ABUSE TRACKER

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

May 20, 2021

Ex Newark Archbishop Accused Of Rape Of 5-Year-Old In $50-Million Lawsuit

NEWARK (NJ)
Latin Times [New York NY]

May 19, 2021

By Nirmal Varghese

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A former archbishop of Newark has been named in a whopping $50-million lawsuit for reportedly sexually abusing an innocent 5-year-old girl on church grounds and on numerous occasions in 1976.

Court papers alleged that archbishop Peter Gerety, who died in 2016 at the age of 104, gained the trust of the young victim’s financially struggling family by delivering meals to their home. The former priest reportedly eventually volunteered to look after the little girl while her mother, a seamstress, was away at work.

While fostering the child at the church rectory, Gerety reportedly took to inviting the young girl to his bedroom where he would touch her inappropriately and pleasure himself in front of her on several occasions, the lawsuit claimed.

Gerety served as Newark’s archbishop from 1974 through his retirement in 1986. The disgraced priest had served in New Haven, Connecticut, and Portland, Maine before starting his service in Newark, said View Cache

May 19, 2021

Samuel Venne in a screenshot from this report.

Retired priest appeals 7-year suspension handed down by Vatican officials

BUFFALO (NY)
WIVB [Buffalo NY]

May 18, 2021

By Luke Moretti

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[Photo above: Fr. Samuel Venne of Buffalo in a screen shot from this report.]

A retired Diocese of Buffalo priest has appealed a decision from the Vatican to suspend him for seven years after being accused twice of sexual abuse of minors.

Samuel Venne, 79, has been a priest with the Buffalo Diocese for more than 40 years. He learned of his punishment through a Nov. 10, 2020, letter from Judicial Vicar Rev. Msgr. Salvator Manganello.

The letter came with a “Penal Precept” spelling out the restrictions against Venne, which included prohibiting him from celebrating Mass publicly and from wearing any clerical garb. [See the Penal Precept in a screen shot from this report.]

In other words, Venne, who has always maintained he is innocent, is not allowed to present himself as a priest.  

Venne has refused to sign the precept.

“I cannot sign any document regarding my…

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Clergy abuse: Catholic Diocese of Erie fund pays $16.6M to victims; total costs: $31.35M

ERIE (PA)
The Bradford Era [Bradford PA]

May 19, 2021

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The emotional and long-term costs to victims are most often incalculable in cases of clergy sex abuse, but the abuse scandal has produced a dollar figure for victims in the Catholic Diocese of Erie: $31.35 million.

The 13-county diocese has spent that much investigating abuse case and making payments to victims, according to data released on Tuesday.

Erie Catholic Bishop Lawrence Persico provided the numbers as the diocese announced that it had made a total of $16.6 million in payments to abuse victims through the diocese’s compensation fund, launched in February 2019 in response to the devastating August 2018 Pennsylvania attorney general grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse of minors in the Roman Catholic Church statewide.

Persico said the fund made its final payments in March. The final payments closed out the program and further clarified how much the diocese has spent on clergy sex abuse cases. The rest…

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Erie Catholic Diocese completes Independent Survivors Reparation Program, survivor speaks out

ERIE (PA)
WJET [Erie PA]

May 18, 2021

By Yoselin Person

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The Erie Catholic Diocese has completed its Independent Survivors Reparation Program.

The pay-out of millions of dollars to victims comes in the wake of the national priest sexual abuse scandal.

Some of those abuses took place here in the Erie Catholic Diocese.

We had a chance to speak with both a survivor along with the Bishop of Erie.

This program went on for six months, but a survivor we spoke to said that the Erie Diocese would need to do more than just a temporary program.

“It’s a little too late. They had an opportunity in 1989 to begin making things right, but it wasn’t until the thing happened in Boston in 2002 that Trot even admitted that he abuse happened,” said Kevin McParland, Survivor.

Kevin McParland is a sexual abuse survivor. He said that he was abused by a former Erie Catholic clergy.

This abuse took place in the…

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Report: Defrocked Grand Haven priest groomed victim

GRAND HAVEN (MI)
WOOD-TV [Grand Rapids MI]

May 18, 2021

By Heather Walker

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A retired West Michigan priest who has since been removed from the priesthood over sexual abuse allegations started grooming his victim when she was as young as 12, police records obtained by the Grand Haven Tribune show.

William Langlois, 75, was defrocked earlier this month. At the time, the Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids said it had learned of the allegations in 2018. Langlois had retired in 2016 after serving as pastor of St. Patrick-St. Anthony Catholic Parish in Grand Haven for the previous 20 years and in other West Michigan parishes for some 30 years before that.

The Grand Haven Tribune reported Tuesday that a March 2018 police report it obtained through the Freedom of Information Act alleges Langlois groomed a “vulnerable child” over a period of a few years. That allegedly began in 1994 or 1995 when she was 12 or 13. 

According to the Tribune, the woman…

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Sinead O’Connor Remembers Things Differently

(IRELAND)
New York Times [New York NY]

May 18, 2021

By Amanda Hess

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The mainstream narrative is that a pop star ripped up a photo of the pope on “Saturday Night Live” and derailed her life. What if the opposite were true?

Sinead O’Connor is alone, which is how she prefers to be. She has been riding out the pandemic in a tiny village on an Irish mountaintop, watching murder shows, buying fairy-garden trinkets online and mainlining American news on CNN. On a recent overcast afternoon, she had a navy hijab arranged over her shaved head and a cigarette permanently installed between her fingertips, and when she leaned over an iPad inside her all-glass conservatory, she looked as if she had been hermetically sealed into her own little world.

“I’m lucky,” she said, “because I enjoy my own company.”

Her cottage was appointed in bright, saturated colors that leapt out from the monotonous backdrop of the Irish sky with the surreal quality of…

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Revised canon law on crimes, penalties almost ready for publication

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

May 19, 2021

By Cindy Wooden

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The revised section of the Code of Canon Law dealing with crimes and penalties, including those related to clerical sexual abuse, should be ready for publication before the end of summer, said the secretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts.

Bishop Juan Ignacio Arrieta, who spearheaded the project, confirmed the imminent publication in late May after the Catholic Bishops of England and Wales released correspondence about changing the current code “to clearly distinguish” between a priest violating his promise of chastity and sexually abusing a minor.

Pope Francis already said in February 2020 that the work on a revised Book VI of the Code of Canon Law, “Sanctions in the Church”. was complete.

The revision, the Pope had said, was needed “to make it more organic and responsive to new situations and problems” that the Church has become more aware of since the code was published in 1983. Work…

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Native American Catholics focus of Knights of Columbus documentary

NEW HAVEN (CT)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 17, 2021

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The historical and contemporary witness of Native American Catholics are the subject of a Knights of Columbus-produced documentary set for broadcast in upcoming weeks.

“It is impossible to fully understand what it means to be a Catholic in North America without a sincere appreciation for the Catholic tradition among so many native tribes,” the Knights of Columbus website said. “Few people realize that Indigenous communities throughout the continent were sincerely practicing their faith centuries before the founding of the United States.”

The Catholic fraternal organization characterized the documentary as offering “a missing piece to the greater story of Catholicism in America.” It combines the history of Native American Catholics and their continuing contributions, with commentary from present-day Native Americans and other Catholic leaders.

Among those who speak in the documentary is Deacon Andrew Orosco, who on his father’s side is descended from the San Pasqual Band of Mission Indians of…

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‘Old habit’ of covering up abuse must stop everywhere, pope says

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Service - USCCB [Washington DC]

May 17, 2021

By Carol Glatz

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[Via The Pilot of the Archdiocese of Boston]

Abuse against a minor is a kind of “psychological murder” that can destroy the victim’s childhood, Pope Francis told an Italian association active in the fight against child abuse and online child pornography.

“Therefore, protecting children against sexual exploitation is a duty of every nation, (which is) called to identify both traffickers and abusers,” he said during an audience May 15 at the Vatican with members of the association, Meter.

The association was founded in 1989 by Father Fortunato Di Noto, an Italian priest who has been leading the fight in Italy to protect children from online predators around the world. It works with law enforcement, government agencies and schools in fighting the crime of child sex abuse and other forms of online abuse, in prevention and offering safety and help for victims.

The pope praised its work, especially in trying to…

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Chicago archdiocese reinstates priest after investigating TikTok allegation

CHICAGO (IL)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 18, 2021

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The Archdiocese of Chicago has reinstated a pastor who was accused of attempted sexual assault, after failing to substantiate the accusation. 

Fr. Larry Sullivan, the pastor of Christ the King parish in Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood, stepped aside from ministry in April after a woman accused him of attacking her and attempting to sexually assault her in 1984, just before he entered seminary. The woman’s accusation was posted on the app TikTok. 

Sullivan said that after the video surfaced, he forwarded it to the archdiocese which began an investigation. The archdiocese said it also reported the accusation to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the Cook County State’s Attorney.

On May 14, Cardinal Blase Cupich issued a letter to the Christ the King parish and school communities, saying that the archdiocese would be reinstating Sullivan as they could not substantiate the accusation made against him. 

“A thorough review…

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Examining the Deep Roots of the Abuse Crisis

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crisis Magazine [Manchester NH]

May 18, 2021

By Darrick Taylor

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[With comments section]

The ongoing sexual abuse crisis in the Church has left many good Catholics shaken, and like many I have tried to understand how this has happened. Obviously, homosexuality in the clergy plays a role, and the all-male nature of the priesthood provides opportunities for such abuse. But here I want to explore the larger historical forces that allowed abuse to flourish in the Church, which at least for me makes it somewhat more explicable in human terms, the supernatural nature of evil notwithstanding. 

Perhaps the most insightful explanation I have encountered comes from the Canadian philosopher John Lamont, whose article “Tyranny and Sexual Abuse in the Church: a Jesuit Tragedy,” identifies a warped idea of obedience which has influenced priestly formation since the 16th century. According to Lamont, a voluntarist conception of obedience, which made the will of a superior the necessary criteria for obedience,…

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Lawsuit: Former Newark archbishop abused 5-year-old girl

NEWARK (NJ)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 18, 2021

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An archbishop of Newark groomed a 5-year-old girl by delivering food to her struggling family and regularly babysitting her, then sexually abusing her on multiple occasions in the 1970s, a lawsuit alleges.

The suit filed in March is believed to be the first to level sexual abuse charges against the late Peter Gerety, who died in 2016 at 104 as the world’s oldest Catholic bishop. Gerety served as archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark from 1974 until his retirement in 1986, according to the archdiocese’s website.

Prior to serving in Newark, Gerety had served in New Haven, Connecticut, and Portland, Maine.

In an affidavit accompanying the lawsuit, the plaintiff, a woman now in her late 40s, alleged Gerety gained her trust by helping her family and praising her as “such a smart and pretty young girl.” Eventually, the lawsuit claims, Gerety took her to a bedroom in the…

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May 18, 2021

Child Victims Act lawsuit accuses murdered priest of molesting boy

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

May 17, 2021

By Jay Tokasz

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Buffalo priest who was murdered inside a church rectory in 1987 is being accused of sexually assaulting a boy a decade earlier.

A Child Victims Act lawsuit alleges the Rev. A. Joseph Bissonette molested a 7-year-old boy in his office at St. Bartholomew Church six or seven times in 1977, under the guise that the priest was counseling and helping the plaintiff with his reading.

[The original article links to: Priests’ Killers Get 50 Years to Life: Judge Regrets State Forbids Death Penalty, by Matt Gryta, Buffalo News, November 2, 1988.]

The Herman Law firm in New York City filed the case May 6 on behalf of a plaintiff identified by the initials M.D.

