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 17, 2019

‘What difference does it make to McCarrick?’ Critics question the value of defrocking.

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 16, 2019

By Michelle Boorstein

In Catholic Church law, being forcibly laicized is sometimes called the death penalty for priests. A dismissal from the priesthood is permanent — something that can’t even be said of excommunication. Even priests who request laicization are told to move away and, unless necessary, to keep quiet about what happened to avoid scandalizing other Catholics. No working in parishes, seminaries, Catholic schools. Your previous identity is wiped out.

But, in the eyes of the church, the mark of priestly ordination can never be removed. Something metaphysical changes that can’t be undone.

Theodore McCarrick is believed to be the first cardinal — a title he held until sexual abuse allegations against him surfaced in the summer — laicized for sexual misconduct. He is one of just six bishops accused of similar crimes and dismissed, according to the abuse-tracking group BishopAccountability. But in an era of rampant clergy scandals, experts predicted that many Catholics won’t see the rare defrocking as sufficient justice for McCarrick’s alleged 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.

Expectations high for Pope Francis’ sex-abuse summit, but some brace for disappointment

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer

February 17, 2019

By Jeremy Roebuck

In what could be a defining moment for his papacy, Pope Francis will welcome more than 100 top Catholic bishops from around the globe to Rome this week for an unprecedented summit aimed at tackling the issue of clergy sex abuse.

Never before has a pontiff convened the global church’s leaders to discuss the issue. And after a bruising year that saw high-ranking church officials resign in scandal, fresh investigations, and demands for new laws, the conference that opens Thursday could present an opportunity for Francis to dispel criticism that he has responded sluggishly as the crisis continued to flash across the globe.

But should his four-day event fail to deliver, the pope risks cementing the impression among detractors that he remains resistant to meaningful change.

Hundreds of reporters and sexual-abuse victims — including some from Pennsylvania — are expected to set up shop outside the Vatican as the prelates gather behind closed doors.

“They know that this is a very high-stakes meeting,” said Massimo Faggioli, a theologian and scholar of church history at Villanova University. “The attention here in Rome is already similar to what you’d see for a papal conclave.”

As if to signal his seriousness, Francis on Saturday took his most meaningful step to date by defrocking Theodore McCarrick, a former cardinal and archbishop of Washington, after the church found him guilty of sexually abusing minors and adult seminarians.

Though the Vatican had laicized hundreds of priests for sexual misconduct since the worldwide crisis began nearly two decades ago, McCarrick, who previously served as a bishop in two New Jersey dioceses, is the first cardinal in modern history to be expelled from the priesthood, the most serious penalty the church can impose.

Before that significant move, Francis and his aides in recent weeks had sought to temper expectations for the conference itself. Speaking to reporters on a papal flight returning from World Youth Day in Panama last month, the pope suggested that anticipation surrounding the conference had grown well beyond anything the meeting itself could deliver.

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 asks for prayers for summit, calls clergy abuse an ‘urgent’ problem

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

February 17, 2019

By Elise Harris

Pope Francis petitioned Catholics Sunday to pray for an upcoming anti-abuse summit at the Vatican, saying he wanted to call the gathering as a response to the “urgent” challenge of clerical sexual abuse.

“From Thursday to next Sunday, there will take place in the Vatican a meeting with the presidents of all bishops’ conferences on the topic of the protection of minors in the Church,” the pope said Feb. 17, and asked Catholic faithful to pray for the summit, which he said he called as “a strong act of pastoral responsibility faced with an urgent challenge in our time.”

The pontiff was speaking at his usual Sunday noontime Angelus address.

The appeal comes days ahead of a Feb. 21-24 summit addressing the global clerical abuse crisis in the Catholic Church, and just a day after the Vatican announced that Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington, was dismissed from the clerical state on charges of sexual abuse and harassment.

Described by the pope as a pastoral meeting rather than a decision-making event, the summit will draw the participation of leading prelates, religious superiors and survivors.

Both Francis and several others involved with the summit have previously said expectations are too high, and that while it likely won’t result in sweeping changes, the goal is to at least get everyone on the same page.

However, many, including survivors of clerical abuse want action, and view McCarrick’s defrocking as just the beginning of a larger problem aimed at cracking down not just on clerical abuse but also those who cover it up.

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.

Ahead of abuse summit at Vatican, Cupich confident meeting will result in plan to protect children

CHICAGO (IL)
WGN TV

February16, 2019

By Dina Bair

Bishops from all over the world are heading to the Vatican next week for an abuse summit. Pope Francis gave Cardinal Blase Cupich the responsibility of planning the gathering.

This is the first time a pontiff has called all the presidents of the world’s bishops’ conferences together. With nearly 200 church leaders converging on the Vatican, no one will be allowed to hide from this crisis.

Cupich recently spoke to WGN’s Dina Bair about the critical issue, which has haunted the catholic church for decades.

The Holy Father warned Catholics to keep their expectations low, but he said at the end of this week-long meeting, he is confident there will be a plan in place to protect children from sex abuse in the church.

“It will be very clear to bishops when they come to this, that when they go home, they have some homework to do,” he said.

Every bishop who comes to the summit claims ownership for this very difficult moment and takes action in a way that makes every bishop in the world responsible for the care of children as a priority.

“There will be a framework of procedures that will be given to bishops,” Cupich said. “Not only for the handling of cases of abuse by clergy, but also the consequences for bishops when they mishandle it or themselves misbehave.”

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 summit on sex abuse: What victim groups are demanding

ROME (ITALY)
Agence France-Presse

February 16, 2019

As the Vatican prepares to host a global child abuse summit on the protection of minors this week, victims’ associations are calling for concrete steps from the Catholic Church to end paedophilia.

While Pope Francis has sought to play down expectations from the summit, here are the main demands from victim groups:

OUST ABUSERS OR THEIR PROTECTORS
Zero tolerance for sexual abuse by clerics should be “written into universal church law by the end of the summit”, says organisation Ending Clerical Abuse.

The organisation, which brings together activists and survivors from more than 17 countries, said any cleric found to have abused a child or covered up abuse – regardless of how long ago the crime took place – should be defrocked.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests wants the Vatican to “fire any and all bishops or cardinals who have had a hand in clergy sex abuse cover-ups”.

DEFINE CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE
Expert Marie Collins, who resigned in protest from a Vatican committee she said was failing to adequately tackle paedophilia, insists the Church should “agree on a clear definition of what constitutes the sexual abuse of a minor”.

“There is currently no clear definition…to guide leaders in their handling of abuse,” says Ms Collins, herself a child victim.

Canon law refers to it as “delicts against the sixth commandment of the Decalogue”, an obscure reference which also fails to specify whether it covers indirect abuse such as a cleric exposing himself or looking at pornographic images of children.

END SECRECY
Clerics found guilty of sexually assaulting minors should be placed on a global public registry, says the group Ending Clerical Abuse.

It wants an “independent Vatican Truth Commission” to be created, to examine and publish the global abuse archives of the Church, beginning with the Vatican.

Bishops around the world should be “compelled to turn their files over to law enforcement for independent investigations into their handling of clergy sex abuse cases”.

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 Latest: Cardinal calls McCarrick punishment ‘important’

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 16, 2019

The Latest on the defrocking of former U.S. cardinal Theodore McCarrick (all times local):

12:20 a.m.

The archbishop of Boston says the Vatican’s decision to defrock former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick is an important step for “administering justice” for McCarrick’s crimes.

Cardinal Sean O’Malley issued a statement Saturday after the announcement that McCarrick had been found guilty by the Vatican of sex abuse, including while hearing confession.

O’Malley says church leaders “must enforce accountability for cardinals and bishops.”

O’Malley says his archdiocese is committed to taking reports of abuse seriously, saying it has a “moral responsibility” to be always vigilant.

10:50 p.m.

A Kansas diocese says disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick will continue to live at a local friary “until a decision of permanent residence is finalized.”

McCarrick had moved to the St. Fidelis Friary in Victoria, Kansas, in September after Pope Francis ordered him to live in penance and prayer while the investigation into his actions continued.

McCarrick was defrocked after being found guilty by the Vatican of sex abuse, including while hearing confession.

In a statement Saturday, Bishop Gerald L. Vincke of the Salina, Kansas, Diocese said he hopes the Vatican’s decision will “help bring healing to all affected by sexual abuse and those hurt by this scandal.”

___

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

Abuse victim advocates call Catholic Church defrocking of McCarrick ‘damage control’

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

February 17, 2019

By Lisa Kashinsky

Former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick has been defrocked after the Vatican found him guilty of sex abuse, but attorney Mitchell Garabedian, a longtime critic of the Catholic Church’s handling of decades of misconduct, says the latest crackdown is just “damage control.”

“The Catholic Church is trying to deceptively convince the public that they’ve fixed the problem when they are the problem,” said Garabedian, an advocate for victims of sexual abuse by priests. “Take away the robes and religion, and the priests are just criminals who either sexually abused children or who covered up the sexual abuse of children.”

Zach Hiner, executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said McCarrick’s dismissal shows clergy preying on minors goes far beyond low-level priests.

“This problem exists at every level of the church. It’s not just bad priests here or there, it’s something that is systemic from the base-level staff to the highest level,” Hiner said.

McCarrick’s defrocking made the 88-year-old former archbishop of Washington, D.C., the highest-ranking clergyman and first cardinal to be punished by dismissal. Pope Francis last July removed McCarrick as a cardinal after a U.S. church investigation found credible an allegation that McCarrick fondled a teenage altar boy in the 1970s, reports state.

Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, said McCarrick’s dismissal “is a clear signal that abuse will not be tolerated. No bishop, no matter how influential, is above the law of 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.

Church entrusts papal succession role to McCarrick associate

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Herald

February 16, 2019

By Peter Borre

In the past few days, four stories involving senior Vatican officials have broken:

The defrocking of a former cardinal; a groping accusation against the Vatican’s ambassador to France; an official of the Vatican’s highest court “credibly accused” of abusing a minor; and the appointment of an American cardinal as ‘chamberlain’ in the event of the pope’s resignation or death. No coincidence that all this comes into public view just before next week’s Rome summit on clergy sex abuse.

There is link between the defrocking of former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick and the naming of Cardinal Kevin Farrell as chamberlain of the Vatican.

As acting pope, the chamberlain confirms the death or resignation of the pope, and manages all temporal goods of the Vatican until a new pope is installed. These responsibilities are much more than ceremonial: there is lingering controversy over the death of Pope John Paul I, the 33-day pope in 1978; and during the vacancy between the resignation of Pope Benedict and the election of Pope Francis in 2013, there were hurried reshuffles within the controversial Vatican Bank. So the Vatican’s chamberlain should be like Caesar’s wife.

Farrell entered the priesthood in 1968 through the Legionaries of Christ; years later he shifted to diocesan priest. The Legionaries became a major scandal, with their Mexican founder eventually removed by the Pope for “reprehensible and objectively immoral behavior.”

Maybe old stuff. But during Farrell’s career, he also spent six years very close to McCarrick. Farrell was No. 2 in the archdiocese of Washington when McCarrick took over in 2001, and Farrell remained in that role until 2007. Their close association extended to sharing an apartment. Yet when Farrell learned of the allegations against McCarrick, he told the Catholic News Service, “I was shocked, overwhelmed; I never heard any of this before in the six years I was with him.”

But according to the AP, a priest/professor at a New Jersey seminary “informed the Vatican in a November 2000 letter about … McCarrick’s misconduct with seminarians.” And Farrell was “shocked?”

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 is still making excuses for paedophilia

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Guardian

February 17, 2019

By Peter Stanford

When the first meeting in the Vatican of cardinals from around the world to discuss clerical sexual abuse was announced, hopes were high among Catholics. Finally, it seemed, the courageous, mould-breaking Pope Francis was going to force through root-and-branch reforms to tackle the scandal that has done such damage to the reputation of the institution he leads.

Yet even before 180 cardinals assemble on Thursday in Rome for this unprecedented four-day summit, the chance of such prayers being answered is looking increasingly remote. The Vatican press office has been downplaying the event as simply an opportunity to remind senior clerics of the patchy efforts that global Catholicism has made this past quarter of a century to address the thousands upon thousands of cases of priests molesting, abusing and traumatising children in their care.

To be fair, a reminder is no bad thing, since there is a long list of bishops around the globe who still make negative headlines because they refuse to take this crisis seriously, and put protecting the institution before the victims of predator priests.

Even in the Vatican itself, the powerful Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith has refused a very basic request from the Commission for the Protection of Minors, set up by Francis in 2014, to send a letter acknowledging receipt of every new report of abuse that reaches it.

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

Column: “Nuns, too” and my own reckoning with the Church

CHAPEL HILL (NC)
The Daily Tar Heel

February 17, 2019

By Annie Kiyonaga

It’s hard to express the depth of my disappointment with the Catholic Church in 500 words. I was raised in a staunchly Catholic family, and my parents are still my favorite types of Catholics: intellectually engaged with the Church’s long history of social justice work, and convinced that the grace of God can be found in art and literature and small acts of kindness. They work together as criminal defense attorneys, and their faith informs their shared belief that everyone deserves a good defense against incarceration. I went to an all-girls Catholic school, where I was taught to prize intellectual curiosity, personal faith and social action.

I blossomed under these conditions, and I’ve held onto my role as a questioning Catholic throughout college out of respect for the people and institutions that formed me. I still believe in God; I still value my parents’ version of faith hugely; I still credit my Catholic school education for my personal and intellectual formation.

Last week, Pope Francis (finally) publicly acknowledged the rash of sexual assault allegations lodged against priests and bishops by nuns around the world. In November, the International Union of Superiors General – which is not, in fact, a Star Wars tribune but a collective of Catholic women’s religious orders – issued a statement condemning the “culture of silence and secrecy” that abounds in the Catholic Church. The editor of Women Church World – yet another incredible name – blamed the sexual assault scandal on the imbalance of power between genders in the Church. Whatever the cause, the stories are horrific: nuns in sexual slavery; nuns reporting abuse and being subsequently shamed; nuns being pressured to get abortions to cover up the misdeeds of priests.

Something about this blatant abuse of power feels especially insulting given the gender inequality within the Church at large. I went to a Catholic school that valued confidence and empowerment for women, but I was never under any illusion that the Catholic Church as a whole valued my rights to control my own body or my potential for intelligent leadership. The Church is a male institution, predicated on the faithful and docile service of its female congregants.

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.

February 16, 2019

The Southern Baptist Sex Abuse Scandal Tells Us a Lot About the Catholic Church

Patheos blog

February 16, 2019

By Hemant Mehta

The Southern Baptist Convention is currently embroiled in an investigation about how it harbored sexual abusers for years. A report by the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News found that, over the past decade, more than 250 staffers or volunteers with Southern Baptist churches were “charged with sex crimes” against more than 700 victims.

If all of that sounds eerily familiar, it’s because the Catholic Church has been exposed for its own (larger) problems sheltering and covering up for sexual abusers.

Now, writing for Religion News Service, Rev. Thomas J. Reese has an excellent list of ways the two scandals are different. In fact, he says, the Southern Baptist problem actually debunks many of the myths spread by critics and defenders of the Catholic Church.

For example, how many times have you heard people blame the Catholic Church crisis on its policy of celibacy? The Southern Baptist scandal shows that treating sex as a sin for ministers isn’t the problem:

… Many liberal critics tried to blame the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church on priests’ vow to abstain from sex, yet Baptists are having the same problem, and there is no equivalent requirement for SBC ministers. Most Baptist predators are married men. There are good reasons for married priests in the Catholic Church, but marriage does not prevent a man from abusing.

Similarly, Church defenders often blamed the abuse on gay priests… but most (if not all) of the Baptist ministers are straight.

Is the Catholic Church’s abuse problem exacerbated by its hierarchical structure? The Southern Baptists don’t have that structure, yet the abuse thrived.

You get the idea.

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’s euphemization of power

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 15, 2019

By Michele Dillon

Leaders of the national conferences of Catholic bishops will soon convene Feb. 21-24 in Rome to collectively confront the scourge of clerical sex abuse that failures in leadership have allowed to fester over several decades. Concrete action outcomes are urgently needed and impatiently awaited.

Any emergent policy, however, if it is not built on church leaders’ recognition of how sacramental power (ordination) may contribute to the fermentation of abuse, is unlikely to be effective in eliminating clerical sexual activity and its cover-up. This task requires Pope Francis and his fellow bishops to actively choose to get to the truth and to outline it.

