News Archive

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

August 6, 2019

Police recommends criminal charges against deputy health minister in multiple cases

TEL AVIV (ISRAEL)
Ynetnews

August 6, 2019

By Eli Senyor

The Israel Police announced on Tuesday there it has sufficient evidence to recomend charges against Deputy Minister of Health Yaakov Litzman for fraud, breach of trust and witness tampering in multiple cases including the extradition of former Melbourne school principal Malka Leifer, who is accused of child sex abuse.

The police also says it has evidence of Litzman’s culpability including charges of bribery and breach of trust in another case involving a the business of a close associate.

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.

Cincinnati auxiliary bishop did not disclose accusations against priest

CINCINNATI (OH)
Catholic News Agency

August 5, 2019

By Ed Condon

An auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, and member of the USCCB committee on child protection, is facing accusations that he failed to report to Cincinnati’s archbishop a series of allegations that a priest had engaged in inappropriate behavior with teenage boys.

After CNA presented its investigation to the archdiocese, a spokesperson said that Bishop Joseph R. Binzer would be removed from his position as head of priest personnel, effective immediately, while the archdiocese begins its own internal investigation.

The archdiocese has not removed Binzer, 64, from his post as archdiocesan vicar general, a position of authority second only to the archbishop. Binzer is also a member of the U.S. bishops’ conference committee for the protection of children and young people.

Binzer could face further disciplinary action by Cincinnati Archbishop Dennis Schnurr, and is likely to undergo a formal investigation under the provisions of “Vos estis lux mundi,” a recently promulgated policy for dealing with bishops who fail to properly handle allegations of sexual abuse or misconduct.

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.

McCarrick Letters Underscore the Importance of Education about Grooming

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

August 6, 2019

Letters released by the Associated Press today show how one powerful church official was not only able to groom children and adults for abuse but was able to do so openly. We hope that the publication of these letters will lead to both healing for the survivors and new opportunities for parents and the public to become educated about grooming.

The letters sent by disgraced former Cardinal Theodore McCarrick are textbook examples of grooming behavior. With his intimate personal communication, he was able to build relationships with boys and men that would eventually turn abusive. The Cardinal also ingratiated himself into the families of his victims. Grooming can be a key part of abuse, as it allows the perpetrator to get close to the target, allowing him/her to gain trust and familiarity that can be used to victimize the young and vulnerable.

We hope that these letters will encourage parents as well as members of the public, particularly those who work with children, to learn more about this subtle process. An excellent resource can be found here. The more informed that people are about behaviors like this, the better able they are to intervene in

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.

La Estafa Maestra, ¿un mito genial?

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
El Economista [Ciudad de México, Mexico]

August 6, 2019

By Alberto Aguirre

Read original article

Antes de comparecer ante el juzgador, para determinar el grado de su participación en la pandilla que organizó y gestionó la Estafa Maestra, Rosario Robles Berlanga ha decidido iniciar su defensa a través de una peculiar estrategia mediática, que buscaría presentarla como víctima de una “campaña sistemática de linchamiento y difamación”, orquestada por Animal Político y Reforma, entre otros informativos.

A la noticia del congelamiento de sus cuentas, la ex secretaria peñista reviró con una comunicación al presidente de la Suprema Corte de Justicia de la Nación, Arturo Zaldívar Lelo de Larrea, en la que condena el manejo de su caso, pero reitera su confianza en las autoridades judiciales.

En su reconstrucción de los hechos, Robles Berlanga adelantó que el OIC acreditó que sus colaboradores no incurrieron en irregularidades. Y que “nunca hubo denuncia penal o petición de algún procedimiento administrativo en mi contra durante los seis años que fui integrante del gabinete en el gobierno federal”.

Tras de la exculpación del OIC, la exfuncionaria requirió a las secretarías de la Función Pública y de Hacienda que informaran sobre los procesos en su contra. “La SFP me respondió que después de hacer la investigación que la ley mandata encontró que la evolución de mi patrimonio era coherente con mis ingresos y la PGR que no había ninguna denuncia o carpeta de investigación en contra mía”, sentenció.

Lo cierto es que sólo por los seis convenios formados en la Sedesol, la Auditoría Superior de la Federación interpuso seis denuncias penales, entre el 2015 y el 2016, contra funcionarios de esa dependencia, siete universidades y el Sistema de Radio y Televisión de Hidalgo, por presunto desvío de recursos.

Robles se fue a la Sedatu y con ella, cuatro funcionarios, que nuevamente firmaron convenios con instituciones educativas que resultaron observados en las auditorías del órgano fiscalizador.

La Estafa Maestra comenzó en Sedesol y se extendió a Sedatu. Al final, involucró a 16 funcionarios que firmaron 28 convenios por 3,258 millones de pesos con universidades y organismos de comunicación entre el 2013 y el 2016 en ambas dependencias. El esquema se repitió, en todos los casos: las dependencias hicieron convenios con las instituciones públicas para brindar servicios diversos y éstas a su vez subcontrataron empresas que simularon cumplir con los encargos o de plano no los realizaron… y los recursos públicos se esfumaron.

Emilio Zebadúa —quien fungió como oficial mayor en Sedesol y Sedatu mientras Robles Berlanga fue titular de ambas secretarías— es el funcionario de más alto nivel que firmó los convenios investigados por la Auditoría Superior de la Federación y denunciados ante la Fiscalía General de la República.

Como oficial mayor de Desarrollo Social firmó los primeros convenios protocolarios con la Universidad Autónoma de Morelos —el 1 de marzo del 2013— y la Universidad Autónoma del Estado de México, cinco días después. Al amparo de ese marco normativo, la dependencia suscribió al menos seis convenios con ambas instituciones, para monitorear y evaluar la Cruzada Nacional contra el Hambre, la principal estrategia de combate a la pobreza en el sexenio peñista.

En la Cuenta Pública del 2013, la ASF probó que los servicios contratados no se cumplieron y acreditó una “simulación de operaciones”, por lo que interpuso seis denuncias penales, entre el 2015 y el 2017. El 1 de septiembre del 2015, Zebadúa fue designado oficial mayor de Sedatu. Allí, siete funcionarios —entre los cuales, tres dependían directamente de Robles y uno de Zebadúa— firmaron al menos 12 convenios con universidades y organismos de comunicación entre el 2015 y el 2016, que sumaron 1,024 millones de pesos, de acuerdo con la información de la Cuenta Pública de ambos años.

En julio del 2017 el entonces subsecretario, Enrique González Tiburcio, y Armando Saldaña, director de Ordenamiento Territorial, presentaron sendas denuncias por la falsificación de sus firmas, ante el OIC de Sedatu, en el presunto convenio marco y el convenio específico suscritos con la Universidad Politécnica Francisco I. Madero, de Hidalgo.

El titular del OIC de Sedatu era Miguel Ángel Vega García, quien en ese caso particular, dio vista a la extinta PGR, cuya fiscalía especializada en delitos cometidos por servidores públicos inició procedimientos contra ambos funcionarios. Actualmente funge como director general de Transparencia, Anticorrupción y Función Pública de la Contraloría General del gobierno de Veracruz. El OIC de Sedesol, mientras Robles Berlanga fue titular de esa dependencia, fue Mauricio Razo Sánchez. Y en Sedatu lo hicieron titular del OIC del FIFONAFE, antes de que la Función Pública ordenara su destitución.

Robles Berlanga y Zebadúa González, para el ministerio público, tuvieron una coparticipación delictuosa en esta trama.

EFECTOS SECUNDARIOS

¿RUPTURA? Los industriales han perdido la paciencia ante lo que consideran inoperancia y cerrazón del titular de la Comisión Federal para la Protección de Riesgos Sanitarios (Cofepris), José Reyes Novelo Baeza. Y es que literalmente les fue notificada que cualquier tipo de reunión o interlocución, sobre cualquier tema, quedó cancelada hasta nuevo aviso. ¿Será?

FELIGRESÍA. Un reportaje de la periodista bonaerense Miriam Lewin para el canal TN reveló un capítulo inédito en la historia de Joaquín, el Chapo, Guzmán: sus vínculos con el Instituto Religioso Clerical Hermanos Discípulos de Jesús de San Juan Bautista, agrupación surgida hace 25 años en la provincia de Salta, al amparo del padre Agustín Rosa Torino y la monja María Alicia Pacheco (conocida como la hermana Micaela) quienes hace tres años estuvieron sujetos a proceso penal, por denuncias por abusos sexuales contra religiosos y feligreses. Ya en el 2015, el Vaticano intervino a los Discípulos de San Juan Bautista, desplazó de la conducción del instituto a sus superiores, incluido Rosa, y abrió una investigación sobre los manejos financieros de la institución religiosa. Ahora se sabe que trasladaron grandes sumas de efectivo desde México hasta Argentina, camufladas en una imagen de la Virgen de Guadalupe para el Cártel de Sinaloa, que algunos “buenos benefactores” pedían a Rosa Torino y a otros miembros de la congregación que los bendijeran antes de los operativos importantes y que el famoso capo ofreció pagar la reparación del techo de un convento, calculada en 50,000 dólares, pero fue reaprehendido en el 2015.

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

SCANDAL IN SOUTH CAROLINA

NEW YORK (NY)
First Things

August 6, 2019

By Christopher Tollefsen

A priest was recently placed on administrative leave in my own Diocese of Charleston. Fr. Raymond Flores, parochial vicar at St. Mary Help of Christians Catholic Church in Aiken, South Carolina, was discovered to have been exchanging explicit images with a minor on Grindr. Because the minor had listed himself on Grindr as age eighteen, however, Fr. Flores will not be charged.

It was subsequently revealed that in 2014, Fr. Flores was removed from ministry in the Diocese of Brooklyn for an “inappropriate relationship with a consenting adult.” According to a statement from that diocese, “after years of counseling and discernment, Fr. Flores expressed to us that he wished to return to active ministry, which required that he accept celibacy.”

On St. Mary’s website, the church pastor, Fr. Gregory Wilson, wrote:

Although Father Raymond’s past behavior was clearly inappropriate for a priest, albeit not unlawful, it is now an internal personnel matter. I hope and pray that you will respect the privacy of and be in prayer for all involved in the incident, as well as for me and our entire parish and school community.

Fr. Wilson’s statement echoed a Diocese of Charleston press release, which stated: “Although Father’s past conduct is clearly inappropriate for a priest, albeit not unlawful, it is now an internal personnel matter.”

There is one element of truth in all this: The minor’s privacy, and that of his family, should be respected. Neither his name nor any further details of his identity should be sought after or divulged. But in several other respects, these statements are misguided. Their guiding theme is privacy, but the Church has a responsibility to transparency that must not be ignored.

The first step should be greater forthrightness about the gravity of Fr. Flores’s transgressions. The declaration that his actions were “inappropriate…albeit not unlawful” is a misleading understatement. Sexual sins by clergymen, who are consecrated to fulfill in their persons Our Lord’s purposes, are forms of sacrilege. They thus grievously harm the Body of Christ, the Church. And “inappropriate” barely begins to describe the irreverence of a priest consecrating the sacred Body and Blood, hearing confession, and administering the other sacraments after sharing obscene images on social media.

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.

State’s clergy abuse hotline got 1,900 calls over first year

HARRISBURG (PA)
Associated Press

August 6, 2019

Pennsylvania’s top state prosecutor says investigations remain underway after 1,862 calls were made to his office’s clergy abuse hotline in the 12 months since a landmark grand jury report exposed decades of child abuse within the state’s Roman Catholic dioceses.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro said Tuesday that about 90 percent of those calls concerned allegations of abuse or cover-ups within the Catholic church. The rest were about institutions or people outside the Catholic church.

Shapiro calls it “a profoundly impactful experience” that he’s been stopped daily by people who are grateful for the investigation or want to tell him their own stories of victimization.

Pennsylvania dioceses have been evaluating claims and making payments through compensation funds established in the wake of the report.

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

Baltimore Archdiocese must expand ‘accused’ list

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

August 6, 2019

Statement by David Clohessy of SNAP (314-566-9790)

We belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Our mission is to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded, expose the truth and deter future wrongdoing.

We’re here to warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about two potentially dangerous men, both connected to – or formerly connected to – the Catholic church in Maryland and DC.

The first is an admitted predator priest who now lives in Washington DC, was in Baltimore as recently as 2003, and held a church leadership post just a few years ago. He’s supposedly been “permanently removed from ministry,” according to a news report and a New York-based Catholic order known as the Marists. (See 10/19/93 Baltimore Sun)

Home

In 1995, Atlanta Catholic officials announced that Fr. Philip S. Gage had been removed two years earlier from his post at the Marist School because of allegations that he molested a 17 year old student there in 1989. Later, church staff learned of another possible victim who was 18 at the time of the alleged abuse. They reportedly sent 7,000 letters to alums about the abuse report, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution. http://www.bishop-accountability.org/news3/1995_05_19_White_SchoolReveals_Philip_Gage_1.htm

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.

John Patrick Grace: Bishop’s book sets clerical abuse scandals in context

HUNTINGTON (WV)
Herald Dispatch

August 6, 2019

By John Patrick Grace

Catholics across the U.S., just as here in West Virginia, are now reading a 103-page book titled “Letter to a Suffering Church,” distributed in bulk in thousands of parishes. The author is Los Angeles Auxiliary Bishop Robert Barron, formerly rector of Mundelein Seminary just northwest of Chicago.

Barron readily admits the gravity of the abuse scandals that have ravaged Catholic parishes in dozens of countries and which, he says, have caused 37 percent of practicing U.S. Catholics to consider leaving their church.

While evoking the outrageous abuse behavior of former Washington, D.C., Cardinal Theodore McCarrick and cases of abusive priests and negligent bishops over the last six decades or so, Barron’s book reminds us of periodic abuses that have marked the long history of the church.

The worldwide clerical sexual abuse crisis of our day is part of a pattern that goes back to Old Testament times and has occurred also in Christian circles right from the first century A.D.

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

Victims seek archbishop’s help, Group wants all Maryland predators ‘outed’

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

July 29, 2019

Victims seek archbishop’s help

Group wants all Maryland predators ‘outed’

Some priests aren’t on his ‘credibly accused’ list

They’re deemed ‘credibly accused’ by other bishops

SNAP: “Stop splitting hairs start protecting kids”

One of cleric, an admitted predator, has a church post

All the ‘missing’ prists were in MD but were ‘outed’ elsewhere

WHAT
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will reveal that some Maryland predator priests are not on the archdiocesan ‘accused’ list. And they will challenge the Baltimore’s archbishop to
–add them to the archdiocesan website, and
–post the alleged offenders’ photos, whereabouts and full work histories, so kids will be safer and victims will feel validated.
Victims will also disclose that previously-hidden presence of an admitted abusive cleric who is in DC, was in Baltimore, and recently held a church leadership position.
The group will also call on Maryland lawmakers to reform or repeal the state’s “archaic, predator-friendly” laws (like the statute of limitations) and set up a two or three year ‘civil window,’ to enable victims to protect kids by exposing wrongdoers in court.

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

Disgraced Jesuit janitor hired despite molestation conviction, named in new 1980s abuse claim

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Times Picayune

August 5, 2019

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Former New Orleans baseball star Peter Modica walked into a Jefferson Parish courtroom on May 9, 1963, and admitted that he had performed oral sex on two 13-year-old boys several weeks earlier at the Metairie playground he supervised.

After serving five years probation, he somehow landed a job as a head janitor at the all-boys Jesuit High School, where he abused minors again.

A 49-year-old man who says he was 11 when Modica began molesting him on Jesuit’s campus in the early 1980s publicly recounted his ordeal for the first time Monday, nearly 11 months after another man who said he was victimized by Modica went public with the financial settlement he received from the Jesuit order, which runs the school.

Speaking at the office of his attorney, Roger Stetter, who frequently represents people abused by Catholic clergy, the man discussed his intention to file a lawsuit against Jesuit in the coming days.

The man, who asked to not be named because he’s told only a handful of people about his molestation, said the leaders of the 170-year-old, all-boys school owe him damages because they failed to protect him from Modica, who they should have known was a child predator.

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

Ex-cardinal’s letters to victims show signs of grooming

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

August 6, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

At first glance, the handwritten postcards and letters look innocuous, even warm, sometimes signed off by “Uncle T.” or “Your uncle, Father Ted.”

But taken in context, the correspondence penned by disgraced ex-Cardinal Theodore McCarrick to the young men he is accused of sexually abusing or harassing is a window into the way a predator grooms his prey, according to two abuse prevention experts who reviewed it for The Associated Press. Full of flattery, familiarity and boasts about his own power, the letters provide visceral evidence of how a globe-trotting bishop made young, vulnerable men feel special — and then allegedly took advantage of them.