The defendants are St. Bartholomew Catholic Church and St. Bartholomew Catholic School, both of which no longer exist. St. Bartholomew’s parish merged in 1993 into Blessed Trinity Church as part of a Buffalo Diocese consolidation…

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Ex-prosecutor Nazir Afzal who brought down the Rochdale grooming gangs will head the Catholic Church’s drive to stamp out child abuse scandals

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Daily Mail [London, United Kingdom]

May 15, 2021

By Simon Caldwell

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  • He will be appointed as chairman of Catholic Safeguarding Standards Agency
  • Mr Afzal won plaudits a decade ago for overturning Crown Prosecution Service
  • He pursued British Pakistani criminals involved in rape and trafficking of 47 girls

The Muslim former prosecutor who led the crackdown on Rochdale’s grooming gangs is to head the Catholic Church’s drive to stamp out child abuse scandals, The Mail on Sunday can reveal.

The appointment of Nazir Afzal as the first chairman of the new Catholic Safeguarding Standards Agency will be announced on Tuesday.

Mr Afzal won plaudits a decade ago for overturning a Crown Prosecution Service decision and pursuing a gang of British Pakistani criminals involved in the rape and trafficking of 47 girls, resulting in 19 convictions.

Birmingham-born Mr Afzal later criticised the white professionals in the CPS for ‘over-sensitivity’, asserting that ‘political correctness and fear of appearing racist may have contributed to justice being…

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How to help victims of sexual abuse get justice: Eliminate statutes of limitations

COLUMBUS (OH)
Evening Sun [Hanover PA]

May 18, 2021

By Marci Hamilton

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In the United States, 1 in 5 girls and 1 in 13 boys experience sexual abuse every year. On college campuses, 13% of students experience rape or sexual assault. And for those brave enough to come forward, our legal system actively works against them — often precluding them from pursuing justice altogether through outdated state laws with statutes of limitations.

For example, survivors of abuse at Ohio State University have been prevented from seeking justice under state causes of action or Title IX by narrow statutes of limitations, even though survivors of abuse in other states don’t encounter the same barriers.

Justice must be available to abuse survivors whenever they are ready to come forward, regardless of geographic boundaries.

With new leadership in Congress and the White House, it is past time for federal lawmakers to prioritize an effort to expand the statute of limitations for these crimes nationwide, with one federal standard that guarantees survivors the right to…

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May 17, 2021

Auxiliary Bishop Karlheinz Diez of Fulda, Germany, speaks Jan. 31, 2020, with synodal assembly participants in Frankfurt. (CNS / KNA / Harald Oppitz)

Whose synodality? Social alliances and institutional models in global Catholicism

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

May 17, 2021

By Massimo Faggioli

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[Photo above: Auxiliary Bishop Karlheinz Diez of Fulda, Germany, speaks Jan. 31, 2020, with synodal assembly participants in Frankfurt. (CNS / KNA / Harald Oppitz)]

Looking at the driving forces of synodality from one continent to another

Ecclesial synodality is something very old and, at the same time, something very recent. It is an integral part of the tradition of the Church.

As the report of the International Theological Commission, Synodality in the Life and Mission of the Church (2018), says in the opening section: ” ‘Synod’ is an ancient and venerable word in the Tradition of the Church, whose meaning draws on the deepest themes of Revelation.”

But the theology of synodality, which is now at the basis of Pope Francis’ push for a synodal reform of the Church, is something that has developed in the aftermath of the Second Vatican Council (1962-65).

The final documents of…

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A famed folk singer won a presidential pardon after molesting a child. Did he prey on others?

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

May 17, 2021

By Gillian Brockell

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No one from the government notified Barbara Winter about the pardon. Not the White House, not the Justice Department’s Office of the Pardon Attorney, not the prosecutor who handled her case.

She found out from her mother, who read in the newspaper that one of the country’s most famous folk singers, who had admitted to and been convicted of molesting her when she was barely 14, had been pardoned by President Jimmy Carter on his final full day in office in 1981.

It felt, Winter says now, “like you got sucker-punched in the gut. It’s telling him, ‘It’s okay what you did, just don’t get caught next time,’ if that makes sense.”

Presidential pardons often kick up controversy, from Gerald Ford’s pardon of his disgraced predecessor Richard M. Nixon, to Bill Clinton’s clemency for fugitive financier Marc Rich, who had been on…

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Former youth footballer investigation found abuse of children as young as six

GLASGOW (UNITED KINGDOM)
Sunday Post [Glasgow, Scotland]

May 16, 2021

By Marion Scott

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Hugh Stevenson’s sexual abuse of young footballers was publicly exposed in 2016 – 12 years after his death.

Former youth footballer Peter Haynes, now 54, waived his anonymity to tell a BBC investigation how Stevenson raped him over a three or four-year period from 1979.

Former young players at Eastercraigs Boys’ Club, where Stevenson was an official, also told of his attempts to groom them.

Haynes’ along with another victim’s account of Stevenson’s abuse was included in the SFA-commissioned Independent Review of Sexual Abuse in Scottish Football, written by former Catholic Church adviser Martin Henry and published in full in February.

Haynes told the review that the first assault by Stevenson – who the report names only as “A” – took place in the referee’s car.

The report said: “Mr Haynes told the review that he believed a number of boys may have been similarly abused by A over the…

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Fresno Catholic Diocese scores win over ex-priest in defamation row

FRESNO (CA)
San Joaquin Valley Sun [Fresno CA]

May 17, 2021

By Alex Tavlian

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The Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno won a key legal battle in a Fresno County court which threw out a defamation suit filed by now-former Bakersfield Monsignor Craig Harrison.

The suit, which alleged that the Diocese’s top spokeswoman, Teresa Dominguez, defamed him by stating in an NPR interview that she visited the home of an alleged sexual assault victim and told the individual that she believed his claims of misconduct by Harrison against him.

In court filings, Harrison and his attorneys argued that the statements by Dominguez equated to the Diocese believing the allegations against him.

In a ruling siding with the Diocese, Fresno County Judge Kristi Culver Kapetan said that the court had to review Dominguez’s comments to the public radio station using a “totality of the circumstances” test, examining the language used to determine if it asserted her opinion – which would not be considered defamatory.

Kapetan found…

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Northern Michigan priest pleads guilty to more sexual abuse charges

IRON MOUNTAIN (MI)
WJBK - Fox 2 [Southfield MI]

May 16, 2021

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A former Upper Peninsula priest who left Michigan years ago has pleaded guilty to a remaining sexual abuse case against him.

Gary Jacobs, 75, is accused of sexually abusing teenagers in the 1980s while serving as a priest under the Catholic Diocese of Marquette.

He pleaded guilty Friday to one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct in Dickinson County, according to Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel. His sentencing will be July 2.

In April, he pleaded guilty to four other counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ontonagon County. His sentencing in that case will be May 25.

According to the plea deal, which covers both counties, Jacobs will serve between eight and 15 years on each of the five counts, which will run concurrently. Nessel’s office calls it the “harshest prison sentence” handed down in its clergy abuse investigation which has resulted in other guilty pleas.

Jacobs must undergo sex offender counseling…

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Ex-priest priest pleads guilty in Upper Peninsula to abuse

IRON MOUNTAIN (MI)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 16, 2021

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A former Upper Peninsula priest who left Michigan years ago has pleaded guilty to a remaining sexual abuse case against him.

Gary Jacobs, 75, is accused of sexually abuse teenagers in the 1980s while serving as a priest under the Catholic Diocese of Marquette.

He pleaded guilty Friday to one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct in Dickinson County, according to Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel. His sentencing will be July 2.

In April, he pleaded guilty to four other counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ontonagon County. His sentencing in that case will be May 25.

According to the plea deal, which covers both counties, Jacobs will serve between eight and 15 years on each of the five counts, which will run concurrently. Nessel’s office calls it the “harshest prison sentence” handed down in its clergy abuse investigation which has resulted in other guilty pleas.

Jacobs must undergo sex…

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Man accused of sexually abusing teen drops defamation suit against accuser

ROCHESTER (NY)
Democrat and Chronicle [Rochester NY]

May 17, 2021

By Sean Lahman

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A local man who says he was falsely accused of sexually abusing a teenager in his care has dropped a defamation suit he filed against his accuser.

That man, Daniel Charcholla, will continue to pursue his suit against his accuser’s former lawyers and WHAM-TV (Channel 13) in Rochester, which aired two stories based on the accusations.

In a legal action commenced in 2019, a man identified by his initials, J.O., alleged that Charcholla had physically and sexually abused him in the early 1980s when he was in his teens.

At the time J.O., an orphan, said he was living in a group home run by DePaul Mental Health Services. Charcholla worked for DePaul, which was then affiliated with the Diocese of Rochester.

“This defamation suit is not a direct response to the allegations in the CVA claim,” said Charcholla’s attorney, Aaron Gavenda. “It is to say that the claims made by…

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May 16, 2021

Father Ron Lange, a Louisburg, Wis., native, served more than 30 years as a missionary in Ghana as a member of the Society of the Divine Word. Photo by: Jessica Reilly

Priest with local ties accused of abuse in Ghana

NORTHBROOK (IL)
Telegraph Herald [Dubuque IA]

May 15, 2021

By Robert Herguth, Chicago Sun-Times

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[Photo above: Father Ron Lange, a Louisburg, Wis., native, served more than 30 years as a missionary in Ghana as a member of the Society of the Divine Word. Photo by: Jessica Reilly]

Even before he was ordained a Catholic priest, the Rev. Ronald Lange went to Ghana in 1968 to do missionary work.

In a profile by the Telegraph Herald years later, Lange spoke of his commitment to learning about Ghana while teaching at schools there and leading a parish with more than a dozen worship sites.

“The people are just so happy to see you,” Lange, a member of the Society of the Divine Word’s Chicago province, and a native of Louisburg, Wis., said at the time. “You don’t even have to be a good priest.”

And he wasn’t, as his order now acknowledges.

In his four decades as a Catholic missionary in Ghana, Lange has been credibly…

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Archdiocese Ordered To Give Details Of Westchester Coach Accused Of Molesting Student

SCARSDALE (NY)
Somers Daily Voice [Somers NY]

May 15, 2021

By Zak Failla

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A judge has ordered the Archdiocese of New York and three Catholic schools to turn over a host of documents and information regarding a former educator and coach who allegedly molested students over the course of decades.

Edwin Gaynor, of Ossining, is accused of fondling minors during gym classes in the 1960s when he worked at Immaculate Heart of Mary School in Scarsdale, as well as other students in Westchester, according to a lawsuit filed in Westchester County civil court two years ago.

It is alleged that the Archdiocese of New York knew of the abuse and rather than handle the situation, they instead continued to move Gaynor to different schools, none of which have been named in the lawsuit accusing him of fondling the student.

This week, a New York State Supreme Court judge overseeing lawsuits against Gaynor ordered the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York and local schools…

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Priest reinstated at Christ the King; sex assault allegation ‘cannot be substantiated,’ Cupich says

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

May 14, 2021

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The pastor at Christ the King parish in Beverly has been reinstated after officials found an allegation that he sexually assaulted someone 37 years ago could not be substantiated, Cardinal Blase Cupich said Friday in a letter to the community.

The Rev. Larry Sullivan was asked to step aside from the parish at 9325 S. Hamilton Ave. in April after an accusation that he and another person attacked a woman in an alley in 1984 before he was to leave for the seminary, when he was 18 years old, according to the Archdiocese of Chicago.

“A thorough review of this matter by the Archdiocesan Office of Child Abuse Investigations and Review and an outside investigator, including multiple unsuccessful attempts to obtain information from the accuser, concludes that the accusation against him, which was alleged to have occurred prior to his entering the seminary, cannot be substantiated,” Cupich wrote.

