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.

December 5, 2020

Prominent New York Priest Is Investigated Over Sexual Assault Accusation

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

December 4, 2020

By Liam Stack

The Manhattan district attorney’s office said it was investigating the Rev. George William Rutler after a security guard said he attacked her at his church.

A nationally prominent Catholic priest is under criminal investigation after a security guard assigned to his church accused him of sexually assaulting her on Election Day, the Manhattan district attorney’s office said on Friday.

The priest, the Rev. George William Rutler, 75, is accused of watching pornography and masturbating in front of the guard, Ashley Gonzalez, 22, without her consent in his office at the Church of St. Michael the Archangel. He then attacked her physically and sexually when she tried to flee from the room, Ms. Gonzalez told the police.

In a letter to his parish after the accusations surfaced, Father Rutler denied Ms. Gonzalez’s claim that he “improperly touched her.” But he did not respond to her allegation that he had watched pornography and masturbated in front of her.

Part of the alleged encounter was recorded by Ms. Gonzalez on her cellphone. She provided the video clip, which shows a man who fits Father Rutler’s physical description, to law enforcement officials and to The New York Times.

Father Rutler, one of the most influential parish priests in the United States, is a well-known figure in the world of Catholic conservatism, and has been outspoken in his criticism of liberalism and the pontificate of Pope Francis.

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

December 4, 2020

The Children of Pornhub

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

December 4, 2020

By Nicholas Kristof

Why does Canada allow this company to profit off videos of exploitation and assault?

Pornhub prides itself on being the cheery, winking face of naughty, the website that buys a billboard in Times Square and provides snow plows to clear Boston streets. It donates to organizations fighting for racial equality and offers steamy content free to get people through Covid-19 shutdowns.

That supposedly “wholesome Pornhub” attracts 3.5 billion visits a month, more than Netflix, Yahoo or Amazon. Pornhub rakes in money from almost three billion ad impressions a day. One ranking lists Pornhub as the 10th-most-visited website in the world.

Yet there’s another side of the company: Its site is infested with rape videos. It monetizes child rapes, revenge pornography, spy cam videos of women showering, racist and misogynist content, and footage of women being asphyxiated in plastic bags. A search for “girls under18” (no space) or “14yo” leads in each case to more than 100,000 videos. Most aren’t of children being assaulted, but too many are.

After a 15-year-old girl went missing in Florida, her mother found her on Pornhub — in 58 sex videos. Sexual assaults on a 14-year-old California girl were posted on Pornhub and were reported to the authorities not by the company but by a classmate who saw the videos. In each case, offenders were arrested for the assaults, but Pornhub escaped responsibility for sharing the videos and profiting from them.

Pornhub is like YouTube in that it allows members of the public to post their own videos. A great majority of the 6.8 million new videos posted on the site each year probably involve consenting adults, but many depict child abuse and nonconsensual violence. Because it’s impossible to be sure whether a youth in a video is 14 or 18, neither Pornhub nor anyone else has a clear idea of how much content is illegal.

Unlike YouTube, Pornhub allows these videos to be downloaded directly from its website. So even if a rape video is removed at the request of the authorities, it may already be too late: The video lives on as it is shared with others or uploaded again and again.

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

Diocese pays $19 million to abuse survivors through fund

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

December 3, 2020

By Peter Smith

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh is paying more than $19 million to 224 survivors of sexual abuse by its priests through an out-of-court compensation fund launched in the wake of grand jury revelations in 2018.

The independent mediator, the Washington, D.C.-based Kenneth Feinberg Group, awarded $19,237,000 through the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, That averages to $85,879 for each claim that was accepted, according to figures from the diocese’s Thursday announcement.

Bishop David Zubik acknowledged that “nothing can really respond to the kind of trauma that they have experienced” but that the program was to “try to show our support and to try to help in the healing of victims of clergy sexual abuse.”

“The most important reality in all of this are the people that have been hurt,” he said in a video news conference.

The payments ranged from “a few thousand dollars, up to $400,000,” said Christopher Ponticello, general counsel for the diocese. Those who accept payments waive their right to sue.

Fifty-two people who received offers rejected them, and another 70 claims were denied.

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

Latest figure in New Orleans clergy abuse scandal worked with Girl Scouts, was Pines Village pastor

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WWL 4 CBS

December 3, 2020

By David Hammer

https://www.wwltv.com/article/news/investigations/david-hammer/latest-figure-in-new-orleans-clergy-abuse-scandal-worked-with-girl-scouts-was-pines-village-pastor/289-2f7fbc83-f571-426e-9e65-d918fcb77b5e

“Here we are, two years later, and we’re still counting new names. And why?”

For much of the 1970s, the Rev. Joseph M. deWater was known as the Archdiocese of New Orleans’ spiritual director of Girl Scouts for Catholic families, their parents and their leaders.

His name ended up on the side of a gymnasium at the New Orleans East where he spent 15 years as pastor beginning in the mid-1980s, before he retired, moved to a small village in the Netherlands and faded into relative obscurity.

But now deWater’s name has resurfaced locally. The archdiocese on Wednesday revealed that he is facing possible punishment from the church following an accusation that he had molested a minor. Archdiocesan officials said they had shared the allegations with law enforcement.

New Orleans Archbishop Gregory Aymond said he has also suspended deWater, 85, from performing any clerical duties pending the conclusion of the penal process, whose potential duration wasn’t immediately clear.

Attempts to contact deWater for comment haven’t been successful.

The archdiocese’s announcement on deWater didn’t contain any information about the nature of the alleged molestation or provide details on where the clergyman had worked in New Orleans before his retirement. The archdiocese typically withholds such details until investigations into abuse claims deem them credible.

However, newspaper archives and church records suggest deWater at one time maintained a relatively high-profile presence in promoting participation with the local Girl Scouts scene. He was also either pastor or assistant pastor of at least four parishes in the metro area, including a lengthy stint at the since-closed Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in the Pines Village section of New Orleans East.

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

Catholic priest named as a child abuser in new report was a counselor at church camp in 1958 when 10-year-old deaf boy disappeared before skeletal remains were found a year later

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Daily Mail

December 3, 2020

By Rachel Sharp

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9014259/Catholic-priest-named-child-abuser-church-camp-1958-deaf-boy-10-disappeared.html

A Catholic priest who was named as a child sex abuser in a new report was a counselor at a church camp in 1958 when a 10-year-old deaf boy disappeared before his skeletal remains were discovered a year later.

Jerry Repola worked at the Catholic Camp St. Malo in Colorado in August 1958, when Bobby Bizup vanished in mysterious circumstances after a day of fishing in the mountains.

Bones belonging to the little boy were found in July 1959 in a spot that had been extensively searched by a 500-strong crew, the Colorado Civil Air Patrol and an Indian tracker the year before.

It has now been revealed that Repola, who died in March 1971 from a long illness, sexually abused a teenage boy when he was a parish priest in Grand Junction in 1967 and authorities believe the boy could be one of several victims.

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

Chicago archdiocese to pay $1.5 million in sexual abuse suit

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press

December 3, 2020

By Don Babwin

The Archdiocese of Chicago has agreed to pay $1.5 million to settle a lawsuit filed by a man who says he was sexually abused as a child by a defrocked priest who was convicted of sexually abusing several boys, the man’s attorney said Thursday.

The settlement agreement announced in a news release by attorney Lyndsay Markley is the latest dark chapter in the story of Daniel McCormack, one of the most notorious pedophiles in the history of the archdiocese.

It is just the latest archdiocese settlement with men who alleged they were abused as children by McCormack, pushing the total payments in such suits past $11 million. After the Chicago Tribune reported that the church agreed to pay more than $7.5 million in 2017 alone, it agreed to pay another $2.9 million the next year.

The archdiocese declined to discuss the latest settlement.

The allegations against McCormack date back decades and involve more than two dozen boys, according to news reports. In 2007, he was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to sexually abusing five boys. In 2009, just before he was eligible for parole, he was designated by the state as a sexually violent person so that he could be held after his release date at a secure state facility. Then, in 2018, a judge at the urging of prosecutors found McCormack to be sexually violent and ordered that he stay in custody indefinitely in a state facility for sex offenders. It wasn’t immediately clear Thursday if he remains in custody.

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

Ex-Cardinal McCarrick, FCRH ’54, Investigated in Vatican Report

BRONX (NY)
Fordham Observer

December 3, 2020

By Jill Rice

[Includes useful timeline by Maddie Sandholm.]

Minors, seminarians and priests accuse longtime archbishop of sexual abuse and abuse of authority

The Vatican released a 450-page report on Nov. 10 about Theodore McCarrick, ex-cardinal of the Catholic Church and Fordham College at Rose Hill ’54, regarding his abuse of power and authority, as well as his abuse of minors, seminarians and priests.

The new report is the result of Pope Francis’ call for a full investigation into McCarrick’s actions in October 2018. Relying primarily on official Vatican documents and correspondences, as well as witness interviews, the report covers McCarrick’s tenure as a priest, bishop, archbishop and cardinal over the past 50 years.

In 2019, McCarrick was defrocked, meaning that he is unable to perform the pastoral and ministerial duties of a priest or to marry, as a layperson — someone not ordained as a priest — would.

Fordham rescinded McCarrick’s honorary degree and has changed the name of its fellowship for a graduate program in International Political Economy and Development to the John Fidelis Hurley, S.J., Fellowship.

Rise to Power and First Allegations

According to the Vatican’s report, McCarrick was appointed as an auxiliary bishop in New York in 1977 under Pope Paul VI. He was then elevated to the seat of bishop of Metuchen, New Jersey, in 1981, and archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, in 1986 under St. John Paul II.

McCarrick was “lauded as a pastoral, intelligent and zealous bishop” and no credible information was present to suggest any misconduct, the report stated. He became the archbishop of Washington, D.C., in 2000 and created cardinal in 2001.

When he was elevated to cardinal, according to the introduction of the report, there were four general allegations against McCarrick.

Anyone who testified against McCarrick remained anonymous, and the report labeled the priests as Priest 1, Priest 2, and so on, for clarity.

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

Abused as a boy, man calls for independent investigation

CANTERBURY (NEW ZEALAND)
Star News

December 4, 2020

A man who suffered horrific sexual abuse at two Dunedin schools says an independent body should be established to investigate church abuse cases.
The man, named only as Marc, presented his evidence to the Royal Commission of Inquiry into Abuse in Care via video conference from Australia yesterday.

He outlined how, between the ages of 10 and 14, he was raped, sexually assaulted, and physically abused by two Christian Brothers, a priest, and a lay teacher, at St Edmund’s Intermediate School and St Paul’s High School.

The abuse took place in the 1970s and early 1980s.

He named four perpetrators — Br Desmond Fay, Br Vincent Sullivan, Ian Thompson and a local parish priest.

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

Investigator says Pueblo Diocese has system in place that could improve handling of child sex abuse cases

PUEBLO (CO)
Pueblo Chieftain

December 3, 2020

By Robert Boczkiewicz

https://www.chieftain.com/story/news/2020/12/03/investigator-says-pueblo-diocese-has-systems-handle-abuse-claims/3810142001/

Denver – An investigator of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests says the Pueblo Diocese has set up systems that would significantly improve its handling of reports of misconduct.

Investigator Bob Troyer, a former federal prosecutor, also says the systems — which are new — are yet untested.

Troyer worked this year and last for the Colorado Attorney General’s Office to delve into hundreds of cases of sexual assaults by priests in the state’s three dioceses: Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Denver.

In Tuesday’s report, Troyer said at least 59 children were sexually abused by 23 priests from 1950 to 1999 in the Pueblo Diocese which stretches across Southern Colorado.

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

Catholic Church shielded priest who sexually abused NY man as a kid: suit

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

December 3, 2020

By Priscilla DeGregory

A New York man says the Catholic Church shielded a priest who sexually abused him for years beginning when he was 13 and homeless in Queens in the 1970s, new court papers show.

Evan Manderson, 63, says the Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn failed to report the Rev. Coleman Costello to law enforcement — and even allowed him to retire with a clean slate despite the church’s knowledge of his alleged sexual abuse of children, a new Queens Supreme Court lawsuit alleges.

Manderson says he was only 13 and was living on the streets when he met Costello through an outreach program for children in Rockaway Beach, the court documents say.

Costello allegedly groomed Manderson and sexually abused him for two years, starting in 1971, until he was 15, the court papers say.

A younger priest asked Manderson about Costello and his “questions reflect a prior knowledge and awareness that Fr. Costello had previously engaged in sexual abuse of children before Fr. Costello abused plaintiff,” the court documents allege.

“The Diocese, whose agents not only knew of but also facilitated Costello’s abuse
of children, never reported Fr. Costello to law enforcement but, instead, concealed the crimes against children,” the suit charges.

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

December 3, 2020

Sacerdotes pederastas consiguen trabajo en México

TEPIC (MEXICO)
Imagen del Golfo [Xalapa, Veracruz, Mexico]

December 3, 2020

By Unknown

Read original article

El reverendo José Antonio Pinal, un joven sacerdote de México, llegó a su primera parroquia en el norte rural de California en 1980, recién salido del seminario. El sacerdote se hizo amigo de la familia Torres, ayudando a los padres, también inmigrantes de México, a completar una solicitud de cupones de alimentos.

Pinal se convirtió en un invitado ocasional a cenar y llevó a los niños a parques temáticos y en viajes por la costa del Pacífico. Alentó a Ricardo Torres, de 15 años, a convertirse en monaguillo.

Pero en las dependencias del sacerdote en la Iglesia Católica del Sagrado Corazón en la pequeña ciudad de Gridley, Torres dijo que Pinal, que entonces tenía 30 años, le dio alcohol, le mostró películas con sexo y desnudos, y lo tocó a tientas y lo violó. El adolescente le dijo a otro sacerdote en 1989 y los abogados de la diócesis le aseguraron a la familia que a Pinal no se le permitiría estar cerca de los niños, dijo Torres.

Treinta años después, en la primavera de 2019, la Diócesis de Sacramento puso el nombre de Pinal en su lista de sacerdotes acusados con credibilidad. La lista contenía cinco denuncias de abuso sexual contra Pinal que datan de fines de la década de 1980.

Pinal había “huido a México”, según la lista, y la diócesis le había prohibido realizar trabajos sacerdotales en público en los 20 condados que conforman la diócesis. Pero una investigación realizada por ProPublica y el Houston Chronicle muestra que la Iglesia Católica permitió o ayudó a docenas de sacerdotes, incluido Pinal, a servir en el extranjero como sacerdotes después de ser acusados de abuso en los Estados Unidos.

ProPublica y The Chronicle analizaron las listas publicadas por 52 diócesis de Estados Unidos que abarcan los 30 principales en términos de la cantidad de clérigos vivos acusados con credibilidad y los ubicados en los estados a lo largo de la frontera entre Estados Unidos y México. 

Los reporteros encontraron 51 clérigos que después de las acusaciones de abuso en los Estados Unidos pudieron trabajar como sacerdotes o hermanos religiosos en una gran cantidad de países, desde Irlanda hasta Nigeria y Filipinas. Al menos 40 habían trabajado en estados de EU. A lo largo de la frontera sur, incluidos 11 en Texas. Ningún país era un destino más común que México, donde al menos 21 clérigos acusados creíblemente encontraron refugio.

Con la ayuda de las redes sociales, un periodista localizó fácilmente a Pinal, que vive en Cuernavaca, a unos 55 kilómetros al sur de la Ciudad de México.

En una entrevista en su casa y en una serie posterior de intercambios de correos electrónicos, Pinal negó repetidamente abusar sexualmente de Torres o que “huyó” de California. Pero en algunos de los correos electrónicos, se refirió a lo que “sucedió” entre él y Torres, y en un correo electrónico enviado el miércoles por la noche, sobre un viaje que realizó con Torres, Pinal dijo: “Fue un desastre, pero lo que sucedió fue consensuado”. ”

Pocos meses después de las acusaciones en California, Pinal reanudó el trabajo sacerdotal, ministrando en aldeas indígenas en Tepoztlán y sus alrededores, un pequeño pueblo cerca de la Ciudad de México conocido por los sitios arqueológicos, y continuó sirviendo durante décadas en parroquias de la Diócesis de Cuernavaca.

Ahora de 68 años, él ministra desde su casa, donde tiene cartas que muestran que la iglesia en Sacramento lo mantuvo en la nómina ya que lo ayudó a encontrar una nueva asignación.

Pinal disfrutó de una cálida correspondencia con el entonces obispo de Sacramento y funcionarios a cargo del ministerio hispano, quienes en los meses posteriores a las acusaciones le aconsejaron que trabajara en México por un “largo período (5-6 años)” antes de regresar a las Cartas de los Estados Unidos. del obispo se firmaron “con cariño”, o con cariño.

“Este fue un grave fallo de juicio y una traición a la confianza”, dijo el actual obispo de Sacramento, Jaime Soto, después de que la correspondencia entre su predecesor y Pinal fue entregada al abogado de Torres a través de un litigio. “La seguridad de los niños es nuestra máxima prioridad. En 1989, aquellos en el liderazgo no pudieron hacerlo. Debo poseer y expiar esto.

El reverendo José Antonio Pinal, a la izquierda, con el obispo Francis Quinn de Sacramento, quien ayudó a Pinal a continuar su ministerio en México después de que Pinal fue acusado de abuso sexual. (Cortesía de las oficinas legales de Joseph C. George)

Después de ser contactados por los periodistas, la Diócesis de Sacramento reconoció que la caracterización de que Pinal “huyó” a México es incorrecta, y en los últimos días, la diócesis revisó la lista para “reflejar con mayor precisión las circunstancias de su partida de 1989”.

Desde 2018, muchas diócesis católicas y órdenes religiosas en los EU, incluido Sacramento, han publicado listas de clérigos considerados creíbles acusados de abusar de niños. Otros actualizaron y ampliaron listas que ya habían hecho públicas. Para la iglesia, la ola de revelaciones ha sido un cálculo tardío del alcance de la crisis de abuso sexual que se expuso hace dos décadas.

Pero las 178 listas publicadas a partir de enero y compiladas en una base de datos de búsqueda por ProPublica revelaron una red de información incompleta y a menudo inconsistente.

A menudo, las listas no especificaban el estado actual y la ubicación del clero. Y aunque las diócesis frecuentemente afirman no saber nada sobre el paradero de un sacerdote, los reporteros de ProPublica y The Chronicle los encontraron en los sitios web de las iglesias, en publicaciones religiosas y en las redes sociales. 

Los líderes de la iglesia a menudo no informaron las denuncias a la policía, no aplicaron restricciones permanentes dentro de la iglesia, ni hicieron caso u ofrecieron advertencias sobre los sacerdotes que enfrentan acusaciones. En al menos cuatro casos, los líderes de la iglesia facilitaron el traslado de los sacerdotes al extranjero.

Las omisiones, inconsistencias y otras deficiencias debilitan el deseo declarado de la iglesia de reparar su relación con millones de católicos descontentos, dijo Anthony M. DeMarco, un abogado de California que ha manejado cientos de casos de abuso sexual infantil.

“Cada parte de la cobertura que hacen para proteger a un pedófilo socava completamente cualquier nivel de confianza que están tratando de construir”, dijo.

Pinal guarda montones de álbumes de fotos y documentos que documentan los casi 10 años que pasó en la Diócesis de Sacramento, que cubre la ciudad capital y grandes extensiones de zonas rurales del norte de California.

“Fue un momento agradable”, recordó Pinal con nostalgia.

En una carta que Pinal ha guardado, el obispo Francis Quinn le dijo a Pinal que “será de la ayuda que sea necesaria para apoyar sus esfuerzos para buscar una nueva diócesis”. La carta fue escrita en 1990, un año después de que el supuesto abuso de Pinal fuera reportado a la iglesia.

Cuando el obispo de Cuernavaca le ofreció a Pinal una cita permanente, Quinn (quien murió el año pasado) se mostró entusiasmado. “Me alegra saber que ha encontrado un ministerio tan satisfactorio”, escribió el obispo.

El año anterior, Pinal había asaltado a su acusador en una carta dirigida a funcionarios a cargo del ministerio hispano, Torres tenía la responsabilidad de lo sucedido. “Con este chico, lo que sucedió porque él lo provocó; y, si estoy preocupado por su recuperación, no es porque me sienta culpable por su trauma, sino por la amistad que tuve con su familia “, escribió Pinal.

Pinal dijo que Torres era reacio a hablar con el clero sobre esto porque era el culpable. “Si se niega a hablar con algún sacerdote, no creo que sea porque me está rechazando, sino porque sabe que no es inocente de la situación por la que quiere culparme por completo. Su única ventaja sobre mí es que cuando esto sucedió, él era menor de edad; entonces, legalmente, estoy jodido. Debido a esto, tuve que dejar la diócesis y los Estados Unidos, como usted mencionó, por un largo período de tiempo (5-6 años) “.

En octubre pasado, Torres presentó nuevamente una demanda contra la diócesis, esta vez en virtud de la nueva Ley de Víctimas Infantiles de California, que proporciona una ventana de tres años para que las víctimas de abuso infantil presenten demandas que de otro modo habrían estado fuera del estatuto de limitaciones. La demanda alega, entre otros cargos, que la negligencia de la diócesis permitió a Pinal molestar a Torres y que la diócesis no informó el abuso a las autoridades relevantes.

Torres dijo que la iglesia aplacó a su familia al engañarlos sobre los pasos dados para reducir la capacidad de Pinal para ministrar. “Se suponía que era la persona más confiable”, dijo Torres sobre Pinal. “Se suponía que debía estar al lado de Dios”.

“El pasado es el pasado”

Durante décadas, la Iglesia Católica en los Estados Unidos ocultó el abuso por parte del clero, transfiriendo sacerdotes de parroquia a parroquia, a veces ocultando razones para movimientos en el código, como “razones familiares y de salud”.

La demanda de clérigos de habla hispana en los Estados Unidos. Impulsada por un aumento de aproximadamente 45 millones de católicos desde la década de 1950, con el mayor crecimiento entre los fieles latinos, hizo que sea más fácil para los sacerdotes cruzar las líneas internacionales, dijeron los expertos, pero más difícil de mantener. explicable.

Es “mucho más difícil rastrearlos cuando están en otro país”, dijo Erin Gallagher, investigadora de la Corte Penal Internacional en La Haya, quien ayudó a localizar sacerdotes fugitivos a principios de la década de 2000 cuando trabajaba en el Oficina del Fiscal de Distrito de San Francisco. “Son parias aquí y pueden irse a vivir a otro lugar de forma anónima”.

