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.

July 9, 2018

Cheyenne Diocese: Abuse allegations against retired bishop ‘credible’

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

July 3, 2018

by Brian Roewe

Joseph Hart, restricted from ministry, served as bishop from 1976-2001

A recent investigation by the Diocese of Cheyenne, Wyoming, found that allegations of sexual abuse of minors against retired Bishop Joseph Hart are “credible and require disciplinary action,” challenging a past inquiry by a local district attorney that has now been called “flawed.”

Hart, who served as Cheyenne bishop from 1976 to 2001, has been restricted from public ministry since September 2015. He has faced allegations of sexual abuse dating back to his time as a priest (1956-1976) in the Kansas City-St. Joseph, Missouri, Diocese.

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The ministerial restrictions will remain in place, said Cheyenne Bishop Steven Biegler, 59, following an outside investigator’s report that concluded Hart, 86, as bishop had sexually abused two boys in Wyoming.

“Nothing is more important than the safety of our children. We have zero tolerance for sexual abuse of any kind,” Biegler said in a statement issued Monday. “If there is ever any indication of abuse brought to our attention, it will be reported to the civil authorities and investigated thoroughly, even when the allegations involve a Bishop.”

Hart has repeatedly denied all accusations of sexual abuse of minors.

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

Pope to Bishops: Do as You Please, But Say Nice Stuff and the Media with Cover for You

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle

July 8, 2018

By Betty Clermont

Some facts withheld by the mainstream U.S. media:

– Pope Francis has sponsored only 6 refugee families although the Vatican owns thousands of apartments in Rome.
– Over 800 U.S faith communities provide sanctuary for immigrants but not the American bishops although they own an estimated 70,000 buildings.
– Pope Francis gives only 20% of billions earmarked for charity to the poor.
– Catholic Charities of Chicago gives only 27% of its revenue to the poor.
– Pope Francis has packed the Vatican with vulture capitalists.
– Many U.S. bishops use “Catholic Foundations” to hide their assets and investments.

Chicago Cardinal Blasé Cupich is “the American point person for Pope Francis.” Cupich often acts as his mouthpiece, defender and envoy.

Cupich had a private audience with Pope Francis last May 17, less than a month before the U.S. bishops held their spring meeting. Under discussion was the document, “Faithful Citizenship,” a voting guide issued every four years by the United State Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) since 1976, last revised in 2015.

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

July 8, 2018

Archdiocese of New Orleans pays ‘substantial’ sum to resolve rape claims against deacon

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The New Orleans Advocate

June 20, 2018

By Jim Mustian

[Note: When it appeared several weeks ago, this article was not blogged in Abuse Tracker.]

The Archdiocese of New Orleans has paid more than a half-million dollars to settle claims that a longtime deacon and teacher repeatedly raped an altar boy at Holy Rosary School in New Orleans more than three decades ago.

The settlement, paid this month, brought a swift conclusion to a lawsuit filed earlier this year that accused the archdiocese of allowing a “sexual predator” to work among children in Our Lady of the Rosary Parish and doing “nothing to intervene and prevent such misconduct from occurring.”

The lawsuit, filed in Orleans Parish Civil District Court, claimed the abuse began in 1979, when the boy was 8 years old and in the third grade, and continued until he was in the sixth grade.

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

Disgraced New Orleans deacon continued as lay minister despite abuse claims; archbishop ’embarrassed’

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The New Orleans Advocate

July 7, 2018

By Jim Mustian

Last weekend, a parishioner pulled up to St. Mary Magdalen Catholic Church but drove away before walking into the sanctuary.

The woman decided not to attend Mass, she said, because she could no longer stomach the sight of George F. Brignac, a defrocked deacon who as recently as last month served as a lector at the Metairie church — reading Scripture and announcements — despite years of sexual abuse allegations that prompted his removal from the ministry in 1988.

Brignac, 83, remained in this public role even after the Archdiocese of New Orleans this spring quietly paid more than $500,000 to settle claims that he repeatedly raped an 8-year-old altar boy at Holy Rosary School more than three decades ago.

At least a half-dozen other boys accused Brignac of molestation throughout his tenure as a Catholic school teacher — allegations that fell on deaf ears within a church that stubbornly supported him through three police investigations.

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

Publisher’s Notebook: Torn Between Faith and Profession

WASILLA (AK)
The Frontiersman

July 8, 2018

By Dennis Anderson

I’m a cradle Catholic. I typically avoid movies concerning the church. Hollywood doesn’t always portray Catholics and our faith in the best of lights. When the movie ‘Spotlight’ was released, I had zero interest in watching the film. ‘Spotlight’ tells the story behind the Boston Globe’s investigative journalism team’s efforts to uncover the widespread of child sex abuse by priests in the Boston area. Subsequently, they uncovered that the church not only knew about these priests, but made unbelievable efforts to conceal the epidemic.

All told, there were over 90 priests confirmed to have been involved. The Globe’s investigation revealed that the church, lawyers and some of the faithful went to great links to keep the accusations quiet. The team also exposed the fact that psychologists working with the church believed that these priests could be rehabilitated. Some were declared cured and sent back into parishes only to abuse again. One such priest was John J. Geoghan, and since the mid-1990’s, more than 130 people have come forward with horrific tales of his abuse, according to the original Boston Globe article released in January of 2002. Geoghan was the early focus of the team because the church successfully had the court documents attached to his case sealed.

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

One evening, while searching through Netflix for something to watch, ‘Spotlight’ appeared in the recently added folder. I checked out the trailer and decided to acquiesce. The trailer had me intrigued because it portrayed that the movie was focused on the passionate efforts of the Spotlight team. So, I watched.

At this time, I was in my first year as Publisher of the Frontiersman. As I watched the movie I never felt so conflicted. As the reporters dug deeper and actors portraying victims told their stories, I was riveted. My emotions ranged from disbelief because, after all, it’s just a movie to the embarrassment that I blindly followed my church to the point where it could do no wrong.

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

Duterte confesses: I stopped as Catholic after priests’ abuse

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
Manila Bulletin

July 8, 2018

By Genalyn Kabiling

Under fire for his controversial statements about God, President Duterte has revealed that he stopped being a Catholic after enduring sexual abuse from a priest in high school.

The President said after the “terrible” incident in school, he created his own God who values justice and fairness.

“Something terrible happened when we were young. It’s not really that serious. But fondling while confessing, we were being fondled so when I graduated, hindi na ako Katoliko. Hindi na ako Katoliko [I was no longer a Catholic. I was no longer a Catholic] at that age. I was not even in politics then,” Duterte said during the inauguration of Malayan Colleges Mindanao in Davao City.

“But pag-graduate ko, I created my own God. ‘Yung nakikita kong values na justice [After graduation, I created my own God based on the values I have seen like justice] — what is justice, fairness — I have always said in Davao, ‘My God is my service to the people.’ Period,” he added.

The President earlier bared that the late Fr. Mark Falvey molested him and other high school students while studying at Ateneo de Davao University. The incident allegedly happened during the sacrament of penance or confession in school.

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

Women’s panel to monitor sexual abuse case against priests

ABU DHABI (UAE)
Gulf News

July 7, 2018

NCW member Rekha Sharma meets victim at her house

Thiruvalla (Kerala) – The National Commission for Women (NCW), which took suo motu cognisance of a woman’s allegation of sexual exploitation by five priests of the Kottayam-headquartered Malankara Orthodox Church, on Saturday said that they will closely monitor the case.

NCW member Rekha Sharma met the victim at her house in the presence of her close relatives and found out from her about the case. She later told the media that it was most unfortunate that these priests have misused their position.

“It’s to be noted that one of the accused passed on the information to the other accused about the victim. I will be calling them as hooligans, as they have misused their position. We will ask the head of the Church why these things are happening,” she said.

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

Witnesses await church sex abuse report with hope for change

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press

July 8, 2018

By Marc Levy

One after another, witnesses beat back fear of revealing details many had kept largely private and recounted to grand jurors their story of sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests whom they had trusted.

As they spoke, many said they felt compassion from the grand jurors in the sweeping investigation into allegations of child sexual abuse and cover-ups in six of Pennsylvania dioceses. And they felt believed.

Now, many are eagerly anticipating the public release of the grand jury report, which is pending clearance from Pennsylvania’s highest court as justices sort through arguments by current and former clergy named in the document that releasing it would violate their constitutional rights.

“I was scared and probably, in the first few minutes, visibly shaking because it’s big,” said James VanSickle, recalling his experience as a witness. “It’s like, ‘wow, I’ve held this secret for so long and now I’m telling you the details and I want to get this right.’ There’s a lot going through your head.”

Dozens of witnesses testified in the state attorney general’s two-year grand jury investigation that victim advocates expect will produce the largest and most exhaustive clergy sexual abuse report by a U.S. state.

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

July 7, 2018

Hunter abuse survivor Peter Gogarty has invited Pope Francis for a talk about Archbishop Philip Wilson’s future

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
Herald

July 6, 2018

By Joanne McCarthy

Hunter abuse survivor Peter Gogarty has gone straight to the Pope with a plea for him to sack Archbishop Philip Wilson, and an offer to discuss the reasons why over the phone.

Mr Gogarty has included his mobile phone number in a letter to Pope Francis on Thursday after Wilson refused to resign following a jail sentence after he was convicted of concealing Hunter Catholic priest Jim Fletcher’s child sex crimes. He intends to appeal the conviction.

“As the only person in the world who can take decisive action in this regard, I urge you to dismiss him from his post immediately,” wrote Mr Gogarty, who was sexually abused by Fletcher in the 1970s, and whose calls for Wilson to resign or be dismissed were backed this week by Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Opposition Leader Bill Shorten.

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

More allegations against Kerala bishop in abuse case

ABU DHABI (UAE)
Gulf News

July 7, 2018

By Akhel Mathew

Priest claims that complaint against bishop had been brought before church leadership

Thiruvananthapuram – Churches of different denominations in Kerala continued to face allegations of abuse, with a priest being the latest to state that the Catholic Church leadership was in the know of the abuse case involving a nun.

The nun had accused a bishop from the state, now based at Jalandhar in Punjab, of sexually abusing her as many as 13 times during his visits to the church guest house in Kuravilangad near Kottayam.

The bishop has denied the nun’s claim, alleging instead that she had a personal vendetta against him for changing her from her duties.

Giving a different twist to the controversy, a priest based in Jalandhar told a local television channel that the complaint against the bishop had been brought before the church leadership, and that the leadership had “behaved irresponsibly”. He said the church leaders, instead of providing justice to the aggrieved nun, began to threaten her.

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

Fortieth statewide investigating grand jury: Selected postings

HARRISBURG (PA)
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania

July 6, 2018

[The Supreme Court has posted six pleadings supporting and objecting to the media’s Application to Intervene Seeking Public Access to Grand Jury Report, Docket Sheets, and Filings. These include AG Shapiro’s response, a joint response in opposition and four other responses in opposition.]

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

Pa. court agrees to hear objections to church abuse report

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press via PennLive

July 6, 2018

By Mark Scolforo and Marc Levy

[Includes video ‘It will be the worst’: Rep. Mark Rozzi speaking on upcoming Catholic Church grand jury report and on SOL reform in Pennsylvania.]

Pennsylvania’s highest court on Friday decided against immediately releasing an investigative grand jury’s report into allegations of decades of child sexual abuse in six Roman Catholic dioceses, instead saying it would hear arguments from priests and others that making it public would violate their constitutional rights.

The state Supreme Court gave lawyers for those who object to being named in the nearly 900-page report and want to prevent its disclosure until Tuesday to lay out their arguments in writing, and the attorney general’s office until July 13 to respond.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro has said he wants the report made public as soon as possible, noting that unindicted people who were cited in the report in a way that “could be construed as critical” were given an unrestricted right to file responses that are expected to be released along with 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.

