ABUSE TRACKER

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

October 12, 2021

The European Court of Human Rights in the French eastern city of Strasbourg.

Dismissing Catholic abuse victims’ lawsuit, ECHR rules Vatican cannot be sued in European courts

STRASBOURG (FRANCE)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

October 12, 2021

By Richard Allen Greene and Kara Fox

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[Photo above: The European Court of Human Rights in the French eastern city of Strasbourg.]

The Vatican cannot be sued in European courts because it is a sovereign state, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled Tuesday in dismissing a suit from survivors of abuse by Catholic clergy.

It was the ECHR’s first case to deal with the immunity of the Holy See, the court said.

A group of 24 Belgian, French and Dutch abuse survivors attempted to sue the Holy See and Catholic Church leaders in Belgian courts beginning in 2011, but courts in that country ruled they did not have jurisdiction over the Vatican, the European Court of Human Rights said Tuesday in explaining its ruling.

The abuse survivors — who said they were abused by priests when they were children — fought their way up through the Belgian court system before bringing their suit to the…

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Camden diocese plan would offer $26 million for clergy sex abuse survivors

CAMDEN (NJ)
The Courier-Post [Cherry Hill NJ]

October 11, 2021

By Jim Walsh

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The Diocese of Camden wants a federal bankruptcy judge to approve a plan that offers $26 million to about 300 victims of alleged clergy sex abuse.

But the diocese acknowledged opposition to its proposal, which could rise to about $40 million “if survivors choose to accept tax-free payments over seven years.”

It asserted a committee representing survivors has offered “no reasonable” proposals after hundreds of hours in mediation with the diocese.

“The point has been reached where survivors should have the choice to accept compensation now,” the diocese said in a statement Monday evening.

The diocese on Tuesday, Oct. 12, is to file a reorganization plan with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Camden, where it filed for Chapter 11 protection from creditors a little more than a year ago.

In filing for Chapter Ii protection, the diocese cited the financial impact of both clergy sex abuse claims and the…

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Catholic Church sex abuse claims: Vatican has immunity, rules ECHR

STRASBOURG (FRANCE)
Euronews [Lyon, France]

October 12, 2021

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The Vatican has sovereign immunity that protects it from being sued in local courts over sexual abuse cases, the European Court of Human Rights said in a chamber ruling on Tuesday.

It dismissed a case brought by 24 French, Belgian and Dutch nationals, who said they were sexually abused by Catholic priests when they were children.

The class-action suit sought €10,000 compensation for each victim but the Ghent Court of First Instance said in 2013 that it did not have jurisdiction over the Holy See. The applicants had argued that they had been deprived of access to a court.

The European court agreed with the Belgian court that the Holy see enjoyed “diplomatic immunity” and “state privileges under international law”.

“The Court did not find anything unreasonable or arbitrary in the detailed reasoning which led the Court of Appeal to reach that conclusion. It pointed out that it had itself…

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Europe court rejects case seeking to blame Vatican for abuse

STRASBOURG (FRANCE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 12, 2021

By Nicole Winfield

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A European court agreed Tuesday that the Vatican couldn’t be sued in a local court for sexual abuse committed by Catholic priests, affirming that it enjoys sovereign immunity and that the misconduct of priests and their superiors can’t be attributed to the Holy See.

The European Court of Human Rights dismissed a case brought by two dozen people who said they were victims of abusive priests in Belgium. The 24 had argued the Holy See was liable because of the “structurally deficient” way the Catholic hierarchy had for decades covered up cases of priests who raped and molested children.

The plaintiffs appealed to the Strasbourg-based court after Belgian courts ruled they had no jurisdiction given the Holy See’s immunity as a sovereign state.

The European court said the Belgian judges were correct and that the victims hadn’t been deprived of their right to have access to a court. It restated…

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October 11, 2021

Actors from left to right, Alexandra Massamiri, Laurent Marinez, Carmen Vadillo and Olivier Wendell-Douglas perform the play "Pardon?" at "Theo Theater" in Paris, Thursday, Oct. 7, 2021. French author and actor Laurent Martinez has been sexually abused by a priest. Over forty years later, he has chosen to make his story a theater play to show the devastating consequences and how speaking out can help overcoming the trauma. The play called "Pardon?" is deeply inspired from the Martinez's own life, describing how he felt devoured from the inside and the difficulties of daily life after being abused. (AP Photo / Michel Euler)

French actor breaks silence on child sex abuse within church

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 11, 2021

By Sylvie Corbet

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[See also a video interview with Laurent Martinez. Photo above: Actors from left to right, Alexandra Massamiri, Laurent Marinez, Carmen Vadillo and Olivier Wendell-Douglas perform the play “Pardon?” at “Theo Theater” in Paris, Thursday, Oct. 7, 2021. French author and actor Laurent Martinez has been sexually abused by a priest. Over forty years later, he has chosen to make his story a theater play to show the devastating consequences and how speaking out can help overcoming the trauma. The play called “Pardon?” is deeply inspired from the Martinez’s own life, describing how he felt devoured from the inside and the difficulties of daily life after being abused. (AP Photo/Michel Euler)]

At the age of eight, Laurent Martinez was sexually abused by a priest. Forty years later, he has chosen to make his story into a play, to show the devastating consequences and how speaking out can help victims heal…

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Roman Fathers sexually abusing church members in Accra?

ACCRA (GHANA)
Ghana Web [Accra, Ghana]

October 10, 2021

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There seems to be uneasy tension among the Accra priesthood of the Roman Catholic Church as the attention of the Metropolitan Archbishop of Accra has been drawn to several cases of sexual abuse.

A letter intercepted by 3news.com purportedly being a reply to concerns raised by a member of the Star of the Sea Catholic Church in Dansoman assured of thorough investigations into the cases.

“Let me take this opportunity to thank you for being bold and championing this course (sic) and for bringing this to my notice with suggestions,” Most Reverend John Bonaventure Kwofie stated in his reply dated Tuesday, September 28, 2021.

“I would arrange for you to meet with the Accra Archdiocesan Officer in charge of Sexual Abuse Cases to furnish him with all the information you have on this matter,” he stated.

It is unclear if the lady in question is a victim of sexual abuse.

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Sheffield bishop Ralph Heskett ‘failed to report priest who sexually abused altar boys’

LIVERPOOL (UNITED KINGDOM)
The Star [Sheffield, Yorkshire, England]

October 11, 2021

By Neil Docking

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A Catholic bishop in Sheffield has been accused of failing to report the sexual abuse of altar boys.

Bishop of Hallam Ralph Heskett is claimed to have known about a priest who preyed on altar boys in Liverpool but failed to report him to the police, with the culprit instead sent away to Scotland.

It is alleged that Bishop Heskett, formerly parish priest at Bishop Eton in Childwall, Liverpool, was told about sex abuse by a priest at a Liverpool monastery but did not report him to the police.

During a court case in Liverpool, Father Thomas MacCarte was convicted of grooming and molested two altar boys at Bishop Eton Monastery in Woolton Road, Childwall.

But when one victim’s dad complained to Bishop Eton’s then parish priest, Ralph Heskett, MacCarte was moved to Scotland instead of being reported to the police.

MacCarte, now 70, was found guilty this week of…

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Seal of the confessional

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

October 11, 2021

By Ramon J. Farolan

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First of all, congratulations to Maria Ressa, the first Filipino winner of the Nobel Peace Prize. Sometimes, the Almighty gives us something to cheer about after being relegated to the bottom of the heap in almost all other activities.

Three years ago, in October 2018, I wrote a number of articles on the problem of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic Church clerics and on the plight of married priests in the Philippines. I mentioned that I was first baptized as an Aglipayan. My relatives on my mother’s side were high-ranking Aglipayan ministers. Shortly after my mother passed away, my surrogate mom, a devout Catholic belonging to the Order of Mt. Carmel and who raised me as her own, had me rebaptized in Catholic Church rites by Belgian missionaries in Baguio City. Since then, I have remained a Catholic although not in agreement with some positions of the Church from…

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The hard truth of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church is demoralizing. But we must confront it

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
The Globe and Mail [Toronto, Canada]

October 10, 2021

By Michael W. Higgins

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Michael W. Higgins is principal/president of St. Mark’s and Corpus Christi Colleges, University of British Columbia, Senior Fellow of Massey College, and co-author of Suffer the Children unto Me: An Open Inquiry into the Clerical Sex Abuse Crisis.

When Pope Francis met with the Archbishop of Paris and other French bishops at the end of September, he observed on the matter of the then-forthcoming report on sex abuse in the church of France: “Look the truth in the face.”

It is not only the hierarchy that is now doing so, but all of France, Catholic and otherwise. Indeed, the world has taken shocked notice.

The Sauvé Report, an investigation commissioned by the French bishops in 2018 in the wake of a series of clerical sex abuse scandals, was issued on Oct. 5. The tremors of disbelief, outrage and horror continue to reverberate. The statistical tally is staggering: 216,000 people sexually abused…

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October 10, 2021

CONDENA DECANATO A PADRE PEDERASTA

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Tribuna Campeche [San Francisco de Campeche, Campeche, Mexico]

October 10, 2021

By Tribuna

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El Decanato de la Iglesia Católica en Carmen condenó los abusos sexuales del sacerdote Gustavo Alberto Zapata Torres, quien confesó haber violado a un menor de edad en 2016 en el Seminario Menor de Nuestra Señora del Carmen. Se mantiene recluido en el Cereso desde finales del 2018.

José Francisco Verdejo Aguilera, vocero del Decanato, dijo que desde el Vaticano se dio la instrucción de no tolerar indicio alguno sobre abusos de cualquier tipo en la Iglesia Católica, incluso de comprobarse responsabilidad se deben suspender sus actividades religiosas, ya que existiría el riesgo de que vuelvan a fallarle a la sociedad.

El sacerdote se refirió a la noticia de que Zapata Torres, exadministrador del Seminario Menor de Nuestra Señora del Carmen, confesó en audiencia de procedimiento abreviado haber violado en 2016 a un adolescente de 13 años de la ciudad de San Francisco de Campeche.

“El papa ha pedido de…

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Sateki Raass quit the priesthood after pleading guilty.

Catholic church calls in Vatican to investigate sexting priest case

AUCKLAND (NEW ZEALAND)
Stuff [Wellington, New Zealand]

October 10, 2021

By Steve Kilgallon

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[Photo above: Sateki Raass quit the priesthood after pleading guilty.]

The head of the New Zealand Catholic church has asked the Vatican for permission to launch an investigation into the handling of complaints about a priest who groomed a teenage girl.

Sateki Raass resigned from the priesthood after he was convicted in 2019 of indecent communication with a girl under 16 and ordered to serve 100 hours community service.

A series of stories by Stuff has since unravelled the Auckland diocese’s handling of the case. This includes bishop Patrick Dunn’s original plans – all later reversed – not to tell school communities attached to Raass’ parish, to allow Raass to say mass after his arrest, and to bail him to a presbytery attached to another primary school despite bail conditions prohibiting contact with under-16s.

Dunn also told parishioners Raass’ offending was merely “inappropriate text messaging”, paid for a QC to represent Raass, and…

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Victim of alleged sexual abuse by a priest speaks out

LAWTELL (LA)
KLFY-TV, CBS 10 [Lafayette LA]

October 6, 2021

By Darla Montgomery

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Three Acadiana men are speaking publicly for the first time about being repeatedly sexually abused, allegedly, by a local priest when they were only 10 and 11 years old.