La investigación de ProPublica-Chronicle descubrió que la capacidad de la iglesia para rastrear sacerdotes abusivos era aún más limitada internacionalmente que dentro de las fronteras de Estados Unidos. Debido a que el Vaticano no dicta lo que los obispos deben revelar sobre el clero acusado, ya sea dentro de la iglesia o al público, los obispos en muchos países han publicado aún menos información que aquellos en los Estados Unidos.

Ninguna diócesis en México, que alberga a unos 90 millones de católicos, ha publicado una lista de sacerdotes acusados con credibilidad, aunque los funcionarios de la iglesia mexicana informaron en enero que 271 sacerdotes han sido investigados en la última década en relación con acusaciones de abuso sexual. 

Un grupo de defensa de víctimas de abuso en México compiló una lista de sacerdotes acusados en 2010.

En los Estados Unidos, algunos delincuentes fueron laicizados, despojados del poder de ser sacerdotes. Pero otros dejaron sus diócesis y reanudaron el trabajo sacerdotal en México, encontraron ProPublica y Chronicle. Algunos cruzaron la frontera con facilidad después de ser acusados de abuso sexual, asegurando nuevos puestos incluso después de que la iglesia los enviara a recibir tratamiento. 

Otros se establecieron en parroquias al sur de la frontera hace décadas, entregando sermones y bendiciendo bebés cuando expiró el estatuto de limitaciones para el enjuiciamiento en los Estados Unidos.

El reverendo José Luis Urbina todavía es buscado por una orden de tres décadas emitida en California, dijo el fiscal de distrito adjunto del condado de Yuba, Shiloh Sorbello. Urbina, después de declararse culpable de abuso sexual de un niño en 1989, huyó del país antes de que pudiera ser sentenciado y luego sirvió como sacerdote en su ciudad natal de Navojoa, México, donde The Dallas Morning News lo rastreó en 2005.

El periódico dijo que el periódico que, en una entrevista telefónica, el sacerdote admitió su culpa. Las autoridades en los Estados Unidos buscaron extraditar a Urbina ese año, pero el gobierno mexicano se negó a enviarlo de regreso, dijo Sorbello. La orden se renovó en 2019 en caso de que Urbina intentara regresar a los Estados Unidos, dijo Sorbello.

“Los casos de homicidio usualmente reciben la mejor facturación por extradición”, dijo Sorbello. “No tenemos recursos para que la gente vaya a México a localizar a este hombre. Y las autoridades mexicanas probablemente no tienen muchos incentivos para hacer nuestro trabajo por nosotros”.

Urbina fue removido del sacerdocio por el Papa Benedicto XVI en 2008, según la lista de la Diócesis de Sacramento.

Uno de los casos más notorios de un sacerdote acusado que cruzó las fronteras internacionales fue el reverendo Nicolás Aguilar Rivera. Después de que aparecieron las acusaciones de abuso en 1987 en la ciudad de Tehuacán, en el sur de México, los feligreses lo atacaron y luego los líderes de la iglesia lo enviaron a Los 

Ángeles. Menos de un año después de llegar a California, se enfrentó a acusaciones similares, que eventualmente llevaron a cargos de haber abusado sexualmente de 10 niños. Los líderes de la iglesia se enfrentaron a Aguilar antes de notificar a la policía y regresó a México, donde continuó abusando de menores, de acuerdo con demandas y quejas penales presentadas en México.

Años más tarde, los abogados que demandaron a la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles en nombre de las víctimas de abuso interrogaron al cardenal Norberto Rivera, entonces arzobispo de la Ciudad de México, sobre si los líderes de la iglesia usaron palabras clave – “razones familiares y de salud” – para ocultar la verdadera razón de las transferencias al extranjero.

Como obispo de Tehuacán, Rivera había ayudado a transferir a Aguilar a los Estados Unidos. Aguilar necesitaba “atender el problema que sospechaba que tenía, que era un problema de salud”, explicó el cardenal en una declaración. “Para ser específicos, la homosexualidad”.

La Arquidiócesis de Ciudad de México dijo que se cree que Aguilar ha fallecido y que no tiene conocimiento de ninguna queja en su contra; la Arquidiócesis no respondió a las declaraciones de Rivera.

Algunos sacerdotes sirvieron durante décadas en México y se retiraron o murieron antes de ser nombrados en cualquier lista.

La Arquidiócesis de San Antonio incluyó al reverendo José Luis Contreras en su lista de sacerdotes acusados creíblemente liberados en 2019, más de 30 años después de que fue acusado de tocar inapropiadamente a un paciente de 17 años mientras servía como capellán en un San Hospital Antonio, según la arquidiócesis.

Contreras fue enviado a tratamiento en 1987 y se le prohibió trabajar en las iglesias del área de San Antonio nuevamente, según la lista, que indicaba que Contreras regresó a México para estar con su hermana en Guadalajara.

Pero Contreras pudo trabajar como sacerdote en los Estados Unidos y México después de la acusación.

Robert F. Vasa, el obispo actual en Santa Rosa, California, dijo que Contreras sirvió en parroquias allí entre 1995 y 2000, entregando a la Diócesis de Santa Rosa una carta de recomendación de la Diócesis de Tepic, ubicada en el estado occidental de Nayarit, Mexico

Vasa dijo que no encontró indicios de la acusación de abuso de Texas en el papeleo de Contreras, copias de las cuales se negó a compartir. Pero también hubo una carta de apoyo de un sacerdote de Santa Rosa que mencionaba los cinco años que Contreras pasó en San Antonio, historial de trabajo que faltaba en el currículum de Contreras.

“¿Debería haber sido visto?” Vasa dijo de la brecha de cinco años. “Ahora mirando hacia atrás, seguro”.

Nada en el archivo, dijo Vasa, revela si el obispo anterior o su personal notaron la discrepancia.

“Detectar esa discrepancia implicaría una sospecha previa, y desafortunadamente en esos días no sospechaban lo suficiente sobre muchas cosas”, dijo. Incluso si el obispo o su personal notaron la inconsistencia, Vasa dijo que no está seguro de que hubiera impedido que Contreras obtuviera un puesto en Santa Rosa.

“No puedo decir qué levantaría las banderas rojas en 1994 y qué no”, dijo. “Ahora sospechamos mucho más”.

Contreras se retiró poco después de celebrar el 50 aniversario de su ordenación en una ceremonia en una parroquia en Colima, un pequeño estado en el oeste de México, en 2017.

Después de que los periodistas enviaron a la diócesis una copia de la lista y preguntas específicas sobre Contreras, los funcionarios respondieron con una declaración en la que declinaban hacer comentarios, citando “la desconfianza y el peligro que lamentablemente prevalece en todo México”. El reverendo Jesús Ramos Hueso, vicario general en Colima, dijo recientemente que nadie en su diócesis estaba al tanto de las acusaciones presentadas contra Contreras en San Antonio.

Contreras enfrenta poco riesgo de repercusiones legales en los Estados Unidos. Un reportero no encontró ningún registro de que la denuncia en su contra fue reportada a la policía. De todos modos, procesar a Contreras sería imposible ahora, ya que el estatuto de limitaciones de Texas sobre la acusación expiró hace décadas, dijeron las autoridades.

Contreras, contactado por teléfono, declinó escuchar la acusación específica en su contra y luego bloqueó a un periodista para que no lo contactara. “Ya me he entregado al Señor”, dijo Contreras. “Para mí, el pasado es una bendición de Dios y nada más. Para mí, el pasado es el pasado “.

“No era un santo”

En una templada mañana de domingo a principios de noviembre en Tijuana, México, los fieles de Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación se saludaron con abrazos, apretones de manos y sonrisas. La iglesia, en el lado oeste del barrio Camino Verde de Tijuana, estaba llena de gente antes de la misa. Los taxis se alineaban en las calles dejando salir a los clientes: los comerciantes distribuían material religioso mientras la música norteña sonaba en los altavoces.

En el patio de la iglesia, donde decenas de niños se reían y jugaban, un periodista encontró al reverendo Jeffrey David Newell, el pastor de la iglesia.

Según la lista de acusados creíbles publicada en 2018 por la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles, Newell está ” inactivo “, lo que sugiere que ya no sirve como sacerdote. Pero una búsqueda en Google realizada por reporteros reveló el nombre de Newell en el sitio web de la Arquidiócesis de Tijuana, que lo enumeró como el pastor de Nuestra Señora de la Encarnación.

Newell, de 58 años, fue acusado hace casi 30 años de abusar sexualmente de un adolescente en Los Ángeles, según entrevistas y una demanda presentada hace una década. (Desde entonces, la demanda ha sido desestimada porque no se presentó dentro del estatuto de limitaciones). El niño conoció a Newell en 1984 cuando era un ministro juvenil laico en la escuela St. Catherine of Siena.

El adolescente dijo que el abuso comenzó en 1986, cuando tenía 15 años, y continuó durante años. En 1991, les contó a los funcionarios de la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles sobre el abuso y se le prometió que Newell “sería removido del sacerdocio y ya no podría abusar sexualmente de los niños”, según la demanda.

Newell, entrevistado brevemente en la iglesia en Tijuana, dijo que confesó a los líderes de la iglesia hace décadas y que tuvo varias rondas de tratamiento y terapia.

“Sucedió”, dijo. “Lo admití. Cometí un error.”

Solo disputó la edad de la víctima en el momento de los encuentros: Newell dijo que la víctima tenía 17 años, no 15.

En respuesta a las preguntas de ProPublica y The Chronicle, la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles dijo que Newell admitió en 1991 a la “relación” con un joven de 17 años.

“Después de que un adulto hizo un informe de mala conducta sexual contra el p. Newell, en mayo de 1991, fue enviado a evaluación y tratamiento de mayo a noviembre de 1991”, dijo la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles. “Admitió tener una relación inapropiada que comenzó antes de ser ordenado (cuando la presunta víctima tenía 17 años) y continuó mientras era sacerdote (cuando la presunta víctima era un adulto)”.

La Arquidiócesis dijo que el estado de Newell figura como “inactivo” en su lista porque las descripciones de estado están destinadas solo a la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles.

Newell dijo que no era la misma persona que era en ese entonces.

“No sé cómo eras cuando tenías 23 años”, dijo Newell. “Yo no era un santo; No sé cuántas personas hay. Ese es mi trabajo, trabajar con pecadores de todos los niveles y, sin embargo, la gente espera algo de nosotros que es sobrehumano”.

En respuesta a las preguntas de ProPublica y The Chronicle, la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles dijo que Newell fue a Tijuana para un retiro en 1993 y que permaneció allí sin permiso.

La arquidiócesis dijo que ha pedido reiteradamente a la Arquidiócesis de Tijuana que no permita que Newell ministre. La respuesta no explica por qué la arquidiócesis no buscó que el Vaticano despojara a Newell del poder de ser sacerdote.

La Arquidiócesis también proporcionó dos cartas que envió a la policía, en 2008 y 2014, informando las acusaciones contra Newell.

Cuando se le preguntó por qué la denuncia no fue denunciada a la policía en 1991, un portavoz de la arquidiócesis, Adrián Alarcón, dijo que la víctima era un adulto en 1991 y que la diócesis lo denunció a la policía solo después de que la víctima se presentara nuevamente, en 2008, e indicó que había sido menor de edad en el momento del presunto abuso.

La carta de 2008 a la policía sugiere una razón por la cual la policía no pudo haber sido contactada. “Nuestros registros indican que” la víctima “contactó a la Diócesis en 1991, antes de que el clero se convirtiera en reporteros obligatorios”, decía la carta. “Nuestros registros no indican si él informó o no el asunto a la policía en ese momento”.

Un hombre cuyas acusaciones coinciden con las detalladas en la demanda de 2010 denunció a Newell a la policía en 2014, según un resumen del caso de la Oficina del Fiscal de Distrito del Condado de Los Ángeles. Newell fue entrevistado por la policía en 2015, dijo la arquidiócesis.

La policía presentó el caso a los fiscales el mismo año, pero dijeron que no podían presentar cargos contra Newell porque el plazo de prescripción se había agotado.

Newell le dijo a ProPublica y al Chronicle en noviembre que preferiría dejar el sacerdocio antes que continuar siendo una distracción.

“No hay nada que pueda decir”, dijo. “Simplemente no hay defensa … es mejor no hablar de eso”.

Newell dijo que no ha abusado de ningún otro niño.

Pero en febrero, otro hombre presentó una demanda en California contra la arquidiócesis, diciendo que Newell abusó sexualmente de él. El hombre dijo que el abuso comenzó en 1993.

La Arquidiócesis dijo que aún no se ha presentado la demanda.

Newell había sido removido de su asignación y enviado a un centro de tratamiento de Maryland después de la acusación de abuso de 1991, según la demanda.

En 1993, según la demanda, la iglesia permitió a Newell “realizar el ministerio parroquial” en Tijuana, una afirmación que la arquidiócesis niega.

El demandante, quien presentó la demanda como John Doe, habló con ProPublica con la condición de que no sea identificado. Dijo que tenía 13 o 14 años cuando conoció a Newell en Tijuana. 

El sacerdote pronto comenzó a pedirle que se quedara después de la misa para ayudarlo, dijo, y ayudarlo con los programas de educación religiosa. La madre del niño, que estaba enferma, lo alentó a escuchar a Newell, dijo.

“Fue entonces cuando comenzó a acercarse a mí”, dijo el hombre. “Vamos aquí, vamos allá”, recordó el hombre que dijo Newell. Newell le preguntó qué necesitaban financieramente él y su familia y comenzó a comprarle ropa.

“Siempre hablaba de Dios y de las misiones que Dios tenía para mí”, dijo.

Una noche, dijo el hombre, Newell pidió ayuda en su casa, donde Newell hizo que el adolescente le practicara sexo oral.

El hombre dijo que Newell también lo llevó en viajes desde Tijuana al área de Los Ángeles, donde continuó abusándolo.

Newell negó las acusaciones de abuso y que hizo viajes al área de Los Ángeles. El sacerdote dice que no dejó Tijuana una vez que se mudó allí a principios de la década de 1990.

En una entrevista de seguimiento el mes pasado, un periodista le mostró al sacerdote una foto tomada en la década de 1990 de Newell con el niño que luego lo acusó de abuso.

Newell dijo que ve a miles de personas y que no conocía al niño.

“Eso es totalmente absurdo”, dijo. “Todos los que me conocen te dirán que es absurdo. Totalmente ridículo. Esa es simplemente una forma de obtener dinero de la iglesia “.

En 2004, la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles nombró a 211 sacerdotes acusados de abuso sexual. Newell no estaba en esa lista. Tampoco apareció en la siguiente lista, lanzada un año después.

No fue sino hasta 2008 que se incluyó el nombre de Newell. La arquidiócesis solo diría que Newell fue agregado “cuando información adicional reveló que la mala conducta pudo haber ocurrido cuando la víctima era menor de edad”.

La Arquidiócesis dijo que los funcionarios de la iglesia en Roma están determinando si Newell todavía es parte de la Arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles y que, si descubren que él es, la arquidiócesis buscará su expulsión del sacerdocio.

El hombre que presentó la demanda en febrero sollozó mientras contaba sus acusaciones contra Newell.

Tenía una solicitud para la Iglesia Católica: “para que él ya no tenga acceso, el poder y la influencia que tiene sobre los niños para hacer esto en nombre de Dios”.

“Nunca va a irse”

Para Torres, quien dijo que fue abusado por Pinal, el sacerdote que se hizo amigo de sus padres, el punto de ruptura se produjo después de que Pinal lo invitó a un viaje a México en el verano de 1983 o 1984.

Torres dijo que no quería ir, pero sus padres fueron conquistados por la persistencia de Pinal. Finalmente, se rindió.

El sacerdote lo violó en el viaje de un mes, dijo Torres. En una foto, tomada hace unos 30 años en la ladera de una colina en México, el sacerdote se apoya en una roca, apartando la mirada de la cámara, su expresión inescrutable. Torres, alto pero juvenil, parece fruncir el ceño.

Una fotografía de Torres, a la izquierda, y Pinal de vacaciones en México de un álbum de fotos en la casa de Pinal mostrada y fotografiada por un periodista.

Durante el viaje, Torres, que estaba en la escuela secundaria, dijo que comenzó a usar un traje de baño incluso cuando no planeaba meterse en el agua. De esa manera, dijo, podría atarlo fuertemente a la cintura para que el sacerdote no pudiera tirarlo hacia abajo.

En una parada en Acapulco, Torres dejó de hablar con Pinal. “¿Qué está pasando? ¿Por qué no me hablas? ¿No sabes que te amo?” Torres recordó el dicho de Pinal.

Dijo que el sacerdote dejó de pagar su comida y que tuvo que estirar su propio dinero por el resto del viaje.

En un correo electrónico respondiendo a las preguntas de un periodista sobre el viaje, Pinal negó las afirmaciones de Torres de que dejó de pagar su comida o que le dio alcohol al adolescente. Pero presionado sobre sus referencias a “lo que sucedió” entre ellos, Pinal envió el correo electrónico el miércoles por la noche en el que decía: “Estaba jodido, pero lo que sucedió fue consensuado”, y agregó que era “solo en Acapulco”.

De vuelta en California, Torres dice que comenzó a evitar a Pinal, asistiendo a la iglesia con su familia pero que ya no era monaguillo. Estaba consumido por la angustia y se culpaba a sí mismo por el abuso. “Era como un zombi andante”, dijo Torres.

Todo comenzó a desmoronarse cuando comenzó la universidad, dijo Torres. Fue a ver a Pinal en Winters, California, otra ciudad rural con una gran población latina donde el sacerdote estaba ministrando. Torres dijo que tenía la intención de enfrentar a Pinal, lastimarlo. Pero en cambio, después de una breve visita, Torres se fue.

Poco después, Torres fue a su parroquia, Sagrado Corazón en Gridley, para denunciar el abuso a otro sacerdote. Un terapeuta contratado por la diócesis le diagnosticó a Torres un trastorno de estrés postraumático, y un psiquiatra dijo que tenía un trastorno de adaptación con ansiedad y depresión, según documentos de la iglesia.

Los funcionarios de la iglesia en Sacramento le dijeron a Pinal que no impondrían sanciones canónicas si veía a un terapeuta y los mantenía informados sobre su progreso, según cartas revisadas por los periodistas. Y apoyaron su trabajo en una diócesis mexicana, siempre y cuando sus líderes “protejan a la diócesis de Sacramento contra cualquier responsabilidad financiera por cualquier acto cometido por usted mientras trabajaba en esa diócesis”.

La correspondencia contenida en su archivo personal no menciona la posibilidad de laicización. Los documentos fueron entregados al abogado de Torres durante una demanda. También omite muchos de los documentos que un periodista revisó en la casa de Pinal, que muestran sugerencias y orientación de altos funcionarios diocesanos.

Torres dijo que sabía poco sobre lo que le sucedió a Pinal hasta 2002, cuando la policía local lo contactó. La diócesis finalmente había denunciado a Pinal a la policía, y estaban investigando un caso. Le dijeron a Torres que necesitaban su ayuda.

Aceptó cooperar y los fiscales presentaron cargos contra el sacerdote en California. La Diócesis de Sacramento contactó a la diócesis en Cuernavaca, esta vez instándola a que Pinal regrese a los Estados Unidos para enfrentar los cargos.

Funcionarios de Cuernavaca objetaron. “Con la documentación, el Padre Antonio ha demostrado que el caso no es como lo presenta”, escribió el Obispo Florencio Olvera Ochoa en una carta a la diócesis de Sacramento.

Obispo de Cuernavaca responde a la diócesis de Sacramento

La carta original está en español.

En inglés dice: “Con la documentación, el Padre Antonio ha demostrado que el caso no es como lo presentas. 

Está legítima y canónicamente asignado a esta Diócesis, y no puedo, después de revisar dichos documentos, ir en contra de un asunto que mi predecesor, un Doctor en Derecho Canónico, dejó completamente resuelto “. Lee la carta completa.

En una declaración, la Diócesis de Cuernavaca reiteró que el asunto concluyó con Pinal uniéndose a la diócesis en 1991.

Pinal había reunido las propias cartas de Sacramento para respaldar sus afirmaciones de inocencia. Nunca regresó a los Estados Unidos en relación con los cargos, que luego fueron desestimados cuando la Corte Suprema de los Estados Unidos revocó la extensión retroactiva de los estatutos de limitaciones de California. Pinal continuó sirviendo como sacerdote.

Pero la policía hizo que Torres llamara a Pinal mientras investigaban en 2002. “El sacerdote nuevamente admitió haber cometido esos actos de abuso contra el niño”, escribió el obispo de Sacramento Jaime Soto a sus homólogos en Cuernavaca en 2010, y agregó que el sacerdote no expresó remordimiento.

El obispo de Sacramento transmite la investigación policial a la diócesis de Cuernavaca

La carta original está en español. En inglés dice: “Durante la investigación policial del 2002 sobre el Padre Pinal, su víctima se contactó con él por teléfono con respecto a sus actos de abuso (con los investigadores escuchando la llamada). El sacerdote nuevamente admitió haber cometido esos actos de abuso contra el niño. Según los informes, el padre Pinal nunca expresó su pesar por la violencia que cometió contra su víctima “. Lee la carta completa.

En 2005, Pinal celebró su aniversario de plata: 25 años de ser sacerdote. Su amigo Gerardo Beltrán, otro sacerdote que sirvió en comunidades rurales cerca de Sacramento y ahora aparece en la lista de clérigos acusados, y en los más buscados del FBI, se unió a la ceremonia.

Cinco años más tarde, en 2010, el nombre de Pinal apareció en una lista de sacerdotes acusados de abusar sexualmente de niños liberados por SNAP México, una rama ahora independiente de la Red de Sobrevivientes de los Abusados por los Sacerdotes con sede en Estados Unidos. Y en 2019, la Diócesis de Sacramento lo puso en su propia lista, diciendo que tenía cinco acusaciones creíbles contra el sacerdote, tres de ellas del mismo año en que Torres se presentó.

Acusación No. 1, reportada en 1989: “tocar y acariciar sexualmente, masturbación, sodomía / penetración”. Las siguientes tres acusaciones en la lista que involucran a más adolescentes son todas idénticas: “Admitido al abuso de menores; detalles desconocidos “. Una mujer acusó a Pinal de “cópula oral” en 2016, informando que ocurrió cuando tenía menos de 14 años, según la lista.

