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.

November 2, 2015

Vatican arrests two advisers over alleged links to leaked documents

VATICAN CITY
Washington Post

By Anthony Faiola November 2

BERLIN — The Vatican on Monday said it had arrested two members of a papal reform commission on suspicion of leaking classified information, opening a week of intrigue as the Holy See braces for two potentially damaging books purporting to reveal inside corruption.

The upcoming books — including one by Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi whose 2012 book on a so-called “Vatileaks” scandal rocked the papacy of Pope Benedict XVI — are set to offer fresh revelations into fraud and mismanagement as well as challenges to Pope Francis’s push for reforms.

In a statement, the Vatican appeared to tie any bombshells in the upcoming books to two sources: Spanish priest Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, former secretary of Francis’s financial and bureaucratic reform committee, and Francesca Chaouqui, an Italian public relations executive tapped in 2013 to bring a touch of modern thinking to the Holy See and who became known in some circles as the “the pope’s lobbyist.”

The Vatican said both suspects were brought in for questioning over the weekend, and were later held under arrest. Chaouqui was released on Monday after pledging to cooperate with the investigation, the Vatican said. Balda, however, was still being detained.

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.

BREAKING: Two Arrested Over Leak of Vatican Documents

VATICAN CITY
National Catholic Register

by Edward Pentin 11/02/2015

A monsignor and a woman who served on a financial reform commission set up by Pope Francis were arrested over the weekend suspected of leaking confidential information and documents.

A Vatican statement issued Monday said that Vatican prosecutors upheld the arrests of Francesca Chaouqui and Msgr. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda. Chaouqui has since been freed because of her cooperation with the investigation, a Vatican spokesman said.

Both served on a now defunct commission, and Msgr. Vallejo Balda continues to work as a Vatican employee and secretary of COSEA, a body Francis set up in 2013 to advise the Pope on reform of Vatican finances.

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.

Prelate, ‘sex bomb’ arrested in new Vatileaks scandal

VATICAN CITY
GlobalPost

Agence France-Presse on Nov 2, 2015

The Vatican has arrested a Spanish prelate and social media expert for allegedly stealing and leaking classified documents in the second such scandal to hit the secretive institution in three years.

Monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, 54, who served on a special commission set up by Pope Francis to advise him on economic reform within the Vatican, was arrested along with a second member of the commission, Francesca Chaouqui, who has been dubbed a “sex bomb”.

The arrests were part of a several months-long investigation into the “misappropriation and disclosure of classified documents and information”.

They followed Italian media reports at the weekend that Vatican police were investigating the attempted theft of a laptop belonging to Libero Milone, the head of the city state’s new finance office.

Both Vallejo Balda and social media expert Chaouqui, 33, were arrested but she was released by Vatican prosecutor Roberto Zannotti on Monday because she agreed to collaborate with investigators and was not considered a flight risk.

Chaouqui’s appointment to the economic committee, which was handpicked by the pope, caused no little embarrassment in 2013 when it emerged the woman dubbed a “sex bomb” by the Italian media had been highly critical of the Vatican on Twitter.

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.

Researchers find drop in giving in areas hit by sex abuse scandal

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Vinnie Rotondaro | Nov. 2, 2015

Think of a map of Catholic America pockmarked with the equivalent of radiation zones, areas where the previously unseen consequences of the sex abuse crisis are beginning to become apparent.

The fallout? Thousands of Catholic abuse scandals in parish communities across the U.S. leading to direct, localized disaffiliation from the church, in turn precipitating substantial decline in charitable giving, affecting not only Catholic-run social service operations, but all social service operations in the scandalized communities.

This is the alarming new finding of an academic paper titled “Losing My Religion: The Effects of Religious Scandals on Religious Participation and Charitable Giving,” published in the September issue of the Journal of Public Economics.

Written by two Chilean-born economists, Nicolas L. Bottan and Ricardo Perez-Truglia, the paper identifies more than 3,000 scandal events throughout the United States from 1980 to 2010 and tracks how the scandals have affected religious affiliation and charitable giving.

It confirms a widely held belief among many social scientists that a causal relationship exists between religious affiliation and charitable giving. Indeed, the paper states that the “decline in charitable giving is an order of magnitude larger than the direct costs of the scandals to the Catholic churches (e.g., lawsuits).”

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.

EDITORIAL: The deep, lasting financial cost of sex abuse

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

NCR Editorial Staff | Nov. 2, 2015

The Catholic church has been deeply wounded by the abuse of minors by clergy and its cover-up. The personal tragedy of damaged individuals, lost lives and lost faith has been well-documented in these pages. The subsequent loss of trust in the institution has been documented here, too. But documentation about the actual financial cost of this crisis has been elusive.

With the publication of research by Jack Ruhl and Diane Ruhl, we have a dollar figure that we can pin on the crisis: $3.99 billion — at least. The Ruhls call their numbers “solid” but also “a very conservative estimate.”

Since 2004, the U.S. bishops’ National Review Board and their office of Child and Youth Protection have issued annual reports that capture some of that data, but we were never convinced those told a complete story. As the story points out, data from the bishops is self-reported and unaudited, and cooperation with the reports has never been 100 percent, especially in the early years and especially from religious orders. The Ruhls believe they have identified a gap of nearly a billion dollars between what they found and what the bishops have reported. (See story)

Their research also turned up reports of documents destroyed and hidden costs of the crisis. How much, for example, have bishops spent through their various state Catholic conferences lobbying against extending statute of limitations laws in childhood sex abuse cases? Those kinds of figures are nearly impossible to find.

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.

National–New studies show Catholic abuse crisis costs $4 billion

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

for immediate release: Monday, November 2

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those abused by Priests (314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com

New studies show Catholic abuse crisis costs $4 billion

Two solid pieces of new research show that the cost of the Catholic church abuse and cover up crisis is at least $4 billion, much higher than bishops have previously disclosed. We’re not surprised. If powerful men will hide clergy sex crimes and cover ups, they’ll surely hide the costs of that wrongdoing too. …

We urge Catholics and former Catholics who have stopped donating to church officials give instead to organizations that expose child sex crimes, not institutions that enable child sex crimes.

And we urge everyone to remember who is responsible for this horrific pain and high cost: selfish bishops who fixate on advancing their clerical careers rather than protecting their vulnerable flocks.

A few years ago, Catholic researchers admitted that some 100,000 boys and girls in the US have been sexually assaulted by priests. We believe that’s a low estimate. Still, that’s the figure we beg citizens and Catholics to remember: the number of lives that have been devastated is more important than the number of dollars that have been paid out.

In the National Catholic Reporter, Diane and Jack Ruhl report that

–So far this year, US Catholic officials have made at least seven confidential settlements with victims.

–“There are no uniform reporting standards for public disclosure of financial records for U.S. Catholic dioceses. (Of) the 197 dioceses. . .NCR could find only 60 that had made some kind of public financial report available for 2014.”

Also in the NCR, economist Ricardo Perez-Truglia says that “Some priests are responsible for a very, very large cut” in charitable giving. That’s misleading. The blame lies just as squarely on the predators’ church supervisors and colleagues who often actively conceal or passively ignore the crimes.

Some will say that Catholic officials must “rebuild trust” with lay people. We disagree. Horrific abuse and deliberate cover ups of clergy sex crimes are still happening. So the church hierarchy – and the rest of us – must focus first on exposing child sex crimes and deterring cover ups. When that’s happened – and we’re a long ways off still – then and only then can “restoring trust” among adults begin to matter.

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

Vatican arrests 2 people in latest probe of leaked documents

VATICAN CITY
Washington Times

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Vatican said Monday it has arrested a monsignor and a woman in the latest probe of leaks of confidential documents at the Holy See.

It said in a statement that the two had been interrogated over the weekend, and that Holy See prosecutors upheld the arrests.

The woman was identified as Francesca Chaouqui and the monsignor as the Rev. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda. The monsignor is a Vatican employee while Chaouqui had served on a commission set up by Pope Francis in 2013 as part of his drive to reform the Holy See’s finances.

A Vatican spokesman said Vallejo Balda was being held in a jail cell in Vatican City, and that Chaouqui was allowed to go free because she cooperated in the probe.

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

Vatican makes two arrests in investigation over leaked documents

VATICAN CITY
Catholic Herald (UK)

The Vatican said Monday it has arrested a monsignor and a woman in the latest probe of leaks of confidential documents at the Holy See.

It said in a statement that the two had been interrogated over the weekend, and that Holy See prosecutors upheld the arrests.

The woman was identified as Francesca Chaouqui and Mgr Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda. The monsignor is a Vatican employee and secretary of COSEA, the body set up in 2013 to advise the Pope over the reform of Vatican finances, which Chaouqui was also a member of.

A Vatican spokesman said Mgr Vallejo Balda was being held in a jail cell in Vatican City, and that Chaouqui was allowed to go free because she co-operated in the probe.

Leaks of confidential documents from Benedict XVI’s papers in 2012 led to the arrest and trial of a papal butler and a Vatican computer technician. A 2013 Vatican law made it a crime to leak confidential documents and information.

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

Vatican arrests 2 for betraying “Pope’s trust”

VATICAN CITY
CBS News

ROME — The Vatican’s own police force has arrested a monsignor and a laywoman in its latest probe into the leak of confidential documents.

The Vatican said both people were members of the commission established on Pope Francis’ order to investigate the Church’s finances. They were being held on suspicion of leaking confidential documents to the media.

A statement released by the Vatican identified the suspects as Spanish priest Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda and Francesca Chaouqui. Chaouqui was released Monday, the statement said, and was “cooperating with the investigation. Balda remained in custody.

The arrests took place over the weekend but only became common public knowledge on Monday, two days before the slated release of a pair of new books touting new revelations of past misdeeds at the Vatican.

One of the two books is written by Gianluigi Nuzzi, whose previous book “His Holiness” contained private documents stolen from Pope Benedict’s desk by his butler.

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

Vatican Arrests Spanish Priest, Laywoman On Suspicion Of Leaking Documents At Holy See

VATICAN CITY
International Business Times

By Morgan Winsor @MorganWinsorIBT on November 02 2015

The Vatican said Monday it has arrested two members of a commission set up by Pope Francis to review Church reforms. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, a Spanish priest, and Francesca Chaouqui, a laywoman, were taken into custody over the weekend on suspicion of leaking confidential documents at the Holy See, according to Reuters.

The two were interrogated over the weekend and Chaouqui was released on her own recognizance after she agreed to cooperate with the investigation, the Vatican said in a statement Monday, according to the Associated Press. The arrests happened days before two Italian authors were slated to publish books that are expected to disclose new revelations of past scandals in the Vatican.

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

Vatican arrests Spanish prelate over leaks: official

VATICAN CITY
Bangkok Post

WRITER: AFP

VATICAN CITY – The Vatican said Monday a Spanish prelate had been arrested for allegedly stealing and leaking classified documents in the second such scandal to hit the secretive institution in three years.

Monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, who served on a special commission set up by Pope Francis to advise him on economic reform within the Vatican, was arrested as part of an investigation into the “misappropriation and disclosure of classified documents and information”.

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.

Vatileaks 2, due arresti: mons. Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda e Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui

CITTA’ DEL VATICANO
Giornalettismo

Fuga di documenti riservati della Santa Sede. In Vaticano sono stati arrestai monsignor Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, spagnolo, già segretario della Prefettura degli Affari economici e della Commissione di studio sulle attività economiche e amministrative, Cosea, e Francesca Immacolata Chaouqui, anche lei componente della Cosea.

VATILEAKS, CHAOQUI ARRESTATA E LIBERATA

Per quanto riguarda Chaouqui, il pm ha «convalidato l’arresto», ma la donna è stata riemssa in libertà perché «non sono più state ravvisate esigenze cautelari, anche a motivo della sua collaborazione alle indagini». Questa la nota rilasciata dalla sala stampa vaticana:

Nel quadro di indagini di polizia giudiziaria svolte dalla Gendarmeria vaticana ed avviate da alcuni mesi a proposito di sottrazione e divulgazione di notizie e documenti riservati, sabato e domenica scorsi sono state convocate due persone per essere interrogate sulla base degli elementi raccolti e delle evidenze raggiunte.

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

Vatican arrests priest, laywoman suspected of leaking confidential documents

VATICAN CITY
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

November 2, 2015

Reuters

VATICAN CITY — The Vatican said today that two members of a commission that Pope Francis set up to study Church reforms had been arrested on suspicion of leaking confidential documents to the media.

Spanish priest Lucio Angel Vallejo Balda, number two at the Vatican’s Prefecture for Economic Affairs, and Italian laywoman Francesca Chaouqui, a public relations expert, were arrested over the weekend, a statement said.

Chaouqui was released on Monday after she agreed to cooperate with the investigation, it said.

Both were members of a commission that Francis set up shortly after his election in 2013 to advise him on economic and bureaucratic reforms in the Vatican administration, or Curia.

The commission completed its work last year and handed its report to the pope.

The twin arrests came just days before two Italian authors were due to release books that their publishers say will reveal new evidence of past scandals in the Vatican.

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

Doing the Right Thing

UNITED STATES
The New Yorker

BY ANTHONY LANE

The title of the new Tom McCarthy film, “Spotlight,” refers to the investigative section of the Boston Globe. The main action begins in 2001, with the arrival of a new editor, Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber), lately of the Miami Herald. He has lunch with the head of Spotlight, Walter Robinson (Michael Keaton), who tells him, “We’re trolling around for our next story,” adding that a year or more can be spent on a single case. Recently, the paper ran a column about a local priest who was charged with abusing children; Baron wonders if this was an isolated incident, or if there might be more to dig up. The movie, to put it mildly, has news for us: there’s more.

Robinson has a crew of three at his behest: Matty Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James), a quiet family man with a mournful mustache; Mike Rezendes (Mark Ruffalo), pushy and restive, the kind of guy who will never stroll across a street when he can hustle and barge; and Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams). Any film that can make McAdams look resolutely unglamorous is flashing its heavyweight credentials, and “Spotlight” gets bonus points for giving her a thrilling scene in which she struggles to load a dishwasher. The movie adheres to the downbeat and the dun, with cheerful colors banished from our sight. The exception is a youthful choir, chanting “Silent Night” in a church ablaze with the trappings of Christmas. Even then, we see Rezendes watching, with a sour expression on his mug, and clearly thinking, Are these kids safe?

He has a point. The film is a saga of expansion, paced with immense care, demonstrating how the reports of child abuse by Catholic clergy slowly broadened and unfurled; by the time the paper’s exposés were first published, in 2002, Spotlight had uncovered about seventy cases in Boston alone. (In a devastating coda, McCarthy fills the screen with a list of other American cities, and of towns around the world, where similar misdeeds have been revealed.) The telling of the tale is doubly old-fashioned. First, there are shots of presses rolling and spiffy green trucks carrying bales of the Globe onto the streets; we could be in a cinema in 1945. Second, the events take place in an era when the Internet still seems an accessory rather than a primary tool. As the journalists comb through Massachusetts Church directories, looking for disgraced men of God who were put on sick leave or discreetly transferred to another parish, we get closeups of rulers moving down lines of text. Don’t expect “Spotlight” to play at an IMAX theatre anytime soon.

On balance, this arrant unhipness is a good thing. So crammed are the details of the inquiry, and so delicately must the topic of abuse be handled, that a more intrepid visual manner might have thrown the movie off track, and one of its major virtues is what’s not there: no creepy flashbacks of prowling priests, or—as in the prelude to Clint Eastwood’s “Mystic River”—of children in the vortex of peril. Everything happens in the here and now, not least the recitation of the there and then. You sense the tide of the past rushing in most fiercely during some of the plainest scenes, as Globe staffers listen to victims like Joe (Michael Cyril Creighton) and Patrick (Jimmy LeBlanc) explain what they underwent decades before. They are grown men, but they are drowning souls. Boldest of all is the brief appearance of Richard O’Rourke as Ronald Paquin, a retired priest, who answers the door to Pfeiffer and answers her questions with the kindliest of smiles. “Sure, I fooled around, but I never felt gratified myself,” he says, as if arguing the finer points of doctrine.

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.

Keeping the spotlight on the Catholic Church

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Adrian Walker GLOBE COLUMNIST NOVEMBER 02, 2015

Terry Donilon, an affable man who is the spokesman for the Archdiocese of Boston, audibly gasped when I asked what I considered a fair question:

“How much abuse do you think still exists in the Archdiocese of Boston?”

Donilon caught his breath and responded: “We think we have the safest entity in the entire Commonwealth,” he said. “Now, I’m not saying someone couldn’t still come forward with a claim from 30 years ago. That could happen. But we believe there is zero abuse going on. None.”

The question hadn’t been intended as a provocation. It had been on my mind since I attended a screening of “Spotlight,” the new movie depicting the Globe Spotlight Team’s 2002 coverage of the clergy abuse scandal. Over the course of its reporting, the paper found that roughly 250 priests in the archdiocese had molested children, often with the protection of Cardinal Bernard Law. It unleashed a wave of reporting by other news organizations that found major abuse scandals in other cities and many foreign countries as well.

The cases stretched back decades. So did the efforts of the church hierarchy to keep the scandal under wraps. The city was rocked by the revelations, and so was the church itself, internationally. Law resigned and was replaced by Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley, who pledged to heal the damage.

The reporting prompted major changes. The Legislature quickly passed a long-pending law to make church officials mandatory reporters of sexual abuse. The church sold property to pay victims compensation for the abuse they had suffered. The sales included the Cardinal’s ornate residence on Lake Street. The archdiocese adopted a “zero tolerance” policy toward abuse and trained church officials to recognize, and report, abuse.

But victims and advocates say the reforms have not gone far enough. While Boston, under a microscope, took many concrete steps, more needs to be done, they say.

“In general I think that there’s been tons of policies and procedures and protocols that have largely amounted to public relations,” said David Clohessy, the executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “This will continue as long as the fundamental and nearly unlimited power of O’Malley and his brother bishops remains in place, and it certainly does.”

One change advocates continue to push is extending the statute of limitations, so victims have a longer time to bring legal action against abusers. That has been a major issue in cases here and elsewhere, because traumatized victims commonly come forward years after their abuse has taken place. Caps on damages in suits against charities are outdated relics as well and need to be raised.

If anyone thinks the scandal is all in the past, they are mistaken. Just this year, the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis was criminally indicted for failing to protect children, and a bishop in Kansas City resigned after being convicted of a misdemeanor for negligently handling a case of abuse. While he no longer heads a diocese, he’s still a bishop, a prince of the church. Some prince.

O’Malley chairs a 17-member Vatican commission to address clergy abuse worldwide, and Pope Francis has also approved the creation of a tribunal that is charged with holding bishops accountable for failing to act on abuse. But skeptics aren’t sure either body has done much. Given the church’s track record, their skepticism is earned.

“There is a lot that needs to be done, and as far as I can see that commission has done nothing,” said Ann Hagan Webb of SNAP, the survivors’ group.

By its nature, sexual abuse is not the kind of problem that is ever “solved;” it will take constant vigilance to keep at bay the tragedies “Spotlight” captures. I want to believe that Donilon is right about the lack of abuse in Boston. But the sad reality is that there will never be a safe time to declare victory.

Adrian Walker is a Globe columnist. He can be reached at walker@globe.com. Follow him on Twitter@Adrian_Walker.

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

The true story behind that Catholic priest ‘rehab house’ in ‘Spotlight’

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston.com

NOVEMBER 2, 2015

BY CHARLOTTE WILDER @THEWILDERTHINGS

There’s a scene in the movie Spotlight when Boston Globe reporter Matt Carroll, played by actor Brian d’Arcy James, realizes that a “rehab facility” for priests accused of sexual abuse is located around the corner from his own house.