And now in their 50’s, the men are coming forward with the allegations, hoping to find closure through a new law that went into effect earlier this summer, allowing adults who were victims as minors up to three years to file suit against accused offenders.

52-year-old Mark Batiste begins his story identifying the priest who allegedly sexually abused him, his brother, and nearly a dozen other altar boys. “First off his name was Fr. James Queren.”

Batiste claims the abuse went on for about three years at the Holy Family Catholic Church in Lawtell.

Recalling the traumatic events Batiste says, “I can remember the first time it happened. I left as soon as he was finished.” Batiste says he went home,…

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Former Columbia City pastor charged

COLUMBIA CITY (IN)
Today's Catholic [Diocese of Fort Wayne IN]

October 8, 2021

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A criminal investigation into charges of sexual misconduct with a minor by Father David Huneck, pastor of St. Paul of the Cross Parish in Columbia City, has resulted in the following charges being filed by the Whitley County Prosecuting Attorney Friday, Oct. 8.

• Count 1: Child Seduction – Level 6 Felony
• Count 2: Sexual Battery – Level 6 Felony
• Count 3: Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor – Class A Misdemeanor
• Count 4: Furnishing Alcohol to a Minor – Class B Misdemeanor
• Count 5: Battery – Class B Misdemeanor
• Count 6: Battery – Class B Misdemeanor

Father Huneck, a priest of the diocese for three years, resigned from his position at the parish and from his role as co-chaplain of Bishop Dwenger High School in Fort Wayne after the allegation of misconduct received Sept. 19. A statement issued by the diocese Sept. 28 said once representatives of the diocese…

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Priest invited teens to his home, gave them alcohol, court docs say

FORT WAYNE (IN)
Fort Wayne's NBC-TV [Fort Wayne IN]

October 8, 2021

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UPDATE: Records show David Huneck was booked Friday into the Whitley County Jail and that a court appearance is set for Tuesday afternoon.

WHITLEY COUNTY, Ind. — The probable cause document filed against local Catholic Priest David Huneck show invited the two victims to his home and gave them alcohol before assaulting them.

David Huneck had served as pastor of St. Paul of the Cross church in Columbia City and as a chaplain at Bishop Dwenger High School in Fort Wayne before stepping down following the accusations of assault.

Probable cause documents say the victims were 17 and 19 years old at the time of the abuse.

One victim told police she knew Huneck from his time as a Chaplain at Bishop Dwenger High School and looked up to him as a role model.

She said on June 30, the two girls were invited to Huneck’s house…

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New podcast: Those Southern Baptist sex-abuse battles are not just about Southern Baptists

NASHVILLE (TN)
Get Religion

October 8, 2021

By Terry Mattingly

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The Southern Baptist Convention’s ongoing fights about how to handle sexual-abuse claims against ministers and other church personnel and volunteers is a perfect example of the kind of story that drives newspaper editors crazy.

It’s big and complicated and it seems like something crazy or important (or both) happens every other day. But it also seems like it’s impossible to yank a big, dramatic headline out of this sprawling, complicated story.

The story never seems to end and the amount of background material needed — in story after story after story — makes it impossible to cover this stuff in tidy 500-word stories. But if a newsroom skips a few of the major developments, that makes it even harder to get back in the game and explain to readers what is happening. Oh, and did I mention that newsroom managers pretty much have to assign a reporter to this story…

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Remembering legacy of embattled Bishop McCormack

MANCHESTER (NH)
The St. Anselm Crier (student newspaper of St. Anselm College, Manchester NH)

October 8, 2021

By Anna Raley

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Bishop John B. McCormack of the Diocese of Manchester died on September 21 at age 86. Community members gathered for the one and a half hour ceremony on Tuesday to commemorate the Bishop’s most impactful life.

McCormack died at Mount Carmel Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Manchester. His  funeral service was held at Joseph Cathedral in Manchester and Bishop McCormack was laid to rest in the cathedral cemetery. Bishop Libasci, the presiding official of the funeral mass, in a statement by the diocese specified, “Bishop McCormack was a good and holy bishop who worked hard in times of great difficulty, demonstrating the virtues of kindness, compassion and humility right up until his passing.”

Sophomore Saint Anselm student Erik Bishop attended McCormack’s funeral mass and commented upon the sense of community in the room. He stated, “While we were not all familiar with each other, we all felt united with one another….

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The Guardian view on sexual abuse and the Catholic church: contrition is not enough

(FRANCE)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 10, 2021

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An investigation into paedophile priests in France reveals an institution in desperate need of reform

The findings of an inquiry into sexual abuse and paedophilia in the French Catholic church, published last week, are difficult to read and painful to contemplate. Over the past 70 years, the Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church found that at least 216,000 children were subjected to abuse at the hands of Catholic priests and members of religious orders. Sexual exploitation within the church and associated institutions, the commission stated, had been a “massive phenomenon”. Beyond immediate family and friends, the prevalence of sexual violence in the church outstripped that in any other social environment.

These conclusions represent, as Pope Francis rightly acknowledged, “a moment of shame” for the Catholic church. They should also be the catalyst for far-reaching reform of its practice and culture. The French report is only the latest in a…

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Authorities: Monk in Alaska faces child sexual abuse charge

KODIAK (AK)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 8, 2021

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A monk associated with the Russian Orthodox Church turned himself into police in Kodiak to report that he had sexually abused a child, according to the Alaska Department of Law, which said he arrived to make the report accompanied by a priest and a parent of the child.

The man faces a felony sexual abuse of a minor charge, an online court records system shows. The department, in a statement Friday, said the man was being held on bond and faces another court hearing later this month.

The public defender agency, which the records system shows is defending the man, didn’t immediately return a phone message seeking comment.

The department said the man, as a monk, was allowed to stay at church-provided housing.

Police have found that he also had stayed in several other Alaska communities and at a monastery near Phoenix, Arizona, the department said.

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Man seeks to be removed from Santa Fe archdiocese’s list of accused abusers

SANTA FE (NM)
Santa Fe New Mexican [Santa Fe NM]

October 9, 2021

By Rick Ruggles

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Rudy Blea continues to pay a heavy toll for a sexual liaison he had 51 years ago, at age 19, with a 17-year-old boy.

The incident led to his inclusion on the Archdiocese of Santa Fe’s list of clergy and other Catholic hierarchy who are considered credibly accused sexual abusers of children. Blea says he shouldn’t be on the list.

Records from state District Court and the U.S Bankruptcy Court in New Mexico describe in some detail how he came to be on the list of 80 men — priests, deacons, brothers — who are widely known as pedophiles. The documents also describe Blea’s arguments for why he shouldn’t be listed among them.

His primary argument is that he never served as a Catholic priest or in any other role in the archdiocese that would qualify him as a member of church hierarchy. The archdiocese said he did, however, study…

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STATEMENT FROM THE ARCHDIOCESE OF KANSAS CITY IN KANSAS, SEPT. 27, 2021

KANSAS CITY (KS)
Archdiocese of Kansas City [Kansas City KS]

September 27, 2021

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The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas announced at all Masses the weekend of Sept. 25-26 at Mater Dei Parish in Topeka that it has received an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Father John Pilcher, pastor. In accord with archdiocesan protocol, law enforcement was notified of the allegation and Father Pilcher has been suspended from the public exercise of priestly ministry pending the outcome of an investigation into the matter.

Father Pilcher denies the allegation and is cooperating fully. He will remain on leave until the investigation is concluded and the archdiocesan Independent Review Board has reviewed the case and made a recommendation to Archbishop Joseph Naumann regarding the matter.  

The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas takes all allegations of misconduct by church personnel very seriously and works to respond to survivors’ needs with urgency and respect.  We encourage anyone with knowledge about this case or…

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French author Frederic Martel’s book ‘In The Closet Of The Vatican’ in light of French investigation showing Catholic Church had 3000 abusers and 300,000 victims in France since 1950s

(AUSTRALIA)
Newcastle Herald [Newcastle, Australia]

October 10, 2021

By Ian Kirkwood

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IT should be a shock, but it’s not.

On Tuesday, the French Catholic Church received a 2500-page report from an independent commission, detailing the abuse of an estimated 330,000 children over 70 years by 3000 Catholic offenders, two-thirds of them priests.

It should make more waves than it has, but COVID hogs the headlines.

And it’s not a shock because we have read this story before. Repeatedly. In France as in dozens of other jurisdictions that have looked into this sad phenomenon, priests have taken to abusing children. Sometimes girls, but overwhelmingly boys.

You will recall that Julia Gillard credited our esteemed former colleague, Joanne McCarthy, as the driving force for a Royal Commission.

I sat with Joanne as we reported the Newcastle chapters of the inquiry.

The Anglicans were no angels but the Catholic insistence on clerical celibacy all but channelled the priesthood towards trouble.

I’ve got a bit of a thing about churches.

If…

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Catholic Church must start to ‘listen’ says Pope

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

October 9, 2021

By Christopher Lamb

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The 84-year-old Jesuit Pope called for a “different Church” which is able to listen.

Pope Francis fired the starting gun on the most ambitious Catholic renewal project in 60 years by warning against the Church becoming a “museum”. 

Speaking at the beginning of a two-year synod process in the Vatican, the 84-year-old Jesuit Pope called for a “different Church” which is able to listen, becomes immersed in people’s lives and avoids the “poison” of complacency. 

“Keep us from becoming a ‘museum Church’, beautiful but mute, with much past and little future,” the Pope told the synod gathering at the Paul VI synod hall in the Vatican.

Francis was speaking at the start of an unprecedented listening and consultation exercise taking place across the 1.3 billion-member Church. Although the process is set to last two years significant potential changes were suggested that means it is likely to last…

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Catholic bishop didn’t report sex predator priest to the police

LIVERPOOL (UNITED KINGDOM)
Liverpool Echo [Liverpool, England]

October 10, 2021

By Neil Docking

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The Bishop of Hallam knew about a priest who preyed on altar boys in Liverpool

A Catholic bishop told about sex abuse by a priest at a Liverpool monastery didn’t report him to the police, a court heard.

Father Thomas MacCarte groomed and molested two altar boys at Bishop Eton Monastery in Woolton Road, Childwall.

But when one victim’s dad complained to Bishop Eton’s then parish priest Ralph Heskett – now the Bishop of Hallam in Sheffield – MacCarte was moved to Scotland.

MacCarte, now 70, was found guilty of three counts of indecent assault, relating to sex attacks when he was based in Merseyside three decades ago.

A trial at Liverpool Crown Court heard the boy’s dad “immediately complained” to Bishop Heskett when his son told him at the time about “sexual things” MacCarte had done to him.

Robert Wyn Jones, prosecuting, said: “It was agreed that the matter would…

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Letter: Too much spin on refugee work obscures Catholic church’s legacy of abuse

TULSA (OK)
Tulsa World [Tulsa OK]

October 8, 2021

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As I process the latest news regarding the Catholic church, I am again miffed at such positive spin the press is giving them while not addressing the horrific sins of the church that have been going on since the 1950s to as recently as 2020.

Of note, I was raised a Catholic, every sacrament was taken, and we even lived down the street from a convent in one direction, a church in the other.

In other words, I have the entire experience. Yet no one in my family continues to support the church because of the tragic way children have been abused. And now are we supposed to glorify the church for taking in refugees? I hope someone is watching over those children.

