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.

February 27, 2019

Targeting priests is a new low in lawyer advertising (commentary)

NEW YORK (NY)
Staten Island Advance

February 27, 2019

By Daniel Leddy

On June 27, 1977, a sharply divided U.S. Supreme Court sent shockwaves through the legal profession by holding that the First Amendment’s free speech clause protects the right of lawyers to advertise their services. The ruling in Bates v. State Bar of Arizona overturned the discipline meted out to two young lawyers for placing a straightforward, dignified advertisement in the Arizona Republic informing readers of the basic legal services performed at their “clinic” and the fee for each.

Writing for the 5-4 majority, Justice Harry Blackmun asserted that lawyer advertising would further reliable decision-making, and discounted fears that some lawyers would use advertising gimmicks to deceive the public. In contrast, Justice Lewis Powell’s strongly worded dissent predicted that the decision would weaken the ability of the states to regulate attorney conduct, and “effect profound changes in the practice of law, viewed for centuries as a learned profession.”

Powell’s concerns were prophetic. For in the aftermath of the Bates decision, the legal profession has been denigrated by absurdities such as lawyers declaring themselves to be “tough and mean;” pronouncing themselves to be “pit bulls,” proclaiming their willingness to do “whatever it takes to win;” claiming to represent space aliens; emerging from the ocean bearing spear guns because so many other lawyers are “sharks,” and even sending bouquets of flowers to funeral homes where victims of legally actionable tragedies were being waked.

Last Tuesday, attorney Jeff Anderson moved offensive attorney advertising from the disgraceful to the despicable with a press release announcing “the names of more than 100 perpetrators accused of sexual misconduct in the Archdiocese of New York.”

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.

Baton Rouge list of clergy accused of abuse grows to 40 with two new additions

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Advocate

February 27, 2019

By Andrea Gallo

The Diocese of Baton Rouge added two more Catholic clerics Wednesday to its list of those who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse with a minor, increasing the diocese’s tally of abusive clergymen to 40.

When Baton Rouge Bishop Michael Duca released the diocese’s initial list a month ago, Duca said the list would evolve over time, and likely grow. The diocese has already updated its list once, earlier this month. The newest additions come on the heels of a worldwide summit Pope Francis convened about clerical sexual abuse, in which the pontiff called for an “all-out battle” against it.

The two names added to the Diocese of Baton Rouge’s list Wednesday are the Rev. Barry Finbar Coyle and the Rev. John Hardman. Though both spent time ministering in Baton Rouge, the accusations against them were lodged in other dioceses. Diocese of Baton Rouge spokesman Dan Borne said Wednesday that the diocese had received no allegations about either priest.

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

Gay Man Participates in Vatican Clergy Sex Abuse Summit

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Blade

February 27, 2019

By Michael Lavers

A gay man from Chile who was sexually abused by a notorious pedophile priest participated in a summit on clergy sex abuse that took place at the Vatican last week.

Juan Carlos Cruz told the Washington Blade on Monday during a telephone interview from Philadelphia that he and a dozen other survivors of clergy sex abuse met with bishops before the 4-day summit began at the Vatican on Feb. 21.

“It was positive because it was a very constructive dialogue, but at the same time (it was) painful and difficult and good,” he said. “It was all kind of things.”

Cruz told the Blade he was also asked to record a video for Pope Francis and the bishops from around the world who traveled to Rome. The video was shown at the beginning of the summit.

“You are the doctors of souls and yet, … you have become, in some cases, the killers of souls, the killers of faith,” said Cruz in the video, according to La Nación, an Argentine newspaper that covered the summit.

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.

Nunavut plans to open centre for victims of child abuse

IQALUIT, NUNAVUT
Nunatsiaq News

February 27, 2019

By Courtney Edgar

Iqaluit’s Umingmak Centre led by Arctic Children and Youth Foundation

A new child advocacy centre aimed at helping Nunavut’s victims of child abuse will open in Iqaluit in April, says Justice Minister Jeannie Ehaloak.

It will be led by the Arctic Children and Youth Foundation, which has worked with the departments of Justice, Health, Education, and Family Services, as well as the RCMP and Nunavut Tunngavik Inc.

The Arctic Children and Youth Foundation, founded by Inuit leader Mary Simon, is a charitable organization created to help children and youth at all levels.

“The centre will be designed to address the needs of child victims and children who have witnessed a crime, and will meet the cultural needs of Nunavummiut,” the foundation says on its website.

“As a one-stop-shop, the centre will co-ordinate the efforts of the various service providers to ensure that all legal and forensic evidence is gathered.”

They’ve been working on the project since at least 2014, when they began advocating for centres to help Arctic youth.

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.

Supreme Court Justice found in violation of disclosure law

PROVIDENCE (RI)
WPRI

February 26, 2019

By Walt Buteau

The Rhode Island Ethics Commission ruled Supreme Court Justice Francis X. Flaherty violated state financial disclosure law by not reporting his involvement in a religious society comprised of attorneys and judges.

The ethics complaint was filed in 2016 by Rhode Island native Helen Hyde, who one of two plaintiffs in a 2016 Supreme Court ruling involving Flaherty, who wrote the decision for the civil case.

The Supreme Court upheld a lower court decision against Hyde’s demand for financial damages from the Bishop of Providence in a sexual abuse case.
Hyde alleged she was molested in the late 60’s in East Greenwich by the late Father Brendan Smyth,
who died in prison after he was convicted of molesting 141 children over four decades.

By the time Hyde came forward, the statute of limitations on her case had expired.

In her complaint, Hyde said Flaherty should have disclosed his involvement with the Saint Thomas More Society since her case involved the Catholic Church.

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

For children of priests, the good of the child comes first

ROME (ITALY)
Vatican News

February 27, 2019

By Andrea Tornielli

The topic of “children of priests” has long been considered taboo, with the result that often, especially in the past, these children grew up without a known and acknowledged father. This topic, then, is distinct from the questions addressed in last week’s Meeting in the Vatican, which focused on the abuse committed against minors.

Recently, Irish psychotherapist Vincent Doyle, a son of a priest, was present in Rome. He is the founder of “Coping International”, an association for the defence of the rights of children fathered by Catholic priests throughout the world. Doyle wants to waive his anonymity and offer psychological help to “the many people born from a relationship between a woman and a priest” in various parts of the world. In recent interviews with diverse media, Doyle has spoken of a document of the Congregation for the Clergy, regarding the attitude to be taken in these cases. The existence of these internal documents — sometimes described, inaccurately, as “secret” — has been known since 2017, and the general criteria regarding protecting the children of priests was recently confirmed by Alessandro Gisotti, the Director ad interim of the Holy See Press Office. Vatican News spoke with Cardinal Beniamino Stella, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Clergy, which has the responsibility of dealing with cases of this sort.

Andrea Tornielli: What are the criteria that guide the decisions to be made in the case of priests with children?

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

R.I. Supreme Court justice violated state ethics code, board finds

PROVIDENCE (RI)
The Providence Journal

February 26, 2019

By Patrick Anderson

Rhode Island Supreme Court Justice Francis X. Flaherty said it never crossed his mind to mention he was president of the St. Thomas More Society of Rhode Island on his annual state financial disclosure form, even while he was on the bench for an appeal of a priest sexual abuse case.

PROVIDENCE — Rhode Island Supreme Court Justice Francis X. Flaherty said it never crossed his mind to mention he was president of the St. Thomas More Society of Rhode Island on his annual state financial disclosure form, even while he was on the bench for the appeal of a priest’s sexual-abuse case.

After all, the organization promoting Catholic legal principles has no paid employees, meets only a handful of times a year — primarily to sponsor the annual Red Mass for the state’s legal community — and has never paid him or other officers a cent.

But the state Ethics Commission on Tuesday concluded the size and informality of the Society were no excuses to leave it off the list of entities government officials are required to disclose their leadership roles in to avoid potential conflicts of interest.

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

Two Embattled Buddhist Leaders Pressured to Stop Teaching

NEW YORK (NY)
Tricycle Magazine

February 22, 2019

By Matthew Abrahams

Following separate sexual misconduct investigations, Shambhala head Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche has stepped back from teaching and Noah Levine’s authority has been revoked.

Two prominent Buddhist teachers accused of sexual misconduct are facing new actions from their communities, which have urged them to stop teaching after internal investigations found the allegations against them credible. Shambhala International head Sakyong Mipham Rinpoche announced that he would be stepping down from teaching for the “foreseeable future” in an email sent out to students on February 21. A day earlier, the Spirit Rock Meditation Center released a statement withdrawing authorization to teach from Noah Levine, who founded the now-shuttered Against the Stream Meditation Society (ATS).

While the Sakyong and Levine have both been accused of abusing their power, the details of the allegations and how they were handled differ in many ways. Most notably, Levine was removed from ATS, which closed its centers soon after, while the Sakyong has remained the lineage holder of Shambhala.

The Sakyong had previously announced that he was stepping aside while a law firm hired by Shambhala, Wickwire Holm, investigated the claims against him. The investigation, released this month, found that the Sakyong “more than likely” engaged in sexual misconduct in at least two cases. Earlier this week, a group of the Sakyong’s former kusung, or personal attendants, released a statement further detailing decades of inappropriate and harmful conduct.

In his email on Thursday, the Sakyong said he will continue to step back from his duties now that the investigation has concluded. He writes that he made this decision after receiving a letter the day before from Shambhala’s 42 acharyas [senior teachers] asking him to do so.

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

Vatican: Cardinal Pell says he’s innocent, but news hurts

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

February 26, 2019

By Frances D’Emilio

The Vatican on Tuesday insisted on Australian Cardinal George Pell’s right to further defend himself after being convicted of molesting two choirboys in his homeland, but said Pope Francis was keeping in place local church restrictions forbidding one of his most trusted advisers from having contact with children while appeals run their course.

Acting Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti read a brief statement that called the news of the 77-year-old’s prelate’s conviction “painful.” He later tweeted confirmation that Pell “is no longer” the Holy See’s economy chief. Pell’s 5-year mandate was due to expire this month, and Francis had not been expected to renew it.

Gisotti took no questions from reporters about the Australian court’s verdict, which was delivered unanimously in December and appealed by Pell last week.

Due to a court order, news of the verdict couldn’t be published until Tuesday.

Pell risks a maximum prison term of 50 years for the conviction of the charges that he sexually abused the boys in a cathedral in the 1990s when he was archbishop of Melbourne. Sentencing hearings were set to begin in Melbourne on Wednesday.

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

Can The Church Survive Pell’s ‘Catastrophic’ Sex Abuse Conviction?

AUSTRALIA
10 daily

February 26, 2019

By Josh Butler

It is a “happy” day for abuse survivors, and the conviction of George Pell on child sex charges is hoped to lead to wholesale change at the highest levels of the Catholic Church.

In December 2018, a Melbourne jury found Pell guilty of five charges — one of sexually penetrating a child under the age of 16 and four of committing an indecent act.

“There’s relief for sure, but I do believe people are happy,” Steven Spaner, coordinator for advocacy group SNAP — Survivors Networks of those Abused by Priests — told 10 daily.

Other survivors have spoken of being “stunned” at the news, while a former priest said the verdict would be “catastrophic” and like a “tsunami” for the church.

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

George Pell’s lawyer says child abuse was ‘plain vanilla’ sex as cardinal heads to jail

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian

February 26, 2019

By Melissa Davey

Cardinal Pell is remanded in custody following his conviction for child sexual assault, which judge calls ‘callous, brazen offending’

Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Catholic cleric ever convicted of child sexual abuse, has been taken in custody following a sentencing hearing in which his lawyer described one of Pell’s offences as a “plain vanilla sexual penetration case where the child is not actively participating”.

After the hearing, with Pell’s lawyer, Robert Richter, having withdrawn his application for bail, the chief judge said: “Take him away, please.” Pell was taken to a maximum security facility where he will be kept in protective custody and remain alone for up to 23 hours a day.

He will be sentenced on 13 March after his conviction for sexually assaulting two 13-year-old boys.

The Vatican on Wednesday also said its doctrinal department will open its own investigation into Pell. “After the guilty verdict in the first instance concerning Cardinal Pell, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) will now handle the case following the procedure and within the time established by canonical norm,” Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti told reporters. A former US cardinal, Theodore McCarrick, was this month dismissed from the priesthood following a CDF investigation.

The former Australian prime minister John Howard was among those who provided character references for Pell as the cardinal’s legal team tried to argue for a lower-end sentence in Melbourne’s county court on Wednesday morning.

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.

Pennsylvania prosecutor fights clergy sex abuse as she maintains Catholic faith

EBENSBURG (PA)
Religion News Service

February 27, 2019

By Bobby Ross Jr.

When allegations of past sexual abuse were first made against a priest at St. Clement Catholic Church in Johnstown, Pa., Cambria County District Attorney Kelly Callihan recognized the name immediately. The Rev. George Koharchik had been her family’s pastor for the decade he served at St. Clement’s, from 1974 to 1984.

When each of her four eldest siblings got married, “he had such a connection with us that he came back to do the weddings,” Callihan, the sixth of nine children, recalled in a recent interview at her second-floor courthouse office.

But Callihan, 50, knew the victims, too: They were friends and former classmates in this western Pennsylvania county — a farming and coal-mining area hit hard by the steel industry’s decline and the opioid epidemic.

“I didn’t falter for a second in believing and understanding” the stories of abuse, Callihan told Religion News Service. “You could just hear the pain that they were going through.”

Callihan ended up referring Koharchik’s case, as well as separate sex abuse claims involving a Franciscan friar, to Pennsylvania’s attorney general. “I knew that I didn’t have the resources in a small prosecutor’s office to take on an investigation of this magnitude,” Callihan said. Also, she said, “I was too close to home with knowing a lot of these victims.”

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

Vatican to open its own investigation into Cardinal George Pell

AUSTRALIA
9News

February 27, 2019

The Vatican says that its doctrinal department will open its own investigation into accusations against Cardinal George Pell.

Pell, a former top Vatican official, is tonight spending his first night behind bars after he was remanded in custody pending sentencing for sexually abusing two choir boys in Melbourne two decades ago.

He has proclaimed his innocence and will appeal the verdict.

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

Priests Credibly Accused of Sexual Abuse of a Minor

ARLINGTON (VA)
Catholic Diocese of Arlington

February 13, 2019

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,

Today I am fulfilling a commitment I made to publish a list of all clergy credibly accused of child sexual abuse in the Diocese of Arlington. I made this commitment in the hope that providing such a list might help some victims and survivors of clergy sexual abuse to find further healing and consolation.