“Oh, s–t,” Carroll says in the movie. Which is what he said in real life when he made the discovery in his West Roxbury home 14 years ago.

“I’m not exactly sure what the script said,” Carroll said. “But as they were filming, Brian (d’Arcy James) said, ‘What did you actually say when you realized [that house] was around the corner?’ And I said, ‘I probably said oh, s–t.’ And that’s the line they used in the movie.”

While his exclamation is accurate, Carroll said the rest of the scene isn’t totally true. The house that Carroll discovered wasn’t actually a rehab facility. It was the home of Father John J. Geoghan, a priest accused of sexually assaulting more than 130 boys. Geoghan was eventually convicted of a single count of molesting a boy at a public swimming pool and later murdered by his prison cellmate.

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.

Jon O’Brien: “The Catholic Church has an obsession with sexuality”

UNITED STATES
El Pais (Spain)

MARÍA R. SAHUQUILLO Brussels 2 NOV 2015

Jon O’Brien believes that the Catholic Church’s hierarchy is drawing further away from its followers and social reality – above all when it comes to sexual and reproductive rights.

The 50-year-old Irish Catholic, who is president of the US organization Catholics for Choice, believes in a secular state, and has severely criticized the Vatican for its treatment of women and homosexuals.

Question. Do you think Catholic Church officials are successfully taking on the challenge of adapting to the diversity of their believers in today’s society?

Answer. There was a great theologian who once said: “Catholicism is defined by unity and diversity.” In other words, this is not a monolithic Church. When I go to Mass on Sunday and I look around me, I see over there two gay men who’ve been in a relationship for a long time. Over on my right hand side I see two gay women who’ve adopted a child. There is also a couple who have divorced and been remarried. All of us are using birth-control methods, and many women have had abortions. This is the reality of the Catholic Church today. The Church is not a building somewhere in Rome; it’s not a building in Madrid. The Church is all of the people and the people as we are manifesting ourselves today have a very different sexual aspect than what the hierarchy has emphasized.

All of us are using birth control methods, and many women have had abortions. This is the reality of the Catholic Church today ”

Q. Do its doctrines correspond to reality?

A. It seemed as though the last two papacies, John Paul II and Pope Benedict, were very focused on the pelvic zone, very focused on our genitalia, and very focused on adherence to a rule. No matter where you go, if you ask Catholics what they believe, if you ask Catholics what they do, it’s very different than what they do in the hierarchy. I think that’s the reality of the Church. My biggest problem is that they have failed us as Catholics to follow them. And they do not represent, I would argue, we Catholic people – they represent themselves. The Bishops now go to Congress in the United States, they go to the UN, and they go to the government in Spain, and they try to convince them to turn their theology into law that doesn’t represent us.

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.

SNAP Update: A “Shout Out”–and A Challenge–to Prosecutors

MISSOURI
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Last week, a Missouri prosecutor did something I’d never seen before. His courage prompted me to think about how district attorneys handle child sex abuse cases, especially involving influential institutions and oppressive cultures.

My conclusion: prosecutors deserve both praise and prodding. Too often, they seem to play it safe, pursue only the low hanging fruit and carefully avoid confronting powerful organizations. But increasingly, some of them seem to be acting with more creativity and vigor. They deserve recognition for doing so.

So first, the praise:

In Platte County Missouri, after two hours of police questioning, Darren L. Padden pled guilty to sexually assaulting a girl 200 and 300 times over a decade, starting when she was four.

Sadly but not surprisingly, almost 20 adults in the community publicly rallied to Padden’s side. Here’s the shocking part though: The local district attorney called them out by name.

Upset by such callousness, prosecutor Eric Zahnd sent out a new release. He blasted these irresponsible individuals for adding to the now 18 year old victim’s pain by writing letters or testifying on behalf of the admitted predator. And Zahnd named each one of them: a local school board member, a former bank president, a former county official, a female church elder, a male church trustee, a nurse and two ex-teachers and two ex-school district employees. (Their names are listed at the end of this blog.)

So again, kudos to prosecuting attorney Eric Zahnd. Thanks to him, a serial predator is behind bars and a girl is no longer being assaulted. And thanks to him, many in northwest Missouri now know who sides with predators and against victims. Hopefully, others who are tempted to back a child molester – and hurt a victim – will think twice before minimizing horrific crimes, helping sick predators and hurting already-wounded victims.

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

Survivors Of Clergy Sex Abuse Screen ‘Spotlight’ Film

MASSACHUSETTS
WBUR

BOSTON Survivors of the Boston clergy sex abuse scandal are praising “Spotlight,” the new film that details The Boston Globe’s investigation into the abuse and its cover-up.

Many of those abused by priests gathered for a private screening in Boston Thursday night, ahead of the movie’s public release next week.

One word seemed to come to mind for survivors after seeing the film: validation.

“First of all, it’s very validating for any victim, especially from this area,” said David Lewcon, of Uxbridge.

He saw the movie for the first time at the Regal Fenway theater Thursday night. The screening was closed to the media, and organizers kept the location secret out of respect for those in attendance.

“There are a lot of moments in the movie, I mean, I had my tissue in my pocket and used it quite often just to wipe my eyes because it just brought out the emotion of the moment and what I’ve been experiencing most of my life,” Lewcon said.

As buzz for the movie spreads around the city, an anti-abuse group called on the Boston Archdiocese to require church staff to watch the film.

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

Catholics protest outside archbishop’s birthday gala

GUAM
KUAM

By Sabrina Salas Matanane

It’s clear the Catholic Church remains divided in Guam. Those who attended a birthday fundraiser held in Tumon, were greeted by a stream of protestors upset with the archbishop.

Inside the Hyatt-the sweet sound of jazz music fills the room. Outside a much different tune.

Teri Untalan said, “He’s got a gala in their for his pseudo-seminary.

Inside: precious items up for silent auction. The archbishop said, “They will announce it as well as other items out there that you may see icons, statutes, figurines whatever.”

Outside: picket signs of protestors vocal about their discontent. “Just get him out of here, we just want him out,” said protesters.

Untalan was among a group of 50 members of the Catholic Church, that are part of the Laity Forward Movement Group, upset with Archbishop Anthony Apuron. As he celebrated his 70th birthday inside the Hyatt Sunday night, they stood outside in protest of the $200 a plate birthday fundraiser .

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.

Protesters Call for Archbishop’s Resignation, Call Actions “Heresy”

GUAM
Pacific News Center

[with video]

Written by Janela Carrera

Some members of the catholic church held a protest in front of the Hyatt Hotel Sunday evening to coincide with Archbishop Anthony Apuron’s benefit event also held at the Hyatt.

Guam – Picketers staged a protest outside the Hyatt Hotel last night calling for the resignation of Archbishop Anthony Apuron who was hosting a benefit dinner at the hotel.

The protest was organized by a group of members of the catholic church who have been holding protests almost on a monthly basis.

This time, the message was stronger than ever. In addition to expressing dismay at the archbishop’s decision to remove two beloved priests from their duties, as well as the controversial alleged turnover of the Redemptoris Mater Seminary to a third party, organizers of yesterday’s protest say they’ve finally had it and want the archbishop to step down.

Teri Untalan is a spokesperson for last night’s protest. “We are at this point just asking the archbishop to restore these priests to their parishes, return the Yona property that he stole from the catholics of Guam and resign. We are not looking for reconciliation at this point. We are just asking him to resign from his position. We have no confidence in him and we feel that the only solution when you have no confidence in your leader is to step down,” Untalan says.

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Former Brisbane students come forward to royal commission into abuse

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

November 2, 2015

Jorge Branco
Journalist

More former students of one of Queensland’s most prestigious schools have come forward with complaints of abuse at the hands of a disgraced paedophile former school counsellor.

As the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse prepared to hear stories from abuse victims at both Brisbane Grammar School and St Paul’s School over the next two weeks, BGS confirmed the inquiry had caused more victims to come out of the woodwork.

“The work of the Royal Commission has already encouraged others to come forward, and we are glad that they have now chosen to do so,” the school posted to Facebook on Friday.

“The School has already started to engage with them, as we have done with many others to date, with a response built on a personal apology, counselling and mediation.”

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Child sex inquiry: ‘Skippy’ victims may be in hundreds

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

NOVEMBER 2, 2015

Michael McKenna
Reporter
Brisbane

The victims of notorious pedophile Kevin “Skippy’’ Lynch may be in the hundreds, with new ­evidence given to the royal commission into child sexual abuse about the unknown extent of his private “relaxation sessions’’ with students.

Lynch’s appointment diaries from his almost 10 years as a counsellor at St Paul’s Anglican school in Brisbane have emerged, showing hundreds of students were booked for regular visits to his locked rooms up until his arrest and suicide in 1997.

At least 100 boys are known to have been abused in the ­sessions by Lynch at Brisbane Grammar School, where he worked between 1974 and 1988, and later at St Paul’s.

It is understood the appointment diaries have never been handed over to authorities, with police closing their covert operation soon after Lynch, 64, gassed himself in a car after he was charged with seven counts of ­indecent dealing with a student.

The royal commission is understood to have unearthed evidence of inaction over complaints and a subsequent cover-up of Lynch’s offending over decades. Two weeks of hearings will begin in Brisbane tomorrow, after the commission said in September that it was reopening the Lynch case and that of Gregory Robert Knight, who taught at St Paul’s in the late 1980s and early 90s and was convicted of child abuse in 2005.

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November 1, 2015

VATICANO, VIOLATO IL COMPUTER DEL REVISORE GENERALE. “NO COMMENT” DELLA SANTA SEDE

CIUDAD DEL VATICANO
Rai News

31 ottobre 2015

Un episodio che mostra il riemergere di un nuovo clima di “veleni” e sospetti, quasi una nuova stagione di “corvi”, come nella non rimpianta era-Vatileaks. In Vaticano è stato violato il computer del revisore generale Libero Milone, 67 anni, il professionista scelto da papa Francesco nel giugno scorso con il compito di supervisione e controllo sui conti e i bilanci di tutti gli organismi, gli uffici e le istituzioni della Santa Sede. Insomma, su tutta la finanza vaticana.

La notizia, anticipata in tv da Luigi Bisignani e pubblicata dal quotidiano Il Tempo, in via ufficiale non viene confermata né smentita, né tanto meno commentata, dalla Santa Sede. “Al momento non abbiamo nulla da dire”, replica la Sala stampa vaticana. Ma sul fatto che sia vera non ci sono dubbi e nelle stanze d’Oltretevere se ne parla parecchio.

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Vatican investigates mystery over hacked computer belonging to finance chief

VATICAN CITY
Telegraph (UK)

By Nick Squires, Rome 01 Nov 2015

Vatican police are investigating whether an insider unhappy with Pope Francis and his drive for transparency hacked into a computer belonging to the Holy See’s auditor general.

The Vatican gendarmerie, which is responsible for security in the sovereign city state, is trying to find out who may have tried to steal information from a laptop belonging to Libero Milone, the head of the audit office.

There were rumours the person behind the attack could be someone within the Vatican who opposes Pope Francis’s reform of Holy See finances and his drive for more accountability.

That could include someone who has lost influence or power as a result of new appointments.

The prime suspect in the case was a monsignor working within the Vatican, according to Ansa, Italy’s national news agency.

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Tom Doyle Reviews Spotlight

UNITED STATES
Hamilton and Griffin on Rights

One fall morning in 2001 I was sitting with Dick Sipe in a hotel coffee shop in Oklahoma City. We were both there for depositions in a case in which we were both expert witnesses. Not long after we sat down Dick asked me “Have you talked to Mike Rezendes yet?” I told him I hadn’t and what’s more, I didn’t know who he was. Dick proceeded to tell me that Mike was an investigative reporter with the Boston Globe and had been talking to him for information on clergy abuse cover-up in the Archdiocese of Boston. “I gave him your name. He’ll be calling you soon. This is really big”

Mike did in fact call me very soon after my visit to Oklahoma City. I was in the Air Force then stationed in Germany but back in the States on a short leave. Before the end of our first conversation I was impressed. This guy really “gets it.” He’s gutsy, very bright and most important, committed to finding the truth.

I already knew the foundation of the story. In March 2001 Kristen Lombardi, then with the Boston Phoenix, was doing a story about the cover- up of the late John Geoghan’s serial sex abuse of young boys in the archdiocese of Boston and the serial cover-up by Cardinal Law and his staff. Her story came out with a full-page picture of Cardinal Law on the cover. It was a great story and had a very important effect but nothing like the nuclear reaction caused by the cover story published by the Boston Globe on Sunday, January 6, 2002…the Feast of the Epiphany.

I happened to be back in the U.S. the first week of January 2002. I was at Maxwell Air Force Base in Alabama at a continuing education program for officers. I had remained in contact with Mike and had a head’s up that the story was coming out on January 6. It was a major, major explosion in the seemingly never-ending exposure of the Catholic Church’s bungling of the sexual and spiritual violation of minors by the clergy.

January 6 was only the beginning. I cynically expected that the explosion would dominate the news, put some well-deserved fear into the bishops and wake up the complacent laity for a while and then after a couple weeks things would go back to the way they had been. There had been other explosions that we thought would cause a significant shakeup…..the Fr. Porter scandal in 1993, the revelation of widespread sex abuse of young seminarians at St. Anthony’s Seminary in California and St. Lawrence Seminary in Wisconsin, also in 1993 and then the Rudy Kos trial in 1997. This time I was wrong, very wrong. The aftershocks from the Globe’s Spotlight investigations are still happening. People have tried to figure out why the Boston phenomenon was different from anything else but it really doesn’t matter. What does matter is that Martin Baron, the Globe’s editor, had the insight to see that the real story was about the Archdiocese’s systemic, destructive response to the victims and had the courage to take on the ultra-formidable Catholic Church to find the truth. What does matter is that the Spotlight Team had the brilliance, courage, determination and just plain guts to keep digging until the mind-boggling reality of what was really happening in the Archdiocese was forced into the light.

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El paraíso de los legionarios

GUADALAJARA (MEXICO)
Gatopardo [Mexico City, Mexico]

November 1, 2015

By Emiliano Ruiz Parra

Read original article

La Legión de Cristo goza de un poder desmedido en Cancún y en varias poblaciones de Quintana Roo. La prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, a cargo de los legionarios desde 1970, ha servido a la congregación religiosa para refugiar a sacerdotes acusados de pederastia.

Los Legionarios de Cristo siempre cuentan dos historias: una versión oficial –cargada de designios divinos– y una verdad disidente. Durante sesenta años la Legión sostuvo, por ejemplo, que Marcial Maciel –su fundador– era un santo en vida. Pero después tuvo que reconocer lo irrefutable: que había sido un pederasta, drogadicto, mitómano y había abusado hasta de sus hijos.

En la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal, a cargo de los Legionarios de Cristo desde 1970, también se cuentan dos historias. [1] La versión oficial retrata la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal como la abnegada evangelización del pueblo maya y de los cientos de miles de inmigrantes que poblaron el Caribe mexicano con el auge del turismo. Llegaron cinco sacerdotes legionarios y, 45 años después, se multiplicaron a 75. Encontraron siete parroquias y en menos de cinco décadas construyeron más de cincuenta. Y se adaptaron a uno de los crecimientos demográficos más acelerados del país, pues Quintana Roo pasó de menos de 90 mil habitantes a un millón 600 mil entre 1970 y 2015.

Sin duda, una parte de esa versión es cierta. Los números son reales y los legionarios gozan de influencia en la entidad. Algunos de sus sacerdotes se han entregado con convicción a sus labores religiosas, ya sea en comunidades indígenas o en barrios de trabajadores. Pero esa verdad oficial convive con la versión de los críticos de la Legión de Cristo, algunos de ellos, ex legionarios que conocieron las entrañas de la congregación y se han convertido en sus denunciantes más elocuentes.

Según la versión de los críticos, la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal ha funcionado como una “Siberia tropical” para relegar a los elementos indeseables, ya fueran sacerdotes acusados de pederastia o elementos críticos con la línea oficial de la Legión de Cristo. Según ellos la prelatura se ha usado como un gran negocio, al ser explotada como un polo de bodas en hoteles de lujo.

En la historia oficial, el Vaticano les pidió a los legionarios encargarse de Quintana Roo en 1970 y “ni el profeta más santo […] se iba a imaginar la explosión demográfica”. Según la versión alternativa, que cuenta el ex legionario Pablo Pérez Guajardo, Maciel cabildeó la prelatura para los legionarios porque poseía información (debido a su cercanía con el secretario de Gobernación, y luego presidente, Luis Echeverría) de que el Estado mexicano invertiría grandes sumas de dinero para desarrollar un gran centro turístico en el Caribe.

La región ha vivido, según la versión oficial, “una frenética cruzada por dotar a la prelatura de templos dignos para el culto”.[2] La versión alternativa acepta este hecho, pero acusa a los legionarios de invadir áreas verdes y apropiarse de espacios públicos para construir iglesias. En su expansión, la prelatura contó con el apoyo de un empresario hotelero, Fernando García Zalvidea, que estuvo preso trece meses por lavado de dinero del Cártel de Juárez, y luego fue absuelto.

Este 21 de noviembre, la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal cumple 45 años, todos ellos bajo el control de los Legionarios de Cristo, la congregación que fundara Marcial Maciel el 3 de enero de 1941 en un sótano de la colonia Juárez de la Ciudad de México. Los legionarios, ahora, emprenden dos obras monumentales: la construcción de la basílica de Santa María Guadalupe del Mar, un templo de 110 metros de altura que pretenden convertir en el ícono de Cancún, con un costo anunciado de unos doce millones de
 dólares; y un seminario de 57 millones
 de pesos con alberca olímpica y canchas de futbol y basquetbol y capacidad para cien seminaristas.

“No te preocupes, habla con las víctimas y procura tranquilizarlos. Pídeles que no les digan nada a sus papás”, dijo Maciel.

Los pederastas

Cuatro seminaristas se acercaron al sacerdote Juan José Vaca, director espiritual del seminario de Ontaneda, España. Le revelaron que el rector, el padre Jesús Martínez Penilla, se los había llevado a la cama y los había masturbado. Por las confesiones de los niños se deducía que los abusos llevaban ya dos o tres meses. Vaca de inmediato le informó a Marcial Maciel por teléfono.

—No te preocupes, habla con los apostólicos [las víctimas] y procura tranquilizarlos. Pídeles que no les digan nada a sus papás—, le dijo Maciel.

En tres horas, Martínez Penilla había tomado el tren a Madrid. De ahí abordó un avión a la ciudad de México y de inmediato salió a Chetumal, en donde se puso a las órdenes de Jorge Bernal, el legionario de Cristo que era administrador apostólico de la prelatura, designado por Maciel Degollado.[3] Corría el año de 1970 y el papa Pablo VI acababa de encargarles la prelatura de Chetumal a los Legionarios de Cristo.

A miles de kilómetros de sus víctimas, Martínez Penilla apareció en la primera fila de las más importantes ceremonias de la prelatura. El 19 de marzo de 1974 flanqueó a Jorge Bernal por las calles de Chetumal durante la consagración de éste último como obispo prelado. En una fotografía se aprecia a cuatro mitrados que los siguen en procesión.[4]

Martínez Penilla desarrolló una carrera como párroco en la prelatura. El directorio eclesiástico de 1991 lo registra al frente del templo de la Inmaculada Concepción, en Bacalar. En el mismo directorio, pero de 2007, aparece como responsable de la parroquia de Nuestra Señora del Perpetuo Socorro en el municipio de José María Morelos.