The great late French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu wrote in his book Practical Reason: On the Theory of Action about how word games, including euphemisms, are a crucial strategy in the Catholic Church’s reproduction of inequality between the hierarchy and the laity. Euphemistic language is not simply jargon or the pragmatic shorthand of insiders. It is used rather to mystify and to distract from and, especially, to deny a given reality. Church officials use euphemistic language, Bourdieu argued, to inoculate themselves from acknowledgement of the real truth of church practices and to convince the laity (and others) that there is nothing arbitrary about hierarchical power and the clerical privilege it embeds.

I thought about Bourdieu in August 2018 as I read the findings from the Pennsylvania grand jury report on sex abuse in Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses. The report documented multiple instances of euphemization in action. And indeed it called out euphemization for what it is.

Summarizing the analysis of the diocesan sex abuse files conducted by the FBI, the grand jury wrote: “It’s like a playbook for concealing the truth: First, make sure to use euphemisms rather than real words to describe the sexual assaults in diocese documents. Never say ‘rape’; say ‘inappropriate contact’ or ‘boundary issues.’ … When a priest does have to be removed, don’t say why. Tell his parishioners that he is on ‘sick leave,’ or suffering from ‘nervous exhaustion.’ Or say nothing at all.”

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Disgraced Cardinal Theodore McCarrick Defrocked, SNAP Responds

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

February 16, 2019

Vatican officials announced today that disgraced Cardinal Theodore McCarrick has been formally defrocked for serially abusing minors.

For the sake of his victims, we are grateful that this case has been somewhat resolved. Still, we cannot help but notice the timing of this resolution: the Friday before the pope’s much ballyhooed global abuse summit. We believe that this decision was “fast-tracked” by the hierarchy because it’s so damning:

–a prominent cardinal severely abused his power and prestige to hurt others,
–another prominent cardinal, Donald Wuerl, covered it up and then repeatedly lied about that, and
–Vatican officials kept silent despite repeated warnings about a predator.

This decision comes on the heels of other high-profile scandals for church officials, including the case of Fr. Hermann Geissler, an Austrian priest accused of sexually abusing a nun, resigning as section manager at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), or the resignation of Msgr. Joseph Punderson, a high ranking Vatican canon lawyer, after being exposed in New Jersey as an abuser.

These examples are yet more proof, all in the past few months, that Catholic officials tout but do not practice “transparency.”

It is still possible, and preferable, that criminal charges be filed, not just against Cardinal McCarrick, but also against Church officials who hid his wrongdoing for decades.

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

Theodore McCarrick has been defrocked. Why did it take so long?

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 16, 2019

By Elizabeth Bruenig

Theodore McCarrick, a former cardinal and archbishop of Washington, has been laicized by the Vatican, stripping him of all rights and obligations as a member of the clergy. The rare and severe penalty marks the end of the investigation into McCarrick launched by Rome after the Archdiocese of New York found allegations of sexual misconduct against the former cardinal credible last summer. According to a statement issued by the Vatican, McCarrick was found guilty of “solicitation in the Sacrament of Confession, and sins against the Sixth Commandment” involving both minors and adults, with “the aggravating factor of the abuse of power.” These findings are based on allegations brought by a reported three accusers in 2018 during a penal process initiated by Rome. Pope Francis has rendered the verdict “definitive.” There will be no appeal.

Rome’s decision on McCarrick marks the first time a U.S. bishop has been laicized due to sexual abuse. While many U.S. priests have been laicized for the same, prelates such as McCarrick have been dismissed from the clerical state for sexual misconduct much more rarely — until now. The Vatican has laicized several recently, including two Chilean bishops, perhaps signaling the seriousness of Pope Francis’s “zero tolerance” campaign against the sexual abuse of minors. But for McCarrick, the penalty represents a dizzying, precipitous fall from grace.

Before news of the allegations against him broke last summer, McCarrick was among the most powerful, well-connected prelates in America. Ordained in 1958, McCarrick was first assigned as a chaplain at the Catholic University of America, where he went on to serve as a dean of students for several years. In 1965, he was made a monsignor by Pope Paul VI and was named president of the Catholic University of Puerto Rico in Ponce, a stunning double feat for an up-and-comer in only his mid-30s. McCarrick was called back to his native New York in 1969 by Cardinal Terence Cooke, who made McCarrick assistant secretary for education in the Archdiocese of New York; in 1971, Cooke made him his personal secretary. In 1977, he became an auxiliary bishop of New York; in 1981, the first bishop of Metuchen, N.J.; and in 1986, the archbishop of Newark. In early 2001, McCarrick was installed as archbishop of Washington and shortly thereafter was made a cardinal by Pope John Paul II.

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.

Judge sets conditions of release for ex-priest

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
Associated Press

February 16, 2019

A New Mexico judge has set conditions of release for a former Catholic priest accused of kidnapping and raping a 6-year-old boy in the 1980s.

KOB-TV reports a judge ruled Friday that 81-year-old Marvin Archuleta must wear a GPS monitoring device while he awaits trial. He also cannot be in contact or around children.

Archuleta was arrested last week in Albuquerque.The New Mexico Attorney General’s Office had filed a motion for him to remain held until his trial. A grand jury in Santa Fe returned an indictment Thursday against Archuleta on charges of kidnapping and rape.

He is accused in court documents of raping a boy who attended the Holy Cross Catholic Church in Santa Cruz, New Mexico, during the mid-1980s. Archuleta’s trial has not yet been scheduled.

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Giving voice to those abused by priests and pastors

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
Express News

Feb. 16, 2019

By Elaine Ayala

A local survivor of abuse holds support group meetings in San Antonio every second Monday.
Photo: Bob Owen, Staff-photographer / San Antonio Express-News
As difficult as it is, Patti Koo reads every word she can about priests and pastors who sexually abused children and adults in places that should have been safe, in houses of worship where perpetrators found protection and victims weren’t believed.

She’s a survivor of such abuse. Her pastor and Bible study teacher in the Rio Grande Valley groomed and manipulated her when she was at her most vulnerable — when she was in counseling with him, where he sexualized religious notions and ultimately assaulted her.

He was a popular preacher, had a religion column in the local newspaper, the McAllen Monitor, and enjoyed the support of congregants. They didn’t believe Koo and blamed her instead. “We lost a lot of friends,” she said.

It’s why many survivors never report the abuse, says Candace Christensen, who specializes in gender-based violence prevention in the Department of Social Work at the University of Texas in San Antonio. That’s especially true in cases where the stories around the abuse are complicated and not as clear-cut as the rape of a child.

She calls those who come forward “heroic.”

Over the span of 18 months, beginning in 2000, Koo’s Baptist-ordained Presbyterian preacher Kenneth Perry Wood sexually abused and assaulted her. She was 44 then, and a physician’s assistant.

“I should have known better,” she recalls thinking over and over again. Her journey included a suicide attempt. She knew the risks of going public.

It took all she had to tell her husband. It took far more to tell her children. Then she and her husband went to the police.

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 Makes Unprecedented Move of Defrocking Ex-Cardinal McCarrick Over Sex Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Slate

February 16, 2019

By Molly Olmstead

The Vatican announced on Saturday that ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, once the archbishop of Washington, has been expelled from the priesthood after being found guilty of sexually abusing minors for decades. McCarrick was for decades one of the most powerful figures in the American Catholic church.

According to the New York Times, the ruling appears to be the first time an American cardinal or bishop has ever been laicized, a process that strips a former priest of all clerical titles, rights, and resources, including housing and any other financial benefits. It also seems to be the first time any cardinal has been laicized over sexual abuse.

The 88-year-old McCarrick has been accused of abusing three minors over decades. Last summer, an investigation by the Archdiocese of New York found an assault accusation from the 1970s to be credible, and McCarrick was removed from office—making him the highest-ranking American Catholic leader to be held to account for abuse allegations. Further reporting by the New York Times and Washington Post found that McCarrick’s rumored behavior had long been an open secret and that church leaders had paid settlements to men who complained of abuse when McCarrick was a bishop. Pope Francis ordered McCarrick to a life of “penance and prayer” during the recent investigation, and he has been living in a Kansas religious residence since.

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.

California’s Franciscan Order to Release Names of Priests Accused of Sexual Misconduct with Minors

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
KQED Radio

February 16, 2019

In response to reignited public outrage over the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal, a number of independent religious orders are publishing lists of priests accused of sexual misconduct with minors.

Father David Gaa, head of the Franciscans Friars of the Province of Santa Barbara, which oversees more than 140 priests — or brothers, as they’re called — in California and neighboring states, is leading this effort within his order, combing through records going back as far as 1950.

Franciscans keep their own archives and run their order independently from dioceses.

Gaa, whose official title is Provincial Minister, said he knows the church has a history of releasing incomplete lists of accused brothers, and because of that, trust has not been repaired.

“I clearly understand the outrage,” he said. “It’s been a colossal failure of the leadership of the hierarchy of the Catholic church. It’s the last chance, the last opportunity, to make sure things are transparent and that the truth just comes out.”

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Timeline of McCarrick’s priesthood, ministry

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 16, 2019

By Paul Haring

Here is a timeline of key events in the life of Theodore E. McCarrick, beginning with his ordination as a priest for the Archdiocese of New York more than 60 years ago and ending with the Vatican’s announcement Feb. 16 that Pope Francis has confirmed his removal from the priesthood.

The timeline includes information on his episcopal appointments to dioceses and archdioceses and covers allegations of abuse lodged against him.

1958, June 15 — Father McCarrick ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of New York by Cardinal Francis Spellman.

1958 — Father McCarrick performs his first baptism in Tenafly, New Jersey. The child, James, later would allege he was abused by Father McCarrick.

1969 — Msgr. McCarrick named assistant secretary of education for the Archdiocese of New York.

1969 — Msgr. McCarrick allegedly exposes himself to James, then an 11-year-old boy, in Northern New Jersey. As reported by The New York Times July 19, James alleged that an abusive relationship continued for nearly 20 years.

1971 — Msgr. McCarrick becomes personal secretary to Cardinal Terence Cooke of New York.

1971 — Msgr. McCarrick allegedly abuses a 16-year-old altar boy in the Archdiocese of New York prior to Christmas Mass. A year later he allegedly abuses the same altar boy, again before Christmas Mass. Both incidents were reported to the archdiocese sometime between March 1, 2017, and April 15, 2018.

1977, June 29 — Msgr. McCarrick ordained as an auxiliary bishop of New York by Cardinal Cooke.

1981, Jan. 31 — Bishop McCarrick installed as first bishop of newly created Diocese of Metuchen, New Jersey.

1984 — Bishop McCarrick authorizes Diocese of Metuchen to purchase beach house in Sea Girt, New Jersey, according to The New York Times. He is alleged to have abused seminarians at the house.

1986, July 25 — Archbishop McCarrick installed as archbishop of Newark, New Jersey.

1987 — Archbishop McCarrick allegedly abuses unnamed seminarian for the Diocese of Metuchen in New York City. The former priest received a settlement from the Archdiocese of Newark and Diocese of Metuchen in 2007, as reported by The New York Times July 16, 2018.

1994 — The unnamed Metuchen priest writes a letter to Archbishop McCarrick’s successor in Metuchen, Bishop Edward T. Hughes, stating that abuse he allegedly endured from Archbishop McCarrick and other priests triggered him to touch two 15-year-old boys inappropriately. In the letter he also claimed he saw Archbishop McCarrick having sex with a young priest and that the archbishop invited him to be next. The letter was in a file the priest provided to the Times on the condition his name not be used.

1995, October — Archbishop McCarrick hosts Pope John Paul II in Newark during his Oct. 4-9 visit to the United States.

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Lists of NJ priests accused of sexual abuse has some notable omissions

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 16, 2019

By Abbott Koloff

Advocates for children abused by priests say the lists bearing the names of nearly 200 accused clergy members that were released last week only hinted at a larger problem that they expect to be brought to light after a state grand jury reviews more detailed records.

The disclosure of 188 names by New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses was prompted by a statewide criminal investigation, and Church leaders emphasized that the lists, which were released Wednesday, included only a narrowly defined group: clerics who had been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.

The restrictions omitted priests of religious orders who were ordained by local bishops and have been accused of sexually abusing children in diocesan churches. The lists didn’t include anyone accused of abusing young adults after they turned 18.

One priest whose name was not on the list stepped down from an Essex County parish in 2014 after a decades-old allegation of abuse surfaced stemming from his time in Bergen County. Church officials said it raised “grave concerns.”

And an unknown number of records from the Paterson Diocese were destroyed decades ago, making it impossible to know how many abuse cases were not counted from before that time.

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Will the Catholic Church stop the sexual abuse? Don’t hold your breath

ST. CLOUD (MN)
St. Cloud Times

February 15, 2019

Karen Cyson

Let’s not discuss the varied opinions on border walls, refugees and immigration. Let’s not discuss the efficacy of vaccines or medical marijuana. Let’s not even discuss whether University Drive should be pushed through to U.S. Highway 10.

Can we agree on one thing? Can we agree that raping children is wrong? I think it’s wrong. Do you?

We live in a world where an international organization, one established on every continent save Antarctica, knows that thousands of its leaders have raped thousands of children over decades and perhaps centuries.

This week that organization is convening a summit to discuss the problem. Don’t hold your breath waiting for reform. Here are the words of the world leader of the group concerning the summit: “I permit myself to say that I’ve perceived a bit of an inflated expectation. We need to deflate the expectations.”

Those were the words of Pope Francis to the world’s1.2 billion Roman Catholics when he got wind of expectations that the summit Feb. 21-24 would produce a zero-tolerance policy regarding priests raping children, bishops and archbishops moving predators from parish to parish and cover-ups. Don’t get your hopes up. Don’t expect the summit to actually do anything.

Perhaps the pope isn’t aware of the magnitude of the problem. Could that be it? Sure, he’s spoken with survivors, he has acknowledged that there has been harm. Has he seen the lists? Have you?

The website BishopAccountability.org (bishop-accountability.org/priestdb/PriestDBbydiocese.html) maintains a list, by diocese, of credibly-accused priests in the U.S.While it may not be completely up to date, what with the release of 286 names in Texas last week, 58 priests named in Virginia andnearly 200 priests named in New Jersey on Thursday,it does contain an astonishing database of credibly-accused priests and the response of the Church (or lack thereof) in all 50 states. Just click on a state and view the roll call. The group that maintains this site has also added links to information on Chile, Argentina and Ireland.

On Thursday, Pope Francis will convene the summit to discuss the issue of sexual abuse with the intent of making bishops aware of the suffering of victims and protocols for dealing with complaints.

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‘The Michael Cohen of the diocese’

NEW YORK (NY)
Daily News

February 16, 2019

By Nancy Dillon and Dan Good

She calls him her “nemesis” and the “fixer” of the Diocese of Brooklyn — and she’s not surprised by a new allegation he too was a predatory priest.

Sister Sally Butler, a longtime Brooklyn nun, says Queens-based Monsignor Otto Garcia personally covered up multiple sex abuse complaints involving other priests while serving in high-ranking positions under Bishop Thomas Daily.

She brought forward three cases to the diocese, she said, so hearing this week he’s now facing the first public allegation he personally molested an adolescent boy in the early 1970s was hardly a shock.

“He was the Michael Cohen of the diocese. He was the ‘fixer.’ He seemed to be a totally amoral person,” she said of Garcia, comparing him to the disgraced lawyer who pleaded guilty last year to illegally funneling money to cover up alleged affairs involving President Trump.

Butler spoke out after Queens resident Thomas Davis told the Daily News in an exclusive interview that Garcia sexually assaulted him multiple times when he was a minor working in the rectory at St. Michael’s Catholic Church in Flushing between 1973 and 1975.

Garcia denied the allegations to The News, claiming he barely knew Davis. “I had so little contact with him that I didn’t know him at all,” he said.

The Brooklyn Diocese released the names Friday of 108 priests credibly accused of sexual misconduct. Garcia was one of two priests listed separately who had an allegation against him that was deemed “unsubstantiated.”

Former Queens resident Bob Burns said hearing the new allegation against Garcia made him “feel violated again.”

“I’m just pissed off. I’m angry,” he told The News. “I wish I was shocked. I always had issues with (Garcia). He was the clean-up man.”

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Theodore McCarrick was just defrocked by the Vatican. But is it justice?

