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.

January 6, 2022

William O’Sullivan

A Priest in Wolf’s Clothing: Diocese settlement satisfying to other Grecco victim William O’Sullivan

ST. CATHARINES (CANADA)
St. Catharines Standard [St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada]

January 6, 2022

By Kris Dubé

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[Photo above: Survivor William O’Sullivan.]

‘Even though it’s financial, there’s some kind of accountability there,’ says St. Catharines resident abused at Welland church as a child

A recent settlement reached by a sexual abuse victim of Donald Grecco, who had sued the disgraced ex-priest and Roman Catholic Diocese of St. Catharines, comes as gratifying news to William O’Sullivan.

“I’m glad to see this happen for him. It’s about time,” said O’Sullivan, who also was abused by Grecco, between the ages of nine and 12 at St. Kevin’s Catholic church in Welland, a place he had protested in front of weekly for more than two years.

In October 2017, Grecco received an 18-month sentence for sexually abusing three boys between 1975 and 1982. It was his second conviction for sexually abusing children; his total number of known victims is six.

Six months later, Grecco was granted an early release from Central…

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Obituary: M. Susan Carlson

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Jewish Light [St. Louis MO]

January 3, 2022

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M. Susan Carlson passed away on December 30, 2021, at the age of 72. Beloved wife of Gerry Greiman for 39 years; dear mother of David Carlson Greiman and Nora Carlson Greiman (James Lange); dear sister of the late Jeff Carlson, the late Greg (Diane) Carlson and Steve (Tina) Carlson; our dear aunt, great aunt, sister-in-law; cousin and friend to many.

Susan was born in Lincoln, Nebraska on November 2, 1949, and grew up on the family farm outside Waverly, Nebraska. She graduated from Cottey College (which later conferred its Distinguished Alumni Award on her) and the University of Nebraska, taught high school for a year, and then earned her law degree from the University of Nebraska School of Law. Following Law School, Susan served as a Law Clerk for the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in St. Louis, where she met Gerry.

After her Clerkship,…

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‘Wasn’t an easy story to write’: Arnprior author’s new novel tackles difficult topic of priest sex abuse

ARNPRIOR (CANADA)
Arnprior Chronicle [Renfrew, Ontario, Canada]

January 5, 2022

By Sherry Haaima

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Local author Ellen Gable Hrkach has been writing fiction for over 20 years. Most of her novels are historical romance or suspense. This past summer, however, Hrkach decided to write her most challenging novel: a story based on her late father’s life.

“It wasn’t an easy story to write. My father was sexually abused by a priest when he was a freshman in high school. He suffered a nervous breakdown when I was two years old and struggled with alcoholism and depression. He died unexpectedly when I was a teenager. He wasn’t a perfect person, but he was a loving and dedicated father,” Hrkach said.

“Where Angels Pass,” Hrkach’s 12th book, is the fictionalized story about Hrkach’s father, who kept the abuse he experienced secret for most of his life. He only told Hrkach’s mother.

“When I found out about the abuse after his death, everything in his life made so…

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January 5, 2022

Abusos: reclaman $90 millones en la causa del cura Escobar Gaviria

PARANá (ARGENTINA)
Análisis Digital [Paraná, Argentina]

January 5, 2022

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El 30 de diciembre se dio por cerrada la etapa de mediación en el marco de la demanda civil que iniciaron las cuatro víctimas de los abusos sexuales a los que lo sometió el cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria mientras fue párroco de san Lucas Evangelista, de Lucas González -a 136 kilómetros de Paraná, en el departamento Nogoyá-, sitio en el que estuvo destinado por la Iglesia Católica entre 2005 y 2016.

Cerrada la fase conciliatoria, ahora ocurrirá la demanda civil ante los Tribunales de Nogoyá. La demanda civil -que sigue luego de que el cura resultara condenado en sede penal- sólo incluyó la participación de la representación legal de las cuatro víctimas -3 en el primer juicio, de 2017, ya que el cuarto caso fue anulado por fallo de la Sala Penal del Superior Tribunal de Justicia (STJ), más el caso que llegó a juicio en 2020- y de…

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Cindy Woodhouse, the Manitoba regional chief at the Assembly of First Nations. Screen capture from video. Amber Bracken for The New York Times

Canada Pledges $31.5 Billion to Settle Fight Over Indigenous Child Welfare System

OTTAWA (CANADA)
New York Times [New York NY]

January 4, 2022

By Catherine Porter and Vjosa Isai

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[Photo above: Cindy Woodhouse, the Manitoba regional chief at the Assembly of First Nations. Screen capture from video. Amber Bracken for The New York Times]

The government agreed to a landmark settlement to repair the system and compensate those families harmed by it. It potentially ends many years of litigation.

The Canadian government announced Tuesday that it had reached what it called the largest settlement in Canada’s history, paying $31.5 billion to fix the nation’s discriminatory child welfare system and compensate the Indigenous people harmed by it.

The agreement in principle forms the basis for a final settlement of several lawsuits brought by First Nations groups against the Canadian government. Of the overall settlement, 40 billion in Canadian dollars, half will go toward compensating both children who were unnecessarily removed, and their families and caregivers, over the past three decades.

The rest of the money will go toward…

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Agreements-in-Principle reached on compensation and long-term reform of First Nations child and family services and Jordan’s Principle

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Indigenous Services Canada [Ottawa, Ontario, Canada]

January 4, 2022

By Andrew MacKendrick

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Ottawa, Traditional Algonquin Territory, Ontario: Indigenous Services Canada – The Government of Canada is pleased to announce that Agreements-in-Principle have been reached on a global resolution related to compensation for those harmed by discriminatory underfunding of First Nations child and family services and to achieve long-term reform of the First Nations Child and Family Services program and Jordan’s Principle, to ensure that no child faces discrimination again.

This is a result of discussions between Canada, the Assembly of First Nations, the First Nations Child and Family Caring Society, the Chiefs of Ontario, the Nishnawbe Aski Nation, and counsel for the Moushoom and Trout class actions.

We begin by acknowledging the generations of First Nations who have advocated so strongly for their children including Residential School Survivors, Sixties Scoop Survivors and children, young people and families whose lives are touched by this case. Their strength and the advocacy of First Nations…

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Hidden Harm and the Short Reach of Traditional Tort Remedies

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Justia [Mountain View CA]

January 5, 2022

By Kathryn Robb

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Not all civil wrongs are the same. There are, of course, the classic ‘slip and fall’ and fender bender claims, and then there are the more catastrophic harms. Whether negligence, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, or trespass—there are degrees of egregiousness in the land of civil justice. Most would agree that none are as bad as the harm to children, especially negligent or intentional abuse of children, where the complicated and lasting damage of trauma transforms the neurobiology of the whole child—continuing the injury to young victims well into adulthood.

The thought of children being manipulated and sexually violated is distressing and uncomfortable, especially when the perpetrator is someone they once trusted—a coach, counselor, doctor, religious leader, or even a family member. When the harm is sexual assault and rape, the image stings, and let’s face it, our eyes and minds look away. We just cannot think about it….

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Boy Scouts of America falls short in bid to emerge from sex-abuse bankruptcy

IRVING (TX)
Los Angeles Times [Los Angeles CA]

January 4, 2022

By Kim Christensen

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The Boy Scouts of America’s bid to emerge from bankruptcy appeared to fall just short Tuesday when a $2.7-billion settlement offer failed to garner enough votes from thousands of men who say they were sexually abused in Scouting.

Although 73% of the nearly 54,000 claimants who cast ballots voted to accept the settlement, the proposal needed at least 75% to ensure confirmation by the bankruptcy judge presiding over the case, according to plaintiffs’ lawyers.

“Survivors understood that the Plan does not adequately compensate them,” said John Humphrey, co-chairman of the official tort claimants committee appointed by the bankruptcy trustee to represent all victims.

The committee said the results would force the Boy Scouts to negotiate a better deal for abuse survivors. The Boy Scouts did not respond to a request for comment.

The results, disclosed in a bankruptcy court filing late Tuesday, capped a contentious two-month voting period in which…

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Bill to extend legal window for child sex abuse survivors unlikely to see a Pa. Senate vote

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Pennsylvania Capital-Star - States Newsroom [Harrisburg PA]

January 3, 2022

By Marley Parish

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Despite pleas from advocates and a recent request from the governor, a bill that would open a two-year window for child sex abuse survivors to pursue civil lawsuits against their abusers is unlikely to see a floor vote as the Pennsylvania Senate returns to session this month.

Senate Majority Leader Kim Ward, R-Westmoreland, who controls the upper chamber’s voting calendar, remains unchanged in her thinking that the constitutional amendment process remains the best legal path to extending the statute of limitations.

Erica Clayton Wright, a spokesperson for Ward, declined to answer further questions about the legislation and a possible Senate vote Monday. Instead, Wright cited previous statements made by Ward, who has argued there is no legal precedent to affirm extending a window legislatively.

If it weren’t for an advertising error made last year by the Department of State, the window for child sex abuse survivors would have…

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20 years after Boston Globe’s ‘Spotlight,’ we need a national database of accused clergy

BOSTON (MA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 4, 2022

By Barbara Thorp

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In the United States, the terrible truth that Catholic clergy have sexually violated children has been known publicly now for at least 36 years. For this truth-telling, we are indebted to journalists such as Jason Berry. In stark and unsparing detail he documented in May 1985, writing for the Times of Acadiana (and NCR), the predations of admitted serial pedophile Fr. Gilbert Gauthe in the Diocese of Lafayette, Louisiana.

Over the decades others followed Berry’s groundbreaking truth-telling, often against and despite enormous pressure to remain silent. Led by many courageous survivors and their families, of notable mention are the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), Bishop Accountability, the Boston Phoenix, The Boston Globe, The New York Times and several state attorneys general.

In January 2019, ProPublica published an interactive national directory of credibly accused clergy drawing on the published disclosures of dioceses…

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Sen. Kim Ward should run House Bill 951 to help survivors of clergy sex abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
PennLive.com

January 4, 2022

By Mark Basquill

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As 2022 opens, clergy sexual abuse remains one of many issues calling for our caring attention. Before compassion fatigue sets in, now is the right time for Pennsylvania Senate Majority Leader Kim Ward to run House Bill 951 and for Catholics in Pennsylvania’s pews and pulpit to push forward until it passes. Despite public and political support for the measure, Kim Ward said she has no intention of bringing the bill to a vote.

House Bill 951 will open a 2-year window for out-of-statute survivors of clergy sexual abuse and help survivors including myself close a chapter of our lives. The bill will also help repair the crumbling foundations of two vital institutions. I have little trust in politicians or priests. However, until we enter a utopian fantasy where we all sing natural harmony, we’ll need legislatures and churches to prevent cacophony. And we’ll need them both to restore…

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Court upholds dismissal of lawsuit by Warren priest against peer

WARREN (MI)
Macomb Daily [Sterling Heights MI]

January 4, 2022

By Jameson Cook

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The state Court of Appeals has upheld the dismissal of a defamation lawsuit by a suspended Warren priest against another clergy member who revealed potentially false sexual-abuse claims against the plaintiff, due to the Constitutional pillar that separates church and state.

A three-judge panel unanimously ruled against Rev. Eduard Perrone in the appeal of his lawsuit against Rev. G. Michael Bugarin, a St. Clair Shores-based priest who is part of the Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit review panel for clergy abuse. The judges say in a Dec. 21 opinion that state courts cannot have jurisdiction over “ecclesiastical matters forbidden under the First Amendment of the Constitution.”

Perrone also alleged “false light” and “intentional infliction of emotional distress” over Bugarin saying the AOD had found allegations by Perrone’s accuser as “credible, meaning they had a semblance of truth,” judges wrote in the seven-page opinion.