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Weekend Roundup: St. Norbert Abbey Paid Former Student $400K Following Sex Abuse Reports, Continued To ‘Revictimize’ Him

DE PERE (WI)
Wisconsin Public Radio - WPR [Madison WI]

May 15, 2021

By WPR Staff

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The Green Bay Press-Gazette has done extensive research into Nate Lindstrom’s experience with abuse in the Catholic church. Lindstrom took his own life this spring. 

Lindstrom received monthly checks from the Norbertines of St. Norbert Abbey in De Peren until May 2019.

“According to interviews and documents, the Norbertines quietly sent Lindstrom monthly checks totaling more than $400,000 over 10 years after his parents complained to the Catholic order’s leaders about the harm their son suffered from being sexually abused by at least one priest in the late 1980s,” the Press-Gazette wrote. 

The Press-Gazette has interviewed Lindstrom, his family, friends and others involved, as well as researched documents, for the past 20 months to compile this in-depth coverage of what has happened at St. Norbert Abbey and how it has impacted those who faced abuse.

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Christ the King pastor reinstated after sex assault allegation ‘cannot be substantiated’

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

May 15, 2021

By Sun-Times Media Wire

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The pastor at Christ the King parish in Beverly has been reinstated after officials found an allegation that he sexually assaulted someone 37 years ago could not be substantiated, Cardinal Blase Cupich said Friday in a letter to the community.

The Rev. Larry Sullivan was asked to step aside from the parish at 9325 S. Hamilton Ave. in April after an accusation that he and another person attacked a woman in an alley in 1984 before he was to leave for the seminary, when he was 18 years old, according to the Archdiocese of Chicago.

“A thorough review of this matter by the Archdiocesan Office of Child Abuse Investigations and Review and an outside investigator, including multiple unsuccessful attempts to obtain information from the accuser, concludes that the accusation against him, which was alleged to have occurred prior to his entering the seminary, cannot be substantiated,” Cupich wrote.

Father Sullivan “fully…

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Letter from Cardinal Blase J. Cupich, archbishop of Chicago, on the reinstatement of Father Lawrence Sullivan to active ministry

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

May 14, 2021

By Cardinal Blase J. Cupich

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Dear Members of the Christ the King Parish and School communities,

On April 21, 2021, I informed you of an allegation of sexual assault against your Pastor, Father Lawrence Sullivan dating from 1984 when he was eighteen years old.  In keeping with our procedures, Father Sullivan was asked to step aside from his pastoral duties until a thorough investigation could be completed.  This has been a difficult time for your parish and school communities and all involved. Thank you for your patience with this process.

A thorough review of this matter by the Archdiocesan Office of Child Abuse Investigations and Review and an outside investigator, including multiple unsuccessful attempts to obtain information from the accuser, concludes that the accusation against him, which was alleged to have occurred prior to his entering the seminary, cannot be substantiated.  Therefore, I am reinstating Father Sullivan as your Pastor effective immediately.

Father Sullivan has…

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May 15, 2021

The yellow markers show where Society of the Divine Word clerics were credibly accused of having abused children. The reds dots are places where the same priests and brothers served during their careers. The locations of the markers are approximations. Frank Main, Robert Herguth / Sun-Times

Exporting abusive priests: Catholic religious order based near Northbrook reveals abusers

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

May 14, 2021

By Robert Herguth

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Many of the Society of the Divine Word clerics credibly accused of molesting kids served as missionaries in the developing world, where experts say the next big priest sex abuse scandal lurks.

[Photo above: The yellow markers show where Society of the Divine Word clerics were credibly accused of having abused children. The reds dots are places where the same priests and brothers served during their careers. The locations of the markers are approximations. Frank Main, Robert Herguth / Sun-Times]

Even before he was ordained a Catholic priest, the Rev. Ronald Lange went to Ghana in 1968 to do missionary work.

In a profile by a community newspaper years later, Lange spoke of his commitment to learning about Ghana while teaching at schools there and leading a parish with more than a dozen worship sites.

“The people are just so happy to see you,” Lange, a member of the Society…

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Pastor at Beverly Church Reinstated After Sex Assault Allegation ‘Cannot Be Substantiated’

CHICAGO (IL)
WMAQ - NBC 5 [Chicago IL]

May 14, 2021

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The pastor of Christ the King Roman Catholic Church in Chicago’s Beverly neighborhood has been reinstated after a review determined an allegation he sexually assaulted someone more than 35 years ago “cannot be substantiated,” the Archdiocese of Chicago announced Friday.

Rev. Lawrence Sullivan was asked to step aside last month pending the outcome of the investigation into the incident, which was said to have occurred when Sullivan was 18 years old.

In a letter posted to the parish’s website, the pastor addressed the allegations, which he says stem from an encounter he had with an employee at a fast food restaurant in 1984.

“I made unwelcome verbal comments to a female employee that upset her to the extent that her parents and the police were contacted,” he said in the letter.

Sullivan said no physical interaction took place, and he was “ashamed and deeply sorry” about his actions that…

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The window is closing: The Child Victims Act’s lookback ends in three months; New Yorkers should come forward

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Daily News

May 14, 2021

By Daily News Editorial Board

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New Yorkers who were sexually molested as children, then harmed again by restrictive laws that gave them precious little time to seek justice, are running out of time to file suit against their tormentors and the institutions that enabled the abuse. As champions of the landmark Child Victims Act, which lengthened statutes of limitations and created a one-year lookback window for filing civil suits that’s since been extended to cope with COVID’s closure of courts, we urge those victimized to seek justice before the deadline arrives three months from today.

The sexual abuse of a young person is unlike any other crime. When monster molesters take advantage of children, typically ones placed in their care, it sends the victim into years of shame, self-blame, post-traumatic stress and even suicidal thinking. It’s psychologically exhausting just to come to terms with the reality…

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Former Michigan priest pleads guilty in another sex abuse case

(MI)
Fox 2 Detroit (WJBK-TV)

May 14, 2021

By Amber Ainsworth

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DICKINSON COUNTY, Mich. (FOX 2) – A former priest from Michigan‘s Upper Peninsula pleaded guilty in a remaining sex abuse case against him Friday.

Gary Jacobs, 75, pleaded guilty to second-degree criminal sexual conduct in Dickinson County. Last month he pleaded guilty to four counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ontonagon County.

The plea deal spans both counties.

Jacobs will concurrently serve 8-15 years on each of the five counts. 

He must register as a sex offender for the rest of his life, Jacobs will have lifetime electronic monitoring when released, his victims can speak at his sentencing if they want to, and he must undergo sex offender counseling.

“I am proud of the work done by our clergy abuse team to reach this plea agreement,” Attorney General Dana Nessel said. “None of this would be possible without the courageous victims who have been willing to share their stories in order to achieve…

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Former U.P. priest pleads guilty in abuse case

LANSING (MI)
Detroit News [Detroit MI]

May 14, 2021

By Amelia Benavides-Colón

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A former Upper Peninsula priest facing one of the harshest prison sentences so far in a clergy abuse investigation by the state Attorney General pleaded guilty Friday in a remaining case against him.

Gary Jacobs, 75, pleaded guilty Friday to one count of second-degree criminal sexual conduct in Dickinson County, the office of Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel said.

Last month, Jacobs pleaded guilty to four counts of criminal sexual conduct in Ontonagon County.

He’s accused of sexually abusing teens in the U.P. in the 1980s while serving as a priest under the Catholic Diocese of Marquette. 

“I am proud of the work done by our clergy abuse team to reach this plea agreement,” Nessel said in a Friday statement. “None of this would be possible without the courageous victims who have been willing to share their stories in order to achieve justice.”

The plea agreement spans both counties and…

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Pope: child abuse is a kind of “psychological murder”

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

May 15, 2021

By Robin Gomes

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Pope Francis on Saturday met a delegation from the Meter Association, which fights abuse of children, especially online.

Pope Francis on Saturday urged families, educational and public institutions to tackle with renewed determination the scourge of child abuse, paedophilia and child pornography, describing them as “psychological murder”.  “Continue your work without hesitation, paying particular attention to the educational aspect, in order to form a firm conscience in people and eradicate the culture of abuse and exploitation,” the Pope told some 50 members of the Meter Association.  The group founded in Sicily, Italy, in 1989 by Father Fortunato Di Noto, has been championing the rights of children especially against child pornography and paedophilia.  

The Good Samaritan

Thanking all those who support the Association in defending abused and mistreated children, the Pope, who has been an ardent campaigner against child abuse, especially against clerical child abuse in the Church, said Meter…

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Nonprofit questions investigation into child abuse at Greensboro church’s day care

GREENSBORO (NC)
Greensboro News & Record [Greensboro NC]

May 14, 2021

By Jamie Biggs

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GREENSBORO — A nonprofit that advocates for child abuse victims is speaking out on behalf of concerned families after a Greensboro woman was sentenced to prison on child pornography charges connected to the day care where she worked.

In late 2020, Alyson Brooke Saunders, 25, pleaded guilty to one count each of producing and distributing child pornography. Saunders, who worked at Fellowship Presbyterian Church’s Fellowship Day School at 2005 New Garden Road, was initially arrested in April 2019.

According to court documents, Saunders used five minors at the day care facility to create sexually explicit images and videos around January and February of 2019. Saunders sexually abused some of the children and sent the images and videos to a co-conspirator, knowing that he planned to post them online, according to the Department of Justice.

Saunders was sentenced last month to 50 years in prison, followed by 20 years of supervised…

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Congregation or cult? Former members accuse Kansas City church of abuse

KANSAS CITY (MO)
WDAF-TV - Fox 4 [Kansas City MO]

May 12, 2021

By Linda Wagar

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. – “It’s kind of like a Christian Disneyland,” said Mia Shapiro, recalling what first impressed her about World Revival Church. “They are super Christians.”

Shapiro was one of more than a dozen former members who spoke to FOX4 Problem Solvers to sound an alarm about a church that they now believe is a cult.

“I want to speak out to not just help people that are there to get out, but to help people find healing and find out that you can have a better life,” Carrie Phelps said. “You don’t have to suffer like that anymore.”

For others, like Taylor Brown, just sounding a warning is not enough.

“I want them to be closed down,” she said. “I want them to be investigated. I want them to stop hurting people.”

World Revival Church, which has a congregation estimated at 400, operates out of a sprawling gated…

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Archdiocese says it needs consultant for real estate issues

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

May 12, 2021

By Rick Ruggles

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The Archdiocese of Santa Fe intends to hire a land use planning consultant to help it shed dozens of properties as part of its bankruptcy case.

Consultants with James W. Siebert & Associates, a Santa Fe land planning firm, would be among numerous experts the archdiocese has hired — attorneys, real estate brokers and accountants — drawing accusations from critics of wasteful spending that ultimately will affect payouts to hundreds of victims of sexual abuse by members of the clergy.

An attorney with the Roman Catholic institution said, however, the experts are needed and that bankruptcy court is the most efficient place for settlements between victims and dioceses.

Court records show the archdiocese has asked U.S. Bankruptcy Judge David T. Thuma for approval to hire the Siebert firm. The records say Siebert can help the archdiocese comply with subdivision statutes and regulations.

A court document said the Siebert company would…

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May 14, 2021

President Joe Biden departs after attending Mass at St. Joseph on the Brandywine Catholic Church as snow falls, Feb. 7, 2021, in Wilmington, Delaware. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

It’s time for our Catholic president to address the church’s sexual abuse scandal

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

May 13, 2021

By David Clohessy

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Here are three steps President Biden can take to stop the suffering.

[Photo above: President Joe Biden departs after attending Mass at St. Joseph on the Brandywine Catholic Church as snow falls, Feb. 7, 2021, in Wilmington, Delaware. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)]

The unemployed. The unvaccinated. The front-line health care workers. The struggling small-business owners. The kids who should be back in school. Millions need and deserve help these days.

