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.

September 23, 2015

Pope Francis is doing more to fight sex abuse than his predecessors. That’s still not enough.

UNITED STATES
Vox

Updated by Dylan Matthews on September 23, 2015

For the most part, Pope Francis’s first visit to North America is being met with giddy anticipation from the media and public figures. But one group is not so enthusiastic: survivors of clerical abuse.

Francis gets credit for doing much more than his predecessors to address the crisis. But the bar is low. For example, Pope John Paul II did shockingly little. His defenders asserted that he was unaware of the facts, but he was receiving reports detailing just how grave the situation was as early as 1985. “Other than making nine recorded public statements, all of which were sufficiently nuanced to be innocuous, and calling a meeting of the U.S. cardinals to tell them what everyone already knew, he did nothing positive,” victims’ advocate and priest Rev. Thomas Doyle writes. Pope Benedict XVI did more, but still left bishops like Kansas City’s Robert Finn, who were known to have covered up abuse, in power.

By contrast, some observers argue that Francis has taken meaningfully positive measures.”Pope Francis’s willingness to act on the issue of holding bishops accountable has been a great source of hope for Catholics who’ve wondered when this great unfinished business of the abuse scandal was going to get handled,” Grant Gallicho, an associate editor at Commonweal, contends.

But survivors of clerical sex abuse still aren’t celebrating the pope’s visit. Activists at Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) argue that Francis has offered more happy talk and conciliatory language than actual changes that would crack down on abusive clergy. They point to the breathtaking extent of the abuse: A 2004 paper by investigators at John Jay College found that between 1950 and 2002, 4,392 out of 109,794 total priests faced “not implausible” sexual assault accusations — 4 percent. As of 2014, the total was up to 6,427 priests credibly accused, with 17,259 alleged victims.

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

Victims blast pope’s praise of bishops

WASHINGTON (DC)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Wednesday, Sept. 23

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, SNAP president (312-399-4747, bblaine@snapnetwork.org)

In a speech today to U.S. bishops, according to ABC News, Francis “does not specifically reference the pedophilia that has rocked the Roman Catholic Church.”

He does, however, speak of some alleged “great sacrifice” made by bishops because of the abuse and cover up crisis.

What sacrifice? What bishops takes fewer vacations, drives a smaller car, does his own laundry or has been passed over for promotion because he’s shielding predators and endangering kids? None.

Only four US bishops (out of hundreds) have resigned because they hide and enabled horrific crimes, but only after staying in power for years and only after massive public, police, prosecutor and parishioner outrage. (Law, Finn, Piche and Neinstedt)

Virtually none of the other US clerics, (out of thousands) have ever been punished in the slightest for protecting predators, destroying evidence, stonewalling police, deceiving prosecutors, shunning victims or helping child molesting clerics get new jobs or flee overseas.

And no one in the entire US Catholic hierarchy, despite 30 years of horrific scandal and at least 100,000 US victims, has been defrocked, demoted, disciplined or even publicly denounced by a church colleague or supervisor, for covering up child sex crimes, no matter how clearly or often or egregiously he did so.

In carefully-crafted remarks, Francis claims church officials are working “to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated.” He knows, however, this is disingenuous. Such crimes are happening right now, all across the world. He refuses to admit this, however, preferring to conveniently imply that somehow, because of tiny, belated and grudging steps forced on bishops in a few Western nations,

Finally, Francis says he has “no wish” to tell US bishop “what to do, because we all know what it is that the Lord asks of us.” He’s half right – bishops do indeed know precisely how to protect kids. But they refuse, like Francis himself does, to take the simple, proven steps to do this.

Still, we’re deeply disappointed that Francis refuses to tell bishops to do a single thing more than they’ve been forced to do by courageous victims, angry Catholics, determined law enforcement, and the church’s own insurers, defense lawyers and public relations experts.

(Here are just some of the tangible steps Francis could have told US bishops to take to protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded, expose the truth and end the cover ups:

[SNAP]

His remarks today confirm what we’ve long said and suspected: this pope, like his predecessors, is doing and will do little if anything to bring real reform to this continuing crisis. Those who care about kids must focus on secular authorities, not church figures (however popular they may be).

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

Pope tells U.S. bishops crimes of sexual abuse should not be repeated

WASHINGTON (DC)
Reuters

WASHINGTON | BY SUSAN CORNWELL AND PHILIP PULLELLA

Pope Francis on Wednesday told U.S. Roman Catholic bishops that crimes of sexual abuse of minors by clergy should never be repeated, acknowledging the damage caused by years of scandal in the U.S. Catholic Church.

In the remarks, delivered at Saint Matthews Cathedral in Washington on the first full day of his visit to the United States, the pope did not utter the words “sexual abuse” but referred to the scandal by talking about “difficult moments” and providing help for victims.

“I know how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you, and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims … and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis told the bishops, who applauded.

Wounds from the scandal, which saw priests who abused children moved from parish to parish instead of being defrocked, are still festering and draining church finances.

The U.S. church has already been dealt a heavy financial blow by settlement payments and other costs totaling around $3 billion, which has forced it to sell off assets and cut costs.

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

Pope Francis Philadelphia visit: Victims of clergy abuse will sit this one out

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
PennLive

By Ivey DeJesus | idejesus@pennlive.com
on September 23, 2015

State Rep. Mark Rozzi was offered VIP tickets to attend papal events in Philadelphia this weekend.

Raised in the Catholic Church, the Berks County Democrat declined. Like many other survivors of clergy sex abuse, Rozzi finds the visit from Pope Francis and the reception extended painful and insulting.

“It’s so frustrating seeing everybody get so excited that the pope’s coming,” Rozzi said. “This is all we hear right now. What you hear is him talk about the fact that he wants to help this group or that group, but there is no mention of wanting to meet with victims.”

Rozzi, who was 13 when he and two other friends were sexually molested by priests in the Philadelphia Archdiocese, has long been at odds with the church. One of the priest died in 1999, having never been prosecuted for the alleged crimes as a result of expired statute of limitation. Rozzi’s two childhood friends committed suicide.

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

A Papal Blessing for a Biden Presidential Bid?

WASHINGTON (DC)
Huffington Post

Al Eisele
Editor-at-Large, The Hill

Pope Francis has said he won’t address any domestic political issues during his visit to the U.S., but there’s a good chance he may bestow his blessing on Vice President Joe Biden, and by inference, encourage him to run for president.

That is, if Biden follows the lead of Vice President Walter Mondale when Pope John Paul II visited Washington 36 years ago.

John Paul was wrapping up a six-city visit to the U.S. in 1969 after saying Mass on the National Mall and meeting President Carter at the White House. He was the first pope to visit the White House and I was working for Mondale at the time and won major points with my Irish Catholic wife and her parents by getting them invited to meet him at a White House reception.

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

Pope prays for victims of clergy abuse during service with bishops

WASHINGTON (DC)
WTOP

WASHINGTON — Pope Francis prayed for the victims of clergy sex abuse during a service at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle Wednesday.

He also praised U.S. bishops for their response to the sex abuse crisis and used his homily almost as a pep talk for bishops, telling them to be good shepherds of their flock.

Speaking before the roughly 300 bishops, Francis lauded them for what he called their “generous commitment to bring healing to victims.” He praised them for having courage and acting, as he saw it, “without fear of self-criticism.”

But he also prayed for the victims of abuse that has spanned decades at the hands of parish priests.

“We have to hope that such crimes will never repeat themselves,” he said.

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

Pope Francis says clergy sex abuse can ‘never be repeated’ and other updates

WASHINGTON (DC)
Los Angeles Times

On the first day of his American visit Pope Francis wasted no time delving into difficult issues: clergy sex abuse, immigration and climate change. In lighter moments, he was welcomed to the White House by thousands of cheering onlookers, posed for a selfie with spectators and took a brief ride on the Ellipse in a popemobile.

One sentence captures it all: Clergy sex abuse, abortion and immigration.

Speaking to hundreds of U.S. bishops at St. Mathew’s Cathedral in Washington, Pope Francis delved into one of the church’s most difficult issues: the clergy sex-abuse scandal. The pontiff told bishops that they must “work to ensure” that those crimes “will never be repeated.”

“I realize how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you, and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims — in the knowledge that in healing we too are healed — and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis said.

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

Pope tells US bishops ‘crimes’ of sexual abuse should never be repeated

WASHINGTON (DC)
Al Jazeera

September 23, 2015

Pope Francis on Wednesday told U.S. Roman Catholic bishops that crimes of sexual abuse of minors by clergy should never be repeated, acknowledging the damage caused by years of scandal in the U.S. Catholic Church.

In the remarks, delivered at Saint Matthews Cathedral in Washington on the first full day of his visit to the United States, the pope did not utter the words “sexual abuse” but referred to the scandal by talking about “difficult moments” and providing help for victims.

“I know how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you, and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims … and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” Francis told the bishops, who applauded.

Wounds from the scandal, which saw priests who abused children moved from parish to parish instead of being defrocked, are still festering and draining church finances.

Thumbnail image for Pope Francis highlights climate change, immigration at White House
Pope Francis highlights climate change, immigration at White House
The pope says climate change is an urgent problem that ‘can no longer be left to a future generation’

The U.S. church has already been dealt a heavy financial blow by settlement payments and other costs totaling around $3 billion, which has forced it to sell off assets and cut costs.

The pontiff has vowed to root out “the scourge” of sex abuse from the Roman Catholic Church, and last June created a Vatican tribunal to judge clergy accused of covering up or failing to prevent sexual abuse of minors.

Victims’ groups say the church has not done enough.

On Wednesday, David Clohessy, head of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, who himself was sexually assaulted by a priest as a child, said he was unimpressed by Francis’ words.

“It’s dreadfully disappointing. Bishops have been cowardly, not courageous, and still are,” Clohessy said. “What grudging, belated steps they have taken have been forced on them by the most courageous people in this crisis, abuse victims and their families.”

Clohessy said Francis “refuses to even be honest about what this crisis is. These are not quote-unquote ‘difficult moments,’ this is a centuries-old, incredibly unhealthy and self-surviving pattern of secrecy and recklessness,” Clohessy said in a phone interview after the pope’s remarks.

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

Pope Francis: US bishops show ‘courage’ over Catholic church sex abuse crisis

WASHINGTON (DC)
The Guardian

Stephanie Kirchgaessner in Rome

Pope Francis has hailed US bishops for their handling of the sexual abuse crisis that has rocked the Catholic church for decades, saying they had shown “courage” throughout and regained the authority and the trust which was demanded of them.

In rare remarks about the string of scandals that first emerged in the mid-1980s, Pope Francis stopped short of addressing the victims of clerical abuse, focusing instead on the pain that had been inflicted on the bishops who were left to weather the storm.

“I am also conscious of the courage with which you have faced difficult moments in the recent history of the church in this country without fear of self-criticism and at the cost of mortification and great sacrifice,” he said.

He then commended the bishops for being ready to sell off church property and assets in order to pay for settlements with abuse victims. “Nor have you been afraid to divest whatever is unessential in order to regain the authority and trust which is demanded of ministers of Christ and rightly expected by the faithful,” he said.

Between 2004 and 2013, US diocese paid $1.7bn in legal settlements, according to a report released last year by the US Conference on Catholic Bishops. In that same period, it also paid $379m in legal fees.

“I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims – in the knowledge that in healing we too are healed – and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated,” he continued, prompting a round of applause from the assembled bishops.

The abuse scandals in the US, as in other countries around the world, did not only implicate pedophile priests but also the bishops and cardinals who protected them, and in many cases allowed them to prey on more young victims.

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Pope Francis’ remarks at the White House (as prepared for delivery)

WASHINGTON (DC)
CNN

Mr President,

I am deeply grateful for your welcome in the name of all Americans. As the son of an immigrant family, I am happy to be a guest in this country, which was largely built by such families. I look forward to these days of encounter and dialogue, in which I hope to listen to, and share, many of the hopes and dreams of the American people.

During my visit I will have the honor of addressing Congress, where I hope, as a brother of this country, to offer words of encouragement to those called to guide the nation’s political future in fidelity to its founding principles. I will also travel to Philadelphia for the Eighth World Meeting of Families, to celebrate and support the institutions of marriage and the family at this, a critical moment in the history of our civilization.

Mr. President, together with their fellow citizens, American Catholics are committed to building a society which is truly tolerant and inclusive, to safeguarding the rights of individuals and communities, and to rejecting every form of unjust discrimination. With countless other people of good will, they are likewise concerned that efforts to build a just and wisely ordered society respect their deepest concerns and their right to religious liberty. That freedom remains one of America’s most precious possessions. And, as my brothers, the United States Bishops, have reminded us, all are called to be vigilant, precisely as good citizens, to preserve and defend that freedom from everything that would threaten or compromise it.

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Pope tells Bishops that clergy abuse must not be repeated

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

By Abby Ohlheiser, Greg Jaffe, Michael E. Ruane September 23

Pope Francis did not shy away from controversy Wednesday, condemning priestly sex abuse, mistreatment of immigrants and destruction of the environment, as he traveled across Washington in his first full day in the United States.

He was also greeted by jubilant crowds, kissed some babies, and dispensed blessings and thumbs up from the popemobile.

But in somber midday remarks to American bishops, he said the offenses of the Catholic church’s sex abuse scandal must never be repeated.

Addressing hundreds of clergymen in Washington’s Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle, the pope told them:

“I realize how much the pain of recent years has weighed upon you and I have supported your generous commitment to bring healing to victims — in the knowledge that in healing we too are healed — and to work to ensure that such crimes will never be repeated.”

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

Pederastas probados podrían ser aún sacerdotes en ejercicio

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Vanguardia MX [Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico]

September 23, 2015

By La Jornada

Read original article

Las curias no ayudan a localizarlos y los feligreses los solapan: “si algo debe, pagará ante Dios”

En México, rastrear sacerdotes presuntamente involucrados en casos de pederastia encuentra como principal obstáculo que la Iglesia católica oculta información sobre mexicanos y extranjeros que podrían estar ejerciendo su ministerio en diversas partes del país.

A ello se aúna que una lista integrada desde hace varios años por la la Red de Sobrevivientes de Víctimas de Abuso Sexual de Sacerdotes Católicos (SNAP, por su siglas en inglés), con casi un centenar de religiosos señalados responsables de este delito, carece de datos pormenorizados sobre los presuntos implicados, pues frecuentemente sólo contiene nombre y un apellido, sin fotografía ni más detalles.

Está el caso, por ejemplo, del sacerdote Mario Cimarrusti. Se dice que es franciscano, “acusado de abuso sexual violento de por lo menos 12 jóvenes en el seminario de San Antonio entre los años de 1962 a 1969, en Santa Bárbara, California”. Ese nombre aparece en la historia de la Casa Franciscana Guaymas AC, fundada en 1969, por el entonces obispo de la diócesis de Ciudad Obregón para brindar ayuda a los pobres del municipio de Guaymas, Sonora. No se sabe si se trata de la mihgtde445ddcfdsma persona o es sacerdote homónimo.

En otros, las curias no ayudan a localizarlos: o los ocultan o los desconocen. Así ocurrió con el cura Lucas Antonio Galván Valdez, de la Congregación Religiosa de los Clérigos Regulares, quien en 1989 se declaró culpable de asalto sexual a una niña de 11 años en Pueblo, Colorado, Estados Unidos. Obtuvo libertad condicional, mientras la diócesis del lugar llegó a un arreglo económico con la familia de la víctima. El caso fue divulgado por la SNAP en cuanto descubrió que el religioso continuaba activo en la ciudad de México como vicario en la parroquia del Sagrado Corazón y San Cayetano, en la delegación Gustavo A. Madero.