Challenging a grand jury is rare, but some legal observers say it might make sense

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

July 6, 2018

By Julian Routh

The legal battle over the release of a report on sexual abuse has called into question the very nature of the grand jury that investigated and wrote about decades of abuse in Catholic dioceses across Pennsylvania.

The Roman Catholic dioceses of Greensburg and Harrisburg last year sought to shut down the statewide grand jury investigating sexual abuse by priests in six dioceses, including their own, contending that the creation of the grand jury lacked a legal justification. And in filings on behalf of more than two dozen clergy petitioners, lawyers on Thursday challenged the release of the mammoth report, claiming it leaves their clients “wrongly accused and falsely implicated.”

According to two Pennsylvania legal experts, the courtroom maneuvering over this grand jury’s report is unprecedented in its strategy, and has triggered a complex discussion about the rights of the accused and the defense of their reputations. The challenges have been both to the validity of the grand jury itself and to the way in which it has done its work.

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

July 6, 2018

Una “Pastoral para Comerciantes” en La Merced

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Revista Desde la Fé [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

July 6, 2018

By Vladimir Alcántara

Read original article

El P. Gabriel Piña asegura que la integración y consolidación de la

comunidad parroquial se ha logrado a partir de un trabajo de Iglesia en

salida, en el que “todo ha sido ir, ir e ir”.

La Parroquia de Santo Tomás Apóstol “La Palma”, erigida en 1772 en el

barrio de La Merced, ampliará la celebración de su fiesta patronal (3 de

julio) hasta la siguiente semana, mediante una exposición denominada el

“Museo de la Biblia”, que contiene datos de gran interés, y la realización de

un torneo juvenil de futbol, que se llevará a cabo en el marco de este

festejo, como parte de las actividades que la parroquia realiza para alejar a

los jóvenes de los vicios.

Sobre la fiesta patronal y el caminar pastoral de la comunidad, habla para

Desde la fe el P. Gabriel Piña Landa, quien desde hace cinco años realiza

una labor de acercamiento con vecinos y comerciantes, bajo el concepto

arquidiocesano de “Pastoral de Ambiente”.

El P. Piña señala que hace un lustro, cuando llegó a esta parroquia, no había

propiamente una comunidad de gente organizada para el trabajo de Iglesia,

por lo que se vio en la necesidad de emprender acciones para integrarla.

“Lo primero –explica–, fue tratar de sembrar confianza en la gente. El barrio

de La Merced tiene muy pocos habitantes, ya que la mayoría de los

inmuebles funcionan como bodegas de comerciantes; pero comenzamos a

visitar a esos pocos para involucrarlos en el trabajo pastoral a través de

diferentes actividades. A partir de ese acercamiento, pudimos formar dos

coros parroquiales”.

Sin embargo –señala–, como la mayoría de las personas que hay en esta

zona son comerciantes, se tuvo que emprender otro tipo de acciones. “Así

como en la Arquidiócesis existe la ‘Pastoral para Empresarios’, la ‘Pastoral

para Académicos’ y otras, aquí vimos propicio una ‘Pastoral para

Comerciantes’, circunscrita a lo que sería una ‘Pastoral de Ambiente’.

Explica que se comenzó por ir a bendecir los negocios, pero no de una

manera exprés, sino como es debido: uno por uno, haciendo una oración y

conversando detenidamente con el dueño del local. “Posteriormente

comenzamos a hacer Horas Santas en algunos espacios, y a hablar con los

comerciantes de los problemas de la zona. Es así como se han ido

integrando a la Iglesia. No estamos esperando a que la gente venga. Todo

ha sido ir, ir, e ir”.

En La Merced los comerciantes siempre están ocupados, pero con frecuencia encargan el

negocio al empleado para asistir a la parroquia; o bien, el empleado pide permiso para hacerlo.

P. Gabriel Piña

Señala que, por otra parte, se ha trabajado bastante en materia de

religiosidad popular, a través de diferentes actividades para las que la gente

abre gustosa sus espacios, pues son personas que tienen mucha sed de

Dios. “Tratamos de alimentar su fe. Desde aquí salen algunas

peregrinaciones a la Basílica de Guadalupe, pues existen varios gremios,

como el de los dulces, el de las flores o el de las verduras, y en todas los

acompañamos como parroquia. La gente realmente percibe mucha cercanía

de su iglesia; por eso participa, por eso celebra con gusto a su santo

patrono”.

Finalmente, el P. Gabriel Piña externó que además de la exposición “Museo

de la Biblia” y del torneo juvenil de futbol que se llevarán a cabo en el marco

de la celebración de la fiesta patronal, se realizó un concurso denominado

“Relatos y Retratos del Barrio de La Merced” –que tuvo una extraordinaria

participación, especialmente de niños–, sobre historias verídicas o ficticias

en torno a la zona, bajo dos categorías: una para personas relacionadas con

la literatura, y la otra para vecinos, de la cual saldrá un anecdotario que

posteriormente se abrirá al público en la página de Facebook de la

parroquia.

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

Obispo de Calama suspende a sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual a menor

CALAMA (CHILE)
El Mostrador

July 5, 2018

[Bishop of Calama suspends priest accused of child sexual abuse]

El obispo de Calama, Oscar Blanco, informó que suspendió al sacerdote Jordi Jorba Navarro, de la Parroquia Asunción de la Virgen, luego de recibir una denuncia por abuso sexual en contra de un menor de edad, hecho que habría ocurrido en el año 2003.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 claim false accusations in grand jury report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

July 5, 2018

By Peter Smith

http://www.post-gazette.com/news/faith-religion/2018/07/05/Clergy-sexual-abuse-Catholic-priests-grand-jury-attorney-general-Josh-Shapiro-Diocese-of-Pittsburgh-Greensburg-Harrisburg-Allentown-Erie-Scranton/stories/201807050134

Attorneys for more than two dozen people, including current and former clergy members, are challenging the release of a mammoth report by a statewide grand jury of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church, claiming Thursday the report leaves them “wrongly accused and falsely implicated.”

The challengers — who also include the executrix for a deceased person named by the grand jury as an offender within the Diocese of Pittsburgh — denounced the report as riddled with “inaccuracies and falsities” and alleged that the supervising judge of the 40th statewide grand jury failed in his duty to ensure the report was based on at least a “preponderance of evidence.”

Attorney General Josh Shapiro defended the report’s integrity in a statement later Thursday.

“The report is accurate and these individuals have had the chance to respond, and their responses will be included in the final grand jury report,” he said. “This legal filing is nothing more than a desperate attempt to stop the public from learning the truth about their abhorrent conduct.”

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

Former priest charged with historic abuse of young boy at a Huddersfield school

HUDDERSFIELD (ENGLAND)
Huddersfield Daily Examiner

July 5, 2018

By Emma Davison

David Crowley allegedly assaulted the child while working at a Catholic primary school in Huddersfield

See our privacy notice
A former priest has appeared in court accused of abusing a young boy at a Huddersfield school.

David Crowley, 64, is charged with three counts of indecent assault and three offences of gross indecency with a boy.

The charges are historic, dating between the late 1970s and early 1980s when Crowley was a priest and working at a Catholic primary school in the town.

The victim came into contact with Crowley and other boys during the course of his employment, prosecutor Andy Wills 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.

Catholic Church finally cracking down on pedophile priests

EVANSVILLE (IN)
Courier & Press

July 5, 2018

By Mary Sanchez

To even casual observers of recent news about the Catholic Church, it’s clear that a new day has dawned.

Finally, after decades of stalling, denials and civil lawsuits, Catholic dioceses seem to recognize their accountability for the criminal behavior of pedophile priests.

Consider the case of retired Bishop Joseph Hart. The former prelate of Cheyenne, Wyo., now 86 years old, could face criminal charges under what the current bishop of Cheyenne has deemed credible and substantiated accusations of sexual abuse.

News of the case traveled ahead of the headlines to Kansas City, where Hart was ordained in 1956. Many believe that is where he first groomed young boys for sexual abuse in the parishes where he served until 1976.

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

Current and former clergy members behind push to block report on clergy sex abuse

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
The Inquirer

July 5, 2018

By Angela Couloumbis and Liz Navratil

Harrisburg – Nearly two dozen current and former members of the clergy are among those seeking to block the release of a highly anticipated grand jury report outlining decades of alleged sexual abuse by clergy in Catholic dioceses across the state, according to a court document filed Thursday.

The revelation that clergy members are behind the fierce secret legal battle came in response to a push by the Inquirer and Daily News, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, and seven other news organizations, which have together asked the state Supreme Court to lift its stay on the report’s release.

News organizations have called the report a “matter of extraordinary public importance.” The more than 800-page grand jury report, which was expected to have been released last month, details alleged clergy abuse in all of the state’s Catholic dioceses except for Philadelphia and Altoona-Johnstown, which already were the subject of similar investigations.

The documents filed Thursday offered a glimpse into the intense legal maneuvering that could result in the report’s being permanently shielded from the public. They also offered the most detail to date about the people who have fought for months to keep their names out of the public realm.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. 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 attorney general, lawyers for clergy, argue over grand jury report release

ALLENTOWN and HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press via Morning Call

July 5, 2018

By Mark Scolforo

[See the docket.]

Pennsylvania’s attorney general and lawyers for current and retired priests came down on opposite sides over an effort by news organizations, including The Morning Call, to unseal an extensive report into child sexual abuse and attempts to cover it up in several Roman Catholic dioceses.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro said in a filing to the state Supreme Court supporting the release that his office opposes requests by unnamed parties to present their own evidence, question witnesses and rewrite the grand jury report “in accordance with their preferred view of the facts.” He argued the report should not be delayed, calling it a matter of exceptional public interest.

“Hundreds of victims, thousands of parishioners and many members of the community are awaiting the report,” Shapiro wrote. “The longer it is held, the greater the risk of undermining public confidence in the judicial system.”

Shapiro called the priests’ criticism of the report “nothing more than a desperate attempt to stop the public from learning the truth about their abhorrent conduct.”

Lawyers for nearly two dozen unnamed current and retired clergy members filed a group response that described the report as replete with errors and “improper assertions,” arguing that without revisions the report will irreparably harm their reputations and deny them the due process the law guarantees.

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

July 5, 2018

Rev. Dozia J. Wilson– Assignment History

ALBANY (NY)
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Dozia J. Wilson was a priest of the Diocese of Albany, ordained in 1972. Early on he was an assistant parish priest in Albany, Diocesan Director of Urban Ministry and Chaplain at the La Salle School for Boys. In May 1976 Wilson was transferred to the Archdiocese of Boston, where he was Administrator of St. Joseph’s in Roxbury until April 1979. He was moved to a Rochester NY parish for several months, to St. Ann’s in Fort Ann for a short while, followed by a decade at St. Mary’s in Hudson. While there he was Chaplain at the Columbia County jail and Columbia-Greene Community College.

Allegations against Wilson are first known to have surfaced in 1976, when some parents complained to the District Attorney that Wilson had sexually abused two boys at an Albany hotel. The diocese was given an ultimatum by the D.A.: either move the priest out of the area or he faces prosecution. Wilson was quietly moved to Boston. In 1997 a young man reported to Cardinal Law in a letter that Wilson sexually abused him over a two-year period, beginning in 1976, when he was a 15-year-old boy. The man said that Wilson had begun giving him alcohol and marijuana in Albany in 1973, and that he and his younger brother were taken by Wilson to Boston, where they lived with him in the rectory of St. Joseph’s. The man filed a civil lawsuit which was settled in 2003. In another lawsuit, filed in 2004, Wilson was accused of the sexual abuse of a boy from 1980 to 1985, beginning when the boy was age 14. This accuser said he first met the the priest at St. Ann’s at age 14, and considered him a father figure. Wilson allegedly would give the boy gifts and take him on trips, including to Boston and the West Coast, and abused him after plying him with alcohol and marijuana.