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

February 16, 2019

By Michelle Boorstein

In Catholic Church law, being forcibly laicized is sometimes called the death penalty for priests – a dismissal from the priesthood, a status change that is permanent, something that can’t even be said of excommunication. Even priests who request laicization are told to move away, and to not divulge what happened unless they have to, in order to avoid scandalizing other Catholics. No working in parishes, seminaries, Catholic schools. Your previous identity is wiped out.

At the same time, in the eyes of the church the mark of priestly ordination can never be removed. Something metaphysical changed then that can’t be undone. A Minnesota diocesan official who was laicizing a man still warmly reassured him, tapping his chest: In here, you’re a priest forever, the official said, a former church lawyer present testified in a 2014 affidavit. The man had abused women, including in the confessional, one of whom killed herself.

Theodore McCarrick is believed to be the first cardinal — a title he held until allegations surfaced last summer — laicized for sexual misconduct, and one of just six bishops accused of similar crimes and dismissed, according to the abuse-tracking group BishopAccountability. But in an era of rampant clergy scandals, when the words “bishop” and “cardinal” are being removed from Catholic fundraising drives in order to boost giving, experts predict many Catholics won’t see the rare defrocking as particularly weighty. Or as sufficient justice for McCarrick’s alleged victims.

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Brooklyn Diocese names more than 100 clergy accused of sex abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

February 15, 2019

By Rebecca Rosenberg

The Brooklyn Diocese on Friday published the names of more than 100 clergy “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors.

The list’s release comes two days after the Diocese of New Jersey published a similar list.

There are 108 names on the shameful registry, which include priests, bishops and deacons in Brooklyn and Queens. Two-thirds of them are deceased, according to a press release by the diocese.

“We know this list will generate many emotions for victims who have suffered terribly. For their suffering, I am truly sorry,” said Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio in a statement.

“I have met with many victims who have told me that more than anything, they want an acknowledgment of what was done to them. This list gives that recognition, and I hope it will add another layer of healing for them on their journey toward wholeness.”

A clergy member was considered “credibly accused” if he confessed, had been criminally convicted or had the allegations substantiated by the Independent Diocesan Review Board, church officials said.

Joseph Zwilling, spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York, which covers Manhattan, the Bronx, Staten Island and additional counties, said it has no plan to release a similar list.

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US ex-cardinal Theodore McCarrick defrocked over abuse claims

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC News

February 16, 2019

A former Roman Catholic cardinal has been defrocked after historical sexual abuse allegations.

Theodore McCarrick is the most senior Catholic figure to be dismissed from the priesthood in modern times.

US Church officials said allegations he had sexually assaulted a teenager five decades ago were credible.

Mr McCarrick, 88, had previously resigned but said he had “no recollection” of the alleged abuse.

The alleged abuses may have taken place too long ago for criminal charges to be filed because of the statute of limitations.

Mr McCarrick was the archbishop of Washington DC from 2001 to 2006. Since his resignation last year from the College of Cardinals, he has been living in seclusion in a monastery in Kansas.

He was the first person to resign as a cardinal since 1927.

He is among hundreds of members of the clergy accused of sexually abusing children over several decades and his dismissal comes days before the Vatican hosts a summit on preventing child abuse.

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Virginia’s two dioceses release lists of clergy credibly accused of abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 16, 2019

Virginia’s two Catholic bishops, Arlington Bishop Michael F. Burbidge and Richmond Bishop Barry C. Knestout, released lists Feb. 13 of the clergy credibly accused of child sex abuse in their respective dioceses.

In Arlington, Burbidge said releasing the list fulfills a commitment he made to publish these names “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,” he said in a letter to Catholics of the diocese that accompanied the list. “Embarrassment, frustration, anger and hurt are all natural emotions to experience in a time such as this. I share those emotions.”

The complete list of 16 names can be found on the diocesan website, www.arlingtondiocese.org. The list of priests credibly accused dates back to when the diocese was established in 1974.

In an open letter published with the Richmond diocesan list, Knestout said: “To the victims and to all affected by the pain of sexual abuse, our response will always be about what we are doing, not simply what we have done. We will seek not just to be healed but will always be seeking healing. We will seek not just to be reconciled but will always be seeking reconciliation.”

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Vatican Defrocks Former US Cardinal Theodore McCarrick Over Sex Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

February 16, 2019

Pope Francis has defrocked former U.S. Cardinal Theodore McCarrick after Vatican officials found him guilty of soliciting for sex while hearing confession and sexual crimes against minors and adults, the Holy See said Saturday.

McCarrick, 88, is the highest-ranking churchman to be laicized, as the process is called. It means he can no longer celebrate Mass or other sacraments, wear clerical vestments or be addressed by any religious title.

The scandal swirling around him was particularly damning to the church’s reputation in the eyes of the faithful because it apparently was an open secret that he slept with adult seminarians. Francis removed McCarrick as a cardinal in July after a U.S. church investigation determined that an allegation he fondled a teenage altar boy in the 1970s was credible.

The punishment for the once-powerful prelate, who had served as the archbishop of Washington and had been an influential fundraiser for the church, was announced five days before Francis is set to lead an extraordinary gathering of bishops from around the world to help the church grapple with the crisis of sex abuse by clergy and systematic cover-ups by church hierarchy. The decades-long scandals have shaken the faith of many Catholics and threatened Francis’ papacy.

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List of priests who were accused of sexual abuse not enough, says survivors group

WILLIAMSBURG (VA)
Williamsburg Yorktown Daily

February 16, 2019

On Wednesday, the Catholic Diocese of Richmond made waves when it published a list of 42 names of clergy with “credible and substantiated” allegations of sexual abuse involving minors.

Some of the names were priests who were assigned in Catholic churches in Virginia Beach and Norfolk.

One of the priests, Rev. Msgr. Joseph Thang Xuan Pham, was a parochial vicar at St. Bede Catholic Church in Williamsburg from 1985 to 1988, his first assignment after being ordained, according to an online biography.

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An Open Letter to Rachael Denhollander on #SBCtoo

Eric Schumacher blog

February 11, 2019

Dear Rachael,

This past week, the Houston Chronicle published a three-part series on sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention.

In response, you asked: “Pastors, where were you? When we were pleading for you to speak up against your peers or the leaders your support props up, where were you?”

I want (and need) to answer your question.

Ten years ago, I was thirty-two years old, almost three years into pastoring my second church. We were recovering from some heart-breaking and regrettable division while walking into new conflicts. I was in the throes of life-paralyzing depression, not knowing how to handle what was happening.

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Essential lessons for conducting grand jury investigations of clergy sexual abuse

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 16, 2019

by Hank Shea, Thomas Wheeler

The Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, through a grand jury investigation supervised by his office, has claimed that the investigation revealed the truth about the sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church: “Now we know the truth: [the abuse] happened everywhere.”

The grand jury’s report, released August 2018, highlighted in horrifying detail sexual abuse crimes and misconduct that spanned over 70 years, involved six Pennsylvania dioceses, implicated 300 predator priests and identified over 1,000 child victims. But as with any report that contains such shocking and highly disturbing allegations, people want to know the evidence: Who made the allegations? When did the crimes occur? What was the church’s response? More simply, they want to know the details of the investigation and how its findings were reached.

Some commentators who have analyzed the Pennsylvania’s grand jury’s investigation have found it seriously deficient. Peter Steinfels, in a lengthy Commonweal article, has provided the most trenchant critique. Such criticism has spawned a debate as to how the investigation was conducted and ultimately, the legitimate use of the Pennsylvania grand jury report. (See this piece by Nicholas Frankovich in the National Review, this view by Christopher R. Altieri in The Catholic World Report and this response by George Weigel at First Things.)

As such, the fairness of the investigation and value of the report have been called into question — did the grand jury’s investigation consider, and its report properly present, all the relevant information? Has the public been provided an accurate and balanced picture? What is the actual truth?

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February 15, 2019

Should We Keep Studying a Fired Pastor’s Work?

CAROL STREAM (IL)
Christianity Today

February 15, 2019

By Kate Shellnutt

As more preachers gain national (and global) followings through books, podcasts, and other resources, the fallout around disgraced leaders extends across the church at large. Christians are left to reckon with how or whether they will continue to engage their past teachings.

America’s largest chain of Christian bookstores, LifeWay Christian Resources, decided to stop selling titles by former Harvest Bible Chapel pastor James MacDonald after his termination this week, taking down all 58 of his items from its website.

LifeWay, the publishing arm of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), will also no longer print the books MacDonald released over the past three years through LifeWay Press and B&H Books, including Lord, Change My Attitude Before It’s Too Late;Think Differently, Act Like Men—The Bible Study; and The Will of God is the Word of God Companion Guide.

Previously, LifeWay has pulled titles from Mark Driscoll and Jen Hatmaker and books about heaven tourism due to doctrinal standards. Individual churches have also opted to no longer make resources by their former pastors available, as Calvary Chapel Fort Lauderdale did with Bob Coy’s popular sermon podcast after he resigned due to a “moral failing” in 2015.

But the decision of whom to continue to read, listen to, learn from, and support is often left up to individual believers. Christians understand that none are without sin, and God uses imperfect vehicles to convey his perfect gospel—but when do their personal shortcomings affect the message they teach?

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More Names Hidden in Chicago, SNAP Responds

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

February 15, 2019

Less than a week before the international summit he is slated to lead, Chicago’s top Catholic official is facing new questions about his knowledge and handling of three “credibly” accused priests in his archdiocese.

According to the Chicago Sun Times, church officials in the Archdiocese of Chicago claim they only learned two months ago that three abusive clerics have lived for years on church property near Northbrook. We find this hard to believe, but at the very least Cardinal Blase Cupich should have disclosed their presence as soon as he learned of it. We wonder if the names would ever have been revealed if the Sun Times had not broken the story.

Just a few months ago, when asked about keeping track of religious order priests who have been accused of sexual abuse, the Cardinal’s spokeswoman said, “it is done on a regular basis.” That was apparently not true, or at least the basis was not regular enough.

Cardinal Cupich claims that he did not know about these priests – Fr. Joe Fertal and two others who Catholic officials still refuse to name – and may say that the responsibility for his lack of knowledge will rest on someone else’s shoulders. But we say that the buck must stop somewhere, that there must be one person within the Archdiocese who is willing to accept responsibility for leaving the names of accused perpetrators off of lists, for consistently choosing not to inform community members of their presence, and for continuing to obfuscate and minimize allegations of clergy misconduct.

Given that Cardinal Cupich is in charge of the dioceses within Illinois, SNAP believes this person should be him. The Sun Times story is yet another reason why the Cardinal should step down from his role in next week’s Vatican abuse meeting.

Fr. Quang Dinh is the supervisor of these priests, as the head of the Divine Word religious order, and we believe that he should be held equally responsible along with Cardinal Cupich. If these two men want to show that they are taking this abuse crisis seriously, they should immediately disclose the names, photos and full work histories of these three clerics.

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New Lawsuit Claims Archdiocese Of New York Schemed To Trick Sex Abuse Victims Out Of Suing Church

NEW YORK (NY)
CBS New York

February 15, 2019

One day after Gov. Cuomo signed the Child Victims Act into law, a class action lawsuit has been filed against the archdiocese of New York.

During a Friday morning press conference, attorney Jeff Herman said the suit was filed on behalf of Emmett Caldwell.

Caldwell alleges he was the victim of sexual abuse while a child in the Catholic Church. He and several other victims claim the archdiocese tricked them into waiving their right to sue the church for abuse.

Herman said Friday that his client was convinced to join the church’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP) without the aid of an independent lawyer.

Herman alleges that the program’s purpose was to “eliminate claims of victims before the Child Victims Act was passed and became law.”

The attorney slammed the head of New York’s archdiocese, Cardinal Timothy Dolan, saying the program was nothing more than a scheme to pay victims “pennies on the dollar.”

“A contract, like a release, may be voided where one party is taken advantage of,” Herman explained.

The lawsuit is not seeking to void the contracts signed with the IRCP; allowing Caldwell and others the ability to take the archdiocese to court under the state’s new Child Victims Act.

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State lawmakers want to eliminate the statute of limitations on sex-abuse lawsuits. Here’s why

HARTFORD (CT)
Capitol Watch podcast

February 14, 2019

Right now, if you’re older than 48, you can’t file a civil lawsuit in Connecticut alleging you were sexually abused as a minor.

State lawmakers want to change that. Success could mean hundreds of costly new lawsuits against the Catholic Church.

Capitol Watch sits down with reporter Dave Altimari, whose coverage of priest abuse prompted lawmakers to take action. We also talk to sexual abuse survivor Gail Howard, who now co-leads the peer network SNAP.

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Diocese Of Brooklyn Reveals 108 Names Linked To Church Sex Abuse Allegations

NEW YORK (NY)
CBSN ewYork

February 15, 2019

New revelations in the ongoing church sex abuse scandal are having a direct effect on Catholics in the five boroughs.

On Friday, the Diocese of Brooklyn released a list of clergy members who the church says have been credibly accused of sexually abusing a child.

Nicholas DiMarzio, the bishop of Brooklyn, released a video statement saying he knows this will be emotional for the victims.

“For their suffering, I am truly sorry. I have met with many victims who have told me more than anything they want an acknowledgment of what was done to them. This list gives that recognition,” DiMarzio said.

The list of 108 priests spans the diocese’s 166-year history, and includes information about any action taken against the accused.

Officials with the church say the priests being named represents less than five percent of clergy in the Diocese of Brooklyn.

Only a third of the accused priests listed in the release are still alive.

Also on Friday, a class action lawsuit was filed against the archdiocese of New York. An attorney for the plaintiff – an alleged victim of clergy sex abuse – says his client and other victims were misled into waiving their right to sue the church for sexual misconduct.

A new state law has extended the statute of limitations to age 28 for child sex abuse victims and also allows them to sue up to age 55.

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Brooklyn Archdiocese releases names of more than 100 clergy `credibly’ accused of sexual misconduct with a minor

NEW YORK (NY)
Daikly News

February 15, 2019

By Leonard Greene

The Brooklyn Archdiocese on Friday released the names of more than 100 priests credibly accused of sexual misconduct with a minor.

The list, 108 in total, includes priests, bishops and deacons for whom allegations were reported to the Diocese or the church’s Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program.

“As we know, sexual abuse is a shameful and destructive problem that is found in all aspects of society, yet it is especially egregious when it occurs within the church, and such abuse cannot be tolerated,” Archbishop Nicholas DiMarzio said in a letter accompanying the release.

“It is my hope that the publishing of this list will provide some assistance to those who are continuing the difficult process of healing, as well as encourage other victims to come forward.”

Among the names on the list is a priest, the Rev. James Lara, who was removed from the ministry in 1992.

Lara, who served in Brooklyn for 19 years, re-emerged in the world of academia under the name Jaime Lara, a professor of medieval and renaissance studies at Arizona State University, with a 25-year career teaching about sacred art history.

The church first disclosed his name two years ago.

Lara resigned from Arizona State after the revelation.

Administrators apparently did not know he spent nearly two decades as a priest, and Lara’s time in active ministry was notably absent from his 18-page curriculum vitae.

Lara’s victims, some of whom have been financially compensated by the church, have described a predator who doted on Boy Scouts and altar boys.

Also on the list is Joseph Byrns, who was defrocked in 2013 after being removed from the ministry in 2004.

Monsignor Otto Garcia, who was accused by a victim in a Daily News report of covering for pedophile priests, and sexually abusing a teenager 40 years ago, did not appear on the list. A statement from the diocese said a review board determined the allegations against Garcia were unsubstantiated.

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Cardinal expects ‘significant progress’ at sex abuse summit

DETROIT (MI)
The Associated Press

February 15, 2019

By Jeff Karoub and Nicole Winfield

The U.S. archbishop helping to organize next week’s summit of the world’s bishops at the Vatican on sexual abuse by clergy said Thursday he expects to make “significant progress” in responding to the scandal that’s riven the church, and that lay Catholics will help to hold the hierarchy accountable.

Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich told The Associated Press in a phone interview that the Feb. 21-24 prevention summit, convened by Pope Francis, is necessary for all global Catholic church leaders to understand they must act and be accountable to the victims for the abuse cases stretching back decades. He spoke of the urgency while acknowledging that victims and their advocates consider such a gathering long overdue.