Increasingly that help is arriving courtesy of President Joe Biden and the federal government. But there is a group that could also use — and certainly deserves — help that is rarely mentioned these days. It’s a group that Biden, as the nation’s second Catholic president, should feel personally bound to help.

For more than 25 years — nearly half of the president’s adult life — the U.S. Catholic Church has been dealing with the horror of widespread clergy sex crimes…

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Records on former priest sought

STEUBENVILLE (OH)
Herald-Star [Steubenville OH]

May 14, 2021

By Linda Harris

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A priest-turned-activist was in Steubenville Thursday to lobby for Bishop Jeffrey Monforton to release “any and all” records in his possession about Kenneth Bonadies, a disgraced former priest who once taught at Catholic Central High School.

The Archdiocese of Hartford recently agreed to a settlement in the low six figures with a Connecticut man who’d accused Bonadies of sexually abusing him more than 100 times over a four-year period in the 1980s when he was teaching at a school in Manchester, Conn.

“We know he had a checkered career,” said Robert M. Hoatson, co-founder and president of the nonprofit Road to Recovery charity.

“He worked here (in Steubenville) until 1976, then all of a sudden he was ‘on leave.’ In the Catholic code, that means he was sent to a rehabilitation center.”

Hoatson said Bonadies, a Hartford native, was ordained in Steubenville in 1965 and served in the Diocese of Steubenville from 1967-1976….

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Diocese of Steubenville says no credible accusations against Rev. Bonadies within it

(OH)
WTOV - Fox 9 [Steubenville OH]

May 13, 2021

By Alex Taylor

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A priest ordained in the mid-1960s in Steubenville — once a teacher at Catholic Central High School — is the subject of a sexual abuse case settlement in the Archdiocese of Hartford, Conn.

A victim came forward alleging he was abused more than 100 times by Rev. Kenneth Bonadies.

And now a victim abuse advocacy group is asking Bishop Jeffrey Monforton of the Steubenville Diocese to release the any files associated with Bonadies from his years with the Diocese of Steubenville.

Both the victim’s attorney and the recovery group believe there to be local victims as well.

Robert Hoatson, president and co-founder of Road to Recovery and a survivor of clergy sexual abuse, was among those outside the Diocese of Steubenville demanding Monforton release “secret files” and all other files related to priesthood and assignments of Bonadies.

The victim’s attorney, Mitchell Garabedian, is also the attorney who led the sexual…

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Vatican abuse trial: Witness testimony gives conflicting view of victim, pre-seminary

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

May 12, 2021

By Hannah Brockhaus

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As the trial for alleged abuse inside a Vatican youth seminary continues, witnesses have given different views on the characters of the victim and the accused, and of the institution’s culture.

In a hearing May 12, the Vatican City State’s criminal court heard testimony from five witnesses, four of whom were students at the pre-seminary at the time the alleged abuse took place.

Located inside Vatican City State, the Pius X pre-seminary is a residence for about a dozen boys aged 12 to 18 who serve at papal Masses and other liturgies in St. Peter’s Basilica and are considering the priesthood.

The alleged victim, a 28-year-old identified only as L.G., has testified that beginning when he was 13 years old, while he was a student at the pre-seminary, he was sexually assaulted over a period of six years by a fellow student, the defendant Fr. Gabriele Martinelli.

Martinelli has defended his…

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Biden inauguration priest resigns California university post

SANTA CLARA (CA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 13, 2021

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The Jesuit priest who presided over an inaugural Mass for President Joe Biden has resigned his position as president of Santa Clara University in Northern California, college officials said, after an investigation found he engaged in inappropriate, alcohol-fueled conversations with graduate students.

The Rev. Kevin O’Brien, at the direction of Jesuit officials, has begun a therapeutic outpatient program to address personal issues, including alcohol and stress counseling. He had been president of Santa Clara University since July 2019 and was placed on leave in March.

The university announced O’Brien’s departure in a statement to the campus community on Wednesday that included messages from acting President Lisa Kloppenberg and board of trustees Chair John M. Sobrato. O’Brien had notified the board of his resignation Sunday and the trustees accepted it the next day.ADVERTISEMENT

The private Jesuit institution in the Silicon Valley, founded in 1851 as the first…

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Plaque Of Accused Priest Covered Up In Old Brookville: Report

OLD BROOKVILLE (NY)
The Patch [Glen Cove NY]

May 12, 2021

By Peggy Spellman Hoey

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Msgr. Mario Costa was one of dozens of priests recently named in a court document as the subject of abuse allegations, court documents say.

OLD BROOKVILLE, NY — A plaque to mark the contributions of a deceased Roman Catholic priest, who has been accused in a clergy abuse scandal, has been covered up outside of St. Paul the Apostle Church in Old Brookville, according to a report in Newsday.

The name of Msgr. Mario Costa was identified on a list of over 100 credibly accused clergy members who attorneys for the Diocese of Rockville recently included in legal papers as part of their bankruptcy court filing, the outlet reported. A parishioner told Newsday that the plaque was covered with white cardboard-like material that was held in place by blue contractor’s tape on Tuesday.

Diocese spokesman Sean Dolan told Newsday the diocese is “gathering information and assessing the…

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Kathleen Jacobs: Treading water on church accusations (Opinion)

CHARLESTON (WV)
Charleston Gazette-Mail [Charleston WV]

May 12, 2021

By Kathleen Jacobs

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It’s been nearly four years since the Gazette-Mail published an op-ed I had penned, titled “Accused priests’ silence elicits doubt of innocence.” As a cradle Catholic, it was a difficult piece to write.

I read it again a few days ago, because I had read a report of yet another accusation of inappropriate behavior by a Catholic priest. I recognize that my word choice is intentional and more than a bit unclear. I am not a reporter. I am (or hope to be one day) an essayist. There’s a vast difference between the two.

An equal number of years ago, a priest commented that, at my core, I am Catholic. I can’t imagine any words (and I love the mix of those 26 letters of the alphabet with a deep passion) ever having the impact that those words had, nor can I imagine any words delivered in the future that…

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‘They believed in us,’ former resident of St. Joseph’s Orphanage says of new law

MONTPELIER (VT)
VTDigger [Montpelier VT]

May 13, 2021

By Alan J. Keays

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Brenda Hannon calls it a source of healing.

Gov. Phil Scott signed into law Wednesday a bill, S.99, that eliminates a three-year limit on filing civil lawsuits over childhood physical abuse. Two years ago, the Legislature eliminated the time limit on filing civil lawsuits over sexual abuse. 

“It feels like a pressure off of us, that we have done some good for future children and society,” said Hannon, 68, a member of the Voices of St. Joseph’s. “It makes us feel like we are being healed from all the trauma that we endured.”

Members of Voices of St. Joseph’s, a group for former residents of the orphanage, testified in recent weeks before the House and Senate Judiciary committees about the abuses they suffered at the now-shuttered St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Burlington, operated by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Vermont.

Some spoke through tears as they recounted abuse from priests, nuns and…

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New Vermont law waives time limit for physical abuse suits

MONTPELIER (VT)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 13, 2021

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Vermont Gov. Phil Scott has signed into law a measure that lifts the statute of limitations in civil cases of childhood physical abuse.

Scott signed the bill on Wednesday.

The new law builds on legislation passed two years ago that ended the statute of limitations for civil cases of past childhood sexual abuse. The proposal was pushed by a group of people who say they suffered physical abuse while living at the St. Joseph’s Orphanage in Burlington, which closed in 1974.

In an email, Ellen Kane, a spokeswoman for the Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington, said they had “no comment at this time as we are not sure how this is all going to play out. However, we continue to pray for all victims of sexual and physical abuse.”

The legislation defines physical abuse as any act that when it was committed would have been considered aggravated assault.

The legislation…

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Pope Francis accepts the resignation of Polish Bishop Jan Tyrawa; SNAP reacts

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

May 13, 2021

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At the end of a Vatican-led investigation into alleged negligence in handling cases of child sexual abuse, Bishop Jan Tyrawa of Poland submitted his resignation to the Pope. Today, Pope Francis accepted the resignation of the 72-year-old prelate.

We applaud the Catholic Church for looking into the accusations against Bishop Tyrawa, which ultimately led to his resignation. However, we remain concerned about the lack of transparency on the findings of this investigation. In our view, the results of the inquiry are even more crucial than the fact that a probe was launched. Accountability, responsibility, and openness merge to expose the truth. Only by knowing what went wrong in the past can we protect today’s children.

Poland, like other countries around the world, has been plagued by the scandal of child sex abuse within the Church. We commend the brave survivors who came forward to authorities to shed…

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Take it from a therapist: you are not alone

(NJ)
Catholic Star Herald - Diocese of Camden [Camden NJ]

May 13, 2021

By Rod Herrera

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May is Mental Health Awareness Month.

The trauma of child sexual abuse can be devastating. Victims/survivors can have life-long problems including low self-esteem, relationship difficulties, trust issues, alcohol and/or drug abuse or addiction, suicidal thoughts or attempts. When the sexual abuse is by a member of the clergy, the impact to the victims/survivors can extend to their faith in God and trust in the church.

Since the clergy sexual abuse scandal of the 1990s, the church is committed to healing victims/survivors. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in 2002 produced the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, a remarkable document approved by and enforced by all 196 dioceses in the country. The Diocese of Camden is committed to pay for counseling for any victim/survivor of sexual abuse by a priest or deacon.

Trauma comes in all forms. I’m not in any way equating my trauma to…

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Jesuits: Fallen Santa Clara University president’s behaviors did ‘not involve sexual abuse.’ So what was it?

SANTA CLARA (CA)
The Mercury News [San Jose CA]

May 14, 2021

By Julia Prodis Sulek

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Questions still swirl over the Rev. Kevin O’Brien did to resign

From the Rev. Kevin O’Brien’s leave two months ago to his stunning resignation this week as Santa Clara University president, school officials informed the campus community in formal letters that were somber and serious — and utterly lacking in explanation.

With little information except that O’Brien’s fall from grace involved “primarily conversations” with Jesuit grad students, confusion and conspiracy theories are coursing through the Catholic campus, leaving people to either sympathize with or vilify the 54-year-old Jesuit priest who was widely admired on campus.

“A lot of people think this guy’s career has been destroyed, and we don’t know why,” SCU Faculty Senate President Leslie Gray said Thursday. “Does it mean something political, something sexual? Nobody knows anything about what’s happened, and that’s frustrating.”

Late Thursday afternoon, responding to an inquiry from the Bay Area News Group, the Jesuit…

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Polish bishop resigns over sex abuse cover-up charges

WARSAW (POLAND)
La Croix International [France]

May 13, 2021

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Seventy-two-year-old Bishop Jan Tyrawa is found guilty of negligence and cover-up.

Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Polish Bishop Jan Tyrawa of Bydgoszcz, at the end of a Vatican investigation into allegations that he covered up clerical sexual abuse.

A Vatican-led probe concluded that the 72-year-old bishop failed to properly handle clerical abuse against minors, said a May 12 statement from the apostolic nunciature in Poland.

“Following formal reports, the Holy See — acting in accordance with the “motu proprio” Vos estis lux mundi — conducted proceedings concerning the reported negligence of the bishop,” the statement said.

The “motu proprio”, which the pope issued in 2019, established new procedures and norms to hold bishops and religious superiors accountable for abusive clergy continuing in pastoral ministry.

“After completing this procedure, taking into account also other difficulties in managing the diocese” the bishop resigned, said the statement of the nunciature.