El 21 de abril del año pasado fue suspendido de su ministerio sacerdotal por el cardenal Norberto Rivera Carrera, y se informó que su congregación lo investigaría. Este diario intentó conocer qué sucedió después de esa determinación, pero en la iglesia de San Cayetano, ubicada en Lindavista, en el Distrito Federal, donde se supo que se encontraría al superior de la orden, Felipe de Jesús Romero Ramírez, se negaron a dar cualquier información.

Otro más es Theodore Baquedano Peck, quien tendrá alrededor de 70 años de edad. En 1973 fue denunciado ante la justicia estadunidense por una mujer que dijo haber sido su víctima a la edad de 11 años, mientras era visitador perteneciente a los Misioneros de Guadalupe en la arquidiócesis de San Francisco. La curia también llegó a un acuerdo económico con la “víctima”, a quien pagó 300 mil dólares sin siquiera tener la certeza de que el clérigo era culpable, según explicó el presidente del Colegio de Abogados Católicos, Armando Martínez, quien estudia el caso por solicitud del arzobispo de Yucatán, Emilio Berlié, el cual decidió dar de baja del ministerio sacerdotal a Baquedano, porque su nombre fue incluido en la lista de presuntos pederastas.

Martínez explicó que para la Iglesia de Estados Unidos es más fácil buscar un acuerdo económico con quien dice ser víctima de abuso sexual de un sacerdote que mantener un pleito legal durante varios años.
Foto
Manifestantes protestan contra la juez Beatriz Moreno, quien dejó libre “por falta de pruebas”, en 2006, a Ramón Salvador Gómez, acusado de violar a menores de edadFoto Cristina Rodríguez

En aquel país, dijo, los honorarios de un abogado de “medio pelo” son de 550 dólares la hora, más lo que implica un juicio. Un caso como el de Baquedano pudo costar a la arquidiócesis de San Francisco un millón y medio de dólares, por lo menos.

Preguntar a los feligreses sobre el pasado de sus párrocos es acusar a quien indaga de querer destruir la Iglesia católica. Así ocurrió en San Andrés Mixquic, delegación Tláhuac, donde se encuentra el sacerdote Rolando Blasi Villatorio, quien se vio involucrado en el asesinato de un joven de 16 años, cuyo cuerpo fue hallado en un cuarto de la parroquia Jesucristo Obrero, en Tlalpan, de la cual era titular en 2007. Estuvo detenido entre 48 y 72 horas como presunto responsable de homicidio, hasta que el Ministerio Público declaró su inocencia. Las investigaciones arrojaron que otras dos personas cometieron el crimen y hoy purgan condena.

Tres mujeres que dijeron pertenecer a grupos religiosos de la parroquia, y optaron por omitir sus nombres, cuestionaron que se indague sobre los antecedentes de su párroco. “Es una tristeza que pregunten. ¿Por qué contra los católicos? No somos nadie para juzgarlo; si algo debe, va a pagar ante Dios. Tenemos a nuestro pastor y está bien lo que está haciendo”, señaló una de ellas.

Al padre Loreto Ramos Roldán, antecesor de Blasi en el templo, también se le preguntó. Mencionó no saber nada y aseguró que el clérigo es bien aceptado por su comunidad.

En la búsqueda de Angel Torres Estrada, párroco en María Madre de la Iglesia, ciudad de México, el mismo sacerdote respondió a las imputaciones en su contra por intento de violación. “Eso pasó hace mucho tiempo. Yo no estaría en el ministerio ni, lógicamente, hablando contigo. Una revista publicó mi nombre cuando debió ser el del sacerdote inculpado, Miguel Angel Alvarado. Vino una fe de errata (en la publicación) a los ocho días, y ya me cansé de cargar la revista bajo el brazo para explicar que lo de mi nombre es un error”, expresó.

Charles Theodore Murr Letourneau fue acusado de haber abusado de niños huérfanos en una casa hogar que fundó en 1987, en Tepatitlán de Morelos, Jalisco. Sin embargo, vecinos señalaron que el sacerdote, de origen estadunidense, fue inculpado injustamente porque la diócesis de San Juan de los Lagos quiso apropiarse del lugar para que lo administraran las monjas de la Congregación de las Madres Pías de la Dolorosa.

Según las fuentes, se le obligó a salir del país bajo el argumento de que no estaban en reglasus papeles. El padre Murr habría construido la Casa Hogar Villa Francisco Javier Nuño, ubicada en la calle Marcelino Champagnat 23, más una panadería, con dinero que le fue heredado. Las propiedades aún se encuentran en litigio.

Un vecino contó que historias como ésas hay más. Citó, sin dar nombres, el caso de una monja italiana que hace años arribó a Tepatitlán para fundar un asilo de ancianos que después convirtió en una escuela privada de las más caras de la zona. Hoy es una próspera mujer casada.

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SNAP v. the Pope, et al

UNITED STATES
Center for Constitutional Rights

Ongoing revelations of pervasive and serious sexual violence against children and vulnerable adults by priests and others associated with the Catholic Church in different parts of the world have demonstrated that the crisis is not one of isolated random sexual assaults by errant priests but is widespread and systemic. In the wake of scandals around the world, experts and investigators have identified policies and practices of the Vatican and high-level officials of the Catholic Church that have covered up and enabled the sexual violence to continue. Some observers have estimated that the number of victims of sexual violence by priests and clergy occurring over the past three decades is in the hundreds of thousands, particularly as more survivors come forward and civil authorities begin investigations in Latin America, Africa, and Asia. CCR represents the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests in filings before the International Criminal Court, the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child and the United Nations Committee Against Torture. The work continues CCR’s history of fighting sexual and gender-based violence and ensuring accountability for rape as a form of torture, and as a war crime and crime against humanity.

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Opponents challenge parish closings, mergers in NY archdiocese

NEW YORK
National Catholic Reporter

Peter Feuerherd | Sep. 23, 2015

NEW YORK Cardinal Timothy Dolan, appointed to lead the New York archdiocese six years ago, didn’t need his doctorate in U.S. Catholic history to realize he was made chief steward of a grand legacy.

There was the massive St. Patrick’s Cathedral, ornate churches scattered around Manhattan and throughout the archdiocese, and small churches, barely noticeable, tucked away amidst apartments and office buildings, whose history dates to ethnic groups who have long moved on.

Impressive, yes, but not always helpful for the modern era. Over the past year, Dolan has unleashed a series of parish consolidations, closings and mergers, affecting a sizeable chunk of the archdiocese’s 368 parishes. After a listening process titled “Making All Things New,” the results landed towards the end of this summer as 112 parishes involved in that process were merged into 55, with 31 churches shuttered permanently.

The goal is a financially stable, revitalized church better able to evangelize a secularized culture, in an archdiocese where only about 12 percent of some 2.8 million Catholics can be found at Sunday Mass. It’s been on Dolan’s mind for a while.

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Controversial LA Cardinal To Travel With Pope Francis For DC Trip

UNITED STATES
CBS Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES (CBSLA.com/AP) — Pope Francis’ six-day, three-city tour of the U.S. this week evolved from a pledge he made last fall to attend the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia.
Stops in Washington and New York were added after Francis put the triennial, Vatican-sponsored conference on his agenda. It opens Tuesday.

Organizers describe the conference that blends prayer, religious instruction and faith-themed lectures as the world’s largest gathering of Catholic families.

With more than 18,000 people signed up, this year’s will be the most attended of the eight World Meetings.

Cardinal Roger Mahony, the retired Archbishop of Los Angeles, will be traveling with the Pope when he meets with President Obama and speaks to Congress.

Mahony told KNX 1070 NEWSRADIO audiences can expect to hear some frank words from this unconventional leader of the Catholic Church.

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Fayette County church ex-youth worker charged with molesting boys

GEORGIA
Atlanta Journal-Consitution

A former volunteer youth ministry worker at a Fayette County church has been charged with child molestation and sexual battery against a child under 16 in a case involving two teenage boys.

Matthew Bradley Young, 46, of Norcross, was arrested Sept. 18 after an investigation into complaints made by parents of the two boys, according to incident reports filed by the Fayette County Sheriff’s Office.Young is in Fayette County Jail.

According to the reports, the parents had contacted the pastor and other leaders at the church and told them they believed their sons had been molested at a church planned function on May 9. The sheriff’s office asked that the church not be identified publicly because the investigation is ongoing.

Officers said in the reports that the parents described contact between Young and the boys via text messages, Facebook, email and cell phones as well as during a youth trip to North Carolina and during various meals. The juveniles were told by Young to delete all text messages immediately, the reports said.

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Guess Who’s Coming to Congress

UNITED STATES
skipshea

Thursday September 24th, Pope Francis will address a joint session of Congress. And politicians just couldn’t be happier. Well some of them anyway. The Right used to love the Popes with their somewhat social conservative ways. But now the Left is embracing the Pope as he seemingly makes left leaning statements.

Like in his now famous address in Bolivia when her decried unfettered capitalism. People like presidential hopeful Bernie Sanders fell all over themselves pointing to his quotes like:

“Human beings and nature must not be at the service of money. Let us say no to an economy of exclusion and inequality, where money rules, rather than service. That economy kills. That economy excludes.”

Its odd how at the same time back in Bernie’s home state of New York there is a vast amount of church closings which includes the likes of Sacred Heart Church in Mount Vernon. …

Otherwise would this trip even be happening. Especially with the scathing report from not one, but two UN investigations into the global epidemic of childhood sexual abuse. That should bring pause to inviting the Pope to speak before a joint session of Congress. You would think.

If we look at it through another lens, the Pope is the leader of a very small country that borders Rome, Italy. The Holy See is its own nation. He was elected for life, so by definition he is now a dictator of a theocracy. In his country women have very little rights. They certainly can’t vote nor do they have any equal opportunities for social or political advancement. Like an economy that excludes. And, as the UN has pointed out, they allowed and covered up for the sexual abuse of children throughout the globe. If the Holy See were any other nation or any other religion we would not be extending invitations to its leader to speak at congress, we would be discussing sanctions and possibly military action against this country. Instead our government embraces it.

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A look at Francis’ priorities as pope

UNITED STATES
USA Today

David Gibson, Religion News Service September 23, 2015

Pope Francis is widely viewed as the “pope of change.” But just how is he changing the Catholic Church — and the world? What matters most to him? Here’s a look at 7 main elements of his pontificate.

1. Walking the walk

Every pope is first and foremost a teacher of the faith. A firm faith is the foundation for all that the Catholic Church does and preaches. But for Francis, more than most pontiffs, faith is expressed in deeds more than in sermons. He likes to cite the adage attributed to St. Francis of Assisi, whose name he took when elected pope: “Always preach the gospel — use words if you have to.”

For Francis, this is the essence of Christianity, and it is how the church must live in order to be true to the gospel — and to have any credibility going forward. He has modeled that mission by shunning the trappings of the office, living simply and trying to get the Vatican to do the same: He has installed showers for the homeless near St. Peter’s Square and sends a personal aide into the streets of Rome to dispense charity to the needy.

Francis says the Catholic Church must focus outward if it is to find its true self, and that’s a revolution in the way the institutional church has worked.

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Father Joseph Maurizio found guilty on 5 of 8 counts

PENNSYLVANIA
WJAC

By: Maria Miller

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. – A jury reached a verdict Tuesday in the federal trial of Central City priest Father Joseph Maurizio.

The five charges he was found guilty of include one count of international money laundering, one count of possession of pictures that exploit children and three counts of eliciting sexual misconduct with three different boys overseas.

One of those boys recanted his initial story of being abused. Another count for that same boy though, Maurizio was found not guilty of.

WJAC-TV was not able to speak with Maurizio’s defense team who somehow skipped past the media, but the former president of Pro Nino USA, the organization that helped fund and run the orphanage in Honduras that Maurizio was involved with, says Tuesday’s verdict validates everything.

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Condenan a sacerdote por turismo sexual en Honduras

PENNSYLVANIA
La Prensa

Un sacerdote católico acusado de viajar a Honduras para abusar de niños pobres durante sus misiones, fue declarado culpable el martes de varios cargos.

Un jurado federal dictó sentencia de culpabilidad al reverendo Joseph Maurizio Jr. de cargos entre los que se incluyen tres de cuatro acusaciones relacionadas a abuso sexual de niños durante sus visitas a un orfanato en Honduras.

Maurizio fue acusado de viajar al extranjero entre 2004 y 2009 para tener relaciones sexuales con tres menores, un cargo conocido como turismo sexual. También fue declarado culpable de posesión de pornografía infantil y de transferir de manera ilegal fondos a una caridad que ayudó a costear los viajes.

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US-Prozess: Ex-Priester wegen Missbrauchs von Waisenkindern schuldig gesprochen

PENNSYLVANIA
Spiegel

Eine Jury im US-Bundesstaat Pennsylvania hat einen ehemaligen Priester in einem Sextourismus-Fall in fünf von acht Anklagepunkten schuldig gesprochen: Der Mann war zwischen 2004 und 2009 mehrfach nach Honduras gereist und hatte dort Sex mit drei Jungen aus einem Waisenheim. Zudem wurde der 70-Jährige wegen des Besitzes kinderpornografischen Materials sowie illegaler Finanztransaktionen verurteilt.

Die Höhe des Strafmaßes soll im Februar bekanntgegeben werden. Dem Mann drohen bis zu 130 Jahre Haft, wie die Zeitung “Pittsburgh Tribune-Review” berichtet.

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Two tumultous years but little real progress for adult victims of child sexual abuse

AUSTRALIA
The Stringer

by Colin Penter
September 23rd, 2015

“Victims and their families have been fighting for recognition and justice for decades and great victories were achieved when the Victorian Inquiry and the Royal Commission were established. But ‘for what’ they say.”

Judy Courtin

The Australian Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse is after 2 years, at its halfway mark. The Commission is focused on systemic issues and institutional responses to allegations and incidents of child sexual abuse. Public hearings have been the main way the Commission does its work.

Although the Royal Commission’s brief is overwhelming, the hearings have been revelatory and harrowing. The Commission has heard evidence of horrific and horrendous systematic and institutional physical and sexual abuse and rape of children within religious, faith and welfare organisations.

Evidence to the Commission shows that both low and high level officials in institutions supposed to protect children actively conspired to abuse and rape them. In many cases these were highly sophisticated, organized institutional crimes committed against children.

The Commission has exposed the breadth of institutional settings – churches, schools, hospitals, out-of-homecare, children’s homes, juvenile centres, NFPs and charities- where abuse occurred.

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Editorial: Pope is a spiritual, not economic leader

UNITED STATES
The Detroit News

Pope Francis continues his six-day tour of the United States today with a visit to the White House, where he’ll find a host in President Barack Obama sympathetic to much of his agenda on social and economic matters.

Pope Francis is quickly becoming one of the most beloved and celebrated popes of the modern era, largely for his efforts to open the Roman Catholic Church to the people.

He has set about to fulfill the 50-year-old reforms of Vatican II that were aimed at making the church more accessible and more modern.

His well-expressed compassion and commitment to service is credited with bringing lapsed Catholics back to the fold, and is even increasing interest in the priesthood.

Among his major initiatives is a softening of the Vatican’s hard-line view on homosexuality, divorce and abortion. Pope Francis famously declared it is not for him to judge gays, and has offered reconciliation to Catholics who have divorced or had an abortion.

Mostly, though, his inspiration is his leadership in carrying out the church’s mission to comfort the afflicted and serve mankind. He has made it the hallmark of his papacy to alleviate poverty.

That has rallied a church in desperate need of resurgence. Finances of the Catholic church are in crisis, in no small part due to $3 billion in payouts to the victims of sexual abuse by priests. That scandal disillusioned many Catholics and contributed to a sharp decline in mass attendance that is beginning to reverse under the pope’s guidance.

