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.

August 27, 2018

Former top Vatican official says pope should resign over abuse crisis

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE
Reuters

August 26, 2018

By Philip Pullella

Pope Francis said on Sunday he would not respond to a former top Vatican official who accused him of having known for years of allegations of sex abuse by a prominent U.S. cardinal, calling on the pontiff to resign in an unprecedented broadside against the pope by a Church insider.

Francis, speaking to reporters on the plane returning from a trip to Dublin, said dismissively that a statement containing the accusations “speaks for itself”.

In a detailed 11-page bombshell statement given to conservative Roman Catholic media outlets during the pope’s visit to Ireland, Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano accused a long list of current and past Vatican and U.S. Church officials of covering up the case of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, who resigned last month in disgrace.

In remarkably blunt language, Vigano said alleged cover-ups in the Church were making it look like “a conspiracy of silence not so dissimilar from the one that prevails in the mafia”.

“Pope Francis has repeatedly asked for total transparency in the Church,” wrote Vigano, who has criticized the pope before.

“In this extremely dramatic moment for the universal Church, his extremely dramatic moment for the universal Church, he must acknowledge his mistakes and, in keeping with the proclaimed principle of zero tolerance, Pope Francis must be the first to set a good example for cardinals and bishops who covered up McCarrick’s abuses and resign along with all of them,” Vigano said.

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

Protesting in Ireland leads Pope Francis to plea for forgiveness

IRELAND
ABC News

August 26, 2018

Pope Francis’ visit to Dublin, Ireland, was met with harsh protesting and breaks from prepared speeches to ask for forgiveness on behalf of the church for its abuse of power, sexual assault and more.

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 refuses to comment on claim he personally ignored abuse

ROME
AFP

August 27, 2018

By Catherine Marciano with Joseph Stenson in Dublin

Pope Francis has declined to comment on a claim he personally ignored sexual abuse allegations against a senior clergyman, after a visit to Ireland dominated by Church scandals.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano, a former Vatican envoy to the United States, said he had told Francis of the allegations against prominent US cardinal Theodore McCarrick in 2013.

But rather than punish McCarrick, who was forced to resign last month, Vigano said Francis had lifted sanctions imposed on him by his predecessor Pope Benedict XVI.

Vigano called on Francis to resign in a letter published Saturday in the National Catholic Register.

He said the pope “knew from at least June 23, 2013, that McCarrick was a serial predator,” adding that “he knew that he was a corrupt man, he covered for him to the bitter end”.

But the pope refused to address the brewing scandal on Sunday.

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.

August 26, 2018

Pope Francis apologizes for Catholic Church’s “crimes” in Ireland

NEW YORK (NY)
CBS News

August 26, 2018

Dublin – Pope Francis issued a sweeping apology Sunday for the “crimes” of the Catholic Church in Ireland, saying church officials regularly didn’t respond with compassion to the many abuses children and women suffered over the years and vowing to work for justice. Francis was interrupted by applause as he read the apology out loud at the start of Mass in Dublin’s Phoenix Park.

Hundreds of miles away, somber protesters marched through the Irish town of Tuam and recited the names of an estimated 800 babies and young children who died at a Catholic Church-run orphanage there, most during the 1950s.

“Elizabeth Murphy, 4 months. Annie Tyne, 3 months. John Joseph Murphy, 10 months,” the protesters said in memory of the children who were buried in an unmarked mass grave whose discovery was confirmed only last year.

Francis, who is on a weekend visit to Ireland, told the hundreds of thousands of people who turned out for Mass that he met Saturday with victims of all sorts of abuses: sexual and labor, as well as children wrenched from their unwed mothers and forcibly put up for adoption. Abuse allegations have taken their toll in the country, and church attendance has plummeted.

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 last time a pope visited Ireland, homosexuality was a crime. Now the Irish prime minister is gay.

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

August 25, 2018

By Siobhán O’Grady

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2018/08/25/last-time-pope-visited-ireland-homosexuality-was-crime-now-irish-prime-minister-is-gay/

In 2015, when Leo Varadkar was serving as Ireland’s health minister, he came out as a gay man on national radio.

The country was preparing to vote in a same-sex marriage referendum, and Varadkar told the radio host that his sexuality is “not a secret, but it’s not something that everyone would necessarily know.”

He also said, “It’s not something that defines me.”

Two-and-a-half years later, Varadkar, whose father was an Indian immigrant, was named prime minister. He is Ireland’s first openly gay leader, the first leader from a minority background and, at 38 at the time of his appointment, the country’s youngest prime minister.

On Saturday, Varadkar welcomed Pope Francis to Ireland, a nation that has radically changed since the last papal visit, in 1979. At that tim, homosexuality was still a crime. Now, the country’s prime minister is gay.

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.

York County DA: Evidence from decades-old clergy sexual abuse case likely destroyed

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 22, 2018

By Geoff Morrow

https://www.ydr.com/story/news/2018/08/22/york-county-da-evidence-clergy-sexual-abuse-likely-destroyed-grand-jury-report/1068448002/

No records exist at the York County District Attorney’s Office in relation to a decades-old clergy abuse case referenced in the recently released Pennsylvania grand jury report, the district attorney’s office said Wednesday.

The report on widespread child sex abuse at the hands of priests alluded to investigative records and evidence being forwarded to the York County DA’s office in 1995, which was then investigated by the York City Police Department.

According to the grand jury report, the Diocese of Harrisburg turned over “photographic negatives and videotape cassettes” to the DA’s office in 1995. The grand jury report details sexual abuse in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania.

Allegations specifically about the Rev. Herbert Shank, one of more than 300 priests named in the grand jury report, were passed along in 1995 to York County law enforcement.

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.

Pa. priest arrested for soliciting sex before diocese placed him in central Pa. church

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 22, 2018

By Candy Woodall

There were several warning signs in the Rev. Francis Bach’s past, but that didn’t stop a diocese from assigning him to multiple churches in central Pennsylvania.

In 1967, he was “relieved of his duties” with a young adult ministry in Harrisburg.

That was a few years after he served at St. Patrick Catholic Church in York, where a man in 2016 said Bach abused him as an altar boy in 1960.

Ten years later, Bach had more blemishes on his employment history and more work in York. He’s one of several examples in central Pennsylvania, according to a state grand jury report released last week on priest sex abuse, of the diocese shuffling predator priests, or “passing the trash.”

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.

‘No more pain’ victim wrote of Pa. priest sex abuse, as he and others took their own lives

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 21, 2018

By Sam Ruland

https://www.ydr.com/story/news/2018/08/21/pennsylvania-priest-sex-abuse-some-took-their-own-lives-others-considered-suicide-grand-jury-report/1042459002/

In a detailed letter to the Diocese of Pittsburgh, a man outlined the extensive abuse he endured at the hands of a priest while serving as an altar boy in his hometown parish.

He classified his experiences as sexual, physical and emotional abuse — memories that plagued his mind for years, and ones he certainly couldn’t escape.

*

Almost two years later, in March 2010, the diocese told the victim they would no longer pay for his mental health treatment. A reason or explanation was not given in the grand jury report. It is not certain if the victim was given one himself.

But what is certain is that the victim took his own life two months later.

And while his story is tragic, it’s not the only one of its kind. The grand jury report documents 12 other priests whose victims either attempted suicide or died by suicide. One instance involves the priest himself, who died by suicide, claiming he also was a victim of abuse.

These are their stories, according to the grand jury report:

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

Local church service pays respects to priest abuse victims

CARTERSVILLE (GA)
Daily Tribune News

August 25, 2018

By James Swift

It was a solemn service at St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Cartersville Thursday evening.

The Holy Hour observance called for “reparation of the damage done by clergy in the past, healing for the victims and purification of the Church.” The ceremony came just three days after Pope Francis issued an open letter urging the Catholic Church to stand in solidarity with victims of clergy sexual abuse and to “condemn these atrocities and join forces in uprooting this culture of death.”

A little under 100 people turned out for the observance at 850 Douthit Ferry Road in Cartersville. About half of the attendees were middle-aged and senior Caucasians, the other half predominantly middle-aged Hispanics and their children.

Father Juan Francisco Anzora presided over the service, alternating his sermon in English and Spanish.

He prayed for the communities affected by “suppressions of abuse” — as well as the friends and families of the abused and their abusers alike — and for their feelings of “shock and horror” to be replaced by feelings of trust and optimism.

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.

‘It’s not about me anymore. It’s about others,’ says victim of Pa. priest abuse

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 23, 2018

By Brandie Kessler

John Delaney knows what’s happening in the hearts and minds of those whose abuse is detailed in the recently released grand jury report on Pennsylvania priest sex abuse.

He lived through what they’re all going through now — the range of emotions from anxiety and excitement, to embarrassment and exhaustion.

Delaney, 47, was in their shoes back in 2005, when a grand jury investigation into the Philadelphia archdiocese was presented.

Delaney, born and raised in Philadelphia but now living in Tennessee, was sexually abused and raped for years by a priest in his parish beginning when he was 10 or 11 years old.

Fifteen years ago, when Delaney testified before the grand jury investigating the archdiocese, he disclosed things he hadn’t ever processed.

“I spent weeks telling them things that had happened that I hadn’t really mentioned before,” Delaney said. “It was long, and it was exhausting.”

Delaney’s abuser, Father James Brzyski, was called one of the archdiocese’s “most brutal abusers.”

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

Pennsylvania priest-abuse report recalls 2003 crisis in Phoenix

PHOENIX (AZ)
Arizona Republic

August 25, 2018

By Michael Kiefer,

A Pennsylvania grand-jury report has reignited international interest in the history and cover-up of sexual abuse by priests, especially abuse of children.

And it brought back memories of a similar crisis 15 years ago in the Phoenix diocese of the Roman Catholic Church.

In 2003, former Maricopa County Attorney Rick Romley forced then-Bishop Thomas O’Brien into an admission of cover-up after an investigation that involved hundreds of thousands of pages of diocese records and the testimony of a priest who wouldn’t look the other way.

Six priests were indicted; two fled the country; others were sued in civil court.

And the Phoenix diocese was made to accept conditions to try to prevent future abuses.

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

Catholic church’s ‘hidden predators’ shows that it can’t reform itself

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Hill

August 22, 2018

By Melanie Jula Sakoda

A grand jury report released in Pennsylvania last week detailed years of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy in six dioceses in that state. The report said that 301 priests abused more than 1,000 children since 1947.

Even more disturbing, the investigation concluded that the bishops “followed a playbook for concealing the truth.” Grand jurors believed that, even today, the bishops were still working hard to protect themselves and that there were more victims who have yet to come forward.

Governmental investigations in Ireland and Australia also found the same consistent pattern of cover up by top Catholic officials.

The Catholic Church is the largest organization in the world, and young people have been hurt by its clergy everywhere it operates. Catholic officials around the globe have covered up these crimes and hindered their prosecution.

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.

Middle school dean charged in teen sex case is a Roman Catholic priest on ‘inactive leave’

RANCHO CUCAMONGA (CA)
Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

August 23, 2018

By Richard K. De Atley

A Banning school administrator who pleaded not guilty to charges that he tried to lure a minor to have sex is on “inactive leave” as a Roman Catholic priest, the Los Angeles Archdiocese said Thursday.

Charles Patrick Mayer, 55, of Menifee, is “not in ministry and living privately, since September of 2000 due to a failure to adhere to Archdiocesan policies concerning interaction with youth and young adults. The Archdiocese has no record of allegations of sexual misconduct by Charles Mayer,” the statement read.

The statement was part of a bulletin to parishioners at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Northridge, which was Mayer’s first assignment as a priest after his 1996 ordination until 2000.

The bulletin asked “anyone who may have information concerning misconduct by Charles Mayer to please contact Detective Donald Patton of the San Bernardino Sheriff’s Department at 909-774-2852.”

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

Victim of priest sex abuse rejects $200K payout from Catholic church

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

August 25, 2018

By Melkorka Licea

A man who has accused a Queens priest of sexually molesting him as a boy has rejected a $200,000 offer from the Catholic Church because the money “doesn’t even come close” to delivering justice.

“I choose to stand on the side of survivors who want to fight,” Paul J. Dunn, 53, told The Post. “There’s no amount of money that will make me feel better.”

The Diocese of Brooklyn, which also covers Queens, offered Dunn a cash settlement in June after he detailed four occasions when priest Cornelius T. Otero coerced him into performing oral sex and forced him to pose naked in “hundreds” of photos when he was a boy, diocese records show.

For the first time, Dunn is coming forward with his story, detailing his suffering to The Post and explaining why he’s turning down a settlement.

Dunn was 10 or 11 when he and Otero, who died in 1998, grew close at St. Joan of Arc Church summer camp in Jackson Heights in 1977 or 1978. Dunn doesn’t recall the exact year.

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.

Rompe voto de silencio

CIUDAD JUáREZ (MEXICO)
El Heraldo de Chihuahua [Chihuahua, Chihuahua, Mexico]

August 26, 2018

By Samara Martínez

Read original article

Existen otros 12 casos de violación

“En la oficina sacó su miembro y me obligó a hacerle sexo oral, afuera estaba su secretaria como si nada, con mucha normalidad. Una vez que terminaba, revisábamos archivos en la computadora como si no hubiera pasado nada, entraba su secretaria y le servía café o agua.”, relata Ricardo Legarda Vázquez víctima de violación y abuso, por más de 10 años, del sacerdote Juan José Esquivias López antiguo párroco del templo de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe, en la colonia Villa Nueva, de esta ciudad de Chihuahua.

Esta es la historia de dolor, tristeza y lucha de un joven que, desde los 13 años, sufrió violaciones continuas por parte de un sacerdote chihuahuense que se ganó, con mentiras y caras de hipocresía, la confianza de toda la comunidad creyente de la colonia Villa Nueva.“Yo lo seguí porque creía que no podía avanzar en mi vida sin él. Yo creía que la única manera de crecer era si lo seguía, ya que me iban a pagar más en ese trabajo e iba a conocer una ciudad nueva. Pero lamentablemente al llegar a Tijuana yo ya era otra persona, ya habían pasado muchos años del primer abuso, yo ya había cambiado y él ya no pudo conmigo, el abuso se dio una o dos veces más, pero esta vez ya muy forzado… de hecho… fue algo muy desagradable, incluso de pensarlo me da mucho asco.”, recuerda Ricardo con el aliento entre cortado. Después de eso, el año pasado en 2017, Ricardo decidió interponer una denuncia en la fiscalía de Chihuahua, la cual fue desechada porque los delitos ya se habían cometido hace varios años. “De pronto recibí ayuda de varias personas que le apuestan a los derechos humanos y empezamos a realizar las nuevas denuncias basándonos en los convenios internacionales en contra del abuso contra menores y adolescentes donde se explica que a pesar de los años no puede dejarse a un lado.”, describe Ricardo el proceso de denuncia. El lunes 20 de agosto, después de que el periódico La Jornada publicara parte del caso de Ricardo, la asociación civil en donde trabajaba el padre Juan José Esquivias, en la ciudad de Guadalajara, mandó una notificación donde se explicaba que el sacerdote había dejado de laborar ahí y el sitio web de la asociación, así como la página de Facebook desaparecieron.

Ricardo vivió una infancia como cualquier niño, jugaba con sus primos, tíos y familiares, era aplicado en la escuela y destacaba en el ámbito académico, sus tardes consistían en visitar La Deportiva y hacer los deberes que la escuela demandaba. De familia católica, todos los domingos asistían a misa y los sábados tomaba clases de inglés.

