ABUSE TRACKER

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

October 28, 2019

From a culture of silence to cover-ups: How Guam ended up with 280 clergy sex abuse claims

HAGATNA (GUAM)
Pacific Daily News

Oct. 27, 2019

By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert

A 9-year-old boy confided in his grandmother on several occasions that the parish priest was sexually abusing him.

The grandmother spanked the boy, identified in court documents only by C.B.D. to protect his privacy. She lectured him that the priest was “God’s representative and not capable of such actions.”

“Unfortunately, due to priests being held to such a high level of respect and stature, it was unheard of them to be capable of committing immoral behavior such as child sexual abuse,” Vincent P. Pereda, a board-certified clinical social worker, said.

The same story is repeated in many clergy sex abuse claims. Pereda said preserving the family’s honor became more important than protecting children.

“You certainly didn’t want a family to be known as accusing a priest, the spiritual leader of a parish community, of misconduct of any form,” he said.

This unquestioned reverence for priests and a “culture of silence” contributed to nearly 280 of Guam’s children being raped and molested by priests and others associated with the Catholic Church from the 1950s to as late as 2013.

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.

Is there such a thing as too much church reform?

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

Oct. 27, 2019

By Colleen Carroll Campbell

Almost a year after the Vatican removed now disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick from ministry and nearly five months after U.S. bishops met in Baltimore to address the ongoing sexual abuse crisis, many Catholics are feeling frustrated by the slow pace of reform in a scandal-plagued church. These Catholics may find a kindred spirit and cautionary tale in Angélique Arnauld, one of history’s most fascinating, if often forgotten, church reformers.

Born in 1591 to Catholic nobles hungry for ecclesial power and willing to pull a few strings in the corruption-plagued French church to get it, Angélique was named abbess of the prestigious Port-Royal convent near Paris when she was only 7. She was officially installed at age 11, on the same day she received her first communion—a sacrament she only dimly understood.

Angélique spent the next five years drifting in and out of depression-induced illnesses while her mother and an older nun ran the convent for her. When she was 16, a traveling Franciscan preacher inspired her to dedicate her life to Christ and study her faith. Angélique began living her vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience to the hilt, motivating her lukewarm nuns to follow suit.

Over the next decade, Angélique transformed Port-Royal from a haven for spoiled socialites to a bastion of religious rigor. Her nuns rose at 2 a.m. to pray, ate no meat, spoke only once daily during a recreation period, and divided the rest of their hours between hard labor and highly choreographed prayer. It was a grueling life. And in a culture that equated austerity with holiness, it made them spiritual celebrities.

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 about sexual abuse highlights priest who worked in Aspen

ASPEN (CO)
Post Independent

Oct. 28, 2019

By Rick Carroll

Of the 43 priests identified in a report last week by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office for sexually abusing minors, one of them assigned to St. Mary Catholic Church in Aspen over 40 years ago once asked not to be transferred when allegations against him surfaced.

Father Robert Harold White “was the most prolific known clergy child sex abuser in Colorado history” and his career is “a microcosm of virtually all the failures we found elsewhere in our review of the Colorado Dioceses’ child sex abuse history,” the report said.

The report was written by former Colorado U.S. Attorney Bob Troyer and covers sexual abuse by Catholic priests from 1950 to 2019 in the state. While at least 166 children were abused by priests during that time frame, the state’s three dioceses, who were aware of the abuse, did little to address the allegations they instead suppressed.

Though the 263-page report noted that following 1998 no allegations or abuse by priests in Colorado were alleged, there is no way to tell if that is actually the case. The case with White was emblematic of the church’s failure to address rampant priest abuse, the report said.

“The Denver Archdiocese was frequently dishonest with White’s victims, their parishioners, and the public about his child sex abuse and the Denver Archdiocese’s knowledge of it,” the report said. “White’s file reveals the Denver Archdiocese did all this for decades, deploying euphemism and secrecy to protect itself. His file also reveals that broad, deep and permanent harm to children was the consequence.”

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 revelations out of Oklahoma about Tucson’s Catholic bishop are extremely disturbing

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 28, 2019

Survivors fear that he may have employed the same tactics on abuse claims here

Victims’ group urges Church and lay investigations to uncover the truth

SNAP says that if anything has been hidden in this diocese it should now be exposed

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse survivors and their supporters will
— disclose information from a just-released Church report that reveals alarming actions by Tucson’s bishop, and
–urge Catholic officials and law enforcement to probe the way Tucson’s bishop has handled child sex abuse cases here, as well as in his other assignments

WHEN
Monday, October 28th at 1 p.m.

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.

Questions linger about church’s knowledge of abuse

WAYNESVILLE (NC)
The Mountaineer

Oct. 27, 2019

By Kyle Perrotti

Former Episcopal priest Howard White has finally been brought to justice for sexual abuse crimes he admitted to committing in Haywood, but with civil litigation still pending, the story isn’t yet over.

Last week in Haywood County Superior Court, White, 78, pleaded guilty to the sexual abuse of three youths in the mid-1980s and one more in 2004 and was sentenced to 12 years in prison.

The emotional hearing featured not only District Attorney Ashley Welch reading the facts of the cases into record, but also one victim’s powerful statement. Between the two, the details that emerged — details which White agreed were factual — confirmed just how monstrous the crimes committed by the once-respected former rector of Grace Church in the Mountains really were.

The four victims present seemed to agree that seeing White plead guilty while not having to take the stand was worth the relatively short sentence he received. But facts that emerged during that hearing raised new questions about how much the church may or may not have known. The victim who offered a statement, Meg Yarbrough, mentioned specifically the role hig

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.

Is Sexual Abuse in the Catholic Church Really No Bigger Problem Than the Rest of Society?

DENVER (CO)
National Catholic Register

Oct. 27, 2019

By Jennifer Roback Morse

A recent study reported, “only 6% of seminarians report sexual harassment.” The McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame produced this path-breaking survey. One optimistic conclusion people might draw from this report is “Sexual abuse in the Catholic Church is no worse than in any other institution of society. People who keep talking about sexual abuse are just bashing the Church.” In my opinion, comparing sex abuse in the Catholic Church with that in other institutions can serve a valid purpose. But I think we need to be careful. Some such comparisons can be actively harmful.

Let me take as an example, The Catholic League’s response to the Notre Dame survey. I choose them because they make a fair statement of a sentiment many people share:

In 2013, Hollaback! commissioned a College Harassment Survey and found that 67 percent of students experienced harassment on campus. In 2006, the American Association of University Women reported that nearly two-thirds of college students experienced sexual harassment at some point during college. In 2018, an online survey by Stop Street Harassment found that 81 percent of women and 43 percent of men said they experienced some form of sexual harassment during their lifetime.

Definitions of sexual harassment vary widely, and incidents range from a sexual joke to rape, thus making comparisons difficult. No matter, compared to life outside the seminaries, the condition in most seminaries today is far better than on college campuses or in the workplace. And they are a vast improvement over what existed in many seminaries not long ago.

The Catholic League’s mission is to defend the Church from slander. Our highly secularized world is filled with people who hate the Catholic Church and miss no opportunity to criticize her. The truly committed sexual revolutionaries honestly believe the Catholic Church is not only bad, but the worst institution ever. I don’t think we should even dignify that statement with a response, should anyone be blunt enough to just blurt it out. The Catholic League, and anyone who loves the Church, is not wrong to defend the Church against scurrilous attacks.

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.

Upcoming bishops’ meeting reflects current state of US church

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

Oct. 28, 2019

By Michael Sean Winters

Two weeks from today, the U.S. bishops will gather in Baltimore for their annual plenary meeting and, in a sense, the gathering is a metaphor for the situation of the Catholic Church in our nation at this moment in time. The meeting, like the church, is traditional, but no one knows what to expect, it will largely be ignored by mainstream society, and it is difficult to feel much confidence in the current leadership.

The biggest challenge is to get back to a sense of normalcy without downplaying the still potentially explosive issue of clergy sex abuse. The last two meetings were dominated by the issue with virtually all other business suspended. There were protesters outside the hotel and hordes of reporters inside. The usual friendly banter at the receptions seemed strained. The bishops as a whole looked haggard. And, the conference’s leadership did not seem up to the task, at the last minute, forced to withdraw its inadequate proposals by the Vatican last November.

One of the items on the agenda is to elect a new president and vice president of the bishops’ conference. It is widely anticipated that current vice president, Archbishop José Gomez of Los Angeles, will ascend to the presidency, and this is the one bright spot of the agenda: At a time when our president is demonizing immigrants and worse, inflicting real harm on real people, the bishops are about to elect a Mexican immigrant as their leader. Additionally, Gomez’s statements at home tend to be more powerful than what the national conference issues, and so we can all hope protecting immigrants becomes the bishops’ top priority in the year ahead.

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.

ANALYSIS: Jackson Diocese weathers series of controversies in 2019

STARKVILLE (MS)
Starkville Daily News

Oct. 28, 2019

By Ryan Phillips

Editor’s Note: This story is an analysis of the controversies facing the Catholic Diocese of Jackson over the last year, meant to be a companion piece with our Sunday story about the current status of the investigation at St. Joseph and the Jackson Diocese.

As the wheels continue to spin on the Lenin Vargas case, the Catholic Diocese of Jackson has also endured several other high-profile controversies since last November.

Most recently, the Diocese was reported to be on the receiving end of a civil lawsuit from its former director of finance, Arie “Aad” Mattheus de Lange, who has sued the Diocese and Bishop Joseph Kopacz, claiming he was fired in retaliation for speaking out against budget practices.

First reported by the Clarion Ledger in Jackson earlier this month, the lawsuit alleges that the reasons provided for de Lange’s termination were “false, pretextual, and did not rise to the level of grave reason.”

“Moreover, it is inexplicable how [the Diocese] could have determined there was a grave reason to terminate de Lange based upon his job performance where there was not a single performance appraisal/review,” the lawsuit states. “De Lange’s discharge was retaliatory in nature based upon his reasonable objection to the unrealistic budget proposed for Catholic Charities and the potential adverse impact it posed to the diocese.”

According to his LinkedIN resume, de Lange worked as the CFO for the Jackson Diocese from February 2013 until October 2018. The lawsuit alleges Kopacz fired him on Oct. 3, 2018 — roughly a month before news broke of the search warrant involving Vargas.

De Lange’s resume goes on to say he immediately found work as interim CFO of the Catholic Diocese of La Crosse, in La Crosse, Wisconsin, before being named as the Chief Finance Officer and Business Manager of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, in Texas.

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.

Schmitt close to finishing referrals in Missouri clergy abuse investigation

JEFFERSON CITY (MO)
Missourinet

Oct. 27, 2019

By Brian Hauswirth

Missouri’s attorney general says his office is close to completing 12 referrals of former clergy members across the state for potential criminal prosecution.

This involves Attorney General Eric Schmitt’s (R) investigation into allegations of sexual abuse by clergy members in the Roman Catholic Church.

“We issued the report about a month ago with our findings and announcing that we had the 12 criminal referrals, so we’re in the process of working with those local prosecutors right now, formally making those criminal referrals,” Schmitt says.

Schmitt’s office notes that in Missouri, the jurisdiction to formally investigate clergy abuse lies with local law enforcement and not the attorney general’s office. Schmitt expects the referrals to be completed soon.

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.

October 27, 2019

Accused of sexual abuse, a priest left Colorado for a safe haven: San Diego

SAN DIEGO (CA)
San Diego Union-Tribune

October 25, 2019

By Peter Rowe

In 1953, the Rev. Walter Buetzler was accused of molesting a fifth-grade boy after hearing the child’s confession at St. Joseph Parish in Monte Vista, Colo. After the boy’s father complained to the parish council and later to the Diocese of Pueblo’s bishop, Buetzler left the state.

He quickly secured a new job: professor of classical languages at the San Diego College for Men, then part of the University of San Diego. The German native, who died more than 30 years ago, taught on the USD campus until at least 1961.

On Wednesday, the Colorado Attorney General listed Buetzler among the 43 priests its investigation found to have sexually abused minors. The report concluded that, between 1950 and the present, at least 166 children were molested by employees of the state’s three dioceses. The report found that fewer than one in 10 cases had been reported to civilian authorities. Other dioceses were rarely warned when a suspected abuser moved there.

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.

Trial of Indian bishop charged with rape to begin in November

KOTTAYAM (INDIA)
Catholic News Agency

October 24, 2019

The trial of Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jullundur, who was charged with rape in April, will begin Nov. 11 in Kottayam. He has been accused of raping a nun repeatedly over the course of two years, and he denies the allegations.

The summons was issued Oct. 23 by a magistrate in Kottayam.

The nun who has accused Bishop Mulakkal of rape has complained against him to the Kerala women’s commission, saying he his harrassing her and others through social media videos.

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.

Kerala Cop Transferred After Serving Notice to Rape Accused Bishop Franco

NEW DELHI (INDIA)
The Wire

October 27, 2019

While the nun accusing the bishop of rape has said she is being targeted by a YouTube channel, the police officer in her case has been transferred.

New Delhi: The saga of the Bishop Franco rape case continues with a new twist: the police officer who served a legal notice to rape accused Franco has now been immediately transferred from his post. Franco is accused of raping a Christian nun 13 times, and a criminal investigation in the case him is ongoing.

The nun who alleges she was raped by Franco has said she has been harassed for months. Earlier this month, she said that a Malayalam YouTube channel named Christian Times had been harassing her. She alleged that this harassment was being done at Franco’s behest. Her complaint was docked at the Vaikom police station. She has also written complaints to the National Women’s Commission, Kerala’s Women’s Commission and the Kerala Human Rights Commission.

The channel itself appears to have a large following of over 52,000 followers. In just the last one month, the channel appears to have uploaded nearly 40 videos about Franco, many of them titled ‘Bishop Franco Mulakkal Nun Fraud Case’.

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.

‘People Are Afraid Of Cinema’: François Ozon Takes On Church Sexual Abuse

“Weekend Edition,” National Public Radio

October 26, 2019

By Rebecca Rosman

[AUDIO]

French filmmaker François Ozon (8 Women, Young & Beautiful) is known for portrayals of strong female characters.

But for his latest, By the Grace of God, Ozon says he wanted to focus on something different: the fragility of men.

“Usually in cinema, men are action and women are feelings,” Ozon told NPR from his office in central Paris. “So I wanted my next film to really portray [men’s] emotions and sensibility.”

By the Grace of God succeeds in doing that and more with its fictionalized portrayal of one of the biggest scandals to ever hit the French Catholic Church. Lyon-based priest Bernard Preynat is accused of sexually abusing dozens of young boys over the course of decades.

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 Sexual Abuse Survivors Respond To Report On Clergy Abuse

DENVER (CO)
The Patch

October 26, 2019

“They won’t tell us what the worst part is because they simply don’t want us to know,” a spokesperson for Zero Abuse Project said.

Advocates of child sexual abuse victims and survivors themselves reacted Friday to the recent independent review revealing the abuse of victims from Catholic priests in Colorado. The report released Wednesday said at least 166 children were sexually abused by 43 priests since 1950.

