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.

February 2, 2024

Group calls for KC Archdiocese to remove two men accused of assault

KANSAS CITY (KS)
WDAF-TV - Fox 4 [Kansas City MO]

February 1, 2024

By Makenzie Koch

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[VIDEO]

KANSAS CITY, Kan. — Advocates for survivors of sexual abuse at the hands of priests are publicly asking the Kansas City archdiocese to remove two men from their jobs in Johnson County.

One is now a priest at a Lenexa parish with a parochial school, and the other is the president at a Roeland Park Catholic high school.

Both have faced accusations of child molestation in the past. One of them faced a lawsuit, but neither of them ever faced criminal charges.

The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas said it did investigations into both men, as did law enforcement, and could not substantiate the accusations.

The advocates group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests said that doesn’t justify putting them back in jobs near children.

“This notion of innocent until proven guilty, that the standard we use to lock up people and deprive them of their…

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Vatican grapples with who’s responsible for abuse of ‘vulnerable adults’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

February 2, 2024

By Elise Ann Allen

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ROME – A key Vatican department charged with prosecuting sexual abuse against minors since 2001 said this week that while it’s also responsible for cases of abuse against adults with mental deficiencies, offenses against adults considered “vulnerable” for different reasons falls outside its jurisdiction and must be handled by other departments.

In a Jan. 30 “Clarification on Vulnerable Adults,” the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF) noted that a series of 2010 amendments to Pope John Paul II’s 2001 motu proprio Sacramentorum Sanctitatis Tutela on series crimes reserved to the DDF gave the department competence over the abuse of persons with mental deficiencies.

A “dicastery,” in the argot of the Vatican, refers to a department or office. Likewise, in Vatican-speak “competence” means responsibility or jurisdiction.

According to Tuesday’s statement, with the 2010 revisions the DDF “acquired the competence to deal with crimes against the sixth commandment of the decalogue…

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Vatican court hands down first-ever conviction for sexual abuse

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 25, 2024

By Elise Ann Allen

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ROME – A Vatican court Jan. 24 overturned the acquittal of a priest accused of sexually abusing a younger student at the Vatican’s St. Pius X Pre-Seminary, delivering a guilty verdict in a landmark case that marked the first ever to go to trial for alleged sexual abuse within Vatican walls.

Upon appeal from the prosecution, the October 2021 acquittal of Father Gabriele Martinelli, who was accused of abusing another student from 2007 to 2012 when he studied at the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary, was overturned by the Vatican’s appeals court.

Martinelli, initially acquitted due to a lack of evidence, this week was found guilty of “corrupting a minor” for sexual abuse committed between 2008-2009 and sentenced to two years and six months in prison.

The St. Pius X seminary, previously located inside a palazzo within the Vatican gardens, houses boys aged 12-18 who serve as altar boys at papal…

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Bart Barber, The SBC, And Abuse

NASHVILLE (TN)
Patheos [Englewood CO]

February 1, 2024

By Layne Wallace

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Is the EC or SBC at Fault in the SBC Sexual Abuse Scandal

In a recent interview the President of the Southern Baptist Convention (SBC), Dr. Bart Barber, discussed the sexual abuse scandal in the SBC among other topics. In the interview Barber says,

“What the investigation found after looking hard to see if they could find a time when the convention or the executive committee knew about abuse and failed to report it, or facilitated an abuser being able to continue to abuse, they didn’t find any instances where the convention or the executive committee did that…”

Technically True

 Video Of Barber’s Remarks about the Sexual Abuse Scandal

Barber is technically correct. The Executive Committee (EC) and the SBC itself did not fail to report sexual abuse or facilitate abuse by moving ministers from place to place. While the EC and SBC as a whole…

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Victim group demands removal of Bishop Miege leader and Lenexa priest accused of abuse

KANSAS CITY (MO)
Kansas City Star [Kansas City MO]

February 1, 2024

By Kendrick Calfee and Judy Thomas

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Two members of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) gathered Thursday outside The Cathedral of St. Peter the Apostle in Kansas City, Kansas, demanding the men to be removed from their roles and for the leader of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas to publicly address concerns about them.

The protest followed a letter Thursday to Archbishop Joseph Naumann, asking for the church leader to hold a public meeting with the group, worried parents and parishioners. In its letter to the archbishop, SNAP said a meeting of this nature could inspire similar meetings elsewhere which could lead to greater awareness of child sex crimes and hopefully even prevent them from happening.

“It would, we believe, deepen the respect that many of your flock have in you, and help create such respect where it is lacking,” the letter says.

The letter from SNAP and calls to action…

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Why is the DDF ‘clarifying’ its caseload, again?

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

February 1, 2024

By Ed. Condon

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The Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith issued on Tuesday a “clarification” on the limits of its competence to prosecute canonical cases of clerical abuse against “vulnerable adults.” 

“The Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith – since 21 May 2010 – has acquired competence to treat the crimes against the sixth commandment of the Decalogue committed by clerics with people who habitually have imperfect use of – reason [emphasis original],” the dicastery’s Jan. 30 clarification reiterated.

“Following the promulgation of the motu proprio Vos estis lux mundi… the concept of vulnerable adult has been introduced into the canonical order, which includes ‘every person in a state of infirmity, of physical deficiency or Psychic, or deprivation of personal liberty, but also Occasionally, it limits its ability to understand or to want or otherwise resist the offense,’” the document continued.

“In this respect, it should be remembered that the definition of adult vulnerable integrates more extensive cases…

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Belgian Church protests ‘debaptism’ order amid abuse outcry

BRUSSELS (BELGIUM)
The Tablet [Market Harborough, England]

January 31, 2024

By Tom Heneghan

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The number of “debaptism” requests have reportedly spiked again after the television series Gotvergeten.

Belgian bishops at the consecration of Archbishop Luc Terlinden of Brussels (second from right) in September – the same month that a documentary on Church abuse provoked public anger.
Belga News Agency / Alamy

The Belgian Church, facing rising protests after a television film on sexual abuse and cover-ups in its ranks, has appealed against a government data protection agency ruling that the Diocese of Ghent must let a person be “debaptised”.   

When Catholics ask to have their names struck from baptismal records, officials usually add a note to their files saying they have renounced their baptism without taking the name off its official registry.

The Church considers baptism a permanent act that cannot be done away with, but the agency ruled in December that the plaintiff’s personal data record overrides the Church’s interest in preserving…

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Sacramento diocese adds man convicted in Placer County to list of priests accused of sex abuse

SACRAMENTO (CA)
Sacramento Bee [Sacramento CA]

February 1, 2024

By Rosalio Ahumada

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The Catholic Diocese of Sacramento has added a name to a list of clergy members accused of sexual abuse that now includes a priest who served in another Northern California diocese but was convicted of molesting a girl while visiting Placer County.

Mark Kristy, once a priest of the religious order Discalced Carmelite Fathers, has been removed from the ministry and lives in Napa County. Kristy was convicted of child sexual molestation and sentenced in 2022 to one year in jail, according to the diocese.

Officials of the diocese were informed of the allegations against Kristy in 2015. Kristy was accused of sexually touching the girl who was younger than 14 and sexually exposing her sometime from 2001 through 2004, according to the diocese. Diocese officials said they reported the allegation to law enforcement and cooperated with authorities in Placer County, which eventually led to Kristy’s prosecution.

On Feb. 16,…

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Vatican clarifies handling of abuse cases of ‘vulnerable adults’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

February 1, 2024

By Cindy Wooden, OSV News

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Cases involving vulnerable adults who have an imperfect use of reason should be referred to offices of Roman Curia

In cases of a cleric sexually abusing a “vulnerable adult,” the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith investigates and judges only cases involving “persons who habitually have an imperfect use of reason,” the dicastery said in a note published Jan. 30.

Other cases involving vulnerable adults, including those in situations where their ability “to understand or will or otherwise resist the offense” is temporarily limited, should be referred to other offices of the Roman Curia, the clarification said.

While church documents issued in the past 15 years have included “vulnerable adults” as a special category in need of protection from clerical sexual abuse, questions have been raised about whether those persons should always be treated in church procedures in a way equivalent to children under the age of 18. For…

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Central Pa. church leader charged for not reporting child sex abuse

NEW CUMBERLAND (PA)
PennLive.com

January 31, 2024

By Madison Montag

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Note: This story was updated to reflect Hintze’s position within Bravo Group.

A Cumberland County man and “stake president” of the Harrisburg area Church of Jesus Christ and Latter-day Saints was charged Wednesday by Pa. State Police after they say he failed to report child sex abuse accusations against a former bishop, Boy Scout leader and lawyer from central Pennsylvania.

Rhett Hintze, 50, of New Cumberland, was charged with one count of failure to report or refer child abuse in connection to the July 2023 charges against Shawn Gooden, a former bishop for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who is accused of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old boy in French Creek State Park in 2000.

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February 1, 2024

Nun linked to Gozo orphanage abuse case dies

(MALTA)
Malta Independent [St. Julian’s, Malta]

January 31, 2024

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A nun linked to allegations of abuse at the Lourdes Home orphanage in Gozo decades ago died on Tuesday.

Mother Superior Carmelita Borg’s death was announced by the Santwarju Madonna ta’ Pompej Facebook page.

The Mother Superior for the Dominican nuns was responsible for the Lourdes Home orphanage in Għajnsielem where alleged abused took place.

Borg was responsible for the Lourdes Home orphanage during the 1970s and 1980s, with victims accusing her of turning a blind eye to the abuse they suffered.

Earlier this month, two women who had lived at the home decades ago, described harrowing experiences of sexual abuse by clergy and savage beatings from nuns in court.

The two women testified in a Constitutional case against the State presided over by Judge Mark Simiana, in which they claim the State had done nothing to safeguard their rights or care at the orphanage.

The women Rosanne Saliba…

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Texas father sues Assemblies of God, accuses Chi Alpha leaders of sexually abusing teenage son

COLLEGE STATION (TX)
Christian Post [Washington DC]

January 31, 2024

By Leonardo Blair

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Some seven months after Daniel Savala, an itinerant minister and convicted sex offender  with ties to the Chi Alpha Campus Ministries sponsored by the Assemblies of God, was arrested for sexually abusing two boys, a Texas father has filed a lawsuit accusing the nation’s largest Pentecostal denomination of negligence that allowed his 13-year-old son to be abused by multiple men.

Also named as defendants in the lawsuit filed in the Harris County Court last Thursday by Stephen Holt on behalf of his teenage son, identified only as L.H., are Chi Alpha Campus Ministries, College Station; North Texas Assemblies of God, and Mountain Valley Fellowship.

Holt is also seeking “monetary relief over $1,000,000” for the “harm” experienced by his son due to “the malice, gross negligence, …. or both of each of the defendants” under Texas law.

Savala, according to CBS affiliate KWTX, was…

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Mark Rozzi, advocate for sex abuse survivors and former House speaker, is leaving politics to focus on his mental health

HARRISBURG (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer [Philadelphia PA]

January 31, 2024

By Gillian McGoldrick

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A survivor of child sex abuse himself, he has worked to extend the statute of limitations for others. He’ll finish out the year in office.

Mark Rozzi got into politics to give survivors of child sex abuse such as himself a voice in Harrisburg.

But after 11 years serving in the Pennsylvania House, including a brief stint last year as House speaker, the Democrat from Reading is leaving politics less hopeful than he was when he started.

Rozzi, 52, quietly ended his auditor general campaign in December and told The Inquirer he has spent the last few months isolating himself during a particularly difficult bout of depression, a yearslong struggle caused by being sexually abused by a Catholic priest when he was a boy. He’ll serve the remainder of his term before leaving office at the end of the year.