The publishing of this list will bring a range of emotions for all of us. Embarrassment, frustration, anger and hurt are all natural emotions to experience in a time such as this. I share those emotions.

Today I also renew my commitment to continue to implement our policies and protocols, established in accord with the United States Catholic Conference of Bishops’ 2002 Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People. These have proven to be effective in preventing abuse, standardizing reporting procedures to legal authorities and investigating allegations of sexual abuse of minors. Please know that I remain actively engaged in addressing these issues and pursuing ways to improve our existing efforts.

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.

Psychiatrist tells judge Denham, 77, “never to have access to children”

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The Herald Sun

February 27, 2019

By Joanne McCarthy

The Catholic pedophile priest whose crimes were the catalyst for a royal commission will remain a danger to male children until the day he dies, a court was told as he faces an even lengthier jail sentence for crimes against a young boy.

John Sidney Denham, 77, should never have access to children and should never have a relationship of any kind with a male child when he leaves jail, even though he could be in his early 90s, a psychiatrist said in a report tendered at a Sydney District Court sentencing hearing on Wednesday.

Although Denham’s overall risk of re-offending is likely to be low, if he is still alive when his current minimum jail term expires in 2028, his placement in the community will need close monitoring despite being an extremely advanced age, Judge Phillip Mahony was told.

The Crown has argued for an even longer jail sentence for Denham after he was found guilty in October of repeatedly sexually abusing a young boy under 10 at Taree in the late 1970s, including raping him in a church presbytery after calling the boy from a Catholic primary school playground.

Denham is already serving a minimum 19 years and five months’ jail sentence for crimes against 56 boys after guilty findings in 2010 and 2015 trials, and was found guilty in 2001 of offences against another young Catholic boy in 2001 but did not serve a jail sentence. The victims were aged from 5 to 17 and the offences occurred between 1968 and 1986.

Denham sat with arms crossed in a NSW jail during the short sentencing hearing on Wednesday and said nothing after initially complaining he could not hear proceedings via the court audio-visual link.

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

The Catholic church must pay a high price for its cover-up culture

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Independent

February 27, 2019

By Geoffrey Robertson

News of the conviction and imprisonment of cardinal George Pell, number three in the Vatican, for the rape of small boys in a sacristy came as a fitting end to a papal summit on child abuse which achieved nothing.

It had begun with other cardinals attributing the problem to homosexuals in the priesthood. Of course, the reality is that priests abuse small boys, not because they are gay, but because they have the opportunity. Most are not even paedophiles, but rather sexually maladjusted, immature and lonely individuals, unable to resist the temptation to exploit their power over children who are taught to revere them as the agents of God.

A church which has tolerated the sexual abuse of tens of thousands of children – a crime against humanity in any definition, needs to face unpalatable truths and to make drastic reforms.

Cover-ups are no longer an option. The magnitude of the crimes is well established and the evidence of how the Vatican and its bishops hushed them up in order to protect the reputation and finances of the Catholic church is fully proved. By insisting upon its right to deal with allegations under medieval canon law weighted in favour of the defendant and providing no effective punishment, the church itself became complicit.

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

Pope says Vatican abuse summit damaged the Church’s credibility

Patheos blog

February 27, 2019

By Barry Duke

NO, not that Pope, but a Catholic priest in Washington DC called Msgr Charles Pope who is disappointed that recently-concluded ‘Protection of Minors in the Church’ summit signally failed to trash gay priests.

Writing for the National Catholic Register, Pope said that he’d hoped that three things would be discussed to restore the credibility of the Church:

1. The summit must focus on more than the sexual abuse of minors by clergy – it must also address the sexual abuse of vulnerable or subordinate adults.

2. The summit must speak to the link between homosexuality and sexual abuse by clergy.

3. The summit must establish a way forward to establishing greater accountability for bishops.

Of the three, he said only the last was addressed.

What seems to upset him most was the failure to address issue No 2:

Regarding the second point, the silence – even outright refusal to discuss – the clear connection between the sexual abuse crisis and active homosexuality in the priesthood is a severe blow to credibility.

That Cardinal Blase Cupich, a key organizer of the summit, denies a causal relationship between homosexual clergy and the fact that more than 80 percent of the victims have been post-pubescent males is not credible to most Catholics. There is simply no logical basis for such a claim, except perhaps among LBGTQ ideologues.

While this should not be used to rationalize the demonization of all people suffering from same-sex attraction, neither should we miss the opportunity to assess the data honestly and develop sane policies in response. In less politically-charged moments, Pope Francis has said as much.

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Survivors Network: Naming Priests Accused Of Sexual Abuse Is A Big Step, But More Needs To Be Done

DES MOINES (IA)
Iowa Public Radio

February 27, 2019

By Katie Peikes

A support group for people who have been abused by clergy says the Diocese of Sioux City’s decision to publish a list of priests accused of sexual abuse is a big step towards transparency, but they still have some concerns.

Up until Monday, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Sioux City had never published a list of priests “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors. The list names 28 that face more than 100 credible allegations. Of the 28 priests on the list, 22 are deceased and only one of the remaining six still lives in Iowa, but has left the priesthood.

Zach Hiner, the executive director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, says the list is a step towards healing.

“This is one sign that church officials in Sioux City understand the importance of these lists, both for the prevention of future abuse and for the healing of survivors,” Hiner said.

Hiner says there’s still a lot that’s missing, though.

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These public figures are defending convicted child sex abuser George Pell

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
The New Daily

February 27, 2019

Cardinal George Pell has lodged an appeal after being found guilty on five charges of sexually abusing two boys in the 1990s.

But there are many defending him. Some question the verdict, others say it is inconsistent with his character.

Many of his defenders didn’t attend the trial, and weren’t exposed to the days’ worth of evidence presented to the court.

News Corp columnist Andrew Bolt believes Pell is innocent: “He is a scapegoat, not a child abuser.”

In his column for the Herald Sun, Bolt went on to say he’d met Pell about five times and liked him.

“The man I know seems not just incapable of such abuse, but so intelligent and cautious that he would never risk his brilliant career and good name on such a mad assault in such a public place.”

Bolt’s News Corp colleague Miranda Devine made a similar claim, that Pell was the victim of a “lynch mob” and “sacrificial lamb” for the Church’s abuses.

“They hate him because he is a conservative Catholic, the implacable enemy who stood in the way of ‘progress’ in the Church. While fellow Catholics crumbled and appeased, he unequivocally defended Church teachings and refused to compromise over gay marriage, euthanasia, abortion, or wedge issues such as communion for divorcees. And now they think they’ve won,” she wrote.

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Church cannot implement reforms alone

PARIS (FRANCE)
LaCroix International

February 27, 2019

The president of the Independent Commission of Inquiry into Sex Abuse in the Catholic Church in France, Jean-Marc Sauvé, has said that the Church should accept aid in the battle against abuse, adding that the Church has taken a new step on “the path of a radical break” with abuse with the Rome summit on sex abuse from Feb. 21-24.

In this interview, Sauvé discusses the implications of last week’s Rome summit on sex abuse with La Croix’s Marie Malzac.La Croix: What did you learn from the Rome summit that has just concluded?

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Pope Francis just declared ‘all-out battle’ on clergy sex abuse. We have no reason to take him seriously

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Examiner

February 26, 2019

By Becket Adams

Pope Francis concluded the Vatican’s summit on clerical sexual abuse this weekend by promising an “all-out battle” against this disease plaguing the Roman Catholic Church.

A bold statement, but in the words of St. Thomas the Apostle: I’ll believe it when I see it.

“We are dealing with abominable crimes that must be erased from the face of the earth,” Francis said, adding that “even a single case of abuse” must be answered, “with the utmost seriousness.”

He also said the church would “spare no effort to do all that is necessary to bring to justice.”

Nice words, but we have no reason to take them seriously, especially when they come from Francis.

First, as just a brief aside, what does he mean by “all-out battle”? Has the church not been doing this already?

Secondly, we’ve heard these promises before. In the early 2000s, after the Boston Globe uncovered rampant sexual abuse in the Boston Archdiocese, the Catholic Church promised a vigorous and thorough housecleaning. It was not so vigorous and thorough as we were led to believe, as evidenced by recent reports from Chile, Australia, and Pennsylvania. Further, let’s not forget that it was the disgraced, now-laicized former archbishop of Washington, D.C., Theodore McCarrick, who led the church’s response to the Boston Globe’s reporting. He served in this capacity despite it being known for years within the church that he was a sexual predator.

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Opinion: It is time for change in the Catholic church and that starts with equality for women

IRELAND
The Journal

February 22, 2019

By Colm Holmes

‘Guided by the Holy Spirit we must come together and find new inclusive governance structures to replace the old patriarchal model, which has broken down’, writes Colm Holmes.

SENIOR CATHOLIC BISHOPS from all over the world gather in Rome this week for a four-day summit on clerical sexual abuse, which some say is the most serious crisis in the church since the Reformation.

Child sexual abuse will rightly top of the agenda, but it’s also just this month that Pope Francis admitted that Catholic priests and bishops have sexually abused nuns and that that abuse is likely to still be happening.

“I think it is still going on because it’s not something that just goes away like that,” said Pope Francis. He correctly identified that it is a cultural problem, the roots of which lie in “seeing women as second class”.

That was a very honest admission by the pope – that women are seen as second class within the Catholic Church. They were viewed that way by society at large for many centuries – women were there to raise children but men were in charge.

That has changed dramatically in the last 100 years, at least in western countries, with women getting the vote and almost all career paths being open to them.

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Abuse in the Church: ‘If people are not aware of an issue, they do not perceive it’

ROME
La Crox International

February 26, 2019

By Céline Hoyeau

The president of the International Union of Superiors General discusses last week’s Rome Meeting on the Protection of Minors in the Church

In this interview with La Croix, White Sister Carmen Sammut, who is president of the International Union of Superiors General (UISG), discusses last week’s Rome Meeting on the Protection of Minors in the Church in which she took part.

La Croix: What was your experience of the meeting on the protection of minors? Were you changed personally over the course of the event?

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Truth and justice after the Cardinal Pell verdict

AUSTRALIA
La Croix International

February 26, 2019

By Frank Brennan, SJ

What is absolutely essential is that the law be allowed to do its work

The suppression order in relation to Cardinal George Pell has been lifted. In December, a jury of 12 of his fellow citizens found him guilty of five offences of child sexual abuse.

No other charges are to proceed. Cardinal Pell has appealed the convictions. The verdict was unanimous. The jury took three days to deliberate after a four-week trial. The trial was in fact a re-run. At the first trial, the jury could not agree. The trial related to two alleged victims, one of whom had died.

Members of the public could attend those proceedings if they knew where to go in the Melbourne County Court. Members of the public could hear all the evidence except a recording of the complainant’s evidence from the first trial.

The complainant, who cannot be identified, did not give evidence at the retrial; the recording from the first trial was admitted as the complainant’s evidence.

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The place of sexual abuse victims in the Vatican

VATICAN CITY
La Croix International

February 25, 2019

By Céline Hoyeau and Gauthier Vaillant

For the victims, any priest or bishop who has committed or covered up sexual abuse should be dismissed from the clerical state

Assembled beneath the banner of the international organization, Ending Clerical Abuse, victims of sexual abuse from all over the world were present in Rome for the Meeting on the Protection of Minors in the Church.

The wind blowing across St. Peter’s Square is ice-cold on this sunlit Sunday Feb. 24. But if Jean-Marie Fürbinger admits to being cold, it is because of the pope’s concluding speech, not the wind.

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Cardinal Pell Avoids Immediate Discipline from the Vatican

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

February 27, 2019

So much for the “all-out battle.”

Just days after making bold statements in Rome, Pope Francis is continuing the trend he set during his global summit by choosing not to discipline prelates who have committed crimes against children. Despite being convicted of sexually abusing two young boys, Cardinal George Pell won’t face immediate discipline from the Vatican, according to church spokespersons.

We continue to be astounded by the Vatican’s reticence to discipline men who have committed, abetted, covered up or minimized cases of abuse. Yet Cardinal Pell’s case in particular is even more shocking.

Cardinal Pell has been convicted in a court of law in the country that he calls home. If such a conviction is not enough to compel immediate action from Pope Francis, then what will be? When can survivors, parents, and parishioners expect Pope Francis’ next salvo in his “battle” against abuse?

The answer from church officials seems to be “not anytime soon.” We hope that when Cardinal Pell is sentenced for his crimes, Australian survivors will find solace and healing.

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Judge Pope Francis on actions, not intentions

INDIA
LA Croix International

February 26, 2019

By Father Myron Pereira SJ, Mumbai

Vatican summit on sex abuse outlined the scale of the problem, but words are not enough

“Go, Francis — repair my Church!” These words of the crucifix in the church of San Damiano to Francis of Assisi are addressed urgently today to Pope Francis.

No assembly in Rome has had greater significance in recent times than the four-day meeting of the heads of bishops’ conferences that concluded on Feb. 24. The agenda was particularly painful: how to heal the decades of sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable adults perpetrated by the Church’s own clergy and hierarchy.

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Sanchez: Church needs to admit that priests often have active sex lives

LAKELAND (FL)
Lakeland Ledger

February 26, 2019

By Mary Sanchez

In the early 1980s, Americans were absorbed by the forbidden love of a dashingly handsome Roman Catholic cardinal and the equally beguiling woman with whom he’d fathered a child.

Would the cleric, Ralph de Bricassart, renounce his holy orders and forego the riches and power of his position at the Vatican for the love of a woman? Would he join his beloved Meggie Cleary and her son, the young man he adored, who was in fact his son too?

Alas, “The Thorn Birds” was a television miniseries, after “Roots” the most watched of its time.

The romance was so alluring because the love was forbidden. Yet even to my then young Catholic mind it seemed quite plausible. Of course priests sometimes violate the discipline of celibate chastity, fall in love and desire a family.

Last week, the Vatican made a telling admission that the church has guidelines for what to do with “children of the ordained” — and, as the New York Times reported, those guidelines are secret.

Wouldn’t it seem, at this point, that there should be no more big revelations about sex that the church needs to admit?

No, we’re not there yet.