“I think there is understandable frustration on that level,” said Cupich, hand-picked by Francis to help organize the summit. “All I can say now is I believe we’re going to make significant progress here. And we should also realize that we always have to keep learning — we can’t get to a place that we think we have this nailed down. If we do that we’re going to get it wrong.

“This meeting will be a significant moment, I think, to put us on a fresh trajectory — in a whole new direction,” he added.

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Virginia’s two Catholic bishops release names of 58 priests they say have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Washington Post

February 13, 2019

By Michelle Boorstein and Sarah Pulliam Bailey

Virginia’s two Catholic dioceses on Wednesday released lists of clergy who officials say were deemed “credibly accused” of sexually abusing youth, the latest in a slew of U.S. dioceses to make public such names amid a national crisis over clerical abuse and coverups.

The Diocese of Arlington, which covers the northeastern corner of Virginia, released a list of 16 names. It said the list was the product of two former FBI agents contracted by the diocese and given access to clergy files and information dating to its founding in 1974. It was not immediately clear whether any of the names of the accused were not previously known to Catholics of the diocese.

Bishop Michael F. Burbidge said in a letter that he ordered the list be released to help “victims and survivors of clergy abuse to find further healing and consolation.”

The Diocese of Richmond, which covers the rest of the state, released 42 names.

Bishop Barry Knestout, who came to Richmond in January 2018, wrote in a letter that the church is called to be “immersed” in reconciliation. “We need to bring to light the damage that has been done by child sexual abuse in the Church in order for healing to take place,” he wrote. “We must continue to demonstrate our commitment to never let this happen again.”

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Update: Great expectations: Vatican abuse summit has key, realistic goals

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Service

February 13, 2019

By Carol Glatz

All eyes and ears will be on the Vatican during an unprecedented gathering Feb. 21-24 to discuss the protection of minors in the Catholic Church.

When Pope Francis announced the international meeting in September, it sparked an optimistic note that the global problem of abuse finally would be tackled with a concerted, coordinated, global effort.

The breadth of the potential impact seemed to be reflected in the list of those convoked to the meeting: the presidents of all the world’s bishops’ conferences, the heads of the Eastern Catholic churches, representatives of the leadership groups of men’s and women’s religious orders and the heads of major Vatican offices.

But the pope tried to dial down what he saw as “inflated expectations” for the meeting, telling reporters in January that “the problem of abuse will continue. It’s a human problem” that exists everywhere.

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New York law gives child sex abuse victims more time to sue

NEW YORK (NY)
AFP

February 14, 2019

The governor of New York state on Thursday signed a law extending the statute of limitations for victims of childhood sex abuse, a move that could trigger a torrent of new complaints.

The law known as the Child Victims Act — which the Catholic Church fought against for years — will allow alleged victims until age 55 to file civil cases and 28 for criminal suits, compared to a limit of 23 under the old rule.

The new law, which will go into effect in six months, also establishes a one-year litigation window for any victim, regardless of age, to take civil action.

“This bill brings justice to people who were abused, and rights the wrongs that went unacknowledged and unpunished for too long,” the state’s governor, Andrew Cuomo, said in a statement.

“By signing this bill, we are saying nobody is above the law, that the cloak of authority is not impenetrable, and that if you violate the law, we will find out and you will be punished and justice will be done.”

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Catholic priest named by Diocese of Metuchen in sexual abuse list no longer works at Monmouth Medical Center

SOMERVILLE (NJ)
Bridgewater Courier

February 15, 2019

By Nick Muscavage

A former priest, named earlier this week by the Diocese of Metuchen in a list of clergymen credibly accused of child sexual abuse, is no longer employed by a Central Jersey hospital.

Mark Dolak, who’s been accused by a former Fords woman among others, no longer works for Monmouth Medical Center, a RWJBarnabas spokesperson said Friday.

Dolak was employed as an acute care family support specialist.

Ellen L. Greene, vice president of Strategic Corporate Communications for RWJBarnabas Health, did not confirm what led to Dolak’s departure or the date he left the position.

The Diocese of Metuchen, along with the state’s four other Catholic dioceses, released lists of credibly accused clergymen on Wednesday.

“We know the release of these names may inspire others who have been abused to come forward,” Bishop James Checcio, head of the Metuchen Diocese, said in a statement following the list’s release. “This in fact would be a healthy outcome, as we seek to live in the light.”

My Central Jersey published a story about accusations made against Dolak last summer.

Susan Bisaha stepped forward with claims against Dolak after she learned of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick’s suspension for sexual abuse allegations.

McCarrick, who was the first bishop of Metuchen before rising to the rank of Cardinal, had oversight of the diocese at the time Bisaha said she was repeatedly abused by Dolak from 1979 to 1987.

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Senior canon lawyer at the Vatican revealed as sexual abuser

PARIS (FRANCE)
LaCroix International

February 15, 2019

By Robert Mickens

Pope Francis has got a real mess on his hands. In just a few days he will gather the presidents of the all the world’s episcopal conferences in Rome to make them understand there must be “zero tolerance” for priests who sexually abuse minors.

But on the eve of this important meeting, yet another long-serving Vatican official has been revealed as a perpetrator.

Msgr. Joseph Punderson, who has worked at the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura since 1993 and its Defender of the Bond (DOB) since 1995, is expected to end three decades of service in Rome after his New Jersey diocese listed him among those “credibly accused of the sexual abuse of a minor.”

Punderson, 70, was one of 30 people on a preliminary list of offenders published on Feb. 13 by the Diocese of Trenton. The news comes only two weeks after Father Hermann Geissler, an Austrian priest accused of making sexual advances on a nun, resigned his post as section manager at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF).

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11 priests and deacons accused of abusing children worked in Paterson churches

PATERSON (NJ)
Paterson Times

February 15, 2019

By Jonathan Greene

New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses released the names of 188 priests and deacons “credibly accused” of sexually abusing children on Wednesday. Among them were 11 clergy members who worked in churches in Paterson.

“Today, in our effort to be transparent, we are publicly releasing the names of those clergy members who we believe have been credibly accused of such misconduct,” bishop Arthur Joseph Serratelli of the Diocese of Paterson said on Wednesday. “None of these individuals is serving as a priest or deacon within the Catholic Church. To the extent that they had priestly faculties, those faculties were removed.”

Diocese of Paterson which covers Morris, Passaic, and Sussex counties released 28 names. 11 of the clergy members served in churches located in Paterson:
Jose Alonso – St. Agnes, Paterson; Our Lady of Victories, Paterson; St. John Cathedral
Charles Bradley – St. John Cathedral, Paterson; Faculty, Paterson Catholic High School, Paterson
William Cramer – Chaplain, St. Joseph Hospital, Paterson
Francis Dennehy – Our Lady of Victories, Paterson; Chaplain, St. Joseph Hospital, Paterson; St. Therese, Paterson.
John Derricks – St. Joseph, Paterson
Stanislaus Durka – St. Stephen, Paterson
Patrick Erwin – St. Gerard Majella, Paterson; St. Joseph, Paterson; Social Action Department (in residence – Our Lady of Victories, Paterson); St. Mary, Paterson.
Carlos Guzman – St. John Cathedral, Paterson
John Heekin – St. Mary, Paterson; St. Therese, Paterson.
James A.D. Smith – Our Lady of Victories, Paterson; St. George, Paterson.
John Sutton – St. Agnes, Paterson; Chaplain, St. Joseph’s Hospital.
100 of the 188 priests and deacons are deceased.

“If you have been a victim of sexual abuse, my prayers and heart go out to you for this horrible action which has been committed against you,” Serratelli said. “I pray for your healing and, on behalf of myself, our diocese and the Catholic Church, I deeply and sincerely apologize for the pain that you have endured.”

The release of names came after the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office established a task force to investigate allegations of sexual abuse by clergy.

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Los claretianos de Barcelona llevan a la Fiscalía una acusación contra un religioso

[Claretians of Barcelona bring abuse allegation against teacher to prosecutor’s office]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

By Oriol Güell

February 13, 2019

El colegio ha apartado al docente tras tener noticia de los hechos, aireados por un exalumno a través de las redes sociales

El Colegio Claret de Barcelona, fundado en 1871, ha apartado a uno de sus docentes y ha llevado a la Fiscalía el caso dado a conocer el pasado fin de semana a través de las redes sociales por un exalumno, que acusa al religioso de haberle tocado todo el cuerpo, menos los genitales, durante un viaje de fin de curso a Menorca hace 20 años. El centro también ha puesto los hechos en conocimiento del Departamento de Educación de la Generalitat de Cataluña.

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What Catholics and Southern Baptists can learn from each other about sex abuse crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
Religion News Service

February 15, 2019

By Fr. Thomas Reese

Seventeen years after the Boston Globe exposé of sex abuse in the Catholic Church, two Texas newspapers have published a similar exposé of abuse in Southern Baptist churches.

Although the National Catholic Reporter had reported on sex abuse by priests since the mid-1980s, it was the Boston Globe reporting in 2002 that captured the attention of the nation. Likewise, there have been stories about Baptist ministers in the past, but they had not captured national attention like this month’s coverage by the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News.

The existence of clergy sexual abuse in the Southern Baptist Convention provides no satisfaction to us Catholics, but it does allow us to test our theories about the causes of abuse.

The Baptist scandal shows us that at least five explanations of the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church don’t hold up:

It is not celibacy. Many liberal critics tried to blame the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church on priests’ vow to abstain from sex, yet Baptists are having the same problem, and there is no equivalent requirement for SBC ministers. Most Baptist predators are married men. There are good reasons for married priests in the Catholic Church, but marriage does not prevent a man from abusing.

It is not homosexuality. Many conservative critics tried to blame the sex abuse crisis in the Catholic Church on homosexual priests, but most of the Baptist ministers alleged to have committed abuse are heterosexual. Studies have also found that most of the priests abusing boys were heterosexual.

It is not just the hierarchy. Most commentators, myself included, have quite rightly been very hard on the Catholic bishops for not dealing with abusive priests. But the SBC is very decentralized in governance, and it has also had problems. Neither governance structure has done well in dealing with abusive clergy or protecting children.

It is not the liberal reforms of the Second Vatican Council. Many conservative Catholics tried to blame the sex abuse crisis on the reforms that came from the Second Vatican Council, the meeting of bishops from all over the world from 1962 to ’65 that attempted to update the church to deal with the modern world. Southern Baptists had no council, and they are having the same problems.

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Survivors Say NJ’s List of Abusive Clergy Leaves Many Unanswered Questions

NEW YORK (NY)
WNYC Radio

February 14, 2019

New Jersey’s bishops have released the names of nearly 200 priests who were “credibly accused” of child sex abuse. But according to survivors who spoke with WNYC, the lists raise almost as many questions as they answer.

For instance, priests who are currently under investigation aren’t included. Some of the dioceses list priests who abused “multiple” victims, but don’t offer specific numbers. Four of the five dioceses fail to disclose the dates of when abusive priests were removed from ministry.

And Mark Crawford, the New Jersey coordinator for the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), says there’s another key piece of information that’s missing.

“They failed to disclose what they knew and when,” Crawford said. “As a victim, it’s part of your healing. You want to know. You have a need [and] an appetite for that information.”

Through Crawford’s extensive network of survivors in New Jersey, he estimates at least 100 clergy are missing from the lists, including the priest who repeatedly raped Fred Marigliano and his little brothers over the course of several years in the 1950’s and 60’s. That’s because their abuser was from a religious order, like the Jesuits, the Franciscans and, in their case, the Society of St. Paul. A spokesperson for Newark’s Archdiocese says priests from religious orders aren’t included on the dioceses’ list because the orders are supposed to police themselves.

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Cardinal Tobin’s challenges after release of list of NJ priests accused of abuse

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 15, 2019

By Mike Kelly

The Roman Catholic prelate who was the driving force behind the dramatic release on Wednesday of the names of nearly 200 New Jersey priests who abused children has a curious way of describing his role.

“I’m in sales. I’m not in management,” Cardinal Joseph Tobin, the head of the Newark Archdiocese and its 1.3 million Catholics, said in interview with NorthJersey.com and the USA Today Network New Jersey.

“I don’t think anything is beyond the grace of God,” he added. “So we have to do our best and trust that God can do what only God can do.”

Tobin’s remarks, in response to questions about how he might reset Catholicism’s moral compass after years of reports of sex abuse by priests, echoed a classic God-is-really-in-charge belief that has long been a cornerstone of Judeo-Christian theology.

But his description of himself as a salesman offers an additional glimpse into the daunting task he faces in trying to cleanse his church of the taint of sexual abuse while also remaining a credible voice on such progressive issues as economic reform and fair treatment for immigrants.

“We’re working for justice. We’re working for healing,” said Tobin, an unabashed political progressive, in pointing out his dual roles as reformer within the church and amid the outside world.

But for all his buoyant confidence, Tobin conceded what plenty of research studies have already discovered in the wake of Catholicism’s long running sex abuse scandal. “The bishops in this country,” he said, “have lost credibility.”

Wednesday’s publication by New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses of 188 names of priests and deacons who had been “credibly accused” of molesting children during the last eight decades was part of an attempt for more transparency by American Catholic officials after years of stubborn secrecy that had eroded trust in the church.

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How long, O Lord, must we wait to reform the clerical system?

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 15, 2019

by Christine Schenk

Pope Francis’s recent acknowledgment that bishops and priests have raped and sexually abused Catholic sisters ignited yet another media firestorm about the egregious lack of clerical accountability in the Catholic Church.

Kudos to long time Rome Associated Press reporter Nicole Winfield for raising the issue with the Pontiff on his flight back from the United Arab Emirates. In a 23 minute New York Times podcast, veteran religion reporter Laurie Goodstein cited NCR’s 2001 investigative exposé by John Allen and Pam Schaeffer that first broke this story. Their courageous reporting was also cited by Winfield last July. I gave an interview to National Public Radio on February 7.

Kudos and thanks to NCR for factually grounding a story of sister abuse that would otherwise seem unbelievable to faithful Catholics. Unbelievable that is, until 2001, when the clergy sexual abuse of children hit the headline s— a story NCR also broke in 1985 based on reports by investigative journalist Jason Berry.

How long O Lord? How long must we wait for both clergy and laity to recognize that incremental change will not work?

We need wide-ranging structural reform. We need checks and balances rather than the feudal governance we have now in which each bishop is the undisputed master of his diocesan fief.

Catholic patience is (finally) running out. And many Catholics are working to find solutions rather than enable the present moribund clerical system.

Here is a sampling of the creative activity of various groups and individuals in advance of the Feb. 21-24 Vatican summit of 100 heads of the world’s bishops’ conferences to discuss the sex abuse crisis.

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Beyond #ChurchToo: A Path Forward for Evangelicals

NASHVILLE (TN)
Ethics Daily

February 15, 2019

By Christa Brown

A 16-year-old girl was groomed and manipulated into an abusive “relationship” by the youth pastor of her evangelical church. When the truth came to light, she was shamed, blamed and silenced. The pastor continued in ministry.

This is the story of Emily Joy, co-creator of the #ChurchToo Twitter hashtag.

It’s also my story.

And it’s the story of thousands of others who have recounted similar church-based traumas under the still-exploding #ChurchToo hashtag.

Inspired by the #MeToo movement, Emily Joy and Hannah Paasch launched #ChurchToo as a way to provide a space for long-silenced people to share their stories of sexual abuse in evangelical churches.

And the stories have indeed flooded forth, not only from women but also from men, telling of the abuse they suffered as church kids.

Such an outpouring stands as a collective testament to a chilling reality. For decades, evangelical clergy have been sexually abusing women and children, and all the while, other religious leaders have known and turned a blind eye. This has been the status quo.

Many people have tried to shine a light on this systemic problem, but with International Women’s Day (March 8) approaching, my heart is filled with particular gratitude for all the strong women, past and present, who have been sisters-in-arms in what has been a multigenerational effort to try to bring change.

But will change ever get here?

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“Te ven vestido de cura en el metro y te llaman pederasta”

[“They see you dressed as a priest in the subway and they call you a pederast:” priests and lay people discuss clergy abuse]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 14, 2019

El obispo José Cobo participa en el primer debate sobre los abusos sexuales en la Iglesia católica con religiosos y víctimas

“Te ven vestido de cura en el metro y te llaman pederasta”, lamenta el obispo José Cobo Cano, prelado auxiliar del cardenal Carlos Osoro en Madrid. Lo dijo ante un centenar de personas convocadas por Redes Cristianas y Religión Digital este miércoles en el colegio mayor Chaminade, en un foro que reunió por primera vez a obispos, religiosos y víctimas de abusos sexuales por eclesiásticos. Cobo confesó tener miedo. “El crimen nos toca a todos”, añadió. Fue Benedicto XVI el primero en observar lo que ahora es un clamor. “Cada sacerdote se ve bajo sospecha. Muchos ya no se atreven a dar la mano a un niño, ni a hablar de hacer un campamento de vacaciones con niños”, dijo el Papa emérito en 2010.

