what St John Paul stood for, and since the hotel opened in 2002 it had seemed as much a monument to the church’s decline as a tribute to a saint. But everything changed with the war in Ukraine. Some 2.5 million Ukrainians have fled to Poland since Russia’s invasion and the hotel is currently home to more than 100 refugees. It’s as if the building has finally discovered its real purpose.

What’s true of the John Paul II hotel is true more widely of the Polish Catholic church. The response of Polish Catholics to the war was immediate, all-out and magnificently unbureaucratic. A vast chain of care was formed that ran from nuns offering cups of…

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Pope Francis’ visit to Canada could include stops in Alberta, Quebec: source

TORONTO (AUSTRALIA)
Global News [Toronto, Canada]

April 15, 2022

By Irelyne Lavery

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Warning: This story deals with disturbing subject matter that may upset and trigger some readers. Discretion is advised.

Pope Francis could be making stops in Alberta and Quebec during his visit to Canada, Global News has learned.

“But, trip details have not been finalized yet,” a source with knowledge of the visit confirmed to Global News on Friday.

Plans for a papal visit were initially announced two weeks ago, when Indigenous delegates from Canada were in Rome.

During their visit to the Vatican, the Pope also delivered an apology for the harm caused by some clergy members who operated the church and state sponsored residential school system.

The apology came over 25 years after the last residential school closed in Canada. It has been met with mixed opinion over whether it was sufficient.

‘As a child when I was in residential school…I never thought I’d see the day that I would see the Pope…

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Portugal: Commission gets 290 victims’ statements of sexual abuse in catholic church since January

LISBON (PORTUGAL)
Lusa News Agency [Lisbon, Portugal]

April 12, 2022

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The independent commission created in January to investigate sexual abuse in the Portuguese Catholic church has already received 290 valid testimonies from victims and 16 cases have already been referred to the prosecutor.

In an assessment of the first three months of work, made on Tuesday at a press conference at the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon, the former minister of justice Alvaro Laborinho Lúcio, who is part of the commission, said that among the 290 validated testimonies, 16 have not yet been invalidated and, therefore, have been referred to the prosecutor.

Created in January to investigate sexual abuse in the Portuguese catholic church, the independent commission had already received 214 statements from victims, aged between 15 and 88, in its first month of activity.

Complaints and statements can be sent to the commission by completing an online survey at darvozaosilencio.org, by mobile phone +351917110000 (daily between 10am and 8pm),…

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French Catholic Church in crisis: Trainee priests grapple with aftermath of abuse scandal

PARIS (FRANCE)
France 24 [Paris, France]

April 11, 2022

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Six months after the publication of the Sauvé report, which revealed the scale of sexual abuse over decades in the French Catholic Church, what effect has the crisis had on aspiring priests? Despite the atmosphere of mistrust currently enveloping the Church, some forty students at the diocese in Orléans are training to join the priesthood while attempting to learn from the errors of those before them. Our France 2 colleagues report, with FRANCE 24’s Emerald Maxwell.

Programme prepared by Emerald Maxwell.

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Texas Youth Pastor Charged with Child Molestation; More Victims Come Forward

MESQUITE (TX)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

April 13, 2022

By Sarah Einselen

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More victims are coming forward after the arrest of a Texas youth pastor on multiple charges related to child molestation, police say.

Police in Mesquite, just east of Dallas, announced Monday they had arrested Conner “Jesse” Penny on accusations he had sexual contact multiple times from 2015-2018 with a girl under 17 years old.

Penny, 32, was youth pastor at Inspiration Church, a Southern Baptist church in Mesquite, at the time of his arrest last Thursday, police stated in a press release. He had also worked for the local schools and in the city of Mesquite’s after-school program, according to police.

He’s being held on felony charges of continuous sexual abuse of a child under age 14, indecency with a child, and aggravated sexual assault of a child, according to Dallas County Jail records. Total bond has been set at $2.5…

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German bishops’ president responds to letter warning of schism risk in synodal path

LIMBURG (GERMANY)
Catholic Sentinel [Archdiocese of Portland OR]

April 17, 2022

By Catholic News Agency

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Bishop Georg Bätzing of Limburg, president of the German bishops’ conference, responded Thursday to a letter warning the country’s synodal path could lead to schism by defending the process as a response to abuses in the Church.

“The Synodal Path is our attempt in Germany to confront the systemic causes of the abuse and its cover-up that has caused untold suffering to so many people in and through the Church,” Bishop Bätzing wrote April 14 to Archbishop Samuel Aquila of Denver. The German bishop’s letter was published April 16 at the German bishops’ conference website.