Records show that Wilson was sent for treatment in November 1978 and that, in May 1979, he asked the Bishop of Tulsa OK for permission to work in his diocese. Nothing came of that. In 1991 he was sent to a rehabilitation for the treatment of alcoholism, after which he was not reassigned. He resigned from ministry in 1993.

Wilson went on to work for ten years as a spiritual advisor at a residential treatment program for boys in Dobbs Ferry. He was fired in 2003 after being beaten up by an 18-year-old male he had picked up in Manhattan.

Ordained: May 13, 1972

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Rev. Dennis C. Chludzinski– Assignment History

ERIE (PA)
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Dennis C. Chludzinski was a priest of the Diocese of Erie, ordained in 1976. He assisted for a year each at two parishes then, in 1978, went on leave of absence. From 1979 to 1982 he was assigned to St. Mark’s Seminary, after which he is no longer indexed in the Official Catholic Directory.

Chludzinski’s name was included on the diocese’s list released April 6, 2018 of priests, lay employees and volunteers accused of sexually abusing minors. He was noted to have been laicized and living in Erie.

Ordained: 1976

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Rev. Thaddeus T. Kondzielski – Assignment History

ERIE (PA)
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Thaddeus T. Kondzielski was ordained for the Diocese of Erie in 1967. He taught at Cathedral Preparatory High School for twenty years, living most of that time at St. Hedwig parish. He went on leave of absence in 1987 and was assigned the following year to St. Philip’s in Crossingsville, where he remained until his retirement in 2013.

Kondzielski’s name was included on the Erie diocese’s list released April 6, 2018 of priests and lay employees and volunteers accused of sexually abusing minors. He was noted to be not allowed to function as priest, and was living in Waterford, PA.

Ordained: 1967
Retired: 2013

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Republican congressman calls police on former students who say he ignored sex abuse

COLUMBUS (OH)
ThinkProgress

July 5, 2018

By Addy Baiird

“Please leave me out of it.”

Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) claims he is being “bullied” by former Ohio State wrestlers who accuse the congressman of turning a blind eye to the sexual abuse of hundreds of student athletes while he worked as the assistant wrestling coach from 1986 to 1994.

According to a CNN report Wednesday, Jordan will contact the Capitol police after receiving emails from one of the wrestlers who has accused Jordan of doing nothing about the sexual abuse by the team doctor, Dr. Richard Strauss.

A source in Jordan’s office told CNN that the emails were threatening because of how many had been sent but provided no other details about why the congressman believes he is being “bullied.”

CNN did report that emails between Ohio State wrestler Michael DiSabato and the congressman obtained by CNN show DiSabato sent Jordan an email on April 24 expressing concerns about the sexual abuse scandal, and asked Jordan to help given his knowledge of it. DiSabato told CNN there was no response.

CNN reported that DiSabato has been sending emails for “months” and Jordan didn’t respond because he didn’t want to “encourage the behavior.”

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Michigan State criticized over head of complaints office

LANSING (MI)
The Associated Press

July 3, 2018

Michigan State University has hired an attorney who defended the school against sexual assault lawsuits to head the office handling sexual assault complaints, sparking pushback from victim advocates.

The university’s interim president, John Engler, appointed Robert Kent this month to temporarily lead the Office of Civil Rights and Title IX Education and Compliance, the Detroit Free Press reported. The school cited his expertise in such cases as its assistant general counsel.

The move comes in the wake of the sexual abuse scandal involving former sports doctor Larry Nassar . Hundreds of women and girls have said he sexually abused them under the guise of medical treatment, including when he worked for Michigan State and USA Gymnastics.

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Theo Fleury can talk to Graham James while abuser serves sentence

CANADA
Montreal Gazette

July 4, 2018

By Paul Cherry

The change to James’s parole appears to be based on a request from Fleury, who said in an interview that he wants to speak with James as part of a documentary.
The Parole Board of Canada has modified one of the conditions imposed on former junior hockey coach Graham James to allow the players he sexually abused to communicate with him while he continues to serve his sentence in Montreal.

The parole board recently made the decision while reviewing the conditions it set when James, 64, was released on full parole in September 2016 following a hearing at a federal penitentiary in Laval.

His first sentence, a 42-month prison term, began in 1997 and expired in 2000. One of the victims involved in that sentence was Sheldon Kennedy, who later played in the NHL. James did not reoffend, but other victims of his crimes, including former NHL player Theo Fleury, pursued charges several years later, which ultimately resulted in the seven-year prison term James is still serving.

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Kevin Spacey: British police probing new sexual-assault allegations from three accusers

UNITED KINGDOM
USA TODAY

July 3, 2018

By Maria Puente

Kevin Spacey: London police probe new allegations

Kevin Spacey, the Oscar-winning actor who vanished from public view last fall after he was accused of sexually assaulting scores of young men or boys over years, was back in the news Tuesday with word that British police are investigating new allegations linked to him.

Scotland Yard confirmed to USA TODAY that it is investigating accusations of sexual assault made by three men who came forward in February and April, which would bring the known total of Spacey accusers in Britain to at least six.

Meanwhile, Australian actor Guy Pearce, who appeared with Spacey in the 1997 film “L.A. Confidential” (which garnered two Oscars), stunned an audience Down Under Tuesday when he obliquely suggested that Spacey had groped him during filming.

In an interview with chat-show host Andrew Denton, Pearce, 50, said it was “slightly difficult” to star opposite Spacey because he was “handsy.” Pearce was hesitant to talk about Spacey when Denton mentioned his name.

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BU Garners 16 CASE Awards

BOSTON (MA)
BU Today

July 3, 2018

Earns more honors for creative work than any other school worldwide

Boston University won a record 16 of this year’s CASE Circle of Excellence Awards, an international competition that honors outstanding work in advancement services, alumni relations, communications, fundraising, and marketing. For the fifth year in a row, the University took more honors than any other college or university belonging to the international organization.

The 2018 awards were announced earlier this month by CASE (Council for Advancement and Support of Education), one of the world’s largest professional associations for educational institutions.

Stephen Burgay, BU senior vice president for external affairs, says the extraordinary number of awards reflects the professionalism of the University’s staff and is indicative of a vibrant campus, where “faculty, staff, and students have award-winning stories to tell.

“Bringing these stories to life in interesting and compelling ways helps to define our community,” says Burgay. “It puts a human face on it, and it demonstrates the impact BU has in the city and the world at large.”

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Ex-wrestler says Rep. Jim Jordan witnessed lewd shower acts while a coach at Ohio State

COLUMBUS (OH)
Yahoo Sports

July 4, 2018

By Jason Owens

Multiple former Ohio State wrestlers have accused U.S. Representative Jim Jordan of turning a blind eye to alleged sexual abuse committed by team doctor Richard Strauss while he was was a coach for the Buckeyes.

Jordan, a prominent Republican from Ohio, was an assistant coach at OSU from 1986-94. NBC reported on Tuesday that three former OSU wrestlers described the alleged abuse by Strauss as common knowledge and that he assaulted as many as 2,000 student athletes from 1978-98.

“I considered Jim Jordan a friend,” Mike DiSabato, one of Strauss’s accusers, told NBC. “But at the end of the day, he is absolutely lying if he says he doesn’t know what was going on.”

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Retired French bishop to be tried for failing to report sexual abuse

FRANCE
La Croix

June 29, 2018

By Gauthier Vaillant

The former bishop of Orleans is charged with not reporting a priest even though he had been informed of the situation

A retired French bishop is expected to face trial before the end of this year along with the priest whose actions of sex abuse he is accused of having failed to report.

Retired Bishop André Fort, was bishop of Orleans from 2002 to 2010 while the 69-year-old Fr de C. is now accused of sexual assault “by violence, coercion, threat or subterfuge” on minors aged 15 who were in his charge.

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L’ancien évêque d’Orléans sera jugé pour non dénonciation de pédophilie

ORLEANS (FRANCE)
France Bleu Béarn, France Bleu Orléans et France Bleu

June 28, 2018

By Eric Normand and Anne Oger

The former bishop of Orleans will be tried for non-reporting of pedophilia

André Fort, l’ancien évêque d’Orléans, est renvoyé devant le tribunal correctionnel d’Orléans pour n’avoir pas dénoncé les agressions sexuelles présumées d’un des prêtres de son diocèse, le père Pierre de Castelet. Six ans après le début de l’enquête, les deux hommes devraient donc être jugés.

Pierre de Castelet, l’ancien curé de Lorris, dans le Loiret est renvoyé devant la justice pour agressions sexuelles sur mineurs de moins 15 ans. Il devrait être jugé avant la fin de cette année devant le tribunal correctionnel d’Orléans aux côtés de l’ancien évêque d’Orléans, André Fort, renvoyé, lui, pour n’avoir pas dénoncé ces agressions, dont il aurait eu connaissance dès 2010.

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Pédophilie dans l’église : “briser la culture du secret c’est très lourd dans un département comme le Loiret”

LOIRET (FRANCE)
France Bleu Orléans

June 28, 2018

By Anne Oger

Pedophilia in the church: “breaking the culture of secrecy is very heavy in a department like Loiret”

Après le renvoi devant la justice de l’ancien curé de Lorris, l’abbé Pierre de Castelet, et de l’ancien évêque d’Orléans, Monseigneur André Fort, pour agressions sexuelles et non-dénonciation de celles-ci, les victimes espèrent que cela contribuera à rompre la culture du silence au sein de l’Eglise.

Il y aura sans doute un procès dans l’affaire Pierre de Castelet, l’ancien curé de Lorris, très investi et très présent, jusqu’à une période récente (2016, date à laquelle l’évêque d’Orléans Jacques Blaquart l’a démis de toutes ses fonctions) dans les mouvements catholiques de jeunes, et notamment les scouts d’Europe, dont il a été l’aumônier à plusieurs reprises. Un procès pour agressions sexuelles sur mineurs de 15 ans par personne ayant autorité pour des faits remontant à juillet 1993, lors d’un camp de vacances organisé dans le Béarn par le Mouvement Eucharistique des Jeunes.

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Pope Francis names Msgr. Michael Fisher as new auxiliary bishop of Washington

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic Standard

June 8, 2018

By Mark Zimmermann

Pope Francis has named Msgr. Michael William Fisher as a new auxiliary bishop for the Archdiocese of Washington. Since 2006, Bishop-elect Fisher has served as Episcopal Vicar for Clergy and Secretary for Ministerial Leadership for the archdiocese, overseeing the recruitment, formation and care of its clergy.

The announcement of Pope Francis’s appointment of Bishop-elect Fisher was made on June 8 by Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the apostolic nuncio of Washington.

In a statement, Cardinal Donald Wuerl expressed gratitude to Pope Francis for appointing Bishop-elect Fisher as a new auxiliary bishop for Washington, noting that the priest “has made significant contributions to the pastoral life of this archdiocese.”

“Msgr. Fisher brings to this ministry recognized talent and demonstrated ability,” the cardinal said. “In particular, his concern for his brother priests, dedication to priestly ministry and his kind yet directive leadership will be gifts to this local Church as he serves in this new capacity.”

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Centenas de brasileiros foram escravizados por igreja evangélica nos Estados Unidos

BRAZIL
Diario de Noticias

First Published on July 24, 2017

By Lusa

Hundreds of Brazilians were enslaved by evangelical church in the United States

Igreja tirava os passaportes das vítimas, que falavam pouco inglês. Brasileiros eram depois forçados a trabalhar 15 horas por dia, sem salário

Centenas de brasileiros foram escravizados pela igreja evangélica Irmandade da Palavra da Fé (Word of Faith Fellowship Congregation) nos Estados Unidos, segundo uma investigação da agência de notícias Associated Press (AP) hoje divulgada.

De acordo com a investigação da AP, a Irmandade da Palavra da Fé utilizava as suas ramificações no Brasil para manter um fluxo constante de jovens trabalhadores — que viajavam com vistos de turistas ou estudantes — para o seu território de 14 hectares na zona rural de Spindale, na Carolina do Norte.