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Ex-youth ministry volunteer at church charged with sex abuse

GEORGIA
WRDW

Wednesday, Sept. 23, 2015

ATLANTA (AP) — A former volunteer youth ministry worker at a Fayette County church has been accused of sexually abusing two teenage boys.

Authorities arrested Matthew Bradley Young of Norcross on Sept. 18 and charged him with child molestation and sexual battery against a child under 16.

Incident reports filed by the Fayette County Sheriff’s Office said an investigation started after authorities received complaints from the boys’ parents.

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports that the parents believed their children were assaulted during a May 9 church function. Sheriff’s office spokesman Allen Stevens said no further details would be released because of the ongoing investigation.

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Gag order issued in case of Alabama pastor accused of molesting multiple children

ALABAMA
AL.com

By Jeremy Gray | jgray@al.com
on September 22, 2015

A gag order was issued today in the case of an Alabama pastor accused of sexually torturing, abusing and raping multiple children and teens.

Clarke County Circuit Judge Robert Montgomery issued the order in the case of Mack Charles Andrews, Jr.

The order also applies to Facebook and other social media, according to court records.

Andrews, 55, was set for a settlement docket today at 9 a.m. At a settlement docket, judges typically ask whether a defendant wants to enter into a plea agreement.

It was not clear this afternoon if a plea was entered. An email to District Attorney Spencer Walker this morning was not returned and an employee in his office said they could no longer comment on the case.

The order comes a day after AL.com shared the story of a woman who said she was sexually tortured and raped by Andrews from the time she was 7 until she was 12.

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Rapist pastor sentenced to 30 years in jail

ZIMBABWE
Bulawayo 24

by Mashudu Netsianda

A BULAWAYO pastor, who turned a congregant, 16, into a sex slave and allegedly infected her with HIV and genital warts while claiming to be driving out a death demon that wanted to kill her father, has been sentenced to 30 years in jail.

Greatness Tapfuma, 33, of Cowdray Park who is the founder of Kingdom Rulers International Church broke into tears soon after Bulawayo regional magistrate Chrispen Mberewere convicted him on two counts of rape.

His followers who had come to court in solidarity with their leader immediately joined him in weeping following the verdict. Tapfuma’s emissaries, the court heard, attempted to bribe his victim with a house, a car or cash so she could drop the charges against him. The pastor, who was recently acquitted of raping two other congregants will, however, serve an effective 25 years in jail after five years of the sentence were suspended on condition that he does not within that period commit a similar crime.

Magistrate Mberewere, in his judgment, ruled that although Tapfuma’s victim tested HIV positive, there was no evidence that the pastor is the one who infected her. “I don’t find that the victim was aware of her HIV status prior to the rape. She only became aware of it after the doctor who examined her recommended that she gets tested for HIV following genital warts. I, therefore dismiss the link between the victim’s HIV infection and the rape,” said the magistrate. – See more at: http://bulawayo24.com/News/Local/74688#sthash.k9bA2Efx.dpuf

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Alaskans head to D.C. for papal visit

ALASKA
Alaska Dispatch News

Erica Martinson
September 22, 2015

WASHINGTON — Alaska’s congressional delegation and visitors from the state are getting ready for an unprecedented visit from Pope Francis as he embarks on a tour of the Eastern Seaboard, including Washington, D.C., Philadelphia and New York City.

Pope Francis arrived in the Washington area Tuesday afternoon and was greeted by President Barack Obama and his wife, daughters and mother-in-law.

On Wednesday, Obama will welcome the pontiff at the White House, and Washingtonians will be treated to a papal parade. He’ll then meet with bishops from across the U.S. and celebrate Mass. On Thursday morning, the pope will address a joint session of Congress, the first time the leader of the Catholic Church has ever done so.

While Alaskans recently got a taste of D.C. motorcades and presidential traffic, Washington, D.C., is getting its own dose this week, with widespread street closures and expectations of hours-long transit backups. …

On Thursday, Joan Wilson, an attorney from Anchorage who attends the same church as Sullivan, will be on the Capitol lawn with her sister, who lives in D.C., and several other relatives, during the pope’s address to Congress.

Wilson originally only requested two tickets, but found out there were extras available from both Sullivan and Murkowski’s offices. “I wish people knew about that,” she said. “I think a lot of people would have come this far to see the pope. He’s a pretty magical guy.”

Wilson, a lifelong Catholic, said the pope’s visit has added importance for her.

Her mother, Mary Nockels, 83, is very ill and may not live past the weekend, she said. Nockles asked her daughter to bring her rosary to be blessed by the pope.

Like many Catholics, Wilson has had her own troubles with the church. Her brother was sexually abused by a priest when they were children in Chicago, she said.

The long history of abuse and silence from the church is not unknown to Alaskans. In 2008, the Fairbanks diocese filed for bankruptcy after being unable to settle lawsuits alleging sexual abuse by priests and church volunteers.

Wilson said she wouldn’t have come for a visit by the previous pontiff. “I had no interest in Pope Benedict’s version of the Catholic Church,” she said.

But Pope Francis “seems to be less about image and more about every individual’s ability to have a personal connection to God. It’s not about dogma; it’s about what you hold in your heart,” Wilson said.

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He has his faith, but not his Church

MASSACHUSETTS
Crux

By Margery Eagan
On Spirituality columnist September 22, 2015

David O’Regan will tell you he’s had a “beautiful, blessed life.” Six grown children. Forty-three years of marriage to a wife he adores. “The baby lady.” That’s what they call Jane O’Regan around the town near Boston where the O’Regans live in a rambling house with a great big yard. They are foster parents. Jane O’Regan always has a baby in tow. They’re caring now for the 69th and 70th child they’ve welcomed: one five months old, the other nine months.

David O’Regan, an imposing, 6-foot, 4-inch 65-year-old, will also tell you he is a prayerful man of faith raised on the Baltimore Catechism in the Catholic Church. “My mother wasn’t well. She was bipolar and treated herself with alcohol and so unfortunately, there was no peace at home.”

But there was peace, even a “mystical solace,” at church, says O’Regan, who became a Eucharistic minister, a prayer group leader, and a CCD teacher who made daily Mass during many, many Lents.

But O’Regan will then tell you this: he stopped going to Mass years ago.

And he nearly lost much else in that once-ordered life: his letter carrier job, his money, even his home. For a time, Jane O’Regan bought groceries on a credit card and Dave sold old electrical equipment on eBay for an extra $20 here and there. This unraveling began in 2002, when The Boston Globe started running story after story about the Church cover-up of the sexual abuse of children by deviant priests.

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Sex Abuse Scandals Haunt American Catholics

UNITED STATES
NET Nebraska

GWEN IFILL: It’s not yet clear what issues Pope Francis will directly address during his visit here, but one problem casts a long shadow for the church: sexual abuse scandals.

This pope has pressured top church officials to end abuse involving priests. Just this year, the bishops of Saint Paul-Minneapolis and Kansas city have resigned in the wake of new revelations.

As part of our special coverage of the pope’s visit this week, special correspondent Chris Bury reports on how sex abuse by clergy still haunts American Catholics.

CHRIS BURY: For the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis, with more than 800,000 Catholics, the sex abuse scandal still resonates in a raw and immediate way.

JENNIFER HASELBERGER, Former Canon Lawyer, Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis: I think, by anyone’s definition of a crisis, we’re in it. And there doesn’t seem to be any way out.

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Pope Francis arrives in the U.S. for a ‘new encounter’

WASHINGTON (DC)
Chicago Tribune

Michelle Boorstein, Abigail Ohlheiser, Michael R. Ruane
Washington Post

Pope Francis arrived in Washington on Tuesday to a joyous greeting from well-wishers as he began the historic visit that millions of Americans have been awaiting and for which three of the country’s great cities have been anxiously preparing.

The pope’s white and green Alitalia jetliner touched down at 3:50 p.m. on a flight from Cuba at the start of a spiritual and political journey that will take him to the centers of U.S. government, power and history.

Beneath gray skies, the pope stepped off the airplane at 4:05 p.m. at Joint Base Andrews in Prince George’s County and was welcomed by President Barack Obama and a cheering crowd assembled on metal bleachers.

The pope took off his white skullcap as he walked down the steps from the jet to the windy tarmac to greet first lady Michelle Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, Jill Biden and Washington Archbishop Cardinal Donald Wuerl, among others. …

A group of women held signs protesting the Catholic church’s handling of its ongoing pedophile priest scandal.

Becky Ianni held up a photo of herself as a child, saying she left the church for what she called a failure to crack down on clergy sexual abuse.

“When the pope comes into town, we’ve seen posters everywhere, pope cocktails and pope bobbleheads and such good feeling,” said Ianni, who leads the Virginia chapter of SNAP, a group that advocates for people who were abused by priests. “But on the other side of the coin are all the victims that are still hurting.”

Nearby, Russell Heiland and Anthony Ezzell, of Reston, Va., stopped by the nuniciature to get a glimpse of the pope before their celebrating their 25th anniversary at a restaurant in Washington.

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10 controversies swirling around Pope Francis’ visit to the US

UNITED STATES
RT

Pope Francis has finally landed in the US for his first-ever visit to the country. The papal swing through the Northeast is guaranteed to captivate Americans, but the popular pontiff is likely to draw praise and criticism on numerous contentious issues.

The Bishop of Rome’s arrival comes at a delicate time for the Church in the US, which suffered damaging setbacks after a child sex abuse scandal. Although Catholicism is still the second-largest religion in the US, the number of Catholics in the US has declined and Pope Francis will be searching for ways to rejuvenate his flock.

So far, Pope Francis has defied being categorized on the traditional left-right spectrum of American politics, but his anticipated comments on a range of issues, from gay marriage and abortion to climate change and prison reform, will undoubtedly be seized upon for their political implications. Here are 10 of the most controversial issues surrounding the visit.

A contentious canonization

After visiting President Barack Obama on Wednesday morning, Francis will hold a canonization mass for Father Junipero Serra, a Catholic missionary who converted thousands of Native Americans in California. Declaring Serra a saint will mark the first time such an event has taken place on American soil, but critics have condemned the move, arguing that Serra was part of a Spanish colonization effort that decimated the Native population.

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Why I’m Boycotting the Pope’s Visit

UNITED STATES
The Daily Beast

Joelle Casteix

While Pope Francis has a glowing reputation for his progressive views on LGBT issues and poverty, he has done nothing for victims of abuse from within the church—like me.
When I told people that I was going to New York for the Papal visit, those who know me understood that I’m not coming for mass, a blessing, or a chance to see the wildly popular pope.

I’m here because I am a survivor of child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

From the ages of 15 to 17, I was sexually abused by my choir teacher at a large Catholic high school in southern California. By the time the abuse ended, I was 17, pregnant, and had a sexually transmitted disease. Even worse: school and church officials knew about my abuser and knew he had other victims. But they did nothing to stop him or help us. In fact, they let him resign with a glowing letter of recommendation.

I suffered the fate of many survivors. I was blamed. I lost my friends and my family. I stayed silent for 15 years because I was ashamed and alone.

But in 2003, I was able to use the civil courts to expose my abuser and uncover more than 200 pages of then-secret documents about my case. They included a signed confession by my abuser, signed documents from school officials, and a letters to and from the diocese on how to keep the matter “quiet.”

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Gerry O’Carroll: For the Church to survive, it has to do one simple thing – end vow of celibacy

IRELAND
Herald

23 September 2015

For two decades now Catholic bishops have been warning about the vocational crisis in the church. The dwindling number of priests in the ministry is now so acute that the centuries-old tradition of the revered Sunday Mass in many rural parishes is now in danger.

In many parishes, especially in rural areas, only one Mass is now celebrated on a Sunday. The norm used to be at least three

This acute shortage of priests has led to the virtual closure of some churches and the growing practice of two or three parishes sharing a priest.

Many priests are now in their 60s and 70s and are being asked by their bishops to carry on their pastoral work beyond their retirement age.

It is an extraordinary situation for a traditionally Catholic country that has helped spread the Gospel across the globe in years gone past. Now that missionary role is being reversed in a novel way.

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September 22, 2015

Victims urge Congress to investigate Catholic abuse/cover up scandal

WASHINGTON (DC)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

SNAP: “100,000 US clergy abuse victims, but federal officials do nothing”
Group applauds governmental investigations and reports in other countries
Two United Nations panels have done probes and attacked church hierarchy
Organization says “Welcoming Francis is fine but, for kids’ sake, challenge him too”

What:
Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will blast US federal officials for “doing nothing” about the on-going child molestation and cover up scandal in the church. They will call on

–Congress to hold hearings into the crisis, and–the Justice Department to make crime-fighting funds to states contingent on reforming archaic child safety laws.

They will also

–urge Pope Francis to stop bishops from fighting secular child safety reforms, and
–urge “everyone who saw, suspected or suffered” child sex crimes and cover ups in churches to “protect kids, expose predators, deter cover ups and push for eliminating predator-friendly statutes of limitations.”

When:
Wednesday, Sept. 23 at 2:30 pm.

Where:
Outside the U.S. Department of Justice, 950 Pennsylvania Avenue NW in Washington DC

Who:
Four-five members of an international support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including a Missouri woman who is the organization’s long time outreach director

Why:
Some consider the U.S. to be the epicenter of the clergy sex abuse and cover up crisis since the first pedophile priest made national headlines here more than 30 years ago (Father Gilbert Gauthe of Lafayette, Louisiana). Catholic bishops admit that 6,427 US priests are accused molesters and Catholic experts estimate that these child molesting clerics have assaulted more than 100,000 kids.

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Suspended priest convicted of charges in sex tourism case

PENNSYLVANIA
The Kansas City Star

The Associated Press

JOHNSTOWN, PA.
A Roman Catholic priest accused of traveling to Honduras to molest poor street children during missionary trips was convicted on Tuesday of several charges.

Federal jurors convicted the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr. of charges including three of four counts related to sex abuse of boys during trips to a Honduran orphanage.

Maurizio was accused of traveling abroad from 2004 to 2009 to have sex with three young boys, a charge known as sexual tourism. He also was convicted of possession of child pornography and illegally transferring money to a charity to help fund the trips. Jurors acquitted him of another count of traveling outside the United States for sex with a minor and two other counts involving the transfer of funds.

The 70-year-old priest, who has been suspended from Our Lady Queen of Angels Parish in Somerset County, showed no reaction as the verdict was read to the packed courtroom. He is scheduled to be sentenced in February.

The priest repeatedly denied the allegations. His defense attorney presented testimony suggesting that interviewers can plant ideas that lead to false accusations.

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Chris Lang: Is Vatican doing enough to punish clergy in sex-abuse scandals?

UNITED STATES
The Morning Call

Pope Francis’ visit to Philadelphia is being billed as a “World Meeting of Families.” The motto reads: “Love is our Mission: The Family Fully Alive.”

While the pope has admirably denounced economic inequality and made strides on certain social issues, scandals in the Catholic Church continue to raise skepticism about its self-proclaimed role as protector of the family.

The Morning Call recently reported that an advocacy group for clergy sex-abuse victims, the Catholic Whistleblowers, wants Pope Francis to investigate the child protection records of Cardinal Justin Rigali, former archbishop of Philadelphia, and Cardinal Raymond Burke, who led dioceses in Wisconsin and Missouri.

I admire the group’s efforts, but I’m not sure how much we can expect from the Church’s leaders.

Just last year, Francis whisked away Papal Nuncio Jozef Wesolowski from the Dominican Republic, when it was discovered the nuncio had been luring young boys into his beach house to engage in sex for money. Critics believe this directly contradicted the Church’s stance of reporting pedophile priests to secular criminal justice systems. The Church invoked diplomatic immunity and secretly recalled him to Rome without informing local authorities.