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Falling on deaf ears: Pope Francis doesn’t fully grasp accusations against church

WATERTOWN (NY)
Watertown Daily Times

February 27, 2019

If Pope Francis is concerned that some people spend years accusing the Roman Catholic Church of wrongdoing, perhaps he should consider the institution’s history of covering up instances of sexual abuse and trying to silence victims.

Catholic authorities from around the world traveled to the Vatican last week for a summit to address the sexual abuse scandal. This is the first time the church has convened such an event pertaining to the issue.

Pope Francis on Thursday delivered a speech to representatives of the Archdiocese of Benevento, which is in Southern Italy. He spoke of the love that Saint Pio of Pietrelcina had for the church.

“He was distinguished for his steadfast faith in God, firm hope in the heavenly realities, generous dedication to the people and fidelity to the church, whom he always loved with all her problems and her adversities,” according to a transcript of the pope’s speech posted on the Vatican’s website. “I will pause a little on this. He loved the church, with the many problems the church has, with so many adversities, with so many sinners. Because the church is holy, she is the bride of Christ. But we, the children of the church, are all sinners — some big ones! — but he loved the church as she was. He did not destroy her with the tongue as it is the fashion to do now. No! He loved her.”

As he has done previously, Pope Francis said many of those who make repeated accusations against the Catholic Church have a malicious intent.

“He who loves the church knows how to forgive because he knows that he himself is a sinner and is in need of God’s forgiveness. He knows how to arrange things, because the Lord wants to arrange things well but always with forgiveness: One cannot live an entire life accusing, accusing, accusing the church. Whose is the office of the accuser? The devil! And those who spend their life accusing, accusing, accusing, are — I will not say children because the devil does not have any. But [they are] friends, cousins, relatives of the devil. And no, this is not good; flaws must be indicated so they can be corrected. But at the moment that flaws are noted, flaws are denounced, one loves the church. Without love, that is of the devil.”

It’s understandable that Pope Francis wants people of faith to continue loving the church. He is correct that it has been a source of much good in the world.

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Getting to the Root of the Problem

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

February 27, 2019

By Jorge I. Dominguez-Lopez

In 2003, when the first wave of sexual abuse by the clergy in the United States was at its critical point, a Latin American priest visiting New York told me: “We in Latin America read the news about the sexual abuse scandals in the Church in the United States but we can’t understand how such a thing could happen.”

For him – as for many commentators at that time – this was just an American problem.

A few years later, the epidemic of sexual abuse scandals hit Ireland and Australia. Some experts offered then another explanation – the sexual abuse epidemic was an Anglo-Saxon problem.

The new theory ignored cases of abuse in the last century like that of Mexican priest Marcial Maciel, founder of the Legion of Christ and the Regnum Christi movement. Other famous cases in Latin America include Peruvian layman Luis Fernando Figari, founder of Sodalitium Christianae Vitae (SCV), a lay Catholic movement, and Fernando Karadima. After years of accusations, Karadima was defrocked by Pope Francis last September.

Karadima’s case was the prelude of the Chilean church’s crisis that exploded last year and resulted in a meeting at the Vatican where all the bishops of Chile presented their resignation to the Holy Father.

Last September, a study revealed that at least 1,670 members of the clergy and lay workers in the church in Germany had been accused of sexual abuse between 1946 and 2014. Six days later, an investigation revealed that 20 out of 39 Dutch cardinals, along with bishops and their auxiliaries “covered up sexual abuse,” for more than 65 years. Italy and India had their share of scandalous revelations too during the same year.

It became clear that the sexual abuse scandal was neither an American, nor an Anglo-Saxon problem. It became clear too in America that it was not a “Catholic problem” as scandals in Hollywood, Protestant denominations and the sports world came to light.

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One year after setting off “tsunami,” a victim talks of healing and continuing faith

BUFFALO (NY)
WBFO Radio

February 27, 2019

By Michael Mroziak

It was his revelation of sexual abuse as a minor, at the hands of a Catholic priest, which began what Bishop Richard Malone later admitted was an overwhelming number of similar claims and complaints lodged against dozens of priests within the Diocese, dating back decades.

One year to the day his revelation touched off a “tsunami,” as it was later described,” Michael Whalen holds on to his Catholic faith but will finally do something he felt unable to do for roughly 40 years—attend Mass.

On February 27, 2018, Michael Whalen stood on the sidewalk along Main Street, near the intersection with Pearl and Edward Streets, across the street from the downtown offices of the Diocese of Buffalo. It was then and there, as part of a call to state lawmakers to pass the Child Victims Act, that Whalen first revealed in public the abuse he suffered as a child.

The priest who abused him, Father Norbert Orsolits, later confessed to molesting Whalen and dozens of others when approached by the Buffalo News.

One year later, Whalen was feeling upbeat when he met one-on-one with WBFO. He is a man who has found peace.

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Graphic and painful testimony on sex abuse

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

February 27, 2019

By Katherine Gregg

Grown-ups sexually molested when they were children — by their local parish priests, by sports coaches, family members, even by the notorious Larry Nassar — came to the Rhode Island State House on Tuesday night to tell their horrific stories, some for the second or third time.

And some were more graphic than others, including Ann Hagan Webb, the 66-year-old psychologist and sister of the Rhode Island lawmaker who introduced the legislation that was the focus of Tuesday night’s House Judiciary Committee hearing. Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee’s legislation would extend from 7 years to 35 the statute of limitations on the pursuit of legal claims against child molesters and any institution employing them that looked the other way.

“Usually we save ourselves, and you, the pain by using generalities like ‘child abuse’ or ‘molestation’ and leave it at that. It’s time to rip the scab off,” Webb told the lawmakers.

Identifying the late Monsignor Anthony DeAngelis as her molester over a seven-year period that began when she was in kindergarten at the Sacred Heart elementary school in West Warwick, Webb recounted a series of disjointed images:

“He’s in a priest’s robe, raping me with crucifix…. I remember the gross look of his genitals close to my face…. I remember choking and gagging … I remember my arm hurting from the repetitive movement of manually bringing him to climax … I remember the sound of the rosary beads as one of the sisters brought me over to the church to meet him.”

Herbert “Hub” Brennan, a well-known physician from East Greenwich, recounted being molested, repeatedly, when he was a child, by the Rev. Brendan Smyth, a visiting priest, counselor and teacher at Our Lady of Mercy School and Church in East Greenwich, between 1965 and 1968. Smyth later returned to Ireland and pleaded guilty there to 141 counts of sexual abuse. He died in prison.

“Smyth would call from his rectory across the street from the school and have the nuns pull me out of my second or third grade classroom … [where] I would wait until he entered and took me across the hall to the nurse’s office where he would abuse me,″ though sometimes, “as an altar boy, he would molest me in the dressing room next to the altar.”

Not all of the people who testified blamed clergy.

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Vatican contrast on Pell, McCarrick driven by doubt about guilt

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 27, 2019

By John L. Allen Jr.

Like virtually everyone in Catholic circles, the Vatican has known since December about Cardinal George Pell’s conviction in his native Australia for alleged sexual offenses against two minor boys in 1996. As a result, Rome was not at all caught off guard when news of the conviction made the rounds Tuesday, after a gag order was lifted.

The statement read aloud to reporters Tuesday by Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti was not, therefore, cobbled together under tight deadline pressure. On the contrary, officials had three months to ponder what they wanted to say when the moment came.

That truth makes it all the more striking how little the statement actually said – no word about any Church trial of Pell, nothing about taking away his cardinal’s red hat or expelling him from the Catholic priesthood, all of which happened to Theodore McCarrick of the United States in what, in Church terms, was the mere blink of an eye.

How does one explain the difference? It’s actually fairly simple: Early on, senior officials were convinced of McCarrick’s guilt. With Pell, they still aren’t.

Over the last couple of days, Crux has spoken with some of the Catholic Church’s leading reformers on clerical sexual abuse, inside the Vatican and out. To be clear, these are not people automatically inclined to give accused clergy the benefit of the doubt, and several are figures who actually dislike some of Pell’s political and theological stances as well as what’s often see as his fairly bruising personality.

Nonetheless, they’ve expressed skepticism that Pell is actually guilty of the crimes with which he was charged and convicted.

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‘Sociopathic lack of empathy’: Parents of victims tell of how George Pell ‘crushed’ them

ADELAIDE (AUSTRALIA)
News.Com.AU

February 27, 2019

By Phoebe Loomes

Two parents who reached out to Cardinal George Pell for help after their daughters were sexually abused by a Catholic priest have spoken about his “sociopathic lack of empathy”.

Chrissie and Anthony Foster said the Catholic leader “crushed” them when they went to see him in 1997 about the abuse of their daughters Emma and Katie by priest Kevin O’Donnell who presided over St Mary’s Church in Dandenong, Melbourne, from 1958 to 1986.

When the Fosters approached Archbishop Pell about the horrific sexual abuse of two of their three daughters, the couple said he “bullied” them, and they were shocked by his aggression.

“In our interactions with the now cardinal, Archbishop Pell, we experienced a sociopathic lack of empathy,” Mr Foster told the ABC’s 7.30 before his death in 2017.

“And when we went to them, went to George Pell, he just crushed us,” Ms Foster added. “He just bullied us and spoke over us.”

After being repeated raped by O’Donnell, Emma became addicted to drugs, had eating disorders and self-harmed before overdosing on medication at 26. Katie was hit by a car after a drinking binge in 1999, leaving her brain damaged.

Ms Foster expanded on her comments last night to Leigh Sales on ABC’s 7.30.

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Former priest says Pell verdict will not create change within the Catholic Church

BURNIE (AUSTRALIA)
The Advocate

February 27, 2019

By Emily Jarvie

Former Catholic Priest Julian Punch said the Catholic Church needs to be deconstructed, following the finding of prominent member Cardinal George Pell guilty of multiple counts of child sexual abuse.

“It needs to be a different church,” Mr Punch said.

“The church has really got to the stage where it is just a group of elderly men who are in denial and who’ve used the church in terms of a power base. They’re certainly not representing any Christian spirit.

“I’ve got a deep spirituality and I don’t see it at all represented in the Catholic Church.

“Besides the survivors of sexual abuse, there’s many, many other people that are survivors in terms of the Catholic Church.”

Mr Punch said he did not think the Pell verdict would encourage any change within the church.

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Lawyers’ list of accused priests includes ‘substantiated’ case of S.I. deacon

STATEN ISLAND (NY)
Staten Island Advance

February 27, 2019

By Maura Grunlund

A list of Roman Catholic priests and religious figures accused of “sexual misconduct” that was released by a law firm last week contains several cases with Staten Island ties that were deemed substantiated by the Archdiocese of New York — including a native Staten Islander who was a prominent deacon and educator.

The allegation against Deacon Arthur Manzione was “substantiated” by the Lay Review Board and he was “dismissed from the diaconate,” according to Joseph Zwilling, director of communications for the archdiocese.

The list, posted on the website of Jeff Anderson and Associates, a firm that advocates for victims, included the names of about 30 current or former members of the clergy with ties to Staten Island.

Many of the priests on the list whose cases have been deemed substantiated by the archdiocese have been previously reported in the Advance.

The law firm’s list also includes the names of Island clergy against whom abuse allegations were found unsubstantiated by the archdiocese, although specific information about when or where the accusations were made is not provided.

Manzione taught students in Catholic schools on Staten Island for many years before rising to the ranks of associate secretary for education of the Archdiocese of New York, according to Advance records.

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Cardinals Sin: Georgetown Appeases, Frustrates Students Seeking Revocation Of Honorary Degrees

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Georgetown Voice

February 27, 2019

By Margaret Gach

Following months of student activism and internal discussions among top administrators, Georgetown University announced it was revoking the honorary degree it conferred on Theodore McCarrick, former cardinal and archbishop of D.C. The Feb. 19 decision comes after McCarrick’s removal from the priesthood three days prior because of sexual abuse allegations against him that became public last summer. This is the first time Georgetown has revoked an honorary degree.

Now, students and Georgetown’s Catholic community are reflecting on the revocation and looking ahead at what they believe the university and the Catholic Church still need to do to address the decades-long clerical sexual abuse crisis.

Julie Bevilacqua (COL ’19) is one of a group of students who met with university officials throughout the fall semester to advocate for the revocations of the honorary degrees given to McCarrick and Cardinal Donald Wuerl—a former archbishop of D.C. accused of covering up clerical sexual abuse. For Bevilacqua and others in the group, the Feb. 19 announcement was a welcome one, but she said their work is far from over.

“I’m feeling simultaneously happy that this degree is finally being revoked and also frustrated that this took so long,” Bevilacqua said. “It’s really important that we remember this is a beginning step and not a final one.”

When the Archdiocese of New York released a statement on June 20, 2018 outlining an accusation that McCarrick had abused a teenage altar boy, Pope Francis ordered McCarrick out of public service and into a life of “prayer and penance” to await a trial in the Vatican. The news set off a series of allegations in other dioceses: Seminarians training to be priests claimed McCarrick had forced them to share a bed with him while they were on retreat, and a Virginia man said that McCarrick, a “family friend,” had sexually abused him over two decades.

The accusations hit the D.C. Catholic community especially hard. McCarrick had been a well-liked archbishop during his time in Washington from 2001 to 2006. Throughout his tenure in D.C., it wasn’t unusual to see him on Georgetown’s campus. McCarrick attended university President John DeGioia’s 2001 inauguration, celebrated Mass in Dahlgren Chapel, was a guest lecturer in classes, and participated in university panels up through 2014. Georgetown conferred an honorary degree on McCarrick in 2004 for his “humanitarian efforts” and “compassionate service to others.”

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Vatican to open own investigation into accusations against Pell

ROME (ITALY)
Reuters

February 27, 2019

By Philip Pullella

The Vatican is opening its own investigation into accusations against Cardinal George Pell, who was found guilty of sexual abuse of minors in his native Australia, a spokesman said on Wednesday.

The move means that Pell, who maintains his innocence and plans to appeal the verdict, could be dismissed from the priesthood if the Vatican’s doctrinal department also finds him guilty.

The Pell conviction has been particularly embarrassing for the Vatican and Pope Francis, coming just two days after the end of a major meeting of Church leaders on how to better tackle the abuse of children by clergy.

The 77-year-old Pell, a former top Vatican official, will spend his first night behind bars on Wednesday after he was remanded in custody pending sentencing for sexually abusing two choir boys in Australia two decades ago.

“After the guilty verdict in the first instance concerning Cardinal Pell, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) will now handle the case following the procedure and within the time established by canonical norm,” Vatican spokesman Alessandro Gisotti said.