— Sally Blann, Bixby OK

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October 9, 2021

A CURA PEDERASTA 6 AÑOS DE CÁRCEL

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Tribuna Campeche [San Francisco de Campeche, Campeche, Mexico]

October 9, 2021

By Tribuna

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El sacerdote católico Gustavo Alberto Zapata Torres, exadministrador del Seminario Menor de Nuestra Señora del Carmen, confesó en audiencia de procedimiento abreviado (PA) haber violado en 2016 a un adolescente originario de la ciudad de San Francisco de Campeche, por lo que fue condenado a seis años de prisión.

Sin embargo, trascendió que podría quedar libre en breve, por gestiones de la Diócesis de Campeche, que ha seguido con atención el caso desde que conoció la denuncia.

El pastor religioso pederasta confeso, preso en el Centro Penitenciario de Ciudad del Carmen desde 2018, se declaró culpable de violación equiparada, por lo que tendrá que pagar 60 mil pesos como reparación del daño y cubrir 14 mil 608 pesos de multa.

La audiencia de PA se concretó el pasado jueves 30 de septiembre, tras dos intentos de acuerdo entre el acusado, su defensa, Ministerio Público, el asesor de víctimas y la…

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Pope Francis and the French clerical abuse/coverup report

PARIS (FRANCE)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

October 8, 2021

By Christopher R. Altieri

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The CIASE report’s methodology deserves – and shall no doubt receive – careful scrutiny and rigorous interrogation. But there are many hard questions that simply aren’t being addressed and answered.

The Catholic Church’s leading expert on sex crimes says the French bishops deserve our gratitude for their willingness to face the disclosure of decades of abuse and coverup.

“I think we have to thank the French bishops,” said Archbishop Charles J. Scicluna of Malta in a short English-language comment he gave to the official Vatican News media outlet, “for [having] the courage to confront themselves with reality.”

The line didn’t quite make it into the Vatican News writeup of the more expansive interview, which was conducted in Italian, but it leads the 58-second audio clip at the bottom of the piece.

“It’s so sad to read what the report states, and the information it gives,” Archbishop Scicluna went on to…

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Wilson-Raybould wasn’t consulted on freeing Catholic Church from residential school compensation deal: source

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

October 7, 2021

By Jason Warick

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Critics question decision to not advise then-justice minister that appeal was being dropped

No one in the federal government is saying who made the final decision to relieve the Catholic Church of its financial responsibilities to residential school survivors.

But a source with direct knowledge of the controversial 2015 case told CBC News that then-minister of justice Jody Wilson-Raybould wasn’t consulted, even though a lawyer in her department signed the final release.

“This is stunning. It’s just unbelievable that the first Indigenous minister of justice was frozen out of a decision like this,” said Tom McMahon, a former general legal counsel for the Truth and Reconciliation Commission who also spent 17 years as a lawyer in the Department of Justice.

Mary Ellen Turpel-Lafond, director of the University of British Columbia’s Indian Residential School History and Dialogue Centre, said she was also alarmed to hear that Wilson-Raybould was left out of the loop.

“This was a…

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Residential school survivors frustrated Wilson-Raybould not consulted on scrapping of 2015 compensation appeal

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

October 8, 2021

By Jason Warick

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Federal official says decisions made in ‘caretaker’ period before Wilson-Raybould was justice minister

Residential school survivors say they’re saddened to hear Canada’s first Indigenous justice minister, Jody Wilson-Raybould, wasn’t consulted by government officials on the decision to abandon an appeal in a key legal case affecting them.

In the days after Wilson-Raybould was sworn in back in November 2015, the government dropped its court appeal of the Roman Catholic Church’s compensation buyout agreement. That ended the government’s legal attempts to make the church pay the millions in compensation remaining on its $79 million worth of promises to survivors.

“That’s why [Wilson-Raybould] was there. That’s why that position is there.… Definitely, she should have had a choice to be in on that decision,” said Rick Daniels, a member of Mistawasis Nêhiyawak and a survivor of St. Michael’s Indian Residential School in Duck Lake, Sask.

An official with Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada provided some details Friday, saying key decisions on…

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French Catholic Church abuse report highlights the special toll faced by boys

PARIS (FRANCE)
NBC News [New York NY]

October 8, 2021

By Phil Goldstein

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Male survivors of child sexual abuse face stereotypes around masculinity and greater degrees of shame and self-blame than other victims.

A report from France on Tuesday revealed that French clergy in the Roman Catholic Church have sexually abused more than 200,000 children since 1950. The inquiry found that the vast majority of the victims — 80 percent — were boys. When I read the news, my heart sank in a familiar way.

I felt damaged, as if I had a stain on my body I could never wash off. And I feared the consequences of disclosure.

As a male survivor of child sexual abuse, I can imagine both the trauma of the abuse and the silent pain that many of the survivors likely carried for decades. Child sexual abuse is a horrible betrayal for everyone who goes through it — but it is especially difficult for…

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7 Things Catholics Need to Know About the French Report on Sexual Abuse

PARIS (FRANCE)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

October 8, 2021

By Solène Tadié

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The purpose of the 2,500-page CIASE report was not only to shed light on sexual abuse within the Church in France, but also to make recommendations to help the Church better address sexual abuse in the future.

The Oct. 5 release of the French report on “Sexual Violence in the Catholic Church between 1950 and 2020,” carried out by the Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church (CIASE), has caused an earthquake of reaction.

Catholics know that such investigations are necessary to put an end to a scourge that has destroyed the lives of thousands of people and continues to disfigure the Church, but it’s also extremely important that the findings of the French report are communicated accurately. 

The purpose of the 2,500-page report, which is the fruit of 32 months of work, was not only to shed light on sexual abuse within the Church, but also to determine…

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Support group for people abused by priests reacts to Fort Wayne priest charged for sexual abuse of minor

COLUMBIA CITY (IN)
WANE [Fort Wayne IN]

October 9, 2021

By Britt Salay

Read original article

The Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests (SNAP) is reacting after charges are handed down for a priest accused of sexually abusing two teens.

Fort Wayne priest now criminally charged with sexual abuse of minor 

Father David Huneck is facing six charges, two of which are felonies, stemming from two separate incidents where he allegedly offered alcohol and groped two teens in the house provided to him by Saint Paul of the Cross Catholic Church in Columbia City. He served as the pastor there as well as chaplain of Bishop Dwenger High School in Fort Wayne.

SNAP is a nonprofit organization that acts as a support group for men and women who have been abused by religious leaders. Melanie Sapkota, Survivor Support Supervisor for SNAP, said despite some myths that abuse in churches happens primarily to young boys, the sex and age of victims vary.

“It’s probably pretty…

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Plenary Council members ask Australian church to embrace its diversity

(AUSTRALIA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

October 8, 2021

By Catholic News Service

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Members gathered for the first assembly of Australia’s Plenary Council have backed calls to ensure the Catholic Church in the country more fully embraces its liturgical diversity, particularly the rich presence of Eastern churches.

Eastern churches are well represented at the assembly, including bishops and laypeople from the Maronite, Melkite and Syro-Malabar eparchies and the Ukrainian Catholic Church.

One of the key questions on the agenda for the Plenary Council is how the church might better embrace its diverse liturgical traditions and the cultural gifts of immigrant communities to enrich the spirituality and worship of the church in Australia.

Through the small-group sessions at the assembly, members have reflected on the need to know and understand one another’s rites and celebrations through education in schools and the formation of future leaders and clergy.

Chaldean Archbishop Amel Nona told the assembly that one of the greatest blessings of the church was its unity in liturgical…

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Church must move from sorrow to action on abuse, archbishop says

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

October 8, 2021

By Cindy Wooden

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Shame and sorrow are appropriate initial responses to the report on the extent of clerical sexual abuse in France, but the Catholic Church must move to action to protect children and to guarantee justice for victims and survivors, said Archbishop Charles J. Scicluna.

“We must move on from mourning to a renewed determination and conviction to act,” the archbishop, adjunct secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Vatican’s top investigator of abuse cases, told Vatican News Oct. 7.

“We must understand that the victims — who have suffered abuse, humiliation, then even the trauma of an institutional cover-up — are part of us,” he said. “Therefore, we must act in a more determined and positive way.”

The report, released Oct. 5 by the 21-member Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church in France, estimated that 330,000 children in France had been abused by priests or other church employees since the 1950s.

Shock, shame and sorrow are appropriate initial reactions,…

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‘Truth and Healing Commission’ could help Native American communities traumatized by government-run boarding schools that tried to destroy Indian culture

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Conversation [Waltham MA]

October 8, 2021

By David R.M. Beck

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The National Day of Remembrance for Native American children honors children who died years ago while attending the United States’ Indian boarding schools each Sept. 30. On that day this year, a bill was reintroduced in both the Senate and the House to establish an American Indian Truth and Healing Commission on Indian boarding schools.

The bill’s purposes include both truth-seeking and healing. It asks “to formally investigate and document,” the impact of the trauma that resulted from Indian boarding school policies – a trauma that has been passed down through the generations in Native communities. It also urged federal support to heal “cultural and linguistic” destruction to tribal communities carried out by the federal, state and local governments.

Outside of Indian Country, the lasting legacy of boarding school policies has been largely ignored in the United States. As a historian of federal “Indian policy” in the 19th and 20th centuries, I…

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San Jose State president resigns amid sex abuse fallout

SAN JOSE (CA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 8, 2021

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San Jose State president Mary Papazian resigned Thursday after the university agreed last month to pay $1.6 million to 13 female student-athletes whose complaints about being sexually assaulted by an athletic trainer were mishandled.

Papazian, who has served as the university’s president since July 1, 2016, will step down at the end of the fall semester on Dec. 21, officials announced Thursday.

Federal prosecutors found that the university failed to adequately respond to reports of sexual harassment and assault that started in 2009 — exposing additional student-athletes to harm for more than a decade.

Scott Shaw, who was San Jose State’s director of sports medicine, resigned last year after allegations resurfaced in news media reports accusing him of inappropriately touching swimmers during physical therapy from 2006 to 2009. He has denied misconduct, and no criminal charges have been filed.

Investigators identified 23 student-athletes who they said were inappropriately touched by…

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October 8, 2021

Abuse report on the Catholic Church in France — a shock, but not a surprise

PARIS (FRANCE)
Politico.eu [Brussels, Belgium]

October 8, 2021

By Tom Heneghan

Read original article

Any progress will depend on whether the commission’s recommendations are implemented.

A report outlining the scale of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in France over the past seven decades has shocked the country. But while the numbers were indeed shocking, the report wasn’t actually a surprise. 

The steady drumbeat of cases exposed over the past 20 years made it hard to ignore the fact that the Church has a serious systemic challenge on its hands. The real shocker was that this was finally said out loud. 

Carried out by an independent commission headed by respected former judge Jean-Marc Sauvé, the report gives size and shape to a scandal the Church can no longer cover up. 

Presented before an audience including several Catholic leaders sitting in shamed silence, it estimated that at least 3,000 priests — around three percent of the country’s total — had preyed on…

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Former priest charged with multiple felonies, including child seduction, sexual battery

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

October 8, 2021

By Jonathan Shelley

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WHITLEY COUNTY, Ind. (WPTA21) – A priest who stepped away from his posts in the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend in September has been charged with six counts, including felony child seduction and sexual battery.