In a New York Times piece, Antonio Medina Calcaño, dean of the faculty of law and political science of the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo, argued: “From the pure standpoint of justice, [Wesolowski] should be tried in the country where the acts took place because the conditions for trying him will not be the same elsewhere.” (The nuncio passed away in August. He was under house arrest in the Vatican awaiting trial by Vatican authorities.)

Details about the nuncio’s actions are disheartening, as impoverished boys as young as 14 were offered increasing amounts of money for sex acts. One boy, who normally earned just $1.50 a day, said he was given $10 to shine the nuncio’s shoes and swim naked in the ocean. He was later paid $25. Then $135. Over time, he received gifts like new sneakers. And a new watch.

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Never Let a Good Opportunity Go To Waste: NY Times Uses Pope Francis Visit To Rehash Stale, Decades-Old Abuse Story

UNITED STATES
TheMediaReport

David Pierre

SEPTEMBER 21, 2015

This month’s historic trip of Pope Francis to the United States cannot halt the New York Times’ relentless obsession with decades-old cases of sex abuse committed by Catholic priests.
Despite the Church’s unprecedented corrective measures just in the past dozen years, not to mention nearly $3 billion in settlements and over $85 million in therapy to accusers, one would think it was 1992 all over again in reading the article from Vivian Yee at the New York Times.

Trotting out the tired parade

Yee’s article brandishes a weary parade of well-known Church critics who have a long history of bashing the Catholic Church to rehash the story of abusive priests from many decades ago. Included in Yee’s article are:

* a 72-year-old man who claims that a priest “groped” him 66 years ago at age 6;
another man who claims who was abused in the “early 1970s”;
* Barbara Blaine, president of the lawyer-funded attack group SNAP (Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests), who once wrote a letter of support on behalf of a child pornographer;
* Joelle Casteix, SNAP’s Southwest Regional director; and
* Terence McKiernan, the cranky president of BishopAccountability.org.

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Just ahead of US arrival, Pope Francis denies being a leftist

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor September 22, 2015

WASHINGTON, DC – Pope Francis arrived in the United States to a boisterous welcome Tuesday, telling reporters on the papal plane that he won’t raise the Cuban embargo in his speech to Congress and rejecting the suggestion that he’s a political leftist.

“Maybe there’s an impression I’m a little bit more leftie, but I haven’t said a single thing that’s not in the social doctrine of the Church,” Francis insisted, referring to official Catholic teaching on social questions.

At one stage, the pontiff even challenged a journalist to give him an example of something he’s said that was “too strong.”

Asked about a recent Newsweek cover story asking if the pope is Catholic, Francis joked that “I’m ready to recite the Creed if need be,” referring to an ancient statement of core Catholic beliefs recited at every Mass.

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Somerset priest found guilty of sexually abusing three Honduran orphans during mission trips

PENNSYLVANIA
Tribune-Review

By Paul Peirce
Tuesday, Sept. 22, 2015

A Somerset County priest was found guilty Tuesday of having sex with three boys at a Honduran orphanage he supported through his nonprofit foundation, possessing child pornography and transferring money outside the U.S. for illicit sexual activities.

The Rev. Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 70, showed no reaction when the verdict was read in a federal courtroom in Johnstown.

Maurizio’s two sisters and two nieces, who attended every day of the trial, sat in the courtroom with parishioners of his former parish, Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Central City.

The women gasped as the guilty verdicts were read, then wept.

Jurors deliberated for more than 12 hours over two days and found Maurizio guilty of five of the eight counts against him. Two additional counts involving the money transfer were dismissed.

The priest’s three accusers and another witness who traveled from Central America to testify were brought into the courtroom, where they sat behind prosecutors to hear the verdict.

They had no reaction as their interpreter whispered to them in Spanish as the verdict was read.

A parishioner who left the courthouse after the verdict said she and other supporters were “obviously disappointed.”

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Maurizio found guilty of five of eight counts

PENNSYLVANIA
Daily American

In a mixed verdict, a jury has found the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr. guilty of possessing child pornography, money laundering and three counts of engaging in illicit sexual conduct with minors.

He was charged with a total of eight counts.

The jury returned to the federal courtroom in Johnstown with a verdict around 4 p.m. after deliberating for 13 hours. The victims were brought back into the courtroom to hear the jury’s decision.

The Central City priest was accused of abusing three boys, ages 14 to 16, during mission trips to Honduras.

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Somerset County priest found guilty of molesting Honduran orphans

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

September 22, 2015

Torsten Ove/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A federal jury in Johnstown today found a Somerset County priest, the Rev. Joseph Maurizio, guilty of molesting Honduran orphans on mission trips.

After deliberating about 12 hours over two days in U.S. District Court, the jury found him guilty on three counts of molesting three boys, a count of possession of child pornography and a count of transferring money outside the country for the purposes of illegal sexual activity.

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Suspended priest convicted of 5 of 8 counts, including molesting poor Honduran children

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
First Posted: September 22, 2015

JOHNSTOWN, Pennsylvania — A suspended Roman Catholic priest from western Pennsylvania accused of traveling to Honduras to molest poor street children during missionary trips has been convicted of five of eight counts.

A federal jury in Johnstown deliberated for more than 12 hours over two days before convicting the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr. on Tuesday of the charges, which include three of four counts related to sex abuse of boys during trips to a Honduran orphanage.

The 70-year-old priest has been suspended from Our Lady Queen of Angels Parish in Somerset County.

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Priest Found Guilty

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Johnstown, Cambria County, Pa.

A priest of the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, Pennsylvania, was found guilty after an eight-day jury trial of offenses related to his sexual abuse of three minor boys during trips to Honduras over a five-year period, U.S. Attorney David J. Hickton announced today.

Joseph D. Maurizio Jr., 70, of Central City, Pennsylvania, was convicted of engaging in illicit sexual conduct in foreign places, possession of child pornography and international money laundering. He is scheduled to be sentenced on February 2, 2016, at 10 a.m.

U.S. Attorney Hickton stated, “The jury’s conviction affirms the courage of these victims, the tenacity of the investigators and the resolve of our prosecutors to ensure justice. We remain steadfast in our commitment to protect children from predators here and pursue those who travel beyond our borders to offend. We are especially vigilant where a person uses a position of trust to victimize the most vulnerable among us.”

“What Maurizio did to the children in Honduras while swindling unsuspecting Americans for money to support his pedophilia is atrocious,” said John Kelleghan, HSI Philadelphia Special Agent in Charge. “The jury’s verdict is testament that society will not tolerate this behavior, and HSI will continue to use its transnational investigative capabilities to bring American child predators to justice — no matter where they commit their crimes.”

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Baptist Pastor’s Sexual Abuse of a Child Leads to Victim’s Suicide as an Adult and Lawsuit

TEXAS
PR Newswire

DALLAS, Sept. 22, 2015 /PRNewswire/ — Carla Sweet and Ed Gomez of Dallas, Texas, filed suit today in Dallas, Texas, state court against First Baptist Church of Rockwall: seeking justice for their son, John “Jeremy” Sweet-Gomez, who was repeatedly sexually abused by a Youth Pastor at First Baptist Church of Rockwall.

The suit alleges that a Youth Pastor at First Baptist Church of Rockwall began sexually abusing Jeremy when he was approximately thirteen years old. The abuse included sodomy, oral sex, and inappropriate sexual touching. The suit states that the sexual abuses and assaults occurred “on church property and during church-sponsored religious trips.” Jeremy suffered repeated sexual abuse as a teenager; he later committed suicide.

Windle Turley, one of the attorneys representing the plaintiffs, said, “at the Turley Law Firm, we have a longstanding commitment to representing victims of institutional and religious sexual abuse. Many organizations and their employees, occupy positions of trust and confidence that make it possible to cause great harm under the guise of religion. When that occurs the wrongdoers, whether individuals or institutions, must be held accountable.”

The suit papers are available at http://www.wturley.com/Recent-Filings/. For more information, contact Windle Turley or Steven Schulte, Turley Law Firm, at 214-691-4025, or stevens@wturley.com.

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NY–SNAP: “Church officials fight secular child safety bills”

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims to Pope: “Stop bishops’ lobbying”
SNAP: “Prelates fight secular child safety bills
Battles are now being waged in each place Francis visits
“Church uses flock’s donations to protect predators,” group says
It begs church-goers: “Donate elsewhere until real change happens”
SNAP: “As Francis ‘talks nice’ with lawmakers, bishops ‘quietly fight dirty’”

What:
Holding signs and childhood photos, while Francis meets with politicians in DC, clergy sex abuse victims will hand fliers to church-goers. They will also

–urge Francis to make bishops stop blocking secular child safety law reforms,
–urge lawmakers (federal and state) to ignore bishops’ “self-serving” lobbying efforts, and
–urge Catholics to donate elsewhere until their church officials push for, not against, better laws that protect kids, expose predators and punish enablers.

Such legislative struggles are pending in each place Francis will visit: New York, Pennsylvania and DC.

The victims will also urge all victims, witnesses and whistleblowers – in every institution that serves kids – to

–report everything they know, see or suspect to law enforcement,
–seek help from independent sources (not church, school, camp or coaching staff), and
–join the growing movement to end or extend archaic, predator-friendly statutes of limitations.

When:
Wednesday, Sept. 23 at noon – 1:00 p.m.

Where:
Outside St. Patrick’s Cathedral (5th Avenue entrance) in Manhattan

Who:
Seven-eight members of an international support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including 1) an Illinois woman and attorney who is the organization’s long time president and 2) a California woman who is a best-selling author on abuse prevention.

Why:
While clergy sex abuse and cover up lawsuits attract considerable media attention, most victims of pedophile priests can’t seek justice in court because bishops exploit archaic, predator-friendly deadlines called “statutes of limitations.” Worse, SNAP says, US bishops are spending “hundreds of thousands of dollars” on “high-priced lobbyists” to block moves to reform these rigid statutes that “give wrongdoers incentives to intimidate victims, threaten witnesses, discredit whistleblowers, destroy evidence and ‘run out the clock’ on child sex crimes and cover ups.”

SNAP wants Pope Francis to forbid such “reckless, callous expenditures” that “save bishops’ reputations but make abuse and cover up likely to continue.” The group also wants state lawmakers to pass civil “window” laws that “make it easier for struggling victims to protect others, expose predators, deter cover ups and seek justice.” And they want federal legislation and policies that reward states that work harder on abuse prevention.

(Four states have enacted civil “window” laws. As a result hundreds of adults who committed and concealed child sex crimes have been exposed, fired, demoted or otherwise punished and dozens of criminal prosecutions have taken place that likely would not have, SNAP maintains. The group says “windows” are “the single quickest, safest and cheapest way to expose predators, safeguard kids and end cover ups of child sexual assaults.”)

Because bishops exploit tight statues of limitations, very few victims are able to “out” their perpetrators in court. In the Milwaukee archdiocese, for example, over the last four years, 575 victims have come forward reporting abuse by clerics there. But the identities and whereabouts of roughly 100 of these clerics remain hidden because victims cannot file lawsuits against them. The same is true of dozens of clerics who ignored or hid these crimes.

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How the Pope Might Renew the Church

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By FRANCIS A. QUINN
SEPT. 18, 2015

Sacramento — I AM a Catholic, born in 1921 of Italian and Irish families and raised in California seminaries. After decades of work as a priest, I was astonished that Pope Paul VI appointed me a bishop in San Francisco. I love my church, and every night I pray that I might die in her warm, loving arms.

Yet I worry about my church’s future. Basic doctrines will not change. But the church may change policies and practices after doing serious study.

So, as we await Pope Francis’ visit to America, I offer a peaceful contribution to the controversies that convulse the church today.

American Catholics are divided, primarily, by three internal church conflicts.

The first is over priestly celibacy. Observers within and outside the church point to mandatory celibacy as a principal factor driving down the number of American priests.

A celibate life is admirable for a priest who personally chooses it. For 1,000 years, great good has been accomplished because priests could fully devote their lives to their ministry.

Nevertheless, in recent years married clergy of other Christian churches have been accepted into service in the Catholic Church. So far, the ministry of these married priests has appeared successful.

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California Bishop Voices Support for the Ordination of Women

UNITED STATES
America Magazine

Luke Hansen, S.J. | Sep 18 2015

A retired Catholic bishop in California is speaking publicly for the first time about his support for the ordination of women, saying he found “liberation” when Pope Francis encouraged bishops at the extraordinary synod last October to “speak boldly and listen humbly” about issues facing the church.

Bishop Emeritus Francis A. Quinn, who served as the bishop of Sacramento from 1980 to 1994 and gained a reputation for his pastoral nature, outreach to the poor and empowerment of lay leadership in the church, said in an interview with America on Sept. 16 that Pope Francis made it clear that bishops should not censor their opinions based on what they think the pope wants to hear.

“So I figured: Well, O.K.,” he explained.

On Saturday, just days before Pope Francis arrives in the United States for a three-city apostolic visit, Bishop Quinn said in an op-ed in the New York Times that the Catholic Church should consider optional celibacy for priests, the ordination of women, and allowing Catholics who are divorced and remarried (without an annulment) to receive Communion.

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The wounds of clergy sex abuse remain unhealed, but truth may yet see light of day

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Newsworks

Arthur Baselice Jr.’s grief has pushed him into a self-imposed exile.

Almost 10 years after his son died from a drug overdose with links to his abuse by two Franciscan clergymen in Northeast Philadelphia, Baselice rarely leaves his house.

“I don’t want to go nowhere,” said Baselice.

Walking through the Baselice home in suburban South Jersey is like walking through a monument to their lost son, Arthur Baselice III. Pictures of him are everywhere. The urn with his ashes sits on a table at the entrance to the living room, where each night his father and mother light a candle in his honor.

Arthur’s bedroom, covered in sports memorabilia, is exactly the way he left it on the night that he died.

“Nothing’s changed,” said the father. “Same sheet, same bedspread. Everything is the same.”

Baselice Jr., 67, a retired Philadelphia detective who grew up a Catholic school kid in South Philadelphia, has a tattoo of his son’s face on his left forearm. Some of his son’s ashes rest in a bracelet on his right wrist.

All these years later, the pain hasn’t dulled. Baselice often wakes up in the middle of the night gasping for breath, tormented by what happened. Sometimes, as he jogs through his Gloucester County neighborhood – seemingly out of nowhere – he bursts into tears.

His wife, Elaine, and his daughter, Ashleigh, he says, are no better.

“Do I cry a lot?” said Baselice. “Yeah, most of the time.”

Baselice says he didn’t used to be an emotional person.

“Emotional?” he scoffs with the jaded laugh of a policeman. “Not at all. But this hit home.”

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Public barred from Diocese auction

NEW MEXICO
Gallup Independent

Published in the Gallup Independent, Gallup, N.M., Sept. 21, 2015

By Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola
Independent correspondent
religion@gallupindependent.com

ALBUQUERQUE — A California businessman hired by the Diocese of Gallup to promote and conduct property auctions as part of its bankruptcy case barred members of the media and public from observing an auction in Albuquerque Saturday.

Todd Good, the CEO and president of Accelerated Marketing Group, of Newport Beach, California, barred anyone from entering the auction who wasn’t a qualified bidder.

Good, along with George H. “Hank” Amos III, CEO and president of Tucson Realty & Trust Co., was hired by the Gallup Diocese to conduct auctions in Phoenix Sept. 12, and in Albuquerque Sept. 19.

At the Albuquerque auction, held at the Airport Sheraton Hotel, Good was asked why he closed the auction to the media and general public when court motions filed by diocesan attorneys never stated the auctions would be closed.

“I can’t answer that,” Good said. “I didn’t write the motions.”

In documents filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, attorneys for the diocese requested and received permission from Judge David T. Thuma to sell pieces of unwanted property in Arizona and New Mexico. However, none of those court documents indicated the auctions would be closed auctions, or closed to the media or the general public.