“They won’t tell us what the worst part is because they simply don’t want us to know,” said Joelle Casteix, a founding member of the board of directors for Zero Abuse Project. “We don’t know who the abusers are because the church won’t tell us, the Olympics won’t tell us, the Boy Scouts won’t tell us.”

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.

Colorado report names four local Catholic priests accused of child sex abuse

GRAND JUNCTION (CO)
KKCO-TV (Ch. 11 – NBC affiliate)

By Erin Crooks

October 25, 2019

[VIDEO]

In Colorado, forty-three Catholic priests are now facing substantiated allegations of child sex abuse; four with ties to Grand Junction and Montrose.

The Colorado Attorney General released the report after an agreement was made with the state’s three dioceses, Archdiocese of Denver, the Diocese of Colorado Springs and the Diocese of Pueblo, following months of prior investigation. It reports allegations that 166 children have been abused by dozens of Catholic priests in the state since 1950.

The report lists the names of four Catholic priests locally. Father Joseph Reade was a priest at St. Mary’s Hospital and the VA Hospital, Father Lawrence Sievers at St. Joseph’s Parish and St. Mary’s Hospital and Father Michael Descoise also at St. Joseph’s, all three in Grand Junction. It also mentions Father Gary Kennedy who was a priest in St. Mary’s Parish out of Montrose. All alleged incidents taking place between 1969 and 1987.

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EDITORIAL: The Catholic Church yet again fails to account for its victims

WASHINGTON, D.C.
Washington Post

October 25, 2019

By Editorial Board

A FEATURE of the Catholic Church’s rippling sexual abuse scandal is that past predations and coverups are often revealed by journalists, government authorities or victims and their advocates, but rarely by the church itself. That has been the case whether the alleged abusers were small-town priests, prominent bishops or the most renowned of the church’s alleged predators: former cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick, who served as archbishop of Washington.

The pattern has reinforced the impression of a church culturally incapable of reckoning on its own with what amounts to a systematic moral collapse. For even after repeated pledges of transparency, zero tolerance, and a new era of accountability from the pope and other senior officials in Rome and the United States, fresh allegations surface of rape, assault, molestation and other outrages, and generally the news comes from sources other than church figures.

An instructive case is that of Mr. McCarrick, who, after he was credibly accused of abusing minors as well as young adult seminarians, was removed from the College of Cardinals last year and defrocked this year by the Vatican — the most severe such punishment meted out to a Catholic cardinal in modern memory. In a Vatican statement more than a year ago, Pope Francis pledged that “we will follow the path of truth wherever it may lead” in Mr. McCarrick’s case, combing through “the entire documentation” in church records and making known conclusions and relevant facts.

Nearly 13 months later, that investigation continues without comment from the Vatican beyond a vague statement in February, when Mr. McCarrick was ejected from the priesthood, that a church proceeding had found him guilty of committing “sins” with minors and soliciting sex during confession. At the same time, it has emerged that senior church figures, including Pope Benedict XVI, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the former archbishop of Washington, and others, knew about allegations that Mr. McCarrick regularly molested young adult seminarians and pressured them to sleep with him years before he was stripped of his titles and publicly rebuked.

Now, new accusations have surfaced from individuals who allege Mr. McCarrick subjected them to abuse as children. According to sources cited by The Post’s Michelle Boorstein, at least seven men have leveled new accusations that Mr. McCarrick abused them as boys. They came forward after Mr. McCarrick gave an interview to Slate magazine, blaming unnamed “enemies” for the allegations against him, which he denied.

Writing under the pseudonym Nathan Doe, one of the seven provided a chilling account of childhood trauma at the hands of a man he describes as “untouchable and in complete control.” In the end, he writes, he and his cohort of victims decided “to defend the truth” by telling their stories. Meanwhile, the promised accounting from the church is still pending.

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.

Please, do the right thing and pay up before we die: Abuse victims’ plea to Catholic De La Salle order over compensation

GLASGOW (SCOTLAND)
The Sunday Post

October 27, 2019

By Marion Scott

A wealthy Catholic order is being urged to settle damages claims brought by victims of abuse at five of its children’s homes in Scotland before they die.

The call came after it emerged the De La Salle order, some of whose monks were convicted in court of sexual and physical abuse, is now pursing former volunteer managers of schools, claiming they should also be liable for funding the compensation payments.

The order won a legal battle to take the action but now those volunteers have appealed the ruling, meaning former residents are no closer to receiving compensation for their ordeals.

Dozens of elderly volunteers across Scotland, mostly now in their 80s and 90s, could face lengthy and expensive court proceedings over who should be held accountable for paying claims.

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.

Opinion: Torn between faith and profession

MONTROSE (CO)
Montrose Daily Press

Oct. 27, 2019

By Dennis Anderson

I’m a cradle Catholic.

I typically avoided movies concerning the Church. Hollywood doesn’t always portray Catholics and our faith in the best of light. When the movie “Spotlight” was released, I had zero interest in watching. “Spotlight” tells the story behind the Boston Globe’s investigative journalism team’s efforts to uncover the widespread of child sex abuse by priests in the Boston area. Subsequently they uncovered that the Church not only knew about these priests but made unbelievable efforts to conceal the epidemic. All told, there were more than 90 priests confirmed to have been involved.

The Globe’s investigation revealed that the Church, lawyers and some of the faithful went to great lengths to keep the accusations quiet. The team also exposed the fact that psychologists working with the church believed that these priests could be rehabilitated. Some were declared cured and sent back into parishes only to abuse again. One such priest was John J. Geoghan and since the mid-1990s more than 130 people have come forward with horrific tales of his abuse, according to the original Boston Globe article released in January of 2002. Geoghan was the early focus of the team because the church successfully had the court documents attached to his case sealed.

Released in 2015, the movie was critically acclaimed. Those involved in the movie raked in the awards in 2016 including the Academy Award of Best Picture. I’ll typically search out movies that are this lauded. I just wouldn’t budge on this one. Another shot fired at the faithful I richoceted in my mind. But I had no idea what the movie was about other than a scandal that I was personally in denial about.

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.

From West Virginia to the Vatican: How a Catholic bishop secretly sent money from a church hospital to a cardinal in Rome

WASHINGTON, D.C.
The Washington Post

October 26, 2019

By Robert O’Harrow Jr. and Shawn Boburg

The idea came to West Virginia Bishop Michael J. Bransfield while he was in Rome visiting an old friend, a powerful cardinal at the Vatican. Bransfield thought the cleric’s apartment was barren and lacked a comfortable room for watching television.

After Bransfield returned to West Virginia, in May 2017, he sent the cardinal a $14,000 check. “I fixed that room up for him,” Bransfield said in an interview with The Washington Post.

The gift, one of two Bransfield sent to Cardinal Kevin Farrell, was an extraordinary gesture from a religious leader in a state plagued by poverty. Even more unusual was how Bransfield obtained the cash he gave away.

The untold story behind those gifts illustrates how $21 million was moved from a church-owned hospital in Wheeling, W.Va., to be used at Bransfield’s discretion. It adds a new dimension to a financial scandal that has rippled through the Catholic Church since Bransfield’s ouster last year.

A Post investigation found that the money Bransfield sent to Farrell was routed from Wheeling Hospital to the Bishop’s Fund, a charity created by Bransfield with the stated purpose of helping the residents of West Virginia, tax filings show.

As Bransfield prepared to write the first of his personal checks to Farrell, a church official arranged to transfer money from the Bishop’s Fund into a diocese bank account — and then from there to Bransfield’s personal bank account, an internal email obtained by The Post shows.

“Bishop Bransfield made very specific requests,” said Bryan Minor, a Bishop’s Fund board member and diocese employee who wrote the email and arranged the transfers for the gifts to Farrell. “He wanted to have a discretionary fund.”

Bransfield used Bishop’s Fund money for a variety of purposes, including church projects in West Virginia that burnished his reputation as a generous benefactor.

The bishop also drew on it to send the second check to Farrell for the apartment, this time for $15,000, church financial records and emails show.

In all, $321,000 was sent out of West Virginia, in apparent contradiction to the stated purpose of the Bishop’s Fund, The Post found. Church officials have declined to identify the out-of-state recipients.

The hospital was the charity’s only source of funding, tax filings and hospital audits show. As a nonprofit institution that relies heavily on federal funding through Medicare, the hospital is subject to restrictions on how it uses its money.

In the interview with The Post over the summer, Bransfield defended the cash gifts to Farrell, saying they were “funds that I had raised.” He and his attorney did not respond to subsequent questions about The Post’s findings.

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.

Timothy Egan: ‘My faith is complicated’

SPOKANE (WA)
Spokesman-Review

October 26, 2019

By John Stucke

Unsettled by his mother’s deathbed words about her long-held beliefs, Timothy Egan, a New York Times winner of the Pulitzer Prize and bestselling author, packed his own lapsed faith, curiosity and Pacific Northwest travel wear and set out to explore his spirituality in his new book, “A Pilgrimage to Eternity.”

The journey took him from Canterbury to Rome along the Via Francigena (pronounced frahn-chee-jeh-na), a 1,300-mile pilgrimage through the medieval history of Christianity. Along the way, he wondered about our “malnutrition of the soul” and allowed himself to ponder the possibilities of faith that he has spent most of a lifetime neglecting.

“I’m still haunted by the last hours of my mom’s life. She was a well-read, progressive Catholic, a mother of seven. ‘I’m not feeling it, Timmy,’ she said, the color fading from her face, the strangling tendrils of her brain cancer closing in, that lethal glioblastoma. ‘I’m not sure anymore. I don’t know what to believe or what’s ahead. I don’t … know.’ “

Joan Patricia Egan died in 2012 after spending her retirement years with her husband, Harry Egan, in Sequim. Her remains were buried at sea in the Strait of Juan de Fuca.

Her son’s book shares his hope to find “a stiff shot of no-bullshit spirituality.” What he finds is something else: amazement and surprise in way he’d never allowed before.

Egan confronts the child sex abuse crisis of the Catholic Church. He writes of the rage and its effect on his family. And he celebrates the words, humility and actions of Pope Francis, who is trying to hold together the 1.3 billion-member church.

“I had to open a vein to write this,” Egan says. “My faith is very complicated.”

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 caught trying to meet ‘paedophile’ to abuse his son,

MANCHESTER (ENGLAND)
Metro News

October 27, 2019

A Catholic priest has been jailed after a man he arranged to meet in order to abuse his son, two, turned out to be an undercover police officer.

Father Matthew Jolley was duped by the officer he first approached on the Grindr dating app in September. It took the priest less than 20 minutes to tell the undercover officer – posing as a 36-year-old bisexual man – that he was sexually interested in young children.

Over the course of a number of depraved chats, Jolley, 32, admitted while he mainly liked girls, a ‘cute’ boy would also be of interest, the Manchester Evening News reports. After telling the police officer he wanted to ‘do his two-year-old son’ – who did not exist – the priest then sent an indecent image of himself.

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.

October 26, 2019

St. Paul-Minneapolis Archdiocese taps restorative justice to heal impact of sex abuse

ST. PAUL (MN)
Star Tribune

Oct. 25, 2019

By Jean Hopfensperger

Janine Geske, a former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice, seems an unlikely frequent flier to Twin Cities Catholic churches. She has been introducing them to a new method for addressing the devastating impact of clergy sex abuse through a process called restorative justice.

A philosophy of justice distinct from the crime and punishment system of courtrooms, it pulls together parties affected by a crime — including victims and their communities — and offers them a safe place and process to heal from trauma.

That’s been happening in Twin Cities churches for more than a year, said Geske. The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis is a national leader in using restorative justice techniques to address the lingering repercussions of clergy abuse, said Geske, who was among the panelists Friday at a symposium titled “Restorative Justice, Law & Healing” at the University of St. Thomas law school in Minneapolis.

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Suspended Indianapolis priest charged with sex crimes

NOBLESVILLE (INDIANA)
Associated Press

October 26, 2019

A suspended Catholic priest in Indiana is facing charges alleging he sexually abused a child in 2016.

The Rev. David Marcotte of Indianapolis is charged in suburban Hamilton County with child solicitation, vicarious sexual gratification and dissemination of matter harmful to minors.

The Indianapolis Archdiocese suspended the 32-year-old Marcotte from public ministry in February after its victim assistance coordinator learned of the abuse allegations. It said that at the time of the alleged abuse, Marcotte was assigned to St. Malachy Parish in Brownsburg and St. Martin of Tours Parish in Martinsville

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Roman Catholic bishops propose opening priesthood to married deacons in the Amazon region

ROME (ITALY)
Washington Post

October 26, 2019

By Stefano Pitrelli and Terrence McCoy

Roman Catholic bishops from across the Amazon recommended Saturday to allow married deacons to become priests — a proposal intended to address a severe shortage in the region, but also one that breaks from centuries of church tradition.

The document by the Vatican gathering — which still needs to be affirmed by Pope Francis — offers a significant shift in church views and could potentially signal a new strategy to modernize key tenets of Catholic tradition, such a priestly celibacy, as the church faces a worldwide decline in vocations.

The proposal, proponents say, would be narrowly applied to permit only selected men ordained as deacons to become priests. The gathering, however, stopped short of fully endorsing calls to allow women as deacons, an ecclesiastical position that can preside over some rites, such as witness marriages, but cannot celebrate Mass.

The bishops instead urged the Vatican to reopen debate on ordaining women as deacons — an appeal quickly backed by Francis.

For the first South American pontiff, the proposals for the ordination of married men are certain to bring fresh strains within the church. Catholic conservatives have been at odds with the Argentine pope over his broad outreach, including to divorced and remarried Catholics.

There is little disagreement over the church’s challenges in the vast Amazon region. Priest shortages are so acute that some Catholics are left effectively on their own. At the same time, evangelical denominations are an increasing force across all of Latin America and siphon off more Catholics each year.

It was about the Amazon rainforest. But issues over ordination were center stage.

“Many of the ecclesial communities of the Amazonian territory have enormous difficulties in accessing the Eucharist,” the bishops said, citing the celebration of the Mass. “Sometimes it takes not just months but even several years before a priest can return to a community to celebrate the Eucharist.”

The three-week synod was convened to discuss a broad range of issues facing the Amazon region and South America, including the church’s role in helping preserve the rainforest. But it was the proposals on the priesthood and women’s role in the clergy that drew the most attention.

Backers of opening the priesthood to married deacons say it is imperative to keep the church relevant in the Amazon. Conservative critics assailed the plan as potentially opening the door to the end of celibacy and married priests in other parts of the world facing a similar shortage in priests.

The measure, approved 128 to 41, now goes to Francis, who is expected to decide whether he will follow it by the end of the year.

If he does, it will address some problems but exacerbate others.

Since Francis succeeded a far more conservative pontiff, Benedict XVI, the Vatican has been increasingly consumed by culture wars between traditionalists and progressives.

The proposals also come at a time of crisis for the church after decades of abuse scandals and, in Latin America and Africa, added pressure from powerful evangelical movements.

These tensions are particularly acute in Brazil, a country long tethered to the rhythms of Catholic life that is now being reshaped by evangelicalism. Catholics, who once accounted for more than 90 percent of the population, are not expected to be even half of it by 2022, according to recent research.