The Whitley County Prosecutor’s Office on Friday filed those charges against David Huneck, along with one count of Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor, one count of Furnishing Alcohol to a minor and two counts of battery.

The filing indicates the earliest of the alleged offences dates to June 2021.

The probable cause affidavit shows that the two alleged victims are a young adult woman and a teenager.

Huneck is accused of using “force or imminent threat of force” to molest the victims.

The incidents took place at Huneck’s home, in Columbia City. The affidavit said the adult and teenager had been invited to the residence to celebrate Huneck’s birthday, and that the priest…

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Warrant: Ex-pastor devised scheme against girl’s parents

ASHEVILLE (NC)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 8, 2021

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A former pastor in North Carolina gave a false report of child abuse to a sheriff’s office and tried to get them to sign over parental rights for their teenage daughter who he is accused of sexually assaulting, authorities said.

Warrants issued for Trent Brandon Holbert, 41, detailed the events that led to his being charged by the Buncombe County Sheriff’s Office with contributing to the delinquency of a minor, indecent liberties with a child and two counts of felony statutory sex offense with a child under 15, the Asheville Citizen Times reported.

When Holbert reported the parents to the N.C. Division of Social Services with allegations of neglect, the claims were found not to be true, according to the warrants.

Investigators began working the case on May 17 when the victim’s parents contacted deputies about their child “engaging in a secret and sexual relationship with their…

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Australian Catholics are having a reckoning moment. Here’s what young believers think

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

October 8, 2021

By Siobhan Marin for The Religion and Ethics Report

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Australia’s most important Catholic meeting since 1937 is on right now.

It’s called the Plenary Council and important issues, like women’s role in the Church, and how to heal after the sexual abuse crisis, have been on the table. 

Chris Lee never expected he’d be one of the 280 members attending.

Despite being raised in a practising household, the 27-year old says he didn’t have much to do with Catholicism when he was a teen.

“Like most young people, I went through the stage where I was away from the faith,” he says.

That all changed, eight years ago, after Chris and his friends were involved in a fight in Sydney’s Kings Cross.

“I got the hospital the next day and the ophthalmologist said, ‘We think one of the guys was carrying a knife because you’ve been cut through the eye,’” he recalls.

Chris had three metal plates put in the…

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Sexual Abuse Revelations Accelerate Sense of a French Church in Retreat

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

October 8, 2021

By Norimitsu Onishi and Aurelien Breeden

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The abuse of more than 200,000 minors by clergy over the past seven decades has shaken the nation and what was once a pillar of French society.

The Catholic Church in France was once so powerful that it was considered a state within a state. In Roman Catholicism’s global hierarchy, France cemented its position as far back as the fifth century, when it became known as the “eldest daughter of the church.”

While Catholicism has ebbed across the Western world, its unrelenting decline in France is all the more striking given its past prominence. Now, a devastating church-ordered report on sexual abuse by the clergy released this week, after a similar reckoning elsewhere, was yet another degradation, further shaking what was once a pillar of French culture and society.

The report, which confirmed stories of abuse that have emerged over the years, shocked the nation with details of its magnitude,…

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The Plenary Council confronts Church abuse

(AUSTRALIA)
The Catholic Leader [Archdiocese of Brisbane, Australia]

October 8, 2021

By Mark Bowling

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MEMBERS of Australia’s historic Plenary Council assembly have spent a day confronting the abuse and hurt committed inside the Church.

One of the 278 Council members, Francis Sullivan described Day 6 of the Plenary as “harrowing”.

“The atmosphere was solemn, the burden far from light,” he said.

Mr Sullivan is chair of Catholic Social Services Australia and formerly headed the Truth, Justice and Healing Council that oversaw the Church responses to a royal commission into child sexual abuse.

A commission final report delivered in 2017 revealed the appalling extent of clergy abuse, the gross failure of Church leaders to deal properly with allegations, to deliver justice for victims and to co-operate with civil authorities.

There were 21 specific recommendations for the Catholic Church, including setting up a national protocol for screening candidates before and during seminary or religious formation, measures to ensure greater transparency and accountability in Church governance,…

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Fort Wayne priest now criminally charged with sexual abuse of minor

FORT WAYNE (IN)
WANE [Fort Wayne IN]

October 8, 2021

Read original article

A local Catholic priest who pastored a Columbia City parish and served as a chaplain at Bishop Dwenger High School has been charged with sexually abusing a minor in a case involving two females.

Whitley County Prosecutor DJ Sigler announced Friday he has filed multiple charges against Father David Huneck.

The charges are as follows:

  • Child Seduction-Defendant has a professional relationship with child and fondles child
  • Sexual Battery–Victim compelled to submit by force or imminent threat
  • Contributing to the Delinquency of a Minor
  • Furnishing Alcohol to a Minor-Basic offense for furnishing to a minor
  • Two counts of battery

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 parish there.

The affidavit said that the investigation began on September 23, when an officer with…

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French Church and state at odds over sex abuse confessions

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 7, 2021

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France’s government has summoned the head of the French bishops’ conference after he said that secrets shared in the confessional are above the law, as the country reels from new revelations of large-scale child sex abuse within the Catholic Church.

Monsignor Eric de Moulins-Beaufort shocked some people in France when he told France-Info radio Wednesday that “the secrets of confession are stronger than the laws of the republic.”

The comments came in response to recommendations in a study released Tuesday estimating that some 330,000 children were sexually abused over 70 years by priests or other church-related figures.

The report describes “systemic” coverup of abuses by the Catholic Church, and urged the church to respect the rule of law in France. The church should send clear instructions to clergy receiving confession that they are legally obliged to report any cases of sexual violence against a child or vulnerable person to judicial…

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France rebukes bishop who said sex abuse revealed at confession would stay secret

PARIS (FRANCE)
Reuters [London, England]

October 7, 2021

By Geert De Clercq, and editing by Peter Graff

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France’s top bishop has been summoned by the interior minister after saying that the pact of secrecy would prevent a priest from reporting sex crimes against children that were revealed during Catholic confession.

Following the publication of a report this week about sexual abuse of children by the clergy, Eric de Moulins-Beaufort, who is archbishop of Reims and head of the Bishops’ Conference of France, said in a radio interview that the secrecy of the confession rite takes precedence over the laws of the republic.

Under French law, anyone who is aware of a sex crime against a minor is obliged to report it to the authorities and risks heavy fines and imprisonment if failing to do so.

“Nothing takes precedence over the laws of the republic in our country,” French government spokesman Gabriel Attal said on Thursday.

He added that Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin – who…

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Retired priest allowed to assist in ministry despite two Child Victims Act lawsuits

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW [Buffalo NY]

October 7, 2021

By Sean Mickey

Read original article

Diocese of Buffalo announces reinstatement of four priests

A spokesperson for the Diocese of Buffalo announced that four priests previously put on administrative leave following allegations of misconduct have been reinstated, following the review and recommendation by the Diocesan Review Board.

One of those priests, Msgr. James G. Kelly, 83, is accused in two Child Victims Act (CVA) lawsuits of having sexual contact with minors.

Kelly is a retired priest who continues to assist in parish ministry, according to the diocese.

The two lawsuits, with alleged victims identified using a “John Doe” pseudonym, were filed by attorney Steve Boyd and Jeff Anderson & Associates.

The abuse in the two claims is alleged to have occurred between 1980 and 1982, and from 2005 until 2007.

Bishop Michael W. Fisher placed Msgr. Kelly on administrative leave on June 30 after the diocese learned of a complaint against him.

Both CVA suits against…

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What the French abuse report says

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

October 7, 2021

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An independent report on clerical sexual abuse in France has made headlines around the world, and, for many American Catholics, renewed their scandal at the issue of clerical sexual abuse in the Church.

The entire report is more than 2,500 pages, and aims to capture the picture of abuse and cover-up in the Church between 1950 and 2020.

While the report has gotten plenty of media coverage, and sparked ample discussion on social media, getting a sense of the entire document can seem daunting.

Here’s what you need to know:

The commission

The report was commissioned by the French bishops’ conference and the Conférence des Religieux et Religieuses de France, an umbrella organization for the superiors of religious communities in France.

In 2019, the two organizations aimed to set up a completely independent commission with four goals:

  • To shed light on the sexual violence committed in its institution since…
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After meeting pope, Merkel says they discussed abuse, climate change

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

October 7, 2021

By Catholic News Service

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After meeting privately with Pope Francis, German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters that one of the issues they discussed was the importance of the church addressing the clerical sexual abuse scandal.

“The truth must come to light,” she said after the meeting Oct. 7.

Merkel, who is preparing to leave office, said she told the pope that because of the diverse and important roles the Catholic Church plays in the world, it is essential that it maintain its credibility and that can happen only by confronting the abuse crisis head on.

Before going to the Vatican, the German leader paid a visit to the headquarters of the Pontifical Gregorian University’s new Institute of Anthropology. German Jesuit Father Hans Zollner is director of the institute, which works to train people to be safeguarding officers in their local church or community and works to promote justice for survivors of abuse.

Formerly known as the Center for Child Protection,…

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Bishop reinstates four priests following probes into abuse allegations

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

October 7, 2021

By Harold McNeil

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Four priests have been reinstated by Bishop Michael W. Fisher following a recommendation by the Buffalo Diocese’s Independent Review Board, which conducted investigations and a review that determined allegations against the priests are unsubstantiated, the diocese announced Thursday.

The priests, who were previously placed on administrative leave by the bishop and were reinstated are: 

• The Rev. Adolph Kowalczyk, pastor of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart in Orchard Park.

• The Rev. Gregory Dobson, a retired priest who continues to assist in various parishes of the Diocese.

• The Rev. Matt Nycz, pastor of SS. Peter and Paul in Williamsville.

• The Rev. Msgr. James G. Kelly, an 83-year-old retired priest of the diocese who also continues to assist in parish ministry.

According to a statement released Thursday by the diocese, rigorous policies and protocols were followed with regard to investigating allegations that were made against the priests, including notifying the Erie…

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Bill to remove statute of limitations for sexual abuse

COLUMBUS (OH)
WKBN-TV, Ch. 27 [Youngstown OH]

October 7, 2021

By Colleen Marshall

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) – A shocking revelation for victims of sexual assault at the hands of Ohio State University doctor Richard Strauss. After waiting two years for state lawmakers to take action on House Bill 249, to suspend the statute of limitations and allow their legal claims against OSU to move forward, the house majority leader admits the bill was a sham.

In an email to one of the victims, republican leader bill Seitz said, “I do not support a resurrection of HB 249.”

“HB 249 was intended to apply pressure to Ohio State to come to the table and make meaningful settlement offers.”

Seitz called the bill flawed and said lawmakers ‘never’ really considered suspending the statute of limitations.

The victims told NBC4 they are not giving up on changing the law, especially since the judge who dismissed their claims pointed out state lawmakers have always had the power…

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The Formation of a New Priest Who Abused Minors: How Did He Slip Past Seminary Screening Policies?

CLEVELAND (OH)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

October 6, 2021

By Judy Roberts

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Robert McWilliams, who was ordained by the Diocese of Cleveland in 2017, was convicted in July of sex crimes he committed involving children, beginning in the year he was ordained.

When Father Robert McWilliams was charged with sex and pornography crimes involving children just two years after his ordination, few were more stunned than those who had screened and formed him for priesthood.