The AP is publishing correspondence McCarrick wrote to three men ahead of the promised release of the Vatican’s own report into who knew what and when about his efforts to bed would-be priests. Access to an archbishop for young men seeking to become priests “is a key piece of the grooming process here,” said one of the experts, Monica Applewhite.

Pope Francis defrocked McCarrick, 89, in February after a church investigation determined he sexually abused minors as well as adult seminarians. The case has created a credibility crisis for the Catholic hierarchy , since McCarrick’s misconduct was reported to some U.S. and Vatican higher-ups, but he nevertheless remained an influential cardinal until his downfall last year.

McCarrick has declined to comment on his case, except to say in an initial statement last year that he was innocent but accepted the Holy See’s decision to remove him from ministry. McCarrick lawyer J. Michael Ritty declined to comment on the correspondence.

The testimony of James Grein, 61, the first child McCarrick baptized, was key to the Vatican case. The son of close family friends, Grein told church investigators that McCarrick began sexually abusing him when he was 11, including during confession and at family weddings and holiday celebrations.

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.

Shake-up at archdiocese: Cincinnati’s No. 2 bishop failed to share complaints about priest

CINCINNATI (OH)
Cincinnati Enquirer

August 5, 2019

By Dan Horn

Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Binzer will no longer oversee priest personnel matters in Cincinnati because he failed to report accusations that a West Side priest behaved improperly with children.

Binzer’s removal is part of a shake-up announced Monday at the Archdiocese of Cincinnati over its handling of misconduct complaints against the former pastor of St. Ignatius of Loyola in Green Township.

The pastor, Geoff Drew, is now on leave while the church investigates the complaints.

“It’s obvious that in this matter we have handled things very, very poorly,” Archbishop Dennis Schnurr said in a statement Monday. “I’m sorry for the pain that this has caused so many people.”

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

Priests accused of abusing deaf Argentine students on trial

MENDOZA (ARGENTINA)
The Associated Press

August 5, 2019

Downcast and sitting in a wheelchair as his historic trial began Monday in Argentina, the Rev. Nicola Corradi didn’t look like the man former students at an institute for the deaf say was the force behind years of “indescribable” torment through alleged sexual abuse.

The 83-year-old Italian priest, along with the Rev. Horacio Corbacho, 59, and Armando Gómez, 63, are being tried for 28 cases of alleged abuse against ex-students at the Antonio Próvolo Institute for Deaf and Hearing Impaired Children in Mendoza province. They face prison sentences of up to 20 years in some cases, up to 50 years in others.

The alleged abuse took place between 2004 and 2016, and the case gained world attention when it emerged that Corradi had faced similar accusations at the Antonio Próvolo institute in Verona, Italy, and Pope Francis had been notified the Italian priest was running a similar center in Argentina.

Corbacho has pleaded not guilty to the sexual abuse charges, while Corradi and Gómez have not entered pleas. The trial is expected to last more than a month.

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

Pennsylvania SNAP Leaders Share Reflections One Year after PA Grand Jury Report

PENNSYLVANIA
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

August 5, 2019

The one-year anniversary of the scathing grand jury report on six Pennsylvania Catholic dioceses is fast approaching. The report triggered tremendous strides on a horrifying topic that was once never discussed. Since Aug 14, 2018, when Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro released the 884-page findings, more than a dozen states’ attorneys general have since launched their own probes into clergy sex abuse cases and set up dedicated phone numbers for victims. Here in Pennsylvania, more than 1,400 new calls have been received by the Attorney General’s hotline. This speaks volumes to the tremendous amount of effort that is going into exposing the perpetrators and those who shielded them.

The aftermath from the grand jury report also saw a federal criminal probe introduced. Last October, federal prosecutors issued subpoenas to all eight Roman Catholic dioceses and the two Eastern Catholic archeparchies in Pennsylvania, seeking years of internal Church records. Authorities have yet to release any details of that investigation. However, it is fair to say that very few people have not heard of the details contained in the grand jury report.

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

Female teacher who abused vulnerable girls jailed for more than seven years

AUSTRALIA
The West Australian

August 2, 2019

By Pierra Willix

One of two female students sexually abused by her young female teacher says she is now too scared to enter a classroom.

The teacher, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was today sentenced to seven and a half years in jail for the crime.

The terrified student, who was 17 at the time of the abuse, wrote to the court saying she had put off university studies in fear of being back in a classroom.

In the victim impact statement, the girl said she had been made to believe that what was happening between her and the teacher was “normal”, but she was now struggling to come to terms with the abuse.

“She is largely carrying the burden of what happened to her,” Judge Ronald Birmingham said.

The arts teacher, who cannot be named for legal reasons, was working at a southern suburbs school when she targeted the two girls between 2015 and 2017.

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

New Pentagon program aims to capture serial sex offenders with victims’ confidential help

WASHINGTON (DC)
USA TODAY

August 5, 2019

By Tom Vanden Brook

The Pentagon is targeting serial sex offenders with a new program that tracks confidential information provided by victims.

The Pentagon, which has long struggled with sexual assault in its ranks, is hoping that victims who have been reluctant to file formal complaints will do so if they know their assailant has assaulted another victim.

The Catch Program debuted Monday across the military and seeks to aid troops who file sexual assault complaints known as restricted reports. Such reports do not trigger an official investigation but allow the victim to receive health care, legal advice and advocacy. The program began receiving some reports June 19, according to Jessica Maxwell, a Pentagon spokeswoman. Several victims have sought to enter information into the system about their assailant.

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.

Baltimore Archdiocese must expand ‘accused’ list

BALTIMORE (MD)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

August 5, 2019

Statement by David Clohessy of SNAP (314-566-9790)

We belong to a support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Our mission is to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded, expose the truth and deter future wrongdoing.

We’re here to warn parents, parishioners, police, prosecutors and the public about two potentially dangerous men, both connected to – or formerly connected to – the Catholic church in Maryland and DC.

The first is an admitted predator priest who now lives in Washington DC, was in Baltimore as recently as 2003, and held a church leadership post just a few years ago. He’s supposedly been “permanently removed from ministry,” according to a news report and a New York-based Catholic order known as the Marists. (See 10/19/93 Baltimore Sun)

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.

Archdiocese of Cincinnati Informed of Allegations against Drew 6 Years Ago, SNAP Reacts

CINCINNATI (OH)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

August 5, 2019

For immediate release: August 5, 2019

It is good that church officials in Cincinnati are looking into the actions that a local auxiliary bishop took in response to hearing allegations that a priest “violated child protection rules.” It is critical that all allegations involving children are routed immediately to police, and so it is also a good thing that Catholic leaders are investigating a possible delay in the reporting of those allegations.

At the same time, we are dismayed that this investigation is happening now, six years after Auxiliary Bishop Joseph Binzer was first informed of inappropriate behavior by Fr. Geoff Drew. Church officials pledged in 2002 to treat all allegations of clergy abuse with zero tolerance, yet we constantly see and hear about situations where too much tolerance was given to priests accused of inappropriate contact with children. Vigilance is what keeps children and the vulnerable protected, and church officials in Cincinnati were anything but vigilant in this case.

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

Former Geelong Grammar music chief abused girl after giving evidence at sex abuse commission

AUSTRALIA
The Age

August 2, 2019

By Erin Pearson

A former head of music at Geelong Grammar and Order of Australia recipient has been jailed after admitting to sexually abusing a young girl in 2017 and 2018.

Eminent musician and composer Malcolm John will spend his 85th birthday in prison after pleading guilty to three counts of sexual abuse of the eight-year-old girl.

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

August 5, 2019

Caso Provolo: condenan a dos sacerdotes católicos a más de 40 años de prisión por abuso sexual a 25 menores en un internado para sordos en Argentina

(ARGENTINA)
BBC [London, England]

August 5, 2019

By Veronica Smink

Read original article

En uno de los casos más escabrosos que involucra a la Iglesia católica, dos sacerdotes que dirigían un internado para sordos en Argentina fueron condenados este lunes por abusar sexualmente de 25 niños y adolescentes que estaban a su cuidado.

El sacerdote italiano Nicola Corradi, de 83 años, el principal responsable del Instituto Antonio Provolo para Sordos en la provincia centro-occidental de Mendoza, fue sentenciado a 42 años de prisión.

Su segundo, el cura Horacio Corbacho, de 59 años, recibió una pena de 45 años de prisión.

En tanto, el jardinero del instituto, Armando Gómez, que fue juzgado junto con los religiosos, también fue condenado a 18 años de cárcel por abusar de dos menores.

Dos monjas que están detenidas, acusadas de haber sido partícipes necesarias en los abusos (una de ellas enfrenta cargos por presuntamente haber cometido abusos ella misma), serán juzgadas en un proceso separado.

Lo que hace especialmente desgarrador a lo ocurrido en el Instituto Provolo de Mendoza no es solamente que las víctimas eran chicos, incluyendo a pequeños de hasta 4 años.

También eran niños que, por su discapacidad, no podían comunicar lo que les estaba sucediendo. Y debido a que muchos venían de familias humildes, no tenían otra opción más que dormir en el instituto.

Pero hay un dato más que ahonda el horror y que le ha dado trascendencia internacional a este juicio.

El principal acusado, Nicola Corradi, ya había sido culpado de cometer abusos en la sede central del Instituto Provolo, en Verona, Italia, mucho tiempo antes de llegar a Argentina.

Esas denuncias, que tienen más de una década, llegaron incluso hasta las manos del propio papa Francisco. Sin embargo, el Vaticano no hizo nada, denuncian las víctimas.

Fueron las autoridades argentinas las que ordenaron el cierre del Instituto en la ciudad mendocina de Luján de Cuyo en 2016 y detuvieron a Corradi, a Corbacho, y a otros 12 sospechosos (entre ellos las monjas Kosaka Kumiko y Asunción Martínez).

La justicia argentina también investiga una serie de abusos cometidos en otro Instituto Provolo, el de la ciudad de La Plata, capital de la provincia de Buenos Aires, que Corradi dirigió entre 1970 y 1997.

“Encubrimiento”

Tanto las víctimas italianas del Instituto Provolo como las de las dos sedes argentinas sostienen que la Iglesia católica sabía que Corradi era un pedófilo y no obstante lo pusieron a cargo de niñas y niños sordos en Argentina.

En 2017 el obispo de Verona, Guiseppe Zenti, se desligó de responsabilidades, afirmando que la curia no tenía poder sobre el Instituto Provolo porque es manejado por una congregación “autónoma”.

Esa congregación es la Compañía de María para la Educación de los Sordomudos o Sociedad de María, fundada en 1840 por el sacerdote italiano Antonio Provolo, que, según Zenti, depende directamente del Vaticano.

Hasta ahora la Santa Sede no ha hablado públicamente sobre el caso. BBC Mundo contactó a la oficina de prensa del Vaticano pero de momento no obtuvo respuesta.

Las primeras denuncias sobre lo que ocurría en el Instituto Provolo de Verona se dieron a conocer en 2009, gracias a una investigación de la revista italiana L’Espresso de Milán. 

Un grupo de 67 exalumnos revelaron los abusos a los que habían sido sometidos entre las décadas de 1950 y 1980 y acusaron al Vaticano de “encubrir” a los abusadores.

Si bien se denunciaron decenas de delitos, por el tiempo transcurrido la justicia no pudo intervenir. Sin embargo, las víctimas, agrupadas en una asociación, presentaron sus denuncias ante la Iglesia para que actuara.

Entre la veintena de sacerdotes acusados de haber cometido abusos estaban Corradi y otros dos curas que también se habían mudado a Argentina en los años 70: Eliseo Primati y Luigi Spinelli.

El primero, de 83 años, codirigió el Instituto de La Plata junto con Corradi, y también es requerido por la Justicia argentina por abusos presuntamente cometidos durante sus casi cuatro décadas allí.

Sin embargo, el prelado retornó a Italia a finales de 2017 (un año después de que estallara el escándalo en Mendoza) y está viviendo nuevamente en la sede central del Provolo en Verona, por lo que la Justicia argentina ha pedido su extradición.

El papa Francisco

El caso afecta de cerca al papa Francisco, el exarzorbispo de Buenos Aires que fue elegido cabeza de la Iglesia católica en 2013.

En 2014, la Asociación Sordos Antonio Provolo de Verona, que agrupa a las víctimas italianas, realizó un video donde dio a conocer el nombre de los presuntos abusadores de esa institución, incluyendo a los tres que para entoncesestaban ya en Argentina.

Y unos meses más tarde, uno de los miembros de la asociación, Giuseppe Consiglio, logró organizar un encuentro personal con Francisco y le entregó en mano una carta con la lista de los acusados.

Sin embargo, el papa argentino recién ordenó una investigación preliminar sobre las denuncias de abuso en el Instituto Provolo de Mendoza en 2017, un año después de que los sacerdotes fueran arrestados y ese internado fuera cerrado por las autoridades argentinas debido al gran número de testimonios sobre los horrores que estaban ocurriendo allí.

La investigación canónica continúa y, tras la condena de la justicia argentina los sacerdotes Corradi y Corbacho podrían recibir la pena máxima de la Iglesia: la excomulgación.

El caso había llegado hasta la Justicia gracias a la intervención de una legisladora mendocina, la senadoraDaniela García

Durante un acto público sobre derechos del niño, en noviembre de 2016, el presidente del Movimiento de Sordos de Mendoza le contó, con ayuda de un intérprete, lo que ocurría en el Provolo.

García alertó a la gobernación y al procurador, quien puso un fiscal a cargo de la investigación.

La Justicia entrevistó a decenas de presuntas víctimas -en muchos casos con la ayuda de intérpretes-, detuvo a 14 personas y ordenó el cierre del instituto. Los testimonios que se recogieron revelaron más de una década de abusos contra los menores.

Las autoridades mendocinas también empezaron a recibir testimonios de vejaciones ocurridas en la sede de La Plata del Instituto Provolo, lo que dio pie a la apertura de la segunda investigación allí.

Desgarrador

Las cosas que descubrieron los investigadores dan escalofríos.

El juez de la causa en La Plata constató que los abusos allí se cometían los sábados, porque era el “día en que disminuía el número de alumnos internados y solo quedaban los que no tenían familia“.

Yoel, uno de los chicos abusados en Mendoza, contó al diario local Los Andes que allí los abusos “siempre eran de noche” y que a los niños que dormían en el instituto se los obligaba a quitarse los audífonos para ir a dormir, para que no escucharan los gritos.

Tampoco se le permitía a los niños utilizar el lenguaje de señas, ya que el método de enseñanza desarrollado por Antonio Provolo busca sustituir la mímica por la palabra. Por ello, algunos de los niños más pequeños no podían comunicarse con sus padres.

Yoel también reveló que a los niños más grandes se los obligaba a abusar de los más pequeños, mientras sus cuidadores miraban.

Varias de las víctimas contaron que sus abusadores amenazaron con matar a sus madres si revelaban lo que estaba pasando.

Paola, la mamá de una exalumna abusada, dijo a Los Andes que Corradi “ataba de pies y manos” a su hija para abusar de ella.

Las historias de horror involucran también a Corbacho y a otros tres hombres que trabajaban en el Instituto: el jardinero Armando Gómez, un cuidador cuya identidad no se ha revelado porque es considerado inimputable y un empleado administrativo llamado Jorge Bordón.

Bordón, conocido como “el monaguillo”, confesó haber cometido 11 delitoscontra cinco víctimas y fue condenado a 10 años de prisión en 2018.

Los demás acusados siempre mantuvieron su inocencia y se negaron a hablar con la prensa.

El juicio que concluyó este lunes fue uno de tres causas que conforman el “Caso Provolo” de Mendoza.

La “monja mala”

La segunda causa involucra a Kumiko Kosaka, una monja nacida en Japón y criada en Argentina a la que muchos de los testigos destacaron por su crueldad.

Kosaka era llamada “la monja mala” porque se dice que azotaba a los niños, pero los crímenes de los que se le acusa van mucho más allá de la violencia física.

Tiene seis imputaciones como partícipe primaria en los abusos cometidos por los curas pedófilos. Y también se le acusa de haber abusado ella misma.

El abogado querellante Sergio Salinas, de la ONG Xumek, dijo al canal de noticias TN que Kosaka golpeaba a los niños “para ponerlos a prueba”. 

“Los golpeaba sistemáticamente y el más sumiso era entregado a los violadores. El que se rebelaba se salvaba de los abusos”, afirmó Salinas.

La monja, que cumple prisión domiciliaria después de haber pagado una millonaria fianza, asegura ser inocente y ha acusado a los intérpretes de los testigos de tergiversar sus dichos. Incluso publicó un video en el que pedía un “juicio justo” y en el que aseguraba que las pruebas en su contra son “falsas”.

Sin embargo, algunas de sus presuntas víctimas dieron detalles escabrosos de sus denuncias.