Pope brings environmental push to Peru’s Amazon region

Evangelicals, meanwhile, are surging. They were a key constituency in the rise of Brazil’s nationalist president Jair Bolsonaro. A former evangelical bishop, Marcelo Crivella, is the mayor of Rio de Janeiro. And they are poised to represent more than 40 percent of the population in the next 15 years.

The difficulties facing Catholics are even more urgent in the Amazon.

Patrícia Cabral, the president of Catholic advocacy organization in Manaus, the capital of Amazonas state, sees it every day working in the Catholic community. Some parishes serve nearly 100 different communities separated by vast distances.

“There are few priests who act in this region,” she said. “Many of the communities are difficult to access and it’s only possible to get there by boat. . . . In some places, the [priest] can only go one time per year.”

But not all Catholic leaders in Brazil, which hosts more than 60 percent of the Amazon within its borders, were supportive of the proposal.

“The problem of the dearth of priests is a problem for the Catholic Church in the whole world, except in some nations. Why this exception for the Amazon?” said Bishop D. José Luis Azcona of the Amazonian state of Para.

Celibacy in the priesthood has been a central part of Roman Catholic tradition for nearly a millennia, but there are some exceptions. Some married Anglican clergy have become priests after converting to Catholicism. There are also married priests in Eastern Rite churches that are in full communion with Rome.

But the proposal would open room for married clergy in the mainstream Latin Rite church.

Francis has issued conflicting signals on the idea. He has said he does not want to overhaul the requirement of celibacy, but he has indicated he would consider ordaining married men of proven virtue — known as “viri probati” — in “very far places . . . when there is a pastoral necessity.”

That language led some Vatican observers to suspect that Saturday’s announcement was only the beginning.

“The possibility to ordain viri probati exists in all countries across the Southern Hemisphere,” said retired bishop Fritz Lobinger, an advocate for married priests.

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A Grave Financial Scandal or Papal “Get Tough” Posturing?

Open Tabernacle (blog)

October 25, 2019

By Betty Clermont

Vatican police raided offices of the Secretariat of State and the Financial Information Authority, the Vatican’s financial “watchdog” agency, on Tuesday, Oct. 1.

“They seized documents, computers, telephones and passports and blocked bank accounts,” Edward Pentin reported.

Five employees were suspended, including a priest. The police issued a circular to all security personnel, including the Swiss Guards, that the four lay persons were banned from entering the Vatican City State. (The priest resides in the city.)

The circular had photographs of the five employees “designed in the manner of a ‘Wanted’ poster or mugshot.”

Two days later, “Pope Francis named a top anti-Mafia prosecutor, Giuseppe Pignatone, as president of the Vatican criminal court over the alleged financial wrongdoing.”

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PA Attorney General calls Allentown Diocese property transfers “deeply concerning”

PENNSYLVANIA
Morning Call

October 26, 2029

By Emily Opilo

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said he is scrutinizing the transfer of properties into trusts by Allentown and other Catholic Dioceses as they were being investigated by a statewide grand jury.

In a meeting with Morning Call reporters and editors Friday, Shapiro called the property transfers “deeply concerning” and consistent with a pattern of secrecy the Allentown Diocese, and Bishop Alfred Schlert, displayed in the 2018 grand jury report, which revealed the abuse of more than 1,000 children by 300 priests in six dioceses.

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From a culture of silence to cover-ups: How Guam ended up with 280 clergy sex abuse claims

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

October 27, 2019

By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert

A 9-year-old boy confided in his grandmother on several occasions that the parish priest was sexually abusing him.

The grandmother spanked the boy, identified in court documents only by C.B.D. to protect his privacy. She lectured him that the priest was “God’s representative and not capable of such actions.”

“Unfortunately, due to priests being held to such a high level of respect and stature, it was unheard of them to be capable of committing immoral behavior such as child sexual abuse,” Vincent P. Pereda, a board-certified clinical social worker, said.

The same story is repeated in many clergy sex abuse claims. Pereda said preserving the family’s honor became more important than protecting children.

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Parishioners seek answers after monsignor is removed over sexual abuse allegations

FRAMINGHAM (MA)
WCVB-TV

October 26, 2019

Parishioners at a Framingham Catholic church attended their first Mass since learning their longtime pastor has been removed due to sexual abuse allegations.

The Rev. Monsignor Francis V. Strahan, who was pastor of St. Bridget Parish, was placed on administrative officials by the Archdiocese of Boston after he was accused of sexually abusing a child. He will not be allowed to have any public ministry during the leave, according to the archdiocese.

“It’s certainly a confusing time for all of us,” said parishioner Gerard Kelly. “I would say to the church, as a parishioner: ‘Shame on you. We deserve to know more. We deserve to know more of the facts.’ With regards to whether I believe the accusations or not, I don’t know enough.

“The single greatest thing they could have done for us, as parishioners, to find closure, would be allow us to say goodbye.”

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Abuso sexual eclesiástico: apartan a Balbi del ejercicio sacerdotal

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Página/12 [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

October 26, 2019

Read original article

La medida es provisoria y fue dispuesta por el arzobispo Mario Cargnello. La expulsión definitiva se decide en la Santa Sede de Roma.

El Arzobispado de Salta dispuso apartar mediante una medida cautelar a Abel Eduardo Balbi del ejercicio público del ministerio sacerdotal pero sigue siendo cura. Esta decisión surgió en el marco de procesos abiertos en la justicia ordinaria.

En la Fiscalía Federal 2, a cargo de Eduardo Villalba, el arzobispo Mario Cargnello presentó el año pasado la denuncia contra Balbi, adjuntando notas periodísticas y testimonios. El cura es investigado por delitos de pedofilia y trata. Además, en la Justicia civil tiene una denuncia por paternidad realizada por un joven.

Las acusaciones contra el sacerdote surgieron el mismo 2018 y se vinculan con su estadía en el período de 1983 a 1991 en Joaquín V. González, ciudad ubicada en el departamento de Anta, a  220 kilómetros de Salta Capital.

El vicario Ignacio Loyola Pinto, confirmó a Salta/12 la decisión que tomó el Arzobispado, “es una medida cautelar para favorecer el proceso y que no haya escándalo, se lo aparta, no puede ejercer públicamente el ministerio sacerdotal pero sigue siendo sacerdote, sigue viviendo como tal”, explicó. 

Loyola Pinto aclaró que “el apartamiento es provisorio hasta que se llegue a la sentencia definitiva”. Indicó que la pena máxima en el ámbito de la administración de la Iglesia Católica que se le puede dar a un cura acusado de estos delitos es la expulsión del estado clerical, pero eso decide la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, un órgano colegiado de la Santa Sede en Romaencargado de juzgar a los religiosos por los casos de abusos sexuales a niños, niñas y adolescentes. “La investigación está enviada para que nos digan qué hay que hacer”, manifestó el vicario.

La causa por filiación fue iniciada por el joven Cristian Vizgarra con el defensor civil  Virgilio Varela. El 2 de octubre de 2018 recayó en el Juzgado Civil, Comercial, Laboral, de Personas y Familia a cargo de Patricia RahmerBalbi tiene como abogado patrocinante a Pedro Brizuela.

Respondieron la demanda en febrero de 2019, de forma extemporánea, “la contestación se incorpora pero no se la tiene en cuenta en cuanto a las pruebas que puedan ofrecer”, había especificado la jueza en su momento. Sin embargo, pese a que en ese escrito el cura aceptaba someterse al ADN, no lo hizo.

La madre de Cristian se llamaba Nélida Vizgarra, tenía 26 años, y murió por una hemorragia en el parto. Estudiaba profesorado de Lengua y trabajaba de secretaria de la iglesia del pueblo cuando quedó embarazada. El joven creció pensando que su madre era una hermana, recién en la adolescencia sus abuelos maternos, quienes lo habían criado, le contaron la verdad pero no le informaron sobre la identidad del padre biológico. 

Cristian había escuchado por comentarios que era “hijo del cura”. A los 26 años, con la misma edad que tenía su madre al morir, decidió denunciar a Balbi para conocer la verdad y que se limpie la memoria de Nélida, a quien el pueblo juzgó, pero no al cura.

La denuncia que Vizgarra decidió hacer pública sirvió para que también las menciones a Balbi en el pueblo de Joaquín Víctor González hicieran rememorar a vecinos y vecinas algunos hechos vinculados al sacerdote. Resurgieron relatos vinculados a abusos sexuales, supuestas fiestas y orgías en la iglesia con adolescentes y la venta de pornografía a parejas en la propia iglesia.

El relato de una mujer en González reivindicando la memoria de un joven que era su amigo y se suicidó sirvió para que se indagara desde la prensa sobre el tema de los abusos sexuales y fue posibilitando otros testimonios. 

El joven había contado que fue víctima de abusos sexuales, señaló a Balbi como el victimario y a la Parroquia Santo Domingo de Guzmán como el lugar donde se perpetraban estos delitos, también había acusado a Balbi en Facebook. 

El caso no llegó a la Justicia, el joven enfermó de esquizofrenia en su adultez. Un hermano suyo confirmó que también lo había contado a integrantes de la familia, dijo que enfermó por los abusos y aseguró que le cree aunque no pudieron realizar la denuncia.

El arzobispo Cargnello estuvo en J. V. González el 26 de noviembre de 2018 y fue consultado por las acusaciones contra Balbi, pidió perdón, aclaró que no había denuncias penales sobre casos de abusos sexuales y alentó a que le hicieran llegar testimonios a la Parroquia. Loyola Pinto confirmó que hubo personas que hablaron con el arzobispo.

El 30 de noviembre Gendarmería Nacional allanó el hospital Oscar H. Costas buscando documentación de 1983 a 1991, investigando la supuesta complicidad de un médico y de un farmacéutico. Según testimonios, a los chicos les daban drogas y alcohol en la iglesia y en ese contexto se producían los abusos. Este artículo fue publicado originalmente el día 25 de octubre de 2019

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October 25, 2019

Irish ex-priest who abused at least 25 children in California arrested in Portugal

NEW YORK (NY)
IrishCentral

Oct. 25, 2019

Former priest, Limerick-born Oliver O’Grady arrested on child pornography charges and will be returned to Ireland to face up to his crimes.

The former Catholic priest Oliver O’Grady has been arrested in the Algarve, in Portugal, under a European Arrest Warrant.

O’Grady, born in Limerick, was ordained as a priest in California in 1971. The pedophile was sentenced to 14 years in prison in the United States for the rape and sexual abuse of at least 25 children, including two young brothers.

He was paroled after seven years before being deported back to Ireland in 2000.

In 2006, O’Grady was the subject of an award-winning documentary, Deliver Us from Evil. The movie detailed how he preyed on children and how the Catholic church moved him from parish to parish and knew that abuses were happening.

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New Lawsuit Filed in California Against Abusive Monsignor from New York

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 25, 2019

In a new lawsuit, a New York native priest is accused of molesting a California child. He is Monsignor Vito Frances Mistretta, originally of Brooklyn. We urge Brooklyn Catholic officials – from Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio down to the parish secretaries and bookkeepers – to aggressively seek out more victims, witnesses and whistleblowers who could shed light on these abuse reports.

The case is among the first of such suits to be filed under a just-signed California “civil window” law – similar to one in New York – that gives potentially thousands of childhood sexual abuse victims (regardless of their age) three years to sue those who committed and concealed childhood sexual abuse.

In April, Mistretta was listed on the official Sacramento diocese’s ‘credibly accused clerics’ list for at least two alleged crimes. Since then, that list has been updated and now shows four known Mistretta victims.

Mistretta worked at churches in at least three California towns: Sacramento, Roseville and Citrus Heights.

The victim is Michael Thomas, who was abused as a child at Holy Family Catholic church in Citrus Heights CA in 1969. Thomas is urging others to file reports with the California attorney general if they know of or suspect abuse or cover ups by Christian Brothers.

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A church leader’s abuse and a woman’s long struggle: ”I don’t know about normal love’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

Oct. 25, 2019

By Justin Wm. Moyer The Washington Post

Lauren Griffis says she was groomed by a Virginia church youth leader from the time she was 11. The man crept into her life, forging bonds with her family before prosecutors say he sexually abused her multiple times at age 16.

Justice was swift. Two weeks after the physical relationship began, Lauren’s mother called police. The man was arrested in 2016, serving a year in jail for taking indecent liberties with a child as church leaders struggled to respond to a crisis in their congregation.

With a rise in clergy abuse cases coming to light in the MeToo era, some church leaders are becoming transparent with congregants, rather than sweeping allegations under the rug. More than a dozen investigations of the Catholic church were announced last year in the United States, with other scandals among Southern Baptists and evangelical churches.

Experts broadly agree on best practices for church leaders to come forward in abuse cases, but a lack of data and the historical underreporting of sex abuse in the church can make it difficult to know how to address it.

“This issue should never be behind us,” said Boz Tchividjian, executive director of the nonprofit Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment. “It should always be on our radar screen.”

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Catholic priest thought he was meeting paedophile from Grindr to arrange abuse

MANCHESTER (ENGLAND)
Manchester Evening Sun

Oct. 25, 2019

By Sam Yarwood and Lynda Roughley

A pervert Catholic priest thought he was meeting another paedophile to arrange the abuse of his ‘two-year-old-son’ – only to be taken down by an undercover cop.

Father Matthew Jolley was stung by the officer after he started talking to him on the dating app Grindr in September. The child didn’t exist.

The cop created a fake profile, posing as a 36-year-old bisexual.

Less than 20 minutes later, he received a message from Jolley saying he was interested sexually in young children.

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Accusations against the Rev. John Beno stun Puebloans

PUEBLO (CO)
Pueblo Chieftain

Oct. 25, 2019

By Anthony A. Mestas

Pueblo politicians who worked with the late Rev. John Beno — and undoubtedly many people in the community — were shocked when they heard the sex abuse allegations levied against the popular and well-known Catholic priest, who also was a former state senator.

Beno was one of 43 Catholic priests named in the Colorado Special Master’s Report on child sexual abuse that accused them of sexually abusing at least 166 children in Colorado since 1950. The report was initiated by the Colorado Attorney General’s office, in cooperation with the Catholic dioceses in Colorado, including the Pueblo Diocese.

As a two-term state senator, Beno, a Democrat, served on the state’s Joint Budget and Senate Appropriations committees. He first was elected to the Senate in 1978 and left office in 1986.

The Pueblo Chieftain reached out to several people who worked with Beno politically. Most did not want to comment about the news because they weren’t entirely familiar with the report, but they did express shock.

The news also rocked Pueblo Catholics, many of whom sent emails to The Chieftain.

Mary Beth Corsentino, leader of Pueblo County Democrats, said Friday that the news hit her hard.

“My earliest memories of Father Beno were as an elementary student. I was a student at St. Therese (a former Pueblo Catholic elementary school at the Shrine of St. Therese),” Corsentino said.

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Suspended Indianapolis priest charged in sexual abuse case

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
RTV 6

Oct. 25, 2019

By Bob Blake

A suspended Catholic priest in Indianapolis has been charged in a Hamilton County sexual abuse investigation.