Bishop…

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May 13, 2021

Edwin Gaynor and his basketball team at Immaculate Heart of Mary in Scarsdale in 1967. Standing in front of Gaynor is Gregory Morra, one of 21 former students who allege in lawsuits that Gaynor sexually abused them

Archdiocese ordered to provide details in Westchester teacher sex abuse lawsuit

SCARSDALE (NY)
Journal News - Lohud.com [White Plains NY]

May 13, 2021

By Isabel Keane

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[Photo above: Edwin Gaynor and his basketball team at Immaculate Heart of Mary in Scarsdale in 1967. Standing in front of Gaynor is Gregory Morra, one of 21 former students who allege in lawsuits that Gaynor sexually abused them]

A judge has ordered the Archdiocese of New York and three of its Catholic schools to turn over a trove of documents related to one of its former teachers who has been accused of molesting more than 20 students decades ago.

Edwin “Ted” Gaynor worked as a teacher and coach at a few Catholic schools in Westchester County between the 1950s and 1980s, including Immaculate Heart of Mary in Scarsdale, St. Bernard in White Plains and Holy Rosary in Hawthorne.

At least 21 people have made allegations against Gaynor and sued him, the Archdiocese, and Immaculate Heart of Mary under the state Child Victims’ Act.

On September 19 plaintiffs, whose cases…

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Former students testify at Vatican sex abuse trial

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

May 13, 2021

By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service

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The abuse at St. Pius X Pre-Seminary was said to have occurred between 2007 and 2012

Four former students at the minor seminary located in the Vatican testified on May 12 at the ongoing trial of Father Gabriele Martinelli, who is accused of sexually abusing a younger student at the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary.

One of the former students asked the journalists present to refer to him only by his initials, M.B., because he soon will be ordained to the priesthood; Giuseppe Pignatone, president of the Vatican City State tribunal, supported the request.

The four former students each had been questioned by Vatican investigators in 2018, and portions of their statements to the investigators were read at the trial. The May 12 session was the ninth of the trial, which began in October.Subscribe to your daily free newsletter from UCA News

The abuse was said to have occurred between 2007…

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Pope Francis accepts resignation of Polish bishop after ‘Vos estis’ investigation

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

May 12, 2021

By Hannah Brockhaus

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Pope Francis on Wednesday accepted the resignation of Polish Bishop Jan Tyrawa, who was investigated for negligence in handling cases of sexual abuse by priests in his diocese.

According to a statement by the apostolic nunciature in Poland May 12, the 72-year-old bishop submitted his letter of resignation to the pope at the end of a Vatican-led investigation into accusations that he had failed to properly handle cases of sexual abuse against minors by priests in his diocese.

“Following formal reports, the Holy See — acting in accordance with the motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi — conducted proceedings concerning the reported negligence of the Bishop of Bydgoszcz Jan Tyrawa,” the statement said.

“After completing this procedure, taking into account also other difficulties in managing the diocese, the bishop of Bydgoszcz resigned from his ministry, accepted today by the Holy Father,” it concluded.

Tyrawa, bishop of the Diocese of Bydgoszcz, in northern Poland,…

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Pope Francis accepts resignation of Polish bishop accused of cover-up

WARSAW (POLAND)
CatholicPhilly.com - Archdiocese of Philadephia

May 12, 2021

By Catholic News Service

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Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of Bishop Jan Tyrawa of Bydgoszcz, the latest bishop accused of covering up sexual abuse by clergy.

The bishops’ conference said the Vatican had “conducted proceedings on reported negligence” in line with the pontiff’s May 2019 motu proprio, “Vos estis lux mundi,” and had also taken account of “other difficulties” facing Bishop Tyrawa.

Poland’s Catholic Wiez bimonthly said May 12 Bishop Tyrawa had reappointed Father Pawel Kania to Bydgoszcz’s Divine Providence Parish after the priest had been detained by police and suspended from another diocese for propositioning boys and storing child pornography on his computer.

It added that Father Kania had cared for altar boys and taught religious classes to children at his new parish in from 2006 to 2009, before being jailed in 2015 for seven years.

In February 2020, a court ordered the Bydgoszcz Diocese to pay $40,000 in damages to one…

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Massachusetts churches amassed over $82 million in small business PPP loans

BOSTON (MA)
Daily Hampshire Gazette [Hampshire MA]

May 12, 2021

By Isabel Contreras

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BOSTON – Massachusetts churches, including Catholic and Christian religious organizations, received upwards of $82 million in forgivable loans through the federal Paycheck Protection Program, according to Small Business Administration data released last month.

The Roman Catholic Dioceses of Worcester, Fall River and Springfield, along with the Archdiocese of Boston, collected over $20 million in PPP loans, distributed among different churches and administrative departments under their jurisdiction. Boston’s Archdiocese, led by Cardinal Sean Patrick O’Malley received the most within this group, with more than $8 million in PPP aid.

Ray Delisle, director of communications for the Diocese of Worcester, said the PPP loans were necessary to keep people employed in the diocese while continuing to provide services to the community during these hard times.

“The purpose of the program was to keep people’s jobs and if we couldn’t keep them employed, they’d be on unemployment, further pressuring the system for support,” Delisle…

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Catholic Priest who worked in NorCal sued for child sexual abuse, SNAP demands outreach

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

May 12, 2021

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A long-serving Catholic clergyman who worked in Northern California has been accused in a new lawsuit of raping a child. We insist that every diocese where the cleric was assigned notify parishioners and the public of the allegations and beg anyone with information to come forward and make a report to law enforcement.

Fr. John McCracken was accused in a recently filed complaint of violently raping a young altar boy on multiple occasions between 1972-1974 when the priest was working at Queen of All Saints in Concord, which is part of the Diocese of Oakland. Over the course of his very long career Fr. McCracken had assignments not only in Oakland, but also in the Archdiocese of San Francisco, the Diocese of Sacramento, and the Diocese of Santa Rosa.

The cleric also supported a summer ministry for children from west Oakland at Sunshine Camp in Mendocino County. We…

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Friends recall journalist as kind-hearted and smart

SALEM (MA)
Gloucester Times [Gloucester MA]

May 13, 2021

By Julie Manganis

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SALEM — Before there were the groundbreaking stories and accolades, before Columbia and Tufts universities, there was Rachel Zoll’s hometown of Salem, where lifelong friends this week recalled a warm, kind, and fiercely intelligent young woman.

“A good life lost too soon,” said childhood friend and Salem High School classmate Ilene Simons on Wednesday, in reaction to Zoll’s death last week.

Zoll, the youngest child of former Salem Mayor and state District Court Chief Justice Samuel Zoll, was 55 when she succumbed to brain cancer last Friday.

The Associated Press, where Zoll had spent 17 years as a national correspondent covering religion, reported on her numerous professional achievements — accomplishments those who knew her growing up in Salem say were not surprising.

Simons (then Talkowsky) grew up with Zoll in North Salem before the Zolls moved to Chestnut Street. They would be at each other’s homes, or playing at McGlew…

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Senate gives preliminary approval to bill for past sex abuse survivors

DENVER (CO)
Colorado Politics [Denver CO]

May 12, 2021

By Michael Karlik

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Senators gave preliminary approval on Wednesday to a bill that would clear the path for childhood victims of sexual abuse to sue their perpetrators or the youth-oriented organizations that supervised them, and reversed an earlier limitation on the payouts that public entities like school districts might have to provide survivors.

Senate Bill 88 would address the problem created when children who are sexually abused come forward and seek legal action years or decades after their abuse, only to find the statute of limitations has expired to pursue their claim. The proposal would create a new claim for survivors currently barred from filing lawsuits, such that they may sue their perpetrator or an institution without a deadline.

“This is one step toward survivors taking their life back, taking their personal power back,” said Sen. Rhonda Fields, D-Aurora, one of the sponsors. “This bill is about survivorhood and reclaiming…

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Comienza el largamente esperado juicio a los Legionarios

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

May 13, 2021

By Irene Savio

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Nunca antes en Italia se ha sentado en el banquillo a miembros de la organización católica mexicana por su gestión de un caso de abuso. Los cinco imputados –ciudadanos mexicanos, algunos de ellos– están acusados de intento de extorsión y obstrucción de la justicia.

Cinco altos representantes de los Legionarios de Cristo –la congregación fundada por el mexicano Marcial Maciel– estarán sentados en el banquillo en Milán a partir de este jueves 13, acusados de intento de extorsión y obstrucción de la justicia: esos acusados habrían negociado desde 2013 acuerdos de confidencialidad para proteger al exsacerdote Vladimir Reséndiz Gutiérrez, quien ya fue condenado por la justicia italiana.

Roma (Proceso).- Rodeado de una gran expectativa por parte de grupos de víctimas y exlegionarios, por las repercusiones que pueda tener, está previsto que este jueves 13, a las 11:00 horas, comience en Milán un juicio sin precedente en el que están imputados cinco…

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May 12, 2021

Polish bishop resigns after probe into cover-up allegations

WARSAW (POLAND)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 12, 2021

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Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of a Polish bishop following a Vatican investigation into alleged negligence in addressing cases of sexual abuse of minors by priests under the bishop’s authority.

The forced departure of Bishop Jan Tyrawa was the latest in a string of sanctions the pope has meted out since mid-2020 to Polish Catholic Church leaders over cases of cover-up of sexual abuse by other priests.

The Vatican Embassy in Poland said that on Wednesday Francis accepted Tyrawa’s resignation from the diocese of Bydgoszcz, in central Poland, and placed Bishop Wieslaw Smigiel from the neighboring Torun diocese temporarily in charge.

The Vatican communique said the investigation was launched in response to signs of negligence in addressing sex abuse of minors. It didn’t say what the findings were concerning these allegations.

It said Tyrawa handed in his resignation after the probe was concluded and also due to some other…

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NEWARK CARDINAL JOSEPH TOBIN: YOU CALL THIS ‘TRANSPARENCY?

NEWARK (NJ)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

May 10, 2021

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If you relied on Newark Cardinal Joseph Tobin (Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Newark), here’s what you would know about one of New Jersey’s most prominent and prolific child molesting clerics:

Fr. Carmen Sita faced ‘multiple’ victims, was defrocked, worked at one parish in Jersey City and inexplicably also went by the name Fr. Jerry Howard.

That’s all that the information that Cardinal JosephTobin provides on his archdiocesan website.

But the Cardinal didn’t mention that Sita

–pleaded guilty to giving drugs to and abusing a New Jersey kid

–was accused of molesting at least four others there

–was sent to a New Mexico church facility for ‘treatment’

–while there, legally changed his name to Jerry Howard

–was sent, without warning, to a parish in the Jefferson City Missouri diocese

–molested several boys there, again, also giving them drugs

–was charged with abusing three kids

–was removed from his parish

–went…

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David Clohessy: The Worst US Bishops

ST. LOUIS (MO)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

May 12, 2021

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Blog by David Clohessy, former Executive Director of SNAP and longtime survivor advocate.

The most secretive and reckless US Catholic bishops are the men heading these dioceses:

  • Fresno California
  • Grand Island Nebraska
  • Grand Rapids Michigan
  • Honolulu Hawaii
  • Kalamazoo Michigan
  • Miami Florida
  • Orlando Florida
  • Palm Beach Florida
  • Portland Maine
  • Saint Thomas Virgin Islands
  • San Francisco California
  • Superior Wisconsin
  • Venice Florida
  • Worcester Massachusetts

How can we make such a sweeping characterization?

It’s simple. These bishops are refusing to do

  • what common sense and common decency requires,
  • what two of their colleagues did almost 20 years ago, and
  • what the majority of their colleagues have finally done: name at least SOME of the priests, nuns, monks, brothers, seminarians and bishops who are proven, admitted or credibly accused child molesters.

How hard is this? For decades, victims and advocates have begged “Just post on your websites the names of these abusers so kids will be safer and so victims will be vindicated.”