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Reaction of conservative Catholics to abuse summit reveals a lot

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 27, 2019

By Michael Sean Winters

Checking out how conservative U.S. Catholics reacted to the Vatican sex abuse summit would be funny if it were not so pitiful. After so many years when they criticized NCR for covering the story (amongst other signs of indifference to the Gospel), now they have decided to get busy. They sense a vulnerability in Pope Francis on this issue, saddled as he is with a curia that has been perfecting the art of sabotaging reform for centuries. They intend to ride this train if they can. But, their commentary betrays their biases more than anything else.

There is Tim Busch, founder of the Napa Institute, board member of EWTN, funder of the business school at Catholic University that bears his name, taking to the pages of The Wall Street Journal to suggest the laity, the faithful laity, will stand up to the scourge of clergy sex abuse no matter the cost because the bishops have failed to do so. Chutzpah. This is the man who hired disgraced former Archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis John Nienstedt as a kind of house chaplain for his Napa Institute and did not blink at Nienstedt’s coddling of a notorious abuser of children among other things. Busch only sacked Nienstedt last summer when the incongruity became too conspicuous to ignore any longer. Say, has Busch ever called for the public release of the document compiled by investigators into Nienstedt’s behavior? Did I miss that?

You could count on the folks at Church Militant to be disappointed with the summit. They wanted the bishops to focus on the scourge of homosexuality among the clergy, not the scourge of clergy sex abuse of minors. This despite the facts that there are no reputable studies that indicate a linkage between gays and sex abuse of minors, and most sexual abuse of minors happens within families and involves men violating girls.

This episode of “The Vortex” referred to the meeting as a “Summit of Lies,” and called the organizers “liars and are deflecting from the real story. They are all part of the homosexual current identified by Archbishop Viganò.” I note in passing that when I clicked on the link, I got an ad for President Trump’s reelection campaign. Only an auto-da-fé featuring some gay clergy would have satisfied them.

LifeSiteNews made a splash at the press conferences during the summit. You can see the embedded video of one session here. Their reporter asked, in a rambling speech pretending to be a question, about the connection between gays and sex abuse and Archbishop Charles Scicluna was succinct in his reply that the two have nothing to do with one another. LifeSite’s reports before, during and after the summit all focus on the issue of homosexuality.

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How a priest’s admission to a News reporter sparked Buffalo’s clergy sex abuse scandal

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 27, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

I knocked on the front door expecting the Rev. Norbert F. Orsolits not to answer – or to slam the door in my face when I introduced myself as a Buffalo News reporter and explained why I had driven 45 minutes to speak with him.

I told Orsolits that a man named Michael Whalen publicly accused the priest of molesting him in the late 1970s. I was looking for a response. Orsolits didn’t shut the door.

Little did I know at the time, one year ago today, that our brief conversation would help set in motion the unraveling of decades of cover-up of sexual abuse by more than 100 priests in the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo.

Orsolits stepped one foot outside and asked me to repeat the name of the person making the accusation. When I did, Orsolits said he didn’t remember anybody named Michael Whalen.

It was an odd reaction. We talked some more. He carefully considered my questions, but didn’t give lengthy answers. I didn’t immediately take notes because I didn’t want to scare him from speaking freely.

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Yakima Diocese may post names of accused priests

YAKIMA (WA)
Yakima Herald-Republic

February 26, 2019

By Jane Gargas

Next month the Catholic Diocese of Yakima is considering taking a new — and very public — approach to dealing with sex abuse by members of the clergy.

The Diocesan Lay Advisory Board will discuss at its March meeting whether the diocese should post on its website the names of clergy who have served here and have had credible allegations of sex abuse of a minor made against them.

The group, which meets quarterly, investigates allegations of sexual misconduct in the local Catholic Church. Once they determine whether to publish or not, members will make a recommendation to Bishop Joseph Tyson, who will make the ultimate decision.

“I am leaning one way, but it wouldn’t be fair for me to say before discussing it with the board,” said lay advisory board chair, Russ Mazzola, a Yakima attorney.

Other board members are Jorge Torres, a psychologist; Tom Dittmar, who has a background in law enforcement; Dr. Mark Maiocco, a physician; Monsignor John Ecker, pastor at St. Paul Cathedral, and Elizabeth Torres, an environmental health-project coordinator.

Tyson confirmed that the board is exploring ways to demonstrate more openness.

“Not just in light of the church’s sexual abuse scandals, but the wider scandals involving Penn State football, Olympic gymnastics, and even the #metoo movement, transparency is the key,” he wrote in an email to a reporter.

The two other dioceses in Washington, Seattle and Spokane, publish names of cleric sex abusers on their websites. The Archdiocese of Seattle posted a list of 77 names of offending priests in January 2016, and several more names have since been added.

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Top Vatican official’s sex abuse conviction latest blow to embattled Roman Catholic Church

NEW YORK (NY)
ABC News

February 26, 2019

By Meghan Keneally

The revelation that a Catholic cardinal in Australia was convicted of molesting boys marks the most senior member of the church to face prison time for sexual abuse.

The charges against Cardinal George Pell — who was not only a major figure in Australia’s Catholic church but also a close adviser to Pope Francis — were not publicly released until Tuesday because of a law in the country’s court system.

In December, he was convicted of molesting two choir boys in the 1990s, but under Australian law, all details of that trial — including the fact that the trial was held at all — were suppressed because Pell was set to be subject to a second trial.

But the suppression order was lifted after additional charges relating to allegations that Pell had also abused boys in his hometown of Ballarat in the 1970s were dropped, prompting details of the first trial and conviction to be made public for the first time, according to the Associated Press.

Pell’s sentencing hearing is set to begin Wednesday, and he could face up to 50 years in prison, the AP reported. Pell’s lawyer Paul Galbally said that Pell maintains his innocence and that an appeal on the conviction has already been filed.

The Australian Broadcasting Company reports that the allegations brought forth in the first trial stemmed from incidents that took place when he was the archbishop of Melbourne, the country’s second-most populous city.

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Víctimas chilenas de abusos sexuales critican medidas del Papa tras cumbre en Roma: “Buscan blindar” a la Iglesia

[Chilean abuse victims criticize Pope’s measures after Rome summit: “They seek to shield” the Church]

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
Emol

By Juan Peña

La “Red de Sobrevivientes” calificó como “obsoleta” la decisión de establecer un mecanismo que defina cómo actuar ante la aparición de denuncias y un grupo de escucha para los afectados.

La “Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso” cometidos en entornos eclesiásticos de Chile criticó las medidas adoptadas por el Papa Francisco en la cumbre que citó en Roma, marcada por la revelación de la destrucción de archivos sobre los autores de abusos sexuales.

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Out of ministry but still in the priesthood, argues a priest and survivor

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

February 26, 2019

By Joe McDonald

The day the priest who abused me was buried, the official papers removing him from the priesthood arrived from Rome.

When I was informed of this and sought clarification it was explained to me that technically he died a priest. My reaction to this news was to murmur, ‘thank God’, which surprised not only his confrère sitting in front of me but, to some degree, myself. This response has come back to me in these days as I attempt to reflect prayerfully on the work of the Vatican Summit on Clerical Abuse in Rome, which has just concluded.

Already there has been much comment on this summit. Before it was even finished the debate was framed along the lines: ‘is this the long awaited line in the sand or just the latest cosmetic exercise’? The analysis no doubt will continue. In this short contribution I do not purport to engage in any serious evaluation of its work except to address one aspect that has emerged. That is the tension between those who would argue that the priest who has abused must be removed from ministry and those who agree but also argue we should stop short of dismissing him from priesthood. I belong to the latter.

I am conscious this position may well be unpopular and I care very much that I do not add to the hurt of those already hurt. However it is important to address the issue at hand. There is, in my view, no debate around issues such as taking responsibility, our duty with regard to reporting, right through to full cooperation with civil law which will invariably be accompanied by punishment. At this point, if it is not in place beforehand, there must be clear arrangements to ensure that the priest who has been found guilty has no further unsupervised access to children or vulnerable adults. The National Conference for Safeguarding has done excellent work in this regard.

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Ezzati: “Me conmovieron profundamente los testimonios de las víctimas”

[Ezzati: “I was deeply moved by the victims’ testimonies”]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 26, 2019

By María José Navarrete

Tras la cumbre vaticana sobre protección de menores en la Iglesia, el cardenal dijo que se necesita avanzar en transparencia. El arzobispo de Santiago valoró las exposiciones hechas por mujeres y la necesidad de mayor colaboración entre obispos.

La semana pasada el arzobispo de Santiago, Ricardo Ezzati, aseguró que siguió “con particular interés y atención” el encuentro convocado por el Papa Francisco en Roma. La cita trató sobre los temas de abusos a menores dentro de la Iglesia. Según contó el prelado, estuvo atento al cronograma, las conferencias de prensa y las ponencias de los expositores, y en conversación con La Tercera entregó sus primeras impresiones.

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“Falta control sobre los obispos. Es lo fundamental”

[“There is a lack of control over the bishops. It is the fundamental thing”]

ROME (ITALY)
El País (Spain)

February 26, 2019

By Daniel Verdu

Lucetta Scaraffia denuncia la impunidad con la que actúan los obispos en los casos de abusos y subraya la importancia de feminizar la Iglesia para protegerla estas crisis

El suplemento femenino que publica L’Osservatore Romano se imprimió hace un mes con un brutal reportaje sobre los históricos abusos que han recibido las monjas por parte de sacerdotes y obispos. Violaciones, abusos de poder, relaciones de esclavitud… La historia fue reproducida por decenas de medios, abrió un debate cerrado a cal y canto durante años en la Iglesia y obligó al Papa a pronunciarse y a reconocer el problema en pleno vuelo de vuelta de su viaje a Abu Dabi. Aquella apuesta periodística, como tantas otras, fue idea de Lucetta Scaraffia (Torino, 1948), periodista, historiadora y directora de Mujeres, Iglesia y Mundo, el valiente suplemento que dirige y que impulsó el anterior responsable e L’Osservatore, Giovanni Maria Vian. Azote del machismo rampante en la Iglesia, Scaraffia está convencida que la institución debe feminizarse para afrontar plagas como la de los abusos.

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“La Iglesia ha superado todos los límites de la decepción”

[Spanish victims: “The Church has exceeded all limits of disappointment”]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 25, 2019

By Julio Núñez and Íñigo Domínguez

Las víctimas españolas sienten que la cumbre sobre pederastia en el Vaticano ha sido “un lavado de cara”

La mayoría de las víctimas españolas de abusos sexuales en la Iglesia consultadas por este periódico afirman que no les sorprende el discurso vacío de medidas concretas del papa Francisco tras la histórica cumbre sobre la pederastia celebrada la semana pasada en el Vaticano. No tenían muchas esperanzas, dicen, de que los obispos anunciasen acciones para reparar el daño a los afectados, que han visto cómo los abusos que sufrieron por clérigos han prescrito. “Han superado todos los límites de la decepción. Han legalizado ante el mundo su intención de seguir ocultando y permitiendo los abusos en su seno. Ha sido una ceremonia estética sin ética alguna”, opina Teresa Conde, de 52 años, víctima de un religioso de los trinitarios de Salamanca que comenzó a abusar de ella cuando tenía 14 años.

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Editorial: El Papa no ha logrado imponer medidas concretas contra la pederastia

[Editorial: Pope has failed to impose concrete measures against pedophilia]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 26, 2019

La celebración desde el pasado viernes hasta el domingo de una cumbre en el Vaticano con los presidentes de conferencias episcopales de todo el mundo que han tratado exclusivamente el problema de la pederastia en el interior de la jerarquía católica constituye un hecho sin precedentes en la historia de la Iglesia y como tal debe ser valorado. Se trata de un escándalo de carácter delictivo a escala global que afecta tanto a 1.254 millones de católicos como a decenas de países donde se han producido durante décadas los delitos que han sido ocultados a sus sistemas judiciales.

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El obispo de San Sebastián reconoce haber instruido cinco casos de pederastia desde 2017

[Bishop of San Sebastian admits learning about five pedophilia cases since 2017]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 26, 2019

By Julio Núñez

José Ignacio Munilla revela que recibió varias denuncias después de que saliera a la luz que el exvicario de su diócesis había abusado de dos menores

El obispo de San Sebastián, José Ignacio Munilla, ha reconocido haber instruido desde 2017 cinco procesos canónicos sobre pederastia, cuatro de ellos no conocidos hasta ahora. Durante una entrevista este lunes en Radio Euskadi, Munilla ha recordado que a comienzos de su mandato como obispo de Gipuzkoa, en 2016, abrió una investigación contra el entonces vicario, Juan Kruz Mendizábal, después de recibir varias denuncias de abusos.

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February 26, 2019

AG issues 400 subpoenas seeking records from Catholic churches in Nebraska

LINCOLN (NE)
Lincoln Journal Star

February 26, 2019

By Riley Johnson

Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson issued more than 400 subpoenas to Catholic churches and institutions across the state Tuesday to compel officials to turn over information on child sexual assault and abuse within the church.

The legal summonses seek all records or information related to any assault or abuse that has occurred by those employed or associated with each church or institution, whether previously reported or not, according to a news release.

Thus far, the state’s three dioceses have cooperated with Peterson’s investigation, which sought 40 years of internal investigative records.

However, Peterson “believes subpoenas are necessary in order to ensure all reports of impropriety have been submitted to the appropriate authorities,” the news release said. “It is our goal that all reports of abuse are subject to complete law enforcement review and investigation as warranted.”

Asked whether state investigators believe church officials have withheld pertinent records, a spokeswoman for Peterson had no comment.

In August, the Attorney General’s Office requested anyone with knowledge of abuse by clergy or other church staff to report it and that the state’s three bishops turn over diocese records concerning alleged abuse.

Lancaster County Attorney Pat Condon, who is assisting in the investigation, deferred comment on his review of records. But in November, he said the Diocese of Lincoln was cooperating.

Peterson and his counterparts in other states announced their investigations into child sex abuse within the church in the wake of the August release of findings from a probe into the problem in Pennsylvania.

A two-year grand jury examination there led by Pennsylvania’s attorney general identified 300 priests credibly accused of abusing more than 1,000 children dating back to 1947 in the state’s six dioceses.

In late November, the Omaha Archdiocese released a report identifying 38 clergy that it said had substantiated abuse allegations against them.