Una aseguró que Kosaka la “entregó” a Corbacho para que abusara de ella.

Y otra dijo que le colocó pañales para ocultar la sangre de sus heridas tras ser violada, cuando tenía años.

Una segunda monja, Asunción Martínez, será juzgada en una tercera causa, junto con exdirectoras y personal del Provolo de Mendoza.

En tanto, también se espera que llegue a juicio el caso por los abusos en el Provolo de La Plata, que involucra a Corradi, Primati y a un empleado administrativo.

*Esta nota se publicó originalmente el 5 de agosto de 2019 y ha sido actualizada con motivo de la condena a los acusados.

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

Priest sex abuse report to be released by Burlington diocese before end of month

BURLINGTON (VT)
Burlington Free Press

August 6, 2019

By Elizabeth Murray

The report commissioned by Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington Bishop Christopher to examine personnel files of Vermont priests for reports of child sex abuse will be published before the end of the month, he said.

According to a statement issued by the appointed lay committee, the final draft of the report is expected to be approved this week and will then be provided to the diocese.

Statements by Coyne and the lay committee come amidst criticism from the international nonprofit support group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) for failing, up to this point, to publicly name the priests against whom abuse allegations have been substantiated. Last week, the Catholic Diocese of Manchester published a list of priests accused of sexually abusing children.

David Clohessy, a SNAP volunteer leader from Missouri, spoke to reporters outside the Diocese on Monday afternoon while holding a sign that showed the link to SNAP’s website, SNAPnetwork.org. He accused the Diocese of dragging its heels in releasing the report, thus further endangering children that may be exposed to the priests in the community.

“The main issue is that child molesters rarely stop,” Clohessy said. “So, while Bishop Coyne will puff out his chest and say, ‘None of these men are in active ministry,’ literally as we speak, one of them could be helping out at a summer camp as a soccer coach.

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.

Caso Provolo: condenan a dos sacerdotes católicos a más de 40 años de prisión por abuso sexual a 25 menores en un internado para sordos en Argentina

(ARGENTINA)
BBC [London, England]

August 5, 2019

By Veronica Smink

Read original article

En uno de los casos más escabrosos que involucra a la Iglesia católica, dos sacerdotes que dirigían un internado para sordos en Argentina fueron condenados este lunes por abusar sexualmente de 25 niños y adolescentes que estaban a su cuidado.

El sacerdote italiano Nicola Corradi, de 83 años, el principal responsable del Instituto Antonio Provolo para Sordos en la provincia centro-occidental de Mendoza, fue sentenciado a 42 años de prisión.

Su segundo, el cura Horacio Corbacho, de 59 años, recibió una pena de 45 años de prisión.

En tanto, el jardinero del instituto, Armando Gómez, que fue juzgado junto con los religiosos, también fue condenado a 18 años de cárcel por abusar de dos menores.

Dos monjas que están detenidas, acusadas de haber sido partícipes necesarias en los abusos (una de ellas enfrenta cargos por presuntamente haber cometido abusos ella misma), serán juzgadas en un proceso separado.

Lo que hace especialmente desgarrador a lo ocurrido en el Instituto Provolo de Mendoza no es solamente que las víctimas eran chicos, incluyendo a pequeños de hasta 4 años.

También eran niños que, por su discapacidad, no podían comunicar lo que les estaba sucediendo. Y debido a que muchos venían de familias humildes, no tenían otra opción más que dormir en el instituto.

Pero hay un dato más que ahonda el horror y que le ha dado trascendencia internacional a este juicio.

El principal acusado, Nicola Corradi, ya había sido culpado de cometer abusos en la sede central del Instituto Provolo, en Verona, Italia, mucho tiempo antes de llegar a Argentina.

Esas denuncias, que tienen más de una década, llegaron incluso hasta las manos del propio papa Francisco. Sin embargo, el Vaticano no hizo nada, denuncian las víctimas.

Fueron las autoridades argentinas las que ordenaron el cierre del Instituto en la ciudad mendocina de Luján de Cuyo en 2016 y detuvieron a Corradi, a Corbacho, y a otros 12 sospechosos (entre ellos las monjas Kosaka Kumiko y Asunción Martínez).

La justicia argentina también investiga una serie de abusos cometidos en otro Instituto Provolo, el de la ciudad de La Plata, capital de la provincia de Buenos Aires, que Corradi dirigió entre 1970 y 1997.

“Encubrimiento”

Tanto las víctimas italianas del Instituto Provolo como las de las dos sedes argentinas sostienen que la Iglesia católica sabía que Corradi era un pedófilo y no obstante lo pusieron a cargo de niñas y niños sordos en Argentina.

En 2017 el obispo de Verona, Guiseppe Zenti, se desligó de responsabilidades, afirmando que la curia no tenía poder sobre el Instituto Provolo porque es manejado por una congregación “autónoma”.

Esa congregación es la Compañía de María para la Educación de los Sordomudos o Sociedad de María, fundada en 1840 por el sacerdote italiano Antonio Provolo, que, según Zenti, depende directamente del Vaticano.

Hasta ahora la Santa Sede no ha hablado públicamente sobre el caso. BBC Mundo contactó a la oficina de prensa del Vaticano pero de momento no obtuvo respuesta.

Las primeras denuncias sobre lo que ocurría en el Instituto Provolo de Verona se dieron a conocer en 2009, gracias a una investigación de la revista italiana L’Espresso de Milán. 

Un grupo de 67 exalumnos revelaron los abusos a los que habían sido sometidos entre las décadas de 1950 y 1980 y acusaron al Vaticano de “encubrir” a los abusadores.

Si bien se denunciaron decenas de delitos, por el tiempo transcurrido la justicia no pudo intervenir. Sin embargo, las víctimas, agrupadas en una asociación, presentaron sus denuncias ante la Iglesia para que actuara.

Entre la veintena de sacerdotes acusados de haber cometido abusos estaban Corradi y otros dos curas que también se habían mudado a Argentina en los años 70: Eliseo Primati y Luigi Spinelli.

El primero, de 83 años, codirigió el Instituto de La Plata junto con Corradi, y también es requerido por la Justicia argentina por abusos presuntamente cometidos durante sus casi cuatro décadas allí.

Sin embargo, el prelado retornó a Italia a finales de 2017 (un año después de que estallara el escándalo en Mendoza) y está viviendo nuevamente en la sede central del Provolo en Verona, por lo que la Justicia argentina ha pedido su extradición.

El papa Francisco

El caso afecta de cerca al papa Francisco, el exarzorbispo de Buenos Aires que fue elegido cabeza de la Iglesia católica en 2013.

En 2014, la Asociación Sordos Antonio Provolo de Verona, que agrupa a las víctimas italianas, realizó un video donde dio a conocer el nombre de los presuntos abusadores de esa institución, incluyendo a los tres que para entoncesestaban ya en Argentina.

Y unos meses más tarde, uno de los miembros de la asociación, Giuseppe Consiglio, logró organizar un encuentro personal con Francisco y le entregó en mano una carta con la lista de los acusados.

Sin embargo, el papa argentino recién ordenó una investigación preliminar sobre las denuncias de abuso en el Instituto Provolo de Mendoza en 2017, un año después de que los sacerdotes fueran arrestados y ese internado fuera cerrado por las autoridades argentinas debido al gran número de testimonios sobre los horrores que estaban ocurriendo allí.

La investigación canónica continúa y, tras la condena de la justicia argentina los sacerdotes Corradi y Corbacho podrían recibir la pena máxima de la Iglesia: la excomulgación.

El caso había llegado hasta la Justicia gracias a la intervención de una legisladora mendocina, la senadoraDaniela García

Durante un acto público sobre derechos del niño, en noviembre de 2016, el presidente del Movimiento de Sordos de Mendoza le contó, con ayuda de un intérprete, lo que ocurría en el Provolo.

García alertó a la gobernación y al procurador, quien puso un fiscal a cargo de la investigación.

La Justicia entrevistó a decenas de presuntas víctimas -en muchos casos con la ayuda de intérpretes-, detuvo a 14 personas y ordenó el cierre del instituto. Los testimonios que se recogieron revelaron más de una década de abusos contra los menores.

Las autoridades mendocinas también empezaron a recibir testimonios de vejaciones ocurridas en la sede de La Plata del Instituto Provolo, lo que dio pie a la apertura de la segunda investigación allí.

Desgarrador

Las cosas que descubrieron los investigadores dan escalofríos.

El juez de la causa en La Plata constató que los abusos allí se cometían los sábados, porque era el “día en que disminuía el número de alumnos internados y solo quedaban los que no tenían familia“.

Yoel, uno de los chicos abusados en Mendoza, contó al diario local Los Andes que allí los abusos “siempre eran de noche” y que a los niños que dormían en el instituto se los obligaba a quitarse los audífonos para ir a dormir, para que no escucharan los gritos.

Tampoco se le permitía a los niños utilizar el lenguaje de señas, ya que el método de enseñanza desarrollado por Antonio Provolo busca sustituir la mímica por la palabra. Por ello, algunos de los niños más pequeños no podían comunicarse con sus padres.

Yoel también reveló que a los niños más grandes se los obligaba a abusar de los más pequeños, mientras sus cuidadores miraban.

Varias de las víctimas contaron que sus abusadores amenazaron con matar a sus madres si revelaban lo que estaba pasando.

Paola, la mamá de una exalumna abusada, dijo a Los Andes que Corradi “ataba de pies y manos” a su hija para abusar de ella.

Las historias de horror involucran también a Corbacho y a otros tres hombres que trabajaban en el Instituto: el jardinero Armando Gómez, un cuidador cuya identidad no se ha revelado porque es considerado inimputable y un empleado administrativo llamado Jorge Bordón.

Bordón, conocido como “el monaguillo”, confesó haber cometido 11 delitoscontra cinco víctimas y fue condenado a 10 años de prisión en 2018.

Los demás acusados siempre mantuvieron su inocencia y se negaron a hablar con la prensa.

El juicio que concluyó este lunes fue uno de tres causas que conforman el “Caso Provolo” de Mendoza.

La “monja mala”

La segunda causa involucra a Kumiko Kosaka, una monja nacida en Japón y criada en Argentina a la que muchos de los testigos destacaron por su crueldad.

Kosaka era llamada “la monja mala” porque se dice que azotaba a los niños, pero los crímenes de los que se le acusa van mucho más allá de la violencia física.

Tiene seis imputaciones como partícipe primaria en los abusos cometidos por los curas pedófilos. Y también se le acusa de haber abusado ella misma.

El abogado querellante Sergio Salinas, de la ONG Xumek, dijo al canal de noticias TN que Kosaka golpeaba a los niños “para ponerlos a prueba”. 

“Los golpeaba sistemáticamente y el más sumiso era entregado a los violadores. El que se rebelaba se salvaba de los abusos”, afirmó Salinas.

La monja, que cumple prisión domiciliaria después de haber pagado una millonaria fianza, asegura ser inocente y ha acusado a los intérpretes de los testigos de tergiversar sus dichos. Incluso publicó un video en el que pedía un “juicio justo” y en el que aseguraba que las pruebas en su contra son “falsas”.

Sin embargo, algunas de sus presuntas víctimas dieron detalles escabrosos de sus denuncias.

Una aseguró que Kosaka la “entregó” a Corbacho para que abusara de ella.

Y otra dijo que le colocó pañales para ocultar la sangre de sus heridas tras ser violada, cuando tenía años.

Una segunda monja, Asunción Martínez, será juzgada en una tercera causa, junto con exdirectoras y personal del Provolo de Mendoza.

En tanto, también se espera que llegue a juicio el caso por los abusos en el Provolo de La Plata, que involucra a Corradi, Primati y a un empleado administrativo.

*Esta nota se publicó originalmente el 5 de agosto de 2019 y ha sido actualizada con motivo de la condena a los acusados.

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

‘They’re demonic’: the deaf victims of Argentina’s paedophile priests speak out

BUENOS AIRES (ARGENTINA)
Buenos Aires Times

August 5, 2019

By Andres Larrovere

Ezequiel Villalonga spent most of his life at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza, a Catholic school for deaf children. But now the 18-year-old, who is deaf and mute, has lost all faith in the Church.

He and his classmates claim they are victims of the paedophile priests who ran the institution, part of a sweeping scandal that has shaken Argentina, Pope Francis’s home country.

“I think that everything in the Church is fake. Everything they made us read, recite, the way (they said) people should live,” he said in sign language, just before the start of the priests’ trial on Monday.

“I think they lie and that they’re demonic,” he added.

Ezequiel only learned sign language as an adult, because despite the Institute’s specialized mission, the school situated in the Andean foothills didn’t teach him how to speak.

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Priests being ‘blamed’ for crimes they did not commit, says Pope

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Tablet

August 5, 2019

By Ruth Gledhill

Pope Francis has spoken out about his concerns that Catholic priests are being “attacked and blamed” for crimes they did not commit. And he has warned them not to retreat into “closed and elitist” groups as a result because this “poisons the soul”.

In a letter to Catholic priests worldwide, he says he wants to encourage them as they live lives of service to others “in the trenches”, at a time when there is great public anger about the many clerical sex abuse scandals.

His letter was sent out on 4 August, the feast day of St John Vianney, patron saint of parish priests and Curé of Ars in France from 1818 to 1859
“Like the Curé of Ars, you serve ‘in the trenches’, bearing the burden of the day and the heat, confronting an endless variety of situations in your effort to care for and accompany God’s people. I want to say a word to each of you who, often without fanfare and at personal cost, amid weariness, infirmity and sorrow, carry out your mission of service to God and to your people. Despite the hardships of the journey, you are writing the finest pages of the priestly life,” he writes.

He describes how he shared with the Italian bishops his worry that, in more than a few places, “our priests feel themselves attacked and blamed for crimes they did not commit.”

The Church has become “more attentive” to the cry of victims of abuse. “This has been a time of great suffering in the lives of those who experienced such abuse, but also in the lives of their families and of the entire People of God.

The Church is committed to the reforms needed to encourage “a culture of pastoral care” so that the culture of abuse will have no room to develop, much less continue, he continues.

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Trial begins for DC priest accused of sexual abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
WTOP TV

August 5, 2019

By Nick Iannelli

A priest accused of child sex abuse in D.C. is set to go on trial this week.

Urbano Vazquez is charged with inappropriately touching two children at the Shrine of the Sacred Heart in Northwest D.C. between 2015 and 2017, when he was assistant pastor at the parish.

The Archdiocese of Washington has since removed Vazquez from ministry.

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Conception Abbey releases past allegations list

MARYVILLE (MO)
Nodaway County News

August 5, 2019

Concern for transparency and accountability has prompted many dioceses and religious orders to publish information about members within their groups who have had allegations of sexual abuse of minors made against them.

With that goal, Conception Abbey provided the names of eight abbey priests or brothers against whom credible allegations of sexual abuse of a minor have been made in the past 70 years. None of these priests continues in ministry.

“On behalf of the monks of Conception Abbey, I offer my unconditional apology to all victims and their families affected by the evil of clergy sexual abuse,” said Right Reverend Benedict Neenan, OSB, abbot of Conception Abbey.

“It is my prayer and hope that publishing this list will aid in the healing of victims and will serve as a lasting reminder of our responsibility to do everything in our power to protect all minors and vulnerable adults from abuse.”

To compile the list, Conception Abbey leadership retained retired FBI agents to review the personnel files of all abbey priests and brothers serving in the past 70 years.

The following are the names of the priests or brothers that the abbey and/or a diocese in which a priest served has determined that an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor is credible.

• Fr. Vincent Barsch, born, 1919; ordained, 1945; left religious life, 1973; state and timeline, South Dakota, ca. 1955-62; status, deceased in 2010.

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Court Hearing on Boy Scouts’ Attempts to Hide Identification of Offenders in Perversion Files

ST. PAUL (MN)
Jeff Anderson & Associates Media

August 5, 2019

Public Release of 1,538 Secret Boy Scout Perversion Files Sought at Hearing Tuesday in Ramsey County District Court

Children Remain at Risk Because Boy Scouts of America Has Kept these Files and Identities of Sexually Abusive Leaders Secret

Lawyers representing a survivor of childhood sexual abuse by a Boy Scout leader are seeking the public release of 1,538 secret Boy Scouts files on leaders with allegations of sexual misconduct against children. Boy Scouts of America (BSA) has refused to make public the perpetrator names and documents contained in these files, known as Perversion Files.

“By keeping the identity and information regarding sexual abusers secret, Boy Scouts of America is putting kids at risk of being sexually abused,” said attorney Jeff Anderson of Jeff Anderson & Associates, who is seeking the release of the 1,538 Perversion Files. “There is a public safety imperative to release the names and information of these offenders immediately. The peril is grave and the time is now.”