According to Hamilton Superior Court records, Fr. David Marcotte, 32, has been charged with three felonies — child solicitation, vicarious sexual gratification, and dissemination of matter harmful to minors.

The Archdiocese of Indianapolis suspended Marcotte from ministry in February after its victim assistance coordinator learned of the abuse allegations. The Archdiocese alerted authorities and notified the chair of the Archdiocesan Review Board about the allegation.

“The Archdiocese has cooperated with law enforcement throughout its investigation,” the Archdiocese said in a statement. “Fr. Marcotte has been prohibited from all public ministry while the investigation and legal process is ongoing.”

Marcotte was ordained in June 2014 and has served in a number of assignments since then. He has served at SS Francis and Clare Parish, Greenwood, the University of Indianapolis, St. Malachy Parish, Brownsburg, St. Martin of Tours Parish in Martinsville, Roncalli High School in Indianapolis. He has also had second stints at UIndy and SS Francis and Clare Parish.

“Let us hold all victims of sexual abuse and misconduct and their families in prayer,” the Archdiocese said in its statement.

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Richmond Catholic Diocese adds names of more clergy with credible abuse allegations

HAMPTON ROADS (VA)
Virginian-Pilot

Oct. 25, 2019

By Saleen Martin, Amy Poulter and Cleo-Symone Scott

Since February, the Richmond Catholic Diocese has added multiple names to its list of clergy with “credible” abuse allegations, including two with previous assignments in Hampton Roads.

The list has been updated in June, September and most recently on Oct. 4. It includes Anthony M. Canu, Patrick J. Cassidy, Terence Doyle, James J. Gormley, Donald Scales and Aedan Manning, whose name appears to be misspelled on the diocese website.

According to the Richmond Diocese, all of these men are dead.

One of those added to the list in June, Anthony M. Canu, was appointed assistant headmaster and registrar at The James Barry-Robinson High School and Home for Boys in Norfolk in 1972, according to Pilot archives.

He was also included in a 2014 list issued by the St. Cloud Diocese in Minnesota. He died in 2019.

Robert McCartney, executive director of the Barry Robinson Center in Norfolk, said this is the first the center has heard about it.

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Indian nun who accused bishop of rape says he’s behind smear campaign

COCHIN (INDIA)
Catholic News Service

Oct. 25, 2019

A Catholic nun who accused a bishop of raping her more than a year ago has approached India’s federal rights commission, accusing the prelate of being behind a defamation campaign against her.

However, a spokesman for the Jalandhar Diocese dismissed the defamation accusations.

Ucanews.org reported the nun, based in Kerala state in southern India, wrote to the National Human Rights Commission Oct. 19 seeking action against Bishop Franco Mulakkal of Jalandhar for allegedly tarnishing her image.

“I have been subjected to extreme humiliation and intimidation in various forms” since the crime was reported to police in June 2018, the letter said.

It said church authorities and church social media forums had spread rumors about her and the nuns supporting her.

False statements and fabricated stories aiming to tarnish their reputation and character were spread through social media channels, particularly internet channel Christian Times, the letter said.

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Apartan a un cura que abusó adolescentes entre 1983 y 1991 en J.V. González

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
Informate Salta [Salta, Argentina]

October 25, 2019

Read original article

La situación del sacerdote Eduardo Balbi está cada vez más complicada. La denuncia avanza en el fuero federal. No se presentó a la extracción de sangre para el ADN por casos de filiación. Lo acusan de “usar la iglesia para orgías”.

El fiscal Eduardo Villalba, a cargo de la Fiscalía Federal Nº 2, aseveró que “pronto habrá novedades” y que costó acceder a testimonios por la delicadeza del tema. “Hemos recibido pruebas importantes que hacen presumir que tendremos un desenlace en cualquier momento. Aún falta, se avanzó a paso de hormiga”, indicó el letrado al mismo tiempo que destacó la colaboración que recibió del arzobispado en este caso.

Villalba tomó la causa luego de que el arzobispo Mario Cargnello y los abogados asesores de la Iglesia le pidieran investigar el caso, según publica El Tribuno hoy. Las denuncias apuntan a una posible connivencia entre el sacerdote, un farmacéutico, un médico y otros hombres del pueblo para abusar o tapar los abusos a adolescentes. Los abusos se habrían sucedido entre 1983 y 1991 en J.V. González. Por la causa, Gendarmería allanó el hospital del pueblo.

Si bien reside en Buenos Aires, Balbi depende del Arzobispado de Salta por lo que el Tribunal Eclesiástico local decidió apartarlo del ejercicio ministerial hace un mes, a la espera de la decisión que tome la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe que debe analizar las pruebas y en base a ello expedirse sobre si elevará a juicio canónico la causa.

Hijos también

En cuanto a la denuncia por filiación asentada también en J.V. González, es la tercera audiencia a la que no se presenta el religioso. La última convocatoria judicial fue a principios de octubre para extracción de sangre y el posterior ADN. En las dos audiencias testimoniales del 30 de julio y el 30 de agosto tampoco se presentó.

Mediante su abogado, Pedro Brizuela, Balbi contestó a la demanda que estaba dispuesto a someterse “al ADN para tratar de aclarar el tema y que quede todo solucionado. No se presentó ninguna prueba. Lo que nos interesa no es litigar, sino llegar a la verdad”, dijo su letrado oportunamente.

No se presentó ninguna prueba. “El ADN no es obligatorio, cuando la persona no quiere es un indicio en su contra y hay que probar -la filiación- con testigos o por otros medios”. 

La inasistencia a los requerimientos judiciales lo deja a Balbi entre las cuerdas. “El ADN no es obligatorio, cuando la persona no quiere es un indicio en su contra y hay que probar -la filiación- con testigos o por otros medios”, indicó Virgilio Varela, defensor civil del Distrito Sur Anta.

Uno de los supuestos hijos es Cristian Vizgarra, quien afirma que Abel Eduardo Balbi, el exsacerdote de Joaquín V. González, es su padre. Ya inició el juicio de filiación y asegura que “todo el pueblo apaña a la iglesia”. Lamentablemente su mamá murió luego del parto por haberse fajado durante el embarazo.

“Quería que lo acceda carnalmente” 

Las acusaciones contra el religioso se remontan a la década del 80 por “incontables abusos”. “Mi mamá hasta el día de hoy me dice que una vez estaba cuerpo a tierra atrás de un ligustro, mirando si yo no salía de la casa parroquial. Todos sabían”, indicó Matías a este medio. “Eran como las 16 y apenas me subí a la camioneta, una Ford Ranchera 0 km, no anduvo con rodeos. Me manoteó apenas subí. Evaluando su comportamiento ahora, me doy cuenta que estaba cebado. Me dijo que lo excité apenas me vio, yo en esa época usaba pantalones ajustados. Quería que lo acceda carnalmente. Yo era bandolero, así que le quise pegar. Aunque yo ya sabía, pero ahí se le terminó de salir la capucha. Después me quiso seducir con algo de dinero“, contó el hombre que hoy tiene más de 50 años y que aseguró estar dispuesto a hablar para saldar aquella deuda que “es de nuestros padres por no haber hecho nada”.

“Usó el templo de la iglesia para sus orgías, los chicos andaban por el pueblo tomando el mistela o jugando con las hostias”, recordó Matías molesto.

Las acusaciones en el municipio anteño hablan de “fiestas con adolescentes” en la parroquia del pueblo, obsequios y dinero a cambio de sexo. Esta segunda denuncia contra el religioso se agravó cuando mediante una carta anónima que llegó a este medio se involucró a otros vecinos de la época. La misiva agregó que en aquellas “reuniones” se empastillaba a los jóvenes con drogas que eran facilitadas por un farmacéutico, incluso algunos eran golpeados, por lo que varios de ellos llegaban en malas condiciones al hospital local donde Balbi habría contado con ayuda de un reconocido médico, que no dejaba constancia del estado en el que llegaban los adolescentes o desvirtuaba la información médica.

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Separaron de la Iglesia a un cura salteño acusado de hacer orgías con chicos en la Iglesia

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

October 25, 2019

Read original article

También tiene un juicio por filiación y se niega a hacerse la prueba de ADN. El fiscal trata de establecer si lideró una red de trata en Joaquín V.González, de la que formaban parte hombres notables del pueblo. Una periodista salteña destapó el caso.

El sacerdote Eduardo Balbi de Salta fue separado de la Iglesia después de que una investigación periodística revelara que era parte de una red de trata. Además, el cura tiene una causa por filiación, pero no se presentó a la prueba de ADN a pesar de haber sido citado tres veces. 

El arzobispado, a cargo de monseñor Mario Cargnello está cooperando con el fiscal a cargo de la causa, Eduardo Villalba. Se sospecha que un farmacéutico, un médico y otros hombres de Joaquín V. González fueron cómplices de numerosos abusos sexuales a adolescentes entre 1983 y 1991. Por la cantidad de víctimas, el caso recuerda al del “chacal ilustre”, el abogado de Gualeguaychú Gustavo Rivas.

En el caso de Balbi, el farmacéutico habría suministrado drogas en forma de pastillas para las fiestas sexuales del cura y el médico no dejaba asentado el estado en que llegaban los chicos a la consulta. 

La Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe analiza las pruebas y testimonios dentro de un proceso canónico.

El presunto hijo de Balbi tiene un parecido asombroso con el cura. (Foto: Gentileza Cuarto Poder)

La madre del supuesto hijo de Balbi murió después del parto y el joven creció convencido de que sus abuelos eran sus padres. La investigación inicial fue llevada a cabo por la periodista Silvia Noviasky de El Tribuno.

«Usó el templo de la iglesia para sus orgías, los chicos andaban por el pueblo tomando el mistela o jugando con las hostias»

Una de las víctimas describió cómo Balbi abusó sexualmente de él cuando eramenor de edad. El relato da cuenta de que el sacerdote manejaba prácticamenteuna zona liberada en la localidad cercana a Orán. Allí, cometía acosos y abusos sexuales.

«Eran como las 16 y apenas me subí a la camioneta, una Ford Ranchera 0 km, no anduvo con rodeos. Me manoteó apenas subí. Evaluando su comportamiento ahora, me doy cuenta que estaba cebado. Me dijo que lo excité apenas me vio, yo en esa época usaba pantalones ajustados. Quería que lo acceda carnalmente. Yo era bandolero, así que le quise pegar. Aunque yo ya sabía, pero ahí se le terminó de salir la capucha. Después me quiso seducir con algo de dinero», contó. 

«Usó el templo de la iglesia para sus orgías, los chicos andaban por el pueblo tomando el mistela o jugando con las hostias», dijo.

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Harvey Weinstein came off badly from his surprise appearance – but the audience came off worse

NEW YORK (NY)
The Guardian

October 25, 2019

By Steve Rose

Is Weinstein so devoid of self-awareness that he didn’t suspect he’d be called out at the Actor’s Hour? Absolutely – and the crowd’s reaction exposes the iron grip of the culture of silence

It is likely to become a drama school improv scenario for decades to come: you’re about to do your standup comedy set at an event for young actors when Harvey Weinstein walks in and sits down. What do you do? Walk out in protest? Perform a citizens’ arrest? Hide the potted plants?

For better or worse, comic Kelly Bachman found herself in exactly this situation on Wednesday when Weinstein, who is out on $1m bail ahead of his impending rape trial in January, shuffled into the Actors’ Hour, a small “speakeasy” on New York’s Lower East Side. He installed himself at a table and was soon surrounded by a small entourage (described as “younger women and older men in suits”). Bachman, who was up to perform, later confessed she’d had nightmares about spotting Weinstein in her audience. But if this was some kind of audition-by-fire, she passed with flying colours.

The entire episode has been well documented, but to summarise, Bachman adjusted her set on the fly to incorporate the kind of attack lines most people would only have thought of 24 hours later. She began by acknowledging “the elephant in the room”, or rather “the Freddy Kreuger” in the room. “I didn’t know we had to bring our own Mace and rape whistles to Actors’ Hour y’all,” she jokes to the small room. Incredibly, there are boos (in male voices) and a heckler tells her to shut up. “Shut up? This kills at group therapy for rape survivors,” Bachman responds, adding: “I have been raped, surprisingly by no one in this room, but I never got to confront those guys so … uh … just a general ‘fuck you’ to whoever.”

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A comic and an audience member confronted Harvey Weinstein at a show. The venue asked them to leave

NEW YORK (NY)
CNN

October 25, 2019

By Madeline Holcombe

A night of comedy ended in a performer and an audience member being asked to leave a bar in New York City after they confronted Harvey Weinstein in the audience.

Kelly Bachman was one of several performers at Manhattan’s Downtime Bar in a variety show sponsored by Actor’s Hour Wednesday night where, she told CNN, she spotted the former Hollywood producer. She used her time onstage to call Weinstein “Freddy Krueger” and call out rape allegations against him.
Weinstein currently faces criminal charges of predatory sexual assault, criminal sexual act, first-degree rape and third-degree rape, to which he has pleaded not guilty. He maintains that all sexual encounters he’s been involved in have been consensual.
The trial is expected to begin in January.

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Harvey Weinstein Turned Up At An Event For Young Actors. A Woman Confronted Him And Was Thrown Out.

NEW YORK (NY)
BuzzFeed News

October 24, 2019

By Amber Jamieson

“It kind of felt like old-school Harvey to me — having his own table in a Lower East Side bar, surrounded by actors.”

A woman comedian was booed and two attendees kicked out after they protested the appearance of disgraced Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein at an event for young performers in lower Manhattan on Wednesday night.

Weinstein turned up with an entourage to watch Actor’s Hour, a monthly event “dedicated to artists” at the Downtime bar in the Lower East Side.

One comedian, Kelly Bachman, called him out in her act onstage, referring to him as “the elephant in the room” and “Freddy Krueger.”

“I didn’t know we had to bring our own Mace and rape whistles to Actor’s Hour,” said Bachman in a video posted to Instagram.

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Archdiocese of Boston removes monsignor over allegation of sexual abuse

BOSTON (MA)
WCVB TV

Oct. 25, 2019

The Archdiocese of Boston announced Friday the immediate removal of a pastor who was accused of sexually abusing a child in 2006.

Rev. Msgr. Francis V. Strahan, who was pastor of St. Bridget Parish in Framingham, was placed on administrative leave, archdiocese officials announced. While on leave, the archdiocese said he will not have any public ministry.

“The decision to place Msgr. Strahan on administrative leave represents the Archdiocese’s commitment to the welfare of all parties and does not represent a determination of Msgr. Strahan’s guilt or innocence as it pertains to this allegation,” officials wrote in a statement.

Archdiocese officials said they had informed law enforcement about the allegations.

According to the parish website, the 86-year-old Strahan was appointed as pastor in 1983. Previously, he served on the faculty of St. John’s Seminary College and Theologate.

In addition to being the pastor of a church, Strahan is the vicar of the Framingham Vicariate, a collection of parishes within the archdiocese.

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Jesuit Prep sued again over sex abuse, this time accusing a priest and coach

DALLAS (TX)
Morning News

Oct. 25, 2019

By Jennifer Emily

A fourth former student at Jesuit College Preparatory School of Dallas has filed a lawsuit alleging he was abused by priests when he was a student there.