“A lot of times, my…

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Washington State Revives Child Abuse Reporting Bill Despite Past Catholic Opposition

SEATTLE (WA)
Seattle Medium [Seattle WA]

January 31, 2024

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Washington state lawmakers are making another attempt to pass a bill that would require clergy members to act as mandatory reporters of child abuse or neglect. Senate Bill 6298 aims to include clergy in the list of mandatory reporters in Washington, addressing a significant gap in the state’s current laws. Last year, the bill faced opposition from Catholic lobbyists, but this time, the bill’s main sponsor, state Sen. Noel Frame, D-Seattle, hopes to find a compromise that will address concerns raised by Catholic representatives regarding the reporting of information obtained during confession.

Washington state currently stands among the five states where clergy members are not legally obligated to report incidents of child abuse or neglect. Recognizing the importance of closing this gap, lawmakers have reintroduced Senate Bill 6298 to rectify the situation. By mandating that clergy members report any suspected cases of child abuse or neglect, the bill aims to…

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No, Married Priests Will Not Solve The Abuse Crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
Patheos [Englewood CO]

February 1, 2024

By Mary Pezzulo

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They’ve been talking about married priests on X/Twitter lately.

Vatican official brought up ending the usual requirement for priestly celibacy in the Roman Catholic Church as a possible way to help priests not feel the need to live “double live.”  He didn’t draw any links between celibacy and sexual abuse, but since he also investigates clerical abuse he mentioned how it’s changed his point of view. And people got to talking. The question was asked, as I’ve often heard it asked: could letting priests have a wife help prevent the horrific sexual abuse scandals that just seem to keep happening? And as I always do when it’s asked, I cringed.

I am all in favor of examining the expectation that priests should be celibate. There are many reasons it might be good to have a married priesthood more like they do in the Eastern tradition. But it’s…

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‘Sugarcane’ Review: Enlightening and Infuriating Look Into Systematic Abuse at an Indian Residential School

KAMLOOPS (CANADA)
Variety [Los Angeles, CA]

January 31, 2024

By Joe Leydon

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Co-directors Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie deliver a quietly devastating account of unpunished crimes committed by representatives of the Catholic Church.

[Note from BA: The residential school featured in this film was St. Joseph’s Mission. This review mistakenly refers to it four times as “St. John’s.”]

It’s altogether likely that many non-Indigenous people knew nothing about the abuse and disappearances of Native American children that occurred over decades in residential Indian schools throughout North America until those outages inspired a wrenchingly potent subplot last year for the Taylor Sheridan-produced TV series “1923.” But the truth behind that fact-based fiction is even more shocking, and infuriating, as detailed in “Sugarcane,” the remarkable film that received a well-deserved jury prize for documentary direction at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

Indigenous filmmaker Julian Brave NoiseCat and co-director Emily Kassie show restraint and empathy while cataloguing the horrors that were endemic at the…

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Hard to say what’s doing in Francis’s Vatican

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

January 31, 2024

By Christopher R. Altieri

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It really is hard to tell what’s going on in Pope Francis’s Vatican, especially these days, but that’s because there’s plenty—too much—to see.

Heading into the weekend, Italy’s Domani published a piece detailing new allegations against the disgraced former Jesuit, Marko Rupnik–inexplicably and intolerably styled Fr. Marko Rupnik—extern of Koper diocese in his native Slovenia, currently resident in Rome and reported to be regularly seen at the Centro Aletti he founded in the early 1990s.

The allegations amount to physical assault and grievous bodily harm.

Basically, the victim alleges that Rupnik broke her right index finger during a “spiritual counselling” session. Maybe he did break the finger, maybe he didn’t. Both Rupnik and Ivanka Hosta (then-superior of the woman’s religious community) allegedly prohibited the victim from seeking medical treatment.

A fracture should show on x-rays, even at many years’ remove from the incident….

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On Religion: Pope Francis Praises Journalists For ‘Silence’ On Some Scandals

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Religion Unplugged - The Media Project - Institute for Nonprofit News [Dallas TX]

January 31, 2024

By Terry Mattingly

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(ANALYSIS) The hellish relationship began with a kiss — a strange exchange between a teenager preparing to become a Loyola sister and the Slovenian Jesuit who was already her confessor.

“The first time he kissed me on the mouth, telling me that this was how he kissed the altar where he celebrated the Eucharist, because with me he could experience sex as an expression of God’s love,” said “Anna” in an interview with the Italian news agency Domani.

The young priest was Father Marko Ivan Rupnik, who was already an artist on the rise. His artistic skills brought him to the Vatican in the late 1990s, and his sacred art has been celebrated around the world. However, he has been accused of sexual and spiritual abuse of Slovenian nuns, such as “Anna,” in the 1980s and ‘90s.

It was hard, said “Anna,” to grasp the meaning of lingering hugs after…

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Québec’s Cardinal Lacroix, named in sex abuse lawsuit, will temporarily step aside from duties

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
America [New York NY]

January 31, 2024

By OSV News

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Cardinal Gérald Lacroix of Québec has announced he will temporarily step aside from his duties, after he was named in court documents Jan. 25 in connection with a class-action sex abuse lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Québec in 2022.

A Jan. 26 statement from the archdiocese, issued in French, said that the cardinal would be “temporarily withdrawing from his activities until the situation is clarified.”

According to court documents, two incidents allegedly involving him reportedly occurred in 1987 and 1988 in Quebec City, when he was a religious brother. He is accused of inappropriately touching a 17-year-old girl on two occasions. The woman has not been identified.

The archdiocesan statement said Lacroix “categorically denies the allegations against him” and considers them “unfounded.”

“In the coming days,” the statement said, “he will send a personal communication” to the archdiocese “which will be relayed to the media.”

That personal message was…

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Book | The Life of Cardinal Humberto Medeiros of Boston | by Richard Gribble – Editor’s Note

BOSTON (MA)
Portuguese American Journal [Sherman Oaks CA]

January 31, 2024

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Cardinal Humberto Medeiros served the Church as priest and bishop in Texas and Massachusetts. An immigrant from the Azores he utilized his superior intelligence, administrative ability, and language skills to move up rapidly in Church ranks. His work with the National Conference of Catholic Bishops, both nationally and internationally, especially with migrant workers, was notable. Medeiros faced a perfect storm of social, political and religious issues in Boston. The author argues that despite the challenges he faced in Boston, Medeiros was true to the Church and his personal moral code, seeking always to serve others rather than be served by them in imitation of Christ.

Richard Gribble has produced a meticulous portrait of Humberto Medeiros, one of the most notable, yet most frequently overlooked U.S. Catholic leaders of the post-1945 era. Gribble carefully weighs the sources and helpfully explores the various contexts in which Medeiros’ life and ministry unfolded. We…

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January 31, 2024

New role for Amy Coney Barrett’s father inside Christian sect sparks controversy

SOUTH BEND (IN)
The Guardian [London, England]

January 29, 2024

By Stephanie Kirchgaessner

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Alleged abuse survivors at People of Praise worry Michael Coney may block group’s handling of sexual abuse from becoming public

Survivors of alleged childhood abuse inside the People of Praise, a secretive Christian sect that counts Amy Coney Barrett as a member, are voicing concerns that the supreme court justice’s father, who was recently promoted to a new role, may seek to block information about the group’s historic handling of sexual abuse becoming public.

Barrett, a conservative justice who was appointed by the former US president Donald Trump, has never publicly disclosed her participation in the covenant Christian community, which some former members have compared to a cult.

Her father, Michael Coney, a Louisiana-based lawyer who worked for Shell and has been a longtime member of the PoP, was this month appointed to serve as the group’s new legal counsel. Coney has also been asked to take the helm of a…

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Church abuse survivors allege negligence in class action against own lawyers

(AUSTRALIA)
Australian Broadcasting Corporation - ABC [Sydney, Australia]

January 31, 2024

By Russell Jackson

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Eight survivors of institutional childhood sexual abuse have launched a class action against one of Australia’s most prominent sexual abuse law firms, which they allege failed to obtain proper compensation from the institutions responsible for their abuse.

In a group proceeding commenced in Victoria’s Supreme Court on Wednesday, former clients of specialist abuse law firm Waller Legal alleged that it failed to properly claim for their “loss of earnings” compensation when pursuing their legal claims, leaving some of them more than $1 million short of the compensation they were entitled to.

“It is alleged that Waller Legal settled claims for substantially less than what the claims were worth, on the basis that a category of compensation (economic loss) was not properly sought,” said a summary of the proceeding.

“The claim in this proceeding alleges that Waller Legal were negligent and were in breach of contract.”

Court documents state that the…

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Utah bill would allow clergy the option to report ongoing child abuse or neglect

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
KSL TV [Salt Lake City, UT]

January 30, 2024

By Bridger Beal-CVETKO, KSL.COM and Daniel Woodruff, KSL TV

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Utah clergy could be allowed to report instances of child abuse or neglect even if the perpetrator told them during confession if the clergy member believes the abuse is ongoing, under a newly proposed bill.

Rep. Anthony Loubet, R-Kearns, spoke with KSL.com about his legislation — which has not yet been made public — saying it also provides legal protection to members of the clergy who decide to inform law enforcement of ongoing abuse.

“What my bill is trying to do is to at least give them those protections that others currently receive,” Loubet said of the civil and criminal liability protections. “So if they report, they don’t have to worry about getting sued for failing to report or being aware of neglect or abuse or anything like that.”

Loubet said he’s working to find a middle ground on the issue of penitent privilege, by giving faith leaders the option…

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Canadian Cardinal Accused Of Sex Assault Says Was ‘Never’ Improper

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Barron's [New York NY]

January 30, 2024

By Agence France Presse

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A Canadian cardinal who is a close advisor to Pope Francis on Tuesday personally denied accusations he sexually assaulted a teenage girl in the 1980s, telling his congregation by video he has never behaved inappropriately towards anyone.

Cardinal Gerald Lacroix, the 66-year-old archbishop of Quebec, is facing claims of sexual assault dating back to 1987 and 1988, when the victim was 17, as part of a class action suit against more than 100 priests in the archdiocese.

Lacroix has been Quebec’s archbishop since 2011 and a cardinal since 2014. Since last year, he has served on the pontiff’s Council of Cardinal Advisors, which meets regularly at the Vatican.

“Never, to my knowledge, have I acted inappropriately towards anyone, whether minors or adults,” he said in a video filmed in his office.

“My soul and my conscience are at peace in the face of these accusations which I refute,” he said,…

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Critics challenge German Synodal Way in light of abuse study

BERLIN (GERMANY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

January 30, 2024

By AC Wimmer

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In light of a Protestant abuse study unveiled in Germany, a Catholic lay group has called into doubt the “persistent narrative of the Synodal Way attributing systemic causes of abuse to specifically Catholic factors.”

Published on Jan. 25, the ForuM study identified 1,259 accused individuals and 2,174 survivors of abuse since 1946 within the Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD), according to a report by CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner. This study’s findings starkly contrast with the claims of an “alleged Catholic-specific dimension of sexual abuse,” stated “Neuer Anfang,” a German lay group critical of the Synodal Way.

The German Synodal Way, which voted for women’s ordination and transgender ideology, among other issues, linked its resolutions to the MHG Study, an investigation of clerical sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in Germany.

However, Neuer Anfang has stated…

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Largest-Ever Settlement Reached in Sex Abuse Case Involving Notorious California Priest

(CA)
Catholic Vote [Madison, WI]

January 30, 2024

By Madalaine Elhabbal

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The Diocese of Orange and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles have agreed to pay a combined settlement believed to be the largest ever in a sex abuse case filed on behalf of an individual against a religious institution. 

