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.

October 28, 2023

Pope lifts statute of limitations to allow Rupnik prosecution

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

October 27, 2023

By Crux staff

Read original article

In response to a complaint from his own anti-abuse panel about “serious problems” in the handling of a case involving a prominent Slovenian artist and priest, Pope Francis has decided to lift the statute of limitations in Church law which, up to this point, had barred a canonical prosecution.

The Vatican made the announcement in a brief statement Friday, roughly 48 hours after news broke that Father Marko Rupnik had been accepted back into his home diocese in Slovenia as a priest in good standing. The 68-year-old cleric and artist had been expelled from the Jesuit order in June, after an internal investigation found a high degree of credibility to charges of sexual and other forms of abuse against adult women.

Friday’s announcement also came in the wake of a couple of high-profile developments last month, which, taken together, suggested to some observers that Rupnik was being virtually rehabilitated.

According…

View Cache

Pope Francis waives statute of limitations in Rupnik case

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

October 27, 2023

By The Pillar

Read original article

The mosaic artist Fr. Marko Rupnik will face a canonical process over allegations of sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse against women religious, the Vatican announced Friday, in an apparent about-face.

The Vatican has not formally specified the charges Rupnik will face, and the Vatican’s press office has declined questions on its statement.

The Holy See press office said Oct. 27 that the process would take place after Pope Francis decided to waive the statute of limitations on the claims, amid a worldwide outcry after it emerged this week that Rupnik had been accepted into a diocese in his native Slovenia after being expelled from the Jesuit order.

The press office said that in September the pope had been informed of “serious problems” in the Vatican’s handling of the case by the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, a Vatican body dedicated to the safeguarding of minors and vulnerable adults. 

View Cache

Aftershocks of the Latest Father Rupnik Earthquake

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

October 27, 2023

By Father Raymond J. de Souza

Read original article

With the world media in Rome to cover the signature synodality initiative of Pope Francis, a stomach-churning Jesuit scandal returned to dominate the news.

To the outrage of victims, the shock of the assembled synod delegates, the bewilderment of bishops and the shame of the Holy See, it turned out that the world’s most infamous Jesuit abuser, Father Marko Rupnik, had been returned to ministry in a Slovenian diocese. The news rocketed around Rome on Wednesday evening.

On Friday, with the Vatican engaged in intense damage control, the Holy Father reversed himself in the face of a media outcry. He directed that the Rupnik case be reopened at the Dicastery of the Doctrine of the Faith (DDF), and lifted the statute of limitations to that effect. The Holy See press office stated that it was an example “[listening] attentively and compassionately to those who are suffering.”

Father Rupnik has been for generations…

View Cache

Chaos Erupts Over SBC Legal Filing in Louisville Abuse Lawsuit

LOUISVILLE (KY)
The Roys Report [Chicago IL]

October 26, 2023

By Bob Smietana

Read original article

Abuse survivors, along with some members of the Southern Baptist Convention’s Executive Committee and the SBC’s abuse reform task force, have denounced a Kentucky court filing by Southern Baptist entities aimed at limiting their liability for sexual abuse claims.

A brief filed earlier this year by lawyers for the Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary and Lifeway, an SBC publisher, argues that a Kentucky law that changed the statute of limitations for making civil claims over abuse — and allowing survivors to sue third parties such as churches or police — should not be applied retroactively.

“There are no mincing of words here. No holding back. This is disgusting,” abuse survivors Megan Lively, Jules Woodson and Tiffany Thigpen said in a statement released Wednesday.

A group of Southern Baptist leaders working on abuse reforms also criticized the brief, saying the filing was “a choice to stand against every…

View Cache

October 27, 2023

La investigación del Defensor del Pueblo estima en 440.000 las víctimas de pederastia en la Iglesia española

MADRID (SPAIN)
El País [Madrid, Spain]

October 27, 2023

By ÍÑIGO DOMÍNGUEZ and JULIO NÚÑEZ

Read original article

The historic report on abuses in the clergy, very harsh on the institution, makes Spain the El histórico informe sobre los abusos en el clero, muy duro con la institución, convierte a España en el país con la proyección oficial de víctimas más alta. Se basa en una encuesta a 8.000 personas que cifra los afectados en un 1,13% de la población. Recomienda que el Estado también asuma su indemnización

España pasa hoy de ser una excepción mundial entre los países católicos, sin casos de pederastia en la Iglesia reconocidos oficialmente, a ser el país con el cómputo de víctimas más alto del mundo: un 1,13% de la población adulta actual ha sufrido abusos en el ámbito religioso, según una encuesta a gran escala, la primera de este tipo en el país, que ha realizado el defensor del pueblo, Ángel Gabilondo. El Defensor ha eludido hacer el cálculo en números…

View Cache

Louisiana pastor charged with sexual abuse of teenage girl

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

October 26, 2023

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

Read original article

Milton Martin, 56, of First Pentecostal Church of Chalmette, accused of abuse of girl, now 28, who was member of congregation

Authorities in Louisiana have charged a Pentecostal pastor with sexually molesting a teenage girl who was a member of his church.

Milton O Martin III, 56, faces one charge each of felony carnal knowledge of a juvenile – colloquially referred to as statutory rape – and of indecent behavior with a minor, records obtained by the Guardian show.

A grand jury in the New Orleans-area community of St Bernard parish indicted Martin on Tuesday, about seven months after he had been arrested in connection with the allegations and had made bail.

Scott Rodrigue, the state police detective who helped obtain the indictment against Martin, also investigated the retired New Orleans Catholic priest Lawrence Hecker, who years ago secretly admitted to church leaders that he sexually molested…

View Cache

Father Marco Rupnik, Accused of Abuse and Returned to Ministry: A Timeline

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
National Catholic Register - EWTN [Irondale AL]

October 26, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

In August, Father Rupnik was accepted for priestly ministry in the Diocese of Koper in his native Slovenia.

The news of Father Marko Rupnik‘s return to priestly ministry despite having been accused of sexual abuse interrupted the bishops’ Synod on Synodality as it was completing its final week of meetings.

The Society of Jesus had dismissed the Jesuit priest and artist last June after admitting to knowing of abuse accusations against Rupnik for years.

Here’s a timeline of known facts about what the Jesuits knew and when they knew it in the Father Rupnik case, what actions the order took, and how he was returned to priestly ministry.

2018

October: Jesuit Father Juan Antonio Guerrero Alves, Father Rupnik’s superior, receives allegations of sexual misconduct on the part of Father Rupnik, and an allegation that Rupnik gave absolution in confession to an accomplice in a sin against the Sixth Commandment. A preliminary…

View Cache

Report reveals widespread sexual abuse in Spain’s Catholic Church

MADRID (SPAIN)
La Prensa Latina [Memphis TN]

October 27, 2023

By EFE

Read original article

Madrid, Oct 27 (EFE).- Over 230,000 people in Spain were abused by Catholic priests as children, according to a report by the Spanish Ombudsman that was published on Friday.

The investigation on sexual abuse in the country’s Catholic Church, commissioned by the Spanish parliament, brings together the testimonies of 487 alleged victims.

The report was delivered by Ángel Gabilondo to the president of the Congress of Deputies Francina Armengol on Friday, one year and a half after it was ordered.

The over 700-page document urged the creation of a state fund to compensate the alleged victims and accuses the Catholic Church’s hierarchy of having denied and concealed these crimes for decades.

While the investigation did not provide the total number of potential victims of abuse, it revealed that 0.6% of Spain’s 39 million-strong population have allegedly suffered sexual abuse by a priest before turning 18.

That translates to an estimated…

View Cache

Spanish probe estimates more than 200,000 children abused by Roman Catholic clergy

MADRID (SPAIN)
France 24 [Paris, France]

October 27, 2023

By Agence France-Presse

Read original article

Over 200,000 minors are estimated to have been sexually abused in Spain by the Roman Catholic clergy since 1940, according to an independent commission published Friday.

The report did not give a specific figure but said a poll of over 8,000 people found that 0.6 percent of Spain‘s adult population of around 39 million people said they had suffered sexual abuse by members of the clergy when they were still children.

The percentage rises to 1.13 percent — or over 400,000 people — when including abuse by lay members, Spain’s national ombudsman Angel Gabilondo told a news conference called to present the findings of the report.

The revelations in Spain are the latest to rock the Roman Catholic Church after a series of sexual abuse scandals around the world, often involving children, over the past 20 years.

But unlike in other nations, in Spain — a traditionally Catholic country that has become…

View Cache

Pope orders Vatican to reopen case of priest accused of adult abuse but allowed to keep ministering

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 27, 2023

Read original article

Pope Francis has ordered the Vatican to reopen the case of a well-known priest-artist accused of sexually, psychologically and spiritually abusing adult women, and removed the statute of limitations on their claims, the Vatican said Friday.

The announcement marked a major turnaround for the Holy See and followed an outcry among victims and their advocates over the handling of the case of the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik, a former Jesuit whose mosaics grace churches and basilicas around the world.

The scandal has been a headache for the Jesuits, the Vatican and Francis himself due to suspicions that Rupnik received favorable treatment from the Holy See, where a Jesuit is pope and other Jesuits head the sex crimes office that investigated Rupnik and declined to prosecute him because the claims against him were deemed too old.

A Vatican…

View Cache

Pope Francis requests review of Rupnik case

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

October 27, 2023

Read original article

Pope Francis lifts the statute of limitations in the case of Fr. Marko Rupnik to allow a canonical procedure to take place regarding allegations against the former Jesuit.

Pope Francis has asked the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith to review the case of former Jesuit artist, Fr. Marko Rupnik, who was accused of psychological and sexual abuse by some consecrated women with whom he worked. He was expelled from the Society of Jesus in June.

A Holy See Press Office statement on Friday said, “In September, the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors brought to the Pope’s attention that there were serious problems in the handling of the Fr. Marko Rupnik case and lack of outreach to victims.”

“Consequently,” it added, “the Holy Father asked the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith to review the case, and decided to lift the statute of limitations to allow…

View Cache

Spain Report On Church Sex Abuse Due Out Friday

MADRID (SPAIN)
Barron's [New York NY]

October 26, 2023

By Diego Urdaneta, Agence France-Presse

Read original article

Spain will on Friday learn the results of the country’s first independent probe into the abuse of minors within the Catholic Church, long accused by survivors of stonewalling and denial.

Unlike in other nations like France, Ireland and the United States, in Spain — a traditionally Catholic country that has become highly secular —  clerical abuse allegations are only now gaining traction.

Spain’s parliament in March 2022 overwhelmingly approved the creation of an independent commission led by the country’s ombudsman to “shed light” on allegations of sexual abuse of “defenceless boys and girls” within the Catholic Church.

The commission’s final report is scheduled to be delivered to parliament at 11:30 am (0930 GMT) by Spain’s national ombudsman Angel Gabilondo, a former education minister.

Spain’s Catholic Church, which for years flatly refused to carry out its own probe, declined to take part in the independent investigation, although it did cooperate by providing documents on…

View Cache

Letters to the Editor: O.C.’s late Bishop Tod D. Brown and the double standard on clergy sex abuse

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

October 27, 2023

Read original article

To the editor: Columnist Gustavo Arellano highlights former Diocese of Orange Bishop Tod D. Brown’s complicity in concealing and enabling Catholic clergy child abuse. He makes an important contribution to the struggle for equality: the equality of believers and nonbelievers.

Since major stories about clergy abuse broke around the beginning of this century, the church has attempted to obstruct full accountability for the crimes of its priests.

The underlying theme of Catholic efforts to escape full reckoning is that since the church is God’s true religion, its wrongdoers deserve more lenient treatment than other child rapists.

The 1st Amendment requires that believers and nonbelievers be equal before the law. Any lesser penalties, or allowing concealment of heinous crimes just because the perpetrators are clergy, violates this principle of equality. There should be no difference in how the law treats any child abuser and in how it deals with any institution that…

View Cache

The Duplicity of an SBC Amicus Brief

LOUISVILLE (KY)
In Solidarity with Christa Brown

October 26, 2023

By Christa Brown, David Clohessy & Dave Pittman

Read original article

… and what will SBC officials do about it now?

In keeping with nationwide trends, the Kentucky legislature extended the time period in which child sex abuse survivors can bring civil lawsuits and allowed that their lawsuits can be asserted, not only against perpetrators, but also against institutions that fail to protect children.

