ABUSE TRACKER

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

September 17, 2023

Pope Francis defrocks Filipino priest accused of sexual abuse

BORONGAN CITY (PHILIPPINES)
CBCP News Service (Catholic Bishops of the Philippines)

September 23, 2023

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By CBCP News

September 17, 2023

Pope Francis has expelled a Filipino priest for sexual abuse involving minors.

The pope’s decision dismissing Pio Aclon from the clerical state was announced Sunday by the Diocese of Borongan where the priest was incardinated.

“He is, therefore, no longer a cleric and cannot exercise priestly ministry in the Church,” the diocese wrote in a circular.

This advisory was read today in all parish churches, chaplaincies and chapels of the diocese.

The circular, however, stopped short of providing further details about the priest.

Aclon last served at a minor seminary in Borongan before the diocese suspended him from his clerical duties.

Pope Francis has repeatedly apologized over the abuses, and vowed to confront abusers and restore justice.

The Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines had assured there will be no cover-up on the sexual abuse cases involving the clergy.

The CBCP has also created…

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January 16, 2021

Priest acquitted of rape charges

SAN FERNANDO (PHILIPPINES)
Punto Central Luzon [San Fernando, Pampanga province, Philippines]

January 30, 2021

By Bong Lacson 

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CITY OF SAN FERNANDO – The Archdiocese of San Fernando announced Saturday the acquittal of a member of its clergy of rape charges that “caused him undue dishonor and discredit” for about two years.

“We wholeheartedly welcome the acquittal of Rev. Fr. Daniel Alvarado Baul of the charge of two counts of rape… issued by the Regional Trial Court, Third Division, Branch 61, Angeles City,” declared Circular Letter No. 5, Series of 2021 dated Jan. 30, 2021 signed by San Fernando Archbishop Florentino G. Lavarias.

Baul was charged for violation of Article 266-A Paragraph 1 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by RA 8353) in the Criminal Case No. R-ANG-19–01969-CR and R-ANG-19-01970-CR, the circular said.

It did not give any specifics of the cases. Media reports of the case sometime in July 2019 mentioned only the alleged victim as a 17-year-old girl and the abuse Baul’s acquittal was “due to lack of evidence.”

“Based on the court decision, Fr. Baul was cleared of the charges…because the complainant did not come to court to testify to prove her accusations against Fr. Baul despite the subpoenas and bench warrant issued by the court against her,” the circular read.

It called the court decision a vindication of the priest’s innocence “which he has consistently maintained throughout his legal ordeal.”

The archdiocese expressed hope the acquittal “to finally clear the air of whatever malicious imputations made against Fr. Baul which have caused him undue dishonor and discredit and unfortunately besmirched his reputation and integrity as a member of the clergy of the Archdiocese of San Fernando.”

With him acquitted, Baul has been reinstated and allowed to continue with his priestly ministry.

The archbishop thanked the priest’s lawyers for their legal assistance and his family and friends for their support and prayers.

This, even as he urged the faithful to pray “for those who concocted these false charges and wish them peace.”

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

January 14, 2020

Cleared in sex abuse case, healing priest wants bishops to lift ban

(PHILIPPINES)
ABS-CBN [Quezon City, Philippines]

January 14, 2020

By Christian V. Esguerra

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MANILA — A Filipino priest, known for his supposed ability to heal and even raise people from the dead, said bishops should now lift their ban, citing the Vatican’s findings that he was “not guilty” of sexually abusing minors.

Fr. Fernando Suarez, 53, said there was no more reason to prevent him from practicing his healing ministry in at least 4 dioceses that earlier shut their doors on him and members of his Missionaries of Mary Mother of the Poor (MMP).

He said many other bishops had not allowed him in their dioceses since the complaint was lodged more than 5 years ago.

The Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), last December, ruled that Suarez had been “falsely accused” of sexual abuse, according to a decree of notification signed by Bishop Antonio Tobias, who heads the Philippine Catholic Church’s National Tribunal of Appeals.

“Nothing now stands in the way for him to exercise his healing ministry, provided it is done properly in coordination with the ecclesiastical authority of every ecclesiastical jurisdiction,” Tobias wrote on Jan. 6, citing the order by Archbishop Giacomo Morandi, secretary of the CDF.

ABS-CBN News could not reach Tobias. But Suarez provided a copy of the document and described the ruling as “a big redemption on my part.”

LIFT BAN

“They should lift my ban,” Suarez told ABS-CBN News, referring to dioceses where he was barred — Cubao, Lingayen-Dagupan, Malolos, and Malaybalay.

“Kung alam mo lang (If you only knew) what I went through,” he added, citing the “ordeal of mental torture, calumny, gossips, especially among… bishops and priests.”

It was not clear why the 4 dioceses kept him away.

But aside from the case, there were also issues raised about his incardination (attachment to a diocese), ABS-CBN News learned.

Every cleric is required under canon law to be “incardinated either in a particular church or personal prelature, or in an institute of consecrated life or society endowed with this faculty, in such a way that unattached or transient clerics are not allowed at all.”

A decree of notification signed by Bishop Antonio Tobias, head of the Philippine Catholic Church’s National Tribunal of Appeals, shows the “not guilty” verdict by a Vatican body on healing priest Fernando Suarez. Photo courtesy of Fr. Fernando Suarez

Suarez was incardinated to San Jose, Occidental Mindoro under then Bishop Antonio Palang on March 31, 2011, said Bishop William Antonio, the current administrator of the apostolic vicariate.

“For a priest to exercise ministry in another territory, he needs the permission of the bishop of the place. For one reason or another, the bishop may not allow a priest to exercise ministry in his territory,” Antonio told ABS-CBN News.

“I cannot give you more information on his case because there are aspects beyond my power and authority,” he added, pointing instead to Tobias who handled the case.

Suarez said he later moved (excardinated or released to a new diocese) and was incardinated to the Diocese of Tagum in 2017. “Never in my life na wala akong diocese (that I did not have a diocese),” he said.