“The issue of whether the defendant’s conduct was…

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Benedict XVI covered up sexual abuse against minors when he was a cardinal

MUNICH (GERMANY)
News.TVS-24 [Noida, India]

January 5, 2022

By Nicole

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Chaplain Peter H. was transferred in 1980 from the diocese of Essen to that of Munich-Freising, after having abused several minors. Upon learning of the accusations, his superiors did not clarify them, but forced him to undergo psychological therapy.

Then-Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, as Archbishop of Munich-Freising, knew that the chaplain had committed abuses, but he still approved his transfer and did not report the case to the Vatican, as was his obligation, according to an extrajudicial decree of the Ecclesiastical Court of the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising 2016.

After the transfer approved by Ratzinger, the priest continued with the abuses, for which he was sentenced in 1986 to 18 in prison, which led the ecclesiastical authorities to transfer him again, this time to Garching, in southern Germany.

Joseph Ratzinger “was willing to admit to the priest H. that he was aware of the situation”, says the document, quoted by…

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“Dozens of child abuse in his diocese, Ratzinger knew”, storm over the Pope emeritus

MUNICH (GERMANY)
L'UnioneSarda.it [Cagliari, Italy]

January 4, 2022

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Storm over Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, accused of not having put an end to the abuses of a priest in his diocese, despite being aware of it.

The German weekly Die Zeit reports this, according to which there is an extrajudicial decree of the ecclesiastical court of the archdiocese of Munich and Freising in 2016 which criticizes the behavior of the other prelates who have not stopped the work of Peter H., a clergyman accused of 23 cases of sexual abuse of minors between the ages of 8 and 16 between 1976 and 1993.

Among these high prelates who have kept silent even knowing there is also Joseph Ratzinger, archbishop of Munich and Freising from 1977 to 1982.

The Pope Emeritus and the Vicars General “have not lived up to their responsibilities towards the young people and children entrusted to their pastoral care”, reports the document.

The text also reads…

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Coming abuse report to review retired Pope Benedict’s tenure as German archbishop

MUNICH (GERMANY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 4, 2022

By Catholic News Service

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In mid-January, the law firm Westpfahl Spilker Wastl is scheduled to publish a report into the handling of clerical sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Munich and Freising.

The potentially explosive aspect is that three of the highest-ranking officials are still alive: Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger — now retired Pope Benedict XVI — and Cardinals Friedrich Wetter and Reinhard Marx, reported the German Catholic news agency KNA.

The investigation followed two years of research and covers the period from 1945 to 2019, centering on who knew what about sexual abuse and when, and what action they took, if any, KNA reported.

Much of the public interest is focused on the retired pope’s 1977-1981 tenure as archbishop of Munich. The case concerns the assignments of a priest accused of a particularly large number of offenses.

In early summer 2021, Cardinal Marx — the current archbishop of Munich — tried to resign from office to take responsibility — explicitly also for possible mistakes of his predecessors. Pope Francis rejected his…

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No. 10 – Guam clergy sex abuse scandal reaches the Vatican, again

(GUAM)
Guam Daily Post

December 31, 2021

By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert

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Guam’s clergy sex abuse scandal has once again reached the Vatican, which this year started defending itself in a particular case, blaming the Holy See for former Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron’s alleged sexual abuses.

The year came and went without any agreement between the Archdiocese of Agana and clergy sexual abuse claimants on the amount of restitution for the victims or on how to get the church out of bankruptcy.

The archdiocese this year increased its offer to pay clergy sex abuse survivors $34.38 million, including real estate.

The clergy sex abuse survivors, through the creditors committee, seek a minimum of $100 million and real estate properties.

A hearing on the two competing plans is expected next year.

The longer the bankruptcy proceedings take, the more money the archdiocese has to pay its own lawyers and the lawyers of the creditors committee.

The archdiocese has been billed and so far…

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Victorian Catholic diocese found vicariously liable for child sexual abuse in landmark ruling

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

January 4, 2022

By Christopher Knaus

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The Catholic church’s failed attempt to argue it was not responsible for a priest’s abuse of a five-year-old, because it took place during after-hours “social” visits, has been slammed as “ruthless” by the survivor and an “affront to common sense” by a judge.

Last month the Victorian supreme court handed down a judgment finding the current diocese of Ballarat was vicariously liable for the abuse of the boy, who cannot be named, by Father Bryan Coffey in Port Fairy in the early 1970s.

The survivor’s lawyers, Ken Cush & Associates, say the ruling is a landmark win that will help countless others.

Coffey abused the boy during pastoral care visits to his home on two occasions in 1971.

The critical issue in the case was whether Coffey, an assistant parish priest, could be considered a formal employee of the diocese at the time, thereby making it vicariously liable for his actions.

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Canada agrees C$40bn deal to reform child welfare for First Nations

OTTAWA (CANADA)
The Guardian [London, England]

January 4, 2022

By Tracey Lindeman

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A C$40bn agreement-in-principle has been reached in Canada to reform the child welfare system for First Nations people and compensate more than 200,000 individuals and families who suffered because of it.

At the heart of the deal is a legacy of discrimination in child welfare systems that saw many children removed from their homes and placed in state care, and others who were denied adequate medical care and social services because of their Indigenous identity.

Half of the C$40bn (US$31bn) is earmarked for reforming a child welfare system deemed discriminatory by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (CHRT) and federal court.

The other half is reserved for payments to First Nations people harmed by the on-reserve and Yukon child welfare systems between 1 April 1991 and 31 March 2022.

First Nations people who experienced delays or denials of medical care and social services between 1991 and 2017 will also receive compensation.

“For too…

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Sexual Abuse in the Clergy: How the Past Cannot Be Wiped Away

(FL)
Space Coast Daily [Brevard County, FL]

January 2, 2022

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According to the latest reports, there were approximately 216,000 victims of sexual abuse perpetrated by clergy in the French Catholic Church between 1950 and 2020.

Since 1950, ‘nearly 200,000 youngsters’ have been sexually molested by French clergy by ‘thousands of paedophiles in the French Catholic Church. The Catholic bishops of Canada apologise for the abuse of Indigenous children. Data on sex abuse in Poland’s Catholic Church is decades behind where it should be.

Sex abuse within the clergy of the world is rampant and has been for decades, and throughout this article, we’re going to dive into the facts to detail the full extent of what’s been going on.

United States of America

Starting with the US, The Boston Globe reported in 2002 on the widespread sexual abuse of children in the Boston diocese and the Catholic hierarchy’s efforts to conceal it. The newspaper’s investigation was the subject of the…

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Lawsuit against Archdiocese of Denver among the first brought under new victim rights law

DENVER (CO)
Denver Gazette

January 4, 2022

By Michael Karlik

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A Colorado man has filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Denver for the sexual abuse he reportedly suffered as a child, using a new state law that enables survivors to hold organizations liable for abuse decades in the past.

The legal action now pending in Denver District Court is one of the first to take advantage of a legal maneuver the General Assembly enacted last year to benefit childhood sex abuse victims who typically were barred from bringing lawsuits more than a few years beyond their assaults.

“As a person who survived years of sexual abuse at the hands of the powers that be, you end up as a broken person, a broken young adult, and a broken adult. It takes forever to realize, this isn’t my fault. This isn’t of my doing. This is what they did to us as victims,” said Brian Barzee of Colorado Springs.

Barzee, 58,…

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January 4, 2022

Salvatore Cernuzio, The veil of silence: Abuses, violence, and frustrations in the religious life of women (Il velo del silenzio: Abusi, violenze, frustrazioni nella vita religiosa femminile)

Book lifts “veil of silence” for 11 former nuns who suffered abuse (author interview)

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Aleteia [Paris, France]

January 4, 2022

By Salvatore Cernuzio

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Abuse is not only sexual, and these women point out the various ways that dignity can be betrayed.

[Photo above: Salvatore Cernuzio, The veil of silence: Abuses, violence, and frustrations in the religious life of women (Il velo del silenzio: Abusi, violenze, frustrazioni nella vita religiosa femminile)]

Spiritual abuse, sexual abuse, abuse of power or of conscience: These are dark realities in communities of consecrated women that Italian journalist Salvatore Cernuzio has sought to reveal. In The veil of silence. Abuses, violence, and frustrations in the religious life of women (Il velo del silenzio. Abusi, violenze, frustrazioni nella vita religiosa femminile, published in November 2021), this Vatican reporter gives 11 women a voice.

These 11 nuns, from all over the world and from different communities, were abused during their religious life. As a result, many of them have chosen to renounce community life. The journalist, who works for Vatican News, the official…

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Clergy Scandal: 20 Years Later – OpEd

NEW YORK (NY)
Eurasia Review [Albany OR]

January 3, 2022

By William Donohue

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On January 6, 2002, the Boston Globe began a series of stories on its investigation into clergy sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston. It would prove to be the most damaging report on the Catholic Church in U.S. history, shocking Catholic and non-Catholic alike. It also inspired reporters across the nation to take a close look at this subject, resulting in more bad news. The good news is that 20 years later, much has changed for the better.

Regrettably, most of the major media outlets are not exactly religion-friendly, and many are downright hostile, especially to Roman Catholicism. As I detail in my new book, The Truth about Clergy Sexual Abuse: Clarifying the Facts and the Causes, this explains why they have no interest in reporting on the progress that has been made.

In the 1970s, which was when priestly sexual abuse was at its height, there was an average of…

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Dublin archbishop: ‘Radical change is coming in the church’

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

January 3, 2022

By Sarah Mac Donald

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[Via the Boston Pilot]

After a year at the head of the Archdiocese of Dublin, Archbishop Dermot Farrell said, “Radical change is coming in the church,” which will see a renewal of energy and new forms of ministry.

“With a powerful commitment from clergy and lay faithful, across the full range of the life and ministry of parish communities, we are going to experience a renewal of energy and the adoption of new forms of outreach and ministry,” the 67-year-old archbishop told Catholic News Service. He also said he believes change is already happening in the church’s structures all over the Western world.

“Pope Francis is offering us a way of being church, the synodal pathway, of walking together more closely and being a church that is hope-filled, despite many challenges.”

The leader of the largest Irish diocese, with more than 1 million Catholics and 207 parishes, invited the faithful to “walk this…

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Alleged victim declines prosecution against former Diocese of Charlotte priest

CHARLOTTE (NC)
WCNC - NBC 36 [Charlotte NC]

January 3, 2022

By Nate Morabito

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Records reveal CMPD cleared its investigation into Father Francis P. Gillespie, but a civil lawsuit against the former Charlotte priest and others remains pending.

The criminal investigation into a former Charlotte priest, accused in a pending lawsuit of sexually abusing a boy multiple times more than 20 years ago, is now closed, according to Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department records. A police report reveals CMPD cleared its investigation into Jesuit Father Francis P. Gillespie in November after the alleged victim “chose not to prosecute.”

Editor’s Note: WCNC is no longer showing the photo of Father Francis P. Gillespie as the criminal case has been closed.

The Diocese of Charlotte previously reported church officials notified CMPD and the Department of Social Services in October of a new allegation of child sexual abuse against the former pastor of Our Lady of the Assumption Church after learning of the alleged abuse.

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Court sets March date for McCarrick hearing

BOSTON (MA)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

January 4, 2022

By Rhina Guidos, CNS

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Proceedings before a criminal trial involving former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick will continue on March 3 in Massachusetts, where he faces three counts of sexually assaulting a teenager in the 1970s.

A second pretrial hearing took place last month to continue on to the next phase in March.

The hearing was preceded by one in October, following the former cardinal’s arraignment in early September in Dedham District Court, where he pleaded not guilty to the charges. Though he was present during the arraignment, McCarrick was not present during the pretrial hearings.

McCarrick was dismissed by the Vatican from the clerical state in 2019 following an investigation of accusations that he had abused multiple children early on in his career of more than 60 years as a cleric and had abused seminarians as a bishop in New Jersey.