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Lo que las víctimas de pederastia le pedimos al Congreso

[Opinion: The penal code must be reformed so the statute of limitations extends to pedophilia victims’ 50th birthday]

SPAIN
El País

February 14, 2019

By Miguel Hurtado Calvo

Se debe reformar el código penal para que el plazo de prescripción comience a contar a partir de que la víctima cumple los cincuenta años

En los últimos años han salido a la luz pública graves casos de pederastia que han conmocionado la conciencia de nuestro país. Desgraciadamente, muchos de estos delitos no han sido castigados porque cuando las víctimas han denunciado, el crimen ya había prescrito. Esta impunidad ha alarmado a la ciudadanía y abierto el debate sobre cuándo deben prescribir los delitos sexuales contra menores. En mi opinión la respuesta es clara. El Congreso debe reformar el código penal para que el plazo de prescripción comience a contar a partir de que la víctima cumple los 50 años, como han propuesto las principales organizaciones de protección a la infancia españolas. De esta forma, la víctima podrá denunciar hasta los 55 años en los casos más leves y hasta los 65 años en los casos más graves.

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The Vatican’s Gay Overlords

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

February 15, 2019

By Frank Bruni

Marveling at the mysterious sanctum that his new book explores, the French journalist Frédéric Martel writes that “even in San Francisco’s Castro” there aren’t “quite as many gays.”

He’s talking about the Vatican. And he’s delivering a bombshell.

Although the book’s publishers have kept it under tight wraps, I obtained a copy in advance of its release next Thursday. It will come out in eight languages and 20 countries, under the title “Sodoma,” as in Sodom, in Western Europe and “In the Closet of the Vatican” in the United States, Britain and Canada.

It includes the claim that about 80 percent of the male Roman Catholic clergy who work at the Vatican, around the pope, are gay. It contends that the more showily homophobic a Vatican official is, the more likely he belongs to that crowd, and that the higher up the chain of command you go, the more gays you find. And not all of them are celibate. Not by a long shot.

I’m supposed to cheer, right? I’m an openly gay man. I’m a sometime church critic. Hooray for the exposure of hypocrisy in high places and the affirmation that some of our tormentors have tortured motives. Thank heaven for the challenge to their moral authority. Let the sun in. Let the truth out.

But I’m bothered and even a little scared. Whatever Martel’s intent, “In the Closet of the Vatican” may be less a constructive reckoning than a stockpile of ammunition for militant right-wing Catholics who already itch to conduct a witch hunt for gay priests, many of whom are exemplary — and chaste — servants of the church. Those same Catholics oppose sensible and necessary reforms, and will point to the book’s revelations as proof that the church is already too permissive and has lost its dignity and its way.

Although Martel himself is openly gay, he sensationalizes gayness by devoting his inquiry to Catholic officials who have had sex with men, not ones who have had sex with women. The promise of celibacy that priests make forbids all sexual partners, and what violates Catholic teaching isn’t just gay sex but sex outside marriage. In that context, Martel’s focus on homosexuality buys into the notion that it’s especially troubling and titillating.

His tone doesn’t help. “The world I am discovering, with its 50 shades of gay, is beyond comprehension,” he writes. It will seem to some readers “a fairy tale.” He challenges the conventional wisdom that Pope Francis, who has detractors all around him, is “among the wolves,” clarifying, “It’s not quite true: he’s among the queens.” Maybe it’s better in the original French, but this language is at once profoundly silly and deeply offensive.

The sourcing of much of “In the Closet of the Vatican” is vague, and other Vatican experts told me that the 80 percent figure is neither knowable nor credible.

“It’s not a scientifically based accusation — it’s an ideologically based one,” said the Rev. Thomas Reese, a columnist for The National Catholic Reporter who visits the Vatican frequently and has written several highly regarded books about the Roman Catholic hierarchy. “One of the problems is that Catholic bishops have never allowed any kind of research in this area. They don’t want to know how many gay priests there are.” Independent studies put the percentage of gay men among Catholic priests in the United States at 15 percent to 60 percent.

In a telephone interview on Thursday, Martel stressed that the 80 percent isn’t his estimate but that of a former priest at the Vatican whom he quotes by name in the book. But he presents that quotation without sufficient skepticism and, in his own words, writes, “It’s a big majority.”

He says that “In the Closet of the Vatican” is informed by about 1,500 interviews over four years and the contributions of scores of researchers and other assistants. I covered the Vatican for The Times for nearly two years, and the book has a richness of detail that’s persuasive. It’s going to be widely discussed and hotly debated.

It depicts different sexual subcultures, including clandestine meetings between Vatican officials and young heterosexual Muslim men in Rome who work as prostitutes. It names names, and while many belong to Vatican officials and other priests who are dead or whose sexual identities have come under public scrutiny before, Martel also lavishes considerable energy on the suggestion that Francis’ predecessor, Pope Benedict XVI, and other towering figures in the church are gay.

Perhaps the most vivid of the double lives under Martel’s gaze is that of Cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo of Colombia, who died a little over a decade ago. According to the book, he prowled the ranks of seminarians and young priests for men to seduce and routinely hired male prostitutes, sometimes beating them up after sex. All the while he promoted the church’s teaching that all gay men are “objectively disordered” and embraced its ban on priests who are believed to have “deep-seated homosexual tendencies,” whether they act on them or not.

Part of my concern about the book is the timing of its release, which coincides precisely with an unprecedented meeting at the Vatican about sexual abuse in the church. For the first time, the pope has summoned the presidents of every Catholic bishops conference around the world to discuss this topic alone. But the book “is also bound to shift attention away from child abuse and onto gay priests in general, once again falsely conflating in people’s minds homosexuality and pedophilia,” said the Rev. James Martin, a best-selling Jesuit author, in a recent tweet. He’s right.

The book doesn’t equate them, and in fact makes the different, important point that the church’s culture of secrecy — a culture created in part by gay priests’ need to conceal who they are — works against the exposure of molesters who are guilty of crimes.

As David Clohessy, a longtime advocate for survivors of sexual abuse by priests, said to me on the phone a few days ago: “Many priests have a huge disincentive to report sexual misdeeds by colleagues. They know they’re vulnerable to being blackballed. It’s celibacy and the secretive, rigid, ancient all-male hierarchy that contributes to the cover-up and, therefore, more abuse.” Abuse has no sexual orientation, a fact made clear by many cases of priests having sex with girls and adult women, including nuns, whose victimization by priests was publicly acknowledged by Pope Francis for the first time early this month.

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Archdiocese: Didn’t know for years that 3 ‘order’ clerics faced sex accusations

CHICAGO (IL)
SunTimes

February 15, 2019

By Robert Herguth

Asked in September about whether the Archdiocese of Chicago keeps track of religious order priests who have been accused of sexual abuse, Cardinal Blase Cupich’s spokeswoman Paula Waters said, “It is done on a regular basis.”

But even amid heightened scrutiny of predator priests from the semi-autonomous orders, the cardinal’s office learned only recently that three elderly Catholic clerics with long-ago allegations of sexual misconduct that were deemed credible have been living on the Society of the Divine Word order’s grounds near Northbrook for years, the Chicago Sun-Times has learned.

One of them, the Rev. Joe Fertal, had been the subject of a lawsuit church authorities in California settled after he was accused of molesting a teenage boy.

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Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich expects ‘significant progress’ during sex abuse summit next week at the Vatican

CHICAGO (IL)
Associated Press

February 15, 2019

By Jeff Karoub and Nicole Winfield

Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich, who is helping to organize next week’s summit of the world’s bishops at the Vatican on sexual abuse by clergy, said Thursday he expects to make “significant progress” in responding to the scandal that’s riven the church, and that lay Catholics will help to hold the hierarchy accountable.

Cupich told The Associated Press in a phone interview that the Feb. 21-24 prevention summit, convened by Pope Francis, is necessary for all global Catholic church leaders to understand they must act and be accountable to the victims for the abuse cases that stretch back decades. He spoke of the urgency while acknowledging that victims and their advocates consider such a gathering long overdue.

“I think there is understandable frustration on that level,” said Cupich, hand-picked by Francis to help organize the summit. “All I can say now is I believe we’re going to make significant progress here. And we should also realize that we always have to keep learning. We can’t get to a place that we think we have this nailed down. If we do that, we’re going to get it wrong.

“This meeting will be a significant moment, I think, to put us on a fresh trajectory — in a whole new direction,” he added.

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Víctimas de pederastia exigen a los partidos que aclaren su postura sobre la prescripción del delito

[Pedophilia victims demand that political parties clarify their position on statute of limitations]

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País

February 14, 2019

By Íñigo Domínguez

Afectados por abusos piden, en una protesta en el Congreso, que se amplíe a 50 años la edad a partir de la cual cuenta el plazo para denunciar

Víctimas de la pederastia en la Iglesia se han manifestado este jueves ante el Congreso para exigir a los partidos políticos que “se mojen” y aclaren su postura sobre la ampliación de los plazos de prescripción de este delito, que ellos quieren llevar de los 18 años, la edad en que actualmente se empieza a contar el tiempo para denunciar, hasta los 50 años. Ante la próxima campaña electoral, han pedido que cada formación lo ponga por escrito en su programa.

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Clergy abuse survivors group says Omaha Archdiocese left 4 names off list of accused priests

OMAHA (NE)
Omaha World-Herald

February 14, 2019

By Christopher Burbach

A national group of clergy abuse victims said Wednesday that the Archdiocese of Omaha left four Catholic priests off the list of priests accused of sexual misdeeds with minors that the archdiocese made public in November.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said the four had been publicly accused of sexually abusing minors and had spent time in the Omaha area. David Clohessy, the former national director of SNAP, said Wednesday in Omaha that Archbishop George Lucas should include the four on his list.

The archdiocese said the four do not belong on the list of priests that it made public and sent to the Nebraska Attorney General’s Office in November. The archdiocese had no personnel files on the four men whom Clohessy named and had received no allegations against them, said Deacon Tim McNeil, chancellor of the archdiocese.

Last year, Nebraska Attorney General Doug Peterson asked the state’s three Catholic dioceses to hand over any information on claims of sexual exploitation since Jan. 1, 1978.

Lucas made public a list of 38 priests and deacons against whom “substantiated allegations” had been made. He also gave the attorney general 100 more names of church personnel who had faced claims of sexual misconduct or impropriety since 1978.

Clohessy has raised similar issues in other dioceses, including in Kansas City last month. On Wednesday, he and SNAP supporter Gordon Peterson of Omaha said the Omaha Archdiocese should publicize the four priests’ names and assignment records to protect vulnerable people now and reach out to any unknown victims who might exist.

“Our position is that when it comes to the safety of kids, there should be no hairsplitting or ducking and dodging,” Clohessy said.

He said the four priests with Omaha ties are Thomas B. Laughlin, Alphonsus Ferguson, James E. Kelly and Michael Patrick Nash.

Laughlin admitted to sexually molesting dozens of boys for decades before he was convicted of molesting two boys and sent to prison in the 1980s, according to news reports. The newspaper the Oregonian reported that Laughlin was “one of Oregon’s most notorious pedophile priests.” Laughlin reportedly lived in Omaha for several years until his death in 2013.

In a 2014 lawsuit against the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, a Minnesota man accused Ferguson of raping him when he was an altar boy in Hastings, Minnesota, in the 1950s. Ferguson died in 1973. He reportedly belonged to a religious order in Omaha.

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El Atlético de Madrid rompe con Manuel Briñas y abre una investigación en su cantera

[Madrid football club breaks with Manuel Briñas, opens investigation]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

By Oriol Güell

February 14, 2019

Nuevos testimonios revelan que los abusos del religioso se prolongaron durante 24 años

El Atlético de Madrid ha decidido este jueves romper su relación con quien durante dos décadas fue responsable de su cantera, el fraile marianista Manuel Briñas, tras conocerse los casos de abusos sexuales a menores del religioso. Las cinco víctimas con las que hasta el momento ha hablado EL PAÍS sitúan los abusos entre 1972 y 1985, cuando tenían entre 10 y 14 años, en las dependencias del Colegio Marianista Hermanos Amorós de Madrid y en los campamentos de verano que Briñas organizaba en la Sierra de Gredos. Ninguno de estos casos se produjo en las instalaciones del club de fútbol.

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Cuatro nuevas víctimas acusan de abusos sexuales a Manuel Briñas

[Four new victims accuse Manuel Briñas of sexual abuse]

BARCELONA (SPAIN)
El País

By Oriol Güell

February 13, 2019

Dos de los afectados definen al exresponsable de la cantera del Atlético de Madrid como “un depredador”

El testimonio de cuatro nuevas víctimas, que ayer detallaron su experiencia a EL PAÍS, eleva ya a cinco el número de quienes aseguran haber sufrido abusos sexuales —cuando tenían entre 10 y 14 años— por parte de Manuel Briñas, el fraile marianista que dirigió dos décadas la escuela deportiva del Atlético de Madrid. Briñas, que hoy tiene 88 años, ha admitido un abuso, pero los nuevos casos contradicen su versión de que no hubo más.

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Leading Southern Baptist apologizes for supporting leader, church at center of sex abuse scandal

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

February 14, 2019

By Robert Downen

Al Mohler, a leading Southern Baptist figure, on Thursday apologized for supporting a religious leader who was accused of helping conceal sexual abuses at his former church.

A leading Southern Baptist figure on Thursday apologized for supporting a religious leader who was accused of helping conceal sexual abuses at his former church, and for making a joke that he said downplayed the severity of the allegations.

In an interview with the Houston Chronicle, Al Mohler said for the first time publicly that he regrets his embrace of C.J. Mahaney, the former leader of the non-Southern Baptist group Sovereign Grace Ministries, now known as Sovereign Grace Churches.

Mahaney and his former organization were sued in 2013 by 11 people alleging that their abuses were concealed by leaders, at least one of whom was later convicted.

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Harrisburg diocese holds listening session in Mechanicsburg

MECHANICSBURG (PA)
WHTM TV

February 14, 2019

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg held a listening session on clergy sex abuse in Mechanicsburg Wednesday night.

The session was held at Saint Joseph Parish at 410 East Simpson Street.

Bishop Ronald Gainer answered questions about Pennsylvania’s grand jury report that uncovered more than 300 predator priests across the state.

This was the fifth listening session. The diocese plans on holding nine sessions.

abc27 News cameras were not allowed inside the meeting.

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Child Victims Act Signed into Law, SNAP Responds

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

February 14, 2019

The much-needed and greatly anticipated Child Victims Act was signed into law today in New York.

We applaud all those involved in championing and passing this important piece of legislation. Any time survivors are given a chance to share their experience and expose their abusers and enablers, it helps protect children and prevent future cases of abuse. The best way to create these opportunities are by reforming the archaic and predator-friendly statutes of limitations and creating “look-back” windows. We are grateful to every person who had a hand in pushing this critical reform through.

Having the chance at their “day in court” can also be a key piece of the healing process for survivors and we are grateful that those who were abused in New York will have this opportunity.

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List Of Maryland Priests Accused Of Child Sexual Abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
Patch

February 15, 2019

By Deb Belt

A new wave of lists naming Catholic priests credibly accused of sexual abuse against children has been released in the past two months, including the Baltimore archdiocese. In late December the church posted a revised list of priests and religious brothers facing accusations over the years; it includes an initial list of 57 men posted in 2002, along with additions of those later accused, and priests named in a grand jury report released by the Pennsylvania Attorney General in August 2018, who either had an assignment in Maryland or were accused of engaging in sexual abuse of minors in Maryland.

“Many Catholics here in our own archdiocese, as well as many across the country, are rightly dismayed by what they perceive as a lack of decisive action to strengthen protocols of accountability for bishops accused of sexual abuse or misconduct,” Archbishop William E. Lori said in November after U.S. bishops met in Baltimore. “Understandably, there is a sense that this was a missed opportunity – and one unnecessarily so. … We must be held fully accountable – as are priests, deacons, lay employees and volunteers of the Church – in matters of moral and professional conduct.”