Under these new laws, Samantha Killary pursued her lawsuit for childhood sexual abuse against a Louisville police officer and also against Louisville Metro for “employing and empowering” him.

The case is now pending before the Kentucky Supreme Court, with arguments about the validity of the new laws.

Into this case, the Southern Baptist Convention decided to insert itself, even though the SBC is not a party and the case has nothing to do with the SBC.

Together, the Southern Baptist Convention, the SBC Executive Committee, Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and Lifeway Christian…

View Cache

October 26, 2023

Papal commission reaches out to Fr. Rupnik’s known victims

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

October 26, 2023

By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service

Read original article

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors has reached out to known victims of Slovenian Fr. Marko Rupnik, asking to meet with them.

The purpose of the invitation, written by a member of the 19-member papal body, was to examine and study how the victims were treated by the church, specifically the Jesuits — the religious order Rupnik was expelled from in June — and the Vatican, Il Sismografo, an Italian blog that closely follows the Vatican, reported Oct. 25.

Catholic News Service confirmed the invitation Oct. 26.

The mission of the papal body includes evaluating the church’s response to victims and abuse allegations and ensuring that “robust policies and practices for the prevention and management of all forms of abuse are in place,” according to the commission’s strategic plan 2022-2027.

Its three-point mandate includes improving church practices by identifying and detailing gaps and ongoing concerns in current prevention…

View Cache

Australian Catholic church’s insurer launches court bid to cover smaller share of abuse compensation

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 26, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

Read original article

Scandal-plagued PwC would determine payout rates under scheme proposed by Catholic Church Insurance in effort to avoid insolvency

The Catholic church insurer wants to establish a scheme that would stave off its own insolvency by paying church bodies only a fraction of the money owed to abuse survivors, at rates to be determined by scandal-plagued consultancy PwC, documents show.

Catholic Church Insurance is facing significant financial turmoil due to the rising volume of abuse claims, estimating it has $381m in liabilities relating to professional standards payouts to various church entities, including dioceses and church-aligned charities.

In an attempt to protect itself financially, CCI is asking the federal court to approve a legally binding scheme that, if it comes close to insolvency, would trigger a reduction in abuse payouts to church bodies. The scheme would allow the insurer to pay out only a yet-to-be-determined percentage of what is owed to survivors.

View Cache

Father Marko Rupnik, disgraced former Jesuit, incardinated in Slovenian diocese

(ITALY)
America [New York NY]

October 25, 2023

By Gina Christian, OSV News

Read original article

(OSV News) — A former Jesuit priest dismissed by the order for sexual abuse has apparently been incardinated in a diocese in his native Slovenia, according to multiple media reports.

Father Marko Ivan Rupnik—a renowned mosaic artist who was expelled from the Society of Jesus in June for refusing to comply with ministry restrictions after credible abuse accusations—has been accepted into the Diocese of Koper, which is headed by Bishop Jurij Bizjak.

The news was first reported Oct. 25 in Italian and German media reports, and confirmed to media in a statement from diocesan vicar general Msgr. Slavko Rebec.

Father Rupnik has been accused of sexually, spiritually or psychologically abusing some 2 dozen women and at least one man over a 40-year period.

He had been briefly excommunicated in 2020 for granting absolution to a woman with whom he had engaged in sexual relations. Among his accusers were several members…

View Cache

The Rupnik affair goes from scandalous to contemptible

(ITALY)
Catholic World Report [San Francisco CA]

October 25, 2023

By Christopher R. Altieri

Read original article

It is impossible to absolve Pope Francis of ultimate responsibility for the farcical management of the Rupnik business. Whether by act or omission, he is the author of it.

A disgraced former Jesuit accused of heinous sexual, psychological, and spiritual abuse allegedly perpetrated against well more than a dozen victims – most of them women religious – over some three decades, Fr. Marko Rupnik, is now a priest of Koper diocese in his native Slovenia.

Koper’s vicar general told The Pillar that Bishop Bishop Jurij Bizjak agreed to give Rupnik a chance since “Rupnik had not been sentenced to any judicial sentence.”

Rupnik has never been tried for his alleged crimes of abuse. That is because the Vatican department responsible for investigating and prosecuting the crimes of which Rupnik stands accused decided not to waive the statute…

View Cache

Priest kicked out of Jesuits for alleged abuse of women welcomed into Slovenia diocese

(ITALY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 26, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

A famous priest-artist who was thrown out of the Jesuits after being accused of sexual, spiritual and psychological abuse of women has been accepted into a diocese in his native Slovenia, the latest twist in a case that has implicated the pope and laid bare the limits of the Vatican’s in-house legal system.

The Diocese of Koper confirmed in a statement sent to The Associated Press on Thursday that the Rev. Marko Ivan Rupnik was accepted as a priest there in August.

Rupnik was taken in because he had been expelled from the Jesuits and because the diocese hadn’t received any documents showing that Rupnik had “been found guilty of the alleged abuses before either an ecclesiastical tribunal or civil court,” it said.

The statement cited the Universal Declaration on Human Rights’ provision on the presumption of innocence and right to a defense for anyone accused of…

View Cache

In unprecedented letter, synod urges more synodality

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

October 25, 2023

Read original article

An unprecedented letter published by the synod on synodality Wednesday said that the Church should focus more on the idea of synodality ahead of the October 2024 final session of the Church’s years-long consultative process. 

The Oct. 25 text also emphasized discipleship of Jesus Christ, and commitment to both service of the poor and protection of the environment.

“We hope that the months leading to the second [Vatican] session in October 2024 will allow everyone to concretely participate in the dynamism of missionary communion indicated by the word ‘synod,’” said the  letter, which was addressed to Catholics around the world.

“This is not about ideology, but about an experience rooted in the apostolic tradition,” the letter added.

The letter was published Wednesday afternoon, as more than 300 of the synod on synodality’s delegates deliberate on an interim report they’ll publish later this week. The aim of the synod on synodality is…

View Cache

Rupnik returns to priestly ministry in Slovenian diocese despite accusations of sexual abuse of over 20 nuns

(ITALY)
Catholic Herald [London, England]

October 25, 2023

By Thomas Colsy

Read original article

Marko Ivan Rupnik, a former Jesuit who has been at the centre of controversy amidst accusations of spiritual and sexual abuse, has been granted permission to return to priestly ministry in the Diocese of Koper in his native Slovenia.

The decision follows consultations by Bishop Juri Bizjak with senior prelates from Rome– alongside a report released in September on the Aletti Center, the artistic institute founded by Rupnik, after a canonical visitation investigating the accused priest’s dealings.

It is understood that Bishop Bizjak, who heads the Diocese of Koper where Rupnik has been incardinated, discussed the course of action with Slovenia’s apostolic nuncio Bishop Jean-Marie Speich, canon lawyer Giacomo Incittii, and Cardinal Angelo De Donatis who serves as the vicar of the Diocese of Rome.

Nuncio Speich lauded the decision to incardinate Rupnik in Slovenia with encouragement and approval, calling it an “excellent solution” and foreseeing no additional trouble “because there…

View Cache

Why Has the Vatican Restored Father Rupnik?

(ITALY)
National Review [New York NY]

October 25, 2023

By MICHAEL BRENDAN DOUGHERTY

Read original article

Father Marko Rupnik was released by the Jesuits after an investigation credibly showed that he had abused his authority over a group of Slovenian nuns for years. In the 1990s this included his forcing them to commune his ejaculate from chalices used for Mass. The Jesuits investigated these crimes but found them outside the statute of limitations. Rupnik went on to Rome to found the Aletti Center, where he could practice as an artist and teach Ignatian spirituality. In 2016, Rupnik committed one of the gravest canonical crimes: He affected to use his power as a priest to absolve a woman of a sexual sin she had committed with him. This crime comes with a penalty of automatic excommunication. In January 2020, an investigation confirmed that Rupnik had committed the crime. In May of the same year, the conviction and verdict were reaffirmed unanimously and formalized after an investigation by…

View Cache

UPDATE: Rupnik ‘presumed innocent’ until proven guilty, says diocese that welcomed him

(ITALY)
Catholic News Agency - EWTN [Denver CO]

October 25, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

Father Marko Rupnik, the former Jesuit priest and mosaic artist accused of serious abuses against women, has been accepted for priestly ministry in a diocese in Slovenia.

In a statement to CNA on Wednesday, the Diocese of Koper confirmed earlier Italian and German media reports that Rupnik was now incardinated there.

The statement said that Rupnik was received into the diocese at the end of August.

The local bishop accepted Rupnik’s request to be received into the diocese “on the basis of the decree on Rupnik’s dismissal from the Jesuit order” and “and on the basis of the fact that no judicial sentence had been passed on Rupnik,” according to an English translation of the statement, written in Slovenian, issued by diocese’s vicar general, Slavko Rebec.

Rebec went on to cite Article 11.1 of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which states:…

View Cache

Fr Marko Rupnik incardinated in Slovenian diocese

(ITALY)
The Pillar [Washington DC]

October 25, 2023

By Luke Coppen

Read original article

The influential mosaic artist Fr. Marko Rupnik has been incardinated into a diocese in his native Slovenia.

Msgr. Slavko Rebec, vicar general of the Diocese of Koper, said in an Oct. 25 statement to The Pillar: “In response to the question whether the priest Marko Ivan Rupnik has been received (incardinated) into the Diocese of Koper, we answer that the said priest was received into the Diocese of Koper at the end of August 2023.”

“The Bishop of Koper admitted him on the basis of the decree of Rupnik’s dismissal from the Jesuit order and on the basis of Rupnik’s request for admission to the Diocese of Koper, and on the basis of the fact that Rupnik had not been sentenced to any judicial sentence: ‘Everyone who is accused of a criminal offense has the right to be presumed innocent until he is found guilty according to law, in a…

View Cache

Rupnik Ha Trovato Accoglienza. Ora È Libero. Il Nunzio: “Non Ci Sono Condanne”.

(ITALY)
Silere Non Possum [Italy]

October 25, 2023

Read original article

Marko Ivan Rupnik was received in a Slovenian diocese. He can now exercise his priestly ministry freely.

Quando si gode di una copertura ai massimi livelli non vi è nulla da temere. Con questa convinzione si è sempre mosso Marko Ivan Rupnik, l’ex gesuita sloveno che è stato dimesso dalla Compagnia di Gesù a seguito della fuoriuscita di notizie in merito a delitti canonici che sono stati trattati in modo “anomalo”, si fa per dire.

Il 1 dicembre 2022 Silere non possum rendeva noto che l’artista aveva subito una condanna per aver assolto la complice nel peccato contro il sesto comandamento. Venne così appurato dalla Congregazione per la Dottrina della Fede che il sacerdote era incorso nella scomunica latae sententiae. Dopo pochi giorni, Papa Francesco ha revocato la scomunica senza spiegare il perché. Poco tempo dopo giunsero al dicastero ulteriori denunce in merito ad abusi commessi da Rupnik. Il procedimento, anche in quel…

View Cache

October 25, 2023

Church Volunteer Faces Child Porn Charges

OCEAN SPRINGS (MS)
Ministry Watch [Matthews NC]

October 24, 2023

By Steve Rabey

Read original article

Pastor defends computer expert who had 9,900 sexually explicit images of children

A Mississippi man who volunteered for his church’s media ministry is now facing two charges of possessing and distributing child sexual abuse images after federal officials found 9,900 sexual images of children on his personal computer, according to The Sun Herald in Biloxi.

A judge denied the man bail and had him immediately jailed, saying he was a flight risk and a potential danger to the safety of the community. Meanwhile, a church leader and family members maintain his innocence.

Cameron “Cam” Cotrill, 66, of Vancleave used his computer expertise to volunteer at Center Pointe Church in Ocean Springs, Mississippi.

The district judge handling the case denied Cotrill bail, as he awaits trial in January. The judge cited substantial evidence against Cotrill, his potential threat to the community, his significant wealth, and his many…

View Cache

I can’t stop dreaming about our clergy pedophile, but maybe this will help

MOSS BLUFF (LA)
Baptist Press [Nashville TN]

October 24, 2023

By Tommy Mouton

Read original article

Just a few days after my 45th birthday, I had another dream about my childhood pastor.