“Nunca admití lo que dicen”, dijo Pinal a ProPublica. “Y lo que sucedió nunca fue un abuso”.

La correspondencia entre las diócesis de Sacramento y Cuernavaca, revisada por los reporteros, no menciona las acusaciones de abuso adicionales.

Pinal dijo que fue arrastrado por las acusaciones de personas que buscaban pagos. “Había muchos sacerdotes en varias partes de los Estados Unidos que estaban siendo atacados”, dijo en una entrevista en su casa en septiembre. “Todos los que trabajaron conmigo en los Estados Unidos y me conocían sabían que nunca haría nada malo”.

Pero Torres dijo que los efectos del abuso lo siguen hasta el día de hoy.

Cuando perdió su trabajo durante la Gran Recesión, Torres decidió abordar su trauma. Se sumergió en su plan de jubilación y pasó siete meses en tratamiento residencial en Mississippi y Florida. Obtener ayuda se convirtió en un trabajo de tiempo completo, dijo Torres, quien ahora trabaja para el gobierno estatal en Sacramento.

Por primera vez, Torres pudo hablar realmente sobre lo que sucedió. Y por primera vez, dijo, comenzó a creer que no era su culpa.

“Nunca va a desaparecer”, dijo, “pero al menos ahora tengo algunas herramientas para lidiar con el estrés”.

Casi al mismo tiempo, su matrimonio terminó en divorcio. Torres ha perdido el contacto con sus hijos, ahora adolescentes y adultos jóvenes. Después del divorcio, no les habló durante dos o tres años. Más recientemente, han venido a visitarnos.

Su relación con sus padres nunca se ha recuperado por completo. Después de pasar tiempo en el Área de la Bahía y en rehabilitación, regresó a Gridley, donde dice que comenzó el abuso. Pero él y sus padres no hablan de lo que pasó.

“Mi mamá fue probablemente la más cercana. Ella dice: ‘Te amo, lo siento’ “, dijo.

Un día, dijo Torres, quiere decirles a sus padres que no los culpa, que no es su culpa.

CON INFORMACIÓN TOMADA DE PROCESO: https://www.proceso.com.mx/621571/sacerdotes-eu-abuso-sexual-mexico

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

First came sex abuse allegations at the abbey. Then secret payments. Then a suicide.

GREEN BAY (WI)
Press Gazette

December 3, 2020

By Haley BeMiller

Nate Lindstrom spent his life battling the memories of his past — and the priests at the center of it.

The cards arrived every month.

They often had a tranquil photo on the front, a snow-covered scene or a depiction of Jesus in a stained-glass window. The letter’s author wrote in messy cursive as he discussed the Green Bay Packers, family events or his “frozen” Toyota Camry that required a new battery.

The writer, a top clergyman in the Green Bay area, often ended his messages with “God Bless.”

Inside each card, Nate Lindstrom would find a check for $3,500 from the Norbertines of St. Norbert Abbey in De Pere.

The money provided Lindstrom with another month of financial stability. But it also took him back to his days as a teenager in Green Bay, when Lindstrom said he endured sexual abuse at the hands of three Norbertine priests.

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.

Lindstrom spent years in therapy and taking medication, and he eventually settled in suburban Minneapolis with his wife and three children. But in 2018, his life changed when the order’s abbot told him the monthly payments would end.

After that, Lindstrom pushed back and reported additional allegations, but those efforts came up empty. The last check arrived in May 2019. He became increasingly depressed and defeated.

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

Archdiocese of Philadelphia spins off Downingtown psychiatric center where pedophile priests were sent

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

December 3, 2020

By Harold Brubaker

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia has spun off St. John Vianney Center, a behavioral health facility in Downingtown, where for decades priests accused of sexually abusing or raping children were sent for evaluation.

In exchange for its independence as a 50-bed nonprofit psychiatric hospital, the Vianney Center agreed to pay the archdiocese $12 million, according to archdiocesan financial statements published last week.

An archdiocese spokesperson said Vianney Center officials wanted the mental health hospital that has exclusively treated clergy and religious to be financially and administratively independent “while continuing its mission as a Catholic institution,” and it had the means to do so.

“In turn, the Archdiocese was in an environment where there was an immediate need for cash as a result of its plans to fund the IRRP,” the spokesperson said referring to the church’s Independent Reconciliation and Reparation Program, which was started two years ago to financially compensate victims of sexual abuse by priests.

A 2018 Pennsylvania Grand Jury report on sexual abuse by Pennsylvania priests outside of the Archdiocese of Philadelphia sharply criticized the Vianney Center and similar treatment centers in Maryland and New Mexico for doing a shoddy job protecting children from predatory priests.

“When a priest denied allegations of sexual abuse, he usually avoided any diagnosis related to the sexual abuse of children,” the report said. “Moreover, these institutions focused on a clinical diagnosis over actual behavior as reported by the victims. Put plainly, these institutions laundered accused priests, provided plausible deniability to the bishops, and permitted hundreds of known offenders to return to ministry.”

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

Deceased priest added to abuse list, 2 more being investigated, according to Archdiocese of New Orleans

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WDSU 6 NBC

December 2, 2020

https://www.wdsu.com/article/deceased-priest-added-to-abuse-list-2-more-being-investigated-according-to-archdiocese-of-new-orleans/34851919

The Archdiocese of New Orleans announced Wednesday that it concluded an investigation into allegations of abuse of minors against a deceased priest, who has since been added to the clergy abuse list. The organization also announced investigations into two retired priests.

According to a statement issued by the Archdiocese, the late Fr. Robert K. Cooper has been added to the Archdiocese of New Orleans Report Regarding Clergy Abuse found online at nolacatholic.org.

The Archdiocese said the deceased Fr. Cooper should not be confused with the Fr. Cooper, who is an active pastor in the Archdiocese of New Orleans.

The complete assignment history for the deceased Robert Cooper is below …

*

Two retired priests placed on leave

The Archdiocese also announced it placed two retired priests on administrative leave pending the outcome of investigations lodged against them.

Those priests are Fr. Joseph M. deWater and Fr. J. Luis Fernandez.

Allegations against these priests, including the time frame and location of the allegations, were not included in the Archdiocese statement.

According to the Archdiocese, neither of the retired priests is living in the New Orleans area and neither has a formal pastoral assignment.

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

Priest listed in sex abuse report was working at church camp in 1958 when deaf boy, 10, disappeared

DENVER (CO)
KUSA 9 News

December 2, 2020

By Kevin Vaughan

https://www.9news.com/article/news/investigations/priest-sex-abuse-report-church-camp-1958-when-deaf-boy-disappeared/73-31c23f99-ebb1-422a-b949-2c05e4971ee3

That means three counselors there that summer have now been credibly accused of sexual misconduct with children.

One of the Catholic priests newly named as a child sex abuser was a counselor at a church camp in August 1958 when a 10-year-old deaf boy disappeared under mysterious circumstances, 9Wants to Know has learned.

That makes him one of three seminarians who were counselors at Camp St. Malo that summer who have since had accusations of child sexual abuse sustained after a 22-month examination of church records by investigators working for the Colorado Attorney General’s Office.

Jerry Repola, who died in 1971 after a prolonged illness, sexually abused a teen-ager while he was assigned to a parish in Grand Junction, according to a supplemental report released this week by state Attorney General Phil Weiser.

It followed up on a report released in October 2019. Together, the two reports detail sexual abuse of at least 212 children in Colorado by 52 priests between 1950 and 1999.

The disappearance of Bobby Bizup – and the discovery of his remains nearly a year later high on Mount Meeker west of the camp – were the subject of a long-running 9Wants to Know investigation. It found that two counselors there when Bobby vanished, Harold Robert White and Neil Hewitt, were serial child sex abusers.

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

Priest with southwest Iowa ties faces restrictions

COUNCIL BLUFFS (IA)
The Daily Nonpareil

December 3, 2020

By Tim Johnson

An Iowa priest who served in southwest Iowa early in his career has been restricted by Des Moines Bishop William Joensen after an investigation found evidence of sexual misconduct.

The Rev. Robert “Bud” Grant, who has been on administrative leave since March, will return to ministry with restrictions and supervision, with the approval of the school and Davenport Bishop Thomas Zinkula. He is a faculty member at St. Ambrose University in Davenport and a sacramental minister at St. Andrew Parish in Bluegrass.

The investigation followed an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor during the early 1990s, according to a press release from the Catholic Diocese of Des Moines. Since the investigation began in March, Joensen and the diocesan Allegation Review Committee gathered and reviewed evidence, including the initial complaint, examined an investigative report produced by a third party and consulted with experts in church law. The state attorney general’s office and law enforcement in Polk, Pottawattamie and Scott Counties are aware of the allegation of behavior occurring in the early 1990s.

“The investigation clearly established that the allegation did not meet the criteria of sexual abuse of a minor as defined by church law at the time of the incident, because the complainant was above majority age,” the press release stated. “However, it was also established that Father Grant engaged in behavior in select instances in the early 1990s that violated the Sixth Commandment and his priestly promises.”

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

December 2, 2020

Roman Catholic Clergy Sexual Abuse of Children in Colorado from 1950 to 2020: Special Master’s Supplemental Report

DENVER (CO)
Office of the Attorney General

December 1, 2020

This Supplemental Report concludes 22 months of work investigating and reporting on a 70-year history of (1) Roman Catholic clergy child sexual abuse in Colorado and (2) the Colorado dioceses’ programs and systems for preventing it. Our investigation has produced a reckoning and accounting of the past and a presentation of lessons from which the Colorado dioceses can continue to improve its child-protection practices into the future.

Our Special Master’s Report on Roman Catholic Clergy Sexual Abuse of Children in Colorado from 1950 to 2019 (“First Report”) was issued on October 22, 2019. It can be found at https://coag.gov/app/uploads/2019/10/Special-Masters-Report_10.22.19_FINAL.pdf. That same month, Colorado’s 3 Roman Catholic dioceses launched the Independent Reconciliation and Reparations Program (“IRRP”). Over the ensuing 4 months, the IRRP solicited and reviewed claims from alleged child sex abuse victims of Roman Catholic clergy in Colorado, and it awarded financial compensation (paid by the relevant Colorado diocese) to those victims whose claims it deemed credible. During that period additional victims also made clergy child sex abuse reports directly to the Colorado Attorney General’s Office.

In July 2020, we were then engaged under a new agreement with the dioceses and the Colorado Attorney General’s Office to determine (1) whether those newly reported child sex abuse incidents are substantiated and (2) what Colorado’s 3 dioceses have and have not done to implement the 5-6 improvements to their child-protection systems that we recommended after we evaluated those systems in 2019.

The results of our review of all the newly reported allegations are as follows. All of these incidents occurred between 1951 and 1999:

– We substantiated 46 additional incidents of sexual abuse of children (37 boys and 9 girls) by 25 diocesan priests in Colorado. The majority of the children were between the ages of 10 and 14 when they were abused.

– 16 of those 25 priests were already identified in the First Report. 9 of those priests are newly identified in this Supplemental Report.

– 5 of the newly identified priests served in the Denver Archdiocese. They are Father Kenneth Funk, Father Daniel Kelleher, Father James Moreno, Father Gregory Smith, and Father Charles Woodrich.

– 4 of the newly identified priests served in the Pueblo Diocese. They are Monsignor Marvin Kapushion, Father Duane Repola, Father Carlos Trujillo, and Father Joseph Walsh.

– 23 of those children were sexually abused by 13 diocesan priests serving in the Denver Archdiocese.

– 23 of those children were sexually abused by 12 diocesan priests serving in the Pueblo Diocese …

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

Final Report

DENVER (CO)
Independent Oversight Committee of the Colorado Independent Reconciliation and Reparations Program

December 1, 2020

Because of incidents of historic sexual abuse of minors by priests in the Catholic Church, for many decades the three dioceses in Colorado—the Archdiocese of Denver, the Diocese of Colorado Springs, and the Diocese of Pueblo (the “Colorado Dioceses”)—have had individual programs to help victim-survivors of that abuse. Since 2003, under the national Charter that governs all dioceses in the United States, the Colorado Dioceses have provided care and services to survivors of abuse by diocesan priests under a unified, national approach. Starting in 2008, the Archdiocese of Denver engaged a group of Colorado community leaders (a Colorado judge, the Lakewood Chief of Police, and a vocational rehabilitation specialist) to assist in settling claims of historic abuse. That group of independent professionals asked all survivors to come forward, evaluated their claims, and determined settlement amounts that the Archdiocese would pay to survivors who came forward.

The 2019 Independent Reconciliation and Reparations Program (“IRRP”) is another step in the continuing effort by the Catholic Church in Colorado to responsibly address this historic sexual abuse issue. In January of 2019, the Colorado Dioceses—led by Archbishop Aquila and supported by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser—openly shared their records to allow a full study of the issue of sexual abuse of minors. This work included the Attorney General and the Church hiring an independent investigator to evaluate the current policies and practices in place for protecting minors from abuse.

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

Victim of abuse by Denver’s Father Woody speaks out: “They’re no longer going to have this shining light”

DENVER (CO)
Denver Post

December 1, 2020

By Elise Schmelzer

Revelations about Father Charles Woodrich force reckoning among institutions named after priest

For four decades, Denverites invoked Father Woody’s name as they cared for tens of thousands of people without homes or food.

The local legend, formally known as Father Charles Woodrich, died in 1991, but his legacy remained in annual giveaways to the poor, in one of Denver’s largest homeless shelters, in programs administered by Denver’s Catholic university and in a day shelter for those who are hungry.

That legacy of Denver’s so-called “patron of the poor” was obliterated Tuesday when Woodrich was named as a child sex abuser in a report spearheaded by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office. Woodrich, according to the report, molested three boys between the ages of 12 and 16 in the 1970s and 1980s while he served as the pastor of Holy Ghost Parish in downtown Denver. The priest plied two of the boys with alcohol and asked another to pose in his underwear and took pictures of him, according to the report.

The revelation has forced a reckoning among the institutions that invoke his name in their work.

“He wasn’t the saint that everybody wants to make him out to be,” one of Woodrich’s victims told The Denver Post on Tuesday.

The man, contacted through his attorney and listed as Woodrich’s “Victim #1″ in the report, spoke on the condition he not be publicly identified, citing the stigma attached to the assault. The Denver Post does not name survivors of sexual assault without permission.

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

12 Pueblo priests named in Colorado attorney general’s latest child sexual abuse report

PUEBLO (CO)
Pueblo Chieftain

December 1, 2020

By Robert Boczkiewicz

Denver – Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser released a report Tuesday listing new “substantiated” incidents of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests in the Pueblo Diocese.

All of the newly substantiated incidents occurred between 1951 and 1999, he said. Some of the priests were identified in the attorney general’s first report last year; four are newly identified.

The newly substantiated claims included in Tuesday’s supplemental report concluded 22 months of former U.S. Attorney Bob Troyer’s work investigating and reporting on a 70-year history of Catholic clergy child sexual abuse in Colorado and the Colorado dioceses’ programs and systems for preventing it. Troyer worked for Weiser on the child abuse investigation.

The priests identified in Tuesday’s report include Monsignor Marvin Kapushion, Gary Kennedy, Daniel Maio, John Martin, Duane Repola, Carlos Trujillo, Joseph Walsh, Lawrence Sievers, John Beno, Delbert Blong, Andrew Burke, and William Gleeson.

They served parishes, an orphanage and other Catholic facilities in Pueblo, Rye, La Junta, Walsenburg, Capulin, Grand Junction and Montrose.

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

52 Catholic priests in Colorado, including iconic Father Woody, abused 212 victims, further investigation finds

DENVER (CO)
Colorado Sun

December 1, 2020

By Jesse Paul and Jennifer Brown

A supplemental report on abuse in Colorado’s three Catholic dioceses includes allegations against Charles Woodrich, who founded a homeless shelter and was called Denver’s “patron saint of the poor”

Investigators digging into child sex abuse in Colorado’s three Catholic dioceses have identified an additional 46 victims dating back to 1950 and nine more abusive priests, including an iconic Denver advocate for the homeless and poor.

The new revelations were released Tuesday by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office in a 93-page supplemental report that marks the end of a 22-month investigation into the church covering the past seven decades.

The latest report includes allegations that a chaplain sexually abused children living in a Pueblo orphanage in the 1950s, and that a Denver priest whipped a child and fondled him during an estimated 1,000 instances of abuse over five years in the 1970s.

It also names Charles Woodrich, better known as Father Woody, a revered priest who founded a homeless shelter and was called Denver’s “patron saint of the poor.” Father Woody established Haven of Hope, where people who are homeless can go for hot meals and showers, and founded the Samaritan House, a homeless shelter in downtown Denver. He died in 1991.

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

Report says Montreal Archdiocese covered for abusive priest for decade

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service via Catholic Philly

December 1, 2020

By Francois Gloutnay

Montreal – For more than three decades, leaders of the Archdiocese of Montreal failed to properly treat the complaints and the red flags periodically raised about Father Brian Boucher, said a report prepared by retired Quebec Superior Court Judge Pepita G. Capriolo.

Instead, church authorities seemed intent on covering the priest’s behavior to protect his and the church’s reputation, she wrote.

In 2019, Boucher was sentenced to eight years in prison for sexual assault of two boys; he was laicized in 2020. But in her 283-page document on Boucher, Capriolo said numerous incidents were reported and called into question during his career. For nearly 40 years, these warnings were all ignored or deemed irrelevant, especially because they concerned adults and not minors.

Capriolo reported not only on sexual abuse, but also physical assault, threats, loss or destruction of secret documents, and even a burglary in the secret archives of the archdiocese. The former judge called the case a “debacle” for the Archdiocese of Montreal.

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

McCarrick Report Leaves us with More Questions Than Answers

PINELLAS PARK (FL)
Legal Examiner – Blog of Saunders and Walker Law Firm

December 1, 2020

By Joseph H. Saunders

I haven’t commented on the much anticipated publication of the McCarrick Report because it fails to offer conclusions. As an advocate for sexual abuse survivors for two decades, I looked forward to reading the Report and gaining insight into the McCarrick saga. However, I came away from the Report disappointed and underwhelmed.

It’s a lengthy piece (449 pages) that offers timelines and the names of key players involved in McCarrick’s rise and eventual downfall, but it offers no conclusions. The first responses to the Report noted that it was highly critical of the previous two popes (John Paul II and Benedict) while leaving Francis virtually unscathed. The later critiques of the McCarrick Report are more balanced and nuanced. They deal with the impact of the Report and its relation to the ongoing problem of sexual abuse of minors in the church.

One analysis in particular is helpful. It comes from a Catholic priest who has had experience dealing with sex abuse as a priest and in his former work as an investigator. Father John Lavers, a Canadian priest of the Diocese of Portsmouth in England, currently serves as the director of chaplaincy with Stella Maris (Apostleship of the Sea) in the United Kingdom. He led a 2012 investigation into allegations of homosexual behavior and activity at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Connecticut that led to the removal of 13 seminarians, primarily from the Archdiocese of Hartford and Diocese of Paterson, New Jersey. Prior to becoming a priest, Father Lavers served in Canadian law enforcement and national security work.

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

Mother raped by Catholic priest says church leaders failed to properly investigate abuse

AUCKLAND (NEW ZEALAND)
New Zealand Herald

December 1, 2020

By Isaac Davison

A mother who was raped by a Catholic priest says the church investigated the abuse initially moved him to a different school rather than punishing him.

She later complained to police, who twice decided against pressing charges before finally securing a conviction after a review.

Ann-Marie Shelley, now aged 64, appeared before a royal commission of inquiry in Auckland this morning, which is holding hearings on abuse in faith-based institutions.

She was left at Hutt Hospital after her birth in 1955 and placed for adoption through Catholic Social Services.

In a harrowing statement, Shelley described how she was neglected or abused at nearly every stage of her life – at the hands of her adoptive parents, at primary school, at a social welfare home, in an unmarried parents’ home, by a priest, and in a Red Cross shelter.

While she was training to be a nurse at Hutt Hospital, she was raped by Peter Hercock, a school counsellor and chaplain at Sacred Heart College in Lower Hutt.

Hercock’s crimes have previously been reported, but Shelley today spoke for the first time in detail about the way the church handled her complaint. She was critical of church leaders who have since been promoted to prestigious roles in New Zealand.

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

December 1, 2020

Further investigation into Colorado Catholic Church IDs 46 more victims, 9 more abusive priests — including Denver’s Father Woody

DENVER (CO)
Denver Post

December 1, 2020

By Elise Schmelzer

New report brings total number of known abusive priests in Colorado to 52, number of child victims to 212

For two years, Father James Moreno sexually assaulted a teenage boy dozens of times after they met at a Denver Catholic school — including in the rectory of the city’s most prominent church.

Moreno assaulted the boy more than 60 times between 1978 and 1980. He groomed him, gave him alcohol and marijuana, and raped him, according to a report released Tuesday by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office.

The abuse happened all over Denver: in the rooms of St. Andrew’s Preparatory Seminary High School, in Moreno’s car, in the boy’s home, in the rectory of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in the heart of Denver, one block from the state Capitol.

The teen, now grown, reported the abuse to authorities last year after the publication of a state-led investigation into child sex abuse perpetrated by Catholic priests in Colorado. Additional investigation into Colorado’s three Catholic dioceses found nine more priests who sexually abused children, including Moreno and a Denver priest and advocate for the poor known as Father Woody, along with 46 more victims of abusive priests — ending a nearly two-year investigation into the dioceses by state authorities.

The new incidences of abuse included in a supplemental report released Tuesday bring the total number of known abusive priests in Colorado to 52 and the total number of children they abused to 212, according to the independent investigator hired by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office and the diocese. The investigator, former U.S. Attorney Bob Troyer, released his initial findings in October 2019 but continued to investigate as more survivors came forward after the publication of his first report.