Os brasileiros falavam pouco a língua inglesa quando chegavam ao país e muitos viram os seus passaportes apreendidos. As vítimas eram forçadas a trabalhar 15 horas por dia, sem salário.

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Editorial: Investigate the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

July 4, 2018

By Buffalo News Editorial Board

Imagine an organization. It’s well-regarded and has a long, storied history. But it has a dark side.

In addition to its many good works, certain members committed some of the worst offenses imaginable – crimes against children. Even worse, imagine that administrators had concocted a scheme to hush it all up in an effort to protect the organization.

A question inevitably arises: What then is the culpability of the organization?

In any setting but a church, the answer would be shouted from the courthouse steps. Should it be different when it is a church?

It shouldn’t, but in Erie County, it appears it is.

It is a matter of record here – and in Catholic dioceses around the world – that a notable minority of priests sexually abused children and that those cases were kept quiet. In some instances, priests were put on leave or, unthinkably, reassigned to other parishes.

Yet neither Erie County District Attorney John J. Flynn Jr. nor Attorney General Barbara D. Underwood say they can follow the obvious trail and determine what responsibility, if any, extends into the church’s hierarchy. Both claim lack of jurisdiction, though expert observers disagree.

That leaves only a couple of likely explanations: lack of resources or, in a heavily Catholic region, lack of will.

The former is simply unacceptable, given the circumstances. So is the latter, but it also sells Catholics short. People of faith don’t need to be coddled. Strength is inherent in faith.

In other places, public officials have been willing to stand up for decency and accountability.

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Evangelical Lutheran synod updating sexual misconduct policy that doesn’t follow state law

ALLENTOWN (PA)
The Morning Call

July 2, 2018

By Tim Darragh

While six Catholic dioceses across the state await the release of a grand jury report cataloging decades of sexual misconduct by priests, the local synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church continues to operate under a sexual misconduct policy that doesn’t comply with state law.

The policy, posted on the Northeast Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church’s website, says those who receive complaints about sexual misconduct should “consider whether civil authorities need to be informed when the alleged victim(s) is a minor.”

Elsewhere on the site, the synod lists the state’s child protective services law, which requires all congregation leaders, paid church employees who work with children, volunteers over age 18 who work with children, Sunday school teachers, nursery attendants, vacation Bible school volunteers and youth group leaders to be “mandated reporters.” Contrary to the synod’s policy, mandated reporters must contact law enforcement if they suspect abuse of a minor; the law does not allow them to “consider” whether to report it or not.

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Harrisburg Diocese tried to stop grand jury investigating sex abuse claims, court documents say

LANCASTER (PA)
WGAL News 8

July 3, 2018

By Matt Barcaro

Harrisburg – The Harrisburg Catholic Diocese tried to stop a grand jury from investigating sex abuse claims last year, newly released court documents show.

This is the first time WGAL has confirmed details of dioceses trying to halt the grand jury probe.

According to the documents, the Harrisburg and Greensburg dioceses asked the court to stop the grand jury investigating sex abuse allegations at six dioceses in Pennsylvania. They argued that a grand jury can only be convened to investigate allegations of organized crime and public corruption.

A judge rejected that argument in November.

WGAL also learned the prior grand jury investigation into the Altoona-Johnstown Diocese ended without finishing its work. The current grand jury was needed to pick up where the previous one left off.

A spokesman for the Harrisburg Diocese said Tuesday that the diocese has always supported the release of the grand jury report but believes the investigation should have been handled by local district attorneys instead of a statewide grand jury.

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Out of the dark, into the light: With abuse reports released, bishop looks to the future of Erie Diocese

SHARON (PA)
The Herald

July 3, 2018

By Melissa Klaric

http://www.sharonherald.com/news/local_news/out-of-the-dark-into-the-light-with-abuse-reports/article_c4b90dce-1dc5-560d-a904-899f7ddb6739.html

With abuse reports released, bishop looks to the future of Erie Diocese

Erie – Bishop Lawrence T. Persico says he didn’t set out to be a trailblazer.

But he has been touted as the first Catholic bishop to release a complete list of names of people accused of misconduct, including not only priests affiliated with his Erie Diocese, but lay people as well. He has also received praise for expanding the role of the office for the protection of children and updating its policy.

“I just wanted to do what was right,” the bishop said.

And that is his intention moving forward, he says, as the grand jury report is about to be made public on its investigation into sexual misconduct allegations by clergy and lay people over the past 70 years. The report covers the Erie Diocese along with five others in Allentown, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton.

Persico has had a chance to read the report on the Erie Diocese, but public release of the report was held up pending the resolution of legal issues. Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro filed legal action Monday to have the report made public.

But now, in addition to looking back, the Erie bishop is looking forward.

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State Supreme Court should order release of grand jury report on child sexual abuse in Catholic dioceses

LANCASTER (PA)
Lancaster Online

July 5, 2018

By the LNP Editorial Board

https://lancasteronline.com/opinion/editorials/state-supreme-court-should-order-release-of-grand-jury-report/article_d3a7eb08-7f2c-11e8-af99-03e481700233.html

Those seeking to keep under wraps a grand jury report on child sexual abuse allegations in the Roman Catholic Church in Pennsylvania have until this afternoon to respond to a request to unseal it from The Associated Press, LNP and five other media organizations. As the AP reported, the deadline was set by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, which put a stay on the release of the grand jury report last month. The grand jury’s supervising judge signaled his intention to file the report publicly, but its release was thwarted by the Supreme Court, which said it had to review legal challenges filed by individuals cited in the report. The grand jury investigation, which began in 2016, covered six of the state’s eight Catholic dioceses (grand jury reports on the Philadelphia and Altoona-Johnstown dioceses were released previously).

Metaphors of darkness and light are frequently invoked by religious leaders, in religious writing, in the Bible itself.

Sin is believed to dwell in the darkness. Redemption lies in the light.

The metaphor applies here, too: The grand jury report detailing sexual abuse and cover-ups of that abuse in Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses needs to be made public without further delay.

That way lies light and healing for the victims of abuse. And they should be the priority here — at long last, they should be the priority.

The only people served by keeping the report sealed are the alleged offenders and those who enabled them. And they’ve already been given too much time, and much too much slack, to elude accountability.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro took legal action Monday to press for the report’s release. He said in a statement that the “people of Pennsylvania have a right to see the report, know who is attempting to block its release and why, and to hear the voices of the victims of sexual abuse within the Church.”

We strongly agree.

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Appeal looming over ‘abuse’ at seminary by Wigan priest

WIGAN (ENGLAND)
Wigan Today

July 4, 2018

By Peter Magill

An appeal is set to be heard later this month for a Catholic priest convicted of repeatedly abusing a teenage boy at a seminary near Wigan.

Law lords will rule upon the case of Father Michael Higginbottom, who worked at St Joseph’s College at Up Holland in the late 70s, after a hearing on July 24.

The 74-year-old, who last lived at West Farm Road in Newcastle, is currently serving a 17-year jail sentence.

Appeal court judges will be asked to consider the verdicts on eight sexual offences, said to involve Higginbottom, between September 1978 and March 1979.

The priest was convicted of abusing his alleged victim while he was a physics teacher at St Joseph’s which trained young boys wanting to become priests.

Earlier this year the Court of Appeal gave the minister leave to appeal after considering submissions from his legal team.

Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett, sitting with Mr Justice Teare and Mr Justice Kerr, ruled that a previous fraud charge relating to the alleged victim, should have been admitted into evidence during the trial.

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French priest-therapist removed from ministry for alleged sexual abuse

MONTROUGE (FRANCE)
La Croix International

July 5, 2018

By Céline Hoyeau

Msgr. Tony Anatrella is accused of having practiced ‘body therapy’ in order to ‘heal’ homosexuality and of having been involved in sexual abuse

The French Catholic Church has announced sanctions against Msgr. Tony Anatrella, who has been the subject of accusations by his former patients for more than 15 years.

Msgr. Anatrella, 77, is accused of having practiced “body therapy” in order to “heal” homosexuality and of having been involved in sexual abuse.

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July 4, 2018

Juez envía a sacerdote a juicio de fondo, excluyen Arzobispado

SANTO DOMINGO (DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)
Listin Diario

July 4, 2018

[Judge sends priest to substantive trial, excludes archdiocese]

By Santiago Benjamín de la Cruz

Tras considerar que no se daban las condiciones legales para mantener la acusación en contra del Arzobispado de Santo Domingo en el caso del asesinato del menor Fernelis Carrión, por cuyo hecho guarda prisión el sacerdote Elvin Taveras Durán, el Segundo Juzgado de la Instrucción de Santo Domingo lo excluyó del caso y envió a juicio de fondo al acusado.

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Un sacerdote español, imputado por el escándalo de los abusos en Chile

CHILE
InfoVaticana

July 4, 2018

[A Spanish priest, imputed by the scandal of the abuses in Chile]

En medio del huracán informativo que están suponiendo los abusos sexuales en la Iglesia de Chile, sale a la luz un nuevo sacerdote imputado: el marianista José Lázaro Lara Burgos, de nacionalidad española.

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[OPINIÓN] Abusos en la Iglesia: verdad (y mentira) a medias

CHILE
Credochile.cl [blog]

July 2, 2018

[OPINION: Abuses in the Church: truth (and lie) half]

By Credo Chile

Los abusos sexuales a menores y adultos cometidos por sacerdotes y religiosos católicos así como su encubrimiento son injustificables y la Iglesia debe evitar que se repitan, partiendo por separar a los culpables de sus funciones. Los abusadores, sus encubridores y las autoridades eclesiásticas que no hicieron lo suficiente para evitar que estos sucesos siguieran ocurriendo han traicionado la confianza de los fieles causando un daño imposible de dimensionar tanto para las víctimas como para la misión de la Iglesia. Digo esto para que el lector no piense que mi intención al escribir este artículo es defender lo indefendible.

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Ex acólito abusado en parroquia de Constitución demandará a la Iglesia

CONSTITUCIÓN, TALCA PROVINCE (CHILE)
Cooperativa

June 30, 2018

[Ex-altar boy abused in the parish of Constitución will sue the Church]

By Jaime Morales Amaya

Cristian Alcaíno llevará a la justicia ordinaria su caso ocurrido cuando tenía 11 años.

El abogado Fernando Leal prepara la acción jurídica que contempla al Vaticano.

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OPINIÓN: Abusos en la Iglesia católica: ¿por qué necesitamos una Comisión de Verdad?

CHILE
El Mostrador

June 28, 2018

[OPINION: Abuses in the Catholic Church: Why do we need a Truth Commission?]

By Daniela Bolívar

La Comisión debe ser un espacio de escucha y recibimiento para las víctimas, pero el acto de escuchar no es suficiente: debe reunir los testimonios y analizarlos en un informe que sea de conocimiento público, donde queden plasmados los abusos y las falencias estructurales y sistemáticas que podrían haber facilitado la ocurrencia o el encubrimiento. La Comisión y el documento que puede generar tienen, por lo tanto, un alto contenido simbólico de reconocimiento del daño individual y social causado, así como de las responsabilidades individuales e institucionales.

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Catholic church grapples with the high price of clergy sexual abuse

MINNEAPOLIS (MN)
MPR News

July 3, 2018

By Kerri Miller and Manda Lillie with Julie Craven and Father Kevin Finnegan

[This is an audio recording of a 50-minute call-in show.]

Should congregants pay the price for decades of priest sex abuse

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis will need to pay victims of abuse more than $210 million in a settlement that has brought them to the seek bankruptcy protection.

This money will go to about 450 survivors who are represented in the settlement. About $40 million of the $210 million will be paid by the church; the rest will be paid by insurers.

How does the church move on from this? Do parishioners trust the process? Are they confident that the issue of sexual abuse is over within the church?