The Diocese of Lincoln hasn’t yet issued a similar report.

But in November, Lincoln Bishop James Conley announced the diocese would have an independent task force review allegations of child sexual abuse and misconduct with minors and how the diocese handled them.

Within the Diocese of Lincoln, there are 134 parishes, according to the Nebraska Catholic Conference. Nebraska has 350 Catholic churches overall.

In the pews, parishioners at Catholic churches across Lincoln have regularly offered prayers at Sunday Masses for those victimized by clergy and church staff. They’ve also prayed for diocese officials as they lead the Catholic church in turbulent times.

The diocese’s four-person task force was instructed to issue a final report on its findings and what information Conley should release to the public by Feb. 1.

A spokesman for the diocese didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment on the issuance of subpoenas or the status of the task force’s work.

Those clergy named in the Omaha report were mostly priests, and some cases date back 60 years but were reported after 1978, the year the state probe looks back to.

The archdiocese said 34 of the 38 clergy members were accused of abusing minors before 2002, when the U.S. Conference of Bishops required dioceses to take steps to protect children. None remain with the archdiocese.

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California priest is accused of manipulating illegal immigrant followers into letting him masturbate them to ‘cure’ them of their sins

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Daily Mail

February 26, 2019

By Chauncey Alcorn

A California priest who allegedly manipulated his followers into letting him masturbate them to ‘cure’ them of their sins has been arrested.

Jesus Antonio Castaneda Serna, 51, headed the Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe Anglican Church in Fresno.

He was taken into custody on Sunday after a 13-month investigation and charged with multiple counts of sexual battery, battery, and attempted sexual battery.

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Focus: Michigan Clergy Sex Abuse Investigation

CADILLAC (MI)
9 & 10 News

February 26, 2019

By Joe Buczek

Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel is going full-speed ahead on the state’s investigation into the Catholic Church.

Kevin Essebaggers gets you up to speed on the actions taken already, and Nessel’s plans for the future of the investigation into predator priests. We also hear everything the Attorney General had to say on the matter at her recent press conference.

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Hampden DA Anthony Gulluni ‘dissatisfied’ with clergy sex abuse reporting by Springfield Diocese

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
Springfield Republican

February 26, 2019

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni said Tuesday he is “dissatisfied” with what he termed the “inconsistency in reporting” of clergy sexual abuse by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield.

The district attorney is urging victims and their families to call his office’s newly established hotline to report sexual abuse by members of clergy in Hampden County.

“I direct them to contact a Massachusetts State Police Detective Unit assigned to the Hampden County District Attorney’s Office at 413 800-2958,” said Gulluni during a press conference called in response to a recently released abuse report from the Springfield Diocese, whose data Gulluni says does not match what is in his files.

“This hotline is created to allow victims to report directly to law enforcement any allegations of any sexual crimes committed by a member of the clergy in Hampden County,” Gulluni said. “I have established this hotline so the rights of victims are preserved and any allegations can be properly vetted and investigated by law enforcement where appropriate.”

While stopping short of accusing the diocese of any wrongdoing and saying the hotline can be used even if someone also contacts the diocese, Gulluni said data on what the diocese said were the number of yearly abuse reports back to 1986 did not match referrals in his possession in recent reviews even given the fact that the diocese covers all four counties of Western Massachusetts.

“Given these reviews in the past several months I am dissatisfied with the system in place and in the inconsistency of reporting over the last many years,” Gulluni said.

“This hotline is a step to rectify and improved the reporting system to ensure victims claims are heard, addressed and respected,” he added.

Gulluni told reporters that a two-page report on the diocesan website and published in February’s issue of The Catholic Mirror shows 15 reports of clergy sexual abuse made to the diocese in 2018.

He quoted a Republican news report in which the diocese said its outreach to all victims includes “the commitment to report all cases to the appropriate district attorneys’ offices which we have done.”

“Following a period of appropriate due diligence by my office in reviewing its files we have not received referrals of any kind from the diocese that comport with its own public statements,” Gulluni said.

Springfield Diocese spokesperson Mark Dupont said that of the 15 cases reported in 2018 “nine were reported, the remainder were either anonymous or came to us via other attorneys directly to the offices of (diocesan) Attorney Jack Egan so there was no intake.”

Dupont said difference in other referral numbers may be due to the fact that the diocese has followed a directive that he said predates Gulluni’s tenure as district attorney here to not refer allegations against deceased priests, but will do so going forward.

He also said in response to one specific referral of a letter that Gulluni mentioned to not originally having in his possession in response to a reporter’s question but now does from the diocese, that the diocese has “undertaken a new policy to send all future notifications via certified mail with return receipt.”

Dupont showed a copy of the letter that appeared to be sent to another district attorney’s office in 2011.

“We maintain this new hotline number should be promoted and made available for all victims of abuse, certainly including church abuse victims,” said Dupont, reiterating the diocese’s response when initially asked about the hotline.

“All victims of abuse are entitled to equal and fair treatment. The diocese will do its part in making this new number available on our website and through all parishes in Hampden County.

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Pell’s conviction applauded in the US

AUSTRALIA
Associated Press

February 26, 2019

By Peter Mitchell

US victims of clergy abuse have welcomed Cardinal George Pell’s child rape conviction in Australia.

America’s largest support group for survivors, St Louis-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said Pell’s prosecution offered two lessons.

“First, police and prosecutors are doing what popes and prelates are NOT doing – exposing child-molesting clerics,” SNAP said in a statement.

“Second, kids can be protected from even powerful and politically connected predators if survivors are smart and brave enough to trust law enforcement.”

Pell, Australia’s highest-ranking Catholic, raped a choirboy in the 1990s in Melbourne and molested another.

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Former Seattle nun wants less talk, more action from Pope Francis to address sex abuse

SEATTLE (WA)
KUOW Radio

February 26, 2019

By Andy Hurst and Kim Malcolm

Kim Malcolm talks with Mary Dispenza about the recent Vatican meeting on clerical sex abuse.

Pope Francis recently held an historic meeting at the Vatican to address sex abuse within the Catholic Church. But many advocates, including Dispenza, say the summit ended with few concrete actions.

Dispenza, a former nun, is the Northwest Director for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, also known as SNAP.

Listen to the interview by clicking the play button above.

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Testimony: Providence diocese has paid more than $21 million to settle clergy-abuse claims

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

February 26, 2019

By Katherine Gregg

In an effort to demonstrate to Rhode Island lawmakers how seriously it takes sexual misconduct allegations, an arm of the Catholic Diocese of Providence has acknowledged paying “over $21 million in legal settlements,″ and another $2.3 million for counseling to “resolve″ more than 130 claims of abuse by clergy in church-run schools and parishes.

The diocese reported the payouts in written testimony the Rhode Island Catholic Conference filed with the House Judiciary Committee in advance of Tuesday night’s hearing on legislation — co-sponsored by 58 of 75 House members — that would extend the time for filing civil suits against the perpetrators of child sex abuse, and the institutions that employed them, from seven to 35 years.

The diocese does not spell out the time period the 130 claims encompassed, or the number of victims to whom the settlements were paid. Nor does it name the priests or church staff implicated in these long-hidden crimes.

But the diocese laid out its case for a massive rewrite of the legislation that Rep. Carol Hagan McEntee has championed in a 15-page filing with the committee submitted in recent days, at the same time as graphic accounts emerged of alleged sex abuse by clergy that the Diocese of Providence have provided the Rhode Island State Police since 2011.

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Hotline created to report clergy sex abuse

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
WWLP TV

February 26, 2019

Hampden District Attorney Anthony Gulluni announced the establishment of a clergy sex abuse hotline at a news conference this afternoon.

The hotline is being setup following the recent disclosures by the Diocese of Springfield.

In a statement from the Diocese of Springfield, spokesman Mark Dupont said while they think the hotline is a good idea, they would urge the D.A. to expand it and make it available to all victims of sexual abuse, not simply to one class of victims.

Hotline: 413-800-2958 staffed by Massachusetts State Police

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Registered sex offender arrested after approaching Jackson school for business deal

JACKSON (TN)
Jackson Sun

February 13, 2019

By Cassandra Stephenson

A Jackson man was arraigned Monday with a charge of violating the sex offender registry after he tried to secure a business agreement with a local secondary school.

Chad Lutrell, 39, allegedly went to St. Mary’s Catholic School to secure an agreement regarding the school’s recyclable materials, according to court documents. As Lutrell exited an office after the meeting, a woman walking into the building recognized him as a registered sex offender. She reported it to the principal, who contacted the Jackson Police Department. The incident was recorded by the school’s security cameras.

A representative from St. Mary’s Catholic School declined to comment on the incident.

Lutrell was convicted of sexual battery in Madison County in 2009. The Tennessee Sexual Offender Registry lists him as a sex offender against children.

The Jackson Police Department Sex Offender Unit and U.S. Marshals Service arrested Lutrell at his home in Jackson on Tuesday morning. He is being held at Madison County Jail with a $5,000 bond.

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Priest sex abuse victim helps heal through poetry

EVANSVILLE (IN)
WTHR TV

February 26, 2019

By Jennie Runevitch

Just a few days ago, the Diocese of Evansville released the names of a dozen Indiana priests with credible accusations of sex abuse against children, spanning decades.

One of the victims only shared his story of abuse after years of silence. And it took his talent for poetry to start healing those old wounds.

“It really was a cathartic process,” said poet Norbert Krapf. “When I moved back to Indiana, it brought all of it back up and that’s when I started to write. I knew that I had to tell my story because I knew it would tell a lot of other stories, too.”

Krapf read to us some of his poetry from “Catholic Boy Blues”, that weaves honesty about the scars with hope for change.

“Nobody in any of these stories, wherever they take place, will live happily ever after,” Krapf read. “But if people can summon what it takes to tell the truth, they can live together and help others find their voice. One voice singing by itself can sound awfully small, but several voices lifting as one can make a chorus that sings a mighty song.”

Norbert Krapf turned to writing to ease the pain of sex abuse he suffered from a priest in southwest Indiana as a child.

It took 50 years for this former Indiana Poet Laureate to find his voice. Fifty years to publicly reveal his secret of being sexual abused by a priest. Krapf says the abuse happened between sixth and eighth grade.

“Abusers prey on trust and they betray trust. And I was not nearly the only person abused by our pastor. We could not tell our parents who would have been so shocked that it would have just destroyed them almost,” Krapf said.

He says the abuse ended in 1957. He started writing in 2007.

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Sacred Heart Seminary: Ground Zero For Catholic Abuse Scandal In Detroit

DETROIT (MI)
Deadline Detroit

February 25, 2019

By Michael Betzold

“If an investigator knocks on your door, ask to see their badge, not their rosary.”

That’s what Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel told Catholics last week, warning them not to trust the church to self-police its abuse scandal. She said that, like Michigan State University investigating Larry Nassar, the Catholic Church is more interested in protecting itself than serving its flock. I share her suspicions.

Self-policing didn’t work well when I was a high school student boarding at Sacred Heart Seminary in the 1960s. From the close of evening prayers until we sat down to breakfast in the refectory the next morning, Grand Silence was in force.

You were supposed to be praying for discernment about your vocation, not joking around with your classmates. Talking was punishable with demerits, and enough demerits could get you expelled. But any time the proctor was out of the dorm, teenage taunts and tricks would erupt. For some of the less pious among us, our seminary years were spent learning how to defy arbitrary rules that were enforced by a larger patriarchal code of Grand Silence.

I didn’t learn about what that code protected at Sacred Heart until decades later, when a close friend finally revealed that he’d been assaulted by a faculty priest during his senior year. He was not the only victim.

Not surprisingly, seminarians targeted were intimidated and ashamed to speak out. Some were threatened with expulsion or deliberately flunked in classes taught by the perpetrators or their friends on the faculty. Our class size dwindled from over 200 entering freshmen to just 88 graduates. I always thought the attrition was due to the same loss of vocation I was experiencing — or just poor grades. Now I wonder whether some departing classmates were fleeing from abuse.

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Five major Catholic leaders taken down by the church sex abuse scandal

ARLINGTON (VA)
USA Today

February 26, 2019

By Lindsay Schnell

The Catholic Church continues to find itself in crisis.

Just days after Pope Francis wrapped up the first-ever Vatican summit on sex abuse –where more than 175 bishops from around the world discussed the clergy sex abuse scandal and how better to respond to victims – the church again drew negative headlines with the news that Australian Cardinal George Pell had been convicted of molestation.

Here are five major players taken down by the scandal.

Cardinal George Pell
Pell, the pope’s top financial adviser, was convicted this week of molesting two 13-year-old choir boys in late 1996. The church’s third-most-powerful official, Pell, now 77, is the most senior Catholic cleric ever charged with child sex abuse. Right before the alleged abuse took place, Pell had been named the highest-ranking Catholic in Melbourne, Australia’s second-largest city.

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‘Centuries of entitlement’: Emma Thompson on why she quit Lasseter film

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Guardian

February 26, 2019

By Catherine Shoard

In her resignation letter from the film Luck, the actor questions whether any company should work with disgraced film executive John Lasseter

When the actor Emma Thompson left the forthcoming animated film Luck last month while it was still in production, it was done without public fanfare, and was only confirmed when film-industry publications such as Variety magazine picked up on it. Now Thompson has put herself firmly above the MeToo parapet with the publication publishing her incendiary letter of resignation addressed to the film’s backers, Skydance Media, one of Hollywood’s most prestigious studios.

It was known that Thompson was unhappy with the arrival in January of former head of Pixar John Lasseter as the new head of Skydance Animation. But the letter goes into extraordinary detail about her disquiet over the appointment of a studio executive whose downfall had been one of the key landmarks of the Me Too and Times Up campaigns.

The move was immediately hailed by activists. Melissa Silverstein, founder and publisher of the website Women and Hollywood tweeted: “This is more than an open letter — Thompson has issued a rallying cry. We hope others with power and privilege will join Thompson in speaking out about abuses of power and those who enable that toxic behavior.”

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Emma Thompson’s letter to Skydance: Why I can’t work for John Lasseter

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Los Angeles Times

February 26, 2019

By Mary McNamara

When Skydance Media Chief Executive David Ellison announced this year that he was hiring John Lasseter to head Skydance Animation, many in and outside the company were shocked and deeply unhappy. Only months earlier, Lasseter had ended his relationship with Pixar — where he had worked since the early ’80s — and parent company Disney after multiple allegations of inappropriate behavior and the creation of a frat house-like work environment. Lasseter had admitted to inappropriate hugging and “other missteps.”