This final dream was the coup de grâce: My great-grandparents’ home was ablaze. It was dark. Early morning still, and I was standing outside, talking on the telephone with him, and he essentially told me he was washing his hands of me and that, whether I believed it or not, he wasn’t the only abuser out there. That there were others. That I could go on and do what I needed to do. It was water under the bridge to him.

Before hanging up the phone, he told me he wouldn’t gift us the $10,000 we needed to rebuild. I never had asked him for any money. I am not asking for any now.

I awoke. Showered. Carried my kids off to school. Then stumbled onto an Ohio Capital Journal article published Aug. 17 about child sex abuse…

View Cache

Philadelphia priest pleads guilty to sexually abusing 13-year-old altar server, victim calls the abuse a “nightmare”

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

October 24, 2023

Read original article

A Catholic priest from Philadelphia was convicted today of sexually abusing a 16-year-old girl in 2014. The victim described the assault as a “nightmare” in court. We applaud this brave survivor for reporting the cleric despite her suffering. Her bravery has helped to ensure that Catholic children and the public are safer. We hope that the cleric will receive the stiffest sentence possible for his crime.

 Fr. Armand Garcia pleaded guilty to corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor stemming from the assault on this now-25-year-old woman. The priest was initially charged with rape, but agreed to a plea bargain taking that charge off of the table. The victim was an altar server at the Immaculate Heart of Mary parish in the Andorra neighborhood at the time of the crime. The survivor had known the clergyman since she was 13 and he was a friend of her father’s. She…

View Cache

Philadelphia priest, on leave since 2018, pleads guilty to sexual abuse of teen girl

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

October 24, 2023

By Gina Christian, OSV News

Read original article

A Philadelphia priest has admitted to sexually abusing a teen girl who was once an altar server at his parish.

Fr. Armand D. Garcia appeared in a Philadelphia courtroom Oct. 23 to plead guilty to corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor. He will be sentenced in January 2024.

The abuse took place while Garcia was a parochial vicar at Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish in Philadelphia from 2014-2017.

The priest had initially been charged with rape; photographing, filming and depicting on a computer sexual acts; sexual assault; and corruption of a minor. According to the criminal docket, the first three charges were dropped, while Garcia entered a non-negotiated guilty plea for corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor.

The victim, who was a 13-year-old student at the parish school when she met the priest, delivered an impact statement at the hearing, noting the…

View Cache

Mother files wrongful death lawsuit against now-closed Christian boarding school in Missouri

MISSION (KS)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 23, 2023

By Heather Hollingsworth

Read original article

A mother is suing a shuttered Christian boarding school in Missouri, blaming her son’s death on a gang rape and other abuse he endured there.

Agape Boarding School has been subjected to a wave of litigation as a series of abuse allegations emerged, but the case filed this month and amended Monday in federal court by Kathleen Britt is believed to be the first wrongful death suit.

The suit said that mental health problems plagued Britt’s son, Jason Britt, after he left the private school, where several staffers subsequently were charged. The suit said he lifted weights obsessively and ingested copious steroids so he would become so strong that he never would be victimized again.

He grew so despondent that he wrote a suicide note. But heart and kidney failure were what claimed his life in February 2022.

“The saddest part of his case is…

View Cache

Pope Francis accepts resignation of bishop from troubled Polish diocese

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

October 24, 2023

By Hannah Brockhaus

Read original article

Pope Francis accepted the resignation of 59-year-old Polish Bishop Grzegorz Kaszak on Tuesday following public calls for him to step down over poor management of scandals involving priests in his diocese.

Kaszak, who had led the southern Polish Diocese of Sosnowiec since 2009, had recently faced blowback from local media for his response to a priest of his diocese allegedly being caught hosting an orgy with a male prostitute at the end of August.

In a letter posted to the diocese’s website Oct. 24, Kaszak said he requested his resignation from Pope Francis on Sept. 29.

“I also ask everyone to forgive my human limitations. If I have offended anyone or neglected anything, I am very sorry for it,” the bishop said.

The diocese said in a Sept. 22 press statement that it had become aware from media reports of an orgy held the night of Aug….

View Cache

With a sex scandal in his troubled diocese under police investigation, a Polish bishop resigns

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 24, 2023

By Nicole Winfield and Vanessa Gera

Read original article

The pope on Tuesday accepted the resignation of a Polish bishop whose diocese has been rocked by reports of a sex party involving a male prostitute in a priest’s apartment, as well as previous violent incidents involving his clergy.

The Vatican didn’t give a reason for why Bishop Grzegorz Kaszak was resigning as head of the diocese of Sosnowiec, in southwestern Poland. At 59, he is several years shy of the normal retirement age of 75.

But his diocese has been in the spotlight again after one of his priests was placed under criminal investigation for an Aug. 30-31 incident at his apartment in Dabrowa Gornicza that allegedly involved a male prostitute.

Polish media reported that one of the participants of a sex party at the home collapsed after overdosing on erectile dysfunction pills. The reports said the priest allegedly tried to initially bar paramedics from entering the apartment.

Waldemar…

View Cache

October 24, 2023

Buffalo Diocese prepared to offer $100 million to child sex abuse victims

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

October 24, 2023

By Jay Tokasz

Read original article

The Buffalo Diocese is offering up to $100 million to settle child sex abuse claims in its federal bankruptcy case.

As much as half of that would come from parishes, schools and other Catholic entities, while the diocese would also need to sell its Catholic Center on Main Street, the former Christ the King Seminary campus in the Town of Aurora and other properties.

More than three years since the claims were filed, none of the abuse victims has been compensated as the diocese, its parishes and insurance carriers attempt to negotiate a settlement with abuse victims.

Those details were revealed in court papers filed late Monday in which diocese lawyers sought a preliminary injunction to keep all sex abuse lawsuits against parishes and schools grounded while mediated negotiations in the diocese bankruptcy case continue.

Court papers said the $100 million does not include insurance funds, while suggesting that insurance…

View Cache

Diocese of Buffalo ‘attempts to delay’ clergy sexual abuse lawsuits, seeks $100 million settlement

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW [Buffalo NY]

October 24, 2023

By Sean Mickey

Read original article

“It’s time to let juries decide these cases”

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — The Diocese of Buffalo claimed it will offer $100 million to settle child sex abuse lawsuits and is considering the sale of the Catholic Center, the former Christ the King Seminary campus and other real estate, according to documents filed in its federal bankruptcy case Monday.

However, lawyers representing child sexual abuse survivors say the preliminary injunction filed by the diocese is an attempt to prevent survivors from pursuing their cases against non-bankrupt entities and effectively silence survivors.

Declaring bankruptcy put a hold on all litigation against the diocese in state court. But that did not apply to its parishes and related nonprofits.

The unsecured creditors committee, made up of six abuse survivors, agreed to place a hold on litigation against non-debtor entities while participating in good faith negotiations.

The agreement expired on September 30 and the committee…

View Cache

Cardinal Fernández named to Vatican legal department

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

October 24, 2023

Read original article

Pope Francis has appointed Cardinal Víctor Manuel Fernández as a member of the Dicastery for Legislative Texts, the Vatican department charged with authoritatively interpreting canon law, despite the pope’s September decision to excuse the cardinal from participating in his own department’s most sensitive legal work.

Cardinal Fernández’s appointment was announced in the daily Vatican news bulletin on Oct. 20. The appointment comes after Fernández was created a cardinal by Pope Francis in September, and assumed the role of prefect for the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith in the same month.

While it is customary for DDF prefects to serve on the council, Fernández’s nomination is unusual. At the time of his appointment as DDF prefect, Pope Francis specifically urged him to focus on doctrinal matters and to leave the department’s legal work overseeing major canonical crimes in the hands of “competent professionals.”

On the day Fernández took office,…

View Cache

A brief announcement relative to the Diocese’s bankruptcy:

BUFFALO (NY)
Diocese of Buffalo [Buffalo NY]

October 24, 2023

Read original article

[See a PDF of the diocese’s original post here.]

For some time now, the Diocese has been actively engaged in mediation with the Creditors’ Committee, which represents the interests of abuse survivors. The Diocese’s insurance carriers have also participated in mediation as we work to establish a pool of settlement funds to provide some measure of restitution and, we pray, closure for survivors.

Any ultimate settlement will need to be funded by monetary contributions sourced from across our Catholic community, including from the Diocese, parishes, and other affiliated Catholic entities, as well as from available insurance assets. While confidential settlement discussions continue, our Catholic community must remain steadfast in supporting survivors and dedicating available resources to their healing. To that end, the Diocese, in close consultation with the priests who make up the parish steering committee, is making a commitment that the collective contribution of our Catholic community, not…

View Cache

Diocese of Buffalo offering $100 million to sex abuse victims

BUFFALO (NY)
Spectrum News [Syracuse NY]

October 24, 2023

Read original article

The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo announced Tuesday it is pledging at least $100 million to survivors of sex abuse.

The diocese says that with the help of parishes and other affiliate Catholic entities, it will create a pool of settlement funds of at least $100 million.

The diocese also says that total does not include any insurance money.

According to official court documents, the diocese would contribute all of its liquid assets and likely need to sell the Catholic Center on Main Street in Buffalo and the Christ the King Seminary Campus in East Aurora.

The diocese released a statement, saying in part:

“We recognize that honoring this commitment will be challenging, but it is absolutely necessary that we do everything in our power to set things right, to move beyond this dark chapter in our history and move forward as together we work to rebuild and renew our church.”

View Cache

PRÊTRE CHARENTAIS MIS EN EXAMEN POUR AGRESSIONS SEXUELLES SUR MINEUR : LES FAITS ONT EU LIEU ENTRE JUILLET 2021 ET AOÛT 2023

(FRANCE)
Charente Libre [Charente, France]

October 24, 2023

Read original article

Le vicaire de Ruffec est mis en examen et placé sous contrôle judiciaire. La victime est un jeune garçon âgé de 9 à 11 ans au moment des faits, qui sont récents.

François-Xavier Grandpierre, vicaire de Ruffec, a été mis en examen, vendredi, pour agressions sexuelles sur mineur. CL révélait l’information ce mardi 24 octobre. On en sait un peu plus sur les faits qui sont reprochés à ce prêtre de 31 ans, qui a grandi en Charente.

Le parquet de Versailles indique que les faits se sont produits entre le 1er juillet 2021 et le 5 août 2023, « au préjudice d’une seule victime, un garçon âgé entre 9 et 11 ans au moment des faits ». On sait aussi que la jeune victime est « l’un des enfants d’une famille dont le mis en cause était proche ».

Le père François-Xavier Grandpierre, vicaire à Ruffec, est visé par une enquête pour atteinte sexuelle sur mineur, au parquet de Versailles….

View Cache

A Priest From Charente Indicted For Sexual Assault On A Minor

(FRANCE)
Globe Echo [London, England]

October 24, 2023

By David Sadler, Agence France-Presse

Read original article

A 31-year-old priest from Charente was indicted for sexual assault on a minor under the age of 15, Agence France-Presse (AFP) learned from the Versailles public prosecutor’s office and the diocese of Angoulême, which suspended from all functions on Tuesday October 24. The indictment, pronounced on Friday, was accompanied by judicial review.

The facts occurred between July 1, 2021 and August 5, 2023, “to the detriment of a single victim, a boy aged between 9 and 11 years old at the time of the events, one of the children of a family to whom the accused was close”, declared the prosecution to AFP. Some of these events took place in Yvelines, where the victim’s family resides. Investigations are continuing to see if there are other victims.

Entering the seminary in 2015 in Bordeaux, the future priest then joined the Paris seminary, before becoming an educator in a boys’ school integrating musical…

View Cache

Polish Bishop Resigns After Diocese Is Rocked by Sex Scandal

SOSNOWIEC (POLAND)
New York Times [New York NY]

October 24, 2023

By Andrew Higgins

Read original article

A priest in the bishop’s diocese was accused of holding a sex party in his church apartment that involved a male prostitute who lost consciousness.

Warsaw – A Polish bishop whose diocese has been badly tarnished by reports of a gay orgy involving priests and a prostitute resigned on Tuesday, the latest in a long series of sexual and financial scandals in Poland’s Roman Catholic Church.