The case involving two of the most notorious sex predators in California reached a $10-million settlement on Friday, January 26, according to a local report from East Bay Times.

The case focuses primarily on the sexual crimes of Fr. Eleuterio Ramos and Fr. Siegfried Widera. 

In 2020, a piece of California legislation provided a three-year window during which the state would lift the statute of limitations for lawsuits regarding decades-old sex abuse cases. This week’s settlement resolves one of the first suits to go to trial since 2020. 

The Archdiocese of Los Angeles, where Ramos first began committing sexual assault on minors almost immediately following his ordination, will pay out $500,000,…

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Racine pastor facing over 75 years prison for alleged sexual assault of 2 teen girls

RACINE (WI)
Racine County Eye [Racine, WI]

January 30, 2024

By Mike Daniels

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A pastor of a Racine church faces more than 75 years in prison after an investigation into alleged sexual assault of two different females.

Bernabe Leon Alvarez, 37, of Racine, is charged with two felony counts of sexual exploitation by a therapist, one felony count of repeated sexual assault of a child and one felony count of child enticement.

The four felonies carry a maximum possible prison term of 77 years, six months and a total fine of $225,000.

Leon Alvarez remains free from custody on a $10,000 cash bond.

The criminal complaint: Pastor accused of sexual assault by two females

First female interviewed

An investigator with the Racine Police Department and a forensic interviewer spoke to the first female last February. The now 18-year-old stated the defendant, the pastor of her former church, not identified in the complaint, began to assault her in August of 2020, when she was…

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President of Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops Statement on the recent allegations of sexual assault concerning His Eminence Gérald Cyprien Cardinal Lacroix, Archbishop of Quebec

OTTAWA (CANADA)
Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB)

January 30, 2024

By Maribel Mayorga, Director of Communications, Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops

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Bishop William T. McGrattan, Bishop of the Diocese of Calgary and President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, has issued the following statement regarding the recent allegations of sexual assault concerning His Eminence Gérald Cyprien Cardinal Lacroix, Archbishop of Quebec.

Bishop McGrattan’s full statement follows:

“On 25 January 2024, it was reported in the news that Cardinal Gérald Cyprien Lacroix’s name has recently been added to a list of clergy and pastoral workers who have been accused of sexual abuse in a class action lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec. He has issued a statement and he has communicated his decision to withdraw temporarily from activities in his Diocese.

Within the Catholic Church, Pope Francis has established a clear procedure that must be followed when an allegation is made against a Bishop, as outlined in Vos Estis Lux Mundi. The Bishops of Canada have set up a third-party reporting system…

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Lenexa’s Holy Trinity faces uproar over new priest with past sex abuse allegations

TOPEKA (KS)
KCUR (NPR affiliate) [Kansas City MO]

January 30, 2024

By Andrew Gaug, Johnson County Post

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Holy Trinity Catholic Parish announced earlier this month that Father John Pilcher had been appointed as its senior associate pastor. Pilcher was accused of sexual assault of a minor while working in Topeka, but the Kansas Bureau of Investigation could not substantiate the claims and no charges were filed.

A Catholic church in Lenexa is facing pushback from some of its parishioners after appointing a priest who previously faced a sexual assault allegation.

Earlier this month, Holy Trinity Catholic Parish announced it had appointed Father John Pilcher as its senior associate pastor.

During Pilcher’s introduction at the church’s Jan. 13 mass, Pilcher brought up the allegation that was leveled against him during his previous stop at a Topeka parish.

“If you Google my name, you will find that back in 2021 when I was pastor at Mater Dei, an allegation was brought up against me,” he…

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B.C. Catholic church admits vicarious liability for boy’s sex abuse

VANCOUVER (CANADA)
Delta Optimist [Ladner, British Columbia, Canada]

January 31, 2024

By Jeremy Hainsworth

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The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver denies institutional problems protecting sexually abusive priests

Warning: This story contains disturbing details of sexual abuse.

The Archdiocese of Vancouver has admitted in court documents sexual abuse of a man by a priest and a Christian Brother and its vicarious liability for that but denied negligence for acting in any way that could attract legal punitive damages.

An unnamed man alleging sexual abuse by two Roman Catholic priests is suing the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver (RCAV), a Corporation Sole, the Catholic Independent Schools of Vancouver (CISVA) and the estates of two men.

In documents filed in B.C. Supreme Court on Oct. 23, 2020, John Doe alleges that North Vancouver Holy Trinity Parish pastor Father John Kilty, now dead, committed multiple acts of sexual assault and battery on him when he was six.

In a further amended response to civil claim filed on Dec. 13, the…

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Here’s an oldie but goodie:

ST. LOUIS (MO)
DavidClohessy.com [St. Louis MO]

January 29, 2024

By David G. Clohessy

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Why am I posting this decades-old newspaper story here and now?

First, because so much about the early history of our movement to protect kids, expose predators, deter enablers and help survivors is nowhere to be found. (Much was pre-Internet and we in SNAP had our hands full just trying to deal with our trauma and the trauma of the hundreds of others who sought our help, even back in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s, before the scandal erupted into national awareness).

Second, because the pastor’s quote here so clearly reveals how Catholic officials felt (and feel) about their institution and this crisis: “My objection was that they were passing out literature. That was detrimental to our faith, our church and to the priesthood itself.”

And third, because though I’ve said it hundreds of times directly to many of my survivor pals and colleagues, I’ve never used this space…

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Columnist Carrie N. Baker: ‘Deliver us from evil’: Rape, reproductive coercion and the Catholic Church

NORTHAMPTON (MA)
Daily Hampshire Gazette [Hampshire MA]

January 24, 2024

By Carrie N Baker

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Sexual assault and reproductive coercion share similar dynamics: both are forms of violence that intimately violate a person’s body. The Catholic Church’s clergy sex abuse scandals and its attempts to coerce people’s reproductive decision-making by banning abortion and attacking contraception reveal a dangerous sexual sociopathology that fundamentally undermines the Church’s claims to moral authority on issues of sexuality.

By now, the stories are familiar and well documented. The 2006 documentary, “Deliver Us From Evil,” chillingly shows how Catholic bishops repeatedly relocated a priest named Oliver O’Grady from parish to parish in an attempt to cover up his rape of dozens of children. The 2005 Academy Award-winning film, “Spotlight,” dramatizes the true story of the Boston Globe investigative reporting team that exposed widespread sexual abuse of children by Catholic priests in the 1970s and the cover up by the Archdiocese of Boston. In 2018, a Pennsylvania grand jury published a 1,356-page…

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Father Sues Assemblies of God for Alleged Abuse of Teen

COLLEGE STATION (TX)
Christianity Today [Carol Stream IL]

January 26, 2024

By Kate Shellnutt

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Texas lawsuit claims that the minor was a victim of a serial predator as well as student leaders in the campus ministry Chi Alpha.

A church in a Texas college town, a chapter of the campus ministry Chi Alpha, and its sponsoring denomination, the Assemblies of God, are being sued by a father who alleges that the leaders he entrusted to disciple his teenage son instead got him naked in ministry settings and used their positions of authority to sexually abuse him.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday, follows a tumultuous several months for Chi Alpha. Since last spring, a serial predator has gone to jail for child sex abuse, chapter leaders across a half-dozen Texas universities have been dismissed, and the organization’s national director resigned.

The majority of the departing leaders had ties to Daniel Savala, a registered sex offender who groomed and…

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Texas Dad Sues Assemblies of God for Allegedly Allowing Abuse by Chi Alpha Leaders

COLLEGE STATION (TX)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

January 29, 2024

By Josh Shepherd

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The father of a teenage boy in central Texas is suing the nation’s largest charismatic-evangelical denomination for negligence, saying one of its ministries gave his son’s alleged abusers “positions which engendered trust.”

The new lawsuit is the latest development in a widening sex scandal involving convicted sex offender Daniel Savala. The scandal has implicated the Assemblies of God (AG) and its sponsored college outreach, Chi Alpha Campus Ministries.

Since last spring, multiple reports have alleged that leaders of Chi Alpha, which operates on over 300 college campuses, allowed Savala access to students at several Texas chapters. 

The suit filed Thursday claims that Chi Alpha and its affiliates in central Texas allowed men, whom Savala had mentored, to have “authority and power over minor children.” This led to the abuse of multiple victims, the suit stated.

Plus, leaders allowed Savala to attend on-campus meetings, prey on young men, and subject college students “to his…

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Washington state reintroduces child abuse reporting bill despite previous Catholic opposition

SEATTLE (WA)
Oregon Public Broadcasting [Portland, OR]

January 28, 2024

By Wilson Criscione

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State lawmakers hope a compromise in the proposed legislation will get Catholic lobbyists on board, a year after a similar bill died over the church’s backlash

After failing a year ago, Washington state lawmakers are trying again this session to pass a bill that would make clergy mandatory reporters of child abuse or neglect.

Senate Bill 6298 would add clergy to the list of mandatory reporters in Washington. And the bill’s main sponsor, state Sen. Noel Frame, D-Seattle, hopes a compromise regarding whether clergy should still report information obtained during a confession will be enough to win over Catholic lobbyists, who proved to be the main obstacle to passing the law last year.

“I cannot handle the idea that a member of a faith community, a leader in a faith community, would stand on the sidelines when they believe a child is at imminent risk of abuse or harm,” Frame said…

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January 30, 2024

Belgian Church official warns Vangheluwe case could mar papal visit

BRUSSELS (BELGIUM)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

January 30, 2024

By Luke Coppen

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A Belgian Church official has told a parliamentary committee that the Vatican’s failure to laicize a bishop who admitted to abuse threatens to overshadow Pope Francis’ scheduled visit to the country.

Speaking at a Jan. 26 hearing of the Flemish Parliament’s committee investigating clerical abuse, Bruno Spriet addressed the case of Bishop Roger Vangheluwe, who resigned as Bishop of Bruges in 2010 after admitting to sexually abusing a nephew.

Spriet, the general secretary of the Belgian bishops’ conference, said: “As we have communicated, his ecclesiastical file is in Rome. After all, according to canon law, only the Holy See can remove someone from the priesthood or episcopate.” 

“In recent years, the Belgian bishops have written several times to the Holy See (in 2017 and 2019) to speak out more clearly about ecclesiastical sanctions against Roger Vangheluwe.” 

“In their joint letter to Pope Francis in October 2023, they reiterated their demand for Roger…

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When the Right Ignores Its Sex Scandals

HOUSTON (TX)
New York Times [New York NY]

January 28, 2024

By David French

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Let me share with you one of the worst and most important recent news stories that you’ve probably never heard about. Late last month, the Southern Baptist Convention settled a sex abuse lawsuit brought against a man named Paul Pressler for an undisclosed sum. The lawsuit was filed in 2017 and alleged that Pressler had raped a man named Duane Rollins for decades, with the rapes beginning when Rollins was only 14 years old.

The story would be terrible enough if Pressler were simply an ordinary predator. But while relatively unknown outside evangelical circles, he is one of the most important American religious figures of the 20th century. He and his friend Paige Patterson, a former president of the Southern Baptist Convention, are two of the key architects of the so-called conservative resurgence within the S.B.C.

The conservative resurgence was a movement conceived in the 1960s…

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Two of three priests named in Michigan abuse report barred from public Masses

GAYLORD (MI)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 30, 2024

By John Lavenburg

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NEW YORK – Two of three priests named in a recent report on clergy sex abuse in the Diocese of Gaylord in Michigan, and who had been in active ministry, have now been restricted from presiding at any public celebration of Mass following a diocesan review of the allegations against them.

