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 17, 2018

Opinion: We Catholics need a new church culture and a remedial course in the virtues

DALLAS (TX)
Dallas News

August 17, 2018

By Joshua J. Whitfield

Writing demands courage, otherwise it’s advertising.

Sometimes a writer doesn’t choose the subject; sometimes it’s shoved in one’s face. Sometimes, one either writes at one’s own risk or makes oneself comfortable with cowardice. Sometimes there’s no choice. Sometimes morality is clear.

As a priest, I appreciate the privilege of writing beyond my normal ecclesial ken. It’s why I write, because I believe both people like me and people unlike me should each have a voice. It’s where my earthly hope originates these days, from the idea that we can still talk to one another and listen.

Which is why I must write about the sex abuse scandals of my church, of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick as well as the damning revelations out of Pennsylvania. It was the eccentric Frenchman, Paul Claudel, who said (echoing Jesus) that, “It is not the mote from one’s neighbor’s eye that that house of God can be built, but with the beams one takes out of one’s own.” If I am to write and if you are to read, and if that’s ever to be meaningful, then clearly I must speak up here. Otherwise, as I said, I should become a comfortable coward and write nothing else.

Hence I confess my dizzying anger, my morose, almost morbid sadness about the whole damn thing. Not tainted, in that rhetorical self-serving way, with me playing the victim: I’m sad for the genuine victims, the uncountable innocents we’ve slaughtered. I’m angry for an incompetent church, incompetent leadership, for unvetted evil. It’s like the fourth circle of hell in Dante’s Inferno: seeing so many tonsured heads, he asks an unsurprised Virgil, “Are all these clerics?” It’s an evil and an incompetence hard to exaggerate, which only the siloed and the foolish deny.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 should know that the Pope is on their side.” A MOST EGREGIOUS LIE!

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle

August 17, 2018

By Betty Clermont

After the release of the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report revealing decades of clerical sex abuse and cover up, yesterday a Vatican spokesman declared, “Victims should know that the Pope is on their side. Those who have suffered are his priority, and the Church wants to listen to them to root out this tragic horror that destroys the lives of the innocent.” REALLY???

– On at least five occasions, Pope Francis was personally informed about sexual predators and did nothing to stop them.

– Currently, officials in Chile are raiding Church offices for information on clerical sex abuse because Pope Francis refuses to provide that information.

– On July 24, Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati, head of the Church in Chile, was accused of covering up sexual abuse. He covered up clerical sex abuse for decades even before Pope Francis elevated him to cardinal in 2014. Ezzati remains in 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.

Amid turmoil, USA Gymnastics takes small steps forward

BOSTON (MA)
The Associated Press via The Miami Herald

August 17, 2018

By Will Graves

The pep talk was short and to the point, a reminder to reigning world gymnastics champion Morgan Hurd that all was not lost.

The 17-year-old had just fallen off the beam at the U.S. Classic last month, ending any serious chance she had at making a run at Simone Biles in the Olympic champion’s return to competition after a two-year break. In the moment, Hurd was frustrated.

And then Tom Forster came over. The newly appointed high-performance team coordinator for the embattled USA Gymnastics women’s elite program pulled Hurd aside and put things in perspective.

“He was like, ‘It’s OK because now is not your peak time anyways,'” Hurd said. “That was the exact mindset I had.”

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

Opinion: It’s time for #MeToo in the Catholic church

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Guardian

August 16, 2018

By David Clohessy

Predator priests will only face justice when those they abused find the courage to speak up

“It’s all about the bishops.” That’s the single most damning line from a new, 1,300-page report, released by the Pennsylvania supreme court on Tuesday, which found that 300 predator priests in the state had abused more than 1,000 children since 1947. It’s the latest scandal in the Catholic church’s continuing child abuse crisis.

The two-year investigation, conducted by Pennsylvania’s attorney general and a dozen grand jurors, involved hundreds of interviews, and examined half a million pages of church records. The inquiry is the biggest US government investigation into child abuse inside the Catholic church.

The incidents of abuse are shocking and deeply disturbing. They include a minor who was impregnated by a priest who paid for her to have an abortion, as well as a priest who confessed to the rape of at least 15 boys. In one instance, a priest abused five sisters in one family, including an 18-month-old girl.

The investigation concluded that bishops “followed a playbook for concealing the truth” and while “priests were raping little boys and girls, [bishops] hid it all. For decades.” Pennsylvania’s attorney general, Josh Shapiro, noted that in some cases, “the cover up stretched all the way up to the Vatican” and that bishops “protected their institution at all costs”. Most disturbingly, jurors believe that, even today, bishops are working hard to protect themselves.

The report says that while 1,000 victims were discovered in this investigation, there are likely thousands more who have yet to step forward.

And that’s where my hope lies.

For nearly 30 years, I have been intimately involved in battling for the rights of those abused by the clergy as children. Four of the six kids in our family were sexually violated by our parish priest, Father John Whiteley. I sued him and his bishop, unsuccessfully, and went on to work full time with Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, the world’s oldest and largest support group for victims.

The single most valuable truth I’ve learned is this: change only comes when victims speak out.

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

Father of son abused by clergy falls deeper into ‘dark hole’ in wake of new report [with audio]

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WHYY

August 15, 2018

By Kevin McCorry

For years, Arthur Baselice Jr. has been in a self-imposed exile.

He doesn’t like leaving his house. He avoids large family gatherings. He frequently bursts into tears.

It’s been that way for more than a decade.

But the source of his pain began much earlier.

In the mid-1990s, his son, Arthur III, was given drugs and sexually abused by clergy at Archbishop Ryan High School in Northeast Philadelphia. His abusers included the principal, a Franciscan friar named Charles Newman.

The ordeal went on for years, and his son was emotionally ravaged by the experience. Arthur III eventually became hooked on heroin and died of an overdose in 2006 — leaving behind a young son and a hole in his father’s heart.

Arthur III’s abuse was not detailed in the two grand jury reports about Philadelphia clergy that came out in 2005 and 2011, but the archdiocese found the allegations credible and removed Newman from public ministry.

WHYY spoke with Baselice Jr. about his story in 2015.

Three years later, little has changed.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 child protection chair Cardinal O’Malley cancels attendance WMoF

IRELAND
Irish Times

August 15, 2018

By Patsy McGarry

Second US Cardinal due in Dublin criticised in report for concealment of clergy abuse

Cardinal Seán O’Malley, chair of the Vatican’s Commission for the Protection of Minors has announced he will not be attending the World Meeting of Families (WMoF) in Dublin later this month.

Archbishop of Boston Cardinal O’Malley was scheduled to chair a discussion on Safeguarding Children and Vulnerable Adults at the WMoF on Friday August 24th. The panel includes Dublin abuse survivor Marie Collins, who resigned from the Commission for the Protection of Minors last year in protest at the frustration of its work by Vatican officials.

Also on the panel is Barbara Thorp former head of the Boston archdiocese’s child protection office, the UK’s Baroness Prof Sheila Hollins, a former member of the Commission for the Protection of Minors, and Prof Gabriel Dy-Liacco from the Philippines a member of the current Commission for the Protection of Minors.

In a short statement today, the Boston archdiocese said that “though previously scheduled to moderate a panel presentation and discussion at the World Meeting of Families, important matters pertaining to the pastoral care of St John’s Seminary in the Archdiocese of Boston and the seminarians enrolled in the formation program there require the Cardinal’s personal attention and presence”.

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

Forgotten Women: The conversation of murdered and missing native women is not one North America wants to have – but it must

NEW YORK (NY)
Independent

August 14, 2018

By Lucy Anna Gray

In the fifth in our series on the lives of ordinary women behind extraordinary stories, this month’s Forgotten Women examines how terrifyingly deep the international crisis of violence against indigenous women runs

It is North America’s dark, open secret that native women are far more likely to be raped, and far more likely to be murdered.

No justice. That is the constant cry from friends and families of victims as countless cases are left unresolved and ignored.

Marita Growing Thunder, a 19-year-old murdered and missing indigenous women (MMIW) activist from Montana, has experienced this lack of justice – five times.

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

There’s No End to the Cost of Abuse to the Catholic Church

UNITED STATES
Bloomberg

August 16, 2018

By Joe Nocera

One woman’s crisis of faith shows why dioceses across the U.S. are struggling.

My mother, Rosalie, grew up Irish Catholic in Providence, Rhode Island — with the emphasis on Catholic. She went to parochial grade school and Catholic high school. She never missed Sunday Mass. She said the rosary, memorized her catechism and prayed every night before bed. She was very devout.

Her own mother believed that if her children entered a religious order, God’s grace would shine down on her family. So after high school my mother dutifully entered the convent. It didn’t take her long to realize that she was ill-suited to being a nun, and that there were other ways to serve God. (When her parents drove her home from the convent, her mother told her to put her head down so the neighbors wouldn’t see her.)

My mother then got a job answering phones at the Providence Journal. There she found other religious-minded women, who became her lifelong friends. She met my father, who had recently left the monastery, at a meeting of something called the Third Order of St. Dominic, an organization for laypeople who were drawn to the teachings of the Dominican friars. For their honeymoon, my parents stayed at the Trapp Family Lodge 1 in Vermont. They went on to have nine children in 12 years. (Talk about God’s grace!) We Nocera kids also went to Catholic grade school, and on Sundays our family would march into St. Pius church two by two for the 10:15 Mass. The first two rows were unofficially reserved for us.

My father never stopped being devout. Late in his life, with his legs in bad shape, he still limped every day to the bus stop so he could get to a midday Mass downtown.

But Catholicism’s hold on my mother loosened over the years, the combination of reading Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique” and becoming a full-time college student at the age of 37, when my youngest brother was 11 months old. Still, she kept believing, even if she became more casual about practicing her religion.

Until, that is, 2002, when the Boston Globe published its extraordinary expose of the sexual abuse by priests, which had run rampant in the Boston archdiocese for decades. The horrendous tales of abuse, which wrecked the lives of so many people; the way predatory priests were quietly moved from parish to parish, where they found new victims; the complicity of Bernard Law, the archbishop, in covering it all up — my mother wasn’t just upset or disillusioned when she read the Globe’s stories. She felt utterly betrayed. One of the foundations of her life had been ripped away. How could she believe in anything a bishop or a priest said anymore? She couldn’t. From that point forward, she was done with Catholicism. Even worse, she was done with God.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 sex scandal: Abuse victims want a full reckoning

UNITED STATES
The Associated Press

August 16, 2018

By Denise Lavoie

Six Roman Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania joined the list this week of those around the U.S. that have been forced to face the ugly truth about child-molesting priests in their ranks.

But in dozens of other dioceses, there has been no reckoning, leading victims to wonder if the church will ever truly take responsibility or be held accountable.

“It happens everywhere, so it’s not really so much a question of where has it happened, but instead, where has word gotten out, where is information about it accessible?” said Terry McKiernan, founder of BishopAccountability.org, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit group that tracks clergy sexual abuse cases.

Since the crisis exploded in Boston in 2002, dioceses around the country have dealt with similar revelations of widespread sexual abuse, with many of them forced to come clean by aggressive plaintiffs’ attorneys, assertive prosecutors or relentless journalists.

In a few instances, namely in Tucson, Arizona, and Seattle, dioceses voluntarily named names.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Pennsylvania’s clergy sex abuse report won’t lead to a similar statewide investigation in Iowa

DES MOINES (IA)
Des Moines Register

August 16, 2018

By Shelby Fleig

Des Moines Bishop Richard Pates on Thursday called the child sex abuse by hundreds of Pennsylvania priests, detailed in a 900-page report made public this week, a “great moral failure.”

“There is no way that we can justify this, neither on the behalf of those who have committed the abuse among young people, nor the failure of our leadership in trying to protect them,” he said.

Pates joined the Vatican in publicly condemning the report’s findings of systematic abuse.

“Those acts were betrayals of trust that robbed survivors of their dignity and faith,” Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said in a statement Thursday.

The product of a two-year grand jury investigation ordered by Pennsylvania’s Attorney General, the report is one of the most comprehensive looks into such abuse by the Catholic church in history. In the report, at least 300 priests in six of the state’s eight dioceses are accused of abusing more than 1,000 children since the 1940s.

The report also says the Catholic Church engaged in a “systematic cover-up’’ by moving abusive priests from one parish to another.

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

‘Lay Your Sin at the Foot of Christ’: PA Catholic Priest Abuse Accuser Speaks Out

HARRISBURG (PA)
Fox News

August 15, 2018

As seen on The Story with Martha MacCallum

A man who said he suffered sexual abuse at the hands of a retired western Pennsylvania priest spoke out to Martha MacCallum.

The interview came a day after the state attorney general announced a grand jury report on over one thousand similar cases over 70 years.

James Vansickle said he was sexually “groomed” and “attacked” by Father David Poulson when he was a teenager.