Grzegorz Kaszak, the bishop of Sosnowiec in southwestern Poland, announced his departure after one of his priests was placed under criminal investigation in connection with reports last month that he had organized a sex party during which a male prostitute lost consciousness from an overdose of erectile dysfunction pills.

Gazeta Wyborcza, a liberal daily newspaper, reported in September that one of the priests at the gathering, held in a building belonging to the parish of the Blessed Virgin Mary of the Angels in…

View Cache

10/23 Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis

KANSAS CITY (MO)
DavidClohessy.com [St. Louis MO]

October 23, 2023

Read original article

We’re here today outside a courthouse because this is where you go – if you were physically or sexually or emotionally abused in an institutional setting – this is where you go for justice, healing, closure, accountability and prevention, to the admittedly flawed but time-tested and transparent legal system. You find justice, healing closure, accountability and prevention in secular courts of law, not in the private offices of wrongdoers.

This is especially true when it comes to institutions that are private, independent and secretive and when they posture as religious or educational.

So more than anything, we want to beg victims, witnesses and whistleblowers who saw, suspected or suffered any crimes or potential crimes at the Agape Boarding School to come forward and report the wrongdoing to people you can trust – your family, your friends, the police, a prosecutor, a therapist or a support group like ours.

When victims,…

View Cache

Wrongful death suit filed vs. Agape Boarding School

KANSAS CITY (MO)
DavidClohessy.com [St. Louis MO]

October 23, 2023

Read original article

Mom sues because her son, gang raped there, is now dead

Unusual case names eight defendants; two of them are sheriffs

It also accuses a company that transports kids to such facilities

Victims also call for better laws & enforcement ‘to prevent more abuse’

WHAT

Holding signs and childhood photos at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will
–announce the first-ever wrongful death lawsuit against a controversial, unlicensed, independent  and now-shuttered Baptist facility for ‘troubled teenagers’ in southern Missouri, and
–call on Missouri lawmakers to pass a new law that would expand the state’s civil statute of limitations on abuse which would enable more child sex abuse victims to expose those who commit or conceal child sex crimes in court.
–urge local and state law enforcement agencies to more aggressively investigate similar schools and more vigorously prosecute wrongdoers.

WHEN
TODAY, Monday, Oct. 23 at 1:00 p.m.

WHERE
On the sidewalk outside the federal…

View Cache

Former PPD Officer and ex-priest convicted of child sexual assault charges

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
WPHL-TV, CW-17 [Philadelphia PA]

October 24, 2023

By Jessica Yakubovsky

Read original article

A former Philadelphia Police officer and a former Catholic Priest have been convicted in separate child sexual abuse incidents.

According to the District Attorney’s Special Investigations Unit, former Philadelphia Police Officer Patrick Heron and former-Catholic priest Armand Garcia were charged in separate criminal proceedings for various counts of sexual abuse allegations with minors.

Former Officer Heron pleaded guilty to 2 counts of Unlawful Contact with a Minor, 2 counts of Sexual Abuse of Children, Involuntary Deviate Sexual Intercourse, Official Oppression, Kidnapping of a Minor, Indecent Assault, Forgery, and Stalking for five criminal cases brought against him by the Special Investigations Unit.

Former-Catholic priest Armand Garcia pleaded guilty to Corruption of Minors and Unlawful Contact with Minors, said the DA’s office and will be sentenced in January 2024. 

Officials say the Commonwealth court had been preparing to go on trial for over a decade for the allegations brought against Heron for the dozens of women and girls he abused, assaulted, intimidated, photographed, and attempted to…

View Cache

Overshadowed by Mount Cashel: This school abuse survivor says Grade 7 was a nightmare

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

October 24, 2023

By Terry Roberts

Read original article

St. John’s man in his 70s was sexually abused by a Christian Brother at former Holy Cross school

The sky over St. John’s on this October morning is thick with dark clouds as a blue sedan slowly pulls into an unremarkable parking lot on Patrick Street. The older man at the wheel is expressionless as he guides his car to a stop.

He takes a second to compose himself, opens his door and plants his sneaker-clad feet onto the damp asphalt. Smartly, he stands erect.

Looking to the back of the parking lot, where Holy Cross all-boys school once stood, he feels a chill unrelated to the threatening skies overhead.

It’s the first time he’s stepped on this ground in 55 years — kept away by an invisible force field energized by pain, anger and shame.

‘This is where it happened’

“This is where it happened,” he says while sitting on a…

View Cache

Pope accepts resignation of bishop of Polish diocese where gay orgy scandal under investigation

SOSNOWIEC (POLAND)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 24, 2023

By Nicole Winfield and Vanessa Gera

Read original article

The pope on Tuesday accepted the resignation of a Polish bishop whose diocese has been rocked for weeks by reports of a gay orgy involving a male prostitute in a priest’s apartment.

The Vatican didn’t give a reason for why Bishop Grzegorz Kaszak was resigning as head of the diocese of Sosnowiec, in southwestern Poland. At 59, he is several years shy of the normal retirement age of 75.

But his diocese has been in the spotlight for over a month after one of his priests was placed under criminal investigation for having allegedly organized a gay orgy at his apartment in Dabrowa Gornicza. Polish media reported that a male prostitute collapsed after overdosing on erectile dysfunction pills.

A prosecutor said the priest is suspected of “failing to provide assistance to a person whose life is at risk,” for having allegedly tried to bar police and paramedics from entering the…

View Cache

Former N.W.T. priest gets 2 years jail for indecent assault against child in Fort Simpson 40 years ago

FORT SIMPSON (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

October 24, 2023

By Natalie Pressman

Read original article

Victim told court that assault by Camille Piché ‘held me down’ for decades

WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced​ ​​​sexual violence or know someone affected by it. 

A former N.W.T. priest began a two-year sentence Monday for a crime dating back four decades. 

Camille Piché pleaded guilty in N.W.T. territorial court to indecent assault against a child while working as a priest in Fort Simpson, N.W.T. 

According to an agreed statement of facts read in court on Monday, Piché was working at the Sacred Heart Church in Fort Simpson when he developed a friendship with the victim’s parents and made regular visits to their home. 

On two of those occasions, in 1981 and 1982, Piché sat next to the victim on their living room couch. The victim was covered by a blanket and Piché admitted he put his hand under the blanket, under the child’s pants…

View Cache

October 23, 2023

Former Philadelphia priest Armand Garcia will plead guilty on sexual abuse charges against a minor

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
CBS News [Baltimore, MD]

October 22, 2023

By Jessica Macauley

Read original article

Former Philadelphia priest Armand Garcia will plead guilty to sexually abusing a teenage girl in court on Monday.

Authorities arrested and charged Garcia back in 2019. He was a pastor at Saint Martin of Tours in Oxford Circle, but the alleged crime took place between 2014 and 2017 at the Immaculate Heart of Mary in the city’s Andorra section. 

Garcia also committed unlawful conduct with the same girl in his home in Delaware County, the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office said. He first met the girl when she was a 13-year-old altar server at the Immaculate Heart of Mary’s Elementary School.

The archdiocese put Garcia on administrative leave when the criminal investigation began in 2018. 

The DA’s Office said the girl is expected to deliver a victim impact statement in court. 

Former Philadelphia priest Armand Garcia will plead guilty to sexually abusing a teenage...
</p>
            <a href=View Cache

SVG: Roman Catholic priest appears in court charged with rape

KINGSTON (JAMAICA)
Loop News [Kingston, Jamaica]

October 23, 2023

Read original article

A Roman Catholic priest appeared in the Family Court in St Vincent and the Grenadines on Monday charged with two counts of sexual offences.

The priest, a foreign national, was arraigned on two counts of rape and two counts of indecent assault and appeared on camera before Magistrate, John Ballah, sitting in his capacity as deputy president of the Family Court.

Media reports here said that the cleric is alleged to have committed unlawful sex acts on a teenage female and was not called upon to plead to the indictable offences. He has been granted and was granted bail to appear before the Family Court, whose president would conduct a preliminary inquiry.

The court would then decide if there was enough evidence to send the matter to trial before a judge and a jury.

The priest left the court in the company of a senior member of the Diocese of Kingstown, …

View Cache

Philadelphia priest pleads guilty to sexually abusing a 16-year-old altar server who said she endured a ‘nightmare’

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Philadelphia Inquirer [Philadelphia PA]

October 23, 2023

By Rodrigo Torrejón

Read original article

The victim said Armand Garcia exploited her trust, raping and manipulating her for years.

A Philadelphia priest has admitted he sexually abused a 16-year-old altar server at a church in Andorra in what she described in court Monday as a “nightmare.”

The Rev. Armand Garcia, 54, pleaded guilty to corruption of a minor and unlawful contact with a minor in the abuse of the now-25-year-old woman, starting when she was 16 and an altar server at the Immaculate Heart of Mary parish in the Andorra neighborhood.

The woman said in court Monday that she went to the priest, whom she knew since she was 13 and who was a friend of her father’s, in 2014 to confide in him about a personal matter and he “exploited” her trust, eventually assaulting and raping her.

“I was targeted, manipulated, and raped to the very end of my contact with him,” the…

View Cache

Crow’s tourist status to run out soon

MOBILE (AL)
Lagniappe [Mobile AL]

October 12, 2023

By Kyle Hamrick

Read original article

The former Mobile priest who in July fled to Europe with an 18-year-old woman who recently graduated from McGill-Toolen Catholic High School may soon have to leave the country when their travel clearance expires later this month.

 Mobile attorney Christine Hernandez, a representative of the young woman’s family, said Wednesday Alex Crow, who was defrocked by the Archdiocese of Mobile over the summer, recently applied for residency in Italy, where he and the young woman have lived since the summer.

Because Italian authorities denied that application, Hernandez said Crow and the young woman will have to leave the country before their 90-day stay ends in the final weeks of October.

Mobile County Sheriff Paul Burch said Thursday afternoon he had “no knowledge” of the Italian government denying Crow’s request, but thought they made the right decision.

“I would hope they would deny that knowing the controversy surrounding him coming there,”…

View Cache

Interpol busca al ex sacerdote que se fugó cuando iba a recibir la pena por haber abusado de una menor

SAN MARTíN (ARGENTINA)
Infobae [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

October 23, 2023

Read original article

Tiene una circular roja. De Carlos Eduardo José nada se sabe desde el 22 de agosto pasado

El ex sacerdote Carlos Eduardo Joséprófugo tras ausentarse al juicio en el que iba a ser condenado por abuso sexual de una estudiante menor de edad, es buscado por Interpol a pedido de la Justicia argentina y sobre él pesa una “circular roja” con orden de detención por agresión sexual agravada por su condición de “ministro de culto y por encontrarse en la guarda de la víctima”.

Según la notificación roja de Interpol N° A-7723/8-2023 con fecha del 29 de agosto, José es un “prófugo buscado para un proceso penal” en la Justicia argentina, a quien “se le atribuye haber abusado sexualmente de M.G.” en el domicilio de la víctima “aprovechándose del temor que le infundía ante la situación de autoridad eclesiástica y escolar que ostentaba, que le impedían consentir y…

View Cache

Retired Bishop Brown of Orange, Calif., dies; recalled as ‘tireless’ witness for Christ

ORANGE (CA)
National Catholic Reporter [Kansas City MO]

October 19, 2023

By Julie Asher, OSV News

Read original article

Retired Bishop Tod D. Brown, the third bishop of the Diocese of Orange, died early Oct. 15 at Providence St. Joseph Hospital after being hospitalized, according to the diocese. He was 86.

Msgr. Tuan Joseph Pham, a close friend of the late bishop, told the Los Angeles Times the prelate died after a long battle with lymphoma.

Bishop Kevin W. Vann, who succeeded Brown as shepherd of the diocese, said in a statement he was “deeply saddened” to announce the passing of his predecessor, who retired in 2012.

“With his tireless spirit and witness to Christ, Bishop Brown faithfully served the people of the Diocese of Orange since 1998 when Pope St. John Paul II appointed him bishop and ordinary of our diocese,” said Vann, who remembered especially “his kindness to me when I was a newly ordained priest years ago.”

In the fall of 1981, then-Frs. Brown and Vann…

View Cache

These Men Say Their Utah Therapist Touched Them Inappropriately During Sessions Paid for by the LDS Church

SALT LAKE CITY (UT)
PROPUBLICA [New York City NY]

October 12, 2023

By Jessica Miller, The Salt Lake Tribune

Read original article

A spokesperson for the church said it does not vet the therapists its bishops recommend and pay for, saying “it is up to church members” to “make their own decisions.”