More than 80 bishops from around the world, including Archbishop Alexander Sample of Portland, signed an April 11 open letter sent by Archbishop Aquila that warned sweeping changes to church teaching advocated by the synodal path may lead to schism.

The Synodal Path is a process that brings together German lay people and Catholic bishops…

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Pope Francis and a Dark Chapter of Canadian History

TORONTO (CANADA)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

April 17, 2022

By Michael Taube

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A welcome and heartfelt apology for Catholics’ role in the country’s abusive residential school system.

Pope Francis has asked for forgiveness for the Roman Catholic involvement with Canada’s residential school system. His heartfelt contrition may bring some reconciliation for the indigenous people affected by this disturbing part of my country’s history and the many Canadians frustrated, saddened and embarrassed by it.

The gesture was long awaited by indigenous leaders and came after an intense week of discussions between Pope Francis and First Nations, Inuit and Métis delegations. Before an audience that included 200 bishops as well as indigenous delegates and their supporters in the Clementine Hall of the Vatican’s Apostolic Palace, on April 1 the pontiff expressed “sorrow and shame for the role that a number of Catholics, particularly those with educational responsibilities, have had in all these things that wounded you, and the abuses you suffered and the lack…

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Bishop Cozzens on pro-life witness, clergy sex abuse, and Eucharistic revival

CROOKSTON (MN)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

April 17, 2022

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“When I live a Eucharist-centered life,” says the Bishop of Crookston, Minnesota, “I can offer my struggles and difficulties in union with Jesus to the Father, and my daily life can be part of the redemption of the world.”

Bishop Andrew H. Cozzens, 53, is the Bishop of Crookston, Minnesota. He grew up in Denver, Colorado, the youngest of three children in a devout Catholic family. His father was an aerospace engineer and his mother a school teacher.

He is a graduate of Benedictine College in Atchison, Kansas. He was active in the pro-life organization Operation Rescue, and was arrested seven times and jailed for two weeks for physically blocking access to abortion clinics. He was also a missionary with NET ministries and is currently chairman of its board of directors. During his time as a missionary, the future…

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April 17, 2022

Indigenous delegates stand with Pope Francis after the Pontiff delivered an apology for the Catholic Church’s role in Canada's residential school system at the Vatican on April 1, 2022. HO-Vatican Media / The Canadian Press

Making peace with the past

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

April 17, 2022

By Olivia Stefanovich

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[Photo above: Indigenous delegates stand with Pope Francis after the Pontiff delivered an apology for the Catholic Church’s role in Canada’s residential school system at the Vatican on April 1, 2022. HO-Vatican Media / The Canadian Press]

The Pope’s residential school apology made history. But for Ted Quewezance and Archbishop Donald Bolen, atonement starts at home.

WARNING: This story contains distressing details.

The morning after returning to Canada from a weeklong trip to Rome, Ted Quewezance walked outside his hotel near the Toronto Pearson International Airport for a smoke and quietly asked himself what he should do next.

Later that day, Quewezance, 69, would return to his home in Keeseekoose First Nation, about 285 kilometres northeast of Regina, with what he went abroad to obtain: a commitment from Pope Francis to visit Canada soon and an initial apology for the conduct of some Roman Catholic Church members at residential schools.

Quewezance,…

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Attorney General: No Chance at Parole for West

JACKSON (MS)
Scott County Times [Forest MS]

April 15, 2022

By Kevin Edwards

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[From the Greenwood Commonwealth]

A former Franciscan friar convicted of sexually abusing a Greenwood grade-school student in the 1990s will have no chance at parole, according to the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office.

Paul West, 62, was found guilty by a Leflore County jury Wednesday of one count of sexual battery and one count of gratification of lust for preying on  La Jarvis Love when Love was a student at St. Francis of Assisi Elementary School. West was a teacher and later principal at the school.

“Sexual abuse of a child is a heinous crime that deserves serious punishment,” said Attorney General Lynn Fitch in a statement. “Children looked up to this man as a teacher and a priest. They trusted him and he failed them in every way. My Office will always work tirelessly to protect and defend the vulnerable from predators like this.”

West was a Franciscan brother, not a…

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Betrayal Is Hard to Get Past

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Winona Times [Winona MN]

April 15, 2022

By Tim Kalich

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[From the Greenwood Commonwealth]

This is not an uplifting Easter story. It’s more of the Good Friday variety, when mankind’s worst instincts are on display, prompting feelings of anger, betrayal and profound sadness.