After announcing the hire, Ellison sent a long email to staff, noting that Lasseter was contractually obligated to behave professionally, and convened a series of town halls in which Lasseter apologized for past behavior and asked to be given the chance to prove himself to his new staff. Meanwhile, Mireille Soria, president of Paramount Pictures Animation, with which Skydance has a distribution deal, took the highly unusual step of meeting with female employees to tell them that they could decline to work with Lasseter.

But it was Emma Thompson, the politically outspoken newly anointed dame commander of the British Empire who made the first real definitive statement on Lasseter, and one of the most significant decisions in post-#MeToo Hollywood.

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Cardinal George Pell of Australia Convicted of Sexually Abusing Boys in 1996

NEW YORK (NY)]
The New York Times

February 25, 2019

By Livia Albeck-Ripka and Damien Cave

A version of this article was published in print editions on Dec. 14, 2018, but not online, to comply with a suppression order imposed by a judge in Australia, where The Times has a bureau. On Tuesday, Feb. 26, in Australia, the suppression order was rescinded after a second trial was canceled. All the dates below refer to the original December publication date.

MELBOURNE, Australia — An Australian cardinal who was once an adviser to Pope Francis has been convicted of molesting choir boys more than 20 years ago, making him the highest-ranking Roman Catholic leader ever found guilty of sexual abuse.

The unanimous jury verdict against the cardinal, George Pell, 77, was delivered Tuesday in the County Court of Victoria, where a suppression order has prevented media outlets from sharing any information about the case that could be accessed in Australia.

Cardinal Pell’s case was especially significant because he occupied the highest levels of the church hierarchy. He had been tapped by Francis to reform the Vatican’s finances after leading the church’s response to sexual abuse allegations against priests in Australia.

While Catholic bishops have been convicted before in cover-ups of child sexual abuse, this is the first time that a bishop has been convicted of perpetrating such abuse, according to Ann Barrett Doyle, co-director of Bishopaccountability.org, a research and advocacy group. More than 60 bishops have been accused of sexually abusing minors, she said.

Cardinal Pell, who returned voluntarily from the Vatican in July of 2017, was charged with five offenses said to have occurred in December of 1996 during his time as the newly appointed Archbishop of Melbourne.

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Australian Cardinal George Pell found guilty of child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
La Croix International

February 26, 2019

The 77-year-old Vatican treasurer on leave of absence was convicted on five charges in Melbourne

Cardinal George Pell, the Vatican treasurer on leave of absence, has been found guilty of child sex abuse and convicted of five charges in an Australian court case.

Pell was found guilty at a secret trial in Melbourne in December after a five-week trial, but the results of the case were not revealed until Feb. 26.

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Popular social media ‘prophet’ Joshua Holmes caught on tape in major scandal

Rolling Out

February 26, 2019

By Mo Barnes

A popular pastor and Internet star is now among the latest big names caught for his alleged freaky and ungodly behavior. Joshua Holmes, who followers have called “Jesus in the flesh,” was apparently caught on video pressing his flesh in group sex with female members of his church.

The news was broken by YouTube commentator Larry Reid on his latest show. During the broadcast, Reid referred to and played a portion of a Periscope video where Thomas is calling out by former church member Yasir Wright for derogatory comments. The “Man of God” is heard calling his accuser a “little p—-” and asking “why you on my d— like that.”

Additionally, Thomas challenges him to meet face to face in very shocking language. Reid stated during his podcast that he was sent a link and told to open it before it was taken down. Wright has been active on social media using the Twitter handle Hope Dealer – @YasirWright777. He has repeatedly posted the indiscretions of Prophet Thomas and even names the women in the church Thomas was allegedly having an affair with.

But it gets even worse for Prophet Thomas. Soon after the exchange, the graphic video was posted online showing him engaged in group sex with women who are members of the church. The video was a shock to his followers and supporters. Thomas has been a frequent guest of religious-based programs on The Word Network, whose demographic is a Black Christian audience. According to media outlet Christian Post, the World Network has not responded to the release of the salacious videos.

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Former School Director Arrested for Child Porn, SNAP Responds

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

February 26, 2019

An ex-Long Island Catholic school staffer has just been indicted on child pornography charges. We hope this move will prod others who have been sexually violated to step forward.

This news provides the first opportunity for Bishop John Barres to enlist in the pope’s new “all out war” on abuse. To do that, he must use parish bulletins, church websites and pulpit announcements to beg anyone with information about Michael Wustrow’s alleged crimes to call police. That’s the best way to protect kids – help make sure predators are imprisoned.

Everyone abhors abuse. The question is: will you take steps to stop it? Barres commands a large staff and many resources. So he could help police, prosecutors, parents and parishioners here, if he has the will. Based on our experience, we suspect he doesn’t.

Finally, we are glad Wustrow is being held without bail. That helps protect kids. All too often Catholic officials facing prosecution for child sex crimes fled overseas.

(Wustrow is the former music director at St. Agnes Cathedral in Rockville Centre, where accused predator priests Fr. Brian Brinker and Fr. Joseph C. McComiskey also worked.)

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Pope ends summit with no word on Apuron, drawing disappointment

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

February 26, 2019

By Haidee V Eugenio

Pope Francis closed on Sunday a four-day summit on the protection of children without any word on Guam Archbishop Anthony S. Apuron’s case.

That drew criticism from groups seeking justice for clergy sex abuse victims and the mother of one of the boys Apuron allegedly abused.

For nearly a year now, the pope has been reviewing Apuron’s appeal of a Vatican tribunal’s verdict finding Apuron guilty of “certain accusations” involving sexual abuse of minors.

“It was very disappointing and disturbing Apuron’s appeal was not addressed. I feel the pope has let my son, Sonny, and other victims and our island down once again,” said Doris Y. Concepcion, who accused Apuron of sexually molesting her late son, who was an altar boy in Agat in the 1970s.

Concepcion, who now lives in Arizona, testified in Apuron’s canonical trial in 2017.

Like Concerned Catholics of Guam and other advocacy groups, Concepcion was hoping the pope would make an announcement at the Feb. 21-24 Vatican summit about Apuron’s nearly year-long appeal.

“The summit is a ruse,” Concepcion said..

Clergy sex abuse survivors who gathered at the Vatican, along with victim advocacy groups, expressed disappointment about the perceived lack of concreteness in proposed remedies at the summit.

Zach Hiner, executive director for the Missouri-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, the world’s largest and oldest survivors group for abuse victims, said the summit ended up with “reflection points and conversation” instead of concrete steps to punish the likes of Apuron.

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Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests responds to Clergy Abuse Summit

ERIE (PA)
WJET-TV

February 26, 2019

Yesterday, we reported on the anti-climactic Clergy Abuse Summit in Rome. Today, SNAP representatives are speaking out about the lack of action taken by those in attendance.

A representative of SNAP says, “After four long days in Rome, survivors and advocates who had hoped to see Catholic church officials take concrete action towards ending the clergy abuse and cover-up crisis were left disappointed. At the end, Pope Francis offered only words, reflection points, and policies to consider for the future.

No bishop who had been involved in covering-up or minimizing allegations was fired. No directive was handed down to order bishops to turn over their secret abuse files to police. No punishment was agreed upon nor system put in place for disciplining those bishops who continue to cover-up abuse cases in the future.

In other words, no child was made safer and no survivor was helped during this summit.

And so, in many ways, not only was the summit everything that survivors expected it would be, but is also an affirmation that we are right to lay our hopes for change at the feet of secular officials, not those in the church.

This summit was called because of the explosive grand jury reports and investigations in places like Pennsylvania and Chile. The work of independent law enforcement officials compelled catholic leaders to look deeply at this problem once again and, now that those same catholic leaders have failed to take direct action, those secular officials will be the ones we are looking to for action in the future.

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Pa. clergy sexual abuse survivors voice anger, disappointment over Vatican conference

HARRISBURG (PA)
Patriot Ledger

February 26, 2019

By Charles Thompson

Shaun Daugherty has now taken his three-year public crusade for justice for clergy sex abuse victims just about everywhere.

And it’s led him to a stark conclusion: For now, the local battles over state law are as important as anything that the Roman Catholic Church is attempting to do on a global scale.

“Everybody had better protect their kids, because the Roman Catholic Church is way too big to police themselves, and they’re not even interested in doing that at this point,” Daugherty said he has concluded upon his return from Rome, where he participated in the church’s global meeting on the protection of minors.

Daugherty, who was abused by a priest in his native Johnstown in the 1980s, was one of 12 sex abuse victims from around the world invited to meet with the organizers of the conference. While he appreciated the chance to make a direct case to top church leaders (Pope Francis did not attend that session), he found what he viewed as the lack of concrete action at the conference appalling.

“They’re still researching. They’re still talking,” Daugherty concluded. “It’s gut-wrenching to me. I’d say it was funny if it wasn’t so disgusting.”

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Dallas victims advocates disturbed by lack of “concrete action” at pope’s summit

DALLAS (TX)
Dallas Morning News

February 26, 2019

By David Tarrant

Dallas advocates for sex-abuse survivors expressed frustration and disappointment after an historic four-day summit led by Pope Francis to confront the global crisis within the Catholic Church.

The summit, which wrapped up Sunday, brought together nearly 200 bishops and other Catholic leaders from around the world to focus on prevention of clergy sexual abuse.

But Lisa Kendzior, co-leader of the Dallas-Fort Worth chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, said in a statement that church leaders should’ve taken more action.

“After four long days in Rome, survivors and advocates who had hoped to see Catholic church officials take concrete action towards ending the clergy abuse and cover-up crisis were left disappointed,” the DFW-SNAP statement said.

“No bishop who had been involved in covering-up or minimizing allegations was fired. No directive was handed down to order bishops to turn over their secret abuse files to police. No punishment was agreed upon nor system put in place for disciplining those bishops who continue to cover-up abuse cases in the future. In other words, no child was made safer and no survivor was helped during this summit,” the statement said.

Francis during the summit did propose 21 “reflection points” to curb clergy sex abuse. Those reflection points included procedures to make bishops accountable and to involve non-ordained experts, or lay people, in abuse investigations.

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Anglican Church priest arrested for series of sex crimes committed during time with Fresno church

FRESNO (CA)
KFSN TV

February 25, 2019

By Corin Hoggard and Jason Oliveira

Fresno Police have arrested an Anglican Church priest for a series of sex crimes during his more than a decade with the local church.

Jesus Antonio Castaneda Serna was arrested early Sunday at the Central Fresno church he started — Holy Spirit.

22 parishioners have come forward to say they’d been victimized by the Anglican Priest but according to police many of the victims are undocumented and afraid to report the crimes to law enforcement.

“He would be facing a maximum of 11 years and six months. That’s why is so important for others to come forward and talk to law enforcement,” said District Attorney Lisa Smittcamp.

The arrest comes after a 13-month investigation. Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyers believes the sex crimes date back years and could have hundreds of victims

“It’s our hope that as we progress that we’ll be able to interview all of the 22 victims and we hope other people to come forward,” said Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer.

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Diocese of Sioux City Releases Names, SNAP Responds

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

February 25, 2019

Today, the Diocese of Sioux City, IA published a list of priests who had been “credibly” accused of abuse.

It is always helpful for survivors when these lists are posted, especially for those who may be suffering in silence. Seeing that they are not alone helps victims heal, and could also compel others who were abused – whether by the same person or in the same place – to come forward. And often, dioceses will state that they are releasing these lists to assist with survivors in their healing and to help warn the public about these clerics. We are always supportive of those goals and are grateful for this first step towards transparency taken by the Diocese of Sioux City today.

What ends up being problematic is when lists are released that are incomplete or carefully curated and leave off the names of “extern” priests, nuns, deacons, bishops, or other church staff. Sometimes, names are left off because they do not meet the diocese’s ever-changing and nebulous definition of “credible.” And this point about credibility is the focus given the release from Sioux City today.

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Ex-music director at St. Agnes Cathedral indicted on child porn charges

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
News 12 Long Island

February 26, 2019

A former music director at St. Agnes Cathedral in Rockville Centre has been indicted on child pornography charges.

News 12 first reported on Michael Wustrow in 2017 when he was under federal investigation for possible child exploitation.

Court documents show the 56-year-old is charged with receiving and possessing child pornography.

Wustrow pleaded not guilty and is being held without bail until a court appearance next month.

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THE VEIL IS LIFTED: Convicted Cardinal Pell’s Second Secret Sex Abuse Trial Is Called Off

AUSTRALIA
The Daily Beast

February 25, 2019

By Barbie Latza Nadeau and Lachlan Cartwright

One jury found the Vatican’s No. 3 prelate guilty of sexually abusing boys, but prosecutors agreed to scrap a second trial on different charges.

Two months after Cardinal George Pell was convicted of sexually abusing boys, a judge has decided the Vatican’s third most powerful official will not face a second trial on similar charges in his home country of Australia.

The decision means that a suppression order that kept the proceedings shrouded in secrecy has been lifted and Pell, 77, will now be sentenced in the original case. Reporters who have attended the proceedings without being able to report them now say the court heard testimony that Pell forced one choir boy to perform oral sex on him after mass and that he masturbated in front the other victim while he groped and fondled him.

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Cardinal George Pell found guilty of child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
NBC TODAY

February 26, 2019

Cardinal George Pell, Pope Francis’ top financial advisor, has been found guilty in Australia of child sex abuse, making him the most senior member of the Catholic Church ever charged with such a conviction. NBC’s Anne Thompson reports for TODAY.

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Lay Catholics who stay silent are complicit in the church’s failure on abuse

LONDON (ENGLAND)
February 26, 2019

By Joanna Moorhead

In Rome, some commentators describe the child abuse scandal as the worst crisis to hit the Catholic church since the Reformation. That’s way wide of the mark: the current situation, which was the focus last week of a four-day summit of Catholic leaders from across the world, is far worse than the fallout from the emergence of Protestantism 500 years ago. This is a true day of reckoning, and whatever theologians are saying about the ability of this institution to have survived 2,000 years of turbulent history, the stakes have never been higher.