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

Fr. John Velez – Diocese of Monterey

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Adam Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale, FL]

December 1, 2020

By Horowitz Law

Read original article

Father John Velez

Diocese of Monterey/Marist Order

Ordained: 1988

Died: Unknown

Assignment History:

  • 1989-1990 La Purisima (El Paso, TX)
  • 1990-1991 Mary of the Nativity (Salinas, CA)
  • 1990-1991 Sacred Heard (Salinas, CA)
  • 1990-1991 Christ the King/Cristo Rey
  • 1991-2011 Sent to Mexico after accusation of child sexual abuse

Summary of Sexual Abuse Allegations Against Father John Velez:

A native of Bogota, Colombia and Marist order priest, Fr. John Velez worked in the Diocese of Monterey. In 2003, Fr. John Velez was accused of sexually abusing an altar boy when he was assigned to St. Mary of the Nativity in Salinas, CA from 1990-1991.

The Diocese allowed Fr. John Velez to work in its parishes even after Velez left La Purishima in El Paso, Texas “under a cloud” of suspicion. According to media reports, Fr. Juan Guillen reported Fr. John Velez to local church officials after the boy told him about Velez’s abuse. Shockingly, Fr. Juan Guillen ended up sexually abusing the same boy later on and is now serving a 10-year sentence in Arizona.

Fr. John Velez admitted to sexually abusing the altar boy in 1991. He was sent to St. Francis Retreat Center in San Juan Bautista where he tried to commit suicide. After being hospitalized following his incident, he was then escorted to Mexico City and turned over to his order.

According to media reports, in 2009, Diocesan officials admitted they didn’t alert the authorities when learning about Fr. John Velez’s abuse. Rather, they told the boy’s parents that the abuse was “not a big deal” and that it “happens to a lot of kids”.

In 2009, The Monterey Diocese settled with the former altar boy for $1.2 million and apologized to the victim and his family. Velez was then deported back to Colombia.

In 2019, Fr. Velez’s name was included on the Diocese of Monterey’s 2019 List of Credibly Accused Clergy of Sexual Abuse. The list also states that Velez is deceased.

Horowitz Law is a law firm representing victims and survivors of sexual abuse by Catholic priests and other clergy in the Diocese of Monterey in California.  If you need a lawyer because you were sexually abused by a priest in one of California’s Catholic dioceses, contact our office today. Although many years have passed, those abused by Catholic clergy in the Diocese of Monterey now have legal options due to a voluntary compensation fund created by the Diocese of Monterey, but filing deadlines will apply so do not delay in reaching out to us.  Our lawyers have decades of experience representing survivors of clergy sexual abuse in California and nationwide. We can help.

Contact us at 888-283-9922 or adam@adamhorowitzlaw.com to discuss your options today.

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

Cardinal Pell on the Vatican and vindication

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

November 30, 2020

By Nicole Winfield

The pope’s former treasurer, Cardinal George Pell, said Monday he feels a dismayed sense of vindication as the financial mismanagement he tried to uncover in the Holy See is now being exposed in a spiraling Vatican corruption investigation.

Pell made the comments to The Associated Press in his first interview since returning to Rome after his conviction-turned-acquittal on sexual abuse charges in his native Australia. Pell told the AP that he knew in 2014 when he took the treasury job that the Holy See’s finances were “a bit of a mess.”

“I never, never thought it would be as Technicolor as it proved,” Pell said from his living room armchair in his apartment just outside St. Peter’s Square. “I didn’t know that there was so much criminality involved.”

Pell spoke to the AP before the Dec. 15 release of the first volume of his jailhouse memoir, “Prison Journal,” chronicling the first five months of the 404 days he spent in solitary confinement in a Melbourne lockup.

Pell left his job as prefect of the Vatican’s economy ministry in 2017 to face charges that he sexually molested two 13-year-old choir boys in the sacristy of the Melbourne cathedral in 1996. After a first jury deadlocked, a second unanimously convicted him and he was sentenced to six years in prison. The conviction was upheld on appeal only to be thrown out by Australia’s High Court, which in April found there was reasonable doubt in the testimony of his lone accuser.

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

Cardinal’s prison diary explores suffering, solitary lockup

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Times

November 30, 2020

By Nicole Winfield

Rome – Cardinal George Pell, who was convicted and then acquitted of sexual abuse in his native Australia, reflects on the nature of suffering, Pope Francis’ papacy and the humiliations of solitary confinement in his jailhouse memoir, according to an advance copy obtained by The Associated Press.

“Prison Journal,” which recounts the first five months of Pell’s 404 days in solitary lockup, also provides a play-by-play of Pell’s legal case and gives personal insights into one of the most divisive figures in the Catholic hierarchy today. To his supporters and even some detractors, Pell is a victim of a terrific perversion of justice; to his critics, he is the symbol of everything that has gone wrong with the Catholic Church’s wretched response to clergy sexual abuse.

Due out Dec. 15, the book likely won’t budge anyone from either camp, but it is a fascinating read nonetheless. It is at times a spiritual meditation, a defiant assertion of innocence and a morbidly voyeuristic view into the daily grind of prison life – all of it narrated by a man who for a time was one of the most powerful Catholic cardinals in the world.

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

Over a year, more than 230 sex abuse suits have been filed in NJ against the Catholic Church

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
Bergen Record via NorthJersey.com

December 1, 2020

By Abbott Koloff and Deena Yellin

[Includes a video introduction by Abbott Koloff and a spreadsheet of the accused with information on diocese, parish or school and town, and years of alleged abuse. See also a printable PDF of the spreadsheet.]

The lawsuits filed over the past 12 months in New Jersey alleging sex abuse by Catholic priests have been numerous — there are more than 230 of them — and varied.

One man said that when he was a teenage student and told the vice principal of a Catholic high school in Bergen County that he’d been abused by a religious brother, the administrator struck the student over the head with a 500-page book, warned him never to speak of it again and imposed a five-day suspension.

A woman said she and other members of her Girl Scout troop were repeatedly abused in the basement of a Hackensack church years ago by a priest who was subsequently moved from parish to parish, eventually arrested in Pennsylvania and charged with sexually abusing a young girl in the Harrisburg area. Four of the Pennsylvania girl’s sisters later said they also were abused.

A girl in southern New Jersey confided years ago to her brother that she had been raped by a priest, who had told her God directed him to have sex with her. The brother responded that he, too, had been abused — by the same priest.

The Record and NorthJersey.com has examined more than 230 sex abuse lawsuits filed in New Jersey against the state’s five Roman Catholic dioceses since Dec. 1, 2019, when the state suspended the civil statute of limitations for such cases. The filings name more than 150 clerics, including dozens not on the church’sown list of 188 credibly accused priests released last year, and trace allegations from the 1940s through the present.

The lawsuits represent more than 240 people who allege they were abused. The bulk of the allegations are from the 1970s and 1980s. About two dozen involve abuse of children who were 5 or 6 years old. While most of the accusers are men, at least 20 women are among the plaintiffs. Almost half of the priests named in the suits are deceased.

Hundreds of additional allegations have been filed with the New Jersey Independent Victim Compensation Program, which was established by the state’s five Catholic dioceses last year to compensate victims who agree not to pursue lawsuits.

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

November 30, 2020

Condenaron a 11 años al excura Escobar Gaviria por abusos a menores

PARANá (ARGENTINA)
Télam Agencia Nacional de Noticias  [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

November 30, 2020

Read original article

El exsacerdote ya había sido condenado en 2017, a 25 años de prisión, por abuso y corrupción de cuatro niños de entre 11 y 12 años.

La Justicia de Entre Ríos condenó este lunes, a 11 años de prisión, al ex cura Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria por el abuso a un niño de 12 años en un juicio realizado luego de otro proceso en 2017 en el que fue condenado a 25 años de prisión por abuso y corrupción de cuatro niños de entre 11 y 12 años.

El proceso judicial, suspendido en cuatro oportunidades, fue encabezado por el Tribunal de Juicios y Apelaciones de Gualeguay integrado por los jueces Alejandro Calleja, Alejandra Gómez y Mauricio Derudi.

En tanto el excura participó desde la Unidad Penal 5 de Victoria, donde cumple prisión preventiva por la otra condena.

El fiscal Rodrigo Molina y el abogado querellante Mariano Navarro habían solicitado 12 años de prisión por el delito de promoción de la corrupción del menor agravado por la condición de guardador.

Por su parte, los abogados defensores Milton Urrutia y María Alejandra Pérez, solicitaron su absolución.

El fiscal detalló que los abusos se cometieron “de forma reiterada y continuada” durante dos años, lo que alteró “el normal desarrollo de la sexualidad” del joven.

Asimismo, aseguró que que los hechos ocurrieron en la Iglesia pero también cuando realizaban viajes a otras localidades; y destacó que las pruebas fueron “contundentes”.

El proceso judicial comenzó en 2017 cuando el joven prestó testimonio en el primer juicio a Escobar Gaviria, y detalló los abusos que sufrió cuando tenía 12 años en la iglesia de la localidad de Lucas González y en viajes a otras ciudades.

Lucas González es un pueblo de unos 5.000 habitantes ubicado a 133 kilómetros de Paraná, donde Escobar Gaviria ofició misas desde 2005 hasta fines de 2015.

En ese entonces, el fiscal de Nogoyá, Federico Uriburu, pidió el desarrollo de un nuevo juicio, y en mayo de 2018 el juez de Garantías de Nogoyá, Gustavo Acosta, remitió la causa a juicio oral.

El 5 de septiembre del año pasado, la Cámara de Casación Penal de Paraná integrada por los jueces Marcela Davite, Hugo Perotti y Marcela Badano, confirmó la condena a 25 años de prisión por abuso y corrupción de cuatro niños de entre 11 y 12 años a Escobar Gaviria.

Esa decisión fue confirmada en marzo de este año por los jueces Miguel Giorgio, Martín Carbonell y Susana Medina, ya que su libertad “pone en riesgo la investigación” del nuevo juicio.

La primera denuncia la realizaron en noviembre de 2016 dos religiosas de la localidad entrerriana de Lucas González, quienes afirmaron que el excura “encerraba a niños de entre 11 y 12 años en dependencias de la iglesia” donde “cometía los abusos”.

Tras esto, Escobar se ausentó del lugar y su paradero fue desconocido hasta que días después se entregó a la Justicia y dijo que estaba “en un retiro espiritual en Rosario”.

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

Former NY Giants chaplain accused of sexually abusing Montclair girl as nuns held her down

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
Bergen Record via NorthJersey.com

November 30, 2020

By Deena Yellin and Abbott Koloff

A priest who until last year worked as the New York Giants team chaplain has been accused in a lawsuit filed last week of sexually assaulting a young girl as two nuns held her down at a Montclair parish decades ago.

The priest, William Dowd, had been removed from ministry almost 20 years ago, after two men accused him of sexually abusing them as children at the same Montclair parish — but he was reinstated in 2007 after being acquitted in a church trial.

One of those men filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Newark last year accusing Dowd of abuse — a complaint that was settled last month with a payment to the plaintiff, according to the man’s lawyer, Greg Gianforcaro. He declined to specify the amount.

In the latest suit, filed Tuesday, a woman alleges that she was abused by two nuns at the Immaculate Conception parish school in 1969, when she was 8 years old. The woman says that two years later, in 1971, the two nuns took her to Dowd and held her down by her arms and legs while the priest raped her in the parish’s Madonna Hall.

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

Pope, with new cardinals, warns church against mediocrity

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

November 29, 2020

By Frances D’Emilio

Pope Francis, joined by the church’s newest cardinals in Mass on Sunday, warned against mediocrity as well as seeking out “godfathers” to promote one’s own career.

Eleven of the 13 new cardinals sat near the central altar of St. Peter’s Basilica, where Francis on Saturday had bestowed upon them the red hats symbolizing they are now so-called princes of the church.

Two of the new cardinals couldn’t make it to Rome because of pandemic travel complications. The freshly-minted cardinals who did come to the Vatican wore protective masks and purple vestments, as the Church began the solemn liturgical season of Advent in the run-up to Christmas.

In his homily, Francis decried what he called “a dangerous kind of sleep: it is the slumber of mediocrity.” He added that Jesus “above all else detests lukewarm-ness.”

Being chosen to head Vatican departments or eventually becoming pope themselves could be in any of these new cardinals’ future. Cardinals often advise popes and pick the next pontiff by conferring among themselves and then meeting in secret conclave to select one of their own to lead the Roman Catholic Church and its roughly 1.3 billion rank-and-file faithful.

Francis has often warned against clericalism during his papacy, and he picked up on that theme in Sunday’s homily.

“If we are awaited in Heaven, why should we be caught up with earthly concerns? Why should we be anxious about money, fame, success, all of which will fade away?” the pope said.

Deviating from his prepared text, he added: “Why look for godfathers for promoting one’s career?”

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

Pope, with new cardinals, warns church against mediocrity

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

November 29, 2020

By Frances D’Emilio

Pope Francis, joined by the church’s newest cardinals in Mass on Sunday, warned against mediocrity as well as seeking out “godfathers” to promote one’s own career.

Eleven of the 13 new cardinals sat near the central altar of St. Peter’s Basilica, where Francis on Saturday had bestowed upon them the red hats symbolizing they are now so-called princes of the church.

Two of the new cardinals couldn’t make it to Rome because of pandemic travel complications. The freshly-minted cardinals who did come to the Vatican wore protective masks and purple vestments, as the Church began the solemn liturgical season of Advent in the run-up to Christmas.

In his homily, Francis decried what he called “a dangerous kind of sleep: it is the slumber of mediocrity.” He added that Jesus “above all else detests lukewarm-ness.”

Being chosen to head Vatican departments or eventually becoming pope themselves could be in any of these new cardinals’ future. Cardinals often advise popes and pick the next pontiff by conferring among themselves and then meeting in secret conclave to select one of their own to lead the Roman Catholic Church and its roughly 1.3 billion rank-and-file faithful.

Francis has often warned against clericalism during his papacy, and he picked up on that theme in Sunday’s homily.

“If we are awaited in Heaven, why should we be caught up with earthly concerns? Why should we be anxious about money, fame, success, all of which will fade away?” the pope said.

Deviating from his prepared text, he added: “Why look for godfathers for promoting one’s career?”

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

Utah priest abuse lawsuit poses new challenge to time limits on old cases

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
KSL

November 29, 2020

By Annie Knox

What began as a routine visit to the deli aisle last year ended in a revelation for Guy Platt.

Platt spotted the Colosimo name on a pork sausage label and wondered if it belonged to a member of the family he recalled from childhood. But an online search turned up a series of mugshots and a more profound connection.

The man he said he remembers sexually abusing and threatening him five decades earlier hadn’t been a schoolmate’s father like he’d thought. Rather, he was a Roman Catholic priest later convicted of victimizing boys in Michigan and Oklahoma, and accused of similar conduct in Utah.

“I was having heart palpitations, those kind of feelings that you get when you’re angry and in shock and when you feel guilty,” Platt recalled in a recent interview.

As adults, Utah brothers Matthew and Ralph Colosimo came forward as victims of repeated abuse by James Rapp in the years following Platt’s own alleged encounters with the onetime cleric.

Platt is now suing the Catholic Diocese of Salt Lake City for damages of more than $300,000, contending the diocese knew Rapp was “wholly unfit to work around children” but allowed him to do so.

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

Editorial: Attorney general shows complicity by Malone in shielding accused priests

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

November 29, 2020

https://buffalonews.com/opinion/editorial/the-editorial-board-attorney-general-shows-complicity-by-malone-in-shielding-accused-priests/article_50b8c190-30c8-11eb-9307-dfd64c22fc43.html

In 2019, a member of a Catholic parish’s pastoral council in Elma told The News that Bishop Richard J. Malone had “taken the blame here and the bullet for years of abuse, years of cover-up.” The state Attorney General’s Office’s investigative report on the Buffalo Diocese released this week suggests that Malone was not an innocent party, but an active participant in the diocese’s repeated instances of turning a blind eye to accusations of sexual misconduct against priests.

The long, devastating history of clergy sexual abuse of children in the diocese of some 600,000 Catholics stretches back decades, long before Malone was installed as bishop here. But as one of the case studies demonstrates in the court filing from Attorney General Letitia James, Malone was one of seven Buffalo bishops who covered up for Rev. Donald W. Becker, who was accused of molesting boys. The attorney general filed a civil suit this week against the diocese, Malone and former Auxiliary Bishop Edward M. Grosz.

Malone resisted calls to resign for more than a year before quitting in December 2019. (Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger took over as apostolic administrator.) The tipping point was the release of private audio recordings in which Malone discussed keeping quiet about an alleged sexual harassment by a priest of an adult seminarian and on another priest’s love letter to the seminarian.

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

“My world was the Church,” abuse survivor Andrew Madden on his journey to recovery

LYON (FRANCE)
EuroNews

November 30, 2020

Interview of Andrew Madden

[Includes three-minute video of the interview.]

Andrew Madden was an altar boy. He had always enjoyed going to the Church and wanted to become a priest. But aged 12, he was abused by Father Ivan Payne. That abuse lasted for several years.

In Ireland, he was the first victim of clerical child sex abuse to go public with his story in 1995.

As part of an Unreported Europe episode focusing on the survivors of Ireland’s child sex abuse scandal at the hands of Catholic priests, Euronews spoke to Madden his personal healing journey.

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

Rare punishment for Bhopal priest — Pope dismisses him for disobedience, abuse of power

NEW DEHLI (INDIA)
The Print

November 30, 2020

By Milind Ghatwai

[Includes copy of the Vatican decree.]

Fr Anand Muttungal claims he has received no communication from Vatican, and church authorities are running a campaign against him

Bhopal – A Catholic priest who used to be the public relations officer for the Bhopal archdiocese has been dismissed from priesthood for disobedience, abuse of power and sullying the image of the church.

While priests’ dismissals on charges of sexual misconduct are not uncommon, punishment is rarely dealt out on disobedience and abuse of power charges, as in the case of 48-year-old Fr Anand Muttungal. This is the first such instance in Madhya Pradesh.

Muttungal had served as the archdiocese’s PRO for eight years before being removed in 2013.

Archbishop of Bhopal Leo Cornelio said in a statement on 26 November: “…By an official decree, Pope Francis has dismissed Anand Muttungal, the former spokesperson of the Catholic church, from priesthood.”

The archbishop accused Muttungal of repeatedly disobeying church authorities, accusing its leaders in public, engaging in trading and business, and bringing “public scandals to the church and its community”.

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

MO reform school’s ties to law enforcement stifle abuse investigations, students say

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Kansas City Star

November 29, 2020

By Laura Bauer and Judy L. Thomas

Word spread inside Agape Boarding School last fall that a report had been made to Missouri’s abuse and neglect hotline and a social worker was on campus to investigate.

Lucas Francis, a student at the time, said he was told that someone had called the state to report that a group of boys was running laps on school grounds in below-freezing temperatures. Francis, one of the boys who said he was forced to run for hours in sleet and snow with only a light jacket on and no cap or gloves, was pulled aside to speak to the Children’s Division worker.

“I was pretty excited because I was finally going to be able to tell them what was going on,” said Francis, now 18, who left the school in March. “I was just going to let them know.”

Until, that is, he said he realized that he wouldn’t be talking to the Children’s Division worker alone. Also inside the parents’ lounge on the sprawling campus, in uniform and waiting for the interview, was Cedar County Sheriff’s Deputy Robert Graves.

Graves, not only a deputy but an Agape alum and long-time employee of the school. Son-in-law of the owner, James Clemensen. And brother-in-law of the school’s principal, Bryan Clemensen.

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

Editorial: The Boy Scouts’ dishonor

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

November 24, 2020

In the absence of radical reform to an organization now deluged with child sex abuse allegations, the Boy Scouts of America charter should be revoked.

The recent revelation that more than 95,000 claims of sexual abuse have been filed against the Boy Scouts of America has been all but lost in the news cycle dominated by President Trump’s refusal to concede his election defeat and the latest deadly surge of COVID-19 infections. But it should be a shock to the system of every American, given the staggering breadth of alleged abuse of children by those who took an oath to God and country to obey the law, help others, and live honest and moral lives.

As the organization seeks to restructure, settle those claims, and reemerge from this crisis to reclaim its place as a treasured American institution, it is also incumbent on members of Congress — and the Americans they represent — to ask: How did this happen, and should an organization that fostered such widespread abuse be allowed to survive at all?

In February, the Boy Scouts of America filed for bankruptcy in light of hundreds of lawsuits filed against it by people who allege sexual abuse over the course of decades. That triggered a reorganization in bankruptcy court to create a compensation fund to pay out settlements to abuse survivors who assert credible claims. Survivors were given a deadline of Nov. 16 to file claims, which brought tens of thousands more people forward. In a statement, the organization has said it is “devastated by the number of lives impacted by past abuse in Scouting and moved by the bravery of those who have come forward.”

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

November 29, 2020

Letter on Father David Ryan

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago

November 28, 2020

By Cardinal Blase J. Cupich

Dear Saint Francis de Sales Parish and School Family,

With this letter, I write to share some difficult news about your pastor, Father David Ryan. In keeping with our child protection policies, I have asked Father Ryan to step aside from ministry following receipt by the Archdiocese of Chicago’s Archdiocesan Office for Child Abuse Investigations and Review of allegations of sexual abuse of minors approximately 25 years ago while he was assigned to Maryville Academy in Des Plaines. Allegations are claims that have not been proven as true or false. Therefore, guilt or innocence should not be assumed.

Father Ryan has been directed to live away from the parish while the matter is investigated, and he is fully cooperating with this direction. Father Jerome Jacob, pastor of Saint Mary of the Annunciation in Mundelein will serve as temporary administrator of Saint Francis de Sales Parish. Father Jacob, a seasoned pastor and Dean of the area will attend to the needs of the parish and school community.

Moreover, as is required by our child protection policies, the allegations were reported to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS) and the Cook County State’s Attorney. The persons making the allegations have been offered the services of our Victim Assistance Ministry and the archdiocese has begun its investigation of these matters.

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

Lake Zurich priest accused of sexually abusing minors while at Maryville Academy 25 years ago

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

November 28, 2020

By Elyssa Cherney

The Archdiocese of Chicago says it is investigating allegations that a Lake Zurich priest sexually abused minors 25 years ago while he was assigned to Maryville Academy in Des Plaines.

The Rev. David Ryan, pastor at St. Francis de Sales Catholic Parish in Lake Zurich, was asked to live away from the parish during the investigation and “is fully cooperating with this directive,” the archdiocese said.

In a letter to the parish Saturday, Cardinal Blase J. Cupich wrote that he asked Ryan to “step away from ministry” after the archdiocese received the allegations. The archdiocese reported the allegations to the Illinois Department of Children and Family Services and the Cook County state’s attorney office, Cupich wrote.