Poulson was arrested in March and charged with abusing two boys. He has not entered a plea and waived his right to a preliminary hearing in May.

Vansickle said he had a “long relationship of friendship” and mentorship with Poulson, a priest from Oil City, Pa.

He said that the abuse culminated in a “sexual attack” in a hotel room when he was 16 and traveling with a scholastic chess team.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 expresses ‘shame and sorrow’ over abuse of 1,000 children by more than 300 priests in Pennsylvania

NEW YORK (NY)
Independent

August 16, 2018

By Chris Riotta

The Vatican has expressed ‘shame and sorrow’ after a report detailed decades of abuse in the Catholic Church

The Vatican has expressed “shame and sorrow” in its first response to a groundbreaking US Grand Jury report detailing decades of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

The report accuses over 300 “predator” priests throughout Pennsylvania of abusing nearly 1,000 children — and the Church of conducting a systematic cover-up. However, the actual number of total abuses in those dioceses since 1947 may be far higher than the reported figure. “We believe that the real number of children whose records were lost or who were afraid ever to come forward is in the thousands,” the grand jury noted in its lengthy report.

In the Vatican’s response, Pope Francis said he understands how “these crimes can shake the faith and spirit of believers,” vowing to “root out this tragic 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.

Vatican voices ‘shame and sorrow’ over damning sex abuse report

VATICAN CITY/BOSTON (MA)
Reuters

August 16, 2018

By Philip Pullella and Scott Malone

The Vatican expressed “shame and sorrow” on Thursday over revelations that Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania sexually abused about 1,000 people over seven decades, vowing to hold abusers and those who protected them accountable.

In a long statement that broke the Vatican’s silence over a damning U.S. grand jury report that has shaken the American Church, spokesman Greg Burke said the Holy See was taking the report “with great seriousness”.

He stressed the “need to comply” with civil law, including mandatory reporting of abuse against minors and said Pope Francis understands how “these crimes can shake the faith and spirit of believers” and that the pontiff wanted to “root out this tragic 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.

Clergy Sex Abuse in Pennsylvania: No Justice Is Intolerable

UNITED STATES
Verdict Justia

August 16, 2018

By Marci A. Hamilton

Attorney General Josh Shapiro issued an extraordinary grand jury report detailing sexual abuse going back 70 years in six Roman Catholic dioceses in the state of Pennsylvania. The report itself is nearly 900 pages while the responses appended add another 450 pages. Here it is. Pennsylvania now has the distinction of having every Catholic diocese subjected to a grand jury investigative report: Philadelphia, then Johnstown/Altoona, and now the rest of them. This monumental achievement fills in more details of arrogant and thoughtless bishops, craven pedophile priests, and a system that rewards the secrecy that endangers children. While we have seen this before, it’s still shocking to read just how impervious this institution has been to the suffering of little children.

It is curious that in the United States, the clergy sex abuse studies are only at the state level while other countries like Australia and Ireland have conducted studies sponsored by the national government. I posit that it is excessive timidity on the part of our elected representatives afraid of their shadows if they publicly criticize a religious organization—even for crimes against children. Thus, Members of Congress and the Presidents have been MIA when it comes to clergy sex abuse. They couldn’t wait to pass legislation to address the abuse of Olympic athletes, which happened this year not long after the Larry Nassar scandal broke, but there has yet to be a single hearing or even a speech by a national leader addressing let alone condemning the systemic sexual abuse of thousands of children across the United States.

The theme of the report buttresses what we have learned across the globe in the last 20 years: the Catholic hierarchy has callously covered up the criminal behavior of its in-house pedophile priests, endangering children in the process. And the facts are locked away in secret archives. We need to pause for a moment to reflect on the existence of these “secret archives.” When the bishops make the specious argument that they should not be liable for old claims because, as they love to say, “memories fade and witnesses disappear,” remember that their own files have the facts pristinely preserved—and utterly unavailable to the victims without the aid of the courts.

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

Lies and cover-ups: Catholic church in Pennsylvania had ‘playbook’ to keep priest abuse secret, FBI said

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 16, 2018

By Mike Argento

On July 17, 1990, Father Thomas Smith wrote to his bishop, Donald Trautman, thanking him for meeting with him and expressing appreciation for the bishop’s faith in him and his quest to return to the active ministry.

At the time, Smith, who had served at a number of churches in the Erie Diocese in northwestern Pennsylvania, was on leave of absence, his third such leave since being ordained as a Catholic priest in 1967.

His absences were termed, in diocese records, as “health leaves.”

The reality: Each of the leaves occurred after the church received reports that Smith had raped children, and the diocese responded by sending Smith to a church-run treatment facility, according to this week’s Pennsylvania grand jury report on the Catholic child sex scandal.

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

Vatican calls clergy sex abuse outlined in Pa. report ‘criminal and morally reprehensible’

HARRISBURG (PA)
Philly.com

August 16, 2018

By Liz Navratil and Angela Couloumbis

The Vatican on Thursday called “criminal and morally reprehensible” the conduct of priests detailed this week in a blistering grand jury report on clergy sex abuse in Pennsylvania.

“Those acts were betrayals of trust that robbed survivors of their dignity and their faith,” a papal spokesperson said in a statement released two days after the nearly 900-page report was made public. “The church must learn hard lessons from its past, and there should be accountability for both abusers and those who permitted abuse to occur.”

Released in multiple languages, the statement did not quote Pope Francis directly, but said he “understands well how much these crimes can shake the faith and the spirit of believers, and reiterates the call to make every effort to create a safe environment for minors and vulnerable adults in the church and in all of society. Victims should know that the pope is on their side.”

The statement represented the first public reaction to the report from Rome, and comes as the Catholic Church has reeled from a fresh wave of clergy sex-abuse cases worldwide and questions over Francis’ response to them.

Five Chilean bishops have stepped down, and more have offered to join them, amid a widening scandal there about clergy sex abuse. And last month, the pontiff accepted the resignation of Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, former archbishop of Washington, who remained a top church leader despite claims that he had preyed on priests or seminarians.

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

Bishops request Vatican investigation as abuse crisis grows

NEW YORK (NY)
The Associated Press

August 16, 2018

By David Crary

Responding to what it calls a “moral catastrophe,” the leading body of U.S. Catholic leaders said Thursday it would ask the Vatican to investigate the scandal involving a former cardinal who allegedly engaged in sexual misconduct with children and adult seminarians.

The request by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops for an investigation into the actions of Theodore McCarrick came as the Vatican expressed “shame and sorrow” over a grand jury investigation this week that found rampant sexual abuse of more than 1,000 children by about 300 priests is six Pennsylvania dioceses over a 70-year period. Vatican spokesman Greg Burke said that victims should know “the pope is on their side.”

The Pennsylvania scandal and the damaging allegations about McCarrick — one of the most influential Catholics in the country — have engulfed the church in scandal reminiscent of what happened in Boston with clergy sex abuse in the 2000s.

The conference president, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, said a full investigation is necessary “to prevent a recurrence, and so help to protect minors, seminarians, and others who are vulnerable in the future.”

Using formal church terminology for high-level Vatican investigations, DiNardo said he would travel to Rome and ask the Vatican to conduct an “apostolic visitation” to address the McCarrick case, working in concert with a group of predominantly lay experts.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 League On Predatory Priests: It’s Not Rape If The Child Isn’t Penetrated

UNITED STATES
Patheos

August 16, 2018

By Michael Stone

Catholic League president Bill Donohue defends predatory priests by claiming it’s not rape if the child isn’t penetrated.

In a bizarre, insensitive, and outrageous post, Bill Donohue, president of the very conservative Catholic League, attacked the recent grand jury report documenting the rape and sexual abuse of over a 1,000 children by hundreds of Catholic priests in Pennsylvania.

Donohue called the report released by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court an “obscene lie” while defending the Catholic Church and their deplorable record of covering up and enabling the rape and sexual abuse of children by predatory priests.

In his post titled “Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report Debunked,” Donohue desperately tries to minimize the findings of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, and in so doing Donohue reveals the profound poverty of both his intellect and his character.

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

MSNBC’s Stephanie Ruhle Breaks Down Listening To Survivor Of Priest’s Abuse

UNITED STATES
The Huffington Post

August 15, 2018

By Rebecca Shapiro

The Pennsylvania attorney general recently released a report on how the Catholic Church covered up decades of sexual abuse.

MSNBC host Stephanie Ruhle grew emotional as she and co-host Ali Velshi discussed the Pennsylvania grand jury report revealing that the Catholic church had covered up 301 priests’ sex abuse crimes against more than 1,000 children over decades.

Ruhle, who said two of her children attend Catholic school, was visibly upset while introducing a video report and held back tears as she listened to Shaun Dougherty, a survivor, share his story.

“These guys are just like single guys trying to score on the weekend ― with children,” Dougherty said of the abusers. “They visit Niagara Falls. They take them on camping trips. They take them to the beach. They bring them here to St. Patrick’s Cathedral, take them to a Broadway show.”

Ruhle broke down as she listened to Dougherty, and she ended the segment lamenting how once-trusted institutions were failing 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.

U.S. clergy sex abuse revelation fuels push to reform assault laws

BOSTON (MA)/NEW YORK (NY)
Reuters

August 15, 2018

By Scott Malone and Gabriella Borter

(Corrects figure in paragraph 20 to $600 million, not billion, in this August 15 story)

The latest revelation of widespread child sexual abuse by Roman Catholic clergy has given impetus to efforts by legislators, including a Pennsylvania lawmaker who has said he was raped by a priest as a child, to make it easier to prosecute such cases.

State Representative Mark Rozzi, 47, said he has fought for years to give people who say they were sexually assaulted as children more time to report such crimes to police in Pennsylvania, one of 14 U.S. states considering bills to extend the statute of limitations for such offenses.

“We’re going to get what the victims want,” Rozzi said in a telephone interview on Wednesday, a day after a grand jury found that 301 priests had sexually abused about 1,000 children over the past 70 years in Pennsylvania.

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

Priest named in Pennsylvania grand jury report was transferred to Lafayette after refusing counseling

LAFAYETTE (LA)
The Acadian Advocate

August 16, 2018

By Ben Myers

A former priest named this week in the sweeping Pennsylvania grand jury report on sexual abuse in Catholic Church was transferred to the Diocese of Lafayette in the 1990s.

Details concerning the transfer and other key points of Father John Bostwick’s tenure are sketchy, and the grand jury report leaves some to the imagination. Foremost among the unresolved questions are whether church officials knew about the allegations prior to the transfer.

What’s certain is that Bostwick transferred to Lafayette in 1992, and that he was removed in 1996 while serving as administrator at Assumption Blessed Virgin Mary Church in Franklin. Bostwick’s removal came just as sexual abuse allegations against him surfaced from the previous decade.

Three years before the transfer to Lafayette, Bishop Walter Sullivan of the Richmond, Virginia, diocese recommended that Bostwick receive psychological counseling. The recommendation came in a letter to the Diocese of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.

Bostwick was a member of the Diocese of Richmond but worked part time in Harrisburg from 1976 to 1990, according to the grand jury report. He refused to get counseling, but nonetheless received official permission to minister outside Richmond in 1990. He was transferred to Lafayette less than two years later.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Ignores This Child Sexual Abuse Law

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Huffington Post

August 16, 2018

By Angelina Chapin

The church has a history of handling child abuse allegations internally ― which protects priests and endangers children.

One of the most damning findings from the recent grand jury investigation into widespread child sex abuse in Pennsylvania Catholic Church dioceses is how leaders covered up the misconduct. “It’s like a playbook for concealing the truth,” wrote the grand jury in its report, outlining seven tactics that church officials followed, such as using euphemisms for rape, shuffling predatory priests among dioceses and conducting bogus internal investigations.

While advocates said the Pennsylvania report is the largest and most comprehensive of its kind for any one state, bombshell reports of child sex abuse in the Catholic Church are hardly new. From the time The Boston Globe published a 2002 exposé on clergy sexual abuse, there have been many high-profile incidents, including an Australian cardinal charged with child sex offenses in 2017 and more recently, an investigation into rampant sex abuse in Chile’s Catholic Church.

Experts told HuffPost that sexual abuse continues in large part because the church ignores laws enacted to protect kids from harm. In particular, they said clergy regularly violate mandatory reporting laws, which require certain groups to inform child protective services or the police about suspected child abuse. But changing the church’s deeply rooted culture of silence and trust into one that holds itself accountable to law enforcement is a big task.

Sherryll Kraizer, the founder and director of the Coalition for Children, said the Catholic Church protects “pedophile priests” instead of children. “It’s a culture that they are struggling with giving up,” she said. “The law is clear, and the criminality is clear, and the sin is clear.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 responds to Pennsylvania priest abuse scandal with ‘shame and sorrow’

VATICAN CITY
Fox News

August 16, 2018

By Elizabeth Zwirz

The Vatican responded Thursday to the report of hundreds of Pennsylvania priests abusing children, saying in a statement: “There are two words that can express the feelings faced with these horrible crimes: shame and sorrow.”