Host Kerri Miller spoke to two guests: Julie Craven who is the director of communications Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church in Minneapolis and Father Kevin Finnegan of Our Lady of Grace in Edina.

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Archbishop Philip Wilson to fight conviction for abuse cover-up

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

July 4, 2018

A Catholic archbishop in Australia says he will appeal against his conviction for concealing child sexual abuse.

Archbishop of Adelaide Philip Wilson was found guilty in May of covering up abuse by a paedophile priest in New South Wales (NSW).

He is the most senior Catholic globally to be convicted of the crime.

During his trial, Wilson denied that he knew of the abuse of altar boys by a paedophile priest in the 1970s. He has so far refused to step down.

“I am conscious of calls for me to resign and have taken them very seriously,” he said in a statement.

“However, at this time, I am entitled to exercise my legal rights and to follow the due process of law.”

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Chile prosecutors widen probe into clerical sex abuse

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
MassLive/The Republican

Updated July 3, 2018

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

The clergy sex abuse crisis for the Roman Catholic Church in Chile is widening beyond a Vatican investigation.

On June 13, Chilean police and prosecutors raided Church offices in two Chilean cities for documents related to the Church’s probe into the crisis carried out by Vatican investigator Archbishop Charles Scicluna of Malta.

On June 19, Chilean prosecutors questioned Sciciuna at the airport as he was preparing to depart, according to Reuters, about abuse cases involving 25 Marist brothers and 30 alleged victims that Sciciuna has been investigating during his recent visits.

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Allegations against former area priest ‘not substantiated,’ diocese says, as alleged victim’s attorneys protest

BATAVIA (NY)
The Daily News

July 3, 2018

By Matt Surtel and Mallory Diefenbach

http://www.thedailynewsonline.com/bdn01/allegations-against-former-area-priest-not-substantiated-diocese-says-as-alleged-victims-attorneys-protest-20180703

Dunkirk – A former Batavia priest has returned to active ministry after sexual abuse allegations against him were found to be “not substantiated.”

Rev. Dennis G. Riter was placed on administrative leave in March. He returned to his duties at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Dunkirk this past weekend.

The complaints against Riter had been investigated by former Erie County assistant district attorney Scott F. Riordan on behalf of the Buffalo Diocese. Riordan was assistant chief of the Sexual Assault Bureau in the Erie County District Attorney’s Office and is currently a village justice in Kenmore.

Riter was pastor from 2002 to 2009 at the former St. Mary’s Church in Batavia.

Allegations were made against Riter this past spring by two former altar boys and their families at a Buffalo-area church. They did not include Batavia.

The allegations were detailed in a news release issued Monday afternoon by Jeff Anderson and Associates, the firm representing Matthew Golden, one of the two altar boys who accused Riter of molesting him as a child.

In addition to the reports of two sexual abuse survivors, Golden and Nick Caetano, a May 1992 letter from a then-seminarian in the diocese to Bishop Edward D. Head and Bishop Edward Grosz, was uncovered by press reports and details the alleged abuse of another boy at Queen of All Saints in Lackawanna. The 1992 letter from a student at Christ the King Seminary detailed a father’s frantic search for his young son who had gone missing.

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Sexual abuse by priests: Woman record statement before Magistrate

NEW DELHI (INDIA)
Times of India

July 3, 2018

https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/kozhikode/sexual-abuse-by-priests-woman-record-statement-before-magistrate/articleshow/64844670.cms

Kottyam – The sworn affidavit of the woman who is alleged to have been sexually abused by four priests of the Orthodox Church was recorded before a Magistrate on Tuesday. The woman arrived at the Judicial First Class Magistrate Court in Thiruvalla by around 5.20pm to record the statement. Earlier in the day, the State Crime Branch officials had handed over the copy of the FIR against the four priests to the court and submitted an application for recording the statement of the woman under section 164.

The woman was presented before the Magistrate after conducting her medical tests. Merin Joseph SP was also added to the Crime Branch probe team.

In another related development, Crime Branch IG S Sreejith called on the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church head Catholicos Baselius Mar Thomas Paulose II at the church headquarters in Devalokam here on Tuesday. The officer arrived here around 1pm and spend over one hour in conversation with the church head behind closed doors. While leaving, Sreejith told the media persons that the church head has extended all possible help for the investigation of the case. The officer also apprised the church head of the status of the case and the also the possibility of the arrest of the priests. The Church head gave the go ahead for the officer regarding this.

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July 3, 2018

Envían a juicio de fondo al sacerdote Elvin Taveras acusado de asesinar a joven

SANTO DOMINGO (DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)
DIARIO LIBRE

July 3, 2018

[The priest Elvin Taveras accused of murdering a young man is sent to trial]

El tribunal excluyó del caso al Arzobispado de Santo Domingo

El Segundo Juzgado de la Instrucción de Santo Domingo Este envió este martes a juicio de fondo al sacerdote Elvin Tavera Durán, quien está acusado del asesinato del adolescente y ex monaguillo Fernelis Carrión Saviñón en octubre del año pasado. El religioso fue suspendido por la Iglesia Católica tras darse a conocer el hecho.

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Caso Marianistas: fiscalía formalizó a sacerdote acusado de abusos sexuales reiterados contra menor

CHILE
El Dínamo

July 3, 2018

[Marianistas case: prosecutor’s office formalized priest accused of repeated sexual abuse against a minor]

Durante la mañana de este martes, la Fiscalía Metropolitana Sur formalizó al sacerdote José Burgos Lara por abusos sexuales en calidad de reiterados en contra de un menor.

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A haven for paedophiles: The ultra-Orthodox settlement where Malka Leifer hides

EMMANUEL (ISRAEL)
The Age

June 30, 2018

By Gabrielle Weiniger

Atop the shadow-cast hills at the northern end of the West Bank, in the ultra-Orthodox Jewish settlement of Emmanuel, abusers of children have found a safe haven.

Malka Leifer, the former Melbourne school principal and accused child molester, came to live here in 2016 after an Israeli judge found she was mentally unfit to face extradition to Australia.

And here, even though she is wanted by Victoria Police on 74 counts of alleged sexual assault and rape involving girls, one resident claims Leifer was able to continue abusing children, including his own teenage daughter, without consequence.

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Pope Francis taps 3 new auxiliary bishops for Chicago Catholic archdiocese

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

July 3, 2018

By Katherine Rosenberg-Douglas

The Vatican on Tuesday announced three auxiliary bishops have been appointed to the Archdiocese of Chicago, replacing two who resigned their positions.

Pope Francis tapped the Revs. Mark Bartosic, Robert Casey and Ronald Hicks as bishops-elect until their episcopal ordination at Holy Name Cathedral, the seat of the Catholic Church in the Chicago area, on Sept. 17, according to the Archdiocese of Chicago.

In 2015, Hicks was appointed vicar general of the archdiocese by Cardinal Blase Cupich, Chicago’s archbishop; since then he has been celebrating Mass at a different parish each weekend. For the last two years, Bartosic has served as pastor of Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary church in Little Village and has been director of the Kolbe House Jail Ministry. Casey serves on the placement board of the archdiocese, which involves assigning priests to parishes.

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Rep. Jim Jordan denies reports he turned blind eye to sexual abuse by Ohio State wrestling doctor

COLUMBUS (OH)
Fox News

July 3, 2018

By Andrew O’Reilly

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, Tuesday denied reports that he “turned a blind eye” to alleged sexual abuse perpetrated against students by an Ohio State wrestling team doctor when the lawmaker coached at the university more than two decades ago.

“Congressman Jordan never saw any abuse, never heard about any abuse, and never had any abuse reported to him during his time as a coach at Ohio State,” Ian Fury, a spokesperson for Jordan, told Fox News.

“He has not been contacted by investigators about the matter but will assist them in any way they ask, because if what is alleged is true, the victims deserve a full investigation and justice.”

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Ex-wrestlers say congressman knew of alleged Ohio St abuse

COLUMBUS (OH)
The Associated Press

July 3, 2018

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

An Ohio congressman isn’t being truthful when he says he wasn’t aware of allegations that a team doctor at Oho State University was abusing athletes, according to two former university wrestlers.

U.S. Rep. Jim Jordan, a former standout college wrestler at the University of Wisconsin and later a coach at Ohio State, knew when he was at the university that the doctor was groping male wrestlers, said ex-wrestlers Mike DiSabato and Dunyasha Yetts.

The wrestlers’ allegations were first reported Tuesday by NBC. Jordan, a two-time NCAA Division I wrestling champion, denies them.

Jordan, a founder of the conservative Freedom Caucus, is one of the most powerful Republicans in Congress and a potential contender for speaker. He’s taken leading roles in fighting the Affordable Care Act and in pushing back against the government’s Russia investigation, most recently interrogating Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein in committee.

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Just one sexual harassment claim can tarnish a company’s image, study says

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

July 3, 2018

By Jena McGregor

Even in the #MeToo era, with heightened sensitivity to sexual harassment claims and fears of damaging headlines, companies might take an allegation of sexual misconduct a little less seriously than they do a claim of financial fraud. A new study suggests – at least when it comes to their public image – maybe they should not.

In a working paper reported by the Harvard Business Review, researchers at UCLA and the University of Amsterdam found even a single allegation about sexual harassment can damage the way people view an employer. There does not need to be a Harvey Weinstein on the payroll, with multiple allegations in play, to have an effect.

Even after one alleged violation, said Serena Does, one of the paper’s co-authors, “people adjusted their perceptions of how fair the organization was to men and women in much broader terms,” she said. “What we show is that a single claim is enough to set that psychological process into gear. When people get cues like this, they adjust their perceptions of inequality.”

Across several experimental studies using participants from the Amazon Mechanical Turk platform, the researchers found participants saw organizations with a sexual harassment claim not only as less equitable than those in a control group, where no misconduct was reported, but as less equitable in those with other transgressions, such as those with financial misconduct allegations.

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Harvey Weinstein indicted on new sexual-assault charges, could face life in prison

NEW YORK (NY)
The Washington Post

July 2, 2018

By Elahe Izadi

Disgraced movie mogul Harvey Weinstein faces additional counts of sexual assault that could carry a potential life sentence if he is convicted, prosecutors announced Monday.

A Manhattan grand jury voted to charge the once-powerful movie executive with the two counts of predatory assault, which carry a minimum 10-year sentence, and an additional count of criminal sexual act in the first degree, stemming from what prosecutors said was a forcible sexual act against a woman in 2006.

The three new charges add to three other counts Weinstein was charged with in May that stemmed from encounters with women in 2004 and 2013.

“A Manhattan grand jury has now indicted Harvey Weinstein on some of the most serious sexual offenses that exist under New York’s penal law,” Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. said in a statement. “This indictment is the result of the extraordinary courage exhibited by the survivors who have come forward.”

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Judge dismisses abuse charges against startup tech founder

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
The Associated Press

July 2, 2018

A Northern California judge has dismissed criminal charges against the founder of a startup tech company who was arrested and charged last year with assaulting and sexually abusing a toddler.

Zain Jaffer, the founder of mobile advertising company Vungle, said Monday that he was grateful to the San Mateo County district attorney’s office for taking a closer look at the evidence and requesting that the case be dismissed.

District Attorney Steve Wagstaffe said he sees the dismissal as evidence of the judicial system working as intended.

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Harvey Weinstein charged with assaulting third woman

NEW YORK (NY)
Reuters

July 2, 2018

By Brendan Pierson

The Manhattan district attorney on Monday announced new criminal charges against film producer Harvey Weinstein, accusing him of sexually assaulting a third woman in addition to the two mentioned in earlier charges.

The new indictment accuses Weinstein of forcibly performing oral sex on a woman in July 2006. The new charges, which include predatory sexual assault, carry a sentence of 10 years to life in prison, according to the office of District Attorney Cyrus Vance.