A spokeswoman for the archdiocese declined to provide further details about the allegations, saying in an email, “We have nothing to add to what is in the letter.”

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

Suburban priest asked to step away from parish following child sex abuse allegations

CHICAGO (IL)
WGN

November 28, 2020

By Andy Koval and Brónagh Tumulty

[Includes a copy of Cardinal Cupich’s letter to parishioners.]

A suburban priest has been asked to step away from his parish following child sex abuse allegations stemming from when he was an executive at a youth academy.

Father David Ryan, a priest at St. Francis de Sales Parish and School in Lake Zurich, has been asked to step away by Cardinal Blase Cupich due to allegations of sexual abuse of minors approximately 25 years ago.

The allegations are tied to when he was an assistant executive director at Maryville Academy, located in Des Plaines. He reportedly became assistant executive director in 1985.

He was promoted to executive director in December of 2003, according to his biography on City Club of Chicago. City Club of Chicago lists him among their board of directors.

At the time, Maryville was serving 1,100 infants, children and youth with a staff of around 900, according to his biography.

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

Father David Ryan leaving St Francis de Sales in Lake Zurich while sex abuse allegation investigated

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Sun-Times

November 28, 2020

Ryan has been accused of sexually abusing minors about 25 years ago while he was assigned to Maryville Academy in Des Plaines, Cardinal Blase Cupich wrote in a letter to the St. Francis community.

Father David Ryan, pastor at St. Francis de Sales Parish and School in Lake Zurich, has been asked to step away from the parish while the Archdiocese of Chicago investigates decades-old sexual abuse allegations.

Ryan was accused of sexually abusing minors about 25 years ago while he was assigned to Maryville Academy in Des Plaines, Cardinal Blase Cupich wrote in a letter to the St. Francis community.

Father Ryan was directed to live away from the church, 135 S. Buesching Rd., while the matter is investigated, “and he is fully cooperating with this direction,” Cupich wrote.

The allegations were reported by the archdiocese to the Illinois Department of Children and Family services as well as the Cook County state’s attorney’s office, Cupich wrote.

Neither DCFS nor the state’s attorney’s office immediately responded to a request for comment.

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

Biden and Cardinal Wilton Gregory share a mandate for healing divisions

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

November 28, 2020

By Christopher White

https://www.washingtonpost.com/religion/biden-and-cardinal-wilton-gregory-share-a-mandate-for-healing-divisions/2020/11/28/73150030-2f4e-11eb-96c2-aac3f162215d_story.html

When Pope Francis needed someone to help heal Catholics in the nation’s capital recovering from the latest round of clergy sex abuse that had engulfed now former cardinal Theodore McCarrick, he tapped Archbishop Wilton Gregory as its new leader in April 2019.

This January, when Joe Biden becomes only the second Catholic president in U.S. history, the politician who pledged to heal America amid a global pandemic, economic dislocation and a racial reckoning will have Gregory as his local pastor.

Both men have been put in their positions with a mandate for reconciliation and are united by a shared admiration for Pope Francis who on Saturday elevated Gregory to the Catholic Church’s College of Cardinals, making him the first African American to receive the honor.

Gregory’s new title is more than mere symbolism. While it will increase his collaboration with the pope and his profile among the U.S. Catholic hierarchy, it also presents him with a rare opportunity for partnership with Biden who has a more complicated relationship with Catholics and with the church than President John F. Kennedy did 60 years ago.

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

New pupils barred from top UK Catholic school after abuse scandal

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Guardian

November 28, 2020

By Mattha Busby

Ampleforth college says it will appeal against education secretary’s decision

The government has ordered one of England’s most prestigious Catholic boarding schools, Ampleforth college, to stop admitting new pupils as a result of “very serious” failings.

Scandal has surrounded the private school in recent years and an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse published a highly critical report in August 2018 that said “appalling sexual abuse [was] inflicted over decades on children as young as seven”.

Ampleforth’s abbot, Cuthbert Madden, was removed from the post that year following allegations that he indecently assaulted pupils. Madden has denied the claims.

His replacement, Deirdre Rowe, stood down as acting head after 10 months in the role following the release of a highly critical inspection report that found the school did not meet standards for safeguarding, leadership, behaviour, combating bullying and complaints handling.

The Department for Education (DfE) has now launched enforcement action against the 200-year-old institution in North Yorkshire after ruling it had failed to meet safeguarding and leadership standards following an emergency Ofsted inspection.

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

Pedophile Scandal Can’t Crack the Closed Circles of Literary France

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

November 29, 2020

By Norimitsu Onishi and Constant Méheut

The scandal surrounding the writer Gabriel Matzneff was not limited to his pedophilia. It also opened a window on the entrenched and clubby nature of many of France’s elite institutions.

Paris – One of France’s most prestigious literary awards, the Renaudot can change a writer’s career overnight. Prizewinners jump onto best-seller lists. Publishers earn bragging rights in a nation that places literature at the heart of its sense of grandeur and global standing.

A striking example is now a notorious one: Gabriel Matzneff, the writer whose career was revived with the award in 2013 before collapsing this year when a woman published a bombshell account of their sexual relationship when she was underage. He now faces a police investigation in a national scandal that has exposed how clubby Parisian elites long protected, celebrated and enabled his pedophilia.

Mr. Matzneff’s win was engineered by an elite fully aware of his pedophilia, which he had brazenly defended for decades. His powerful editor and friends sat on the jury. “We thought he was broke, he was sick, this will cheer him up,” said Frédéric Beigbeder, a confidant of Mr. Matzneff and a Renaudot juror since 2011.

The fallout from the Matzneff affair has rippled through France, dividing feminists and seemingly ending the career of a powerful deputy mayor of Paris. Yet the insular world that dominates French literary life remains largely unscathed, demonstrating just how entrenched and intractable it really is.

Proof of that is the Renaudot — all but one of the same jurors who honored Mr. Matzneff are expected to crown this year’s winners on Monday.

That the Renaudot, France’s second biggest literary prize, could wave away the Matzneff scandal underscores the self-perpetuating and impenetrable nature of many of France’s elite institutions.

Whether in top schools, companies, government administration or at the French Academy, control often rests with a small, established group — overwhelmingly older, white men — that rewards like-minded friends and effectively blocks newcomers.

In France’s literary prize system, jurors serve usually for life and themselves select new members. In a process rife with conflicts of interest that is rarely scrutinized, judges often select winners among friends, champion the work of a colleague and press on behalf of a romantic partner.

The process would never be tolerated in contests like Britain’s Booker Prize or the American Pulitzer, where juries change every year and judges recuse themselves over potential conflicts of interest.

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

November 28, 2020

Sins of the fathers: Ireland’s sex abuse survivors

LYON (FRANCE)
EuroNews

November 28, 2020

[Includes 20-minute interview with interviews of survivors.]

Revelations of sexual abuse inside the Catholic church shook Ireland to its core. Unreported Europe speaks to those who survived the paedophile priests and examines if the church has truly taken responsibility for the scandal.

Our lives are not as normal as other people who haven’t been abused. The abuse has just changed our attitude to life, changed our attitude to people. – Martin Gallagher, Survivor

Ireland has one of the largest Catholic communities in Europe. The Church is rooted into the culture of the country, but when Pope Francis visited Dublin in 2018 his words divided the nation.

Since 2002, multiple reports and investigations have shed light on nearly 15,000 cases of sexual abuse committed in Ireland between 1970 and 1990.

The pontiff had come to apologise for those crimes carried out by members of the Church’s clergy. For many survivors, the visit and remorse that came with it was far too late.

You know, you only have to do a few Google searches to see loads of examples of popes and bishops saying ‘We didn’t know’. Like the rest of society, we didn’t understand such things were possible. They did. They lied. – Colm O’Gorman, Survivor

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

Ampleforth College: £36k-per-year Catholic boarding school banned from taking new pupils after ‘serious’ failings

ISLEWORTH (MIDDLESEX, ENGLAND)
Sky News

November 27, 2020

By Tim Bake

The school was previously criticised by an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse in 2018.

https://news.sky.com/story/ampleforth-college-36k-per-year-catholic-boarding-school-banned-from-taking-new-pupils-after-failings-12144433

A £36,000-a-year Catholic boarding school has been banned from admitting new students following “serious” failings on safeguarding and leadership standards.

Ampleforth College, which was previously criticised by an independent inquiry into child sexual abuse in 2018, was found to have “prioritised the monks and their own reputation over the protection of children”.

The Department for Education (DfE) sent a letter to the North Yorkshire school’s proprietor on Friday as part of an enforcement action.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson told the school to stop accepting new pupils to “safeguard the education and well-being of children”.

The letter raised concerns from multiple inspection reports dating from 2016 onwards, and said the institution had failed to meet safeguarding and leadership standards.

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

Indian priest laicized for gross abuse of power

HONG KONG
Union of Catholic Asian News

November 27, 2020

Pope Francis dismisses Bhopal priest who once accused his archbishop and two priests of trying to poison him

Pope Francis has laicized an Indian Catholic priest for gross abuse of ecclesiastical power and office.

Announcing the Vatican decision, Archbishop Leo Cornelio of Bhopal said in a statement that “now, with regret and pain, I wish to formally communicate to everyone that by an official decree from our Supreme Pontiff Pope Francis, on Oct. 22, 2020, Anand Muttungal (Joseph M.T.) of the Archdiocese of Bhopal has been dismissed in poenam (as a penalty) from the clerical state and dispensed from all his clerical obligations, including that of celibacy.”

However, Muttungal, the former public relations officer of Bhopal Archdiocese, said he was unaware of his dismissal.

“I must say that to date I have had no communication from the Vatican,” he said, adding he was not aware of the offense attributed to him that led to his dismissal.

Referring to a criminal case he had filed against Archbishop Cornelio and two other priests from the archdiocese, he said that “… authorities have been trying to get me to withdraw the criminal cases going on against them.”

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

Clergy sex abuse advocate welcomes AG’s lawsuit against Catholic Diocese

BUFFALO (NY)
WBFO NPR

November 24, 2020

By Michael Mroziak

An advocate for clergy sex abuse victims who had actively called for the removal of Bishop Richard Malone is praising the New York State Attorney General for her lawsuit against the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and its former top leadership.

Robert Hoatson, co-founder and president of Road to Recovery, appeared Tuesday in his usual chosen place for his Buffalo appearances, on the sidewalk across the street from the Catholic Center on Main Street. His podium displayed a sign declaring “Free At Last,” a commentary on behalf of victims.

“We’re free at last, we victims, we advocates, we are free at last because government officials have stepped in and have investigated and concluded that what occurred here was absolutely outrageous in this Diocese of Buffalo,” he said. “Not just with Bishop Malone or Bishop Grosz, or even Bishop Scharfenberger, but for decades and decades and decades before that.”

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

EWTN’s Raymond Arroyo Interviews Archbishop Viganò About McCarrick Report

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

November 13, 2020

By Raymond Arroyo Interviewing Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò

The archbishop, whose explosive letter in August 2018 helped trigger the Vatican investigation into McCarrick’s misconduct, explains why he believes the report is gravely flawed.

More than any other person except for Theodore McCarrick himself, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò is responsible for triggering the 449-page Vatican report released this week that details what other Church leaders knew about the disgraced ex-cardinal’s decades-long pattern of sexual misconduct, and the actions they took or failed to take with respect to what they had learned.

As the report itself documents, the archbishop was the first senior Vatican figure to call concretely for action to be undertaken against McCarrick, at a time when Archbishop Viganò was serving as a senior official in the Secretariat of State. Then, after the archbishop was subsequently posted to Washington as the U.S. nuncio from 2011 to 2016, he was again involved with the Vatican’s handling of the McCarrick file.

And in August 2018, Archbishop Viganò released his initial 11-page “testimony” regarding McCarrick, in which he accused numerous Church leaders of turning a blind eye to McCarrick’s misconduct — including the explosive claim that he personally told Pope Francis about the transgressions following the Holy Father’s election in 2013, and that the Pope ignored this information and tapped McCarrick to carry out duties on the behalf of the Vatican. The firestorm sparked by Archbishop Viganò’s document resulted in the Holy Father’s formal authorization of an investigation of all relevant documentation related to the allegations against McCarrick, and how they were handled.

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

Former Seminary Investigator: McCarrick Was ‘Epicenter’ of Problems

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

November 25, 2020

By Edward Pentin Interviewing Fr. John Lavers

Father John Lavers, who led a 2012 investigation into allegations of homosexual activity among seminarians at Holy Apostles Seminary, assesses the findings of the McCarrick Report

Vatican City – What are the strengths and weaknesses of the McCarrick Report, and what can be learned from it that could be applied to similar cases in the future?

Father John Lavers, a Canadian priest of the Diocese of Portsmouth in England, currently serves as the director of chaplaincy with Stella Maris (Apostleship of the Sea) in the United Kingdom. He led a 2012 investigation into allegations of homosexual behavior and activity at Holy Apostles College and Seminary in Connecticut that led to the removal of 13 seminarians, primarily from the Archdiocese of Hartford and Diocese of Paterson, New Jersey.

Father Lavers’ investigation also indicated that a homosexual “pipeline” had been created that funneled vulnerable Latin American candidates into some U.S. seminaries where they were sexually exploited, and subsequently ordained as actively homosexual priests in some American dioceses.

And on the basis of the evidence collected for the Holy Apostles investigation, Father Lavers concluded that it was Theodore McCarrick himself who was at the “epicenter” of this powerful influential network that has preyed on seminarians, and has advanced homosexually active clergy within the U.S. Church.

Prior to becoming a priest, Father Lavers served in Canadian law enforcement and national security work. In this interview with the Register, he explains the nature of the report, how it falls short, and what he believes the next steps should be.

Father Lavers, what has been your initial reaction to the McCarrick Report?

I think the expectation of the report may have been overstated, even over-expected by people. It’s a report that would not be classified as investigative, but more of a gathering of data and analysis — almost like how you would approach an academic function: looking at the documents that the Vatican archives would have, as well as other information that they would have pulled from the various dioceses of the United States. But it’s not an investigative report.

And when I use the term “investigative report,” I use it from the perspective of how professional law enforcement, and/or intelligence services, would do, say, an investigation into this and in following all the leads as well as following the evidence. This report does not do that.

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

November 27, 2020

Piden detener a un cura de La Plata acusado de abusar sexualmente a una nena de once años

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
TN Todo Noticias [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

November 27, 2020

Read original article

Se trata del religioso Raúl Sidders. Es investigado por delitos cometidos entre 2004 y 2007, cuando se desempeñaba como sacerdote del colegio San Vicente de Paul. 

El Fiscal Álvaro Garganta, titular de la UFI 11 de La Plata, pidió este jueves la detención del cura Raúl Sidders, acusado de abusar sexualmente a una nena entre 2004 y 2007, cuando se desempeñaba como sacerdote del colegio San Vicente de Paul. La medida fue reclamada por los abogados de la víctima y deberá ser resuelta en el plazo de cinco días por el juez Agustín Carlos Crispo.

“La gravedad de los delitos, la contundencia y elocuencia del relato de la víctima, el persistente daño en la salud provocado por los hechos endilgados a Sidders y su ya probada capacidad de sustraerse del proceso confluyen en la solicitud de inmediata detención que se sustancia en estas horas”, dijo a TN.com.ar Juan Pablo Gallego, el abogado de la nena abusada entre los 11 y 14 años, identificada como “Rocío”.

En línea con lo expuesto por el letrado y por su colega patrocinante, Pía Garralda, se conoció que tras la solicitud requerida este jueves Sidders se trasladó al área de la Triple Frontera, en Puerto Iguazú, con “grave riesgo de fuga”.

La causa en contra del religioso se inició a finales de agosto, cuando la víctima de los abusos, que hoy tiene 27 años, hizo la denuncia en sede judicial. Según contó, los delitos fueron cometidos entre 2004 y 2007, cuando el cura trabajaba como capellán del colegio San Vicente de Paul de La Plata.

Tanto la acusación como la consiguiente investigación fueron acompañadas por parte de la comunidad educativa de la institución -donde se produjeron los vejámenes-, por sobrevivientes de abuso eclesiástico y por organizaciones políticas, de mujeres y de derechos humanos.

De acuerdo con los abogados de “Rocío”, existe un “cuadro probatorio abrumador” en contra de Sidders, que lo señala como el autor de los delitos. Además, apuntaron que la detención del religioso constituiría un “duro golpe al operativo de impunidad”de las autoridades del Arzobispado de la Plata y del obispado de Iguazú, que expresó públicamente que la denuncia se trataba de una fake news.

Según argumentaron, el encubrimiento de la jerarquía eclesiástica se manifiesta en que, a pesar de la causa se sigue contra Sidders, este mantiene tanto su cargo eclesiástico como público, ya que también es capellán de la Gendarmería Nacional.

El pedido de detención se da a solo un año de comprobarse los delitos de igual índole cometidos por Eduardo Lorenzo, párroco de la misma Diócesis de La Plata, cuya muerte fue anunciada tras trascender su solicitud de arresto.

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

Study leads to benchmarks for sexual misconduct policies at US seminaries

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service via Union of Catholic Asian News

November 27, 2020

By William Cone

Seminarians were surveyed anonymously about incidents of sexual misconduct at their schools of formation

Policy benchmarks developed from a study of sexual harassment and misconduct at seminaries and religious houses of formation in the United States are being promoted as a way to stem the abuses that came to light recently about former cardinal Theodore McCarrick.

The study was conducted in spring 2019 by the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana, and the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University in Washington.

Seminarians were surveyed anonymously about incidents of sexual misconduct at their schools of formation. The study found that, even though sexual misconduct is uncommon, there is low awareness among students of protocols for reporting such infractions.

Following the study’s completion, a group of bishops, seminary rectors, faculty and lay consultants was formed to develop proactive policy guidelines. The policy benchmarks came from that McGrath Seminary Study Group.

“All of these people are very well respected in the field of seminary education and are regarded as reformers, I would say,” said John Cavadini, Notre Dame theology professor and director of the McGrath Institute for Church Life, who convened the study group earlier this year. Two of the group members are presidents of national associations of seminary rectors.

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

Editorial: Blame to share

TORONTO (ONTARIO, CANADA)
Catholic Register

November 26, 2020

In the weeks since the Vatican released its report regarding disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the blame game has been in full swing.

How is it possible, both critics and friends ask, that such a man as McCarrick could ever rise to the highest levels of the Church? It’s a good question, with not a lot of good answers.

The 460-page report does not lay blame on any one person or group. Instead, it has carefully followed the trail of facts and communiques inside and outside the Vatican regarding who knew what and when and how about the allegations of sexual misconduct against McCarrick. The issue of guilt isn’t addressed in the report; that had been decided by an investigation two years ago that found “credible” evidence against him. He was subsequently removed from the priesthood.

At the heart of the report compiled over two years is the Vatican’s response to the rumours and allegations that had been circulating about McCarrick for years. It’s clear the Vatican was guilty of turning a blind eye, ignoring warning signs and siding with the accused. The good news is that it has chosen not to keep its missteps hidden from public view.

Three popes are central to this story of course, because that’s where the buck stops. John Paul II fares the worst. He heard reports of McCarrick’s behaviour, ordered an investigation, but ultimately chose to believe his denials of wrongdoing, perhaps swayed by his own history in Poland of seeing people unjustly accused. Pope Benedict put restrictions on McCarrick that were largely ignored. Pope Francis was more proactive, ordering further investigation after more claims of abuse surfaced in 2018 and laicizing him last year. McCarrick is now 90 years old, whereabouts not publicly known, and there are no criminal charges filed against him.

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

Vatican’s McCarrick Report Casts A Dark Cloud Over Pope John Paul II’s Legacy

WASHINGTON (DC)
NPR

November 25, 2020

By Sylvia Poggioli

When St. John Paul II died in 2005 after nearly 27 years on the papal throne, his funeral drew millions to St. Peter’s Square. The crowd soon broke out into spontaneous chants of “Santo subito” — “make him a saint immediately.”

Days later, John Paul was put on the fast track, becoming a saint a record nine years after his death.

Now, many Catholics wonder whether that was too hasty. A recent report issued by the Vatican is casting a dark cloud over John Paul.

The report is the result of an investigation into Catholic leaders’ failings in allowing now-disgraced former American Cardinal Theodore McCarrick to rise up the church hierarchy. Its explosive revelations have started to tarnish the legacy of the Polish-born pope and globetrotting media star who is credited with triggering the fall of communism in Europe.

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

McCarrick report is one small step to dismantling clerical culture

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

November 20, 2020

By Tom Roberts

It has long been understood by those who take a measured and thoughtful assessment of his papacy that the story of St. Pope John Paul II was sent off to the printer long before it was ready.

The narrative had not had time to mature, to incorporate the layers of complexity that marks us as truly human, to account for contradictions and flaws. The McCarrick report is the most persuasive evidence to date that the appellation “The Great” was applied too soon. In that regard, the report also serves as warning not to rush to conclusions about the abuse crisis itself.

John Paul II, confronted with the most damaging scandal the church faced in centuries, ignored the disturbing warnings from victims and from bishops entrusted with the care of the flock and instead embraced the adulation and counsel of serial predators. In doing so, he became not a figure of the courage that he persistently demanded of others, but the highest profile example of a corrupt hierarchical culture responsible for perpetuation of the abuse disgrace.

The editors of this publication do a great service to the church, and to sexual abuse victims, by asking the U.S. bishops to put the brakes on the John Paul II cult. It is, indeed, time to rein in the cult that has grown up around a garish superhero version of a pope.

The greatest value of the recent report, however, is not in establishing the weight of blame for the McCarrick debacle, though that is significant. Its greatest value is establishing that for all of his legendary achievements on the international front, at home John Paul II was a rather pedestrian member of a culture that has deep underlying maladies that became manifest in the abuse crisis. What he did, which warrants condemnation today, was not extraordinary at the time. He did what was expected of one deeply invested in and rewarded by the culture. He protected it at all costs, ignoring credible and impassioned warnings about McCarrick and another of his favorites, Marciel Maciel Degollado, founder of the corrupt Legionaries of Christ. The costs have been globally destructive of the church’s credibility and authority.

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

Setting the record straight on NCR and McCarrick coverage

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

November 20, 2020

By Heidi Schlumpf

The McCarrick report, released Nov. 10, attempts to describe how former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick rose through the ranks of leadership in the church despite his abuse of children and vulnerable adults, mostly seminarians. The shorthand for its charge: “Who knew what, and when?”