A los 13 años el camino de dolor comenzó, un compañero de inglés lo invitó a formar parte del grupo de monaguillos del templo de Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe; al principio Ricardo no aceptó, pero después de varias insistencias decidió ir un sábado. “Los primeros días fueron normales ya que no tenía el acercamiento a los padres, solo en la misa y saliendo me iba a casa, hasta ese momento no hubo nada fuera de lo normal o que fuera sospechoso.”, comenta Ricardo.

Al mes notó algo fuera de lo común, Esquivias López hacía comentarios raros acerca de su apariencia, destacando que él era más alto y blanco que los demás niños, por lo que al poco tiempo fue nombrado coordinador de servidores de altar, seguido de eso el sacerdote le besó la mano. 

El primer acercamiento anormal se dio en el municipio de Santa Isabel, cuando el grupo de monaguillos viajó con el sacerdote por parte de la iglesia; Esquivias López repartió a todos los niños en diferentes puntos de la comunidad excepto a Ricardo y ahí fue la primera vez que le tocó la pierna. “A mí se me hizo muy extraño, pero no quise decir nada porque existe un respeto hacia la figura del sacerdote y me dio miedo regarla…preferí no decir nada.”

Al poco tiempo, en agosto del 2000, el padre invitó a Ricardo al cine que está en Ortiz Mena y Mirador. Ya iniciada la película, volvió a tocarle la pierna, pero esta vez agarró la mano del joven para colocarla sobre su pene y alentarlo a masturbarlo mientras que él le tocaba sus genitales. “Además del abuso que pasó en la sala, la carga emocional fue demasiada, ya que al salir me hizo sentir culpable y me dijo que yo lo había incitado a hacer eso, es decir, él se encargó de depositar toda la culpa en mí, y yo me la creí, me sentía culpable, sucio, sentía que estaba actuando mal, pero creí que nadie me iba a creer.”

Ricardo jamás había experimentado ningún acercamiento sexual, “yo tenía trece años… imagínate.”, declara en entrevista con El Heraldo de Chihuahua.

Al llegar a casa, el joven, del shock que vivió, no recuerda exactamente qué fue lo que paso, pero su más grande inquietud era la culpabilidad. “Cuando me dijo que era la última vez que pasaba eso porque él era sacerdote y yo lo había hecho pecar, me hizo sentir tan culpable y eso es lo peor. En la noche no pude dormir, tenía la conciencia intranquila y me sentía muy mal.”

Los primeros abusos

“En la oficina sacó su pene y me obligó a hacerle sexo oral, afuera estaba su secretaria, como si nada y con mucha normalidad. Ahorita en retrospectiva me pongo a pensar que él ya sabía cómo actuar y conocía cuáles eran sus escenarios y una vez que terminaba en mi boca revisábamos archivos como si nada hubiera pasado, entraba su secretaria y le servía café o agua.”, recuerda el joven la primera vez que pasó.

“Es difícil decir que alguien de su círculo cercano sabía algo de lo que estaba pasando, porque puedo asegurar que como pasó conmigo hubo otros niños antes y después, pero él se encargó de crear un ambiente de confianza, al punto de que la gente cerraba los ojos y confiaba plenamente. Incluso a mí me pasó que llegué a defenderlo inconscientemente, hay gente muy ingenua que no se imagina lo que pasa y otros quizá sí sospecharon pero como no tenían alguna prueba, pues no llegaba a más. Era bastante extraño que siempre estaba acompañado de algún monaguillo y que tuviera muchos ahijados, no es normal que un padre siempre ande con un niño a su lado.”, comenta Ricardo. 

A pesar de que Ricardo ya había visitado anteriormente la casa de los padres, en donde residía Esquivias López, en una visita justamente dos semanas antes de que cumpliera 14 años, se le hizo raro que no hubiera ningún otro padre. “Estábamos en su casa, pero en esa ocasión estaba él solo, siempre había más padres y esa vez no. Cuando estábamos en la habitación empezó a tocarme las piernas como siempre hasta que me penetró por el ano. Me dolió muchísimo, empecé a sangrar y él no paraba…fueron varios días continuos de sangrado después de eso, yo creo que hubo un desgarre interno, pero mi preocupación era no manchar la ropa para que mis papás no se dieran cuenta.”

Los abusos continuaron de manera sistematizada del 2000 al 2002, con una frecuencia de 5 a 6 veces por semana. “Yo siempre trataba de esconderlo para que mis papás no sospecharan, yo me encargué de protegerlo para que todo pareciera normal.”, aclara Ricardo al preguntarle el por qué seguía con él.

Codependencia emocional

Tiempo después, justamente al momento de que Ricardo terminara su secundaria a Juan José Esquivias López lo hicieron vicerrector de la Universidad Iberoamericana en Torreón, Coahuila. “A pesar de que él (el padre) ya estaba lejos, yo lo visitaba en vacaciones y durante algún tiempo mientras estudiaba la preparatoria en Chihuahua.”, dice Ricardo.

El joven declara que sus visitas a Torreón no eran por petición del sacerdote, sino porque Ricardo tenía una codependencia emocional tan fuerte que necesitaba verlo; psicológicamente es un síndrome conocido como “Síndrome de Estocolmo”, donde la víctima desarrolla cierto apego por su abusador.

Esquivias López le otorgó una beca a Ricardo para que estudiara su licenciatura en Torreón, ahí mismo en la Universidad Iberoamericana. Fue en el 2005 cuando el joven ingresó a la licenciatura en comunicación y de ese año y hasta el 2007 siguió la violencia psicológica y los abusos.

“Sí hubo una dependencia muy, muy fuerte, yo ya lo conocía muy bien y con una mirada o un gesto yo sabía perfectamente qué quería que hiciera. Había días que apagaba mi celular o me escondía en la universidad para no verlo porque yo también ya quería empezar a hacer mi vida, ir con mis amigos, salir en la noche, yo como que ya empezaba a pisar freno pero de una manera discreta.”, comenta el joven.

“No creo que haya sido enamoramiento de mi parte, se hizo una atmósfera en la que no había más alternativas; es como si siempre tomas coca cola y nunca has probado otros refrescos, piensas que es el único que existe y a mí me pasó eso desde los 13. Enamoramiento… no creo porque siempre hubo miedo.”, asegura Ricardo.

Afortunadamente, a finales de 2007, principios de 2008, al sacerdote lo cambiaron a Santiago de Chile. “No sé qué pasaría porque a veces sus movimientos eran muy extraños, yo no sé si la misma compañía de Jesús lo movió por alguna denuncia para protegerlo, que ahorita no lo dudo.”

Ahí es cuando finalmente Ricardo empezó a respirar, y eso lo hizo darse cuenta de lo que había vivido: “Ahí caigo en una depresión muy fuerte, le perdí el sentido a la vida, a mi proyecto… me sentía solo, triste, me empezaron a caer todos los “veintes”, lo que me ayudaba a seguir era que yo sabía que tenía que terminar la carrera, para poder ser algo en la vida.” 

Ricardo aclara que la universidad jamás le condicionó la beca con la que él contaba para sus estudios, que fue el padre quien lo amenazó con quitársela si él decía algo, “dudo mucho que la universidad supiera algo porque Juan José siempre se encargó de mantener todo por debajo, de lo que no dudo es de que los jesuitas lo supieran.”

Al terminar su carrea, Ricardo comenzó su servicio social en Saltillo, específicamente en la casa de los migrantes, donde se ayudó a sí mismo, a darse cuenta de que no era el único que sufría, de que había otras personas que como él, habían sido víctimas de las injusticias y eso fue un parte aguas en su vida. “Me preocupaba por los demás, pero me había abandonado a mí mismo.”

“Ya había cambiado, era más maduro y ya no era un niño”

En Saltillo, Ricardo comenzó a trabajar en los derechos humanos, cuando fue contactado por Esquivias López quien lo invitó a trabajar a Tijuana, pues estaba nuevamente en México, ahora desempeñando un importante cargo en la ciudad fronteriza dentro de la Universidad Iberoamericana.

“Yo lo seguí porque creía que no podía avanzar en mi vida sin él. Yo creía que la única manera de crecer era si lo seguía, ya que me iban a pagar más en ese trabajo e iba a conocer una ciudad nueva. Pero lamentablemente al llegar a Tijuana yo ya era otra persona, ya habían pasado muchos años del primer abuso, yo ya había cambiado y él ya no pudo conmigo, el abuso se dio una o dos veces más, pero esta vez ya muy forzado… de hecho… fue algo muy desagradable, incluso de pensarlo me da mucho asco.”, recuerda Ricardo con el aliento entre cortado.

En esa ocasión Ricardo solo aguantó seis meses, renunció al trabajo y continuó su vida en Ciudad de México, directamente en el Museo de Antropología e Historia y eso le ayudó a seguir con su vida, estando allá, declara que vivió una depresión muy fuerte al pensar en suicidarse, pero finalmente decidió regresar a Chihuahua con su familia.

Se rompe el silencio

“Hasta el 2015 decido hablar con mis papás, decido contarles todo de una manera muy compasiva, porque ellos no eran culpables, ni yo tampoco y teníamos que entender esto para poder sanar todo el dolor. Decido escribirle al Provincial de los Jesuitas, que es el encargado de ellos en todo el país, y le mando una carta por correo electrónico explicándole lo sucedido. Irónicamente pensé que nunca me iban a responder, pero al día siguiente me contestaron diciendo que les daba mucha pena lo sucedido.”, explica Ricardo.

La sorpresa del joven fue cuando el secretario jesuita, Jaime Porras, lo visitó en Chihuahua para platicar: “la conversación que tuvimos fue muy fuerte porque me dijo que lo único que ellos podían hacer por mí era pagarme la ayuda psicológica. -“Ah, y otra cosa… el papa ha señalado que no más cosas por lo obscurito, entonces si nos quieres chantajear con que va a salir la nota, adelante porque nosotros no te vamos a dar dinero si es lo que buscas.”- me comentó el secretario… imagínate mi sorpresa”, asegura Ricardo, decepcionado aún más de ellos.

Después de eso, el año pasado en 2017, Ricardo decidió interponer una denuncia en la fiscalía de Chihuahua, la cual fue desechada porque los delitos ya se habían cometido hace varios años. “De pronto recibí ayuda de varias personas que le apuestan a los derechos humanos y empezamos a realizar las nuevas denuncias basándonos en los convenios internacionales en contra del abuso contra menores y adolescentes donde se explica que a pesar de los años no puede dejarse a un lado.”, describe Ricardo el proceso de denuncia.

“Yo no recupero esos años de mi adolescencia y de mi infancia pero me ayuda a sanar, me ayuda a tener una visión más esperanzadora de la vida, pero creo que es importante levantar la voz y denunciar para que no vuelva a pasar, porque habemos personas muy ingenuas y confiamos, pero es necesario tener precaución y cuidado, en especial con los niños y adolescentes porque es una etapa de mucha vulnerabilidad, se sienten incomprendidos, solos y cualquier muestra de afecto se presta a un abuso. Si yo hubiera podido distinguir entre lo que es un abuso y una simple muestra de afecto, yo creo que esta historia no existiría.”, asegura Ricardo.

Existen, hasta el momento, 12 víctimas más

“Puedo decir que a lo largo de todos estos años identificando a otras personas que sufren o han sufrido violaciones por parte de sacerdotes, hasta el momento tengo ubicados a doce personas más y creemos que puede haber más. He hablado con algunos de ellos, pero no están dispuestos a denunciar, tienen miedo, no quieren exponerse públicamente, no quieren que la familia se entere y lo entiendo, porque es todo un proceso. A mí me tomó 16, 17 años y creo que cada quien tiene que vivir su propio proceso de sanación y cada quien sabrá que hace con su historia.”, segura el involucrado.

El lunes 20 de agosto, después de que el periódico La Jornada publicara parte del caso de Ricardo, la asociación civil en donde trabajaba el padre Juan José Esquivias, en la ciudad de Guadalajara, mandó una notificación donde se explicaba que el sacerdote había dejado de laborar ahí y el sitio web de la asociación, así como la página de Facebook desaparecieron. 

Actualmente Ricardo Legarda es el director académico de la universidad de la Tarahumara, y ha trabajado en el Instituto Chihuahuense de las Mujeres, colaborando con la parte de los derechos humanos y la prevención de la violencia. 

Ricardo se describe como un hombre que ha avanzado en la vida, que ha tratado de dar lo mejor y de brindarle lo mejor de él a los demás, se considera a sí mismo como responsable, honesto, y como alguien que busca el bien de los demás. “Soy un ser humano con heridas y cicatrices pero eso no me define, tengo sueños y esperanzas y en un futuro me gustaría escribir un libro sobre esto para ayudar a prevenir este tipo de situaciones, también quiero desarrollar reformas y leyes en este tema. Espero que las victimas que hayan sufrido o lo estén haciendo en este momento, sepan que ellos no son culpables de lo que está pasando, que a veces se disfraza el amor con máscaras. Es importante que confíen en su familia, en sus amigos y denunciarlo es mi recomendación más grande.”

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

Former Vatican envoy pens j’accuse letter in McCarrick case

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Associated Press via Miami Herald

August 26, 2018

By Nicole Winfield

Note: See also Viganò’s “Testimony” in English translation and the Italian original; Richard Sipe’s 4/20/08 letter to Pope Benedict XVI and Sipe’s 7/28/16 letter to Bishop McElroy of San Diego, both cited by Viganò.]

The Vatican’s retired ambassador to the United States has penned an 11-page letter accusing senior Vatican officials of knowing as early as 2000 that the disgraced former archbishop of Washington, ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, regularly invited seminarians into his bed but they still promoted him to cardinal.

The letter, an extraordinary j’accuse from a one-time Holy See diplomat, also accuses Pope Francis of having initially rehabilitated McCarrick despite being informed of his penchant for young seminarians in 2013, soon after he was elected pope.

The National Catholic Register and another conservative site, LifeSiteNews, published the letter attributed to Archbishop Carlo Maria Vigano on Sunday as the pope was wrapping up a two-day visit to Ireland.

Vigano, 77, a conservative whose hard-line anti-gay views are well known, also urged the reformist pope to resign over the issue. He and the pope have long been on opposite ideological sides, with the pope more a pastor and Vigano more a cultural warrior.

The Vatican didn’t immediately comment on the letter or confirm its authenticity.

In it, Vigano accused the former Vatican secretaries of state under the previous two popes of having ignored detailed denunciations against McCarrick for years. He said Pope Benedict XVI eventually sanctioned McCarrick in 2009 or 2010 to a lifetime of penance and prayer, but that Francis subsequently rehabilitated him.

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

Ex-Nuncio Accuses Pope Francis of Failing to Act on McCarrick’s Abuse

IRONDALE (AL)
National Catholic Register

August 25, 2018

By Edward Pentin

[Note: See also Viganò’s “Testimony” in English translation and the Italian original; Richard Sipe’s 4/20/08 letter to Pope Benedict XVI and Sipe’s 7/28/16 letter to Bishop McElroy of San Diego, both cited by Viganò.]

In a written testimony, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò claims Pope Francis withdrew sanctions against Archbishop Theodore McCarrick.

In an extraordinary 11-page written testament, a former apostolic nuncio to the United States has accused several senior prelates of complicity in covering up Archbishop Theodore McCarrick’s allegations of sexual abuse, and has claimed that Pope Francis knew about sanctions imposed on then-Cardinal McCarrick by Pope Benedict XVI but chose to repeal them.

Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, 77, who served as apostolic nuncio in Washington D.C. from 2011 to 2016, said that in the late 2000s, Benedict had “imposed on Cardinal McCarrick sanctions similar to those now imposed on him by Pope Francis” and that Viganò personally told Pope Francis about those sanctions in 2013.