Weinstein, 66, once one of Hollywood’s most powerful filmmakers, has pleaded not guilty to the first set of charges and has denied ever having non-consensual sex. His lawyer, Benjamin Brafman, could not be reached immediately for comment on Monday.

Vance issued a statement about the new charges saying, “This indictment is the result of the extraordinary courage exhibited by the survivors who have come forward. Our investigation continues.”

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Adelaide Archbishop to learn fate in child sex allegations

AUSTRALIA
9News

July 2, 2018

By Ben Avery

Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson is hours away from learning if he’ll go to jail for covering up child sex abuse by a paedophile priest.

The 67-year-old will be sentenced by a Magistrate at Newcastle Court at 9.30am tomorrow, after already being found guilty of the crime in a landmark verdict on May 22.

Magistrate Robert Stone found Wilson failed to report the repeated abuse of two altar boys by paedophile Priest Jim Fletcher in the 1970s.

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Diocese placing restrictions on Bishop after sexual allegations

CHEYENNE (WY)
KGWN

July 2, 2018

By Britney Carter

The Wyoming Bishop is releasing results in an investigation against one of their own.

Bishop Steven Biegler of the Diocese of Cheyenne says he will continue restrictions on Bishop Emeritus Joseph Hart due to sexual abuse allegations. The allegations came from 2 boys from Wyoming.

Hart served as the Bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 to 2001.

In the release, the Bishop says in 2002 the District Attorney in Casper issued a report that there was no evidence to support the allegations. However, after civil claims against Bishop Hart in Kansas, Biegler ordered an internal investigation in December of last year.

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Opinion: Clive McFarlane: Kathy Shaw used her craft to enrich the lives of others

WORCESTER (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

June 29, 2018

By Clive McFarlane

In 1974, Joseph A. Fredette, a local priest and the live-in manager of a halfway house for juvenile delinquents, fled the country after Worcester police issued a warrant for his arrest on charges that he had sexually assaulted some of the boys in his care.

Years later, as the Catholic Church sex abuse scandal dominated headlines, a dogged pair of Telegram & Gazette reporters, Kathy Shaw and George Griffin, began searching for the fugitive priest. The duo learned that the priest, after fleeing the country, had been writing frequently to one of his victims, who shared the letters with Mr. Griffin and Ms. Shaw.

From those letters they were able to pinpoint his location and contact him in New Brunswick, Canada.

“I called him up, and I thought he was going to crap in his pants,” Mr. Griffin, now an adjunct professor at Worcester State University, recalled.

After the priest hung up and refused to accept further calls, Mr. Griffin said, he and Ms. Shaw flipped a coin to decide which of them would go to Canada to confront him.

Ms. Shaw won the honors, and in her bio she described “walking up and rapping on the front door of his rustic house in the wilderness,” and discovering that “questions had been raised by some area residents regarding young men he had living with him when he served in a nearby parish.”

The pair’s investigative work eventually led to the priest being extradited back to Massachusetts to face trial in 1994.

“It remains the only time one of these pedophile priests has been extradited from another country to stand trial here,” Mr. Griffin noted.

For Ms. Shaw, who died on Sunday, that investigative effort was the start of what would become a lifelong commitment to chronicling the atrocities of the clergy sexual abuse scandal, a commitment she kept up to her death.

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Cheyenne diocese says former bishop sexually abused two Wyoming boys, calls previous investigation ‘flawed’

CHEYENNE (WY)
Casper Star-Tribune

July 2, 2018

By Seth Klamann

A former Cheyenne bishop sexually abused two Wyoming boys and a 2002 investigation into the claims by the Casper district attorney — which found the allegations had no evidence — was “flawed,” the diocese alleged Monday in an announcement.

Joseph Hart served as the bishop or auxiliary bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 to 2001. Before that, he was a priest in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph in Missouri for 20 years. He faced allegations of sexual abuse from several men from his time in Missouri. He has repeatedly denied the allegations in Wyoming and Kansas City and did so again Monday in a statement from his lawyer. He said he would cooperate with any investigation related to the claims.

According to a diocese statement, a Wyoming man had accused Hart of sexual abuse by 2002, and a second man came forward recently. Former Natrona County District Attorney Kevin Meenan investigated the claims in 2002 and found “there was no evidence to support the allegations,” according to the diocese.

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Texas A&M facing criticism over sexual misconduct cases

COLLEGE STATION (TX)
The Associated Press

July 1, 2018

As Texas A&M University faces backlash from current and former students over its handling of sexual assault allegations, records since 2003 show that 20 students were allowed to continue attending classes after the school found them responsible for sexual misconduct.

A review of thousands of student conduct hearings by the Houston Chronicle comes as Texas’ largest public university is under scrutiny after a female student in June accused the school of not doing enough to punish her alleged assailant, who was suspended one semester and allowed to rejoin the swim team.

The cases reviewed by the newspaper included a total of 51 students since 2003 held responsible for sexual misconduct, which can include sexual abuse, sexual contact or sexual assault. Ten students were expelled, and 21 were suspended.

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Sex trafficking survivor says he was sold during Indianapolis 500

INDIANAPOLIS (IN)
Indianapolis Star

July 3, 2018

By Tim Swarens

One of Matt Sprague’s most searing memories, he says, is of being trafficked out of hotel rooms during Indianapolis 500 race weekends

Kelly Sprague knew her husband had a severe problem.

Night after night, he thrashed about violently in their bed. He wandered the house aimlessly in the early morning hours. He cut himself with knives.

All while he slept.

Matt Sprague recalls the exhaustion he felt when he woke up each morning. He also understands now that he suffered from deepening depression, and a lifelong struggle with negative self-talk — which left him feeling worthless after even small mistakes or minor criticisms — had become harder to control.

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New Vermont Law Increases Protection From Sexual Harassment

MONTPELIER (VT)
The Associated Press

July 1, 2018

By David Jordan

A new Vermont law inspired by the #MeToo movement strengthen protections for workers facing sexual harassment.

The law taking effect Sunday extends the types of employees protected from sexual harassment, which now includes interns, volunteers and independent contractors.

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Alison Brie Says GLOW’s #MeToo Scene Made Her Examine Her Own Hollywood Experiences

UNITED STATES
Glamour

June 30, 2018

By Julyssa Lopez

Our favorite ladies in leotards returned to Netflix on Friday with the second-season premiere of GLOW, and, as predicted, there’s a ton the characters need to untangle as they duke it out in the wrestling ring. In a candid interview with Mashable, show star Alison Brie went into some of the issues that the new episodes are tackling (no pun intended) and shared that #MeToo figures into one of the storylines—an experience that made her confront her own attitudes about misconduct in Hollywood.

Without spoiling too much, there’s an episode where Brie’s character, Ruth, has a gross encounter with the head of a TV network. The executive seems interested in talking about Ruth’s career ambitions and invites her to his hotel, where an upsetting incident unfolds. The scenes mirrors the many casting couch stories women have come forward with amid the #MeToo movement, and Brie says they made her do some personal reflecting.

“Shooting those scenes did bring up some personal feelings for me—which I sort of didn’t expect,” Brie told Mashable. “Honestly, when I first read it I was like, ‘Is this scene bad enough? Is he really doing anything bad?’ And then I had to stop and realize, ‘Oh, wow, I’ve been in a lot of bad situations. And I’ve really normalized that kind behavior, even for myself.'”

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Prep school sex abuse cases lead to victim therapy funds

CONCORD (NH)
The Associated Press

July 1, 2018

By Holly Ramer

An elite prep school’s decision to pay for therapy for sexually abused alumni mirrors an increasingly successful approach taken by other institutions, according to victims and their advocates.

St. Paul’s School in Concord recently announced three initiatives to support abuse survivors: an independent arbitration system for those seeking monetary compensation, an alumni-led effort to encourage further discussion and the victims’ therapy fund.

Sexual abuse scandals at New England boarding schools in recent years have resulted in investigations, efforts to adopt safeguards for students and requests for alumni to come forward with memories of misconduct. Several schools have created victim therapy funds, including Choate Rosemary Hall in Connecticut and St. George’s School in Rhode Island.

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Junot Díaz addresses sexual misconduct allegations in new interview

BOSTON (MA)
Entertainment Weekly

July 1, 2018

By Maureen Lee Lenker

Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Junot Díaz has vehemently denied allegations of sexual misconduct and misogynistic verbal abuse leveled against him by three women in May.

In his first interview since he was accused of inappropriate behavior, Díaz told The Boston Globe he was “shocked” by the allegations. “I was, like, ‘Yo, this doesn’t sound like anything that’s in my life, anything that’s me,’” he said.

Díaz also tried to differentiate between his fiction (which often features male characters treating women poorly) and his own life, and between sexual misconduct and consensual relationships gone awry. “There is a line between being a bad boyfriend and having a lot of regret, and predatory behavior,” he said.

In early May, Díaz was accused of cornering and forcibly kissing writer Zinzi Clemmons when she was a grad student, and of verbally bullying two other fellow writers, Carmen Maria Machado and Monica Byrne. The accusations came in the wake of Díaz’s own revelation in an essay that he had been sexually assaulted as a child.

Immediately following the accusations, Díaz issued a statement to the New York Times that said, “I take responsibility for my past. That is the reason I made the decision to tell the truth of my rape and its damaging aftermath. This conversation is important and must continue. I am listening to and learning from women’s stories in this essential and overdue cultural movement. We must continue to teach all men about consent and boundaries.”

Speaking to the Globe, Díaz lamented that statement. “I’ve written a lot of crap in my life,” he said. “One does when one’s a writer. But, definitely, that statement is the worst thing I’ve written, the worst thing I’ve put my name to. Boy, I wish I’d had the presence of mind to rewrite the damn thing.”

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Accused priests. Millions in quiet payouts. And it was all kept on a list

LONDON (ONTARIO, CANADA)
The Star

June 28, 2018

By Sandro Contenta and Mary Ormsby

This is how money was paid out in settlements involving the Roman Catholic Diocese of London, Ont.

A one-page document filed with London’s Superior Court provides a rare window at how a Canadian diocese dealt with a string of sexual abuse allegations against its priests. The chart was part of a decade-long court battle between the Roman Catholic Diocese of London and its insurance company. The settlement amounts total $15 million, plus legal and other costs. We provide a breakdown.

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LDS Church policy on handling sex abuse cases at core of newly filed lawsuit

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Daily Herald

June 28, 2018

By Genelle Pugmire

When Kristy Johnson was just starting first grade in the 1960s, life changed for her at home as well.

Now, decades later, Kristy Johnson, of La Habra, California, has filed a complaint and is seeking a jury trial against her father, Dr. Melvin Kay Johnson, of Lehi, with the U.S. District Court District of Utah, Central Division.

Kristy Johnson is accusing her father of years of sex abuse that occurred in their home, and in other locations. The family are members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

While not a defendant in the case, the lawsuit call the LDS Church to task for the way in which members are reportedly counseled to handle sex abuse issues. The case seeks changes to the LDS Handbooks 1 and 2 when it comes to zero tolerance.

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Father molested his children for years and Mormon bishops did not report it to police, lawsuit and documentary claim

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
The Salt Lake Tribune

June 28, 2018

By Courtney Tanner and Nate Carlisle
·
Kristy Johnson remembers the routine. Growing up, her father would take her to a basketball game at Brigham Young University, where he worked, and each time, after the final buzzer, they’d walk over to his office. There, she says, he would close the door, lock it and molest her for a few minutes.

They always went out for ice cream when he was done.

Johnson says she was 6 years old when it started. Now, 55, she says it’s time for him to be held accountable.

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Nuns’ home in Monastery up for sale

NOVA SCOTIA (CANADA)
The Chronicle Herald

June 29, 2018

By Aaron Beswick

A 193-year-old monastery in northern Nova Scotia has been put up for sale against the wishes of the local diocese and the nuns who live there.

The sale coincides with a lawsuit against the Chicago-based Order of St. Augustine, also known as the Augustinians of the Midwest Province.