Co-published with The Salt Lake Tribune

When health care workers sexually abuse their patients in Utah, survivors confront obstacles to justice: in the law, in the courts — and in the culture as a whole.

This article was produced for ProPublica’s Local Reporting Network in partnership with The Salt Lake TribuneSign up for Dispatches to get stories like this one as soon as they are published.

This story discusses sexual assault.

Three additional men have come forward to say a therapist recommended and paid for by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints touched them inappropriately during counseling sessions related to struggles with their sexuality. The men’s statements follow allegations by three others, previously reported by The Salt Lake…

View Cache

Baltimore priest removed from ministry after settlement over claims of sexual misconduct surfaces

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBAL-TV, NBC-11 [Baltimore MD]

October 18, 2023

By Tommie Clark

Read original article

Father Paschal Morlino removed as pastor of St. Benedict Church in southwest Baltimore

The Archdiocese of Baltimore is confirming a settlement with a priest in Baltimore accused of sexual harassment.

The archdiocese said it learned about the claims on Thursday involving Father Paschal Morlino, who is the pastor of St. Benedict Church in southwest Baltimore. Within 24 hours, the priest was suspended from any duties in public ministry. His removal was announced Sunday to parishioners.

Next to St. Benedict, a 90-year-old towering church, is the Father Paschal Center off Paschal’s Way. A parishioner and volunteer who asked to remain anonymous told 11 News it’s where she worked alongside the popular priest at the food pantry.

“(I saw) him every day. I know what kind of person he is. I knew the person that was the accuser,” the parishioner said.

In a statement, the archdiocese said someone filed a complaint in…

View Cache

What’s a creditor’s committee? 7 abuse victims to negotiate for all in Archdiocese of Baltimore bankruptcy

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

October 20, 2023

By Lee O. Sanderlin

Read original article

As the Archdiocese of Baltimore’s bankruptcy begins to work its way through the legal system, court officials have selected a group of sexual abuse victims who, with an assist from several attorneys, will eventually negotiate settlement terms for the hundreds of fellow survivors.

Known as an unsecured creditors committee, the seven victims will play a key role throughout the archdiocese’s bankruptcy — a process that is expected to last years.

In a typical bankruptcy, meaning one that is not based around allegations of sexual assault and child abuse, such a committee is composed of people or financial institutions who hold liens or have outstanding invoices against the debtor. They’re in line behind secured creditors, who have collateral such as real estate. Unsecured creditors sometimes get as little as pennies on the dollar for what they’re owed.

But in cases where the debt…

View Cache

Church takes ‘secondary victims’ case to High Court

(AUSTRALIA)
CathNews New Zealand [Wellington, New Zealand]

October 23, 2023

Read original article

A High Court bid launched by the Catholic Church is set to have far-reaching consequences for personal injury claims in Victoria. Source: Herald Sun.

A legal challenge is seeking to block the parents, siblings, friends and families of abuse victims from suing for damages. If successful it would prohibit “secondary” victims from seeking damages against a range of organisations for psychological injury.

They could include the state government, WorkSafe, the Transport Accident Commission, schools, clubs, kinders, religious organisations and social and cultural groups.

The case centres on a claim brought by the father of a dead former choirboy who claims his son was assaulted by Cardinal George Pell.

Cardinal Pell was convicted, then acquitted, of abusing the choirboy now at the centre of this landmark case. The former choirboy died of a heroin overdose in 2014 having never disclosed allegations of abuse to his parents or authorities.

The choirboy’s father is…

View Cache

The pope’s absolute power, and the problems it can cause, are on display in 2 Vatican trials

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Associated Press [New York NY]

October 19, 2023

By Nicole Winfield

Read original article

Two Vatican trials are coming to a head this week and posing uncomfortable questions for the Holy See, given they both underscore Pope Francis’ power as an absolute monarch and the legal, financial and reputational problems that can arise when he wields it.

On Wednesday, the Vatican’s former in-house auditor was in court for a hearing in his 9.3 million euro wrongful dismissal lawsuit against the Holy See. Libero Milone says Vatican police forced his resignation in 2017 under the threat of arrest, after he was told Francis had “lost faith” in him over his zealous attempts to audit Vatican monsignors.

The Vatican secretariat of state has objected to being named as a defendant in the suit, arguing it had nothing to do with Milone’s hiring or resignation and that the city state’s tribunal had no place getting involved.

The rationale: The pope hired Milone and…

View Cache

October 22, 2023

Lucha, absolución y dolor: La cronología de los aberrantes abusos sexuales en el Próvolo que marcaron a Mendoza

(ARGENTINA)
Diario de Mendoza [Mendoza, Argentina]

October 22, 2023

By Rocío Di Marco

Read original article

Este miércoles se conoció el fallo absolutorio contra las últimas imputadas y, tras esto, se cierra un capítulo en la extensa y oscura historia del Instituto Próvolo. Denuncias por abusos desde 1950, cientos de testigos, cartas eróticas, tres juicios que resumieron la causa y la lucha incansable de víctimas y familiares, son algunos de los detalles del resonante caso.

Uno de los casos que más resonó en Mendoza y en el país es, sin duda, el ocurrido en el Instituto Antonio Próvolo para Sordos. Los casos de abuso involucran a sacerdotes, monjas, y exdirectivos del establecimiento. Algunos de los imputados ya fueron condenados por abusar sexualmente de 25 niños y adolescentes. 

Sin embargo, el miércoles pasado la Justicia absolvió a 5 de las restantes acusadas durante el último tercer juicio, el que le dio fin a una causa que comenzó varios años atrás.

Incluso, el hecho es más…

View Cache

Synod briefing highlights: A Church with the Poor

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Vatican News - Holy See [Vatican City]

October 21, 2023

Read original article

During Saturday’s Synod briefing, speakers highlight topics ranging from the role of women to the defense of minors and vulnerable individuals, as participants prepared to recite the Rosary and pray for peace in St. Peter’s Square on Saturday evening.

At nine in the evening on Saturday in St. Peter’s Square, the recitation of the Rosary takes place with a prayer intention for peace. A special appeal for was launched on Friday in the Synod Hall “to help the young people, in a Middle East that is bleeding, not to lose hope and not to have as their only perspective for the future that of suffering or leaving their country”, and “to provide these young people, as a Church and as pastors, with the instruments to reach peace.”

Paolo Ruffini, Prefect of the Dicastery for Communication and President of the Synod Information Commission, highlighted this at Saturday’s briefing with journalists, which…

View Cache

Ireland’s worst paedophile priest Fr Tony Walsh could be hit with four new charges

DUBLIN (IRELAND)
Irish Sun [Dublin, Ireland]

October 22, 2023

By Stephen Breen

Read original article

The so-called ‘singing priest’ received a four-year sentence in December 2022 for abusing survivor Alan Nolan, 51, and two other boys in the 1980s.

And Gardai have now submitted new files on the monster to the Director of Public Prosecutions.

The files being analysed relate to three males and one female.

If charged, it could mean Walsh spending more time in jail after his expected release date in 2027.

Details of the files were also confirmed by brave abuse survivor Darren McGavin, 51, who revealed he’s working as an advocate with four other victims of the priest.

He hopes the four men will also make statements against Walsh.

Depraved Walsh — who used the cover of the Catholic Church to prey on innocent children — has started to admit his crimes when he has been hit with fresh charges over the last six years.

Since 1995, the beast has been convicted of…

View Cache

Handling of sexual harassment allegations poses a big threat to Josh Shapiro’s political identity

HARRISBURG (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette [Pittsburgh PA]

October 22, 2023

By Mike Wereschagin and Ford Turner

Read original article

The Pennsylvania governor made a name for himself by exposing sexual misconduct and cover-ups

A sexual harassment scandal had once again consumed Harrisburg.

Allegations against a Democratic lawmaker, Rep. Mike Zabel, from both a lobbyist and a fellow House member had sparked urgent calls for his resignation and reignited widespread outrage at a male-dominated Capitol culture that seemed to let the powerful act with impunity toward women.

On March 3, Gov. Josh Shapiro weighed in.

“Let me be very clear where I stand. People deserve to be safe and free from harassment wherever they work,” the new Democratic governor told the Philadelphia radio station KYW. “I think it’s critically important for those who come forward to be able to share their truth and have it investigated fairly and properly.”

He said the investigation of the Democrat from Delaware County “should be done swiftly. And I think the [House] Speaker…

View Cache

German bishop at Synod on Synodality: Church should not ignore ‘signs of the times’

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

October 21, 2023

By Jonathan Liedl

Read original article

A German bishop participating in the Synod on Synodality challenged the idea that the Catholic community in his country is at odds with the universal Church — and reasserted that it will continue to play a role in the ongoing discussions in Rome about the Church’s future.

Speaking at the Synod press briefing Saturday afternoon, Bishop Franz Josef Overbeck of Essen acknowledged that others have expressed concerns to him regarding the Catholic Church in Germany’s controversial “Synodal Way.”

“Many people have asked me, ‘Are you still Catholics and part of the Catholic Church?”, said Overbeck, one of the German Bishops Conference’s three delegates to the universal Synod, and a major proponent of the German Synodal Way. “And I say, ‘Yes, of course, we are Catholics, and we are here to stay.”

Begun in 2019, the Synodal Way is a non-canonical initiative of the German bishops’ conference and the Central Committee…

View Cache

October 21, 2023

Survivor group sends complaint to Vatican on Paprocki’s ‘secrecy and callousness’

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
NPR [Springfield, IL]

October 20, 2023

By NPR

Read original article

Four men who say they were sexually abused by clergy gathered outside the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception Thursday to announce their group sent a formal complaintwith the Vatican, charging that Springfield’s bishop “harms his flock.”

The group also sent a letterto Bishop Thomas Paprocki asking that they be allowed to speak at a Diocesan gathering later this month. “We think that would be a long overdue, welcome gesture on his part, and we think that it would encourage other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to come forward. Kids are safe when abuse is reported or abuse is not reported in a climate…of fear and shame,’’ said David Clohessy, former national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests and volunteer director of the Missouri group.

The other letter is in response to a new process by which laypeople can report to the…

View Cache

Episcopal priest: Archdiocese of Baltimore must be held accountable, morally and legally, for child sexual abuse | GUEST COMMENTARY

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

October 20, 2023

By Mother Debra Susannah Mary Rhodes

Read original article

My husband and I are both Episcopal priests. While wearing a clerical collar, he has often been insulted by strangers, called a “pedophile”, “child-molester” and worse. Why? Because people assumed he was a Catholic priest. This is beyond heartbreaking to him and to me, a survivor of childhood sexual abuse by our family pediatrician as a girl in my native New York.

We both deeply love the Church, not just the Episcopal Church, but the Church as a whole. Jesus called the Church to be a light to the nations and a vision of the Kingdom of Heaven. By extension, we believe that when the Church, by the actions of those in direct control, acts against the will of God by abusing children, it needs to be called into account, both morally and legally.

On Sept. 29, 2023, Archbishop William E. Lori, of the Archdiocese of Baltimore (AOB), disclosed the…

View Cache

Pa. Gov. Shapiro uses $295K from taxpayers to settle sexual harassment claim against aide

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
PennLive.com

October 20, 2023

By Jan Murphy

Read original article

Gov. Josh Shapiro’s administration agreed to pay $295,000 in taxpayer funds to settle a sexual harassment complaint from a female former deputy secretary involving a former top aide in his office, according to documents obtained through the state’s Right to Know Law.

The 14-page document, signed on Sept. 5, stipulated that neither the commonwealth nor the governor’s office would be held liable for any wrongdoing regarding the allegations she made against Shapiro’s former Secretary of Legislative Affairs Mike Vereb.

The agreement contains a clause barring both sides from discussing the matter; however, it allows for the settlement to be released if there is a legal requirement, such as the Right to Know Law, to do so.

The settlement reached through the Pennsylvania Human Relations Commission mediation process closes the matter, barring any litigation or charges arising from the woman’s claims against the governor’s office. PennLive is…

View Cache

As sex abuse victims wait, insurance coverage holds up Buffalo Diocese bankruptcy case

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

October 20, 2023

By Jay Tokasz

Read original article

Rory Lott was just 8 years old when a priest allegedly molested him as he laid in a hospital bed with injuries from a car accident.