Archbishop Viganò said in his written statement, simultaneously released to the Register and other media, (see full text below) that Pope Francis “continued to cover” for McCarrick and not only did he “not take into account the sanctions that Pope Benedict had imposed on him” but also made McCarrick “his trusted counselor.” Viganò said that the former archbishop of Washington advised the Pope to appoint a number of bishops in the United States, including Cardinals Blase Cupich of Chicago and Joseph Tobin of Newark.

Archbishop Viganò, who said his “conscience dictates” that the truth be known as “the corruption has reached the very top of the Church’s hierarchy,” ended his testimony by calling on Pope Francis and all of those implicated in the cover up of Archbishop McCarrick’s abuse to resign.

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.

August 25, 2018

Pope Francis meets survivors of clerical sex abuse in Ireland

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

August 25, 2018

By Ronan McGreevy

Survivors tell pope he must hold to account religious orders who ran Mother and Baby Homes

Pope Francis has met survivors of clerical sexual abuse in Ireland and also those who spent time in industrial schools, seminaries and Mother and Baby Homes.

The pope was asked at the hour and a half long meeting on Saturday afternoon to use his influence to get the religious orders who ran the Mother and Baby Homes to “acknowledge their actions and issue an open and unqualified apology” to mothers and their children.

The meeting took place at the Papal Nuncio’s residence on Dublin’s Navan Road on the first day of the pope’s visit to Ireland, the first by a pope in 39 years.

Eight victims were present. Among them were Marie Collins, who resigned from the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors, Clodagh Malone, a survivor of St Patrick’s Mother and Baby Home, and Paul Redmond who was born in a Mother and Baby home and has written the book entitled ‘The Adoption Machine’.

Fr Paddy McCafferty, who was abused as a seminarian in Wexford, and Bernadette Fahy who spent much of her childhood in the notorious Goldenbridge Orphanage, were also there.

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

Attorney for victims says Hawley’s investigation of archdiocese is ‘exactly backwards’

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis American

August 24, 2018

By Chris King

http://www.stlamerican.com/news/local_news/attorney-for-victims-says-hawley-s-investigation-of-archdiocese-is/article_2eba9cca-a7eb-11e8-96a7-ff9f66824fe9.html

She challenged archbishop to release any victims who settled from gag agreement

“Victims of sexual abuse of any kind deserve to have their voices heard, and Missourians deserve to know if this misconduct has occurred in their communities,” Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley stated on August 23, when announcing an independent review of the Archdiocese of St. Louis regarding allegations of sexual abuse by clergy members.

That’s what Hawley – who is running for U.S. Senate as a Republican in the November 6 general election – said when the archbishop called. “By inviting this independent review, the archdiocese is demonstrating a willingness to be transparent and expose any potential wrongdoing,” Hawley stated.

Nicole Gorovsky, an attorney with clients who claim to have been sexually abused by priests in Missouri, said she and her clients did not receive the same warm welcome from Hawley when they asked him to investigate the church.

“I stood outside your office with survivors of childhood sexual abuse to ask you to organize an investigation into abuses within the Catholic Church in Missouri. We asked for an investigation like the one that occurred in Pennsylvania which revealed over 300 perpetrators and likely over 1,000 victims,” Gorovsky wrote to Hawley on August 24 in a letter that she shared with media.

“You responded that you did not have the power to do such an investigation.”

Indeed, Hawley claimed, in announcing his investigation, that he was empowered to do so by an invitation from Archbishop Robert J. Carlson.

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.

They baptized their children for school places. Now regret is setting in.

ATLANTA (GA)
CNN

August 25, 2018

By Kara Fox

Leixlip, Ireland – Fiona and her husband aren’t religious. They don’t go to Mass, take communion or recite the Holy Rosary.

But twice in recent years, the couple have driven halfway across Ireland to baptize their children at their families’ community parishes.

The reason? Their children’s education.

The sacrament — and the certificate that comes with it — has long held the key for parents hoping to secure a place for a child’s first day at school in Ireland, where approximately 90% of primary schools have a Catholic ethos.
Although those schools are state-funded, their Catholic Church patrons set the admission guidelines, giving Catholic children priority enrollment over non-Catholics in a crowded system.

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 Francis heads to Ireland amid a mixture of anticipation and anguish over abuse

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Post-Gazette

August 24, 2018

By Peter Smith

Dublin – Roisin Galvin was 12 years old the last time a pope came to say Mass at Dublin’s vast public space, Phoenix Park.

The year was 1979, and the pontiff was a still-vigorous John Paul II, greeted enthusiastically by an overwhelmingly Catholic population.

Back then, all of Ms. Galvin’s friends went to Mass regularly, but now she finds it difficult to raise her five children Catholic in a culture in which many Irish have left the faith or keep it in name only.

“There is only one Mass where I live on a Sunday, and all the priests are very elderly, ” said Ms. Galvin, who lives in a village in County Dublin. “I’m wondering what’s going to happen. Most of them are octogenarians.”

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.

Victims’ group calls on pope to name clerical sex abusers

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

August 25, 2018

By Simon Carswell

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/social-affairs/religion-and-beliefs/victims-group-calls-on-pope-to-name-clerical-sex-abusers-1.3606741

End Clergy Abuse group wants zero tolerance of sex abuse under church law

Clerical sex abuse is “a global problem” requiring “a global solution”, a worldwide group of abuse victims meeting in Dublin has said. End Clergy Abuse, which represents clerical abuse survivors and activists, called on Pope Francis to follow the example of survivors who have come forward and take action to name clerical sex abusers and hold bishops who covered it up to account.

The group wants the pope to bring zero tolerance of clerical sex abuse into force under church law, remove from office bishops who covered up sex crimes by clergy, and publish a global registry of confirmed clerical abusers held by the Vatican.

“The time of words should be over and the time of action should start now,” Matthias Katsch, an abuse survivor from Germany, told a press conference on the eve of the pope’s arrival in Ireland for a 36-hour visit, the first by a pontiff since 1979.

Clerical abuse victims and campaigners from Ireland, the UK, Belgium and the US came together in Dublin for only the second meeting of global campaigners. They spoke to reporters near the Catholic Church’s World Meeting of Families at the RDS where they were earlier invited to listen to a panel discussion on “Safeguarding Children and Vulnerable Adults” and the Vatican’s response to the latest allegations of clerical child sex abuse and cover-up by 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.

2 more states launch reviews of Catholic Church records on sexual abuse

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Tribune-Review

August 24, 2018

By Deb Erdley

A Pennsylvania grand jury report that detailed seven decades of allegations of sexual abuse of 1,000 children by Catholic priests and subsequent cover-ups is reverberating across the Midwest, as church and law enforcement officials here continue to clock more reports on hotlines.

State attorneys general in Missouri and Illinois on Thursday announced reviews of Catholic Church records there, citing interest generated by the Pennsylvania report.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan specifically referenced Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s grand jury report. She said the report identified at least seven priests with connections to Illinois.

“The Chicago Archdiocese has agreed to meet with me. I plan to reach out to the other dioceses in Illinois to have the same conversation and expect the bishops will agree and cooperate fully. If not, I will work with states’ attorneys and law enforcement throughout Illinois to investigate,” Madigan said Thursday.

The same day Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley announced he was opening an independent review of the Archdiocese of St. Louis regarding allegations of sexual abuse by priests.

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

Pope Francis speaks of failure to address ‘repugnant crimes’ of clerical sex abuse

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

August 25, 2018

By Simon Carswell

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/social-affairs/religion-and-beliefs/pope-francis-speaks-of-failure-to-address-repugnant-crimes-of-clerical-sex-abuse-1.3607788

Failure ‘rightly given rise to outrage and remains a source of pain and shame for the Catholic community’

Pope Francis, in the first speech of his visit to Ireland, has recognised how the Church’s failure to address the “repugnant crimes” of clerical sexual abuse “remains a source of pain and shame” for Irish Catholics.

Speaking at Dublin Castle almost two hours after landing in Ireland, the pontiff in addressing the scandal that has damaged the Church’s standing since the last visit of a pope almost four decades ago, said he was “very conscious” of the circumstances of “our most vulnerable brothers and sisters.”

Speaking after a speech by the Taoiseach, the pope specifically made reference to “women who in the past have endured particularly difficult situations” – a veiled reference to the treatment of Irish women in the Magdalene Laundries and other Church-run institutions.

“With regard to the most vulnerable, I cannot fail to acknowledge the grave scandal caused in Ireland by the abuse of young people by members of the Church charged with responsibility for their protection and education,” Francis, speaking in Italian, told an audience that included Taoiseach Leo Varadkar.

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

Former Pennsylvania altar boy says he stole from church to avenge abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Reuters

August 24, 2018

By Vanessa Johnston

Mike McDonnell was an altar boy who loved to sing Latin hymns at his church in suburban Philadelphia, but his Roman Catholic faith became a source of torment at age 12 when he woke up to find a priest molesting him in the vacation bed the clergyman forced him to share.

“From that day forth, I would never be that same child,” said McDonnell, now 49. “I went into shock mode and shut down. I would hold onto those secrets for 20-plus years.”

McDonnell, now a peer counselor at a drug and alcohol treatment facility, agreed to share his personal story with Reuters in the wake of a stunning grand jury report of Roman Catholic priests accused of abusing more than 1,000 children across Pennsylvania. He said he wanted to encourage other victims to emerge from the shadows to begin their own healing.

While the incident at age 12 broke him, he said the abuse started at age 10, when another priest molested him. “At that age, I wasn’t sure the things that were going on,” he said.

His decades-long road to recovery was fraught with alcohol abuse, broken marriages and even a criminal record. The Archdiocese of Philadelphia paid for McDonnell’s counseling sessions but he seldom attended. Instead he forged receipts and eventually was convicted of pocketing more than $100,000 in a theft he called payback for the abuse.

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

US Sen. Bob Casey calls for strengthening child abuse reporting law, in wake of Pennsylvania grand jury report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Action 4 News

August 24, 2018

By Bob Mayo

Philadelphia – In the wake of the findings by a Pennsylvania grand jury, U.S. Sen. Bob Casey is calling for strengthening laws to better protect children from sexual abuse.

“The grand jury report was a chronicle of pure evil. Pure evil. There’s no other way to say it,” Casey, D-Pa., said at a news conference in Philadelphia on Friday.

Casey, a Catholic, feels the issue is larger than the six dioceses the grand jury examined.

“We should all be angry,” Casey said. “You don’t have to be a Catholic. You don’t even have to be an American. Just as a human being, we should be angry.”

Casey is proposing federal action to press for tougher and more uniform standards across Pennsylvania and all states. His bill would seek to require that suspected child abuse be reported directly to law enforcement or state authorities.

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

Pennsylvania Supreme Court tweaks grand jury secrecy rules

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Morning Call

August 24, 2018

By Steve Esack

[See also a copy of the Supreme Court ruling.]

Harrisburg – The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has tweaked secrecy rules related to how defense lawyers can share testimony or evidence related to clients called before grand juries.

The 5-2 ruling issued Tuesday stemmed from a legal dispute that arose during the statewide grand jury investigation of clergy child sex abuse in six Catholic dioceses, including Allentown. The justices ruled that a grand jury nondisclosure form, created by the attorney general’s office, unfairly muzzled defense lawyers’ rights and their abilities to serve their clients.

The ruling allows defense lawyers to seek their clients’ permission to publicly share the content and scope of their testimony to the grand jury, which operates in private. Witnesses have always been permitted to disclose their own testimony.

“The obligation of confidentially generally extends to all matters occurring before the grand jury, which includes, but is not limited to, what transpires in a grand jury room,” wrote Chief Justice Thomas Saylor. “A lawyer otherwise subject to secrecy, however, may disclose a client’s own testimony to the extent that the client would otherwise be free to do so under applicable law.”

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.

Pa. grand jury: When she reported being abused by a priest, the church investigated her

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 24, 2018

By Mike Argento

“The church was our life,” Bortz said. “We didn’t do anything that didn’t involve the church. It was our life.”

When she was in ninth grade at Allentown Central Catholic High School, her religion teacher was Father Francis “Frank” Fromholzer. She didn’t know him very well; she was more acquainted with the priests who were friends of the family. At one point, Fromholzer suggested taking Bortz and her best friend on a trip to the Poconos. It wasn’t all that unusual, Bortz said. Priests were always taking kids from the parish on outings, such as roller skating or bowling; for many of the kids from working-class and troubled families, it was a treat that their own families could ill afford.

While driving to the Poconos, according to testimony by Bortz and her friend to the grand jury, Fromholzer fondled the girls. In the Poconos, Bortz recalled, the priest laid out a blanket and started kissing her. He did other things. She recalled it hurt, she told the grand jury. “It was confusing,” she told the grand jury, “because – you were always told you were going to hell if you let anybody touch you. But then you’ve got father doing it…”

Fromholzer, according to her grand jury testimony, continued to harass her through the ninth grade. It stopped, she told the grand jury, when she entered 10th grade and was in a different building. She didn’t report the abuse immediately. It just wasn’t something you talked about, she said.

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

Allentown Diocese reports new claims of child sex abuse by priests

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Morning Call

August 24, 2018

By Tim Darragh

Fourteen people claiming to have been sexually abused by priests and not previously reporting it have contacted the Allentown Diocese since the Aug. 14 release of a grand jury report investigating six Pennsylvania dioceses, a spokesman said Friday.

The spokesman, Matt Kerr, said none of the priests identified by the accusers is in ministry.

The increase in accusers comes as calls to a state hotline specifically set up by Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s office to field calls about clergy sex abuse continue to surge. As of Friday, 656 people had contacted the hotline, said Shapiro’s spokesman, Joe Grace. At the beginning of the week, the hotline had received 400 calls.

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.

Clerical abuse victims call for zero-tolerance approach

CORK (IRELAND)
Irish Examiner

August 24, 2018

Clerical abuse victims have called for a zero-tolerance approach to be taken against priests involved in the child abuse scandals.

A global survivors group also proposed a list of abusive priests be made public in an effort to protect others.

Members of the Ending Clerical Abuse (ECA) group – aimed at holding the Catholic church to account for clerical sex abuse – gathered in Dublin today to recount their abuse stories on the eve of the Pope’s visit to Ireland.

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 Francis speech: Calls clerical abuse scandal in Ireland ‘repugnant’, makes thinly-veiled reference to abortion referendum

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Independent

August 25, 2018

By Kevin Doyle

https://www.independent.ie/irish-news/pope-francis-in-ireland/pope-francis-speech-calls-clerical-abuse-scandal-in-ireland-repugnant-makes-thinlyveiled-reference-to-abortion-referendum-37250833.html

– Pope Francis speech: Calls clerical abuse scandal in Ireland ‘repugnant’, makes thinly-veiled reference to abortion referendum
– Pope: Measures must be taken in response to ‘betrayal of trust’
– Warns about culture that doesn’t respect the unborn
– Varadkar: Church must acknowledge same-sex families and adopt zero tolerance towards abusers

MEASURES must be taken in response to the “betrayal of trust” and “repugnant” abuse inflicted on abuse victims in Ireland, Pope Francis has said.

In his first public statement since arriving in Dublin, the Pontiff said the Catholic Church must work to “remedy past mistakes and to adopt stringent norms meant to ensure that they do not happen again”.

Speaking in front of Taoiseach Leo Varadkar in Dublin Castle, Pope Francis also risked raising the temperature around his visit with a thinly-veiled reference to the abortion referendum.