Priests of the Archdiocese of Baltimore have no parentheses after their names. Priests and brothers from religious orders or other dioceses have that noted in parentheses after their names. None of the men listed are in ministry in the Archdiocese of Baltimore; some have died and some have been laicized. All have had their faculties to function as a priest in the Archdiocese of Baltimore permanently removed.

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September trial set for former Fort priest

FT. ATKINSON (WI)
Jefferson County Daily Union

February 15, 2019

By Ryan Whisner

A week-long September trial has been set for a former Fort Atkinson priest charged with molesting an altar boy during his tenure at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church.

The Rev. William A. Nolan, 65, formerly of Madison, has pleaded not guilty to six felony counts of sexual assault of a child under the age of 16 that reportedly occurred while he was serving at the Fort Atkinson parish from 2002-07 and for some years beyond.

The alleged victim, now 26, alleges that the incidents of assault began in February 2006 and occurred over a five-year period when he was ages 13-17. He told authorities that the alleged contact between them occurred more than 100 times.

If convicted of the combined charges, Nolan is facing a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison for each of the six counts.

On Thursday, Nolan appeared before Jefferson County Circuit Court Judge William Hue for a motion hearing.

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New lawsuit seeks court order forcing Catholic Church to disclose ‘secret’ lists of pedophile priests and brothers in New York

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Daily News

February 14, 2019

By Molly Crane-Newman and Nancy Dillon

A Manhattan native who says a priest repeatedly molested her – sometimes during games of strip poker – is among the plaintiffs in a new lawsuit demanding the names of all New York pedophile priests and brothers reported to the Catholic Church.

The lawsuit against the Catholic Conference of Major Superiors of Men was filed Thursday in Manhattan Supreme Court, the same day Gov. Cuomo signed into law the historic Child Victims Act.

The new law extends the criminal and civil statutes of limitations on sexual assault so victims, including victims of clergy sex abuse, have a new chance to seek justice and accountability decades later.

“For years I had hoped that something would change, so that I, and people like me, who have stayed silent, would finally see justice. Today, by filing this lawsuit, hopefully the truth about the perpetrators will come out,” plaintiff Bridget Lyons, 47, said as the lawsuit was announced.

Lyons was a 13-year-old girl living with her mom and 8-year-old brother in the East Village when Father Jack Kennington began molesting her in the 1980s, she says.

Kennington, who was a priest at Most Holy Redeemer in Manhattan, inappropriately touched her and her brother during massages and the secret card games, she and her family previously alleged.

“This abuse led to years of depression, PTSD, trust issues. …It also ruined my faith and trust in the Catholic Church,” she said Thursday at a press conference with her fellow plaintiffs and lawyer Jeff Anderson.

Lyons’ initial bid to sue Kennington in 1993 was rejected due to the statute of limitations, but her brother was allowed to file thanks to his younger age. The brother’s suit was settled for an undisclosed sum.

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Advocates expect increase in victims coming forward after Catholic sexual abuse allegations list

HAMPTON ROADS (VA)
WTKR TV

February 14, 2019

By Allison Mechanic

It has been one day since the Catholic Diocese of Richmond released a list of priests who have substantiated claims of sexual abuse against them. Area advocacy groups for survivors are already feeling the affects.

“We see an increase within the hotline because people are triggered,” explained Courtney Pierce with Samaritan House in Virginia Beach.

Samaritan House offers a wide variety of resources both on the phone and in person. While they are expecting to see an increase in calls to the hotline over the next few days, they say friends and family members should also be prepared.

“It’s really important to empower survivors to do whatever it is they want to do – if that’s to come forward and let their community know about their abuse or seek one-on-one counseling or speak to a friend,” said Pierce.

If a survivor does come to a friend, Pierce suggests listening and support.

“People say they don’t have the words or they’re not well-trained to handle the situation, but a listening ear is really important,” said Pierce. “Affirmation and confirmation of their victimization is also important.”

The state of Virginia is also prepared to handle cases of sexual abuse by a priest. Last year, Attorney General Mark Herring launched the Virginia Clergy Abuse Hotline. The number for the hotline is 1-833-454-9064.

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List of priests names who were accused of sexual abuse not enough, says survivors group

VIRGINIA BEACH (VA)
Southside Daily

February 15, 2019

On Wednesday, the Catholic Diocese of Richmond made waves when it published a list of 42 names of clergy with “credible and substantiated” allegations of sexual abuse involving minors.

Some of the names were priests who were assigned in Catholic churches in Virginia Beach and Norfolk.

The “Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests,” or SNAP, claims on their website to be the largest, oldest, and most active support group for women and men wounded by religious and institutional authorities. SNAP has a Virginia Beach chapter, but its local coordinator, Wayne Dorough, was not immediately available for comment.

But SNAP’s executive director, Zach Hiner, made a public statement Wednesday both praising and criticizing the Richmond Diocese for releasing the names.

“It is always helpful for survivors when these lists are posted especially for those who may be suffering in silence. But what is not helpful is when lists are carefully curated to leave off names of priests who have been accused of abuse, but whose allegations haven’t been deemed by church officials to be ‘credible,’” Hiner said.

SNAP is calling on Catholic officials to go a step further.

“We urge Catholic officials in Virginia to not only go back to these lists and add any names that may have been omitted, but also to add work histories, information about current whereabouts and, critically, when the diocese first learned of the allegations and what their immediate response was,” Hiner said. “Only by including this information can we get a clearer picture of what went wrong in Virginia and what must be done now to protect children and prevent abuse.”

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Lots of names are missing from the list of 188 N.J. priests accused of sexual abuse. Here’s why.

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

February 14, 2019

By Kelly Heyboer and Rebecca Everett

The lists of priests and deacons accused of child sexual abuse released by New Jersey’s five Catholic dioceses earlier this week was startling.

They contained page after page of names — 188 in total — of clergy members accused of sexually abusing generations of children in every corner of the state over several decades.

But the list only told part of the story.

The list, released Wednesday by the Archdiocese of Newark and the Dioceses of Camden, Metuchen, Paterson and Trenton, did not include priests, monks, nuns or others who served in religious orders or order-run Catholic schools in New Jersey. It only included only the names of priests and deacons “credibly accused” while they worked within the dioceses.

So, that means Jesuit priests, Franciscan priests, Benedictine monks and others who served in religious orders that operate under separate leadership structures than the five New Jersey dioceses were likely not included on any of the lists.

It is unknown how many additional clergy members from New Jersey might be on those lists if they are ever all released. Critics said the Catholic community in New Jersey deserves to know the full number of accused priests.

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Former Evansville Diocese priest accused of sexual abuse

EVANSVILLE (IN)
Evansville Courier & Press

February 15, 2019

By Jon Webb

An Indiana man has publicly accused a former Evansville Diocese priest of sexual abuse.

Testifying in front of the Indiana Senate Judiciary Committee Wednesday, Christopher Compton, 42, said the Rev. Raymond Kuper sexually abused him multiple times when Compton was 9 years old.

He accused of Kuper of “borderline brainwashing” him.

Kuper died in 2012.

The Courier & Press doesn’t usually name accusers of sex crimes, but Compton has testified in a public meeting and has been named in other publications as well. Video of the hearing is available on the state website.

Compton and several others testified in favor of Senate Bill 219, which would give accusers more time to pursue civil cases in incidents that have long exceeded the statute of limitations.

Deeper look at abuse history: Evansville Catholic diocese has history of abusive priests| Webb

Recent report of abuse: Evansville Diocese places priest on administrative leave after sexual misconduct report

Compton told legislators the reported abuse occurred when he was a student at Christ the King School. According to his obituary, Kuper was pastor at Christ the King from 1977 to 1987.

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Richmond Diocese adds another priest to list of members accused of sexual assault

RICHMOND (VA)
News Channel 6

February 15, 2019

The Catholic Diocese of Richmond has released the name of another priest with a “a credible and substantiated allegation of sexual abuse” against a child.

The group announced Thursday they they received information from the order of Saint Benedict about an allegation of abuse that occurred outside the Richmond Diocese.

An sexual assault allegation against Rev. Donald Scales, O.S.B. was found credible by the Diocese of Charlotte Review Board.

Fr. Scales served in the Diocese of Richmond.

While the Richmond Diocese claims they were unaware of any allegations of abuse against Fr. Scales, Bishop Knestout has added his name to the list previously published on February 13.

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Retired Police Lt. recalls investigating Richmond priest convicted of child sex abuse

RICHMOND (VA)
News Channel 6

February 15, 2019

By Brendan King

Retired Prince George Police Lieutenant Bill King remembers the early 2000’s well – the time he helped convict a priest for sex crimes against a child.

The suspect was Rev. John P. Blankenship who was the chaplain at Petersburg Federal Correctional Center at the time he was indicted.

In February of 2003, he pleaded guilty to four separate counts of sodomizing a minor in Prince George County.

Rev. John Blankenship is a registered sex offender residing in the city of Richmond.

The abuse took place in 1982 at the Church of the Sacred Heart. The victim was 14 at the time.

Investigators said that Blankenship took advantage of the young teen while his mother cleaned the church.

King said Blankenship turned himself in alongside his lawyer at the police station.

“He was basically stoic because I’m sure his attorney had told him to be limited in what he said,” King recalled. “There we arrested and booked him.”

King said he was surprised that church officials claimed they did not know police were investigating Blankenship prior to his indictment.

“I had already been [to the Richmond Diocese] and told them who I was looking for. They gave me the information I needed on him to indict him,” he explained. “When I went there to get the information and was met by Father Apuzzo, he wasn’t surprised.”

In 2002, the Daily Press reported “diocesan officials say they were surprised to learn of the priest’s indictment or the county’s interest in the case.”

“We didn’t know that there was an investigation going on until this morning,” the Rev. Pasquale Apuzzo, spokesman for the diocese, told reporters at the time.

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Deal reached to expand statute of limitations for sexual abuse lawsuits

WASHINGTON (DC)
Politico

February 14, 2019

By Matt Friedman

New Jersey victims of sexual abuse may soon have more time to file lawsuits against their alleged abusers.

State Sen. Joe Vitale and Assemblywoman Annette Quijano (D-Union) said Thursday that state lawmakers have reached a deal after an effort to remove the statute of limitations entirely on civil sexual abuse cases spent years in legislative limbo.

“I want to thank all of the advocates, many of them victims and survivors themselves, who have worked tirelessly to see this bill heard in front of the Judiciary,” Vitale (D-Middlesex) said in a statement. “Steadfast in their fight, and with great resolve, they recognize all victims deserve the same corridor to justice. They have had an immense amount of patience with me and my staff as we have grasped the weight of this issue over the last decade, and I will forever be in awe of their courage and bravery.”

The bill also has the support of Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy, making its passage into law guaranteed if lawmakers can muster the voters to pass it in the Assembly and Senate.

“Victims of sexual abuse, especially those victimized in childhood, deserve to find doors held open for them as they seek justice against their abusers,” Murphy said.

Currently, sexual abuse victims who are 18 or older have two years from the point when they realize the abuse has damaged them to file a lawsuit against their abusers or the institutions that harbored them. Under Vitale’s compromise proposal, which he said will have a hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 7 followed by a vote in the full Senate on March 13, the window for victims to file lawsuits would expand to seven years as long as they’re under the age of 55.

The compromise deal was first reported by NJ Advance Media.

New Jersey’s statute of limitations for criminal sexual abuse was removed long ago. Vitale has long worked to repeal it for civil cases as well, but was unable to wrangle enough votes for passage, while the Church enlisted the help of one of Trenton’s top lobbying firms.

“There wasn’t enough support to eliminate it entirely. That wasn’t because my colleagues didn’t think victims shouldn’t have access to justice, just that some of them thought there should be a level of predictability,” Vitale said in a phone interview, adding that the bill would get a hearing in the Senate Judiciary Committee on March 7, followed by a vote in the full Senate on March 11.

Vitale said he believes he has the votes necessary to pass the bill.

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SNAP advocate believes more cases of sexual abuse by priests have happened but not been reported

RICHMOND (VA)
News Channel 6

February 14, 2019

By Matthew Fultz

As victims, church members and the general public look through the list of names of men the Catholic Diocese of Richmond says has hurt children, they still have many questions – like where are the names of the other priests who were accused and have there been no reports of abuse since 1993?

CBS 6 talked to a victims advocate, Dottie Klamer, with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priest (SNAP) to get answers.

“Everything that`s going on in the Catholic church right now has been brewing for a long long time,” said Klammer.

Decades and decades of sexual abuse have been slowly coming to light. After Virginia’s attorney general opened an investigation into clergy abuse last year, Wednesday, the Dioceses of Arlington and Richmond released a list of names of catholic priests who abused minors.

“We tell them first of all that they need to file a police report, that they need to go on record,” said Klammer.

Dottie Klammer, Richmond Coordinator for SNAP, tells victims each day who say their abuser not on the list, to file first.
She said the investigation starts internally at an accused priest’s church.

“What I understand is that they have panel and boards at the different parishes in the state of Virginia,” said Klammer. “And people are deciding on some level who`s guilty and who isn`t.”

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Special Report Part 2: “The Sound of Silence,” experts explain the how and why of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church

PEORIA (IL)
WEEK TV Channel 25

February 14, 2019

Jeff Jones says he was just 9 years old when the beloved Priest he first met at St. Joseph’s in Pekin started sexually abusing him.

“Every day,” he begins with a long pause, “…since I was nine or 10, I think about this.”

And he’s not alone in his claims. The attorney who represented him and 11 others in a lawsuit later settled with the Peoria Diocese said these cases are still happening today.

Frederick W. Nessler, Attorney: ” Well we’ve handled between 200 and 300 cases, and I think it’s north of 250, now. I think we have 40 cases in house, presently, we’re working on,” explained Attorney Frederick W. Nessler of The Law Offices of Frederick W. Nessler & Associates, Ltd.. Admittedly, he has multiple law offices in several states including Illinois, and some of those cases involved sexual abuse in other denominations and institutions, but he reiterated the majority of them involved the Catholic Church.

For Jones, he says the sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of Father Walter Breuning lasted 6 years, but took him decades to reveal.

“I think it boils down to shame and humiliation,” Jones shares.

It’s something Illinois State University Professor Shelly Clevinger, PhD says is common among victims of sexual abuse.

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NJ measure to ease sex abuse statute of limitations shows signs of progress

WOODLAND PARK (NJ)
North Jersey Record

February 15, 2019

By Philip DeVencentis and Deena Yellin

After nearly 20 years of failed efforts, proposed legislation that would ease the civil statute of limitations for sex abuse survivors is showing signs of progress in New Jersey.

State Sen. Joseph Vitale, D-Middlesex, sponsor of S-477, said Thursday that the Senate Judiciary Committee will vote on the measure March 7 and that he was “extraordinarily hopeful” about its prospects. Also on Thursday, Gov. Phil Murphy announced his support.

The bill would allow child victims of sexual abuse to sue until age 55, or from seven years of their realization that the abuse occurred. It would give adult victims seven years to bring a civil case, or seven years from the time they discover their abuse, whichever is later.

The bill would also give a two-year window to those victims who were previously time-barred so that they have the opportunity to pursue their cases. It would allow victims to hold both the individual and any liable institution accountable.

Current laws demand that civil action be filed within two years after a victim turns 18.

Assemblywoman Annette Quijano, the prime sponsor of the bill in the Assembly, said, “If we put short, arbitrary legal limits on their time to process, we limit their ability to pursue justice and we, ourselves, become perpetrators in their injustice.”

“The language in the current bill has the approval of all the survivor groups, and that has helped to bring along some of my colleagues,” Vitale said. “Now we’re at a point that it seems as though the vast majority of my colleagues on both sides of the aisle support the bill. I’m extraordinarily hopeful.”

The measure has also gained the backing of the New Jersey Catholic Conference. On Thursday, Executive Director Patrick Branigan said: “We fully support the elimination of the statute of limitations prospectively for both perpetrators and institutions. We support the elimination of the statute of limitations retroactively for perpetrators, which would address Sen. Joseph Vitale’s frequent comment about the need to hold accountable the 95% of perpetrators who are not clergy.”

Vitale’s announcement comes on the heels of five dioceses in New Jersey releasing lists of priests credibly accused of sexually abusing children.