Para 2010 había cambiado nuevamente de adscripción. En la página 43 de Una Iglesia de corazón misionero hay dos imágenes del sacerdote: en una de ellas se le ve leyendo un libro, quizá los evangelios, en una banca; en la segunda fotografía lo flanquean 18 personas. Son parte de su comunidad en el templo de la Inmaculada Concepción de María de Isla Mujeres.

Cuando Juan José Vaca estaba a punto de salir de la Legión de Cristo le escribió una extensa carta a Marcial Maciel fechada el 20 de octubre de 1976. En ella le reprochaba una década de abusos sexuales que habían empezado en 1949. Vaca revelaba los nombres de veinte legionarios que habían pasado por situaciones similares a la suya. Entre ellos había tres sacerdotes que trabajaban en la prelatura: Javier Orozco, Ángel de la Torre y Jesús Martínez Penilla.

La prelatura, sin embargo, albergó un caso más grave que el de Martínez Penilla. En el capítulo “El caso del Instituto Cumbres, 1983” de Marcial Maciel, el historiador Fernando M. González detalla la primera historia de abuso sexual de la Legión contenida en expedientes judiciales.

Una madre de familia (a quien González identifica como Elsa N) denunció los abusos sexuales sufridos por su hijo a manos del prefecto de disciplina, un laico de nombre Eduardo Enrique Villafuerte Casas Alatriste. La justicia mexicana atrapó a Villafuerte y lo condenó a 18 años de cárcel. El examen médico comprobó las violaciones sexuales. En ese entonces, el director del Instituto Cumbres (una preparatoria de los Legionarios de Cristo) era el sacerdote Eduardo Lucatero Álvarez.

En su declaración ministerial, consignada en la averiguación previa 163/83, del 7 de junio de 1985, Villafuerte acusa que Lucatero “tuvo conocimiento de los hechos, y se concretó únicamente a despedirlo de su empleo, y a avisarle a su familia, aconsejándole que abandonara el país porque iba a tener problemas”. Villafuerte relata que no era el único abusador de niños en el colegio. Identifica a Guillermo Romo, Francisco Rivas y Alfonso NJ como otros empleados del Cumbres que tocaban a los niños.

“Que también sabe y vio en ocasiones al subdirector [sic] confesando a los menores, y que dicho [sujeto] se llamaba Eduardo Lucatero (LC), el cual también se llevaba a las niñas, hermanas de los menores y les acariciaba sus partes nobles obscenamente”, continúa. Sin embargo, al sacerdote Lucatero sólo se le impuso una multa por encubrimiento.

Antes de acudir a las autoridades ministeriales, una de las madres de las víctimas acudió a las del plantel. Fue un error. “Mi vida cambió totalmente. Perdí el trabajo por culpa de los legionarios, perdí mis amistades de toda la vida, mi dinero, mi condominio, y de la noche a la mañana haga de cuenta que se me abrió un hoyo. Son gente muy poderosa. Me amenazaron, me trataron de sacar del periférico varias veces con un auto Mustang para que no fuera a juicio”, le contó a González.

Lucatero Álvarez terminó en la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal, que nunca disimuló su presencia en el Caribe. En la tercera de forros de Una Iglesia de corazón misionero se le ve en segunda fila entre el clero de Quintana Roo, con ornamentos sacerdotales y en oración. El grupo lo encabeza el obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo.

El mismo volumen lo registra como sacerdote adscrito a la catedral de la Santísima Trinidad, en Cancún. En una fotografía (página 85) aparece en el extremo derecho de un grupo de veinte personas que posan delante de la fachada de la catedral. Alto, de lentes, guayabera y crucifijo al hombro, posa con una sonrisa.

En el Directorio eclesiástico 2 014 de la prelatura se le consigna como sacerdote del clero religioso. El directorio lo identifica como titular de la Dimensión de la Doctrina de la Fe en la Pastoral Profética. Es decir, era el “guardián” de la disciplina y el cumplimiento de los dogmas en la Iglesia de Quintana Roo.

El perro, el vino y el psiquiatra

Pablo Pérez Guajardo se pasaba el día adormilado. Su depresión no desaparecía a pesar de la ingesta de pastillas. Hasta que decidió dejar de tomar su dosis de diazepam y dárselas al perro de raza pastor alemán, una de la mascotas en la casa de Vía Aurelia 677. Pablo poco a poco perdió la somnolencia. En cambio, el perro dormitaba todo el día ya sin ganas de jugar. “Los superiores se preocuparon por el perro que estaba muy mal. El perro sí les alarmaba y yo no”, recuerda con rabia.

Pérez Guajardo se ha convertido en una de las voces más críticas de la Legión. Sin ser nunca un directivo de la orden, durante veinte años estuvo cerca de la cúpula legionaria y del propio fundador Marcial Maciel. Entre 1986 y 2006 perteneció a la comunidad de seminaristas y sacerdotes que residía en Vía Aurelia, Roma, en la sede de la dirección general de los Legionarios de Cristo.

Lo encuentro en fotografías antiguas: la del 3 de enero de 1991 en la basílica de San Pedro. Para celebrar los 50 años de la Legión de Cristo, Marcial Maciel dispuso que sesenta legionarios fueran ordenados por el papa Juan Pablo II. Con las manos en oración, se le ve a escasas tres personas del pontífice. Ese día recibió la ordenación sacerdotal después de quince años en la congregación.

Lo vuelvo a ver en Una Iglesia de corazón misionero, libro de nuestra historia, el libro que los legionarios editaron para celebrar los cuarenta años de la prelatura. Aparece tres veces: en la tercera de forros (con el resto de los curas del estado) y en las páginas 132 y 133. Una fotografía en gran angular lo retrata en medio de un centenar de personas, la mayoría niños: su comunidad de la capilla San José en la colonia Guadalupana, un barrio proletario en la periferia de Playa del Carmen. En la página impar tiene un micrófono en la mano y se lo acerca a un niño.

En esas imágenes quedó su época de cercanía legionaria. Pero el 29 de septiembre de 2011 envió al entonces director general de los legionarios, Álvaro Corcuera, una “Carta de Fuego”, en donde exigía a la congregación un deslinde de su fundador Marcial Maciel.

“Fue amortajado con vestiduras sacerdotales un maricón, drogo, borracho y mujeriego […] No sólo él se rió de Dios, de la Iglesia y de nosotros, también usted y buen número de superiores mayores se han burlado de la autoridad del Papa al acompañar a nuestro pedófilo fundador en sus viajes con la concubina y la hija sacrílega [……] Sus labios han besado el cadáver de un falso profeta que usted y los superiores mayores nos han presentado como Alter Christus siendo un 
Anti-Cristo”, le escribió.

A esa carta siguieron una decena de cartas más en donde denunciaba el lavado de dinero, el encubrimiento sistemático de pederastas, el culto a la memoria de Maciel, la explotación financiera de los colegios y otras presuntas desviaciones de la Legión de Cristo.

Delgado, de ojos verdes, orejas puntiagudas y cabello escaso, Pablo Pérez Guajardo fue expulsado de la Legión de Cristo en mayo de 2015, pero desde septiembre de 2012 lo echaron de la capellanía de San José. Cuando lo entrevisté, en septiembre pasado, acondicionaba la cochera de una casa como capilla. Se dice vetado: “el obispo (Pedro Pablo Elizondo) me prohibió que entrara a las escuelas católicas y a los hospitales”.

Conversamos durante tres horas. De su vida, el capítulo más vivo, y el más desgarrador también transcurría en Roma: en 1986 fue asignado a la dirección general de los legionarios, el centro de mando de la congregación religiosa. Ahí convivió con Maciel y Luis Garza Medina, ‘número’ dos de la orden religiosa y cerebro financiero de ésta.

La vida legionaria afectó las emociones del padre Pérez Guajardo. Se deprimió. Garza Medina le pidió atenderse con Francisco López Ibor, hijo del célebre psiquiatra español Juan José López Ibor. Se negó. Pero después fue el propio Maciel quien le pidió consultar al psiquiatra. Las sugerencias de Nuestro Padre eran órdenes. Pérez Guajardo desconocía entonces que era una práctica de Maciel enviar a los sacerdotes problemáticos a la clínica madrileña. Cada cuatro meses viajaba a Madrid a surtirse de dosis de medicamentos psiquiátricos que lo mantenían dormido o sonámbulo, sin ganas de rechistar.

Su computadora tenía acceso a internet. Navegando, se dio cuenta de que su dosis de antidepresivos era mayor a la necesaria, y que su tristeza obedecía a su vida de religioso: soledad, alejamiento de su familia desde los 18 años, falta de estímulos. Empezó a darle sus medicamentos al perro pastor alemán que cuidaba con celo otro sacerdote legionario, Juan Manuel Dueñas Rojas.

Al quitarse los medicamentos volvió a estar despierto, pero pagó un precio. Tenía estallidos de ira y simas de tristeza. Sus padres estaban enfermos y deseaba ir a pasar con ellos sus últimos años. Con su padre no lo logró: cuando aterrizó en México ya lo estaban velando.

Una escena retrata su furia: a los curas sólo les estaba permitido beber un vaso de vino con la cena. Los superiores se servían dos o tres porque tenían permiso del padre Maciel. Enojado y con ganas de venganza, Pablo se robaba las botellas aflojando el triplay detrás de la repisa. Las ocultaba en el baño o en los ductos de aire acondicionado.

Una tarde, uno de los superiores lo llamó para regañarlo. Pablo Pérez Guajardo, que ya se la esperaba, traía una de las botellas de vino, ya descorchada. La sacó de entre sus ropas y la derramó sobre el escritorio.

—¿Cómo se atreve? ¡Aquí hay cartas de Nuestro Padre!— le reprendió el sacerdote (¿Y qué que hubiera esas cartas?, se preguntaría años después Pablo: si la mayoría de las cartas de Maciel eran plagios o escritos de otros autores, todo lo que ofreció Maciel fue un fraude).

Hartos de su indisciplina, le autorizaron que se trasladara a la Ciudad de México, a una casa de legionarios en la que pudiera estar más cerca de su madre, enferma de cáncer.

Derramar el vino fue la primera de
 sus indisciplinas. Ahora la recuerda como un acto calculado de rebeldía para conseguir su traslado. Vista a la distancia era una travesura. Su auténtico desafío vino después, con sus denuncias públicas escritas en cientos de cuartillas de cartas y en sus confesiones, la catarata de recuerdos que iban reconstruyendo el rompecabezas de una congregación en donde campeaban el fraude y el abuso. La tarde que conversamos, algunas de esas escenas vinieron a su cabeza: la noche anterior a la profesión de votos, Marcial Maciel llamó a uno de sus compañeros y pasó la noche con él. Ese cura fue enviado a la prelatura. Cuando se hizo público que Maciel había tenido una hija, el sacerdote abusado (ya de 50 años) contaba compulsivamente su historia; o de la vez que el cardenal Angelo Sodano, secretario de Estado del Vaticano, les dijo a él y otro grupo de legionarios: “Dichosos ustedes porque obispos y cardenales hay muchos, pero fundador [Marcial Maciel] uno solo””; o de cuando se enteró de que Luis Garza Medina —hermano de Dionisio Garza Medina, presidente de Grupo Alfa y uno de los hombres más ricos de México— había urdido un plan para controlar a la Legión de Cristo: hizo seguir a Maciel por detectives privados, recabó la información sobre su doble vida y le hizo un chantaje: su silencio a cambio del control financiero de la congregación religiosa.

Tras cuarenta años en la Legión, Pablo Pérez Guajardo observó y escuchó cientos de historias, pero guardaba fidelidad a sus votos privados.[5] Después de su regreso, lo destinaron a una casa de religiosos en el Estado de México y, al final, la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal. Según su relato, estuvo asignado a la catedral de Chetumal en donde reactivó las misas matutinas y salió a las calles a ofrecer bautizos gratuitos a los niños. El obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo, al ver su energía, lo mandó a una encomienda más difícil: una colonia proletaria en Playa del Carmen.

De su paso por la colonia Guadalupana se puede contar su historia como cura de barrio marginal (él la llama zona atolera en contraste con la zona hotelera) pero resultan más pertinentes para este artículo sus impresiones sobre la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal, contenidas en una carta que le escribió a su obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo el 24 de septiembre de 2012. Allí le dice, por ejemplo, que la prelatura ha sido, desde su creación, el destino de los indeseables: aquellos que no cuadraban con la línea de Maciel, ya fuera porque se habían negado a trabajar en colegios para niños ricos, como un grupo de curas irlandeses que se sentían frustrados de hacer pastoral sólo para clases acomodadas.

La prelatura se había hecho de tres buenos negocios, acusaba Pablo Pérez: las bodas glamour celebradas en las capillas de los hoteles de lujo. Los curas legionarios habían sido reducidos a un servicio de escort: un apuesto sacerdote impecable, bien vestido, con la raya del cabello perfecta, para adornar las ceremonias de los ricos. A esas bodas, por cierto, se les negaba el acceso a los trabajadores de los hoteles.

El segundo negocio, la Ciudad de la Alegría: un complejo de casas-hogar para niños, ancianos y enfermos terminales “es, en buena medida, la confeccionadora de recibos deducibles de impuestos para los hoteles y empresas (Best Day) de Fernando García Zalvidea”.

Y una tercera fuente de ingresos: los donativos que los legionarios recababan en Estados Unidos y Europa con el argumento de destinarlos a la evangelización de los pueblos mayas, a los cuales “nunca [les] ha llegado dinero: la inmensa mayoría de las regiones o colonias pobres carecen de dispensarios católicos, escuelas parroquiales, templos y servicios sociales”.

Pérez Guajardo se fue de la prelatura. Buscó lugar en Saltillo, con el obispo Raúl Vera López, promotor de derechos humanos, y antagónico a los legionarios. Apenas estuvo unos ocho meses e hicieron cortocircuito. Pérez Guajardo lo acusó de usar a los pobres para su beneficio, y Vera respondió calificándolo de espía.

“¿A dónde voy a mis casi 60 años?”, se preguntó el sacerdote. Y regresó a Playa del Carmen, a la zona obrera, a instalar una capilla en el garaje de una vivienda en obra negra. Cuando lo visité, se movía en un automóvil Chevy viejo y sucio, sin asientos, y vivía con una familia, rodeado de costales de cemento y cortinas de polvo. En 2015 la Legión lo había expulsado de sus filas: “En términos canónicos no tengo licencias ministeriales, quedando firme que no hay ninguna sanción o pena canónica ya que no existe ningún delito (ni pederastia, pareja sexual, fraude, problemas doctrinales o enseñanzas morales erróneas)”, me dijo.

Cuando conversamos se le notaba el cansancio tras cuatro años de denuncia sin que nada hubiera cambiado. Estaba irascible y resignado a su trabajo pastoral: dar catecismo, celebrar bautizos, avanzar en la construcción de su capilla. Le pregunté por qué había invertido tanta energía en las cientos de cuartillas de denuncia. Tenía esperanza: su esperanza era que lo escucharan en el Vaticano y le retiraran la prelatura a los legionarios. A Quintana Roo, me dijo, le faltaba un obispo franciscano, jesuita o diocesano que usara morral, huaraches y mezclilla, y se mezclara con los obreros y los indígenas de tierra adentro, y ya no con los magnates de la zona hotelera.

La leyenda del santo lavador

Fernando García Zalvidea fue uno de los miles de inmigrantes que atrajo el auge turístico de Cancún. A bordo de una limusina, ofrecía excursiones a los gringos fascinados por el paraíso caribeño. Uno de ellos le dijo un día: This is my best day. Le gustó la frase y la hizo suya. Cancún estaba en permanente expansión y era territorio fértil para los emprendedores como García Zalvidea que, al paso de su fulgurante ascenso como hotelero, tejió una red de relaciones políticas, religiosas y empresariales con la élite de Quintana Roo. Sus negocios fructificaron hasta que llegó a ser dueño de una cadena de hoteles a la que llamó Real Caribe y de la empresa Best Day, que fue pionera en ofrecer viajes todo pagado por internet.

Pero su emporio se tambaleó en 1998. La Procuraduría General de la República (PGR) lo relacionó con el “maxiproceso”: una investigación sobre narcotráfico y lavado de dinero del Cártel de Juárez en Quintana Roo. Se acusaba al gobernador Mario Villanueva Madrid, El Chueco, de haber puesto la Procuraduría de Justicia local al servicio del capo Ramón Alcides Magaña, El Metro. Fernando García Zalvidea fue acusado de lavar dinero del cártel en la compra del hotel Gran Caribe Real. Lo detuvieron y lo internaron en el Reclusorio Sur de la Ciudad de México.

Los resultados del maxiproceso fueron ambiguos. El ex gobernador Villanueva Madrid fue detenido, encarcelado y extraditado a los Estados Unidos (en donde sigue preso) pero su caso fue excepcional. La mayoría de los indiciados fueron absueltos, entre ellos el propio García Zalvidea, que obtuvo su libertad el 4 de marzo de 2000 tras catorce meses preso en el Reclusorio Sur de la Ciudad de México.

Tres años después, en marzo de 2004, la revista Contralínea publicó diversas conversaciones telefónicas entre el ex procurador Antonio Lozano Gracia, el ex candidato presidencial del PAN, Diego Fernández de Cevallos y el abogado de García Zalvidea, Germán Rangel. Lozano y Fernández de Cevallos, ambos panistas, hablan de las “gestiones políticas” para liberar al hotelero y luego para que la PGR cerrara el caso.

Fernando García Zalvidea se convirtió en el benefactor más visible de los Legionarios de Cristo en Quintana Roo. En el año 2000 auspició la construcción de la Ciudad de la Alegría, la mayor obra social de la prelatura en Quintana Roo: un centro que concentra escuelas, casas de ancianos, niños y enfermos terminales, y tratamiento de adicciones.

Pero Fernando García Zalvidea extendió sus redes a la política a través de su hermano Juan Ignacio, El Chacho, quien fue diputado federal del PAN en el 2000 y luego brincó al Partido Verde. Con las siglas ecologistas ganó la alcaldía de Benito Juárez (Cancún está adentro de Benito Juárez) en febrero de 2002. Fue el primer alcalde de oposición en la ciudad. En 2004 El Chacho se acercó a quien encabezaba las encuestas para la elección presidencial, el izquierdista Andrés Manuel López Obrador.

Juan Ignacio hizo saber que quería ser candidato de un frente opositor a la gubernatura de Quintana Roo. Y meses después de hacer públicas sus aspiraciones, fue destituido por el congreso y, ya fuera del cargo, encarcelado por quebranto del erario municipal. Estuvo preso más de un año, hasta que su hermano Fernando garantizó una fianza de 71 millones de pesos.

Los García Zalvidea eran de las familias más poderosas del estado. El Chachoya había mandado señales de disciplina con el PRI al apersonarse, en 2010, a los actos de campaña del ahora gobernador Roberto Borge. Y en otra pista, Fernando se congraciaba con el PAN: en 2012 le organizaba actos a su candidata presidencial Josefina Vázquez Mota con hoteleros. A uno de esos encuentros invitó también al obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo.

Los invasores

En la Supermanzana 30, los Legionarios de Cristo se quedaron con un pedazo del parque. Se metieron poco a poco. Los vecinos tenían siete mil metros cuadrados para espacios públicos. Lo partieron en cuatro: un pedazo para el kínder, otro para la primaria, otro para el kiosco y uno más para área verde. En ese pedazo levantaron una capilla pequeña. Cuando el padre —legionario de Cristo— iba a celebrar la misa, uno de los vecinos le abría y le cerraba la puerta.