And the heads of each of…

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A plaque at St. Paul the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Brookville honors its former longtime pastor, the Rev. Mario Costa. Credit: James Hughes

Plaque memorializing priest accused of abuse has been covered over, photograph shows

BROOKVILLE (NY)
Newsday [Melville NY]

May 11, 2021

By Bart Jones

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[Photo above: A plaque at St. Paul the Apostle Roman Catholic Church in Brookville honors its former longtime pastor, the Rev. Mario Costa. Credit: James Hughes]

A plaque honoring a former pastor at a Roman Catholic church in Brookville has been covered over, a parishioner’s photograph shows, after reports that the priest had credible accusations against him of sexually abusing a minor.

Newsday reported last week that Msgr. Mario Costa was among the 101 names on a list of credibly accused clerics that the Diocese of Rockville Centre included in bankruptcy court papers filed last month.

On Tuesday, the plaque at St. Paul the Apostle Roman Catholic Church was covered with white cardboard-like material held in place by blue tape, according to a local parishioner who took a photograph of it.

Asked about the covered-up plaque, Sean Dolan, a spokesman for the diocese, said Tuesday, “The Diocese of Rockville Centre…

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San Francisco Archbishop Plays Politics, SNAP Calls Out his Hypocrisy

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

May 11, 2021

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The Catholic Archbishop of San Francisco recently again made clear his view that political figures who support abortion rights — whose ranks include President Joe Biden and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, who represents his city — should be denied Communion.

Archbishop Salvatore Cordilone issued a 17-page pastoral letter on the topic on May 1st and reinforced the message in an hour-long interview on the 7th with the Catholic television network EWTN. “To those who are advocating for abortion, I would say, ‘This is killing. Please stop the killing. You’re in position to do something about it,.”

SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, paraphrases the Archbishop’s words back to him. “Clergy sexual abuse kills. You are in a position to do something about it. Please stop the killing.”

We are called the “Survivors Network” for a very simple reason. The truth that…

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One of East Bay’s Longest-Serving Priests Accused of Raping Child Decades Ago

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

May 11, 2021

By Candice Nguyen and Michael Bott

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The former church leader served as a priest throughout the Bay Area for over six decades. NBC Bay Area’s Investigative Unit looks into the call to action to track down other potential victims of Monsignor John T. McCracken

An East Bay priest who died in 2012 – six years after retiring as the longest serving priest within the Diocese of Oakland – is accused in a new lawsuit of raping a young boy on multiple occasions between 1972 and 1974.

The accusation comes as part of a wave of new lawsuits hitting Catholic dioceses across the state, made possible by a recent law opening a three-year window for new civil cases based on older allegations previously barred by the statute of limitations. Attorneys involved in those cases say more than 700 new accusers have come forward with allegations against Northern California dioceses alone since last year, and they expect more…

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Bill giving some child sex abuse victims more time to sue passes Louisiana House

BATON ROUGE (LA)
New Orleans Advocate [New Orleans LA]

May 11, 2021

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

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The Louisiana House on Tuesday unanimously passed a bill that would give victims of child molestation who are not yet 28 years old significantly more to time to pursue civil court damages.

House Bill 492, whose lead sponsor was Rep. Jason Hughes, D-New Orleans, now heads to the state Senate for a committee hearing and then — if approved there — for consideration by the full chamber. If eventually ratified in its current form, the bill would give child sex abuse survivors until their 53rd birthday to file lawsuits regarding their abuse.

Current law gives victims only until their 28th birthday to initiate litigation.

The proposed legislation, as written, would not change things in the civil courts for victims of child molestation who have already reached their 28th birthday, though they have until they turn 48 to press criminal charges.

That’s because, to avoid opposition from the insurance lobby, Hughes said…

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Catholic Church investigating claims children were prostituted to Church officials

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

May 12, 2021

By Sophie Cornish

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[VIDEO: The Catholic Church says it’s shamed and saddened by abuse in the church. The church has opened its evidence at the Inquiry into abuse in care on how it’s handled complaints. (Video first published March 2021).]

The Catholic Church has confirmed it is investigating claims children from a Wellington boys’ home were prostituted out to Church officials.

It is also calling on anyone with personal information on the matter to come forward and speak to them.

The allegations were made at a Royal Commission of Inquiry hearing on Tuesday by Keith Wiffin, a former ward of the state who lived at Epuni Boys’ Home in Lower Hutt in the 1970s.

A victim of sexual abuse at the home when he was 11 Wiffin, now 61, said he never personally experienced the practice himself, but had learnt the Church was investigating the claims.

He said he had also been told…

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Peoria diocese continues promoting Sheen’s beatification cause

PEORIA (IL)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

May 10, 2021

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The Diocese of Peoria is continuing to promote the cause for beatification of Ven. Fulton Sheen, almost 18 months after his planned beatification Mass was abruptly canceled. 

“We continue to promote the cause for both his beatification and canonization,” said Bishop Louis Tylka at the Cathedral of St. Mary of the Immaculate Conception in Peoria, Illinois, on May 8. Tylka was celebrating a Mass commemorating Sheen’s birthday. 

The bishop added that “so much more so” is the diocese promoting Sheen’s cause to further “the preaching and sharing of the Gospel.”

Bishop Tylka is coadjutor bishop of the Peoria diocese, and will become the diocese’s ninth bishop once current Bishop Daniel Jenky, CSC, retires in March 2022 when he reaches the mandatory retirement age of 75.

Born in El Paso, Illinois on May 8, 1895, Peter John Sheen was ordained a priest of the Peoria diocese on Sept. 20, 1919. He…

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Plea hearing of Catholic priest accused of historic sex offences against boys in Leeds adjourned for a further two months

LEEDS (UNITED KINGDOM)
Yorkshire Post (England)

May 10, 2021

By Tony Gardner

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A Catholic priest charged with committing sex offences against boys dating back more than 40 years had his plea hearing at Leeds Crown Court adjourned for a second time.

Father Patrick Smythe is accused of four counts of indecent assault against four different boys under the age of 16 between 1978 and 1983.

The 77-year-old, a priest with the Diocese of Leeds, was due to enter pleas to the charges when he appeared before the court today (May 10).

The case was adjourned for a further two months following an application by the prosecution.

A hearing was previously adjourned in February this year.

provisional trial date has already been fixed for February 28, 2022.

The first offence is alleged to have taken place in Leeds between May 1978 and May 1981.

The second offence is alleged to have taken place in Leeds between May 1979 and May 1981.

A third…

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May 11, 2021

El cura Napoleón Sasso cumplió los 16 años de condena y ya está libre

SAN JUAN (ARGENTINA)
El Diario de Pilar [Pilar, Argentina]

May 11, 2021

By Redacción Pilar a Diario

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Estuvo preso por abusar de cinco nenas mientras era cura párroco de La Lonja, entre 2001 y 2003. El hecho tomó repercusión nacional. Ya no es sacerdote y está casado.

Mario Napoleón Sasso Muñoz ya no es más cura, está casado y se desconoce su ubicación actual. Es que su domicilio ya no es una unidad carcelaria ni su habitación una celda fría: Sasso es un hombre libre, al haberse cumplido la condena que se le impuso en 2007 por abusar sexualmente de al menos cinco menores de entre 7 y 14 años.

El caso estalló a fines de 2003, aunque pudo haber salido a la luz mucho antes si no se hubiese desoído -o directamente ocultado- lo que ocurría con este cura sanjuanino que desde 2001 estaba destinado en La Lonja.

Mario Napoleón Sasso Muñoz ya no es más cura, está casado y se desconoce su ubicación actual. Es que…

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Bishops from Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming walk in procession to pray at the tomb of St. Paul after concelebrating Mass at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome Feb. 12, 2020, during their "ad limina" visits to the Vatican to report on the status of their dioceses. (CNS/Paul Haring)

Pope Francis’ process for investigating accused Catholic bishops clearly requires reform

CHEYENNE (WY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

May 10, 2021

By NCR Editorial Board

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[PHOTO ABOVE: Bishops from Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming walk in procession to pray at the tomb of St. Paul after concelebrating Mass at the Basilica of St. Paul Outside the Walls in Rome Feb. 12, 2020, during their “ad limina” visits to the Vatican to report on the status of their dioceses. (CNS/Paul Haring)]

Pope Francis’ new system to evaluate allegations of sexual abuse or cover-up against individual Catholic bishops, which went into effect in June 2019, is admirable. For the first time in millennia — quite literally — there is an active process in place to hold prelates accountable should they fail in their duty to protect children or vulnerable adults from clerical predators.

But after two years, it is clear that the process — which involves the Vatican empowering archbishops to conduct investigations as necessary in their local regions under the norms of…

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Diocese of Buffalo Drafts Parish Grouping Plan

BUFFALO (NY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

May 10, 2021

By Catholic News Agency

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The parish plan will then be implemented over the next three years.

The Diocese of Buffalo is preparing to draft a plan for regrouping parishes, with a finalized plan due in September. 

Bishop Michael Fisher told participants at a May 8 virtual meeting that the plan will include the creation of “families” of three to six parishes that work closely with each other to provide for the spiritual, sacramental and educational needs of parishioners, The Buffalo News reported.

The parish plan will then be implemented over the next three years. 

The Zoom meeting with Bishop Fisher was organized by the Movement to Restore Trust, a local group of lay Catholics founded in 2018 amid allegations of abuse cover-up by Bishop Richard Malone, Fisher’s predecessor. 

Bishop Malone resigned  in December 2019, and Bishop Edward Scharfenberger of Albany served as the diocese’s interim apostolic administrator until Bishop Fisher’s installation in January 2021.

“There are…

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Man abused in state care alleges children from Wellington boys’ home were prostituted out to Catholic Church officials

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

May 11, 2021

By Sophie Cornish

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A survivor of abuse in state care has alleged children were taken from a Wellington boys’ home and prostituted out to Catholic Church officials.

Keith Wiffin made the claims at a hearing for the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care on Tuesday and alleged the Church is currently investigating the allegations.

Wiffin claimed boys were taken from Epuni boys’ home in Lower Hutt in a van by a housemaster, Alan Moncrief-Wright, to a Church site, where clergymen would walk around the van looking at the boys, selecting the ones they wanted to sexually abuse.

The Catholic Church has been approached for comment regarding the allegations.

A previous ward of the state himself, Wiffin, now aged 61, lived at Epuni from age 11 and suffered sexual abuse at the hands of at Moncrief-Wright. Wiffin has previously given evidence to the Commission on two occasions.

Moncrief-Wright was later convicted and jailed…

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Abuse survivor ‘shocked’ by dismissal of priest at same church

GRAND HAVEN (MI)
WOOD-TV [Grand Rapids MI]

May 10, 2021

By Ken Kolker

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The news that her former priest was removed from the priesthood for credible allegations of sexually abusing a minor brought back horrible memories for a worshipper at St. Patrick-St. Anthony Catholic Parish in Grand Haven.

She was molested at the same church decades ago by a different priest.

Father William Langlois, now 75, was recently ousted from the priesthood for what the Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids called credible allegations of molesting a child — news that shocked parishioners at the church where he was pastor for years.

“I right then got in a state of depression, bringing back all these memories from when I was abused,” said the woman, who asked not to be identified.

She was 14 or 15 in 1960, she said, when Father John Sullivan repeatedly molested her at St. Patrick’s. Sullivan, now deceased, had a long history of sexual offenses as a priest before coming…

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Catholic religious orders must come clean about abusive clergy

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

May 10, 2021

By CST Editorial Board

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Despite public pressure, some orders still resist telling the full truth about sexual abuse allegations, as the Sun-Times’ Robert Herguth has reported.

A clerical sex abuse scandal has rocked the Catholic Church for decades now, and to our way of thinking, full disclosure is the only way for the church to put the scandal completely to rest.

Every independent religious order must follow the lead of the rest of the Church and come clean about abusive priests in their ranks.