He questioned whether a “materialistic ‘throwaway culture’” has made people “increasingly indifferent to the poor and to the most defenceless members of our human family, including the unborn, deprived of the very right to life”.

However, the Taoiseach told the audience that Ireland has “voted in our parliament and by referendum to modernise our laws – understanding that marriages do not always work, that women should make their own decisions, and that families come in many forms including those headed by a grandparent, lone parent or same-sex parents or parents who are divorced”.

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

AG Lisa Madigan to examine Illinois ties of priests named in Pennsylvania sex abuse report

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

August 24, 2018

By Angie Leventis Lourgos

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan wants to meet with Catholic church leaders throughout the state to ensure “a complete and accurate accounting” of alleged child sex abuse by priests with local ties who were named in the Pennsylvania grand jury report.

At least seven of the more than 300 Roman Catholic priests named in the Pennsylvania report this month have Illinois connections.

The Chicago Archdiocese has agreed to meet with Madigan, and she plans to speak with other Catholic bishops throughout the state, she said in a statement released Thursday.

“The Catholic Church has a moral obligation to provide its parishioners and the public a complete and accurate accounting of all sexually inappropriate behavior,” she said.

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

Pope Francis Returns to a Country Transformed and a Church in Tatters

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

August 25, 2018

By Jason Horowitz

Nearly 40 years since the last papal visit to Ireland, Pope Francis arrived on Saturday to a transformed country where the once-mighty Roman Catholic Church is in tatters, its authority buffeted by deepening secularization and a global sex abuse crisis challenging Francis’ papacy.

“I’m happy for this visit,” Francis said on the papal plane before he landed in Dublin, where he was greeted on the tarmac by local bishops and children who offered him flowers. He added that it “touches my heart to return to Ireland after 38 years. I was here for nearly three months to practice English in 1980. And for me this is a great memory.”

For Catholics around the globe, this return visit promises to be more memorable.

As recently as a few weeks ago, the pope’s visit to Ireland mostly promised an awkward encounter in an estranged relationship. Since the last papal visit — by John Paul II in 1979 — Ireland, once a cornerstone of the church, has abandoned its teachings by legalizing divorce and gay marriage. The country now has a gay prime minister, and just a few months ago voted to lift a ban on abortion.

But recent revelations in the United States and Chile of the institutional covering-up of sexual abuse by clerics have lent sudden urgency to the pope’s visit, where he will speak at the church’s ninth World Meeting of Families. The issue now threatens to overshadow the visit by Francis, who has struggled to grasp the enormity of the scourge throughout his papacy.

Catholics worldwide wait to see whether he will use Ireland, with its own painful history of abuse, as a symbolic stage upon which to announce concrete measures to combat a crisis that threatens the future of his church. It is not clear that he will.

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 Pope in Ireland: Full coverage of Pope Francis in Ireland

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Times

August 25, 2018

By Sorcha Pollak et al.

LIVE: The Pope in Ireland

[The Irish Times is maintaining a Live Blog of the visit of Pope Francis to Ireland.]

13:02 “Today, as in the past, the men and women who live in this country strive to enrich the life of the nation with the wisdom borne of their faith. Even in Ireland’s darkest hours they found in that faith a source of courage needed to forge a future of freedom and dignity, justice and solidarity. The Christian message has been an integral part of that experience… it is my prayer that Ireland will not be forgetful of the powerful strains of the Christian message.”

12:56 Pope Francis: “I am very conscious of the circumstances of the our most vulnerable brothers and sisters, I think of those women who have in the past endured difficult situations. I cannot fail to acknowledge the grave scandal caused in Ireland of the abuse of young people by the members of the church…”

12:53 Speaking of the Northern Irish conflict, the Pope said: “We give thanks for the two decades of peace that have followed this historic agreement with the hope that the peace process will overcome every remaining obstacle and give birth to a future of mutual trust.”

12:52 The Pope has spoken of the “intractable conflicts and violence, contempt for human dignity and human rights and the growing divide between rich and poor. We need to recover in every instance of political and social life the sense of being a true family of peoples.”

12:50 Pope Francis is now speaking at Dublin Castle

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.

August 24, 2018

Un oscuro estigma para la curia argentina

VENADO TUERTO (ARGENTINA)
La Voz [Córdoba, Argentina]

August 24, 2018

By Gustavo Di Palma, Especial

Read original article

Los casos de pedofilia en el ámbito eclesiástico, en Argentina, son otro motivo de inquietud para el papa Francisco. Escasa ayuda de las autoridades locales a la Justicia y a las víctimas.

Si se sigue la tradición de tomar como punto de referencia el escándalo del cura Julio César Grassi, condenado a 15 años de prisión por abuso sexual infantil y corrupción de menores, la Iglesia argentina ya acumula desde 2002 hasta la actualidad 66 acusaciones por el mismo delito. Esto confirma el promedio de cuatro sacerdotes denunciados por año.

Como los registros oficiales sobre la cuestión son inexistentes, los datos surgen de una detallada investigación realizada por la agencia de noticias Télam a mediados de 2017, más el relevamiento de distintas fuentes judiciales aportada por la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Sexual Eclesiástico de Argentina, que puso en evidencia cuatro nuevos casos en los últimos meses. Tampoco hay estadísticas oficiales sobre la cantidad de víctimas de depredación sexual ejercida por miembros del clero, aunque Carlos Lombardi, abogado de la red, aseguró a La Voz que “hay cientos de casos”.

La Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Sexual Eclesiástico, que se constituyó en 2014 para acompañar a víctimas de delitos sexuales cometidos por clérigos de la Iglesia Católica, es un espacio donde confluyen experiencias, testimonios y asistencia legal y psicológica para esas situaciones. En un reciente encuentro realizado en la ciudad Paraná, la organización concluyó que “existe una red muy grande compuesta por entregadores, abusadores, cómplices y encubridores, todos miembros de la Iglesia”.

La Justicia argentina condenó penalmente hasta el momento a nueve curas investigados por delitos sexuales, que afectaron a menores. El otro dato significativo es que la propia Iglesia investigó con sus normas canónicas ocho casos, pero sólo en tres procedió a la expulsión de los sacerdotes, mientras otros tres curas fueron declarados inocentes mediante los procedimientos propios de la institución religiosa.

Grassi, por ejemplo, podría dar misa y ejercer sus funciones como cualquier cura si quisiera, pese a tener sentencia firme de la Corte Suprema de Justicia. Aunque Francisco reconoció desde el inicio de su papado la complicidad de la Iglesia con los curas pedófilos y se muestra sensibilizado con el tema, en su país de origen las sanciones aplicadas en el ámbito eclesiástico sobre los casos denunciados no satisfacen a la sociedad.

El criterio que prevalece en la Iglesia hasta aquí es trasladar de ciudad o de país a los curas abusadores, mientras que la decisión de acudir a la Justicia ordinaria corre por cuenta de las propias víctimas o de sus familiares. “Es difícil cuantificar la cantidad de casos que jamás salen a la luz, por el miedo o pudor de las personas afectadas”, señala Lombardi.

En la lista de curas denunciados por abuso sexual, hay 15 que jamás fueron investigados. Dos de esos sacerdotes murieron antes de que la Justicia indagara sus acciones.

Entre los hechos relevados, hay situaciones de ribetes muy llamativos. Ese es el caso de Luigi Spinelli, consejero del Instituto Próvolo de Mendoza donde al menos 25 chicos sordomudos fueron sometidos sexualmente durante por lo menos una década. Del paradero de Spinelli, que también había sido denunciado en Verona (Italia), no se tuvieron novedades hasta mediados de 2017, cuando se supo que había fallecido en 2016 en coincidencia con la divulgación pública del escándalo. Sin embargo, persisten las dudas, porque su cuerpo nunca apareció.

Si se sigue la tradición de tomar como punto de referencia el escándalo del cura Julio César Grassi, condenado a 15 años de prisión por abuso sexual infantil y corrupción de menores, la Iglesia argentina ya acumula desde 2002 hasta la actualidad 66 acusaciones por el mismo delito. Esto confirma el promedio de cuatro sacerdotes denunciados por año.

Como los registros oficiales sobre la cuestión son inexistentes, los datos surgen de una detallada investigación realizada por la agencia de noticias Télam a mediados de 2017, más el relevamiento de distintas fuentes judiciales aportada por la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Sexual Eclesiástico de Argentina, que puso en evidencia cuatro nuevos casos en los últimos meses. Tampoco hay estadísticas oficiales sobre la cantidad de víctimas de depredación sexual ejercida por miembros del clero, aunque Carlos Lombardi, abogado de la red, aseguró a La Voz que “hay cientos de casos”.https://e17d0485ea299751fce24a97efbf3121.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

La Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Sexual Eclesiástico, que se constituyó en 2014 para acompañar a víctimas de delitos sexuales cometidos por clérigos de la Iglesia Católica, es un espacio donde confluyen experiencias, testimonios y asistencia legal y psicológica para esas situaciones. En un reciente encuentro realizado en la ciudad Paraná, la organización concluyó que “existe una red muy grande compuesta por entregadores, abusadores, cómplices y encubridores, todos miembros de la Iglesia”.

La Justicia argentina condenó penalmente hasta el momento a nueve curas investigados por delitos sexuales, que afectaron a menores. El otro dato significativo es que la propia Iglesia investigó con sus normas canónicas ocho casos, pero sólo en tres procedió a la expulsión de los sacerdotes, mientras otros tres curas fueron declarados inocentes mediante los procedimientos propios de la institución religiosa.

Grassi, por ejemplo, podría dar misa y ejercer sus funciones como cualquier cura si quisiera, pese a tener sentencia firme de la Corte Suprema de Justicia. Aunque Francisco reconoció desde el inicio de su papado la complicidad de la Iglesia con los curas pedófilos y se muestra sensibilizado con el tema, en su país de origen las sanciones aplicadas en el ámbito eclesiástico sobre los casos denunciados no satisfacen a la sociedad.https://e17d0485ea299751fce24a97efbf3121.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

El criterio que prevalece en la Iglesia hasta aquí es trasladar de ciudad o de país a los curas abusadores, mientras que la decisión de acudir a la Justicia ordinaria corre por cuenta de las propias víctimas o de sus familiares. “Es difícil cuantificar la cantidad de casos que jamás salen a la luz, por el miedo o pudor de las personas afectadas”, señala Lombardi.

En la lista de curas denunciados por abuso sexual, hay 15 que jamás fueron investigados. Dos de esos sacerdotes murieron antes de que la Justicia indagara sus acciones.

Entre los hechos relevados, hay situaciones de ribetes muy llamativos. Ese es el caso de Luigi Spinelli, consejero del Instituto Próvolo de Mendoza donde al menos 25 chicos sordomudos fueron sometidos sexualmente durante por lo menos una década. Del paradero de Spinelli, que también había sido denunciado en Verona (Italia), no se tuvieron novedades hasta mediados de 2017, cuando se supo que había fallecido en 2016 en coincidencia con la divulgación pública del escándalo. Sin embargo, persisten las dudas, porque su cuerpo nunca apareció.https://e17d0485ea299751fce24a97efbf3121.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Rubén Pardo, exsacerdote de Quilmes que tenía VIH, falleció en 2005 tras ser denunciado por la violación de un chico de 14 años en 2002. Aunque nunca fue juzgado, la Justicia condenó al obispado de esa ciudad por encubrimiento y lo obligó al pago de una indemnización. Otro cura que tenía VIH, Héctor Pared, fue condenado a 24 años de prisión en marzo de 2003 por el caso de un abuso sexual en Florencio Varela, pero murió en septiembre de ese mismo año.

A propósito del escándalo que afecta a la Iglesia de Estados Unidos, los registros extraoficiales de Argentina también muestran hechos que tienen conexión con lo que ocurre en aquel país. Uno de esos casos es el del cura Atilio Jesús Garay, que llegó a ser candidato a intendente de la localidad entrerriana de General Campos pese a estar acusado de violar en forma reiterada a una chica en la ciudad norteamericana de Los Ángeles, en 2004. Ese es uno de los hechos que está sin condena hasta el momento.

El otro hecho que conecta a la Iglesia argentina con los casos que conmocionan al clero estadounidense es el de Richard Suttle, denunciado en 2008 por delitos sexuales cometidos entre 1982 y 1983 en una escuela primaria de Prescott (Arizona). Ese sacerdote, cuyo caso tampoco recibió condena, fue trasladado en 2013 a Buenos Aires como integrante de misiones religiosas de las Naciones Unidas.

En Córdoba

La provincia de Córdoba tampoco es ajena a hechos de abuso sexual cometidos por sacerdotes católicos. A mediados de 1998, el cura de Berrotarán Walter Eduardo Avanzini fue mostrado in fraganti por el programa periodístico A decir verdad, que conducía el periodista Miguel Clariá en Teleocho, mientras pagaba para tener sexo con adolescentes en los baños de la plaza San Martín de la ciudad de Córdoba, nada menos que frente a la Catedral.

El asunto no fue investigado por la Justicia ni por la Iglesia y Avanzini, ya alejado del sacerdocio, consiguió empleo en el Ministerio de Educación de la Provincia. En 2016, aprobó en la Universidad Católica de Córdoba una maestría sobre Investigación Educativa, con una tesis titulada “Acoso entre pares. Desde la mirada de los actores educativos adultos”. La última referencia lo ubica desde febrero de 2017 como “asesor técnico pedagógico” en la Fundación Valorarte de Villa Dolores, orientada a la educación de nivel medio, según su perfil en una red social.

Otro caso autóctono es el de Carlos Richard Ibáñez Morino, acusado en la década de 1990 por abusar de al menos 10 niños y adolescentes en Bell Ville. Ibáñez Morino, oriundo de la ciudad de Caucete (San Juan) fue suspendido por el Arzobispado de Córdoba, pero continuó ejerciendo tareas sacerdotales en Paraguay, donde se recluyó en 1992. Incluso hay testigos que lo vieron en una zona reservada para sacerdotes durante la visita del papa Francisco a Asunción, según informó el Diario de Cuyo.

En la actualidad, se espera el cumplimiento de un proyecto de extradición aprobado por la Corte Suprema de Justicia de Paraguay para que el exsacerdote de Bell Ville pueda ser juzgado en suelo cordobés. Por este caso, los medios paraguayos proyectan un manto de sospecha sobre la jerarquía eclesiástica de ese país, a la que acusan de encubrir a Ibáñez Morino.

Luis Alberto Bergliaffa es otro sacerdote suspendido por el Arzobispado cordobés tras una investigación canónica que duró tres años, a raíz de una denuncia de abuso sexual contra una menor. Bergliaffa, que no fue expulsado de la Iglesia, se desempeñó hasta 2014 en la parroquia Nuestra Señora de Fátima del capitalino barrio Matienzo, y su caso nunca llegó hasta la Justicia ordinaria.

El año pasado, el Arzobispado desmintió a través de un comunicado que Bergliaffa hubiera sido trasladado a Río Negro, a raíz de informes periodísticos que daban cuenta de su presencia en una parroquia de esa provincia. El texto divulgado por las autoridades eclesiásticas aclara: “El presbítero Luis Bergliaffa tiene prohibido, por el término de 10 años, el ejercicio público del ministerio sacerdotal. Dicha pena puede ser prolongada o agravada, en el caso que no cumpla las determinaciones del decreto penal. Desde la misma Santa Sede, se ha recibido la indicación que, durante este tiempo, debe trabajar para obtener su sustento”.