Anderson is seeking the release of the 1,538 Perversion Files in the case of John Doe 180, who was sexually abused as a minor by Boy Scout leader Peter Stibal. John Doe 180’s lawsuit in Ramsey County against Stibal, Boy Scouts of America (BSA) and related entities settled in 2014. The 1,538 Perversion Files were produced to John Doe 180 under seal, not to be released publicly. On Tuesday, Anderson will ask Ramsey District Court Judge Leonardo Castro to order the public release of the files.

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Goodwill allowed ‘credibly accused’ priest to visit schools in R.I.

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

August 4, 2019

By Brian Amaral

Kevin R. Fisette, who appears on the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence’s list of clergy who’d been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing a minor, visited schools and worked in the presence of children after he got a new job at Goodwill, according to social media postings and school officials.

A man on the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence’s list of clergy who’d been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing a minor visited schools and worked in the presence of children after he got a new job at Goodwill, according to social media postings and school officials.

Kevin R. Fisette, 64, was removed from ministry and resigned from his post as pastor of St. Leo the Great Church in Pawtucket in 2009 after a sexual-abuse allegation from the early 1980s — which the Diocese of Providence deemed credible but that his supporters say was unfounded — surfaced. By October 2010, he had a new job at Goodwill Industries of Rhode Island. From 2014 to 2018, social media posts showed him visiting Goodwill’s donation bins at Rhode Island schools.

Photos show Fisette posing with children at Burrillville Middle School, Leo Savoie Elementary School in Woonsocket, and St. Mary Academy-Bay View, an all-girls independent Catholic school in Riverside, while expressing appreciation to them for collecting donations for Goodwill.

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‘Everything in the church is fake’: Deaf victims of Argentina’s pedophile priests speak out

MENDOZA (ARGENTINA)
Agence France-Presse

August 4, 2019

Ezequiel Villalonga spent most of his life at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza, a Catholic school for deaf children. But now the 18-year-old, who is deaf and mute, has lost all faith in the Church.

He and his classmates claim they are victims of the pedophile priests who ran the institution, part of a sweeping scandal that has shaken Argentina, Pope Francis’s home country.

“I think that everything in the Church is fake. Everything they made us read, recite, the way (they said) people should live,” he said in sign language, just before the start of the priests’ trial on Monday.

“I think they lie and that they’re demonic,” he added.

Ezequiel only learned sign language as an adult, because despite the Institute’s specialized mission, the school situated in the Andean foothills didn’t teach him how to speak

He was only seven months old when his mother realized he was deaf. When Ezequiel was four, she sent him to the Provolo, which was founded in 1995, 621 miles (1,000 kilometers) west of Buenos Aires.

Until Ezequiel was 16, when the scandal finally broke, he spent his days inside the massive building with a green roof. Once inside its red brick walls, he was only allowed to go home on weekends.

“Life there was terrible. We didn’t learn anything, we couldn’t speak to each other because we didn’t know sign language,” he said.

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Should Clergy Be Required to Report Abusers Who Confess?

NEW YORK (NY)
Mother Jones

August 5, 2019

By Madison Pauley

Kristy Johnson was 6 years old in 1969, when her father, an educator employed by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, began sexually abusing her at their home in Utah. Her mother discovered what was happening and sought help from their local Mormon bishop. But according to a civil lawsuit Johnson filed against her father last year, the bishop did not contact police, instead handling the abuse “as a matter of sin, only.”

The same thing happened each time the abuse was reported to church leaders, according to Johnson’s complaint. One bishop instructed her father to “clean up his act,” she tells me. Her father was reassigned to different towns. And the church never called the cops, the lawsuit alleges. “They didn’t want the word to get out, because of who my father was,” Johnson says. “Because it would make the church look bad. That was their main concern.”

“If we mandate teachers to report, if we mandate other professions to report, why aren’t we mandating religious leaders to report as well?”

Despite the Mormon Church’s quiet attempts to counsel her father, the violence allegedly continued for about 15 years. According to the lawsuit, the attacks escalated from fondling to beating and rape, stopping only when Johnson left home at age 21 for her church mission. Only later, once she learned her sisters had also been sexually abused, did she decide to go to the police. It was the first time she’s aware of that law enforcement had ever been contacted. Her father, Melvin Kay Johnson, was not arrested; he has since admitted to “inappropriate sexual conduct” with his daughters when they were older and settled the lawsuit against him.

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Diocese’s asset shift may be scrutinized if it files bankruptcy over sex lawsuits

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

August 5, 2019

By Jay Tokasz

A year after a bill that would suspend the civil statute of limitations in child sex abuse cases was first introduced in the New York State Legislature, the Buffalo Diocese in 2006 began moving $91 million from its main investment account into the accounts of parishes, schools, cemeteries and other Catholic entities.

Diocese officials at the time characterized the transfers as “an opportunity to increase long term investment income” and “to invest in harmony with the teachings and beliefs of the Roman Catholic Church.”

But it also was an effort to shield money in the event the bill became law and exposed the diocese to the same kinds of clergy sex abuse lawsuits that other dioceses faced, said Monsignor William J. Gallagher, a retired priest who served on the diocese’s finance council and was a longtime pastor of St. John Vianney Church in Orchard Park.

“Instead of having the diocese holding money for everybody because then it’s reachable by lawsuit, this way they created independent outfits to take care of it,” said Gallagher. “When the lawsuits started, they had to make sure that everything was separated.”

The Child Victims Act was signed into law in February, after 14 years of failing to advance to a vote in the State Senate. And now the diocese faces the prospect of dozens — and perhaps hundreds — of lawsuits this month with the opening of a one-year window in which sex abuse cases that were time-barred by statutes of limitations can proceed in civil courts.

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Pope encourages priests dejected by abuse crisis

ROME (ITALY)
Catholic News Service

August 5, 2019

Pope Francis acknowledged the shame and frustration felt by priests who are discouraged by the actions of fellow clergy members who betrayed the trust of their flock through sexual abuse and abuse of conscience and power.

In a letter addressed to priests around the world Aug. 4, the pope said that many priests have spoken or written to him expressing “their outrage at what happened” and the doubts and fears the sexual abuse crisis has caused.

“Without denying or dismissing the harm caused by some of our brothers, it would be unfair not to express our gratitude to all those priests who faithfully and generously spend their lives in the service of others,” he said.

Commemorating the 160th anniversary of the death of St. John Mary Vianney, patron saint of parish priests, the pope praised those priests who, like their patron, carry out their mission “often without fanfare and at personal cost, amid weariness, infirmity and sorrow.”

However, he also shared his concern that many priests “feel themselves attacked and blamed for crimes they did not commit.”

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Group to protest Burlington Diocese handling of sex abuse allegations

BURLINGTON (VT)
WCAX TV

August 5, 2019

Vermont’s Roman Catholic Diocese plans to release by the end of the month its long-awaited report on priests who have been accused of sexually abusing children.

It comes as a group in Burlington plans to protest Monday over the delay in the report’s release.

The group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests claims that Bishop Christopher Coyne pledged to post the names of the accused priests, but that he “continues to be secretive.”

Organizers say clergy sex abuse victims and their supporters will gather Monday at Burlington Diocese headquarters in South Burlington around 2:15 p.m. to disclose names of eight accused Catholic clerics.

Bishop Coyne in a statement Monday said he expects the list by the end of the month.

“While it was hoped that the report of the independent file review committee would have been published earlier this year, the Diocese of Burlington has provided the committee with the time needed to ensure a thorough and accurate accounting of credibly accused priests. As a result, the independent file review committee’s work took longer than originally anticipated. The work is just about completed and the report will be published by the Diocese of Burlington before the end of August,” Coyne said.

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August 4, 2019

Separa Iglesia católica a sacerdote acusado de violación en Puebla

PUEBLA (MEXICO)
Diario de Yucatán [Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico]

August 4, 2019

By Lluvia Magaña Peralta

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PUEBLA.- El sacerdote católico Adalberto N, fue separado de su ministerio, luego de que el arzobispado de Puebla conoció de la presunta violación contra una menor de edad.

El presbítero, que ejercía sus funciones en el municipio de Quecholac, está inhabilitado para presidir cualquier ceremonia y suministrar sacramentos católicos hasta que la Fiscalía General del Estado de Puebla (FGEP) defina el delito que haya cometido, dio a conocer el arzobispo de Puebla, Víctor Sánchez Espinosa.

En rueda de prensa reconoció que la denuncia se presentó ante la FGEP; por lo que considera que la familia de la agraviada debe seguir el procedimiento; Así como lo harán los tribunales eclesiásticos que aplicarán las sanciones correspondientescontra el párroco. Afirmó que no se encubrirá ningún caso de abuso.

“Estamos dispuestos a escuchar toda denuncia que nos llegue. A la familia se le ofrece trato digno y la disposición de escucharlos; el sacerdote no está prófugo, se le separó de la comunidad como lo ordena el Papa, en una medida cautelar hasta que se aclare su inocencia o culpabilidad”, expresó.https://twitter.com/alecafierro/status/1158064705296113665

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Iglesia separa a sacerdote acusado de violación en Puebla

PUEBLA (MEXICO)
Aristegui Noticias [Mexico City, Mexico]

August 4, 2019

By Redacción AN / AG

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Adalberto ‘N’, fue separado de su ministerio, luego de que el arzobispado de Puebla conoció de la presunta violación contra una menor de edad.

(El sacerdote católico Adalberto ‘N’, fue separado de su ministerio, luego de que el arzobispado de Puebla conoció de la presunta violación contra una menor de edad.

Adalberto ‘N’, quien ejercía sus funciones en el municipio de Quecholac, está inhabilitado para presidir cualquier ceremonia y suministrar sacramentos católicos hasta que la Fiscalía General del Estado de Puebla (FGEP) defina el delito que haya cometido, dio a conocer el arzobispo de Puebla, Víctor Sánchez Espinosa.

En rueda de prensa reconoció que la denuncia fue presentada ante la FGEP, por lo que consideró que la familia de la agraviada debe seguir el procedimiento, como también lo harán los tribunales eclesiásticos que aplicará las sanciones correspondientes contra el párroco Adalberto ‘N‘, pues no se encubrirá ningún caso de abuso, dijo.

“Estamos dispuestos a escuchar toda denuncia que nos llegue, a la familia se le ofrece trato digno y la disposición de escucharlos, el sacerdote no está prófugo, ha sido separado de la comunidad como lo ordena el Papa, en una medida cautelar hasta que se aclare su inocencia o culpabilidad”, expresó.

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August 3, 2019

A list of priests’ names that’s far too little, far too late

CONCORD (NH)
Concord Monitor

August 3, 2019

By Ray Duckler

David Ouellette was fooled once, as a 15-year-old victim growing up in Rochester.

He wasn’t fooled last Wednesday, though. He read the list, released by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Manchester, the one documenting priests who had been accused of sexually abusing children for decades. He noticed names, parish assignments, punishments handed out.

Ouellette wanted more details, though. He says he won’t get fooled again.

“Personally,” Ouellette told me by phone, “I think of it as a smokescreen and a public-relations campaign.”

Where, for example, was the information about specific crimes committed, and how many victims stepped forward with accusations, and why were many of these suspected predators merely shifted from church to church in a cover-up that impacted the entire world? Most importantly, where are they now?

“It really doesn’t tell you anything,” Ouellette said, referring to the list.

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Ruth Krall, Historical Meandering: Ideologies of Abuse and Exclusion (3)

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Bilgrimage blog

August 2, 2019

By William Lindsey

This is the third and final installment of an essay by Ruth Krall entitled “Historical Meandering: Ideologies of Abuse and Exclusion.” The previous two parts of this essay have appeared here and here. This essay is one in a series of essays Ruth is publishing on Bilgrimage under the series title “Recapitulation: Affinity Sexual Violence in a Religious Voice.” The first of the two links above will give you links to each previous essay. In this essay series, Ruth is focusing on the endemic nature of religious and spiritual leader sexual abuse of followers.

The current essay deals with the importance of an historical framework for understanding and dealing with this endemic sexual abuse in religious institutions. Vis-à-vis the Christian churches, Ruth proposes that “if we are to seek to understand or unearth the fundamental pilings (i.e., the deep and pervasive foundations) of this abuse scandal inside Christendom, we must first learn how to work with each other” — to understand the various faith languages of different Christian traditions and the prejudices borne within each stream of Christianity, and to talk together coherently about these faith languages and prejudices as we seek a solution to problem endemic to all of our faith traditions.

Please note that the endnotes begin with xxxvii because this essay is a continuation of an essay previously published in two installments.

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‘They’re demonic’: the deaf victims of Argentina’s pedophile priests speak out

LAPLATA (ARGENTINA)
AFP

August 3, 2019

By Carlos Reyes with Magalí Cervantes

Ezequiel Villalonga spent most of his life at the Provolo Institute in Mendoza, a Catholic school for deaf children. But now the 18-year-old, who is deaf and mute, has lost all faith in the Church.

He and his classmates claim they are victims of the pedophile priests who ran the institution, part of a sweeping scandal that has shaken Argentina, Pope Francis’s home country.

“I think that everything in the Church is fake. Everything they made us read, recite, the way (they said) people should live,” he said in sign language, just before the start of the priests’ trial on Monday.

“I think they lie and that they’re demonic,” he added.

Ezequiel only learned sign language as an adult, because despite the Institute’s specialized mission, the school situated in the Andean foothills didn’t teach him how to speak.

He was only seven months old when his mother realized he was deaf. When Ezequiel was four, she sent him to the Provolo, which was founded in 1995, 621 miles (1,000 kilometers) west of Buenos Aires.

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2 priests under suspension have ties to Miami Valley

CINCINNATI (OH)
WHIO TV 7

August 3, 2019

Two Roman Catholic priests on administrative leave, which church officials say is the “strongest action” a local bishop can take on his own against a priest, have ties to the Miami Valley.

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati, which serves southwest Ohio, including the greater Cincinnati and Dayton regions, on July 23 suspended the Rev. Geoffrey Drew, and has suspended the Rev. Clarence Heis for the second time.

Drew, who previously served at St. Rita of Cascia Parish in Dayton and St. Luke the Evangelist Church in Beavercreek, was placed on leave from his post at St. Ignatius of Loyola in Green Twp., Hamilton County. He is accused of behavior that violates the “decree on child protection,” according to a letter written by Archbishop Dennis Schnurr, our media partner WCPO-TV in Cincinnati reported.

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Cancela actividades eclesiásticas sacerdote acusado de abuso sexual en Quecholac

PUEBLA (MEXICO)
El Sol de Puebla [Puebla, Puebla, Mexico]

August 3, 2019

By José Luna

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De acuerdo a los señalamientos, el párroco habría violentado en varias ocasiones a una menor de edad

QUECHOLAC, Pue.- El sacerdote Adalberto N., suspendió desde el pasado jueves toda actividad eclesiástica en el Ex Convento de Santa María Magdalena, la cual tenía a su cargo. Lo anterior, luego de que se diera a conocer la denuncia que fue hecha en su contra por un presunto caso de abuso sexual.

Ante esta situación, se suspendieron los servicios eclesiásticos en el Ex Convento, mientras las celebraciones eucarísticas que estaban programadas para este fin de semana se cancelaron de última hora, sin dar una explicación sobre los motivos que lo orillaron hacer lo antes descrito.

Habitantes señalaron que al padre Adalberto José de aproximadamente 60 años no se le ha visto desde la tarde del miércoles.

Al párroco lo consideran una persona muy social y participativa en las actividades parroquiales de la comunidad.

Cabe mencionar que fue ante la unidad de Investigación Especializada en Delitos Sexuales, donde fue denunciado el sacerdote. 

Por este hecho se dio inicio a una carpeta de investigación bajo el CDI/3969/2019/UDS, ya que según lo informado por los familiares el cura abusó en repetidas ocasiones de la adolescente quien era muy allegada a la iglesia junto con su familia. Además de que la mantenía con amenazas para que no dijera nada; sin embargo, luego de que la progenitora encontrara huellas de violencia en su cuerpo, la adolescente habría decidido contar los hechos.

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Adalberto, párroco en Puebla, habría violado y embarazado a una adolescente, y se da a la fuga

HEROICA PUEBLA DE ZARAGOZA (MEXICO)
Central Periodismo Irreverente [Puebla de Zaragoza, Puebla, Mexico]

August 3, 2019

By Redacción/SinEmbargo

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La adolescente relató que el sacerdote abusó sexualmente de ella en varias ocasiones aprovechando la cercanía de sus padres a la Iglesia y dijo que la había amenazado con hacerle daño a sus padres en caso de que contara algo sobre las violaciones que perpetró en su contra por varios meses.