Following former Franciscan friar Paul West’s conviction this past week by a Leflore County jury, I received a call from Arthur Baselice Jr., a retired Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, police detective who now lives in New Jersey.

He had been following the case of West, who was convicted and given what amounts to a life sentence for sexually abusing La Jarvis Love in the 1990s, when Love was a student at St. Francis of Assisi Elementary School and West was a teacher and later principal.

Around the same time that West was preying on Love and allegedly two of Love’s cousins, another friar from the same Wisconsin-based Franciscan province was allegedly abusing Baselice’s son and namesake, Arthur Baselice III.

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“Faith Can Survive Without Buildings,” says Local Priest

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
VOCM [St. John's NL, Canada]

April 17, 2022

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This could be the very last Easter Sunday service in some Roman Catholic churches in Newfoundland, but a local priest is putting this Easter in perspective.

Father Paul Lundrigan of Holy Trinity in Torbay says some parishes, including his, are grappling with the legal obligations to the victims of abuse at Mount Cashel orphanage, while trying to find a way forward in the practice of their faith.

He says it is a time of great reflection, but as COVID and other world events have taught them, there are strengths within the Church family, and the faith can survive without buildings as history has already proven.

The early Christians were ostracized and practiced their faith in homes and other places.

Lundrigan says the faith survived like that for a long time, which sends the message that it’s the gathering that matters, not where it happens.

Lundrigan also draws inspiration from the strength…

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Cologne Catholic Church funds paid for priest’s gambling debts

COLOGNE (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

April 16, 2022

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The revelation that a priest’s debts were repaid from a fund to compensate sex abuse victims has prompted outrage in Cologne’s Catholic community.

Catholics in the archdiocese of Cologne on Saturday expressed shock that the church had paid more than €1 million to clear the private debts of a priest.

The news provoked particular outrage as it emerged that the money came from a compensation fund for the victims of sexual abuse, who have so far received only a small fraction of the amount used for the priest’s debt.

What are the revelations?

As far as has become known so far, the diocese initially paid almost €500,000 ($540,000) for the priest to clear his gambling debts.

Since the money was apparently not taxed correctly, a total of €650,000 in income tax, including interest, had to be paid in arrears. The money was said to have been paid from a social fund…

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April 16, 2022

Explainer: Why is Indonesia’s sexual violence law so important?

MEDAN (INDONESIA)
Aljazeera [Dohar, Qatar]

April 14, 2022

By Aisyah Llewellyn

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With the strike of a gavel, Indonesia’s controversial sexual violence bill has been passed into law by parliament.

As legislators took to their feet on Tuesday to applaud the passage of the long-awaited bill, House Speaker Puan Maharani appeared visibly moved.

The legislation was “a gift for all Indonesian women,” she said.

The bill, known as RUU TPKS, has been a long time coming.

First proposed in 2012, it faced stiff opposition from conservative groups who argued over everything from its name to the contents of the law itself, requiring repeated revisions in an effort to ease its passage.

Elizabeth Ghozali, a lecturer in criminal law at Santo Thomas Catholic University in the city of Medan, told Al Jazeera that the bill was a landmark piece of legislation that finally puts the rights of victims first.

“Previously, Indonesian law was only focused on punishment in sexual violence cases. That was seen as…

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Arizona court won’t halt sex suits naming Boy Scouts, others

PHOENIX (AZ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

April 16, 2022

By Bob Christie

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Arizona victims of long-ago child sex abuse can proceed with lawsuits against groups like the Boy Scouts of America after the state Supreme Court rejected claims that a state law extending victims’ right to sue was unconstitutional.

Arizona is among many states that have reacted to child sex abuse in recent years by allowing victims of even decades-old abuse to sue groups that didn’t protect them from predators. That has led to lawsuits against the Roman Catholic Church, Scouts and others.

The high court last week rejected appeals by Big Brothers Big Sisters of America and its affiliates in central and southern Arizona of lower court rulings that found a 2019 law extending the statute of limitations was constitutional.

The rulings appear to be the first to directly address whether the Arizona law is legal, according to Phoenix attorney Robert Pastor, who represents victims in the two cases the high…

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Catholic friar sexually abused students in 1990s, jury finds. Now he’s prison bound

GREENWOOD (MS)
Charlotte Observer [Charlotte NC]

April 15, 2022

By Cassandre Coyer

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A former Catholic friar was sentenced to decades in prison after he sexually assaulted multiple students during the 1990s, officials say.