‘POWER PLAY’

Suarez said the sexual abuse case was triggered by a complaint from a sacristan and his friend in San Jose, Occidental Mindoro. Details of the case were kept strictly confidential under church rules.

Both the Vatican ruling and Tobias’ letter did not say why Suarez had been exonerated. Suarez said his 2 accusers had recanted their statements.

Suarez said there appeared to be “someone behind” the complaint, adding that it might have had something to do with a “power play.” He did not elaborate.

“Parang pina-project. Parang may crusade against me. (It’s as if I was targeted, like there was a crusade against me.)”

It remains to be seen if his exoneration can also help put to rest other controversies surrounding his healing ministry.

RAISING THE DEAD

Retired Archbishop Oscar Cruz earlier questioned Suarez’s supposed “gift” to bring dead people back to life, telling this reporter in a previous interview that only Jesus Christ could do that.

Suarez said he never actually saw for himself the dead rise right after a healing session.

He said he was only told of such stories afterward by witnesses, such as this doctor whose patient suffered a cardiac arrest but supposedly came back to life around 5 years ago.

“Meron din ako sa Canada na tatanggalin na ang mga mata e. E pri-nay over ko. Nabuhay din,” said Suarez, who claimed to have sprung “3 to 4” people back to life as told by various witnesses.

(There was this case in Canada, whose eye was about to be taken out. The person came back to life after my pray-over.)

EXTRAVAGANT

A number of priests spoke with ABS-CBN News, pointing to Suarez’s supposed image within church circles as one with an “extravagant lifestyle” and many rich and powerful friends.

“I don’t think my lifestyle is extravagant,” said Suarez, who’s known to wear simple clothes according to a fellow priest.

Suarez said he was aware of criticism of his healing ministry, the worst being that his gift “came from the devil and I’m making money out of it.”

“Paano ko to pagka-kwartahan? Eh lahat ng collection, iniiwan ko sa simbahan. Kung gusto nyo, ‘wag na lang mag-collection,” he said.

(How can I earn money off it? All collections, I leave in the church. If you want, I’ll stop collections.)

During the interview on Monday, Suarez described Ramon Ang, head of food and infrastructure conglomerate San Miguel Corp, as a friend.

Suarez said Ang recounted how tycoon Eduardo “Danding” Cojuangco Jr. had been “healed” after the priest prayed over him before.

The priest said he usually made friends afterward with those who benefited from his healing ministry, but did not seek them out. Many of them happened to be wealthy, raising eyebrows among his fellow priests.

“Hindi ko naman kasalanan na maging kaibigan ko sila. Mabubuti rin naman silang mga tao… nangangailangan rin sila ng spirituality,” he said, describing them as “good, real friends” until now.

(It’s not my fault that they’re my friends. They’re good people too… who also need spirituality.)

“I have lots of friends, rich and poor alike.”

TENNIS

Among priests, he organizes a yearly tournament in the Philippines called “Fr. Fernando Suarez Tennis Cup,” which is also staged in countries like Poland, attracting participants from at least 15 nations.

Proceeds went to poor parishes, he said.

An avid tennis player, Suarez acknowledged that he regularly watches international tournaments such as the French Open.

But he said he began doing so only after he “healed” an international tennis official, who eventually converted to Catholicism and has since been covering expenses for such trips.

“Ever since, libre nya. Sya ang sumasagot,” he said. “Yung iba naman, may mga kaibigan ako sa abroad.”

(It’s been free ever since. The official shoulders the cost. For the other trips, I have friends abroad.)

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

July 25, 2019

Former altar boys file abuse complaint

CEBU CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Gulf News [Dubai, United Arab Emirates]

July 25, 2019

By A Correspondent

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Four former altar boys asked the Catholic Church in central Philippines to dismiss a priest whom they accuse of sexual molestation in 2000, adding that they will take the case to the lower court if no action is taken this year.

Four former altar boys asked the Catholic Church in central Philippines to dismiss a priest whom they accuse of sexual molestation in 2000, adding that they will take the case to the lower court if no action is taken this year.

In a letter to Cebu Archbishop, Cardinal Ricardo Vidal, dated July 17, the accusers, now in their 20s, asked the Augustinian Order “to remove Father Apolinario Mejorada from any and all pastoral duties that involve contact in any manner with children until such time as he is certified to have been rehabilitated”.

They also asked the accused and the Order of Saint Augustine, which was established in the 16th century, “to make a formal apology to each of us”.

One of them, Christian “Dong” Bejedia, 21, told Gulf News in a phone interview that he was 16 when Mejorada, now 50, molested him, when he was an altar boy at the Basilica Minore del Santo Nino in Cebu City, from 1997 to 2000.

The same priest allegedly sexually abused three other altar boys, separately on different occasions from 1995 to 2000. They are Jun Duhaylungsod, Cerrone Dayo, and Michal Gathchalian. They were signatories to the letter sent to Cardinal Vidal.

Three of them were given $2,400 (P 120,000) each, or a total of $ 7,200(P 360,000), to keep silent when they brought the scandal to the attention of the local church hierarchy in 2000. One of them was in the U.S. when the amicable settlement was made. 

“Father Mejorada paid us money to seek our silence. But the harm in body, mind, and soul that Father Mejorada brought to us can never be equated in monetary terms,” said the victims. “Each of us went through very difficult periods in our lives from which we have not yet fully recovered.”

“We are willing to face the world to tell the truth, no matter how shameful and humiliating it would be for each of us, if that should prove the only way we can stop the abuse of other young boys (in the church),” the victims noted.

The brother of the accused, Father Mario Mejorada, who also belongs to the same order, confirmed the payment to silence the accusers. The accused priest was sent recntly to a rehabilitation centre run by Philippine bishops in Lipa, Batangas, southern Luzon, 150 km south of Manila.

The Saint Augustine Church refused to comment on the latest scandal.