The plaintiff, a Dallas lawyer in his 50s, filed the lawsuit this month against the school and the Catholic Diocese of Dallas, among others, saying he was sexually abused in the early 1980s by two Jesuit Prep priests.

The priests named in the suit are the Rev. Peter Callery, a teacher and wrestling coach, and the late Rev. Patrick Koch, a former president of the school.

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Aquila: Report on Colorado sexual abuse calls Church to vigilance and holiness

DENVER (CO)
Catholic News Agency

Oct. 24, 2019

After the release of a report on sexual abuse in Colorado’s Catholic dioceses, the Archbishop of Denver said that the Church should learn from its past, and that spiritual renewal is an essential part of ensuring a safe environment in the Church.

Issued Oct. 23, the report examined the archives and personnel files of Colorado’s dioceses dating back 70 years. It found that 43 diocesan priests since 1950 have been credibly accused of sexually abusing at least 166 children in the state.

The report was issued after a seven-month investigation conducted by a former U.S. Attorney, Bob Troyer. Colorado’s bishops and the state’s attorney general decided mutually to support the investigation, which was funded by an anonymous donor.

While nearly 70% of victims were abused in the 1960s and 1970s, the most recent acts of clerical sexual abuse documented in the report took place in 1998, when a now incarcerated and laicized Denver priest sexually abused a teenage boy.

Denver Archbishop Samuel Aquila told CNA Oct. 23 that after the scandal of former cardinal Theodore McCarrick emerged in June 2018, Colorado’s bishops wanted an independent investigation of their own files. The archbishop said they reached an agreement with the attorney general’s office on the investigation because they wanted to understand the “historic nature of sexual abuse within the state of Colorado among diocesan priests.”

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Attorneys: Diocese still paying out benefits to abusive priests

ROCHESTER (NY)
WHAM TV

Oct. 25, 2019

The Diocese of Rochester’s appearance in a U.S. federal courtroom Thursday was mostly procedural.

However, it was a pivotal day for some survivors of clergy abuse as it was the first time they confronted diocesan leaders in an actual courtroom during bankruptcy proceedings.

“It makes it real,” said survivor Carol DuPreè . “This isn’t about dollar signs. This is about people’s lives.”

DuPreè is one on a nine-member committee comprised of nine sex abuse survivors who have filed claims against the diocese under New York’s Child Victims Act. Their role is to represent all abuse claimants and offer input on how the diocese might compensate them.

13WHAM learned Thursday that the diocese is still paying out dental and medical benefits to seven priests who are known to the Catholic Church to have sexually abused children.

Attorneys for survivors say they aren’t pursuing to have those benefits cut. Attorneys for the diocese say those benefits are due to run out at the end of the year.

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Former state lawmaker named in Colorado attorney general’s investigation of clergy abuse

PUEBLO (CO)
9 News

Oct. 24, 2019

Among the priests identified in the report on clergy abuse released Wednesday by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser: Father John Beno of Pueblo’s St. Francis Xavier parish.

Beno went by another title: Democratic state senator, from 1979 to 1986.

According to abuse allegations detailed in the report, Beno abused two young girls. One was 5 years old at the time of the rape in 1961. She reported the assault in 1996 to the Pueblo Diocese. During an investigation at the time, Beno denied even knowing her, but the diocese found “his denial is outweighed by corroborating evidence,” according to the report.

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How New York’s Catholic Church protected priest accused of abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Al Jazeera

Oct. 25, 2019

By Paul Abowd

When Tim Murphy published his memoir in 2007, it revealed allegations of sexual abuse he said he had faced at the hands of a Catholic priest four decades prior.

Murphy’s self-portrait depicted a rebellious teenager who grew up in a devout Catholic family in Millbrook, New York, in the United States of the late 1960s.

As a teenager, Murphy had begun abusing drugs and alcohol and had run-ins with law enforcement. That is when his parents asked a family friend – Father Donald Timone – for help counselling their son.

Murphy wrote that this priest abused his parents’ trust – detailing the years of alleged molestation he faced during trips to the country and overnight stays at Timone’s residence, beginning when he was aged between 12 and 13.

“At this vulnerable season of adolescence this priest left me mentally crippled, an injury that would last for years and years,” he wrote in the memoir entitled From Crack to the Cross: A Journey of Hope.

In 2002, Murphy took the advice of a counsellor and decided to file a police report. In 2003, he also reported Timone to the Archdiocese of New York, testifying in person about the alleged abuse he had faced.

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Charlotte Diocese discusses abuse claim review process, preps to release names

CHARLOTTE (NC)
Wautauga Democrat

Oct. 25, 2019

By Kayla Lasure

As the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlotte is in the midst of a comprehensive review of clergy personnel files in search of any indication of sexual abuse of minors, Father Patrick J. Winslow explained the ways the entity’s efforts over the years have focused on education, prevention and accountability.

Winslow met with media on Oct. 23 at the St. Aloysius Catholic Church in Hickory to discuss several issues: how the Diocese of Charlotte has responded to the abuse crisis since 2002, how current abuse allegations are handled and the work of the comprehensive review.

Local ties to allegations

A Pennsylvania grand jury filed a report in 2018 revealing hundreds of priests who were accused of abusing more than 1,000 children and that church leaders took steps to cover up the crimes. As a result of this, several dioceses and orders have decided to release the names of accused priests.

In December 2018, the Maryland Province Jesuits released a list of names of priests who were “credibly” accused of sexually abusing minors. The Diocese of Charlotte has since followed suit, and announced its plan to release names by the end of 2019.

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Sin and consent: Houston case reveals why clergy must be held to the highest standard

HOUSTON (TX)
Dallas Morning News [Dallas TX]

October 25, 2019

By Dallas Morning News Editorial Board

Read original article

This relationship’s legality is murky; its morality is not.

In the era of #MeToo and #ChurchToo, when new revelations of clergy abuse seem to arise daily, we can’t afford to make excuses for faith leaders. In fact, those who care for our souls should be held to the highest moral standard.

But that’s not what happened in Houston last week. A grand jury declined to indict Monsignor Frank Rossi, who admitted to having an inappropriate sexual relationship with parishioner Laura Pontikes.

Rossi was formerly the vicar general to Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, the Catholic archbishop of Galveston-Houston and president of the U.S. bishops conference who has been leading the U.S. hierarchy’s response to the ongoing sexual abuse scandal. Pontikes claims that DiNardo hasn’t adequately responded to her complaint against Rossi.

Pontikes alleges that Rossi manipulated her into a sexual relationship while also serving as her confessor and spiritual adviser, even as he provided marriage counseling for her husband, and while he was soliciting large donations from the couple.

This is a different kind of clerical sexual misconduct: one with an adult. Rossi claims the relationship was consensual, which gives him plausible but frustrating cover, in our view. Under Texas law, sexual assault can happen without physical force in a relationship between adults where one party holds all the power. Think of college professors and coeds, doctors and patients, therapists and clients, employers and employees, or priests and parishioners.

The law does not say there can be no such thing as consent in these relationships, which is part of the reason such cases are difficult to prosecute. But the law does protect those who are vulnerable to predatory trickery or coercion. After all, the predator may ask himself, why use physical restraint to hold down your victim when lies can have the same effect?

Frank Rossi is a bad priest. That much is undisputed. According to the teachings of his church, Rossi’s relationship was immoral. His confession of adultery confirms it. He betrayed Pontikes’s trust while cashing her checks. He cuckolded her husband while giving him marriage counseling. What’s left to decide now is whether he’s also a criminal and whether the church will excommunicate him for the sin.

Based on the facts we have, we understand the confusion and disappointment over the grand jury’s decision. David Pooler, a Baylor University professor who has studied such cases extensively, told us, “I have talked to multiple survivors now and they’re just devastated. It’s like, well, what’s the use of even reporting? It has deflated and discouraged many survivors.”

Their discouragement over the sense that justice was lost in this case is borne of the certainty that morality was abandoned first.

editorialboard@dallasnews.com @dmnopinion

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October 24, 2019

Disgust, validation, hope: Survivors, Catholics react to report detailing 70 years of Colorado clergy sex abuse

DENVER (CO)
Denver Post

October 25, 2019

By Elise Schmelzer

Seeing Father George Weibel’s name printed in the newspaper Thursday brought Hazel Lorraine Kroehl back to the Broomfield swimming pool where 60 years earlier the priest abused her.

Emotions flooded Kroehl. Then old shame crept up, before being washed away with gratitude. Finally, the world knew the priest for who he was — a pedophile.

Then Kroehl, 72, burst into tears.

“This is the first time I’ve ever cried over it,” she said Thursday.

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Former priest pleads guilty to child sexual abuse spanning decades in North Carolina

WASHINGTON (DC)
Episcopal News Service

Oct. 24, 2019

By Egan Millard

Howard White Jr., a former Episcopal priest who was previously convicted of molesting a student during his time as a chaplain at a Rhode Island boarding school, pleaded guilty on Oct. 21 to 15 charges of child sexual abuse in North Carolina.

White, 78, was sentenced to 12 years in prison for the assaults that took place from 1984 to 2004, while he was rector of Grace Church in the Mountains in Waynesville, according to the Asheville Citizen-Times.

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Plaintiffs claiming sexual abuse from 1960s file civil suits against Diocese of Rockville Centre

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
News 12 Long Island

October 23, 2019

A total of five lawsuits were filed Tuesday against the Diocese of Rockville Centre alleging priest sex abuse from decades ago.

Sheryn Silvestre and Joanne Jack made the allegations in February that they were abused by staff at St. Agnes Parish in the 1960s. Joanne’s brother, Alexander, has now joined the case, alleging that he too was sexually abused.

Boston attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who is representing the three plaintiffs, filed civil complaints that accuse Msgr. John McGann, who would later become bishop of the diocese. It also includes Msgr. Edward Melton, Father Robert L. Brown, and the parish janitor, John Hanlon.

All four men accused are now deceased.

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3 File Lawsuit Against Late Bishop McGann Alleging Sexual Assault

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY
Patch

October 23, 2019

By Alex Costello

They also named others in the lawsuit, claiming they were abused as children in the 1960s.

Two women and a man have filed a lawsuit today against the late Bishop John McGann, accusing him of sexually assaulting them when they were children, before he was the leader of the Diocese of Rockville Centre.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of the three by attorney Mitchell Garabedian, who has made a career of suing the Catholic church for sexual abuse of children. Garabedian filed the lawsuits today under the New York State Child Victims Act, according to Newsday, which created a one-year window for past victims of sexual abuse to file suit against their abusers, even though the original statute of limitations passed.

Garabedian originally announced his intent to file lawsuits in February. Today, he named the three who were filing the charges: Sheryn Silvestre, 64, of Thurman, New York; Joanne Jack, 63, of Eden Prairie, Minnesota; and her brother, Alexander Jack Jr., 66, of Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, Newsday reported.

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The Vatican’s new corruption scandal

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Post

October 23, 2019

By JD Flynn

Jesus told his disciples: “Nothing is hid that shall not be made manifest, nor anything secret that shall not be known and come to light.” The teaching is playing out in real time at the Vatican, the heart of the church founded by the Nazarene.

Prosecutors and gendarmerie staged a raid this month into the usually serene offices of the Vatican’s Secretariat of State, seizing computers and caches of documents from archives and employees. Two weeks later, the longtime head of Pope Francis’ security service resigned after leaked ­reports of alleged financial wrongdoing in the Vatican.

Reports have emerged detailing the movement of Vatican money through slush funds across Europe — and a Vatican investment of more than $250 million into luxury London apartments, brokered through a ­financier who profited even while the Vatican’s investment tanked.

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Rose McGowan lawsuit accuses Weinstein of ‘diabolical’ effort to silence her

UNITED STATES
The Guardian

October 23, 2019

By Mario Koran and agencies

Movie mogul engaged fixers, lawyers and spies to intimidate actor over her allegations of rape, she says in lawsuit

The actor Rose McGowan alleges in a new lawsuit that the film mogul Harvey Weinstein took “diabolical” actions when he learned she was going to write in a memoir that the producer had raped her decades prior, engaging a team of fixers, lawyers and an international spy agency to intimidate and silence her.

“This case is about a diabolical and illegal effort by one of America’s most powerful men and his representatives to silence sexual-assault victims. And it is about the courageous women and journalists who persisted to reveal the truth,” the actor alleges in the lawsuit filed in a California federal court on Wednesday.

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Catholic group accused of plots against Pope Francis deny coup claims

UNITED KINGDOM
Express

October 23, 2019

By Charlie Bradley

POPE FRANCIS is allegedly facing a multi-layered threat to his papacy from the conservative wing of the Catholic Church, with multiple figures and organisations attempting to thwart his progressive and unconventional policy – but he has received a message of support from enigmatic faction Opus Dei.

Opus Dei had a friendly relationship with Francis’ predecessor Pope Benedict XVI, But Francis’ methods represent a contrast to previous conventions in the Catholic Church. The Vatican has seen a more progressive tenure with cardinals being appointed from less recognised churches to represent all corners of Catholicism across the globe. This led to speculation over a rift between Opus Dei and the new pope, with Wayne Madsen writing in his article for Strategic Culture Foundation that the organisation conspired with other conservatives in the Vatican to undermine Francis.

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‘I Feel Lucky That It Wasn’t Me’: Catholics Grapple With Revelations About Prominent Priests

DENVER (CO)
Colorado Public Radio

Oct. 24, 2019

By Andrew Kenney

Joe Lupfer recognized the names of the priests instantly: Lawrence St. Peter and James Rasby.

Rasby had been the priest at Lupfer’s communion. St. Peter was a pastor and the president of Holy Family High School, where Lupfer graduated in 1975.

St. Peter “had kind of an aura about him,” he recalled.

“When he would say mass, it was all very precise.”

But the allegations contained in a new report from the Colorado Attorney General’s Office — no, those didn’t make sense to Lupfer. Not at first.

“I really, honestly, would say it’s skepticism,” Lupfer, 63, said of his initial reaction. “I can’t say that I believe it right now.”

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Former Catholic and Anglican Priest to Stand Trial for 22 Sex Crimes

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 24, 2019

A former Anglican priest from Fresno accused of sexually assaulting nearly a dozen victims will stand trial. We applaud this move and hope this news encourages others who may have seen, suspected, or suffered his abuse to come forward and make a report to police.

Fr. Jesus Antonio Castaneda Serna is the former head of Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Church in Fresno, CA. Prior to that he was a Catholic priest in Cowiche, Washington. However, he was fired by Church officials in the Diocese of Yakima, Washington. It was later revealed that Fr. Serna was accused of sexually abusing a man in that diocese.

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Church Officials Move Slowly on Abusive KC Priest Promoted to Bishop

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 24, 2019

Catholic officials are keeping kids at risk by dragging their feet with a bishop who has multiple “substantiated” allegations of child sexual abuse.

Bishop Joseph Hart is accused of molesting at least ten Missouri boys, and he has allegations from at least six boys in Wyoming. Yet bishops in Kansas City, Cheyenne and Rome are moving at a snail’s pace to protect the vulnerable and heal the wounded.