The decision by Bishop Jeffrey Walsh to impose the restrictions on Father James Gardiner and Father Raymond Cotter was made after Walsh met with Gaylord’s Diocesan Review Board Jan. 22, in what he described as a “long and intense meeting” to thoroughly review files and to discern outcomes.

The third priest in active ministry named in the report, Father Donald Geyman, will continue his current assignment as pastor of St. Francis of Assisi Parish in Traverse City, Michigan, pending the outcome of an assessment and determination of a safety plan.

Walsh said the outcomes are his “best effort to…

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Exclusive: Vatican’s abuse expert says ending priestly celibacy could prevent a ‘double life’

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 30, 2024

By Joshua J. McElwee and Christopher White

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One of the Catholic Church’s leading doctrinal officials has reiterated his unusual call for the global institution to consider ending its millennia-long requirement that priests remain celibate, saying that allowing priestly marriage could be a means of preventing clerics from living dangerous double lives.

In an exclusive interview with National Catholic Reporter on Jan. 24, Archbishop Charles Scicluna said: “One of my worries is that people are put in a situation where they are comfortable with a double life.”

“This is not to diminish the beauty of celibacy or the heroic commitment of people who have accepted celibacy as a gift and live it,” said the archbishop, speaking in an interview at the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith for NCR’s “The Vatican Briefing” podcast. “But I think it is good that we discuss it.”

Earlier this month, Scicluna — who serves as both…

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Rather than require clergy to report abuse, Utah could open the door to the option

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
KUER 90.1 (NPR) [Salt Lake City UT]

January 30, 2024

By Saige Miller

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Legally requiring a religious leader, like a Latter-day Saint bishop or Catholic priest, to report child abuse has failed to pass the Utah Legislature in two recent attempts. This time around, Republican Rep. Anthony Loubet hopes his bill addressing the problem makes it all the way to Gov. Spencer Cox’s desk.

Loubet’s approach doesn’t mandate ecclesiastical leaders to report abuse. Instead, it would give them the option to, even if a person “has made a confession to the clergy member” about perpetrating such abuse. They can also make a report if they have a “reason to believe that a child is, or has been, the subject of abuse or neglect,” even if it hasn’t been disclosed to them.

If a bishop, for example, reports abuse to local authorities, they would be granted legal protections if an investigation is launched. The bill’s language states it has to…

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Communiqué – Réaction diocésaine – action collective

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Archdiocese of Québec [Québec, Canada]

January 26, 2024

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Le cardinal Gérald Cyprien Lacroix vient d’annoncer à ses principaux collaborateurs et collaboratrices qu’il se retire provisoirement de ses activités jusqu’à ce que la situation soit clarifiée. Il nie catégoriquement les allégations qui le visent depuis hier, qu’il juge sans fondement. Dans les prochains jours, il adressera une communication personnelle aux diocésains de Québec qui sera relayée aux médias.  

L’équipe diocésaine comprend cette décision qu’elle accueille avec tristesse : tout sera mis en œuvre par ses collaborateurs et collaboratrices afin de prendre le relais des tâches liées à la mission diocésaine.

Les autorités diocésaines continueront d’avancer dans le processus de l’action collective, dans le respect de la vérité et avec le souci d’offrir une réparation aux survivants et survivantes d’abus sexuels. 

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Quebec City cardinal faces sexual assault allegations in class-action suit

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

January 25, 2024

By Antoni Nerestant

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Court documents say Gérald Cyprien Lacroix touched 17-year-old without consent

As part of an ongoing class-action lawsuit against the archdiocese of Quebec, a high-ranking member of the Roman Catholic Church in the province is now facing allegations of sexual assault.

The class action lawsuit targeting the archdiocese was authorized in June 2022.

Cardinal Gérald Cyprien Lacroix has now also been named in court documents that were presented Thursday morning.

The class action now also names the Séminaire de Québec, a revered institution responsible for creating Université Laval, the first francophone university in North America. 

The alleged incidents involving Lacroix took place between 1987 and 1988 in Quebec City when the plaintiff was 17. Lacroix is accused of touching her without her consent. 

The woman is not named in the court documents.

From 1982 to 1987, Lacroix served as the secretary-general of the Pie-X secular institute in Quebec City. From 1985 to 1987, he was…

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Quebec cardinal denies abuse allegations but decides to temporarily step aside

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 30, 2024

By Elise Ann Allen

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ROME – After being named in a class-action sex abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec, Cardinal Gérald Lacroix has denied the allegations against him but has announced his decision to step aside until the matter is clarified.

On Jan. 25, Lacroix was named in a class action lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Quebec in 2022, with court documents alleging that he inappropriately touched a 17-year-old girl on two occasions, in 1987 and 1988.

In a Jan. 26 statement, the Archdiocese of Quebec said that Lacroix “categorically denies the allegations against him” and considers the allegations “unfounded.”

However, they said the cardinal had decided to temporarily withdraw from leadership of the archdiocese and that they accepted the decision “with sadness.” In coming days, the statement said, Lacroix would “send a personal communication” to the archdiocese “which will be relayed to the media.”

With the charges, Lacroix was added to…

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Abuse allegations against Chi Alpha expand with new lawsuit

HUNTSVILLE (TX)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

January 29, 2024

By Mark Wingfield

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Allegations of sexual abuse and grooming by Chi Alpha, a national campus ministry of the Assemblies of God, expanded significantly Jan. 25 with details alleged in a lawsuit brought by an unnamed minor in Texas.

Previously, allegations of sexual abuse have been lodged against two former Chi Alpha leaders — Daniel Savala and Chris Hundl — but the new lawsuit for negligence in care for a minor names additional alleged perpetrators. If the claims made in this lawsuit are proved true, the extent of sexual abuse within Chi Alpha will be far more widespread than earlier indicated.

Stephen Holt of Brazos County, Texas, is the father of a minor child named only as L.H. in the suit. Together, they seek more than $1 million in damages from the General Council of the Assemblies of God, North Texas District Council Assemblies of God, Mountain Valley Fellowship, and Chi Alpha Campus Ministries, College Station.

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Canadian Cardinal Lacroix to ‘temporarily’ step down, denies sexual abuse allegations

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

January 29, 2024

By Peter Pinedo for CNA

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Cardinal Gerald Lacroix, head of the Archdiocese of Quebec, has temporarily stepped aside from his duties as archbishop after being accused in a lawsuit of sexual abuse of a 17-year-old, allegations that the archbishop is strongly denying.

In a short French-language statement released on Friday, the archdiocese said that though Lacroix “categorically denies the allegations against him,” he is “temporarily withdrawing from his activities until the situation is clarified.”

According to the statement, Lacroix maintains that the allegations are “unfounded.”

The statement said, however, that archdiocesan authorities “will continue to move forward in the process of collective action, with respect for the truth and with a concern to offer reparation to survivors of sexual abuse.”

Lacroix, 66, is a member of the Council of Cardinals advising Pope Francis. He has been a cardinal since 2014 and archbishop of Quebec since 2011.

The legal action…

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Critics challenge German Synodal Way in light of abuse study

BONN (GERMANY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

January 30, 2024

By AC Wimmer

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In light of a Protestant abuse study unveiled in Germany, a Catholic lay group has called into doubt the “persistent narrative of the Synodal Way attributing systemic causes of abuse to specifically Catholic factors.”

Published on Jan. 25, the ForuM study identified 1,259 accused individuals and 2,174 survivors of abuse since 1946 within the Evangelical Church in Germany (EKD), according to a report by CNA Deutsch, CNA’s German-language news partner. This study’s findings starkly contrast with the claims of an “alleged Catholic-specific dimension of sexual abuse,” stated “Neuer Anfang,” a German lay group critical of the Synodal Way.

The German Synodal Way, which voted for women’s ordination and transgender ideology, among other issues, linked its resolutions to the MHG Study, an investigation of clerical sexual abuse in the Catholic Church in Germany.

However, Neuer Anfang has stated…

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Plea deal hearing for former Chicago pastor on child sex abuse charges delayed

CHICAGO (IL)
WLS - ABC 7 [Chicago IL]

January 26, 2024

By Jasmine Minor

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A former South Side pastor appeared in court Friday, where he was expected to accept a plea deal for alleged child sex abuse, but the hearing was pushed back.

Jerry Jones is accused of abuse that allegedly took place during his time as a pastor at Apostolic Assembly Church in Morgan Park.

In court Friday, the judge ordered a “pre-trial investigation,” which typically takes 30 days to complete. During that time, Jones will be on a 12 hour daily curfew.

Lawyers for Jones’ complainants said it’s possible Jones could avoid time behind bars.

Jones is charged with 10 counts of aggravated sexual abuse from 2020 and was charged in 2023 with criminal sex abuse.

His next hearing is scheduled for Feb. 28.

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Accused child predator Lawrence Hecker in ICU

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
WDSU [New Orleans LA]

January 26, 2024

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A 92-year-old former priest, Lawrence Hecker, who was arrested and accused of rape and kidnapping, is currently hospitalized in the ICU.

Hecker’s attorney told a judge in court Friday that Hecker tested positive for COVID-19 two weeks ago and was admitted for blood pressure issues and a UTI.

The prosecution in the case said Hecker’s ailments are treatable and that the hospital is working to discharge him.

It is unclear at this time when Hecker will be released from the hospital.

A status update in the case is expected on Feb. 23.

His trial is set for March 25, which was not changed in court Friday. The judge did not announce any delays due to Hecker’s health.

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Canadian cardinal accused of assaulting teenager

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

January 26, 2024

By Agence France-Presse

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Gerald Lacroix, who is close to the pope, has been archbishop of Quebec since 2011 and a cardinal since 2014

Cardinal Gerald Lacroix has been accused in Canada of sexually assaulting a female teenager, as part of a class action lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec, court documents showed Thursday.

The 66-year-old Lacroix is facing claims of abuse dating back to 1987 and 1988, when the victim was 17, attorney Alain Arsenault, who is handling the suit, told AFP.

Arsenault said victims are feeling freer to speak out, and that those accused “were protected for a long time.” He expects more victims to come forward and join the suit.

Lacroix, who is close to Pope Francis, has been the archbishop of Quebec since 2011 and a cardinal since 2014. He has served since last year on the pontiff’s Council of Cardinal Advisors, which meets regularly at the Vatican.

The legal…

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Former Genesee County priest dies while serving jail sentence

LANSING (MI)
WJRT-TV, ABC-12 [Flint MI]

January 26, 2024

By Ryan Jeltema

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Former Catholic priest Vincent DeLorenzo died Friday morning while serving a one-year sentence at the Genesee County Jail.

FLINT, Mich. (WJRT) – A former Flint-area priest serving a one-year jail sentence for a child sex crime died in custody Friday morning.

Vincent DeLorenzo pleaded guilty last April to one count of attempted first-degree criminal sexual conduct involving a young male attending a funeral service at Holy Redeemer Parish in Burton in the 1980s.

He was about halfway through his one-year sentence at the Genesee County Jail when his attorney, Mike Manley, says DeLorenzo became ill last weekend. Authorities transferred DeLorenzo to an area hospital, where he died Friday.

Manley thanked the Genesee County Sheriff’s Office for acting compassionately to make sure DeLorenzo received appropriate end of life medical care.

DeLorenzo admitted to sexually assaulting a 5-year-old boy after a funeral service for the boy’s deceased family member.

During his 20-year…

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Spanish priest, 80, found naked and strangled to death at home in ‘lovers dispute’ – as man, 40, arrested

VALENCIA (SPAIN)
Daily Mail [London, United Kingdom]

January 26, 2024

By Stewart Carr

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Fr Alfonso López Benito, 80, was found dead at his apartment in Valencia

The body of an elderly priest accused of paying male migrants for sex was discovered naked in bed in his Spanish apartment.