A number of those independent orders — among them the Jesuits and Carmelites — have made the only correct moral and ethical choice. They now publicly disclose the names of clergy who have been credibly accused of abusing minors. But other independent orders have stubbornly resisted full disclosure of the details regarding abusive clergy, as the Sun-Times’ Robert Herguth has reported in a recent investigative series.

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Child Sex Abuse Victims Say Legislation To Give Them Justice Is Stalled In Harrisburg

HARRISBURG (PA)
KDKA-TV, Ch. 2 [Pittsburgh PA]

May 10, 2021

By Andy Sheehan

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They’re looking for justice and their day in court. but victims of child sex abuse say legislation to grant them that opportunity is stalled in the state legislature; KDKA’s Andy Sheehan reports.

[VIDEO]

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May 10, 2021

Newark Archbishop Peter Gerety in a 1986 photo. File / NorthJersey.com

Girl thought Newark Archbishop Gerety was sent by God — then he allegedly molested her

NEWARK (NJ)
The Record [Woodland Park NJ]

May 10, 2021

By Abbott Koloff

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[Photo above: Newark Archbishop Peter Gerety in a 1986 photo. File/NorthJersey.com]

She believed that a high-ranking prelate in the Catholic Church who brought food to her impoverished family in Newark — often praising her for being “such a smart and pretty young girl” — had been sent by God.

But then Archbishop Peter Leo Gerety, the leader of the Newark Archdiocese in the 1970s and 1980s, allegedly took the girl, who was 5 years old at the time, to his bedroom in the rectory of the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart and instructed her to lie on his bed.

Now a 49-year-old woman, she said in a recently filed lawsuit that Gerety sexually abused her several times in 1976 — the first accusation of sexual abuse to be made public against the late archbishop, who had been considered a pivotal figure in the 1970s for his role in implementing reforms of the…

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Taking a ‘wait and see’ stance on Pope’s latest blow for accountability

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

May 2, 2021

By John Allen

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Perhaps no one was as startled this week when a 46-year-old woman was placed under house arrest for aggravated theft from a small church in the far southern Italian province of Reggio Calabria as the woman herself.

Her name hasn’t been released by Italy’s military police, who made the arrest, but they did provide details on the case. The woman works as a cleaner, and the church was among her clients. She apparently told police the pastor paid her almost nothing for several hours of intense work every week, so, some time ago, she’d adopted the habit of simply lifting cash out of the poor box when she opened it to dust.

In effect, she said, the money was part of her compensation, even if she’d never technically been given permission to take it, and she insisted she hadn’t done anything wrong. (By the way, she was nabbed by military…

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Archbishop pleads for privacy for Pampanga priest, married couple in scandal

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

May 7, 2021

By Tonette Orejas

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Pampanga Archbishop Florentino Lavarias has appealed to the public to respect the privacy of a Catholic priest and the married couple involved in an affair scandal shared on social media by the couple’s son.

“As I invite everybody to respond with introspective concern and earnest prayers, may I also kindly implore all of us to please respect the privacy, identity, and right of the parties concerned,” Lavarias said in a circular released to the clergy, religious and laity on Thursday (May 6).

His appeal came after a five-minute video of the confrontation between a man and the priest he accused of having an affair with his wife went viral on social media courtesy of the couple’s son with some channels naming the priest, the man and his wife.

In the video taken by one of the sons, the man accused the priest of having sex with his wife when the…

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The mystery of Biden family friend Father Kevin O’Brien

WASHINGTON (DC)
IrishCentral [New York NY]

May 7, 2021

By Tom Deignan

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Father Kevin O’Brien, who said Mass for the Biden family on inauguration day, has been “accused of … something.”

It might seem as if we can’t get enough of men in the public eye behaving badly.

Most recently, there were the bizarre accusations made against (naturally) Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, which so far have included everything from sex trafficking to something called “bro culture.”

As is only fitting these days, Gaetz’s, uh, passionate denials were nearly as bizarre as the accusations against him. It certainly doesn’t help that Gaetz looks like a cartoon caricature of Colin Jost and Maria Shriver’s baby.

Then there were the accusations made against New York City Comptroller and mayoral candidate Scott Stringer. This after fellow candidate Andrew Yang was accused of acting improperly in a video that included a man using offensive language.

A statement released by several lawmakers also referenced “bro culture,” and added…

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Lafayette Diocese: Allegations against former priest Michael Guidry credible, formally apologizes to victim and family

LAFAYETTE (LA)
KATC-TV [Lafayette LA]

May 7, 2021

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The Diocese of Lafayette says they have determined that allegations made against former priest Michael Guidry are credible.

The allegations they say are the ones made by Oliver Peyton.

The Diocese of Lafayette released a statement on May 7, 2021, denouncing Guidry’s actions and formally apologizing to Peyton and his family.

In 2019, Guidry was sentenced to 10 years in prison after pleading guilty to molesting a teenage boy, who was the son of a deacon he served with at St. Peter’s Church in Morrow.

Scott Peyton, Oliver’s father tells KATC that the apology was issued on Friday because the lawsuit against the Diocese and Guidry was settled and the dismissal was signed this week.

According to court records, the lawsuit was dismissed by a St. Landry Parish judge on April 30. Records show that all claims had been resolved and each party will have to bear their own costs.

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Canadian bishops unveil new system to report bishops for abuse, cover-up

ROME (ITALY)
Crux [Denver CO]

May 8, 2021

By Elise Ann Allen

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At a time when many are eager to see more implementation of Pope Francis’s recent norms for bishops’ accountability, the Canadian bishops have rolled out a new online reporting system where complaints, either of sexual abuse or coverup, against the Church’s shepherds can be made.

On May 6, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops launched a new bilingual service in English and in French for reporting “situations of sexual abuse either committed or covered-up by a bishop.”

According to a statement issued by the bishops Thursday, the new online service “furthers their commitment to responsibility, accountability and transparency in matters of clergy sexual abuse and their commitment to facilitate healing and justice for victims-survivors.”

Called the “Canadian Reporting System for Sexual Abuse or Cover-up by a Catholic Bishop,” the new system is being touted as a direct response to Pope Francis’s 2019 motu proprio, or legal edict, Vos estis lux mundi, drafted…

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‘Vos Estis’ expires in one year. What works and what changes are needed in version 2.0?

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

May 10, 2021

By Christopher White

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Two years ago this month, Pope Francis issued a sweeping new church law on bishop accountability, establishing a global system for investigation allegations against bishops of abuse or its cover-up.

Known as Vos Estis Lux Mundi (“You Are the Light of the World”), the norms encourage — but do not mandate — the involvement of lay experts in the process of investigating allegations against bishops. When it was signed into law, Vos Estis was adopted for a three-year period “ad experimentum.

To date, there are at least six known authorized Vos Estis investigations into U.S. bishops by the Vatican. Since taking effect, several other bishops have also come under investigation, although the Vatican has used different processes for handling their cases.

Chieko Noguchi, a spokeswoman for the U.S. bishops’ conference, told NCR that “Since the [Vos Estis] model derives its authority from the Holy See, the Conference does…

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Diocese of Buffalo announces plans to move forward, survivors say more needs to be done

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW [Buffalo NY]

May 8, 2021

By Jeff Slawson

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 “I have zero tolerance for any abusive behavior criminal act by any of the clergy, and certainly towards a minor and towards an adult,”

Bishop of Buffalo Michael William Fisher announced, in conjunction with the Movement to Restore Trust, how the diocese will be looking to help move the clergy forward following years of sexual abuse cases. Those cases lead to the declaration of bankruptcy last February.

“There are issues that we need to confront in the days and weeks ahead and that is something that I cannot do alone,” Bishop Fisher said.

The Bishop says those issues will be confronted through new initiatives. The diocese will group parishes together in “families” looking to increase participation and changing the way Catholic education is done. This “Road to Renewal” will look to strengthen parish life, Catholic education and other ministries in the diocese with a short-term goal of identifying their immediate…

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Wisconsin launched a clergy sex abuse investigation. Here’s why, and what it means for victims, church officials.

MADISON (WI)
Green Bay Press Gazette [Green Bay WI]

May 10, 2021

By Haley BeMiller

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A newly launched review of clergy sexual abuse across Wisconsin has reignited a push for accountability long sought by survivors but also highlights the challenges of investigating what happened to children decades ago. 

The investigation will be led by the state Department of Justice and focus on allegations against Catholic clergy and other faith leaders. Prosecutors will rely on documents from Wisconsin’s religious orders and five dioceses, along with reports from victims or others who have information. 

The probe comes amid a renewed reckoning over clergy abuse in Wisconsin after the suicide last year of a man who accused three priests from St. Norbert Abbey in De Pere of sexually abusing him as a teenager in the 1980s. Nate Lindstrom received $420,000 in secret payments from the Catholic order over 10 years until the abbey stopped sending checks in 2019, a Green Bay Press-Gazette investigation found.

Here’s what you need to…

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May 9, 2021

Pope Francis dismisses retired Grand Haven priest from the Clerical State due to sexual abuse allegations

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
WZZM - ABC 13 [Grand Rapids MI]

May 7, 2021

Read original article

The incidents of sexual abuse that occurred from 1999-2006 happened while Langlois was serving as pastor of St. Patrick – St. Anthony Parish in Grand Haven.

A retired Catholic priest who served a lakeshore parish has been dismissed by Pope Francis from the clerical state due to sexual abuse. 

Retired priest Fr. William Langlois’ dismissal includes a dispensation from all obligations of the clerical state, including celibacy. 

According to the Diocese of Grand Rapids, Langlois may no longer minister as a priest, celebrate the sacraments, wear clerical dress, or present himself as a priest. 

In September 2014, Langlois was on leave for six months. A spokesman for the Diocese of Grand Rapids said Langlois was taking leave from his duties at St. Patrick-St. Anthony Parish for having an inappropriate, but not illegal, relationship with a woman. The spokesman said the leave is an opportunity to heal. 

Back in Sept. 2014,…

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Costa Rica orders ex priest held on sex abuse charges

(COSTA RICA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 8, 2021

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A Costa Rican court on Friday ordered a priest facing sexual abuse charges held in custody for six months while awaiting trial.

Mauricio Víquez was extradited back from Mexico after he fled Costa Rica, where the statute of limitations was running out on abuse charges facing him.

Viquez allegedly abused two teenagers in 2003. At the time in Costa Rica, such charges generally couldn’t be pursued 10 years after a complainant’s 18th birthday.

The case led Costa Rica to lengthen the statute of limitations on sex crimes from 10 to 25 years.

Viquez was expelled from the priesthood by the Roman Catholic Church. There are other abuse accusations against him.

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Assistant pastor at Concord church sexually abused young girl four decades ago, lawsuit alleges

(NY)
Staten Island Advance [Staten Island NY]

May 9, 2021

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She was young, trusting and vulnerable, and a cleric at a Concord church took advantage of her faith in him to sexually abuse her more than 40 years ago, a former parishioner alleges.

The plaintiff was molested by Jonathan Del Turco, an assistant pastor at Christian Pentecostal Church, in 1977 when she was around 9 years old, alleges a lawsuit against the church.

The cleric “used his position of authority and trust over plaintiff to sexually abuse and harass” the young girl, a civil complaint alleges.

He abused her in his “church-owned residence, car, and in various locations within and/or on the premises of the church,” alleges the complaint.

The church was negligent “in not knowing that abuser posed a threat of sexual abuse to children,” the complaint contends.

The plaintiff suffered “severe and permanent emotional distress” due to the alleged abuse, which has…

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Emails Show Famed Prosecutor Linda Fairstein Intervening In Criminal Cases For NYC’s Elite

NEW YORK (NY)
HuffPost [New York NY]

May 6, 2021

By Molly Redden

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Messages show the former prosecutor helping well-connected New Yorkers navigate her old sex crimes unit.