Otro hecho que impactó en la Iglesia cordobesa fue el escándalo de pedofilia que tuvo como epicentro La Casa del Niño del Padre Aguilera de Unquillo. Los abusos sexuales contra niños que vivían en el hogar terminaron con condenas de la Justicia cordobesa. En tanto, el Gobierno de Córdoba, a través de la Secretaría de Niñez, Adolescencia y Familia (Senaf), dispuso dos intervenciones a la institución.

Por último, no puede omitirse el caso del actual obispo de Río Cuarto, Adolfo Uriona, que aunque fue sobreseído por la Justicia, carga sobre sus espaldas la denuncia por supuesto manoseo formulada por una joven cuando se desempeñaba en el obispado de Añatuya (Santiago del Estero), en 2006. Su caso no se encuadra en el compromiso de “tolerancia cero” del papa Francisco, que lo designó en su actual cargo en 2014.

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

In a single Pennsylvania parish, 5 priests accused of abuse

SHAVERTOWN (PA)
The Associated Press

August 24, 2018

By Michael Rubinkam

A lacerating grand jury report on sexual abuse by Catholic clergy in Pennsylvania is especially difficult reading for a church where five of the accused priests served as pastor.

For parishioners of St. Therese’s Church, outside Wilkes-Barre in northeastern Pennsylvania, the report dredged up painful memories of broken trust and provoked disgust at church leaders who kept abusive priests on the job. At least two instances took place at the church, according to the grand jury. St. Therese’s lost a pastor over sexual misconduct as recently as 2006.

Yet for all the heartbreak, the pews were full last weekend. And while it’s too early to tell whether the bombshell revelations will affect attendance or giving at St. Therese’s, a vibrant parish serving about 1,500 families, church members say they separate their faith from the evil acts of supposedly holy men.

“Do we know that our priests are men and that sometimes they do bad things? Yes, we do. Do we want them in our community anymore? No, definitely not,” longtime parishioner Kathie Kemmerer said after morning Mass this week. But “inasmuch as we’re upset about everything and we feel terrible for the victims, we’ll keep coming. We’ll keep coming because this is the place to get God’s grace.”

The grand jury found that some 300 predator priests sexually abused more than 1,000 children since the 1940s, abetted by bishops and other high-ranking church officials who orchestrated a cover-up to avoid public scandal and financial liability. The Pennsylvania report, along with recent sexual abuse allegations against the retired archbishop of Washington, ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, has plunged the Catholic Church into crisis more than 15 years after the clergy abuse scandal first broke in Boston.

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 has fallen over a cliff’

IRELAND
BBC News

August 24, 2018

Abuse survivor Marie Collins says she wants to hear a clear plan of action on dealing with clerical sex abuse from Pope Francis during his two-day visit to the Republic of Ireland.

Earlier this week, it was confirmed that he would meet some victims during his Irish visit.

She was speaking to Martin Bashir, the BBC’s Religion Editor, ahead of the first papal visit to the country in 40 years.

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 Pope Francis’ visit, some question the future of the Catholic Church in Ireland

IRELAND
Yahoo View

August 23, 2018

Length: 3:04

The past few weeks have been tumultuous for the Catholic Church in the wake of a devastating Pennsylvania grand jury report that detailed decades of child sex abuse at the hands of priests.

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

St. Louis Archdiocese Agrees To AG’s Investigation Of Sexual Abuse Accusations

ST. LOUIS (MO)
National Public Radio

August 24, 2018

By Vanessa Romo

Updated at 9:37 a.m. ET

The St. Louis Archdiocese is handing over its records to the state Attorney General’s office for an investigation into the Missouri church’s handling of sexual abuse accusations against clergy members.

Archbishop Robert Carlson made the announcement that he was voluntarily opening church files at a press conference on Thursday. Carlson said he made the invitation to Attorney General Josh Hawley in a letter, adding that he was prompted by “several letters” he had received urging greater transparency.

“Second,” he said, “we have nothing to hide.”

The move by Carlson follows the recent release of a Pennsylvania grand jury report detailing decades of alleged sexual abuse by more than 300 priests and cover-ups by high-ranking clergy leaders.

Carlson said Hawley will have “unfettered access” to the Archdiocese’s comprehensive files.

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

Erie Catholic Diocese Gets New Abuse Complaints

ERIE (PA)
Erie News Now

August 23, 2018

By Paul Wagner

Abuse Calls Continue to Come Into Erie Catholic Diocese

More calls about clergy sex abuse are coming into the Erie Catholic Diocese.

Since the Pennsylvania Attorney General grand jury report was released last week, the diocese has received 22 new complaints of sexual or physical abuse against minors, plus 5 new complaints alleging sexual abuse with adults.

The allegations are against 12 priests, 5 that are not included in the grand jury report, plus 8 lay people, all newly accused.

So the totals are 13 newly accused of abuse, 5 priests and 8 lay people.

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.

Nuns charged in Smyllum Park child abuse investigation

SCOTLAND
The Guardian

August 23, 2018

By Severin Carrell

Police examining claims of abuse over decades at Catholic home charge 12 people

Police in Scotland have arrested and charged nuns and a number of other former staff in an investigation into alleged child abuse at a Catholic children’s home.

The nuns are among 12 people who have been charged by detectives investigating detailed allegations of systematic physical and sexual abuse of children over many decades at Smyllum Park in Lanark.

Police Scotland said another four former staff at the Catholic institution would be reported to the Crown Office, Scotland’s prosecution service, later on Thursday.

The force would not release any further details about the identities of those charged or the offences they face, pending final decisions by prosecutors.

“Twelve people, 11 women and one man, ages ranging from 62 to 85 years, have been arrested and charged in connection with the non-recent abuse of children,” it said.

“All are subject of reports to [the] Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal. A further four individuals will be reported today. Inquiries are continuing, it would be inappropriate to comment further.”

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.

Victims say they felt hurt by fellow Catholics’ lack of compassion

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

August 23, 2018

By Zita Ballinger Fletcher

Sexual assault victims say they were hurt not only by individual priests, but by church officials and ordinary Catholics who treated them with intolerance and indifference.

Four survivors of sexual assaults by priests shared their stories with Catholic News Service. They are: Jim VanSickle and Mike McDonnell of Pennsylvania, Michael Norris of Houston and Judy Larson of Utah.

Many of them have not been to a Catholic church in years. They say the hardhearted attitudes of diocesan officials, staff and ordinary churchgoers and an atmosphere at their parishes allowed the abuse.

“Being raised Catholic, I remember — you don’t speak out against your own church,” said VanSickle. “Nobody’s going to listen to you.”

Most of them belonged to what they described as extremely traditional parishes and said they were attacked as vulnerable children. Their view of Catholicism changed when fellow believers showed them no compassion and acted to protect selfish interests.

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

Pennsylvania, despite all its findings of child sexual abuse, does way too little to help its victims

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

August 19, 2018

By John Baer

There’s an ugly irony in last week’s release of a statewide grand jury report on decades of sex abuse of children, and its cover-up, by Catholic clergy.

Turns out the state with the fullest examination of the globally troubling problem is also the state offering some of the nation’s weakest recourse for those who’ve been abused.

And you can guess why: Pennsylvania’s legislature.

It has long lagged in helping victims ease at least some suffering endured at the hands of evil.

Just one more category in which we trail most states. And, in this case, not by a little.

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.

Duluth Jury Rules in Favor of Sexual Abuse Survivor, Bishop Paul Sirba Withholds Information and Refuses to Testify

DULUTH (MN)
Anderson Advocates

August 23, 2018

Bishop Paul Sirba Refuses to Testify, Withholds Information Regarding Father William Graham from Jury

Tonight, a Duluth jury returned a verdict in favor of a courageous sexual abuse survivor, Doe 446, concluding the survivor did not intentionally inflict emotional distress upon Fr. William Graham after Doe 446 named Fr. Graham in a sexual abuse lawsuit in 2016.

The survivor requested that Bishop Sirba testify and Bishop Sirba refused, instead sending a lawyer to fight this request. Bishop Paul Sirba refused to testify to the details of the investigation and refused to provide Fr. Graham’s file to the court and the public. Further, the details surrounding Fr. Graham’s administrative leave from the Diocese of Duluth, and his non-existent contract, were withheld from the jury. Because Bp. Sirba refused to testify, and chose to conceal the situation from the jury, the jury found that Doe 446 interfered with his contract.

“Bishop Sirba’s refusal to testify and his continued concealment of Fr. Graham’s file and the subsequent investigation is outrageous and criminal,” said Mike Finnegan, one of the attorneys representing Doe 446. “This survivor had the courage to come forward and disclose his abuse to the diocese and he was once again re-victimized by Bishop Sirba, the Diocese and its lawyers. We will continue to fight for justice on behalf of Doe 446.”

After Doe 446 came forward and named Fr. Graham in a lawsuit, the Diocese of Duluth conducted an internal investigation into the abuse allegations. The information gathered during the investigation was presented to the Diocesan Review Board and Doe 446’s allegations were found credible.

On August 5, 2018, the Diocese of Duluth added Fr. Graham’s name to its list of priests with credible allegations of child sexual abuse.

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

Investigation finds 5 former priests named in grand jury report got state licenses as social workers or counselors

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WTAE

August 22, 2018

By Paul Van Osdol

At least five former priests named in the grand jury report worked as state-licensed counselors or social workers, Action News Investigates has learned.

In four of the five cases, no criminal charges had been filed, so state officials knew nothing about the child sex abuse allegations when the former priests applied for state licenses.

Arthur Merrell was a chaplain at the Allegheny County Jail and the Shuman Juvenile Detention Center until 1998, after the grand jury says he was accused of inappropriately touching a boy younger than 15 and having sexual relations with a mentally ill man.

The grand jury says Merrell admitted to the acts, then left the priesthood.

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.

Our view: Bishop’s open approach welcome

ERIE (PA)
GoErie

August 24, 2018

Editorial Board

Worn levers and a tired script were within easy reach of Catholic Diocese of Erie Bishop Lawrence Persico when protesters showed up Tuesday at the seat of Catholic power in Erie.

He could have retreated behind the walls of St. Mark Catholic Center and held the protesters at legalistic bay on a distant public sidewalk.

Persico exercised a greater power instead. He stepped into the chancery parking lot and invited the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests to hold their demonstration on church property.

“Down there, what good is it?” he asked, referring to the sidewalk, as detailed by reporter Ed Palattella.

The church deserves every ounce of opprobrium heaped upon it right now. Charged with a divine saving mission, it put the interests of the institution and the men who control it above the protection of children, whom some priests defiled.

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

Bishop Morlino, others charge ‘homosexual subculture’ for clergy abuse crisis

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

August 21, 2018

By Brian Roewe

A lax following of church teachings on sexuality in the wider culture a recurring theme

This article was updated at 5 p.m. Central Time to include comments from theologian Todd Salzman.

Accusations of sexual abuse and misconduct by former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick and within several U.S. seminaries have rematerialized past charges placing gay priests and homosexuality at the root of the church’s escalating crisis, positions backed in recent days by a handful of bishops.

“It is time to admit that there is a homosexual subculture within the hierarchy of the Catholic Church that is wreaking great devastation in the vineyard of the Lord,” wrote Bishop Robert Morlino in an Aug. 18 letter to Catholics in the Diocese of Madison, Wisconsin.

Morlino said the revelations around sexual abuse in recent weeks — from the Pennsylvania grand jury report, and allegations against McCarrick, which included grooming and sexually abusing seminarians and young adult priests — have left him tired: “of people being hurt … of the obfuscation of truth … of sin.”

He pointed to a deeper crisis of acceptance and diminishment of sin, saying “we have refused to call a sin a sin,” and urged the church to resist becoming a refuge for sin, including “deviant sexual — almost exclusively homosexual — acts by clerics.”

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.

Another scandal in the all-male priesthood

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Trib Live

August 23, 2018

By Roy Bourgeois

As a Catholic priest, I did the unspeakable. I called for the ordination of women in the church. The Vatican was swift in its response. The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith informed me that I was “causing grave scandal” in the church and that I had 30 days to recant my public support for the ordination of women or I would be expelled from the priesthood.

I told the Vatican that this was not possible. Believing that women and men are created of equal worth and dignity and that both are called by an all-loving God to serve as priests, my conscience would not allow me to recant. In my response, I felt it was also important to make clear that when Catholics hear the word “scandal,” they think about the thousands of children who have been raped and abused by Catholic priests — not the ordination of women.

In 2010, the Vatican called the ordination of women as priests a crime comparable to that of the sexual abuse of children. Judging from its actions, however, it would appear that the Vatican views women’s ordination as a crime substantially more serious than child abuse. Among the thousands of priests who raped and sexually abused children, the vast majority were not expelled from the priesthood or excommunicated. Every woman, however, who has been ordained to the Catholic priesthood has been excommunicated by the Vatican.

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 Francis apologises to the world

AUSTRALIA
9News

August 21, 2018

By Mark Burrows

Pope Francis’ letter to the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics condemning child sex abuse has been described as all words no action by abuse survivors in Australia and overseas.

The Pontiff’s letter to the “People of God” said sex abuse was a “crime” and an “atrocity”.

He slammed the clerical cover-ups and called for an end to the “culture of death” in the Church.

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

Pa. Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal Leads Other States To Open Investigations

ST. LOUIS (MO)
OAN Newsroom

August 24, 2018

The grand jury’s horrific report on child abuse in Pennsylvania has led victims and officials across the nation to look into Catholic parishes in their states.

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley said his office is launching a “thorough and robust investigation” of potential clergy sex abuse in the archdiocese of Saint Louis.

This comes after Archbishop Robert Carlson sent a letter to Hawley, saying the church will open its records and allow a thorough impartial review of potential clergy abuse.

“The files that we are taking about are actually files of anyone who has been accused of sexual abuse and while we don’t know the protocols yet that the attorney general’s office will use, any files that they want to see will be available to them,” Carlson explained.

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.

Père Pierre Vignon : « Le cardinal Barbarin n’est plus en mesure de remplir son ministère »

FRANCE
La Croix

August 23, 2018

Recueilli par Gauthier Vaillant

Father Pierre Vignon: “Cardinal Barbarin is no longer able to fulfill his ministry”

Le père Pierre Vignon, prêtre du diocèse de Valence, explique les raisons qui l’ont décidé à rédiger une pétition demandant la démission de l’archevêque de Lyon.

La Croix : Pourquoi pensez-vous que le cardinal Barbarin doit remettre sa démission ?

Père Pierre Vignon : Le cardinal Barbarin est tellement marqué par cette affaire qu’on ne parle plus d’affaire Preynat, mais d’affaire Barbarin. Il a présenté des excuses, mais il ne suffit pas de dire « c’est ma faute ». Car quoi qu’il dise maintenant, quel que soit le sujet sur lequel il s’exprime, c’est toujours l’ombre de cette affaire qui prédomine. On n’écoute plus ce qu’il dit. Il n’est donc plus en mesure de remplir son ministère.

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 should confess all its sins on sexual abuse

TORONTO (CANADA)
The Toronto Star

August 16, 2018

Editorial Board

The Pennsylvania grand jury report into the sexual abuse of children by Roman Catholic priests is unbearable to read.

One priest is accused of raping a 7-year-old girl in the hospital after she had her tonsils removed; another confessed to raping 15 boys as young as 7; a third bound and whipped his victim with leather straps; a fourth forced a 9-year-old boy to give him oral sex and then rinsed his mouth out with holy water to purify him; five sisters in the same family were sexually assaulted.

These monstrous acts, and many more, were committed by some 300 priests against at least 1,000 children in six Pennsylvania dioceses. The real number of abused children, the grand jury added, might be in the thousands.