Un día, ese vecino, Mario Cortés, salió de viaje y le dejó las llaves al cura. Estaba claro que estaban prestadas hasta su regreso. Pero nunca las volvió a ver. A partir de entonces la prelatura se quedó con la capilla y, años después, con mil metros cuadrados del parque.

La céntrica ubicación de la capilla atrajo a cientos de vecinos de otras supermanzanas. Rodeada de parque, se convirtió en un espacio ideal para bodas y bautizos. Cuando Juan Ignacio El Chacho García Zalvidea era alcalde de Cancún, trató de legalizar la invasión de la Supermanzana 30. Le dio a la prelatura una “orden de ocupación” del parque.

A partir de entonces empezó una larga batalla. Dos de sus protagonistas me cuentan su historia, Herminia Peña y Luz María Elguero, que residen en el perímetro del parque. Con el aval del Chacho García Zalvidea, la prelatura levantaba bardas alrededor del terreno; los vecinos acudían a derribar los castillos. La prelatura metía maquinaria para hacer socavones; los vecinos boqueaban el paso de los camiones con sus vehículos.

No fue una lucha fácil. La prelatura actuaba de noche y daba sabadazo: las obras siempre empezaban en Semana Santa para pillar a los vecinos de vacaciones y tenían de su lado a la fuerza pública. Un miércoles de Semana Santa dos vecinos hacían guardia para impedir la instalación de castillos: llegó la policía y se los llevó a declarar (salieron libres unas horas después). Y había una presencia frecuente en torno de la Supermanzana: Fernando García Zalvidea. Los vecinos se acostumbraron a ver su camioneta Porsche blanca recorriendo las obras.

Durante el gobierno del Chacho García Zalvidea la prelatura quiso comerse cuatro mil metros cuadrados del parque. Presumieron una maqueta que tenía templo, guardería, recámaras y criptas. El entonces presidente de la colonia estampó su firma en los planos y, con ese aval, la prelatura empezó las obras de bardeado y cimentación.

Pero cayó El Chacho cuando amenazó con irse a la filas de Obrador, y los alcaldes que lo sucedieron ya no estaban tan entregados a la causa de los legionarios. Un perredista, Gregorio Sánchez, buscó una solución intermedia. Canceló la orden de ocupación que había regalado El Chacho pero le dejó a la prelatura mil metros cuadrados del parque.

Estos años de historia se cuentan en unas líneas. Para las vecinas —en su mayoría mujeres— de la Supermanzana 30, representó cientos de horas de tocar puertas, acudir a ventanillas, redactar quejas, hacer antesalas, revisar pilas de documentos, aprender leyes y reglamentos, cruzar llamadas, hacer reuniones, con su dosis desagradable de soportar las caras de los curas que, desde el púlpito, las acusaban de tener el corazón endemoniado y de conspirar para quemar la iglesia.

El ayuntamiento cedió de nuevo. El 17 de mayo de 2013, el director de obras arquitectónicas y civiles, Humberto Aguilera, expidió la licencia de construcción de obra nueva 66 231 para la parroquia de la Sagrada Familia. Le daba a la prelatura del 16 de mayo hasta el 16 de noviembre para terminar la obra en una superficie de mil 12 metros cuadrados.

Desesperados, los vecinos inconformes fueron a levantar una denuncia penal. Acusaron al obispo Elizondo, al empresario Fernando García Zalvidea y al sacerdote Luis Alberto Chavarría LC (representante legal de la prelatura) de despojo y delitos contra el desarrollo urbano. La procuraduría admitió la denuncia y abrió la averiguación previa 4819/13 el 17 de septiembre de 2013. A partir de entonces la demanda durmió el sueño de los justos (o de los injustos) y no pasó nada.

Pero la prelatura se impuso. Ahora se aprecia una iglesia a todo lujo: dos niveles, altar en mosaico dorado, dos pantallas planas y doce ventiladores. Las banquetas se ampliaron (a costa de derribar árboles) para convertirlas en estacionamientos. Una de ellas ostenta un letrero: “exclusivo sacerdote”.

La Supermanzana 30 no es la única que fue invadida por la prelatura. El 22 de septiembre pasado estuve en la colonia Hacienda Real del Caribe de la Región 200. Los vecinos me enseñaron un predio que era una de las áreas verdes de su barrio: un predio con árboles de donde colgaron llantas para que se columpiaran los niños.

Primero apareció una cruz. Después vino la barda y un letrero que anunciaba la capilla del Señor de la Divina Misericordia. “Si los niños se cuelan a jugar, al rato llega a sacarlos la gente de la iglesia”, me contó una chilanga que se mudó a esa colonia popular de Cancún.

No lejos de ahí, en la Supermanzana 117, la prelatura también consumó un acto de invasión. El mismo método: primero una cruz, luego cuatro palos y un techo de nylon, y al final ladrillos: la capilla de Santiago Apóstol se comía el jardín que estaba frente a la primaria La Raza de Bronce.

La invasión provocó reacciones encontradas en la comunidad. Lourdes Ibarra y Alicia Vázquez encabezaron el bando que se oponía al agandalle. Otras vecinas apoyaban a los legionarios. Las primeras eran cristianas evangélicas y las segundas, católicas. Lo cierto es que ambas estaban de acuerdo en una cosa: había sido una invasión de un área pública. Si acaso la justificaban porque ahora el parque estaba desmontado y limpio.

En estas páginas cuento tres ejemplos. Acaso sean muchos más. Cuando el perredista Julián Ricalde era alcalde de Cancún se contabilizaron trece invasiones. Y, según Tulio Arroyo, lo difícil es encontrar una iglesia en Cancún que no sea una invasión. Los legionarios lo han adoptado como modus operandi: identificar un lote vacío y apropiárselo a golpe de misas y bardas.

Tulio Arroyo transpira una obsesión: defender las áreas verdes de Cancún. Y ese propósito lo ha puesto en el punto de colisión con los legionarios, acostumbrados a hacer su voluntad en Quintana Roo. Tulio Arroyo es un ingeniero especializado en energías alternativas. Chilango con estudios en Nueva York, se convirtió en defensor del medio ambiente cuando el ayuntamiento pretendió deforestar la última reserva ambiental del centro de Cancún, un parque conocido como el Ombligo Verde. La alcaldesa priista Magali Achach pretendía entregarle un lote a la prelatura para que hiciera una catedral.

Arroyo Marroquín y su esposa Bettina Cetto, encabezaron el movimiento En defensa del Ombligo Verde. Se convirtieron en expertos en derecho administrativo y acompañaron los brotes de protesta que surgían aquí y allá a las invasiones de la Iglesia. Arroyo les ayudaba a convocar ruedas de prensa, redactar comunicados y orientar los intrincados caminos de los tribunales; y consiguió salvar el Ombligo Verde de su deforestación total. Pero no pudo impedir que los legionarios construyeran ahí la catedral de Cancún. Arroyo y Cetto vivían enfrente del parque. Justo frente a su ventana se levantó la catedral.

La historia extraoficial dice que esos 10 mil metros fueron el pago de Vicente Fox a Marcial Maciel por facilitar su divorcio.

Notre Dame del Sureste

Los Legionarios de Cristo apuestan a la monumentalidad. Su red de colegios se llama Semper Altius (siempre más alto) y sus escuelas aluden a las alturas: Cumbres, Himalaya, Everest, Alpes, Highlands. En la prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal se han propuesto erigir el mayor símbolo religioso del sureste: la basílica de Santa María de Guadalupe del Mar, un edificio con una cruz de 110 metros de altura, con capacidad para mil 500 personas y con un costo estimado de 12 millones de dólares.

Pero los planes de la prelatura se han topado con la resistencia de ecologistas. Se asentaría frente a la laguna Nichupté, una zona de manglares y especies protegidas. Uno de ellos es Pedro Canché. Indígena maya, Canché pasó nueve meses en la cárcel acusado de sabotaje. Su encarcelamiento era, en realidad, una manera de callarlo. El gobierno de Quintana Roo tuvo que soltarlo tras la presión internacional y ahora se le ve como un emblema de la libertad de expresión.

Según Canché —en un escrito dirigido al ayuntamiento— el proyecto Tajamar (del que la basílica es una parte), representará un “inminente ecocidio que devastará la flora, fauna y humedales […]. De llevarse a cabo la construcción, se devastaría totalmente uno de los ‘pulmones’ naturales que posee Cancún y que son invaluables”.

Como en otras historias de legionarios, de la megabasílica de Cancún se cuentan dos historias. La historia oficial dice que Fonatur le regaló los 10 mil metros a la prelatura. Y surge la pregunta: ¿Por qué un órgano del Estado mexicano tendría que donar un terreno público a la Iglesia católica?, ¿por qué no cederle también un predio a los cristianos, adventistas, mormones, Testigos de Jehová o a los ateos de Cancún?

La historia extraoficial la ofrece el padre Pablo Pérez Guajardo: esos 10 mil metros fueron el pago del presidente Vicente Fox a Marcial Maciel por facilitar su divorcio religioso ante el Vaticano. Por su calidad de jefe de Estado, su solicitud de nulidad debía pasar por la Rota Romana, un tribunal de la curia pontificia. Ya divorciado de Lilian de la Concha, el sacerdote Alejandro Latapí, legionario de Cristo, celebró su boda religiosa con Marta Sahagún.

Encuentro con el obispo

Detrás de su escritorio colgaba el cuadro Head of Christ del pintor estadounidense Warner Sallman, que se conoce también como “El Cristo legionario” porque el fundador de la congregación, Marcial Maciel Degollado, la introdujo como la imagen oficial en seminarios, casas y escuelas de la Legión de Cristo. En tres cuartos de perfil, representa a Cristo de rasgos afilados, cabello ondulado y túnica blanca.

Entrevisté al obispo Pedro Pablo Elizondo el 23 de septiembre de 2015 en las oficinas de la curia, a un lado de la catedral de Cancún, en el Ombligo Verde. En 40 minutos, surgieron en la conversación algunos rasgos que han hecho célebres a los Legionarios de Cristo: el éxito como insignia; el énfasis en el carácter emprendedor de la Legión y la abundancia de sus frutos materiales; la molestia ante las preguntas incómodas (pederastas, la doble vida de Marcial Maciel) y, al final, la advertencia de llevarme a tribunales si no era fiel a sus palabras. Acá una versión resumida de nuestra conversación:

—¿Cómo ha sido en términos de complejidad, de reto, atender una población que creció diez veces en 45 años?
—El crecimiento explosivo que trae grandísimos retos para la evangelización. Como destino turístico y belleza ambiental es sumamente atractivo y agradable vivir aquí, como el paraíso. La gente viene de paseo y se queda. Son muy atractivas la playas, la arena, [el mar] turquesa, el sol, la brisa que sopla.

—¿Cuál era el manpower cuando se fundó la prelatura?
—Llegamos cinco sacerdotes y había cinco parroquias. Ahora son 115 sacerdotes y 53 parroquias. Ha habido dos periodos, el obispo anterior, monseñor [Jorge] Bernal. Cuando me hicieron obispo, en 2004, recibí 52 sacerdotes y ahora son lo doble y lo mismo las parroquias, se han duplicado. ¿Cómo le haces para doblar las parroquias, cuando no hay nada, cuando es selva, cuando es monte? Llegar a chapear, a desmontar, a hacer iglesita de palitos. Así fue la zona hotelera, cuando yo llegué así estaba. Y poco a poco llegar a hacer una iglesia digna, grande, sagrada, acogedora y ése es el carisma que han traído los Legionarios de Cristo: el espíritu emprendedor y misionero que logró construir muchas iglesias. Todavía están en construcción la catedral, la basílica, nuestro seminario.

—De estos 115 de ahora, ¿cuántos son diocesanos?, ¿cuántos legionarios?
—Setenta legionarios, 35 diocesanos, y el resto de otras congregaciones. Tenemos una gran necesidad [de sacerdotes].

—Llama mucho la atención la basílica, por los 110 metros. Supongo que será la construcción más alta de Cancún, ¿por qué tan monumental?
—Inicialmente se tuvo un encuentro con el presidente Vicente Fox y con los presidentes de la república después. Y hay un lugar que se llama Malecón Tajamar que se ha convertido en el centro social más importante de Cancún. Y providencialmente ese terreno se ha donado por Fonatur a la Iglesia católica. Este proyecto sale de la ubicación tan preciosa para ser el centro religioso de Cancún y que al mismo tiempo se convierta en un ícono y atractivo turístico para todos los turistas. Que sea un lugar como la [catedral] de Colonia o la Sagrada Familia de Barcelona o Notre Dame de París donde la gente va, reza y los turistas se encuentran con una ventana al evento guadalupano. Y podemos hacerlo con la máxima tecnología audiovisual e interactiva para presentar Guadalupe a los 14 millones de turistas. Es un proyecto de turismo religioso. Es un proyecto turístico.

—Tiempos y presupuestos para la basílica…
—Primero los permisos. Llevamos años y años gestionando. El día de mañana voy a tener una entrevista con el secretario de turismo para ver si ya sale.

—Quisiera tener la versión institucional del obispo, de la prelatura, el caso ya muy publicado en la prensa de dos sacerdotes, Eduardo Lucatero y Jesús Martínez, que han estado aquí y que fueron en algún momento señalados o acusados en algún abuso. Se dijo que la prelatura servía como para encubrir o proteger o resguardar.
—Son casos de 20, 30 o 40 años. Casos sobreseídos que podían estar aquí o en cualquier otra parte. Son sacerdotes que ya están retirados. Uno de ellos está enfermo, en silla de ruedas, atendido muy caritativamente, que no tiene nada pendiente, que tiene un ministerio muy reducido o nulo, que es Lucatero, de 75, 76 años. Y el otro [Martínez Penilla] es de 80 años, ya pasó la edad, no está en ningún ejercicio de su ministerio y [se le trata] con toda la caridad cristiana que se merecen personas que han trabajado por la Iglesia, y la Legión tiene la obligación de no tirarlos como trapos sucios, inútiles, sino hacer que se les dé un trato digno y respetuoso como seres humanos y servidores. Eso es todo, ¿qué más?

—¿Cómo se vivió la etapa crítica, la revelación de que el fundador de la congregación, Marcial Maciel, tenía una hija?
—Desde luego que lo vivimos con mucha pena, con mucha tristeza y con mucho respeto para no juzgar, condenar lo que solamente le toca a Dios. Nosotros creemos que Jesucristo es el único juez de todos, también de los que juzgamos a los otros, superficial y ligeramente, sin estar enterados. Respeto porque es un misterio, misterio cómo una persona con una vida desordenada crea una congregación tan ordenada. Es lo que dijo Benedicto XVI. Dijo: Es un misterio para mí. Frente al misterio lo menos que puedes hacer es ser respetuoso si es que estás ubicado, si no estás ubicado dices todo lo que puedas decir para sacar provecho, pa vender el periódico. Pues sí, cada uno tiene derecho a hacer su luchita, ¿no?, pues qué bueno. Aquí [en Quintana Roo] la confianza no se perdió.

—De la invasión en la Supermanzana 30, [y] de una escuela primaria en donde se construyen iglesias que son terrenos públicos, son parques…
—La última es en Playa del Carmen, se llama Villas del Sol. Está metido en el monte. Los fieles católicos insisten que les den un espacio como en todas partes del mundo, que es terreno de equipamiento. Este terreno de equipamiento está señalado que es el 15 por ciento del desarrollo para que hicieran escuela, iglesia, hospital, mercado, bomberos, policía, servicios públicos. En el municipio el encargado de Asuntos Religiosos les dice: ‘si quieren la Semana Santa ahí, limpien su terrenito y celebren las ceremonias religiosas de la Semana Santa’. Limpiaron, pusieron la cruz y pues llegaron los periódicos: ‘Que el obispo está invadiendo, que es el más rico del mundo’. Yo ni sabía, yo no tenía ni idea. Aquí [en Cancún] es enormemente mucho más grande y ha habido lugares sin que se entere nadie. Los fieles han dicho: ‘Aquí vamos a hacer nuestra iglesita’. ¿Y por qué no? Y comienzan, y ponen su tingladito, y al rato llaman a un padre, y al rato están rezando el rosario debajo de un árbol, y se juntan. Digo, ¿no tienen derecho a tener un espacio donde puedan alabar a Dios, crecer en las virtudes, en fin, ser hermanos, construir comunidad, que están solos, que vienen uno de Tabasco, otro de Campeche, otro de Veracruz y quieren los vecinos juntarse para tener un ratito de convivencia…

—Con este crecimiento de Quintana Roo, demográfico y de infraestructura, ¿todavía se justifica una prelatura?
—Esa es la gran pregunta que me hacen todos los obispos. La razón por la que todavía tenga que ser prelatura, es el crecimiento exagerado de la población, que no ha dado tiempo para que vayan creciendo los sacerdotes nativos.

El paraíso intocable

La Legión de Cristo no es sólo una congregación religiosa, sino un holdingreligioso, empresarial y financiero: una hiedra que se extiende en asociaciones de miles de laicos agrupados en el Regnum Christi —algunas de sus integrantes, sobre todo mujeres, trabajan de tiempo completo para la Legión—, un emporio educativo con colegios y universidades en más de veinte países; el banco Compartamos; sociedades para la recaudación de recursos como Kilo de ayuda y Teletón, además de una red de alianzas con los empresarios más ricos de México, como Carlos Slim —a quien casó Maciel— y Emilio Azcárraga Jean —Maciel celebró las exequias de su padre, a pesar de que ya se le había señalado como abusador de niños.

Benedicto XVI dimitió al gobierno de la Iglesia en febrero de 2013. Su sucesor, el jesuita argentino Jorge Mario Bergoglio, llamado Francisco, labró una pastoral popular y progresista, en las antípodas de la Legión de Cristo, pero no se atrevió a tocar el imperio que había fundado Maciel. Incluso permitió que la congregación regresara a la normalidad, ya sin interventores pontificios encima.

El Vaticano tampoco ha castigado uno de los desempeños más ineficientes en México. En Quintana Roo, según el censo de 2010, los católicos representan 63 por ciento de la población. Esa cifra está muy por debajo del 82 por ciento nacional. Mientras los legionarios construyen iglesias con fervor, 14 por ciento de los quintanarroenses se declara cristiano no católico, y otro 13 por ciento se dice sin religión.

En Quintana Roo, la Legión ha gozado de un ambiente propicio para hacer lo que ha querido: albergar a pederastas —y a encubridores de pederastas— y apropiarse de terrenos públicos sin que existan consecuencias. Desde 1970 el estado de Quintana Roo ha sido un paraíso para los Legionarios de Cristo.

NOTAS
1. De manera habitual, la Iglesia católica se divide en diócesis: porciones territoriales bajo el mando de un obispo. Sólo en casos excepcionales se crean ‘prelaturas’: zonas en donde la Iglesia tiene una estructura tan débil que es incapaz de atender a la población local y, por lo tanto, la delega a una congregación religiosa. Suelen ser zonas indígenas con pobreza extrema y de difícil acceso. En México, a los franciscanos se les han cedido las prelaturas de El Nayar (Nayarit) y El Salto (Durango), y a los salesianos, la prelatura de Mixes, en Oaxaca. Entre 1958 y 1992, los jesuitas se encargaron de la Tarahumara, en Chihuahua. La prelatura de Cancún-Chetumal comprende el estado de Quintana Roo.
2. Hasta aquí, las citas textuales provienen de Una Iglesia de corazón misionero, libro de nuestra historia, que la prelatura editó en 2010 para celebrar su 40 aniversario, páginas 34 y 39, respectivamente.
3. La historia del abuso y la fuga de Martínez Penilla la cuenta el historiador Fernando M. González en Marcial Maciel, los legionarios de Cristo: testimonios y documentos inéditos, pp. 365-366.
4. Una Iglesia de corazón misionero, p. 28.
5. En diversas congregaciones religiosas se toman tres votos: castidad, pobreza y obediencia. Maciel inventó dos votos más: el de caridad y el de humildad. El voto de caridad prohibía a los legionarios criticar a sus superiores, y el de humildad les impedía buscar puestos directivos en la organización. A través de ambos votos, el fundador consiguió que, durante décadas, ningún legionario denunciara sus crímenes.