Though he was not a priest in Massachusetts, state prosecutors have said the alleged…

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January 3, 2022

The Rev. Athanasius Abanulo stands behind a group of parishioners as they hold a special ceremony for the Lady of Guadalupe at Holy Family Catholic Church in Lanett, Ala., on Sunday, Dec. 12, 2021. Originally from Nigeria, Abanulo is one of numerous international clergy helping ease a U.S. priest shortage by serving in Catholic dioceses across the country. (AP Photo / Jessie Wardarski)

US Catholic clergy shortage eased by recruits from Africa

WEDOWEE (AL)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 27, 2021

By Kwasi Gyamfi Asiedu

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[Photo above: The Rev. Athanasius Abanulo stands behind a group of parishioners as they hold a special ceremony for the Lady of Guadalupe at Holy Family Catholic Church in Lanett, Ala., on Sunday, Dec. 12, 2021. Originally from Nigeria, Abanulo is one of numerous international clergy helping ease a U.S. priest shortage by serving in Catholic dioceses across the country. (AP Photo / Jessie Wardarski). Article includes video at the end of the photo gallery.]

The Rev. Athanasius Chidi Abanulo — using skills honed in his African homeland to minister effectively in rural Alabama— determines just how long he can stretch out his Sunday homilies based on who is sitting in the pews.

Seven minutes is the sweet spot for the mostly white and retired parishioners who attend the English-language Mass at Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in the small town of Wedowee. “If you go beyond that, you lose the…

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Retired Judge Brings Passion for Helping Children to New Mission

BRIDGEWATER TOWNSHIP (NJ)
TAP into Bridgewater/Raritan [Bridgewater NJ]

January 3, 2022

By Brenda Esler

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Retired Superior Court Judge Thomas Dilts handled child abuse cases for 16 of his 20 years as a family court judge serving Somerset and Hunterdon Counties.

Presiding over an average of 120 cases per week, he saw each day as an opportunity to make an impact in the lives of children and families. 

As he approached retirement, Dilts knew that he wanted to continue to help children who have been abused and neglected, and realized there was more work to be done from the other side of the bench. He shared this vision in his retirement speech, and, within a week, 15 colleagues answered the call to action, forming the Children’s Hope Initiative in fall 2011.

Eleven of the original 15 board members continue to serve the organization today.

Statistics shared on their website, ChildrensHopeInitiative.org, underscore the critical needs the organization works to address. In the United States, a report…

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Papal representative tells Mexican Church leaders to listen to abuse victims

(MEXICO)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 3, 2022

By Inés San Martín

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Rosario, Argentina – Hours before boarding the plane towards his new post, the papal representative in Mexico called the land of Our Lady of Guadalupe a “faithful” place, but also “scourged by violence, by death.”

Archbishop Franco Coppola, Apostolic Nuncio in Mexico, expressed his gratitude for having represented Pope Francis for a little more than five years as he celebrated Mass for the World Day of Peace, commemorated by the Catholic Church every January 1st, in Latin America’s most famous shrine, dedicated to La Morenita.

The Italian diplomat stressed that Mexico is a “rich country”, because it has “many material and human resources,” but warned that peace will not be achieved here as long as there is so much inequality.

“There is a part that lives with dignity, and there is a majority that lives poorly, that lives in poverty; unable to fulfill basic needs, lacking instruction (education), and lacking decent…

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Indian priest convicted of abuse may be defrocked

BHOPAL (INDIA)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

January 3, 2022

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Father Lawrence Johnson held guilty for abusing a minor boy now faces canonical procedures

Indian Cardinal Oswald Gracias has recommended the Vatican to resume canonical procedures against a Catholic priest, who was convicted of sexually abusing a minor boy.

Father Lawrence Johnson, 55, a priest of the Archdiocese of Bombay (now Mumbai), was sentenced to life imprisonment by a special court dealing with sexual offenses against children on Dec. 29.

The priest was also charged with violating several sections of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act.

Cardinal Gracias, who is also the archbishop of Bombay, in a statement on Dec. 31 said that “as the case has been concluded in the courts, I am recommending to the Roman Offices that the canonical proceedings which were suspended due to the ongoing hearings be now resumed.”

Father Johnson was arrested on Dec. 2,…

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Money, media and Mel Gibson: Suburban-based Coalition for Canceled Priests uses aggressive tactics in bid to reinstate sidelined clerics

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

January 3, 2022

By John Keilman

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A curious trio of billboards went up across Rockford in November. They showed five men in Roman collars bracketed by angry red type: “Not one more penny! Until you reinstate our priests.”

The appeal to withhold contributions from the collection plate was the latest in-your-face gesture from the Coalition for Canceled Priests, a group that formed in the Chicago suburbs last year to advocate for clerics it says have been unfairly removed from the Roman Catholic ministry by bishops.

Its provocative tactics, which have also included a Lincoln Park rally and a viral endorsement from Mel Gibson, reflect its belief that public and financial pressure are more likely to get results than working through the church hierarchy.

“I’m not saying that all bishops are bad, far from it, but there’s a lot of corruption going on,” said co-founder the Rev. John Lovell, who has been sidelined for nine…

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“Devastating” decline in religious practice among young Poles, says Catholic primate

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

January 3, 2022

By Daniel Tilles

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There has been a “devastating” decline in religious practice among young people in Poland, says one of the country’s most senior church figures, Wojciech Polak, the archbishop of Gniezno and Primate of Poland.

He admits that the Catholic hierarchy’s failure to deal with sex abuse by clergy has been a primary cause, and has called for the church to continue the process of “purifying” itself.

However, Marek Jędraszewski, the archbishop of Kraków, has questioned his colleague’s interpretation, arguing that in fact the church has been a “victim” of the pandemic and young people’s growing use of technology.

Polak pointed to recently published data showing that less than 25% of young Poles now regularly practise religion. In the early 1990s, the figure was almost 70%.

“These are simply devastating numbers,” said Polak, in an interview with the Polish Press Agency (PAP). “A very strong re-evaluation is taking place in the young generation.”

Asked…

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SDA church and officials sued for $1.5M for roles in alleged abuse

(GUAM)
Guam Daily Post

January 2, 2022

By Phill Leon Guerrero

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An attorney who represented multiple people allegedly sexually abused by local Catholic priests is now seeking damages against another religious institution: the Guam-Micronesia Mission of Seventh-day Adventists.

According to a lawsuit filed Dec. 31, 2021, by attorney David Lujan, the new case stems from misconduct alleged to have occurred in June 2012.

At that time, the victim in the suit, a U.S. citizen identified only as a man with the initials “AA,” came to Guam from the Philippines to complete his high school education.

The man, who was 16 years old in 2012, became acquainted with Danny Dial, who was serving as the church’s director, according to court documents.

“Since Dial was from Mindanao in the Philippines where AA was also from, and both speaking the same dialect, Dial asked AA’s guardian if AA could stay with him a few days so he could take AA and show him Agana…

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Phil Fontaine was the first Indigenous leader to bring the horrors of residential school abuse to the public eye 30 years ago, and now, he’s preparing for a visit to the Vatican in the hopes of procuring a formal apology from the Pope.

Indigenous leader Phil Fontaine hopes papal apology will give him, other survivors closure

KAMLOOPS (CANADA)
CTV Television Network [Toronto, Canada]

January 2, 2022

By Donna Sound and Alexandra Mae Jones

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[Photo above: Phil Fontaine was the first Indigenous leader to bring the horrors of residential school abuse to the public eye 30 years ago, and now, he’s preparing for a visit to the Vatican in the hopes of procuring a formal apology from the Pope. Article includes video.]

Half a year after the discovery of 215 unmarked graves at a former residential school in Kamloops, B.C., those numbers have now grown to almost 1,400 at sites across Canada.

Many of these schools were run by the Catholic Church, spurring calls for a formal apology from Pope Francis. But although a papal visit to Canada was planned, it was postponed just before Christmas because of the new Omicron variant and rising COVID-19 case numbers.

The Vatican has not confirmed the Pope’s travel itinerary, or a new date for that papal meeting with Indigenous leaders from Canada. But at least one prominent…

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January 2, 2022

Judge rules Catholic Church vicariously liable for Ballarat paedophile priest Bryan Coffey’s abuse 50 years ago

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

December 27, 2022

By Elizabeth Byrne

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A man has successfully sued the Catholic Church after a court found it had vicarious liability for sexual abuse he says he suffered from a notorious priest 50 years ago.

Key points:

  • The Catholic Church has been found liable for its priest’s abuse of a five-year-old boy in 1971
  • The ruling is believed to be the first of its kind in Australia
  • Other victims of the priest were compensated out of court this year

The Victorian man’s lawyers believe it is the first such ruling in Australia.

Father Bryan Coffey was convicted in the Ballarat County Court in February 1999 of multiple counts of sexual assault against other children, and was given a three-year suspended sentence.

He died in 2013.

The man told the Victorian Supreme Court that Coffey had sexually abused him at his parent’s Port Fairy home on two occasions in 1971, when the assistant priest was visiting.

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Here we go again: With Catholic news, reporters should be careful with this word – ‘reform’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Get Religion

December 31, 2022

By Terry Mattingly

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Let’s pause for a moment and reconsider a very loaded and tricky word that shows up all the time religion-news coverage (as well as political coverage, of course).

That word is “reform.”

For really, really, loyal GetReligion readers, I will admit that I am, in part, flashing back to this 2008 GetReligion post: “Who gets to “reform” what?” Once again, let’s look at some of the language that shows up in online dictionaries when you search for that term. To “reform” an institution or a law means to:

* make changes for improvement in order to remove abuse and injustices; “reform a political system” * bring, lead, or force to abandon a wrong or evil course of life, conduct, and adopt a right one; “The Church reformed me”; “reform your conduct” … * a change for the better as a result of correcting abuses; “justice was for sale…

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A New Year challenge for us to protect children

(PHILIPPINES)
Manila Times [Manila, Philippines]

January 2, 2022

By Fr. Shay Cullen

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HAS Christmas ended? Is the story over? Did we learn anything from the Christmas nativity story, and what values did the Church draw from it and teach us? Will we face 2022 with a new determination inspired to live out and practice the values of the Gospel?

The Christmas belen (manger scene) that depicts the baby Jesus wrapped in swaddling clothes and surrounded by adoring parents Mary and Joseph, the shepherds and animals will be dismantled and removed from churches. But will it and the story it tells be removed from our minds and hearts? That is the story of Jesus of Nazareth that brought the love of God into the world, that elevated the rights of children and women to the highest level and that has called us to respect the rights of children and women and stop child abuse.

That Jesus who was born to a life of poverty in…

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Letter: The hypocrisy of failing to practice what we preach

NORWICH (CT)
The Day [New London CT]

January 2, 2022

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Thank you, Lisa McGinley, for your article “Money is the least of what the church has to lose” (Dec. 26). As a Catholic priest in West Virginia, I follow the “Abuse Tracker” website closely and found your article there. You have expressed many of my concerns more clearly and concisely than any other article I have seen. You have given us a very helpful perspective on our hypocrisy of failing to practice what we preach. We are seriously undermining our stated mission by destroying our credibility.

In all of the Gospels, hypocrisy by religious leaders was the ONLY situation that brought out Jesus’ anger!

I am grateful to journalists and attorneys who, whatever their motivation, have forced the church to face up to our systemic faults and grant some justice to our victims. They have also forced…

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January 1, 2022

Former Northland priest accused of abuse dead at 72

DULUTH (MN)
Duluth News Tribune [Duluth MN]

December 31, 2021

By Teri Cadeau

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A former Northland priest accused of child sexual abuse has died.