The Diocese of Gallup’s bankruptcy hearings are open to the public, as are documents in the case’s court file. The only exceptions to this are confidential documents related to clergy sex abuse survivors who have filed claims in the case.

Good’s response

“It doesn’t matter,” Good responded when asked about the wording of the court motions that outlined how the auctions would be conducted.

Good described himself as an “agent for the court” and said, “We have discretions how we conduct the sale. We see no advantage to let somebody in the sale that is not a bidder. In other words, it doesn’t benefit the debtors and it doesn’t benefit the creditors, and therefore we only let qualified bidders into the event.”

Good suggested anyone who disagreed with the closed auction should take it up with Thuma.

“They can go back into court on Monday, and they can talk to the judge about it,” Good said. “They can call me in front of the judge if they want to, and I can explain why I did it.”

Good was also asked about apparent errors in the report diocesan attorneys filed with the court Wednesday, regarding last week’s auction in Phoenix that reported only total gross sales of $58,960 for 12 properties. In the report, one piece of property was listed twice with different sales figures, another piece of property was not accounted for, and another listed an incorrect buyer’s premium.

Good started to review the report, and then asked, “What I want to understand is, how do you have this list?”

It was explained to Good that the report was a public document, filed by diocesan attorneys with U.S. Bankruptcy Court, and available to the public.

“I can’t discuss this,” Good said. “If you want to put your request into writing, send to attorneys for the debtors and we’ll respond.”

Attorney barred

Attorney Meredith Edelman was also barred from attending the Albuquerque auction.

Edelman, originally from Pinetop, Arizona, previously worked as a bankruptcy attorney for two international law firms. She is currently a doctorate scholar at the Australian National University, working on a research project examining Catholic clergy sex abuse through the lens of restorative justice principles. Edelman is back in the United States conducting interviews for the project and recently interviewed several representatives from the Diocese of Gallup.

According to Edelman, a man from the auction threatened to remove her from the hotel property after she also questioned why the auction was closed to the public when it had not been advertised that way in any of the court documents. In an interview afterward, Edelman said she did not get the man’s name but was disappointed by the incident.

From her own experience as a bankruptcy attorney, Edelman explained, she would have expected the court documents to clearly state whether the auction was only open to qualified bidders.

“I would make it clear what is and isn’t allowed,” she said.

Sales reports

Local residents Justin Winfield and his father Robert Winfield were admitted to Saturday’s auction as qualified bidders but left early without purchasing any property.

The Winfields said they attended the auction with the intention of possibly buying the diocese’s vacant lot in downtown Gallup, located on the corner of Aztec Avenue and Fourth Street. They didn’t want to see the property sell for a low price, they explained, so they were prepared to purchase it to ensure the Diocese of Gallup received a reasonable price. They said they were pleased, however, when someone else bought the lot for $50,000.

“We didn’t have a plan for the property,” Justin Winfield said, adding he and his father thought they might donate the lot back to the diocese.

Justin Winfield said they weren’t concerned about the property’s history of environmental damage, which was caused years ago by leaking underground gasoline storage tanks.

“It’s still a nice piece of property,” he said.

The Winfields said one of the properties that did sell before they left the auction was the Catholic Charities building in Farmington. That building was the subject of controversy earlier this month after Catholic Charities Director Debe Betts told a Farmington reporter that the Diocese of Gallup had listed the property for sale without her knowledge. According to a media report, Betts said she only learned about the sales plan after an auction notice was posted on her organization’s building.

Betts has not responded to further media requests for comment about her claims.

According to the Winfields, a buyer at the auction purchased the Catholic Charities building for $40,000 with the stated intention of donating it — presumably to Catholic Charities.

A report detailing the Albuquerque auction sales should be filed with U.S. Bankruptcy Court later this week and available for review by the public.

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Pope Francis and 6 things you need to know about the Catholic Church in the U.S.

UNITED STATES
Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA)

By David Briggs

Pope John Paul II defended the rights of migrants in California, warned about what advances in robotics could mean for the dignity of the worker in Detroit and repeatedly challenged the U.S. to consider the effect of its global footprint on the world’s poor during his 1987 visit across the nation.

Yet one of my memories is this loud lament of a reporter from a respected, prominent newspaper:

It would be great to write about these things, but all my editors want to know is what did he say about sex.

Pope Francis will be trending across all media platforms next week when he arrives in the U.S. for a six-day visit beginning Tuesday that will include stops in Washington, D.C., New York and Philadelphia. …

The sexual abuse scandal matters: The church’s multiple failures in addressing sexual abuse of minors, and its continued refusal to either discipline its own leaders or fully release information on offending clerics, have created a lasting legacy of distrust.

In one online survey of Catholics who left the church, 20 percent of respondents who said they were returning to the church listed anger at church leadership over the sexual abuse scandal as one reason for their departure. Among those who say they are not returning, 64 percent said anger over the scandal was a reason they left.

“The scars of the sexual abuse crisis run deep” among those not returning to the church, said researcher Michael Cieslak of the Catholic Diocese of Rockford, Ill

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Man Who’s Protested Vatican Embassy Since 1998 Is Unmoved By Papal Visit

WASHINGTON (DC)
Huffington Post

Arthur Delaney
Senior Reporter, The Huffington Post

WASHINGTON — John Wojnowski has been protesting sexual abuse by Catholic priests outside the Vatican embassy every day for the past 17 years — undaunted by rain, snow or a slate of health problems.

The Huffington Post asked Wojnowski Monday if he hopes Pope Francis sees his sign when the pontiff visits the embassy on Tuesday.

“I don’t care,” he said, confident his message is getting across regardless of whether the pope sees it. “At the embassy, they know.”

Wojnowksi, 72, says an Italian priest molested him when he was 15. Since 1998, he has held up signs outside the building proclaiming ” CATHOLICS COWARDS” or “VATICAN HIDES PEDOPHILES” or “MY LIFE WAS RUINED BY A CATHOLIC PEDOPHILE PRIEST. ”

“It’s a very terrible crime with lifetime damage,” Wojnowski said of the sexual abuse. “Many people [who are victims] become alcoholics, drug addicts, many people commit suicide.”

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Priest sanctioned after appearing at women’s ordination gathering

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas C. Fox | Sep. 22, 2015

Two days after appearing at a women’s ordination conference in Philadelphia, Precious Blood Fr. Jack McClure said today he has been told he can no longer celebrate Mass at Most Holy Redeemer parish in San Francisco where he has been pastor and parochial vicar for the past 15 months.

According to McClure, he was informed by Precious Blood Fr. and Most Holy Redeemer pastor Matthew Link that the secretary for San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone said McClure can no longer celebrate Mass at the beyond the end of this month.

McClure said his last Mass will be Sunday, Sept. 27.

“I feel bad about this. I feel bad for the parish. I feel bad about this silencing,” said McClure. “But I want to make it known I appreciate the generosity Archbishop Cordileone has shown me and my religious community for allowing us to serve in his archdiocese. However, in conscience I needed to break my silence.”

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MAGDELENE SURVIVORS CALL FOR JUSTICE

IRELAND
Today FM

Letter to be delivered to Justice Minister today

Several groups representing survivors of the Magdalene Laundries will deliver a letter to the Minister for Justice today calling for justice for the forgotten families of the victims of institutional abuse.

They’re calling on the government to fast track the redress scheme for aging survivors, and to grant free legal aid to people taking a case to the Mother & Baby Homes Commission.

The letter has been written by Angela Collins, whose grandmother spent 27 years in a Magdalene laundry and was buried in a mass grave with 72 other women.

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Industrial school survivor slapped, kicked and ‘forced to sleep outside at night with pigs’

IRELAND
Irish Independent

Mark O’Regan

PUBLISHED
22/09/2015

A survivor of one of Ireland’s industrial schools has claimed she was slapped, kicked, and “forced to sleep outside at night with pigs” if she snored too loudly.

Mary Collins also said her mother, Angela, was among those buried in a mass grave with 72 other women.

Her mother had been forced to spend 27 years in a Magdalene laundry.

Speaking outside the Dáil this morning, the 54-year-old claimed that at St Vincent’s home in Cork, her mother was forced to give up her youngest child for what was an illegal adoption.

She also alleged her mother was denied vital medical treatment – and this eventually led to her death.

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Survivors Network Director: Pope Francis Should Be Doing More

UNITED STATES
WBUR

Pope Francis lands in Washington D.C. Tuesday, where he will be greeted by President Obama and the First Lady. He will be the fourth pope to visit the U.S., and the first to address Congress.

This Pope is now well-known for speaking out on the moral implications of climate change and the dangers of capitalism. He has also taken steps to acknowledge the deep pain of the clergy sex abuse crisis that began here in Boston.

But, David O’Regan says he has to do more.

Guest

David O’Regan, New England director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. He tweets @BostonSNAP.

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Jonathan Rosenblatt and the Boundary between Innocent, Creepy, and Abusive

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

Jonathan Rosenblatt, rabbi of the Riverdale Jewish Center, is the grandson of Yossele Rosenblatt. I am sitting here listening to Yossele’s magnificent cantorial singing on recordings made a hundred years ago. He had everything, vocal range, control, phrasing, musicality, originality, and above all, soul. His secular contemporary in the opera was Enrico Caruso.

According to an often repeated story, Caruso attended one of Rosenblatt’s New York recitals. After hearing Rosenblatt sing Eli, Eli, he went on stage and kissed him. That was an innocent kiss expressing one great artist’s admiration of another.

But other interactions devoid of physical contact can be downright creepy. Most women have had the unpleasant experience of being visually undressed by strangers. Even worse, most have experienced conversational partners talking to their chest instead of their face.

Men are used to using adjacent public urinals. Most such interactions are matter-of-fact. Whether or not one chances to notice the other, we are all socialized not to stare. To be caught staring is to cross a boundary. We know when it happens and we turn away or glare back.

As long as the inappropriate gaze comes from a stranger is it mostly an annoyance. But it gets much more unpleasant when it comes from someone with power over you like a parent, teacher, boss or mentor. Workplace sex harassment lawsuits arise from such situations.

Inappropriate gaze is not necessarily a crime, because the law is a crude instrument. It can become the crime of child endangerment when it involves nudity and minors in ways that accustom them to being groomed or sexualized.

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We Are Judged On How We Protect The Vulnerable Among Us

UNITED STATES
The Jewish Week

Tue, 09/22/2015

Rabbi Ari Hart

As we leave Rosh Hashanah and head into Yom Kippur, the sound of crying is echoing in my ears. The theme of crying appears throughout the liturgy we recite, it’s mirrored in the sounds of the shofar, and it pours forth from the souls of members of our community.

In recent years, we’ve heard more and more stories, more and more cries of sexual abuse in the Jewish community coming to light, across the globe and across denominations. What once perhaps felt shocking and unreal has become tragically commonplace as scandal after scandal unfolds. It is painful and tragic for our community.

The true tragedy, though, is not the embarrassment and shame we feel when abuse is exposed. The true tragedy is that innocent and vulnerable children have been harmed in ways that are permanently scarring – physically, emotionally and spiritually, and we as a Jewish community have many times failed in our responses.

On Rosh Hashanah, we read two Torah portions that share a common, powerful theme. They are both the stories of vulnerable youths saved from terrible harm at the last minute by a compassionate God. Sarah and Abraham cast Ishmael out to the desert. His mother Hagar was unable to bear his cries for water so she abandoned him by a bush to die. God stepped in and provided immediate healing and a path to a bright future for Ishmael. So too with Isaac. Abraham, acting on God’s command, nearly killed his own child until God’s angel stopped him at the last minute, calling out “do not lay a hand upon the child!”

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Sex Abusing Rabbi Dovid Weinberger is back in the Five Towns

NEW YORK
Frum Follies

Dovid Weinberger recently moved back into West Lawrence some two years after his abrupt departure from his position as rabbi of Congregation Shaaray Tefila in Lawrence, NY.

He quit in the wake of revelations that he was sexually exploiting women who sought his help for various kinds of counseling including marital counseling.

According to local sources some of the same rabbis who forced him to agree to quit the rabbinate, and publicly denounced him, are now divided about whether to advise their communities publicly.

In December 2013 he promised to stay totally out of the rabbinate when he signed the following statement:

To whom it may concern, I Rabbi Dovid Weinberger, formerly the Rabbi of Cong. Shaarei Tefilla of Lawrence, NY, do hereby acknowledge that I will retire from the Rabbinate effective immediately, and will never again serve in the capacity of Rov or Rabbi of any congregation or community, nor will I ever again be involved as a mechanech [teacher] in any venue of Chinuch [education].

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Malka Leifer and the Skeptical Social Worker

AUSTRALIA
Frum Follies

I was reading the text of the court ruling* awarding more than a million dollars damages to the woman sexually assaulted by her Adass Israel School principal, Malka Leifer. This jumped out at me:

[In 2007] the plaintiff consulted Ms Chana Rabinowitz, a counsellor/social worker, concerning her symptoms. The plaintiff saw Ms Rabinowitz on five or six occasions and then ceased seeing her. The plaintiff said she stopped seeing Ms Rabinowitz because she did not appear to believe that she was sexually abused by Leifer. Eventually, the plaintiff resumed sessions with Ms Rabinowitz after she confirmed the plaintiff’s allegations with the plaintiff’s sister and a person at the School. (page 57, section 155)

It shocked me for several reasons.

It was proof that the Adass Israel School knew Malka Leifer molested her students and yet kept her on as principal until 2008 at which time they knew of a total of 8 victims.

Mrs. Chana Rabinowitz is a staff social worker at Darchei Binah Seminary (according to a blurb for Mrs. Debbie Fox’s book, Seminary Savvy, 2015). It raises the possibility that we are dealing with a therapist unwilling to believe a victim of sexual abuse without corroboration from other sources. This pattern makes it less likely victims get necessary support and contributes to the underestimation and under-reporting of sexual abuse.

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Diocesan Bankruptcy Battles Color Pope Francis’s First U.S. Visit

UNITED STATES
Wall Street Journal

By TOM CORRIGAN

As Catholic officials highlight Pope Francis’s inaugural U.S. visit as a time of spiritual renewal, the church here is seeking a different kind of renewal—in the courtroom.

Four dioceses are in active bankruptcy proceedings attempting to settle claims of sexual abuse by their clergy: Milwaukee, Wis.; Gallup, N.M.; Stockton, Calif.; and Minnesota’s Twin Cities.

Filing for bankruptcy temporarily freezes all litigation, giving a diocese breathing room to continue serving its flock while it negotiates a plan to compensate, and potentially reconcile with, abuse victims. (Pope Francis is expected to meet with victims during his visit, though it isn’t on his official itinerary.)

But chapter 11 doesn’t come cheaply. These cases, often filed on the eve of trial, can spark lengthy and hard-fought legal battles that not only take an emotional toll but also devour cash, cutting into funds available for both victims and churches’ charitable pursuits.

“The sin of sexual abuse affects more than just victims and their families,” said the Rev. James Martin, a Jesuit priest and editor at large at the Catholic magazine America. “Think of all the things that a diocese that has spent millions of dollars on settlements and lawyers could have done in terms of keeping parishes open and schools and scholarships.”

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DONOHUE SET TO MEET POPE

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic League

On September 23, Bill Donohue, and vice president Bernadette Brady-Egan, will meet with Pope Francis following a prayer service at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle in Washington, D.C.

The invitation to meet the pope was extended by Donald Cardinal Wuerl. He also invited them to the canonization Mass at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception. Timothy Cardinal Dolan invited Bill to the prayer service at St. Patrick’s Cathedral, but he has elected to stay in D.C. to do TV interviews.

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Clergy Abuse Victims to Hold Vigil as Pope

WASHINGTON (DC)
NBC Washington

By John Lewis

A support group of sex abuse survivors will hold a vigil Tuesday outside St. Matthew’s Cathedral in D.C., just a few hours before Pope Francis is scheduled to arrive in the area.

The Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) will bear signs and childhood photos of adults who committed suicide after being molested by priests as children. SNAP Outreach Director Barbara Dorris said she expects at least five or six survivors attend the vigil.

“Right now, this is a really tough week for survivors,” said Dorris. “The pope is being hailed as this hero, and yet for survivors he’s done pretty much nothing. He has’t done anything that makes children safer or discipline bishops that protect predators.”

The group will meet at 1 p.m. outside the church at 1725 Rhode Island Ave. NW to express their disapproval for the pope’s popularity “largely obscuring the ongoing sexual violence and cover-up crisis in the church,” SNAP said in a release.

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Clergy Sex Abuse Survivor Dreads Pope Visit

UNITED STATES
WBUR – Here & Now

Robert Costello, who survived sexual abuse by a Roman Catholic priest when he was a child, says he is not looking forward to Pope Francis’ visit to the U.S. this week. Costello is disturbed by all of the media coverage of the visit and doesn’t think this pope is doing enough to help survivors.

Earlier this year, he penned an open letter to the pope expressing his disapproval with how the scandal has been handled. He wishes Pope Francis would meet with survivors here in Boston, which Costello and other survivors call the ‘ground zero’ of the clergy sex abuse scandal.

He says though the problem is out of the spotlight, it isn’t going away.

Costello joins Here & Now‘s Robin Young to talk about his experience and the stress the upcoming papal visit has caused him.

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Diócesis de Guanajuato no encubrirá a cura

LEóN (MEXICO)
Vanguardia MX [Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico]

September 22, 2015

By El Universal

Read original article

El obispo Lázaro Pérez Jiménez suspendió a Laucencio Pérez de su ejercicio sacerdotal por estar acusado de abuso sexual el agravio de varios menores.

La Diócesis de Celaya garantizó que la Iglesia católica no encubrirá al sacerdote Laurencio Pérez Mejía, preso y acusado de corromper a una niña de 14 años de edad, con quien presuntamente sostuvo una relación sentimental durante tres años. 

El administrador diocesano, Lauro Gómez Zamundio, divulgó un oficio con fecha del 17 de enero del 2007, el que el obispo Lázaro Pérez Jiménez suspendió a Laucencio Pérez de su ejercicio sacerdotal por estar acusado de abuso sexual el agravio de varios menores. 

“Por las acusaciones que he recibido contra usted, de graves faltas de abuso sexual cometidas en agravio de varios menores de edad, y que usted ha negado persistentemente haber cometido; dado que los familiares de los afectados han recurrido a la autoridad civil, y ésta, a través de la Procuraduría de Justicia del Estado de Guanajuato, ha encontrado pruebas de su culpabilidad y ha girado orden de aprehensión en su contra, y que de ser verdaderas, yo no puedo detener la acción de la justicia para no incurrir en encubrimiento o complicidad, con pena y dolor me veo en la necesidad de imponer a Ud. La sanción canónica de suspensión “a divinis” por tiempo indefinido, en el sentido y alcance del canon 1395 del CIC”, describe el documento. 

La suspensión estará vigente hasta que, a juicio del obispo, quede usted exculpado de los cargos que por vía judicial se le imputan. 

No se le prohíbe promover acciones en su defensa legal”, concreta el oficio signado por el obispo, quien falleciera en octubre pasado a causa de un infarto. 

El administrador de la diocesano afirmó que con base en la justicia y en atención a las probables víctimas, la Diócesis no encubre cuando alguno de sus ministros es requerido por las Autoridades, presumiendo que haya cometido algún delito.

“Tampoco acelera u obstaculiza procesos judiciales; para eso están las autoridades competentes”, dijo al dar lectura a un comunicado con la postura de la Iglesia católica. 

El cura Pérez Mejía, de 49 años de edad, podría ser condenado hasta 8 años de prisión, de acuerdo al Código Penal del Estado, por la relación que presuntamente tuvo con una adolescente, desde el 2005, cuando tenía a su cargo al parroquia de la comunidad de Pueblo de Nieto, del municipio de Apaseo el Grande. 

El cura enfrenta en prisión el proceso penal 86/ 2006 por el delito de corrupción de menores en agravio de la menor, con quien cohabito vivió tres años. 

El sacerdote está recluido en el Cereso de San Miguel de Allende a disposición del Juzgado Primero Penal de San Miguel de Allende. 

El 18 de marzo fue capturado por elementos de la policía ministerial en las puertas del templo de la comunidad de Rincón de Tamayo, donde ejercía su ministerio sacerdotal. 

En el 2005 el padre de la niña, Angel Alvarez denunció al párroco del templo de la comunidad de Pueblo de Nieto, exigió justicia y castigo. 

Declaró que el sacerdote sedujo a su hija María N, cohabito con el padre cerca de tres años y hace un año tuvieron noticias de ella en el sentido de que vivían en la comunidad de Ameche, en Apaseo el Grande. Dijo que se entero que al parecer tuvieron un hijo que murió. 

El artículo 237 del Código Penal del estado establece prisión de tres a ocho años para el que procure, facilite o mantenga en la corrupción a un menor de dieciocho años de edad mediante actos lascivos o sexuales… 

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Bergoglio’s First Time in the United States

ROME
Chiesa

by Sandro Magister

ROME, September 22, 2015 – Landing in Washington after visiting Cuba, Pope Francis is setting foot in a country that was born Protestant but in which almost half the population today has a connection with Catholicism.

In fact, to the 20 percent of citizens of the United States who profess themselves to be full-fledged Catholics must be added 9 percent who call themselves Catholic by cultural affinity, another 9 percent who were raised in a Catholic environment but then left it, and 8 percent who have close relatives who are Catholic and go to Mass with them.

The result is that Catholicism overall has a grip on 45 percent of the citizens of the United States, and on fully 84 percent of “Latinos,” who are the fastest-growing segment of the population and will see Pope Francis canonize one of “their” saints, Junipero Serra, in a ceremony celebrated almost entirely in Spanish.

The Washington-based Pew Research Center has come out with a brand-new analysis of Catholicism in the United States, published on the brink of the pope’s arrival, that allows an in-depth exploration of some features of the “people of God” in this country:

> U.S Catholics Open to Non-Traditional Families

As can already be guessed from the title of the survey, American Catholics are also highly influenced by the dominant political-cultural trends in the West on questions concerning the family and the sexual sphere. Which are precisely the questions that originated this journey of Francis to the United States, primarily motivated by his desire to participate in the world meeting of families in Philadelphia, in the run-up to a synod also dedicated to the family.

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Consignan a sacerdote de Tlaxcala por pederastia

HEROICA PUEBLA DE ZARAGOZA (MEXICO)
Vanguardia MX [Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico]

September 22, 2015

By El Universal

Read original article

Vecinos de la localidad dijeron que el prelado es conocido como el padre Rojas y que ya tenía antecedentes de acusaciones de violación de menores de edad

Tlaxcala.- Por el delito de abuso sexual en agravió de un menor de 10 años, un sacerdote de la parroquia de El Carmen Tequexquitla, al oriente de Tlaxcala, fue consignado por la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado (PGJE), reveló el procurador.

Renuente en sus comentarios, Pedro Flores Vázquez, abundó que por cuestiones de respeto a la autoridad del poder judicial “el asunto se verá en un juzgado y no tendrá trato preferente, es como cualquier otra persona y ha transgredido la ley”.

Aunque no descartó que el presbítero, de quien tampoco quiso revelar su identidad, pueda solicitar un amparo ante la justicia federal.

El abogado de Tlaxcala dijo que este es el primer caso oficial donde se ha visto involucrada la grey católica, por lo que el acusado ya está consignado en la sala civil de Apizaco.

“No tengo más detalles eso lo consigna el investigador, yo no tengo la mesa, yo como superior sólo veo que se cumpla la ley”, finalizó diciendo el titular de la Procuraduría General de Justicia de la entidad.

“El Padre Rojas” ya tenía antecedentes: pobladores

De acuerdo con versiones de pobladores del municipio de Tequexquitla, se trata de Blas Abelardo Rojas Valadez o José Rojas Valadez, quien desde junio del año en curso dejó de ejercer el sacerdocio en la parroquia de El Carmen, sin embargo aún vive en ese municipio ubicado al oriente de la entidad.

Dijeron que el prelado conocido como “el padre Rojas”, ya tenía antecedentes de acusaciones de violación de menores de edad, sin embargo por temor a represalias las familias de los agraviados no habían presentado las denuncias penales.

Mencionaron que ante el caso, la Diócesis de Tlaxcala desde finales del año pasado confirmó las acusaciones y en un primer momento propuso la reubicación del sacerdote a otra parroquia, pero no aceptó y opto por renunciar a sus votos a mediados del año en curso.

La iglesia católica de Tlaxcala hasta el momento ha guardado silencio en el asunto. 

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MICHAEL J. HUNTER

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star – Obituaries

[MO–A kind, veteran SNAP leader passes away]

Michael passed away Tuesday, Sept. 15, 2015. He grew up in Westport and attended Guardian Angels Grade School, DeLaSalle High and UMKC. He served in the Army as an Artillery Surveyor. He is preceded in death by his parents Darrel and Stella Hunter, as well as his sister Mary Louise Page and his brother Kevin P. Hunter. He is survived by his beloved partner Joyce Meers. He is also survived by his son Matthew M. Hunter and wife Angie, granddaughter Simone and grandson Ian. As well as his son Adam P. Hunter and his partner Katie Wintering. He is survived by his sister Carolyn Sue Sullivan, brother Darrel E. Hunter and wife Julee, sister Patricia Darrah and husband Don, sister Marian Hunter and sister Kathy Donegan and husband Frank. His love of his family, art, music, nature, and his fellow man defined him. His physical heart may have failed him, but his large and passionate heart will never be forgotten by those who loved him. A Memorial Celebration will be held on October 11, 2015 at Shawnee Mission Park Shelter #8 from 12:00 noon until 4:00 PM. In lieu of flowers please make donations to S.N.A.P. at PO BOX 6416, Chicago, IL 60680.

Published in Kansas City Star on Sept. 20, 2015

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Public, media not allowed at Diocese auction in Albuquerque

NEW MEXICO
Washington Times

GALLUP, N.M. (AP) – A California businessman hired by the Diocese of Gallup to conduct property auctions as part of its ongoing bankruptcy case kept members of the public from attending an auction in Albuquerque.

The Gallup Independent reports (http://bit.ly/1jl8YBA ) CEO of Accelerated Marketing Group, Todd Good, says there was no advantage to allowing someone that wasn’t a qualified bidder into the auction Sept. 19.

The diocese filed for bankruptcy in 2013 as lawsuits mounted over claims of clergy sex abuse.

Attorneys for the diocese were granted permission to sell pieces of unwanted property in Arizona and New Mexico, but court documents didn’t indicate that the auctions would be closed to the media or general public.

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CA–Predator found guilty working in parish in today’s NYTimes

CALIFORNIA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Tuesday, Sept. 22

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

A page one New York Times story today reports a priest shortage in the Fresno Diocese.

[New York Times]

That shortage is likely one reason that found guilty in a civil trial of molesting a boy but remains in a parish there.

[SNAP]

He’s Fr. Eric Swearingen. He heads four Catholic churches in Visalia, a town mentioned in the Times article.

http://tccov.org/our-leadership/

And he’s one of about a dozen proven, admitted or credibly accused US priests who are still on the job in the US now.

[Counter Punch]

A 2006 jury voted 9-3 that Fr. Eric abused Juan Rocha. But they deadlocked on the second question facing them: whether diocesan officials should have known about and prevented the abuse. So technically, it was a mistrial. But an impartial panel heard the evidence and decided, by a sufficient margin, legally speaking, that Fr. Eric had molested a boy.

Yet he’s still in parish work, despite thousands of “zero tolerance” abuse pledges by US bishops over decades.

Bishop Armando Ochoa is not only keeping Fr. Swearingen on the job around largely unsuspecting families. But last year, he promoted Fr. Swearingen. (Ochoa is the second Fresno bishop to keep Fr. Swearingen around kids. His predecessor, Bishop John Steinbock, did as well, even after the court decision.)

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Images

UNITED STATES
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

Our thoughts are with the survivors and their families today as Pope Francis arrives in Washington to begin a six day visit in the United States.

We salute the courage of survivors in the face if a bombardment of images on television screens, newspapers, You Tube, your phone, and Facebook.

We know that the audio images will assault you anew also.

Please come and linger on the NSAC News pages and on our website www.nationalsurvivoradvocatescoalition.wordpress.com during these days.

We hope the images you see there will be an antidote that will bring you some comfort, a quiet haven, a connection so that you know that you are not alone in an agony that you bear each day but one that is intensified by a papal visit to the United States.

Today, we wanted to greet with the images of Barbara Blaine, the founder of the Survivors Network for Those Abused by Priests (SNAP) David Clohessy SNAP’s executive director and Barbara Dorris, SNAP’s Outreach Director. We’ll provide more images in the days ahead that we hope you find comforting as this visit plays out in the media.

The people pictured here today are the first people who would say that it is the images of all the survivors who should be in NSAC News today and not their images.

But we believe these images will give you a starting place for reaching for the strength for today’s journey.

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Catholic lobby flexes its muscle ahead of Pope Francis’s visit

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

By Catherine Ho September 22

In August, when President Obama took the podium in the East Room to announce his plan to curb greenhouse gas emissions, standing behind him was Sister Joan Marie Steadman, head of the Leadership Conference of Women Religious, the nation’s largest group of Catholic nun leaders.

Steadman didn’t speak, but got a shout-out from the president, who thanked her for helping “rally Catholic women across America to take on climate.”

He added: “And she’s got a pretty important guy on her side. As Pope Francis made clear in his encyclical this summer, taking a stand against climate change is a moral obligation. And Sister Steadman is living up to that obligation every single day.”

The show of solidarity for Obama’s aggressive climate change plan offers a window into the powerful role that Catholic groups, many of which have existed for hundreds of years, play in today’s Washington. Many Catholic advocacy leaders balk at the term “Catholic lobby,” preferring to identify as social justice advocates. But their influence is significant.

As Pope Francis arrives in the nation’s capital, Catholic lobbyists see themselves as pushing for more humane treatment of migrants and rallying against sex trafficking, for example, rather than as traditional Washington power players. But they also weigh in on the nation’s hottest political debates from the environment, to immigration, to health care and abortion rights. Catholics meet regularly with lawmakers and the administration, and their support is coveted — even as polls show Americans are becoming more secular.

“I wouldn’t exactly call it a lobby — none of us are making the big bucks bringing the word of Catholic social teachings to Congress,” said Shaina Aber, policy director for the Jesuit Conference, the largest Catholic male religious order. “But we do coordinate around various issues that are part of our faith tradition.”

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Why Is the ‘Radical Pope’ About to Canonize a Priest Who Helped Enslave and Murder Native Americans?

UNITED STATES
AlterNet

By Richard Kreitner / The Nation September 21, 2015

Earlier this summer, to great fanfare, Pope Francis apologized for the Catholic Church’s role in the colonial invasion of the Western Hemisphere and the violent subjugation of its indigenous inhabitants. “Many grave sins were committed against the Native people of America in the name of God,” he told a gathering in Bolivia. “I humbly ask forgiveness, not only for the offense of the church herself, but also for crimes committed against the native peoples during the so-called conquest of America.”

On the issues of climate change and economic inequality, and to a lesser extent on issues related to sexuality and social mores, the so-called “radical pope” has made immense progress in improving the tone of the Catholic Church’s communications with the rest of the world. He has brought a new relevance to the church by emphasizing the ongoing nature of the exploitation he admitted to and denounced in Bolivia, and by refocusing the notoriously Italocentric institution’s orientation to Latin America and the Global South.