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

October 12, 2016

Church inquiry, exorcism on ‘possessed’ Sagbayan students today

TAGBILARAN CITY (PHILIPPINES)
The Bohol Chronicle [Bohol, Philippines]

October 12, 2016

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The Diocese of Tagbilaran will conduct today an inquiry and possibly an exorcism on students of Japer Memorial High School in Sagbayan who are believed to have been possessed by spirits after exhibiting bizarre behavior.

Fr. Agerio Paña, chancellor of the Diocese of Tagbilaran, told DYRD Balita that they will conduct an ocular inspection and other activities such as exorcism in the school located in Brgy. Sta Catalina.

Paña said that the officials of the Japer High School reached out to the diocese appealing to have the case investigated as the hysteria involving at least 25 children has been causing fear and panic among students, faculty and parents.-ADVERTISEMENT-

The Church will be sending exorcist priests Fr. Sinforiano Monton, Fr. Victor Bompat and Father Joseph Skelton to the affected area in Sagbayan.

The said priests have been given authority by the Church to conduct exorcism or a ceremony to drive out evil spirits believed to be possessing a person or place.

According to Paña, this will not be the first time that they will be performing an exorcism.

He said that they had conducted an exorcism on 20 students in Tagbilaran City two years ago.

However, Paña said that they are still going to verify if the Sagbayan incident is indeed a possession case as there are several other factors which could cause a sudden change in behavior and speech of children.

On Tuesday, Provincial Schools Division Superintendent Wilfreda Bongalos and a team conducted a psycho-social debriefing among the affected students.

The students were reportedly possessed by evil spirits after a gmelina tree believed to have been occupied by spirits was cut down inside the school almost a month ago.

The tally of “possessed” students were accumulated in a span of almost a month until Thursday last week. (Rey Tutas)

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

January 22, 2016

You did it to me! (Matthew 25:40)

MANILA (PHILIPPINES)
CBCP News Service (Catholic Bishops of the Philippines)

January 22, 2025

By Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines

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Pastoral Exhortation on the Pastoral Care and Protection of Minors

[To see the original document on the website of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, click here.]

Beloved people of God:

Among the crimes that cry the loudest to heaven for justice, hardly is any more heinous than the abuse of children, no matter the form such abuse may take. The despoliation of the young already jolts us in its offensiveness. We are rightly overcome by revulsion at the painful paradox that while nature has made the young dependent on their parents and on caring and nurturing elders, the very same persons to whom they look for protection and succor turn into their assailants and molesters. While this sad phenomenon cannot and should not be generalized, it will be found with disturbing frequency in our midst and in such grievousness as to warrant the particular attention of your bishops.

With sadness, shame and contrition, we must acknowledge that some members of the clergy have committed these offenses, not only in egregious violation of the sacred promises of their Ordination, but in most blatant contravention of the Lord Jesus’ own strict command that children are not only to be welcomed with affection, but that every care must be taken to put no stumbling block in their way.

The universal condemnation of the abuse of children by any adult is one of the strongest refutations of that brand of relativism that is pervasive today. No matter one’s race, ethnicity, culture or religion, there is no way of justifying, excusing much less defending the abuse of children and the assault on vulnerable sectors in our society. The abuse and molestation of children is intrinsically wrong, and its repulsiveness does not admit of mitigation.

The forms of child abuse

Republic Act No. 7610 that the Philippines enacted in compliance with the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child identifies the forms of child abuse. Child abuse is statutorily defined to include:

Psychological and physical abuse, neglect, cruelty, sexual abuse and emotional maltreatment;
Any act by deeds or words which debases, degrades or demeans the intrinsic worth and dignity of a child as a human being;
Unreasonable deprivation of his basic needs for survival such as food and shelter;
Failure to immediately give medical treatment to an injured child resulting in serious impairment of his growth and development or in his permanent incapacity or death.[1] The positive side to this legal definition of the offense of “child abuse” is the legislative envisagement of what a child needs and what we, as a society, owe our children. Given the gamut of the different forms of child abuse, it should be clear that any meaningful response by the Church should include members of the clergy and of the laity alike. And while the investigation of offenders and the prosecution of abusers, whether clergy or lay, will be a pressing concern, more important by far is the immediate and perennial challenge of meeting the needs of the child, particularly in settings of dysfunctional families.

The facts

Data gathered some years ago by the National Statistics Coordination Board reveal that the most common forms of child abuse are: sexual abuse, neglect, physical abuse or maltreatment and abandonment.[2]

If these are the prevalent forms of child abuse in the Philippines, it should not be too difficult to understand that no single category or class of persons can be singled out as the provenance of perpetrators. While undoubtedly, one will find the stereotypical predator among them, it is also true that family members and relatives, teachers and superiors, work supervisors and even those who might appear friendly and caring, members of the clergy among them, will count exploiters and abusers in their number. And this is one of the most hurtful dimensions of child abuse: the erosion of trust and the dilution of solicitude with exploitation! It most grievously hurts those whose trust was betrayed, but it also hurts those who are supposed to be trusted. Those who trust find their trust betrayed. Those who are supposed to be trusted no longer enjoy the unqualified confidence of those who once trusted them!

One brochure distributed in the United States by cause-oriented groups and made available online attempts to provide a profile of the child molester and also offers useful information on this dreadful social malady. Interestingly, but equally disturbingly, in classifying “sexual offenders” it becomes clear that categories cover the entire swath of human society: males and females, young adults, middle-aged adults and seniors, upper class, middle class and disadvantaged, all races and ethnicities, vocationally diverse.[3] The fact, therefore, is that no single sector can be identified as the source of “molesters” and “predators”. There is no such thing as “the typical” molester or abuser.

Exclusion: The broader context

One form of neglect needs special mention precisely because it is hardly paid any heed: the exclusion of children, by which we mean the treatment of children as an “appendage” to the society of adults. It is the fallacy of thinking of human society as a society of adults, with children occupying some kind of second class membership, while awaiting full membership as adults. Effectively, this means that children are not seriously listened to, nor are their concerns considered worthy of serious consideration, nor does their condition as children get factored into different forms of human and social planning.