“The abuses described in the report are criminal and morally reprehensible,” the statement read. “Those acts were betrayals of trust that robbed survivors of their dignity and their faith.”

More than 1,000 children were allegedly abused by more than 300 “predator priests” and church officials were accused of covering up the allegations, a grand jury’s report released Tuesday said.

“The Church must learn hard lessons from its past, and there should be accountability for both abusers and those who permitted abuse to occur,” the Vatican 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.

Vatican in ‘shame and sorrow’ over abuses in Pennsylvania

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

August 16, 2018

By Frances D’Emilio

The Vatican expressed “shame and sorrow” Thursday over a scathing Pennsylvania grand jury report about clergy who raped and molested children in six dioceses in that state, calling the abuse “criminally and morally reprehensible” and says Pope Francis wants to eradicate “this tragic horror.”

In a written statement using uncharacteristically strong language for the Holy See even in matters like the long-running abuse scandals staining the U.S. church, Vatican spokesman Greg Burke sought to assure victims that “the pope is on their side.”

Pope Francis himself wasn’t quoted in the statement, and there was no mention of demands in the United States among some Roman Catholics for the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 helped former priest accused of abuse get Disney job: report

ORLANDO (FL)
Fox News

August 16, 2018

By Bradford Betz

An ex-priest from Pennsylvania, who sexually abused children, worked at Disney World for nearly 15 years, despite facing at least one allegation of sexually abusing a boy, a grand jury report revealed this week.

The report said the priest had applied for the Disney job with a positive reference from his Pennsylvania diocese.

Edward Ganster moved to the Orlando area to work at the Magic Kingdom after leaving the priesthood in 1990. An obituary in the Orlando Sentinel said Ganster died at age 71 in 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.

‘Really sick, abusive stories’: 40 Pennsylvania priests confessed their crimes; little was done afterward

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 16, 2018

By Candy Woodall

Decades before a grand jury report made them public, at least 40 Pennsylvania priests confessed to sex crimes against children, often without facing any legal or professional consequences.

Now many won’t ever have to face charges unless Pennsylvania changes state law to extend its statute of limitations. At present, child victims have until age 50 to pursue criminal charges, which requires proof beyond a reasonable doubt to convict, and age 30 — 12 years after they turn 18 — to file a civil suit, according to the Pennsylvania Coalition Against Rape, which advocates for sexual-assault victims.

“There’s no doubt victims out there deserve some type of compensation for what happened to them,” said state Rep. Mark Rozzi, a Democrat from Muhlenberg Township who was abused by a priest in the Allentown Diocese when he was a child. “There’s no doubt that the church has put the liability on the victims for way too long.”

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

Clergy sex-abuse report: These 9 accused priests had postings around Philly

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philly.com

August 15, 2018

By Jeremy Roebuck

Philadelphia wasn’t a focus of the landmark grand jury report that state Attorney General Josh Shapiro released Tuesday accusing hundreds of priests across Pennsylvania of sexual abuse involving more than 1,000 purported victims over decades. But it was inevitable there would be links to the state’s largest city and its only Roman Catholic archdiocese.

Some priests accused in the report had postings in the region during their careers. Some victims said they were abused here. And two towering figures in the history of the Philadelphia Archdiocese – the late Cardinal Anthony J. Bevilacqua and his former aide Bishop Edward Cullen — played significant leadership roles in two of the dioceses investigated, either before or after they came to Philadelphia.

Read on for a summary of links to the Philadelphia and South Jersey 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.

Catholic Church’s “secret archives” detail how abuse was concealed [Video]

HARRISBURG (PA)
CBS News

August 15, 2018

New details are emerging about how Catholic Church leaders protected priests accused of sex abuse for decades. Documents containing allegations and admissions of abuse were locked up. CBS News’ Nikki Battiste reports.

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

Abuse victim wants action, not apology from Catholic Church [Video]

HARRISBURG (PA)
FOX News

August 15, 2018

Tim Lennon, president of the board of directors of the Survivor Network of those Abused by Priests, wants to see grand juries in every state and every diocese investigate reports 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.

Catholic publications are inviting the faithful to contribute to cardinal’s defence of child sexual abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
The Newcastle Herald

August 17, 2018

By Joanne McCarthy

CARDINAL George Pell supporters are being asked to contribute to his legal fund as he prepares to defend charges of historical child sexual offences.

Advertisements in the Catholic Weekly and Annals Australasia, published by the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart as a “journal of Catholic culture”, have invited donations since at least March to “help pay Cardinal Pell’s legal fees”.

Donations are held in a trust account by Victorian legal firm Ferdinand Zito & Associates. Cardinal Pell has pleaded not guilty to sexual offences against children in the late 1990s when he was Archbishop of Melbourne. He is also accused of sexual offences in Ballarat in the 1970s when he was a priest

After Cardinal Pell was committed to stand trial in May the Catholic Weekly carried an article on its website saying: “When Cardinal Pell took leave from his role as Prefect of the Vatican Secretariat for the Economy to voluntarily return to Australia nearly 12 months ago to fight the charges, many supporters wanted to contribute to his legal costs.”

But not all Catholics are happy with the request.

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

Magistrate’s hope for Sydney private schoolboy who sexually assaulted girl at party

SYDNEY (AUSTRALIA)
The Sydney Morning Herald

August 16, 2018

By Angus Thompson

A children’s magistrate who sentenced a former private schoolboy over the rape of a 15-year-old girl at an eastern suburbs party has urged the teen to not let the crime “hold you back”.

The boy, who was 15 at the time of the sexual assault, has been sentenced to 20 months’ probation over the 2017 incident, which was filmed by a friend and widely distributed.

The boy pleaded guilty earlier this year to aggravated sexual assault and to disseminating child abuse material.

He was also sentenced to 18 months’ probation for distributing the disturbing video, an order that will be served at the same time as the larger probation period.

After delivering her sentence, magistrate Sue Duncombe told the boy that the sexual assault would not determine his future.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 sexually abused boy at St. Charles Prep, student claims

COLUMBUS (OH)
WSYX/WTTE

August 16, 2018

By Tom Bosco

The Columbus Catholic Diocese will reach out to alumni of St. Charles Preparatory high school after a lawsuit was filed last month by a former student who said he was sexually abused by a now-deceased priest.

The plaintiff in the civil case accuses Monsignor Thomas Bennett of sexually abusing him six times while the student was a freshman. The incidents are alleged to have happened on school property.

The diocese said they had no sexual complaints or allegations against Bennett during his decades-long service. Bennett taught at St. Charles from 1963 until shortly before his death in 2008.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 in ‘shame and sorrow’ over abuses in Pennsylvania

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

August 16, 2018

The Vatican expressed “shame and sorrow” Thursday over a scathing Pennsylvania grand jury report about clergy who raped and molested children in six dioceses in that state, calling the abuse “criminally and morally reprehensible” and says Pope Francis wants to eradicate “this tragic horror.”

In a written statement using uncharacteristically strong language for the Holy See even in matters like the long-running abuse scandals staining the U.S. church, Vatican spokesman Greg Burke sought to assure victims that “the pope is on their side.”

Pope Francis himself wasn’t quoted in the statement, and there was no mention of demands in the United States among some Roman Catholics for the resignation of Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington.

The grand jury report made public this week accused the cardinal of helping to protect some molester priests while he was bishop of the Pennsylvania city of Pittsburgh. Wuerl has defended his actions in Pittsburgh while apologizing for the damage inflicted on victims.

Burke said the incidents of abuse graphically documented in the report were “betrayals of trust that robbed survivors of their dignity and their faith.”

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

Over 300 ‘predator priests’ in Pennsylvania accused of abuse in grand jury report

HARRISBURG (PA)
NBC News

August 14, 2018

By Daniella Silva

More than 1,000 child victims were identifiable from the church’s own records, according to the report.

A scathing Pennsylvania grand jury report released Tuesday reveals decades of child abuse allegations against more than 300 accused “predator priests” as well as claims that Roman Catholic Church leaders covered up the crimes and obstructed justice in order to avoid scandal.

More than 1,000 child victims were identifiable from the church’s own records, according to the report.

“We believe that the real number — of children whose records were lost, or who were afraid ever to come forward — is in the thousands,” the grand jury 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.

A look at the handling of Pennsylvania clergy abuse claims

PHILADELPHIA
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

By Claudia Lauer

A grand jury report documenting seven decades of child sexual abuse by hundreds of Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania found that most of the bishops who served in the state during that period mishandled at least some of the allegations.

In some cases, they failed to pass accusations on to law enforcement and in others shuffled priests off to different parishes. The report alleged a systematic cover-up and concluded that church leaders “largely escaped public accountability.”

The grand jury was particularly critical of bishops who served after the church adopted sweeping reforms in 2002 to ensure the swift removal of any clerics who molested a child. A look at accusations against four of the more recent bishops cited in the report:

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

August 16, 2018

Messico Ex sacerdote mexicano envuelto en escándalo sexual por pederastia en el Vaticano

MORELIA (MEXICO)
Il Sismografo [Rome, Italy]

August 16, 2018

Read original article

Eduardo Medina) Vladimir Reséndiz Gutiérrez, originario de Zamora, Michoacán, fue despojado de sus hábitos clericales en 2013, debido a un escándalo sexual en que se vio envuelto por pederastia. Actualmente enfrenta un juicio en Italia por cargos de abuso sexual a dos menores. Su caso es emblemático ya que los abusos habrían ocurrido entre 2007 y 2008, dos años después de que Benedicto XVI condenara públicamente al padre Marcial Maciel, y los Legionarios de Cristo tuvieran que reestructurarse. Reséndiz Gutiérrez también formaba parte de los Legionarios de Cristo. (…)

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 bishops call for apostolic visitation into McCarrick abuse case

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

August 16, 2018

By Brian Roewe

Head of US bishops: ‘Failure of episcopal leadership’ caused ‘a moral catastrophe’

The head of the U.S. bishops said they will invite the Vatican to conduct an apostolic visitation to the country to lead a “full investigation” into questions still surrounding revelations of sexual abuse by former cardinal Archbishop Theodore McCarrick.

In addition, Cardinal Daniel DiNardo said the bishops will take steps to create channels for easier reporting of abuse and misconduct by bishops, and will push for better procedures under canon law to resolve complaints made against bishops.

The statement from DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, came Aug. 16 as the church’s clergy sex abuse scandal has resurfaced in furious fashion.

Two days earlier, the Pennsylvania attorney general released a 1,300-page grand jury report documenting historical accounts of clergy sexual abuse in six dioceses of that state that documented the abuse of more than 1,000 children by 300-plus priests over 70 years, with the number of victims believed to be even higher.

That report followed the continued fallout from revelations in June of alleged sexual abuse of seminarians and young adults by McCarrick, once seen as an influential leader both within the church and in politics, having served as archbishop of Washington D.C. The accusations, which McCarrick has denied, led the 88-year-old retired prelate in late July to resign his place in the College of Cardinals.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 bishops invite Vatican investigation into McCarrick scandal

WASHINGTON (D.C)
Catholic News Agency

August 16, 2018

By Courtney Grogan

The U.S. bishops’ conference called for a Vatican-led investigation into allegations of sexual abuse and cover-ups surrounding Archbishop Theodore McCarrick, as well for new abuse reporting processes, and greater involvement of laity in addressing abuse concerns.

“We are faced with a spiritual crisis that requires not only spiritual conversion, but practical changes to avoid repeating the sins and failures of the past that are so evident in the recent report,” said Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, in an Aug. 16 statement.

“Stronger protections against predators in the Church and anyone who would conceal them,” are needed, said DiNardo, “protections that will hold bishops to the highest standards of transparency and accountability.”

The bishops will invite the Vatican to conduct an official Apostolic Visitation to the United States to address questions surrounding Archbishop McCarrick, in consultation with the lay members of the National Review Board, DiNardo said.

Previously the U.S. bishops did not “make clear what avenue victims themselves should follow in reporting abuse or other sexual misconduct by bishops,” acknowledged DiNardo, who called for the development of “reliable third-party reporting mechanisms.”

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

Update: Cardinal explains plan to address ‘moral catastrophe’ of abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

August 16, 2018

By Julie Asher

The president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops Aug. 16 announced three key goals and a comprehensive plan to address the “moral catastrophe” of the new abuse scandal hitting the U.S. church.

The plan “will involve the laity, lay experts, the clergy and the Vatican,” Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston said. This plan will be presented to the full body of bishops at their general assembly meeting in Baltimore in November.