Lott healed from his physical injuries long ago, but he said he’s never been able to escape the mental torment over the abuse in 1966.

“It just changed me. I can’t describe it,” said Lott. “That scar is still there. It’s been with me over 50 years.”

Lott was also among an estimated 850 people who filed abuse claims against the Buffalo Diocese in its Chapter 11 bankruptcy case.

More than three years since the claims were filed, none of the abuse victims has been compensated as the diocese, its parishes and insurance carriers attempt to negotiate a settlement with abuse victims.

“I just want this over,” Lott said. “Everything’s at a standstill.”

All parties in the mediated talks are under a confidentiality agreement,…

View Cache

Liberty University president blasts leaked Education Department report that shows massive mishandling of abuse claims and disregard for safety protocols

LYNCHBURG (VA)
Baptist News Global [Jacksonville FL]

October 20, 2023

By Mark Wingfield

Read original article

Which is worse: That someone leaked a report alleging Liberty University has mishandled and covered up sexual abuse for years, or that Liberty University appears to have mishandled and covered up sexual abuse for years?

According to Liberty President Dondi Costin, the leak is an intentional effort to malign the Baptist school founded by televangelist Jerry Falwell Sr. And according to him and other supporters, this is further evidence of the Biden administration’s attacks on religious conservatives.

Cindy Warren, who is part of an alumni group seeking to hold the university accountable, tweeted Oct. 16 on X: “As one of the people who filed the first Clery Act complaint 18 years ago, I’m gonna go ahead and say this isn’t the government trying to make LU look bad. LU has done an excellent job of that on their own. I was a super Republican when we filed that report btw.”

Also,…

View Cache

Lawyer charges Vatican ‘trial of the century’ with seeking scapegoats

VATICAN CITY (VATICAN CITY)
Crux [Denver CO]

October 20, 2023

By Crux staff

Read original article

As the Vatican’s “trial of the century” lumbers towards its expected conclusion before the end of the year, it’s becoming increasingly clear that in rendering a verdict, the three-judge panel hearing the case isn’t just being to asked to choose between guilt or innocence for the ten defendants.

In fact, the judges are also facing a choice between two competing narratives, which, in summary form, might be expressed as “conspiracy” versus “ineptitude.”

On the one side is the story being told by chief prosecutor Alessandro Diddi, the Vatican’s Promoter of Justice, which is a tale of a large-scale criminal conspiracy to defraud the Vatican involving shady Italian financiers, corrupt Vatican officials and advisors, and, last but certainly not least, the pope’s own former chief of staff, Italian Cardinal Angelo Becciu.

On the other is the narrative propounded by the defense, and put in epigrammatic fashion yesterday by Cataldo Intrieri, a…

View Cache

October 20, 2023

Government is failing young sexual abuse victims, charity warns

LONDON (UNITED KINGDOM)
Morning Star [London, UK]

October 20, 2023

Read original article

THE government is failing young victims of sexual abuse through its “piecemeal” and “underwhelming” responses when issues are raised, a major children’s charity said today.

The NSPCC said there was “little sign of meaningful change” 12 months after the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA). The inquiry looked at 15 areas, scrutinising institutional responses to child sexual abuse – including investigations into abuse in Westminster and the Anglican and Catholic churches.

Earlier this year, IICSA chairwoman Professor Alexis Jay and panel members highlighted “deep concern at the government’s inadequate response” to their recommendations and predicted that action may be deferred indefinitely “for the sake of other political priorities.”

They suggested that the government had claimed to accept some of the inquiry’s recommendations “through what is little more than a very weak and, at times, apparently disingenuous official response.”

Responding to the report in May, Home Secretary Suella Braverman said…

View Cache

New evidence of abuse by Cardinal Hengsbach

ESSEN (GERMANY)
Katholisch.de [Bonn, Germany]

October 20, 2023

Read original article

They are connected to possible acts of abuse by the founder of the Ruhr bishopric and are of varying scope, according to the diocese of Essen: There are further clues in the Hengsbach case.

After the allegations of abuse against former Cardinal Franz Hengsbach became known, the diocese of Essen received ten more tips. A spokesman for the diocese confirmed a corresponding report by WDR on Friday. The information was related to possible acts of abuse by the founder of the Ruhr diocese and had different implications, the broadcaster quoted Vicar General Klaus Pfeffer as saying. They are taken very seriously. The contact persons of the diocese are currently holding talks with the whistleblowers.

In September, the (arch)dioceses of Essen and Paderborn made public two allegations of abuse against the former bishop and Cardinal Hengsbach (1910-1991). These refer to the 1950s and 1960s, but had only been reported later and…

View Cache

Caso Próvolo: se conocieron las razones de por qué absolvieron a la monja Kumiko y a otras mujeres por los abusos sexuales a niños sordos

(ARGENTINA)
Yahoo! [Sunnyvale CA]

October 20, 2023

By Pablo Mannino

Read original article

MENDOZA.– No deja de provocar sorpresa y reacciones dispares la decisión de la Justicia mendocina de absolver a las cinco mujeres imputadas por los abusos sexuales a chicos sordos en el ex instituto Antonio Próvolo. Ahora, tras confirmarse que las víctimas apelarán el fallo ante la Corte, tal como lo contó LA NACIÓN, se conocieron los fundamentos de la controversial sentencia en el “segundo megajuicio”. En tanto, la defensa de las acusadas puso en valor lo actuado por el tribunal que las dejó libres de culpa y cargo de los delitos, principalmente, de omisión de denunciar los vejámenes ocurridos en el colegio.

Lo que queda claro en el fallo de las magistradas, compuesto por 371 fojas, es que cuestionan con dureza la investigación realizada por los fiscales al tiempo que aseguran que hubo contaminación, y no “confabulación” de los relatos de los denunciantes y sus familiares.

LA NACIÓN accedió al documento original, aunque a pedido de…

View Cache
Sister Francoise Seguin, right, at St. Anne’s in Fort Albany in 1967. (Submitted by Evelyn Korkmaz [between the nuns])

Former St. Anne’s nun 8th person charged for alleged abuses at that residential school

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

October 19, 2023

By Brett Forester

Read original article

‘Many people will be relieved,’ says Former Fort Albany chief Edmund Metatawabin

[Includes a video with additional archival photos and interviews with survivor advocate Evelyn Korkmaz and Former Fort Albany chief Edmund Metatawabin. Photo above: Sister Francoise Seguin, right, at St. Anne’s in Fort Albany in 1967. (Submitted by Evelyn Korkmaz [who is between the two nuns].)

Some were remembered only by their nicknames.

They were brothers Big Nose and Pigskin, Hamburger Lips and Pinching Lady, sisters Grasshopper, Skunk and Pig — aliases and Cree epithets the children of St. Anne’s residential school in Fort Albany, Ont., gave their alleged abusers.

They’re among 180 alleged perpetrators listed by 152 survivors in 61 lawsuits, filed against the Canadian government and Catholic Church in the early 2000s. But in some cases, like those above, the now-adult children could only recall the nicknames.

“It’s really haunting, because you realize that these were names that were whispered among…

View Cache

Former West Berkshire GP Robin Borthwick ‘confessed historic child sexual abuse to monk’, court hears

READING (UNITED KINGDOM)
BerkshireLive [Reading, Berkshire, UK]

October 19, 2023

By Richard Lemmer

Read original article

The alleged sexual abuse took place during the 1970s and 1980s, a court has heard

A West Berkshire GP committed “intensely terrifying” sexual abuse on a young boy in the 1970s and 1980s – before allegedly making a confession to a monk years later, Reading Crown Court has heard. Dr Robin Borthwick, 78, is accused of historic sexual abuse, facing four counts of indecent assault on a boy under the age of 16, who cannot be named for legal reasons.

Dr Borthwick has been deemed unfit to stand trial due to his health and is absent from the trial of facts at the crown court, the jury were told as the case proceeded on Thursday. The court heard that Dr Borthwick allegedly sexually abused the boy at a GP surgery and in two other locations during the 1970s and 1980s.

Taking to the witness stand on Thursday (October 19) as…

View Cache

Former Christian Brother John Laidlaw, 84, given more jail time over further abuse against students

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

October 19, 2023

By Lexie Jeuniewic

Read original article

A notorious former Christian Brother has been sentenced for a second time after admitting to further historic abuse against boys at Catholic schools in Victoria.

Key points:

  • John Laidlaw, 84, will likely die in jail after being sentenced over further abuse of students at Christian Brothers College schools
  • Judge Helen Syme told the court Laidlaw’s crimes were an abuse of power and trust 
  • It is the second time Laidlaw has been sentenced over sexual offending against children

John Laidlaw, 84, appeared in the Melbourne County Court via video-link from prison today, after pleading guilty to nine charges — including indecent assault — arising from offending against students between 1966 and 1990.

During that time, Laidlaw was a teacher at a variety of Christian Brothers College (CBC) schools, including St Joseph’s at Warrnambool and St Kevin’s at Toorak, Melbourne.

The victims, who cannot be identified, were referred by Judge Helen Syme using pseudonyms.

The court heard the victims were…

View Cache

Diocese: Unable to reach settlement with Long Island clergy sex abuse survivors

ROCKVILLE CENTRE (NY)
Newsday [Melville NY]

October 19, 2023

By Bart Jones

Read original article

Three years after declaring bankruptcy, the Diocese of Rockville Centre said Thursday it had failed to reach a settlement with 600 survivors of clergy sexual abuse as an Oct. 31 court-imposed deadline crept closer.

The diocese said it had been offering the survivors an average of at least $400,000 each, but attorneys for the survivors said that was far too little. The attorneys said they expect the cases to now be sent back to state civil court, where awards could be even higher.

Legal fees in the protracted proceedings have reached $100 million, according to attorneys.

Sean Dolan, a spokesman for the diocese, said in a statement: “The Diocese, parishes, and related parties have made their highest and best settlement offer in the amount of $200 million” to be divided among the survivors.

“This offer would provide survivors with the largest settlement of any diocese in a chapter 11 bankruptcy case to date:…

View Cache

Linda M. Tiburzi, one of many victims abused by John Merzbacher and advocate for children, dies

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

October 20, 2023

By Frederick N. Rasmussen

Read original article

Linda Malat Tiburzi, one of a dozen victims abused by Catholic Community Middle School teacher John Merzbacher in the 1970s who in the aftermath of her vicious assault and life of turbulence went on to become an advocate for victims of such abuse, was found dead Oct. 17 in her Glen Burnie home. She was 62.

“We think it was a heart attack,” Dianna C. Hughes, Ms. Tiburzi’s aunt who helped raise her, said.

“She was an amazing and a very talented and smart person and I don’t think people realized that the abuse took all of that away from her,” Mrs. Hughes, of Locust Point, said. “She was a very giving person and had a heart that wanted to help people.”

Linda Marie Malat was born in Baltimore and raised in Locust Point. After her mother left the family, she was reared by her grandparents and aunt.

“We have…

View Cache
Paul Jan Zdunek at a Boy Scouts awards dinner at Bishop John Neumann School in 1977 with his mother, Carole Hines.

Facing sex abuse claims, the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts filed for bankruptcy. One man vows both will pay.

BALTIMORE (MD)
Baltimore Sun [Baltimore MD]

October 20, 2023

By Jean Marbella

Read original article

[Photo above: Paul Jan Zdunek at a Boy Scouts awards dinner at Bishop John Neumann School in 1977 with his mother, Carole Hines.]

As a divorced mother in the 1970s, Carole Hines was happy to drive her son to camping trips with the Boy Scouts or host parties in their home for his men and boys’ choir. Both the troop and the choir were affiliated with the Catholic school he attended in Highlandtown, which she herself had gone to as a child.

“I thought, ‘He has male role models,’” Hines recalled. “I was so oblivious.”

These days, the Boy Scouts and the Catholic Church no longer command such unquestioned trust. Both are in the throes of a reckoning over decades of child sex abuse committed by troop leaders, clergy, teachers and others affiliated with them, and the institutions’ role in enabling and covering it up.