Family decisions are made by adults, children’s views set aside as insignificant and deserving scant attention. Put most succinctly, children are not taken seriously at all!

In the life of the Church, we find this disturbingly verified. Few priests relish an apostolate with and for children. Even the opportunities offered by liturgies for children are hardly optimized in the Philippine church. In most parishes, there is often hardly anything that differentiates children’s Masses from adult Masses, except perhaps for children serving at Mass and doing the readings.

Nurturing and protecting children

Of the nurturing of children and their protection, the Second Vatican Council taught:

“Christian husbands and wives are cooperators in grace and witnesses of faith for each other, their children, and all others in their household. They are the first to communicate the faith to their children and to educate them by word and example for the Christian and apostolic life…It has always been the duty of Christian married partners but today it is of the greatest part of their apostolate to manifest and prove by their own way of life the indissolubility and sacredness of the marriage bond, strenuously to affirm the right and duty of parents and guardians to educate children in a Christian manner, and to defend the dignity and lawful autonomy of the family.”[4]

There is hypocrisy then when the parents of abused and exploited children readily judge others – though these may, in fact, be deserving of judgment – when they, as parents, have failed to do what the Church teaches to be their obligation in respect to children. The parent who has failed in his duties as a parent should be wary about accusing others of neglecting their obligations towards children.

If we, as pastors, are to address the dreadful challenge of child abuse effectively, we must recognize its complications. In this respect, what the Second Vatican Council teaches about the responsibility of parents and of families becomes particularly relevant in the light of expert analysis of the dynamics of child-exploitation. One thorough study busts myths and demolishes stereotypes.

“Society seems to have a problem addressing any sexual-victimization case in which the adult offender is not completely ‘bad’ or the child victim is not completely ‘good.’ The idea child victims could simply behave like human beings and respond to the attention and affection of offenders by voluntarily and repeatedly returning to an offender’s home is a troubling one. It confuses us to see the victims in child pornography giggling or laughing. At professional conferences on child sexual abuse, child prostitution is rarely discussed. It is the form of sexual victimization of children most unlike the stereotype of the innocent child victim. Child prostitutes, by definition, participate in and sometimes initiate their victimization but often do so rather than face subsequent consequences such as abuse at home, homelessness, and violence at the hands of those manipulating them to participate in this illegal activity.”[5]

A victimized child is not necessarily one against whose will atrocities have been visited. A victimized child is not necessarily the passive partner in an exploitative relation. Children, therefore, can learn and acquire conduct that may contribute to their own exploitation. And when cases of child abuse of this kind eventually surface, one must, perforce ask, how parents and families failed these children!

What is often taken for a doctrinal pronouncement is actually a very practical guide – an indispensable first step in the prevention of child abuse.

“The fruitfulness of the conjugal love extends to the fruits of the moral, spiritual and supernatural life that parents hand on to their children by education. Parents are the principal and first educators of their children. In this sense the fundamental task of marriage and family is to be at the service of life.”[6]

Where spouses live the reality of the sacrament of matrimony and cooperate with the grace of that same sacrament, they are enabled to provide their children with that kind of education that awakens in them the realization that while dangers that befall them may come from causes external to them – such as the malice of others – they may come as well from bad habits acquired, dangerous inclinations carelessly cultivated, deleterious and unhelpful company forged and kept.

Clerical abuse

In an address to the International Catholic Church Bureau, made available to the public in its entirety by Vatican Radio, Pope Francis articulated the sentiments of the Church on the sad fact of abuses committed by members of the clergy.

“I feel compelled to personally take on all the evil which some priests, quite a few in number, obviously not compared to the number of all the priests, to personally ask for forgiveness for the damage they have done for having sexually abused children. The Church is aware of this damage, it is personal, moral damage carried out by men of the Church, and we will not take one step backward with regards to how we will deal with this problem, and the sanctions that must be imposed. On the contrary, we have to be even stronger. Because you cannot interfere with children…”[7]

Clearly, the victims of abusive members of the clergy need all the compassion, the solicitude and the care of all of us in the Church. Molestation and exploitation by members of the clergy has done them so grievous a wrong. The local church in the Philippines will solicitously attend to the needs of victims of clerical abuse, and it has done so already in many ways. More needs to be done by way, particularly, of institutionalizing the assistance given victimized children.

On July 7, 2014, Pope Francis celebrated the Eucharist with some victims of clerical abuse in the chapel of the Domus Sanctae Marthae. There, he uttered what we, your bishops, now echo:

“Sins of clerical sexual abuse against minors have a toxic effect on faith and hope in God. Some of you have held fast to faith, while for others the experience of betrayal and abandonment has led to a weakening of faith in God. Your presence here speaks of the miracle of hope, which prevails against the deepest darkness. Surely it is a sign of God’s mercy that today we have this opportunity to encounter one another, to adore God, to look in one another’s eyes and seek the grace of reconciliation.”[8]

As to the relation–and the difference–between civil and canonical procedures in dealing with allegations of child abuse, the Holy See, in a letter to the Government of the Republic of Ireland, explained:

“The sexual abuse of children is a crime. It is a crime in civil law; it is a crime in canon law. Sexual abuse perpetrated by clerics has two distinct aspects. The first is concerned with the civil and criminal responsibility of individuals, and this, being a matter for the civil authorities, is regulated by the laws of the State where the crime is committed. As has already been stated, all citizens, including members of the Church, are subject and accountable to these laws. It is the State’s responsibility to legislate in order to protect the common good and adopt measures to deal effectively with those who infringe its laws. The State has the duty to investigate allegations of crime, to ensure due process and the presumption of innocence until guilt is proven and to punish wrongdoers, without favor or distinction, in accordance with the principles of justice and equity.