The Rev. David Tushar, 72, died Dec. 23 in Las Vegas, where he was living in retirement. Born in Eveleth, Tushar served as a priest in Northeastern Minnesota for nearly 35 years before he was placed on leave in 2019 pending an investigation into allegations of abuse at a previous placement.

Tushar attended Crosier Seminary in Onamia, the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, Gregorian University in Rome, and Catholic Theological Union and Loyola University in Chicago. He was ordained to the priesthood for the Congregation of the Holy Cross in 1976.

The allegations were related to his earlier service as a Holy Cross Father and Catholic School teacher in Niles, Illinois, from 1978-79. After Tushar was deemed “credibly accused” by the Diocese of Duluth in 2019, the case was sent on to the Vatican. He was also removed…

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Child sexual abuse survivors prepare to file lawsuits under new state measure

DENVER (CO)
Colorado Newsline [Denver, CO]

November 18, 2021

By Faith Miller

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Lawmakers in the Colorado General Assembly passed legislation in June giving new power to people who’d survived sexual abuse decades ago — and survivors and their attorneys said Thursday they’re planning to move forward with several cases once the law takes effect in the new year.

The statute of limitations had expired for these survivors, leaving them without the ability to hold abusers accountable. But Senate Bill 21-88 represented a major victory for child sexual abuse survivors and their advocates after years of advocacy and several failed attempts at passing similar state legislation.

“I faced years of sexual abuse in a high school here in Denver from Catholic clergy,” said Brian Barzee, who spoke at a Nov. 18 news conference with his lawyer, Michael Nimmo, to raise awareness about SB-88. “It’s only because of this new law that any of us are ever going to have a voice…

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Mumbai: Cardinal ‘asks pardon’ after priest convicted for child abuse

MUMBAI (INDIA)
The Times of India [Mumbai, India]

December 31, 2021

By Bella Jaisinghani

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The archbishop of Bombay Oswald Cardinal Gracias has “sought pardon” from the community after the conviction of a Catholic priest under the POCSO Act. He said he continued to pray for both the victim and his abuser.

On December 29, Fr Lawrence Johnson, former priest of Christ The King Church in Shivaji Nagar, was sentenced to life imprisonment for sodomising a 13-year-boy inside the church in 2015.

The Cardinal on Friday said: “I was very distressed to learn that Fr Lawrence Johnson was convicted of aggravated sexual assault on a minor. I deeply sympathise with the victim and the family. I ask pardon that a representative of the Church, appointed to be in charge of the community, was responsible for this.”

He addressed the victim’s mother’s accusations that the church “abandoned and harassed” them during their struggle for justice. “Several invitations by my secretary to the victim’s parents…

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Life sentence to priest: Victim’s family says faith restored in ‘justice and Jesus’

MUMBAI (INDIA)
The Times of India [Mumbai, India]

December 29, 2021

By Bella Jaisinghani

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The life sentence awarded to Fr Lawrence Johnson by a POCSO court has restored the faith of the victim’s family in “justice and Jesus”.

The boy’s mother in a tearful interview said that “Jesus had answered her prayer at Christmas”. “The courts have pronounced Fr Lawrence guilty today. But I held him guilty on the very day of the assault. He even knelt before me and admitted his crime. My faith in the men that run the Church is broken but my faith in Jesus is unshakeable.”

The 13-year-old faced the latest in a series of assaults inside Christ The King Church, Shivaji Nagar, Govandi, on November 27, 2015 that left him bleeding and bruised. He is now 18 years old, and is still undergoing treatment for bodily ailments apart from suffering hallucinations and nightmares.

His mother said, “Supporters of Fr Lawrence even held a morcha against us while we…

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Mumbai: Priest sentenced to life imprisonment for sexually assaulting minor in church

MUMBAI (INDIA)
The Times of India [Mumbai, India]

December 29, 2021

By Swati Deshpande

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A special court on Wednesday convicted and sentenced to rigorous life imprisonment a Catholic priest Father Johnson Lawrence for sodomising a young teenaged boy in 2015, under Protection of Children from Sexual Offences (POCSO) Act. The boy was 13-year-old.

In December 2015, the priest then 52 years old was arrested by Mumbai police. He has been in prison since.

During the pronouncement of the verdict, the priest was present in court before special Judge Seema Jadhav who found him guilty of offences under section 6 (aggravated penetrative sexual assault) and 12 (sexual harassment) of POCSO.

Special public prosecutor Veena Shelar had examined nine witnesses to prove the case against the accused.

The Priest’s defence was one of complete denial. His counsel Avinash Rasal argued that there was no evidence against him and to demonstrate he examined two defence witnesses, members of the Legion of Mary who said there were six-seven…

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Indiana Catholic priest reaches plea deal in sexual abuse cases

COLUMBIA CITY (IN)
WISHTV [Indianapolis, IN]

December 29, 2021

By Associated Press and WISH Staff Reports

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A northeastern Indiana priest has agreed to plead guilty to child solicitation and sexual battery charges for allegedly sexually abusing a teenage girl and a young woman.

The Rev. David Huneck was charged in October with felony child solicitation and sexual battery and several misdemeanor charges.

If the 31-year-old priest pleads guilty to the felony charges and a judge accepts his plea at a Jan. 27 Whitley County hearing, the misdemeanor charges would be dropped.

The Journal Gazette reports that Huneck was charged after two females, ages 17 and 19, reported two incidents in which Huneck allegedly sexually assaulted them.

Huneck resigned in September from his parish and a role at a Fort Wayne Catholic high school after the Catholic Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend said it became aware of allegations of sexual misconduct.

The diocese became aware of the allegations against Huneck on Sept. 19. A statement from Bishop Kevin…

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Abuse probe orphanage withheld data on children

ATHENS (GREECE)
Greek City Times [Sydney, AU]

December 30, 2021

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An Athens orphanage at the centre of a probe into the alleged abuse of five boys between the ages of 7 and 11 had refused to declare the number of children in its care, Deputy Minister for Social Affairs Domna Michailidou told Kathimerini on Tuesday. 

“When we launched the [online] platform for fostering and adoption, we asked all [child care] facilities in the country to register the children they hosted, in order for them to join the system,” the minister said. “The specific facility refused to do so until the last moment. I had to call them on the phone and press them. They were the last in Greece to follow the instructions.” 

Michailidou also said that there is also a pending complaint against the orphanage from 2017 alleging illegal adoptions, which “has not yet been fully investigated.”

The facility was placed under investigation after a written complaint from a…

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Midlands Voices: Nebraska’s civil recovery laws must fit the depravity of child sex abuse

OMAHA (NE)
Omaha World-Herald [Omaha NE]

December 30, 2021

By Senator Rich Pahls

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Nebraska Attorney General Douglas J. Peterson did our state a service Nov. 4 when he released his detailed report on child abuse committed by Catholic Church officials in the Omaha, Lincoln and Grand Island Dioceses.

I doubt that few people — including good, faithful Catholic Nebraskans — don’t hang their heads in sorrow when reviewing the details: credible allegations of sexual abuse and/or misconduct against 51 priests, four deacons and two teachers by a total of 258 victims dating back to Jan. 1, 1978.

Our first human reaction is to cry out “Why?” Which is usually followed by thoughts of, “How are we going to get even?” Then we sober up, realize that revenge accomplishes nothing, but doing nothing demonstrates nearly a tacit approval of serious criminal behavior.

That is why I’m taking some well-thought-out next steps when the legislative session begins in January to give Nebraskans the…

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Law to Protect Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse, Hold Abusers Accountable Goes into Effect

DENVER (CO)
KKTV [Denver, CO]

December 31, 2021

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Marking the conclusion of a yearslong effort to protect survivors of child sexual abuse and hold institutions that cover up abuse accountable, the Child Sexual Abuse Accountability Act goes into effect tomorrow, January 1, 2022.

The law – sponsored by Senators Jessie Danielson (D-Wheat Ridge) and Rhonda Fields (D-Aurora) and Representatives Dafna Michaelson Jenet (D-Commerce City) and Matt Soper (R-Delta) – allows survivors of child sexual abuse to sue schools, government entities, or private institutions that cover up sexual abuse, as well as the perpetrators, and seeks to prevent future instances of sexual abuse. 

“No child should ever have to suffer sexual abuse, but for far too long our laws have failed to protect the youngest victims of these unspeakable crimes, and today we say no more,” said Sen. Danielson. “This law ensures that actions taken by abusers and institutions to harm our little ones can no longer be swept under the rug,…

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December 31, 2021

Maxwell conviction a symbolic win for sex abuse survivors, advocates say

NEW YORK (NY)
Washington Post

December 30, 2021

By Shayna Jacobs

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Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking conviction is being hailed by advocatesas symbolically significant for sex abuse victims, the latest example of women convincing a jury in a high-profile prosecution despite defense efforts to tear down their testimony.

Maxwell, 60, an Oxford-educated former socialite who spent years on the party circuit with some of the world’s wealthiest and most influential figures, was found guilty Wednesday of grooming and trafficking teenagers for multimillionaire Jeffrey Epstein, her longtime boyfriend and employer, who died by suicide while facing his own sex trafficking indictment in 2019.

The verdict, reached after a month-long trial, may come to serve as a road map for future prosecutions against systemic sex abuse facilitators, legal analysts said. Maxwell was convicted of roping in girls as young as 14 over a roughly 10-year period between the mid-1990s and 2000s.

“This was really the first trial that we saw where a woman who…

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Former Aspen priest faces civil lawsuit accusing him of 300 occasions of sex assault on altar boy

ASPEN (CO)
Aspen Times [Aspen CO]

December 31, 2021

By Jason Auslander

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Lawsuit accuses Catholic priest of beating boy if he didn’t accede to sexual demands starting when accuser was 7 years old and lasting for four years

A former Aspen Catholic priest not only sexually assaulted a local altar boy approximately 300 times in the early 2000s, he beat the boy when he declined to accede to his sexual demands, according to a civil lawsuit filed last week in Denver District Court.

The Rev. Michael O’Brien allegedly began abusing Keegan Callahan at age 7, soon after he moved to Aspen in the summer of 2004 with his devout Roman Catholic family, the lawsuit states. The abuse of Callahan, now 24 and serving a 14-year prison sentence for committing sex crimes against juveniles in Aspen, allegedly continued through 2008.

“If (Callahan) chose not to comply with O’Brien’s sexual demands, O’Brien would physically punish (Callahan) by hitting him in the torso, chest, and/or…

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Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s bankruptcy case plods along in New Mexico

SANTA FE (NM)
Northwest Arkansas Democrat Gazette (nwaonline.com)[Fayetteville AR]

December 31, 2021

By Rick Ruggles, Santa Fe New Mexican

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The Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy efforts have plodded along for three years with no end visible in the case involving more than 400 clergy abuse victims.

Lawyers say three years is a comparatively long time for Chapter 11 proceedings but is far from unheard of. It’s in everyone’s interests — the archdiocese’s and the victims’ — to resolve it through Chapter 11, attorneys say. Therefore, an eventual settlement is still expected.

“The alternatives are so bad that it’s worth it to stay in the game,” Laura Coordes, associate professor of law at Arizona State University, said of Chapter 11.

The archdiocese seeks to raise an adequate sum, through property sales, donations and insurance, to reach settlements with the victims.

In a blog this month, Archbishop John Wester wrote: “We knew when we filed for Chapter 11 that it would not be easy. We are making progress, albeit…

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Mumbai priest convicted of sexually abusing boy in 2015

MUMBAI (INDIA)
Crux [Denver CO]

December 31, 2021

By Nirmala Carvalho

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A priest in India has been convicted of abusing a teenage boy in 2015.

Father Lawrence Johnson was arrested in 2016, and the parents later accused Cardinal Oswald Gracias and auxiliary Bishop Dominic Savio Fernandes of not reporting the incident to police.