Although primarily focused on popes, bishops and other church leaders, the report also briefly considers the role of journalists in exposing — or, in this case, not exposing — this particular story.

For those who did not read all 461 pages — and all 1,410 footnotes — I can tell you that the National Catholic Reporter is mentioned in four footnotes, referencing articles we have published about sexual abuse, including an interview with McCarrick, in Rome, by current Vatican correspondent Joshua McElwee in 2014.

Three of those footnoted articles were by NCR’s former Vatican correspondent John Allen, who is now editor of Crux, the now-independent Catholic news website initially launched as a project of The Boston Globe.

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

Priest’s Aboriginal victims sue Pope Francis over church’s failures

SYDNEY (NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA)
Sydney Morning Herald

November 27, 2020

By Chip Le Grand

Pope Francis has been named as a defendant in a Victorian Supreme Court damages claim by three Aboriginal men who were sexually assaulted as young boys by paedophile priest Michael Glennon after the Vatican knew of his crimes against children but did not defrock him.

It is the first known case in Australia in which victims of clerical sexual abuse have sought to hold the world’s most senior Catholic personally responsible for his church’s failure to take decisive action against predators in its ranks.

The three plaintiffs, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, all claim to have experienced significant, ongoing impacts from their childhood abuse including drug addiction, homelessness and unemployment.

They are seeking compensation and exemplary or punitive damages against Pope Francis, the Archdiocese of Melbourne and Melbourne Archbishop Peter Comensoli for the inaction of their predecessors.

If successful it would represent the first time an Australian court has punished the church – as distinct from compensating victims of abuse – for its failure to protect children from paedophile priests.

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

Catholics angered, saddened by Montreal Church’s mishandling of abusive priest

TORONTO (ONTARIO, CANADA)
CBC News

November 26, 2020

By Leah Hendry and Steve Rukavina

‘The sheep are not following the church blindly anymore,’ one former parishioner says

People who tried to warn Montreal’s Catholic Archdiocese about a pedophile priest say they’re sad, angry and overwhelmed by an explosive report outlining the church’s repeated failures to heed their warnings.

The Montreal archdiocese asked retired Quebec Superior Court justice Pepita Capriolo to investigate the church’s handling of allegations against former priest Brian Boucher, who was convicted in January 2019 of sexually abusing two young boys.

Capriolo’s report, released Wednesday, outlines the failures of top officials in the Montreal diocese to take action after repeated red flags about Boucher were raised.

“I have to tell you I’m overwhelmed by what Justice Capriolo has put together,” Kurt Reckziegel, a parishioner at Our Lady of the Annunciation Church in the Town of Mount Royal, said Thursday.

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

This archbishop is about to become the first African American cardinal in Catholic history

ATLANTA (GA)
CNN

November 27, 2020

By Daniel Burke and Delia Gallagher

Rome – For the past week, Archbishop Wilton Gregory of Washington, DC, has been holed up in a Vatican guesthouse, receiving meals at his door.

On Saturday afternoon, if all goes as planned, Gregory will step out of his quarters and into history. During an installation ceremony planned for 4pm in Rome, Gregory will become the first African American cardinal in Catholic history.

Gregory will be one of 13 men — and the only American — elevated to the College of Cardinal during Saturday’s ceremony. Because of the coronavirus pandemic, two bishops will not be in Rome, another first in church history, according to Vatican News.

In keeping with the Pope’s concerns for Catholics who have been historically marginalized, the other soon-to-be cardinals include men from Rwanda, Brunei, Chile and the Philippines.

Gregory, 72, already the highest-ranking African-American Catholic in US history, told CNN this week that he has been praying, writing homilies and letters to well-wishers, and reflecting on his new role.

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

Bishop Barron praises Mary MacKillop’s efforts to renounce clerical abuse

BRISBANE (QUEENSLAND, AUSTRALIA)
Catholic Leader – Archdiocese of Brisbane

November 27, 2020

By Joe Higgins

In light of the McCarrick Report, detailing the abuse of disgraced ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, Los Angeles auxiliary Bishop Robert Barron appeared on his Word on Fire podcast and praised a name familiar to Australians.

Host Brandon Vogt asked Bishop Barron about how to understand the abuse crisis from a historic lens and how saints had responded to similar crises in the past.

Bishop Barron mentioned the great reformers like St Francis of Assisi and St Ignatius Loyola, and said Australian St Mary MacKillop came to his mind “very powerfully”.

“She (St Mary MacKillop) brought this issue to light and she suffered enormously for it,” he said.

“(She was) facing a Church that was in many ways problematic and dysfunctional, but she brought this issue forward.”

Bishop Barron lamented how many Catholics fell into resentment with the Church over the abuse scandals and other scandals too.

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

November 26, 2020

IMPUNIDAD ECLESIÁSTICA. Abuso sexual: piden detener al cura Raúl Sidders, protegido por el Arzobispado de La Plata

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
La Izquierda Diario [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

November 26, 2020

By Valeria Jasper

Read original article

El fiscal Álvaro Garganta considera que hay pruebas contundentes contra el sacerdote que hasta hace poco fue capellán de Gendarmería. Si el juez Carlos Crispo ordena su prisión preventiva, será un duro golpe para el Arzobispado platense y quienes buscan encubrir al abusador.

Así lo confirmaron Juan Pablo Gallego y Pía Garralda, abogados de Rocío, la joven que denunció los abusos que cometió Raúl Sidders contra su persona entre sus 11 y 14 años, mientras se desempeñaba como sacerdote del colegio San Vicente de Paul, en la ciudad de La Plata.

En un comunicado que dieron a conocer en la tarde de este jueves afirman que este gran paso fue posible por la valentía de Rocío y el acompañamiento de parte de la comunidad educativa del colegio, sobrevivientes de abuso eclesiástico, organizaciones de mujeres, derechos humanos y políticas. El juez Agustín Carlos Crispo deberá resolver el pedido de detención en el plazo de cinco días.

Cabe recordar que Raúl Sidders desarrolló su tarea sacerdotal en la escuela San Vicente de Paul, en la ciudad de La Plata, durante 20 años. Luego de que varios ex alumnos y alumnas dieran a conocer testimonios sobre abusos y acosos de exalumnos por parte de Sidders, fue denunciado penalmente por abuso sexual agravado.

En marzo Sidders fue enviado por la Iglesia a Puerto Iguazú (Misiones) para colaborar con el obispo Baisi y a su vez integrarse al destacamento de la Gendarmería Nacional de esa ciudad. Pero según confirmaron a este diario fuentes del Ministerio de Seguridad, el cura fue desvinculado de la fuerza luego de que ésta recibiera un oficio judicial el 8 de octubre, una semana después de radicada la denuncia penal en La Plata. “Se tomó la decisión de dejar sin efecto su designación (como capellán) y se informó al Obispado Castrense el 14 de octubre”, dijeron desde el entorno de Sabina Frederic a La Izquierda Diario.

Tanto Víctor Fernández, máximo representante de la iglesia platense y mano derecha de Bergolio como Nicolás Baisi (su par misionero y exobispo auxiliar suyo hasta hace unos meses), hacen honor a una práctica sistemática por parte de la jerarquía eclesiástica de intentar ocultar bajo la alfombra cualquier hecho que involucre a uno de sus hermanos, con desmentidas y una efusión negativa de la cuestión. Sin dejar de mantenerlos en sus funciones como es el caso de Sidders.

El pedido de detención, por parte de la Fiscalía, es una gran cachetada para jerarquía católica, en especial para el arzobispado platense y de Puerto Iguazú que hicieron una defensa acérrima de Sidders, calificando de falsas noticias a las denuncias.

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

Así despiden al padre Pedro Gutiérrez Farías en Salamanca

IRAPUATO (MEXICO)
Periódico Correo [Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico]

November 26, 2020

By Redacción

Read original article

Los restos del sacerdote reposan en un ataúd de madera y le acompañan con una foto en blanco y negro de la época joven del padre 

Redacción

Salamanca.- Rodeado de una parte de sus hijos, familiares, amigos y sacerdotes, al padre Pedro Gutiérrez Farías fue despedido hacia su última morada con una misa que presidió el obispo de la diócesis de Irapuato, Enrique Díaz Díaz.

Los restos del sacerdote reposan en un ataúd de madera y le acompañan con una foto en blanco y negro de la época joven del padre Pedro, aunque ahí ya porta sus hábitos.

Las flores blancas combinadas con amarillas para ofrecer el pésame y lamentar el deceso del conocido sacerdote inundaron el lugar.

Los restos de Pedro Gutiérrez Farías fueron velados en La Ciudad de Los Niños, la celebración religiosa se realizó en la capilla que el sacerdote edificó en este mismo espacio.

El lugar dentro de la capilla fue insuficiente para albergar a todos los que llegaron para despedir al sacerdote, hombres, mujeres, familias completas lamentaban el fallecimiento del Padre Pedro.

Los ojos llorosos de quienes alguna vez fueron albergados en este espacio fue el común denominador, “nadie como nuestro papi, nuestro papá, el padre Pedro”, se escuchaba decir a los dolientes.

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

Report on the investigation regarding Brian Boucher’s career in the Catholic Church

MONTREAL (QUEBEC, CANADA)
Archdiocese of Montreal

November 25, 2020

By Justice Pepita G. Capriolo

The author of this report was mandated by Archbishop Christian Lépine to investigate “who knew what when” in regard to Brian Boucher’s actions during his career within the Catholic Church and to formulate recommendations to the Archdiocese, with the view that such behaviours not be repeated.

To do so, the author searched for and analyzed in detail hundreds of documents and interviewed more than 60 witnesses. She received the assistance and support of Bishop Thomas Dowd, appointed by Archbishop Lépine as her liaison with the clergy, but she was not in any way directed or censored in her work. Indeed, the author had complete autonomous access to all documents, including those contained in the Secret Archives, which even Bishop Dowd could not consult. Furthermore, she was able to interview anyone whose testimony she judged useful.

The involvement of Brian Boucher in the Catholic Church covers a long period: from his time as a catechist in the mid-1980s to 2019, when he was convicted and sentenced on two counts of sexual assault of a minor. Throughout these years, his suitability as a seminarian and later as a priest was often questioned, but it was only in December of 2015 that a serious investigation began, leading to Boucher’s canonical and criminal trials. Brian Boucher is no longer a priest and is currently serving an eight-year sentence.

Until 2016, no one had come forward and claimed having been Boucher’s victim of sexual abuse while still a minor. No parent had ever brought such a charge against Boucher to the attention of his superiors. But this is no cause for premature exoneration of the Church authorities. Many people had complained about Boucher’s unacceptable behaviour over the years: he was rude, authoritarian, overly intense, intransigent, homophobic, racist, misogynist and verbally, and sometimes even physically, aggressive. These complaints were repeatedly reported to his superiors. Rumours about his untoward interest in young boys had been circulating since the 1980s and communicated to those in charge of the Grand Séminaire de Montréal as well as to the Archdiocese. These rumours later became more concrete: Boucher was observed having a very close and worrisome relationship with a young boy at the end of the 1990s. No concrete evidence of sex abuse was brought forth- but how often is this behaviour caught on camera? Despite the concerns raised over this relationship and brought to the attention of the authorities in ever-increasing detail, no investigation was undertaken at the time.

A contemporary unwanted sexual advance directed at an 18-year-old was dismissed and erased from the collective written memory of the Church. A later, heartbreaking abusive relationship with a 19-year-old student under Boucher’s tutelage when he was Chaplain of the Newman Centre became the tipping point … to send Boucher for psychological treatment!

The overly vague psychological evaluation of Boucher done by the Southdown Institute in 2003 had the disastrous effect of appearing to shield him from any suspicion of being a child molester, until Bishop Dowd began his investigation in December 2015, twelve years later. The reports containing the conclusions based on Southdown’s therapeutic approach also gave the impression that Boucher’s aggressive and inappropriate behaviour had been “fixed.”

Despite Southdown psychological reassurance, rumours persisted and another complaint about inappropriate behaviour with a minor was sent to the diocesan authorities and quickly dismissed in 2006. In 2011, a senior official of the Church wrote a lengthy, detailed summary of Boucher’s ongoing failings in order to stop his reappointment as pastor of a parish. The official left on extended sick leave and Boucher was reappointed.

Boucher was finally caught in his own lies: he claimed that, during his sabbatical studies in Washington, he had been the victim of sexual abuse by a much younger man, a fellow priest. Bishop Dowd investigated this claim and quickly realized, given the evidence he found, that Boucher had been the perpetrator and not the victim. Once a broader investigation was started, Bishop Dowd discovered the existence of at least two child victims.

Boucher’s deplorable story is told in detail over 150 pages of the report.

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

Archdiocese of Montreal releases independent report on complaints against former priest Brian Boucher

MONTREAL (QUEBEC, CANADA)
Archdiocese of Montreal

November 25, 2020

https://www.newswire.ca/news-releases/archdiocese-of-montreal-releases-independent-report-on-complaints-against-former-priest-brian-boucher-853098934.html

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Montreal has released the report of an independent investigation into its handling of complaints against former diocesan priest Brian Boucher. The 276-page report, authored by the Honourable Pepita G. Capriolo, retired Québec Superior Court Justice, was made public at a press conference today by Archbishop Christian Lépine with Justice Capriolo.

The Archbishop commissioned Justice Capriolo in November 2019 to investigate “who knew what when” regarding complaints made against Mr. Boucher, from his seminary days until 2019. The Archdiocese had initiated a canonical investigation into his behaviour four years earlier, in 2015.

“I had the support of the Archbishop. At no point did he or any other member of the diocese attempt to limit or restrict my investigations,” the retired justice said during the press conference. The author of the report was given independent access to hundreds of documents and interviewed everyone whose testimony she deemed relevant, which was more than 60 witnesses. The report concludes with 31 recommendations designed to ensure responsibility, transparency and accountability within the organization of the Archdiocese and thus mitigate a recurrence of similar abuses.

The report reveals that, in the course of Brian Boucher’s involvement with the Archdiocese, his suitability both as a seminarian and a priest were the subject of repeated complaints. It was only in 2015 that the diocese undertook a comprehensive investigation into his behaviour.

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

Catholic Church wilfully blind again, leaders of victims groups say

MONTREAL (QUEBEC, CANADA)
Montreal Gazette via Strathroy Age Dispatch

November 25, 2020

By Paul Cherry

The culture of silence has ruled supreme within the Catholic Church for years, a former abuse victim says.

The disturbing details that emerged from Justice Pepita Capriolo’s report on how the Catholic Church ignored warning signs and adopted a culture of secrecy as Brian Boucher, now a convicted pedophile, made his way toward being ordained a priest sounded all too familiar to people who represent other victims of sexual abuse at the hands of priests in Quebec.

Boucher, now 58, was convicted last year of sexually assaulting two boys: one while working at Our Lady of the Annunciation Church in Town of Mount Royal, the other at St. John Brébeuf Parish in LaSalle.

Capriolo was asked to do an audit of the time Boucher spent in the Catholic Church and found warning signs were ignored before he was ordained.

“I think we can certainly talk about wilful blindness which was for the longest time the modus operandi of the Roman Catholic Church in Quebec and elsewhere in cases of abuse of children,” said Carlo Tarini, director of communication for the Comité des victimes des prêtres. The group has supported victims of abuse who have filed class-action suits against Catholic orders in the past.

“Certainly, the prevailing method of dealing with pedophile priests was to tell them they should pray to redeem their sins. Unfortunately, prayers have nothing to do with preventing pedophiles from abusing children, which is something the Church should have certainly known,” Tarini said.

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

Review slams Montreal church’s handling of pedophile priest

TORONTO (ONTARIO, CANADA)
The Globe and Mail from Canadian Press

November 25, 2020

By Sidhartha Banerjee

Montreal’s archdiocese did little to address complaints against a pedophile priest and seemed more interested in protecting his reputation than his victims, according to an independent review released Wednesday.

Former Quebec Superior Court justice Pepita G. Capriolo’s report highlighted numerous deficiencies in the church’s response to complaints against Brian Boucher. The priest was sentenced in March, 2019, to eight years in prison for abusing two boys.

“Secrecy is everywhere in this file,” Ms. Capriolo wrote in her report. “Secret archives, secret hiding places for sensitive documents and documents so secret they have been eliminated completely.”

Ms. Capriolo told a news conference Wednesday the church improperly handled complaints against Mr. Boucher from the 1980s to the end of 2015. “Yet Boucher’s inexcusable behaviour had been the subject of a slew of complaints from the very start of his career in the church.”

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

Report blames top Montreal Church officials for ignoring complaints about priest who preyed on young boys

TORONTO (ONTARIO, CANADA)
CBC News

November 25, 2020

By Benjamin Shingler

Catholic Church officials protected Brian Boucher’s reputation for years before he was arrested, report says

Montreal – A Montreal priest was able to sexually abuse two young boys and terrorize several others over a 20-year span because top officials in the Catholic Church ignored complaints about his behaviour and, in some cases, tried to keep serious allegations secret, according to a damning new report.

The priest, Brian Boucher, worked at 10 churches in Montreal during his career, which began in the early 1980s. He was sentenced to eight years in prison in 2019 after being found guilty in one case and pleading guilty in another.

After Boucher was sentenced, the church commissioned former Quebec Superior Court justice Pepita Capriolo to investigate how the crimes could have gone undetected for so long.

As she released her report on Wednesday, Capriolo placed blame on the upper echelons of Montreal’s Catholic Church. She said officials preferred to turn a blind eye rather than investigate mounting complaints about Boucher.

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

Temple priest arrested in Bengaluru for allegedly sexually assaulting 10-yr-old girl

BANGALORE (INDIA)
TheNewsMinute

November 26, 2020

The incident occurred on Tuesday in Devanahalli and the accused, Venkataramanappa, has been arrested.

A 62-year-old temple priest was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly raping a 10-year-old girl in Devanahalli, located in the northeast Bengaluru. The priest allegedly sexually assaulted the 10-year-old girl at his daughter’s residence. The incident was first reported by Deccan Herald. The accused has been identified as 62-year-old Venkataramanappa. According to the police, on Tuesday, he had gone to visit his daughter at around 4 pm in Devanahalli, when he saw the 10-year-old girl playing outside.

Deputy Commissioner of North East Bengaluru, CK Baba, said that at around 4.30 pm, Venkataramanappa allegedly lured the girl inside, into his daughter’s home, and is said to have sexually assaulted her. DCP Baba said that the girl and her family live in the neighbourhood and so she often plays in the area.

When the girl did not return home after a long time, her parents began looking for her. They went to the temple, located near the accused’s daughter’s home, and asked street vendors whether they had seen their daughter. A flower vendor allegedly informed the girl’s father that she had gone into the accused’s daughter’s house.

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

‘He will be away from children’: Houston-area priest pleads guilty to child indecency charges

NEW YORK (NY)
NBC News / Telemundo

November 25, 2020

By Belisa Morillo and Luis Antonio Hernández

One accuser said Manuel La Rosa-Lopez’ upcoming sentence gives him a sense of justice, as well as hope that the Catholic Church “will change the way it does things.”

A Houston-area priest has pleaded guilty to child indecency charges in a case that has put a focus on the archdiocese of Galveston-Houston and its failures over the handling of sexual abuse cases.

The Rev. Manuel La Rosa-Lopez, 62, pleaded guilty to two out of five charges of indecency with a child Nov. 17, as part of an agreement with the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office. He faces 10 years in prison in the case which deals with allegations that he molested two teens more than 20 years ago after gaining the trust of their families; his sentencing is Dec. 16.

La Rosa-Lopez avoided a possible 20-year sentence with the guilty plea.

“We offered him to plead guilty on two of the greater charges, which were second-degree felonies, indecency with a child,” Montgomery County chief prosecutor Nancy Hebert told Noticias Telemundo Investiga. “In exchange for that plea, we’re dismissing the other three charges.”

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

Priest jailed for theft blames Catholic doctrine, also facing sex abuse charges

DENVER (CO)
Catholic News Agency

November 25, 2020

By JD Flynn

A South Dakota priest has been sentenced to almost eight years in federal prison, after he was convicted of 65 felonies related to stealing donations from Catholic parishes. Ordered to pay more than $300,000 in restitution, the priest said he stole in part because he disagrees with Catholic doctrine on homosexuality.

The priest is also facing federal criminal charges related to child sexual abuse and possession of child pornography.

Fr. Marcin Garbacz, 42, was convicted in March of wire fraud, money laundering, and tax fraud — crimes he committed while serving as a chaplain and Catholic school teacher in the Diocese of Rapid City, between 2012 and 2018. Garbacz was ordained a priest in 2004.

Prosecutors said the priest stole more than $250,000 from parishes, spending some money on artwork, a piano, a Cadillac, liturgical items, and a $10,000 diamond ring.

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

Target 11 receives more complaints about Pittsburgh Diocese Compensation Fund

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WPXI

November 25, 2020

By Rick Earle

After a Target 11 Investigation into the independent compensation fund established by the Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese to pay victims of clergy sex abuse, Investigator Rick Earle received more complaints about the diocese.

Several victims of clergy sex abuse reached out to Target 11 and expressed concern about a lack of response by the diocese. Three victims said they reached out to the diocese after the grand jury report on clergy sex abuse was released and they said they never got any response. The men, all of whom are in their 50′s and 60′s now, said there were abused by the same priest at a church in Lawrenceville. All three said they left their contact information with the diocese but never got a response.

Two of the victims did not want their names used, but both expressed frustration and concern with the process. A third victim decided to speak publicly about the alleged abuse and his efforts to contact the diocese.

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

Child abuse in the Catholic Church — a scandalous approach to scandal

BONN (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle

November 25, 2020

By Melina Grundmann

Karl Haucke was sexually abused by a priest for years. He and other survivors were promised an investigation. But the Catholic Church has decided not to publish the findings. To Haucke, this is a repeat of the abuse.

Standing on the banks of the Rhine river, practically in the shadows of Cologne’s cathedral, Karl Haucke says he has lost faith in the Catholic Church. His story begins in the early 1960s, when he was sent to boarding school in the West German capital at the time, Bonn. From the age of eleven, he was regularly abused by a priest for four years — at least once a week.