Kansas City church officials are reportedly putting any diocesan effort “on hold until the process in Rome finishes.” But no matter what happens in Rome, cases have already been settled against Bishop Hart here, and the last diocese he worked in has publicly named him among those clergy with “substantiated” allegations of abuse. Given this, there is nothing preventing Bishop James Vann Johnston, Jr. from warning parents, parishioners, prosecutors, and police about Bishop Hart, using pulpit announcements, church bulletins and parish websites. In fact, we believe it is the bishop’s civic and moral duty to do this, immediately and aggressively.

In Kansas City, there are no doubt still some adults who may trust their kids around Bishop Hart, and we are confident that there are still victims who are suffering because of his abuse.

We believe Wyoming Bishop Steven Biegler took more steps to warn police and the public about Bishop Hart than his predecessors did. But there is so much more he could and should do to safeguard children and help victims now.

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Irish ex-priest who raped and abused at least 25 kids in California is arrested in Portugal for child pornography

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Daily Mail

Oct. 24, 2019

A paedophile Irish ex-priest who raped and abused at least 25 children in California, has reportedly been arrested on the Algarve.

Portuguese police sources confirmed on Thursday Oliver O’Grady, 74, the subject of a 2006 documentary film called Deliver Us from Evil, was the man they had arrested.

O’Grady is understood to have been held on a European Arrest Warrant by Portuguese police.

In January 2012 O’Grady was jailed for three years for possession of large amounts of child pornography.

The images were discovered after the defrocked priest left his laptop on an Aer Lingus flight.

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Prolific Predator Priest Arrested for Child Porn in Portugal

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 24, 2019

One of the world’s most notorious predator priests – who admitted molesting at least 25 children in California, was deported to Ireland and later moving to the Netherlands – has just been arrested again. We hope he spends every remaining minute of his life locked up so that children will be safer.

According to reports, Fr. Oliver O’Grady was caught with child pornography in Portugal. He previously spent years in a northern California prison for molesting kids and received considerable media attention in recent years because he was interviewed for and is featured in a highly acclaimed documentary film on the Catholic sex abuse and cover up scandal. (The award-winning film is Deliver Us From Evil).

Years ago, he was defrocked, convicted in northern California, and deported to his native Ireland. In at least one case, he sexually exploited a vulnerable adult parishioner and went on to molest her daughter and sons.

In 2010, a civil lawsuit charged that O’Grady repeatedly sexually assaulted a five-year-old boy in the early 1990s. The crimes reportedly took place in the rectory of Sacred Heart parish in Turlock, where O’Grady was assigned. He was babysitting the child at the time, according to the suit. It says that the defendants “had knowledge or notice of O’Grady’s prior acts of unlawful sexual conduct with minors” but “failed to take reasonable steps to prevent future criminal sexual misconduct and molestation.”

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Former De La Salle High School student files lawsuit accusing teacher of sexual abuse

CONCORD (CA)
KRON TV

Oct. 23, 2019

By Philippe Djegal

On the sidewalk outside De La Salle High School in Concord, former student Jay Hoey announcing the lawsuit he’s filed against his old school, it’s founders and religious order, the Christian brothers and his former teacher, known as Brother Joseph Gutierrez.

Hoey claims Gutierrez drugged and sexually abused him multiple times from 1968 to 1972.

“I’ve suffered from anxiety, depression, suicidal thoughts, you know, have been diagnosed with bipolar, PTSD. Pretty much everything you can think of,” Hoey said.

Hoey says he didn’t come to grips with the extent of the abuse until 2015, when he had a brain tumor surgically removed.

Gutierrez is on the official diocese of Oakland’s credibly accused clerics list.

He was also accused in a separate civil lawsuit in 2003, of abusing another De La Salle High School student.

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CO Attorney General: 43 Catholic Priests Sexually Abused 166 Kids Since 1950

Patheos blog

Oct. 24, 2019

By Hemant Mehta

Yesterday, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser (below) announced the results of his office’s investigation into child sexual abuse in the Catholic archdioceses across the state. His 263-page report covered a period of 70 years, and what his staff found was damning:

The Report reveals that it is more likely than not that from 1950 to the present there have been at least 127 children victimized by 22 Roman Catholic priests in the Archdiocese of Denver, at least 3 children victimized by 2 Roman Catholic priests in the Diocese of Colorado Springs, and at least 36 children victimized by 19 Roman Catholic priests in the Diocese of Pueblo. Thus, over the last 70 years in Colorado, a total of at least 166 children have been victimized by 43 Roman Catholic priests.

If that’s not enough, 97 victims were apparently abused even after Catholic leaders were aware the priests in question were predators. They didn’t do anything to punish those priests… and then they struck again.

One priest alone, Rev. Harold Robert White, had 63 victims. He was shifted to six different parishes over the course of 15 years.

While none of the priests in question are currently serving in the ministry, that’s only as far as Weiser knows. Of those priests who are credibly accused of sexual abuse and still working in a Church, he wrote, “We know of none, but we also know we cannot be positive there are none.” Yikes…

If there’s any upside for the Catholic Church here, it’s that leaders appeared to work in conjunction with the AG’s office, though there’s doubt that the Church truly handed over all its personnel files. The AG didn’t have the legal power to obtain documents that the Church didn’t want to give his office.

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MI DIOCESE FEEDS MEDIA FALSE INFO

LANSING (MI)
Church Militant

Oct. 23, 2019

By Anita Carey

Despite calls from the victim and a witness, the bishop of Lansing, Michigan, is refusing to take down an erroneous statement that excuses an abusive priest.

A newly published report on the diocesan records pertaining to British extern priest, Fr. Pat Egan, has exposed the failure of the diocese of Lansing, Michigan, to investigate an abuse allegation dating to the 1990s.

Accompanying the report, Bp. Earl Boyea of the diocese of Lansing issued a statement claiming current allegations have been handled properly, while it was “past diocesan officials [who] did not properly handle a prior case dating back to 1990.”

Both the summary of findings, signed by Peter Hurford of Honigman LLP, with the claim they conducted “an investigation of Diocesan records” and the diocesan statement noting it as an “independent external review,” show the review was limited to just the diocese’s files with no investigation into the accuracy of them.

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Jury: Ex-priest not guilty of sex abuse

CLOVIS (NM)
Eastern New Mexico News

Oct. 23, 2019

A former priest accused of sexual abuse of a minor was found not guilty by a Parmer County jury on Wednesday.

The trial of Peter Mukekhe Wafula began last week in Farwell.

Wafula, 40, served in Hereford, Friona and Bovina before he was removed from the ministry in 2018.

He was indicted by a Parmer County grand jury in October 2018.

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Archbishop elected head of national body

WINNIPEG (CANADA)
Winnipeg Free Press

Oct. 24, 2019

By John Longhurst

Winnipeg Archbishop Richard Gagnon will head the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops. He says he is humbled by the confidence and trust placed in him.

For Winnipeg Archbishop Richard Gagnon, being elected president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops is a “great honour and privilege.”

Gagnon, who leads the Archdiocese of Winnipeg, was elected to the top position during the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) annual meeting in Cornwall, Ont., last month.

“It’s a big responsibility,” he said, adding he’s humbled that his colleagues “have placed their confidence and trust in me.”

As president, Gagnon will lead the national assembly of the bishops of the Catholic Church in Canada as it addresses various issues.

“We don’t issue orders,” he said. “Our role is to provide guidelines” and assist the dioceses in “moving forward” on various issues.

One of those issues is reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples, and whether the CCCB will invite Pope Francis to Canada to issue an apology for the church’s role in residential schools.

Such an invitation is “an ongoing discussion” Gagnon said, adding the Pope is “open to the idea.”

“I realize many people want him to come,” he said. But “this is not a box for him (the Pope) to tick off.”

A papal visit, he shared, would be just one part of the larger process of reconciliation happening in local dioceses across Canada, although he acknowledged it would be a “powerful symbol.”

Another item on the agenda of the CCCB is clergy sexual abuse.

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Former Montrose priest among those named in special report highlighting child sex abuse

MONTROSE (CO)
Montrose Press

Oct. 24, 2019

By Katharhynn Heidelberg

An independent review of Colorado’s three Catholic dioceses’ handling of sexual abuse complaints lists allegations against Western Slope priests, including one who served in Montrose.

The review’s results and recommendations were released Wednesday as a “Special Master’s Report” undertaken by Robert Troyer, a retired U.S. Attorney, as part of an agreement between Colorado’s dioceses and the Colorado Attorney General’s Office.

The report says Gary Kennedy, a former Montrose priest who retired in 2011, was reported last month for alleged sexual abuse said to have occurred between 1967 and 1969, against a boy who was 13 – 15 at the time.

Troyer’s report says Kennedy, who served St. Mary Parish as assistant pastor during the period of alleged abuse, would take a group of altar boys to the church basement where he had set up a mattress behind a curtain and there, would take turns “wrestling” with each boy. The man who came forward in 2019 alleged Kennedy would grab him and grind his genitals against him.

The Archdiocese of Denver was unable to comment on specific cases, its spokesman said Wednesday, after the report was released. The Montrose Daily Press could not immediately locate contact information for Kennedy.

“We must face the past and learn from it, and we must know if our children are safe today,” Archbishop Samuel Aquila said in a letter and video statement released after the report. “Thanks to our ongoing vigilance, they are.” In his statement, the archbishop commended the survivors for their courage and recognized that more survivors might now step forward; Aquila pledged an open-door policy.

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Colorado Report Accuses 43 Catholic Priests of Child Sex Abuse

DENVER (CO)
The New York Times

October 23, 2019

By Liam Stack

Investigators said 166 children were abused since 1950, but victims’ groups said the number could be higher. They criticized the inquiry as overly reliant on the voluntary participation of the Catholic Church.

Investigators in Colorado released a report on Wednesday on child sex abuse by Roman Catholic priests that chronicled the abuse of 166 children at the hands of 43 priests across the state since 1950, with most of the acts committed by just five priests who abused 102 children.

But the investigation was criticized by victims’ groups. They called it toothless and faulted its reliance on the voluntary participation of the Roman Catholic Church, which the report itself accused of a decades-long effort to hide potentially criminal activity from parishioners and the authorities.

The report said that instances of abuse peaked in the 1960s and 1970s, but investigators said that because of shortcomings in church record-keeping and reporting practices they could not be sure the abuse was not continuing today.

“Arguably the most urgent question asked of our work is this: Are there Colorado priests currently in ministry who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing children?” the report said. “The direct answer is only partially satisfying: We know of none, but we also know we cannot be positive there are none.”

It said that files provided by the church “are not reliable proof of the absence of active abuse.”

The report was the result of an investigation commissioned by Phil Weiser, the Colorado attorney general, and led by Bob Troyer, a former United States attorney for Colorado. It came amid a cascade of similar revelations over the past year across the country, as prosecutors investigated past abuse and dioceses themselves released information about accused abusers.

“It’s unimaginable,” Mr. Weiser said at a news conference on Wednesday. “The most painful part for me, we’ve had stories told of victims coming forward — and they weren’t supported.”

Victims’ groups said they were frustrated by the investigation, which relied heavily on files provided by the state’s Catholic dioceses — Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo — under an agreement between the Church and investigators. Investigators in other states, including Texas and Pennsylvania, had used search warrants or subpoenas.

“That’s all well and good but how do you enforce that you got all the files?” said Zach Hiner, the executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP. “I appreciate that the A.G. is leaving the door open for a true grand jury investigation, and I hope that he will push for that authority now.”

The agreement also significantly limited the scope of the investigation, the report said.

“It does not chronicle abuse committed by religious-order priests in Colorado or by Diocesan priests before they were ordained,” the report said. “It does not report clergy sexual misconduct with adults, including adult Church personnel like religious sisters or adult seminary students.”

The report said that there were at least 100 occasions since 1950 when church officials received information about child sex abuse that they could have reported to the police, but that they chose to do so fewer than 10 times.

That was driven by “a strong culture of reluctance” to report allegations that might harm the reputation of the church or a fellow priest and it was reinforced, as late as the 1980s, by punishment meted out to those who did report child sex abuse to the authorities, the report said.

One priest was convicted in 2007 of assaulting a child and was removed from the priesthood in 2013, the report said. But it said the statute of limitations meant there was little that could be done to prosecute other abusers now.

Unlike in other states, investigators in Colorado didn’t refer any child sex abuse allegations to the district attorney’s office because most of the cases were too old and many of the accused abusers are dead. Four allegations were already known to prosecutors, it said.

In a statement, SNAP urged Colorado lawmakers to change those laws so that abuse victims could seek justice.

Samuel J. Aquila, the archbishop of Denver, said in a video statement on Wednesday that his archdiocese “would not hide from the past and must face the historical sexual abuse of minors by its diocesan priests.”

“As a result of the attorney general and the church’s shared efforts to have this issue investigated and a report published, several survivors have come forward for the first time and more are likely to come forward in the days ahead,” the archbishop said. “If any survivor wishes to meet personally with me, my door is always open.”

The report contained disturbing descriptions of sexual violence and detailed a decades-long cover-up that included church files that euphemistically categorized sex abuse as a series of “boy troubles” or “boundary violations” that were caused by “nervousness.” It said church personnel in Colorado stopped using those euphemisms only in the late 1990s and early 2000s.

Although most of the abuse happened decades ago, the number of allegations reported each year rose steadily as adults began to open up about childhood trauma, the report said.

At least nine children were allegedly abused in the 1980s and at least 11 in the 1990s. The most recent abuse allegation involved four children and one Denver priest in 1998.

The report said two cases of grooming a child for abuse, or taking actions to build trust that could later be exploited, had been reported since 2000. The most recent was in 2011, it said.

Dioceses took an average of 19.5 years to take action against a priest after they were informed of a sexual abuse allegation, and more than half of the victims were abused by a priest after the church had already been notified of an allegation against him. Seven abusers faced no repercussions at all during their lifetimes, the report said.

For survivors like Jeb Barrett, 80, who said that he was sexually abused by a priest as a teenager, the report did not go far enough.

“Survivors and families affected by the abuse are going to be retraumatized,” said Mr. Barrett, who lives in Aurora. “It is further victimization that the church won’t tell the whole truth.”

[Elizabeth Dias contributed reporting.]

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October 23, 2019

List of Catholic priests in western NC accused of sexual abuse to come in December

STATESVILLE (NC)
Record and Landmark

Oct. 23, 2019

By Megan Suggs

The Catholic Church in western North Carolina is conducting a review of personnel documents going back to the creation of the diocese in 1972 to release a list of priests accused of sexual abuse. The plan is to release the list by December.

On Wednesday, the Rev. Patrick Winslow, the vicar general and chancellor for the Diocese of Charlotte, came to St. Aloysius Catholic Church in Hickory to discuss the review process.

The Charlotte diocese is made up of 46 counties, including Iredell.

Winslow said the church adopted a charter in 2002 to prevent sexual abuse by the clergy. The charter includes a zero tolerance protocol where priests accused of sexual abuse are put on temporary leave. A review board determines whether the accusations are credible, and if they are found to be so, the priest is permanently removed from ministry.