However, a court later ordered the investigation into the prelates dropped, since the boys father had reported the incident to the authorities before he met with the cardinal and had informed Gracias he had done so during the meeting.

Charmaine Bocarro, the victim’s lawyer, said it was a “landmark” judgement, “as the victim got justice.”

She said Johnson had “financial might and the pressure from [his] supporters” backing him, causing “innumerable” problems for the victim’s case.

Bocarro worked the case free of charge.

“I have always worked for the poor, women, and marginalized. There are very few who stand up for them,” she said.

Catholics in India hope…

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Priest who led diocesan Office of Child Protection charged in abuse case

ARLINGTON (VA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

December 29, 2021

By Catholic News Service

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A retired priest of the Diocese of Arlington, who for seven years oversaw the diocese’s program on protecting minors from clerical sexual abuse, was indicted shortly before Christmas on two counts of sexually abusing a minor.

A trial is scheduled next October for Father Terry Specht, 68, who now lives in Donegal, Pennsylvania.

The priest was the director of the diocese’s Office of Child Protection from 2004-2011.

The Washington Post reported that Father Specht was indicted on two felony counts related to sexual abuse of a child under age 13. The indictment said the assault took place in 2000, when Father Specht was chaplain and assistant principal at Paul VI Catholic High School in Fairfax.

Two separate allegations about Father Specht were brought to the Arlington Diocese: one in 2012 and the other in 2019. “The diocese immediately reported each allegation to law enforcement,” according to a Dec. 28 statement from the Arlington Diocese.

“In 2012, Father Specht was placed on administrative…

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December 30, 2021

Top Five Most Under-Covered Vatican Stories of 2021

(ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

December 30, 2021

By John L. Allen, Jr.

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Every year, certain storylines dominate news coverage of the Vatican. Some are largely positive, though many tend to be negative, such as the clerical abuse scandals that have been a strong contender for biggest Vatican story of the year for each of the last 20 years.

Reporters being basically pack animals, the inevitable effect of a few stories looking so large is that others tend to slip through the cracks. That’s not always a measure of their relative importance, but rather the judgments of news organizations about which stories are more likely to sell.

There were plenty of well-covered storylines out of the Eternal City this year, from the pope’s triumphant trip to Iraq in March to his colon surgery over the summer, as well as his highly controversial decision to largely suppress the old Latin Mass. (Given that a subsequent poll of American Catholics found two-thirds unaware Francis had…

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Former Va. priest responsible for protecting children charged with child sexual abuse

FAIRFAX (VA)
Washington Post

December 28, 2021

By Rachel Weiner

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Terry Specht, 68, of Donegal, Pa., was indicted last week by a grand jury in Fairfax County with two felony counts related to sexual abuse of a child under 13

A retired priest who for years oversaw the safety of children in Arlington’s diocese is charged with sexually abusing a child.

Terry Specht, 68, of Donegal, Pa., was indicted last week by a grand jury in Fairfax County with two felony counts related to sexual abuse of a child under 13 years old. The assault took place in 2000, according to the indictment, when Specht was chaplain and assistant principal at the 1,000-student St. Paul VI Catholic High School in Fairfax.

Specht “maintains his innocence,” Fairfax public defender Dawn Butorac said. “He’s a retired priest, being put through this 21 years after the alleged event.”

The Virginia attorney general began investigating in 2019 when the alleged victim called a hotline set…

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Retired Virginia priest charged with child sex abuse

FAIRFAX (VA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 28, 2021

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A retired priest who once oversaw the safety of children in a Catholic diocese in the Washington suburbs has been charged with sexually assaulting a child, Virginia’s attorney general announced Tuesday.

A Fairfax County grand jury indicted Terry Specht, 68, of Donegal, Pennsylvania, last week on two felony counts related to sexual abuse of a child under 13, The Washington Post reported. According to the indictment, the assault took place in 2000, when Specht was chaplain and assistant principal at St. Paul VI Catholic High School.

Specht “maintains his innocence,” Fairfax public defender Dawn Butorac said. “He’s a retired priest, being put through this 21 years after the alleged event.”

Specht was the director of the Arlington Diocese Office of Child Protection and Safety between 2004 and 2011. In this role, he was responsible for policy and instruction but didn’t oversee sexual abuse investigations or assign…

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December 29, 2021

Vatican laicizes Ohio priest convicted of sexually exploiting children

CLEVELAND (OH)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

December 29, 2021

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Pope Francis has dismissed from the priesthood a Cleveland man who is serving a life sentence in prison for sexually exploiting children.

The action against Robert McWilliams, 41, means he will no longer be able to serve in any role as a priest, the Diocese of Cleveland said in a statement Dec. 21.

“This dismissal is a penalty imposed directly by the pope. There is no possible appeal,” the diocese said.

McWilliams told U.S. District Judge Sara Lioi during sentencing Nov. 9 that he had sought dismissal from the priesthood. He blamed his actions on an addiction to pornography.

In July, McWilliams pleaded guilty to two counts of sex trafficking of youths younger than 18, three counts of sexual exploitation of children and three counts involving child pornography.

Lioi said she imposed the strict sentence because the public needed to be protected from McWilliams because he had preyed upon youths…

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Details of alleged abuse by ex-New Orleans Catholic priest include graphic details

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

December 28, 2021

By David Hammer

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Five people who claim Highfill abused them or their siblings say the Air Force is investigating at least two different abuse cases on Air Force bases in the 1980s.

A Catholic priest who was ordained in New Orleans is now under investigation for allegedly sexually abusing an airman and a pre-teen boy during his time as an Air Force chaplain, according to several of his alleged victims and their family members who told WWL-TV they were recently interviewed by the Air Force Office of Special Investigations.

Brian Highfill is now retired from the military and living in Las Vegas. He was removed from public ministry by the Archdiocese of New Orleans and added to a list of credibly accused clergy in August 2020, after WWL-TV and The Times-Picayune | New Orleans Advocate found nearly two decades of abuse complaints against Highfill.

But now, new details are emerging about some of…

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Athens Orphanage Under Investigation for Sexual Abuse of Young Boys

ATHENS (GREECE)
Greek Reporter [Los Angeles, CA]

December 23, 2021

By Stacey Harris-Papaioannou

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The Deputy Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Domna Michailidou said on Greek national television on Thursday that she has filed criminal complaints against an Athens orphanage for the sexual abuse of boys.

At this time of year when the world partakes in family-oriented celebrations, Greeks have been shocked to learn of the alleged abuse of young boys. In a place intended to be a haven from a toxic home environment, young boys were allegedly encouraged and pressured by orphanage staff members to perform sexual acts with one another, while the adults who cared for them watched them.

In this case, the deputy minister of the nation went directly to the prosecutor with the complaints and then revealed the horrific story on Greek television.

After receiving a signed letter of complaint alleging the exploitation and sexual abuse of boys, ages seven to 11, at an Athens institution, Michailidou contacted the prosecutors…

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DOJ received 2.8 million online child sex abuse complaints in 2021

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
Philippine Daily Inquirer [Makati City, Metro Manila, Philippines]

December 29, 2021

By Marlon Ramos

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The Department of Justice (DOJ) has received more than 2.8 million reports about online child sexual abuse this year, more than double the nearly 1.3 million reports it collated in 2020.

In its annual report, the DOJ’s Office of Cybercrime (OOC) said it launched an official investigation of 268 cases of online sexual exploitation of children this year, almost four times the 73 cases it handled in 2020.

The OOC’s findings seemed to confirm an earlier report from international group WeProtect Global Alliance, which noted that cases of child sexual abuse on the internet had worsened during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Philippines was previously identified by the United Nations Children’s Fund as the “global epicenter of the livestream sexual abuse trade.”

But the DOJ’s anti-cybercrime unit noted that most of the 2.8 million reports it received were “not actionable” since these had been submitted multiple times or were “misleading” and…

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Indiana Supreme Court expands who can get emotional distress damages

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 27, 2021

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A ruling by the Indiana Supreme Court has expanded the limited number of people who are eligible to recover damages in lawsuits alleging negligent infliction of emotional distress.

Indiana lawsuits seeking damages for emotional distress typically can only be pursued by a person who suffers a direct physical injury, suffers an injury that also injures or kills a third-party, or witnesses a relative’s death or severe injury immediately after it occurs.

But in a 3-2 decision released Dec. 22, Indiana’s high court said it is also now allowing a parent or guardian to seek damages from a child caretaker when the parent or guardian discovers, with irrefutable certainty, that the caretaker sexually abused their child and that abuse severely impacted the parent or guardian’s emotional health, The (Northwest Indiana) Times reported.

The new rule arose from a case involving the sexual assault of a profoundly disabled child…

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I Was Sexually Abused By A Priest. Then I Became A Priest. Here’s What I Know Now.

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
HuffPost [New York NY]

December 28, 2021

By Robert D. Karpinski

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In November, a report from the Nebraska attorney general’s office identified hundreds of victims who’d made “credible allegations of sexual abuse against 57 Catholic Church officials in the state going back decades,” according to The Associated Press ― including “many that high-ranking church leaders knew about and didn’t report to the authorities.”

Also in November, a lawsuit was filed against the Diocese of Charleston, South Carolina, as well as the bishop of the diocese, claiming that “a child was sexually abused by a priest at a Catholic church in Myrtle Beach between 1990 and 1994,” per the CBS affiliate WBTW.

Robert Greene, director of the Netflix documentary “Procession,” sums up the experience of being sexually abused by clergy when he says: “The thing to know about this abuse is not just being sexually abused in such a tender age, it’s being abused by an entire belief system….

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December 28, 2021

Former priest once tasked with protecting area kids, now charged with sexually assaulting one

ARLINGTON (VA)
WTOP-FM, 103.5 MHz [Washington D.C.]

December 28, 2021

By Jessica Kronzer

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The former director of the Arlington Diocese Office of Child Protection and Safety, Terry Specht, is facing charges for allegedly sexually assaulting a minor, according to Virginia’s attorney general.

The 69-year-old former priest of Donegal, Pennsylvania, served as the director of the Arlington Diocese Office of Child Protection and Safety between 2004 and 2011.

A Fairfax County grand jury indicted Specht on a pair of felony charges: aggravated sexual battery of a child under the age of 13 and sexual abuse of a child whom a custodial or supervisory relationship existed.

The abuse allegedly occurred between March and September in 2000.

“Children should always feel comfortable around religious leaders in their life, without fear that they could somehow hurt them,” Virginia Attorney General Mark Herring said in a news release.

“I want to encourage any Virginian who may have information about this or any other instance of clergy abuse…

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Diocese confirms name of priest under investigation by Michigan State Police

GAYLORD (MI)
Record-Eagle [Traverse City MI]

December 23, 2021

By Grace George

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The Diocese of Gaylord confirmed that Father Bryan Medlin is the priest at the center of an investigation by the Michigan State Police and the Michigan Attorney General.

In a Dec. 22 press release, the Diocese of Gaylord confirmed that Medlin is the priest under investigation by the Michigan State Police and the Michigan Attorney General after he was accused of sending inappropriate text messages to high school students. The diocese also confirmed that Medlin is not engaging in parish, diocesan or ministerial activities during the investigation.

“The safety and security of our students — and all those within our schools and parishes — could not be more important and we are thankful for the continued work of civil authorities in safeguarding our young people,” said Mackenzie Ritchie, Diocese of Gaylord communications director, in a written statement. “The diocese continues to fully cooperate with law enforcement and civil authorities and…

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Plea agreement filed in case against former Fort Wayne priest

(IN)
WANE [Fort Wayne IN]

December 27, 2021

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Lawyers have filed a change of plea agreement for former Fort Wayne priest Father David Huneck. He is scheduled to be in court Tuesday.

Huneck faces charges of Child Seduction, Sexual Battery, Battery, Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor, and Furnishing Alcohol to a Minor. He was arraigned in Whitley Superior Court and a special judge was appointed.