He said the “substantial involvement of the laity” from law enforcement, psychology and other disciplines will be essential to this process.

He also said that right now, it is clear that “one root cause” of this catastrophe “is the failure of episcopal leadership.”

In a lengthy letter addressed to all Catholics, Cardinal DiNardo laid out three goals just established by the bishops’ Executive Committee in a series of meetings held early the week of Aug. 13.

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

Olympic gymnasts Kyla Ross, Madison Kocian: Larry Nassar abused us

UNITED STATES
The Associated Press

August 16, 2018

Madison Kocian and Kyla Ross watched nearly all the women with whom they won Olympic gold step forward, one by one, over the past 18 months to detail their abuse at the hands of disgraced former USA Gymnastics national team doctor Larry Nassar.

In January, Nassar was sentenced to an effective life sentence after being convicted of federal child pornography and state sexual abuse charges. Kocian and Ross are now coming forward to help themselves heal and to send a message to victims of sexual abuse everywhere that there is no timetable on coming to grips with the trauma.

“Everyone copes in their own way,” said Ross, a member of the Fierce Five that stormed to gold at the 2012 Olympics.

“It doesn’t matter how old you are and what happens to you. I’ve come to the point in my life, this is something I want to share my story and move on,” Ross told The Associated Press.

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

Olympic Gymnasts Madison Kocian and Kyla Ross Reveal Abuse by Larry Nassar

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

August 16, 2018

By Olivia Messer

Months after the serial sexual-abusing doctor was sentenced to life in prison, two more star Olympic athletes came forward to detail their abuse at his hands.

Olympic gold medalists Kyla Ross and Madison Kocian on Thursday came forward as the latest of the hundreds of athletes who fell victim to serial sexual abuser and former USA Gymnastics team physician Larry Nassar, who was sentenced in February to a maximum of 235 years in prison.

The gymnasts, who are now 21 and currently members of the NCAA champion UCLA gymnastics team, appeared on CBS This Morning to tell their stories of abuse.

“Being on national team for all those years, we were really silenced,” said Ross. “We didn’t really have a voice and say as athletes.”

“I’ve come to the point in my life this is something I want to share my story and move on,” she told The Associated Press. “We don’t want to be viewed as victims. This is something we have to grow through.”

Both women said they were moved after nearly 200 girls and women read victim-impact statements at two emotional sentencing hearings in January, in which the 54-year-old Nassar faced the survivors he had preyed on. More than 300 victims have come forward to accuse the former Michigan State physician who worked for decades with student-athletes.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 is the Pope still silent about damning sex abuse report? [With Video]

HARRISBURG (PA)
CNN

August 16, 2018

Analysis by Daniel Burke

In July, Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro wrote a personal letter to Pope Francis, warning him that “a comprehensive investigation” by his office had found “widespread sexual abuse of children and a systemic coverup by leaders of the Catholic Church.”

Shapiro says he never received a response.

The six Pennsylvania dioceses named in the scathing grand jury report received copies of the 800-page document in May, according to Crux News. Before the report was published on Tuesday, Cardinal Donald Wuerl, one of the Pope’s top allies and the former archbishop of Pittsburgh, had a detailed website prepared to defend himself against charges that he shielded abusive priests. (The website was removed on Thursday after an outcry from Catholics.)

So the idea that the Vatican was caught off guard by the explosive report or needs more time to process it is increasingly difficult to understand — as is the Pope’s silence on the matter. This is a pontiff, after all, who has chastised the media for ignoring the deaths of homeless people.
What’s the threshold of victims it would take for the Vatican to quickly respond to the grand jury report? 2,000 children? Or 3,000?

Is 1,000 children abused at the hands of Catholic clergy not enough to warrant a comment from their Holy Father?

Apparently not.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Priests Ran Child Porn Ring Out Of Pittsburgh Diocese

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Patheos

August 15, 2018

By Michael Stone

New grand jury report shows Catholic priests in Pittsburgh ran an extensive child porn ring where children were sexually exploited and groomed for abuse.

In a growing and horrific story out of Pennsylvania, a breathtaking grand jury report released by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court documents rampant and pervasive child sex abuse in the Catholic Church, listing more than 300 accused clergy and over a 1,000 confirmed child victims.

The report demonstrates that hundreds of “predator priests” sexually abused more than 1,000 children in Pennsylvania for decades — all the while being protected and enabled by Roman Catholic Church leaders.

In one particularly heinous episode documented in the report, a group of Catholic priests in Pittsburgh ran an extensive child porn ring where children were sexually exploited and groomed for abuse. Working together, the priests would select, target, and groom young teen boys to exploit.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 occurred at several Washington County churches

WASHINGTON (PA)
Observer-Reporter

August 15, 2018

By Barbara Miller

Priests at a gathering at a seminary swimming pool bragged about the boys they brought along, according to testimony before the statewide grand jury, and a former priest at St. Philip Neri, Donora, is alleged to have had inappropriate contact with at least eight young boys.

Those who came to the pool were the Rev. Bob Castelucci and another priest, friends of the Rev. Leo Burchianti, who was assigned to the Donora church in 1979 and 1980.

Burchianti, when discussing the allegations in 2007, corroborated their use of the pool and also said he had a sexual relationship with one victim’s mother for six to eight months, according to a grand jury summary.

A review of the allegations against priests who served in local parishes found that some of the abuse occurred while the priests were assigned here.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 St. Titus Monsignor named in state catholic church sexual abuse report

TITUSVILLE (PA)
The Titusville Herald

August 15, 2018

By Sean P. Ray

A long-serving Monsignor at St. Titus Church was among the 301 Catholic priests named in a grand jury report about sexual abuse within the Pennsylvania Catholic Church.

The 887-page report, which was released Tuesday and made by 23 grand jurors, details several reports of abuse across six of Pennsylvania’s eight Dioceses, including the Diocese of Erie, which has Crawford and Venango counties within its coverage area.

A total of 41 “predator priests,” as they are called in the report, are named as operating in the Diocese of Erie. Among them was a priest who served more than two decades at St. Titus Church, in Titusville.

A report on Monsignor James P. Hopkins is given in the grand jury document. According to the report, a victim wrote a letter to Erie Bishop Donald Trautman on Aug. 3, 1993, in which she stated that Hopkins grabbed and kissed girls inappropriately.

The girl alleged that in 1945, she experienced personal abuse by Hopkins when she was 13-years of age, stating that Hopkins would, “grab our face in his hands, force us to look up, and then plant a sloppy kiss on our mouths. He would also grab us and pull us close, wrap his cape around us, and fondle us whenever he pleased.”

The Herald was unable to find record of a Monsignor James P. Hopkins in Herald archives. However, a Monsignor James F. Hopkins was named in multiple articles within the same time frame that James P. Hopkins would’ve been St. Titus’ pastor, possibly indicating a mistake in the report.

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

‘I realized I wasn’t crazy’: Victim of Lawrenceville priest reveals abuse after 50 years

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 15, 2018

By Andrew Goldstein

Former Pittsburgh resident Rich Westwood remembers attending a Catholic service in Florida a number of years ago when the priest began a homily about forgiving church leaders of sexual abuse.

Mr. Westwood walked out of the church and never came back.

“When the priest is up there talking about other priests and says nothing about the victims, that’s where I draw the line,” he said. “Unless you walked in my shoes for 40 some years, you don’t know what it’s like.”

Mr. Westwood, 59, who now lives in North Carolina, said Tuesday in a phone call to the Post-Gazette that the Rev. Ferdinand B. Demsher sexually assaulted him in the late 1960s and early 70s when he served as an altarboy at St. Mary of the Assumption in Lawrenceville.

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

Elk County Catholic schools release statement amid Catholic Church sexual abuse case

ST. MARYS (PA)
WJAC TV

August 14, 2018

By Sierra Darville

The Elk County Catholic School System issued a statement following the release of a grand jury’s report on a two-year sexual abuse investigation.

ECCSS President Sam MacDonald released a statement Tuesday afternoon saying that schools are working to create a safe environment for all of its students.

“Full transparency is the only path to healing for the victims,” MacDonald said.

According to the statement, the Diocese of Erie was the first diocese involved in the grand jury investigation to release a list of all “credibly accused priests, religious and lay employees.”

MacDonald states the some of the stories mentioned in the report apply directly to people assigned to churches and schools in Elk County.

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

Child USA reacts to grand jury report on church sexual abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
69 News

August 14, 2018

CHILD USA released a statement on the grand jury report on the clergy sex abuse in six Roman Catholic dioceses.

“Attorney General Josh Shapiro has released a monumental report on the clergy sex abuse that has destroyed Pennsylvania children’s lives for decades,” said CEO and Academic Director of CHILD USA Professor Marci Hamilton.

Hamilton said the grand jury’s recommendations, which include eliminating the criminal statute of limitations, reviving expired civil statues of limitations, amending the state’s mandated reporting law so that repeated failures to report result in stiffer penalties and treating confidentiality agreements that impede disclosure of abuse to the police as obstruction of justice, are necessary to protect Pennsylvania children.

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

There are two ‘scandals’ in Catholic sex abuse report, but church should get its priorities straight

HARRISBURG (PA)
News-Sentinel

August 16, 2018

By Kevin Leininger

On Oct. 14, 2002, I reported Michelle Bennett’s claim that the Rev. William Ehrman had sexually molested her repeatedly in the rectory of New Haven’s St. John the Baptist Church more than 50 years earlier when she was in the fourth grade. Less than one month later, then-Bishop John D’arcy attended mass and informed the congregation an investigation affirmed the credibility of Bennett’s story.

“Christ said, ‘I am the way, the truth and the life,’ ” D’Arcy said. “The church is a place of truth, and you have a right to hear the truth.”

“Catholic” (with a small “c”) means “universal,” but there is a world of difference between the response by D’Arcy — who supposedly had been exiled to the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend for blowing the whistle of pedophile priests in Boston — and the Roman Catholic Church’s corrupt response to abuse by six dioceses in Pennsylvania as outlined in a scathing new grand jury report.

The Pittsburgh-based investigation identified more than 1,000 victims of alleged sexual abuse, rape, impregnation, coerced abortion and other crimes against church and state, committed by 301 priests and lay teachers, and abuse of the trustingly innocent by the supposedly godly only begins to reflect the unimaginable human cost. As Bennett told me in 2002, “Catholic girls did as they were told. I accepted blame for what happened because priests were ‘God’s people’ and could do no wrong. Therefore, I was bad.”

But there will and should be an institutional cost for the actions and inactions by church leaders detailed in the 900-page document. According to the grand jury, the church leaders used euphemisms to conceal the truth (“Never say ‘rape,’ say ‘inappropriate contact’ “), assigned untrained clergy members to conduct investigations, concealed the real reasons for the transfer of abusive priests, often failed to notify authorities of abuse claims, and much more.

“The main thing was not to help children but to avoid ‘scandal,’ ” the grand jury concluded. “That is not our word, but theirs; it appears over and over again in the documents we recovered.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 abuse survivor wants AG’s to investigate more dioceses

ST. LOUIS (MO)
KSDK

August 15, 2018

By Casey Nolen

As for the Archdiocese response to Lennon’s assertions, its offices were closed for a church holiday Wednesday but it’s expected leaders will comment on the Pennsylvania grand jury later in the week.

The leader of a national sex abuse survivors’ network says those shocking sex abuse allegations against Catholic priests in Pennsylvania could easily be found here in Missouri and Illinois.

Tim Lennon runs “SNAP” – Survivors’ Network of those Abused by Priests – and he’s also a survivor himself.

“I’m on a path,” says Lennon. “I feel like I’m doing exceptionally well but I can’t say I’m healed.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Again In The Catholic Church– How Do We Stop This? (Audio)

SAN ANTONIO (TX)
KTSA News

August 15, 2018

By Kareem Dahab

KTSA radio host Trey Ware speaks with callers who are just as angry about the recent sex abuse scandal against children in Pennsylvania, and what can be done to stop it.

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

Greene County priest named in Catholic Church sex abuse report responds to allegations

CARMICHAELS (PA)
Observer-Reporter

August 15, 2018

By Mike Jones

A Roman Catholic priest now serving in Greene County said “nothing sexual occurred whatsoever” nearly four decades ago while wrestling with boys when he was a priest at Immaculate Conception Church in Washington.

The Rev. John Bauer forcefully pushed back against allegations of abuse years ago – along with providing alcohol to boys on a road trip to Ohio – as he addressed parishioners at the end of Wednesday morning Mass at St. Hugh Church near Carmichaels, where he is pastor.

“So, yesterday was a slow news day,” Bauer said just before ending the Mass. “If there was one scintilla of doubt of sexual abuse, I would have left the priesthood.”