This was a priest chosen and educated in the wake of the Church’s clergy sex-abuse scandal, someone who had undergone an intensive, detailed vetting process and seminary training steeped in teaching about sexual ethics and appropriate boundaries. 

Although a sense of betrayal and shock always follows such allegations, in McWilliams’ case it was intensified by the fact that he had been ordained just two years before his arrest in December 2019. From the rector of his seminary and psychologists who evaluated him to his peers, those who…

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Indigenous ‘Expert’ Who Advised Book Burnings at Catholic Schools in Canada Draws Scrutiny

TORONTO (CANADA)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

October 7, 2021

By Kevin Jones, Catholic News Agency

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Over 4,700 individual books, comprised of several hundred titles, were removed from the shelves or put under review due to alleged outdated, incorrect, or inappropriate depictions of indigenous people.

A Catholic school district in Canada that decided to burn 30 library books about indigenous people and remove some 4,700 others due to alleged mistakes and insensitive portrayals took advice from a woman whose indigenous status and expertise is now in question.

“We were not aware that Suzy Kies does not have Indian status under (federal law) and sincerely believed that we had the opportunity to work with an experienced Indigenous knowledge keeper,” Lyne Cossette, a spokesperson for the school board in southwest Ontario, told the Toronto Sun.

“These revelations have prompted us to rethink our library review process,” Cossette said. “As such, we are pausing the entire Giving Back to Mother Earth project and reviewing how to move forward with regard…

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Francis is betting a synodal church will be a cure for a clerical church

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

October 8, 2021

By Christopher White

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Just days before Pope Francis officially opens the two-year process for the next Synod of Bishops, an independent report into France’s history of clerical abuse revealed the abuse of more than 333,000 children at the hands of church officials. The report was filled with damning evidence similar to those released in AustraliaGermanyIrelandthe United States and elsewhere over the last two decades.

The synod on synodality, which begins Oct. 9, has grand aspirations to reshape the Catholic Church’s ability to engage its members and revitalize its mission. In large part, Francis is betting that a more synodal church — that is, a participatory, listening church — just might be the cure to a church marred by decades of clericalism and abuse. 

The entire undertaking, Boston College theologian Rafael Luciani told NCR, is “enhancing…

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October 7, 2021

Southern Baptist Convention committee grants access to privileged files amid sex-abuse inquiry

NASHVILLE (TN)
Tennessean [Nashville TN]

October 5, 2021

By Liam Adams

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After a battle that dragged on longer than many expected, the Southern Baptist Convention executive committee waived attorney-client privilege for an investigation into the panel’s handling of sexual abuse reports and treatment of victims over the past 21 years.

During a special, virtual session on Tuesday, the executive committee voted 44-31 to approve a contract with a third-party investigator, Guidepost Solutions. The contract allows Guidepost to review privileged communications and legal memos between executive committee members or staff and their lawyers.

“I am grateful that the vote went yes today after much deliberation and private sessions,” said Jules Woodson, a sexual abuse survivor and activist. “That being said, it should not have taken three weeks to get here. The fact that it did is part of the problem.”

Ronnie Floyd, executive committee president and CEO, who has not expressed support for waiving privilege before, said he will support…

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After weeks of chaos, Southern Baptist leaders vote for full transparency in sex abuse investigation

NASHVILLE (TN)
Houston Chronicle [Houston TX]

October 5, 2021

By Robert Downen

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Southern Baptist Convention leaders on Tuesday voted to waive attorney-client privilege in an investigation of their alleged mishandling and concealment of sex abuses over the last two decades.

The vote by the SBC’s Executive Committee caps weeks of tumult that nearly pushed the nation’s second-largest faith group into crisis over its handling of sexual abuse cases and, in the days leading up to the Tuesday vote, prompted a wave of resignations by top denominational leaders.

Had the committee refused to waive on Tuesday, numerous Baptist historians said the denomination would have been pushed into an unprecedented standoff over who holds ultimate power in the denomination — 47,000 churches, or the small group of executive committee members they elect to represent them?

“It’s time to know for sure where we have fallen short on the question of sexual abuse within the Southern Baptist Convention so that we can correct any errors and…

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This Republican senator won’t vote for a law to help victims of child sex abuse | Opinion

HARRISBURG (PA)
PennLive.com

October 6, 2021

By Kathryn Robb and David Clohessy

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Politicians know that image is everything. And if they know what’s good for them, they need to know what’s going on around them – personally and otherwise.

Politicians also tend to know many people, organizations, and community leaders. They need to know to stay connected and politically afloat, especially a politician like Senator Bob Mensch, who has been in public life for years and lived in Pennsburg township for nearly 50 years.

Mensch is from Pennsburg. That’s where Fr. Edward Avery worked at St. Philip Neri parish. Maybe Mensch knows Avery or knows of him. Avery admitted molesting a child and spent time in prison.

Or maybe Mensch knows Fr. Joseph R. Monahan, who also worked at St. Philip Neri. Monahan is accused, in a grand jury report, of molesting an eighth-grader. It’s a small world. In 2006, because of an abuse report, Fr. Monahan was View Cache

Clergy sexual abuse: A global crisis

BOSTON (MA)
"The World," PRI.org [Boston MA]

October 6, 2021

By Joyce Hackel

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[Click here to hear interview.]

For decades, an international network of clergy sex abuse survivors and their advocates have been pushing for more accountability within the Catholic Church. Matthias Katsch, a member of the Independent Commission of Inquiry on Child Abuse in Germany and a clergy sexual abuse survivor, and Anne Barrett Doyle, the co-director of the international watchdog group BishopAccountability.org, talk with The World’s Marco Werman about how an inquiry in France may reverberate worldwide.

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Clergy sex abuse case needs more time for mediation

ALAMOGORDO (NM)
Alamogordo Daily News [Alamogordo NM]

October 6, 2021

By Nicole Maxwell

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The child sexual abuse case filed by a John Doe, an alleged victim of Fr. David Holley when he was in Alamogordo in the 1970s, needs more time to reach mediation.

A motion filed in the case on Sept. 30 requests a time extension to set up mediation between Doe and the defendants Servants of the Paraclete, the Dioceses of Las Cruces, El Paso and Worcester and two Alamogordo parishes.

The motion asks Second Judicial District Judge Daniel Ramczyk to give both parties more time to participate in a mediation.

The motion “respectfully moves to extend the deadline currently set for the parties to participate in mediation due to difficulties in scheduling a complex mediation amongst all counsel and to complete the mediation currently scheduled for January 20, 2022,” the motion states.

The two Alamogordo parishes are Immaculate Conception Parish and St. Jude Parish. 

On February 17, 2021, the court ordered that the…

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AFRICA/ZAMBIA – The country’s bishops promote the protection of minors and a safe ministry for priests and religious

LUSAKA (ZAMBIA)
Fides News Agency [Vatican City]

October 7, 2021

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Lusaka (Agenzia Fides) – The people called to offer service to the Church, each in their own ministry, have a great responsibility to contribute to making society better and safer for all children and vulnerable people. This is the statement of Fr. Francis Mukosa, General Secretary of the Zambia Conference of Catholic Bishops (ZCCB), revealed at the opening of a recent online seminar promoted by the Catholic Safeguarding Institute.

Father Mukosa said the church suffered greatly in the recent past due to the consequences of child abuse cases. “In particular, the church is losing in terms of reputation with a consequent expulsion of so many people”.

Among the objectives of the seminar – which emerged in the note sent to Fides – is to help the church of Zambia to undertake a serious mission of evangelization as well as to help it regain credibility in the country and in the…

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Toxic blend of “trust and power” makes Catholic Church hotbed for systemic child abuse

PARIS (FRANCE)
France 24 [Paris, France]

October 7, 2021

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[VIDEO]

In the wake of a major child sexual abuse investigation that counted 216,000 victims in France, spanning over seven decades, France 24 is joined by Marc Artzrouni, European Coordinator for SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests). Mr. Artzrouni expressed amazement and gratification that the damning report had such a profound and immediate impact. “I wasn’t really expecting such an impact,’ admits Mr. Artzrouni, “and I’m really glad the report is reverberating throughout the world and throughout the media.” Additionally, he highlights a very disturbing pattern: “Very few countries have been unaffected by this. Very few countries where there is a Catholic presence have been unaffected by this.” Offering a little historical perspective, Mr. Artzrouni points out that “this report goes back to the 1950’s. It’s highly probable that this has been going on for centuries in the Catholic Church.”

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3 Lawtell men say they were abused by a priest as young boys

LAWTELL (LA)
KLFY-TV, CBS 10 [Lafayette LA]

October 6, 2021

By Darla Montgomery

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A law effective this summer now gives adults who were abused as children, up to three years to take legal action against accused offenders and any child abused since the new law’s effective date, has no time restriction.

The timing of the renacted (r.s. 9:2800.9 under house bill 492) legislation coincides with three men from St. Landry Parish who are looking for closure in what they say was years of abuse by a priest of a catholic church where they served as altar boys.

Lawtell, Louisiana is a small rural community in St Landry Parish and is home to just over 1200 people.  It was formed in the early days of the 20th century, so it’s filled with history, it’s peaceful, but there’s also a dark secret that’s been hidden until now.

In describing what happened to him, Mark Batiste says, “As a child I was scared. When I first…

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Vatican Issues Acquittals in Sexual Abuse Case Involving Former Altar Boys

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
New York Times [New York NY]

October 6, 2021

By Elisabetta Povoledo

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One defendant, now a priest, had been accused of sexual abuse when he and his accuser were teenage students at a seminary within the Vatican walls. Another priest was accused of covering it up.

A Vatican court on Wednesday acquitted a priest on sexual abuse charges dating to when he and his accuser were teenage altar boys at a seminary within the Vatican walls. A second priest, the rector of the seminary at the time, was cleared of charges that he covered up the alleged abuses.

Prosecutors claimed that the abuse began when the priest, the Rev. Gabriele Martinelli, now 29, and his accuser, who was identified only by his initials, L.G., were young teenagers, less than a year apart, living at a seminary and that it continued for five years. Father Martinelli was not a priest at the time, but he was ordained years later.

The court rulings, based…

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Vatican court orders prosecution to hand over video deposition

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic Review - Archdiocese of Baltimore [Baltimore MD]

October 6, 2021

By Junno Arocho Esteves, Catholic News Service

Read original article

A Vatican court ruled that prosecutors must hand over video of the deposition of their main witness to lawyers representing 10 defendants, including Cardinal Angelo Becciu, who are all on trial on charges related to financial malfeasance and corruption.

At the third session of the Vatican trial Oct. 6, Giuseppe Pignatone, president of the Vatican City State criminal court, ordered Vatican prosecutors to deliver the video and audio testimony of Msgr. Alberto Perlasca, the former head of the Secretariat of State’s administrative office, by Nov. 3.

However, while the court agreed with defense lawyers that some procedures were not properly followed by investigators for the prosecution, Pignatone denied the defense’s request to annul the 488-page indictment, which would have thrown out the case.

Pignatone said the court would reconvene Nov. 17 to determine how and when the trial will proceed.

The Vatican court’s decision effectively gives the prosecution time to…

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Former Catholic Priest In Harford County Pleads Guilty To Preying On A Minor

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

October 5, 2021

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Fernando Cristancho, a former Catholic priest in Harford County, pleaded guilty on Monday to coercion and enticement of a minor to engage in illegal sexual activity, the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office announced on Tuesday.