So you might have thought there would be only one topic on the agenda at the thousands of Catholic parishes in the UK last weekend; or even that the organisation’s churches would be empty, with the so-called faithful staying away in disgust. After all, the event in Rome cracked open the sad and sorry depths to which the church has sunk. Pope Francis and 190 leaders, mostly pink- and red-skullcapped prelates and cardinals (they certainly know how to dress up, even if they don’t know how to behave) listened in stunned silence to testimonies, including one from an African woman who relayed her experience of being raped by a priest throughout her teens: three times she got pregnant, and three times he forced her to have an abortion.

Another survivor from Chile said the church’s leaders had discredited victims and protected the priests who abused them, while a Nigerian nun, Sister Veronica Openibo, called out the church’s leadership for its hypocrisy in parading themselves as the custodians of moral values, while covering up atrocities that blighted the lives of the most vulnerable members of its community. Meanwhile one of the pope’s most trusted advisers, Cardinal Reinhard Marx, admitted that files documenting abuse had been “either destroyed or never created”.

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Diocese and Cardinal O’Hara HS facing $300M lawsuit by former student

BUFFALO (NY)
WBFO 88.7

February 25, 2019

By Chris Caya

A Niagara County woman, who alleges being sexually assaulted by a Catholic priest when she was a teenager is suing the Diocese of Buffalo. It is believed to be the first suit of its kind, locally, since the state’s Child Victims Act was signed into law earlier this month.

Gail Holler-Kennedy is suing the Diocese along with Cardinal O’Hara High School in Tonawanda and the Franciscan orders that ran the school for $300 million.

“There is no amount that can ever bring back what was stolen from an innocent child when they were sexually abused,” said attorney Mitchell Garabedian. He says Holler-Kennedy was abused dozens of times between 1978 and 1981 by her then-science teacher Father Mark Andrzejczuk.

“On multiple occassions he wrote passes excusing the plaintiff, a young girl, from attending another teacher’s class. And when she was excused, he sexually assaulted her in an empty classroom,” Garabedian said.

Fr. Andrzejczuk died in 2011. But Garabedian says the damages he caused Holler-Kennedy are extensive.

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Pope Francis condemns clerical sexual abuse but survivors disappointed in lack of action

VATICAN CITY
NBC News

February 24, 2019

Pope Francis called on the church to “do all that is necessary” to bring perpetrators to justice, but survivors were disappointed by a lack of swift action. The Vatican says the pope will issue a new law and create a task force and handbook.

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Francis unveils 21-point plan at bishops’ summit on abuse of minors

VATICAN CITY
La Croix International

February 22, 2019

Survivors offended as proposals ignore their pleas for zero-tolerance policy

Pope Francis has handed bishops and religious superiors attending the Feb. 21-24 conference in Rome on the abuse of minors a list of 21 action items to consider.

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The sex abuse summit and the Vatican’s lack of transparency

ROME/VATICAN CITY
La Croix International

February 22, 2019

By Robert Mickens

Illustrative of the Church’s fear of revealing the truth is the case of Msgr. Joseph Punderson

On the eve of the Vatican’s summit aimed at getting the entire Church to face up to the ever-widening clerical sex abuse crisis, some in the media wondered if the meeting risked being overshadowed by other controversies.

One was supposed to be the issue of gay priests — whom traditionalist Catholics have scapegoated as pederasts, and a French author has sensationalized in a just-released book in which he claims the Catholic hierarchy and the Roman Curia are full of gay men who are either leading double lives or are actually homophobic and militantly anti-homosexual.

Another looming controversy that was destined to detract from the abuse summit was the recent revelation that the Vatican has issued secret rules for priests who have fathered children.

And yet another was the issue of religious women (nuns) who have been sexually abused and raped by priests and bishops, something the Vatican has tried to keep quiet for a number of decades.

None of these controversies is directly related to the sexual abuse of minors; with apologies to our traditionalist brothers and sisters who are convinced that gay priests are prone to be child molesters.

However, there is an issue that is related to the abuse summit. And it is one that very few people are talking about. It’s the Vatican’s lack of transparency in dealing with credibly accused predator priests working directly for the Holy See.

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State of emergency at the Vatican over sex abuse

VATICAN CITY
La Croix International

February 22, 2019

By Céline Hoyeau, Nicolas Senèze and Gauthier Vaillant

How can we profess faith in Christ when we close our eyes to all the wounds inflicted by abuse? asks Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle of Manila

“From the age of 15 I had sexual relations with a priest. This lasted for 13 years. I got pregnant three times and he made me have an abortion three times, quite simply because he did not want to use condoms or contraceptives. At first I trusted him so much that I did not know he could abuse me. I was afraid of him, and every time I refused to have sex with him, he would beat me.”

The young African woman, who shared her testimony with the bishops assembled for the meeting on the protection of minors on Feb. 21, left nothing of her Calvary experience to the imagination.

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In Poland, admission of sex abuse is causing ‘a revolution’ in the Church

POLAND
La Croix International

February 21, 2019

By Marie Malzac

In this very Catholic country where silence has long prevailed, the Church is now willing to confront the issue with greater transparency

This is the final in a five-part series on steps taken by Catholic bishops on the various continents.

Like Italy and Spain, where the Catholic tradition is strongly established, the Polish Church has been silent on the issue of sexual abuse for a long time.

In 2009, the Polish bishops published a framework document on combating pedophilia. Measures included help for the victims, attitudes towards priests involved, and the training of future clergy with a focus on prevention.

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Abuser priests fundamentally undermine confidence

FRANCE
La Croix International

February 21, 2019

By Céline Hoyeau

The abuser acts in the name of an absolute principle that the abused person also regards as absolute

Dominican Father Gilles Berceville, who teaches spiritual theology at the Catholic Institute of Paris, argues that the current crisis needs to lead to more reflection on the issue of spiritual abuse. La Croix’s Céline Hoyeau interviewed the priest.

Céline Hoyeau: In his Letter to the People of God, Pope Francis links sexual abuse, abuse of power and abuse of conscience. How do you explain this?

Father Gilles Berceville: Abuse must not be restricted to sexual assault. An assault by a priest is not merely sexual. It is often a symptom of something deeper, namely spiritual abuse.

How to define this and why is it so serious?

It is a very specific form of abuse of conscience because it is exercised by a person with moral or religious authority.

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Inside the horrifying, unspoken world of sexually abusive nuns

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

February 16, 2019

By Isabel Vincent

It’s the line from Scripture that stayed with Cait Finnegan for nearly half a century as she tried to suppress the painful memories of the sexual abuse she says she suffered at the hands of her Catholic clergy educator.

“God is Love,” Sister Mary Juanita Barto told Finnegan as she repeatedly raped her in classrooms at Mater Christi High School in Queens in the late 1960s.

The abuse began when Finnegan was 15 and continued throughout her high school years — on school buses to out-of-town sporting events, at religious retreats in upstate New York, at Finnegan’s childhood home in Woodside and at a Long Island convent.

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It’s not just the Florida spa investigation allegedly tied to Robert Kraft. Sex trafficking is rampant across US

UNITED STATES
USA TODAY

February 25, 2019

By Ryan W. Miller

While charges against New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft for soliciting prostitution brought national attention to the issue of sex trafficking on Friday, data, expert opinion and cases from around the USA show how widespread the problem is.

Sex trafficking accounted for 6,081 of the more than 8,500 reported cases of human trafficking in the United States in 2017, according to statistics from the National Human Trafficking Hotline.

There is no official estimate of the total number of human trafficking victims in the U.S. Polaris, a nonprofit that operates the hotline on human trafficking, estimates that the total number of victims nationally reaches into the hundreds of thousands when estimates of both adults and minors and sex trafficking and labor trafficking are aggregated.

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Pope Francis declares ‘all-out’ war on abuse, but lack of ‘concrete’ plan frustrates survivors

VATICAN CITY
ABC News Videos

February 24, 2019

The conference brought together 190 bishops and cardinals from around the world to address an issue that has seriously undermined the church’s moral authority.

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Pope vows war on abuse; survivors say let down

VATICAN CITY
Reuters Videos

February 24, 2019

Pope Francis has promised zero tolerance on sex abuse at the end of a landmark conference. But survivors and activists say without concrete action such as defrocking abusing bishops, they don’t trust the Church to police itself. Lucy Fielder reports.

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Cardinal George Pell found guilty of child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 26, 2019

By Adam Cooper

Cardinal George Pell has been found guilty and is set to be jailed for child sexual abuse in the most sensational verdict since the Catholic Church became engulfed in worldwide abuse scandals.

Pell, who was Vatican treasurer, close to the Pope and the most senior Catholic figure in the world to be charged by police with child sex offences, has been found guilty of orally raping one choirboy and molesting another in Melbourne’s St Patrick’s Cathedral 22 years ago.

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Cardinal George Pell, the most senior Catholic charged with child sex abuse, convicted in Australia

AUSTRALIA
The Associated Press

February 25, 2019

MELBOURNE, Australia — The most senior Catholic cleric ever charged with child sex abuse has been convicted of molesting two choirboys moments after celebrating Mass, dealing a new blow to the Catholic hierarchy’s credibility after a year of global revelations of abuse and cover-up.

Cardinal George Pell, Pope Francis’ top financial adviser and the Vatican’s economy minister, bowed his head but then regained his composure as the 12-member jury delivered unanimous verdicts in the Victoria state County Court on Dec. 11 after more than two days of deliberation.

The court had until Tuesday forbidden publication of any details about the trial.

The convictions were confirmed the same week that Francis concluded his extraordinary summit of Catholic leaders summoned to Rome for a tutorial on preventing clergy sexual abuse and protecting children from predator priests.

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Vatican treasurer Cardinal George Pell found guilty of child sex charges

AUSTRALIA
CNN

February 26, 2019

By Hilary Whiteman and Ben Westcott

One of the most powerful men in the Roman Catholic Church was found guilty of multiple historical child sex offenses at a secret trial in Melbourne in December, the existence of which can only now be revealed.

Australian Cardinal George Pell, 77, is almost certain to face prison after a jury found him guilty of one charge of sexual penetration of a child and four charges of an indecent act with or in the presence of a child in the late 1990s.

The conviction of Pell, the Vatican treasurer and a close adviser to Pope Francis, will send shockwaves through the church, which is already reeling from accusations of sexual abuse committed by priests worldwide.

Pell is the most senior Catholic official to be found guilty of child sex offenses to date. His conviction brings the escalating international controversy around the abuse of children in Catholic institutions straight to the doors of the Holy See.

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February 25, 2019

Where does Jackson diocese stand with members, priests after recent controversies?

JACKSON (MS)
Clarion Ledger

February 26, 2019

By Sarah Fowler

In 2002, a bombshell investigation in Boston revealed that priests had been abusing children for decades and that — also for decades — the church had been attempting to silence the victims and cover up the abuse. As more victims came forward, it was soon clear the abuse was not just confined to a few parishes in Massachusetts — it was a global coverup that implicated hundreds of priests.

Mississippi was not immune. Despite an overhaul of policy and implementing a new program aimed at protecting children, new allegations emerged both locally and internationally. Lawsuits have been filed and either settled or dismissed. The church settled with 29 of 30 victims in 2006, paying them a total of $731,250. In the one case that was not settled, the victim was told he was “twenty years too late,” due to the statute of limitations, and his case was dismissed.

Today — as the Jackson diocese prepares to release names of priests who have been accused of sexual abuse and as the church as a whole continues to address claims of sexual abuse while continually reviewing measures to prevent future incidents — Mississippi Catholics find themselves balancing the love of their faith with their reactions to scandals old and new.

Over the last six months, the Catholic Diocese of Jackson has found itself dealing with the following:

A new lawsuit based on previous allegations of a child being victimized by a priest.
A federal affidavit alleging one priest lied to his congregation about having cancer and then raised money for treatment and for an orphanage that has not been proven to exist.
Priests speaking out as informants for the federal government against another priest.
A federal investigation related to the priest who lied about having cancer.
Mississippi Catholics have responded in different ways. Some parishioners are calling on the bishop to resign while others have found a newfound passion for their church community.

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Have the Bishops Learned Anything?“>The Vatican Summit on Sex Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Commonweal

February 25, 2019

By Austen Ivereigh

The contrast was little short of amazing. On the one hand, you had the experience inside the synod hall by the end of last week’s Vatican abuse summit, with talk of a new resolve and clarity. On the other, you had the scorn from victims’ groups who saw only missed opportunities.

Nothing like this had ever been done before: to use a synodal process to effect a global institutional conversion aimed at overcoming mechanisms of denial and resistance. Inside, 190 church leaders were becoming crusaders against child abuse, a shift that was especially notable among the presidents of bishops’ conferences from Asia and Africa, some of whom began the February 21–24 meeting saying this wasn’t their problem. Yet outside, survivors’ spokespeople said the summit was just a wordy exercise for show, one that avoided the real task.

In fact, it was the victims who had been invited to tell the bishops their stories who were catalysts for the conversion of hearts and minds. Fr. Hans Zollner, the determined and methodical German Jesuit who is the pope’s point man on this issue, spoke at the final press conference about working groups and individuals who told him of the transformation they had undergone after hearing from the survivors—many on video, others in person: “When I hear people from Asia and Africa speaking now, in the same language, with the same determination, saying we need to confront this, own this, do something about it, at home—this is for me the most comforting and hopeful experience and impression I have.” Zollner mentioned an Italian woman who had shared an especially powerful story, breaking down at the end. The bishops, cardinals, and religious-order heads stepped forward to thank and comfort her. Their reaction, Zollner told us, was a “sign that this has reached the heart level, and if it reaches that level you can’t be as you were before.”

The victims’ groups demanded “concrete” measures and didn’t see them, despite the pope promising exactly that. “Why can’t he enact zero-tolerance into church law? He has the power to do that,” complained Peter Isely, who represents a group called Ending Clergy Abuse. Yet if “zero tolerance”—a phrase with many meanings—means holding bishops accountable for failures to act on abuse allegations, then the meeting demonstrated that real progress is underway. For one, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith will produce a small handbook, a vademecum, so that every bishop in the world will understand his obligations exactly. If bishops don’t fulfill those obligations, the 2016 motu propio “Like A Loving Mother” makes it clear that they will be removed.

To make it easier to report such failures, two measures are likely to be enacted. The first is a proposal from Cardinal Blase Cupich that should make it easier to denounce, investigate, and report on a bishop’s failure to act. (Some version of it is likely to pass the USCCB in June, and will no doubt be copied in other countries.) The second is a plan now being studied by the pope’s C9 advisory body that would create a new dicastery dedicated to coordinating the Vatican’s anti-abuse efforts. According to Cardinal Oswald Gracias, who is one of the C9 advisors, this, too, would make it easier to hold bishops accountable.