The second aspect is religious in nature and as such comes under the internal responsibility of the Church, which, in this regard, applies her own legal or canonical system. Divine laws are binding on all, and positive ecclesiastical laws are binding on all those who “were baptized in the Catholic Church or received into it, and who have a sufficient use of reason and, unless the law expressly provides otherwise, who have completed their seventh year of age” (Code of Canon Law, canon 11). It is evident that the Church, in accordance with her own nature and internal organization, has the duty to punish wrongdoers for the grave and grievous damage done to the community of the Church. With regard to those areas of responsibility for which the Church has competence, her canonical system stipulates the norms, procedures and penalties which the relevant Church authority is to apply, without interference from any outside body. When cases arise of child sexual abuse committed by clerics or by religious or lay people who function in ecclesiastical structures, Church authorities are to cooperate with those of the State, and are not to impede the legitimate path of civil justice.”[9]

We cannot pass over in silence, however, the theme of forgiveness for priests who have erred. They should never be allowed to molest children again, they must not be given the chance and the opportunity to do so, and they must do what the law exacts of them. But they cannot be excluded from the mercy of which the Church is the sign and the sacrament for all. Christ calls his priests in the full knowledge of their frailties. He has not called angels to minister to men and women; he has, instead, called men apart, weighed down by their own infirmities, to attend to others who, like themselves, are wounded by sin. Of pardon, the famous French religious philosopher, Paul Ricoeur, has very instructive insights:

“Pardon is a kind of healing of memory, the end of mourning. Delivered from the weight of debts, memory is freed for greater projects. Pardon gives memory a future…As the horizon of the sequence sanction-rehabilitation-pardon, pardon constitutes a permanent reminder that justice is the justice of human beings and that it must not set itself up as the final judgment.”[10]

We come full circle then when the indictment of the offender, the appropriate action against him, the atonement and the satisfaction lead to the healing both of a wounded child, a wounded church and a wounded offender!

But the Church has also been unjustly wronged, for the faults of a few have cast a pall of suspicion on the many who remain true to the promises of their Ordination and zealous in the ministry. Priests have been unjustly slurred as predators in a most unjust form of generalization. What is so often conveniently forgotten is the fact that, throughout history and throughout the world, among the foremost defenders of children and advocates of their rights have been priests. They too have led in the field of the education and the schooling of children and of the young.

Our Sins of Commission and Omission

In recognizing the sin, we discern, in docility to the Spirit, how we are to make amends and do better in the future.

At the top of the list of sins of commission are crimes of sexual abuse and molestation in various forms and degrees. Among these, we must include different forms of sexual harassment that include coarse, indecent and offensive language that create a hostile environment for the child.

As grievous is the cruelty that takes the form of physical and psychological abuse. While some would have us draw a distinction between acts of physical violence that inflict serious harm from those that do not, there is no justification for an ordained minister ever to lay his hands abusively on a child nor is there ever really a reason to hurt a child’s feelings by harsh, unkind and “unpriestly” words!

Then, there are also those children we exploit in different forms of work situations, especially when we have among our “convent boys” and “sacristans” or altar servers, children who labor long and difficult hours at our service and are paid a pittance if any at all, badly nourished and ill-clothed.

Among our sins of omission we must count as most serious, failing to pay heed to complaints of abusive conduct by members of the clergy, and our failure to act decisively against the errant and protectively towards their victims. Equally serious has been the practice of many to deny the sacraments, including the Sacraments of Initiation, to those children who, through no fault of theirs, are born to irregular if not immoral unions.

We have also lagged in sustained efforts at the proper Catholic education of children, especially in public schools, usually resting content with a token number of catechists handling big classes, one day a week!

Finally, we have failed to include children in the life of the Church. Our parish activities are for adults and so are our liturgies!

After the foregoing reflections, we must be resolute about what to do.

Pastoral Guidelines and Norms:

1. The current canonical and disciplinary provisions both for the universal church and for the church in the Philippines remain in place and demand strictest compliance. Bishops will not pre-empt investigations by declaring innocence or pronouncing exoneration until after a thorough, impartial and credible evaluation of facts as established by competent evidence.

2. No priest who is under preliminary investigation by the authorities of State for offenses having to do with child abuse, such as sexual harassment, the violation of Republic Act No. 7610 and other crimes either punished by the Revised Penal Code or defined and penalized by special laws shall be allowed to leave the diocese. The bishop, rather, shall take him under his supervision in the bishop’s residence to guarantee his availability for the process of investigation. The same rule applies in respect to priests already facing trial. The dioceses will respect the decision of the parents, relatives or relevant state agencies whether to prosecute or not before the organs and institutions of State, but bishops are not excused from communicating the case to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith when their dioceses or religious institutes come, through established canonical processes, into possession of reliable information on clerical misconduct of this kind.

3. Child-victims of clerical abuse are to be attended to, the bishop seeing to the medical, psychological and spiritual care that they need. Claims for financial assistance, damages or indemnity should await the proper disposition of the courts. Both for the protection of the child-victim and the good name of the priest whose guilt has not yet been established, access to complaints, depositions, declarations and other documents in canonical proceedings – whether administrative or judicial – is limited to the parties and to their advocates or counsel as well as to the church officials tasked with the investigation and disposition of the case. Records of proceedings before the organs of State remain subject to the provisions of the laws of the Republic and the relevant administrative rules.

4. The pendency of criminal action against a priest shall not prejudice appropriate canonical processes against him. Exoneration before the organs and agencies of State does not dispense the bishop from conducting a thorough investigation of allegations and, either through administrative or judicial proceedings, meting out the appropriate penalty, when warranted on the erring priest. In like manner, a resolution or judgment of civil forums dismissing or acquitting a member of the clergy shall not preclude a complementary and separate investigation through the appropriate ecclesiastical forum for the purposes of addressing church discipline, undertaken with full canonical respect for the office and the rights that a priest may enjoy. At the same time, the bishop shall see that the priest receives appropriate spiritual guidance and that he receives the benefit of legal representation and counsel.