According to Cristancho’s guilty plea, the former priest sexually abused a young lector even after the Archdiocese of Baltimore said he could no longer work in the church.  He also acknowledged producing child pornography involving several victims.

In 1999, Cristancho, who was ordained in in Colombia, began working at St. Ignatius Catholic Church in Harford County and immediately started spending time with the boy’s family, prosecutors said. The boy became a lector at the church when he was 11.

When they were working together, Cristancho would tell the boy that he had back pain and asked for back rubs. He took the boy to dinner and kissed him. He also showed the boy videos of two…

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I love Pope Francis. But his criticism of EWTN disturbs me as a journalist.

NEW YORK (NY)
America [New York NY]

October 6, 2021

By J.D. Long-García

Read original article

As soon as I saw the photograph, I knew. It had to be the front page.

It was one of the first times I picked the front-page story for the diocesan newspaper where, at the time, I served as editor. I wanted to call attention to a special annual Mass, celebrated for all immigrants.

The photo was of a woman receiving Communion while holding her toddler. I thought the tender moment would connect with all readers and would underscore the dignity of migrants. But I was also prepared for negative feedback—because anytime we covered immigration, we would get an earful.

The morning after the paper was distributed, a long voicemail was waiting for me on my office line. But the complaint was not what I expected. The woman, a religious sister who worked at one of our parishes, was outraged.

How dare we run a photo of a person receiving…

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Former Priest Pleads Guilty on the First Day of Trial to Coercion and Enticement of a Minor to Engage in Criminal Sexual Activity

BALTIMORE (MD)
The U.S. Department of Justice

October 5, 2021

Read original article

As Part of His Plea Agreement, Also Admits Producing Nude Images of Four Other Minor Victims—With Most of the Images Being Taken When the Victims Were Less Than Five Years Old

Baltimore, Maryland – Fernando Cristancho, age 65, of Bel Air, Maryland, pleaded guilty yesterday to coercion and enticement of a minor who he met through the church to engage in illegal sexual activity.  Cristancho also admitted that he produced nude images of four other minor victims.

The guilty plea was announced by Acting United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Jonathan F. Lenzner; Special Agent in Charge James R. Mancuso of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Baltimore; Colonel Woodrow W. Jones III, Superintendent of the Maryland State Police; Harford County Sheriff Jeffrey R. Gahler; and Harford County State’s Attorney Albert Peisinger.

According to his guilty plea, Cristancho was ordained as a Roman Catholic priest in Colombia, South America, in…

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Former Harford County priest pleads guilty to coercion and enticement of a minor

BALTIMORE (MD)
Catholic Review - Archdiocese of Baltimore [Baltimore MD]

October 6, 2021

By George Matysek

Read original article

Fernando Cristancho, a former priest assigned to St. Ignatius, Hickory, in Forest Hill, pleaded guilty Oct. 4 to coercion and enticement of a minor to engage in illegal sexual activity, according to an Oct. 5 news release from the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office. Cristancho met the victim through the parish. He also admitted that he produced nude images of four other minor victims.

The offenses against “John Doe” occurred when he was 11, 12 and 13, according to the news release. Cristancho showed the victim pornography and after Cristancho was no longer working at the church, he arranged to hold religious services in the home of a parishioner, with John Doe acting as a lector or altar server. Cristancho sexually abused the child from 2002 through at least fall 2003, according to the news release.

An Oct. 5 statement from the Archdiocese of Baltimore said the archdiocese “admires the courage…

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Priest: The question I was asked after the French Catholic Church sexual abuse report

()
CNN [Atlanta GA]

October 6, 2021

By Father Edward Beck

Read original article

Father Edward L. Beck, CP, is a Roman Catholic priest and a religion commentator for CNN. The views expressed in this commentary are his own.

The faithful of the Catholic Church in France — and indeed worldwide — are reeling from a commission’s report documenting that between 2,900 and 3,200 church workers have abused more than 200,000 minors over a 70-year span. Upon hearing the news, a parishioner of mine asked, “Father, is this abuse stuff starting all over again?” Gratefully, I was able to say, no, however, the continued reckoning of the Catholic Church and other institutions continues because of years of denial and cover-up. Yes, things have changed, but change has been too long in coming.

The issues and facts beneath the headlines are important. The total number of clergy and church workers implicated in the French report constitutes approximately 3% of the approximately 115,000…

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Whitley County prosecutor will decide soon on case of area priest facing allegations of sexual abuse

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

October 6, 2021

By Jeff Neumeyer

Read original article

Will a Catholic priest who resigned his post at a Columbia City parish be tagged with criminal charges?

We may get an answer by the end of the week.

The investigation involves Father David Huneck, who resigned last month as pastor of St. Paul of the Cross Catholic Church in Whitley County and as a chaplain at Bishop Dwenger High School in Fort Wayne.

We have learned two females, one of them a minor, came forward, alleging they were victims of acts of sexual misconduct carried out by Father Huneck.

The Fort Wayne-South Bend Catholic Diocese told reporters last week it conducted a preliminary investigation right away, concluding they were “credible allegations” and notified the Indiana Department of Child Services.

The diocese has included Huneck’s name on its list of Catholic clergy who’ve been “credibly accused” of sexual abuse.

The Columbia City Police Department has been gathering evidence in the…

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The Vatican: The Show Must Go On

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Open Tabernacle

October 7, 2021

By Betty Clermont

Read original article

“The main mission of the Holy See is to help bring the message of the Gospel to the ends of the earth,” a Vatican official recently claimed. But they dedicate far more time and resources to presenting a false façade of moral integrity to the world.

PRETENDING CONCERN FOR OUR CHILDREN

Pope Francis is adept at play-acting. “The pope knows and pretends not to know … In fact, every speech of the pope contains a hidden series of minor contradictions. As if the pope was pursuing a line, but did not want to be criticized for that line and was trying to avoid criticism by creating a narrative. The statements of the pope are not enough. We need to analyze the facts. And the facts say that Pope Francis, in some cases, says one thing and does another,” Italian Vatican reporter, Andrea Gagliaducci, observed

In response to the Oct. 5 release of a…

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A report finds French clergy sexually abused over 300,000 children since 1950

NEW YORK (NY)
National Public Radio - NPR [Washington DC]

October 5, 2021

Read original article

NPR’s Rachel Martin talks to David Gibson of the Center on Religion and Culture at Fordham University about French children sexually abused by people in the Catholic Church.

[AUDIO]

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

It has been almost 20 years since The Boston Globe exposed widespread child abuse in the Catholic Church here in the U.S. Since then, the global church has faced sex abuse crises in several countries around the world, but only now are revelations coming to light about what has been happening in France. A new report estimates that some 300,000 children in that country were sexually abused by priests and other church staff over a 70-year period.

David Gibson is the director of the Center on Religion and Culture at Fordham University, and he joins us now to talk about the fallout and the path forward for the Catholic Church in France. Thank you for being here.

DAVID…

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Opinion: After 20 years, the latest story of Catholic Church sex abuse is familiar — but still shocking

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

October 6, 2021

By The Editorial Board

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A sweeping French report finds that priests sexually abused some 200,000 children over 70 years.

The scale of sexual abuse by Catholic priests and lay figures against children in France since 1950, detailed in a report this week by an independent commission, was a jaw-dropping reminder that revelations of the church’s complicity and coverup in the scandal have not run their course, nearly two decades after they gained wide public notice.

The French commission’s investigation, which took about two-and-a-half years, found that the victims of priests, many or most of them boys between 10 and 13 years old, numbered more than 200,000 over seven decades. Additionally, the commission concluded there were more than 100,000 additional victims, counting abuse at the hands of Catholic lay figures — nearly all of it overlooked, accepted or intentionally swept under the rug by the church hierarchy.

Those findings prompted…

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Northern Ireland police to probe abuse at church-run homes

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 6, 2021

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Police in Northern Ireland on Wednesday announced an investigation into allegations of physical and sexual abuse at church-run institutions that housed unmarried women and their children.

The announcement came a day after an independent panel recommended a public inquiry to examine human rights abuses in the homes, so-called Magdalene laundries and workhouses.

Detective Chief Superintendent Anthony McNally said the force has set up dedicated reporting channels to make it easier for people to come forward.

“Specially trained officers within our Historical Child Abuse Team will be investigating all allegations of non-recent physical and sexual abuse against residents of these homes,” he said. “All reports we receive will be examined thoroughly and any criminality detected will be robustly investigated.”

A major study by Queen’s University and Ulster University published earlier this year found that more than 14,000 girls and women spent time at nun-run laundries and mother-and-baby homes, which were run…

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October 6, 2021

Priests cleared in Vatican sex abuse case

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
NBC News [New York NY]

October 6, 2021

By Claudio Lavanga, Saphora Smith and The Associated Press

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It was the first criminal trial alleging sexual abuse within Vatican walls. 

An Italian priest was cleared Wednesday of sexually molesting a fellow altar boy when they both were teenagers at the Vatican’s youth seminary, in the first criminal trial alleging sexual abuse within Vatican walls.

The Vatican tribunal said in a statement that sexual relations of “various nature and intensity” had taken place between the defendant, the Rev. Gabriele Martinelli, and his accuser, identified only as L.G., for a period of five years. But it said there was insufficient proof L.G. was forced into the relations.

Significant contradictions and “illogical declarations” by L.G. had made it impossible to establish whether he was forced into the acts, the statement said, adding that many people who were present in the room where the sexual acts were meant to have taken place repeatedly say they did not hear or…

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Vatican court absolves former altar boy in sex abuse trial

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

October 6, 2021

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A Vatican tribunal absolved a former altar boy of charges that he molested a younger boy in the Vatican’s youth seminary, ruling Wednesday in the first clergy sexual abuse trial to be heard by the pope’s criminal court.

The three-judge panel acquitted Rev. Gabriele Martinelli of some charges and ruled others couldn’t be punished or allegedly occurred too long ago. The former rector of the seminary, the Rev. Enrico Radice, was similarly absolved.

In a statement, the tribunal said it had essentially confirmed that there had been a sexual relationship between Martinelli and the alleged victim, L.G., but no proof that L.G., who was just seven months younger, had been forced into it.

The case concerned the closed world of the St. Pius X youth seminary, a palazzo inside the Vatican walls just across the street from where Pope Francis lives. The seminary is used as a residence for boys…

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Gonzaga University Grapples With Ties to Predatory Priests

SPOKANE (WA)
Inside Higher Ed

October 6, 2021

By Elizabeth Redden

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A commission recommended how administrators can respond to the Catholic clergy sex abuse crisis and the university’s links to accused priests. Advocates for survivors were not impressed.

A commission at Gonzaga University, a Jesuit institution in Washington State, recently released a 46-page report on how the institution should move forward in response to the Roman Catholic clergy sexual abuse crisis.

The report outlines a series of recommendations the university — which has been squarely implicated in the crisis — should take in response, including developing new academic initiatives, establishing a memorial, reviewing policies related to sexual assault on campus and increasing outreach to and support for tribal communities and Native students in recognition of the fact that “in Gonzaga’s regional context, the history of Catholic sexual abuse has disproportionately harmed Native communities.”