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Child abuse campaigner: I’ve walked across Europe but now my message must cross the world

SCOTLAND
Daily Record

1 NOV 2015
BY MARION SCOTT

WALKING 10,000 miles across Europe to try to end child abuse was just the start of a journey now taking actor Matthew McVarish across the world.

The CBeebies star has just returned from Geneva, where he gave a talk to the United Nations on how to tackle the ­problem.

Matthew knows all about the issue from bitter experience. He was abused by his uncle from the age of seven.

He got to speak to delegates after walking through Europe to raise awareness of the issue.

He met the Pope and political leaders during his hike to press for the removal of statutes of ­limitations so sex crimes dating back decades can be prosecuted.

Eight EU countries have amended their laws since his walk and he has now been invited to speak in India and Thailand.

Matthew, who played buffet car manager Raymond in CBeebies show Me Too, said: “Hungary, ­Slovakia, Estonia, Latvia, ­Lithuania, Portugal, Malta and Romania removed their ­statute of limitations as a result of my walk.

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Protesters: ‘We want our church back’

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

Jojo Santo Tomas, jsantotoma@guampdn.com November 2, 2015

Holding signs that read “Reform, Restore, Resign” and “I Love my Catholic Church,” at least 50 Catholics gathered for a protest in Tumon on Sunday.

The protest brought together many concerned Catholics who feel their church being torn apart. Protesters gathered at four corners of the entrance to the Hyatt Regency Guam hotel, where Archbishop Anthony F. Apuron was inside, celebrating his birthday with hundreds of guests who paid $200 each for the gala fundraiser.

Many protesters said the money could better be used elsewhere.

“We have been waiting for more than a year for him to talk to us about the problems of our church, and he has said nothing, done nothing, to address our issues,” said Vangie Lujan, of Chalan Pago. She is a 30-year Catholic and sings for the choir at the Agana Cathedral.

“We want transparency. Why we’re here? He wants to raise $300,000 tonight … but he never uses this amount of resources, or effort, to raise funds for other parts of the church like Kamalen Karidat. He doesn’t use his resources to help Catholic Social Services.

“And yet, he will do everything for the RMS? Or the St. John Paul II? And they’re saying the bills of the Cathedral … but we know it’s going to support the Neocatechumenal way. When is he going to start supporting the rest of us Catholics? We want our church back.”

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Haitian officials look into new allegations against man who founded orphanage

HAITI/MAINE
CentralMaine.com

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti —Haitian investigators are looking into new allegations of child sex abuse against an American man who founded an orphanage for boys in Haiti’s capital decades ago and who successfully sued a Freeport, Maine, man for defamation this summer.

Police with an arrest warrant searched unsuccessfully Friday for Michael Geilenfeld at a modest private residence in a mountainside community above Port-au-Prince and the nearby Wings of Hope home for about 30 physically and mentally disabled children and young adults. On its website, the facility says it is a “critical part” of Geilenfeld’s charitable organization.

Geilenfeld and his North Carolina charity, Hearts with Haiti, this year sued Paul Kendrick of Freeport for defamation. In July, a federal jury in Portland, Maine, agreed with Geilenfeld and the charity that Kendrick had been reckless and negligent in launching an email campaign spreading false claims that Geilenfeld had sexually abused some orphans in his care.

The jury awarded $7.5 in damages to the charity and $7 million to Geilenfeld.

Kendrick said Saturday that he welcomed the new investigation of Geilenfeld.

“In my mind, children in Haiti are still not safe from Michael Geilenfeld,” Kendrick said. “Now, Haiti officials are stepping in and I applaud that.”

Kendrick said a U.S. District judge in Portland dismissed a motion to order a new trial and another asking that the award be determined excessive in the defamation case. He said his lawyer will file an appeal with the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals this month.

Geilenfeld is already the subject of another criminal case in Haiti that accused him of sexually abusing boys in his care. He spent 237 days in detention before being released in April by a Haitian judge who dismissed the charges in a brief trial that was not attended by the accusers, now adults. But the country’s justice minister granted a re-examination of the case and it is now in court again on appeal.

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Catholic church reaches out to heal those impacted by past clergy abuse

MINNESOTA
Brainerd Dispatch

By Jennifer Stockinger on Oct 31, 2015

A Brainerd Catholic church is reaching out to the community and to the survivors who were abused by clergy in hopes to help them heal.

Father Tony Wroblewski of St. Francis Catholic Church said the Brainerd church is keeping with the theme of “A Year of Mercy” as declared by Pope Francis and have created a diverse group of parishioners to reflect on how the church, the Brainerd lakes Catholic community, can integrate the Pope’s focus on the Catholic faith and to present actions taken, both within and without the Catholic church, to address the past abuse of young people by clergy.

Wroblewski said the church wants to help victims, families and the community heal. The group, named the Mercy Task Force, is studying ways the Catholic community can promote atonement, healing and where fitting, forgiveness.

Wroblewski said since the Minnesota Child Victims Act went into effect a number of lawsuits about abuse of young people by clergy have been filed. The act changed the statutes of limitations and gives child sexual abuse victims until May 25, 2016, to file civil lawsuits.

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Clergy, laity pray for justice for Cassidy

ILLINOIS
The Community Word

Hundreds of Central Illinoisans for years watched Father Terry Cassidy mimic a fish that’s unaware it’s surrounded by water. It’s been his light-hearted effort to show how people often don’t realize they’re surrounded – by grace.

But Cassidy, 64, now finds himself feeling surrounded, too – by an allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor, by a group advocating for such victims, and by a handful of influential people within the Catholic Diocese of Peoria (CDOP).

“What’s happened to Father Terry is evil,” says an ordained deacon who spoke on the condition his name not be used since the Diocese instructed clergy to not respond to media inquiries.

“I’m not defending child abusers,” he continues. “They should be held accountable. But I am defending a wonderful man persecuted, I think, for his popularity, his success as a minister.”

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Dianne Williamson: Clergy sexual abuse scandal in ‘Spotlight’

MASSACHUSETTS
Telegram & Gazette

Dianne Williamson

Posted Nov. 1, 2015

Today, it’s hard to remember a time when innocent victims of clergy sexual abuse were derided and scorned, when damaged families were hushed by a hierarchy, when the Catholic Church used its considerable power to protect and cover for the criminals within its ranks.

That culture of denial was upended in 2002, when The Boston Globe published an investigative series showing how the church enabled scores of pedophile priests by transferring them from parish to parish, while settling secretly with families who complained.

I don’t catch many movies in the theaters these days, but one I plan to see is the well-received “Spotlight,” which opens this month and recounts how the Globe’s Spotlight team broke the scandal wide open. Its stories led to the resignation of Cardinal Bernard Law and a seismic shift in the public’s acceptance of the realities of clergy sex abuse. …

On a professional level, I’m well aware of the deep pain caused by the scandal within the diocese of Worcester. More than five years before the Globe’s investigative team tackled the topic, this newspaper was writing strikingly similar stories about priestly abuse. Years before the Globe won a Pulitzer Prize for its reporting, brave victims were telling us their stories.

One of them, now a middle-aged man who lives in a nearby town, was sexually abused by a priest when he was an altar boy. Years later, still traumatized, he sought counseling from another priest who also sexually abused him. I’ve written about this man many times and used his name, but last week he said he’s trying to put the past behind him.

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October 31, 2015

Notre Dame Academic Coach Forced Sexual Liaison on Student: Suit

INDIANA
NBC News

by TRICIA CULLIGAN and ELIZABETH CHUCK

A male student at the University of Notre Dame claims a female administrator pressured him into a sexual relationship with her daughter, according to a lawsuit filed Friday against the prestigious Catholic school.

The suit alleges the student, who is black, was subjected to sexual harassment and racial discrimination by the defendant, who is white.

Neither are identified in the lawsuit, which says the university employee, an academic coach to student athletes at the St. Joseph, Indiana-based school, was “commanding, directing, encouraging and convincing the Plaintiff to engage in sexual relations” with her daughter.

That included interrogating the student about the “nature, frequency, and quality of the sexual activities” he had with her daughter, and making “racially charged comments about his sexual prowess and genitalia,” said the suit, filed by law firm Anderson, Agostino & Keller in St. Joseph Circuit Court. …

Notre Dame dismissed the lawsuit’s claims in a statement.

“The allegations against the University of Notre Dame in the complaint are unfounded, as are gratuitous and unfounded references to ‘student-athletes’ — an allegation that is nothing more than a cynical attempt to attract publicity,” said university spokesman Paul Browne.

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THANK you TIFF, for NOT giving Spotlight the award for Best Movie.

UNITED STATES
PopeCrimes& Vatican Evils.

Paris Arrow

We would like to thank TIFF for NOT giving “Spotlight” the Best Movie award (and other awards) during its 40th Toronto International Film Festival of 10 days of red carpet premieres. Lenny Abrahamson’s “Room” http://tiff.net/festivals/festival15/room starring Brie Larson as a young mother who will do anything to protect her five-year son (portrayed by 8-year-old) Jacob Tremblay, was the winner of the Grolsch People’s Choice award determined by audience voting. “Room”, adapted from Emma Donoghue’s 2010 novel, is told from the perspective of a boy who was locked in a room with his mother for his entire life. “Room” is a small-scale drama compared to the heavy Hollywood A-listers Spotlight, (yet like David versus Goliath), it won Best Movie.

TIFF winners usually go to the forefront of Oscar conversation. TIFF can boast that six of the seven films that have won its People’s Choice prize have gone on to an Academy Award nomination for best picture. Three of those, “Slumdog Millionaire, The King’s Speech, 12 Years A Slave” actually won the Oscar top prize.

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The 13-year-old girl sent on a ‘day-trip’ to Australia

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

Up until the late 1960s the UK sent children living in care homes to new lives in Australia and other countries. It was a brutal experience for many, writes Kirstie Brewer.

In the winter of 1949, 13-year-old Pamela Smedley boarded a ship to Australia with 27 other girls. She had been told by the nuns from the Catholic home she lived in that she was going on a day-trip. In reality, she was being shipped out to an orphanage in Adelaide and wouldn’t see England again for more than three decades.

“We thought it would be like going to Scarborough for the day because we were so innocent and naive,” says Pamela, who is now in her 70s and still lives in Adelaide.

“The nuns said that in Australia you could pick the oranges off the trees, and I was very excited because I loved oranges.”

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D’Arcy in spotlight with film’s release

FORT WAYNE (IN)
Journal Gazette

You might know that a movie set for release next week tells how a team of Boston Globe journalists uncovered the child sexual abuse story that rocked the Catholic Church. You might not know a lone, brave voice in the story belonged to John D’Arcy, who died three years after he stepped down as bishop of the Fort Wayne-South Bend Diocese in 2010.

D’Arcy, as former Boston Archdiocese auxiliary bishop, wrote a letter to Archbishop Bernard F. Law in 1984 warning that priest John Geoghan was a serial pedophile. The church’s own investigators called D’Arcy “a voice in the wilderness” for his warning, which did not surface until after the Globe’s investigation, in a lawsuit that ultimately resulted in the archdiocese settling with scores of sex-abuse victims for $85 million.

The movie “Spotlight,” named for the investigative team that tirelessly tracked and reported the story, stars Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams and John Slattery.

In an interview with the National Catholic Register a year before he died, D’Arcy rejected the idea that he deserved credit for the letter he sent the archbishop, instead emphasizing the sex-abuse scandal as a lesson for bishops.

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Peru Catholic Society Admits Sex Abuse Probe against Founder

PERU
Newsmax

Saturday, 31 Oct 2015

LIMA, Peru (AP) — A secretive Roman Catholic society with chapters across South America and in the U.S. has revealed under pressure that a Vatican investigator is looking into allegations that its founder sexually molested young recruits.

The scandal at the Peru-based Sodalitium Christianae Vitae, or Sodalitium for Human Life, has close parallels to other recent cases of charismatic Catholic leaders in Latin America being accused of sex abuse — as well as the church dragging its feet on investigating claims and trying to keep scandals quiet.

This week, Sodalitium’s general secretary disclosed the Vatican investigation after two journalists published a book detailing the accusations against founder Luis Fernando Figari, 68.

Co-author Pedro Salinas, a former society member, has been publicly accusing Figari since 2010 of physical, psychological and sexual abuse. According to the book, three men lodged complaints the following year with a Peruvian church tribunal alleging Figari sexually abused them when they were minors.

There is no indication the tribunal did anything with the case, including notifying prosecutors. Nor is it known when the Vatican was advised.

Cardinal Juan Luis Cipriani, the conservative archbishop of Lima with jurisdiction over the tribunal, was quoted as telling the Chilean newspaper El Mercurio this week that case is “regrettable and painful” and claiming

“We have acted with absolute transparency and rapidity,” he said.

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Former priest convicted of molestation loses latest legal fight

TENNESSEE
WJHL

[with video]

BLOUNTVILLE, TN (WJHL) A former priest from Kingsport convicted of sexually abusing a child in his congregation three decades ago lost his latest legal fight Friday.

William Casey was in Sullivan County Criminal Court trying to convince a judge to force the District Attorney General’s Office to recuse itself from his case.

A judge denied that request Friday.

Four years ago, a jury convicted Casey of rape and sexual misconduct involving a child over the period of 5 years during his time as priest at St. Dominic’s Catholic Church in Kingsport.

Casey is serving a 35 to 40 year prison sentence.

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Architect of Vatican’s Financial Transparency at Communion Breakfast, Nov. 8

CONNECTICUT
Fairfield University

Joseph F.X. Zahra, vice coordinator of the newly established Council for the Economy of The Holy See and the highest ranking lay member of Pope Francis’ ad-hoc cabinet, will be the featured speaker at the Ninth Annual Communion Breakfast for Business Leaders on Sunday, November 8, 2015, at Fairfield University. The annual breakfast is sponsored by Centesimus Annus Pro Pontifice (CAPP) of Fairfield County and Fairfield’s Center for Faith and Public Life.

Zahra, whose talk is entitled “Inside the Financial and Administrative Changes at the Vatican: What Pope Francis Wants and Why He is Doing It,” is the former head of Bank of Valletta and a renowned economist who sits on numerous major corporate boards and regularly lectures around the world.

As the most senior lay person in the Curia, Zahra has been at the heart of Pope Francis’ reform initiatives from the beginning and is uniquely positioned to tell this story. Noting that the Vatican’s financial reforms are also meant to provide dioceses around the world with a model they can themselves adopt, Zahra said that “what lies at the heart of Pope Francis’ financial and administrative reorganization of the Vatican is his wish to ensure transparenBrian Morancy, simplicity and the efficient use of resources.”

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Rev. James F. Power

MASSACHUSETTS
Patriot Ledger

Rev. James F. Power, of Charlestown, passed away August 14, 2015 at the age of 85. Born in South Boston and a graduate of Gate of Heaven High School. Loving son of the late John J. and Agnes R. (McGrath) Power. Served his country in the Army during the Korean War, graduated from Boston College and entered the seminary. James was ordained in 1962 and assigned to St. Mary of the Assumption, Revere. Later assignments included St. Peter’s in Plymouth and Star of the Sea in Marblehead. During his time in Marblehead he served as Campus Minister at Salem State University. Also during this time he completed studies toward his Masters and Doctorate degrees at Boston College, later becoming the pastor of St. Francis Church in Dracut and ended his service at St. James the Great in Wellesley.

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Living up to commitment to protect and to heal

WORCESTER (MA)
The Catholic Free Press

Most Reverend Robert J. McManus, S.T.D.
Bishop of Worcester

My dear friends in Christ,

Over the coming weeks, some of you will see movie trailers for “Spotlight!” which is a cinematic portrayal of how The Boston Globe covered the crisis of abuse of children by members of the Catholic Church. As painful as it is to recall those days of continuous headlines about this heinous crime against innocent children, it is important that we pause and reflect on how much has happened since that terrible revelation. How is the Diocese of Worcester and the Catholic Church nationwide living up to the commitment made in Dallas in June of 2002 to protect and to heal?

First and foremost in our hearts and minds are those who were victims of these heinous acts and their family members. Many victims have come forward in their adulthood to tell the story of what they experienced as children; some seek help, others simply come to share their pain so that they may find help and healing. With the help of the Victims’ Assistance coordinator and the Diocesan Review Board, we have listened and responded to the best of our ability to dozens of victims and their family members since 2002, broadening the efforts which began locally with Bishop Harrington in the late-1980s and Bishop Reilly in the 1990s. While individual reports were the subject of headlines, countless more victims came forward simply to be believed so that they could move on with their lives and see that it would not happen to another child in the future.

I am deeply grateful to the many members of our Diocesan Review Board, more than half of whom are independent of the Church and bring invaluable experience in child care advocacy, civil law and law enforcement. Their expertise has been an important voice in victims advocacy as we sought to bring Christ’s healing to this pain.

While the above efforts were focused on healing, we have simultaneously been working toward protection of children in our care. As directed by the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, this effort began in 2002 with a two-pronged approach: screening the backgrounds of ALL ordained and lay employees and volunteers with the Commonwealth as well as training everyone in identifying the signs and symptoms of child abuse. We have collaborated with various groups in the community including resources in the District Attorney’s Office, YWCA Daybreak and, most recently, the Dallas Child Advocacy Center, one of the largest such groups in the country. Since 2013, over 30,000 screenings and trainings have been done in our diocese. We also introduced a Code of Conduct which must be signed in advance of engaging in ministry, and our Review Board periodically reviews these programs and resources to incorporate improvements to face new challenges such as child pornography.

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October 30, 2015

Retired priest charged

CANADA
Cornwall Standard-Freeholder

By Greg Peerenboom, Cornwall Standard-Freeholder
Friday, October 30, 2015

A retired priest faces a criminal charge involving an incident with an adult male several weeks ago.

Fr. Denis Vaillancourt, 69, served under the Diocese of Alexandria-Cornwall in a number of capacities, including parish priest of Eglise Sacre-Coeur in Alexandria.

“Any allegation of improper conduct by a priest is an extremely serious matter,” said a diocese media release Friday afternoon.

“The Diocese has co-operated fully with local authorities,” states the release which indicated that Vaillancourt had been arrested by the Ontario Provincial Police.

A separate media release has not been issued by the OPP, so it is unclear as to what the charge or charges pertains.

“It would be inappropriate for diocesan officials to comment on the specifics of this case as it is currently a police matter,” the diocese further stated.

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Crime commission issues chilling child exploitation warning

AUSTRALIA
Brisbane Times

October 31, 2015

Cameron Atfield
Political journalist

The threat of paedophilia was only set to rise in the future, according to a disturbing prediction in the Queensland Organised Crime Commission of Inquiry.

Commissioner Michael Byrne, QC, handed down the report from the $6 million, six-month inquiry on Friday and there were predictions that would cause considerable community concern.

“There can be little doubt that child sex offending, particularly to feed the illicit and insatiable child exploitation market, represents a risk with an upward trajectory,” the report finds.

“Further, there is a growing trend towards commercialisation of the child exploitation market.

“Despite the fact that child exploitation material is often viewed as a commodity in itself, the Queensland Police Service told the commission that offenders are increasingly using difficult-to-trace crypto-currencies to purchase or obtain access to child exploitation material.”