But the abuse was not just of a physical, sexual nature. The priest made him relate the stories during the weekly confession. “Confession includes penance. Depending on the abuser’s mood, he might say ‘I’ll come around to your bed tonight or tomorrow.’ Then it would start all over again.”

Back then, Haucke had no one to talk to about it and no way of figuring out what was being done to him. He was unaware that the same thing was happening to many of his fellow pupils. “We had no words to describe what was being done to us. Nor did we know what it meant. And it did not stop at physical pain. We had a clear sense of humiliation and being used,” says Karl Haucke.

As an adult, he had no concrete memory of the abuse. He turned into a workaholic, toiling for as many as fourteen hours a day without even knowing why. A racing heart and other symptoms of trauma had long since become familiar companions.

Then, Haucke suddenly realized what was going on. It was in 2010 when the news of the biggest sexual abuse scandal in the history of the Catholic Church broke in Germany and thousands of abuse cases in church institutions were gradually revealed.

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

November 25, 2020

Murió el cura fundador de “Ciudad de los Niños”, donde se reportaron abusos sexuales

LEóN (MEXICO)
Proceso [Mexico City, Mexico]

November 25, 2020

By Verónica Espinosa

Read original article

El cura Pedro Gutiérrez Farías fue considerado por décadas como un benefactor de menores sin hogar o entregados por sus padres.

GUANAJUATO, Gto., (apro).- El sacerdote Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, fundador de los albergues conocidos como “Ciudad de los Niños”, en Salamanca y Morelia, donde decenas de menores y jóvenes fueron víctimas de abusos sexuales, maltrato y tortura, ante omisiones de distintas autoridades, falleció este miércoles de un infarto.

Aunque no se ha confirmado, aparentemente el cura se contagió de covid-19 y tuvo complicaciones.

Una juez federal y la Comisión Nacional de los Derechos Humanos (CNDH) corroboraron graves violaciones a derechos humanos de menores y jóvenes albergados en los centros de asistencia de Gutiérrez, que según las investigaciones ni siquiera tenían supervisión del DIF de Guanajuato, pese a lo cual el propio gobierno estatal le otorgó donativos millonarios durante años.

Abusos sexuales –algunos de los cuales se acusó al propio sacerdote–, tortura, alimentación deficiente, falta de atención escolar y de salud, golpes y castigos, que incluían encierros en un lugar conocido como “el cuartito”, fueron documentados en informes, revisiones y entrevistas, algunas de las cuales se conocieron por trabajadoras sociales y se reportaron a la Procuraduría de Justicia, actual Fiscalía, así como al DIF.

Ninguna de las denuncias o quejas por estas situaciones prosperó.

El sacerdote Pedro Gutiérrez fue considerado por décadas como un benefactor de menores sin hogar o entregados por sus padres.

Después se conoció que a unos 300 infantes les cambió los apellidos con ayuda de gobiernos que enviaban hasta los albergues a los oficiales del Registro Civil. El cura les puso sus apellidos y los de algunas de las monjas que lo asistían.
    
Por todo esto, la CNDH emitió el año pasado una amplia recomendación dirigida a las fiscalías y gobiernos de Guanajuato y Michoacán, para reabrir investigaciones, pero también para indagar y sancionar a personal de la propia Fiscalía, del DIF y de las secretarías de Educación y Salud, que fueron negligentes en proceder ante incidentes o irregularidades de las que tuvieron conocimiento, algunas desde hace más de una década.

Una investigación de la reportera Kennia Velázquez, a raíz de la resolución judicial de amparo de una juez de distrito, reveló que el sacerdote tenía a su nombre varias propiedades en Guanajuato y Michoacán, entre ellas un rancho.
    
Tras conocerse la recomendación, el propio cura reapareció públicamente en la sede de la Ciudad de los Niños, en Salamanca, rechazó cada una de las acusaciones y aseguró que estaba en trámites para reabrir los albergues, cuyos menores fueron reubicados por el DIF, al desatarse el escándalo por las condiciones en que operaban.

Una de las personas que siguió respaldando al sacerdote fue la actual alcaldesa de Salamanca, Beatriz Hernández Cruz, ahora de Morena, quien desde que era militante del Partido Acción Nacional (PAN) aparecía en eventos de “Ciudad de los Niños”.

La presidenta municipal publicó este día un mensaje de condolencia por la muerte del cura, que oficialmente estaba suspendido como ministro religioso, según refirió en su momento la Diócesis de Irapuato, a la que pertenecía.
    
“Levanto una oración por el eterno descanso del P. Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, quien fue un luchador incansable y buscó siempre el bienestar de los salmantinos. Que a sus familiares y amigos nos de el consuelo de saber que ya se encuentra gozando de la gloria de dios. Lo vamos a extrañar, estimado padre Pedro. Con respeto y cariño, Beatriz Hernández Cruz”, publicó la alcaldesa.

El cura y sus albergues también recibieron recursos y apoyo del expresidente Vicente Fox y su esposa Martha Sahagún, quienes incluso inauguraron un centro de asistencia juvenil.

A pesar de que en su momento se deslindó de la actividad de Gutiérrez al frente de los albergues y lo suspendió para oficiar misas, la Diócesis de Irapuato también publicó este miércoles una condolencia por la muerte del sacerdote, quien a sus 79 años seguía librando cualquier posible acción judicial y pretendía volver a operar la Ciudad de los Niños.
    
“Pido a dios por su eterno descanso y que le conceda el premio de la gloria, reservado a los trabajadores de su viña”, dice el mensaje de la diócesis.

A nombre de “sus más de 3 mil hijos regados por toda la república y en el extranjero”, otro cura anunció hoy que Gutiérrez sería velado en el inmueble donde funcionó por 40 años la Ciudad de los Niños, y que mañana se realizará una misa de exequias oficiada por el propio obispo de Irapuato.

“Ciudad de los niños de Salamanca seguirá viva, seguiremos trabajando, seguiremos luchando por el ideal de este gran hombre…lucharemos con todo lo que está de nuestra parte para que se vuelva a conseguir su anhelo de él, que es hacer el bien”, anunció el colaborador de Gutiérrez, al que llamó “papi”.

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

Fallece el padre Gutiérrez Farías, impulsor de ‘La Ciudad de los Niños’

IRAPUATO (MEXICO)
Periódico Correo [Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico]

November 25, 2020

By Staff LC Camargo

Read original article

La muerte del sacerdote fue confirmada por la Diócesis de Irapuato, acusando “problemas respiratorios” que “no pudo superar” 

Cuca Domínguez

Salamanca.- A los 79 años de edad falleció el sacerdote católico, Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, a causa de afecciones respiratorias que no superó pese a que fue llevado a recibir atención médica y estaba hospitalizado. La noticia consternó a la gran familia que construyó a través de La Ciudad de Los Niños, albergue que dio hogar a cientos de niños desde 1977, aunque en 2017 enfrentó un proceso legal que inició el DIF estatal luego de que una juez federal determinó que ahí habían incurrido abusos contra menores, incluso se le señaló por registrar con su apellido a por lo menos 130 menores.

 Gutiérrez Farías fue reconocido como ‘Salmantino distinguido‘ en el año 2015, por el gobierno municipal de entonces, por su destacada labor como fundador de albergues para niños y niñas en desamparo.

Pedro Gutiérrez Farías

 Nació en QuirogaMichoacán un 24 de febrero de 1941, fue séptimo hijo del matrimonio formado por Rafael Gutiérrez Barriga y María de la Paz Farías. Ingresó a la escuela Apostólica del Padre Saturnino, a los 9 años, a los 10 años pasó al seminario de Morelia. Fue ordenado sacerdote el 28 de febrero de 1965. 

Desarrollo su sacerdocio los primeros 3 meses en el sanatorio de Nuestra Señora de la Salud en Morelia, después fue colaborador parroquial en Zitácuaro, posteriormente pasó como párroco en San Juan Tararamero, en la Luz municipio de Villa Morelos.

 Al llegar a Salamanca, primero fue párroco en San Antonio Abad; fundó la Confederación Nacional de Niños de México el 18 de marzo de 1977; fundó La Ciudad de los Niños de Salamanca, Gto. A.C. el 24 de septiembre de 1977; fundador de las Cooperadoras de la Sagrada Familia el 15 de julio de 1985; fundador de los Cooperadores de la Sagrada Familia, Institución Diocesana el 06 de agosto de 1986; fundador del Seminario de los Cooperadores de la Sagrada Familia en la Ciudad de Aguas Calientes, Ags. El 14 de agosto de 1991; fundador del Convento-Casa Cuna de Salamanca, A.C. el 10 de enero de 1998.

 A través de La Ciudad de los Niños, albergue que estableció en Salamanca y que posteriormente extendió a Irapuato, Moroleón y Morelia, se le reconoce el impulsó que dio a los menores albergados que incluso le llamaban “papi”, por el apoyo para egresar como sacerdotes, religiosas, abogados, dentistas, chefs, trabajadoras sociales, ingenieros, contadores, psicólogos, maestros de música y otros más.

 Desde abril del 2017 el gobierno del estado a través del sistema DIF estatal se hizo cargo de La ciudad de los niños, que en ese tiempo albergaba a 63 menores, luego de una jueza determinó que en el lugar se violentaron los derechos de menores ahí albergados, la salud del sacerdote se debilitó.

A partir de entonces se han derivado una serie de procesos en los que se relaciona al sacerdote Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, ya que se señaló que que en el lugar se violentaban en todos los aspectos los derechos de los niños, por lo que el DIF estatal terminó llevando a un albergue estatal a los menores e inició procesos para reintegrarlos a sus familias o brindarles la atención especializada en algunos casos.

 El gobierno del estado regresó las instalaciones de La Ciudad de los niños a Gutiérrez Farías y éste anunció que buscaría reabrir el albergue, habiendo incluso iniciado un proceso legal para que le regresaran a los menores.

 La Ciudad de los Niños

El sacerdote Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, comenzó a recibir niños abandonados o incluso entregados por sus propios padres, a los que les daba su apellido y adoptaba. Con 13 menores, el 19 de julio de 1977, inició la construcción del primer albergue en Salamanca y fue el punto de partida para la creación de un albergue en la ciudad de Irapuato, donde se atendía a niños con capacidades diferentes; un albergue mixto para menores en Moroleón y otro albergue también mixto en Morelia, Michoacán, el que comenzó en 2011 con 10 niños.

 Entre los políticos que apoyaron estos albergues se encuentran Carlos Romero Deschamps, exsecretario general del sindicato petrolero del país; Vicente Fox Quesada desde que fue gobernador y luego como presidente de la República; el senador Juan Carlos Romero Hicks, a través de su esposa Faffie Sieckman de Romero, cuando fue presidenta del sistema DIF estatal, incluso en su gobierno entregaron una máquina para procesar cacahuate para botana, que sería utilizada para obtener ingresos para el albergue, pero nunca funcionó, entre otros.

 A la entrega de apoyo se sumaron artistas como Marco Antonio Solís ‘El Buki’, que se dijo organizaba bailes en los 80´s y las ganancias eran enviadas a este albergue.

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

Sacerdote se despide del Padre Gutiérrez en nombre de sus más de 3 mil “hijos”

IRAPUATO (MEXICO)
Periódico Correo [Guanajuato, Guanajuato, Mexico]

November 25, 2020

By Yadira Cárdenas

Read original article

El religioso lamentó la muerte de su “papi” y dio a conocer que el jueves se realizará una misa de cuerpo presente en La Ciudad de los Niños 

Salamanca.- El sacerdote Humberto Rivera Villegas a nombre de los más de 3 mil “hijos” del padre Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, lamentó la muerte de su “papi”, quién dijo falleció a causa de un infarto fulminante, pero quedará su legado en cada una de las personas por las que trabajó y por las que siempre llevó la cabeza en alto al saber que hizo el bien; señaló que este jueves se realizará una misa de cuerpo presente en La Ciudad de los Niños oficiada por el Obispo de Irapuato, Enrique Díaz Díaz.

“Hoy con tristeza y dolor comunicamos que nuestro papá ha partido a la casa del padre respondiendo a su llamado, falleció a consecuencia de un infarto fulminante,  su mayor enseñanza es el amor a dios y no queremos dejar de agradecer a la sociedad salmantina y los alrededores que fueron a su lado trabajadores incansables, por dar verdadera calidad y amor a niños, adolescentes y jóvenes que fueron toda su alegría”, señaló el sacerdote.

Dijo que Pedro Gutiérrez se sintió salmantino de todo corazón y supo amar a la sociedad que le dio tanto, con 55 años de sacerdocio bien trabajados y luchados, además se haber sido un hombre bendecido por dios, que supo responder a dios con generosidad del mundo y un sacerdote que ha dejado en huella en Salamanca, además que supo caminar siempre con la frente en alto, que se sentía libre porque sabía que estaba haciendo le bien, “papi, tus hijos le damos gracias a dios por persistir”.

Humberto Rivera Villegas, destacó el legado del sacerdote en cada uno de los más de  3 mil “hijos” que han formado familias y son personas de bien no solo en México, también en el extranjero, además de señalar que seguirán luchando para seguir con el proyecto y el ideal del Padre Pedro sobre la “Ciudad de los Niños”, y pondrán todo lo que esté de su parte para que se realice.

Pedro Gutiérrez Farías, será velado en las instalaciones de la “Ciudad de los Niños” y a la una de la tarde de este jueves se realizará una misa de cuerpo presente en el mismo lugar, que será oficiada por el Obispo de Irapuato, Enrique Díaz Díaz, la cual será transmitida a través de redes sociales debido a la pandemia.

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

Confessions of a Vatican source: Jason Berry on the McCarrick report

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

November 25, 2020

by Jason Berry

When Pope John Paul II made Theodore McCarrick a cardinal in 2001, the archbishop of Washington, D.C., was a silk-between-the-fingers fundraiser. A year later, when the pope summoned the U.S. cardinals to Rome to confront the abuse crisis, McCarrick took the lead at press conferences — a bold move, given his revelation to The Washington Post and CNN that accusations against him had been investigated and found false.

In the ensuing years, McCarrick traveled the globe as an unofficial church diplomat, and rumors spread that he had slept with seminarians while a bishop in Metuchen and Newark, New Jersey, using a beach house on the Jersey Shore. Rumors no journalist could pin down.

As the genial, glad-handing cardinal gained a high media profile, he seemed to be almost everywhere, even leading graveside prayers on TV at the funeral for Sen. Edward Kennedy.

And yet, as we now know from the 449-page Vatican report on McCarrick, two New Jersey dioceses had quietly paid settlements to victims by 2007. In 2018, after more lawsuits and survivors spoke out, a Vatican tribunal at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith found him guilty of moral crimes. Pope Francis approved McCarrick’s laicization, stripping him of priestly status, and ordered an investigation on how McCarrick had avoided detection for so long.

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

Priests’ defamation suits are the latest wrinkle in sex-abuse fallout

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

November 25, 2020

By Mark Nacinovich

As U.S. dioceses continue to pay out big settlements for lawsuits, the church is facing another nettlesome problem stemming from the abuse scandal: Priests who say they were falsely accused are suing for defamation.

In August 2018, shortly after a Pennsylvania grand jury report listed more than 300 priests in six dioceses in the state who had been credibly accused of abusing more than 1,000 minors since 1947, Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson asked the three dioceses in his state to turn over files on church personnel credibly accused of sexual abuse since 1978.

Archbishop George Lucas of Omaha complied with that request, and in November 2018, the Omaha Archdiocese published a list of the names of 38 priests and deacons who had faced “substantiated claims” of abuse in the archdiocese.

The fallout from that list reverberates today. One of the priests whose name was on it — Fr. Andrew Syring — is suing the Omaha Archdiocese for defamation, counted among those priests who say they have been unfairly swept up in the church’s effort to repair its reputation and put the crisis behind it.

Lyle Koenig, Syring’s lawyer, said his client’s defamation suit is one of 20 to 25 similar cases in the country. By comparison, 7,002 priests were “credibly” or “not implausibly” accused of abuse in the U.S. between 1950 and June 30, 2018, according to BishopAccountability.org, which cited published information from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

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

Allentown Diocese has paid $16 million to abuse victims

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Morning Call

November 24, 2020

By Peter Hall

The Allentown Diocese has paid nearly $16 million to victims of sexual abuse by members of the clergy, it reported Tuesday, as the program to compensate victims draws to a close.

The payments, totaling $15.85 million, were made to 96 abuse victims through the diocese’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, according to a final report by an independent committee appointed to oversee the program.

Allentown was among seven Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses to establish compensation funds in the wake of a 2018 Pennsylvania grand jury report that revealed efforts to hide decades of sexual abuse by hundreds of priests.

Administered by Washington, D.C., attorney Kenneth Feinberg, who is also overseeing compensation programs for abuse victims in other dioceses, Allentown’s program accepted applications from April to September 2019, receiving 106, the diocese reported.

Six of those applicants rejected offers totaling $1.18 million, three were deemed ineligible and one offer remains outstanding, the report says. The payments averaged about $165,000 per victim and came with a stipulation that those accepting them would not sue.

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

Archbishop Gregory stood up to Trump. Now he’s about to be the first Black cardinal in U.S.

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

November 25, 2020

By Tracy Wilkinson

Washington DC – Few of his parishioners were surprised when Washington, D.C., Archbishop Wilton Gregory took on President Trump.

Gregory isn’t known to speak out often about issues specifically facing Black Americans. But when he does, it is unambiguous and forceful — in words unusually strong for a man of the cloth.

*
In selecting Gregory, 72, Francis is rewarding a man who over the decades took courageous stands to end sexual abuse by clergy. They were positions that at times seemed to sideline his career, but that put him, his supporters say, on the right side of history and on a firm moral footing.

Like most Black people in the United States, Gregory was not born into the Catholic faith, growing up in a Protestant denomination. It was largely with the great migration of Black Americans from the South to the North in the first half of the 20th century that many turned to Catholicism, drawn partly by its educational opportunities and social work in urban areas.

As a child on the South Side of Chicago, the young Gregory so admired the nuns who taught him in the grade at his Catholic school that he decided he wanted to become a priest. He informed the school’s head father of this ambition, according to a story Gregory often relates. He was told: Well, maybe you should become a Catholic first.

And so he did, taking his first communion while in elementary school.

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

Lawyer cites ‘cover-up’ after pastor removed at Plymouth’s Our Lady of Good Counsel

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit News

November 24, 2020

By Mark Hicks

A priest recently removed from leading an Archdiocese of Detroit parish after church leaders said he was “overwhelmed with the responsibilities” is challenging the decision, claiming it was retaliation for his objections to another leader’s alleged sexual harassment and abuse

The Rev. Michael Suhy, who had been pastor at Our Lady of Good Counsel in Plymouth, was targeted because he “refused to be quiet,” his lawyer, Ron Thompson, told The Detroit News. “This is a cover-up. This is once again the Catholic Church trying to hide their misconduct.”

The Rev. Michael Suhy was pastor at Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church in Plymouth.
Archdiocese officials dispute the claim, saying Suhy could no longer handle his duties.

“The discussions aimed at getting Fr. Suhy to step aside voluntarily for his good and the good of the parish started — with him — this past spring,” said Ned McGrath, a spokesman for the archdiocese, in an email Tuesday. “Ultimately and unfortunately, his intransigence triggered a canonical process for his removal.”

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

The McCarrick report: Victims show fear, courage, anger, need for action

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service via Hawaii Catholic Herald

November 25, 2020

By Carol Glatz

Vatican City – The Vatican Secretariat of State’s report on Theodore E. McCarrick provides a glimpse into how a number of witnesses and victims of the former cardinal’s abuse sought numerous ways to alert church officials and were disturbingly aware their allegations might trigger repercussions.

Over its 460 pages, the report also reveals how much difference 30 years can make when it comes to flagging misconduct and abuse.

The report begins with a New York mother’s account of writing to every U.S. cardinal and the papal representative in the mid-1980s detailing McCarrick’s “dangerous” behavior toward her underage sons. Having left no address or legible name, her red-flag warnings went unheeded.

Decades later, in 2017, when the Archdiocese of New York received an allegation of the sexual abuse of minor by McCarrick in the early 1970s, the report showed how the archdiocese’s now mandatory reporting system and procedures resulted in McCarrick’s eventual dismissal first from the College of Cardinals and, later, from the priesthood.

But for decades in between, the victims and witnesses described in the report recount how they struggled to figure out if and how they should or could make their claims in essentially a no-man’s land for accusations.

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

Montreal archdiocese to release report on response to pedophile priest Brian Boucher

TORONTO (ONTARIO, CANADA)
Canadian Press via Global News

November 25, 2020

A review of the Catholic archdiocese of Montreal’s handling of complaints against a pedophile priest is to be released today.

The archdiocese enlisted former Quebec Superior Court justice Pepita Capriolo to examine the church’s response to complaints against former priest Brian Boucher.

Archbishop Christian Lépine is expected to speak about the report, tabled in September, at a news conference Wednesday.

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

Experts: Seminaries need clear sexual harassment guidelines to prevent clerical abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

November 24, 2020

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

Theodore E. McCarrick, middle row center, is seen with fellow seminarians in a close-up of the official portrait of the class of 1958 of St. Joseph’s Seminary in Yonkers, N.Y. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)
When the former cardinal Theodore McCarrick was bishop of the diocese of Metuchen, N.J., he routinely asked seminarians to join him at his vacation home, visits that regularly included the bishop sharing a bed with young men. Any reasonable standards would characterize those episodes, in which a powerful authority figure even suggested sharing a bed with students, as instances of sexual harassment. Stories like these led to Mr. McCarrick’s downfall, as was laid out in a recent Vatican investigation into allegations of harassment and abuse.

But a group of theologians, bishops and administrative professionals say that, even decades after Mr. McCarrick’s abuse, seminaries and formation houses are still learning how best to equip their students to recognize and report inappropriate behavior. According to the working group, assembled by the University of Notre Dame theologian John Cavadini, seminary and formation house leaders should strive to implement five benchmarks when it comes to protecting faculty, staff and students. There is a need, the group agreed, for regular training on harassment policies, clarity around reporting and investigating, support for victims, periodic review of policies, and the ability to apply guidelines to specific conditions. Meeting these benchmarks would not only protect seminarians from abuse and harassment but could also shape the culture in parishes.

“It’s not just policy training but part of the seminarian’s human and pastoral formation. These seminarians are going to be priests, and we want them to go away from the seminary formed in the kind of culture that takes this seriously,” Mr. Cavadini, who directs the McGrath Institute for Church Life, told America.