Alfonso López Benito, 80, a former canon of Valencia Cathedral, was found deceased on Tuesday by a friend and janitor who had gone to pay him a visit.

A postmortem found he had died by suffocation and had likely been dead for several days.

A 40-year-old South American man has been arrested on suspicion of murder. Described as a Peruvian immigrant, he was said to have tried to use the priest’s bank card in a local bar.

Police have theorised that Fr Benito’s death could have been the result of a violent argument between lovers.

Fr Benito had allegedly been asked by the Archbishop’s office in Valencia to stop bringing lovers to his home, which was…

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January 29, 2024

German Protestant churches riddled with sexual abuse and cover-ups, report finds

HANOVER (GERMANY)
Irish Times [Dublin, Ireland]

January 26, 2024

By Derek Scally

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Forum Study suggests church features prized by German Protestants facilitated rather than prevented sexualised violence and continue to hinder full disclosure

Berlin – For 500 years, German Protestants have been quietly confident that theirs was the better Christian church: a participative and democratic antithesis to centralised, clerical Roman Catholicism.

But a bombshell report on Thursday into sexualised violence and institutional cover-up presents a very different – yet wearingly familiar – story.

After four years of work, the Forum Study suggested many church features prized by German Protestants had aided and abetted – rather than prevented – sexualised violence in the past, and are hindering full disclosure in the present.

Even at 871 pages, the report’s authors conceded their report is an incomplete first attempt to cast light on abuse within Germany’s EKD, a federation of 20 autonomous Protestant and Reformed churches with 13,000 parishes and 19 million registered members.

At…

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Cardinal O’Malley reflects on 20 years at the helm of the Boston Archdiocese

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Globe

January 28, 2024

By Danny McDonald

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For Cardinal Seán P. O’Malley, the tinted windows were the giveaway.

Back in 2003, the windows of the official car were darkened for the area’s highest-ranking Catholic priest so that passersby and protesters could not see who was inside. Recently, O’Malley admitted there is a metaphor there somewhere for the state of the church when he took over the once politically and socially powerful Boston Archdiocese, which was reeling from the uncovering of its botched handling of clergy sexual abuse.

“We were in a terrible crisis,” O’Malley told the Globe recently. “I think we’ve come a long way from there towards establishing a sense of peace.”

Boston, for so long a bastion of American Catholicism, was ground zero for what would be a global crisis. More than 1,400 people would come forward to say they were sexually abused by a priest, deacon, or…

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Call for explanation from Bishop over defrocking of former seminary head Fr Michael O’Connor

WATERFORD (IRELAND)
Irish Independent [Dublin, Ireland]

January 28, 2024

By Sarah Mac Donald

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A veteran campaigner has called on Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan to give an “immediate” and “detailed explanation” for his defrocking of the former president of St John’s Seminary in Waterford & Lismore.

Tony Gribben of the Dromore Group said the sacking of a priest is a serious matter and the people of Waterford & Lismore deserve an explanation for the move. Bishop Cullinan’s failure to explain the sacking “generates suspicion and intrigue”.

In a statement this weekend, Bishop Cullinan said he commissioned an inquiry into Fr Michael O’Connor, a priest of the Diocese of Waterford & Lismore, in accordance with church procedures.

Fr O’Connor was president of St John’s College in Waterford city for nine years between 1985-1994. The seminary closed in 1999 due to dwindling vocations.

The Irish Independent understands that Fr O’Connor has been out of ministry for nearly 25 years when the process was undertaken.

While no priest in the…

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January 28, 2024

Bishops ‘Treating Sexual Abuse Survivors Fairly’ – Just a PR Slogan?

FORT LAUDERDALE (FL)
Horowitz Law [Fort Lauderdale FL]

January 25, 2024

By Adam Horowitz

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Riding on the wave of public outrage, the phrase ‘treating all survivors fairly’ has quickly become the go-to tagline in the US Catholic Church’s PR playbook. We seem to hear it all the time, especially when a Catholic official is weighing or seeking Chapter 11 protection in the face of potentially startling disclosures about clergy sex abuse and coverups that would likely come through civil lawsuits. This raises an interesting question we’d like to ask every US bishop, one that we’ve never seen any Catholic official answer in any convincing way. Note:  Deadlines for diocesan bankruptcies are approaching soon in Maryland and northern California.

High-Profile Church Authorities Emphasis on ‘Fair Treatment’

Given the frequency of the statement, it is essential to revisit some of the quotes from prominent Catholic figures:

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Members of panel investigating handling of abuse cases at Immanuel Baptist asked to sign nondisclosure agreements, deacons say

LITTLE ROCK (AR)
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette [Little Rock AR]

January 27, 2024

By Frank E. Lockwood

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Immanuel Baptist pastor calls for independent inquiry into church’s handling of sex abuse allegations

Immanuel Baptist Church Lead Pastor Steven Smith on Friday called for an independent, third-party investigation into the congregation’s handling of sex abuse accusations.

Although an inquiry being conducted by the church’s insurance company is ongoing, Smith on Friday described that as merely a “necessary first step.”

“The past two months at Immanuel Baptist Church have been marked by swirling accusations, allegations, conflicting accounts, divisiveness, confusion, even anger,” the pastor wrote in a statement Friday addressed to the “Immanuel Family.”

“I have tried to provide helpful information and to answer questions as they were asked — but the wide range of emotions and confusion have persisted.

“This is why I have proposed that we hire a fully independent firm with expertise in sexual abuse to conduct a thorough investigation and assessment of these matters. A firm with…

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Robert Corfield, ex-minister of secretive sect, admits to child sex abuse

(CANADA)
BBC [London, England]

January 27, 2024

By George Wright

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Robert Corfield, a man who abused a boy in Canada in a secretive Christian church in the 1980s, has spoken publicly about what happened for the first time.

He was confronted by the BBC as part of a wider look into claims of child sexual abuse spanning decades within the church, known as The Truth.

His name is one of more than 700 given by people to a hotline set up to report sexual abuse within the church.

The sect says it addresses all abuse allegations.

The church, which has no official name but is often referred to as The Truth or The Way, is believed to have up to 100,000 members worldwide, with the majority in North America.

The potential scale of the abuse has been captured through a hotline – set-up last year by two women who say they were also sexually abused by a church leader when…

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New member of Mormon church leadership says it must do better to help sex abuse victims heal

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
Muskogee Phoenix [Muskogee OK]

January 28, 2024

By Associated Press

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Patrick Kearon, the newest member of the body that governs The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, has said he would like see the faith better care for sex abuse victims

The newest member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ top governing body said every faith — including his — must do more to protect victims of sexual abuse and help facilitate a healing process.

Last month, Patrick Kearon, 62, became the first new member since 2018 named to the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, the body which oversees the business interests and global development of the faith widely known as the Mormon church.

Speaking to The Associated Press on Tuesday, Kearon, who was raised in England and converted to the faith as an adult, outlined the global, compassionate approach he would take on a range of sensitive issues from the border crisis to the LGBTQ…

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Statement by Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan concerning the dismissal of Michael O’Connor from the priesthood

(IRELAND)
Diocese of Waterford & Lismore [England]

January 27, 2024

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“In the exercise of my responsibility as Bishop of Waterford & Lismore, and to provide clear information to the faithful of the Diocese, I am publishing the following statement in the interest of the spiritual and pastoral integrity of the Diocese:

I commissioned an inquiry into Father Michael O’Connor of the Diocese of Waterford & Lismore in accordance with Church procedures. This process involved referring the case of Father O’Connor to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican. The result of this inquiry is that Michael O’Connor has been dismissed from the clerical state, and therefore he is no longer a priest.

This decision is solely based on the outcome of this Church inquiry. I will not be making any further comment on the matter.”

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Former seminary president dismissed from priesthood

(IRELAND)
RTÉ - Raidió Teilifís Éireann [Dublin, Ireland]

January 27, 2024

By By Conor Kane

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A former president of a seminary in the diocese of Waterford and Lismore has been dismissed from the priesthood following an internal inquiry, the bishop of the diocese has confirmed.

The inquiry into Fr Michael O’Connor, who was president of St John’s College in Waterford city for nine years, was initiated “in accordance with church procedures,” Bishop Alphonsus Cullinan said in a statement.

Commissioning the inquiry involved referring the case of Fr O’Connor to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith in the Vatican, which is responsible for defending Catholic doctrine and was formerly known as the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

“The result of this inquiry is that Michael O’Connor has been dismissed from the clerical state, and therefore is no longer a priest,” Bishop Cullinan said.

“This decision is solely based on the outcome of this church inquiry,” he said, before adding that he would…

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2000+ victims of sexual abuse within Germany Protestant Church

BERLIN (GERMANY)
Jurist [Pittsburgh PA]

January 27, 2024

By Madeline Yingling

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Over 1,259 employees of the Protestant Church of Germany have committed sexual abuse since 1946, according to an independent report published Thursday. The study also found that at least 2,225 individuals have been victims of the abuse.

Researchers examined documents from the 20 regional churches of the Protestant Church of Germany (EKD) as well as Diakonie Germany, the church’s social welfare organization. The report analyzed approximately 4,300 disciplinary files, 780 personal files and 1,300 additional documents regarding all employees of the church, from clergy members to youth leaders.

Many of the personal files from the regional churches were not available to researchers, and the authors of the study therefore believe the total number of cases is even higher. The authors estimated that at least 3,500 people within the church have committed sexual abuse, with a third of the perpetrators being clergy members. The authors further estimated that over…

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Vatican court overturns priest’s acquittal in landmark seminary sexual abuse case

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

January 25, 2024

By Elise Ann Allen

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Upon appeal from the prosecution, the October 2021 acquittal of Father Gabriele Martinelli, who was accused of abusing another student from 2007 to 2012 when he studied at the St. Pius X Pre-Seminary, was overturned by the Vatican’s appeals court.

Martinelli, initially acquitted due to a lack of evidence, was this week found guilty of “corrupting a minor” for sexual abuse committed between 2008-2009, and sentenced to two years and six months in prison.

The St. Pius X seminary, previously located inside a palazzo within the Vatican gardens, houses boys aged 12 to 18 years old, who serve as altar boys at papal Masses inside St. Peter’s Basilica. It was established by Pope Pius XII in 1956 to house young men and boys from Italian dioceses who felt a potential call to the priesthood.

Abuse scandals involving the pre-seminary erupted in 2017 when former altar boys went public with allegations…

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Senior Adviser to Pope Faces Sexual Assault Allegation

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Newser [Chicago, Il]

January 28, 2024

By Bob Cronin

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Lawsuit names Quebec cardinal in late 1980s abuse

Canadian Cardinal Gerald Lacroix, a senior adviser to Pope Francis, has been named in a class-action lawsuit accusing him of sexual assaults in 1987 and ’88. The suit accuses Lacroix of sexually touching a female teenager without her consent on multiple occasions, the Wall Street Journal reports. A new filing adds more than a dozen suspects and 46 people who say they were victims to the original suit against the Catholic Archdiocese of Québec, which was filed in 2022. Alain Arsenault, the lawyer handling the suit, said those accused “were protected for a long time,” per AFP, and now feel freer to speak out. The law firm said the suit includes 147 people who say they were sexually assaulted by a total of more than 100 priests.