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Tainted Kerala bishop faces fresh harassment charges

SHARJAH (UNITED ARAB EMIRATES)
Gulf Today

Oct. 23, 2019

A nun, who had filed a rape case against Catholic Bishop Franco Mulakkal, who is out on bail, approached the national and state Women’s Commissions and the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), alleging that the priest and his supporters harassed her through various online platforms.

“Attempts to intimidate and defame me and my colleagues through the social media were made by the bishop and his followers. False statements, imputations and fabricated stories tarnishing our reputation and character are being systematically spread through the YouTube channel, Christian Times, run by Bishop Franco and his aides,” the complaint said.

The actual intention of these videos was to insult and harass her, her fellow nuns who are witnesses in the case. The idea was also to exert immense pressure on the investigation officials. Though the Kuravilangad police booked a case against the You Tube channel in May this year, the channel continues to upload more videos, she added. Ever since the FIR was registered, she and her fellow nuns were subjected to character assassination, the nun said in the complaint. The nun stated that such actions are a violation of the bail conditions laid down by the Kerala High Court.

The complaint was filed on Oct.19 according to a spokesman of the Save Our Sisters (SOS), an outfit formed in solidarity with the nun against the bishop. “There is a concerted effort to defame her. All kinds of stories are doing the rounds. They started character assassination after all efforts to cow her down failed,” said the spokesman.

Meanwhile, the trial against the tainted bishop will begin at the Additional District Sessions Court 1 in Kottayam on Nov.11. The Additional District Sessions Judge Gopakumar has already issued a summons seeking the bishop to appear for a preliminary hearing on the charge sheet.

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Colorado releases new report on Catholic sex abuse in state

DENVER (CO)
Religion News Service

October 23, 2019

By Jack Jenkins

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser has unveiled a new independent report detailing allegations of sex abuse against at least 166 children by 43 Roman Catholic priests over the course of 70 years.

Weiser announced the more than 250-page report during a news conference on Wednesday (Oct. 23), describing the documented abuse of children by Catholic priests going back decades as “unimaginable.”

“The most painful part for me is that we have had stories told of victims coming forward, and they weren’t supported,” Weiser told reporters in Denver. “We can’t make up for that. What we can do is build a culture that going forward, when people come forward and tell their stories, they are supported.”

Weiser also made mention of a new reparations program for victims, which will be funded by dioceses and orchestrated by Kenneth Feinberg.

The report states that 97 of the victims were sexually abused “after the Colorado Dioceses were on notice that the priests were child sex abusers.”

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Jury finds former priest not guilty of sexual abuse charges

PARMER COUNTY (TX)
KFDA TV

Oct. 23, 2019

By Kaitlin Johnson and Arianna Martinez

Oct. 23, 2019

A Parmer County jury found Peter Wafula, the former priest accused of sexual abuse of a child, not guilty today.

The courtroom heard the closing statements today before the jury went into deliberations. During the closing statements, the defense told the courtroom, “There is no greater crime on earth than to convict an innocent man.”

On the other hand, the prosecution said, “A person who knows he should never be alone with a child has him alone in a place where he has control.”

The jury had three options to consider, including indecency with a child, assault or not guilty.

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Fresno ex-religious leader accused of sex assaults will get trial, judge says

FRESNO (CA)
Fresno Bee

Oct. 23, 2019

By Robert Rodriguez

After nine days of testimony from 15 witnesses, Judge Jane Cardoza ruled Wednesday there is enough evidence to send former Anglican priest Jesus Antonio Castaneda Serna to trial for allegedly sexually assaulting nearly a dozen of his adult parishioners.

Serna is charged with 22 felony and misdemeanor counts, including sexual battery, battery, attempted sexual battery and attempting to prevent a witness from testifying. With the exception of one woman, all of the alleged victims are men.

The defendant has pleaded not guilty to the charges. If convicted, he could face 23 years and six months in prison.

Serna’s attorney Ralph Torres said he will prove to a jury Serna’s accusers may have had other motives for seeing him removed from his position in the church.

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Diocese of Buffalo Updates List of Accused Priests Yet Continues to Omit Names

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 23, 2019

Church officials in Buffalo have updated their lists of accused priests. However, while providing more information, they continue to omit names, not presenting parishioners and the public with the full truth.

Buffalo church officials split hairs when they refuse to list the names of deceased priests who have “only” one allegation against them. If it weren’t for the Church’s history of obfuscating allegations, minimizing knowledge about them, and declining to investigate them in the first place, it is likely that some of those claims would have been corroborated many years ago. We also know that it is often after seeing that someone else has named an abuser that other victims realize they are not alone and come forward too. This has happened in the #MeToo movement, with university abuse scandals, and within the church abuse scandal.

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Grand Jury Declines to Indict Msgr. Rossi, SNAP Reacts

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 23, 2019

This morning, a grand jury declined to indict a Houston-area church official who had been accused of sexually assaulting a woman who had come to him for counseling.

Our hearts ache for Laura Pontikes, the alleged victim in this case. We know that Cardinal Daniel DiNardo himself told Pontikes that he believed her when she first came forward with the allegations against Monsignor Frank Rossi. We also agree with Baylor Professor David Pooler that this case seemed to be a clear example of nonconsent and are saddened for the victim that she was not believed by the grand jurors. We hope that she is getting the help and support that she needs in this challenging time.

To us, this case shows the challenges of recognizing the issue of consent, especially in relationships that have a power imbalance such as in the clergy-penitent relationship. It is nearly impossible for there to be an equal relationship when one person is coming to the other in time of emotional and spiritual crisis.

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Attorney General’s Report into Clergy Abuse in Colorado Released, SNAP Responds

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

Oct. 23, 2019

Today, the Colorado Attorney General released the results of his voluntary review of church records in Colorado. Unfortunately, absent subpoena power and the ability to compel testimony under oath, we are not confident that the attorney general was able to review the full scope of abuse and cover-up in Colorado.

According to this report, over the course of 70 years in Colorado, 166 children were abused by 43 priests. Our hearts ache for each one of these victims and their families. We hope that this report will now compel legislators in Colorado to take steps to institute legislative reform that can help prevent future cases of abuse and support survivors, such as reforming the statute of limitations laws that often bar survivors from bringing claims forward and exposing abusers and their enablers. At the same time, we doubt that these numbers represent the full scope of abuse in the state, especially given the revelations that church officials only reported abusers less than 10 times since 1950.

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For A Different Kind Of Catholic: St. William’s Activism, Unorthodox Practices

LOUISVILLE (KY)
Louisville Eccentric Observer

Oct. 23, 2019

By Danielle Grady

Members of St. William Catholic Church stood shoulder to shoulder on the steps of their Park Hill church, holding signs and banners declaring: “Refugees and Immigrants Welcome.”

“This morning, we reaffirm our long-standing commitment as a sanctuary parish,” Dawn Dones, the pastoral associate for St. William, told a huddle of TV cameras and reporters.

With that, St. William, located at the corner of 13th and Oak streets, became the first Catholic church in Louisville in recent times to publicly declare itself a sanctuary, but the parish has had many firsts.

St. William has long been known as an advocate for progressive, social justice causes, despite — and sometimes at odds with — the often-conservative nature of the Roman Catholic Church. The congregation’s activism goes back to the ‘60s when it opposed the war in Vietnam and began advocating for fair housing. Since then, the parish has voiced support for other groups and causes, such as Black Lives Matter.

“We believe in what we’re doing. We’re not bashful about it,” said Bob Eiden, a member of the church since the 2000s. “Plus, we’re the progressive center for Louisville.”

This forward-thinking spirit is represented in the way St. William is run and in the way it performs its Masses, as well. The parish is the only one in the Archdiocese of Louisville to be headed by a pastoral administrator (and a woman, at that) instead of a male priest. Decisions are made by the congregation as a whole, instead of being handed down unilaterally by its leader. And during Mass, norms are broken, including the use of gender-neutral language throughout the ceremony, not kneeling during the Eucharistic Prayer and reflections given by congregation members over Bible readings instead of a homily from the priest.

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Vatican still investigating claims against former bishop

TORRINGTON (WY)
Torrington Telegram

Oct. 23, 2019

By Seth Klamann

The Vatican’s “administrative penal process” into former Wyoming bishop Joseph Hart — which could see the cleric removed from the priesthood — has yet to resolve, the church said Tuesday, and investigations in Kansas City are on hold until the process in Rome finishes.

Current Wyoming Bishop Steven Biegler announced in June that Hart, who has been accused of sexual abuse by more than 10 men, would face adjudication by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The body was first formed to safeguard church doctrine and to investigate heretics nearly 500 years ago.

More recently, the CDF has been the highest court overseeing the penal process into disgraced clerics. Earlier this year, for instance, it upheld the conviction by a church court of the archbishop of Guam. The CDF also investigated former cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who was accused of sexual abuse. In January, the body issued a decree finding McCarrick guilty and removing him from the priesthood.

According to Crux Now, a Catholic news outlet that’s covered Hart extensively, the former bishop is likely to face a trial in front of five judges. A similar process was followed when the CDF investigated McCarrick and Anthony Apuron, the Guam archbishop. Crux Now also reported that former Wyoming bishop Paul Etienne asked the CDF to investigate Hart in 2010. It’s unclear why the case didn’t move forward then.

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At least 166 children have been sexually abused by Catholic priests in Colorado since 1950, new report finds

DENVER (CO)
Coorado Sun

Oct. 23, 2019

By Jennifer Brown and Jesse Paul

Catholic priests in Colorado sexually abused at least 166 children since 1950, according to a damning, 263-page report released Wednesday by an independent investigator who found the church expunged files and covered up abuse for decades.

It took nearly 20 years on average for the church to stop an abusive priest after receiving an abuse allegation, and more than half of the child victims were sexually abused after the diocese was aware that the priests were abusers, the review found.

The report accuses 43 priests, but most of the abuse was committed by five. In the Denver archdiocese, three priests alone abused at least 90 children. The report said there were 100 instances in which the church could have reported abuse to police dating back to 1950, but did so fewer than 10 times.

The findings come after a seven-month investigation into the church led by Colorado’s former U.S. attorney, Bob Troyer, and after an agreement between the state’s attorney general and the Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo dioceses. The report is the most comprehensive accounting of abuse by Catholic priests in Colorado to date and comes after similar reckonings across the nation.

The investigation — which was paid for by a private, anonymous donor — did not find any priests currently in ministry who have been credibly accused of abusing children, though the report cautioned that “we cannot be positive there are none.”

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Seton Hall Silent on Allegations of Homosexual Subculture at Its Seminaries

DENVER (CO)
National Catholic Register

Oct. 23, 2019

By Lauretta Brown

More than a year after the explosive allegations of sexual abuse of minors and seminarians by ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, one of the important unanswered questions is exactly what kind of misconduct the disgraced former bishop committed at Seton Hall University’s two seminaries — and whether this misconduct was situated in the context of an alleged long-standing homosexual subculture that could still be in place today.

In August, Seton Hall released a statement regarding an outside review that the university commissioned last year in the immediate wake of the McCarrick revelations. But although that statement indicates the review has been completed and found that McCarrick had engaged in historical “sexual harassment” of Seton Hall seminarians, it conspicuously failed to discuss the issue of homosexuality directly and whether a homosexual subculture had been found to still exist at Immaculate Conception Seminary and St. Andrew’s Hall College Seminary.

And the statement does not disclose what changes, if any, are contemplated to screening procedures for seminary candidates or the formation of seminarians to address the alleged homosexual subculture.

But according to some of the individuals who provided testimonies to the review, one thing is clear: The response to date by local Church authorities has been very inadequate.

In August 2018, Seton Hall University’s board of regents announced that it had retained Gibbons P.C. as “special counsel to commission an independent review of McCarrick’s influence and actions at the [Immaculate Conception] Seminary. Gibbons retained the law firm of Latham & Watkins to conduct the independent, unrestricted review.”

This review was commissioned shortly after a Catholic News Agency report that featured allegations from seven priests that McCarrick made sexual advances on the seminarians at Seton Hall over a period of decades, initially during his time as an aide to Cardinal Terence Cooke of New York and later as bishop of Metuchen, New Jersey, from 1982 to 1986 and as archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, from 1986 to 2000.

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Sex abuse crisis: Rev. Donald Becker’s case now in Rome

BATAVIA (NY)
Batavia News

Oct. 23, 2019

By Matt Surtel

The case of the Rev. Donald Becker is currently in Rome, according to a revised list of priests accused of sexual abuse.

The newly reformatted list was released Tuesday by the Buffalo Diocese. It provides some information not previously available.

Although Becker, 77, was removed from ministry in 2002 and is described as retired, the case in Rome would decide his future standing within the church.

Becker served at St. Mary’s Church in Batavia from 1992 to 2002 when he was placed on sick leave in the aftermath of sexual abuse allegations.

He has been named in a total of six lawsuits filed since Aug. 14. In one, Becker is accused of molesting a boy beginning when he was 11 years old.

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Sex abuse crisis: Rev. Donald Becker’s case now in Rome

BATAVIA (NY)
Batavia News

Oct. 23, 2019

By Matt Surtel

The case of the Rev. Donald Becker is currently in Rome, according to a revised list of priests accused of sexual abuse.

The newly reformatted list was released Tuesday by the Buffalo Diocese. It provides some information not previously available.

Although Becker, 77, was removed from ministry in 2002 and is described as retired, the case in Rome would decide his future standing within the church.

Becker served at St. Mary’s Church in Batavia from 1992 to 2002 when he was placed on sick leave in the aftermath of sexual abuse allegations.

He has been named in a total of six lawsuits filed since Aug. 14. In one, Becker is accused of molesting a boy beginning when he was 11 years old.

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Danny Masterson’s Alleged Sexual Assault Victims Serve Scientology’s David Miscavige With Legal Papers

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Blast

Oct. 22, 2019

By Ryan Naumann

The four women suing Danny Masterson for alleged sexual assault have slapped the Church of Scientology’s leader David Miscavige with legal papers.

According to court documents obtained by The Blast, Masterson’s alleged victims are informing the court they have legally served Miscavige with their lawsuit. The service was done at the Church of Scientology Celebrity Centre International on Hollywood Boulevard.

The papers were given to an employee at the front of the center. The documents being served will allow their suit to continue on against Miscavige

Back in August, the four women – two of whom are identified by name, the other two are Jane Does, sued Masterson, the Church of Scientology and Miscavige. They accused the defendants of stalking them in an effort to silence their sexual assault allegations against Masterson.

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Danny Masterson’s Alleged Sexual Assault Victims Serve Scientology’s David Miscavige With Legal Papers

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Blast

Oct. 22, 2019

By Ryan Naumann

The four women suing Danny Masterson for alleged sexual assault have slapped the Church of Scientology’s leader David Miscavige with legal papers.

According to court documents obtained by The Blast, Masterson’s alleged victims are informing the court they have legally served Miscavige with their lawsuit. The service was done at the Church of Scientology Celebrity Centre International on Hollywood Boulevard.

The papers were given to an employee at the front of the center. The documents being served will allow their suit to continue on against Miscavige

Back in August, the four women – two of whom are identified by name, the other two are Jane Does, sued Masterson, the Church of Scientology and Miscavige. They accused the defendants of stalking them in an effort to silence their sexual assault allegations against Masterson.