5. In no case should an attempt be made to settle amicably or by compromise criminal cases involving child abuse filed against priests. On the other hand, if after prudent and diligent inquiry, the bishop is convinced, having obtained counsel from both civil and canon law experts, that the charges against a priest are spurious or maliciously trumped up, the bishop should do everything allowed by law for the protection of the good name of the priest.

6. The prohibitions found in Republic Act No. 7610 apply to priests as well and to children in their “conventos” or rectories or residences. Only adults should be employed as kasambahays, laborers and handypersons in parishes and rectories. Children whose schooling is paid for by priests should not live in the rectories and residences of priests, nor should their priest-benefactors require of them their company except when there are other adults with them. Bishops are therefore encouraged to include, among the items of their pastoral visit, a “personnel audit” to determine whether or not a priest has any children in his employ and if any live with him in his residence.

7. Children in all Catholic schools are to be given express and adequate instruction by properly trained and oriented teachers on what behavior to accept from adults and what to reject. They should be taught the ways of courtesy and respect, but they should also be instructed on how to reject and thwart inappropriate advances. We however reprove in the strongest possible terms that kind of “orientation” that results in “suggesting” to children that they have been victims of abuse, contrary to fact and to reality. This is certainly malicious and unconscionable.

8. In all dioceses, the team consisting of civil and canon law experts constituted by the CBCP to familiarize priests with the laws and canons that have to do particularly with behavior and comportment towards children is to be invited and to be given ample opportunity, hindered by none, and enjoying the full support of the bishop, to provide priests with useful instruction.

9. In seminaries and houses of formation, those who have engaged in the exploitation of others or who have physically abused classmates or juniors should not be promoted, much less admitted for candidacy to Holy Orders. The psychological tests administered, while not necessarily binding on priests in charge of formation, should nevertheless be given serious heed, but these tests must themselves be acceptable by scientific and academic standards. The CBCP herewith reiterates the rule that laicized priests or those suffering from canonical penalties should not be allowed to participate in the formation of seminarians.

10. When the apostolate for children and the involvement of children in the life of the parish is planned, parish priests and parochial vicars will do well to include children, especially of a more mature age, to participate in planning, as well as their parents. In these meetings it will be most helpful to learn from the children and from the parents the treatment of children that the children and their parents themselves deem acceptable, proper and appropriate. While even the remote opportunity for abuse and exploitation is to be shunned, these measures of caution should not diminish in any manner the ardor of priests for the solicitude, care and concern for children.

May Our Lady of Sorrows who is also Mother Cause of Our Joy teach us how to care for God’s children as she loving cared for Jesus her Son!

For the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of the Philippines, January 22, 2016, Cebu City.

+SOCRATES B. VILLEGAS
Archbishop of Lingayen Dagupan
CBCP President

_____________________________________
[1] Section 3, b, Republic Act No. 7610;[2] Dr. Romulo A. Virola, Statistics on Violence Against Women and Children: A Morally Rejuvenating Philippine Society? National Statistical Coordinating Board (2008)[3] Ken Wooden, “A Profile of the Child Molester”, http://www.childluresprevention.com/research/profile.asp[4] Apostolicam Actuositatem, 11[5] Child Molesters: A Behavioral Analysis, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, US Department of Justice, p. 6[6] No. 1653, Catechism of the Catholic Church[7] http://www.news.va/en/news/pope-francis-on-clerical-sexual-abuse-not-one-step[8] http://w2.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/cotidie/2014/documents/papa-francesco-cotidie_20140707_vittime-abusi.html[9] Response of the Holy See to Mr. Eamon Gilmore, Minister of Foreign Affairs and Trade of the Republic of Ireland on the Cloyne Report[10] Paul Ricoeur, The Just, David Pellauer, Trans. (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000), pp. 144-145

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May 24, 2014

US Western Province History (USW)

LOS ANGELES (CA)
SVD - Witness to the Word [Rome, Italy]

May 24, 2014

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The Western Province celebrates its 50thAnniversary this year. In 1964, the province began with 38 priests and seven Brothers. The ministry sites for the new province included Verbum Dei High School, St. Leo parish and the SVD Mission Office, all in Los Angeles.

St. Francis Xavier parish in San Francisco served Japanese Catholics. St Patrick parish served African Americans in Oakland. In addition SVDs served at St. Martin of Tours parish in Bridaleil, Oregon. The province also had the high school seminary and residence at Riverside, California, and a
Mission Center in Denver.

The first Divine Word Missionaries had come to California in 1926 to minister to the Japanese in San Francisco. From then until 1964, the Southern Province stretched all the way to the Pacific Ocean. The 1931 Catalogus contains the first listing of St. Patrick parish in Oakland and the year 1937 saw the SVD arrival at St. Benedict the Moor parish in San Francisco.
Fr. Ponciano Ramos

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March 31, 2014

Are bicyclists the new king of the road?

ALBURQUERQUE (PHILIPPINES)
Philippine Star [Manila, Philippines]

March 31, 2014

By SHOOTING STRAIGHT - Bobit S. Avila - The Freeman

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For our special presentation on Straight from the Sky, we bring you a talk on how to make a proper observation of the Lenten Season. The beauty of the Catholic Church is that it covers every aspect of the life and times of our Lord Jesus Christ. When he was born, we rejoiced and celebrated Christmas. But during his passion and death on the cross, we too join our suffering Lord all the way to Calvary and we all rejoice on Easter Sunday when our Lord conquers death and rise again to take his kingdom in heaven.

To help me bring you up to speed for your Lenten reflection, we have with us my dear friend Fr. Joseph Skelton, Jr. of the Santa Monica Parish in Albuquerque, Bohol. I don’t know if it is divine providence that the Santa Monica Parish was spared from the devastating earthquake last Oct.15th when its neighboring parishes crumbled to the ground.