At the time of the alleged crimes, Huneck was the pastor at Saint Paul of the Cross Catholic Church in Columbia City. Huneck also served as chaplain of Bishop Dwenger High School in Fort Wayne. Huneck resigned from his posts after the allegations surfaced, and the diocese suspended him from pastoral duties.

According to a probable cause affidavit filed in Whitley Superior Court, the charges stem from two incidents that allegedly took place at the home in Columbia City provided to Huneck as part of his being the pastor at a…

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Plea agreement filed in case against priest accused of sexual battery

(IN)
WPTA - ABC 21 [Fort Wayne IN]

December 27, 2021

By Jazlynn Bebout

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A plea agreement has been filed in the case against a local priest who is facing several sex crime charges after documents say he assaulted two teens earlier this year.

ABC21 reported that David Huneck had served as a pastor in Columbia City and as a chaplain at Bishop Dwenger High School in Fort Wayne before stepping down. He was then charged with child seduction, sexual battery, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, furnishing alcohol to a minor, and two counts of battery.

Court documents released in the case accuse Huneck of inviting two victims, then aged 17 and 19, to his home and giving them alcohol before assaulting them on two different occasions.

Online court records show that a plea agreement was filed in the case last week. Prosecutors were not able to disclose the details of the agreement. A hearing in the case…

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Haredi Author Chaim Walder Dies by Suicide After Dozens of Sexual Assault Allegations

SAFED (ISRAEL)
Haaretz [Tel Aviv, Israel]

December 27, 2021

By Josh Breiner

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According to a Haaretz investigation in November, Chaim Walder allegedly sexually exploited women, girls and boys for years

Ultra-Orthodox author and therapist Chaim Walder, who has been accused of sexually assaulting women, girls and boys, died by suicide on Monday.

Walder’s body was found in a cemetery in central Israel after a passerby reported of gunshots. He left his house Sunday after days of self-seclusion and his family later reported him missing. 

Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu, head of the rabbinical court in Safed that heard testimony against Walder, said it was unfortunate that the author had chosen to kill himself. “We suggested to him that he repair what he ruined,” he said. “To ask forgiveness of the victims. To change his ways.” 

According to a Haaretz investigation in November, Walder, 52, allegedly sexually exploited girls and women for years. One of them was slightly older than twelve when the exploitation began,…

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December 27, 2021

Causa Ilarraz: la Corte Suprema corrió vista a la Procuración General

PARANá (ARGENTINA)
Análisis Digital [Paraná, Argentina]

December 27, 2021

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Este lunes la Corte Suprema de Justicia de la Nación corrió vista a la Procuración General para que emita dictamen sobre la causa contra Justo José Ilarraz, en el marco del recurso extraordinario federal concedido por el Superior Tribunal de Justicia a la defensa del cura en septiembre del año pasado.

Cabe recordar que la defensa de Ilarraz, ejercida por Jorge Muñoz, había presentado un recurso contra la anterior sentencia de Sala Penal del STJ, de marzo del año pasado, por la que había rechazado la impugnación extraordinaria y confirmado la sentencia de Casación que revalidó la condena a 25 años de prisión por Corrupción agravada de menores y abuso deshonesto agravado. Por este recurso aún pendiente de resolución en la Corte es que la condena no está firme. Ahora, tuvo un avance en el Máximo Tribunal judicial del país, supo ANÁLISIS.

En septiembre de 2020, la Sala Penal -con el…

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Key part of law helping child sex abuse victims sue is unconstitutional, NC court rules

RALEIGH (NC)
Winston-Salem Journal [Winston-Salem NC]

December 20, 2021

By Will Doran, Tribune News Service

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A 2019 law intended to help victims of child sex abuse sue the people who abused them — and the organizations that allowed it to happen — is unconstitutional, a North Carolina court ruled on Monday.

The law passed the legislature unanimously. It sailed through the Republican-controlled General Assembly with support from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle as well as Democratic Attorney General Josh Stein, who later publicly pushed for victims to use the new law to go to court.

A major change in the law temporarily lifted the statute of limitations for people who were sexually abused as children to be able to sue in civil court. It allowed any sex abuse victim to file a lawsuit in 2020 or 2021, even if they would normally have been barred because the statute of limitations already expired.

That’s the piece that a three-judge panel of Superior Court judges…

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Judges deem law addressing child sex abuse unconstitutional

RALEIGH (NC)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 20, 2021

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A North Carolina law cannot temporarily lift the statute of limitations to allow people who were sexually abused as children decades ago to be able to sue in civil court, a three-judge panel ruled on Monday.

The measure, which had passed the state legislature unanimously in 2019, was designed to help child sex abuse victims sue the people who abused them and the groups who let it happen, The News & Observer of Raleigh reported.

Among other aspects, the law allowed any sex abuse victim to file a lawsuit in 2020 or 2021, even if they would normally have been barred because the statute of limitations already expired.

But the judges ruled 2-1 that that change was unconstitutional.

The two judges in the majority, Gregory Horne and Imelda Pate, wrote that previous case law says the state constitution bars the legislature from reopening the statute of limitations,…

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Abuse in care inquiry ‘needs to hear from more’ Pasifika survivors – lead counsel

WELLINGTON (NEW ZEALAND)
Radio New Zealand [Wellington, New Zealand]

December 27, 2021

By Jake McKee

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The number of Pacific survivors and witnesses registered with the Abuse in Care Royal Commission of Inquiry has increased 14 percent since its Pacific-focused hearing in July this year.

However, the Royal Commission is encouraging more to come forward.

The fortnight-long hearing, which was the first of its kind, looked at abuse of Pacific people in state and faith-based institutions between 1950 and 1999.

Eighteen Pacific people had registered in the months since then.

But Tania Sharkey, who was the lead counsel assisting the hearing, said the Royal Commission “needs to hear from more”, because Pacific survivors were over-represented in abuse in care, but under-represented in the data.

In total, there were 121 registered Pacific survivors and witnesses, which accounted for less than four percent of all registrations.

Sharkey said there were survivors who had come forward but “will choose not to register”.

“So we are engaged with them and…

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US ex-priest jailed for child sex abuse in East Timor

(TIMOR-LESTE)
Aljazeera [Dohar, Qatar]

December 21, 2021

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A court in East Timor has jailed a defrocked American priest for 12 years after he was charged with sexually abusing several orphaned and disadvantaged girls in his care.

The sentencing of Richard Daschbach took place on Tuesday.

The case against the 84-year-old marked the first time that allegations of sexual abuse perpetrated by a priest have gone to trial in the staunchly Catholic country.

Daschbach, who founded in the early 1990s a shelter for orphans and vulnerable children, was accused of 14 counts of sexual abuse of children younger than 14, as well as one charge of child pornography and domestic violence.

The trial began in February in the district of Oecusse, 200 km (125 miles) west of the capital, Dili, and near his Topu Honis shelter. Court proceedings were closed to the public, and the trial was postponed several times before concluding last month.

Responding to Tuesday’s ruling, Daschbach’s lawyer,…

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US ex-priest convicted in East Timor of sexually abusing girls at his orphanage

(TIMOR-LESTE)
New York Post

December 21, 2021

By Emily Crane

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A defrocked American priest was found guilty in East Timor on Tuesday of sexually abusing young girls under his care at the remote orphanage he founded.

Richard Daschbach, 84, was sentenced to 12 years in prison after being charged with child sexual abuse, child pornography and domestic violence.

More than a dozen females came forward alleging they had been abused by Daschbach at his Topu Honis orphanage in the Southeast Asian country’s remote enclave of Oecusse.

Only nine ended up being included in the sex abuse case due to legal technicalities.

Five accusers detailed the abuse in interviews with the Associated Press, saying Daschbach would keep a list of young girls on his bedroom door and choose one to sit on his lap every night as the orphanage held prayers before bed.

The girl sitting on Daschbach’s lap would sleep with him that night and be subjected…

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December 26, 2021

Kevin O'Connell, as a young boy on Caldey Island (Image: Kevin O'Connell / Caldey Island Survivors Campaign)

‘I was sexually abused by monks living on Caldey Island’

SWANSEA (UNITED KINGDOM)
WalesOnline [Cardiff, Wales, UK]

December 26, 2021

By Laura Clements

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[Photo above: Kevin O’Connell, as a young boy on Caldey Island (Image: Kevin O’Connell / Caldey Island Survivors Campaign)]

A victim of alleged historical sexual abuse on Caldey Island has described the hideous abuse he says he suffered in the popular tourist destination.

Kevin O’Connell, 59, is campaigning for a public inquiry into the alleged abuse. He claims he was sexually abused by Father Thaddeus Kotik, a monk living on Caldey Island, as an 11-year-old child. He said Kotik even followed him back to his family home and the abuse continued in his own childhood bedroom.

Six women who alleged abuse by Kotik between 1972 and 1988 have previously been given an out-of-court settlement by the Cistercian Order and subsequently a total of 20 people came forward to allege abuse.

At the time, the Caldey Island abbot Daniel von Santvoort apologised saying he was “truly sorry” allegations made at the…

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Indian River clergyman being investigated by attorney general, state police

GAYLORD (MI)
Cheboygan Daily Tribune [Cheboygan MI]

December 21, 2021

By Kortny Hahn

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The Michigan Attorney General’s office and Michigan State Police are currently investigating a clergyman who is serving as pastor of the Cross in the Woods National Shrine in Indian River.

“At this time, we are only confirming our investigation involving Fr. (Bryan) Medlin,” said Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel’s Press Secretary Lynsey Mukomel in an email. “I have nothing more to add given it’s an active investigation.”

The Michigan Attorney General’s office contacted the Michigan State Police earlier this month, requesting law enforcement investigate the clergyman.

“We are investigating a clergy member that falls under the Diocese of Gaylord,” said Michigan State Police Seventh District Public Information Officer Spl. Lt. Derrick Carroll in an email.

Carroll said the Diocese of Gaylord had contacted the Michigan Attorney General, and then the Michigan State Police were requested to investigate the incident on Dec. 10.

“The investigation continues and there is no further…

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Money is the least of what the church has to lose

NORWICH (CT)
The Day [New London CT]

December 26, 2021

By Lisa McGinley

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This was the year that the Diocese of Norwich filed for bankruptcy because church officials and lawyers recognized that dozens of alleged victims of clergy sexual abuse are in a position to make their claims in civil court. If they win their individual cases, they could be awarded compensation for injury inflicted years ago by priests who were allowed to get away with it.

No one is charging that the current leadership of the diocese has any personal connection to what happened decades back, but as successors to those who were in charge at the time, they represent the institution.

For a pastoral institution that preaches justice, mercy and repentance to be defending itself against any legitimate claim by any former young Catholic shows how internally conflicted the church can be. On the one hand, the church preaches the need to own up to one’s sins. On the other, it lawyers up, because each individual diocese and parish is a corporation that…

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December 25, 2021

Father James Jackson, FSSP, appearing at a Nov. 15 arraignment before the Rhode Island District Court. (photo: Courtesy photo / Joe Bukuras / CNA)

FSSP Priest Pleads Not Guilty to Federal Child Pornography Charges

PROVIDENCE (RI)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

December 23, 2021

By Joe Bukuras

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[Photo above: Father James Jackson, FSSP, appearing at a Nov. 15 arraignment before the Rhode Island District Court. (photo: Courtesy photo / Joe Bukuras / CNA)]

Father James Jackson pleaded not guilty Dec. 21 to federal charges of distributing child pornography and possessing and accessing with intent to view child pornography.

The Catholic priest, a member of the Priestly Fraternity of St. Peter, entered the plea remotely via video conference, before U.S. Magistrate Judge Patricia A. Sullivan, sitting in Providence, Rhode Island.