The crimes were covered up for decades by church authorities, including Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the former bishop of Pittsburg, according to the grand jury report. He’s the third cardinal to be disgraced by sex abuse scandals in the last several months, including Cardinal George Pell, one of the Vatican’s highest officials, ordered to stand trial in Australia on several charges of sexual abuse.

Sex abuse scandals have been rocking the Catholic Church worldwide for decades. In most countries, including Canada, abuse has been uncovered through court proceedings, public inquiries or media investigations. The information has been pried from a church that has placed its reputation above the trauma of helpless victims. This self-serving attitude needs to change.

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.

Dear Roman Catholic Church: Stop saying childhood sexual abuse within your ranks is in the past

TOWN AND COUNTRY (MO)
Gorovsky Law

August 14, 2018

By Nicole Gorovsky

Dear Roman Catholic Church – Please stop saying that childhood sexual abuse in your ranks is in the past…

Today a Grand Jury in Pennsylvania released a report showing over 300 predator priests in just that state and detailing that there are over 1,000 victims. From my work as a lawyer for childhood sexual abuse victims who have sued priests and the roman catholic church in Missouri, I know that if those are the cases that the church are willing to admit as “credibly accused,” there are likely many more than that.

More importantly, people need to know that the abuse scandal in the church is not a story of the past. It is not something from which the church has learned and improved. The scandal is not anywhere near over.

CNN quoted a Pennsylvania Bishop today as stating that the grand jury report “will be a reminder of the grave failings that the church must acknowledge and for which it must seek forgiveness.” What a poignant statement. It sounds like he has empathy for the victims of the past. But, listen closer – his statement is really propaganda by the church to subtly convince people that child abuse within the church is a thing of the past. He talks about it in the past tense…it will be a reminder of the grave failings… Notice he didn’t say “we must do better…” in the present tense. The Church has been doing this for years – with each new child who comes forward they say – “that was in the past, we’re better now.” This has been a repeated mantra for many years now and it’s time to notice.

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.

‘A Get Out of Jail Free Card.’ Why Church Abuse Survivors Want to Abolish the Statute of Limitations After Pennsylvania Report

UNITED STATES
TIME

August 15, 2018

By Gina Martinez

A Pennsylvania grand jury’s report alleging decades of horrific child sexual abuse by Catholic priests is casting new light on the state’s statute of limitation law – which the grand jury and state officials says is stopping them from filing criminal charges.

The law also means few, if any, of the 1,000 people who say they suffered abuse at the hands of 300 Roman Catholic priests will be able to sue for civil damages.

“We ask the Pennsylvania legislature to stop shielding child sexual predators behind the criminal statute of limitations,” the grand jury said in its report.

In response to the shocking allegations, state Rep. Mark Rozzi, who was abused by a Catholic priest when he was a child, announced plans to introduce a bill that would eliminate the criminal statute of limitations. He also wants to create a two-year opening that would allow accusers to file civil claims against the church.

Currently, the statute of limitations law allows victims of child sex abuse to come forward with criminal allegations until they are 50 years old. Victims can file civil claims until they are age 30. Most of the allegations in the grand jury report go back decades; many of the victims are in their 60s and 70s – meaning they are years past the time when criminal charges can be filed.

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.

Missouri to investigate potential sexual abuse in Catholic church

ST. LOUIS (MO)
The Guardian

August 23, 2018

Inquiry initially covers archdiocese of St Louis, but officials have asked bishops of the four other dioceses to cooperate

Missouri is launching an investigation of potential sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic archdiocese of St Louis, the state attorney general, Josh Hawley, said on Thursday.

The announcement follows the bombshell report in Pennsylvania confirming even more widespread sexual abuse by priests across the state than had been previously revealed. Hawley said his office does not have the power to force institutions to cooperate with criminal investigations but was able to launch the inquiry after the archdiocese agreed to help.

“They say they want to cooperate fully and I’m confident they will,” Hawley told reporters on a conference call.

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.

Dear Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley: This is Not the Investigation We asked For

JEFFERSON CITY (MO)
Gorovsky Law

August 24, 2018

Dear Attorney General Josh Hawley,

On Wednesday, August 22, 2018, I stood outside your office with survivors of childhood sexual abuse to ask you to organize an investigation into abuses within the Catholic Church in Missouri. We asked for an investigation like the one that occurred in Pennsylvania which revealed over 300 perpetrators and likely over 1,000 victims.

You responded that you did not have the power to do such an investigation. Your response was somewhat of a half-truth given that the Attorney General of the State of Missouri has the power to coordinate all kinds of law enforcement and prosecution efforts in the state. For example, you are currently running an advertisement on television claiming that you coordinated a state-wide audit on the backlog of untested rape kits in prosecutor’s offices in Missouri and are now coordinating an effort to get funding for this issue, and you are publicly pushing state prosecutors to be more aggressive on sexual assault cases. You can behave similarly here.

After telling the public that you were powerless in the childhood sexual abuse situation, on Thursday, August 23, 2018, Archbishop Robert Carlson sent you a letter and held a press conference to say that he would voluntarily provide you with documents from his Archdiocese. You accepted his offer.

Unfortunately, this is exactly backward. Allowing the accused wrongdoer to pick and choose what will be provided in an investigation of his wrongdoing is not an investigation at all. It is certainly not what I was asking for as I stood outside your office on Wednesday, and I do not believe it is what survivors of clergy abuse want either.

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.

‘Moral Obligation’: Illinois Attorney General To Meet With Dioceses On Alleged Abuse

CHICAGO (IL)
National Public Radio

August 24, 2018

By Colin Dwyer

Nearly two weeks after the release of a Pennsylvania grand jury’s investigation into clergy sexual abuse, the report’s ramifications on the Roman Catholic Church are being felt far beyond state lines.

Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan has announced that she will meet with the Archdiocese of Chicago and that she has contacted other dioceses in the state to discuss the Pennsylvania report, “which identifies at least seven priests with connections to Illinois.”

“The Catholic Church has a moral obligation to provide its parishioners and the public a complete and accurate accounting of all sexually inappropriate behavior involving priests in Illinois,” Madigan said in a statement released Thursday.

In a statement of its own, given to local media, the Chicago Archdiocese said it has “worked cooperatively” with county officials for years, and that it looks forward to “discussing our policies and procedures related to misconduct issues with [Madigan] and her office.

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.

NOWHERE TO HIDE: Catholic Church Sex Abuse: Missouri Launches Investigation Into Potential Crimes

ST. LOUIS (MO)
The Daily Beast

August 24, 2018

By Jamie Ross

After the devastating scale of abuse in Pennsylvania was revealed, other states want to know if it spread to their own Catholic establishments.

The scale of sexual abuse by priests in Pennsylvania—where more than 1,000 children were targeted over decades—has prompted shocked officials in other U.S. states to examine how far the cancer has spread.

Officials in Missouri announced Thursday that the state would launch an investigation into sex crimes within the local Catholic Church, saying the Archdiocese of St. Louis had offered to open its files to scrutiny.

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley came under pressure from survivors of sexual abuse in the state who protested outside his office earlier in the week after new allegations of abuse emerged.

Last week a couple reportedly sued the Springfield-Cape Girardeau Diocese alleging that Troy Casteel, its director of family ministry, sexually abused a woman on diocese property during marital counseling. The couple claims that the diocese was aware of the claim but gave Casteel “sanctuary.”

Casteel was known to spend time alone with the wife and go on trips with her, according to the lawsuit, but the diocese did not intervene. It’s claimed Casteel’s actions culminated in abusing the woman.

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.

We have to have deeper reforms in the church

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

August 23, 2018

By Thomas Gumbleton

I thought I might start our reflection today by finding out something which I think is quite special and noteworthy. In the second lesson, the passage from Paul’s letter to the church at Ephesus where he’s outlining various virtues for us to try to grow into and live according to. And at one point toward the end he says, “Sing and celebrate the Lord in your hearts giving thanks to God always.” Those few words “giving thanks to God,” sometimes is translated as “always be thankful.” That’s what Paul is telling us: always be thankful.

When you look at the original language, it’s even more dramatic, it seems to me, because the what the words are: be eucharists, estotes eucharistountes. Eucharist means thanksgiving, so Paul is saying to let your whole being, every part of you give thanks to God. Why? Because everything we have and are and will be is a gift from God so our whole being should react in total thanksgiving. Every moment, every second of our life should be praise and thanks to God because without God we don’t exist, we’re nothing, never would be, never will be.

God has loved us into being so we need to be eucharists, always thanking God. That, of course, becomes even more clear — the reason why we should thank God in the Gospel lesson where Jesus talks to us about giving his very self as our food and drink: “I am the living bread that comes down from heaven. Whoever eats this bread, drinks my blood will live forever.” Those are very important words today that we need to remember and try to grow in that spirit of thankfulness in our prayers every day — every moment, in a sense, and if we can every day.

But this Sunday, this weekend, it may be somewhat difficult to be thinking about thanking God because of the tragedy that has been exposed about our church during this past week. Archbishop [Allen] Vigneron wrote a long letter to all the priests and another one to the people of the diocese asking us to speak about this. First of all to, I guess, reassure everybody in spite of all the terrible things. If you read any part of that report from the grand jury in Pennsylvania, you know it’s just a sordid, ugly story.

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

New cardinal: Abuse victims should be ‘ashamed’ to speak due to their own failings

MEXICO
LifeSiteNews

August 21, 2018

By Doug Mainwaring

Reacting to the recent avalanche of reports of clerical sexual abuse around the world, a newly minted Mexican Cardinal has suggested that victims who accuse priests should be “ashamed” because they too have skeletons in their own closets.

Those who “accuse men of the Church should [be careful] because they have long tails that are easily stepped on,” said Cardinal Sergio Obeso Rivera according to a report in Crux.

“I’m here happy to talk about nice things, not about problematic things, it’s an accusation that is made, and in some cases it’s true,” said Obeso Rivera.

The cardinal’s remarks to journalists came after the release of a sweeping, two-year-long Pennsylvania Grand Jury investigation into sexual abuse by Catholic priests. That report has sent shockwaves around the globe.

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

South Florida Priest Murdered in Cuba Outed as Part of Pennsylvania Child Porn Ring

MIAMI (FL)
The Miami New Times

August 16, 2018

By Jerry Iannelli

The utterly bizarre and horrid tale of Pennsylvania-turned-Florida-turned-Cuban priest George Zirwas has taken an even darker turn this week. More than 15 years ago, New Times published a meticulously reported feature delving into Zirwas’ 2001 murder in Havana, where he was injected in the neck with an overdose of muscle relaxant. The story noted that some people claimed he was involved in a child pornography ring and that boys had accused him of molestation. But in 2003, when the story was published, Zirwas’ defenders denied the allegations.

But now, an explosive Pennsylvania grand jury report into rampant rape and pedophilia inside that state’s Catholic churches has confirmed the rumors: The report, released earlier this week, outlines how Zirwas and a group of other Pennsylvania priests “used whips, violence, and sadism in raping their victims” and routinely filmed and photographed child pornography with boys on church property.

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 Diocese of Kansas City – St. Joseph says it will work with AG Hawley on requests [video]

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KCTV5

August 23, 2018

By Nick Sloan

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley said his office is investigating the Archdiocese of St. Louis concerning allegations of abuse by clergy members.

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.

David Zubik, former Green Bay bishop, under fire over Pennsylvania abuse cases

GREEN BAY (WI)
Green Bay Press-Gazette

August 23, 2018

By Paul Srubas

David Zubik, the former bishop of the Green Bay Catholic Diocese, has found himself at center stage this week in a three-decades-old scandal about priest sexual abuse in his current diocese in Pittsburgh.

Zubik has been leader of the Pittsburgh diocese since 2007. It is one of several named by a Pennsylvania grand jury as being part of a statewide scandal involving more than 300 predator priests who left more than 1,000 young victims over the last several decades.

While nearly all the abuse cases referenced in the grand jury’s report predate Zubik’s term as bishop, he was administrative secretary to the bishop and director of clergy personnel through part of the period and held other important administrative functions.

The grand jury report indicates Zubik was probably aware of at least some of the steps the diocese took to keep adverse publicity to a minimum during the years the abuses came to light, including reassigning suspected abusers to other parishes or dioceses and reaching settlements with victims that included confidentiality agreements.

Many of the abuses described in the grand jury report were addressed in the 1980 and early 1990s, when Cardinal Anthony Bevilacqua and, later, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, led the Pittsburgh diocese, while Zubik had administrative positions.

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.

Why Catholic priests become predators and why can’t the truth be told

IRELAND
Irish Central

August 23, 2018

By John Spain

Priestly celibacy is an unnatural and impossible demand dreamed up by the church centuries after Christ died.

This coming weekend the Pope will visit Ireland and he can be sure of a warm Irish welcome. It’s what we do for all our visitors here, despite any misgivings we might have.

But there is no escaping the fact that this visit by Pope Francis comes under a very dark cloud indeed. It’s not just the extent of the latest horror story of sex abuse in the Catholic Church, this time from Pennsylvania where a grand jury report has identified 300 priests who abused at least 1,000 victims in six dioceses there (and probably thousands more) over the last 70 years.

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

US priest speaks up for Church’s gay ‘parish pariahs’

VATICAN CITY
AFP

August 23, 2018

By Catherine Marciano

US Jesuit priest James Martin speaks at the World Meeting of Families in Dublin on August 23, 2018

Gay people in the Catholic Church are sometimes “treated like dirt”, according to a priest invited by the Vatican to address a conference on families in Dublin on Thursday ahead of a visit by Pope Francis.

US Jesuit priest James Martin preaches openness towards gay Roman Catholics — in the face of some traditionalists who have tried to shut him down.

He spoke at the 2018 World Meeting of Families (WMOF) in Dublin, a global Catholic gathering that takes place every three years, which opened on Tuesday.

“The inclusion of a talk called ‘Showing Respect and Welcome in Our Parishes to LGBT Catholics and their Families’ is a huge step forward,” Martin told AFP.

“It is a sign to all Catholics that the Vatican considers LGBT Catholics part of the Church,” said the author of a bestselling book which reaches out to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Christians.

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.

Asia Argento Accuser Breaks Silence and Confronts ‘Stigma’ of Being a Male Survivor

UNITED STATES
Brit + Co

August 23, 2018

By Elizabeth King

Actress Asia Argento was one of the first women to accuse movie mogul, Harvey Weinstein of sexual violence last year, becoming a leading voice of the #MeToo movement. Now, Argento stands accused of sexual assault, which the actress-director denies, and of allegedly covering up the assault by paying off the accuser. The alleged victim is 22-year-old Jimmy Bennett, an actor who was a teenager at the time of the alleged assault. A few days after the story broke in the New York Times, Bennett has spoken out.

The New York Times story about the alleged assault reveals that Argento is accused of sexually assaulting Bennett five years ago when Bennett was 17 years old. Argento also reportedly paid Bennett $380,000 in a legal settlement last year. Bennett posted a statement to his Instagram account on Wednesday, addressing what happened to him and the stigma of surviving sexual abuse as a man.

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.

Ohio State’s culture of cover-up helped save Urban Meyer’s job

COLUMBUS (OH)
Yahoo Sports

August 23, 2018

By Dan Wetzel

On the morning of Aug. 1, a bombshell story broke suggesting that Urban Meyer had lied about not knowing of a 2015 domestic abuse allegation against former Ohio State assistant coach Zach Smith.

Minutes later, Meyer met with football staffer Brian Voltolini. Their first inclination, per the school’s investigation, was to figure out how to delete text messages from Meyer’s phone.

In other words, cover things up.

“Specifically,” the report reads, “how to adjust the settings on Meyer’s phone so that text messages older than one year would be deleted.”