We thank Fr. Joseph Skelton for making time to be with us on this show in order to help you make a proper observation of Lent. Please watch this interesting show on SkyCable’s channel 61 at 8:00PM with replays on Wednesday and Saturday and replays can be seen on MyTV channel 30 M-W-F at 7:00AM and 9:00PM.

*  *  *

Last Saturday was “Earth Hour” where environmentalists all over the world had another one full hour of people turning off their lights to show to the world that we are part of this global thought that we must reduce our carbon emissions. I have no quarrel with that. But look at the jeepneys and light trucks and their drivers travelling around Metro Cebu City. These are the people who don’t give a damn about the world, as if we owed them their living.

But what gets my gall is that the Land Transportation Franchising and Regulatory Board (LTFRB) cannot even stop these violators from plying our roads. When our regulatory agencies fail in their job then more and more violators will emerge. I challenged the LTFRB three years ago to apprehend jeepneys that didn’t put up their lights during the night and stop the illegal parking in front of their eyes at the barangay hall in Lahug. But they are still there; proving to the world how incompetent the LTFRB is!

Speaking of violators. I was going out of Escario Street corner Juana Osmeña Street last Saturday night and was pleasantly surprised to see a great number of bicycle riders enjoying Earth Hour. But when the traffic light went green on our side, those bicyclists, thinking that they were above the law, totally disregarded the green light and other traffic rules.

When we got into the corner of Escario Street and Gorordo Avenue, those bicyclists stopped again the light turned red. I wanted to go down my car to tell those bicyclists why they stopped? If they had the gall to violate the traffic light in Juana Osmeña Street why not violate the traffic light in Gorordo Avenue? But then I thought, we’d probably have a rumble and I was alone.

Mind you, I was one of the first to ride a mountain bike in Cebu but our bike group was a law-abiding bunch. The bikers of today are a different bunch. They believe that because they have the support of environmental lawyer Tony Oposa, they think they have become the new king of the road replacing those hard-core, hard-headed jeepney drivers. Many of these bicycle riders want a bike lane and I’m supportive of this. However, how can the ordinary motorist support their call when they show to us that they do not care about the traffic rules? Let’s make one thing very clear. Everyone that uses the road only has a privilege given by the state. This is why when one operates a motor vehicle, one needs to procure a driver’s license. The fees used to pay for the license is used to pave or fix our roads. That is the deal with the government and the people.

So where does this put bicyclists? Maybe it is time for the city of Cebu to consider passing a law where bicycle owners must get a bicycle license.

Call it an unpopular move. But for as long as bicycle riders show their defiance by violating our traffic rules, then the citizenry must work for a way to regulate them. I met my nephew Niconics Ybañez that evening who was also on his bicycle but he wasn’t in that crowd and he too complained about those bicyclists that violated traffic laws. So you guys out there ought to start thinking what we should do about these traffic violators that CITOM cannot arrest because they have no driver’s license to confiscate?

*  *  *

The Sulu Sultanate Warns of War was the headline of Manila Times last Saturday. Whatever happened to “Give Peace a Chance?” On the other hand, if your feet are on the ground, you can immediately tell that whatever the Aquino regime signed last Thursday with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) would lead to peace or not? As I’ve pointed out so many times already, for as long as those cooks in the Philippine government do not put in the right ingredients, peace will never come to Mindanao. 

*  *  *

Email: vsbobita@gmail.com.

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March 24, 2014

2014 ‘Tribute to Thomasian’ features Fr. Maramba, Korean classical musicians

(PHILIPPINES)
Inquirer.net [Daly City, CA]

March 24, 2014

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The University of Santo Tomas (UST) Conservatory of Music, in cooperation with the Cultural Center of the Philippines, presents the UST Symphony Orchestra under the baton of Korean conductor Jae-Joon Lee, with Filipino and Korean classical artists, in the concert “Tribute to the Thomasian 2014,” on March 30, 6 p.m., at the CCP Main Theater.

“Tribute to the Thomasian” is the annual grand concert of the UST Symphony Orchestra, the official student orchestra of the biggest music school in the Philippines.

The program consists of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s “Overture from The Marriage of Figaro,” Robert Schumann’s “Piano Concerto in A, Op. 54” and Ludwig van Beethoven’s “Symphony No. 9 in D minor, Op. 125.”

Featured artists are pianist Fr. Manuel P. Maramba, OSB, soprano Yun-Kyoung Yi, mezzo soprano Nenen Espina, tenor Lemuel de la Cruz, and baritone Daesan No with the UST Singers, Coro Tomasino and the Liturgikon Vocal Ensemble.

Founded in 1927 by Dr. Manuel Casas of the UST Faculty of Medicine and Surgery, the UST Symphony Orchestra has produced many musicians, some of whom have become the country’s leading artists. Currently, the Orchestra is comprised of 70 student-members, including winners of national music competitions, participants of foreign youth orchestras, and scholars of important music schools abroad.

It is the official orchestra of the University of Santo Tomas and an integral part of the UST Conservatory of Music. A resident performing group of the CCP which subsidizes its training program, it holds regular concerts at the CCP and participates in the CCP Outreach and Exchange program. It also serves as a training orchestra for future needs of the Philippine Philharmonic Orchestra and other professional ensembles.

For more information, call the UST Conservatory of Music at 7314022, 4061611 loc. 8246, or the CCP Box Office, 8323704.

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September 2, 2012

Youth for El Shaddai Bohol w/ Fr. Joseph Skelton Jr. – With One Voice (28th Anniversary DWXI PPFI)

(PHILIPPINES)
YouTube [San Bruno CA]

September 2, 2012

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Published on September 2, 2012

[Note from BishopAccountability.org: In August 2012, convicted American priest Joseph Skelton, Jr. performed at an event in Bohol province with a group of young people called Youth for El Shaddai Bohol.  El Shaddai is an international lay Catholic charismatic organization headquartered in Manila. A video of Skelton’s performance was posted on YouTube. Several frames of the video confirm that the event occurred on August 18-19, 2012.]