Murphy said, “Victims of sexual abuse, especially those victimized in childhood, deserve to find doors held open for them as they seek justice against their abusers. I commend Senator Vitale and Assemblywoman Quijano for their pursuit of legislation to extend the statute of limitations.”

Similar measures have been passed in New York and other states.

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Prominent nun says Polish priests must stop abusing women religious

WASINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

February 15, 2019

One of Poland’s most senior nuns said priests must stop sexually molesting religious women, in line with efforts to improve treatment of women in the traditionally Catholic country.

“Sexual abuse of nuns by clergy has long been a problem in Poland — and it’s a very painful matter,” Ursuline Sister Jolanta Olech, secretary-general of the Warsaw-based Conference of Higher Superiors of Female Religious Orders, told Poland’s Catholic Information Agency, KAI.

Sister Olech told KAI on 14 February that no data had been collected on the abuse of nuns in her country. However, she added that she had been informed of “very painful” cases during 12 years as conference president and secretary-general, and she welcomed Pope Francis’ 5 February call for action against offending clergy.

“This isn’t the first time the issue has been raised, and we don’t know if it will change much — but it should show some people at least that the time for concealing this problem is over,” she said. “The cases I dealt with were reported to the superiors of the priests and monks concerned. But I don’t know what the results were, and the cases were never made public.”

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Put a period on the list of abuser priests

JERSEY CITY (NJ)
Jersey Journal

February 14, 2019

By Rev. Alexander Santora

Growing up in Catholic Jersey City – Holy Rosary Grammar School, its church, St. Joseph’s up the hill, St. Peter’s Prep and College – I knew many priests.

Never once did I suspect that one of them, or any, would ever be involved in abusing a minor. I would never even link the words “priest” and “abuse” in the same sentence.

Not until I was assigned to St. Aloysius Church did I gradually learn about a priest – Carmen Sita, whom I replaced. He had been removed and sent to a rehab for his abusive behavior and was then assigned to a parish in Missouri under a pseudonym, Gerald Howard.

His name appeared on the list released yesterday of 188 priests in New Jersey with credible accusations of a sexual abuse of minors against them. From the list, I also learned of priests I had crossed paths with in ministry, though I’d never lived with them in a rectory. And priests I knew as fellow seminarians at Darlington. Probably about three dozen in all.

I was particularly shocked that a Trenton priest who has worked in a Vatican office in Rome for 30 years was on the list. I knew him and his family from a Toms River parish I assisted on weekends for 12 years.

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Abuse Victim Who Chained Himself to Vatican Finds Closure in Meeting

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

February 15, 2019

By Claire Giangravè

Since the Church’s sex abuse scandals first erupted, victims have tried different methods to be heard by Church authorities. Some have protested, others have marched, others still have appealed to friends and connections in order to bring their case to the Vatican.

But for one Italian survivor, the key was not so much storming the gate as being chained to it.

Arturo Borrelli, 40, claims to have been sexually abused about thirty years ago on the peripheries of Naples, Italy, by his religion teacher Father Silverio Mura. On Feb. 4, he shackled himself to the Sant’Anna entrance of the Vatican in a desperate attempt to be heard.

Police officers arrested him and took him in for questioning, but the unlikely result was that Borrelli was invited to meet officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), which handles matters of clerical abuse, at the Vatican ten days later.

In an email sent to the survivor’s lawyer, Italian Cardinal Angelo Becciu, prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints and former Substitute in the Secretariat of State, voiced the “full availability” of the CDF for such a meeting.

Borrelli was finally able to enter the Sant’Anna gate Thursday at 10:00 a.m., where he was greeted by Father Paolo, a priest delegated by Pope Francis to follow his case. (The priest did not give his last name.) At the same time, his lawyer met with CDF officials to present legal documentation.

“I am pleased,” Borrelli told Crux in an interview following his meeting. “Finally, I was welcomed the way I wanted. Since 2010 I have asked for the love of the Church and finally Father Paolo gave it to me.”

Borrelli met Francis in July 2018, when he said he had the chance to tell the pontiff about his abuse. On the same day, Borelli’s eighteen-year-old son died in a car accident leaving him “emotionally wrecked.”

During the meeting on Thursday, Borrelli said he was moved by the opportunity to pray in a chapel for his son with Father Paolo. He was later offered refreshments and spoke of his experience.

The priest promised that a legal decision will be made as soon as May regarding his abuser, Mura, who might be defrocked. While the exact date of the verdict remains unclear, Borrelli said that the CDF is “moving quickly, since they know that my case is a delicate one and I am suffering a lot.”

Chaining oneself to the Vatican is an unorthodox way to gain access, and an impossible prospect for many clerical abuse victims who can’t make it to Rome but still wish to denounce the injustice they suffered. But Father Paolo, Borrelli said, claimed that while “in the past there was another mentality” regarding victims, today “everything has changed.”

For Borrelli, it was perseverance and determination that allowed him to find the closure he long awaited, qualities that he encourages for every victim wishing to be heard to have.

“Whoever has been a victim of abuse must not be afraid to denounce it! Denounce it! Denounce it! Because at the end the truth always emerges,” he said. “There must be no shame. You have to fight!”

The activist and survivor will be in Rome for the upcoming Feb. 21-24 summit of heads of bishops’ conferences on the topic of clerical sexual abuse. He said that he plans to encourage the bishops to adopt legislation that emphasizes the protection of minors and get behind Francis on this issue.

“I trust the pope blindly, because in my case he contributed many times,” Borrelli said. “I hope that those close to him allow him to work. Because if people close to the pope let him do his job surely this battle, that is not easy to fight, can be won.”

Emerging satisfied from the Vatican was also Carlo Grezio, Borrelli’s lawyer for the past four years, who met with two officials of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith – a disciplinary section head Father John Kennedy, and undersecretary Father Matteo Visioli.

“I had their reassurance regarding the timing of the sentence of Father Silvio Mura and a total, definitive, reassurance on the fact that Monsignor Mura is no longer in contact with children or anyone else,” he told Crux in an interview.

Grezio described the meeting as “a victory from one point of view, because we began to obtain what we should have obtained ten years ago when the curia in Naples failed us.”

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‘Onslaught’ of allegations against priests predicted under Child Victims Act

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 14, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

Six Catholic dioceses in New York so far have identified 249 Catholic priests who have been credibly accused of molesting children.

But the names of potentially hundreds more priests could surface publicly now that Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has signed the Child Victims Act.

Cuomo’s signature on the legislation Thursday means that childhood victims of sexual abuse who previously were time-barred from suing now will have an opportunity to file lawsuits.

Victims of childhood sex abuse had until age 23 to sue under New York’s statute of limitations. The age now changes to 55. In addition, the new law opens a one-year “look back” window for victims to file claims, even in sex abuse cases from decades ago. The look-back period starts in six months.

“We are anticipating a lot of people will come forward,” said attorney Jayne Conroy, who represents sex abuse victims across the country, including in the Buffalo Diocese. “I think in New York state it will be an onslaught.”

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El arzobispo de San José de Costa Rica, acusado de encubrir a un cura denunciado por abusos a menores

[Archbishop of San José, Costa Rica, drops out of papal summit, accused of covering up clergy abuse]

SAN JOSE (COSTA RICA)
El País

February 15, 2019

By Álvaro Murillo

El superior de la Iglesia católica en el país centroamericano, José Rafael Quirós, se ha visto forzado a cancelar su participación en la cumbre sobre pedofilia convocada por el Papa

Cuando todavía era menor de edad, el joven Anthony Venegas fue a la Curia Metropolitana de Costa Rica para contar que el sacerdote de su parroquia, un cura mediático y venerado, abusaba sexualmente de él y de otros adolescentes. Era 2003 y la delación la escuchó el vicario José Rafael Quirós, que una década más tarde fue nombrado arzobispo de San José —la capital tica— y ahora enfrenta denuncias ante el Vaticano por encubrir los casos, en su mayoría prescritos. “Ese asunto se me pasó”, se justificó el año pasado ante dos denunciantes. Esta semana, Quirós se vio forzado a cancelar su participación en la cumbre sobre pedofilia convocada para el próximo día 21 por el papa Francisco en Roma.

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After the Fall: The legacies of Grand Rapids’ two most notorious priests

GRAND RAPIDS (MI)
WOOD TV

February 14, 2019

By Ken Kolker

No matter how many years pass, the memories will not.

The bad ones burn deepest: like what happened more than once in the small log cabin on the Grand Rapids-Walker city line to a 12-year-old girl who thought she was Father John Sullivan’s one and only.

Or what she saw through the small second-floor window on the south side of her family’s home, the window on the left, as her abuser walked away with his arm around her little sister.

“I knew what he was going to be doing,” Fran Heinemann said.

There’s the pew in a small country church near Grand Haven where the priest first approached a 14-year-old girl who wanted to be a nun, his latest prey.

The broom closet at Holy Spirit in Grand Rapids.

There’s the spot on Campau Lake near Caledonia, about 100 yards out, where a 12-year-old altar boy went swimming with a priest he idolized.

And there’s the confessional where the abused went to their abuser for forgiveness of sins they thought were their own.

“I knew it was him because you’d see him walk in there to do confessions,” Heinemann said.

The Roman Catholic dioceses in Grand Rapids and across Michigan are bracing for the worst from a state attorney general’s investigation into decades of priest abuse: the possibility that it could uncover more abusive priests, more cover-ups and more survivors than ever before revealed.

The AG started investigating after a grand jury in Pennsylvania revealed that 300 priests had molested 1,000 children since the 1940s. That prompted Target 8 to investigate the legacy of abuse in the Grand Rapids diocese.

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Gay Priests To Pope: Don’t Blame Us For Child Sex Abuse

ROME (ITALY)
Daily Beast

February 15, 2019

By Barbie Latza Nadeau

The letter couldn’t have come at a better time. Just a week before Pope Francis convenes a crisis summit in Rome on systematic clerical sex abuse in the global Catholic Church, a group of gay priests from the Netherlands have written a letter trying to restore some perspective. In it, they ask the pontiff not to validate persistent gossip that a so-called “gay mafia” inside the Catholic Church is responsible for systematic clerical sex abuse of children.

In fact, orientation should not matter at all in the celibate world of the Catholic clergy. Priests and nuns take a vow of celibacy at ordination that prohibits them from engaging in any sexual act — including masturbation — no matter what their sexual orientation. But if the endemic clerical sexual abuse of minors, the majority of them boys, is confounded with homosexuality, that’s a convenient excuse for the church. The last three popes have pretended the pedophile scandal can be “solved” by getting rid of gay priests.

“We have the distinct impression,” the Dutch group wrote to Francis, “that the Vatican and the Congregation for the Clergy and perhaps even you yourself tend to suggest that those priests who are openly gay are the ones responsible for the sexual abuse of children and minors.”

In point of fact there is no link between the two, and that there is even ample evidence of widespread healthy, consensual gay relationships between gay priests living in communal situations. The more plausible answer regarding pedophiles is that they are attracted to the priesthood simply because of the well known access to and power over little kids.

The Dutch group clearly disagrees with the premise that gay priests are the problem, and instead says it believes unhealthy sexual repression is the key to the crisis. When young men enter the seminary, often as adolescents, they are told that sexual urges are sinful and that they must repent for being normal. The only way to talk about sex for a seminarian is in the context of the confessional.

“We believe that the current major crisis with respect to this context is primarily the result of the disapproval, suppression, denial and the poor integration of sexuality, and especially homosexuality, on the part of many individual priests and within our Church as a whole,” the gay priest group writes, noting that if young men entering seminaries were actually screened for sexually deviant behavior such as pedophilic tendencies, that would also help a lot.

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SBTS President Albert Mohler Apologizes for Supporting C.J. Mahaney

OREGON

February 14, 2019

By Julie Anne

This is a big story – one we’ve been waiting for over 7 years. C.J. Mahaney, former President of Sovereign Grace Ministries churches has been best buds with leaders in the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC) despite the fact that there were huge sex abuse scandals (including reports of a pedophile ring) under Mahaney’s watch.

Most of the survivors have never had justice served because of a technicality which disallowed their case from being heard: the Statute of Limitations. (Don’t get me going on that topic.)

But despite having had no independent investigations, C.J. Mahaney’s pals from Together for the Gospel, The Gospel Coalition, and the Southern Baptist Convention have stood by him, even publicly defending him, and inviting him to speak at their conferences! #mindblown

Today, the Houston Chronicle interviewed Albert Mohler, President of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, in which he apologized for not speaking out earlier.

Interestingly, today I was tweeting about Albert Mohler’s relationship with C.J. Mahaney, even tagging Albert Mohler and asking about their relationship in light of the SBC sex abuse cases uncovered by journalists at the Houston Chronicle.

Here is Mohler’s apology:

“I believe in retrospect I erred in being part of a statement supportive of (Mahaney) and rather dismissive of the charges,” Mohler said. “And I regret that action, which I think was taken without due regard to the claims made by the victims and survivors at the time, and frankly without an adequate knowledge on my part, for which I’m responsible.”

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Five disturbing things we learned from the Catholic Church’s list of 188 alleged sexual abusers in N.J.

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

February 14, 2019

By Stephen Stirling

The list spans nearly a century. It reaches across every corner of the state. And it reveals a tangled web of abuse allegedly carried out by scores of priests, some of whom were apparently shuffled from parish to parish.

The five Catholic Dioceses’ release of 188 priests and deacons who were credibly accused of sexually abusing children reverberates across generations of Catholics both in New Jersey and across the country, once again confronted with disheartening allegations against church leaders amid an ever-deepening scandal.

Even as details remain scant, an analysis of the information released by the Catholic Church Wednesday reveals what many expected — that in New Jersey, and, as has been shown elsewhere, allegations of sexual abuse date back decades and come out of every diocese and dozens of parishes.

Here are some of the key takeaways from our reporting, thus far.

Hundreds of victims
While very few details have been released about how many people came forward with abuse allegations, data shows 57 of the clergymen named by the church Wednesday have multiple accusers.

Taken with others that have a single accuser and the nearly half for whom no information was released, there are at least 245 alleged victims. The actual number is likely far higher.

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Sacerdote docente envió videos sexuales a alumnos: su colegio no lo denunció y pudo cambiar de país

[El Salvador teacher-priest sent sexual videos to students: his school did not denounce him and he may have moved to Guatemala]

CHILE
BioBioChile

February 13, 2019

By Paola Alemán and Francis López

En noviembre pasado, un grupo de padres de familia del Colegio Salesiano San José, de Santa Ana, al occidente de El Salvador, elevó su queja contra las autoridades de esta institución de estudios, tras descubrir un video de alto contenido sexual cuyo protagonista era el padre Melvin Pérez. El religioso envió el material erótico a un alumno menor de edad, de tercer año de bachillerato (4º medio en Chile) con quien, según testigos, tenía una “relación consentida”.

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‘RULE’ OF VATICAN ‘CLOSET’ Top Catholic bishops who attack homosexuality are MORE likely to be gay, explosive new book claims

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Sun

February 14, 2019

By Neal Baker

SENIOR Catholic bishops who attack homosexuality are MORE likely to be gay, an explosive new book claims.

Among its most startling claims is an alleged “rule” about top figures in the church who condemn homosexuality, Catholic news site The Tablet reports.

According to sources close to the book, author Frederic Martel suggests that senior clerics who are more vocal in their criticism of homosexuality are more likely to be gay themselves.

The French journalist and sociologist is said to have spent four years carrying out 1,500 interviews with dozens of clergy and other Vatican sources.

His landmark book – which will send shock-waves through the Catholic church – is due to be published next week.

Many priests maintain discreet long-term relationships – while some live double lives having casual sex with gay partners and using male prostitutes, the book allegedly finds.

Also among the most incendiary claims is the suggestion that up to four in five priests working in the Vatican are gay – although they may not be sexually active.

Bloomsbury, the British publisher, describes In The Closet Of The Vatican as a “startling account of corruption and hypocrisy at the heart of the Vatican.”

The book will be published in eight languages across 20 countries next Wednesday – to coincide with the opening of a Vatican conference on sexual abuse.

Martel, a former adviser to the French government, alleges that Colombian cardinal Alfonso López Trujillo was among the most vociferous defenders of church teaching on homosexuality – while also being gay.

Trujillo – a senior Vatican figure – regularly used male prostitutes, the book claims.

Critics of the book said “it is not always easy to tell when Martel is trafficking in fact, rumour, eyewitness accounts or hearsay,” according to the Tablet.