Detective Inspector Jon Rouse of Taskforce Argos, the QPS unit dedicated to combating child exploitation, told the commission networking among sexual predators was “evolving rather than emerging”.

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Movie Sneaks What ‘Spotlight’ respects about the church-scandal-breaking journalists and the actors who play them

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Times

[with video]

Glenn Whipp

The closing credits scroll had ended, the lights were up at Toronto’s Princess of Wales Theatre, and “Spotlight” co-writer and director Tom McCarthy was introducing the actors — Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton and Rachel McAdams, among them — who brought to life the movie’s story of the Boston Globe’s painstaking investigation into a pedophilia scandal within the Catholic Church. The audience cheered and then rose to its feet when McCarthy brought the real-life journalists on stage, leading to a moment that the filmmaker described later as gratifying but a bit awkward.

“They didn’t know what to do,” McCarthy said of the reporters so used to working behind the scenes. “If they could have pressed a button and dropped through a trap door on stage, they would have done it.”

McCarthy and “Spotlight” co-writer Josh Singer spent 2 1/2 years crafting a film that details the Globe’s reporting, beginning in 2001, that proved Boston archdiocese leaders knew there was widespread sexual abuse among its priests but did little or nothing about it. The finished movie, which opens in limited release Nov. 6, plays as a detective story that also explores the question of why people look the other way when “good” institutions do terrible things.

McCarthy and Singer each grew up avid sports fans and, as they wrote “Spotlight,” they started to think about how the reporting team mirrored championship sports squads. Every member had a specific role, understood their function and performed it at a peak level.

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How the ‘Spotlight’ movie got made

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Meredith Goldstein GLOBE STAFF OCTOBER 30, 2015

On Jan. 6, 2002, The Boston Globe published a story by its investigative Spotlight team revealing that the Catholic Church knew about sexual abuse in its ranks and allowed a priest — John J. Geoghan — to keep his job, even though he had abused young parishioners for years.

It was the first story in a series that dug deep into the Catholic Church sexual abuse scandal. The initial piece, which shocked the Boston community, asked: “Why did it take a succession of three cardinals and many bishops 34 years to place children out of Geoghan’s reach?”

It was a question that sparked the interest of film producers Nicole Rocklin and Blye Faust, who were attracted to real-life stories. A writer had suggested that the pair look into the story, and as soon as they did, they knew they wanted to make a film, not about the scandal itself, but about the journalists who told the story.

“It was immediate. It was obvious from the get-go,” Faust said, of their interest in producing a movie.

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‘Spotlight’ celebrates a vanishing form of journalism and of filmmaking

UNITED STATES
Washington Post

By Ann Hornaday October 30

There’s a brief montage in “Spotlight,” a drama about the Boston Globe’s 2002 coverage of sexual abuse within the Catholic Church, that neatly sums up the film’s overriding ethos: After a Globe reporter asks a newsroom librarian for clips regarding a particular story, a sequence of shots portrays the request being fulfilled, as a researcher goes through yellowed newspaper excerpts, cranks balky spools of microfilm, prints out the results, compiles it all in a file and delivers the bundle by way of a rickety basket cart.

By conventional cinematic standards, the sequence is far from thrilling. But within the world that “Spotlight” creates — a world of reporters doggedly doing their jobs with little fanfare or immediate gratification, before Google was the all-knowing behemoth it is today — it’s a soaring ode to minutiae that makes riveting cinema out of journalism’s least dramatic moments.

For Tom McCarthy, who co-wrote and directed “Spotlight,” that montage holds the key to whether his film — and the rigor and attention to detail with which he made it — will succeed or fail with viewers. Noting that his decision to go deep into the daily grind of reporting was “a huge gamble,” he said, “I felt like if [the clips] started to operate at the right level, if the audience was connecting with those, then we really succeeded with the movie.”

So far, it looks like the bet is paying off: “Spotlight” made a triumphant debut earlier this fall at three festivals in Venice, Telluride and Toronto, emerging as a critical favorite and Oscar front-runner. In late November its cast — which includes Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams and Liev Schreiber — will receive a special ensemble acting citation at New York’s Gotham Awards, an early harbinger of awards-season heat.

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For ‘Spotlight,’ Actors Portrayed Hunters Chasing Predators

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By LORNE MANLY
OCT. 30, 2015

Working from a cramped, dingy office, a scrappy band of journalists exposes the Archdiocese of Boston’s decades-long cover-up of sexual abuse of children by scores of priests.

Definitely an investigation worthy of a Pulitzer Prize, which the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team won for that 2002 series. But fodder for a Hollywood film?

The director and co-writer Tom McCarthy, whose credits include “The Station Agent” and “The Visitor,” was convinced that the nuts and bolts of journalism at its finest could make for thrilling cinema. The result is “Spotlight,” opening Friday, Nov. 6, with a budget just under $20 million and an ensemble cast that includes Michael Keaton, Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams and Liev Schreiber.

“Spotlight” allowed Mr. McCarthy and his co-writer, Josh Singer, to explore both the importance of local investigative journalism at a time of convulsive change in the newspaper business and the conspiracies of silence that can surround wrongdoing at seemingly admirable institutions.

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Survivors of clergy sex abuse hope “Spotlight” film brings victims forward

UNITED STATES
Reuters

By Scott Malone October 30, 2015

Survivors of clergy sex abuse said they hope the upcoming film “Spotlight,” about the Boston Globe’s groundbreaking report that Roman Catholic officials routinely covered up abuse by priests, prompts more victims to publicly confront their abusers.

The newspaper won a Pulitzer Prize for revealing in 2002 that church officials routinely covered up reports that priests had sexually assaulted children, setting off a global wave of investigations that found similar patterns at dioceses around the world.

The scandal damaged the Catholic Church worldwide, undermining its moral authority and requiring costly legal settlements. The church is still struggling with the crisis, which Pope Francis addressed last month on his historic first visit to the United States, meeting with victims and declaring that “God weeps” for their pain.

The film, which focuses on the work of the investigative reporters who spent months tracking down sealed court records, victims and abusive priests, does not depict abuse but shows the heavy emotional toll it took on survivors, many of whom turned to alcohol, drugs or suicide when unable to overcome their pain.

“I do think it will encourage more survivors who are still trapped in silence and shame and suffering to find the courage to speak up,” said David Clohessy, who runs the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests and was sexually assaulted by a priest as a teenager. …

Terence McKiernan, president of BishopAccountability.org, which maintains records on abuse and cover ups, said he worries that a movie set more than a decade ago could lead some viewers to believe the crisis had passed.

“It wouldn’t be a bad thing for people to ask themselves in what ways is this continuing and in what ways is it better,” said McKiernan, who has seen the film. “How is it that this terrible problem duplicated itself around the world, and what do we do about that?”

Insurance experts told a Vatican conference in 2012 that as many as 100,000 U.S. children may have been the victims of clerical sex abuse. Some 12 U.S. dioceses have filed for bankruptcy since the scandal broke, in part due to more than $3 billion in settlements paid to victims.

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Brugse bisschop ontheft verdachte priester uit taken

BELGIE
Het Nieuwsblad

[Bruges Bishop Jozef De Kesel has suspended a priest named only as MD, who is suspected of sexual abuse in the 1980s. This was reported Friday by the diocese. The bishop took the action because MD left the country despite the ban and went to Brazil.]

De Brugse bisschop Jozef De Kesel suspendeert priester M.D., die verdacht wordt van seksueel misbruik in de jaren tachtig. Dat meldt het bisdom vrijdagochtend.

De bisschop nam die beslissing, omdat M.D. ondanks een verbod naar Brazilië vertrok tijdens zijn preventieve schorsing die nog liep.

Tegen de omstreden priester liepen twee klachten over seksueel misbruik die dateren uit de jaren tachtig. De klachten liepen pas in 2011 binnen. De priester die al sinds de jaren negentig in Brazilië werkzaam was, werd teruggeroepen. Omdat de feiten verjaard waren oordeelde het parket, dat de priester terug naar Brazilië kon. Het bisdom volgde dat advies.

Maar eind vorig jaar, na een reeks andere zaken van seksueel misbruik binnen de kerk, drong De Kesel aan op zijn komst naar België. De betrokken priester ging daar op in, kwam terug naar België en werd hier vervolgens preventief geschorst. Het voorbije jaar werd de zaak verder onderzocht. “Op basis van alle gegevens in het dossier en van het rapport van Fides (Forensisch Initiatief voor Deviante Seksualiteit) heeft het Opvangpunt de bisschop geadviseerd om hem niet naar Brazilië te laten terugkeren. Bisschop De Kesel volgt dit advies en heeft aan de betrokken priester duidelijk gemaakt dat hij bij een terugkeer naar Brazilië zou overgaan tot de suspensie van zijn priesterambt, wat neerkomt op een verbod nog priesterlijke taken te verrichten”, aldus het bisdom.

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Diocese to fingerprint all clergy, workers

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Catholic

Friday, October 30, 2015

By Ann Rodgers General Manager

In response to new Pennsylvania child protection laws, the Diocese of Pittsburgh now requires FBI background checks and fingerprinting of all diocesan clergy, employees and many volunteers. This is in addition to the state child abuse and criminal background checks that the diocese has required for more than a decade.

To make these new requirements easier for volunteers and employees, the diocese has purchased a mobile fingerprint unit that can be taken to parishes and schools. At the same time, the diocese has instituted online training for its required “Protecting God’s Children” course and also for the mandated reporter training now required for those who are legally obligated to report suspected child abuse. Links to that training can be found at www.diopitt.org in the left-hand column below “Protecting God’s Children.”

Phyllis Haney, director of the diocesan Department for Protection of Children and Young People, is available to answer questions and to visit parishes to explain the new policies.

“I used to be a parish safe environment coordinator, and I understand how challenging this can be. I am here to help and support all of you in our parishes and schools, so that our children can be safe and secure,” she said. Haney can be reached at 412-456-5633 or e-mail phaney@diopitt.org.

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Was the Boston Globe’s Church Abuse Scoop the Last Great Print Story?

UNITED STATES
Slate

By Isaac Chotiner

Newspapers make rare appearances in movies these days, and when they do they usually function as a throwaway detail. (Spider-Man works at a made-up New York rag.) But the new film Spotlight, directed by Tom McCarthy, is arguably the most unabashedly romanticized filmic depiction of hardworking print journalists since All The President’s Men.

The movie, opening Nov. 6, focuses on the Boston Globe’s investigative reporting team, which helped uncover the Catholic Church pedophilia scandal in early 2002. The leader of that team, which went on to win a Pulitzer for its work, was Walter Robinson, a Globe veteran, who is played by Michael Keaton in the film. (The other members of the on-screen investigative unit include Mark Ruffalo and Rachel McAdams.)

I spoke to Robinson by phone recently. He left the Globe in 2006 to teach journalism at Northeastern, then returned to the paper last year as editor-at-large. Robinson also took some time over the past several years to advise the filmmakers. He was chatty and warm and, appealingly, made no effort to hide his excitement about the movie.

Over the course of our conversation, we discussed the changing role of the church in Boston, Pope Francis, how the Internet helped blow the abuse story wide open, and whether movie stars are as good-looking as the people they portray. The conversation has been slightly condensed and edited for clarity.

Isaac Chotiner: I guess I can call you Robby since everyone in the movie does, even people who don’t know you.

Walter Robinson: Yeah, I know. It’s not my real name. But whatever.

The movie presents Boston as being unwilling to confront what was going on in the Catholic Church. In the last 13 years, has the relationship between the city and the church changed?

Yeah. One sort of very concrete example of the change is that the church always had its way with the Massachusetts legislature. It had its own lobbyist on Beacon Hill, and if there was legislation that the cardinal did not approve of, it was very rare for such legislation to pass. They had more power than any other—pardon me for saying this—special interest.

You’re allowed to say it.

Yeah, I can say it now. There is a law in Massachusetts called a “mandated reporting law.” That is, doctors, nurses, social workers, teachers are required by law to report any suspicions they have about abuse of children, whether it’s sexual abuse or any other kind of abuse. If they don’t report it, they themselves are subject to criminal penalties.

In Massachusetts, there had been attempts over a number of years to include clergymen under that law. Those attempts always failed. My recollection is that organizations of Protestant ministers and Jewish congregations in Massachusetts had always supported that legislation, and the Catholic Church had not, and therefore it never passed. Within months of the moment that this story crashed onto the shore, in 2002, that legislation went through both houses of the legislature and was signed by the governor really fast. The church lost almost all of its political clout in Massachusetts as a consequence of the clergy scandal. What that says is that public confidence in the church, in the institution, eroded very swiftly. I don’t think it’s come back all that much.

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Ludlow woman at forefront of bill extending deadlines for sex abuse victims to get her day in court

MASSACHUSETTS
The Republican

By Stephanie Barry | sbarry@repub.com
on October 30, 2015

Former Worcester day care provider sentenced for lying about son’s sexual assault on child
SPRINGFIELD – A Ludlow woman who successfully pushed for new legislation extending the statute of limitations for alleged victims of childhood sexual abuse to file lawsuits will get her day in court.

Kathy Picard, 52, has said previously she worked for 12 years to push a new bill extending the deadline for alleged victims to sue. The law changed the deadline from age 21 to 53. The bill was signed by former Gov. Deval L. Patrick on June 26, 2014, with Picard present.

The same day, she filed a $1 million lawsuit in U.S. District Court against her stepfather. A trial is set to begin Monday.

Picard’s suit says Louis Buoniconti began molesting her at age 7 and increased the sexual abuse until she 17 – accusations Buoniconti adamantly denies, according to court records.

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Other Pontifical Acts

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 30 October 2015 (VIS) – The Holy Father has appointed:

– Bishop Fidel Herraez Vegas, auxiliary of Madrid, Spain, as archbishop of Burgos (area 13,850, population 374,970, Catholics 337,473, priests 519, religious 1,377), Spain. He succeeds Archbishop Francisco Gil Hellin, whose resignation from the pastoral care of the same archdiocese upon reaching the age limit was accepted by the Holy Father.

– Bishop Renauld de Dinechin, auxiliary of Paris, France, as bishop of Soissons (area 7,378, population 557,000, Catholics 403,000, priests 89, permanent deacons 22, religious 97), France.

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Archdiocese has exclusive rights until May to file plan

MINNESOTA
The Catholic Spirit

Jessica Trygstad | October 29, 2015

At an Oct. 29 hearing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, the judge overseeing the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’ Reorganization proceedings allowed it to be the sole party to file a plan for Reorganization until May 31, 2016. Before Judge Robert Kressel’s approval, the date was set for next month.

Attorney Richard Anderson of Briggs and Morgan, representing the archdiocese, said that the time of exclusivity allotted to the archdiocese to file a plan is necessary because mediation is ongoing.

“It would be a mistake and harmful for everyone’s interests for the archdiocese to file a plan that hasn’t been fully vetted. The premature filing of a plan would just be a waste of resources and time,” he said following the hearing.

Anderson emphasized that the motion wasn’t asking for an extension of any deadlines and that the archdiocese hasn’t missed any deadlines.

“This isn’t a deadline. This is a right,” he said. “The archdiocese has a right to file a plan with an exclusive period.”

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Schreiber’s take on the 5th estate

UNITED STATES
SFGate

By Pam Grady

When he hasn’t been busy playing fixer Ray Donovan on the eponymous Showtime series, Liev Schreiber has made a cottage industry lately of playing real people: President Lyndon Johnson in “Lee Daniels’ The Butler,” Soviet chess champion Boris Spassky in “Pawn Sacrifice,” and now “Boston Globe” editor Marty Baron in one of the most highly anticipated dramas of the fall season, Tom McCarthy’s “Spotlight.”

“I hate playing people who actually lived,” Schreiber, 48, says. “It’s too much responsibility, but what I learned playing Hamlet is that if you pick smart roles, people will think you’re smart.”

Early award winner

Modesty aside, the actor was sharp enough to spot a winner when he accepted the role of Baron. One of the few films to live up to the hype when it screened at the Toronto International Film Festival, “Spotlight” is also an early award winner, picking up two prizes at the Venice Film Festival, where it made its world premiere; a screenwriting award at the Hollywood Film Festival; and most recently, the Audience Favorite Gold Award, US Cinema, at the Mill Valley Film Festival.

“Spotlight” is the story of how a group of investigative journalists at the Boston Globe in 2002 broke open wide the story of sexual abuse by Catholic priests and the church’s longtime practice of covering up the crimes. The Globe’s Spotlight team focused on their local parishes, but the story reverberated worldwide. Baron was the outsider, an editor brought in by the paper’s new parent, the New York Times, and the man who recognized the importance of the story and urged his reporters to pursue it.

“Baron’s very different from everyone else,” says McCarthy. “And day one, at that first 10:30 meeting, he sort of picks up on a piece of reporting that came from within the Globe, which I think is important to remember. It was a column by Eileen McNamara. He just sort of asked some simple questions and it unlocked what became this massive investigation. That, to me, was just so compelling.”

“I think Marty is a true American hero, and I think Marty did a remarkable job shepherding that team of journalists,” adds Schreiber. “And he’s always been very good at it, he’s asking the right questions and finding the right story and not being afraid to challenge powerful institutions and organizations.”

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‘Spotlight’ Sticks to the Story

UNITED STATES
Wall Street Journal

By DON STEINBERG
Updated Oct. 29, 2015

Director Tom McCarthy and his fellow screenwriter Josh Singer knew they had a compelling story with “Spotlight.” The trick was turning it into a riveting movie.

In 2001, reporters at the Boston Globe investigated child sexual abuse by area priests and a coverup by the archdiocese. The articles the newspaper published, beginning in January 2002, led to similar revelations around the world.

The filmmakers had broad themes to work with, such as the abuse itself, the inaction of those who knew something was wrong and the importance of local investigative journalism.

Nonetheless, these rich subjects could yield a dry, procedural story about a team of reporters embarking on a six-month investigation where breakthroughs emerge from legal filings, interviews and library research. The movie dramatizes the experiences of people who tend to be sticklers for accuracy (lawyers, journalists, victims and accused), at a time when other recent films about contemporary people (like “ Steve Jobs” and Mr. Singer’s earlier screenplay, “The Fifth Estate,” about Julian Assange and WikiLeaks) have been called out for playing with facts to heighten the drama.

“I would be lying to you if I said I wasn’t scared,” Mr. Singer said. He and Mr. McCarthy (who directed and wrote the funny dramas “Win Win” and “The Station Agent”) could have oversimplified or altered the investigation story. Instead, they chose to include many journalists who were part of the project rather than ignore them for the convenience of the movie.

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‘Spotlight’ Stars Reveal In-Depth Research to Play Investigative Reporters

UNITED STATES
Hollywood Reporter

by Hilary Lewis 10/28/2015

The film, about the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer prize-winning team that exposed a massive cover-up of child abuse by priests throughout the Boston Archdiocese, features Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Stanley Tucci and others.

In the new movie Spotlight, Rachel McAdams, Mark Ruffalo and Brian d’Arcy James play three members of the Boston Globe’s “Spotlight” investigative team, which in 2001 uncovered numerous instances of child abuse by Catholic priests and a cover-up within the Boston Archdiocese. And as they prepared to portray reporters searching for answers, the actors investigated the journalists.

Ruffalo told The Hollywood Reporter at Tuesday night’s New York premiere that he “spent a lot of time with the real journalist” he portrays, Michael Rezendes.

“I had meals with him. I talked with him for hours. I sat next to him at work,” Ruffalo said. “I watched him work the phones. I watched him write his stories. I talked to him about his life and his family. I had him give me tours of Boston. As much as I could soak him up seemed to be the most important part.”