The document also suggests ways the university can work with leadership of the sponsoring Jesuit order…

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French Catholic church expresses ‘shame’ after report finds 330,000 children were abused

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 5, 2021

By Angelique Chrisafis

Read original article

Church asks for forgiveness as it accepts findings of ‘appalling’ abuse by clergy and lay members over 70 years

The French Catholic church has expressed “shame” and pleaded for forgiveness, after a devastating report found that at least 330,000 children were victims of sexual abuse by clergy and lay members of church institutions over the past 70 years.

The publication of the landmark report on Thursday, France’s first major reckoning with what the Catholic church accepted was “appalling” abuse, has shaken the country with its horrific findings of a “massive phenomenon” of sexual abusers of children operating for decades within the church and its associated institutions.

The two-and-a-half-year independent inquiry found that staggering numbers of children were subjected to sexual violence by priests and clergy while the crimes were covered up in a “systemic way” by a deliberate “veil of silence” in the church.

The president of the investigative committee,…

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Vatican judges in fraud trial agree defense rights violated

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

October 6, 2021

By Nicole Winfield

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The Vatican tribunal hearing a landmark fraud case ruled Wednesday that prosecutors had deprived 10 defendants of their rights and ordered prosecutors to turn over key pieces of evidence and redo their investigation for some suspects.

Tribunal President Giuseppe Pignatone said there had been “lamentable violations” by the pope’s prosecutors in failing to give the suspects the chance to respond to all accusations against them during the preliminary phase of the investigation.

Pignatone also repeated his July 29 order for prosecutors to hand over the videotaped recordings of a key suspect-turned-star witness whose testimony formed the basis for several of the charges in the indictment. He rejected as incomprehensible the prosecutors’ arguments that the witness’ privacy would be compromised if the tapes were released to the defense.

The trial concerns the Holy See’s 2013 investment in a London real estate venture that lost the Vatican tens of millions of euros,…

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Vatican trial prosecutors concede case gaps, willing to investigate more

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Reuters [London, England]

October 6, 2021

By Philip Pullella

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The prosecution at a Vatican trial of 10 people accused of financial crimes, including a cardinal, acknowledged on Tuesday weaknesses in its case and said it was willing to return to the investigative phase to fill in gaps contested by the defence.

Deputy prosecutor Alessandro Diddi made the surprise announcement at the first hearing since the trial started in July, saying: “I feel the duty to meet (the defence requests) half-way.”

Defence lawyers told the court Diddi’s request was unacceptable. Citing a raft of what they said were procedural errors, they asked court president Giuseppe Pignatone to annul the 500-page indictment of the 10 handed down on July 3, which would effectively kill the current trial.

Pignatone adjourned the trial after about two hours and said he would announce his decisions on Wednesday morning.

The trial revolves mostly around the purchase by the Vatican’s Secretariat of State of a commercial…

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Pope Francis expresses shame at the scale of child sexual abuse by clergy in France

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Public Radio - NPR [Washington DC]

October 6, 2021

Read original article

Pope Francis expressed “shame” for himself and the Roman Catholic Church on Wednesday for the scale of child sexual abuse within the church in France and acknowledged failures in putting the needs of victims first.

The pope spoke during his regular audience at the Vatican about a report released Tuesday that estimated some 330,000 French children were abused by clergy and other church authority figures dating back to 1950.

“There is, unfortunately, a considerable number. I would like to express to the victims my sadness and pain for the trauma that they suffered,” Francis said. “It is also my shame, our shame, my shame, for the incapacity of the church for too long to put them at the center of its concerns.”

He called on all bishops and religious superiors to take all actions necessary “so similar dramas are not repeated.”

The pope also expressed his “closeness and paternal support” to French…

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French Church abuse: 216,000 children were victims of clergy – inquiry

PARIS (FRANCE)
BBC [London, England]

October 5, 2021

Read original article

Some 216,000 children – mostly boys – have been sexually abused by clergy in the French Catholic Church since 1950, a damning new inquiry has found.

The head of the inquiry said there were at least 2,900-3,200 abusers, and accused the Church of showing a “cruel indifference towards the victims”.

Pope Francis “felt pain” on hearing about the inquiry’s finding, a Vatican statement said.

One of those abused said it was time the Church reassessed its actions.

François Devaux, who is also the founder of the victims’ association La Parole Libérée (Freed speech), said there had been a “betrayal of trust, betrayal of morale, betrayal of children”.

The inquiry found the number of children abused in France could rise to 330,000, when taking into account abuses committed by lay members of the Church, such as teachers at Catholic schools.

For Mr Devaux it marked a turning point in France’s history: “You have…

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French Catholic Church inquiry finds “veil of silence” hid abuse of 216,000 minors over 5 decades

PARIS (FRANCE)
CBS News [New York NY]

October 5, 2021

Read original article

An independent inquiry into alleged sex abuse of minors by French Catholic priests, deacons and other clergy has found some 216,000 victims from 1950 to 2020, a “massive phenomenon” that was covered up for decades by a “veil of silence.”

The landmark report, released Tuesday after two and a half years of investigations, follows widespread outrage over a string of sex abuse claims and prosecutions against Church officials around the globe. But as CBS News correspondent Chris Livesay reports, the French inquiry involves not only the latest revelations about abuse by Catholic clergy, but possibly highest number of victims ever identified by reports and investigations that have been carried out worldwide.

When lay members of the Church such as teachers at Catholic schools are included, the number of child abuse victims climbs to 330,000 over the seven-decade period.  

France’s Catholic bishops asked the victims for forgiveness. The…

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Pope Francis prays during a Eucharistic celebration in the Vatican, on the final day of a summit on sexual abuse in the Catholic Church / AFP

Catholic Church child sexual abuse scandal

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
BBC [London, England]

October 5, 2021

Read original article

From Australian country towns to schools in Ireland and cities across the US, the Catholic Church has faced an avalanche of child sexual abuse accusations in the last few decades.

High-profile cases and harrowing testimony given to public inquiries have continued to keep the issue in the headlines.

In the most recent development, a damning inquiry found that some 216,000 children in France had been sexually abused by members of the clergy since 1950.

A Vatican statement said Pope Francis “felt pain” over the findings, and expressed hopes for a “path of redemption”.

Efforts by the Pope to address the problem have included holding an unprecedented summit on paedophilia in the Church, and changing its laws to explicitly criminalise sexual abuse.

But alleged cover-ups continue to dog the Catholic Church, and victims groups say the Vatican has not done nearly enough to right its wrongs.

Here’s what you need to know.

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French clergy sexually abused over 200,000 children since 1950, report finds

PARIS (FRANCE)
Reuters [London, England]

October 5, 2021

By Tangi Salaün and Ingrid Melander

Read original article

  • Investigation finds estimated 216,000 children suffered abuse
  • French Catholic Church showed ‘cruel indifference’ – report
  • Latest sex abuse scandal to rock the Roman Catholic Church
  • Senior bishop asks for forgiveness, promises to act

PARIS, Oct 5 (Reuters) – French clergy sexually abused more than 200,000 children over the past 70 years, a major investigation released on Tuesday found, and its authors said the Catholic Church had turned a blind eye to the ‘scourge’ for too long.

The church had shown “deep, total and even cruel indifference for years,” protecting itself rather than the victims of what was systemic abuse, said Jean-Marc Sauve, head of the commission that compiled the report.

Most of the victims were boys, he said, many of them aged between 10 and 13.

“Faced with this scourge, for a very long time the Catholic Church’s immediate reaction was to protect itself as an institution and it has shown complete,…

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New pastor announced days after Columbia City priest was accused of sexually abusing minor

COLUMBIA CITY (IN)
WANE [Fort Wayne IN]

October 5, 2021

By Taylor Williams

Read original article

A week after a Columbia City Catholic priest resigned from his duties at Saint Paul of the Cross Catholic Church in Columbia City, a replacement has been announced.

Monday night, Bishop Kevin Rhoades introduced the congregation to Father Jose Arroyo. The Puerto Rico native most recently served at a parish in Goshen.

“I’m excited to be a part of this healing process here at St. Paul the Cross,” Father Arroyo said. “I love Saint Francis and his rule of wanting to rebuild the church and I think that my role at this point…to know them, to love them, and to serve them and that’s what I’m here for.”

Father Jose ArroyoFather Jose Arroyo

That healing involves former priest Father David Huneck. He is accused of engaging in “sexual and other misconduct, including that…

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Judge in Vatican corruption trial orders prosecution to share more evidence

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Reuters [London, England]

October 6, 2021

By Philip Pullella

Read original article

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – The chief judge at a Vatican trial of 10 people accused of financial crimes, including a cardinal, on Wednesday ordered the prosecution to give the defence more access to evidence and to question defendants who were not given the right to speak earlier.https://www.dianomi.com/smartads.epl?id=3533

Court president Giuseppe Pignatone responded to a surprise offer https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/prosecution-vatican-trial-acknowledges-defects-willing-investigate-more-2021-10-05 the prosecution made on Tuesday in which it acknowledged weaknesses in its case and said it was willing to return to the investigative phase to fill in gaps contested by the defence.

The trial revolves mostly around the purchase by the Vatican’s Secretariat of State of a commercial and residential building at 60 Sloane Avenue in London’s South Kensington, one of the wealthiest districts in the British capital.

Pignatone ordered the prosecution to give the defence access to remaining documentation, evidence, videos of interrogations and other material by Nov. 3 and adjourned the…

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October 5, 2021

Marcial Maciel embraced by Pope John Paul II in a 1991 ceremony marking the 50th anniversary of the Legion of Christ order. Image: Photo by Maria Dipaola/MCT/Tribune News Service via Getty Images

LEGION OF CHRIST: As Catholic order fought sex abuse claims, secret trusts devoted to it poured millions into American rental properties

MIAMI (FL)
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) [Washington DC]

October 5, 2021

By Spencer Woodman

Read original article

Leaked files reveal nearly $300 million stashed overseas for the Legion of Christ in wake of Vatican investigation. Millions were invested with a corporate landlord that evicted struggling U.S. tenants during pandemic.

[PHOTO ABOVE: Marcial Maciel embraced by Pope John Paul II in a 1991 ceremony marking the 50th anniversary of the Legion of Christ order. Image: Photo by Maria Dipaola/MCT/Tribune News Service via Getty Images]

Key Findings

  • Leaked records reveal a set of secret New Zealand trusts holding nearly $300 million in assets devoted to the Legion of Christ, Roman Catholic order caught in an international pedophilia scandal.
  • As the secret trusts’ investments expanded, victims of sexual abuse by Legion priests were seeking financial compensation from the order through lawsuits and through a commission overseen by the Vatican.
  • In response to questions about whether the Legion disclosed the trusts to the Vatican, the order told ICIJ that “religious institutes do not…
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French Catholic church expresses ‘shame’ after report finds 330,000 children were abused

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 5, 2021

By Angelique Chrisafis

Read original article

Church asks for forgiveness as it accepts findings of ‘appalling’ abuse by clergy and lay members over 70 years

The French Catholic church has expressed “shame” and pleaded for forgiveness, after a devastating report found that at least 330,000 children were victims of sexual abuse by clergy and lay members of church institutions over the past 70 years.

The publication of the landmark report on Thursday, France’s first major reckoning with what the Catholic church accepted was “appalling” abuse, has shaken the country with its horrific findings of a “massive phenomenon” of sexual abusers of children operating for decades within the church and its associated institutions.

The two-and-a-half-year independent inquiry found that staggering numbers of children were subjected to sexual violence by priests and clergy while the crimes were covered up in a “systemic way” by a deliberate “veil of silence” in the church.