Bauer was one of 301 men named in state Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s grand jury report released Tuesday that investigators termed as “predator priests,” including 99 in the Diocese of Pittsburgh, where Greene County is located. The report states a man claimed Bauer wrestled with him and other boys at IC’s school wrestling room in the late 1970s or early 1980s, discussed masturbation in front of him and provided alcohol to three students while driving to Columbus, Ohio, for a wrestling tournament.

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

Boca Raton priest named in scathing Pennsylvania report on church abuse

BOCA RATON (FL)
Local10.com

August 15, 2018

By Tim Swift

Monsignor Thomas Benestad denies charges first alleged in 2011

A sweeping grand jury report on six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania released this week found that a retired Boca Raton priest was accused of sexually abusing a 9-year-old boy in the early 1980s.

Monsignor Thomas Benestad, 73, is mentioned as one of 19 offenders from Allentown Diocese identified by the grand jury. Benestad has served in a limited capacity at Ascension Church in Boca Raton since 2007.

Released Tuesday, the report found that about 300 Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania molested more than 1,000 children since the 1940s. Senior Church officials are accused systematically covering up the complaints.

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

Catholics defend today’s church in wake of priest sexual abuse report

HARRISBURG (PA)
Tribune-Review

August 15, 2018

By Stephen Huba

‘Certain this is over’

The grand jury report said the Rev. George Zirwas, who served at St. Scholastica in Aspinwall from 1991-94, and other priests asked a boy to stand on a bed and remove his clothes as they discussed the image of Christ on the cross. Then they photographed the boy and added his photo to a collection of other teenage boys, according to the report.

One St. Scholastica parishioner said after Wednesday morning mass that she remembered Zirwas as an “odd” man who kept an apartment in Shadyside. The parishioner, who didn’t want to be identified, said a more senior priest allowed Zirwas to offer mass but didn’t allow him to make house calls.

Another parishioner who didn’t want to be named said it was “terrible that it happened,” referring to sexual abuse in general at the church, adding, “it’s just devastating that grown adults would act like that, whether they’re priests or not.”

Parishioner Janet Hribar, 70, of O’Hara Township, said she is convinced that psychological counseling for priests, background checks and prayer have ended the problems in the church.

“I’m absolutely certain that this is over,” Hribar said.

There was no mention of the report at the morning mass, Hribar said. But that the church had set copies of a letter from Bishop David Zubik near the church’s entrance.

“There is no priest or deacon in ministry today against whom there has been a substantiated allegation of child sexual abuse,” Zubik’s letter said, while outlining preventive steps including engaging an expert to review the diocese’s policies and practices related to child protection and hiring someone to monitor clergy who have been removed from ministry following abuse allegations.

— Wes Venteicher, Tribune-Review

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 faith leaders respond to PA church sex abuse scandal

NORTHAMPTON (MA)
WWLP

August 15, 2018

By Tashanea Whitlow

A grand jury investigation into priest sex abuse in Pennsylvania is sending shock waves across the country.

This comes after hundreds of Catholic priests are accused of sexually abusing thousands of young parishioners and the church is accused of covering it up. Some are finding it difficult to believe men of God could commit such crimes.

“From my faith perspective, the light of God shines brightly when we can pull things out of the shadows,” said Rev. Margaret Sawyer of the Pioneer Valley Workers Center in Northampton. “And we can’t have this type of mistreatment in the shadows. My heart is breaking for those victims.”

The 2-year investigation into six dioceses over 7 decades revealed more than 300 abusive priests, who preyed on more than 1,000 victims, but that number could rise. According to the grand jury, there may be thousands of more abuse 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.

Chile police raid Catholic church HQ in sex abuse investigation

CHILE
The Associated Press

August 14, 2018

– Marist Brothers accused of dozens of cases of abuse
– ‘The impunity of the Chilean hierarchy has ended’

Chilean authorities have raided the headquarters of the Catholic church’s Episcopal Conference as part of a widespread investigation into sex abuse committed by members of the Marist Brothers order, prosecutors said.

The raid by investigating prosecutors and ’s equivalent of the FBI took place at one of the most important buildings of the Chilean church in the capital, Santiago. Prosecutor Raul Guzmán, who confirmed the raid, is investigating more than 35 accusations of abuse committed against former students at schools run by the Marists, who are religious brothers, not priests.

“The impunity of the Chilean hierarchy has ended. In Chile, we’re seeing what happens when the Catholic church is treated as an ordinary corporate citizen,” said Anne Barrett Doyle of the online abuse database BishopAccountability.org.

“Prosecutors in Chile have raised the bar for civil authorities in other countries. The children of Chile will be safer, survivors more likely to find justice, and the church ultimately stronger.”

Church authorities had no immediate response to requests for comment.

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

When and where Western Pa. priests named in grand jury sex abuse report served

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Tribune-Review

August 14, 2018 [Updated August 16, 2018]

By Nate Smallwood

Editor’s note: This list has been updated from the original version to include more information about priests named in the report.

The following is a list of all Catholic priests from the Greensburg and Pittsburgh dioceses named in a state grand jury report on sex abuse by clergy.

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

Judge Approves Church Sexual Abuse Payments

GREAT FALLS (MT)
Montana Public Radio

August 15, 2018

By Edward O’Brien

A federal bankruptcy judge has approved a plan for the Diocese of Great Falls-Billings to pay $20 million to 86 people who said clergy sexually assaulted them when they were children. The bankruptcy plan was approved Tuesday in Butte.

The Washington-based Tamaki Law office represents 36 of the abuse victims. Attorney Vito de la Cruz says Judge Jim Pappas’ final order provides at least some closure to the abuse survivors he represents.

“It is an acknowledgment by the Church that they were victimized. It is an acknowledgment that the Church had responsibility in that victimization. It provides closure for many folks.”

The Eastern Montana diocese filed for bankruptcy in March of 2017, just months before the first jury trials of sex abuse victims were set to begin.

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

Grand Jury Report Claims Three Priests Committed Sexual Abuse Against Children at Same Church in Schuylkill County

SCHUYLKILL HAVEN (PA)
ABC WNEP16

August 15, 2018

By Peggy Lee

We are learning more about the priests named in that explosive grand jury report who are accused of committing sexual abuse against children.

According to the report, three of the accused priests served at one parish in Schuylkill County.

Parishioners of St. Ambrose Parish in Schuylkill Haven settled into the church for an evening Mass on Wednesday, a Holy Day of Obligation for the Feast of the Assumption.

This service comes just a day after that scathing grand jury report detailed decades of child sex abuse by more than 300 priests in six dioceses, including here in the Diocese of Allentown.

“I feel bad for everyone involved. I feel bad for the poor people that have suffered from the abuse, the Church as a whole is now suffering,” said Heather Smalley.

The report lists that three priests at St. Ambrose committed sex crimes while assigned 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.

Catholic Church abuse: Indiana bishop reported allegations, warned of ‘scandal’

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Indianapolis Star

August 15, 2018

By Crystal Hill

A Catholic bishop in northern Indiana was made aware of — and reported — sexual abuse allegations against two Roman Catholic priests, but warned in both cases that a “scandal” could arise if the information became public.

Rev. Kevin Rhoades, bishop of the Fort Wayne-South Bend Catholic Diocese, is named in a recently-released Grand Jury report that details sexual abuse allegations against more than 300 Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania.

The blistering Grand Jury report details how the church handled the reporting of the abuse allegations, and said officials were more interested in protecting abusers and their own reputations than caring for victims.

More than 1,000 young victims were identifiable from the church’s own records, the report says.

“The main thing was not to help children, but to avoid scandal,” the report says. “Priests were raping little boys and girls and the men of God who were responsible for them not only did nothing: They hid it all.”

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

Chicago-area megachurch paid $3.25M over child sexual abuse

SOUTH BARRINGTON (IL)
The Associated Press

August 14, 2018

A massive Chicago-area evangelical church whose founder faces accusations of sexual harassment paid $3.25 million to settle lawsuits alleging a church volunteer sexually abused two disabled children.

The Chicago Tribune reports that court documents show Willow Creek Community Church made the payments last year and in February. The church has denied related allegations of negligence.

The volunteer, Robert Sobczak Jr., is serving a seven-year prison sentence after pleading guilty in 2014 to sexually abusing an 8-year-old boy at the church and an older boy who wasn’t connected to Willow Creek.

The payments came before church founder Bill Hybels resigned in April . He has denied groping allegations dating to the 1980s. The church’s Board of Elders apologized last week for being slow to take the accusations 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.

Bishop Zubik Responds To Release Of Grand Jury Report [Video]

PITTSBURGH (PA)
CBS Cleveland

August 15, 2018

Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese Bishop David Zubik is reacting to the release of the grand jury report on clergy sex abuse in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania; KDKA’s Andy Sheehan reports.

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

‘Weaponization of faith’: Examples from clergy abuse report

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

A landmark grand jury report on clergy abuse in six Roman Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania detailed how priests often used religious rituals, symbols of the faith and the threat of eternity in hell to groom, molest and rape children.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro called it the “weaponization of faith.”

Some of the examples cited in the report, released Tuesday, of how over 300 “predator priests,” dating back to the 1940s, used the children’s own religious faith and trust in them as religious leaders to victimize and silence them:

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

Church helped former priest accused of abuse get Disney job

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

By Marc Levy

A sweeping grand jury report into child sexual abuse in Roman Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania said church officials gave a former priest a positive reference to work at Disney World, even though they’d fielded at least one allegation about him sexually abusing a boy.

The ex-priest, Edward Ganster, left the priesthood in 1990, moved to the Orlando area and went on to work at Disney World before he died in 2014.

The report said Ganster worked at the theme park for 18 years. Ganster drove the train at the Magic Kingdom, according to an obituary in the Orlando Sentinel, which said Ganster worked there for 15 years.

Disney World did not respond to a request for information.

Ganster, who became a priest in 1971, was working at St. Joseph’s Church in Easton in the late 1970s when a woman complained to a monsignor that Ganster had gotten in bed with her 13-year-old son on an overnight trip and “hurt” him, the report said. The boy also told his mother that “something happened” in the confession booth, it said.

The monsignor told her Ganster would be given counseling and Ganster was promptly reassigned, the report said.

About a decade later, Ganster was on sick leave at a Catholic mental health hospital as he sought to leave the priesthood and get married.

Ganster wrote the Diocese to say he would apply for a job at Disney World and wanted to use the Diocese as a reference, the report 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.

Pennsylvania sexual abuse report is another setback for Pope Francis

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Guardian

August 15, 2018

By Harriet Sherwood

Pontiff vowed ‘decisive action’ when elected but has failed to get a grip on series of scandals

The damning report on the sexual abuse of potentially thousands of children by priests in Pennsylvania, and the subsequent cover-up by a Catholic church primarily interested in self-protection, is another blow for Pope Francis, who is already reeling after a series of damaging scandals over recent months.

The shocking accounts of rape and assault of vulnerable children by men who are supposed to be moral exemplars are bad enough. But, as is almost always the case, the actual abuse is compounded by collusion and concealment by senior church figures and attempts to silence and intimidate survivors.

Francis, considered progressive and enlightened on many issues, has struggled to get a grip on the scandal that has gravely weakened the Catholic church’s moral authority. Despite calling for “decisive action” when he was elected as pontiff in 2013, he has failed to turn that into a reality. Instead he has been on the back foot, reactive rather than proactive, and has misread the extent of betrayal by the church.

A special papal commission set up to make recommendations on the church’s role in child protection ran into difficulties last year when two members – both abuse survivors – quit. One, Peter Saunders, said he had thought the pope was “serious about kicking backsides and holding people to account” but that it turned out not to be so. The other, Marie Collins, said the abuse crisis was handled “with fine words in public and contrary actions behind closed doors”.

Then this year, on a visit to Chile, the pope denounced survivors who said the church had covered up sexual abuse and crimes, robustly defending a bishop he had appointed in the face of objections. The pope was later forced to admit he made “grave errors” of judgment, launch an investigation into abuse and the cover-up in the country, and accept the resignation of the bishop he had championed.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 “secret archives” detail playbook for concealing abuse

HARRISBURG (PA)
CBS News

August 15, 2018

By Nikki Battiste

New details are emerging about how Catholic Church leaders protected priests accused of sexual abuse. A Pennsylvania grand jury says more than 300 priests abused more than 1,000 children, and likely thousands more, over seven decades.

A trove of documents containing allegations and admissions of sexual abuse were kept locked up in what the church calls its “secret archives,” with the only key in the bishop’s hands.

“The cover-up made it impossible to achieve justice for the victims,” said Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro.

He laid out a pattern of consistent, decadeslong cover-up across six dioceses.

The files contained a pattern of strategies that were practically a playbook for concealing the truth. Some of the tactics for church recordkeeping included euphemisms, like saying “inappropriate contact” or “boundary issues” instead of “rape.”