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‘Lured to her death by Vatican cardinal paedophile ring or kidnapped in revenge by Italy mobster’: Enduring mystery of girl, 15, who vanished on way home from flute class after Pope told family ‘She’s in heaven’

ROME
Daily Mail (UK)

By HANNAH ROBERTS IN ROME FOR MAILONLINE

The mysterious disappearance of the 15-year-old daughter of a Vatican official is Italy’s most enduring cold case.

Emanuela Orlandi vanished while on her way home from a flute lesson in July 1983, and was never seen again.

It sparked an international intrigue that has pointed to the Stasi, the Italian mob and even a Satanic sex cult among the cardinals.

The teenager, the fourth of five children in a devoutly Catholic family, was enticed to meet her abductors with the offer of some work distributing leaflets at a fashion show for Avon cosmetics.

In reality, the Avon job did not exist. No one has ever been convicted of her disappearance and no body has ever been found.

The original theory followed by investigators was that she was kidnapped to secure the release of the would-be assassin who tried to kill John Paul II.

But Vatican insiders have claimed that she died under the influence of drugs at a satanic sex party with prelates.

Others insist she was is still alive and living secretly in a convent with the knowledge of the Vatican.

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Mitchell Garabedian seems to approve of ‘Spotlight’

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Mark Shanahan GLOBE STAFF OCTOBER 30, 2015

Mitchell Garabedian, the attorney for many of the victims in the priest sex abuse scandal that is the focus of “Spotlight,” hasn’t said much, if anything, about the film, which is widely considered to be the Oscar front-runner for best picture. Garabedian (inset) isn’t participating in the press junket for the film, and Stanley Tucci, who plays the relentless lawyer in the movie, told reporters at the Venice Film Festival that he’d never met or spoken to Garabedian. (The actor said he was urged not to because Garabedian can be abrasive.) It was interesting then to see Garabedian give director Tom McCarthy a thumbs-up from his seat in the audience at Wednesday’s premiere of “Spotlight” at the Coolidge Corner Theatre. To paraphrase Sally Field: He likes it! He really likes it!

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Catholic priest Terrence Millard loses appeal over child smack in church

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

October 30, 2015

Patrick Begley
Journalist

A Sydney mother whose eight-year-old son was smacked by a priest in church says it was “disgusting” for the man to rely on a child discipline defence in his legal appeal.

Terrence John Millard, a former parish priest at Greenacre in Sydney’s south-west, on Friday lost his fight against the common assault finding.

He denied hitting the boy at St John Vianney Catholic Church on September 11 last year.

Millard had been conducting a reconciliation rehearsal for children at the affiliated primary school when he noticed the boy lounging on a pew, giggling and distracting his classmates.

He says he took the boy by the shoulders in a reassuring way, guided him to the back of the church, stood him in front of the Stations of the Cross and asked him to reflect on his behaviour.

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Xavier College’s past revealed following online bullying scandal

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

DRUGS, theft, assault, property damage, a trafficking offence and even an incident involving weapons and explosives.

It sounds like the worst school on the worst corner of the worst suburb, and yet you pay about $25,000 a year to go there.

Xavier College is a prestigious Catholic boys school in Kew in Melbourne with an esteemed alumni — Labor Opposition Leader Bill Shorten, AFL Brownlow medallist Jobe Watson, world champion marathon runner Robert de Castella and Formula One world championship winner Alan Jones.

Even Barry Humphries’ character Sir Les Patterson claims he was a student.

The school says it aims to produce “reflective, compassionate and articulate men” who will provide “outstanding service and leadership in our world”.

But it is often plagued with scandal, and online bullying is the latest transgression to rock the senior boys campus. Its students this week came under fire for taunting public school students on Facebook ahead of the VCE English exam, calling them “povos”.

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‘Spotlight’ needed on clergy sexual abuse in the Bay Area

CALIFORNIA
San Francisco Chronicle

By Tom Stier
October 29, 2015

The movie “Spotlight,” which opens Nov. 6, tells the story of the Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigation team’s reporting during 2001 and 2002 on the clergy sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Boston and its cover-up by Cardinal Bernard Law. For many, this movie will draw unwanted publicity to the Catholic Church but I, a former Catholic parish priest, welcome the attention. I hope this movie shines the spotlight on the Catholic Church in Oakland and San Francisco so the full extent of abuse and cover-up right here in the Bay Area may be known.

For the truth is, the story revealed here would be just as heartbreaking and just as horrifying as in Boston. The reason the Boston Globe’s journalists were able to shine such a light on the Catholic Church in Boston was due to the courage of a judge who forced the Archdiocese of Boston to open the files of its scores of criminal priests.

The Diocese of Oakland has yet to publicly name all the priests, both diocesan and religious, who abused children and teens throughout Alameda and Contra Costa counties. Oakland Bishop Michael C. Barber and his team cannot tell the full truth to the Catholics of the East Bay, nor can Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone fully reveal these abuses to Catholics of San Francisco.

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Church admits abuse by clergy in Sussex was worst in the country

UNITED KINGDOM
The Argus

SEXUAL abuse committed by clergymen in Sussex was the worst of anywhere else in the country, the church has said.

The frank admission comes after the ninth Sussex churchman in two years was found to have used their position to commit sexual offences.

Vickery House, a former vicar of Berwick, was found guilty at the Old Bailey on Wednesday of five counts of indecent assault on males – with one as young as 14 – over a period of 16 years.

A Diocese of Chichester spokesman told The Argus they hoped House’s conviction would “touch wood” be the last case to come to light.

But many abuse survivors and their lawyers said they expected more to be unearthed and called for the national Goddard Inquiry into historic sex abuse to make the diocese a particular focus of investigation.

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Victim testifies how sexual abuse by Minnesota priest altered his life

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Nicole Norfleet Star Tribune OCTOBER 29, 2015

John Doe 30’s life is not how he expected it to be.

The 52-year-old hair stylist said he has spent much of his adulthood struggling with anxiety, moving from place to place and not trusting people after an alleged sexual assault by a Minnesota priest when he was a boy. He has tried twice to kill himself and has always lived alone.

“I feel like the church has turned its back on me. I feel betrayed by the church,” the man testified Thursday in his court case against the Diocese of Duluth.

Attorneys for Doe 30 said he was 15 in 1978 when he was molested daily during a two-week stay with the Rev. James Vincent Fitzgerald, who had a church in Squaw Lake. Doe 30 is suing the diocese in Ramsey County District Court, alleging that it failed to protect him.

The case is the first under the Minnesota Child Victims Act to go to trial. The 2013 law has allowed older claims of child sex abuse previously barred by statutes of limitations to be aired in court.

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October 29, 2015

Ex-Cathedral teacher Joe Graziano jailed three years for repeat sexual abuse

CANADA
Hamilton Spectator

By Carmela Fragomeni

A former Catholic high school teacher who befriended and then sexually abused a vulnerable student has been sentenced to three years in prison.

Giuseppe (Joe) Graziano, 56, taught religious studies and cosmetology at Cathedral High School, on Wentworth Street North, at the time of the offences.

“Mr. Graziano slowly worked his way into the life (of the student) — more than one would expect of a teacher,” said Superior Court Justice Harrison Arrell in sentencing Graziano on Thursday.

Graziano was convicted in August of sexual interference and sexual exploitation for sexually touching a person under 16 and for touching a young person while in a position of trust.

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Teacher’s Aide Acquitted of Sexually Abusing Student Plans Career Change

CALIFORNIA
NBC Bay Area

[with video]

By Chuck Coppola

A former Catholic school teacher’s aide acquitted this week of 10 counts of sexual abuse against a student is now talking about starting over and finding a new career.

Mia Cummings, 31, of Oakland, was held for nearly two years in Santa Rita Jail awaiting trial.

This week, she was released after a jury ruled they didn’t believe the allegations against her.

The former after-school program coordinator at All Saints Catholic School in Hayward tells NBC Bay Area she’s trying put the pieces of her life back together.

“I started by taking my son to school for the first time,” Cummings said Thursday. “That’s what I started with.”

Her son was 2 when she was arrested just before Thanksgiving in 2013. Unable to make the $500,000 bail, Cummings spent the next two years seeing her child once a week as a jail visitor.

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Pope OKs indulgences for Legion during anniversary

VATICAN CITY
Newsday

VATICAN CITY – (AP) — Pope Francis has granted a special plenary indulgence to members of the scandal-tainted Legion of Christ order as it celebrates the 75th anniversary of its foundation by the discredited Mexican priest, Marcial Maciel.

Vatican Radio said Thursday that the decree was approved following a request by the current Legion superior, the Rev. Eduardo Robles-Gil.

Robles-Gil has been leading the Legion since the Vatican signed off on its process of reform following revelations that Maciel sexually abused seminarians.

Indulgences are the ancient church tradition related to the forgiveness of sins that roughly amounts to a “get out of Purgatory free” card. Catholics seeking them must be contrite and have a moment of deepening faith.

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Pope offers pardon to scandal-tainted Legion of Christ

VATICAN CITY
Inquirer (Philippines)

AFP

VATICAN CITY—Pope Francis has granted a “plenary indulgence,” or religious pardon, to the ultra-conservative Legion of Christ movement, mired in a pedophile scandal, provided its members perform acts of penance, Vatican Radio said Thursday.

The Legion of Christ has for years been beset by accusations of sexual abuse.

The order’s founder, Mexican-born Marcial Maciel, stepped down in 2005 amid allegations of pedophilia and fathering several children. He died in 2008.

In August the Chilean government decided to deport Irish priest John O’Reilly, the local Legion head who was convicted of sexually abusing a young girl.

“After the huge scandal provoked by its hellish past,” the Legion of Christ group “has begun a period of purification and renewal,” Vatican Radio said.

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Lawyers for imam accused of sex abuse await possible new indictment

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

George Houde
Chicago Tribune

Another indictment against a well-known Muslim leader accused of sexual abuse is expected next month, his defense attorneys said after his appearance Thursday in Cook County Circuit Court.

Mohammed Abdullah Saleem, founder of the Institute of Islamic Education in Elgin, appeared before Judge Joseph Cataldo, three weeks after the imam was charged with aggravated criminal sexual abuse of a girl who was his student at the time.

An attorney for Saleem, who had previously been charged with sexually abusing a woman who worked for him at the school, said she expects the new indictment to relate to the allegations already made by the former student, who is now an adult.

But the attorney, Huma Rashid, said the defense team is prepared to fight any additional allegations, should they arise.

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

Cardinal O’Malley releases statement on ‘Spotlight’

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston.com

By Dialynn Dwyer @dia_dwyer
Boston.com Staff | 10.29.15

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley released a statement Thursday on Spotlight, the new film that chronicles the investigation by Boston Globe reporters into the systemic sexual abuse of children within the Roman Catholic Church.

In a letter to the editor to the archdiocesan newspaper The Pilot (republished in full below), O’Malley said the film depicts a painful time in the history of the Catholic Church that reporters helped bring to light:

The media’s investigative reporting on the abuse crisis instigated a call for the Church to take responsibility for its failings and to reform itself—to deal with what was shameful and hidden—and to make the commitment to put the protection of children first, ahead of all other interests.

O’Malley said the church continues to seek the forgiveness of those who were abused and said he has personally met with “hundreds of survivors” over the last 12 years, hearing their stories and “humbly seeking their pardon.”

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Hundreds Of Gay Marriages Have Been Annulled By A Catholic Judge

ITALY
Yahoo! News

Rob Waugh

Hundreds of gay marriages have been annulled in Italy by a panel led by a Catholic judge in the secretive Opus Dei organisation.

Same-sex marriage is not technically legal in Italy, but several left-wing mayors have registered marriages which have been conducted abroad.

Judges at Italy’s highest appeal court, the Council of State, annulled a ruling in favour of cities that had registered these unions.

The panel was led by a judge who was a former president of a halls of residence in Milan, run by Opus Dei.

The move has caused controversy – Opus Dei, made famous by Dan Brown’s Da Vinci Code, is a highly conservative organisation, whose members practice a ‘pious’ lifestyle.

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Ex-Bishop helped cover up abuse by colleague

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By John Bingham, Religious Affairs Editor 29 Oct 2015

A disgraced bishop who was jailed earlier this month for sexually assaulting a string of young would-be priests also helped cover up abuse by one of his closest aides, it has emerged.

Peter Ball, the former Bishop of Lewes in the Church of England diocese of Chichester, wrote to apologise to one young man who had been abused by the Rev Vickery House in 1984, claiming to have taken steps to ensure that “nothing like it happens again”.

House, now 69, was jailed for six and a half years at the Old Bailey for a series of sex attacks on boys and young men, including one victim aged just 14, over a 16-year period from 1977 to 1992.

A former vicar in Berwick, East Sussex, he served as Ball’s deputy running a church gap-year scheme called “Give A Year For Christ” where he targeted young men testing out a possible “call” to ordination.

Three of his House’s victims were also abused by Ball, who was also jailed three weeks ago after admitting indecent assaults on 18 young men in the 1970s and 1980s.

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Payment and apology follow abuse complaint against Bishop Bell

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by Madeleine Davies

Posted: 30 Oct 2015

ALLEGATIONS of sexual abuse by a former Bishop of Chichester, the Rt Revd George Bell, have resulted in compensation and a formal apology from the current Bishop, Dr Martin Warner, 20 years after the complaint was first made.

A statement issued by Church House, Westminster, on Thursday of last week confirmed “a legal civil claim regarding sexual abuse against the Right Reverend George Bell”. The complaint concerns the abuse of a young child in the late 1940s and early 1950s.

Tracey Emmott, the solicitor for the survivor, said that her client remained “bitter” that the original complaint, made in 1995, was “not properly listened to or dealt with until my client made contact with Archbishop Justin Welby’s office in 2013”. This failure had been “very damaging, and combined with the abuse that was suffered has had a profound effect on my client’s life”.

The survivor first reported the abuse to the then Bishop of Chichester, Dr Eric Kemp, in August 1995, the statement said. The late Dr Kemp responded to the correspondence offering pastoral support, but did not refer the matter to the police or, so far as is known, investigate the complaint further. Dr Kemp died in 2009; Bishop Bell had died in 1958.

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Breaching seal of confession won’t stop abuse, says Forward in Faith

UNITED KINGDOM
Church Times

by Tim Wyatt

Posted: 30 Oct 2015

ANY attempt to allow priests to breach the confidentiality of sacramental confession would be wrong, and could lead to priests’ being imprisoned, the traditional Catholic organisation Forward in Faith (FiF) has warned.

FiF’s formal submission to a Church of England working party on the seal of the confessional urges the House of Bishops, the Archbishops’ Council, and the General Synod not to remove the ban on revealing what has been said in confession.

In the sacrament of reconciliation, or penance, a priest is obliged never to disclose what is confessed by a penitent. Canon 113 of the Code of 1603 expresses this, but, the FiF submission says: “The obligation was not created by Canon 113 . . . The Seal is intrinsic to the sacrament.”

The working party has been convened to examine whether an exception to this seal should be made if someone confesses to child abuse or other serious criminal offences.

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Former Navy Chaplain to Plead Guilty in Child Porn Case

DELAWARE
WBOC

DOVER, Del. (AP) – A former Navy chaplain and Catholic priest who pleaded guilty years ago to sexually assaulting a U.S. Naval Academy midshipman is facing up to life in prison on child pornography charges.

A judge on Thursday scheduled a Nov. 16 plea hearing for 50-year-old John Thomas Matthew Lee of Millsboro.

Federal prosecutors say Lee has agreed to plead guilty to charges of production and distribution of child pornography. He was indicted on the charges in June.

Lee was court-martialed in 2007 on charges including forcible sodomy and failing to tell a sex partner he was HIV-positive. He was sentenced to no more than two years in prison.

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Former priest to plead guilty child porn charges

DELAWARE
The News Journal

Brittany Horn, The News Journal October 29, 2015

A former Navy chaplain and Catholic priest who pleaded guilty years ago to sexually assaulting a U.S. Naval Academy midshipman is scheduled to plead guilty to child pornography charges.

John Thomas Matthew Lee, 50, of Millsboro, will stand before Judge Leonard P. Stark for a plea hearing on Nov. 16 in Dover, according to court documents filed Thursday.

Federal prosecutors say Lee has agreed to plead guilty to charges of production and distribution of child pornography. He was indicted on the charges in June and could face up to life in prison.

Extensive photos and communication with young boys were recovered on phones and computer files in Lee’s home, according to court documents.

Lee was court-martialed in 2007 on charges including forcible sodomy and failing to tell a sex partner he was HIV-positive. He was sentenced to no more than two years in prison.

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Prosecutor cites ‘spirit of reform’ at Minnesota archdiocese

MINNESOTA
Washington Times

By STEVE KARNOWSKI – Associated Press – Thursday, October 29, 2015

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) – A Minnesota archdiocese and prosecutors both made conciliatory statements Thursday after an initial hearing on criminal charges against the church over its handling of an abusive priest, and the judge said she understood the two were engaged in talks.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis didn’t enter a plea or send any leaders to appear at the brief hearing. Ramsey County Chief Judge Teresa Warner told Assistant County Attorney Tom Ring and archdiocese defense attorney Joe Dixon that she understood that discussions or negotiations were continuing, but gave no details. She scheduled the next court date for Nov. 30.

The archdiocese faces six gross misdemeanor counts of child endangerment for allegedly turning a blind eye to repeated misconduct by Curtis Wehmeyer, a now-imprisoned former priest at Church of the Blessed Sacrament in St. Paul, who was convicted of molesting two boys in Minnesota and one in Wisconsin.

Prosecutors say top church officials failed to respond to “numerous and repeated reports of troubling conduct” by Wehmeyer, dating back to when he entered seminary in 1997 until he was defrocked in March.

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Audit commends diocesan policies to prevent abuse

NEW YORK
Catholic Courier

By Jennifer Burke/Catholic Courier

The Diocese of Rochester fared well in a September 2015 audit of its compliance with the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

Not only did auditors from the independent auditing firm Stonebridge Business Partners find the diocese in complete compliance with the charter, but the auditors also praised the diocese for several new steps taken in the past year, according to Father Daniel Condon, diocesan chancellor.

“We are in compliance. We’ve never not been in compliance,” Father Condon noted.

The Diocese of Rochester and most other dioceses in the country have undergone independent audits each year since 2003 in order to gauge their compliance with the charter, which is a set of procedures the USCCB adopted in 2002 in response to allegations of sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy. The charter required dioceses to follow specific guidelines when responding to allegations of the sexual abuse of minors, implement safe-environment programs and develop codes of conduct for clerics, employees and volunteers.

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Dennis Hastert Case Renews Debate over Sex Crime Statute of Limitations

UNITED STATES
KMBZ

(WASHINGTON) — The nationwide debate over statutes of limitations on child sex crimes has been reignited in the wake of a plea deal that could give former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert little to no jail time for a fraud charge linked to alleged decades-old sexual abuse of minors.

Hastert, 73, allegedly abused more than one student while he was a coach at Illinois’ Yorkville High School in the late 1960s and early 1970s, but was only brought to trial for a financial crime after attempting to hide recent hush money payments to one of his alleged victims. The maximum penalty for the financial crime for which Hastert was convicted is five years, but the plea deal includes a recommendation that he receive at most six months in prison. Hastert has declined to comment on the abuse allegations.

Jolene Burdge, the sister of one of Hastert’s alleged victims not involved in the hush money payments, told ABC News after the deal was filed Wednesday that she felt Hastert “got a pass.”