The book does not make links between the allegedly widespread homosexuality among priests and child sex abuse in the church, sources say.

Although In The Closet Of The Vatican does reportedly claim that gay priests felt compelled to keep quiet about reports of abuse to avoid their sexuality being exposed.

Martel is a non-believer and is gay.

Among his interviewees were 41 cardinals, 52 bishops and monsignors, 45 papal ambassadors or diplomatic officials, 11 Swiss guards and more than 200 priests and seminarians, The Tablet reported.

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Great expectations: Vatican abuse summit has key, realistic goals

MASSACHUSETTS

February 15, 2019

By the Bishops of Massachusetts

We write as your pastors; we write also at a critical moment for the Catholic Church in Massachusetts, in the nation and throughout the world. The issue which confronts us all, but especially confronts us as bishops, is the sexual abuse crisis that has again enveloped the life of the Church.

Catholics throughout the United States and the world have struggled with the deepest questions of reason and faith as the multiple issues of sexual abuse by priests and bishops have become public over the last sixteen years. The past year has been especially traumatic, and we again apologize to survivors and their families for all they have endured. We also apologize to the Catholic community for the seemingly unending nature of this scandal and the many questions it raises regarding Church leadership.

The attention of the Church and the wider society will be focused in an extraordinary way on the upcoming Summit Meeting in Rome, convoked by Pope Francis to address the crisis globally. Our purpose in this message is to provide perspective on the meeting considering what has occurred in the Church in the United States and throughout the world.

The Past: The clergy abuse crisis exploded in the United States early in 2002 when the unprecedented dimensions of the crisis became clear, leading the U.S. Bishops Conference to adopt “The Dallas Charter” later that year. The Charter promised a policy of zero-tolerance of sexual abuse of minors, meaning that accused priests determined to have abused a minor would be removed from ministry; all cases would be referred to appropriate civil authorities and each case would then be investigated within the Church. Beyond the provisions in the Charter, individual dioceses have adopted policies to provide care and counseling for survivors and education and prevention training in our parishes, schools and religious education programs. Reviewing the past, we acknowledge the record includes gaps and failures as well as successful implementation of these policies. At the same time, the Church in the rest of the world has experienced the abuse crisis in different ways at different times.

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February 14, 2019

Vatican envoy to France under investigation for sexual assault

PARIS (FRANCE)
CNN

February 15, 2019

By Saskya Vandoorne

The Vatican’s envoy to France, Archbishop Luigi Ventura, is under investigation for sexual assault, a French judicial source told CNN Friday.

The Paris prosecutor’s office opened an investigation on January 24, the source said.
Ventura, 74, has been based in Paris since 2009, serving as a diplomat for Pope Francis, as reported by Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The Vatican said in a statement that the Holy See was aware of the investigation and that it “awaits the results.” While the Vatican’s embassy in Paris said it would not comment on the investigation.

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French archbishop’s proposals for fighting sexual abuse

PARIS (FRANCE)
LaCroix International

February 14, 2019

By Céline Hoyeau and Gauthier Vaillant

Archbishop Georges Pontier of Marseille, president of the Bishops’ Conference of France will take two ideas to Rome. One is the creation of a Specialized Ecclesiastic Court. The other is about reforming the management of diocesan archives.

On Feb. 12, he met for two hours with four victims of sexual abuse, three of whom had had a discussion session with French bishops at their assembly in Lourdes past November. Pope Francis himself had asked the presidents of all conferences of bishops to hold such a meeting ahead of the global summit on sexual abuse in the Church at the Vatican he called Feb. 21-24.

Archbishop Pontier met the press on Feb. 13 to brief them on summit. The Archbishop of Marseille, representing France, will attend the summit, together with 114 other chairs of episcopal conferences worldwide.

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French Senate questions Catholic official on abuse by clergy

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press

February 14, 2019

By Thomas Adamson

The spokesman for France’s Catholic bishops’ conference told lawmakers Tuesday the French church is working with authorities to uncover and eradicate child sex abuse after allegations made in recent years revealed the scope of the country’s problem with pedophile priests.

Senators questioned the Rev. Olivier Ribadeau Dumas of the Conference of Bishops of France for a Senate commission that is preparing a report on pedophilia across French institutions.

It is being compiled as senior churchmen from every bishops’ conference around the world are preparing to attend a Feb. 21-24 Vatican summit convened by Pope Francis to try to develop a universal response to the problem.

The commission’s work also takes place as the trial of a prominent French cardinal accused of protecting a pedophile priest nears its end next month.

The Rev. Bernard Preynat confessed to abusing French Boy Scouts in the 1980s and 1990s, and his victims allege clergy in positions of authority covered up for him for years. One of the church leaders they accused of allowing Preynat to continue working with children until his 2015 retirement is Cardinal Philippe Barbarin.

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Clergy abuse survivor sues Syracuse Catholic Diocese hours after new law takes effect

SYRACUSE (NY)
Post-Standard

February 14, 2019

By Julie McMahon

A survivor of clergy sexual abuse in Central New York filed a lawsuit against the Syracuse Roman Catholic Diocese, this afternoon after a new law lifted restrictions on such suits.

The Child Victims Act, passed in New York in January and signed by the governor today, gives victims until their 55th birthday to file civil suits against their abusers and institutions.

Kevin Braney, 46, filed his lawsuit hours after Cuomo at 11:25 a.m. signed the bill, which went into effect immediately. By 3 p.m., Braney had filed accusations against three priests who he says raped and molested him over about two years beginning in 1988. As a teenager, he served as an altar boy at St. Ann’s Church in Manlius.

The lawsuit is the first reported in the Syracuse diocese. It is likely one of the first filed in New York state under the new Child Victims Act.

The spokeswoman and chancellor for the Syracuse diocese did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Braney last year rejected a $300,000 settlement offer from the diocese through a compensation program set up for victims. Braney said his goal is not a financial settlement but to expose abuses by individual priests and cover-ups by the Catholic church. He said he’s committed to having a jury hear his claims.

“Every day I get a step closer to justice, the further I get from the horrors of the past,” he said.

Two priests Braney accuses in the lawsuit were named to the Syracuse diocese’s list of clergy members with credible claims against them last year. Both are deceased.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse has released a list of priests who faced credible allegations of abuse.

A third priest, who is active, was previously cleared by diocesan officials and Onondaga County District Attorney William Fitzpatrick of allegations brought forward by Braney.

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Child Victims Act signed into law

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union

Thursday, February 14, 2019

By Rachel Silberstein

Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo signed New York’s Child Victims Act into law on Thursday, extending the statute of limitation for victims of childhood sex abuse who pursue civil and criminal charges against their perpetrators.

The bill signing took place in the New York Daily News’ Manhattan newsroom. The New York City tabloid had crusaded for child victims and their advocates for years, shaming lawmakers and opponents of the bill on its front cover and in editorial pages as the bill stalled in the Senate.

“This is society’s way of saying we are sorry,” Cuomo said. “We are sorry for what happened to you. We are sorry that it took so long for us to recognize what happened to you.”

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Massachusetts Church Officials Announce 15 New Cases

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

February 14, 2019

Catholic officials from the Diocese of Springfield, MA have announced that they received 15 new reports of child sexual abuse last year.

We are grateful that victims are stepping forward and making reports of their abuse and we applaud the bravery of those who are speaking up today. By coming forward about what happened to them, victims help protect children and prevent future cases of abuse. When these survivors do come forward, we hope they will first seek independent sources of help like police, therapists and support groups, before contacting church officials.

Based on revelations from recent investigations into clergy sexual abuse, we are not confident of the claim that ‘all new cases have been referred to the relevant district attorney.’ While we hope this is the case, we believe that victims, witnesses and whistleblowers should play it safe and call law enforcement authorities directly.

Nor are we confident that ‘Only eight incidents are listed as having happened in this century,’ as the diocese claims. Church officials have long and troubling track records of being dishonest or disingenuous about this continuing crisis.

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Man sexually assaulted by priest he met in Troy to sue clerics group

ALBANY (NY)
Times Union

February 14, 2019

Mark Lyman, a local man who was sexually assault by a Catholic priest when he was a boy, will be among a group of people filing a lawsuit against an organization of priests and religious brothers, alleging the group concealed the “histories and identities” of clerics who abused children.

The filing of the lawsuit against the Catholic Conference of Major Superiors of Men on Thursday coincides with Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s signing of the Crime Victims Act.

The legislation passed last month sets a one-year period for alleged victims of sexual assault to file a lawsuit against their abusers or any organization or individuals that may have facilitated the abuse.

Thursday afternoon, Lyman and three other plaintiffs are expected to talk about their lawsuit against the conference and the opportunities for justice that the Child Victims Act will offer victims. The plaintiffs are also expected to demand the histories of each priest and brother who sexually abused children in New York.

The lawsuit is not being filed under the victims act but as a separate legal action.

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Bishop Sullivan’s statement on releasing the names of credibly accused clerics

CAMDEN (NJ)
Catholic Star Herald

February 14, 2019

By Bishop Dennis J. Sullivan

In keeping with a promise made by the Roman Catholic Bishops of New Jersey, I am today releasing the names of 56 priests and one deacon of the Diocese of Camden who have been credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors (see page 4). The other bishops from New Jersey are simultaneously releasing the names of priests from their dioceses.

In the Diocese of Camden, these 56 priests are a small percentage of the more than 800 priests who have faithfully served the people of South Jersey since the diocese was founded in 1937.

As to the names on the attached list, it includes those who admitted to the abuse, those who were found guilty after a trial in the church courts or the civil courts, and others against whom the evidence was so overwhelming as to be virtually unquestionable. Most of these incidents occurred in the 1970s and the 1980s and involved male teenagers. It should also be noted that the majority of these priests, all of whose names have been provided to local law enforcement authorities, are dead.

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Why Does the Catholic Church Keep Failing on Sexual Abuse?

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Atlantic

February 14, 2019

By Emma Green

Cardinal Seán O’Malley has spent decades cleaning up after pedophile priests. Now he’s once again found himself in the middle of a crisis.

A few years after seán o’malley took over the Archdiocese of Boston in 2003, at the peak of the clergy sexual-abuse crisis in America, he led novenas of penance at nine of the city’s most affected parishes. At each church he visited, he lay facedown on the floor before the altar, begging for forgiveness. This is how O’Malley has spent his life in ministry: cleaning up after pedophile priests and their apologists, and serving as the Catholic Church’s public face of repentance and reform.

Possibly more than any other cleric on Earth, O’Malley understands how deeply the Church’s errors on sexual abuse have damaged its mission and reputation. Today, he is one of Pope Francis’s closest advisers, the only American on a small committee of cardinals who meet regularly at the Vatican. He runs the pope’s special commission on the protection of minors. And he is a member of the influential Vatican office responsible for preserving and defending Catholic doctrine. He believes that the Church has changed, can change, and will change. But as the world’s top bishops prepare to meet later this month for an unprecedented summit on sexual abuse at the Vatican, O’Malley has found himself frustrated, unable to push reforms through at the top.

In an interview on a recent cold morning in Boston, the cardinal spoke about the progress he believes the Church, and Pope Francis, have made in recent years, and what’s still lacking. He detailed his proposal to establish Vatican tribunals to deal with bishops accused of wrongdoing—one of the major problems the Church has yet to address. The pope “was convinced to do it another way,” O’Malley said. “We’re still waiting for the procedures to be clearly articulated.” He often described problems in the Church passively, without directly assigning agency or fault. For example: American bishops have asked the Vatican for an investigation into Theodore McCarrick, the former cardinal who was consistently elevated despite widely acknowledged rumors of sexual misconduct, until he was removed from ministry last summer. After months of requests, an investigation appears to be under way. “Certainly, many of us have personally expressed to the Holy Father and the secretary of state the need to do something quickly,” O’Malley said. “I keep getting assurances. But we’re waiting for the documents to be produced.”

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Catholic dioceses in New Jersey release names of accused priests

NEW JERSEY
Reuters

February 13, 2019

By Brendan O’Brien

Five Roman Catholic dioceses in New Jersey on Wednesday released the names of 188 clergy members who have been accused of sexually abusing children dating back decades, including a former cardinal facing defrocking by the Vatican.

The disclosure was the result of an internal investigation of archdiocese records and all of the priests and deacons listed have previously been reported to law enforcement and none remain in the ministry, Newark Archbishop Cardinal Joseph Tobin said in a statement.

“It is our sincerest hope that this disclosure will help bring healing to those whose lives have been so deeply violated,” he said, noting some of the abuse dates back to 1940.

New Jersey Attorney General Gurbir Grewal formed a task force in September to investigate allegations of sexual abuse by members of the clergy in his state, along with any efforts to cover up such abuse.

“I am pleased to see that our task force’s grand jury investigation has prompted the dioceses to finally take some measures to hold predator priests accountable,” Grewal said in a statement on Wednesday.

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What Hollywood Can Teach the Catholic Church About Confronting Longtime Sexual Abuse (Guest Blog)

LOS ANGELES (CA)
The Wrap

February 13, 2019

By Johnathon Schaech

Pope Francis has called an unprecedented “summit” of bishops to the Vatican to discuss for the umpteenth time the problem of sexual abuse by priests — this one is focused on the abuse of children. The summit starts Feb. 21 and ends on the night of the Academy Awards, Feb. 24.

I cannot help but see the significance between the revelations about abuse and power in the Roman Catholic Church mirroring the revelations of abuse and power in our community out here in Hollywood. Clergy sex-abuse survivors have been coming together and speaking out since 1988 through SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. In 2002, the group helped the Boston Globe investigative team expose the Boston diocese’s practice of covering up for predators and moving them to new, unsuspecting parishes. Hollywood immortalized that moment in the 2016 Oscar-winning movie “Spotlight.”

In Hollywood, the silence breakers of 2017 had their own “Spotlight” moment. They gave a new and different focus to the issue covering up and ignoring sexual abuse in our society, and the #MeToo movement gained serious momentum.

Whether simply a coincidence or the result of the burgeoning #MeToo movement, this past year a Pennsylvania grand jury exposed more than 300 “predator priests” in just six dioceses in that state and found more than a 1,000 victims. Since the report was released, more survivors have come forward and more clergy have been exposed.

Investigative reporters in Boston and Philadelphia determined that as many as one in three American bishops have failed to respond appropriately to cases of sexual abuse. The attorney general of Illinois revealed that close to 75 percent of allegations reported to the Catholic Church in that state were either minimized or never even investigated in the first place. The FBI observed in the Pennsylvania report that the Church had what was akin to “a playbook” for concealing and covering up the truth.

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Heading to Rome for Clergy Sex Abuse Conference

ERIE (PA)
Erie News Now

February 11, 2019

By Paul Wagner

Local Men Prepare to Attend Papal Sexual Abuse Conference in Rome

Two men who say they were abused years ago by Erie Catholic Diocese priests will travel to Rome next week for a conference on clergy sexual abuse.

Pope Francis is holding the meeting with key bishops from around the world.

We spoke by face time today with both Jim Vansickle and James Faluszczak.

Both men testified before the Pennsylvania grand jury that named 301 so-called predator priests and about 1,000 victims.

They say the church must do more, including taking a zero tolerance stance against covering up abuse.

They hope their presence in Rome will give strength to victims.

Faluszczak said, “If that gives victims in Pennsylvania and throughout the world greater courage in going to law enforcement as I did then, mission accomplished.”

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Proposed bill could lead to prosecution of priests, lawsuits against dioceses

NEW LONDON (CT)
The Day

February 12. 2019

By Joe Wojtas

Over the past several years, bills introduced by state legislators to extend or eliminate the state’s rather short statute of limitations for filing charges in sexual assault cases were not approved.

But this year, supporters of the measure hope the recent release by the Archdiocese of Hartford and the Diocese of Norwich of the names of 91 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually assaulting children and teens will not only result in one of the bills becoming law but also eliminating the statute of limitations for filing civil lawsuits.

If both occur, living priests could face criminal charges and the dioceses likely would face a large number of new lawsuits by alleged victims who currently are prohibited from filing lawsuits after their 48th birthday.

One of the new bills has been filed by state Rep. Devin Carney, R-23rd District, who represents Lyme, Old Lyme, Old Saybrook and Westbrook.

“I just think it’s the right thing to do,” Carney said Tuesday. “This issue crosses party lines. I know Republicans who are proposing it and I know Democrats who are proposing it. It has bipartisan support.”

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