Puebla, Puebla, 3 de agosto (PeriódicoCentral).- El párroco Adalberto José “N”, es acusado por presuntamente cometer abuso sexual contra una menor de edad en el municipio de Quecholac, localizado en el Triángulo Rojo de Puebla.

Se trata de una adolescente quien esta semana relató a su familia que el sacerdote abusó sexualmente de ella aprovechando la cercanía de sus padres a la Iglesia.

La menor de edad detalló que el cura la había amenazado con hacerle daño a sus padres en caso de que contara sobre las violaciones que perpetró en su contra por varios meses.

Fue la madre de la menor quien empezó a notarla cada vez más retraída y descubrieron que tenía marcas en su cuerpo por lo que acudieron al DIF del municipio y tras varias sesiones con especialistas la adolescente contó los abusos que el cura cometía en su contra.

La menor de edad además advirtió que temía encontrarse embarazada, por lo cual ya se le practicaron exámenes para determinar si espera un bebé del párroco.

A través de distintas cuentas de Facebook los vecinos de Quecholac han distribuido la imagen del sacerdote para solicitar más informes a otras posibles víctimas de abuso sexual.

Versiones extraoficiales señalan que el párroco ya se fugó del municipio para evitar ser aprehendido por las autoridades ministeriales debido a que comenzaron con los trámites para denunciarlo formalmente ante la Fiscalía General del Estado.

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MUST-READ: ‘Top 10 Myths About Clergy Sex Abuse in the Catholic Church’

UNITED STATES
Patheos

August 2, 2019

By Deacon Greg Kandra

This is an important compendium that every Catholic needs to read and share.

From Psychology Today:

As we approach the year anniversary of the recent uptick in media attention due to the release of the Pennsylvania grand jury report (as well as the now-former Cardinal McCarrick abuse allegations), let’s review the top ten myths about clerical abuse in the Catholic Church.

Myth 1: Sexual abuse is more common among Catholic priests than other groups of men.

About 4 percent of Catholic clerics had credible or substantiated accusations of child sexual abuse of minors (both prepubescent children and postpubescent teens) during the last half of the 20th century (John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 2004, 2011). Research data, although from limited small scale studies, finds the prevalence of clerical abuse among non-Catholic religious communities consistent with the Catholics. If you review insurance claims against Church communities for sexual victimization perpetrated by their clerics, you’ll find that that there is no difference between Catholic and non-Catholic groups (Zech, 2011).

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Seven abuse victims seek at least $50,000 each from Rochester church, Boy Scouts of America

ROCHESTER (MN)
Fox 47

August 2, 2019

An update on the seven lawsuits filed recently in Olmsted County related to admitted abuser Richard Hokanson:

Each of the seven victims is seeking in excess of $50,000 from the St. Pius X Catholic Church in Rochester, as well as the Gamehaven Council and The Boy Scouts of America.

Hokanson was a scout leader of a troop based at the St. Pius X Catholic Church. He was employed by each of the organizations. The plaintiffs say they were sexually abused by Hokanson between 1969 and 1981.

The defendants wrote in court documents that “there is little doubt that estimated damages could exceed $100,000 per victim.”

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Diocese Wants Anyone with Misconduct Information to Come Forward

TULSA (OK)
KWGS NEWS

August 2, 2019

On July 5, 2019, the Diocese of Tulsa & Eastern Oklahoma announced that Father Joe Townsend, a priest of the Diocese, had been placed on administrative leave due to a non-frivolous allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor. After several weeks, the still ongoing third-party investigation has provided the Diocese with a better understanding of the allegation lodged against Father Townsend and what needs to be done to proceed with the investigation.

“As such, in fulfillment of the Diocese’s commitment to transparency and our desire to determine the merits of the allegation, we wish to announce that the allegation of misconduct against Father Townsend stems from when he served as an Associate Pastor at St. Pius X Catholic Church from June 1988 to June 199”, the Diocese said in a news release.

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NY Child Sexual Abuse Survivors Prepare To File Lawsuits Against Abusers

NEW YORK
WAMC

August 3, 2019

By Karen DeWitt

Beginning on August 14, New Yorkers who are survivors of childhood sexual abuse will have a one-year window of opportunity to file civil suits against their abusers, under the terms of the Child Victims Act passed by the legislature earlier this year. Thousands of cases are expected to be filed, with payouts potentially in the millions.

Gordon Smith was 14-years-old when he says he was first abused by two priests at a St. Patrick’s Catholic Church and school in Albany in the early 1960s.

He was filling in as a janitor for his father, who was sick. He says the abuse continued, on a weekly basis, for three years.

“It was about as horrific as it could get,” said Smith, in an interview with public radio and TV. “We’re talking about molestation, we’re talking about sodomization, we’re talking about oral sex.”

One of the priests that Smith is accusing, Father Donald Starks, appears on a list kept by the Albany Roman Catholic Diocese of priests with “credible” accusations against them. Starks died in 1989.

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Tulsa priest placed on leave amid sexual misconduct investigation

TULSA (OK)
Tulsa World

August 2, 2019

A Tulsa Catholic diocese investigation on Friday determined that sexual misconduct allegations against a local priest date back more than two decades.

The allegations of misconduct against Father Joe Townsend, a priest of the Diocese of Tulsa and Eastern Oklahoma, stem from his time as an associate pastor at St. Pius X Catholic Church in Tulsa from 1988 to 1991, according to a news release. Townsend was ordained in May 1988.

Townsend was placed on administrative leave in early July after the “non-frivolous allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor” was made, the news release said. Church officials said they have engaged a “third-party investigation” into the allegation.

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Catholic Priests Push Back Against Abuse Claims in Court

FAIRFAX (VA)
Courtroom News Service

August 2, 2019

By Joan Hennessy

As the Catholic Church digs itself out of a global sex abuse scandal, some priests are heading to court to contend they were wrongfully accused of misconduct and defamed when the church published their names on lists of “credibly accused” clergy members.

Seventeen years have passed since The Boston Globe documented widespread abuse by Catholic clergy. In the years that followed, victims all over the country sued the church and 19 dioceses and religious orders filed for bankruptcy protection, according to the National Catholic Reporter.

The church’s legal troubles reignited a year ago when a Pennsylvania grand jury report detailed abuse by priests in six state dioceses. The same month, a Pennsylvania bishop released a list of clergy accused of abuse. Other dioceses have done the same.

In February, when the Richmond diocese published its list of clergy members accused of sexual misconduct, Oliver Joseph Smalls, Jr.’s name was on it.

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Diocese Releases Update On Alleged Sexual Misconduct Of Tulsa Priest

TULSA (OK)
NewsOn6.com

August 2, 2019

The Diocese of Tulsa and Eastern Oklahoma said they are asking anyone with knowledge of possible sexual misconduct on the part of a Tulsa priest to come forward. Father Joe Townsend continues to be on administrative leave due to allegations of sexual misconduct with a minor.

A news release from the Diocese states that an ongoing, third-party investigation has provided them with a “better understanding” of the allegation made against Father Townsend, prompting the call for people to come forward. They can contact law enforcement or call the Pastoral Hotline at 918-307-4970.

The allegation against Father Townsend involves St. Pius X Church and School community almost 30 years ago, according to Father Richard Bradley, Pastor of St. Pius X Catholic Church.

“We understand the need to fully investigate the allegation in order to bring to light any abuse that may have occurred, and we pledge our support of the investigative process. At the same time, we affirm that there are many students from that era as well as their parents, who remember Father Joe fondly and favorably. We pray for a peaceful and speedy resolution to this matter,” he said in a news release.

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Liberals fear unrest as Poland Catholic Church doubles down on anti-gay rhetoric

WARSAW (POLAND)
Reuters via Today Online

August 2, 2019

Poland’s Catholic Church has doubled down on the anti-gay rhetoric that has become the nationalist ruling party’s dominant theme in recent weeks, drawing a rebuke from liberal politicians who compared an archbishop’s remarks to incitement to genocide.

In a sermon given to mark the 75th anniversary of the Warsaw uprising by Polish resistance fighters against Nazi occupation, the archbishop of Krakow, Marek Jedraszewski, described Poland as under siege from a “rainbow plague” of gay rights campaigners he compared to Poland’s former Communist rulers.

“Our land is no longer affected by the red plague, which does not mean that there is no new one that wants to control our souls, hearts and minds,” he told a mass in the medieval St. Mary’s Basilica, one of the most important churches for Poles.

“Not Marxist, Bolshevik, but born of the same spirit, neo-Marxist. Not red, but rainbow,” he was quoted as saying by private TVN24 broadcaster.

Robert Biedron, an openly gay politician from the progressive Wiosna party, denounced the sermon.

“We already had such people, politicians who used similar words and that lead to huge slaughters, genocide. This is an incitement to crime, to hatred,” he told news website wirtualnapolska.pl.
Read more at https://www.todayonline.com/world/liberals-fear-unrest-poland-catholic-church-doubles-down-anti-gay-rhetoric

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Sex Abuse Victims’ Stories Need to be Told: Guest Column

PROVIDENCE (RI)
GoLocalProv.com

August 3, 2019

By Carlene Casciano-McCann

Sex abuse victims stories need to be told, says Carlene Casciano-McCann

With the recent high-profile stories exposing sexual abuse and exploitation of children, many of us are incensed that this type of exploitation continues unabated.

We are outraged at perpetrators of sexual abuse, yet how often do we really think about the victims – the loss of innocence, trust and control over their own bodies; the burden of potential lifelong mental health issues. With the recent disclosure of credibly accused priests in the Catholic Diocese and Jeffrey Epstein’s arrest for trafficking children, we have evidence of abuses that have occurred in secrecy, with others being complicit in covering up and/or engaging in the illicit activity.

The stories sensationalize the perpetrator and do not tell the full story in order to protect the victim’s identity and privacy. Yet the crisis is revealed in the victim’s story which is what needs be told. Infants and toddlers are sexually molested – children irreparably harmed before they even have words to describe the assault. Pre-teen children and teenagers are sexually abused and the emotional trauma can make it difficult to find the words to tell others. Children carry the shame of sexual abuse despite it being the behavior of an adult perpetrator.

Sexual abuse is a difficult crime to prosecute. There is rarely physical evidence of an assault.

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Beset by clergy abuse claims, New Orleans archdiocese hopeful church can ‘heal,’ touts donor help

NOLA.COM
New Orleans (LA)

August 3, 2019

By Ramon Antonio Vargas and Jerry DiColo

Steve Gegenheimer had struggled for decades to process what happened to him — in a rectory, in a parked car, in the woods and in hotels in Mississippi — over a two-year period in the 1970s, when he was a teenage altar boy on the West Bank.

In November, the priest he says sexually abused him decades ago was publicly named as a suspected child molester by New Orleans Archbishop Gregory Aymond. Days later, Gegenheimer finally called a lawyer.

Over the next five months, at the archdiocese’s request, Gegenheimer wrote out a narrative explaining the abuse. He filled out the rest of a detailed questionnaire. He met with diocesan attorneys over several hours one emotionally draining day.

And after signing settlement documents that resulted in an undisclosed payment, he received a letter inviting him to speak and pray with the archbishop himself.

Gegenheimer had not taken up Aymond on his offer when he spoke about the experience this summer, but he said the invitation and payment — taken together — helped him to finally move past his abuse.

“You … carry a secret for 30, 40 years,” said Gegenheimer, who explained he later became a priest but left the clergy after entering into a relationship with a woman whom he ultimately married. “I wanted it to be over.”

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Portland Archdiocese Settles 8 Sexual Abuse Claims Against Former Oregon Priest

PORTLAND (OR)
OPB

August 2, 2019

By Conrad Wilson

The Archdiocese of Portland has agreed to settle eight claims of sexual abuse involving former North Bend priest Rev. Pius Brazauskas.

Together the settlements add up to nearly $4 million.

The alleged abuse stems from about 1975 to 1985 involving boys who at the time of the abuse were between 5 and 16 years old. At the time, Brazauskas was in his 70s.

Brazauskas died on March 1, 1990. He was 84 years old.

A January 2018 lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon identified three victims as J.B., S.R. and S.F. They were the first sexual abuse allegations against Brazauskas.

After the lawsuit was filed, five more men came forward, said Peter Janci, attorney for the victims.

“We think there are a lot of other victims out there,” Janci said. “He was somebody who had an insatiable proclivity to abuse kids. In my career, representing hundreds of victims of child sexual abuse I don’t usually see individuals who develop that inclination in their 70s.”

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Activist Italian priest arrested on charges of abusing young men

ROME (ITALY)
Crux

August 3, 2019

By Claire Giangravè

An Italian priest known for involvement in his community was placed under house arrest by local authorities on Wednesday, on charges of allegedly drugging and sexually abusing adult members of his parish.

“The news of the arrest of Father Stefano Segalini and the precautionary measures applied by the judiciary pain us deeply,” said Father Luigi Chiesa, Vicar General of the Diocese of Piacenza-Bobbio in northern Italy where the events allegedly took place, in an August 1 statement.

“The pain of those who declare themselves to be victims of abuse, as well as the pain of he who finds himself accused of such a great crime, requires first of all our closeness and prayer,” Chiesa said.

Segalini led the church of San Giuseppe Operaio, the most frequented parish in the northern Italian town of Piacenza, until last May when he suddenly retired. An arrest warrant issued by a judge after preliminary investigations claims that Segalini allegedly abused adults not in the parish, but during spiritual retreats and evening activities.

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OKLAHOMA DIOCESE REVEALS TIMELINE OF PRIEST’S ALLEGED ABUSE

TULSA (OK)
Associated Press via KRMG Radio

August 3, 2019

[Tulsa diocese’s statement about Joe Townsend is posted on the diocesan Facebook page, linked here.]

The Diocese of Tulsa and Eastern Oklahoma says the alleged sexual misconduct involving a minor by a priest started shortly after he was ordained.

The diocese said in a statement Friday that “a non-frivolous allegation of sexual misconduct with a minor” against Father Joe Townsend date to his time as associate pastor at St. Pius X Catholic Church in Tulsa from June 1988 to June 1991. The statement says Townsend denies the allegation and is cooperating with an investigation.

The diocese website says Townsend was ordained May 27, 1988.

The diocese announced July 5 that Townsend had been placed on administrative leave.

The diocese last year identified two other priests who were facing credible accusations of abusing minors. Both men are no longer associated with the Tulsa diocese.

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Sex abuse victim receives large settlement with Modesto church

MODESTO (CA)
Modesto Bee

August 1, 2019

By Erin Tracy

Modesto’s CrossPoint Community Church settled a lawsuit with a woman who said the church covered up the sexual abuse of her and others by pastors for years.

CrossPoint, formerly First Baptist Church, must pay Jennifer Roach $267,500 and was released of any liability or wrongdoing as part of the settlement.

“Sexual abuse is soul-crushing, and its impact is far reaching,” Roach said in an email. “Victims often end up delaying or abandoning their education, which impacts their ability to earn throughout their lifetime. Financial settlements don’t change the fact that the abuse happened, but they can restore some of what was stolen from the victim.”

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August 2, 2019

Deacon Allowed to Work with Children Despite Being Defrocked for Abuse

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

August 2, 2019

As recently as last year a former Catholic deacon defrocked after allegations of child sexual abuse had leadership roles in a Louisiana Catholic group. Even worse, he had access to children for decades despite his history. Now, church officials must take responsibility for this troubling revelation.

This is just the latest example of how Catholic leadership continues to talk a big game publicly, but privately does not do all they can to ensure accused perpetrators are kept from the vulnerable. We call on New Orleans law enforcement officials to investigate this situation to see if any crimes were committed, and we call on local parishioners to demand answers and transparency from their church officials.

This is one reason why we in SNAP clamor for lists of accused clerics – posted permanently and prominently on diocesan websites — so it will be easier for parishioners, staff, and the public to identify perpetrators who keep gravitating towards children. Had New Orleans church officials revealed such a list years and years ago – instead of in 2018 – it is likely that George Brignac never would have had the access to children that he enjoyed for years.

Now that this information has been exposed, we believe that Archbishop Greg Aymond should investigate and then disclose publicly how this was allowed to happen, and finally take action against those who put children in harm’s way. That is the only way such incomprehensible behavior will be stopped.

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Second arrest made in Wildomar’s Faith Baptist Church sex abuse scandal

SAN BERNARDINO (CA)
San Bernardino Sun

August 1, 2019

By Joe Nelson

Less than a year after a former youth pastor at Wildomar’s Faith Baptist Church was accused of molesting three teenage girls, another former staff member has been arrested for allegedly sexually abusing a student at the church’s school nearly 30 years ago.

Laverne Paul Fox, the former principal at Faith Baptist Academy and former bus director for the church, was arrested Monday in Erie, Pennsylvania, and extradited to California, where he was held at the Robert Presley Detention Center in Riverside on $120,000 bail.