Yet when he visits the United States next week, the pope will commit a grievous and historical error, one for which some super-“radical” pope of the future will have to apologize in turn. On Wednesday, at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, DC, Francis will canonize Father Junípero Serra, the founder and most famed symbol of the system of missions in the Spanish colony of Alta California.

Born in Spain, Serra arrived in Spanish-held Mexico in 1749 and quickly set about working for the Inquisition, citing by name several natives who refused to convert to Christianity; they were guilty, he wrote, of “the most detestable and horrible crimes of sorcery, witchcraft and devil worship.” Serra soon gained control of the missions of Baja California, but he found that the native population had already been nearly extinguished by contact with the Spanish. Looking for fresh converts, he led expeditions up the coast into the present-day state of California, where he settled at Monterey and set up ten new missions to spread the gospel through the new land.

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Former US envoys to the Vatican endorse Jeb Bush

UNITED STATES
Crux

By John L. Allen Jr.
Associate editor September 22, 2015

WASHINGTON – As Pope Francis arrives in the United States, three former US ambassadors to the Vatican, all Republicans who served under President George W. Bush, have endorsed Jeb Bush in the 2016 race for the White House.

The three are:

* James Nicholson, a former chair of the Republican National Committee during the 2000 elections, who went on to serve as secretary for Veterans Affairs after his posting in Rome;

* Francis Rooney, an Oklahoma businessman and major Republican donor;

* Harvard law professor Mary Ann Glendon, who has held several Vatican positions and currently serves on the board of the Vatican bank.

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Dozens from Milwaukee Area Travel to See Pope Francis

MILWAUKEE (WI)
WUWM

[with audio]

A number of Milwaukeeans are heading to the cities where Pope Francis will spend the next week: Washington, DC; New York and Philadelphia. They have different reasons for making the trip. …

Peter Isely admits many people find Pope Francis to be engaging, but Isely says, “what’s important is changing the system,” so the church does more to protect children from sexually-abusive clergy. Isely is with the group Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, and he has already traveled out east. He says the group will hold events throughout the pope’s high-profile visit.

“We have groups, of course, in all of those cities he’s going to be at, so we’ll be trying to get our message out in all those cities,” Isely says.

One of the pope’s stops will be at the United Nations. Isely’s group held a news conference there Monday. The group announced demands, including global zero tolerance for sexual abuse in the priesthood, and the creation of a global registry of sex offenders.

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Exclusive: In clash with pope’s climate call, U.S. Church leases drilling rights

UNITED STATES
Reuters

BOSTON | BY RICHARD VALDMANIS

Casting the fight against climate change as an urgent moral duty, Pope Francis in June urged the world to phase out highly-polluting fossil fuels.

Yet in the heart of U.S. oil country several dioceses and other Catholic institutions are leasing out drilling rights to oil and gas companies to bolster their finances, Reuters has found.

And in one archdiocese — Oklahoma City — Church officials have signed three new oil and gas leases since Francis’s missive on the environment, leasing documents show.

On Francis’ first visit to the United States this week, the business dealings suggest that some leaders of the U.S. Catholic Church are practicing a different approach to the environment than the pontiff is preaching.

Catholic institutions are not forbidden from dealing with or investing in the energy industry. The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops’ (USCCB) guidelines on ethical investing warn Catholics and Catholic institutions against investing in companies related to abortion, contraception, pornography, tobacco, and war, but do not suggest avoiding energy stocks, and do not address the ownership of energy production interests.

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FRANCIS VISITS THE CHURCH THAT JOHN PAUL BROKE

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

BY PATRICIA MILLER SEPTEMBER 21, 2015

Nearly two and one-half times as many current Catholics think Francis is “more liberal” than they are on “the environment, immigration and distribution of wealth” than those who think he is more liberal on “birth control, abortion and divorce.” – From a New York Times/CBS News poll, release on September 20, 2015

The last time there was this much excitement about a pope’s inaugural visit to the United States, Pink Floyd’s “Another Brick in the Wall” topped the Billboard charts, Jimmy Carter was in the White House, and cell phones were the size of a brick.

But those aren’t the only differences between Pope John Paul II’s historic 1979 visit and Pope Francis’ virgin trip to the US this week. Pope Francis will find a church that is markedly different in a number of significant ways; so different, in fact, that it calls into question whether we can still refer to the Catholic Church in the US.

When JPII made his first visit US, he found a church that was in transition but largely intact. Some 40 percent of Catholics went to mass in any given week and there were nearly 60,000 Catholic priests and 135,000 nuns, with the nation’s 18,800 parishes boasting an average of two priests each. The sacraments were still a major part of most Catholics’ lives: there were nearly 1 million baptisms and 350,000 Catholic marriages.

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CLERGY SEXUAL ABUSE VICTIM/SURVIVORS NEED TO TAKE CARE OF THEMSELVES DURING THE VISIT OF POPE FRANCIS

UNITED STATES
Road to Recovery

Robert M. Hoatson, Ph.D.
Co-founder and President of Road to Recovery, Inc.
(a non-profit charity that assists victims of sexual abuse and their families)

Many Catholics and ordinary citizens for that matter may not fully be aware of the difficulties faced by victim/survivors of clergy sexual abuse and their families during the visit of Pope Francis to the United States. Simply stated, clergy sexual abuse victim/survivors and their families may be “triggered,” a term referring to the sudden return of many of the same feelings and memories of having been sexually abused by clergy members, not just because the Pope represents the Catholic Church and therefore reminds victim/survivors of the clergy or religious persons who abused them. The triggering actually brings them back to the horrific events of sexual abuse that they endured and survived until now.

Victim/survivors need to take care of themselves this week because the popularity of Pope Francis among the Catholic faithful and the general public and the unprecedented media coverage of Pope Francis could lead many to believe that the sexual abuse scandal has been resolved when victim/survivors know full well there is much to be done by the Catholic Church and the Pope himself to bring healing and justice to the victim/survivors. Road to Recovery, Inc. is one such outlet for victim/survivors during this week, and all victim/survivors who are finding the Papal visit difficult to deal with are urged to reach out to Road to Recovery and other advocacy and support agencies for help and a listening ear.

Road to Recovery was founded by two Catholic priests (at the time) in 2003, Kenneth E. Lasch, a retired priest of the Diocese of Paterson, New Jersey, who was pastor of a parish where many of his parishioners were sexually abused by a previous pastor. I was the other priest at that time, and I am a sexual abuse victim/survivor of several persons from the approximate ages of three to twenty-nine. I was forced to get out of the priesthood in 2011 after the Archbishop of Newark, New Jersey, fired me from ministry and suspended me from performing priestly duties, virtually strangling me financially and pastorally.

Road to Recovery has helped over three thousand victim/survivors of sexual abuse since 2003, and we offer victim/survivors assistance and a listening ear throughout the visit of Pope Francis to the United States. Our phone number is public (862-368-2800), and we offer anyone who is finding it hard to cope with Pope Francis’ visit confidential help and assistance at any time of the day and night. We are here to help.

If any of the Catholic faithful or general public is aware of any victim/survivor who is need of help, give us a call and we will reach out to your family member, neighbor, or friend. Let us take care of each other during these joyful days for many and trying times for others.

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Jury to resume deliberations in Somerset County priest’s sex abuse trial

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A federal jury deliberated more than five hours Monday in the case of a Somerset County priest accused of molesting Honduran orphans and will return today to try some more.

The Rev. Joseph Maurizio, 70, suspended pastor at Our Lady Queen of Angels, went on trial Sept. 10 in U.S. District Court in Johnstown. The Justice Department says he plied orphans with money and candy so he could fondle them, engage in other sex acts and take nude photos of them.

The parties made closing arguments Monday morning and the jury began deliberating at about 2:30 before quitting at about 8 p.m.

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Rozzi: Help Child Abuse Victims Now

PENNSYLVANIA
YouTube

Published on Sep 21, 2015

Pa. state Rep. Mark Rozzi says child sex abuse victims must be given more time to get justice against their abusers. His H.B. 661 would raise the age for an adult victim of child sex abuse to file a civil claim from 30 to 50 years old, among other things. Rozzi, a victim of child abuse himself, adds it takes some victims years, and even decades, to come forward with their stories of abuse, so there shouldn’t be an expiration date barring them from seeking action against perpetrators.

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Pope Francis needs to do more to stop priest sex abuse, advocates say

LATIN AMERICA
GlobalPost

Will Carless on Sep 22, 2015

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — Last week, a GlobalPost investigation detailed a disturbing new chapter in the Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal: Priests accused of molesting children have been able to escape scrutiny by relocating to poor, remote parishes in South America.

Two-and-half years into Pope Francis’s papacy, these revelations raise questions over whether he has done enough to address the church’s plague of sex abuse. More than 6,000 priests face allegations, according to Bishop-Accountability.org, and many have never faced justice for their alleged crimes.

The sex abuse crisis is among the biggest challenges for this popular pope.

So far, there have been major announcements during this papacy. Last year, Pope Francis announced the creation of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, tasked with advising the church on how to deal with its sex abuse crisis. Then, this year, he sent a letter to every bishop instructing them to abide by “zero tolerance” for priests who sexually abuse children. He also pledged to create a special tribunal to judge bishops accused of covering up child sexual abuse scandals. And he has begged forgiveness from priests’ victims.

But are these actions just lip service? Or is the pope effecting real change across the Catholic world?

GlobalPost polled five experts on child sexual abuse in the Catholic Church. We asked: Do you believe the pope’s actions constitute meaningful change? Do they go far enough to protect children at risk of sexual abuse by clergy? If not, what should the pope do to show that he’s serious about cleaning up this problem?

Below are the responses, edited by GlobalPost for clarity and length.

(We also contacted Vatican Spokesman Federico Lombardi, as well as Terrence Donilon, communications secretary for Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who heads the pontifical commission. They did not respond.)

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More people come forward with stories of sex abuse by former church youth leader

VIRGINIA
WTVR

[with video]

SEPTEMBER 21, 2015, BY SHELBY BROWN

CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, Va. — A former church youth group leader was charged with new crimes after two more people came forward with claims he inappropriately touched them. Jeffrey D. Clark, 45, was first arrested September 8 and charged with two counts of aggravated sexual battery against a child. He met that child through his role at Immanuel Baptist Church in Colonial Heights, police said.

Since that arrest, two more people have contacted investigators with similar stories, police said. The incidents occurred during the past two years and also involved children Clark met through church, investigators added.

The first to come forward was a juvenile, the second was a juvenile at the time of the alleged incident but is now an adult, police said. As a result, Clark was recently charged with two counts of indecent liberties with a child while in a custodial role and simple sexual battery.

Additional charges were possible, police said.

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HOW TO MAKE NONES AND LOSE MONEY: STUDY SHOWS COST OF CATHOLIC SEX ABUSE SCANDALS

UNITED STATES
Religion Dispatches

BY KAYA OAKES SEPTEMBER 21, 2015

It doesn’t take more than a glance at the recent Reuters report to see that the American Catholic church doesn’t just have a crisis in the rising number of former Catholics.

Unsurprisingly, those same Catholics took their money when they walked. The resulting closures of multiple parishes and a drain on the retirement fund for priests have added to the $3 billion cost of the clergy sex abuse scandal, leaving the American church with a massive money problem and shrinking numbers of parishioners on the eve of Pope Francis’ arrival.

A recent study by Nicholas Bottan and Ricardo Perez-Trugila in the Journal of Public Economics revealed that, unsurprisingly, “a scandal causes a persistent decline in the local Catholic affiliation and church attendance.”

“Some Catholics join other religious denominations during the first three years after a scandal,” they write. “But these individuals later end up with no religious affiliation.” They end up, in other words, as Nones.

The economists involved in this study focused on the zip code where a clergy sex scandal had occurred. They found a “large and statistically significant effect” on charitable contributions in those zip codes after a scandal, and not only to Catholic-based charitable organizations. The researchers theorize that perhaps once a person stops attending church, the social pressure to be charitable declines.

Interestingly, however, these same individuals mirror the statistical notion that even though an increasing number of Americans consider themselves religiously unaffiliated, that doesn’t necessarily mean they do not believe in God. Botton and Perez-Trugila indicate that sex abuse scandals cost the church money and participation, but not necessarily faith.

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No verdict in Central City priest trial

PENNSYLVANIA
We Are Central PA

Johnstown, Cambria County, Pa.

After six hours of deliberation in the trial of Father Joseph Maurizio, we are still waiting for a verdict.

The dozen jurors sat through closing arguments after two weeks of trial.

Monday the defense rehashed the inconsistencies in the prosecution’s argument, like the boys timeline of when and where the alleged sex acts could have happened as well as how. An alleged victim also came forward during the trial and said he lied in his forensic interview.

The prosecution said the innocent boys relied on folks like Maurizio to help them and that the jury simply has to look at the evidence, including the photos, allegedly taken by Maurizio. Some of the photos showed the boys exposed.

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Jury to continue in sexual tourism trial of suspended priest

PENNSYLVANIA
Washington Times

JOHNSTOWN, Pa. (AP) – Jurors were expected to resume deliberations in the trial of a suspended Roman Catholic priest from western Pennsylvania accused of traveling to Honduras to molest poor street children during missionary trips.

The jury heard closing arguments Monday in a federal courtroom in Johnstown, then deliberated for several hours without reaching a verdict in the trial of the Rev. Joseph Maurizio Jr.

The 70-year-old priest has been suspended from Our Lady Queen of Angels Parish in Somerset County. He’s charged with traveling abroad from 2004 to 2009 to have sex with three young boys – a charge known as sexual tourism – and illegally transferring $8,000 to a charity to help fund the trips.

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Book Notes…

UNITED STATES
Bilgrimage

William D. Lindsey

Book Notes: Joelle Casteix’s The Well-Armored Child: A Parent’s Guide to Preventing Sexual Abuse

I have a book to recommend to you — particularly those of you raising children, or with friends and relatives raising children. The book will also be useful and very instructive for those committed to addressing the problem of sexual abuse of young people, as I believe many readers of this blog are. It’s Joelle Casteix’s The Well-Armored Child: A Parent’s Guide to Preventing Sexual Abuse (Austin: River Grove, 2015).

Joelle’s book arises out of her own struggle to deal with having been sexually abused as a teenager by a teacher in her Catholic school. As she tells readers in the book’s introduction, “I realized that in order to heal, I needed to make an immediate difference” (xi). As a survivor of abuse, she has recognized, that is, that her commitment to healing others (and to preventing sexual abuse of minors) has been part and parcel of her own healing process.

The book also flows from her growing recognition that the abuse prevention movement has neglected its most important resource for prevention: parents. As Joelle also notes in the book’s introduction, in her years of lecturing about child abuse throughout the United States, the question she is asked more frequently than any other question is, What can I do to keep my child safe?

If those of us without children imagine that because this challenge applies exclusively to parents — if we imagine that the problem of child abuse in our society doesn’t affect all of us — we’re badly informed. As Joelle notes, child sexual abuse represents a huge burden affecting our entire society (15):

When you add up the costs to our communities — for mental health care, police services, jails, adoption and foster care, victim services, drug and alcohol rehab, food stamps, welfare, and other social services that many victims and their families require — the price tag is staggering (ibid.).

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One man’s battle to lift the lid on evil: Cop who uncovered an unholy truth

AUSTRALIA
Sunraysia Daily

By Daniella White – dwhite@sunraysiadaily.com.au Sept. 22, 2015

WHEN the Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse was announced in 2012, Mildura man Denis Ryan jumped for joy.

For him, it was forty years in the making. A detective based in Melbourne, Mr Ryan transferred to Mildura in 1962 because his doctor said a drier climate would help his son’s asthma.

Within ten years he had uncovered shocking claims of sexual abuse against possibly hundreds of children at the hands of Monsignor John Day.