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.

In Bad Faith: Child Sex Abuse and the Catholic Church

NEW YORK (NY)
Al Jazeera

Oct. 23, 2019

In a series of exclusive interviews with Fault Lines, several men across New York City come forward with painful memories of abuse by a Catholic priest.

They say that Father John Paddack – who was ordained in 1984 and had been ministering in New York until he was suspended in July – molested them during confession and counselling sessions in different Catholic schools across the city.

They are allowing these predator priests to frolic around aimlessly on the streets of New York, with open access, under the shield of a collar.

The men allege years of abuse by Paddack, sparking the latest revelations in a decades-old scandal that has shaken the Catholic Church to its foundation.

And they say that, in the intervening decades, Paddack remained in ministry – working in close proximity to children.

The church should “stop hiding”, says Joseph Caramanno, one of the men who says he was abused by Paddack while in high school, and one of the first to open a public case against the priest.

“They are allowing these predator priests to frolic around aimlessly on the streets of New York, with open access, under the shield of a collar,” he says.

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.

In Bad Faith: Child Sex Abuse and the Catholic Church

NEW YORK (NY)
Al Jazeera

Oct. 23, 2019

In a series of exclusive interviews with Fault Lines, several men across New York City come forward with painful memories of abuse by a Catholic priest.

They say that Father John Paddack – who was ordained in 1984 and had been ministering in New York until he was suspended in July – molested them during confession and counselling sessions in different Catholic schools across the city.

They are allowing these predator priests to frolic around aimlessly on the streets of New York, with open access, under the shield of a collar.

The men allege years of abuse by Paddack, sparking the latest revelations in a decades-old scandal that has shaken the Catholic Church to its foundation.

And they say that, in the intervening decades, Paddack remained in ministry – working in close proximity to children.

The church should “stop hiding”, says Joseph Caramanno, one of the men who says he was abused by Paddack while in high school, and one of the first to open a public case against the priest.

“They are allowing these predator priests to frolic around aimlessly on the streets of New York, with open access, under the shield of a collar,” he says.

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.

KATC’s The List receives Regional Emmy nominations

LAFAYETTE (LA)
KATC News

Oct. 22, 2019

KATC’s news team has received two Suncoast Regional Emmy Award nominations for their programs focusing on the accusations of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Lafayette.

The nominations, organized by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, were announced Monday.

In a half-hour special report, KATC-TV exposed a long-kept secret in the Diocese of Lafayette: The List of priests who faced credible accusations of sexual abuse involving children.

In the 1980s, the diocese was home to the first reported case of clergy sex abuse in the country. The scandal persisted in this devoutly Catholic region for decades and the diocese eventually acknowledged that 15 priests were credibly accused. Over the years abuse survivors called for the 15 names to be made public, yet the diocese refused. As recently as 2014 a former bishop said he saw “no purpose” in releasing the 15 names.

In January 2019 KATC revealed the scandal was far more extensive than the church let on– and published the names of 36 priests with credible accusations of sexual abuse involving children. This report followed years of research, and months of waiting for the church to release its list. The decision to publish this list ahead of the church’s “official” list was based on several factors: an increasing lack of transparency from the diocese, the unwillingness to commit to a release date as other Louisiana dioceses had done, and most importantly the public’s right to know.

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.

KATC’s The List receives Regional Emmy nominations

LAFAYETTE (LA)
KATC News

Oct. 22, 2019

KATC’s news team has received two Suncoast Regional Emmy Award nominations for their programs focusing on the accusations of sexual abuse in the Diocese of Lafayette.

The nominations, organized by the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, were announced Monday.

In a half-hour special report, KATC-TV exposed a long-kept secret in the Diocese of Lafayette: The List of priests who faced credible accusations of sexual abuse involving children.

In the 1980s, the diocese was home to the first reported case of clergy sex abuse in the country. The scandal persisted in this devoutly Catholic region for decades and the diocese eventually acknowledged that 15 priests were credibly accused. Over the years abuse survivors called for the 15 names to be made public, yet the diocese refused. As recently as 2014 a former bishop said he saw “no purpose” in releasing the 15 names.

In January 2019 KATC revealed the scandal was far more extensive than the church let on– and published the names of 36 priests with credible accusations of sexual abuse involving children. This report followed years of research, and months of waiting for the church to release its list. The decision to publish this list ahead of the church’s “official” list was based on several factors: an increasing lack of transparency from the diocese, the unwillingness to commit to a release date as other Louisiana dioceses had done, and most importantly the public’s right to know.

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.

Springfield Diocese wants to add investigator for clergy abuse reports

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Republican

Oct. 22, 2019

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield is seeking to hire a new investigator to look into reports of clergy sexual abuse of minors for the Diocesan Review Board.

Jeffrey L. Trant, who recently was appointed to lead the diocese’s newly designated Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance that oversees such allegations, said the person hired will succeed the first person to hold the position, retired State Police Officer Kevin Murphy. A search for his successor is underway.

“As a result of an ongoing review that the Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance is completing since my appointment as director of the office in June, it was determined that there was a need to hire new investigative staff,” Trant said. “Around the same time, Kevin Murphy, who has served as the only investigator for the review board, notified Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski and me of his decision to retire.”

Murphy has been the sole investigator for the Diocesan Review Board since 2004.

“The new investigator will succeed Mr. Murphy in conducting investigations of reports of clergy sexual abuse against children, youth and other vulnerable persons once we are cleared to do so by the district attorney for the jurisdiction where the abuse is reported to have occurred,” Trant said.

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Springfield Diocese wants to add investigator for clergy abuse reports

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Republican

Oct. 22, 2019

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield is seeking to hire a new investigator to look into reports of clergy sexual abuse of minors for the Diocesan Review Board.

Jeffrey L. Trant, who recently was appointed to lead the diocese’s newly designated Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance that oversees such allegations, said the person hired will succeed the first person to hold the position, retired State Police Officer Kevin Murphy. A search for his successor is underway.

“As a result of an ongoing review that the Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance is completing since my appointment as director of the office in June, it was determined that there was a need to hire new investigative staff,” Trant said. “Around the same time, Kevin Murphy, who has served as the only investigator for the review board, notified Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski and me of his decision to retire.”

Murphy has been the sole investigator for the Diocesan Review Board since 2004.

“The new investigator will succeed Mr. Murphy in conducting investigations of reports of clergy sexual abuse against children, youth and other vulnerable persons once we are cleared to do so by the district attorney for the jurisdiction where the abuse is reported to have occurred,” Trant said.

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New names added to Buffalo Diocese’s list of nearly 100 accused priests

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

October 22, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

The Buffalo Diocese has added 19 names since last November to its growing list of priests with substantiated claims of child sexual abuse.

That list now includes 97 priests – 75 from the diocese and 22 religious order priests who worked in the diocese.

The list of names has more than doubled in the less than two years since Bishop Richard J. Malone first began identifying priests accused of molesting children.

The diocese’s latest list still represents only a fraction of the roughly 150 clergy who have been publicly accused of sexual impropriety with children and, in a handful of cases, adults. However, it does name three priests who previously had not been outed publicly – in media accounts or in lawsuits – as accused abusers: the Rev. Ramon Aymerich, the Rev. Richard J. Bohm and the Rev. Terrence N. Niedbalski.

Aymerich is identified as having left the Catholic Church in 1982 to become an Episcopal priest. Bohm and Niedbalski are deceased.

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 names added to Buffalo Diocese’s list of nearly 100 accused priests

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

October 22, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

The Buffalo Diocese has added 19 names since last November to its growing list of priests with substantiated claims of child sexual abuse.

That list now includes 97 priests – 75 from the diocese and 22 religious order priests who worked in the diocese.

The list of names has more than doubled in the less than two years since Bishop Richard J. Malone first began identifying priests accused of molesting children.

The diocese’s latest list still represents only a fraction of the roughly 150 clergy who have been publicly accused of sexual impropriety with children and, in a handful of cases, adults. However, it does name three priests who previously had not been outed publicly – in media accounts or in lawsuits – as accused abusers: the Rev. Ramon Aymerich, the Rev. Richard J. Bohm and the Rev. Terrence N. Niedbalski.

Aymerich is identified as having left the Catholic Church in 1982 to become an Episcopal priest. Bohm and Niedbalski are deceased.

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.

Abuse claims put Catholic Church in New York City under scrutiny

NEW YORK (NY)
Al Jazeera

Oct. 23, 2019

By Paul Abowd

Gabriel* was a young Catholic student when Father John Paddack arrived at his school in 1984. The priest taught at Incarnation School, said mass at its parish and was involved with the altar boy programme. Before long, Gabriel says Paddack began calling him into a secluded place in the church, where the boy was instructed to confess his sins.

That is where Gabriel said Paddack molested him – about twice a week for two years, starting when he was between the ages of 11 and 12 years old.

Gabriel was familiar with the Catholic ritual of confession, but he said Paddack did things differently: There was no barrier separating them. In fact, he said, Paddack sat close to him, placing one hand behind his neck and the other on his inner thigh.

“How do you get alone with someone?” he said. “Confession. You don’t have a crowd. It’s a one on one thing.”

Gabriel kept the trauma of this abuse mostly to himself for decades. He was angry and ashamed. When Al Jazeera’s current affairs programme Fault Lines interviewed him in June, he asked to use a pseudonym, fearing retribution from the Catholic Church hierarchy.

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.

Abuse claims put Catholic Church in New York City under scrutiny

NEW YORK (NY)
Al Jazeera

Oct. 23, 2019

By Paul Abowd

Gabriel* was a young Catholic student when Father John Paddack arrived at his school in 1984. The priest taught at Incarnation School, said mass at its parish and was involved with the altar boy programme. Before long, Gabriel says Paddack began calling him into a secluded place in the church, where the boy was instructed to confess his sins.

That is where Gabriel said Paddack molested him – about twice a week for two years, starting when he was between the ages of 11 and 12 years old.

Gabriel was familiar with the Catholic ritual of confession, but he said Paddack did things differently: There was no barrier separating them. In fact, he said, Paddack sat close to him, placing one hand behind his neck and the other on his inner thigh.

“How do you get alone with someone?” he said. “Confession. You don’t have a crowd. It’s a one on one thing.”

Gabriel kept the trauma of this abuse mostly to himself for decades. He was angry and ashamed. When Al Jazeera’s current affairs programme Fault Lines interviewed him in June, he asked to use a pseudonym, fearing retribution from the Catholic Church hierarchy.

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.

October 22, 2019

Prosecutor: Warning to archdiocese about Father Drew was verbal, not written

CINCINNATI (OH)
FOX 19

Oct. 22, 2019

By Jennifer Edwards Baker

Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser is clarifying remarks he made recently regarding a warning he said he issued to the archdiocese about one of their priests.

Gmoser recently confirmed to FOX19 NOW he warned the Archdiocese of Cincinnati through a letter in September 2018 to keep the Rev. Geoff Drew away from children and to monitor him.

He now says he realizes that warning was verbal, not written.

“I came to learn later after conferring with the representative, a representative of the Archdiocese, that it was not a letter so there is not some document that they are hiding from you. I stand by what I told them but they were kind enough to inform me that ‘no, Mike, it was not a letter, it was a conversation and that communication was by telephone, not in the written form.’

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Prosecutor: Warning to archdiocese about Father Drew was verbal, not written

CINCINNATI (OH)
FOX 19

Oct. 22, 2019

By Jennifer Edwards Baker

Butler County Prosecutor Mike Gmoser is clarifying remarks he made recently regarding a warning he said he issued to the archdiocese about one of their priests.

Gmoser recently confirmed to FOX19 NOW he warned the Archdiocese of Cincinnati through a letter in September 2018 to keep the Rev. Geoff Drew away from children and to monitor him.

He now says he realizes that warning was verbal, not written.

“I came to learn later after conferring with the representative, a representative of the Archdiocese, that it was not a letter so there is not some document that they are hiding from you. I stand by what I told them but they were kind enough to inform me that ‘no, Mike, it was not a letter, it was a conversation and that communication was by telephone, not in the written form.’

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.

Illinois chief justice distrusts church hierarchy to police itself on abuse

NEWTON (MA)
National Catholic Reporter

Oct. 22, 2019

By Peter Feuerherd

Don’t count on the bishops to clean up sex abuse in the church, Anne Burke told the annual gathering of Voice of the Faithful here Oct. 19.

Burke, chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court and a justice of the court’s First Judicial District, formerly served as interim chair of the National Review Board for the U.S. bishops’ conference; she last addressed Voice of the Faithful in 2012. At that time, she saw reason for optimism that the bishops were willing to address the sex abuse crisis.

“Unfortunately, the hope I extended to you in 2012 has been severely eroded,” she said. “I no longer have faith in the hierarchy.”

Voice of the Faithful was founded in 2002 in response to the sex abuse crisis in the Boston Archdiocese, where this year’s convention was held. The group now boasts affiliates around the country, which monitors progress on transparency by the church hierarchy on sex abuse and finances.

“I am disheartened to say we continue to learn of new instances of clerical misconduct and discover anew that some members of the hierarchy have engaged in secrecy and cover-ups,” Burke 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.

Illinois chief justice distrusts church hierarchy to police itself on abuse

NEWTON (MA)
National Catholic Reporter

Oct. 22, 2019

By Peter Feuerherd

Don’t count on the bishops to clean up sex abuse in the church, Anne Burke told the annual gathering of Voice of the Faithful here Oct. 19.

Burke, chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court and a justice of the court’s First Judicial District, formerly served as interim chair of the National Review Board for the U.S. bishops’ conference; she last addressed Voice of the Faithful in 2012. At that time, she saw reason for optimism that the bishops were willing to address the sex abuse crisis.

“Unfortunately, the hope I extended to you in 2012 has been severely eroded,” she said. “I no longer have faith in the hierarchy.”

Voice of the Faithful was founded in 2002 in response to the sex abuse crisis in the Boston Archdiocese, where this year’s convention was held. The group now boasts affiliates around the country, which monitors progress on transparency by the church hierarchy on sex abuse and finances.

“I am disheartened to say we continue to learn of new instances of clerical misconduct and discover anew that some members of the hierarchy have engaged in secrecy and cover-ups,” Burke said.

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‘Save Catholic church’ by lifting ban on female priests, activists say

ROME (ITALY)
The Guardian

Oct. 22, 2019

By Angela Giuffrida

Campaigners have gathered in Rome to call for the lifting of a ban on female priests that would “save the Catholic Church” where it is failing to ordain enough men.

Activists from the Women’s Ordination Worldwide (Wow) group protested outside the Vatican on Tuesday as the church’s hierarchy pondered the idea of allowing married men in the Amazon to become priests in order to plug the shortage in the region.

The activists argue that ordaining women priests would solve the issue as effectively and should be prioritised.

‌”Empowering women would save the church,” said Kate McElwee, a Rome-based representative of Wow. “Our church and our Earth are in crisis – and empowering women in roles that they are already serving in their communities is a solution. We’re advocating for equality and that includes ordination.”

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