The president of the investigative committee,…

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New pastor announced days after Columbia City priest was accused of sexually abusing minor

COLUMBIA CITY (IN)
WANE [Fort Wayne IN]

October 4, 2021

By Taylor Williams

Read original article

A week after a Columbia City Catholic priest resigned from his duties at Saint Paul of the Cross Catholic Church in Columbia City, a replacement has been announced.

Monday night, Bishop Kevin Rhoades introduced the congregation to Father Jose Arroyo. The Puerto Rico native most recently served at a parish in Goshen.

“I’m excited to be a part of this healing process here at St. Paul the Cross,” Father Arroyo said. “I love Saint Francis and his rule of wanting to rebuild the church and I think that my role at this point…to know them, to love them, and to serve them and that’s what I’m here for.”

That healing involves former priest Father David Huneck. He is accused of engaging in “sexual and other misconduct, including that with a minor.”

Huneck had served as a pastor at the Columbia City church since 2020. He was also a chaplain…

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Catholic clergy in France likely abused more than 200,000 minors, independent commission estimates

PARIS (FRANCE)
Washington Post

October 5, 2021

By Rick Noack and Chico Harlan

Read original article

A major report released Tuesday said French Catholic clerics had abused more than 200,000 minors over the past 70 years, a systemic trauma that the inquiry’s leader described as deep and “cruel.”

The report’s findings could trigger a public reckoning in a country where church officials long stalled efforts to investigate complicity. The findings also add to the picture of country-by-country trauma within a religion that has tended to find abuse on a stunning scale anywhere it has looked.

The Vatican said in a statement that Pope Francis had been informed of the report during a recent visit by French bishops. “His thoughts turn first to the victims, with immense sorrow for their injuries and gratitude for their courage to speak out,” the statement said, adding that Francis hopes the French church can follow a path of “redemption” after becoming aware of this “appalling reality.”

The Independent Commission on Sexual…

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Former pastor accused of sex abuse at Catholic parish in 1990s, Charlotte diocese says

CHARLOTTE (NC)
Charlotte Observer [Charlotte NC]

October 5, 2021

By Joe Marusak

Read original article

A Roman Catholic priest who served at two parishes in the Raleigh Diocese until last week is accused of sexually abusing a student at a Charlotte parish in the 1990s, the Diocese of Charlotte said Tuesday.

The Rev. Francis Gillespie, 79, is alleged to have committed the abuse at Our Lady of the Assumption Church on Shamrock Drive in east Charlotte in the mid- to late-1990s, when he was pastor of the church and its school, according to a statement by the Charlotte Diocese. Gillespie served as pastor from 1994 to 2001, diocesan officials said.

The abuse is alleged to have occurred in the church, not the school, according to the diocesan statement.

The accuser recently reported the abuse to the Charlotte Diocese and Gillespie’s New York-based supervising religious order, the USA East Province of the Society of Jesus, diocesan officials said.

The Catholic News and Herald, the Charlotte diocesan…

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Historic abuse survivor camps outside Scots police station to campaign for better support

FALKIRK (UNITED KINGDOM)
Daily Record [Glasgow, Scotland]

October 1, 2021

By Paul T. Smith

Read original article

Dave Sharp says Police Scotland and some abuse charities need to have a better understanding of survivors.

A child abuse survivor and campaigner has spent the past five nights camped outside Falkirk Police Station to “start a conversation” about the issue.

Dave Sharp, 62, is calling for a change in attitude towards survivors and thinks Police Scotland, along with abuse charities, need to have a better understanding about what people like him are going through.

He’s worried that those who have experienced abuse are not getting the help and support they need, and instead are being put to one side.

Mr Sharp, who suffered repeated attacks by priests at the former St Ninian’s School in Falkland, Fife, during the 1970s, says many survivors are left feeling isolated because cops and charities are not providing the right kind of support.

He told Falkirk Live: “Many survivors of…

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The numbers: France’s report on church sex abuse of children

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 5, 2021

Read original article

France’s first major study of sexual abuse of children in the Catholic Church revealed shockingly large estimates of victims and adds to global understanding of the depth of the problem. Here is a look at some key findings:

THE VICTIMS

Based on projections, the independent study estimates some 330,000 children overall were victims of sexual abuse linked to the church from 1950-2020. Of those, it estimates that some 216,000 were abused by priests, and the rest by other church figures such as scout leaders or camp counselors.

The study’s authors estimate 80% of the abused children were boys. A broader study of sexual abuse of children in France found that 75% of the overall victims were girls.

France has had several legal cases involving church sexual abuse, but most incidents investigated for the study happened too long ago to prosecute.

THE ABUSERS

The report released Tuesday estimates that about 2,900-3,200…

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French clergy sexually abused over 200,000 children since 1950, probe finds

PARIS (FRANCE)
Reuters [London, England]

October 5, 2021

By Tangi Salaün and Ingrid Melander

Read original article

Summary

  • Investigation finds estimated 216,000 children suffered abuse
  • French Catholic Church showed ‘cruel indifference’ – report
  • Latest sex abuse scandal to rock the Roman Catholic Church
  • Senior bishop asks for forgiveness, promises to act

French clergy have sexually abused more than 200,000 children over the past 70 years, a major investigation released on Tuesday found, and its authors accused the Catholic Church of turning a blind eye for too long.

The church had shown “deep, total and even cruel indifference for years,” protecting itself rather than the victims of what was systemic abuse, said Jean-Marc Sauve, head of the commission that compiled the report.

Most of the victims were boys, he said, many of them aged between 10 and 13.

The church not only did not take the necessary measures to prevent abuse but also failed to report it and sometimes knowingly put children in touch with predators, he said.

The head…

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Catholic clergy abused more than 200,000 minors in France since 1950: investigation

PARIS (FRANCE)
The Hill

October 5, 2021

By Jordan Williams

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Catholic clergy abused over 200,000 minors in France since the 1950s, according to the findings of an independent investigation released Tuesday.

The report from the Independent Commission on Sexual Abuse in the Church (CIASE) found that over 216,000 minors had been abused, CNN reported.

When including the victims of people who had other links to the church but were not clergy, such as through Catholic schools, the number of abuse victims rises to approximately 330,000.

The report said the Catholic Church is “where the prevalence of sexual violence is at its highest, other than in family and friend circles,” the outlet reported.

According to the report, the abuse was at its peak between 1950-1970, and a later surge in cases followed in the 1990s, Reuters reported. Most of the victims were boys between the ages of 10 and 13.

According to the outlet, between 2,900-3,200 suspected pedophiles had been in the…

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Years into attorney general probe of Maryland Catholic church, survivors wonder where it stands

BALTIMORE (MD)
Washington Post

October 4, 2021

By Alison Knezevich

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Three years after it became public that Maryland Attorney General Brian E. Frosh was investigating child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, abuse survivors are wondering: Is he building a case or has the probe stalled?

In September 2018, Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori told clergy the archdiocese was under investigation by the state. A few months later, church officials confirmed they had given the attorney general more than 50,000 pages of internal documents dating to 1965.

But to this day, Frosh has not provided details on the investigation, which members of his office say is ongoing.

“Honestly, I’m shocked that it would take this long to charge anybody or find anything,” said Liz Murphy, who was interviewed twice in 2018 by an investigator with the attorney general’s office about the abuse she suffered at a Catholic school in South Baltimore in the 1970s.

The lack of a conclusion to…

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“No hay nada ilegal”: Legionarios de Cristo sobre Pandora Papers

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
La Jornada [Mexico City, Mexico]

October 5, 2021

By Carolina Gómez Mena

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Ciudad de México. Derivado de lo expuesto por la indagatoria periodística internacional Pandora Papers, la organización religiosa Legionarios de Cristo, insistió en que “no hay nada ilegal”, ni menos algo “oculto”

Precisó que de los fideicomisos que se les atribuyen, dos son algo personal de uno de sus integrantes y el tercero, sí pertenece a la congregación, pero tiene como fin recaudar y distribuir recursos para atender a sacerdotes ancianos o enfermos.

Aseveró que “los Legionarios de Cristo administra sus recursos cumpliendo con todas las leyes en cada país donde tiene presencia, y la legislación canónica” y explicó que “el Retirement and Medical Charitable Trust (RMCT) es un fideicomiso establecido por la congregación de los Legionarios de Cristo (en Nueva Zelanda) para recibir donativos y destinarlos especialmente al cuidado de la salud de sacerdotes y personas consagradas, especialmente los ancianos, o a otros fines religiosos, caritativos y educativos”.

Aseguró que…

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Abuse allegation at OLA made against priest who served there in the 1990s

CHARLOTTE (NC)
Catholic News Herald [Diocese of Charlotte NC]

October 4, 2021

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An allegation of child sexual abuse has been reported against a Jesuit priest, Father Francis P. Gillespie, who served at Our Lady of the Assumption Parish more than 20 years ago.

Father Gillespie was pastor of Our Lady of the Assumption Church and School from 1994 to 2001, and the abuse is alleged to occurred at the church in the mid- to late 1990s, when the claimant was a student at the school.

The allegation was recently reported to the Diocese of Charlotte and to Father Gillespie’s supervising religious order, the New York-based USA East Province of the Society of Jesus, which removed Father Gillespie from ministry on Sept. 29 while the allegation is investigated.

The Diocese of Charlotte reported the allegation to Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police and to Mecklenburg County Department of Social Services on Sept. 28. Announcements were made during weekend Masses at Our Lady of the Assumption Church Oct….

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New child sexual abuse allegation against former Charlotte priest

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

October 4, 2021

By Nate Morabito

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[VIDEO]

The Diocese of Charlotte said the allegation is against former Our Lady of the Assumption Church Pastor Francis P. Gillespie and stems from more than 20 years ago.

A former Charlotte priest, now 79-years-old, faces an allegation of child sexual abuse dating back 20 years.

The Diocese of Charlotte recently reported an allegation of child sexual abuse against former Our Lady of the Assumption Church Pastor Jesuit Father Francis P. Gillespie to the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department and Department of Social Services, pledging to “cooperate fully with any investigation,” according to a statement released to WCNC Charlotte Monday.

The diocese’s newspaper added the abuse allegedly occurred at the church in the mid-to-late 1990s and involved a student.

According to the diocese, Gillespie previously served as pastor at Our Lady of the Assumption Church and School from 1994 to 2001.

“His supervising religious order, the Jesuits, assigned him to ministry in the…

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French Catholic clergy abused 216,000 victims since 1950

PARIS (FRANCE)
BBC [London, England]

October 5, 2021

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Some 216,000 children have been sexually abused by members of the French Catholic clergy since 1950, an independent inquiry has found.

It warned that the number could rise to 330,000 when abuse by lay members of the Church was included.

The head of the inquiry, Jean-Marc Sauvé, said the figures were “overwhelming”.

The French Church expressed “shame and horror” over the findings, and asked for forgiveness.

One victim called the report a turning point in France’s history, and said it was time for the Catholic Church to fundamentally reassess its actions.

The release of the report marks the latest sexual abuse scandal to rock the Roman Catholic Church.

The inquiry was commissioned by the French Catholic Church in 2018.

It spent more than two-and-a-half years combing through court, police and Church records and speaking to victims and witnesses.

Mr Sauvé, a senior civil servant, said that until the early 2000s,…

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