Lacroix, 66, is on a temporary leave of absence from…

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Joliet Bishop Silent About Financial Cost of Priest Sex Abuse Scandals, Closing Catholic Parishes

JOLIET (IL)
Newsbreak [Mountain View, CA]

January 27, 2024

By Natalie Frank, Ph.D.19 hours ago

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Joliet Diocese faces financial struggles, announces closure of Catholic institutions

The Joliet Diocese, encompassing Will, DuPage, and Kendall counties, has declared the closure of five churches and two schools, citing financial constraints and a decline in mass attendance. The decision, attributed to “budgetary issues,” comes after a year-long evaluation process that stirred discontent among the faithful.

Bishop Ron Hicks’ office has pointed to diminishing mass attendance and financial challenges, yet remains silent on the profound impact of the decades-old priest sex abuse crisis on these closures. The diocese has been grappling with the aftermath of the abuse scandal for over two decades, with over 70 clerics accused of child molestation listed publicly.

While millions have been spent on legal settlements with victims, Bishop Hicks has chosen not to disclose the total financial burden or engage in discussions about the topic, as reported by the Chicago Sun-Times in September.

In the…

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Malayali priest arrested on charges of running children’s home unlawfully gets bail

BHOPAL (INDIA)
Malayala Manorama Online [Kottayam, Kerala, India]

January 28, 2024

Read original article

Bhopal: Fr Anil Mathew of the Congregation of Carmelites of Mary Immaculate was released from jail after he secured bail in the case in which he was accused of running a children’s home unlawfully. He was initially charged under the Juvenile Justice (Care and Protection of Children) Act, 2015. Police later charged him for engaging in conversion attempts at the facility under the Madhya Pradesh Freedom of Religion Act, 2021, an anti-conversion law.

During the inspection carried out by the chairperson of the National Commission for the Protection of Child Rights (NCPCR) and a team of the State Commission for Protection of Child Rights (SCPCR) at the children’s home at Tara Savania village, about 20 km from the Bhopal, it was revealed 26 children were missing from the facility.

However, the priest’s counsel argued that they had gone back to their respective homes after presenting letters of request from their…

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January 27, 2024

Charisma CEO Calls Exposure of Mike Bickle’s Alleged Sex Abuse a ‘Spiritual Attack’

KANSAS CITY (MO)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

January 27, 2024

By Julie Roys and Rebecca Hopkins

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In a podcast Thursday, Charisma Media CEO Stephen Strang repeatedly called exposure of alleged clergy sexual abuse by Mike Bickle, founder of the International House of Prayer Kansas City (IHOPKC), a “spiritual attack.” He further claimed that “to burn the ministry to the ground is just the tool of Satan.” And he expressed hope that Bickle “reemerges in ministry stronger than . . . before.”

Strang used the strong language during his interview with IHOPKC Executive Director General Kurt Fuller on Strang’s podcast, the Strang Report.

Strang also stated that “charges were leveled about Bickle” on October 7—“the same day that Hamas attacked Israel.” (The first meeting with IHOPKC leaders concerning Bickle’s alleged clergy sex abuse was on Oct. 9, according to members of the so-called “advocate group,” working with alleged victims of Bickle’s.)

“This persecution is coming from within the Christian community,” Strang alleged. “. . . There…

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Alarming Report on Sex Abuse in Germany’s Protestant Church: SNAP Responds

(GERMANY)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

January 26, 2024

By Marc Artzruni

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A just released report commissioned by the German Protestant Church (EKD) in 2020 estimated that over 9,300 children and young people were sexually abused since 1946 by 3,500 perpetrators, a third of which were members of the clergy. The EKD is an umbrella organization of 20 regional churches, representing 19.2 million Protestants in the country.

SNAP welcomes the publication of this report on the appalling extent of clerical sex abuse – even if it exposes the depth of depravity that prevails in yet another faith community. We believe that it is always a good development to have these crimes exposed. We are also grateful that more is being done in Germany to identify victims, compensate them adequately, punish perpetrators, and put in place safeguards to ensure that such crimes cannot be repeated.  

The study results are based on an examination of around 4,300 disciplinary files, 780…

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Japanese rape victim sues congregation over ‘cover-up’

(JAPAN)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

January 26, 2024

By UCA News reporter

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Woman taking action against Society of Divine Word gives up right to anonymity before court hearing in Tokyo

A Japanese Catholic allegedly raped by a priest from the Society of Divine Word (SVD) congregation and who is suing the order for covering it up has revealed her name publicly during a court hearing, says a report.

Tokie Tanaka, 63, a nurse residing in Tokyo, said during a press conference on Jan. 23 that she decided to reveal her identity after she was inspired by another victim, the Asahi Shimbun reported on Jan. 24.

Tanaka was referring to a former Ground Self-Defense Force member, Rina Gonoi, 24, who publicly reported sexual abuse at the hands of her colleagues while using her real name.

“I haven’t done anything wrong. Why do I need to hide?” Tanaka said adding that the move from Gonoi to go public with her name was “courageous.”

“Speaking out under…

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Suspect arrested over killing of Spanish priest

VALENCIA (SPAIN)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

January 25, 2024

By Filipe D'Avillez

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A 40-year-old man has been arrested by police in Spain on suspicion of murdering Fr. Alfonso Benito López, an 80-year-old priest who was found dead in his apartment, on Tuesday, 23 January. 

According to official sources quoted by local press, the suspect was arrested after using the victim’s bank card in a bar in Valencia, the coastal city where the crime took place. He was found in possession of the bank card and Fr. Alfonso’s mobile phone. 

The Spanish priest was found lying on his bed by the building’s janitor, on Tuesday.

Suspicion of foul play was aroused immediately, when the janitor received a text message from the priest’s phone only minutes after having discovered his corpse. Other friends and acquaintances had received messages in the previous days, saying that the priest was going to be out of town for a week to deal with personal matters. 

Local police…

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Oblates mum on status of accused priest

BOSTON (MA)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

January 26, 2024

By The Pillar

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The Oblates of the Virgin Mary have not responded to questions about the status of Fr. David Nicgorski, a priest accused of misconduct in spiritual direction, and of sexually assaulting a religious sister.

Since The Pillar reported on the priest last week, Nicorgski has been accused of hearing confessions invalidly, in a diocese where he was prohibited from priestly ministry. 

And The Pillar has learned that other allegations against the priest have likely been raised at the Vatican.

The Pillar reported last week that Fr. David Nicgorski had been prohibited by the Vatican from offering spiritual direction for a five-year period — which began last year — after several women religious accused him of sexually manipulating and coercing them in spiritual direction, and, in one case, accused him of committing sexual assault.

But while the case has sparked widespread discussion among U.S. Catholics, the Oblates of the Virgin Mary have declined to say whether Nicgorski…

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Guest column: Child sex abuse survivors hang hopes on Louisiana Supreme Court

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
Nola.com [New Orleans, LA]

January 26, 2024

By Mac McCall

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I am writing this letter to address the issue in the Louisiana Supreme Court on prescription, or the statute of limitations, on child sexual abuse. As I have said before, this is not a political issue. This is a human issue.

When we allow and support abusers to get away with these heinous acts because of a loophole in the law, we support the abuse. I trust that the Louisiana Supreme Court will make the right decision in supporting the lookback window which is supported by scientific evidence. This is not about an insurance claim but a claim to change our society for the better. The children abused grow into adults with trauma and, if it is not properly addressed, they suffer until the day they die.

I dealt with my abuser and his lawyers holding the issue of prescription over my head, which retraumatized…

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Mississippi’s top court says it won’t reconsider sex abuse conviction of former friar

PEARL (MS)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 26, 2024

By Associated Press

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The Mississippi Supreme Court will not consider an appeal from a former Franciscan friar who was convicted in 2022 in the 1990s sexual abuse of a student at a Catholic school.

The court decision was announced Thursday, and it means the conviction of Paul West remains in place.

The Mississippi Court of Appeals ruled in August that it found “no reversible error” in the conviction. West’s attorneys then asked the Supreme Court to further examine the case. Justices did not explain their decision not to do so.

West, 63, is in the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility.

Leflore County jurors in April 2022 found West guilty of one count of sexual battery and one count of gratification of lust.

A judge sentenced him to 30 years on the first count and 15 years on the second count, to be served at the same time.

As first…

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Canadian cardinal denies ‘unfounded’ sex assault claims

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Union of Catholic Asian News (UCA News) [Hong Kong]

January 27, 2024

By AFP, Ottawa

Read original article

Cardinal Gerald Lacroix is facing charges dating back to 1987 and 1988, when the victim was 17, as part of a class action suit

A Canadian cardinal who is a close advisor to Pope Francis on Friday “categorically” denied accusations he sexually assaulted a teenage girl in the 1980s, but he will step back from his duties, the archdiocese of Quebec said.

Cardinal Gerald Lacroix, the 66-year-old archbishop of Quebec, is facing claims of sexual assault dating back to 1987 and 1988, when the victim was 17, as part of a class action suit against more than 100 priests in the archdiocese.

Lacroix has been the archbishop of Quebec since 2011 and a cardinal since 2014. Since last year, he has served on the pontiff’s Council of Cardinal Advisors, which meets regularly at the Vatican.

“Cardinal Gerald Cyprien Lacroix has just announced to his main collaborators that he is temporarily…

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Canadian Cardinal Lacroix named in sexual abuse lawsuit

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

January 26, 2024

By Walter Sanchez Silva, ACI Prensa Staff

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The archbishop of Quebec, Canada, Cardinal Gerald Lacroix, has been accused of abusing a 17-year-old teenager almost four decades ago.

The allegations are included as part of a lawsuit filed against the Archdiocese of Quebec and were made public in court on Thursday.

As reported by the AFP news agency and according to lawyer Alain Arsenault, who is representing a group of plaintiffs against the Archdiocese of Quebec, the accusation dates back to 1987 and 1988, when the alleged victim was 17 years old.

Arsenault said he expects additional victims to join the lawsuit, which originated in 2022 and initially involved 101 people who were allegedly “sexually assaulted” by priests and laypeople since 1940.

The new court documents, AFP notes, list 46 new alleged victims, bringing the total number of people suing the archdiocese to 147.

Lacroix, 66, is a member of the Council of Cardinals advising Pope…

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Canadian cardinal temporarily steps down after lawsuit alleging abuse

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Reuters [London, England]

January 26, 2024

By Reuters

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Cardinal Gerald Lacroix, one of the top Roman Catholic clergymen in Canada, on Friday stepped down temporarily after he was named in a class-action lawsuit against the church that alleged sexual assault.Local media said Lacroix’s name had been added to a list of alleged perpetrators filed in a Quebec court on Thursday.In a statement, the Quebec diocese said Lacroix, 66, had announced to co-workers he was temporarily withdrawing from his activities until the situation could be clarified.

“He categorically denies the allegations against him,” it said. The lawsuit, authorized by the court in 2022, represents more than 100 people who were alleged to have been sexually assaulted by 88 priests and staff working at the Quebec diocese starting in 1940.It also names Marc Ouellet, a former Vatican cardinal from Canada who stepped down from his position last year. Last December, Ouellet, 79, said he was suing a woman who accused him…

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Evangelicals REALLY don’t get it about sexual assault. Here are some examples. (Part 1)

NASHVILLE (TN)
Daily Kos [Berkeley, CA]

January 26, 2024

By Darrell Lucus

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This is the first installment in a three-part story.

When the words “sexual assault” and “evangelical” are used in the same sentence, does the sexual assault scandal that has roiled the Southern Baptist Convention come to mind? In August 2022, the SBC announced it was under investigation by the Department of Justice; it was just the latest tumble in a years-long, but well-deserved and long overdue downfall.