But in what he describes as one of the greatest criminal conspiracies ever in Victoria, his attempts to bring him to justice were thwarted by the “Catholic Mafia” within the police force, a corrupt court clerk and the church.

“On my second day in Mildura I went to the CIB office and I met senior detective Jim Barritt,” he said.

“When I had applied for the position here … a mate of mine at the time Dinny Barritt, who was a detective sergeant, … said for God’s sake don’t go to Mildura, my brother Jim is there and there’s something wrong with him in the head.

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Francis Fails on One Huge Issue

UNITED STATES
Huffington Post

Martha Burk

We’ll be inundated Pope, Pope, and more Pope 24-7 this week, as the pontiff makes his rounds in the nation’s capital. Francis plans a White House visit, an outdoor mass in Washington, and a speech before Congress. He’s also likely to join a rally on the National Mall that could draw a quarter-million people to highlight his stance on protecting the planet. He speaks to Congress on September 24, Sirius XM is featuring Pope Radio, and Time Warner cable is providing round-the-clock coverage of his visit.

No doubt this pope is kinder and gentler than his predecessors on some issues that affect women, like abortion and ending a marriage. In the past few weeks, he’s made getting an annulment easier, and announced that priests can grant absolution to women who have had abortions (at least during the Roman Catholic church’s upcoming Holy Year). Both are compassionate moves, 2014-04-01-yourvoicesmallest3.JPGsince a Catholic who remarries without an annulment is kicked out of the church, and statistics from the Guttmacher Institute show Catholic women have more abortions than protestant women. (Of course a great majority of these could be prevented if the Vatican would relent on contraception, which it shows no sign of doing.)

But on one huge issue of pressing importance — sex abuse by priests — Pope Francis is not as good as he looks. It’s true that the Vatican has put victims on an advisory panel reviewing the church response to some of the allegations, and it has announced that one child sex abuser, Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski, will be tried by a church tribunal for sex abuse and possibly for possessing child pornography as well.

But there’s a catch. Moving the trial to the Vatican allowed the perp to flee from a criminal trial in the Dominican Republic, where he surely would have drawn prison time. The Vatican has no prison, so he’ll probably get off with a defrocking at worst. And according to a current article in Ms. Magazine, Wesolowski’s not the first sex-abusing member of the clergy to be given refuge in the Vatican.

Francis also ignored a public outcry and promoted priest Juan Barros to the rank of bishop, even though he was embroiled in a sex scandal in Chile. Over 3,000 protesters showed up at the mass when Barros was installed in his new office.

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The man Pope Francis should meet in Washington

WASHINGTON (DC)
Yahoo!

Matt Bai
September 21, 2015

When Pope Francis arrives in Washington Tuesday night, he will set his suitcase down at the Apostolic Nunciature, informally known as the Vatican Embassy. It’s an unassuming mansion along a highly trafficked stretch of Massachusetts Avenue, directly across the street from the Naval Observatory and the vice president’s mansion.

When Francis looks out onto the locked-down avenue, however, closed to all but the southbound buses and a trickle of cars, he probably won’t see a 72-year-old, white-haired Polish immigrant named John Wojnowski, who has become as much a part of that sidewalk as the blistered concrete.

And that’s a travesty, because it means that Francis will not see his embassy in quite the same way that many Washingtonians have glimpsed it through the years. He will not understand the lonely sacrifice of one broken, belittled man, or the depth of despair that exists in some quarters of the American church.

Wojnowski’s story has no clear beginning or end; rather, it replays itself every day, in the same endless loop, and probably will for as long as he’s alive. So let’s just start it here:

One day in 1997, Wojnowski read an in item in the newspaper about a sexual abuse scandal roiling a Catholic diocese in Texas, where the victim had killed himself. An Army veteran and longtime ironworker, Wojnowsk­i had just taken early retirement because of failing knees. Separated from his wife and emotionally estranged from his two children, he was living alone with his regrets in the working-class suburb of Bladensburg, Md., getting by on Social Security and a small pension.

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Where Is Cardinal Bernard Law Now?

MASSACHUSETTS
WBUR

By DAVID BOERI

Church officials say that Pope Francis is likely to meet with victims of sexual abuse by priests when he comes to America this week — a sign of continuing turmoil and mistrust among Catholic parishioners following a series of scandals. And when critics call for more transparency and accountability, it’s Cardinal Bernard Law they often point to.

Law was forced to resign as bishop of the Archdiocese of Boston after a series of stories by a team of investigative reporters at The Boston Globe found victims and uncovered documents showing that church authorities had protected pedophile priests from prosecution — a story that’s about to be revisited by the release next month of a new movie called “Spotlight.”

But despite the disgrace that befell Cardinal Law in Boston, he found a comfortable and influential second career at the Vatican.

‘Lied Through His Teeth’

The fall of Cardinal Bernard Law began with a press conference he called in mid-January 2002 — one week after a story published by The Boston Globe revealed that he had protected pedophile priests in the Boston Archdiocese.

The scene was Nixonian. A favorite of Pope John Paul II and a close friend of both Bush presidents, Cardinal Law was a red-hatted power broker in Washington and Rome — the two capitals that counted most. But he was under siege — and his assertions were bold.

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Former priest charged with felony sex crimes

NEW YORK
Mid-Hudson News

BREWSTER – State Police arrested a Hopewell Junction man on felony counts of criminal sexual act and sexual abuse.

Joseph Faraone, 68, is a former pastor of St. James Church in Carmel and St. Denis Church in Hopewell Junction as well as churches in Mount Kisco and Yorktown Heights.

Faraone, an employee of a local non-for-profit human service organization, was arrested after an investigation by State Police and the Putnam County District Attorney’s Office found that he had sexual contact with a 50-year-old female patient who was unable to consent. He is in the Putnam County Jail in lieu of $50,000 cash bail or $100,000 bond.

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Pope’s historic visit has many optimistic about Church’s future

UNITED STATES
Lowell Sun

By Todd Feathers, tfeathers@lowellsun.com

Over the past three decades, papal visits to the United States have been colored by shrinking participation in the Roman Catholic Church, the priest sexual-abuse scandal, and social issues that have at times illuminated fault lines between many American Catholics and the Vatican.

As Pope Francis begins his first visit to the country in Washington, D.C., today, few of those divides have been definitively resolved. But theologians and local Catholics said a change in the atmosphere is palpable as they prepare for a visit that could be equal parts shocking, refreshing and reaffirming to the American Catholic system.

“We might be surprised by how pointed he is when he speaks to the joint session of Congress and the U.N.,” said Daniel J. Daly, chair of the Saint Anselm College Theology Department.

“People will be uncomfortable but it won’t be because he’ll be talking about abortion and physician-assisted suicide, but because he’ll be talking about suffering and mercy.”

In terms of his position on issues such as gay marriage, abortion, and contraception, Pope Francis shares the doctrinal views of his predecessors, Daly added. But in his teachings, the Argentinean has chosen to emphasize economic inequality, environmentalism, and other themes of shared humanity.

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September 21, 2015

Pope Francis to Find a Church in Upheaval

UNITED STATES
The New York Times

By LAURIE GOODSTEIN
SEPT. 21, 2015

MERCED, Calif. — More than 5,000 parishioners packed the pews, the choir loft and the vestibule on a recent weekend at Sacred Heart Church here in California’s Central Valley for five Masses — four of them in Spanish. Young Hispanic families spilled outside onto the steps, straining to hear the homily over the roar of an elevated freeway across the street.

Across the country in Philadelphia, there is only one weekend Mass now at Our Lady Help of Christians, a church built by and for German immigrants in 1898. The clock in its tower has stopped. The parochial school next door is closed. Only 53 worshipers, most of them with white hair, gathered for Mass on a recent Sunday in the soaring Gothic sanctuary.

The Roman Catholic Church that Pope Francis will encounter on his first visit to the United States is being buffeted by immense change, and it is struggling — with integrating a new generation of immigrants, with conflicts over buildings and resources, with recruiting priests and with retaining congregants. The denomination is still the largest in the United States, but its power base is shifting.

On the East Coast and in the Midwest, bishops are closing or merging parishes and shuttering parochial schools built on the dimes and sweat of generations of European immigrants. In many parishes, worshipers are sparse, funerals outnumber baptisms, and Sunday collections are not enough to maintain even beloved houses of worship.

In the West and the South, and in some other unexpected pockets all over the country, the church is bursting at the seams with immigrants, mostly from Mexico and Latin America, but also from Asia and Africa. Hispanic parents put their children on waiting lists for religious education classes and crowd into makeshift worship spaces, but avoid predominantly Anglo parishes because they do not always feel welcome there.

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Archbishop who retired amid abuse scandal returning for pope

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
ABC 27

PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A former Roman Catholic archbishop of Philadelphia who retired amid a scandal over clergy sex abuse is returning to the city for the pope’s visit.

A spokesman for Cardinal Justin Rigali says he’ll join other U.S. bishops for several events related to Pope Francis’ U.S. trip. The trip starts Tuesday and will include the World Meeting of Families in Philadelphia.

Rigali retired to the Diocese of Knoxville, Tennessee, in 2011 months after a grand jury accused the archdiocese of sheltering more than three dozen credibly accused priests and lying about it to victims and others. Rigali pledged to review the priests’ cases and work with authorities.

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Jury begins deliberations in trial of priest accused of sexually abusing orphans

PENNSYLVANIA
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

By Torsten Ove / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

A federal jury today began deliberating in the case of a Somerset County priest accused of molesting orphans during mission trips in Honduras.

The Rev. Joseph Maurizio, 70, went on trial seven days ago in U.S. District Court in Johnstown.

The parties made their closing arguments this morning and the jury began deliberating at about 2:30.

Rev. Maurizio, the suspended pastor at Our Lady Queen of Angels in Central City, was arrested a year ago on charges of molesting three boys on trips to the ProNino orphanage between 2004 and 2009.

The Justice Department said the priest was known as the “money man” who used cash from a charity he created to fund trips to the orphanage and to pay boys for sex acts.

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Victims group deplores US military policy in Afghanistan

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Monday, Sept. 21

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

It’s an outrage that our military and our money are backing child rape in Afghanistan. In a very real way, there’s little difference between ignoring and enabling sexual violence.

[New York Times]

Our hearts go out to Dan Quinn and the grieving family of Lance Cpl. Gregory Buckley Jr. These two brave men clearly did what was right.

Of course we must be sensitive to the religious beliefs and cultural practices of others. But under no circumstances can we ignore or aid those who sexually assault kids, not even in the name of fighting terrorism.

We don’t profess to be experts in military or diplomatic strategy. But we strongly believe that virtually nothing trumps children’s safety, not even seemingly crucial foreign policy or political considerations. And we’re convinced that “where there’s a will, there’s a way.” Our military and civilian commanders can and must find a way to fight both the Taliban and child rapists.

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WHAT HAPPENS WHEN CHURCH AND STATE GET MIXED

UNITED STATES
Fort Madison Daily Democrat

Posted: Monday, September 21, 2015

These days, no shortage of Americans want Uncle Sam to play a larger role in regulating financial institutions. Some folks would even like to see the nationalization of large banks.
In another corner, more than a few people like the idea of church and state no longer being quite so separate as the Constitution demands. Needless to mention, most of said people want some variant of Christianity to be the state religion.

No doubt that some especially — shall we say — ‘interesting’ characters yearn for a combination of the two.

While many a sage political scientist, economist, or philosopher can provide cautionary tale after cautionary tale as to why these are bad ideas, nothing explains like firsthand experience.
Enter the story of Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, former chairman of the Institute for the Works of Religion (IWR), more well known as the ‘Vatican Bank’.

In March of 2012, our State Department placed the Vatican on an official list of countries where money laundering is a dire concern. Not long after, as — among U.S. news agencies — it seems only Reuters covered in detail, Tedeschi was unanimously ousted by the IWR’s board of directors. One should note that in 2010, the IWR had roughly $33 million of its assets frozen by Italian authorities due to suspected criminality.

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Abuse victims say Catholic Church must do more to atone for predatory priests

UNITED STATES
Los Angeles Times

By MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE

Each morning when he wakes and walks to his shower, Mark Rozzi is reminded of a priest from his childhood, and the nightmare that unfolded in the rectory back in 1983.

He was a 13-year-old student and altar boy at Holy Guardian Angels Catholic Church and school in his hometown of Reading, about 65 miles north of Philadelphia, when he was raped in the shower by the Rev. Edward Graff.

Rozzi said he managed to get away and told his parents, who complained to the principal, but Graff was never prosecuted. Instead, like so many other priests accused of abuse, he was transferred to other churches, Rozzi said. Eventually, the priest was arrested in Texas and died while in custody before trial.

Rozzi later discovered that several of his friends had been abused by Graff as well; one struggled for years with mental illness and unemployment until he committed suicide this year, on Good Friday.

“I have seen my friends kill themselves, my friends become alcoholics and drug addicts, and then the church make a mockery of us,” he said.

For Rozzi and other clergy abuse victims, this week’s visit to the United States by Pope Francis presents an opportunity — to remind the world of the pain inflicted by pedophile priests and to hold the church more accountable for their crimes. …

Marci Hamilton, a professor at Cardozo Law School in New York who has assisted Philadelphia clergy abuse victims and served on the 2005 grand jury said, “There has been no formal outreach from the archdiocese in Philadelphia or the Vatican to any of the survivors I know of.”

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NY–Group of clergy sex abuse victims will hold an unusual public support group meeting

NEW YORK
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Abuse victims to discuss their pain
First-ever NYC “public support group meeting”
Event held in conjunction with survivors’ art show
SNAP has held thousands of such events in private
But this time, victims will share details in open setting

What:
On the day Pope Francis arrives in the US, while surrounded by an exhibit of abuse-inspired paintings created by a young woman who suffered clergy sexual crimes, a group of clergy sex abuse victims will hold an unusual public support group meeting. In frank and personal discussions, they’ll describe the pain they endured (and still endure) because of clerics who committed and concealed sexual violence against them.

The artist will also discuss her paintings and her long, difficult but ultimately successful work to get her perpetrator extradited from overseas to face justice, both civil and criminal.

And the victims will be available to do one-on-one interviews and share their views on what Francs and the Catholic hierarchy must do to “protect the vulnerable, heal the wounded and expose the truth.”

When:
Tuesday, Sept. 22
Survivor Art Exhibit – 3:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m.
Public support group meeting – 5:30 p.m. – 7:30 pm.

Where:
Cameo Studios, 307 W 43rd Street in Manhattan

Who:
Six-eight members of an international support group called SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAPnetwork.org), including an Illinois woman who is the organization’s long time president, a New York City survivor/artist whose perpetrator fled overseas but was extradited and pled guilty, and a California woman who is a best-selling author on child protection

Why:
1. Though many know SNAP as an “activist” group, for more than 25 years, its largely volunteer leaders across the US (and increasingly, across the world) have held thousands of confidential, peer-led self-help groups that enable deeply wounded and still-struggling victims of predatory priests, nuns, bishops, ministers, seminarians and other church staff to begin to regain their power and start healing.

In a rare move, the group will open its doors for this one support group media to the media.

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Inician declaraciones de testigos por demanda civil contra Fernando Karadima

CHILE
Infinita

[Witness testimony has begun in the civil suit against priest Fernando Karadima.]

A partir de las 15:30 horas, los testigos convocados por la defensa de las tres víctimas de abuso sexual por parte del sacerdote Fernando Karadima, comenzarán a prestar declaraciones ante la Justicia, por la demanda contra el Arzobispado de Santiago.

Las citaciones son con el ministro de fuero Juan Muñoz Pardo, quien instruye la demanda civil interpuesta en 2012 por el médico James Hamilton, el periodista Juan Carlos Cruz y el filósofo José Andrés Murillo.

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