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 survivor fears Church ‘sold’ his baby sister to a family in America

UNITED KINGDOM
SKY News

August 22, 2018

By David Blevins

A son speaks out about his mother’s detention by the Catholic Church and his fears his sister could be dead or have been sold.

Her only crime was becoming pregnant “out of wedlock”.

Delia Mulryan spent 30 years of her life locked up in a Magdalene Laundry.

The Catholic Church had secured lucrative government laundry contracts and detained thousands of women to do the work.

Peter Mulryan says his mother and the other women, immortalised in the film The Magdalene Sisters, were forced into slave labour.

“The poor mothers would be slaving from seven o’clock in the morning until seven o’clock in the evening.

“They couldn’t even talk to one another, communicate, laugh or joke. It was so sad an environment to be in,” he said.

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

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley launches investigation into clergy sex crimes

JEFFERSON CITY (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

August 24, 2018

By Jack Suntrup and Nassim Benchaabane

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley said Thursday that he would launch an investigation into sex crimes within the Roman Catholic Church, adding that the Archdiocese of St. Louis had offered to open its files to his office.

At a news conference shortly after Hawley’s announcement, St. Louis Archbishop Robert Carlson promised Hawley’s office would have “unfettered” access to archdiocese records.

“Anything that we have we will turn over,” Carlson said.

Hawley’s announcement came after survivors of clergy sexual abuse and their advocates protested outside his St. Louis office on Wednesday demanding that he launch a statewide investigation. It also came a week after the release of grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania that uncovered the widespread abuse of more than 1,000 children by more than 300 priests over a period of 70 years.

Hawley, a Republican who is running for U.S. Senate this year, said on Thursday that while prosecuting and subpoena authority rested with local law enforcement, his office would still investigate alleged crimes, publish a public report and refer credible cases to local prosecutors.

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.

‘Credible accusations’ led to removal of priest, archdiocese says

OKLAHOMA CITY (OK)
NewsOK

August 23, 2018

By Carla Hinton and Randy Ellis

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Oklahoma City said Wednesday that it removed a priest from duty in 2002 after receiving what it determined as “credible accusations of abuse” against him.

Benjamin Zoeller was removed as a priest in 2002 and Pope Benedict XVI formally stripped him of his priestly rights and authority in 2011 through a process called laicization, an archdiocese spokeswoman said Wednesday.

The archdiocese released a statement about Zoeller on Wednesday in response to an Aug. 17 letter from a 49-year-old former Oklahoman who said he was 16 and a member of the clergyman’s Oklahoma City parish when he was sexually abused by the then-priest in 1985.

Zoeller was never charged with sexual abuse related to the incident.

The alleged victim said he was prompted to write the letter after the recent release of a highly disturbing grand jury report alleging abuse of more than 1,000 children by hundreds of Catholic priests in Pennsylvania. The man, who now lives in Minnesota, is not being identified because of The Oklahoman’s policy not to name victims of sex crimes.

The man said he was dismayed by the years-long cover-up of abuse that the Pennsylvania report shared in detail and he was prompted to reach out to the Oklahoma City archdiocese to see if anyone had ever reported Zoeller to law enforcement authorities.

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.

Local angles for the ongoing clergy abuse scandal

ST. PETERSBURG (FL)
Poynter

August 23, 2018

By Bill Mitchell

The latest developments in the clergy sexual abuse scandal tee up unusual opportunities for journalists — especially local journalists — to advance the story in significant ways.

The latest developments in the clergy sexual abuse scandal tee up unusual opportunities for journalists — especially local journalists — to advance the story in significant ways.

That’s especially true in two reporting categories: untold stories and watchdog journalism.

Both approaches can help you and your newsroom — whether broadcast, print, digital or all three — to move beyond the too-easy temptation to limit your coverage to showing up at weekend Masses for people-in-the-pew reaction stories.

Some of the ideas listed below have gone untold because, previously, they might have been considered too narrowly focused for a general, secular audience. But the evolution of the story has expanded its readership well beyond Catholics alone.

And Catholic bishops — answerable under Church law only to the Pope — are an ideal target for the sort of watchdog journalism that holds the powerful accountable.

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 Continues to Hide Abuse Perpetrators – Anti-Abuse Activist

MOSCOW
Sputnik News

August 22, 2018

Pope Francis has condemned sex abuse and clerical cover-ups in a letter to all Catholics. This comes after a grand jury in the US last week released a report revealing seven decades of abuse by over 300 priests against 1,000 minors in Pennsylvania.

Sputnik discussed this with David Clohessy, former executive director of SNAP — the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

Sputnik: What’s your take on the message shared by the pope recently? What impact can it have on this massive and rather disturbing issue?

David Clohessy: This is the latest of long series of papal apologies and papal pledges to be better and each time a pope comments on this continuing crisis he sounds a little bit more remorseful, a little bit more sincere, but at the end of the day nothing changes, he refuses to take tangible, common sense steps that will expose predators, protect kids and stop this horror.

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.

Hawley to investigate priest sex abuse in St. Louis, asks other dioceses to cooperate

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Kansas City Star

August 23, 2018

By Judy L. Thomas

Update: The Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph says it will allow Missouri Attorney Josh Hawley to investigate priest sexual abuse locally.

Missouri Attorney General Josh Hawley said Thursday that his office is launching a “thorough and robust investigation” of potential clergy sex abuse in the Archdiocese of St. Louis, with full cooperation from church officials, and he encouraged other dioceses in the state to allow similar probes.

“Today, I have received a letter from the archbishop confirming that he and the archdiocese will open to my office their files and will allow us to conduct a thorough, impartial review of potential clergy abuse in the Archdiocese of St. Louis,” Hawley told reporters in an afternoon telephone news conference.

“So we intend to gather extensive evidence from the church, as well as from victims and their families and other persons who are not associated with the archdiocese. At the conclusion of this investigation, my office will issue a formal report setting out our findings. That report will also include any charging recommendations based on the evidence we discover in our investigation.”

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

Springfield Catholic diocese to move forward with inquiry into clergy abuse

SPRINGFIELD (MO)
Springfield News-Leader

August 23, 2018

By Will Schmitt

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau plans to launch an independent inquiry going back more than five decades in the wake of reported abuse by priests elsewhere in the U.S.

Leslie Eidson, director of communications for the Springfield-Cape Girardeau diocese, said the inquiry was being launched at the direction of Bishop Edward Rice, whom Pope Francis picked to lead local Catholics in April 2016.

A formal canonical decree asking for the independent examination of all personnel files as well as an open letter from Rice to congregants to be read at all Masses this weekend were in the works, Eidson said.

In the letter, Rice says the Springfield diocese is aware of nine inactive priests who have faced previously reported credible allegations of abusing a minor. He also says a pastor was recently placed on administrative leave for “sexual misconduct over the Internet” and says that the diocese is investing a recently reported lawsuit alleging sexual misconduct by a former Springfield diocese employee.

Earlier Thursday, Archbishop Robert Carlson of the St. Louis diocese announced he was cooperating with Attorney General Josh Hawley’s office in a voluntary review of clergy abuse.

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

Denes McIntosh: Catholic confessional recruiting ground for pedophile priests

GRASS VALLEY (CA)
The Union

August 21, 2018

By Denes McIntosh

Other Voices

As individuals, and as a culture, it wouldn’t hurt to go to confession.

In fact it could help. I’m not advocating that anyone necessarily do the traditional Catholic Church confession, although that is a sound option for some adults, but I am suggesting that confession is a good practice, however one might choose to engage in it.

But I want to illuminate how confession is used in the Catholic Church, secretly, to enable, and perpetuate its long-standing culture of pedophilia. We are all aware of the culture, some more than others. It’s been in the news enough the past few years to allow anyone to be informed who is interested in being informed. But what troubles me is that after all the headlines, the few arrests, the payoffs, the proclamations by the pope, the bishops and the other PR spokespersons for the Church, there has still not been any significant investigation into how such a culture could develop, to become, and remain, ensconced so profoundly in the Church.

It’s as if the public wishes to believe that it’s all cleaned up now, so it is all cleaned up now. But that’s like pretending that after the Major League Baseball steroid scandal, and all the attention paid to it, that there are no longer any more steroids being used in baseball. Actually, we just got tired of the issue.

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.

NY BISHOP JOHN BARRES SLAMMED FOR USING CHOIR BOY TO DEFEND HIMSELF

EAST NORTHPORT (NY)
Church Militant

August 20, 2018

By Stephen Wynne

Rockville Centre bishop implicated in PA grand jury report

Church officials in the diocese of Rockville Centre are circling the wagons in an attempt to defend their embattled local prelate, Bp. John Barres, who as head of the diocese of Allentown, Pennsylvania from 2009–17 did nothing to remove Msgr. Thomas J. Benestad from ministry after credible allegations were filed against him.

In 2011, a man reported that Msgr. Benestad had sexually abused him in the early 1980s, beginning when he was 9 years old.

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.

Wyoming police reopen case in sex abuse claims against former Kansas City priest

CHEYENNE (WY)
The Kansas City Star

August 23, 2018

By Judy L. Thomas

Police in Cheyenne, Wyo., have reopened an investigation involving a former Kansas City priest who went on to become a Wyoming bishop and was later accused of sexually abusing several boys.

In a news release issued this week, the Cheyenne Police Department said it was seeking information regarding sex abuse claims reported to the department as a result of an internal investigation underway by the Diocese of Cheyenne. That investigation is looking into what the diocese says are credible allegations of sexual abuse committed by former Bishop Joseph Hart.

Police did not name the subject of the investigation in their release — only calling him a “church official” — but it is clear that the person they are referring to is Hart. Now 86, Hart served as bishop or auxiliary bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 to 2001. He was a priest in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph from 1956 to 1976.

“With new information, the CPD has reopened an investigation in regards to allegations of abuse taking place in Cheyenne in the 1970s through the late 1990s by a local church official,” the police department said. “However, due to the time that has passed since those events, CPD investigators are seeking additional information from any victims or witnesses.”

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.

‘If it’s painful for you, think what it does to us’

ARDMORE (PA)
Main Line Times

August 23, 2018

By Henry Briggs

“If it’s painful for you, think what it does to us.”

I have heard some versions of that phrase for a number of years now whenever the subject of child rape comes up and not just from Catholics. While the Catholic Church is in the spotlight again this week, and has been on and off for decades, maybe even centuries, it isn’t alone.

A few years ago, my old high school sent a letter to alumni admitting to sexual abuse of students. It wasn’t alone. The Chicago School System had child abuse at its schools, as did LA and other cities. To a lesser or greater extent, so did many other schools, none of them Catholic: St. Paul’s, Choate-Rosemary Hall, Exeter, to name a few. Horace Mann in New York had 62 cases. “Me” and “mini-me,” compared to the Catholic Church, of course, but not in terms of the harm: the non-Catholic kid suffered just as much as the kid in CCD or PSR.

In most cases, people who love those institutions — from school alumni to lay board members — share the “if it is painful for you, think what it is to us” sentiment with outsiders. And then continue with their lives as though nothing had happened.

Child sexual abuse is bad; knowing about it and doing nothing to stop it is horrific.

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

Former priest at church in Kent accused

GREENSBURG (IN)
The Indiana Gazette

August 23, 2018

By Patrick Cloonan

The pastor of several Fayette County churches has been relieved of his ministry duties by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Greensburg, pending an investigation of charges dating to a period shortly after his tenure at a church in Indiana County.

“Earlier this week, the Diocese received a credible allegation of sexual abuse of a minor against Msgr. Michael W. Matusak dating back almost 20 years,” the diocese stated late Wednesday afternoon.

The allegation apparently covers an event that happened after then-Father Matusak left Church of the Good Shepherd in Kent, where he was known as “Father Mike” and was its first pastor from 1989 to 1997.

The diocese also reported that the matter “is now in the hands of law enforcement” in Westmoreland County, where Matusak was serving after his tenure in Kent.

“This is the first and only allegation the diocese has ever received against Msgr. Matusak,” the diocese said. “A credible allegation does not mean it has been substantiated or proven. This announcement in no way implies Msgr. Matusak is guilty.”

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 to Visit Ireland, Where Scars of Sex Abuse Are ‘Worse Than the I.R.A.’

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

August 23, 2018

By Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura

Gortahork, Ireland – If any place illustrates the depth and depravity of child sexual abuse in the Roman Catholic Church — and why the Irish are so angry about it — it is this unlikely corner of the country, where among rolling hills of wild heather, castles and bucolic fishing villages, predatory priests terrorized children with impunity for decades.

County Donegal, which overlooks the Atlantic in northwestern Ireland, has fewer than 160,000 residents, but it may have the worst record of clerical abuse in the country. According to a watchdog group that monitors the Catholic Church in Ireland, 14 priests have been accused in recent years, four of whom were convicted. They include the Rev. Eugene Greene, one of the nation’s most notorious pedophile priests, who served nine years in prison for raping and molesting 26 boys between 1965 and 1982, though the real figure may be far higher.

Yet this year, when Pope Francis needed someone to head a neighboring diocese, he chose Bishop Philip Boyce, who had been heavily criticized for refusing to defrock Father Greene when the priest was under his management in the late 1990s.

As Francis prepares for a visit to Ireland this weekend — the first by a pope since John Paul II in 1979 — the painful specter of such abuses hangs over his trip, as well as the church’s long history of protecting pedophile priests. It is cases like this one that many faithful say make it incumbent on Francis to give them not just words, but action.

*
Residents said Francis’ appointment of Bishop Boyce demonstrated that the church’s record of shuffling along abusers and those who protected them remained unbroken.

Bishop Boyce “was keen to protect the family of the convicted priest from further trauma by not initiating laicization,” the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church found in a 2011 review.

A religious mural near Meenlaragh. As Pope Francis prepares to visit Ireland this weekend, the country’s painful history of clerical sexual abuse hangs over his trip.CreditPaulo Nunes dos Santos for The New York Times
For those in Donegal, Bishop Boyce’s appointment was salt in the wounds. Francis chose him to replace John McAreavey, who resigned as bishop of Dromore after coming under fire for officiating at the funeral of a priest he knew to be a pedophile. It is unclear whether Bishop McAreavey was disciplined by the church.

Bishop Boyce did not respond to requests for comment.

Father Greene, now in his 90s, is thought to be living in a protected home run by an ecclesiastical order in Cork and enjoying a “happy retirement,” said John McAteer, the editor of the weekly Tirconaill Tribune. “I find it shocking,” he said.

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

August 23, 2018

Do we owe Sinéad O’Connor an apology for speaking the truth about church child abuse?

IRELAND
Irish Central

August 19, 2018

By Niall O’Dowd

Following the shocking revelations of 70 years of abuse of children by Pennsylvania priests, we owe Sinead O’Connor an apology.

Her declaration back in 1992 that the Catholic Church was rotten to its core and pedophile priests and their enablers were the real enemy was true.

It caused a massive worldwide reaction when she tore up a picture of the then Pope on Saturday Night Live in October 1992 and declared, “Fight the real enemy.”

We now know that the pedophile scandals were rampant during the era of Pope John Paul, who chose to turn a blind eye. O’Connor was calling out the right person.

Before Spotlight, before the worst of the American and Irish church scandals, O’Connor called it right and only got abuse in return.

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.

No grand jury to investigate church abuse in Kansas

WICHITA (KS)
KAKE

August 22, 2018

By Greg Miller

A Kansas City-area attorney says she’s disappointed that a grand jury won’t be ordered to investigate abuse in Catholic churches in Kansas.