Following a two-day trial, Paul West, 62, from Wisconsin, was convicted of one count of sexual battery and one count of gratification of lust, according to a news release from Mississippi’s Attorney General’s Office.

West was a teacher and principal at the St. Francis of Assisi School in Greenwood, a city about 100 miles north of Jackson, from July 1993 until October 1998, according to a statement from the Catholic Diocese of Jackson.

Investigators said that West molested multiple children during his years at the school. Decades after the assaults, former students came forward and shared testimonies of “the repeated sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of West,” according to the release.

“Children looked up to this man as a teacher and a priest. They…

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‘I want justice:’ Clergy sex abuse survivor calls on Fall River Diocese to provide ‘substantial settlement’

FALL RIVER (MA)
The Republican - MassLive [Springfield MA]

April 16, 2022

By Kiernan Dunlop

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Richard Eldridge stood outside of the Diocese of Fall River’s Chancery office Wednesday demanding a “substantial settlement” for abuse he allegedly suffered at the hands of Father Edward J. Byington.

Byington was one of two priests suspended by the diocese in January 2020 due to separate allegations of sexual abuse of a minor going back several decades, The Standard-Times reported.

In a statement posted to its website in December 2021, the diocese announced the allegations against Byington “have been determined to be credible” and he would not return to ministry.

At the time of his suspension, Byington was already retired and not assigned to a parish.

Eldridge, 67, told MassLive that when he was 15 or 16 years old, even though he was protestant, he attended the Roman Catholic ECHO (Encountering Christ in Others) retreat because his friends were going. He…

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April 15, 2022

Former Franciscan Brother sentenced for 1990’s abuse

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

April 15, 2022

By Mark Belenchia

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A Franciscan brother, Paul West, 62, who was the subject of a major AP News investigation for his abuse of three young boys in Mississippi has been convicted of the 1990s abuse of La Jarvis Love. On Wednesday, April 13, 2022, a jury found him guilty of sexually abusing a student at St. Francis of Assisi School in the 1990s.

The Leflore County jury spent less than an hour deciding West’s fate. The verdict was loud and clear, guilty of one count of sexual battery and one count of gratification of lust, the Greenwood Commonwealth reported. West was accused of sexually abusing La Jarvis Love, now 39. Circuit Judge Ashley Hines sentenced West to 30 years on the first count and 15 years on the second count, to be served consecutively. Love began crying when the verdict was read.

Our hearts go out to La Jarvis Love and his family…

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Statement Regarding Criminal Conviction and Sentencing of Paul West

JACKSON (MS)
Diocese of Jackson [Jackson MS]

April 14, 2022

By Joanna King

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Paul West was a teacher and principal at St. Francis School in Greenwood, Mississippi from July 1993 until October 1998. The Diocese of Jackson cooperated fully in the State of Mississippi’s recent criminal conviction of Paul West, including providing background testimony at his trial on the diocese’s list of clergy who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors. The list was first provided to the Attorney General in 2002 and then updated and released publicly in March of 2019.

The Diocese reported the initial allegation against Paul West to the Department of Human Services and the Greenwood Police Department in 1998 and reported the subsequent allegations to the Leflore County District Attorney in 2018. West was removed from ministry after the original 1998 complaint.

The Diocese of Jackson is committed to protecting children. Sexual misconduct by Church personnel violates human dignity and the mission of the Church. The…

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Ex-Catholic school principal sentenced to 45 years for sex crimes

JACKSON (MS)
WTOK [Meridian MS]

April 14, 2022

By Jacob Gallant

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[From WLBT]

A former teacher and principal at St. Francis School in Greenwood will face 45 years in prison, Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch announced Thursday.

Paul West, 62, was convicted of sexual battery and gratification of lust following a trial in Leflore County.

The Catholic Diocese says West served as teacher and principal at the school from July 1993 until October 1998, when he first faced an allegation of sexual misconduct. The Diocese says West was reported to Greenwood Police Department after the allegation and subsequently removed from the ministry.

The Diocese released a statement on West’s conviction, which says in part:

The Diocese of Jackson is committed to protecting children. Sexual misconduct by Church personnel violates human dignity and the mission of the Church. The Diocese has dedicated substantial time and resources to ensure that children being served by the Church are not at risk of sexual abuse…

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On the power of the Resurrection and healing from abuse

SPOKANE (WA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

April 15, 2022

By Meredith McKay

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Early on in my healing work, a friend suggested that I think back to who I was before I was sexually abused.