That group administers a charity called Augustinian Fathers (Ontario) Inc., which claims to own the monastery.

The Our Lady of Grace Monastery in the community of Monastery, Antigonish County, has been listed for $895,000. The 361-hectare property includes a 60,000-square-foot, three-storey residence, church, central heating plant, a 15,000-square-foot barn/wood shop, house, gymnasium and five nuns who don’t want to leave.

Mother Superior Gloria told The Chronicle Herald that in February the parent order informed her that the monastery would be put up for sale if they didn’t buy it for $790,000.

“But we have no money,” said the Mother Superior.

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Records: Diocese of Corpus Christi priest accused of theft

CORPUS CHRISTI (TX)
Corpus Christi Caller Times

June 28, 2018

By Eleanor Dearman

Krzysztof Bauta, a Catholic priest released from his job at a Port Aransas church last year, is accused of stealing at least $150,000 from the diocese, court documents show.

In December 2017, officials from the Diocese of Corpus Christi met with a Texas Ranger. They alleged Bauta “had continuously stolen or defrauded the Diocese out of a large sum of money from July 2013 through December 2017,” an arrest warrant affidavit shows.

Bauta was arrested Tuesday by Texas Rangers for theft, a second-degree felony, according to his booking sheet. Sgt. Nathan Brandley, of the Texas Department of Public Safety, confirmed the arrest and said “there is still an open and ongoing investigation going on with the Texas Rangers.”

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Have faith that the Catholic church sex abuse report will be released

ALLENTOWN (PA)
The Morning Call

June 27, 2018

By Paul Muschick

The anger and disappointment over the last-minute hold on a potentially damning grand jury report on priest sex abuse in Pennsylvania is understandable.

The victims, the Catholic faithful and the public have waited too long already for these secrets to be spilled. We want the names. We want to know whether church officials or others tried to cover up their despicable actions.

The legal maneuvering to delay, or permanently block, publication of the report is being viewed as just another attempt to keep these secrets buried. I can see why. History shows the church has not handled these scandals well. Fears of continued cover-ups are warranted.

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How did Cardinal McCarrick’s secret last so long?

BOSTON (MA)
Catholic Culture

Jun 20, 2018

By Phil Lawler

At least fifteen years ago, I wrote a confidential email message to a few trusted friends, telling them to brace themselves. Within a few days, I said, a major secular newspaper would break a sensational story about Cardinal Theodore McCarrick. To my surprise, the newspaper never ran the story—which finally came out today.

At the time, several reporters had spoken with me about the cardinal. Most had been unable to find anyone willing to go on record with complaints. Rod Dreher, one of the journalists who was investigating the rumors, now writes about the frustration he felt when witnesses refused to go public. I ran into the same brick wall; while I heard multiple accusations, without a willing witness I had only hearsay evidence. But at least one reporter found a former seminarian who was ready to tell his story—or so I was told. Yet that story never emerged— at least not in the mainstream media.

Today Rod Dreher reveals that a delegation had gone to Rome sometime before 2000, to caution Vatican officials against the rumored appointment of then-Archbishop McCarrick as Cardinal-archbishop of Washington. Their advice was ignored. In 2003, as the rumor mill churned, I heard that a bold American bishop had confronted the cardinal, urging him to resign in order to avoid a scandal. Again the plea was dismissed.

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McCarrick verdict is the latest marker on the road to conversion

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

June 21, 2018

by Michael Sean Winters

Cardinal Theodore McCarrick resigned from public ministry yesterday after the Holy See determined that allegations of sexual abuse against a minor dating back almost 50 years were “credible and substantiated.” The Archdiocese of Newark and the Diocese of Metuchen also released information that allegations of sexual misconduct with adults against McCarrick had been made in the past, with two of the three allegations resulting in a settlement.

McCarrick served as a priest for 60 years. He served the church as president of the Catholic University in Puerto Rico, as bishop of Metuchen, New Jersey, and as archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, and later of Washington. He became a cardinal and participated in the conclave of 2005 that elected Pope Benedict XVI. McCarrick was a “man of the conference” serving on a variety of committees over the years.

He was one of the church’s foremost ambassadors, traveling to countries most of us could not spell and some we had never heard of, building relationships across ethnic and racial and denominational lines. Even in retirement, his schedule would have been daunting to a person half his age, but he kept at it. All for the good of the church.

None of that protected him from the charge of having abused a minor. None of it should have protected him. It is now clear that after years, decades and probably centuries of covering up the crimes of the clergy regarding the sexual abuse of children, now a regime of transparency and accountability is firmly enough in place that no one, not even a cardinal, can be considered above the law. They may get a pass for other crimes and failings, but not this. For all the continued problems — the Chile situation, the curial foot-dragging that led Marie Collins to resign from the Pontifical Commission on Child Protection — the culture at the Holy See has begun to change on this issue. Twenty years ago, such allegations would have been swept under the rug. Not anymore.

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Iglesia indaga a otro sacerdote acusado supuesto por abuso sexual de hace 30 años

SANTIAGO (CHILE)
La Nacion

June 28, 2018

[Church investigates another priest accused of sexual abuse 30 years ago]

By Giselle Saure

Mientras dure el proceso de investigación, el clérigo ha sido apartado del oficio sus oficio y no puede realizar actos públicos propios de su ministerio.

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Denunciante de ex obispo Duarte: Comenzó “el proceso de purificación de la Iglesia chilena

CHILE
Tele13 Radio

June 13, 2018

[Accuser of former Bishop Duarte: “The process of purification of the Chilean Church” has begun]

[AUDIO]

El ex seminarista aseguró que existe un movimiento anti Papa, el que plantea que se están cometiendo errores doctrinales serios.

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Denunciante de ex obispo Duarte: “Hay movimientos ultraconservadores anti Papa que están agarrando fuerza”

CHILE
El Dínamo

June 12, 2018

[Accuser of former Bishop Duarte: “There are ultra-conservative anti-Pope movements that are gaining strength”]

A poco más de 24 horas de que se confirmara que el Papa Francisco aceptara la renuncia de cuatro obispos, el ex seminarista de San Rafael y denunciante del renunciado Gonzalo Duarte, Sebastián del Río, celebró la noticia, pero sostuvo que la Iglesia chilena ha actuado de manera torpe cuando a las denuncias de abuso por parte de religiosos.

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Recesan para el martes audiencia preliminar sacerdote acusado de matar monaguillo

SANTO DOMINGO (DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)
Listin Diario

June 30, 2018

[Preliminary hearing for priest accused of killing altar boy is recessed until next Tuesday]

By Wanda Méndez

El Segundo Juzgado de la Instrucción de la provincia Santo Domingo recesó para el próximo martes, a las 9:00 de la mañana, el conocimiento de la audiencia preliminar seguida al sacerdote Elvin Taveras Durán, acusado de asesinar al monaguillo Fernelis Carrión Saviñón, el 4 de agosto del 2017.

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Entrevista Monseñor Gonzalo Duarte

VIÑA DEL MAR, VALPARAÍSO (CHILE)
Quinta Visión

July 2, 2018

[Interview with Monsignor Gonzalo Duarte, former bishop of Valparaíso.]

[VIDEO] A Fondo. Monseñor Gonzalo Duarte García de Cortázar. Ex Obispo de Valparaíso.
Conduce Rodrigo Oliver.

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Ex obispo de Valparaíso acusa a denunciante de abuso sexual de “cambiar la historia”

CHILE
El Dínamo

July 3, 2018

[Former Bishop of Valparaíso accuses complainant of sexual abuse of “changing history”]

A semanas de que el Papa Francisco aceptara su renuncia junto a la de Cristián Caro y Juan Barros, el ex obispo de Valparaíso, Gonzalo Duarte, se refirió a la decisión que lo llevó a presentar su dimisión.

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La Iglesia Católica emite segundo comunicado sobre las investigaciones del sacerdote cuencano

CUENCA (ECUADOR)
El Comercio

July 3, 2018

[The Catholic Church issues a second statement on the investigations of the Cuenca priest]

Este lunes 2 de julio, la Arquidiócesis de Cuenca remitió un segundo comunicado –casi en los mismos términos que el del 30 de mayo- sobre las investigaciones que se siguen contra el sacerdote cuencano, César C., de 91 años de edad.

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Abuse survivors doubt independence of company running safeguarding standards forum

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
ABC

July 1, 2018

By Giselle Wakatama and Liz Farquhar

Prominent Hunter Valley clerical abuse survivors will boycott a Catholic safeguarding standards forum, saying it is a sham that lacks independence.

A consultation forum will be held in Newcastle today as part of an Australia-wide engagement with survivors of child sexual abuse, advocates, Catholic Church personnel and others to discuss draft national Catholic safeguarding standards.

The standards are being developed by the company Catholic Professional Standards Ltd (CPSL), established by the Catholic Church as part of its response to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse to develop, audit and report on compliance with professional safeguarding standards across Catholic entities.

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Abuse survivors react to Archbishop Wilson’s sentence

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
ABC via The Guardian

July 3, 2018

[A brief video showing clips from two survivors’ statements.]

Peter Gogarty and Daniel Feenan speak outside Newcastle local court after Philip Wilson was sentenced to 12 months’ detention for concealing child sexual abuse. The Adelaide archbishop is the most senior Catholic official in the world to be convicted over his failure to report to police the abuse of two altar boys by a paedophile priest in the 1970s. He is likely to be spared time in prison.

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‘We know it’s not going to be pleasant’: Priests ponder when, how to prepare parishioners for report

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

July 2, 2018

By Peter Smith

http://www.post-gazette.com/news/faith-religion/2018/07/02/Pennsylvania-Roman-Catholic-dioceses-sexual-abuse-report-Supreme-Court-grand-jury/stories/201806260169

At a recent weekday Mass, the Rev. Lou Vallone dealt directly with the looming grand jury report on sexual abuse in Pittsburgh’s and five other Pennsylvania Roman Catholic dioceses.

“We know it’s coming, we know it’s not going to be pleasant, but we know it’s necessary,” said Father Vallone, pastor of St. John of God Parish in McKees Rocks and St. Catherine of Siena Parish in Crescent. As the church teaches about its sacrament of penance or confession, he said, “the sinner has to go in and say, ‘I did this,’ or he’s never going to be on the path of reconciliation.”

As the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considers whether and when to authorize the release of the voluminous grand jury report, some priests are raising the issue with parishioners, but others are waiting until the report comes out to respond to it.

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Court seeks input on secrecy of sex abuse grand jury report

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press

July 2, 2018

By Mark Scolforo

[This article provides a link to a docket that lists the media motion, Application to Intervene to Seek Public Access to Grand Jury Report and Associated Docket Sheets.]

A lengthy report into allegations of sexual abuse and related cover-ups within Pennsylvania’s Roman Catholic churches remained on hold Monday, as the state’s highest court gave those who wanted to keep the grand jury report under wraps three days to weigh in.

The state Supreme Court, through its filing office, told lawyers for those who have pending appellate challenges to the report’s release that they will have until Thursday afternoon to respond to a request to unseal it by The Associated Press and six other media organizations.

The media organizations on Friday asked to intervene and make the argument to the Supreme Court that the report should be released. They said those who wanted to respond to the report itself had apparently already been given such an opportunity by the judge who supervised the investigative grand jury.

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Journalists need to draw distinctions in reporting sex abuse cases

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

June 29, 2018

By Michael Sean Winters

The news broke last week that Cardinal Theodore McCarrick, the retired archbishop of Washington, had been ordered to abstain from any public ministry because of a credible and substantiated allegation of sexual abuse against a minor. We also learned that two settlements had been made in New Jersey involving adults who alleged sexual impropriety against the cardinal when he served as a bishop and archbishop in that state. Cardinal Joseph Tobin, who is now the archbishop of Newark, also announced that he was lifting the confidentiality requirement those settlements contained, and he said the victims could come forward if they wished to do so. I stand by what I wrote at the time the news broke.