Even if a priest was abusing children, they were allowed to keep their housing and living expenses. Above all, the church was told not to call the police and instead handle claims like a personnel matter.

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

Priests used gold crosses to ID kids as abuse targets and other horrors from Pennsylvania report

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

August 15, 2018

By Anthony J. Machcinski

A two-year investigation of sexual abuse of children within six Catholic diocese came to a head on Tuesday, with the release of a report that details decades of abuse, and names 301 priests.

Even in a list filled with hundreds of shocking accusations, several stick out as particularly horrific or extreme cases of leadership turning their heads away from situations.

Here are some examples of these over-the-top cases. A warning, some of the information listed below is extremely graphic.

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

I was one of more than 1,000 victims in Catholic Church sex abuse scandal

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Post

August 15, 2018

By Tamar Lapin

A man who was one of more than 1,000 children in Pennsylvania preyed on by “predator priests” says he is still traumatized 39 years later — as he called the grand jury report chronicling the abuse a “victory” in a “war that’s just beginning.”

Jim VanSickle told the Washington Post he was 16 in 1979 when he met a young priest named David Poulson, his English teacher at Bradford Central Christian High School.

“I was a lost kid,” said VanSickle, who is now 55.

His grandmother had just died and his father was sick and couldn’t work. So he found a mentor in Poulson, who was 26 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.

Cartoonist Gary Varvel: Catholic priests’ sexual abuse scandal

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Indianapolis Star

August 15, 2018

By Gary Varvel

Church leadership covered it up for decades

Over 300 Catholic priests sexually abused and raped 1,000 little boys and girls and the church leadership covered it up for decades, according to a Pennsylvania grand jury.

Jesus said, “If anyone causes one of these little ones — those who believe in me — to stumble, it would be better for them if a large millstone were hung around their neck and they were thrown into the sea.” – Mark 9:42.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Pennsylvania clergy abuse recalls being groomed by priest

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Daily News

August 15, 2018

By Megan Cerullo

Jim VanSickle will keep telling his harrowing tale of survival as long as it keeps the spotlight on sexual abuse within the Catholic Church.

He is committed to creating a community where other survivors can come forward and share their stories too.

VanSickle, who attended the Bradford Central Christian High School in Bradford, Penn., was a “lost” 16-year-old when he met his English teacher, a priest named David Poulson in 1979, the Washington Post reported.

His grandmother had died and his father was too sick to work, according to the report.

And so he turned to Poulson, 10 years his senior, for guidance.

The pair formed a powerful bond that VanSickle credits with helping him graduate from high school and college.

“He turned my life around,” VanSickle told the Washington Post. “He was my spiritual leader. He was my friend.”

But VanSickle, now 55, also accuses Poulson of abusing him, both physically and emotionally.

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

Dying man wins record $1 million compensation payout for Christian Brothers abuse

AUSTRALIA
Australian Broadcasting Corporation

August 16, 2018

By David Weber

A Perth man who has been awarded a record $1 million compensation payout for abuse suffered at the hands of Christian Brothers says he would have been happy simply with an apology.

Paul Bradshaw took legal action over sexual abuse he suffered in the 1950s and 60s.

Under the terms of the settlement he will be awarded $1 million and will also have his costs paid by the trustees of the Christian Brothers.

It is believed to be the highest single payment awarded in Australia as a result of legal action against the Christian Brothers.

Outside the court Mr Bradshaw, who only has six months to live, said money was not what had motivated his fight.

“I wasn’t going for the money. I was just going for justice,” he said.

“It’s all I wanted was justice, nothing else.

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

This Is a Make-or-Break Moment for Pope Francis

HARRISBURG (PA)
Esquire

August 15, 2018

By Charles P. Pierce

Nothing will define his papacy like how he responds to the systemic sexual abuse of children.

oly mother of god.

There is no longer any doubt that the institutional Roman Catholic Church in the United States existed in part—and likely still exists—as a vast conspiracy to obstruct justice in the crime of sexual assault by members of its clergy. If you ever wondered why the Church fought so hard to keep the civil criminal justice system at bay in regards to the criminals and deviants in its ranks, the report of the grand jury in Pennsylvania ought to clear that up for you.

If we’d had something like this in Boston, the late Bernard Cardinal Law would have ended his days at the MCI-Somewhere, instead of the Basilica of Our Lady of the Clean Getaway in Rome. From The New York Times:

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

‘Spotlight’ Reporter on PA Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal: It’s a ‘Systemic Problem’

BOSTON (MA)
Fox News

August 15, 2018

Rezendes: the story now goes to the Vatican.

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Michael Rezendes said that he wasn’t surprised by the bombshell sexual abuse scandal around the Catholic Church in Pennsylvania.

It was announced Tuesday that hundreds of priests in the state sexually abused more than 1,000 children over a 70-year period, according to a grand jury report.

Rezendes, a member of the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team that exposed the church’s sexual abuse cover-up in the city, said that Tuesday’s announcement was nearly identical to the one he investigated.

“This is a systemic problem within the Catholic Church,” he said on “The Daily Briefing.”

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

Three accused Catholic priests connected to SWFL

NAPLES (FL)
WINK News

August 15, 2018

By Olivia Mancino

Members of St. Ann’s Catholic Church in Naples are reacting to information about a priest who once pastored there.

That priest is among the hundreds accused of disturbing acts against children in Pennsylvania.

According to grand jury documents released in Pennsylvania Tuesday, Father Robert Brague was appointed parochial vicar at Saint Ann’s back in 1990, but this came after initial allegations were made in Pennsylvania.

Letters sent to a bishop said that the then 46-year-old Brague impregnated a 17-year-old girl.

The bishop responded to the letter written by the victim’s sister saying: “Father Brague and your sister have a long, difficult road ahead. What has happened is their responsibility and certainly, father Brague will take care of his obligations.”

According to the report, he was moved there in the early 90’s by the church. Father Brague died in 1997.

We talked to members of Saint Ann’s parish Wednesday who say they hope this new
attention will move the healing process forward.

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

Buffalo Diocese criticized in Pennsylvania priest abuse report

BUFFALO (NY)
The Buffalo News

August 15, 2018

By Dan Herbeck

A Pennsylvania grand jury report on sexual abuse involving more than 300 priests in that state criticized Buffalo’s Catholic Diocese for its handling of allegations against the Rev. Michael R. Freeman, a former Buffalo priest.

Freeman was moved from Buffalo churches to parishes in Pennsylvania even after the Buffalo Diocese learned in 1981 that he had been involved in “criminal behavior” and “admitted inappropriate sexual behavior” with young men and children during five assignments in the Buffalo area, according to the report issued by Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania’s attorney general.

Shapiro said investigators found no records that church leaders in Buffalo or Pennsylvania ever alerted law enforcement to Freeman’s admissions of “sexually violating children.”

“The Buffalo Diocese continued to permit Freeman to serve in active ministry until March 1989 and continued to provide financial aid to Freeman until July 31, 1999,” the Pennsylvania report stated. “The Grand Jury found no documentation in Freeman’s file that indicated that the Dioceses of Buffalo or Erie ever notified law enforcement officials, despite the fact that Freeman admitted to sexually violating children in at least five of his six ministry assignments.”

In March, the Buffalo Diocese included Freeman’s name on a list of 42 priests that it said it had received “credible accusations” of abuse against, but it provided no details about the allegations. According to the Pennsylvania report, he was removed from the priesthood in 1989, while serving in Pennsylvania. The Buffalo Diocese in March said Freeman died in 2010.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 DA named by grand jury fired from job

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

A former Pennsylvania prosecutor has been fired from his job as an attorney for a county youth services office after a report showed that as a prosecutor, he stopped an investigation into alleged child abuse by a priest to gain political favor from the Pittsburgh Diocese.

Former Beaver County District Attorney Robert Masters told a grand jury investigating clergy abuse that he wrote a letter to the then-bishop of Pittsburgh in 1964 saying he was halting an investigation to “prevent unfavorable publicity.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 school to drop name of cardinal accused of inaction in cases of child sex abuse

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

A new Catholic school in Baltimore will no longer feature the name of a late cardinal accused of failing to act in the case of priests who abused children in Pennsylvania.

Cardinal William H. Keeler had a reputation for transparency as archbishop of Baltimore, releasing in 2002 the names of 57 priests accused of sexual abuse. But a grand jury report released Tuesday details widespread sexual abuse in six of Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic dioceses. It accuses Keeler of covering up sexual abuse allegations while serving as bishop of Harrisburg. Keeler also allegedly allowed an accused priest to minister in the Baltimore archdiocese.

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

Analyst: Catholic Abuse Report a ‘Wake Up Call” [Video]

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

A priest and religion expert says the scathing report released this week accusing hundreds of Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania of molesting more than 1,000 children since the 1940s is a “wake up call to other dioceses in the country.” (Aug. 15)

[Length: 1:17]

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 group calls for Zubik’s resignation after priest sex abuse scandal

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Trib Live

August 15, 2018

By Wes Venteicher

A group of people who say they were sexually abused by Catholic priests called on Bishop David Zubik to resign Wednesday, taking issue with his claim that the Pittsburgh Diocese didn’t cover up decades of clergy sexual abuse detailed in a grand jury report.

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, known as SNAP, cited Attorney General Josh Shapiro’s claim that “it is clear that the cover-up occurred in the Pittsburgh Diocese along with every other diocese in Pennsylvania. The abuse occurred and it was enabled by this cover-up.”

Zubik said Tuesday there was no cover-up in a news conference he held shortly after Shapiro’s comment. Zubik apologized to victims.

“If Zubik can’t even admit wrongdoing, he very likely won’t stop wrongdoing,” SNAP Midwest Associate Leader Judy Jones said in a news release.

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

Calls flood into clergy sex abuse hotline in wake of scathing report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 15, 2018

In the 24 hours since the release of a state grand jury report detailing widespread sexual abuse of children in six Catholic dioceses in Pennsylvania, more than 150 people have called or emailed a hotline set up for survivors, Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a tweet Wednesday.

“Lots of survivors … are now surfacing to tell their stories and seek justice,” Mr. Shapiro said in the tweet.

The grand jury already identified more than 1,000 child victims from more than 300 abusive priests across 54 of the state’s 67 counties.

The Clergy Abuse Hotline was set up for those seeking to report information or leads regarding child sexual abuse in Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses to the attorney general’s office at 888-538-8541.

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

Bob Casey calls for examination of statute of limitations after Pennsylvania Catholic Church abuse scandal

HARRISBURG (PA)
Washington Examiner

August 15, 2018

By Robert King

Sen. Bob Casey, D-Pa., said the Senate should examine laws regarding the statute of limitations in the wake of a major report that found the Catholic Church covered up decades of abuse in Pennsylvania.

A grand jury report found that more than 300 priests in Pennsylvania abused more than 1,000 children for the past 70 years.

“We believe that the real number — of children whose records were lost, or who were afraid ever to come forward — is in the thousands,” the grand jury report 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.

Will the names of all N.J. Catholic priests accused of abuse be released?

HARRISBURG (PA)
NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

August 16, 2018

By Kelly Heyboer and Ted Sherman

The release this week of a Pennsylvania grand jury report graphically detailing Catholic clergy abuse that was allowed to go on for decades has raised new questions about the willingness of the church to let go of its secrets.

The grand jury report named some 300 Catholic priests who allegedly molested more than 1,000 children over a 70 year time span.

“But all of them were brushed aside, in every part of the state, by church leaders who preferred to protect the abusers and their institution above all,” wrote the grand jury.

Despite the growing outrage over the report, however, there has been little move to expand the scope of disclosure elsewhere about how pervasive such abuse may be elsewhere, including New Jersey.

“Where is our state?” asked Mark Crawford, an abuse survivor and New Jersey director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, a national advocacy and support group. “Why are they dragging their feet in creating accountability and consequences to allowing a predator have access to children?”

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

The grand jury report about Catholic priest abuse in Pennsylvania shows the church is a criminal syndicate

HARRISBURG (PA)
NBC News

August 15, 2018

By Anthea Butler

The Catholic church hierarchy systematically covered up the abuse of at least 1,000 kids by 300 priests over 70 years.

It is time to face the horrible truth: The Catholic church is a pedophile ring.

According to the grand jury report of six dioceses in Pennsylvania, over a period of 70 years, 300 priests abused over 1,000 children in Pennsylvania and Church officials repeatedly covered it up. The release of the report is a searing indictment of the filth that has existed in the Catholic church.

Sexual abuse has been institutionalized, routinized and tolerated by the church hierarchy for decades. If you think this statement is hyperbole, consider that the grand jury report includes, but is by no means limited to, the case of a ring of pedophile priests in the Pittsburgh, who raped their male victims, took pornographic pictures of them and marked them by giving them gold crosses to wear so that they could be easily recognized by other 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.