In 2015, when Harvey Weinstein had his first close shave with law enforcement, his legal team enlisted Linda Fairstein, the former New York City sex crimes prosecutor, to vouch for them with her old colleagues. 

It looks like they weren’t alone.

Emails released to HuffPost this week through a public records request show that Fairstein, who quit as head of the sex crimes unit in 2002, and her successor, Martha Bashford, maintained a close friendship that opened the door for Fairstein to weigh in on ongoing cases. Fairstein denies her involvement was ultimately meaningful. 

The emails, released by the Manhattan district attorney’s office, are heavily redacted. But they offer a rare glimpse of how well-connected New Yorkers try to minimize their exposure to the law, and the role adopted by Fairstein, one of New…

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Survivors speak out in advance of judiciary committee vote on Adult Survivors Act

ALBANY (NY)
Spectrum News [Syracuse NY]

May 7, 2021

By Susan Arbetter

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According to a group of women advocating for survivors of sexual abuse, an expose in Huffington Post published this week underscores the urgent need for passage of the Adult Survivors Act (A.648 Rosenthal/S.66 Hoylman).

Ambra Battilana Gutierrez, Evelyn Wang, the wife of mayoral hopeful Andrew Yang and Marissa Hoechstetter are among the group of women who are fighting for their day in court. They appear in a public service announcement for the Adult Survivors Act produced by Safe Horizon, which you watch here.

The Adult Survivors Act is similar to the Child Victims Act; it would provide a one-year lookback window for survivors who were abused when they were 18 years old or over. If passed, adult survivors would have one year in which to file a civil claim, no matter how long ago the abuse happened, even if the statute of limitations has expired.

The Huffington Post report centers around former New York…

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Buffalo bishop open to releasing more files related to clergy abuse

BUFFALO (NY)
WGRZ-TV [Buffalo NY]

May 9, 2021

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Bishop Michael Fisher said he and others are looking at how other dioceses have released additional information on clergy who were removed from ministry.

The new bishop for the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo says he wants to be as transparent as possible when considering the release of new documents related to clergy abuse.

During a Saturday Zoom meeting organized by the Movement to Restore Trust, a local group focused on restoring faith in the church, Bishop Michael Fisher had this to say:

“We will provide more extensive details that relate to priests who have been removed from ministry due to credible or substantial allegations, but we also need to do this with respect for those inherent privacy situations that are governed by the law,” Bishop Fisher said.

Fisher said he and others are looking at how other dioceses have released additional information on clergy who were removed from ministry. No…

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Memorial Tribute to Marcel G. Gagnon: First Co-Founder of SNAP’s New England Chapter

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

May 6, 2021

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Marcel G. Gagnon
January 8, 1939 – April 30, 2021

SNAP pays tribute to Marcel G. Gagnon, one of the earliest supporters of our mission. We offer our condolences to Marcel’s family and friends.

Marcel G. Gagnon, of Old Orchard Beach, died suddenly on April 30, 2021 in Portland, Maine.  He was born in Biddeford on January 8, 1939 to Adolphe (François-Xavier) and Delvina (Canuel) Gagnon.  He attended École Saint-Joseph, and Saint-Louis High School, where he played drums in the marching band.  After his graduation in 1958, he joined the U.S. Army, and received training in what would become his vocation, culinary arts. He served at Fort Devens, MA, Fort Bragg, NC, and in Keflavik, Iceland.  Following the Army, he worked for several years at the Colonly Hotel, for 25 years for Reilley’s bakery, and then for another 20 years for Maine Medical Centre coordinating Bakery Services.

Marcel’s sense of duty…

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The evangelical sexual abuse crisis is the spiritual warfare of our time

WAKE FOREST (NC)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

May 4, 2021

By Karen Swallow Prior

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This month marks three years since the world crashed in on me.

Not the whole world. But the cornerstone of my world that is the church. 

Many of us felt the temblors in 2016 as we watched many in our evangelical world excuse and even embrace an abusive man as president in the name of political power. In hindsight, I see now that acceptance of abuse had been going on for a long time in the contemporary church, which may be why so many couldn’t understand why tolerance of this abuser was such a big deal to some of us.

But 2016 opened my eyes, as it did for others. As I started to see, I started to listen.

In April of 2017, I posted a question to abuse survivors on my Facebook wall. The responses created such an unexpected avalanche that it turned into an article at Christianity Today titled…

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Consider the Extent of Clergy Sexual Abuse on Long Island

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

May 5, 2021

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Here are some of the places that clergy sexual abuse on Long Island happened:

In a church vehicle in West Babylon.

In parks, like Wildwood State Park, Blydenburgh Park, Cedar Point County Park, Smith Point Park, and Southaven Park.

In personal vehicles: Fr. Collins’ boat, Fr. Charland’s airplane, Fr. Chasse’s camper van, and cars owned by Fr. Farley, Fr. Fitzgerald, Fr. Fitzpatrick, Fr. Giuntini, Fr. Hand, Fr. Hein, Fr. Logan and others.

In church facilities: the Seminary of the Immaculate Conception in Huntington, the St. Ignatius Retreat House in Manhasset, St. Francis Retreat House in Garrison, New York, rectories and an unspecified convent.

And it happened in an incredibly wide range of other places: the Hamptons, on school trips, the Nassau County Jail, a movie theater, in Calverton Cemetery, an unspecified beach, the Racquetball and Health Club in Westbury, the New York Men’s Club in Kerala, a men’s bath house,…

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May 8, 2021

Associated Press Religion Writer Rachel Zoll, second from right, receives a visit in Amherst, Mass., on Oct. 26, 2018, from Managing Editor Brian J. Carovillano, editor at large Jerry Schwartz, and Deputy Managing Editor Sarah L. Nordgren after being awarded an Oliver S. Gramling Journalism Award for being AP's pre-eminent voice on religion for more than a decade. Zoll, who for 17 years as a religion writer for The Associated Press endeared herself to colleagues, competitors, and sources with her warm heart and world-class reporting skills, has died after a three-year bout with brain cancer. She was 55. (Cheryl Zoll via AP)

Rachel Zoll, much-admired AP religion writer, dead at 55

AMHERST (MA)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 8, 2021

By David Crary

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[Photo above: Associated Press Religion Writer Rachel Zoll, second from right, receives a visit in Amherst, Mass., on Oct. 26, 2018, from Managing Editor Brian J. Carovillano, editor at large Jerry Schwartz, and Deputy Managing Editor Sarah L. Nordgren after being awarded an Oliver S. Gramling Journalism Award for being AP’s pre-eminent voice on religion for more than a decade. Zoll, who for 17 years as a religion writer for The Associated Press endeared herself to colleagues, competitors, and sources with her warm heart and world-class reporting skills, has died after a three-year bout with brain cancer. She was 55. (Cheryl Zoll via AP)]

Rachel Zoll, who for 17 years as religion writer for The Associated Press endeared herself to colleagues, competitors and sources with her warm heart and world-class reporting skills, died Friday in Amherst, Massachusetts, after a three-year bout with brain cancer. She was 55.

Zoll covered religion…

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Rachel Zoll RIP – An Anthology of Journalism on Catholic Clergy Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

May 7, 2021

By Rachel Zoll

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Rachel Zoll, ace religion writer at The Associated Press for 17 years, passed away on April 7, 2021. Below is a small sample of her extensive reporting on the Catholic clergy abuse crisis.

Los Angeles Archdiocese Reports on Seven Decades of Abuse Claims, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (February 17, 2004)

Evaluation of American Seminaries Gets Under Way, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (September 29, 2005)

Gay Priests Conflicted As Church Leaders Set to Discuss Restrictions, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (November 13, 2005)

Experts: Abusers Think They’re Innocent, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (October 20, 2006)

Questions Linger about L.A. Cardinal, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (July 21, 2007)

Pope Benedict XVI Working to Clean up Priesthood, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (April 19, 2008)

Catholic Bishops Warned in ’50s on Abusive Priests, by Rachel Zoll, Associated Press (March 30, 2009)

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Retired Grand Haven priest defrocked over sexual abuse allegations

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
WOOD-TV [Grand Rapids MI]

May 7, 2021

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A retired West Michigan priest has been removed from the priesthood, the Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids says, after the church received allegations of sexual abuse that were deemed credible.

Pope Francis affirmed the dismissal of William Langlois. He served for years as pastor of St. Patrick-St. Anthony Parish in Grand Haven before retiring in 2016.

The allegations of abuse were reported to the diocese in 2018, it said in a Friday release. The abuse happened for seven years, from 1999 to 2006, the diocese said, starting when the victim was a minor and continuing into adulthood.

The diocese reported it to local authorities, who investigated the allegations with the Michigan Attorney General’s Office. While that investigation was underway, Langlois was barred from public ministry even though he was already retired.

After the allegations were deemed credible, Grand Rapids Bishop David Walkowiak sent the investigation to the Congregation for the…

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Mexico extradites ex-priest accused of child abuse to Costa Rica

MONTERREY (MEXICO)
Tico Times [San José, Costa Rica]

May 7, 2021

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Former Costa Rican priest Mauricio Víquez, accused of sexual abuse of minors, was handed over Thursday by Mexico to Costa Rican authorities, the Mexican attorney general’s office reported.

Víquez, who had been detained in Mexico since 2019, was handed over in extradition “to be prosecuted for his probable responsibility in the crimes of qualified rape, sexual abuse, aggravated corruption and dissemination of pornography to the detriment of underage victims,” ​​the prosecution said in a statement.

The former priest was arrested in August 2019 in San Nicolás de los Garza, in the metropolitan area of ​​Monterrey, the third-largest city in Mexico.

The capture of Víquez occurred after two of the alleged victims of the abuses traveled to Mexico to request support from the public in that country.

Víquez was located in January 2019 after arriving in Mexico and creating a Facebook page using his middle name, Antonio. He intended to offer students…

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Catholic church unveils new system for reporting sexual abuse committed or covered up by bishops

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

May 7, 2021

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Victims, advocates question why police aren’t considered the first point of contact

Victims and advocates say a new system for reporting sexual abuse and cover-ups by Catholic bishops appears to be a case of “optics over substance” and may not go far enough to protect those at risk of being abused.

This week, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) announced the unveiling of a national and bilingual service for reporting situations of sexual abuse either committed or covered up by a bishop.

“This service furthers their commitment to responsibility, accountability and transparency in matters of clergy sexual abuse and their commitment to facilitate healing and justice for victims-survivors,” the national assembly said in a statement.

The system was created in response to a letter from the Pope calling for one easily accessible system for allegations solely against Bishops. Allegations against priests are still handled at the local diocese level.

With the…

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Scandal in the Bronx: Dominican priest accused of abusing a minor after asking to legalize Haitian immigrants on the island

(NY)
Explica [Paris, France]

May 7, 2021

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Dominican Father Ricardo Fajardo stepped away from his duties as pastor of the parish “Holy Spirit” (Holy Spirit) in the Bronx (NYC) while investigating a lawsuit alleging that he abused a minor several decades ago, amid protests Recent reports against him for showing “pro-Haitian” sentiments.

The complaint was filed under the Child Victims Act alleging the sexual abuse of a minor by Father Fajardo. The alleged conduct would have occurred in the 1990s and the accusation has been shared with district attorneys in Manhattan and the Bronx.

In an April 28 letter to parishioners, Auxiliary Bishop Edmund J. Whalen, vicar for the clergy, said: “While you will no doubt find this news disturbing, as it did me, I know you would rather hear it directly from me than media ”, quoted the Catholic New York portal.

Bishop Whalen said that Father Fajardo has denied the accusation, “and of course, you are considered innocent until your…

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