Documents she released on Monday reveal hundreds of allegations of sexual abuse and called for an investigation into the Catholic church.

Kansas attorney general Derek Schmidt has responded, saying “I admire and encourage those victims of childhood sexual abuse who continue to choose to come forward, sometimes after many years have passed.” But he declined to start a grand jury investigation.

“There’s no way to determine the extent and the depth of the abuses that occurred,” said attorney Rebecca Randles. “There has to be some form of law enforcement, executive or police power for an investigation into this and it has to be on a broader scale.”

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.

Prominent Catholics see larger role for laity in church’s abuse response

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

August 23, 2018

By Dennis Sadowski

An independent lay-run board that would hold bishops accountable for their actions, a national day for Mass or prayers of reparation, and encouragement to parishioners to become more involved in their diocese are among steps suggested by prominent lay Catholics to right the U.S. church as it deals with a new clergy sexual abuse scandal.

Those contacted by Catholic News Service said that it was time for laypeople to boost their profile within the church and help begin to dismantle long-standing clericalism that has sought to preserve the reputation of offending clergy at the expense of the safety of children.

“Their credibility is gone and the trust of the faithful is gone,” Francesco Cesareo, chairman of the National Review Board, said of the U.S. bishops as they worked to develop steps to promote greater accountability on abuse.

The National Review Board, established by the bishops in 2002, oversees compliance by dioceses with the “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.” It has no role in oversight of bishops.

“The bishops have to put their trust in lay leadership and allow that lay leadership to develop the processes and oversight when these kinds of allegations occur, particularly holding bishops accountable,” Cesareo said.

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

The missing part of Pope Francis’ letter: Vatican III

MELBOURNE (AUSTRALIA)
La Croix

August 22, 2018

By Terry Laidler

The Church’s understanding of who ministers, how they minister and how it trains and supports a much broader range of people to minister needs a total revamp

The pope’s letter of 20 August 2018, condemning sexual abuse by clergy and its systematic cover-up begins to show real compassion for those abused and some of the bewilderment and exasperation even good people who supported the Church experienced as the crisis continued to unfold unaddressed:

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.

LCWR ‘ashamed of the church we love’ after abuse report

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Global Sisters Report

August 21, 2018

By Dan Stockman

The largest organization of women religious in the United States says the latest clergy sex abuse reports have left it “sickened and ashamed of the church we love, trusted, and have committed our lives to serve.”

The Leadership Conference of Women Religious, which represents about 80 percent of U.S. sisters, issued a statement Aug. 20 in response to a grand jury report from Pennsylvania that more than 300 priests sexually assaulted at least 1,000 victims over 70 years, most of which bishops covered up.

“We weep and grieve with all who over the decades have been victimized by sexual predators within the faith community and feel their pain as our own,” the LCWR statement reads. “We recognize that the damage done to many is irreparable.”

The grand jury report has created a national backlash to the abuse scandal, with many calling for major changes in the structure and culture of the church itself.

“We call upon the church leadership to implement plans immediately to support more fully the healing of all victims of clergy abuse, hold abusers accountable, and work to uncover and address the root causes of the sexual abuse crisis,” the statement says. “It is clear that more serious action needs to be taken to assure that the culture of secrecy and cover-up ends.”

Sr. Carol Zinn of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Philadelphia, executive director of LCWR, told Global Sisters Report the response to the statement so far has been gratitude.

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.

Protecting children in the church

VATICAN CITY
LA Croix

August 23, 2018

By Hans Zollner SJ

There is no doubt that the protection of children and youth against sexual violence remains a central problem in the Catholic Church and in society

The issue of sexual abuse of minors committed by clergy is constantly returning to the forefront of media attention. Recently, through various news outlets and publications worldwide, this focus has been particularly sustained for the Karadima case in Chile. It’s hard to say why that has resonated with people around the world more than other cases have.The offer of resignation by all Chilean bishops is a sign of huge importance, which is in line with a development that we have seen over the last years. There is no one turning point — the ship of the church is slowly moving in another direction. It is a huge effort, and change is on the way.For Pope Francis, calling a whole bishops’ conference to Rome has been new. John Paul II and Benedict XVI summoned cardinals and bishops to discuss clerical sexual abuse, but this is new for Francis. He takes the problem seriously.

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.

Survivor of Clergy Sex Abuse Pushes for Transparency in Catholic Church

BOSTON (MA)
NECN

August 20, 2018

By Abbey Niezgoda

A Boston clergy sex abuse survivor and her lawyer are reacting after reading the letter from Pope Francis condemning the abuse and cover-up in the Catholic church. The letter was released by the Vatican Monday following a grand jury report that found more than 1,000 clergy abuse victims in parishes across Pennsylvania.

Alexa MacPherson said she was sexually assaulted for six years as a child by a priest in Dorchester. She said the letter is not just too late, it is not enough.

“There wasn’t anything concrete in that letter,” MacPherson said. “It was just we need to move forward, this is the past, we don’t want this to happen again. What are you doing?”

“With shame and repentance, we acknowledge as an ecclesial community that we were not where we should have been, that we did not act in a timely manner, realizing the magnitude and the gravity of the damage done to so many lives. We showed no care for the little ones; we abandoned them,” the letter said in part.

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

Priest on Catholic church sex abuse cover-up: ‘I feel a strong sense of betrayal’

CINCINNATI (OH)
The Enquirer

August 23, 2018

By Kyle Schnippel

Please bear with me for this letter, but I feel this needs to be said and addressed. I have been struggling how to address this topic. Many of my brother priests across the country have addressed the topic homiletically, which I have yet to do. It is sometimes difficult to address the topic when I only preach at one parish on a weekend.

The long and short of it is: I am angry and betrayed at the news and events that have recently been revealed in both Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. I am angry at the shortsightedness of bishops. I am angry at those who knew something about Archbishop McCarrick and did or said nothing. I am even angrier at those who actively sought to bury the information that is now being revealed in the press and in witness statements, etc.

With McCarrick in particular, I feel a strong sense of betrayal. In 2002, he was part of the face of the reforms called for in the wake of the revelations out of Boston and the implementation of the Dallas Charter that called for zero tolerance in the face of credible allegations of abuse against a priest. And he had credible and substantiated cases against him! Cases that were apparently widely known, yet nothing came out against him and he continued to minister “in good standing” while so many priests who had far less credible evidence against them were removed from ministry.

(I want to be absolutely clear here: I 100 percent agree that there is no room in ministry for priests who have engaged in sexual abuse of another. Full stop. My issue is that it is very clear now that Archbishop McCarrick (formerly Cardinal McCarrick) had significant evidence against him, yet he continued in ministry. This is the source of my anger.)

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.

Cheyenne police seek help in church sex abuse investigation

CHEYENNE (WY)
Wyoming Tribune Eagle Via Wyoming News Exchange

August 22, 2018

By Katie Kull

The Cheyenne Police Department is asking for help in the investigation of a local church official accused of sexually abusing at least one boy when he worked there from the 1970s through the 1990s.

Cheyenne Police Department spokesman Officer Kevin Malatesta said detectives are hoping to talk to anyone who has information about the alleged abuse.

“Everybody’s testimony adds to the case, and so if we have other credible witnesses or victims to these crimes, that assists us in the prosecution of this,” Malatesta said.

The news release doesn’t specifically name the person the department is investigating, but it points to a recent announcement by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Cheyenne that it found new evidence that Bishop-Emeritus Joseph Hart had abused at least two young boys when he worked there from 1976-2001.

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.

CPD reopens sexual abuse investigation into Catholic Church

CHEYENNE (WY)
KGWN TV

August 22, 2018

By Kayla Dixon

The Cheyenne Police Department is seeking information regarding sex abuse claims that have been reported to the CPD through the Wyoming Catholic Diocese’s internal investigation.

With new information, the CPD has reopened an investigation in regards to allegations of abuse taking place in Cheyenne in the 1970’s through the late 1990’s by a local church official. However, due to the time that has passed since those events, CPD investigators are seeking additional information from any victims or witnesses.

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.

Oklahoma City Archdiocese investigating recent clergy abuse claim dating back to 1980s

OKLAHOMA CITY (OK)
KFOR

August 22, 2018

By Bill Miston

The Archdiocese of Oklahoma City is investigating a report of alleged abuse dating back more than three decades involving a former priest defrocked by the pope in 2011.

Archdiocese officials said Wednesday the Archbishop has ordered an independent investigation of former priest Ben Zoeller, who served in eight parishes in Oklahoma since the 1960s.

According to an archdiocese spokeswoman, a letter August 17 was sent by a former resident reporting abuse at the hands of Zoeller in 1985.

Archbishop Paul Coakley ordered a review of Zoeller’s file, which “found credible allegations of abuse” and ordered an independent investigation, the spokeswoman said.

Zoeller was removed as a priest from the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City in 2002 and defrocked in 2011.

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.

Children’s daycare church worker accused of sexual abuse released from jail

HOUSTON (TX)
Chron

August 22, 2018

By Fernando Ramirez

An Abilene church daycare worker accused of sexually abusing at least five different victims has been released from jail.

Five months after his arrest, 25-year-old Benjamin Roberts posted bail after his bond was reduced from $350,000 to $100,000, reports KTAB/KRBC.

Roberts was originally arrested by the Abilene Police Department in March after his residence was identified as a place where child pornography was being downloaded, according to court documents obtained by Abilene Reporter-News.

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.

Cupich: On abuse, focus should be victims rather than Church’s credibility

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Crux

August 23, 2018

By Elise Harris

Cardinal Blase Cupich of Chicago is one of the few American prelates making an appearance at this week’s World Meeting of Families in Dublin, after both Cardinals Donald Wuerl of Washington and Sean O’Malley of Boston withdrew due to abuse-related scandals.

Amid fears that after the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report the Church in the United States could face a new eruption of the abuse crisis, Cupich acknowledged that “a lot of damage has been done” to the faith of believers, but the primary focus should be the wellbeing of the victims and not the Church’s reputation.

Speaking to Crux, Cupich said his first concern “is not my credibility or the bishops’ credibility. My first concern is that it’s damaged the faith lives of people.”

“If it’s damaged our credibility, then we have to do something about it, but my major concern is that we need to focus our attention on the damage it does to people’s faith lives. Also, [the focus should be on] the hurt that’s revisited victims as a result of this. This is something we as Church leaders should be concerned about, not our own skin,” he said.

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

Missouri must investigate church sexual abuse statewide, advocacy group says

ST. LOUIS (MO)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

August 22, 2018

By Nassim Benchaabane

Survivors of clergy sexual abuse are demanding Missouri’s top prosecutor launch a statewide investigation into alleged sex crimes by Catholic priests.

The call comes on the heels of a grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania that uncovered the widespread abuse of more than 1,000 children by more than 300 priests. The report alleges that bishops and other leaders of the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania covered up child sexual abuse over a period of 70 years.

“We believe we have exactly the same issues as they do in Pennsylvania,” said Nicole Gorovsky, a former Missouri assistant attorney general, former federal prosecutor and private attorney who specializes in child sexual 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.

What these victims want the Pope to know

BETHLEHEM (PA)
CNN

August 23, 2018

By Mallory Simon and Erica Hill

Pope Francis is failing the thousands of victims of abusive priests in the US and around the world, survivors told CNN in emotional interviews.

A rare letter of apology and contrition from Francis, and his promised meeting with Irish victims of priestly abuse this weekend has done nothing to ease the ongoing pain of the five people we met in Pennsylvania, where a grand jury concluded earlier this month that hundreds of priests raped, molested and abused boys and girls for decades.

The Pope wrote that the church “abandoned” child victims while the perpetrators were protected. He called for fellow Catholics to fast and pray, but offered no new directions to stop any current or future abuse.

Those were hollow words for these four people abused by priests and a father who lost his son to drugs after his molestation.

This is what they want Francis to know:

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

Pressure to address sex abuse mounts ahead of Pope Francis’ visit to Ireland

IRELAND
CBS News

August 23, 2018

Pope Francis will arrive in Ireland this weekend for an international Catholic gathering amid intensifying scrutiny over the church’s handling of sexual abuse by priests. The scandal forced two U.S. cardinals to cancel their trips. The pope asked for prayers as he prepares for the first papal visit to Ireland in nearly 40 years and is expected to meet privately with sex abuse survivors.

CBS News’ Jonathan Vigliotti spoke with Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago, and Sister Liz Murphy, a leading Irish missionary, who hope Pope Francis can chart a way forward following last week’s Pennsylvania grand jury report, which Cupich called a “catalog of horrors.”

“There is a dysfunction in the family, and we have to address it,” Cupich said.

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

Scandale de pédophilie : quelles sanctions ?

FRANCE
ARTE Journal

August 23, 2018

By Fanny Chauvin

Pedophilia scandal: what sanctions?

Disponible du 23/08/2018 au 25/08/2038
Disponible en direct : oui
Découvrez l’offre VOD-DVD de la boutique ARTE

Un jury populaire de Pennsylvanie vient de dévoiler un rapport qui accuse 300 prêtres d’abus sexuels. Les faits, dissimulés par les autorités religieuses, se déroulent sur plus de 70 ans. 1000 victimes sont recensées.

Après l’affaire Barbarin en France et ce nouveau scandale aux Etats-Unis, l’Église catholique est de nouveau secouée par les affaires d’abus sexuels. Le Pape a exprimé sa “honte” et condamne “avec fermeté ces atrocités”. Un discours qui ne suffit pas pour les victimes. Mais que peuvent-elles attendre? L’Église catholique est-elle prête à changer ?

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.

Pa. Catholic church sex abuse report: Look up the churches where hundreds of accused priests worked and lived

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

August 23, 2018

By Nathaniel Lash and Jared Whalen

A state grand jury report released last week revealed decades of allegations of child sex abuse at the hands of more than 300 priests in six Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses.

The report presented accounts by victims and actions taken by church officials, and detailed the parish assignments of more than 250 of the accused clergy. This search tool catalogs the thousands of records detailing where they lived and worked in the dioceses, including some in the Philadelphia region.

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.

Sex Abuse to Cast Shadow Over Pope’s Ireland Visit

VATICAN CITY
The Wall Street Journal

August 23, 2018

By Francis X. Rocca

Pope Francis is under pressure to address a global crisis during weekend in a country scarred by mistreatment of minors

When Pope Francis lands in Ireland on Saturday, he will be visiting a once-devout Catholic society that is increasingly challenging the church’s authority—and where anger is running high over decades of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic priests.

The pope’s delicate two-day trip comes as clerical sexual abuse scandals unfold in other countries, including the U.S., and many Catholics are criticizing the pope’s response to the crisis as inadequate.

The topic is thus likely to dominate his visit, and his statements and gestures on the subject there will play out to a global audience.

This will be the first visit to Ireland by a pope in nearly 40 years. When John Paul II came in 1979, he drew 1.25 million people to an outdoor Mass in Dublin, more than a third of the country’s population at the time.

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.

Attorney for Victims Calls on Dayton to Convene Grand Jury to Investigate Alleged Cover-Ups by Bishops

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
KSTP

August 22, 2018

An attorney for victims of clergy sex abuse wants Gov. Mark Dayton to convene grand juries to investigate alleged cover-ups by Catholic bishops in Minnesota.

Attorney Jeff Anderson said Wednesday he was inspired by a grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania that showed about 300 priests in the state had molested more than 1,000 children.

But Minnesota’s statutes on grand juries say nothing about governors having the power to call grand juries. That power resides with county attorneys and district judges.

Through the declaration of bankruptcy by the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and by other diocese in the state, Anderson said a lot has been done to bring justice to 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.