The Catholic Church is guilty of a grave moral failure for allowing massive sexual abuse of children

HARRISBURGH (PA)
Fox News

August 15, 2018

By Jeremiah Poff

A stunning grand jury report issued Tuesday that said over 300 Catholic priests in Pennsylvania sexually abused more than 1,000 children over seven decades – and accused church leaders of covering up the wrongdoing – shows a massive and indefensible moral failure of the Catholic Church in the U.S.

The Catholic priests and bishops of Pennsylvania and the rest of the United States have failed the church. They have failed American Catholics. They have failed to uphold the dignity of the priesthood. They have failed God.

In the next few days much will be made of the damning 800+ page report issued by the Pennsylvania grand jury that named priests in six of the state’s seven dioceses as sexual predators who targeted vulnerable children – the most innocent of all the faithful. While the report identified 1,000 children it said were victims, it said there were probably thousands more child victims whose identities are not known.

The grand jury report states: “Priests were raping little boys and girls, and the men of God who were responsible for them not only did nothing; they hid it all. For decades.”

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

These Are The Chilling Stories Of Abuse Covered Up By The Catholic Church

PITTSBURGH (PA)
The Huffington Post

August 15, 2018

By Carol Kuruvilla

A Pennsylvania grand jury identified more than 300 alleged “predator priests.” Here are just some of the stories.

For decades, stories about clerical sexual abuse committed by Pennsylvania Catholic priests were reportedly locked away in the church’s secret archives.

These old secrets exploded into the light Tuesday with the publication of a grand jury report into six of Pennsylvania’s eight Roman Catholic dioceses.

The jurors’ 884-page report allowed Pennsylvania Catholics to finally grasp the extent of the abuse ― and cover-up ― in six dioceses: Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton. Over the course of two years, jurors identified 301 “predator priests” and more than 1,000 victims.

Jurors heard stories of boys and girls being groped. They heard about cases of kids becoming victims of child pornography, being made to masturbate with assailants, and being raped orally, vaginally and anally.

Underpinning the horrific alleged crimes in the report are hundreds of pages of documents from the church’s secret archives that the jurors claim show that senior church officials knew the abuse was happening and failed to act properly. Catholic leaders, including former bishops, actively worked to protect abusers and the church’s public reputation, while brushing aside victims’ reports, the jurors claim.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 abuse victims detail lifetime of trauma and broken trust

HARRISBURG (PA)
CNN

August 16, 2018

By Holly Yan

It’s been 70 years since Robert says he was sexually abused by a priest. And in the decades since, his wife and family suffered every day.

“I couldn’t show any affection with my wife,” said Robert, now 83. “My children, I couldn’t hold or hug.”

This is the kind of lifelong trauma endured by hundreds of victims at the hands of Pennsylvania priests.

Robert has been waiting seven decades for priests to be held 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.

Behind the latest Catholic sex abuse scandal: The church’s problem is male dominance

UNITED STATES
Salon

August 16, 2018

By Amanda Marcotte

Both sexual predation and anti-choice politics are rooted in patriarchal ideology and a culture of sexual shame

The Catholic Church sex abuse scandals are often talked about as if they are in the past, but this summer has been a reminder that this horror show continues to unspool, 16 years after the Boston Globe’s famous “Spotlight” series exposing the cover-up first ran. This week, a grand jury in Pennsylvania released a report accusing more than 300 priests of abusing more than 1,000 children over seven decades. The details are almost incomprehensibly awful, including accusations of repeated rape, child pornography and priests who marked their victims with jewelry to alert other predators that these children had been “groomed” to accept abuse.

“The cover-up was sophisticated. And all the while, shockingly, church leadership kept records of the abuse and the cover-up,” Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a press conference, in which he shared some of the worst details of the allegations. “These documents, from the dioceses’ own ‘Secret Archives,’ formed the backbone of this investigation.”

As political science professor Scott Lemieux said in a post at the blog Lawyers, Guns, and Money, these revelations are especially important right now, when Donald Trump is trying to remake the Supreme Court to overturn Roe v. Wade. Lemieux notes that “the Catholic Church in Pennsylvania was a driving force behind bad legislation restricting abortion rights” during the same period the church was actively covering up for systematic child rape. Furthermore, that legislation “was the basis for a lawsuit from the state’s governor that severely damaged Roe v. Wade and very nearly resulted in it being overruled altogether.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 survivors group SNAP seeks resignation of Bishop Zubik; calls him ‘callous and dangerous outlier’

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 15, 2018

By Andrew Goldstein

The world’s largest support group for victims of sexual abuse in institutional settings Wednesday called for Pittsburgh Bishop David Zubik to step down a day after the state Supreme Court released a grand jury report on sexual abuse by priests at six Pennsylvania dioceses.

The group, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said Bishop Zubik is denying that the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh covered up sexual abuse of children by priests despite “overwhelming evidence to the contrary.”

At a news conference Tuesday at diocese offices Downtown, Bishop Zubik denied any cover-up under his watch or that of his predecessor, Cardinal Donald Wuerl.

“Virtually every other governmental inquiry into Catholic scandals across the world has reached almost the exact conclusions,” SNAP said in a news release. “Most other U.S. bishops have admitted, at some level, in vague terms, that cover ups have happened. (We’re firmly convinced that cover ups are going on now.) In this sense, Zubik is a callous and dangerous outlier.”

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

The Catholic Church’s Rotherham

NEW YORK (NY)
National Review

August 15, 2018

By Michael Brendan Dougherty

If the Church cannot govern itself from within, it will be governed from without.

‘We are deeply saddened.” So begin the many perfunctory statements of many Catholic bishops today in response to the Pennsylvania grand-jury report detailing how priests in that state abused children and how bishops shuffled these priests around. What deeply saddens these men? The rape of children, the systematic cover-up, or the little schemes to run out the clock on the statute of limitations? Are they saddened by the people who were so psychologically wounded by their abuse at the hands of priests that they killed themselves? What exactly are they sorry about? Soon the bishops are telling us about a chance for “renewal” after the promised implementation of new policies. They tell us about “overcoming challenges” in the Church. Or they use the phrase “a few bad apples.”

I find it impossible not to notice that these expressions of sorrow never arrive before the courts, the state attorneys general, or the local press arrive on the scene. That fact gives you another idea about what causes the bishops’ sorrow.

Fifteen years ago Frank Keating, the former governor of Oklahoma, resigned from a panel called the National Review Board, set up by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops to monitor compliance with the Church’s new anti-abuse politics. He was under intense pressure to resign because he had offended bishops when he said some of them were acting like “La Cosa Nostra,” a reference to the Sicilian Mafia.

Cardinal Roger Mahoney of Los Angeles and other prelates made a great show of detesting Keating’s remarks. Keating refused to apologize. “My remarks, which some bishops found offensive, were deadly accurate. I make no apology,” he said. “To resist grand-jury subpoenas, to suppress the names of offending clerics, to deny, to obfuscate, to explain away; that is the model of a criminal organization, not my church,” Keating said in his resignation statement.

Keating was dismissed as a crank. Hadn’t every consultant and auditor given the the Church’s anti-abuse policies hearty endorsements? Wasn’t it routinely described as a model of safety?

Of course, Keating was right. Mahoney was later exposed as having engaged in an energetic attempt to cover up the truth about his own diocese. He shielded predators from law enforcement and even argued that the personnel files of the archdiocese were protected by the seal of the confessional.

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

Cardinal Wuerl, Bishop Zubik Under Fire In Grand Jury Report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA

August 15, 2018

He gained a national reputation for rooting out sex abuse in the church, even defying the Vatican by refusing to transfer pedophile priest Anthony Cipolla back in 1993.

But now Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro accuses Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the former bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh, of protecting child predators.

“Child rape is rape, whether it occurred in the 1980s, ‘90s, or 2018,” said Shapiro. “It is never acceptable, and it is never okay to cover it up as Bishop [David] Zubik did and as Cardinal Wuerl did.”

Part of Shapiro’s claim involves Richard Zula, one of the priests convicted under Cardinal Wuerl’s watch. He says Cardinal Wuerl allegedly offered Zula $180,000 after Zula threatened to name other 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.

Investigation launched into allegations former DA blocked clergy child abuse prosecutions

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WPXI

August 15, 2018

The former Beaver County district attorney named in the 900-page grand jury report into priest sex abuse in Pennsylvania is being investigated for allegations that he blocked inquiries into priests suspected of child abuse.

Current District Attorney David Lozier announced the investigation Wednesday into the official conduct of Robert Masters, 87. Masters has also been fired from his longtime position as solicitor for Children & Youth Services.

Masters was the solicitor for the social service agency for 38 years before being fired Wednesday. The agency’s mission is to protect children from abuse and neglect, preserve families and ensure every child under its care or supervision has a safe, permanent home.

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

Seattle Archdiocese releases name of priest accused of abuse amid scathing national report

SEATTLE (WA)
Komo News

August 16, 2018

By Jennifer Sullivan

The Seattle Archdiocese said a former Catholic schools superintendent is accused of abuse nearly 60 years ago.

Monsignor Phillip Duffy, who died in 1987, is accused of abuse that occurred in 1959 or 1960. There was one victim involved and it’s unknown how long the abuse spanned, Seattle Archdiocese spokesman Greg Magnoni told KOMO in a statement.

Duffy, according to the Archdiocese, served as the church schools superintendent from 1947 until 1968.

The Seattle Archdiocese issued a press release Tuesday announcing Duffy’s name, saying they spoke with a “independent consultant” after the alleged victim contacted them. The Archdiocese said the victim contacted them in early 2016.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 15, 2018

A Pittsburgh priest ducked molestation charges ‘in order to prevent unfavorable publicity.’ Then he moved to Oceanside.

SAN DIEGO (CA)
Union-Tribune [San Diego CA]

August 15, 2018

By Peter Rowe

Read original article

Earlier this week, when a grand jury reported that bishops had covered up decades of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania, Esther Miller suspected these crimes would touch Southern California.

Unfortunately, she was right.

“I have a new victim,” said Miller, the Southern California representative of Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests, or SNAP. “The news triggered all these emotions and she’s a mess.”

The unnamed woman, who has declined to publicly tell her story, was a girl when she was allegedly molested by the late Rev. Ernest Paone.

Dogged by scandal in the Diocese of Pittsburgh, Paone moved to Oceanside in 1966. While never formally transferred to another diocese, he assisted several Southern California parishes, including St. John the Evangelist in Encinitas and Oceanside’s St. Mary, Star of the Sea.

He also taught for 20 years, reportedly at Fallbrook’s Potter Junior High between 1966 and 1986.

While volunteering at St. Denis Catholic Church in Diamond Bar, he allegedly molested a 9-year-old girl.

“He was embedded closely in the family,” Miller said. “He would come to Sunday dinners at the house.”

Now grown, the alleged victim called Miller this week, after news on the Pennsylvania grand jury cited Paone.

“She just opened her guts,” Miller said. “She just sobbed and sobbed and sobbed.”

Both the San Diego and Los Angeles dioceses say they have not received reports of Paone abusing local congregants.

Yet his long residence in Southern California, plus his long history as a serial abuser, makes some wonder if he continued preying on children here.

“They had no doubt he was an offender,” Patrick Wall, a former priest turned legal investigator, said of the Pittsburgh diocese. “That’s why they got him out of Dodge.”

Good standing?

A Pittsburgh native, Paone was ordained in 1956 and assigned to a parish in his hometown. He had an unusually short tenure there and at his next four parishes, serving in five churches in five years.

In 1962, Paone’s supervisor — the Rev. Edmund Sheedy, pastor of St. Monica — interceded to prevent his subordinate’s arrest. Paone had been accused of “molesting young boys of the parish,” Sheedy wrote Bishop John Wright, “and the illegal use of guns with even younger parishioners.”

At another Pennsylvania church, Paone in 1964 was accused of sexually abusing young boys. That investigation was quashed, the Beaver County district attorney wrote the diocese, “in order to prevent unfavorable publicity.”

In May 1966, Paone was granted indefinite leave “for reasons bound up with your psychological and physical health as well as spiritual well-being.”

By September of that year, Paone had moved to Oceanside and was teaching in Fallbrook.

The San Diego County Office of Education confirmed that Paone had enrolled in the California State Teachers’ Retirement Systems in September 1966 and began drawing retirement pay in June 1986.

The office referred further comment on Paone to William Billingsley, assistant superintendent of human resources in the Fallbrook Union Elementary School District.

Billingsley did not return several phone calls and emails.

In 1968, Paone requested and received a letter from the Pittsburgh diocese to the Los Angeles diocese, confirming he was a priest in good standing. He made the same request in 1975, and the Pittsburgh diocese again complied.

Yet Paone, according to a statement released by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles this week, “had no formal assignment at any parish in the Archdiocese and was always a priest of the Diocese of Pittsburgh.”