The Boy Scouts…

View Cache

Letter to Cardinal Pierre

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
DavidClohessy.com [St. Louis MO]

October 19, 2023

By David Clohessy

Read original article

Oct. 19, 2023
His Eminence Christophe Cardinal Pierre
Papal Nuncio
3339 Massachusetts Ave NW
Washington, DC 20008

Dear Cardinal Pierre:

“The Diocese of Springfield’s handling of child sex abuse allegations is a story of failed leadership—leadership that allowed clerics to sexually abuse children in the diocese for decades. Through it all, men leading the diocese for 50 years chose to protect the reputation of the church and its clerics, rather than attempt to ensure the physical and mental well-being of its children.”

“As a result, children of the diocese suffered through decades of child sex abuse, the impact of which continues to this day.”

So wrote Illinois’ highest ranking law enforcement professional, Attorney General Kwame Raoul, following a nearly five-year investigation into clergy sex crimes and cover ups across the state.
Into this horrific situation stepped Bishop Thomas Paprocki twelve years ago. He knew Springfield had been a troubled diocese. (In fact, one of his…

View Cache

‘Something in me died following the abuse:’ Two alleging clergy abuse speak out publicly

SPRINGFIELD (IL)
State Journal-Register [Springfield IL]

October 20, 2023

By Steven Spearie

Read original article

In the early 1990s, Stephen Stack of Troy began to study for the priesthood in the Springfield Catholic Diocese.

After receiving his master of divinity degree from Mundelein Seminary but before he was ordained, Stack entered a psychological program to address problems of social anxiety and depression.

There he was first able to address his own history of sexual abuse.

He detailed for the first time publicly Thursday a succession of sexual abuse starting by his brother three years older than Stack, now 61. That brother had been allegedly sexually abused by a deacon in the family’s church, Sacred Heart in Granite City.

Another younger brother, Stack said, was sexually abused by the Rev. William Weerts, a priest of the diocese who in 1986 pleaded guilty to sexual abuse charges and was sentenced to six years in prison.

Stack, speaking at a Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests press conference in front…

View Cache

High court to rule on Catholic church’s liability for abuse committed by paedophile priests

(AUSTRALIA)
The Guardian [London, England]

October 19, 2023

By Christopher Knaus

Read original article

Church has been granted special leave to appeal Victorian judgment that found Ballarat diocese was vicariously liable for abuse of child

The Catholic church has won the right to challenge in the high court a landmark Victorian ruling forcing the church to take on greater liability for the actions of paedophile priests within its ranks.

In the past two years, the Victorian courts have delivered and upheld an unprecedented ruling that the Ballarat diocese was vicariously liable for the abuse of a five-year-old child known as DP at the hands of assistant priest Father Bryan Coffey.

Vicarious liability is typically used to hold employers responsible for the wrongful or negligent actions of their employees during the course of their employment – even where there is no fault on the part of the employer.

The church, however, has long argued that priests like Coffey were not formal employees, allowing it to dodge…

View Cache

Diskussion zum Fall Hengsbach: “Er hatte eine enorme Macht-Aura”

ESSEN (GERMANY)
Westdeutscher Rundfunk Köln (WDR) [Cologne, Germany]

October 20, 2023

By Jana Brauer

Read original article

Jahrzehntelang galt der verstorbene Kardinal Franz Hengsbach als Ikone im Bistum Essen. Dann werden Missbrauchsvorwürfe öffentlich. Ein Fall, der viele bewegt und einmal mehr die Frage aufwirft: Ist die Kirche noch zu retten? Darüber wurde am Donnerstagabend in Essen im WDR 5 Stadtgespräch diskutiert.

“Ich war 25 Jahre alt, als Kardinal Hengsbach auf dem Essener Burgplatz Gottesdienste gehalten hat. Die Leute schwärmten herbei, das weiß ich noch”, erinnert sich eine Frau im Publikum. In ihrer Stimme schwingen hörbar Emotionen mit. Der verstorbene Kardinal Franz Hengsbach, von dem hier die Rede ist, galt bislang als Ikone des Ruhrbistums. Vor wenigen Wochen wurden Missbrauchsvorwürfe gegen ihn öffentlich. Ein Schock für viele Menschen. Nicht nur im Ruhrgebiet. An diesem Donnerstagabend wird genau über diesen Fall beim WDR 5 Stadtgespräch diskutiert.

Etwa 40 Menschen sitzen mit Blick auf eine kleine Bühne in einem Raum der Essener Volkshochschule. Das Gebäude befindet sich mitten in der Essener Innenstadt, unweit…

View Cache

October 19, 2023

Caso Próvolo: “Estamos totalmente sorprendidos, angustiados y con desazón”

(ARGENTINA)
CNN [Atlanta GA]

October 19, 2023

By CNN Radio Argentina

Read original article

(CNN Radio Argentina) – El abogado de los abusados Sergio Salinas afirmó este jueves en CNN Radio que “estamos totalmente sorprendidos, angustiados y con desazón” luego de que las nueve mujeres imputadas por abusos sexuales contra niños hipoacúsicos en el Instituto Próvolo de Mendoza fueran absueltas después de dos años de debate oral.

Sucede que este miércoles el Tribunal Penal Colegiado 2 de la provincia de Mendoza decidió absolver a las monjas Kumiko Kosaka y Asunción Martínez, así como a siete exdirectoras y empleadas del Instituto.

En Los Primeros de la Tarde, con Adrián Puente, Salinas expresó: “Estamos totalmente sorprendidos, angustiados y con desazón. No esperábamos ni teníamos la respuesta esperada”.

“No porque somos caprichosos, sino porque desde el punto de vista probatorio hay una múltiple cantidad de pruebas. Es llamativo”, aclaró el abogado querellante.

Además, indicó que “profesionalmente hablando, tengo que tragar saliva”, aunque advirtió que “la Justicia está compuesta por varios escalones y el primero es…

View Cache

“Vergüenza mundial”: indignación de las víctimas de abusos en el Próvolo por el fallo que absolvió a monjas y exempleadas

(ARGENTINA)
La Nación [Argentina]

October 19, 2023

By Pablo Mannino

Read original article

La Justicia de Mendoza liberó de responsabilidad a las religiosas Kumiko Kosaka y Asunción Martínez; a las exdirectivas Graciela Pascual y Gladys Pinacca, y a la cocinera Noemí Paz; dos curas y un jardinero habían sido condenados por los vejámenes a alumnos sordos.

MENDOZA.– “Ahora nadie sabía nada”, “Vergüenza mundial”, “No tienen cara”, “Pura indignación y dolor”, “Lamentable, todo fundamentalismo e ideología”, “Es una decepción gigante”, “Una tristeza inmensa”, “La Justicia nos sigue revictimizando”, “Un asco todo”, “No pararemos hasta llegar a la más alta instancia judicial”. 

Estas son algunas de las reacciones de las víctimas de los abusos sexuales cometidos en el ex-Instituto Antonio Próvolo de Mendoza tras conocerse ayer la sorpresiva sentencia en el “segundo megajuicio”, que absolvió a las cinco imputadas por, principalmente, encubrimiento y omisión de las denuncias. Además, el tribunal eximió de pena a la monja Kumiko Kosaka, quien estaba acusada de ser autora de vejámenes, por los que arriesgaba 25 años de…

View Cache

Qué pasó en el Próvolo

(ARGENTINA)
La Nación [Argentina]

October 19, 2023

Read original article

Esta semana se conocieron las sentencias a cinco acusadas de encubrir o facilitar abusos a menores hipoacúsicos que asistían al establecimiento.

El exinstituto Antonio Próvolo de Mendoza fue el escenario de numerosas denuncias de abuso de sexual de menores por parte de sacerdotes, religiosas y personal del establecimiento en perjuicio de niños sordomudos que asistían a esa institución. A raíz de las acusaciones se realizaron dos megajuicios, dada la cantidad de testimonios, la duración de los debates y el tratamiento judicial que se le supo dar a la causa que concentró la atención pública.

Ahora, durante el debate del segundo juicio, resultaron absueltas de los cargoscinco religiosas y exdirectivas del instituto, acusadas principalmente de encubrir, facilitar o haber omitido denunciar los vejámenes cometidos por sacerdotes y personal del establecimiento.

En esta instancia quedaron absueltas las monjas Kumiko Kosaka y Asunción Martínez; las exdirectoras y empleadas del instituto Graciela PascualGladys Pinacca y la cocinera Noemí Paz.

Aunque inicialmente eran nueve imputadas, quedaron afuera del…

View Cache

Sacerdote expulsado del estado clerical y prófugo de la Justicia es buscado por Interpol

SAN MARTíN (ARGENTINA)
ACI Prensa [Lima, Peru]

October 19, 2023

By Julieta Villar

Read original article

El argentino Carlos Eduardo José, expulsado del estado clerical y prófugo de la Justicia desde el pasado 22 de agosto, cuando debía presentarse para recibir su condena por abuso sexual de una menor, es buscado por la Organización Internacional de Policía Criminal (Interpol).

Sobre él pesa una “circular roja” con orden de detención por agresión sexual, agravada por su condición de “ministro de culto y por encontrarse en la guarda de la víctima”.

Dicha circular, con fecha 29 de agosto, determina que Carlos Eduardo José es un prófugo “buscado para un proceso penal” a cargo de la Justicia argentina. A él “se le atribuye haber abusado sexualmente de M.G.” en el domicilio de la víctima, “aprovechándose del temor que le infundía ante la situación de autoridad eclesiástica y escolar que ostentaba, que le impedían consentir y resistir tales embates”.

Por su delito, iba a recibir una condena el pasado 22…

View Cache

Mendoza court acquits nuns in Próvolo deaf children sex abuse case

MENDOZA (ARGENTINA)
Buenos Aires Times [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

October 19, 2023

Read original article

[Expanded version of an article posted earlier today in Abuse Tracker]

Nuns from the Antonio Próvolo Institute, investigated for sexual abuse of deaf children, acquitted by court; Victims’ lawyers criticise court and say they will appeal.

Two nuns and seven other female employees accused of complicity in years of sexual abuse of minors at the Antonio Próvolo Institute for Deaf and Hearing Impaired Children in Mendoza Province were acquitted by a court Wednesday of sexual abuse and rape.

The ruling, broadcast on public television, concluded a trial of two-and-a-half years in a case that has shocked the home country of Pope Francis.

This is the second trial in the case for crimes committed between 2004 and 2016 at the Próvolo Institute. In November 2019, Horacio Corbacho and Nicola Corradi, two priests in charge of children at the centre, were jailed for more than 40 years each for sexual abuse, including…

View Cache

Deerfield Academy reaches 6th sexual abuse settlement against former math teacher

DEERFIELD (MA)
The Republican - MassLive [Springfield MA]

October 18, 2023

By Luis Fieldman

Read original article

Deerfield Academy recently reached a six-figure settlement with a former student who brought claims of sexual abuse by a math teacher during the late 1980s — the latest in over a dozen similar claims settled by the prestigious New England boarding school.

The former male student claimed that Peter Hindle, a Deerfield faculty member from 1956 to 2000 and now deceased, sexually abused him at least 20 times by repeatedly climbing through his dorm room’s window when he was about 16 years old, according to the former student’s lawyer Mitchell Garabedian on Wednesday.

The former student was not identified, but Garabedian said that the abuse happened between 1989 and 1990 and that the prep school did not take action after the former student told his counselor of the abuse. The settlement was described as being in the “low six figures.”

Deerfield Academy in a statement said…

View Cache

How the Catholic Church’s crash in Poland brought down the Law and Justice party

WARSAW (POLAND)
Religion News Service - Missouri School of Journalism [Columbia MO]

October 18, 2023

By Anna Piela

Read original article

With an exodus of young people, the Polish church may be facing the ‘Irish scenario.’

In Poland’s parliamentary elections this month, Law and Justice, the right-wing populist party that has ruled the country for the last eight years, still got the biggest share of votes nationwide, with 35%, but not enough to keep the party in power, even with the help of its natural partner, the far-right libertarian Confederation party’s 7%. Instead, Law and Justice’s main opposition, the Civic Coalition, led by Donald Tusk, announced its plans to create a coalition government with the New Left and the Third Way parties, which got the support of 54% of voters.