In February 2019, the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News collaborated on “Abuse of Faith,” a sprawling six-part series that exposed a massive cover-up of sexual assault in the nation’s largest Protestant denomination. In response to outcry among Southern Baptist pastors, the Convention asked the investigative firm Guidepost Solutions to determine the extent of the cover-up.

Guidepost released its report in May 2022. It makes for horrifying reading. Though Guidepost was only tasked with investigating cases dating after the turn of the century, it ultimately uncovered…

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$10 million settlement reached in clergy child sexual abuse case in Orange, LA counties

LOS ANGELES (CA)
Orange County Register [Anaheim, CA]

January 26, 2024

By Sean Emery

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The Diocese of Orange and the Archdiocese of Los Angeles have reached a combined $10 million settlement in a clergy child sex abuse case involving two of Orange County’s most notorious predators, attorneys with a high-profile sexual abuse law firm announced on Friday, Jan. 26.

The settlement — which includes $9.5 million from the Diocese of Orange and $500,000 from the Archdiocese of Los Angeles — heads off what was expected to be among the first to go to trial of a massive wave of lawsuits filed against Roman Catholic dioceses statewide by now-adult survivors who were given a three-year window under state law to file civil complaints regarding decades-old abuse.

It is believed to be the single largest settlement received by an individual against a religious organization, said attorney Morgan Stewart, whose Irvine-based firm — Manly, Stewart & Finaldi — represents more than 200 alleged clergy sexual abuse victims across…

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January 26, 2024

Quebec cardinal, papal advisor named in sex abuse lawsuit

QUéBEC CITY (CANADA)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 26, 2024

Read original article

A Canadian cardinal and key ally of Pope Francis has been named in a class action sexual abuse lawsuit against the Archdiocese of Quebec, with the specific charge being that he inappropriately touched a 17-year-old girl on two occasions in 1987 and 1988.

Cardinal Gérald Lacroix’s name was added to a list of alleged perpetrators in the class action suit in court filings Thursday. The lawsuit was authorized in 2022, and covers anyone who was sexually assaulted by personnel of the Archdiocese of Quebec since 1940.

Lacroix becomes the second Canadian cardinal to be named in the lawsuit, after allegations were lodged against Cardinal Marc Ouellet in 2022 over alleged inappropriate touching said to have occurred in 2008. A Vatican investigation later found “no grounds” for any action against Ouellet, who filed a counter-suit against his accuser for defamation in December 2022.

Ouellet’s accuser later claimed that two other women…

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Pastor Mike Breen Resigns from Ohio Church Over Alleged Clergy Sex Abuse

DAYTON (OH)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

January 26, 2024

By Josh Shepherd

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Pastor, author, and Christian entrepreneur, Mike Breen, has resigned as lead communicator at Apex Church in Dayton, Ohio, over alleged “sexual misconduct” with a “vulnerable” church member.

That’s according to a Jan. 15 statement from 3DMovements (3DM), an international coaching ministry for churches and pastors that Breen founded in 2004. Breen is no longer associated with 3DM. However, he leads a similar organization now, called Discipling Culture Collective.

“Mike Breen carried on an extended sexual affair with a vulnerable member of (Apex) church, which he has been leading,” the 3DM statement read. “Mike has confessed to the allegations of sexual misconduct and resigned from his leadership position at Apex.”

The 3DM statement added that Apex Church hired an independent agency to investigate the allegations against Breen. The investigation reportedly “found evidence that Mike also abused his power through bullying and intimidation,…

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American founder of Haitian orphanage sexually abused 4 boys, prosecutor says

DENVER (CO)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 26, 2024

By Colleen Slevin

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An American founder of a Haitian orphanage forced four boys who lived in the institution to engage in sexual acts more than a decade ago, a prosecutor said Friday.

Michael Geilenfeld, 71, is a “dangerous, manipulative and cunning child sexual predator” who for decades has preyed on poor children while working abroad as a missionary, Jessica Urban, a prosecutor with the Justice Department’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, said during a detention hearing in Denver federal court.

Her statements marked the first time authorities have disclosed details of the investigation that led to Geilenfeld’s Jan. 18 indictment in Florida on charges of child sexual abuse. Urban, speaking via a video feed, offered the evidence to support her argument that Geilenfeld should not be released on bond as his case proceeds. She said authorities fear he or his supporters will try to intimidate victims to prevent them from testifying…

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‘Community divided:’ Kansas Archbishop defends priest hiring at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Lenexa

KANSAS CITY (MO)
KSHB - NBC 41 [Kansas City MO]

January 25, 2024

By Lisa McCormick

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[See also the letter by Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann]

Parents at Holy Trinity Catholic Church in Lenexa are alarmed and asking questions over this month’s appointment of a priest — alleged in 2021 of sexual abuse of a minor – as the parish’s new senior associate pastor.

The group also has concerns about how they learned about Fr. John Pilcher’s appointment and his background. They first heard the news on Jan. 13 when Pilcher disclosed it to the congregation during Mass.

“I want to be totally transparent,” Pilcher said during his homily, which was recorded and posted on YouTube. “If you Google my name, you will find that back in 2021 when I was pastor at Mater Dei (Catholic Church in Topeka), an allegation was brought up against me.”

That allegation involved the sexual abuse of a minor. The Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas said…

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Report on sex abuse in Germany’s Protestant Church documents at least 2,225 victims

HANOVER (GERMANY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

January 25, 2024

By Kirsten Grieshaber

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At least 1,259 people working for the Protestant Church of Germany have committed sexual abuse in the last decades and at least 2,225 victims were affected by the abuse according to an independent report published Thursday.

The numbers are based on the study of documents and files from the regional churches and the Lutherans’ diaconal relief and social welfare organization, known as Diakonie.

However, the authors said they were not able to analyze the personnel files of all pastors and deacons within the church, but primarily disciplinary files. They estimated that the real number of perpetrators is much higher, with nearly 3,500 people who have committed sexual abuse, German news agency dpa reported.

“It’s the tip of the tip of the iceberg,” said Martin Wazlawik from Hannover University, who coordinated the study on sexualized violence in the Protestant Church in Germany.

The church commissioned the study in 2020 and financed…

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Protestant Church in Germany faces sexual abuse allegations

HANOVER (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle [Bonn, Germany]

January 25, 2024

Read original article

More than 9,000 children and teenagers are estimated to have been sexually abused in Germany’s Protestant Church since 1946, according to a new report. Critics say these findings reveal only the “tip of the iceberg.

[See the report.]

The number of victims of sexual abuse in the Protestant Church in Germany (EKD) is much higher than previously thought, according to a new report published on Thursday.

Commissioned by the EKD in 2020 for around €3.6 million ($3.92m), the report constitutes the first comprehensive study into sexual abuse of children and young people in the EKD since the end of World War II, and its findings represent a huge increase on the 900 previously known cases.

What the report into abuse in the Protestant Church said

The independent researchers said that at least 1,259 perpetrators commited acts of sexual abuse upon 2,174 victims. 

However, the number of unavailable files meant that the…

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Vatican hands down first-ever conviction for sexual abuse committed on its grounds

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Euronews [Lyon, France]

January 25, 2024

By Giulia Carbonaro

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An Italian priest and ex-altar boy has been convicted to 2 years and 6 months in prison for committing sexual abuse against a minor, a student he was tutoring in a vocational institute.

The Vatican has handed down its first-ever conviction for sexual abuse committed on its grounds to an Italian priest, Gabriele Martinelli, 31, who had previously been acquitted of the same and other crimes for lack of evidence.

Martinelli is a former student of Saint Pius X Pre Seminary, a vocational institute in the Vatican that hosts the pope’s altar boys. In 2020, he was first tried in court for sexually abusing a seminary student he was tutoring in August 2010, but the case has failed to find him guilty of the charges.

That initial verdict was reversed on Tuesday, when a Vatican court found Martinelli guilty of abusing the trust of the student and forcing him to…

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Catholics need to stop blaming all sexual ills on contraceptive use

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

January 26, 2024

By Rebecca Bratten Weiss

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In 1968, Pope St. Paul VI promulgated the encyclical letter Humanae Vitae, closing the discussion about whether the Roman Catholic Church should revise its stance on birth control. Paul offered several reasons for reiterating the church’s long-standing prohibition, one being that, in his opinion, the use of contraception would lead to the depersonalization of women. 

The document states, “A man who grows accustomed to the use of contraceptive methods may forget the reverence due to a woman, and, disregarding her physical and emotional equilibrium, reduce her to being a mere instrument for the satisfaction of his own desires, no longer considering her as his partner whom he should surround with care and affection.” 

Today, conservative Catholics frequently reference Paul VI’s prognostications in an attempt to connect sexual abuse and misconduct with the phenomenon of contraceptive use. 

In July 2018, the National Catholic Register published a…

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WA Lawmakers Introduce Bill Requiring Clergy to Report Child Abuse, One Year After Similar Bill Died over Catholic Opposition

SEATTLE (WA)
InvestigateWest [Seattle WA]

January 25, 2024

By Wilson Criscione

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Lawmakers hope a compromise will get Catholic lobbyists on board

After failing a year ago, Washington state lawmakers are trying again this session to pass a bill that would make clergy mandatory reporters of child abuse or neglect. 

Senate Bill 6298 would add clergy to the list of mandatory reporters in Washington. And the bill’s main sponsor, state Sen. Noel Frame, D-Seattle, hopes a compromise regarding whether clergy should still report information obtained during a confession will be enough to win over Catholic lobbyists, who proved to be the main obstacle to passing the law last year. 

“I cannot handle the idea that a member of a faith community, a leader in a faith community, would stand on the sidelines when they believe a child is at imminent risk of abuse or harm,” Frame said in a legislative committee hearing discussing the bill Thursday. “I really hope this is the middle path.”

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Survivor organizations alarmed by loophole exempting clergy from mandatory reporting in new bill

SEATTLE (WA)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

January 25, 2024

By Tim Law and Mary Dispenza

Read original article

Backtracking in proposed legislation keeps children at risk

On Thursday, January 25th, the Human Services Committee of the Washington state Senate will hold a public hearing on SB 6298 , “an act relating to the duty of the clergy to report child abuse or neglect.” This new bill has been introduced following the failure of previous legislation (SB 5280 ) that included an amendment that made members of clergy mandatory reporters of child abuse, without offering an exception for information about a child that may be at risk for abuse that was obtained during private pastoral communication.

 Under pressure from Catholic bishops , state Senate lawmakers have introduced a new bill that bypasses the amendment to the previous legislation brought by the House Human Services, Youth, & Early Learning Committee, by putting the clergy exemption back into the bill. If they succeed, clergy will be effectively exempt from reporting child abuse and neglect…

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A pedophile priest. A $10-million payout. A monster who won’t leave my life

ORANGE (CA)
Los Angeles Times [Los Angeles CA]

January 25, 2024

By Gustavo Arellano

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Most reporters have covered a story so disturbing that they never want to think about it again — yet the evil subject makes it impossible to ever forget.

My cross to bear is Father Eleuterio Ramos.

The Montebello native terrorized Catholic parishes in Orange and Los Angeles counties during the 1970s and 1980s, once admitting to detectives that he had molested “at least” 25 boys. Church officials knew about Ramos’ depravity almost from the beginning of his career, yet never turned him over to law enforcement or even removed him from the ministry. Instead, they moved him from parish to parish until the Diocese of Orange asked the Diocese of Tijuana in 1985 to accept him — after he confessed to having “slipped,” according to a church memo.