Nonetheless, the archdiocese noted that its own records show that Paone assisted at Immaculate Heart of Mary in Santa Ana; St. Angela in Brea; and St. Denis in Diamond Bar.

Besides serving as a substitute priest and teaching in Fallbrook, Paone also furthered his studies. In 1970, he graduated from the University of San Diego with a master’s degree in history.

‘Health issues’

Between 1982 and 2005, Paone filed several lawsuits in San Diego courts, including a 1982 case alleging fraud.

Paone and nine others had invested in a proposed 11-acre development in Valley Center. The plan collapsed, though, taking with it all of the money — including Paone’s $19,995. While all 10 were initially represented by one lawyer, Paone eventually chose to represent himself.

In 1983, his lawsuit was dismissed.

Paone moved several times in Oceanside, living there with one of his brothers. In 1992, he moved to Las Vegas and offered his services to St. Anne’s. This arrangement only lasted a month, from February until March.

Citing “health issues,” he returned to Los Angeles.

“Fr. Paone was never a priest of the Diocese of Reno-Las Vegas,” said a statement issued by that diocese this week, adding that there had been no reports of Paone molesting anyone during his month in Nevada.

The Pittsburgh diocese did not warn the Reno-Las Vegas or any other diocese of Paone’s unsavory past until 1994. That July, a woman whose sister had been abused by Paone in the 1960s complained to church authorities in Pittsburgh.

She said that her father, on learning of the crime, “went to the rectory with a shotgun and told Father Paone that he better leave town,” the grand jury report said.

Word of this complaint was forwarded to San Diego and Los Angeles, but without mention of other accusations.

In 1996, though, the San Diego diocese sent a pointed message to Pittsburgh’s bishop, Donald Wuerl.

“Acting on the advice of our insurance carrier,” the note said, Wuerl was asked to provide assurances that Paone had “not had any problems involving sexual abuse, any history of sexual involvement with minors or others, or any other inappropriate sexual behavior.”

Wuerl directed a subordinate to notify San Diego that Paone had not held an assignment within the diocese for more than 30 years.

In May 2002, the Pittsburgh diocese stripped Paone of his priestly faculties. He formally resigned his ministry in February 2003.

By 2006, Paone had returned to his home state. That year, a Pittsburgh parish reported that Paone was “apparently asking inappropriate questions” of children preparing for the sacrament of confirmation.

Another priest objected and removed Paone from this duty.

He died in Pittsburgh in 2012, at the age of 81, from complications caused by Alzheimer’s disease. He had never been formally charged or convicted.

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

Pedophile Priest Reportedly Taught at Fallbrook Junior High for 2 Decades

SAN DIEGO (CA)
Times of San Diego [San Diego CA]

August 15, 2018

By Ken Stone

Read original article

A Pittsburgh priest known to have molested children as long ago as 1962 moved to San Diego in 1967, teaching in Fallbrook for 20 years and celebrating Mass locally, Times of San Diego has learned.

That Roman Catholic clergyman, the late Rev. Ernest C. Paone, apparently avoided scrapes with local authorities, however.

“We looked into Father Paone’s links to the Diocese of San Diego, said Kevin Eckery, the San Diego diocese vice chancellor for communication.

“He lived in Oceanside, but he never received an appointment from us, period. He may have done private Masses or fill-in work. But every time he asked for something more permanent, he was told no.”

In the wake of an explosive Pennsylvania Grand Jury report gaining national attention, its study of Paone reveals how that state’s Catholic officials refused to deal with documented cases of child molestation.

But the San Diego diocese had no knowledge of this, Eckery said Wednesday in a phone interview.

“There was some concern over the circumstances under which he left the Diocese of Pittsburgh … just that feeling that we didn’t have the complete picture,” he said.

A Vicar priest under Bishop Robert Brom made the decision to deny Paone full priestly privileges in San Diego County, Eckery said.

Paone’s name doesn’t appear in a national database of priests accused of sexual abuse, and he wasn’t mentioned in the $198 million settlement with the San Diego diocese.

Until 1991, when he was technically transferred to the Diocese of Reno-Las Vegas, Paone was cleared to serve in San Diego by his home diocese of Pittsburgh even though his superiors knew him to be a pedophile, the report said.

But: “There is no indication that the [Pittsburgh] diocese provided any interested parties information that Paone had sexually abused children or that the diocese had played a role in preventing his prosecution for that conduct,” said the grand jury report.

That report also said Paone, who died at age 81 in 2012, “attended at least one course at Catholic University in San Diego.”

That likely was a reference to what is now the University of San Diego, whose officials confirmed a one-time student by that name.

“Please note that prior to 1972, Paone would have enrolled in the San Diego College for Men,” said Pamela Gray Payton, a school spokeswoman. “The name ‘University of San Diego’ was selected after the College for Men merged with the San Diego College for Women in 1972.”

According to a 2008 issue of USD’s alumni magazine, Paone was a graduate student in 1970 who retired after 20 years of teaching at Potter Junior High School in Fallbrook.

The Fallbrook Union Elementary School District didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Meanwhile, the San Diego County Office of Education found Paone in the state teachers retirement system, spokesman Stacy Brandt said.

“He became a CalSTRS member Sept. 6, 1966, and retired from the STRS system June 19, 1986,” he said.

A spokesman for the state Commission on Teacher Credentialing said Wednesday it didn’t have a record of a credential for Paone, but on Friday said: “Mr. Paone was issued a secondary teaching credential in 1966, and a junior college teaching credential (these documents are no longer issued by the Commission) in 1970,” found on microfilm.

In a 2,700-word chapter titled “The Case of Father Ernest Paone,” the Grand Jury report said that in August 1964, Beaver County District Attorney Robert Masters sent a letter to Bishop Vincent Leonard of the Diocese of Pittsburgh about a sexual abuse investigation of Paone.

“The district attorney advised the diocese that ‘in order to prevent unfavorable publicity,’ he had ‘halted all investigations into similar incidents involving young boys,” the report said, noting no action was taken against Paone.

More than a half-century later, the Grand Jury asked why.

“On September 15, 2017, Masters … was confronted with his letter which the Grand Jury obtained from Diocesan files,” the report said. “When asked by the attorney for the Commonwealth why he would defer to the bishop on a criminal matter, Master replied, ‘Probably respect for the bishop. I really have no proper answer.’”

Masters told the Grand Jury he was “desirous of support from the diocese for his political career.”

The Diocese of Pittsburgh repeatedly labeled Paone a priest in good standing. But it wasn’t until 41 years after the diocese learned that Paone was sexually assaulting children that he was finally retired from active ministry, the report said.

In 2006, three years after Paone’s retirement, the Pittsburgh diocese got a confidential memorandum from the Rev. John Rushofsky, a clergy personnel official, that revealed Paone had been “assisting with confessions for confirmation-age children, apparently asking inappropriate questions of the young penitents.”

“When questioned about this, Paone told local [Los Angeles or San Diego] diocesan officials that he had received permission from the [Pittsburgh] diocese,” the report said.

Between Paone’s departure from Pennsylvania in 1966 and 1991, he also served as pastor of a parish in the Los Angeles County city of Diamond Bar, where he heard “many confessions in that parish,” the report said.

Diocesan spokesman Eckery said Paone was a regular celebrant at St. Denis Catholic Church in Diamond Bar every weekend for at least 21 years. (The Rev. Msgr. James J. Loughnane, who started as pastor there in 1993, says Paone was not a pastor and triggered no negative stories. “I don’t know if there’s anyone around who will even remember him now,” he said Thursday. “I never met the man.”)

Paone was granted an indefinite leave of absence in 1966 “for reasons bound up with your psychological and physical health as well as spiritual well-being,” the report said, quoting one of many documents it found.

Even though the statute of limitations had expired on Paone’s incidents, the report says that in June 2002, a victim advised the Diocese of Pittsburgh that he was sexually abused by Paone in the 1960s.

“It occurred at the victim’s house, at a hunting camp to which Paone had access to in the woods, and in Paone’s car,” the Grand Jury said. “Paone also provided the victim with alcohol, pornographic magazines and cash.”

Paone died in Pittsburgh on May 12, 2012 — reportedly of Alzheimer’s disease.

His paid obituary said: “Father Paone was ordained in 1957, and spent nine years working in the Diocese of Pittsburgh. He spent 20 years in California teaching in the public school system, and performing his priestly duties in ministry of Hispanic people, and dividing his work with two different churches. In May of 2011, he celebrated 55 years as a priest.”

Updated at 6:15 p.m. Aug. 17, 2018

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

Bishops accused of brushing off sexual abuse complaints

HARRISBURG (PA)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

By Marc Levy and Mark Scolforo

A priest raped a 7-year-old girl while visiting her in the hospital after she had her tonsils removed. Another priest forced a 9-year-old boy into having oral sex, then rinsed out the youngster’s mouth with holy water. One boy was forced to say confession to the priest who sexually abused him.

An estimated 300 Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania molested more than 1,000 children — and possibly many more — since the 1940s, according to a scathing Pennsylvania grand jury report released Tuesday that accused senior church officials, including the man who is now archbishop of Washington, D.C., of systematically covering up complaints.

The “real number” of victimized children and abusive priests might be higher since some secret church records were lost and some victims never came forward, the grand jury said.

U.S. bishops adopted widespread reforms in 2002 when clergy abuse became a national crisis for the church, including stricter requirements for reporting accusations to law enforcement and a streamlined process for removing clerics. But the grand jury said more changes are needed.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 Sexual Abuse Crisis Deepens As Authorities Lag In Response

BOSTON (MA)
WBUR

August 15, 2018

By Tom Gjelten

A two-year grand jury investigation in Pennsylvania resulted in what the state’s attorney general, Josh Shapiro, called “the largest, most comprehensive report into child sex abuse in the Catholic Church ever produced in the United States.”

But the report, released Tuesday, was not the first. In 2002, The Boston Globe revealed that Catholic authorities in the Boston Archdiocese had engaged in a massive cover-up of sex crimes committed by area priests, and investigations in other parts of the country have since uncovered similar patterns of sexual abuse by members of the Catholic clergy. The ongoing scandals amount to a deepening church crisis.

“Each new report of clerical abuse at any level creates doubt in the minds of many that we are effectively addressing this catastrophe in the Church,” Cardinal Sean O’Malley, the archbishop of Boston, warned last month.

His statement came in the aftermath of what the Washington Archdiocese called a “credible and substantiated” allegation leveled against Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the former archbishop of Washington. O’Malley cautioned that a failure to take action in such cases “will threaten and endanger the already weakened moral authority of the Church.”

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

Ex-Dallas bishop whose tenure marred by scandal dies at 87

DALLAS (TX)
The Associated Press

August 15, 2018

The Catholic Diocese of Dallas says that the Most Rev. Charles Grahmann, whose 17-year tenure as bishop of the diocese was marred by one of the first church sex abuse scandals to explode into public view, has died. He was 87.

The diocese says in a statement that Grahmann died Tuesday in San Antonio following a long illness. He was the sixth bishop of the Dallas diocese and served from 1990 to 2007.

Grahmann was appointed the first bishop of the Diocese of Victoria in 1982 before being named bishop in Dallas, where he was known for his ministry to the poor and marginalized.

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

Detroit archbishop on sex abuse scandal: Repent or get out

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit Free Press

August 14, 2018

By Ann Zaniewski

On the eve of Tuesday’s release of a scathing grand jury report about church leaders protecting more than 300 “predator priests” in Pennsylvania, Archbishop of Detroit Allen Vigneron said priests who have impure relations with others need to repent or give up the priesthood.

He stressed that all clergy — including bishops like himself — need to be held accountable for their behavior.

Vigneron’s remarks came in two similar letters Monday — one geared toward clergy, the other to the faithful at large — issued ahead of the release of the report which accused leaders in six Pennsylvania dioceses for decades of being more interested in safeguarding the church and the abusers than the well-being of more than 1,000 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.

‘It’s the Same Blueprint’: Locals React to Scathing Grand Jury Report on Pennsylvania’s ‘Predator Priests’

BOSTON (MA)
NBC Boston

August 15, 2018

By Jeff Saperstone and Karla Rendon-Alvarez

A newly-released grand jury report details disturbing allegations of sexual abuse on more than 1000 children at the hands of roughly 300 priests in Pennsylvania

Shocking reports coming out of Pennsylvania detailing decades of sexual abuse by hundreds of Roman Catholic Church priests have hit close to home.

The Archdiocese of Boston, who faced its own share of sexual abuse cover-ups, refused to comment on the scathing grand jury report that was released Tuesday. The disturbing report, which details allegations against roughly 300 priests, comes after two years of investigation by the jury.

“Unfortunately, this is just the tip of the iceberg,” attorney Mitchell Garabedian said, “There are many, many more victims out 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.