Laverne Paul Fox, a former principal at Faith Baptist Academy in Wildomar and former bus director at the affiliated Faith Baptist Church, was arrested Monday in Erie, PA. after begin charged with three felony counts of child molestation involving a student at the school in 1990.

Fox, 60, posted bail Tuesday and is scheduled for arraignment Oct. 2 at the Southwest Justice Center in Murrieta, according to online booking records.

Riverside County prosecutors charged Fox on June 21 with three felony counts of child molestation involving a girl under the age of 18. The alleged sexual abuse occurred about July 1990, according to the criminal complaint.

“I feel like I’m finally getting justice 27 years late,” said Fox’s alleged victim, Kathy Durbin, on Wednesday. She said she reported the alleged abuse to church pastor Bruce Goddard in 1992, but he never reported it to police.

While the Southern California News Group does not typically disclose the names of victims of sexual abuse, Durbin has allowed her name to be published.

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Abuse survivor: Some ‘victim advocacy’ groups ‘have their own agendas’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Agency

August 2, 2019

By Ed Condon

This story is the second part of a two-part series about how one victim of sexual abuse found healing. The first part was published Aug. 1.

When Michael* was 15 years old, he was abused by a priest at his Catholic high school. He told CNA recently about the suffering he endured, and about how, seven years after his abuse, he confided in another priest – only to have his faith in God and the Church shattered again.

For nearly three decades, Michael struggled with the pain and trauma of his abuse. He spent years, and tens of thousands of dollars, in therapy. He was diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. He needed help.

The therapy was a beginning. But Michael told CNA he found the most healing in the Church and faith that his abusers had driven him from. Healing did not come not easily.

Michael says he wants to see real reform in the Church, and to ensure no one suffers like he did. But, he urges caution against what he calls “predatory advocacy groups” and an “industry that trolls for victims.”

Michael spoke to CNA about his experiences with such groups.

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Hundreds register for diocese’s abuse compensation plan

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

August 1, 2019

By Peter Smith

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh has received formal notice of more than 400 people who either have filed or may file claims for financial compensation for alleged sexual abuse by its clergy.

And early returns are in for claims that have already been filed. The diocese has so far paid about $4 million in total to 26 victims, or roughly $150,000 per person, according to the fund’s administrators.

Wednesday was the deadline for people who hadn’t previously reported abuse to the diocese to register formally with the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program, which the diocese launched in the wake of a 2018 grand jury report on sexual abuse by priests in the diocese over the past seven decades.

By midnight Wednesday, some 372 registrations had been filed, said Camille Biros, who is administering the fund along with Washington, D.C., attorney Kenneth Feinberg.

The 372 registrations, however, haven’t been reviewed yet for initial eligibility. They include some duplicate registrations, and they may also include allegations not covered by the compensation program, such as abuse by lay teachers or religious-order priests. The program only covers abuse by clergy (priests or deacons) who were ordained by the diocese.

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Archdiocese of Cincinnati suspends two priests

CINCINNATI (OH)
WCPO 9onyourside

August 2, 2019

By Craig Cheatham

The Archdiocese of Cincinnati has placed two priests on administrative leave, which church officials say is the “strongest action” a local bishop can take on his own against a priest.

Parents learned this week of Rev. Geoffrey Drew’s suspension from St. Ignatius School in Green Township, but the WCPO I-Team discovered the existence of a second priest that the Archdiocese had placed on administrative leave by searching the ‘Protecting Our Children’ page on the Archdiocese’s website.

The Archdiocese declined to answer WCPO’s questions about the allegations against Father Clarence Heis. The Archdiocese website only refers to a “pending investigation” of Heis. It also does not indicate when the Archdiocese placed Heis on administrative leave.

“Anytime they go to the extraordinary action of suspending or removing a priest – or anybody in their employment – it means there’s a serious concern,” said Dan Frondorf, the leader of the Cincinnati chapter of the Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests, also known as SNAP.

This is the second time the Archdiocese has suspended Father Heis.

It also placed him on leave in 2006 after Heis pleaded no contest to disorderly conduct and resisting. A police officer arrested Heis in 2005 for allegedly having sex with two adult men in a public park in Fairborn, near Dayton. The Archdiocese reinstated Heis in 2009, according to The Catholic Telegraph, the official newspaper of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. Since his reinstatement, Heis has worked out of the main office of the Archdiocese, according to his LinkedIn account and issues of the Official Catholic Directory.

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Too many questions remain unanswered in the case of West Virginia Bishop Michael Bransfield

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

August 2, 2019

By Michael J. Iafrate

Two months after the U.S. Catholic Church was hit by a major scandal surrounding a West Virginia bishop, church officials are telling us it’s time to move on. But for many of us Catholics in West Virginia, that message feels like a punch in the gut. Serious reasons remain for Catholics everywhere to pause and demand much more transparency surrounding the case of former bishop Michael Bransfield.

Those reasons have to do with who oversaw the production of the investigative report on Bransfield, what the report said about allegations of child sexual abuse, and the fact that the document has never been made public.

Bransfield retired in September just as U.S. church officials announced an investigation into alleged sexual and financial misconduct during his tenure. In June, we learned details of those allegations when The Washington Post reported on the contents of the secret church report: massive financial mismanagement and lavish spending of church money, officials’ ignoring of Bransfield’s sexual misconduct, and the fact that top leaders in the United States and Rome had received cash gifts from Bransfield, including William Lori, the archbishop who oversaw the probe.

Two weeks ago, the Vatican handed down penalties suspending Bransfield from public ministry and immediately named a new bishop, Mark Brennan. But for many Catholics in West Virginia, it’s not time to move on. There are a few reasons for that.

Church officials in West Virginia and Baltimore have mischaracterized a key part of their own report. Throughout the investigation, when Lori and diocesan officials would discuss the Bransfield allegations, they generally used the term “sexual harassment” of priests and seminarians. However, The Post’s coverage cites the report as describing something that appears to go beyond harassment. It quotes a seminarian who says Bransfield pulled the young man against him and ran his hands over the seminarian’s genitals.

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Open government group raises concern over Neronha’s agreement with Providence Diocese

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

July 30, 2019

By Katherine Gregg

A freedom-of-information coalition in Rhode Island is raising red flags over the “blanket” secrecy Attorney General Peter Neronha promised the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence in a “memorandum of understanding” aimed at gaining access to diocesan records dating back to 1950 of alleged child sex abuse by clergy.

“Troubling precedent,″ wrote Linda Lotridge Levin, the retired University of Rhode Island journalism professor who is president of Access/RI, a coalition that counts, among its board members, representatives of the Rhode Island affiliate of the ACLU, Common Cause Rhode Island, the League of Women Voters of Rhode Island and the New England First Amendment Coalition.

Levin acknowledged, in her Monday letter to Neronha, that his “goal in entering [into] this MOU, as opposed to convening a grand jury, is to allow you to be more transparent with the public about your findings by eschewing the broad secrecy requirements that would enshroud grand jury proceedings.”

Unable to convince Rhode Island lawmakers to give a grand jury here the power a Pennsylvania grand jury had when it exposed decades of clergy abuse and coverups, Neronha went this route: voluntary disclosure by the diocese.

The review, in conjunction with the Rhode Island State Police, is meant to identify any prosecutable cases and make sure that no credibly accused clergy members are in active ministry, according to an earlier statement from the attorney general’s office.

“We greatly appreciate that and applaud your goal,” Levin wrote. “At the same time, we fear language in the MOU may establish a precedent that is itself problematic.”

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Diocese of Harrisburg officials reflect on one-year mark of releasing list of accused clergy

HARRISBURG (PA)
Fox 43 News

August 1, 2019

By Jack Eble

One year ago Thursday, Bishop Ronald Gainer and the Diocese of Harrisburg revealed decades of sexual abuse allegations against priests, deacons and seminarians.

Bishop Gainer apologized to survivors, “the Catholic faithful,” and “the general public” for the abuse and the inaction by past Diocese leadership.

The list includes more than 70 names of clergymen, nearly 30 more than its counterpart in the Pennsylvania Grand Jury Report that was released roughly two weeks after the Diocese of Harrisburg released its list.

Mike Barley, a spokesperson for the Diocese of Harrisburg, said they believe their decision came at the right time after compiling all of the known names accused, trying to show transparency as the Grand Jury Report loomed.

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Can clergy earn back the public trust they’ve lost?

NEW YORK (NY)
The Christian Century

August 2, 2019

By Peter W. Marty

There’s probably never been a time when emotionally insecure people could thrive in ordained ministry. But the current moment may be more challenging than ever given dwindling public esteem for the profession. Not since Gallup began charting the reputation of occupations in 1977 has respect for clergy been so low.

New polls by Gallup and by the Associated Press-NORC Center reveal that only 36 percent of Americans express high regard for the honesty and ethical standards of ministers. Although frequent churchgoers still hold clergy in high regard, only 52 percent of those who attend church on a monthly basis consider clergy to be trustworthy.

Pastors may not yet feel as irrelevant as travel agents, parking lot attendants, or necktie sales clerks, but the influence of clergy has shrunk notably in the last two decades. Only 13 percent of regular churchgoers regularly seek advice from their clergy on ethical dilemmas or big decisions. Eighty-eight percent of people who infrequently attend church “rarely” or “never” seek clergy input.

Scandals that have rocked the church for decades no doubt contribute significantly to the drop in confidence in clergy. Clergy sexual abuse problems persist, especially in traditions with male-dominated leadership that resist structural change. Conservative evangelicals have unapologetically shaped faith claims around party politics, attracting many critics in the process. Unscrupulous greed on the part of prosperity gospel preachers has further harmed the reputation of faith communities.

Nobody wants to be irrelevant. Yet how much can pastors really do to reverse the increasing lack of interest in organized religion and religious practice that shapes attitudes toward clergy? Their position can seem like that of a piano salesman trying to convince people to revive the household sing-alongs that animated family life several generations ago. It’s an uphill slog.

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The Nuns Who Bought and Sold Human Beings

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

Augusts 2, 2019

By Rachel L. Swarns

Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School, one of the oldest Roman Catholic girls’ schools in the nation, has long celebrated the vision and generosity of its founders: a determined band of Catholic nuns who championed free education for the poor in the early 1800s.

The sisters, who established an elite academy in Washington, D.C., also ran “a Saturday school, free to any young girl who wished to learn — including slaves, at a time when public schools were almost nonexistent and teaching slaves to read was illegal,” according to an official history posted for several years on the school’s website.

But when a newly hired school archivist and historian started digging in the convent’s records a few years ago, she found no evidence that the nuns had taught enslaved children to read or write. Instead, she found records that documented a darker side of the order’s history.

The Georgetown Visitation sisters owned at least 107 enslaved men, women and children, the records show. And they sold dozens of those people to pay debts and to help finance the expansion of their school and the construction of a new chapel.

“Nothing else to do than to dispose of the family of Negroes,’’ Mother Agnes Brent, the convent’s superior, wrote in 1821 as she approved the sale of a couple and their two young children. The enslaved woman was just days away from giving birth to her third child.

Nuns disposing of black families? I have been poring over 19th-century church records for several years now and such casual cruelty from leaders of the faith still takes my breath away. I am a black journalist and a black Catholic. Yet I grew up knowing nothing about the nuns who bought and sold human beings.

For generations, enslaved people have been largely left out of the origin story traditionally told about the Catholic Church. My reporting on Georgetown University, which profited from the sale of more than 200 slaves, has helped to draw attention in recent years to universities and their ties to slavery. But slavery also helped to fuel the growth of many contemporary institutions, including some churches and religious organizations.

Historians say that nearly all of the orders of Catholic sisters established by the late 1820s owned slaves.

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Sexual abuse survivors ask for AG investigation into Diocese of Lake Charles

LAKE CHARLES (LA)
KPLC TV

August 1, 2019

By Theresa Schmidt

Three months ago, the Diocese of Lake Charles released a list of credibly accused clergy which included the names of eleven priests, eight of whom are dead.

But some complain the list is far from transparent and have asked the Louisiana attorney general to investigate.

In 2016, ex-priest Mark Broussard was convicted of sexual offenses against children and is serving two life sentences plus fifty years. When the Diocese released its list of credibly accused priests, it said allegations regarding Broussard were received by the Diocese in 1994 and 2009. Yet some say the diocese knew sooner.

Richard Windmann, himself a victim, is the Louisiana leader of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, also called SNAP.

They advocate for full disclosure statewide.

“These priests, that have been entrusted with the church, they don’t own the church. The administrators, the governance of the church, it’s the people in the pews that are the church. And when they leave there’s not going to be a church. And it won’t be because of the actions of victims and survivors. It will be because of the actions of priests and archbishops and bishops who cover it up,” said Windmann.

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Abuse finding didn’t end ex-deacon’s work with children

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Associated Press

August 2, 2019

By Jim Mustian and Kevin McGill

A former Roman Catholic deacon barred from the ministry in New Orleans because of sexual abuse allegations maintained access to schoolchildren and held leadership roles as recently as last year in the Knights of Columbus, despite promising three decades ago to avoid young boys “for the good of the Church,” according to records obtained by The Associated Press.

George Brignac, 84, was defrocked as a deacon in 1988 after a 7-year-old boy accused him of fondling him at a Christmas party. That allegation came on top of previous claims that he had abused other boys, including one that led to his acquittal in 1978 on three counts of indecent behavior with a juvenile. The Archdiocese of New Orleans settled several lawsuits against Brignac, including one for more than $500,000.

Still, he remained involved in the church as a lay minister who read the gospel during Mass until last year, when news reports about his past prompted officials to remove him.

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Jesuit inquiry confirms abuses by famed Chilean priest

ROME (ITALY)
Catholic News Service

August 2, 2019

While deceased Jesuit Father Renato Poblete Barth was known publicly as a champion of the poor in Chile, an internal investigation funded by the Jesuits revealed that the famed clergyman abused more than a dozen women over a span of nearly 50 years.

The results of the six-month independent investigation, which were announced July 30 by Jesuit Father Cristian del Campo, provincial superior of Chile, concluded that “the abuses of power, of conscience, sexual and other crimes committed by Renato Poblete Barth were sustained by a sort of double life, protected by his public image of a good person.”

“The abuse, transversely, was carried out from a position of power that gave him that image, his enormous network of contacts, and the economic power that he had by autonomously handling important sums of money during many years,” the report said.

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Catholic church asks for copy of 1917 Canon Law in Latin

INVERELL (AUSTRALIA)
Inverell Times

August 1, 2019

By Andrew Thomson
.
The Catholic church has demanded a clergy sex abuse victim, who was raped as a nine-year-old in a confessional box, provide a copy of the church’s own rules in Latin.

A south-west victim of notorious pedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale is pursuing civil damages through the Victorian Supreme Court from Bishop of Ballarat Paul Bird, on behalf of the diocese.

In May, Supreme Court Justice Michael McDonald asked the church’s legal team for an explanation in relation to the church denying knowledge of Ridsdale’s pedophile activities with a view to determining if costs should be awarded to the victim.

That led to the church sacking its legal team and calling in the lawyers who acted for now jailed Arch Bishop George Pell.

The victim’s lawyers have been asking the church hand over archive documents.

Under 1917 Canon Law which applied at the time of the offending, the church was required to keep an archive of all important documents, including sex assault allegations against clergy members, and a record of who had seen the documents and what documents had been destroyed.

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Paedophile victims praised for coming forward after priest who taught in Lancashire jailed for 18 years

LANCSASTER (ENGLAND)
Lancaster Live

August 1, 2019

By Paul Britton and Dominic Moffitt

Two men who were sexually abused by a priest in Lancashire have received praise from The NSPCC.

The charity called their actions ‘brave’ after the two men, who were sexually abused as teenagers by a paedophile priest, gave evidence that led to his conviction – and an 18-year prison sentence.

One stood up in court twice to detail his suffering at the hands of Catholic priest Michael Higginbottom in separate trials.

The charity said their ‘courageous actions’ in reporting the abuse and recalling their experiences to a jury showed ‘the passage of time is no protection for abusers’.

Higginbottom, 76, was found guilty of five counts of serious sexual assault and seven counts of indecent assault following a re-trial.

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Key Plenary Council topics emerge from final report of the Listening and Dialogue phase

BRISBANE (AUSTRALIA)
The Catholic Leader

August 2, 2019

By Mark Bowling

CELIBACY for priests, the role of women, and the inclusion of divorced and remarried Catholics were among “strongly discussed” topics contained in the Plenary Council 2020’s latest report.

The final report of the council’s Listening and Dialogue phase captures the voice of more than 222,000 Australians and provides insights into 17,457 individual and group submissions.