According to research released last year from the McGrath Institute and the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate at Georgetown University, 6 percent of active Catholic seminarians surveyed in 2019 said they had been subject to sexual harassment, abuse or misconduct. Nine in 10 seminarians said they had not been subjected to sexual harassment, abuse or misconduct.

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

US Catholic bishops’ response to McCarrick report is sad but predictable

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

November 23, 2020

By Thomas Reese

The discussion of the Vatican report on ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick by the U.S. bishops at their annual fall meeting was sad but predictable — sad because the bishops failed to communicate that they understood the report’s implications; predictable in that some bishops defended John Paul II against the report’s finding that the pontiff shared culpability in the McCarrick case.

The report, released Nov. 10, acknowledged that despite it being known that McCarrick was sleeping with seminarians, he was promoted to the Archdiocese of Washington and made a cardinal by Pope John Paul II.

It would have been better for the bishops to acknowledge the pope’s failure and argue that if he were alive today, he would be apologizing for his mistakes. In their 45-minute public discussion of the report, followed by 90 minutes of talking privately about it, they did neither.

Bishops are reluctant to criticize John Paul’s record of appointing and promoting bishops because most of them were appointed the same way by the same pope. To acknowledge his failures would open the possibility that they, too, were selected through a defective process that stressed loyalty over other factors.

“It can’t be a bad system; it selected me,” would be the attitude of most bishops.

Only Bishop Mark Brennan of Wheeling-Charleston suggested that the process should be improved. He proposed giving 30 to 60 days at the end of the process for people to comment on a candidate before his appointment was finalized. That way, he said, “We might avoid appointing someone to the episcopacy who did not deserve it.”

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

Advocates praise New York AG for filing lawsuit against Buffalo Diocese

BUFFALO (NY)
WBEN

November 24, 2020

“We are free at last because government officials have stepped in.”

Just one day after New York State Attorney General Letitia James announced a lawsuit against the Buffalo Diocese, alleging that diocesan leadership covered up credible claims of improper sexual conduct by priests, sex abuse victims advocate Robert Hoatson stood in front of the diocese proclaiming a victory for survivors.

“We victims, we advocates, we are free at last because government officials have stepped in and have investigated and concluded that what occurred here was absolutely outrageous,” said Hoatson. “This report from Attorney General Letitia James outlines what we have known for decades: that the church refuses to take accountability for its actions and to reform its actions because we’re still experiencing the same kind of behaviors.

“If you look at the statement that came out of Mr. Tucker last night, that came out of the diocese, they continue to use the same words,” Hoatson continued. “‘Oh, we have zero tolerance for anybody who sexually abuses a child here in the Diocese of Buffalo,’ but we know that is not true.”

Read the full diocese statement below:

“We will be reviewing this lawsuit just announced by the New York Attorney General and weighing the Diocese’s response. In the meantime, we wish to reiterate that there is zero tolerance for sexual abuse of a minor or of sexual harassment of an adult in the Diocese of Buffalo by any member of the clergy, employee or volunteer. The Diocese has put in place rigorous policies and protocols governing required behavior as well as a code of conduct which all clergy are expected to abide by. Moreover, the Diocese has committed to full cooperation with all civil authorities in both the reporting and investigation of alleged crimes and complaints.”

Attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who was made famous for representing victims and helping to expose the Boston Diocese in the early 2000’s, joined Hoatson’s press conference via phone, and he praised James for filing the lawsuit, saying steps like that are part of the healing process for victims.

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

November 24, 2020

Raoûl LeBlanc (1975 – 2020)

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
Nécrologie Canada [Canada]

November 24, 2020

By Mary

Read original article

(1975 – 2020)


Rogersville – Raoul LeBlanc, 45 years old, originally from Rogersville NB, has passed away peacefully towards his Lord in Heaven. He fought bravely to overcome his heart attack from two month ago but surrendered his spirit to God on November, 14th 2020. at Queen Elizabeth II Hospital in Halifax. Raoul has died too young but he lived a very full 45 years of life. He was once a dedicated catholic missionary priest for many years with the Mayans in Mexico and had ministered in many countries around the world with the Legionaries of Christ. And then after discerning another path he became a loving husband to his wife Seritha and devoted father to Regan, Rory and stepdaughter Desiree and her two sons: Isaac and Noah, who he consider as his daughter and grandchildren. He was the best of brothers, faithful friend to many. No matter where he was or what he did, he is described by many who knew him as fun-loving, good hearted and fearless. He genuinely loved people and sacrificed himself easily to make others happy. One can say he has accomplished his mission on Earth. “Well done, good and faithful servant”.
Raoul was the third son of Yves Leblanc and Cecile Chevarie.
He is survived by three brothers and three sisters: Father Kenneth, Kevin, Meadow, Emmanuel, Claire and Melissa.

Family will be receiving relatives and friends, Friday November 27th at 7pm, at the salon ‘La Colombe’ 11325, route 126, Rogersville. Funeral service will be held at the St-François de Sales RC church, Rogersville, Saturday, November 28th, at 11am. People who will attend the funeral will have to register at the church before the celebration.
Visiting hours: Friday Nov. 27th from 7pm to 9pm and Saturday from 9:30 am until the departure for the funeral. Face mask and distancing is mandatory.
Funeral arrangements have been entrusted to the care of “La Colombe” Funeral Cooperative Ltd, of Tracadie.
(1975 – 2020)

Rogersville – Raoul Leblanc, 45 ans, originaire de Rogersville NB, est décédé paisiblement et est allé rejoindre son Seigneur dans le Ciel. Il s’est battu courageusement pendant deux mois pour survivre à une crise cardiaque, mais il a livré son esprit à Dieu, le 14 novembre 2020, à l’hôpital Queen Elizabeth II d’Halifax. Raoul est mort trop jeune, mais il a vécu 45 ans bien remplis. Il était autrefois un prêtre missionnaire catholique dévoué pendant de nombreuses années avec les Mayas au Mexique et il avait exercé son ministère dans de nombreux pays à travers le monde avec les Légionnaires du Christ. Et puis après avoir discerné un autre chemin, il est devenu un mari aimant pour sa femme Seritha et un père dévoué pour Regan, Rory et sa belle-fille, Désirée et ses deux enfants : Isaac et Noah qu’il considérait comme sa fille et ses petits-enfants. Il était le meilleur des frères, l’ami fidèle de beaucoup. Peu importe où il était ou ce qu’il faisait, beaucoup de ceux qui le connaissaient le décrivent comme aimant s’amuser, ayant un bon grand cœur et n’ayant aucune peur. Il aimait vraiment les gens et se sacrifiait facilement pour rendre les autres heureux. On peut dire qu’il a accompli sa mission sur Terre. «Bravo, bon et fidèle serviteur».
Raoul était le troisième fils d’Yves Leblanc et de Cécile Chevarie.
Il laisse aussi dans le deuil trois frères et trois sœurs: Père Kenneth, Kevin, Meadow, Emmanuel, Claire et Melissa.
La famille recevra parents et amis à compter de 19h le vendredi 27 novembre au salon «La Colombe» 11325, route 126 Rogersville. Les funérailles auront lieu en l`église Saint-François de Sales, le samedi 28 novembre, à 11h. Les personnes qui désirent assister aux funérailles doivent s’enregistrer avant la célébration.

Heures de visites : vendredi le 27 novembre, de 19h à 21h et le samedi 21novembre à partir de 9h30 jusqu’au départ pour les funérailles. Le port du masque et la distanciation social est obligatoire.
La direction des funérailles a été confiée aux soins de la Coopérative Funéraire « La Colombe » Ltée de Tracadie.

Our most sincere sympathies to the family and friends of Raoûl LeBlanc (1975 – 2020)..

cooperative funeraire lacolombe

Death notice for the town of: Tracadie-Sheila, Province: Nouveau-Brunswick

death notice Raoûl LeBlanc (1975 – 2020)

mortuary notice Raoûl LeBlanc (1975 – 2020)

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

New York Attorney General sues bishops Malone, Grosz and Buffalo Diocese for failing to protect children

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

November 23, 2020

By Charlie Specht

AG says diocese ‘engaged in cover-up’ of priests

New York State Attorney General Letitia James on Monday sued the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and former bishops Richard J. Malone and Edward M. Grosz for failing to protect children and for engaging in a decades-long cover-up of sexual abuse by diocesan priests.

New York’s top prosecutor also filed a motion that seeks to force a full public disclosure of predatory priests and their actions against those whom they were entrusted with spiritual care, and is seeking a court-appointed monitor that would ensure that interim Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger complies with sexual abuse policies and procedures.

The state is also seeking to bar both Malone and Grosz — who resigned their positions last year after a Vatican investigation — from serving in secular fiduciary roles in any nonprofits or charitable organizations in New York State.

“When trust is broken with spiritual leaders, it can lead to a crisis of faith,” James said in a news release. “For years, the Diocese of Buffalo and its leadership failed to protect children from sexual abuse. Instead, they chose to protect the very priests who were credibly accused of these atrocious acts. Individuals who are victims of abuse deserve to have their claims timely investigated and determined, and the Buffalo Diocese refused to give them that chance.”

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

Class action against Oblate priests jumps to 190 alleged victims from across Quebec

TORONTO (ONTARIO, CANADA)
CBC News

November 24, 2020

By Julia Page

A class-action lawsuit launched against a Catholic religious order in 2018 has grown from the initial 30 Innu claimants on Quebec’s Lower North Shore to 190 Indigenous and non-Indigenous people from across Quebec.

Allegations of sexual abuse by priests with the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate initially surfaced during the federal inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls (MMIWG).

Those allegations have now multiplied across several First Nations, where the clergy tried to “silence repeated sexual assaults it was well aware of,” according to court documents submitted to Quebec Superior Court, in the request for authorization for the class action.

[Photo caption: Several priests in this photo, taken in the 1980s in the Sept-Îles region, have been named in the class action suit against the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. (Submitted by Institut Tshakapesh)]

The inquiry’s stop in Mani-Utenam in November 2017, an Innu community near Sept-Îles, on Quebec’s North Shore, revealed decades of alleged abuse against Innu children and women living in Unamen Shipu and Pakua Shipu, on the province’s Lower North Shore.

Alexis Joveneau, a Belgian priest who arrived in the region in the 1950s, held a tight grip on the Innu communities where he worked, until his death in 1992.

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

Detroit Catholic Archdiocese removes priest from Plymouth parish

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit Free Press

November 24, 2020

By Niraj Warikoo

The Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit has removed the pastor of a large church in Plymouth, alleging he was not able to handle the responsibilities of the parish. But the pastor is claiming he was unfairly targeted for speaking out on what he says was a harassment case involving an employee of the Archdiocese.

The Rev. Michael Suhy, pastor at Our Lady of Good Counsel parish, was told last week that he was being removed from the church he led.

Auxiliary Bishop Gerard Battersby said in a statement: “One of Archbishop Vigneron’s conclusions was that Father Suhy has become overwhelmed with the responsibilities, burdens, and challenges of administrating a large and complex parish like Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish with its added dimension of having a school. Following the required consultations and fact-finding, the action taken on Nov. 17 was believed necessary for Father Suhy’s well-being, and also for the well-being of the parish, parishioners, and school.”

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

New York Attorney General sues Buffalo Diocese for ‘sex abuse cover-up’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

November 23, 2020

New York’s Attorney General has filed a lawsuit against the Buffalo Catholic Diocese, alleging its leaders protected priests accused of child sex abuse.

Attorney General Letita James said the diocese and two now-retired leaders failed to refer over two dozen accused priests to the Vatican for removal.

In response, the diocese pledged “full cooperation” with authorities.

It is the first suit to come from a state inquiry that began in 2018. Seven other dioceses are under investigation.

Announcing the lawsuit on Twitter, Ms James promised to bring those responsible to justice.

“While we will never be able to undo these horrific acts, we will do everything in our power to hold the Buffalo Diocese and its leadership accountable and ensure this never happens again.”

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

November 23, 2020

Attorney General James Takes Action Against Catholic Diocese of Buffalo for Failing to Protect Minors from Sexual Abuse by Clergy

ALBANY (NY)
Attorney General of the State of New York

November 23, 2020

https://ag.ny.gov/press-release/2020/attorney-general-james-takes-action-against-catholic-diocese-buffalo-failing

Church Leadership Failed to Respond to Sexual Abuse Allegations,
Engaged in Cover-Up of Credible Claims of Improper Sexual Conduct by Priests

Buffalo – New York Attorney General Letitia James today filed a lawsuit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and former senior leaders, Bishop Emeritus Richard J. Malone and former Auxiliary Bishop Edward M. Grosz, for failing to follow mandated policies and procedures that would help to prevent the rampant sexual abuse of minors by priests within the Catholic Church. The Office of the Attorney General’s (OAG) two year-long investigation into the sexual abuse of children and vulnerable adults within the New York dioceses of the Catholic Church found that allegations of improper sexual conduct against diocesan priests in Buffalo were inadequately investigated, if at all, and were covered-up for years. Even though the diocese’s leadership found sexual abuse complaints to be credible, they sheltered the accused priests from public disclosure by deeming them as “unassignable,” and permitted them to retire or go on purported medical leave, rather than face referral to the Vatican for possible removal from the priesthood.

“When trust is broken with spiritual leaders, it can lead to a crisis of faith. For years, the Diocese of Buffalo and its leadership failed to protect children from sexual abuse,” said Attorney General James. “Instead, they chose to protect the very priests who were credibly accused of these atrocious acts. Individuals who are victims of abuse deserve to have their claims timely investigated and determined, and the Buffalo Diocese refused to give them that chance. While we will never be able to undo the wrongs of the past, I can guarantee that my office will do everything in its power to ensure trust, transparency, and accountability moving forward.”

*
In addition to today’s suit, Attorney General James filed a motion to allow for the disclosure of the accused priests’ names and alleged conduct outlined in the complaint. [See also the memorandum supporting the motion.]

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

Complaint

ALBANY (NY)
Attorney General of the State of New York

November 23, 2020

By Letitia James et al.

The Attorney General brings this lawsuit to obtain remedial and injunctive relief for the persistent violation of New York nonprofit law by the Diocese of Buffalo (the “Diocesan Corporation” or the “Diocese”). For nearly two decades, the Diocesan Corporation ignored standards established by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (“USCCB”) in June 2002 to address and prevent the sexual abuse of minors by U.S. clergy. In direct defiance of the USCCB’s public commitment to reform, the Diocesan Corporation, through the conduct of its senior leadership, evaded key provisions of these standards, ignoring requirements for the investigation and review of alleged clergy sexual abuse.

2. Complaints of sexual abuse against priests continued unabated at the Diocesan Corporation from 2002 forward. Rather than adequately investigate and formally review the allegations to determine if priests were qualified to maintain their clerical status, the Diocesan Corporation privately designated priests that it considered to have abused minors as “unassignable.” Some of these unassignable priests were removed from ministry or allowed to retire in anticipation or shortly after the adoption of the USCCB’s 2002 standards. The Diocese permitted these unassignable priests to remain incardinated without any meaningful supervision or monitoring. These tactics together amounted to a practice of non-compliance with the USCCB’s principles and procedures, and they operated to conceal the actual nature and scope of sexual abuse allegations in the Diocesan Corporation.

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

AG sues Buffalo Diocese, alleging misuse of funds in covering up sex abuse cases

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

November 23, 2020

By Jay Tokasz

https://buffalonews.com/news/local/ag-sues-buffalo-diocese-alleging-misuse-of-funds-in-covering-up-sex-abuse-cases/article_9c323614-2da9-11eb-aad2-7fc022a2ecae.html

New York Attorney General Letitia James on Monday sued the Buffalo Diocese, along with retired Bishop Richard J. Malone and retired Auxiliary Bishop Edward M. Grosz, alleging that diocese leaders protected more than two dozen priests accused of child sexual abuse by not referring their cases to the Vatican for potential removal from the priesthood.

The civil lawsuit filed in State Supreme Court in New York County accused Malone and Grosz of misusing charitable assets by supporting priests the diocese considered to have committed sexual abuse.

The lawsuit was accompanied by the release of a 218-page report on the attorney general’s two-year investigation into Catholic dioceses across the state, with a focus on allegations of a coverup of improper sexual conduct by diocesan priests in the Buffalo Diocese.

The investigation found that Buffalo Diocese leaders determined sex abuse complaints to be credible, but sheltered the accused priests from public disclosure by deeming them “unassignable” and allowed them to retire or go on medical leave, rather than face referral to the Vatican for laicization.

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

Buffalo Diocese Accused of Yearslong Cover-Up of Sexual Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

November 23, 2020

By Liam Stack

The state Attorney General said in a lawsuit that two former top leaders helped shelter more than two dozen priests accused of harming children.

The New York attorney general’s office on Monday accused the Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and three bishops connected to it of violating church policy and state law with their involvement in a yearslong cover-up of sexual abuse by priests.

The lawsuit is the first state legal action against the Catholic Church in New York since a new wave of abuse investigations began in 2018, and it is the culmination of just one of eight inquiries, one for each Catholic diocese in the state. The other seven inquiries are ongoing.

The lawsuit represents what prosecutors believe is a novel legal strategy: The state will attempt to use civil laws, in particular those governing religious charities and their fiduciaries, to sue a Catholic diocese for failing to follow church policies enacted in 2002, after a series of investigative reports by The Boston Globe thrust the sex abuse scandal into public view.

It also may also raise questions about religious liberty: in addition to restitution and changes in the way the diocese handles sexual abuse claims, the lawsuit seeks to ban two bishops from management roles in any charitable organization, which may draw pushback from those who believe this encroaches into church autonomy.

The office of the attorney general, Letitia James, said its investigation found that the diocese and its two former top leaders, Bishop Richard J. Malone and Auxiliary Bishop Edward M. Grosz, used bureaucratic maneuvers to shelter more than two dozen priests accused of harming children.

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

Mississippi abuse trial delayed for ex-Catholic Church friar

GREENWOOD (MS)
Associated Press

November 21, 2020

The trial for a former Catholic Church friar accused of sex abuse at a Mississippi school has been postponed.

Paul West, a former member of the Franciscan religious order, was supposed to face trial on Tuesday for allegations that he sexually molested students in the 1990s at Greenwood’s St. Francis of Assisi School.

No new trial date was immediately set, Kelly Roberts, senior deputy clerk of the Leflore County Circuit Court, told The Greenwood Commonwealth.

West’s court-appointed lawyer, Wallie Stuckey, sought the continuance that was granted. Stuckey said he filed the request because he hadn’t received all the information he’s legally due from the state about the witnesses and evidence that will be presented to the jury.

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

Stop blaming children for the behaviour of sexual predators

SAN ĠWANN (MALTA)
Malta Today

November 23, 2020

By Josanne Cassar

When it comes to young children who have been exposed to sex, we must also be concerned about what happens next and how this emotional trauma will colour their future

Two headlines this week have perturbed me considerably, not only because of the stories they refer to, but because it points to an alarming inability by some fellow members of the press to comprehend how important it is to report sex abuse stories using the right terminology.

This is not about being ‘politically correct’, which has become a hackneyed phrase, and is often being used with negative connotations, much in the same way we sneer at people for being ‘snowflakes’, i.e. overly sensitive and easily offended.

No, the issue here is that the way certain headlines are phrased, and the choice of language in the reporting, filters down to the public which is all too ready to blame the victims instead of the culprits.

iNewsmalta.com came out with this gem: “Raġel jistenna li jgħaddi ġuri dwar sess ma’ tifla ta’ 11-il sena” (Man expected to stand trial for having sex with 11-year-old girl”.

LovinMalta, not to be outdone, wrote this headline about the same story: “Preteen Rabat Girl Sexually Abused By 31-Year-Old ‘Family Friend’ She Met At A Party”.

An 11-year-old cannot “have sex” with a man because this is not some romance novel we are talking about here. How many times does it need to be emphasised that a minor cannot consent to sex and, without consent, it is statutory rape? When this government lowered the age of consent from 18 to 16, a decision I strongly disagreed with, I knew that it would only give licence to all sorts of predators to feel that they could get away with abusing children even more. At 16 we are not adults, and although physically our bodies tell us we are ready to have sex, emotionally and psychologically most cannot handle it, and it often leads to dysfunctional sexual relationships for life in girls who confuse lust and physical gratification for the need to be loved.

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

Pope asked to dismiss Maltese priest convicted of sexually abusing a boy

MALAGA (SPAIN)
EuroWeekly News

November 23, 2020

By Matthew Roscoe

50-year-old Fr Donald Bellizzi was convicted on appeal of sexually abusing the then-teenage boy who had been entrusted into his care and the pope was given the recommendation by the Rome-based Conventual Franciscans Order, of which Bellizzi still belongs while in prison, to dismiss him.

Bellizzi, who was jailed for three-years, abused the poor boy from 2010, when he attended meetings to find out if he had the vocation to become a priest, in abuse that lasted until he was 16-years-old, when he was eventually able the stand up to the priest and report the abuse.

The Secretary-General of the Conventual Franciscans, Tomasz Szymczak, told Times of Malta when contacted that the matter was investigated and that the pope had been asked to dismiss the guilty friar.

“The General Curia is now presenting a request to the Holy Father to dismiss Friar Donald from the clerical state and from the religious order, in accordance with the regulations in force,” Szymczak said.

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

Muslim Communities Divided Over Abuse Allegations Against Popular Preacher

ROCHESTER (NY)
WXXI

November 22, 2020

Leila Fadel, Host: In 2017, in the midst of the #MeToo movement, a rigidly conservative celebrity American Muslim preacher was caught in a sexting scandal. Nouman Ali Khan was accused of using his position to lure and groom women into sexual relationships under the guise of secret marriages, all while he was legally married to someone else. The scandal divided Muslim communities as some came to his defense and others called for him to be held accountable. He largely disappeared from public life.

Now, like a few other men accused of being sexual predators at the height of #MeToo, he appears to be attempting a comeback. Last week, Nouman Ali Khan was invited to speak on an all male-hosted podcast called “The Mad Mamluks,” and that was met with outrage from largely young Muslims questioning why anyone would give him a platform.

We called Alia Salem to hear her reaction. She’s the founder of FACE, which stands for Facing Abuse in Community Environments, a Dallas-based organization that investigates spiritual, sexual and financial abuse by Muslim leaders.

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