“I think he got a pass because of his power and status. I think he got a back room deal. His victims didn’t get a pass when he put them through the abuse,” she said.

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St. Paul’s School Rape Trial: Owen Labrie Sentenced to Year in Prison

NEW HAMPSHIRE
NBC News

[with video]

by ERIK ORTIZ and M. ALEX JOHNSON

The former New Hampshire prep school student convicted on lesser charges in a rape trial that exposed a campus tradition of sexual conquest was sentenced Thursday to a year in prison followed by probation.

Owen Labrie, 20, potentially faced up to 11 years in prison for the four misdemeanor sex offenses and one felony charge of computer-related seduction in the sexual assault case involving a fellow student.

Jurors, however, acquitted Labrie on Aug. 28 of the more serious felony rape charges, which each carried up to 20 years in prison.

“I believe that you are not the angel as portrayed by your counsel” and in letters of support submitted on his behalf, state Superior Court Judge Lawrence Smukler told Labrie. “But neither are you the devil as portrayed by the prosecution.”

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Raymond C. Plourde

MASSACHUSETTS
Tributes

November 11, 1931 – April 17, 2013
Boston, Massachusetts

Raymond was born on November 11, 1931 and passed away on Wednesday, April 17, 2013.

Raymond was a resident of Boston, Massachusetts.

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Blazing ‘Spotlight’: Tom McCarthy’s drama focuses on ‘Boston Globe’ inquiry into Catholic Church coverup

UNITED STATES
Film Journal

By Daniel Eagan Oct 29, 2015

Rumors of widespread sexual abuse within the Catholic Church were largely just that—rumors—until a 2002 series of Boston Globe articles detailed how the Church hid pedophilia among more than 70 local priests. Spotlight, an Open Road Films release, reveals how the newspaper exposé came about. Already an awards contender, the drama opens in theatres on Nov. 6.

The screenplay, co-written by director Tom McCarthy and Josh Singer, focuses on Spotlight, a four-member Globe team which took on long-term investigative projects for the paper. In the script, which is structured like a mystery, Marty Baron (played by Liev Schreiber), the Globe’s new editor and an outsider to Boston politics, pushes the team to dig into abuse accusations about John Geoghan, a priest.

Speaking by phone from his office, McCarthy emphasizes how important a part research played in preparing and writing the script. Much like the Spotlight team, McCarthy and Singer had to be meticulously accurate. Get anything wrong, from accents to addresses or clothes, and viewers could dismiss the entire story.

“I guess our main concern was trying to remain true to the spirit of those journalists and the reporting they did,” McCarthy says. “That was our guiding principle. What would the reporters do? What would Marty Baron do? Understanding of course that our job’s a little different, we’re telling a narrative feature and we have to do it in two hours or so.”

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‘Spotlight’ shows how church was impelled to act, O’Malley says

MASSACHUSETTS
Boston Globe

By Lisa Wangsness GLOBE STAFF OCTOBER 29, 2015

Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley says the forthcoming “Spotlight” film chronicling The Boston Globe’s investigation of child sex abuse in the Roman Catholic Church illustrates how the newspaper’s reports prompted the church “to deal with what was shameful and hidden.”

In a statement to the archdiocesan newspaper The Pilot on Thursday, the Roman Catholic archbishop of Boston said the movie depicts “a very painful time” in church history. He said the church continues to seek the forgiveness of those harmed by abusive priests, and he reiterated his commitment to ridding the church of abusive priests.

“The Archdiocese of Boston is fully and completely committed to zero tolerance concerning the abuse of minors,” he said. “We follow a vigorous policy of reporting and disclosing information concerning allegations of abuse.”

O’Malley has not seen the movie yet, a church spokesman said. It premiered in New York and Boston this week, and the film’s distributors are holding a screening for abuse survivors Thursday night in Boston. The film, which has won critical acclaim in early reviews, is scheduled to open in theaters Nov. 6.

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Film Shines A ‘Spotlight’ On Boston’s Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal

MASSACHUSETTS
NPR

[with audio]

In 2001, a team of reporters at the Boston Globe began investigating reports of child sexual abuse by Catholic priests. The “Spotlight” team, as it was known, eventually revealed that the abuse had been happening for decades — and that church leaders in Boston had been aware of it, and had been involved in covering it up.

Veteran reporter and editor Walter Robinson, who led the Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning Spotlight team, tells Fresh Air’s Dave Davies: “These crimes were unimaginable, and that they could’ve been countenanced and enabled by such an iconic institution, it gave us so much energy to pursue the story and get the story and make it public.”

Now, the new film, Spotlight, chronicles the investigation that brought the scandal to light. Tom McCarthy, who co-wrote and directed the new film, says he was immediately drawn to the story.

“As I dug into the material, first just on my own, and then with my co-writer Josh Singer, we realized that the story operated on so many levels. … It went well beyond the investigation itself,” McCarthy says. “It was something we were immediately engrossed in.”

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Vatican bracing for new revelations of mismanagement

VATICAN CITY
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

By NICOLE WINFIELD0

VATICAN CITY (AP) — The Vatican is bracing for more allegations of financial wrongdoing and mismanagement with the publication next week of two books that underscore the challenges Pope Francis is facing to reform the Holy See.

Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi’s “Merchants in the Temple” follows his blockbuster 2012 book, “His Holiness,” based on confidential papal correspondence detailing corruption and political intrigue in the Vatican. The so-called Vatileaks scandal that ensued resulted in the conviction of Pope Benedict XVI’s butler for leaking the documents, and some say, to Benedict’s historic resignation.

Italian journalist Emiliano Fittipaldi is releasing “Avarice: Documents Revealing Wealth, Scandals and Secrets of Francis’ Church.” Fittipaldi writes for L’Espresso newsweekly, which has published some of the most damaging leaks of Francis’ papacy, including most recently the letter by 13 cardinals warning Francis about his family synod.

The publication of the books, both on Nov. 5, will no doubt set off a new flurry of speculation about the depth of opposition to Francis’ reform agenda, given both are purportedly based on leaked documents and internal information to which only Vatican officials would have had access.

On Thursday, Italian newsweekly Panorama hinted at the dangers to come with a cover story “Sabotage in Vatican,” noting the pending financial revelations and detailing the recent intrigues surrounding the just-ended synod on the family, which exposed internal battles over the direction Francis has set for the church.

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Vickery House: Priest jailed over sex attacks

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A retired clergyman has been jailed for six and a half years for carrying out sex offences against a boy and three men in the 1970s and 1980s.

Vickery House, 69, from West Sussex, was convicted of five counts of indecent assault, including two against a boy aged between 14 and 15 in Devon.

He denied carrying out the attack on the boy and said his actions with the men were “mistaken sexual advances”.

House, of Handcross, was sentenced at the Old Bailey on Thursday.

Judge Christine Henson QC told House, who was a Church of England vicar: “You should have epitomised all that was good, honest and moral about society.

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Retired priest jailed for six and a half years for sex offences

UNITED KINGDOM
Crawley Observer

Harley Tamplin
ct.news@jpress.co.uk
Thursday 29 October 2015

A retired Church of England priest has been jailed for six and a half years after he was found guilty of sexual offences against four men.

Vickery House, 69, of Brighton Road, Handcross, was sentenced at the Old Bailey today (Thursday October 29) having been found guilty of five sexual offences on Tuesday (October 27) after a 12-day trial.

He was found guilty of two offences against a teenage boy in Devon in the 1970s, and three others against three men in East Sussex in the 1980s. He was cleared of three further counts.

He had pleaded not guilty to all eight counts.

Detective inspector Jez Prior of Sussex Police said: “This complex investigation began when we received information from the Church of England in May 2012, concerning one of the victims who he has been found guilty of assaulting. The others came forward during the investigation.

“The case was about power that House, who was a priest when all these offences were committed, exercised while he was responsible for ministering to their spiritual needs, and it was about opportunism, as he took advantage of situations in which to sexually assault them.

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Minn. Archdiocese Doesn’t Enter Plea Over Handling Of Abusive Priest

MINNESOTA
CBS Minnesota

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — A Minnesota archdiocese that faces criminal charges over its handling of an abusive priest didn’t enter a plea at its initial hearing Thursday.

No leaders from the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis appeared at the hearing, which lasted just a few minutes.

The archdiocese faces six gross misdemeanor counts of child endangerment for allegedly turning a blind eye to repeated misconduct by Curtis Wehmeyer, a now-imprisoned former priest at Church of the Blessed Sacrament in St. Paul, who was convicted of molesting two boys in Minnesota and one in Wisconsin.

Ramsey County Chief Judge Teresa Warner scheduled the next court date for Nov. 30. She told Assistant County Attorney Tom Ring and archdiocese defense attorney Joe Dixon that she understood that discussions or negotiations were continuing but gave no details.

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NSS: Church cannot escape blame for the failure to uncover truth about sex abuse

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Thu, 29 Oct 2015

NSS: Church cannot escape blame for the failure to uncover truth about sex abuse

The National Secular Society has said that the Church of England cannot escape blame following the jailing of a retired Anglican priest for sexual offences committed against boys as young as 14.

Vickery House, from West Sussex, was jailed for six and half years at the Old Bailey today after being found guilty of five charges of indecent assault. House had denied eight counts of indecent assault against six males aged 14 to 34 dating back to the 1970s and 1980s.

The former Church of England priest was the “Right-hand man” of disgraced bishop Peter Ball who was jailed earlier this month for a string of offences against teenagers and young men.
Three of House’s victims were also abused by Ball around the time they took part in a Church of England scheme called Give A Year For Christ which was run by the clergymen.

Speaking after the sentencing, National Secular Society executive director, Keith Porteous Wood, said:

“House and Bishop Ball misused their Anglican religious order to attract and systematically abuse young men. Instead of exercising their duty of care, they ruthlessly exploited their religious and institutional power over the victims.

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BREAKING NEWS: Former priest sentenced to more than six years for sexual offences against young men

UNITED KINGDOM
Hastings & St. Leonards Observer

A now retired Church of England priest has been sentenced to a total of six and a half years imprisonment for five sexual offences against four young men in the 1970s and 1980s.

Vickery House, 69, of Brighton Road, Handcross, was sentenced at the Old Bailey on Thursday (October 29) having been convicted on Tuesday after a 12-day trial.

He was found guilty of two offences against a boy in Devon between 1970 and 1971; one offence in East Sussex between 1983 and 1985, was against another man; one offence was against a man in East Sussex in 1981; and one offence was against another man in East Sussex in 1985.

He was found not guilty of one offence in Devon against the second victim and of one offence against each of two other men, in East Sussex and in London.

Detective Inspector Jez Prior of Sussex Police said, “This complex investigation began when we received information from the Church of England in May 2012, concerning one of the victims who he has been found guilty of assaulting. The others came forward during the investigation.

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Victims’ lawyer slams church after ex-priest Vickery House jailed for attacks

UNITED KINGDOM
Leigh Journal

Victims have called on government to stop the Church “policing itself” as the right-hand man of pervert bishop Peter Ball was jailed for six and a half years for a series of sex attacks spanning 16 years.

Earlier this week, retired priest Vickery House, 69, was found guilty of five counts of indecent assault on males – with one as young as 14 – in the 1970s and 80s.

During much of that time, House was vicar in Berwick, East Sussex, and worked under Ball – who earlier this month was jailed for 32 months after he admitted molesting young men between 1977 and 1992.

Three of House’s victims were also abused by Ball around the time they took part in a Church of England scheme called Give A Year For Christ which was run by the clergymen.

The scandal has been mired in accusations of an establishment cover-up with former Bishop of Lewes and Gloucester Ball, 83, counting a member of the Royal Family among those who wrote letters of support before he was let off with a caution in 1993.

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NY–Victims skeptical of agreement between bishop & prosecutors

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 29

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those abused by Priests (314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

We’re highly skeptical of the agreement between Syracuse Bishop Robert Cunningham and several local prosecutors. It was negotiated during months of secrecy which, in itself, is troubling.

A deal by a bishop to do better in the future might be helpful. But making predators’ names public right now is definitely helpful. That still needs to happen, immediately, if Syracuse kids are to be safer from child molesting Syracuse clerics.

If Cunningham cares about protecting kids, he’ll tell Syracuse families right now about every single predatory priest, nun, brother, seminarian or church worker who is now in his diocese or has ever been in his diocese. And he’ll permanently post their names, photos and whereabouts on church websites.

Across the globe, thousands of bishops have repeatedly promised to act openly and responsibly in clergy sex abuse and cover up cases. And repeatedly, thousands of bishops have broken these promises. So we aren’t very hopeful about yet another such promise, even if it will supposedly be enforced by prosecutors.

There’s one sure way to prevent Catholic officials from concealing current and future pedophile priests: reporting known and suspected abuse directly and immediately to the police. We hope parents, parishioners and the public call secular officials, not church officials, with any and all suspicions or knowledge they have about clergy sex crimes.

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Catholic Services Appeal Update: A Day Late and a Million Dollars Short

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

[with document]

Jennifer Haselberger

10/28/2015

Pastors of parishes in the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis this week received the following update on the status of the 2015 Catholic Services Appeal. Frankly, I am surprised that they are only $1,000,000 short, especially given the high legal costs associated with the bankruptcy and fighting the criminal charges leveled against the Archdiocesan corporation.

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Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis faces charges from Ramsey County Attorney

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

By Jean Hopfensperger Star Tribune OCTOBER 29, 2015

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis made its first appearance in Ramsey County District Court Thursday in a clergy sex abuse case spearheaded by the Ramsey County Attorney that is being watched nationally.

County Attorney John Choi criminally charged the archdiocese with “failing to protect children” last summer, citing the church’s oversight of the troubled former priest Curtis Wehmeyer. Wehmeyer was convicted of sexually abusing two sons of a parishioner in 2010, in a camper trailer parked outside his Blessed Sacrament Church in St. Paul.

It was the first time a U.S. archdiocese had been charged with such an offense, and just the second time a U.S. archdiocese as an institution has been criminally indicted on a charge of clergy abuse in its ranks, legal scholars say.

Clergy abuse cases historically have been directed at individual priests.

Ramsey County Chief Judge Teresa Warner presided over the brief hearing. She said she would hear both the criminal case — and the accompanying civil case — on the same schedule.

She set the next court date for Nov. 3.

At the time he announced the charges in June, Choi said, “The charges place responsibility for the abuse of those children not just on Wehmeyer, but on the archdiocese as well. He said the charges reflect a “disturbing institutional and systemic pattern of behavior, committed by the highest levels of [archdiocese] leadership.”

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MA–Cardinal should promote “Spotlight” film

MASSACHUSETTS
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 29, 2015

Statement by Ann Hagan Webb, former director, New England SNAP, (617-513-8442).

Next month, when “Spotlight” opens in theaters, Cardinal Sean O’Malley should order every church staff member to see it. That is the best, quickest and cheapest way he can protect more kids. It’s easy for bishops to claim they have changed, but acting with real openness would prove real change. Boston parents and parishioners can only benefit by learning more about the church’s on going abuse and cover up crisis. O’Malley should be promoting this movie if he truly cares about the safety of children.

For more on O’Malley’s troubling track record on abuse click here. www.snapnetwork.org/rome_question_o_malley_record or http://www.snapnetwork.org/ny_cardinal_o_malley_calls_for_compliance_not_enforcement

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A look at other lawsuits where the courts have ordered diocese officials to make records public.

CALIFORNIA
Monterey County Weekly

Posted: Thursday, October 29, 2015

by Mary Duan
and Sara Rubin

The Weekly’s legal battle for records is certainly not the first, nor will it be the last, in seeking to expose the extent of sexual abuse – and cover-ups by officials – in the Catholic church or anywhere. There are many more cases with diverse circumstances, but what they have in common is media outlets and victims sought to reveal confidential records, while church officials consistently opposed their release.

Here’s a look at several of the significant cases where documents were turned over to the public:

Boston:

After The Boston Globe revealed the extent of cover-ups of sexual abuse in the Boston Archdiocese in the early 2000s, the issue of sexual abuse in the Catholic church surged into international consciousness. Until then, sexual abuse in the church was widely understood by the public to be isolated, one-off incidents.

The Globe challenged a court order that allowed the archdiocese to file court documents under seal in lawsuit against Fr. John Geoghan, and in late 2001, a judge forced the Boston Archdiocese to turn over thousands of pages of records.

The newspaper discovered the archdiocese had privately settled sexual abuse claims concerning 70 of its priests – and that the bishop knew about Geoghan’s abuse for years.

According to theGlobe, Bishop Robert Banks’ own notes from a 1989 conversation with a psychiatrist treating the priest said, “You better clip his wings before there is an explosion… you can’t afford to have him in a parish.”

Los Angeles:

Faced with 508 lawsuits alleging sexual abuse by members of the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, the archdiocese agreed to pay $660 million to settle all of those cases in 2007. But the scandal wasn’t over: Attorneys for the plaintiffs demanded the release of personnel files of the accused priests.

The archdiocese appealed an order requiring the release of the records, but dozens of files of clergy, living and dead, were released under court order in 2013. They showed top officials protected accused priests.

“[The release of the files] concludes a sad and shameful chapter in the history of our Local Church,” according to a diocese statement. (The archdiocese made the clergy files available at http://clergyfiles.la-archdiocese.org.)

“The archdiocese again apologizes to all who were harmed in the past by clergy sexual abuse. We continue to pray earnestly that you and your families find emotional and spiritual healing.”

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After decades of impunity, this fugitive father’s past finally caught up with him

UNITED STATES/LATIN AMERICA
GlobalPost

Will Carless
Jimmy Chalk
Rob Harris
on Oct 29, 2015

Colombian priest Federico Fernandez-Baeza has been accused multiple times of molesting children. In 1987, a Texas grand jury indicted him on two second-degree felony counts of indecency with a child, charges that stemmed from his alleged abuse of two boys over two years.

But despite numerous allegations against him, Fernandez was allowed to leave the United States and move to Colombia after his former diocese of San Antonio reportedly paid more than $1 million to his alleged victims. In Colombia, he went right back into the church.

When GlobalPost went looking for Fernandez, we discovered not only was he still working for the Catholic church, he was now an administrator at a prestigious university, with regular access to students.

This is the story of how our attempt to confront Fernandez eventually forced the church into action. After decades of impunity, this fugitive father’s past finally caught up with him.

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Polish priest given suspended sentence for molesting girls

POLAND
Radio Poland

29.10.2015

A Polish priest has been given a suspended two-year prison sentence for molesting girls near Zamość, south east Poland.

Among other incidents, Father Stanisław G. (full name withheld under Polish privacy laws) fondled girls while preparing them for their first communion.

The priest will be put on a probationary period for five years.

Besides the suspended prison sentence, the clergyman has been given a lifetime ban from instructing or overseeing minors. He has also been fined PLN 3,000.

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AZ–Victims ask Phoenix bishop to help re predator

ARIZONA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Oct. 27

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those abused by Priests (314 566 9790, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A Phoenix priest is accused of ignoring reports that a now-admitted child molester made a boy strip naked and whipped him.

Fr. Patrick Crane is with Our Lady of Sorrows in Phoenix. Last month, he was interviewed by a detective because he worked for three years – from 2003 to 2006 – with Kevin Sloniker, who faces recent child sex charges in Washington and Idaho. Crane said he remembers part of the conversation with the boy.

For the safety of kids, we call on Phoenix Bishop Thomas Olmstead to suspend Fr. Crane.

And we call on Idaho Bishop Peter F. Christensen and Spokane Bishop Thomas Daly to use church websites, parish bulletins, pulpit announcements and personal appeals to reach out to others who may have seen, suspected or suffered crimes by Sloniker.

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