Plenary council president Perth Archbishop Timothy Costelloe said the 314-page document was the result of the listening process that had produced “an extraordinary treasure of ideas and proposals which represents the heartfelt response of many people”.

“The great challenge ahead of us now is to ‘catch’ the voice of the Holy Spirit within the passionate, hopeful but sometimes contradictory voices of God’s people.”

Among the wide-ranging list of submissions were those calling for ways to improve the sacraments to increase Church attendance and “allow the fullness of a Catholic life to flourish”, and addressing the clerical child sex abuse scandal.

The structure of Church life “drew a great deal of attention” around leadership and governance, the need for greater listening between leadership and the laity, and the need to “modernise Church teachings to bring them in line with Australian society in t

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Schoolgirl scandal priest Simon Sayers banned from ministry for life

PORTSMOUTH (ENGLAND)
Portsmouth News

August 2, 2019

A PRIEST has been struck off for life for having a sexual relationship with a married parishioner who turned to him for help.

Former Emsworth-with-Warblington parish rector Simon Sayers admitted ‘betraying his calling’ in a letter to a private tribunal that eventually found him guilty of inappropriate conduct this week.

It comes after he was previously banned from his ministry for five years in 2016 over two sexual incidents with a 16-year-old school girl.

The tribunal, which Mr Sayers did not attend, was told he began a sexual relationship with the parishwoman when she approached him for pastoral support.

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What has changed at Catholic seminaries?

DENVER (CO)
National Catholic Register

August 1, 2019

By Msgr. Andrew Baker and Fr. Carter Griffin

Many Catholics, understandably, have grown skeptical of seminary formation. After all, it is priests and bishops who have caused the scandal of clergy sexual abuse, and every one of them is a product of seminaries.

Sometimes it is presumed that little has changed in seminaries since the time, decades ago, when the vast majority of those abusive priests were formed. Professor Janet Smith recently published a commentary that rightly asks whether seminary reforms are authentic and lasting or simply “window dressing.”

As the rectors of two seminaries forming men for the priesthood today, we would like to offer our own perspective in order to throw some light on the present situation — because, in fact, a great deal has changed.

Admittedly, the complexities of any topic as sprawling as the formation of Catholic priests cannot be covered in a short essay like this. Our remarks apply mainly to diocesan seminaries in the United States and the North American College in Rome, for example, since we are most familiar with those. Even among those seminaries, reforms have not been uniform; some changes have probably been merely superficial, as Janet Smith surmises. Furthermore, even the most wholesome seminary environment does not guarantee that graduates will remain faithful, any more than a good family guarantees that every child will turn out well. We are therefore painting with a broad brush.

Nevertheless, despite these caveats, we emphatically believe that any impartial observer with all the facts would come to the same conclusion: Seminary admissions are far more stringent, and formation far more rigorous, than they were when the great majority of clerical sexual abusers were ordained. We believe this to be a source of hope and encouragement for us all.

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AG Josh Shapiro To Block Diocese From Using Orphanage Endowment To Pay Sex Abuse Victims

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA TV

July 25, 2019

By Andy Sheehan

The church scandal has left Bishop David Zubik with two monumental tasks.

He must compensate the victims of alleged clergy sexual abuse while keeping the diocese out of bankruptcy.

To do that, he’s looking to a defunct orphanage in the South Hills, and its endowment of close to $9 million to help fund his victim’s compensation fund.

“We’re working through the proper channels to make sure that we have access to those funds, and we can use them for the IRCP fund,” the bishop said.

But Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro — whose report detailed the abuse of minors at the hands of diocesan priests — is telling the diocese not so fast.

In papers filed in Allegheny County Orphan’s Court — his office said orphanage founder, James L. Toner, “would never have intended his charitable gift to be used for this purpose.”

When Toner died in 1899, he left the diocese $140,000 to build and operate the Toner Institute, which became a home and school for orphans and troubled boys from 1921-77. The Toner Institute is gone, but the Toner Trust has now grown to between $8 and $9 million.

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Higher Than Expected Sex Abuse Claims Puts Strain On Diocese Of Pittsburgh

PITTSBURGH (PA)
KDKA TV

August 1, 2019

By Andy Sheehan

More people than anticipated have registered to file sexual abuse claims with the Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh.

On the floor around attorney Alan Perer’s desk are the files of clients that allege abuse from the Diocese of Pittsburgh Catholic priests.

He said many have come out of the shadows to talk about what happened to them as children.

“I think the scope is far greater than what the grand jury said,” Perer said. “I have people calling me every day saying I never told anyone about this my whole life.”

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A Hudson Megachurch, a Beloved Pastor and the International Sex Abuse Scandal They’ve Tried To Hide

CLEVELAND (OH)
Cleveland Scene

August 1, 2019

By Sam Allard

For a man who purports to be so boldly committed to truth, American missionary and Christian pastor Tom Randall has been at the center of – in fact, may be the chief architect of – a long and wicked deception.

Randall is a gregarious man with an earnest, unsophisticated preaching style. He stands 6’5″ and ambles about with the busted-knee hitch of a former serious athlete. He has never fully conquered his Rs, but the speech impediment has endeared him to friends, colleagues, golfers on the PGA Senior Tour, where he served for several years as chaplain, and megachurch congregations nationwide. To these audiences and others he has told versions of the same story about himself: He grew up as a thief on the inner-city streets of Detroit and was shepherded to Christ by a college basketball coach.

These days, the 65-year-old Randall lives in Stow, Ohio, with his wife Karen and preaches from time to time at the nondenominational Hudson megachurch Christ Community Chapel, where he has been on the payroll since 2014, shortly after he returned to the states from a brief and highly sensationalized stint in a Manila detention center.

The Philippines. That’s where Randall lived as a missionary for years, purportedly playing professional basketball and spreading the word of God “through sports, recreation [and] competition.”

In January 2014, Randall was back in the Philippines on a semi-regular mission trip when he was arrested during an early morning raid of Sankey Samaritan Orphanage, the children’s home he founded in 1998. Randall, the facility’s Filipino manager Toto Luchavez and Toto’s son Jake were handcuffed and taken into custody.

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Archdiocese of Portland to pay nearly $4 million to settle sex abuse claims by 8 men against Oregon priest

PORTLAND (OR)
The Oregonian

August 1, 2019

By Maxine Bernstein

The Archdiocese of Portland will pay nearly $4 million to settle claims by eight men who say they were sexually abused when they were boys in the 1970s and 1980s by a priest on the Oregon coast.

The Rev. Pius Brazauskas, who died in 1990, abused three of the men when they were between ages 5 and 12, according to a lawsuit they filed in January 2018. Brazauskas French kissed them, groped their genitals and pressed himself against them, they said.

The suit marked the first time anyone publicly named Brazauskas as an alleged child abuser, said their lawyer Peter B. Janci of Portland. After the suit was filed, five other men came forward to allege similar abuse.

Brazauskas was assigned to Holy Redeemer Catholic Church in North Bend at the time.

The initial plaintiffs in the case, identified only by initials as J.B., S.R. and S.F., will receive $675,000 each under the settlement. They are now in their 40s.

Of the five others, S.S. will receive $675,000, J.N. $475,000; B.S., $440,000, A.S. $125,000 and D.G. $100,000, according to court documents.

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Lawsuit claims LA diocese knowingly accepted priest accused of sex assault

NEW YORK (NY)
Episcopal News Service

August, 1, 2019

By Egan Millard

A woman is suing the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, saying one of its priests sexually assaulted her and others in New York in the 1970s, and the diocese knowingly allowed him to serve as a priest there anyway. However, two other dioceses that have licensed the priest in question say their background checks never turned up any allegations of sexual misconduct.

The Rev. Paul Kowalewski, 71, is retired but had been serving as an occasional supply priest at the Church of St. Paul in the Desert in Palm Springs, California, and his ministry has been suspended, the Rt. Rev. Susan Brown Snook, bishop of San Diego, told Episcopal News Service. Though the church is in the Diocese of San Diego, he is canonically resident in the Diocese of Los Angeles, and served as the rector of a large Los Angeles parish from 2005 to 2013.

Patricia Harner, the plaintiff, says Kowalewski sexually assaulted her in 1971, when she was a 19-year-old parishioner at St. Amelia Catholic Church in Tonawanda, New York, and he was a seminarian preparing to be ordained in the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo.

In response to questions from ENS, the Diocese of Central New York – the first Episcopal diocese in which Kowalewski served as a priest – said there is no record that indicates the diocese knew of any sexual abuse allegations against him when he was received or during his tenure there. The diocese conducted a background check on Kowalewski in 1990, which turned up no indication of sexual misconduct, according to their records.

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August 1, 2019

Victims’ Rights Attorney Releases Extensive List of NY Archdiocese Clerics Accused of Sex Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
NBC 4 News

August 1, 2019

Though the Archdiocese of New York released its own list of 120 priests and deacons that it said had been credibly accused of sexual abuse or the possession of pornography, or whose behavior had led to compensation claims being paid in April, the victims’ rights attorney said it compiled a more extensive, yet “incomplete” list of the accused witht he help of individuals across the country.

Survivors and victims’ advocates joined the firm Jeff Anderson & Associates in releasing the report on sexual abuse in the Archdiocese and calling Archbishop Timothy Dolan and religious orders to fully disclose the accused who have worked in the Archdiocese.

“It’s time to release more information about the real peril that does exist and has existed in the Archdiocese of New York and the failure of this cardinal and his predecessors to reveal the full truth,” lawyer Jeff Anderson said.

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No charges against Aiken priest accused of exchanging explicit pictures with minor

AUGUSTA (BA)
Augusta Chronicle

August 1, 2019

By Jozsef Papp

No probable cause for criminal charges was found against a priest accused of exchanging explicit pictures with a juvenile in Aiken.

According to the Aiken County Sheriff’s Office, an investigation was started Tuesday after receiving information from the Aiken Department of Public Safety about a possible pornography case involving Father Raymond Flores, 33, of Saint Mary’s Help of Christians Church.

Investigators discovered Flores was having an online conversation with a juvenile on Grindr, an online adult dating application, during which they exchanged photos of their genitalia. An investigation revealed the juvenile indicated on Grindr he was 18 years old.

Flores, the juvenile and his family and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston fully cooperated in the investigation. According to the sheriff’s office, the investigation revealed there was no evidence that would have risen beyond the initial complaint and established probable cause for criminal charges.

The findings were presented to the 2nd Circuit Solicitor’s Office and the South Carolina Attorney General’s Office. The juvenile’s family told investigators they did not want to pursue any further investigation.

Flores was placed on administrative leave without the ability to perform priestly duties for behavior inappropriate of a priest, according to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston.

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Tagle asks Catholics to pray for ‘persecuted, falsely accused’ bishops, priests

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
ABS-CBN News

August 1, 2019

By Maria Tan

Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle is asking Catholics to pray for bishops and priests who are “persecuted and falsely accused,” according to an official of the Archdiocese of Manila on Thursday.

“Cardinal Luis Antonio G. Tagle, is asking all of us, priests, religious men and women, and lay faithful in the Archdiocese of Manila, to offer our Masses and prayer for all our bishops and priests, especially those who suffer because of persecutions and false accusations,” Fr. Reginald Malicdem, Manila Archdiocese chancellor, said in a statement.

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Diocese of Manchester, NH Releases List of Accused Priests

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

August 1, 2019

The Diocese of Manchester, NH has released a list of priests accused of sexual abuse. Now that church officials have taken this first step, we call on them to update the list to include critical information that has been left off, and to explain these omissions.

Releasing a list of names is important to acknowledging the depth and breadth of clergy abuse in New Hampshire. Unfortunately, as we have come to expect, the list of names and details released today is incomplete and inadequate.

For example, church officials in Manchester have omitted the names of priests that spent time in the Diocese of Manchester but were accused of abuse and listed elsewhere. To us, this omission makes no sense because clergy that abused children will likely have victims everywhere they worked.

Similarly, key details related to the allegations were left off the list. Church officials can and should include information related to when the allegations were first received, what steps the diocese took in response to those allegations and —critically — when those actions were taken and by whom. These facts are necessary to understanding not only the scope of abuse, but also the scope of any cover-up that may have occurred within the diocese.

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SNAP Applauds Survivor who Came Forward in Mississippi

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

August 1, 2019

A survivor has stepped forward in Mississippi to report the abuse she suffered at the hands of a Mississippi priest. We would like to thank this courageous survivor for coming forward and reporting these crimes committed against her.

We would also like to encourage other survivors to come forward and report crimes committed against themselves. Report to the police first, regardless of how long ago these crimes were committed. The Church should be the last institution notified about such crimes.

The ‘credible’ list of names released by church officials in March was years overdue.

Furthermore, delaying the addition of Balser’s name to this list because of some arbitrary internal Church procedure is a travesty. This delay harms the survivor as well as many others. Stating that there was no intercourse only serves the Church in its effort to minimize this crime. Crimes of this nature are damaging to children no matter what took place. Shame on Bishop Kopacz, his fitness board, the church lawyers and any other Church official who participated in downplaying this crime.

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A soldier’s wife went to her Army chaplain after a rabbi sent her explicit messages. She says he harassed her instead

SEATTLE (WA)
The Seattle Times

July 31, 2019

By Katherine Khashimova Long

When Traci Moran, an observant Jewish woman living at Joint Base Lewis-McChord with her enlisted husband, came to Army Chaplain Capt. Michael Harari in August 2018, she was looking for spiritual guidance, she said.

A Tacoma rabbi, Zalman Heber, had been sending her sexually explicit text and voice messages for almost a month despite Moran asking more than once that he stop, the messages showed.

Harari was her husband’s unit chaplain — meaning he was responsible for the spiritual well-being of the unit’s families — and the only rabbi on base. And he and Heber were part of the same Hasidic organization, Chabad, that runs synagogues and cultural centers around the world.

All of that meant, Moran said, that Harari was “in an incredibly unique position to take my report and tailor counseling to my specific religious views.”

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Figure skater Ashley Wagner: ‘I was sexually assaulted by John Coughlin’ at 17

UNITED STATES
Yahoo Sports

August 1, 2019

By Liz Roscher

Figure skater Ashley Wagner wrote a powerful first-person essay that appeared on USA Today on Thursday, bravely recounting her sexual assault. In the essay, she says that the man who assaulted her was now-deceased figure skater John Coughlin.

Wagner says that the assault happened in June of 2008, when she had just turned 17. She went to her first party while she was at a figure skating camp in Colorado Springs, a house party thrown by several local athletes. She and her friends were offered beds in the house when they couldn’t find rides back to their hotel at the end of the night, and Wagner said that she felt “safe” because she was with her friends.

In the middle of the night, Wagner wrote that she woke up when Coughlin, who was 22 at the time, came into the room and got into bed with her. She said that he started kissing her neck and touching her, and pretending to be asleep didn’t make him stop.

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Names of 310 Perpetrators Accused of Sexual Misconduct in theArchdiocese of New York to be Released Today

NEW YORK (NY)
Jeff Anderson & Associates

August 1, 2019

Today in Manhattan, survivors, advocates and the law firm of Jeff Anderson & Associates will:

Release The Anderson Report on Sexual Abuse in the Archdiocese of New York containing the identities, histories, photographs and information on 310 clerics accused of child sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of New York;

Demand full disclosure by the Archdiocese of New York, Archbishop Timothy Dolan, and the religious orders, of the identities, histories, and current whereabouts of all clergy accused of child sexual abuse who worked in the Archdiocese;

Discuss a new law, the New York Child Victims Act, which opens a one-year “window” in mid-August for survivors of child sexual abuse to take legal action against the perpetrator and the institution that may have protected the perpetrator, regardless of when the abuse occurred.

WHEN: Today – Thursday, August 1, 2019 – at 11:00 AM ET

WHERE: Courtyard Marriot – Manhattan/Central Park
Belvedere Room
1717 Broadway, New York, NY 10019

Notes: The press conference will be live-streamed via YouTube https://www.youtube.com/andersonadvocates and Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/AndersonAdvocates/.

Contact: Jeff Anderson: Office: (646)759-2551; Cell: (646)499-3364
Mike Reck: Office: (646)759-2551; Cell: (646)493-8058
Trusha Goffe: (646)759-2551; Cell: (646)693-6862

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Diocesan compensation fund enters new phase

SCRANTON (PA)
Citizens Voice

August 1, 2019

By David Singleton

One phase of the Diocese of Scranton’s program to compensate victims of clergy child sexual abuse is over. Now it’s on to the next.

The window for victims who had not previously reported the abuse to the diocese to register for the Independent Survivors Compensation Program closed midnight Wednesday.

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Police investigation report paints diverging pictures of Harrison

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
The Californian

Aug. 1, 2019

By John Cox

An investigation report released this week by the Bakersfield Police Department paints two seemingly irreconcilable pictures of the Rev. Craig Harrison: a hands-off father figure who preached tough love while rewarding good behavior, or a sexual predator who groomed his victims using guilt and gifts.