Then, some in the media decided that this information warranted opening a floodgate of rumors and speculations, not only about McCarrick but also about reporters covering the Catholic Church. Phil Lawler, at CatholicCulture.org, wrote “How did Cardinal McCarrick’s secret last so long?” He concludes that short essay by suggesting the press was either lazy or biased. “Why were so many journalists willing to let the rumors go unexplored? Or, if they did explore the rumors, why were they willing to drop the story, at a time when so many other allegations were splashed across the headlines?” Lawler asked. “Could it be because, for anyone seeking to influence a cardinal, the threat of disclosure is more effective than disclosure itself?”

Rod Dreher was one of the journalists who tried to nail down the stories about McCarrick’s sexual deviancy in the beginning part of the century and he used the new revelation to print now rumors about McCarrick’s behavior that he did not print previously. He dismissed McCarrick’s claim of innocence, writing at The American Conservative, “Innocence? I believe McCarrick is lying, and that he knows he is lying. I have been waiting for this story to break since 2002.” The power of denial in sexual matters is much stronger than Dreher thinks, and McCarrick could well think he is telling the truth if he has repressed this incident.

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Abuse Investigation of former Wyoming Bishop results in Restrictions in Ministry and Reports to Rome and Law Enforcement

CASPER AND CHEYENNE (WY)
WTWO

July 2, 2018

By Fr. Carl Gallinger, Vicar General
With comment by Tom Morton

[This article helpfully provides the text of a PDF press release of the Diocese of Cheyenne, and identifies the DA referenced in the release as Kevin Meenan.]

A former bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Cheyenne, which covers the geographical area of Wyoming, allegedly abused two boys during his tenure, according to a statement from the Bishop Steven Biegler on Monday.

This is the statement verbatim from the diocesan website:

“Bishop Steven Biegler of the Diocese of Cheyenne said that he is continuing restrictions on Bishop-Emeritus Joseph Hart, due to a new investigation of allegations that he sexually abused two boys from Wyoming after he became Bishop of Cheyenne. Hart served as Bishop or Auxiliary Bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 to 2001. From 1956 to 1976, he was a priest of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.

“Beginning in 1989 and thereafter, several men alleged that Bishop Hart sexually abused them years earlier when he was a priest in Kansas City and they were boys. By 2002, a Wyoming man accused the bishop of sexually abusing him as a boy. The man said it occurred in a sacramental confession and on outings after Hart had become the bishop in Wyoming. Recently, a second Wyoming man alleged that Bishop Hart also abused him.

“In 2002, the District Attorney in Casper, Wyoming, issued a report concluding “that there was no evidence to support the allegations” originating in Wyoming. The Diocese of Cheyenne now questions that conclusion based upon a recently completed exhaustive investigation.

“As a result of civil claims against the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, based on alleged sexual misconduct by Father Joseph Hart and other priests, there were financial settlements in 2008 and 2014. However, there were no trials and no determination of guilt or innocence. Bishop Hart has consistently denied all allegations that he sexually abused minors.

“Since this matter was not resolved, Biegler ordered a fresh, thorough investigation. In December 2017, he retained an outside investigator who obtained substantial new evidence and concluded that the District Attorney’s 2002 investigation was flawed and that Bishop Hart sexually abused two boys in Wyoming. The Diocesan Review Board reviewed the investigative report and concurred with the investigator’s assessment that the allegations are credible and substantiated.

“In March 2018, the Diocese reported the alleged abuse to the Cheyenne District Attorney as required by Diocesan policy, national Catholic Church policy, and Wyoming law. The Cheyenne Police Department then opened an investigation. The Diocese is cooperating with that investigation. In May 2018, Bishop Biegler sent the Initial Investigation (Investigatio Praevia) report to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF) in Rome.

“Previously, Bishop Paul Etienne restricted Bishop Hart from celebrating public liturgical services in the Diocese of Cheyenne. Bishop Steven Biegler learned of the allegations when he was ordained the Bishop of Cheyenne in June 2017. He continued the restrictions. The Congregation for Bishops in Rome has extended these same restrictions everywhere. After the recent investigation, Bishop Biegler decided that St.Joseph’s Children’s Home in Torrington should remove Hart’s name from a building in the facility.

“Bishop Biegler concluded, ‘I hope that our investigation will lead to a final determination by the CDF that these sexual abuse allegations against Bishop Hart are credible and require disciplinary action. Nothing is more important that the safety of our children. We have zero tolerance for sexual abuse of any kind. If there is ever any indication of abuse brought to our attention, it will be reported to the civil authorities and investigated thoroughly, even when the allegations involve a Bishop.'”

___________

The District Attorney referred to in Bishop Biegler’s press release was Kevin Meenan. In 2003, Meenan was indicted and later pleaded guilty to forgery and identity theft involving his stepchildren in 2003. Before he left office in 2010, former Gov. Dave Freudenthal pardoned him.

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Sex abuse allegations against former KC priest ‘credible,’ Wyoming diocese says

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Kansas City Star

July 2, 2018

By Judy L. Thomas

A former Kansas City priest who went on to become a Wyoming bishop has been credibly accused of sexually abusing two boys, the bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne said Monday in a surprise announcement in which he criticized a previous investigation by civil authorities as “flawed.”

Bishop Steven Biegler, of the Diocese of Cheyenne, said he was continuing restrictions placed years ago on Bishop-Emeritus Joseph Hart after a new investigation into allegations that he sexually abused two Wyoming boys found the claims to be “credible and substantiated.”

“Nothing is more important than the safety of our children,” Biegler said. “We have zero tolerance for sexual abuse of any kind. If there is ever any indication of abuse brought to our attention, it will be reported to the civil authorities and investigated thoroughly, even when the allegations involve a bishop.”

Hart, 86, served as Bishop or Auxiliary Bishop of Cheyenne from 1976 to 2001. He was a priest of the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph from 1956 to 1976.

Starting in 1989 and after, several men alleged that Hart had sexually abused them when he was a priest in Kansas City and they were boys. In 2002, a Wyoming man accused Hart of sexually abusing him as a boy. The abuse, the man said, occurred in sacramental confession and on outings after Hart had become bishop.

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Archbishop Philip Wilson Is Sentenced for Sexual Abuse Cover-Up in Australia

NEW YORK CITY (NY)
New York Times

July 2, 2018

By Adam Baidawi

Melbourne, Australia – The highest-ranking Catholic official to have been found guilty of concealing sexual crimes against children was sentenced to 12 months in detention by an Australian court on Tuesday.

The official, Philip Wilson, the archbishop of Adelaide, was sentenced a month after being found guilty of failing to report child sexual abuse. Archbishop Wilson is expected to serve his sentence under home detention, if a court agrees to the arrangement.

After his conviction, the archbishop gave up his duties but refused to resign. He was convicted of covering up abuse by a priest, Jim Fletcher, in the state of New South Wales in the 1970s.

“We have made history in Australia,” said Peter Gogarty, an abuse survivor, according to ABC News.

There were no immediate indications on Tuesday that the archbishop would resign. Bishop Greg O’Kelly, who was appointed to administer the Adelaide archdiocese after Archbishop Wilson gave up his duties, said in a statement that his role had not changed.

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Sisters seek to end gag order in priest sex abuse settlement

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press

July 2, 2018

By Mark Scolforo

[See the complaint.]

Two sisters asked a judge Monday to invalidate broad confidentiality agreements other family members made with a Pennsylvania Roman Catholic diocese so they can speak publicly about sexual abuse at the hands of a parish priest more than two decades ago.

The lawsuit in county court in Harrisburg by two adult women said their silence was required in settlements made with the Harrisburg Diocese over sexual abuse of two other sisters in the same family by the Rev. Augustine Michael Giella.

New Jersey court records indicate Giella confessed to fondling one of the girls and taking photos of her unclothed. Giella was facing sexual assault, child endangerment and child pornography charges in Ocean County, New Jersey, when he died in 1993 at about age 72.

A spokesman for the Harrisburg Diocese, Mike Barley, said it no longer enforces nondisclosure agreements in priest abuse settlements.

“There’s nothing that would prevent them from speaking,” Barley said.

The four sisters’ lawyer, Ben Andreozzi, said he wants to get that in writing before the four women speak publicly about what they endured.

Andreozzi said all four women have appeared before a grand jury that spent two years investigating child sexual abuse in the dioceses of Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton, churches with 1.7 million members.

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Catholic sex abuse: ‘Guilty priest ignored my story for decades’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC

July 2, 2018

By Simon Atkinson

[Note: This is a 2 1/2 minute video interview of survivor Peter Creigh, who was abused by Fr. James Fletcher. Creigh informed now-Archbishop Philip Wilson twice about Fletcher’s crime, but no action was taken.]

Australian archbishop Philip Wilson has become the highest-ranking member of the Catholic Church to be convicted of covering up sex abuse.

On Tuesday, the archbishop of Adelaide was given a maximum sentence of 12 months in detention.

A victim of that concealed abuse tells the BBC how his story was ignored more than 40 years ago – and the destruction that caused.

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Kerala: Four priests booked for sexual abuse

NEW DELHI (INDIA)
Indian Express

July 3, 2018

By Shaju Philip

The issue has rocked the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, a prominent non-Catholic Church in Kerala, after the victim’s husband wrote to the Church, alleging that the priests had blackmailed and abused his wife, a school teacher.

Kerala Crime Branch on Monday registered a rape case against four priests of Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church who have been accused of sexually exploiting a married woman belonging to their Church.

The issue has rocked the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, a prominent non-Catholic Church in Kerala, after the victim’s husband wrote to the Church, alleging that the priests had blackmailed and abused his wife, a school teacher.

Last week, veteran CPM leader V S Achuthanandan had moved a complaint with the state police chief, seeking a probe into the allegations.

Subsequently, the Crime Branch recorded the woman’s statement, leading to the case against the four priests, three of them married — in Malankara Orthodox Church, priests have the option to lead a married life. The accused priests are Jaise K George, Abraham Varghese, Johnson V Mathew and Job Mathew.

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July 2, 2018

Archbishop Philip Wilson sentenced to 12 months’ detention for child abuse cover-up

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
ABC (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

July 3, 2018

By Nancy Notzon

Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson has been sentenced to 12 months’ detention for concealing child sexual abuse.

Magistrate Robert Stone adjourned the matter to August 14 while Wilson’s home detention order is assessed for suitability.

He will be eligible for parole after six months.

In May, the 67-year-old was found guilty of concealing the sexual abuse of children between 2004 and 2006 at the hands of paedophile priest Jim Fletcher in the 1970s.

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Australian bishop sentenced to year’s detention for cover-up

NEWCASTLE (AUSTRALIA)
Associated Press

June 3, 2018

By Rod McGuirk

The most senior Roman Catholic cleric in the world to be convicted of covering up child sex abuse was sentenced in an Australian court on Tuesday to 12 months in detention.

Newcastle Magistrate Robert Stone ordered Adelaide Archbishop Philip Wilson to serve at least 6 months before he is eligible for parole.

But Wilson will not immediately go into custody. Stone will consider on Aug. 14 whether Wilson is suitable for home detention. He could live with his sister near Newcastle.

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Pennsylvania clergy abuse: Attorney General Shapiro fights to release grand jury report

YORK (PA)
York Daily Record

June 29, 2018

By Randy Parker

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro does not intend to let his investigation into child sexual abuse in the Catholic church go unnoticed.

On Friday, Shapiro said that he would take legal action next week to allow him to release a grand jury report on allegations of such abuse.

Earlier this month, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court blocked the release of the report that details clergy sexual abuse cases in six Catholic dioceses across the state.

The Supreme Court had invited the attorney general to “lodge an objection to a continued stay” of the report’s release. In a news release Friday, Shapiro said he would do just that on Monday.

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