Father Jackson’s lawyer, John Calcagni III, declined comment after the proceeding.

Father Jackson, formerly pastor of St. Mary’s Church in Providence, was arrested on Oct. 30 by the Rhode Island State Police after an investigation by a Rhode Island computer crimes task force.

The state police had executed a search warrant that day at the parish and arrested Father Jackson after determining that he was the owner of…

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Diocese of Gaylord responds to investigation into Indian River priest

GAYLORD (MI)
WPBN - NBC 7 [Traverse City MI]

December 23, 2021

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The Diocese of Gaylord has released a statement in regards to the investigation into a northern Michigan priest.

On December 17, The Office of Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel confirmed to UpNorthLive News there was an investigation into Father Bryan Medlin from Indian River.

The Diocese of Gaylord’s website said Father Medlin was appointed pastor of the National Shrine of the Cross in the Woods in September 2021.

According to Michigan State Police, Medlin is accused of sending inappropriate text messages to high school students at a Leelanau County school.

In the statement, from December 22, about the investigation, the Diocese said Father Medlin “is not engaging in any ministerial activities at this time, and parish responsibilities are being overseen by Rev. James Gardiner.”

The Diocese encourages everyone to report any allegation of abuse, harassment, or inappropriate conduct by someone in the Church to the Michigan…

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Allegation of violation of diocesan Protocols for Ministry to Minors

GAYLORD (MI)
Diocese of Gaylord [Gaylord MI]

December 22, 2021

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The Diocese of Gaylord became aware some days ago of an apparent violation of diocesan Protocols for Ministry to Minors involving electronic messages sent to a small number of students. The diocese immediately referred the concerns to the Michigan Department of Attorney General and Michigan State Police, who are investigating the matter. Any investigation of the matter by Church authorities will be undertaken after the civil investigation concludes.

This investigation involves Rev. Bryan Medlin, pastor of the National Shrine of the Cross in the Woods in Indian River. Fr. Medlin has stepped aside from all parish and diocesan responsibilities (i.e., pastor of Cross in the Woods Parish and assistant director of vocations of the Diocese of Gaylord) while this civil investigation is underway. He is not engaging in any ministerial activities at this time, and parish responsibilities are being overseen by Rev. James Gardiner.

Mackenzie Ritchie, Director of Communications for…

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Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s bankruptcy case plods along

SANTA FE (NM)
KRQE - CBS/Fox 13 [Albuquerque NM]

December 24, 2021

By Rick Ruggles

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The Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy efforts have plodded along for three years with no end visible in the case involving more than 400 clergy abuse victims. Lawyers say three years is a comparatively long time for Chapter 11 proceedings but is far from unheard of. It’s in everyone’s interests — the archdiocese’s and the victims’ — to resolve it through Chapter 11, attorneys say. Therefore, an eventual settlement is still expected.

“The alternatives are so bad that it’s worth it to stay in the game,” Laura Coordes, associate professor of law at Arizona State University, said of Chapter 11.

The archdiocese seeks to raise an adequate sum, through property sales, donations and insurance, to reach settlements with the victims.

In a blog this month, Archbishop John Wester wrote: “We knew when we filed for Chapter 11 that it would not be easy. We are making…

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He endured a bishop’s sexual abuse and sued. The state’s top court now wants in on the case

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Berkshire Eagle [Pittsfield MA]

December 24, 2021

By Larry Parnass

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In a rare move, the Supreme Judicial Court is inviting debate over questions arising from a lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield. How the state’s highest court rules will be pivotal to a former altar boy’s wish to be compensated for rapes he endured by a bishop who long led Catholic life in the Berkshires.

Francis V. Kenneally, the SJC’s clerk, notified attorneys Wednesday that justices have decided to consider legal issues relating to whether the church is protected from a claim that the unnamed plaintiff suffered not only brutal sexual assaults by former Bishop Christopher J. Weldon and other priests, but that diocesan officials bungled his 2014 report of that abuse.

Though the lawsuit was filed in Hampden Superior Court, a judge’s ruling at that level earlier this year was appealed by the diocese’s legal team to the Massachusetts Appeals Court….

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U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein, Colleagues Urge White House, DOJ to Reinvigorate Work to Prevent, Investigate, Prosecute Sexual Exploitation of Children

WASHINGTON (DC)
Sierra Sun Times [Mariposa CA]

December 24, 2021

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Senator Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) joined Senators Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) and Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) to urge the Biden administration to take action to ensure a whole-of-government strategy to dismantle the scourge of commercial sexual exploitation of children.

Despite cases of commercial sexual exploitation of children skyrocketing, the federal government’s strategy for years has been a patchwork of efforts – some statutorily required, some not. As part of this, the federal government operates numerous programs and initiatives to address human trafficking, with few focused solely on commercial sexual exploitation of children and addressing this pressing issue here at home.

The senators in their letter also highlighted that the attorney general is statutorily required to file a “National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction” annually, in accordance with the Providing Resources, Officers, and Technology To Eradicate Cyber Threats to Our Children Act (PROTECT Our Children Act). Yet, the Trump administration failed to ever provide a report to Congress and did not prioritize efforts…

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Pope Francis says Catholic Church will ‘never again’ conceal clergy sex abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
PBS NewsHour [Arlington VA]

December 21, 2021

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Pope Francis demanded Friday that priests who have raped and molested children turn themselves in and vowed that the Catholic Church will “never again” cover up clergy sex abuse.

Francis dedicated his annual Christmas speech to Vatican bureaucrats to abuse, evidence that a year of devastating revelations of sexual misconduct and cover-up around the globe has shaken his papacy and caused a crisis of confidence in the Catholic hierarchy.

Francis acknowledged that the church in the past had failed to treat the problem seriously, blaming leaders who out of inexperience or short-sightedness acted “irresponsibly” by refusing to believe victims. But he vowed that going forward the church would “never again” cover up or dismiss cases.“Let it be clear that before these abominations the church will spare no effort to do all that is necessary to bring to justice whosoever has committed such crimes.”

“Let it be clear that before these…

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December 24, 2021

Papa Francisco acepta renuncia de obispo señalado de encubrir cura pederasta

GUADALAJARA (MEXICO)
La Opinión de Santiago [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

December 24, 2021

By Albertina

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El Papa Francisco aceptó la renuncia del obispo Marcelino Hernández Rodríguez a la diócesis de Colima, presentada el pasado mes de mayo tras cumplir 75 años de edad, informó la nunciatura apostólica a través de la Secretaría General de la Conferencia del Episcopado Mexicano.

Tras su renuncia, el Papa designó al cardenal Francisco Robles Ortega, arzobispo de Guadalajara, como administrador apostólico de la Diócesis de Colima hasta el nombramiento del nuevo obispo.

Hernández Rodríguez había sido obispo de la Diócesis de Orizaba, Veracruz en 2008 y nombrado por el propio Francisco como XI obispo de Colima el 11 de noviembre de 2013.

En los últimos años, Marcelino Hernández se vio involucrado en señalamientos judiciales por su presunto encubrimiento de un sacerdote pederasta en la arquidiócesis de México, donde era obispo auxiliar, por lo que en diciembre de 2015 y octubre de 2016 se vio obligado a comparecer a declarar ante…

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Ukrainian Catholic Diocese settles case involving alleged sexual abuse by former Terryville priest

PLYMOUTH (CT)
Hartford Courant [Hartford CT]

December 23, 2021

By Jesse Leavenworth

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The Ukrainian Catholic Diocese of Stamford has settled allegations of sexual abuse by a former priest for $450,000.

The Rev. Joseph Shaloka, who died in 1990, was pastor at St. Michael Ukrainian Catholic Church in the Terryville section of Plymouth when the abuse occurred, attorney Nate Baber of Aeton Law Partners said Thursday.

A representative of the diocese could not be reached.

His client was 12 years old when Shaloka started sexually abusing him in the rectory next to the church on Allen Street, and the abuse continued for about five years, Baber said.

The alleged victim, now age 51, did not complain about the abuse at the time because he considered Shaloka a father figure and did not see the abuse as abnormal, Baber said. He said his client was not a member of St. Michael, but had been introduced to Shaloka by a friend who thought the priest…

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Nikolai Stremsky was given a national honour for having Russia's biggest family (file pic 2016)

Russian priest who adopted 70 children jailed for abuse

SARAKTASH (RUSSIA)
BBC [London, England]

December 24, 2021

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[Photo above: Nikolai Stremsky was given a national honour for having Russia’s biggest family (file pic 2016)]

A Russian court has jailed for 21 years a former Orthodox priest, said to have adopted 70 children, for a string of child abuse offences.

Nikolai Stremsky was convicted of raping several children and other violent acts in his parish in the Urals in south-west Russia.

Stremsky was reputed to have Russia’s largest family and was decorated with a national Order of Parental Glory.

Barred from the priesthood he has also been stripped of his honour.

As an abbot in the town of Saraktash, Stremsky and his wife ran a foster home from the early 1990s, adopting children from orphanages in the region. Most of the 70 they adopted have since grown up.

He was arrested in 2019 and investigated for offences against seven minors, He condemned the allegations against him as slander.

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Traditionalists, the Barque of Peter, and Spiritual Abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Patheos [Englewood CO]

December 22, 2021

By Mary Pezzulo

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I should probably have a hot take on the recent controversy over the restrictions to the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite.

I never pretended to be a theologian or a liturgist. I don’t care for the Extraordinary Form myself; I prefer the Divine Liturgy of Saint John Chrysostom which is much older and prettier than the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite. I’ve done my share of poking fun at Traditionalists, and they often deserve it. But not everyone who likes the Extraordinary Form of the Latin Rite is a traditionalist bully. Some people like it because they like old-fashioned things, or because it’s quiet, or because they think Latin is a cool language. And they’re not wrong.

Bullies are the loudest voices we hear, of course. And the Traditionalist bullies have done a lot of damage. They’re always attacking people in the most spiritually abusive ways, claiming we’re…

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‘Horrendous crimes’: East Timor priest jailed for 12 years for child sex abuse

(TIMOR-LESTE)
Sydney Morning Herald [Sydney, New South Wales, Australia]

December 21, 2021

By Chris Barrett

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Singapore – Richard Daschbach, the defrocked American priest whose child sex abuse trial has shaken deeply Catholic East Timor, has been found guilty and sentenced to 12 years in prison.

The 84-year-old learnt his fate on Tuesday in the District Court of Oecusse, the western Timorese enclave where he abused children at a remote shelter he ran for girls and boys for more than two decades.

Revered to such an extent that his followers believed he had special powers, Daschbach was suspected of abusing at least a dozen young girls at the Topu Honis orphanage.

On Tuesday, he was found guilty of the sexual abuse of four female children there.

Jurídico Social, the human rights law firm that represented the nine victims in the case, said it would “go down as a historical day in the development of the Timor-Leste judicial sector”.

“The history written today is a bitter history…

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December 23, 2021

El Papa acepta renuncia del obispo Marcelino Hernández, señalado de encubrir cura pederasta

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

December 23, 2021

By Pedro Zamora Briseño

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En los últimos años, Marcelino Hernández se vio involucrado en señalamientos judiciales por su presunto encubrimiento de un sacerdote pederasta en la arquidiócesis de México.

COLIMA, Col. (apro).- El Papa Francisco aceptó la renuncia del obispo Marcelino Hernández Rodríguez a la diócesis de esta entidad, presentada el pasado mes de mayo tras cumplir 75 años de edad, informó la nunciatura apostólica a través de la Secretaría General de la Conferencia del Episcopado Mexicano.

Al mismo tiempo, el Papa designó al cardenal Francisco Robles Ortega, arzobispo de Guadalajara, como administrador apostólico de la Diócesis de Colima hasta el nombramiento del nuevo obispo.