Fr. Zollner also announced new “task forces” of experts that will parachute into resource-starved or remote dioceses to boost local safeguarding capacities. There will also be changes to the law. The definition of a minor in Vatican City State laws governing child pornography will be raised from fourteen to eighteen, as part of the introduction of laws to protect minors that will align the Vatican with best practices of the church worldwide. These laws would cover, for example, Holy See diplomats. (There have been two cases in recent years of nunciature staff downloading child pornography.)

One reform that looks certain concerns the so-called “pontifical secret” governing trials of abusive priests. The CDF’s adjunct secretary, Archbishop Charles Scicluna, said that whatever is not strictly necessary to protect the good name and privacy of accusers and the accused while trials are underway will be reviewed in the interests of accountability and transparency. This should make it easier to announce when priests have been tried and found guilty, so that victims can know justice has been done.

And it’s not as if there isn’t more to come. The pope gave the bishops and religious leaders twenty-one recommendations culled from pre-summit submissions that included the screening of candidates, the reporting of allegations, and so on. The small groups discussed these and added at least as many new ones, which organizers said would be studied immediately with the heads of Vatican dicasteries, who also attended the summit.

All of this sounded pretty concrete to me. The victims’ groups, however, were generally scornful. They had come seeking “zero tolerance” and had found only fine-sounding words. What especially annoyed and disappointed many of them was Francis’s speech at the summit’s conclusion, which Anne Barrett Doyle, a co-founder of BishopAccountability.org, the Boston-based advocacy organization, called a “stunning letdown.”

Whether one calls it clericalism, institutional idolatry, or corruption, the mindset that has governed too many bishops for too long makes them deaf to victims and protective of perpetrators.
In the speech, Francis laid down eight principles—culled from World Health Authority documents, and his own anti-abuse experts—to guide the church’s efforts to combat a worldwide evil that has struck at the heart of Catholicism’s credibility.

Francis presented a broad picture of the abuse of minors, a form of cruelty as old as humanity yet revealed as never before in our own time. Acts of sexual violence against children in homes, neighborhoods, schools, and various other institutions has created millions of silent victims, while the spread of internet pornography and the rise of sexual tourism has led to numbing levels of suffering. (In 2017 alone, the pope said, three million people traveled to have sexual relations with a minor.) Francis was implicitly addressing church leaders from Africa who had complained at the start of the summit that clerical sex abuse wasn’t their issue, and that what they had to tackle were other forms of child exploitation. Francis insisted that clerical sex abuse represents the same demonic abuse of power that lurks behind “other forms of abuse affecting almost 85,000,000 children, forgotten by everyone.” These include “child soldiers, child prostitutes, starving children, children kidnapped and often victimized by the horrid commerce of human organs or enslaved, child victims of war, refugee children, aborted children and so many others.”

In other words, these are all dimensions of the same evil that the church everywhere has to confront as part of its core mission. You cannot care about child soldiers without caring about the sexual abuse of children, starting with the abuse committed by priests. Yet rather than seeing the pope’s references as a way of dismantling the African church’s denial mechanism, victims’ groups see it as a PR exercise designed to diminish the church’s responsibility. Barret Doyle believes Francis was “rationalizing”—minimizing the church’s crimes by pointing out that abuse happens in all sectors of society.

In reality, there was nothing the bishops and the pope could have said that would have satisfied the victims’ groups. Their response to the issue is one that Francis has explicitly rejected: one-size-fits-all retribution. As Archbishop Scicluna pointed out, when the church administers sanctions or penalties, it is for the reform of the sinner and reparation of scandal, not simply punishment.

That doesn’t mean it is lenient. In a post-summit article that seeks to capture the clash of viewpoints, Rachel Donadio describes canon law as taking “a more pastoral approach, one that leans toward forgiveness.” Yet when it comes to the abuse of minors, church law offers no second chances: abuser priests will no longer be able to act as priests, and bishops who cover up for them will be removed. The point is that canon law takes a “common-good” approach, not a punitive one. “Removing from exercise of ministry should not be seen as a punishment but rather as the duty to protect the flock,” Archbishop Scicluna told journalists.

But if your view of laws is essentially retributive, canon law does looks lax. This in turn feeds the suspicion of victims’ organizations and some right-wing Catholics, who believe that if only the church were fiercer, or more punitive—if only it were less “merciful” and more draconian—this issue could be resolved very quickly.

The summit organizers didn’t believe this. They say that laws and regulations, though necessary, are incapable of attacking the issue at its roots. They say this is a problem that can be solved only by conversion, not coercion. Whether one calls it clericalism, institutional idolatry, or corruption, the mindset that has governed too many bishops for too long makes them deaf to victims and protective of perpetrators. The pope calls it the spirit of evil, which cannot be defeated by practical means alone, but by spiritual means of “humiliation, self-accusation, prayer, and penance.” Hence the penitential liturgy on Saturday, when a Chilean victim spoke slowly and piercingly of the effect of abuse of him—“there is no dream without the memory of what happened. No day without memories, no day without flashbacks.” Hence, too, the examination of conscience, the collective confession, and an appeal for “the grace to overcome injustice and to practice justice for the people entrusted to our care.”

“The pope is a supreme monarch: Can’t he just order everyone to do this?” asked an exasperated BBC interviewer when I tried to explain why the pope had brought together church leaders for a four-day summit. The Archbishop of Luxembourg, Jean-Claude Hollerich, gave to La Croix the answer I should have given. Le pape est très sage, he said. “He knows very well that you can’t change the church by just giving orders from above. You have to change people’s hearts.” Hollerich, moderator of the French-speaking group, said he could see this happening in his group: “there is a development in their consciences, in the bishops’ thinking in the course of these few days,” he said. “The bishops are changing.”

The primary purpose of the summit was never to devise severe new legislation, for which a global meeting of church leaders would hardly be necessary. The purpose was what the pope called “personal and collective conversion, the humility of learning, listening, assisting and protecting the most vulnerable.” On the way to that conversion, there were two forms of resistance to God’s grace identified by the pope: defensiveness (the kind of attitude that says, “this isn’t our issue”) and juridicism (believing you can change everything by laws and regulations alone).

Of course, if you do not believe in the power of grace to transform consciousness, this will all sound like evasive palaver. If you believe bishops are essentially corrupt and self-serving and will only act against abuser priests when they see each other locked up in jail, you will hardly see the point of the pope’s analysis.

So we’re left with a kind of paradox. Real change can happen only through the involvement of survivors, whose testimonies are key to the church’s conversion on this issue. Yet too often survivors’ organizations do not recognize conversion as amounting to any kind of solution. Their anger is fully justified—and it has sometimes forced the issue when bishops would have preferred to see it remain buried—but it has left many of them blind to the significance of what just happened at the Vatican.

TagsSexual-abuse Crisis Pope Francis Clericalism

Austen Ivereigh is the pope’s biographer. His new book A Heart For Change: Inside the Tension of Pope Francis’s Reform will be published next fall by Henry Holt.

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2 priests found credibly accused after Saint Meinrad internal investigation

EVANSVILLE (IN)
WFIE TV

February 25, 2019

By Jared Goffinet and Kate O’Rourke

While the Diocese included two of the priests on the Archabbey’s list, Saint Meinrad handled the allegations with its own review board.

As we reported Friday, Saint Meinrad’s list includes Robert Woerdeman with one credible allegation and Warren Heitz with two.

Saint Meinrad tells us they encourage victims to report abuse to authorities and that if victims don’t, the Archabbey will. We are told most of their monks serve in seminary school as teachers or administrators.

Now, we’ve learned Heitz’s alleged abuse occurred in the ′70s. One was reported in 1999 and the other in 2018.

Heitz was removed from public ministry in 2002. Since then, we are told he has lived at a supervised residential facility for offenders since 2009.

But up until that point, which was 10 years after abuse was reported, he lived at Saint Meinrad.

“Because he’s residing here does not mean he didn’t have restrictions, so in 2009 it was decided after further evaluation and input from professionals that the best course of action was to move him to a supervised residential facility, but that does not mean that he was not under restrictions when he was living here at St. Meinrad,” Explains Saint Meinrad Spokeswoman Mary Jeanne Schumacher.

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.

Erie’s Persico says pope gave ‘green light’ to reforms

ERIE (PA)
Erie Times

February 25, 2019

By Ed Palattella

Erie Catholic Bishop Lawrence Persico said he is ready to restart an effort with colleagues to further address the clergy sex-abuse crisis in the United States.

The go-ahead, Persico said, came from Pope Francis, who on Sunday ended an unprecedented Vatican summit on clergy sex abuse by declaring “an all-out battle against the abuse of minors” within the Roman Catholic Church and beyond.

Though abuse victims criticized Francis for failing to propose measures of his own, Persico said the pope gave responsibility for developing new rules to bishops’ groups worldwide, including the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

The Vatican frustrated Persico and others this past fall when the Holy See asked the conference to hold off on passing new regulations until Francis held the global meeting on abuse. With that four-day session over, Persico said, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops is set to resume its work, with the Vatican to review its proposals later.

“The pope is very clear,” Persico said on Monday. “He wants progress on this. He wants something concrete and he wants effective measures. So I think now this is the green light.”

Persico said he believes the Vatican will be inclined to approve what the American bishops develop, including ways to discipline abusive bishops or bishops who covered up abuse. The final authority for punishing a bishop will remain with the pope, but the new rules are designed to give bishops more of a role in policing themselves.

If the Vatican is slow to approve the American proposals, Persico said, it risks even more of a backlash. Victims and others have advocated for change since the Aug. 14 release of the Pennsylvania grand jury report on clergy sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania.

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.

Top U.S. bishop after Vatican sex abuse summit: attack crisis with “unyielding vigilance”

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February 25, 2019

By Kim Chatelain

Promising “unyielding vigilance” in attacking clergy abuse, the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops wrapped an unprecedented Vatican summit by vowing to intensify a 2002 charter designed to create a safe environment for children in the church.

Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, who heads the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, released his statement Sunday (Feb. 24) at the end of a four-day meeting of church hierarchy in Rome to discuss sexual abuse and child protection.

At a meeting in Dallas in 2002, the U.S. bishops’ conference established what is formally called the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” which is also known as the Dallas Charter. Among other things, it requires dioceses to set up safe environment programs that include background checks and training for anyone who has contact with minors at any Catholic church or school event. The document has been updated several times since its adoption.

Some church leaders have said the number of sex abuse complaints has dropped dramatically since the charter was put in place. However, recent reports of child molestation by clergy members, most notably a shocking report by a Pennsylvania grand jury last year, brought the issue into public view again and prompted Pope Francis to stage the summit.

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.

As the Pope’s Summit Ends, Survivors Continue on Their Own Path

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February 25, 2019

After four long days in Rome, survivors and advocates who had hoped to see Catholic church officials take concrete action towards ending the clergy abuse and cover-up crisis were left disappointed. At the end, Pope Francis offered only words, “reflection points,” and policies to consider for the future.

No bishop who had been involved in covering-up or minimizing allegations was fired. No directive was handed down to order bishops to turn over their secret abuse files to police. No punishment was agreed upon nor system put in place for disciplining those bishops who continue to cover-up abuse cases in the future.

In other words, no child was made safer and no survivor was helped during this summit.

And so, in many ways, not only was the summit everything that survivors expected it would be, but is also an affirmation that we are right to lay our hopes for change at the feet of secular officials, not those in the church.

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

Ex-priest worked for county until named in sex abuse report

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Associated Press

February 25, 2019

A Pennsylvania county government disclosed it fired a former Roman Catholic priest from a job working with people who have mental disabilities shortly after his name appeared in a grand jury report into child sexual abuse .

York County officials told the York Daily Record/Sunday News they had not been aware of allegations against David H. Luck before the August publication of the grand jury report that included information about him.

Luck was suspended from serving as a priest in the Harrisburg diocese in 1990. He was subsequently hired as a caseworker in the mental health and intellectual and developmental disabilities section of the York County Human Services Department.

County officials said Monday that 1994 and 2015 background checks on Luck yielded nothing.

Luck declined comment to the newspaper and did not return a phone message from the AP left at a York phone number linked to him.

The grand jury report cited secret diocesan archives that said Luck, who became a priest in 1987, was accused by a family in 1988 of raping a 15-year-old boy and fondling an 11-year-old boy.

The report alleged that Luck told church officials he was a pedophile in 1990, the year he was suspended from priestly duties.

The grand jury report said no one from the Harrisburg diocese alerted police. Luck was not charged criminally.

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.

Profiles of the Summit Attendees

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To prepare for the Catholic church’s first global summit on child sexual abuse by clergy, attended by episcopal conference presidents, BishopAccountability.org has looked closely at how the conference presidents from eight of the world’s largest Catholic countries have handled the abuse crisis in their home countries.

Representing roughly half of the world’s Catholics, these eight prelates include:

an archbishop who estimates that only one percent of his country’s priests have abused children;

the head of a vast archdiocese who says he has dealt with only one abusive priest;

a cardinal who has never spoken publicly about the crisis;

a cardinal who has kept in ministry at least three accused priests.

We further examined the child protection guidelines and actions of the episcopal conferences in all eight countries. They range widely. Some conference websites, like those of France, Mexico, and the U.S., provide abundant information: how to report, the process for handling accusations, advice on prevention. It’s a challenge for the visitor to discern which documents are marketing materials and which are canonically binding. At the other extreme are the episcopal conferences of Brazil and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. On their websites, the crisis is invisible, and no guidelines can be located.

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New Lawsuit Filed in Buffalo, SNAP Responds

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Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

February 25, 2019

A new lawsuit against the Diocese of Buffalo, the Franciscan Order, and a high school school in upstate New York was filed today. We applaud the bravery of the victim and hope that this lawsuit helps her on her healing journey.

We are especially grateful to Gail Holler-Kennedy for exposing the wrongdoing by Fr. Mark S. Andrzejczuk and officials at the Buffalo Catholic Diocese, the Conventual Franciscan religious order and Cardinal O’Hara High School. We hope her courage will inspire others who are in pain to speak up.

According to media reports, the allegedly abusive priest also worked at Archbishop Curley High School in Baltimore. We hope officials at that school in Baltimore will aggressively reach out to their alumni in search of other victims of Fr. Andrezejczuk.

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.