The three parties’ coalition will likely push through significant changes in the political landscape, reversing polarizing Law and Justice measures on immigration and reproductive rights. But this turnabout was prefaced, and probably caused, by a watershed shift in the once unassailable position…

View Cache

Argentina court acquits nuns in deaf children sex abuse case

MENDOZA (ARGENTINA)
Agence France Presse [Paris, France]

October 19, 2023

Read original article

Two nuns and seven other female employees of an Argentine institute for deaf children were acquitted by a court Wednesday of sexual abuse and rape.

The ruling, broadcast on public television, concluded a trial of two-and-a-half years in a case that has shocked the home country of Pope Francis.

Two priests in charge of children at the Antonio Provolo center — Horacio Corbacho and Nicola Corradi —  have been convicted and handed sentences of more than 40 years each for sexual abuse, including rape, of some 20 minors.

The victims were aged four to 17 when the crimes were committed from 2004 to the closure of the institute in 2016.

The institution’s gardener, Armando Gomez, has also been jailed for 18 years for sexual abuse, and a former altar boy pleaded guilty to the sexual abuse of five children.

Several staff were taken into custody after allegations of abuse first…

View Cache

Cameroonian Rapist Priest ‘Rehabilitated’

BUEA (CAMEROON)
Church Militant [Ferndale MI]

October 16, 2023

By Matthew David

Read original article

Interpretation of canon law allows rapists to go free after short period of ‘prayer and penance’

A ruling from the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith has placed a rapist priest back on the job in Africa, and canon law helped that to happen.

On July 1, 2023, Fr. Hilary Ngome, who confessed to raping at least one 13-year-old girl, was fully returned to ministry by a Vatican decree, according to Bp. Michael Miabesue Bibi, prelate of the Buéa diocese in Cameroon. He announced the decree in a public letter dated Aug. 23, 2023.

Priest Admits to Rape

According to an affidavit from the family, in August of 2018, Fr. Ngome, then a parish priest of St. Martin de Porres Parish in Likomba, asked a young girl to clean his residence. When she came to clean his room, he forced her onto the bed and raped her.

View Cache

Question looms over Baltimore pastor’s ouster: How does a monk come up with $200K?

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

October 19, 2023

By Jessica Calefati and Tim Prudente

Read original article

Questions are swirling among parishioners at Saint Benedict Church in Baltimore after the removal of their longtime pastor over a secret $200,000 settlement he paid five years ago.

Was their leader falsely accused? How can they clear his name? What does the future hold for the historic parish in Southwest Baltimore?

Another question looms large over the controversy. How does a monk come up with $200,000?

The Rev. Paschal Morlino paid the money through a private attorney to a man who accused him of fraud and sexual assault. The Archdiocese of Baltimore removed Morlino for not disclosing the settlement, and church officials are now investigating the source of the money.

In a wide-ranging, 90-minute interview with The Banner last week, Morlino confirmed the payment while denying the allegations against him. He has not been charged with a crime.When asked where the settlement money came from, he offered…

View Cache

B.C. lawsuit tied to Mount Cashel heading out of court — in stark contrast to N.L. cases

ST. JOHN'S (CANADA)
CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corporation) [Toronto, Canada]

October 19, 2023

By Ryan Cooke

Read original article

John Doe #50 wanted to live to see justice.

He sat on his bed across from me with weathered hands resting on tired legs. The sun beamed through the bedroom window behind him, hiding his teary eyes with a darkened silhouette.

It had been 70 years since he was thrown to the wolves at the Mount Cashel Orphanage in St. John’s, but he could still close his eyes and go to that place without a moment’s notice. 

We spoke in December 2020, as the country’s top court was mulling the question of whether the Catholic church should be responsible for the abuses of the Christian Brothers who ran the orphanage. 

He’d been waiting for that answer since 1999, when he was one of four men to step forward as lead plaintiffs in a class-action lawsuit seeking to hold the church responsible.

“There’s a lot of our guys who have died,”…

View Cache

What’s the future for Buffalo Catholic elementary schools?

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News [Buffalo NY]

October 19, 2023

By Ben Tsujimoto

Read original article

There’s reason for concern about the future of Catholic elementary education in Western New York.

Strains are well-publicized – present and future litigation and settlement costs of the bankruptcy case following 900 sex abuse claims against the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, a significant decrease in subsidies by the diocese and steep enrollment declines over the last decade – but the extent of the anxiety is open to debate among current and past leadership in the diocese’s education sphere.

Their general mission is the same: that a faith-based Catholic education remains available for Western New York children amid a time of turmoil and rebuilding trust within the Catholic Church.

But they do not agree how to get there.

Michael LaFever, retired superintendent of Catholic schools in the Buffalo Diocese, paints a bleak picture that recently closed schools in Wellsville and  View Cache

The Archdiocese of Chicago to Hold 12th Annual Hope and Healing Mass

CHICAGO (IL)
Archdiocese of Chicago IL

October 18, 2023

Read original article

Church of the Holy Family will host the Mass on Saturday, Oct. 21, 2023 at 10 a.m.

The Archdiocese of Chicago’s Office of Assistance Ministry will hold its 12th Annual Hope and Healing Mass at 10 a.m., on Saturday, Oct. 21, 2023, at Church of the Holy Family, 1080 W. Roosevelt Rd. in Chicago. (editor’s note: to protect the privacy of victim-survivors who will attend the Mass, media are asked to not film or photograph their faces).

“From my earliest days as a bishop, I have been committed to putting the victims at the center of my ministry and I will continue to apply the highest level of vigilance to these efforts and to further strengthen our safeguards against abuse,” said Cardinal Blase Cupich, archbishop of Chicago. “On behalf of the archdiocese, survivors of clergy sexual abuse will forever be in our prayers, and we have dedicated ourselves to rooting out…

View Cache

Boy Scouts’ bankruptcy judge approves nearly $250 million in fees

DALLAS (TX)
Reuters [London, England]

October 18, 2023

By Dietrich Knauth

Read original article

The Boy Scouts of America has received a U.S. bankruptcy judge’s approval to pay about $245 million in fees to lawyers and financial advisers who crafted the youth organization’s $2.46 billion settlement of sex abuse claims.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Laurie Selber Silverstein in Wilmington, Delaware, late on Tuesday mostly approved final fee applications from more than two dozen law firms and advisers who worked on the bankruptcy case. The overall bankruptcy fees could end up closer to $275 million, based on outstanding requests for payment from other groups that participated in the bankruptcy.

Silverstein had decried the “staggering” legal fees racked up in the case in 2021, when the number crossed the $100 million threshold.

White & Case, which served as lead counsel during the Boy Scouts’ bankruptcy, received the highest fee award, at $71 million. Pachulski Stang Ziehl & Jones, which represented the official committee of abuse claimants, received…

View Cache
Linda Malat Tiburzi says a prayer and lights candles in honor of a friend and former classmate, Eddie Blair, who died before the trial of their former teacher in January 2023. Tiburzi, who dedicated her life to supporting abuse survivors, died Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023, at age 62. (Kaitlin Newman / The Baltimore Banner)

Linda Malat Tiburzi, abuse survivor and advocate, dies at 62

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Baltimore Banner [Baltimore MD]

October 18, 2023

By Julie Scharper

Read original article

[Photo above: Linda Malat Tiburzi says a prayer and lights candles in honor of a friend and former classmate, Eddie Blair, who died before the trial of their former teacher in January 2023. Tiburzi, who dedicated her life to supporting abuse survivors, died Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2023, at age 62. (Kaitlin Newman/The Baltimore Banner)]

Linda Malat Tiburzi, who turned the trauma of being raped as a girl by a Catholic middle school teacher into a life of advocacy for abuse survivors, died Tuesday, according to family and friends. She was 62.

“The focus of her life was to protect children and to be a voice for survivors who couldn’t speak out. She was a fierce advocate,” said Liz Murphy, her friend of 50 years. “There will never be anyone else like her. She was my sister warrior.”

The two women fought a long and often dispiriting battle for…

View Cache

State Secretariat lawyers challenge Becciu criminal defense

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

October 19, 2023

Read original article

To defend itself from a lawsuit, the Vatican Secretariat of State made an argument Wednesday that could cause problems for the criminal defense efforts of former secretariat official Cardinal Angelo Becciu.  

The secretariat’s lawyers argued that since 2015, the department’s finances were subject to oversight from the Vatican’s auditor general, who was appointed by Pope Francis.

The problem?

In his criminal trial, Cardinal Angelo Becciu has argued the opposite.

Lawyers for the Vatican Secretariat of State argued in court Oct. 18 that that the Holy’s See’s auditor general held legal oversight of the secretariat’s financial affairs, from the time an auditor was appointed in 2015. 

The concession came during the closing hearing of a lawsuit filed against the department by Libero Milone, the former auditor general of the Vatican, who was forced to resign in 2017 after being accused by Cardinal Angelo Becciu of “spying” on the private financial affairs…

View Cache

October 18, 2023

Dos monjas y otras siete mujeres absueltas de abusos sexuales a niños sordos en Argentina

(ARGENTINA)
UDGTV Canal 44 [Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico]

October 18, 2023

By AFP

Read original article

Nueve acusadas en un caso de abuso sexual y violación de niños sordos de un internado católico de Mendoza, entre ellas dos monjas, fueron absueltas el miércoles de todos los cargos.

Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Nueve acusadas en un caso de abuso sexual y violación de niños sordos de un internado católico de Mendoza, entre ellas dos monjas, fueron absueltas el miércoles de todos los cargos, informó la justicia.

Un tribunal penal dictó las absoluciones tras dos años y medio de un proceso cuestionado por familiares de las víctimas, niños de entre 4 y 17 años desde 2004 en el instituto católico Antonio Próvolo, cerrado en 2016.

  • En dos juicios anteriores, en 2018 y 2019, fueron condenados los sacerdotes Nicola Corradi, a 42 años de cárcel, y Horacio Corbacho (a 44 años) y el exjardinero del internado Armando Gómez Bravo (a 18 años). Corradi, de nacionalidad italiana, murió en 2022 a los 84 años.

Este tercer juicio involucró los abusos a…

View Cache

Caso Próvolo: absolvieron a las nueve imputadas por los abusos

(ARGENTINA)
Infobae [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

October 18, 2023

Read original article

En el banquillo había dos monjas, ex directoras y empleadas del Instituto. La decisión fue del Tribunal Penal Colegiado 2 de la provincia de Mendoza

Todas las imputadas por los delitos de abusos en el Instituto Próvolo fueron absueltas,este miércoles, en el juicio oral que se les siguió en el ámbito del Tribunal Penal Colegiado 2 de la provincia de Mendoza.

Se trata de las monjas Kumiko Kosaka y Asunción Martínez, así como ex directoras y empleadas del Instituto: Graciela Pascual y Gladys Pinacca; la cocinera Noemí Paz, Valeska Quintana, Laura Gateán, Cristina Leguiza y la psicóloga Cecilia Raffo.

El veredicto se conoció en horas del mediodía tras más de dos años de debate, en los que pasaron más 100 testigos en unas 300 audiencias, en el marco del tercer debate por abusos sexuales y omisión de denuncias por abusos que había comenzado el 3 de mayo de 2021.

En este sentido, las juezas Gabriela Urciuolo, Belén Salido y Belén Renna, a cargo del Tribunal Penal Colegiado 2 mendocino, consideraron que las…

View Cache

Manifestación en el Obispado por justicia en casos Rasgido-López Márquez

CATAMARCA (ARGENTINA)
El Esquiu [Catamarca, Argentina]

October 18, 2023

Read original article

Familiares y amigos de víctimas de abuso sexual eclesiástico se

manifestaron frente al Obispado para reclamar justicia bajo el lema

“Los abusos sexuales no prescriben”.

La concentración se llevó a cabo en un primer momento en la plaza 25

de Mayo, luego marcharon hacia uno de los edificios del Poder Judicial

para concluir la marcha en el Obispado.

En este marco, Daniel Blanes, principal referente del MST, fue el vocero

de esta manifestación, y entre los conceptos esgrimidos solicitó “la

celeridad de la justicia” para llevar al banquillo de los acusados a los

sacerdotes denunciados por abuso. También la “separación Iglesia –

Estado”.

Renato Rasguido y Eduardo López Márquez son dos sacerdotes que

están imputados por varios casos de abuso sexual con acceso carnal

agravado por ser ministros de un culto.

View Cache