Originario de San Luis Potosí, donde nació en mayo de 1946, Hernández Rodríguez había sido nombrado por el propio Francisco como XI obispo de Colima el 11 de noviembre de 2013, cargo del que tomó posesión el 10 de enero de 2014, en sustitución de monseñor José Luis Amezcua…

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Spanish Church reels in wake of dozens of child abuse allegations

MADRID (SPAIN)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

December 21, 2021

By Guy Hedgecoe

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Spain’s Catholic Church is under pressure to investigate allegations of child sex abuse by its clergy following revelations of a barrage of previously undisclosed cases.

El País newspaper has reported 251 alleged cases of abuse by members of the Catholic Church, from between 1943 and 2018. The newspaper says there were at least 1,237 victims affected.

El País said it handed the findings directly to Pope Francis during a flight on December 2nd. According to the newspaper, the pope “acted fast” on his return from the trip, giving the document to the Congregation of the Doctrine of the Faith, the body charged with investigating abuse claims.

Although cases of abuse have come to light in Spain previously, the numbers have been much lower than in countries such as IrelandFrance or the United States and the Spanish church has never carried out a major investigation.

Antonio Carpallo, who is 81, told of how he…

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Archdiocese Announces It Has Filed for Creditor Protection

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

December 21, 2021

By Archbishop Peter Hundt

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Today the Archdiocese of St. John’s announced that it has filed a Notice of Intention to make a Proposal pursuant to the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act.

“Over the past year since the legal decision became final that the Archdiocese was vicariously liable for the claims of abuse at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in the 1940s, 50s and 60s, we have been working hard to determine how best to resolve these claims while also ensuring the ongoing practise and celebration of our Catholic faith.” said Archbishop Peter Hundt.

The Archbishop went on to say, “As a next step in the process of resolving these claims, the Archdiocese has filed for creditor protection. In effect, we will be requesting additional time to complete the evaluation of our assets, formally call for claims against the Archdiocese, and develop a proposal for our creditors to settle victims’ claims and creditor liabilities. This process will…

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Catholic archdiocese in St. John’s files for creditor protection after abuse ruling

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
The Canadian Press [Toronto, Canada]

December 22, 2021

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[Via Toronto Star]

The Roman Catholic archdiocese of St. John’s, N.L., says it has filed for creditor protection as it evaluates its assets in anticipation of paying settlements to victims of abuse at the former Mount Cashel orphanage.

Archbishop Peter Hundt said in a news release Tuesday that the church is requesting more time to take stock of its assets, to formally call for claims against it and to develop a proposal to settle the claims.

He has previously said the basilica in St. John’s is among the properties being considered for sale in order to pay the settlements.

A Supreme Court of Canada ruling in January found the church liable for physical and sexual abuse committed at the St. John’s orphanage between the 1940s and 1960s.

St. John’s lawyer Geoff Budden was involved in the case and said Tuesday he represents at least 75 men now entitled to settlements,…

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Heartbreak relived: Catholic Church seeks abuse victim’s abortion record

(AUSTRALIA)
The Age [Melbourne, Australia]

December 23, 2021

By Tammy Mills

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A woman who was sexually abused by a Catholic priest says the church is now trying to subpoena deeply personal medical records, including of an unrelated abortion, as part of her lawsuit against the archbishop.

The woman, a former teacher now aged 60, is suing the Melbourne archiocese over allegations the abuse her parish priest subjected her to from the age of 13 caused psychiatric injury, including post-traumatic stress disorder and depression.

The survivor and her lawyers say, while the church accepted she was sexually assaulted by Preston assistant priest Father Francis Thorp in the 1970s, its legal team intends to subpoena sensitive medical records as part of the claim.

The records flagged for subpoena include information about a termination she had when she was in her late 20s, a decade after the abuse ceased, a contraceptive device she had implanted and her obstetric records.

The woman, who cannot be…

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December 22, 2021

Reporting child abuse in the Church, 2

ILOILO CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Panay News [Iloilo, Phillipines]

December 22, 2021

By Shay Cullen

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POPE Francis has also instructed that such crimes are known to the church authorities to be reported to the civil anchorites and must not be withheld under the guise of “confidentiality” stipulated in Canon Law to protect the name of those involved. This has been used in the past to stifle all action against pedophile priests and to protect them. Now it is a crime to do so.

The Instruction specifically states that church authorities must cooperate with the civil authorities and share evidence with them in any investigation. Also, the victims must never be bound to silence about the abusive act by anybody or impeded by anybody. So, the traditional out-of-court settlement is morally wrong and forbidden.

Child sex abuse committed a heinous crime and must be held accountable before the law. This is justice for the victims and a strong deterrent to other would-be child abusers. Remember that…

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Reporting child abuse in the Church, 1

ILOILO CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Panay News [Iloilo, Phillipines]

December 21, 2021

By Shay Cullen

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THERE are serious and profound changes taking place in the Catholic Church to acknowledge and prevent child sexual abuse by clerics and laypeople. The number of priests convicted in the Philippines is zero.  Clerical child abuse has become a crisis for the Church as an institution.

We celebrate this December Pope Francis’s historic decree that approved a new law, Motu Proprio Vos estis lux mundi, to protect child victims and prosecute any clergy accused of child abuse.  It covers bishops that covered up acts of abuse by priests or laypeople. Every complaint of child abuse must be reported and investigated immediately and reported to the Church and the civil authorities. 

The Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) has its guidelines in dealing with child abuse by priests but they are outdated and do not include any cooperation with civil authorities in bringing a cleric child rapist or abuser to justice….

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Vatican should return Indigenous artifacts and records of residential schools

TORONTO (CANADA)
Toronto Star [Toronto, Canada]

December 16, 2021

By Star Editorial Board

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Sometimes the Vatican can appear so obsessed with papal bulls and encyclicals, and its frequent rounds of damage control, and managing people’s naughty bits, and tabulating the number of angels shaking their booty on the heads of pins, that it forgets the gospel according to Robert Fulghum.

“Don’t take things that aren’t yours.”

“Put things back where you found them.”

As most who have ever cracked the spine on a bestseller know, that was part of Fulghum’s formula for virtuous living as contained in his book All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten.

It turns out that popes over the decades – especially the apparently avid artifact collector Pius XI — have amassed hundreds of items from Indigenous peoples in Canada, including an antique seal-skin kayak from the Western Arctic.

When news of this broke, Inuvialuit leaders in the region issued a statement demanding the return of the…

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Crown-Indigenous relations minister ‘absolutely open’ to review of survivor compensation deal

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

December 21, 2021

By Jason Warick

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Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Marc Miller says he’s “absolutely open” to an independent review of the residential school compensation deal reached between the federal government and Catholic Church.

“I would say we’re absolutely open to the idea; we have to get to the bottom of what we’ve done,” Miller said in a phone interview Monday. “The job I’ve been given is to get to the bottom of these things.… This is not the end of the story.”

Advocates say while that’s encouraging news, Miller could show good faith by immediately releasing key government documents related to the deal he admits are already in his possession.

“We expect the federal government to release everything. This is a necessary step for many survivors in their own healing journey,” Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations Chief Bobby Cameron said.

In recent months, a CBC News investigation has revealed new details of the Catholic Church’s three key promises to compensate survivors under the landmark Indian…

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Retired Canadian archbishop: ‘We will not regain our credibility’ if the church doesn’t confront Indigenous abuse

OTTAWA (CANADA)
America [New York NY]

December 20, 2021

By Bill McCormick, S.J.

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Pope Francis’ meeting with representatives of Canadian Indigenous communities at the Vatican, spurred after unmarked graves were discovered at residential schools earlier this year, has been delayed. America spoke via email with Archbishop Terrence Prendergast, S.J., archbishop emeritus of Ottawa-Cornwall and current apostolic administrator of the Diocese of Hearst–Moosonee—which includes a number of people belonging to First Nations—about the situation in Canada. Responses have been edited for length and clarity.

At an ordination Mass in August 2021, you spoke movingly of the church’s response to the residential boarding schools revelations. Would you mind sharing with us what you said there?

Here are excerpts from that homily:

We Jesuits of the world are celebrating a special jubilee year in 2021, the 500th anniversary of a Spanish soldier named Ignacio de Loyola being gravely wounded by a cannonball in the siege of Pamplona—not so much that battle as by an inner struggle that followed….

I would…

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United Methodists to join in plan for Boy Scouts bankruptcy

DOVER (DE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

December 21, 2021

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Congregations affiliated with the United Methodist Church have agreed to contribute $30 million to a fund for victims who say they were molested as youngsters in the Boy Scouts of America, an attorney said Tuesday.

A committee representing United Methodist churches that sponsored Scouting activities also agreed to help raise an additional $100 million for the fund.

Jessica Lauria, an attorney for the BSA, told Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein about the planned agreement during an online hearing Tuesday in federal bankruptcy court in Delaware. Lauria said the United Methodist-affiliated churches would receive protected party status, which means they would be released from further liability for abuse claims.

The proposed trust is expected to grow to more than $2.6 billion and would be the largest sexual abuse settlement in U.S. history.

More than 82,000 sexual abuse claims have been filed in the bankruptcy case. Victims who say they were abused must…

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Prosecution of ex-Cardinal McCarrick takes next step in Massachusetts

DEDHAM (MA)
Crux [Denver CO]

December 22, 2021

By John Lavenburg

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A Dec. 21 motion for transcript, audio and video recordings of depositions related to the criminal charges against ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick was an important step for the prosecution, according to one of his alleged victims present in the courtroom.

The motion was a part of a brief second pre-trial hearing in the case at Dedham District Court in Massachusetts. In addition to the motion, the case was continued to March 3 for a status update.

McCarrick wasn’t present in the courtroom. His attorney Barry Coburn stated he had no objection to the commonwealth’s motion before exiting the courtroom without further comment. Crux couldn’t reach Coburn for comment after the hearing.

James Grein, a Virginia man who came forward in 2018 with two decades of abuse allegations against McCarrick, was present in the courtroom on Dec. 21 and told Crux that he had “high emotions” ahead of the hearing. Grein said it was “important” for…

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Despite setbacks, Vatican editorial defends trial procedures

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

December 21, 2021

By Junno Arocho Esteves

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Six months after the Vatican announced criminal charges in connection with a London property deal that cost millions, the Vatican City State court is still dealing with preliminary, procedural arguments.

But in an editorial for Vatican News Dec. 20, Andrea Tornielli, an official at the Dicastery for Communication, argued that was to be expected due to complications arising from the Vatican’s penal code, which is older than and different from Italy’s.

“This has created objective problems for all parties to the proceedings, who are asked to apply that code to factual situations that the legislator of a century ago could certainly not foresee,” he wrote.

The Vatican court originally had brought to trial 10 individuals, including Cardinal Angelo Becciu, former prefect of the Congregation for Saints’ Causes, and four companies on charges involving financial malfeasance and corruption in relation to a multimillion-dollar property deal in London.

But in October, the court ordered the prosecution to redo its investigations of four of the defendants and…

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Spanish bishops react to newspaper report alleging abuse by 251 priests

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

December 22, 2021

By Inés San Martín

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 On Dec. 2, a Rome-based Spanish journalist handed Pope Francis a journalistic inquiry of abuse allegations against 251 priests, arguably the largest investigation into clerical sexual abuse conducted in Spain to date.

On Sunday, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni sent out a statement to a group of journalists saying that the report had been sent to “the competent authorities” so that it can proceed according to the “canonical norms in force, opportunely updated in recent years.” 

“The Holy Father has always insisted on his attention and closeness to the victims of abuse, with words, prayer and many gestures,” the head of the Vatican press office stressed in his message.

The Vatican has not specified to which “instances” it has forwarded the document documenting the abuses, but in virtually every case, sexual abuse against minors committed by a Catholic priest are investigated and tried by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the…

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