In the end, there was no need to decide which view was more accurate because a detective assigned to the case concluded he could not find corroborating evidence the popular priest had touched anyone inappropriately.

Adding to the ambiguity, the recently closed investigation of the priest’s actions in Bakersfield ended with a finding that certain “inappropriate acts” Harrison was accused of were actually legal. Plus, a determination was made that some acts Harrison was alleged to have committed occurred too long ago to be prosecuted.

The report’s conclusions appear to fall short of the full vindication Harrison and his supporters have claimed as they await the results of investigations police in Firebaugh and Merced are conducting into similar accusations allegedly stemming from his time as a clergyman in those cities.

Harrison and his attorneys maintain he has never acted inappropriately and that the accusations against him originate with a group of people set on destroying his reputation and collecting payments from the Catholic Church.

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Change in New York State Law to Usher in ‘Tidal Wave’ of Child Sex Abuse Lawsuits

NEW YORK (NY)
Reuters

August 1, 2019

By Shannon Stapleton

Thousands of child sexual abuse lawsuits are expected to flow into New York State courts in the coming weeks exposing decades-old misconduct at schools, hospitals, churches and youth clubs, according to lawyers for victims.

On Aug. 14, the Child Victims Act takes effect, giving people one year to sue over allegations of sexual abuse, regardless of when they said it occurred.

Under the law signed by Governor Andrew Cuomo in February, New York has gone from one of the toughest states to bring a case because of its strict statute of limitations to one of the easiest, potentially unleashing decades of unresolved claims.

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Catholic Church continues to play hard-ball with clergy sex abuse victim

BALLARAT (AUSTRALIA)
The Courier

August 1, 2019

By Andrew Thomson

The Catholic Church continues to challenge a clergy sex abuse victim of notorious priest Gerald Ridsdale.

After last month arguing to delay the civil compensation trial by at least 120 days, it has now demanded the victim, who was raped as a nine-year-old in a confessional box, provide a copy of the church’s own rules in Latin.

The victim’s lawyers have been asking the church to hand over archive documents.

Under 1917 Canon Law which applied at the time of the offending, the church was required to keep an archive of all important documents, including sex assault allegations against clergy members and a record of who had seen the documents and what documents had been destroyed.

It’s not known what is included in the archive file of Ridsdale, arguably Australia’s most notorious paedophile priest with past convictions for assaults on more than 50 children.

“For the church to ask me to provide a copy of their 1917 Canon Law was bad enough, but we offered to give it to them even though you can buy it on the internet,” he said.

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Bishop Keenan: ‘People are angry, but no one is saying why’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Catholic Herald

August 1, 2019

By Ruairidh MacLennan

Bishop John Keenan has led the Diocese of Paisley since 2014. Prior to this he served as Catholic chaplain to the University of Glasgow for 14 years, and as vocations director for the Archdiocese of Glasgow. He has emerged as a strong proponent of the New Evangelisation, and of a renewal of faith in Britain. I spoke to him in St Mirin’s Cathedral, Paisley.

Bishop Keenan, what are the main challenges facing the faith across Britain today? Could you offer a diagnosis?

Bishop John Keenan Britain is one of the most secularised countries in the Western world. It has bought into the idea that it became a modern state by winning out against religion and the Church. People see their dignity as being that which enables them to determine their own identity and morals, particularly in the realm of sexuality. This has become such a widely held view that anyone who holds an opinion to the contrary – namely, that there is an objective truth about ourselves and our lives given to us by God – is considered to be an enemy of the modern state. The Catholic Church is now the one institution in Britain which still believes that there is a God who gives us our human nature and identity, and who has made known to our reason what sort of lives we should be living in order to truly be free and fulfilled.

I am reminded of the comments which the Speaker of the House of Commons, John Bercow, made in 2018 in which he suggested that certain rights – mandated by the state – “trumped” other rights.

JK It is a new manifestation of what Orwell said: “All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others.” This is where we are now. All rights are “equal”, be they religious rights or LGBT rights … but some are more equal. Orwell used that as a parody of communism, and eventually he identified this as the fatal flaw which would bring about its downfall. It was predicated on a contradiction, as is postmodern society. He said that of the Eastern Bloc, but it now equally applies to the politics of the West. You cannot have equality for all and say that some are more equal. Ultimately it ceases to be about truth, but about power. It is built on sand, not nature, or reason. It is built on the will to power.

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Bishop Brennan faces a stern challenge

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Catholic Herald

August 1, 2019

By Jordan Bloom

Trust is easily broken and repaired only with difficulty in a place like West Virginia, whose south-west corner is most closely associated with the notoriously grudge-prone Hatfield clan. (The Hatfield–McCoy feud, a bloody land dispute between two rural families, raged from 1863 to 1891.) The incoming Bishop Mark Brennan (pictured) of West Virginia – or of the diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, which is coterminous with the state – will have his work cut out repairing the damage done by his predecessor.

Bishop Michael Bransfield, it is alleged, used his position as shepherd of one of the most economically distressed parts of the country to live not like a successor to the Apostles but as an orange liqueur-swilling sybarite – doling out patronage money to his episcopal allies when he wasn’t making sexual advances towards seminarians. Bransfield, who protests his innocence, was once head of the board of trustees of the Papal Foundation, Theodore McCarrick’s slush fund.

One detail that has emerged during the scandal is the diocese’s possession of land in Texas from a bequest decades ago, which has become a significant source of revenue from oil leases. The $15 million figure cited as its annual revenue could do a lot of good in a place like West Virginia.

The revelations of Bransfield’s extraordinary spending habit – $4.6 million to renovate his house, more than $2 million on travel – are all the more incredible for having happened in a place where a dollar goes much further than in New York or Washington.

Bransfield was reportedly fond of pointing at diocesan property and saying, “I own this.” Well, not any more.

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July 31, 2019

Sacerdote de Quecholac es acusado de presunto abuso sexual

PUEBLA (MEXICO)
El Sol de Puebla [Puebla, Puebla, Mexico]

July 31, 2019

Read original article

Una adolescente habría revelado que el padre la tenía amenazada 

El Sol de Puebla 

QUECHOLAC, Pue:- Una familia originaria de este municipio denunció de forma anónima al sacerdote Adalberto “N” ante las autoridades competentes, por un supuesto caso de abuso sexual en contra de una adolescente que lo delató tras callar por varios meses.

Los padres de la parte agraviada, quienes decidieron permanecer en el anonimato por seguridad, declaró a esta casa editorial que al notar a su hija que pasaba por un mal momento, decidieron intervenir y tras revisar físicamente a la menor se llevaron la sorpresa de que la jovencita presentaba varias lesiones en su cuerpo.

En ese preciso momento, la adolescente confesó que el sacerdote Adalberto “N” había abusado de ella sexualmente en repetidas ocasiones, no conforme, la obligaba a que acudiera frecuente a la iglesia con la amenaza de que iniciaría una serie de represalias en contra de su familia quien es muy allegada a la religión católica, por lo cual decidió callar por varios meses.

Enseguida, la adolescente en compañía de sus tutores decidieron buscar ayuda ante las instancias municipales del Desarrollo Integral de la Familia (DIF), para llevar a cabo un chequeo médico, así como solicitar asesoría legal para presentar la denuncia correspondiente ante la Fiscalía General del Estado (FGE), por el supuesto abuso sexual que cometido por este sacerdote.

Se espera que tras la intervención de las autoridades, un médico legista determine el grado violación sobre la menor, quien permanece en el anonimato, además hacen un llamado a la comunidad en general para denunciar en caso de también ser víctima de abuso sexual por parte del padre Adalberto “N”.

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‘I thought losing my virginity would be rape’: inside Christian purity guides

LONDON (ENGLAND)
The Guardian blog

July 31, 2019

By Sian Cain

Joshua Harris was just 22 in 1997 when he published I Kissed Dating Goodbye, a dating guidebook for young Christians that advised them to do anything but. Dating was a “training ground for divorce”, he argued in the book, which sold almost 1m copies worldwide. It also made Harris a superstar in the Christian purity movement, a pro-abstinence crusade that began in evangelical churches in the 1990s and became well-known in the purity ring-wearing hands of Jessica Simpson and the Jonas Brothers. Many authors came after Harris – John and Stasi Eldredge, Hayley DiMarco, Tim and Beverly LaHaye – all of them in the US, where religious publishing is worth $1.22bn (£1bn) a year.

Now 44, Harris made headlines this week when he revealed he no longer considers himself a Christian. He has been issuing apologies for his own books over the last decade, even making a documentary called I Survived Kissing Dating Goodbye. On his Instagram this week, he wrote: “I have lived in repentance for the past several years – repenting of my self-righteousness, my fear-based approach to life, the teaching of my books, my views of women in the church, and my approach to parenting to name a few.”

Dianna E Anderson, who left the purity movement in her 20s and is the author of Damaged Goods: New Perspectives on Christian Purity, says its relationship guides have inflicted lasting damage on young people desperate to preserve their holiness while battling hormones.

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The church of Larry Nassar

Patheos blog

July 31, 2019

By Fred Clark

I included this story in the “postcards” link round-up, but I’m still so gobsmacked by it that I’ve got to visit it again. It’s from this RNS report by Bob Smietana, “Video links Beth Moore, Russell Moore, James Merritt to ‘Trojan horse of social justice.’“

Owen Strachan, associate professor of theology at Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary and former president of The Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood, also appears in the video, arguing that “liberal Christianity” is invading the evangelical church and a spiritual battle is underway.

“We are always having the principalities and powers exert pressure on us,” said Strachan.

An image that appears to be of Rachael Denhollander, an abuse activist who spoke at the SBC’s annual meeting, is intercut with [those] comments.

That angered Jacob Denhollander, Rachael’s husband.

He told Ascol and Founders Ministries on Twitter that their use of “my wife’s image in your video and the insinuation that she is part of the principalities and powers attacking the church is cowardly, grossly dishonest, and bearing false witness.”

These guys looked around the whole world for an iconic symbol of nefarious “powers and principalities” they regard as invading the church and attacking their faith in a spiritual battle, and the person whom they chose to represent all of that was Rachael Denhollander.

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The Vatican press office has turned over, again

Get Religion blog

July 31, 2019

By Clemente Lisi

The Vatican press office may be second only to the White House communications department when it comes to ranking the world’s busiest public relations operation.

Like President Donald Trump, Pope Francis and the Holy See are in some serious need of daily damage control. The resurfacing of the clergy sex abuse scandal — year after year for decades — and the allegations that led to the downfall of former cardinal Theodore McCarrick have been the Vatican’s biggest PR headaches over the past year.

Responsible for handling the Holy See’s messaging on the clergy scandal and a host of other issues will be a retooled press office. Much of the turmoil that has surrounded the pope and the Catholic church over the past year called for an overhaul of the Holy See’s press operation.

The past two weeks has seen a flurry of announcements, including the naming of a new press office director and vice director (more on this position further down), two of the biggest jobs at the Vatican held by lay people.

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Associated Press digs into hush-hush network that protects priests – on Catholic right only

Get Religion blog

July 31, 2019

By Terry Mattingly

If there was an omnipresent reader who had somehow managed to follow my 30-plus years of work linked to the Catholic clergy sex crisis, I think that she or he would have spotted at least one overarching theme.

The big idea: This is a scandal that cannot be divided according to liberal and conservative prejudices. Anyone who tried to do that would have to avoid too many case studies, too many tragedies, too many people — on the left and right — hiding too many crimes. I have argued that wise, patient reporters will listen to liberal and conservative activists and then search for issues and ideas that they share in common.

Hold that thought, because I will end with that.

Every now and then, we see an important story produced by journalists (often in the mainstream press) who seem to think the scandal is all about the sins of conservatives or (often in some independent Catholic publication) all about the sins of liberals.

The Associated Press just produced a story of this kind, a report that raises important issues and was built on tons of journalism legwork to get solid sources. It’s a valid and important story. But it appears that these journalists only saw half of a larger tragedy. The headline: “Unmarked buildings, quiet legal help for accused priests.”

Yes, secrets were uncovered. But stop and think about that headline. Is the assumption that all Catholic priests accused of sexual abuse are, in fact, guilty? Is it possible to imagine that some Catholics might support efforts to research and clear the names of priests who they believe have been falsely accused and have valid reasons to do so? And are all these efforts on the right? Just asking.

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Un sacerdote condenado a 11 años por el abuso de una adolescente apelará su sentencia

RIO GALLEGOS (ARGENTINA)
Clarín [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

July 31, 2019

By REDACCIÓN CLARÍN

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La chica tenía 13 años cuando el cura Cristian Vázquez la atacó sexualmente en tres oportunidades. La defensa repetirá su pedido de nulidad para el fallo dictado en junio.

En el que constituyó el primer caso en la provincia de un juicio oral por delitos sexuales aplicado a un religioso, el sacerdote Cristian Vázquez fue condenado en junio a 11 años de prisión por el abuso de una adolescente de 13 añosen la ciudad fueguina de Río Grande. La pena fue definida por el Tribunal en lo Criminal del distrito. 

Ahora, su defensa confirmó que el párroco apelará ese dictamen condenatorio por considerarlo arbitrario, al tiempo que van a reiterar el planteo de nulidad.

Javier Da Fonseca, abogado de Vázquez, adelantó que en las próximas horas presentará un recurso de casación que tramitará directamente ante el Superior Tribunal de Justicia de la provincia. 

Da Fonseca cuestiona la presunta arbitrariedad con que los jueces valoraron las pruebas del caso, y volverá a mencionar planteos de nulidad ya realizados durante el juicio.

Vázquez, de 39 años, quedó detenido desde el veredictoporque los magistrados consideraron que no tiene arraigo en Río Grande, ni domicilio fijo, trabajo o familiares, lo que en virtud de la pena conlleva un riesgo procesal y para la víctima, explicó el abogado de la querella, Francisco Ibarra, que representa a la joven abusada y a su familia. 

El sacerdote fue hallado autor material y penalmente responsable de los delitos de abuso sexual simple (en dos oportunidades) y abuso sexual con acceso carnal (en una ocasión), en todos los casos agravado por su condición de religioso.

La víctima era una asidua concurrente a la iglesia junto a su familia, realizaba tareas como monaguillo y “todo el grupo familiar formaba parte del círculo íntimo del cura, ya que tanto la joven como su hermana limpiaban su departamento a cambio de un salario, e incluso celebraron juntos una Navidad“, según los requerimientos fiscales para llegar al juicio.

“De acuerdo a lo probado, el cura aprovechó las circunstancias para acercarse a la joven y abusar de ella en tres oportunidades: dentro de un automóvil, en la casa de la menor y en su propio domicilio. Este fue el más grave de los episodios porque incluyó el acceso carnal”, tal lo resumió Ibarra.

Si bien los abusos sucedieron en 2013, recién fueron denunciados por la madre de la víctima en 2016, cuando su hija (que hoy tiene 18 años) pudo contar por primera vez lo sucedido. 

Poco después de la denuncia el sacerdote fue separado del cargo por el obispado de Río Gallegos (Santa Cruz), como consecuencia de un proceso de la justicia canónica. 

Con información de Télam

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Full accounting provides hope for path forward

CRANSTON (RI)
Cranston Herald

July 31, 2019

Earlier this month, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence released a list of priests and clergy members found to have been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing children since 1950.

It represented an important step forward for survivors of abuse, as well as for the broader community. As Providence Bishop Thomas J. Tobin said, acknowledging these cases through the recent disclosure represented a “difficult but necessary moment in the life of our diocesan church.”

In terms of both transparency and accountability, however, much more work remains to be done. Now, it is poised to proceed.

Attorney General Peter F. Neronha last week announced a memorandum of understanding has been reached with the Diocese granting his office and Rhode Island State Police with access to “all complaints and allegations of child sexual abuse by clergy dating back to 1950 – whether deemed credible by the Diocese or not.”

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Catholic priest in Aiken exchanged explicit photos with the underage boy on adult app, authorities say

AIKEN (SC)
WYFF TV

July 31, 2019

A Catholic priest in South Carolina has been accused of exchanging sexual photos with a minor on a social media app that church officials and authorities say is intended for adults.

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Charleston sent a statement to news outlets Tuesday saying 33-year-old Father Raymond Flores of the St. Mary Help of Christians Catholic Church has since been placed on leave and can’t perform his priestly duties. The diocese says the priest’s behavior did not involve physically touching a minor.

An Aiken County Sheriff’s Office report says Flores exchanged the explicit photos with the underage boy on an adult social media app. Authorities and officials didn’t immediately name the app.

No charges have been filed at this time. Sheriff’s Capt. Eric Abdullah says an investigation is ongoing.

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