The Orange diocese settled five sex abuse lawsuits against Ramos during the 1990s. Eleven lawsuits were still pending when Ramos died 20 years…

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January 25, 2024

How US archdiocese helped priest accused of abusing deaf children

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Guardian [London, England]

January 25, 2024

By Ramon Antonio Vargas and David Hammer

Read original article

Gerard ‘Jerry’ Howell was supported by New Orleans’s archbishop after credible sexual abuse allegations were made against him by dozens of children

For decades, Gerard “Jerry” Howell had avoided punishment for what his own church considers credible sexual abuse allegations leveled against him by dozens of children – including many deaf youths whom he met through his work.

Now, he’s found another way around what little administrative accountability he eventually faced, this time with the help of New Orleans’s archdiocese and its archbishop.

A court order put a halt to retirement benefits paid to Howell and other similarly accused priests, but only after the archdiocese declared bankruptcy in 2020 as it continued to struggle managing the fallout of a decades-old clerical abuse scandal.

Nonetheless, in a private letter to a high-ranking Vatican official in the US, New Orleans’s archbishop  View Cache

‘Nones’ may have dim view of religion, but many still say they’re ‘spiritual’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Crux [Denver CO]

January 24, 2024

By John Lavenburg

Read original article

[See also Pew Research Center, Religious ‘Nones’ in America: Who They Are and What They Believe, January 24, 2024)]

A new survey has found that about 70 percent of American adults who describe themselves as religiously unaffiliated, the so-called “nones,” nevertheless believe in God or a higher power, and almost half of them (48 percent) describe themselves as spiritual.

The findings come from a new survey conducted by the Pew Research Center titled “Religious ‘Nones’ in America: Who They are and What They Believe.” It follows a survey Pew conducted last October, which found that 28 percent of American adults are religiously unaffiliated.

Archbishop Charles Thompson of Indianapolis, the U.S. Bishops’ Conference Committee on Evangelization and Catechesis chair, said that he has often heard about people who identify as spiritual but not religious, and believes there is an opportunity for the church to reach them.

“You want to tap…

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Michael Stano, lower left, during his time as an altar boy at Notre Dame Catholic Church in Denver. Monsignor Richard Hiester is on the left. Credit: Courtesy of Michael Stano

Man sues Archdiocese of Denver, two disgraced priests, alleging sexual abuse when he was a boy

DENVER (CO)
KUSA - NBC 9News [Denver CO]

January 24, 2024

By Kevin Vaughan

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[Photo above: Michael Stano, lower left, during his time as an altar boy at Notre Dame Catholic Church in Denver. Monsignor Richard Hiester is on the left. Credit: Courtesy of Michael Stano. Report includes a video with other images.]

Emotion caught in Michael Stano’s voice as he talked about his troubled childhood – and the question he heard repeatedly as his family struggled to understand his behavior.

“I always knew there was something wrong or something different about me – I shouldn’t say wrong,” Stano told 9NEWS. “My grandmother would shake me regularly, and, you know, ‘What’s going on?’ And, you know, ‘What’s causing this?’

“She would never say, you know, ‘What’s wrong with you?’ My grandmother would never say that. She would always say, ‘What happened to you?’”

When he was a boy, he could never answer that question.

“I completely repressed everything,” he said.

Now he has an…

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Vatican court convicts former altar boy who served the pope

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Washington Post

January 23, 2024

By Anthony Faiola and Stefano Pitrelli

Read original article

[For the original Washington Post investigation: A teen was accused of abuse inside Vatican City: Powerful church figures helped him become a priest, by Chico Harlan and Stefano Pitrelli, July 12, 2021. See also cache.

A Vatican appeals court on Tuesday convicted a priest of corrupting a minor when he served as an altar boy for the pope within the walls of the Holy See, handing down a 2½-year prison sentence in a case that brought allegations of sexual abuse — and the church’s resistance to rooting it out — into the geographic heart and spiritual center of the Roman Catholic Church.

The appeals court on Tuesday partially reversed the 2021 acquittal of Gabriele Martinelli, 31, in the Vatican’s first criminal trial on sexual abuse. The court concurred that there was no evidence Martinelli had used coercion when he engaged in sexual relations…

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Vatican appeals court sentences priest to prison for sexual abuse of teen

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

January 24, 2024

By Matthew Santucci

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The Vatican Court of Appeals sentenced an Italian priest to jail on Jan. 23 for “the crime of corruption of minors” relating to the sexual abuse of a fellow student at a school for papal altar boys.

The case is being called historic, as it is the first such ruling that has been handed down for sexual violence perpetuated on Vatican sovereign territory. 

Father Gabriele Martinelli was accused of forcing the former altar server, identified as L.G., to have sexual relations with him between 2007 and 2012 while they were students at the St. Pius X pre-seminary.

Martinelli was sentenced to two and a half years in prison and ordered to pay a fine of 1,000 euros (about $1,089.78) to cover the legal proceedings, Vatican News reported

The 31-year-old Martinelli was ordained to the priesthood in 2017 and is a priest in the Diocese of Como in…

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Priest jailed for sexual abuse inside Vatican in ‘Pope’s choirboys’ case

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
The Telegraph [London, England]

January 24, 2024

By Nick Squires

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Father Gabriele Martinelli sentenced to two and a half years for abusing altar boy at youth seminary few yards from Pope Francis’s residence

A Catholic priest has been jailed for sexually abusing an altar boy within the walls of the Vatican in the first legal case of its kind.

In what the Italian media called the “Pope’s choirboys” case, Father Gabriele Martinelli, 31, was sentenced to two and a half years in prison by a Vatican court for sexually abusing a minor when both of them were enrolled in a youth seminary located just a few yards from Pope Francis’s residence.

It was the first Vatican trial involving sexual abuse inside the walls of the Vatican, the world’s smallest sovereign nation.

The St Pius X youth seminary was a residence for boys aged 12 to 18 who served as altar boys at masses led by the Pope in St…

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January 24, 2024

El sacerdote que es acusado por abuso sexual en CDMX y por el que la Arquidiócesis inició una investigación

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Animal Político [Mexico City, Mexico]

January 24, 2024

By Redacción Animal Político

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La Arquidiócesis Primada de México inició una investigación interna contra el sacerdote Sergio ‘N’, a quien detuvieron el pasado 15 de enero por su presunta participación en el abuso sexual de un adolescente en la Ciudad de México.

De acuerdo con la Fiscalía General de Justicia de la Ciudad de México, los hechos ocurrieron el 17 de diciembre de 2023 en contra de un adolescente, durante una posada en la colonia Texcaltenco, en Tlalpan.

Fue hasta el 15 de enero de 2024 que elementos de la Policía de Investigación ubicaron al sacerdote en la colonia San Pedro de los Pinos, cerca del mercado, en la alcaldía Benito Juárez, y lo detuvieron.

Ante la detención, la Arquidiócesis inició una investigación propia a la par de las autoridades, como lo estipula el Código de Derecho Canónico y normas internas.

La iglesia aseguró que “no ha recibido ninguna denuncia sobre este caso y los hechos imputados no ocurrieron…

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Twice in 6 months, an accused abuser is back near a school; SNAP responds

KANSAS CITY (KS)
SNAP - Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests [Chicago IL]

January 23, 2024

By Mike McDonnell

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We’re deeply worried that Kansas’ Catholic archbishop, for the second time in six months, is putting an accused child molester to work in or near a Catholic school. These moves are reckless and irresponsible. In August, Archbishop Naumann let Bishop Miege hire Phil Baniewicz, who was named in a 2005 civil sexual abuse lawsuit in Arizona, as its new president.

Now, Naumann is transferring Fr. John Pilcher to Holy Trinity parish, which has a parochial school, in Lenexa.
Our simple question: Why take the risk?

Most parishes in Kansas do not have elementary schools. It would be cautious and prudent to put Fr. Pilcher in one of those churches. But Naumann is sadly but predictably opting to roll the dice with the well-being of children. The church ‘investigation’ into the abuse report involving Fr. Pilcher was relatively brief. We see no evidence that Naumann or his staff did any real outreach…

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‘Another level of coverup’: How a Mass. law prevents clergy abuse survivors from getting justice

BOSTON (MA)
WGBH Radio - NPR affiliate [Boston MA]

January 24, 2024

By Nancy Eve Cohen

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It can take decades for an adult who survived sexual abuse as a child to bring a lawsuit. That’s the case for many who were abused by trusted members of the community, like Catholic priests. But in Massachusetts, even if a survivor of clergy abuse decides to sue, state laws can stand in the way of justice.

The first hurdle is the statute of limitations. If a victim is older than 53 and it’s been more than 7 years since they realized the abuse harmed them, the statute of limitations applies — meaning it’s likely too late to bring a lawsuit.

The second obstacle is known as the charitable immunity law, which applies to nonprofit charities. It generally limits the liability of charitable organizations, including Catholic dioceses, to $20,000. (Medical malpractice lawsuits against a nonprofit provider are capped at $100,000.)

Eric MacLeish has been one of the…

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Louisiana Supreme Court hears arguments on sex abuse ‘lookback’ law

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
KADN - Fox 15 [Lafayette LA]

January 23, 2024

By Jim Hummel

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The Louisiana Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in an Acadiana clergy sex abuse lawsuit that will affect the outcomes of other sex abuse cases in the state.

The issue being considered by the justices is a 2021 law that created a three-year ‘lookback’ window to file civil lawsuits, regardless of when the alleged abuse occurred. Previously, survivors had until they turned 28 years old to file such claims.

The civil case before the high court is against the Diocese of Lafayette and St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church in St. Martinville. In the lawsuit, six plaintiffs allege they were molested by Father Kenneth Morvant decades ago when they were between the ages of 8 and 14.

“We have real issues about credibility, reliable evidence, and proof,” said Gil Dozier, an attorney for the Diocese of Lafayette. “This case, on top of that, is predicated on repressed memory. The plaintiffs in…

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Abuse survivors deeply troubled by Cardinal Fernández’s resurfaced book on sex and orgasms

ROME (ITALY)
America [New York NY]

January 22, 2024

By Gina Christian - OSV News

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Two sexual abuse survivors told OSV News they are deeply troubled by a recently resurfaced book on mysticism written several years ago by the Vatican’s doctrinal head that includes graphic descriptions of sexuality.

“La pasión mística: espiritualidad y sensualidad” (”Mystical Passion: Spirituality and Sensuality”) — written in 1998 by then-Father and now Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández, head of the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith — bills itself as “an invitation to the world of passionate love that hides in the depths of our being.”

In a Jan. 8 interview with Crux, the cardinal — who has also come under fire for his 1995 book “Heal Me with Your Mouth: The Art of Kissing” — dismissed “La pasión mística” as a naive effort “that I certainly would not write now,” and said the book was no longer available in print, having been canceled shortly after publication.

But clerical abuse…

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Freeport man feels vindicated after Haitian orphanage founder charged with sexually abusing minors

PORTLAND (ME)
Portland Press Herald [Portland ME]

January 23, 2024

By Jacqueline Charles and Jay Weaver

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Paul Kendrick had accused Michael Karl Geilenfeld of being a serial pedophile. Geilenfeld twice sued Kendrick for defamation and legal cases have persisted for more than a decade.

A U.S. man who founded an orphanage in Haiti and spent over a decade dodging accusations that he abused minors in his care was charged Monday with traveling from Miami to the Caribbean country to sexually abuse children.

Michael Karl Geilenfeld, 71, who was arrested Saturday in Denver, had even won a multimillion-dollar defamation lawsuit in a Maine federal court against an advocate who accused him of sexually abusing boys at his orphanage in Haiti. Geilenfeld also had been arrested in Haiti on the very same allegations, landing him in a Port-au-Prince jail amid the defamation battle, only to have the case dismissed by a judge when some of his alleged victims were no-shows in court.

Geilenfeld is expected to have a…

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