They wondered if I might find power in remembering characteristics or aspects of myself before the abuse that are still a part of me today. When I first attempted to recall who I was before the abuse, I could not remember specific traits or memories. I was so young when the abuse started, no older than 5, and it felt like trying to recall the memories of someone who wasn’t yet a person.

The abuse occurred during my formative years, when a child’s brain develops into who they will become later in life, from our social lives to our emotions to how we show up relationally. What memories did I form first? Did that memory of learning to tie my shoes at day care come first? Or was it…

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A Timely Guide for the Renewal of the Clergy

BOSTON (MA)
The Pilot - Archdiocese of Boston [Boston MA]

April 13, 2022

By Roger J. Landry

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The “ultimate antidote to scandal,” he says, is not found in “structural reforms” or in a “merely cultural Catholicism,” but in “holiness of life.”

Each year, as we draw near to Holy Thursday, the Church asks us to pray for priests, future priests, and the renewal of the priesthood Jesus instituted during the Last Supper.

The celebration of the Chrism Mass, traditionally held the morning of Holy Thursday but often anticipated earlier in Holy Week, features the moving rite in which priests renew before their bishop their dedication to unite themselves closely to Christ and strive to imitate him, to be faithful ministers of his mysteries, to celebrate the Eucharist with sincere devotion, to sacrifice worldly pleasures and ambition joyfully for the good of Christ’s flock, and to teach the Christian faith and share Christ’s peace and love.

The bishop, in turn, asks the faithful to pray for their priests and for…

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Abuse scandal Lépine’s Cross to bear

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

April 13, 2022

By Peter Stockland

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As Archbishop Christian Lépine moved through the last days of Lent toward Easter 2022, he acknowledged the worst Cross to bear in his 10 years leading Montreal Roman Catholics has been the scandal of clerical sexual abuse.

“I’m always thinking about it,” Lépine told The Catholic Register in a late March interview. “It goes so much against Jesus Christ Himself. It’s not just about the numbers. It’s about the fact that one case is too many, that priests who were there to witness to Jesus Christ, witness to the love of the Eternal Father (committed) crimes or betrayed trust. Talking specifically about the sexual abuse of minors….”

His voice trails. Even in the context of a phone conversation, it’s palpable that Christ’s help is being called for at the other end of the line. Lépine, whose 10th anniversary as Archbishop of Montreal was on March 20 and who marks 10 years since…

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Sexual abuse happens not only in the church, but also in ‘good Christian homes.’

LEXINGTON (KY)
Lexington Herald Leader [Lexington KY]

April 15, 2022

By Sharon Donohue

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I have a hot news flash for my brothers and sisters here in the Bible Belt: The individuals you should be concerned about do not include the recently confirmed Supreme Court Justice; rather, they are the people sitting next to you.

I speak as a former editor for two Christianity Today publications and for Moody Monthly, a Christian family magazine. As a young editor fresh out of college, I urged Moody Monthly to do a cover feature on child sexual abuse in the church.

At that time, mid-1980s, no one was talking about this publicly. But I had a hunch predatory sexual abuse was happening far more than we realized, in “good church families,” and that the perpetrators were fathers, uncles, brothers, and others who often held trusted positions of authority in the church—deacons, elders, religious teachers, and pastors.

My hunch proved right. I was editor of the Letters department,…

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Worcester Bishop Demands Catholic School Remove Pride, Black Lives Matter Flags

WORCESTER (MA)
New Ways Ministry [Mount Rainier MD]

April 13, 2022

By Robert Shine

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A Catholic middle school in Massachusetts is resisting one local bishop’s attempts to have the school take down Pride and Black Lives Matter flags or the school will risk losing its Catholic affiliation.

Bishop Robert McManus of Worcester gave the directive to The Nativity School of Worcester, a Jesuit-run middle schools serving low-income students who are predominantly students of color. In a statement demanding the removal of the flags, McManus insisted that the church teaches “all lives are equal.” He continued:

“[The] flag with the emblem Black Lives Matter has at times been coopted by some factions which also instill broad-brush distrust of police and those entrusted with enforcing our laws. We do not teach that in our schools. And, while we teach that everyone is created in the image and likeness of God, gay pride flags are often used to stand in contrast to consistent Catholic teaching that sacramental marriage…

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