Still from the video, showing Fr. Joseph Skelton in clerical garb performing “With One Voice.”
Still from the video, showing Skelton performing with a youth group at an event on August 18-19, 2012.
Still from the video, showing a banner documenting that the performance took place at an event on August 18-19, 2012.
Still from the video, showing Skelton performing in front of the dated banner.

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November 6, 2011

Mission Thrust Caps the Four-Year Series of Augustinian Spirituality Congress

QUEZON CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Wayback Machine Internet Archive [San Francisco CA]

November 6, 2011

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November 4-6, 2011 – Quezon City, Philippines – Mission was the centrepiece of the 4th Augustinian Seminarians’ Spirituality Congress which was held at and hosted by San Agustin Center of Studies Community. The three-day formands’ forum was held on November 4-6, 2011 with the theme: Transfor-Mission: A Renewed Commitment for Evangelization. It was attended by the three formation communities of the Province of Sto. Niño de Cebu: The Collegium and Professorium departments of San Agustin Center of Studies; the Professional Seminarians of San Agustin Seminary and the Novices of Augustinian Novitiate and Prayer House.

The first day commenced in the afternoon with the arrival and registration of the participants. In the formal opening of the program, the perspective setting was set by the chairman of the Initial Formation of the Province, Rev. Fr. Andrew Batayola, OSA. Batayola is also the Master of the Simple Professed. Then, it was followed by the first of the tripartite plan of the congress – the Congress followed the See-Judge-Act Method of theologizing. The see part facilitated with a sort of a panel discussion ushered with the presence of four representatives from Augustinian congregations working in mission: Rev. Fr. Gilles Bloin, AA (Augustinians of the Assumption); Rev. Fr. Apolinario Mejorada, OSA (Augustinians of the Province of Cebu); Rev. Sr. Cecilia Bayona, AMP (Augustinian Missionaries of the Philippines) and Rev. Sr. Cresteta Grana, OSA (Augustinian Sisters of Our Lady of Consolation).  The four panellists shared their missionary experiences, related their ups and downs, exhorted the formands to work for mission and lastly aspired for a greater missionary endeavour in and out the Church.

The second day was a whole day judge-part. The morning slot was taken by Rev. Fr. James Kroeger, MM, a Marist Missionary. He theologized on the missionary endeavour of the Church by lifting principles and thoughts from the very biblical root of mission: the Pauline and other New Testament Epistles. Fr. Kroeger mentioned also a different view of mission in the Church as it is the result of the constant reforming of the Church and of the updating of herself on how to relate the ever new message of Christ to the fast changing society. The afternoon session was the turn of Fr. Peter Casiño, OSA, an Augustinian of the Vicariate of the Orient and a missionary to Africa. He conveyed mission in the Augustinian context. Here he imparted ideas, principles and thoughts on Augustinian mission from his close-to-experiences inferences.

The last day was the act-part when the seminarians visited and had a half-day immersion in Payatas, Quezon City. They were grouped into small teams and assigned at different chapels spending the whole morning relating, listening and sharing with the urban poor in the outskirts of the city. In the afternoon, the brothers went back to SACS spending the whole afternoon relating their experiences and sharing their insights and concrete experiences on mission to the poor. After which, the reading of the acts was done and a video presentation allowed the seminarians to profoundly situate mission as the heart of Augustinian service.

Moroever, the three-day serious-to-business congress was pierced also with light moments and activities in the evening with showcasing of talents. Yet, talents that showed relation to mission and the like motifs.

Markedly, this congress is the last of the mapped four-year plan of the Province in annually gathering the seminarians to dwell in the spirit of renewal in specific spirituality of the Order. 2008 had seen the renewal of the Order initiated in formation; 2009 tried to ruminate over interiority and its appendage on affectivity; 2010 meditated on community and this 2011 capped with mission and service to the Church. Yet, as the words of the Chair of Initial Formation in his perspective setting, Fr. Batayola that it may be ending here, it is his hope that it will be continued “depending to the next administrators of the Province.”

At the closing mass on November 6, 2011, a symbolic sending off of the two fourth year simple professed friars was done to relate that their final stage in the initial formation sends them to the missionary vineyard of the Province and of the Order. The Congress ended with the dinner program, after the Closing Mass, where everybody enjoyed the Augustinian camaraderie among the formands of the Province.

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September 29, 2011

Court dismisses rape case against priest

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

September 29, 2011

By Frinston Lim, Tagum City

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Long-running case again thrown out by judge for lack of probable cause

A regional trial court in Compostela Valley yesterday dismissed a rape case concerning a 26-year old woman against a Catholic priest, reversing an order from the Department of Justice (DOJ) to have him indicted. The judger ruled against the DOJ order to file the rape case against Father Melvin Dela Cuesta of the Diocese of Tagum before the court, affirming the previous ruling of two provincial prosecutors who had dismissed the case in 2006 for lack of probable cause. In August DOJ Undersecretary Leah Tanodra-Armamento ordered the refiling of charges. Fr Dela Cuesta after the hearing, refused interviews. “Talk to my lawyer,” the priest said. The woman, a former part-time clerk of St Therese of the Child Jesus parish in Nabunturan, Tagum diocese said the priest had called her to massage him inside his room the night of July 23, 2006 after he arrived from a party drunk and tired. She said that due to tiredness, she fell asleep and was woken when the priest allegedly started abusing her. “I resisted but was overpowered,” the woman said before she burst into tears. She stepped out of the courtroom briefly when she spotted the accused priest. Prosecution lawyer Luwill Al-ag cited the report that Fr Dela Cuesta sought forgiveness from the complainant’s father, asserting this indicated an admission of guilt. “The sex could be consensual,” the defence countered. Her eyes welling with tears, the woman said after the ruling: “I’m feeling hopeless. I’m feeling very weak.”

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September 14, 2011

Child abuse victims accuse pope of crimes against humanity

KORONADAL CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Inquirer.net [Daly City, CA]

September 14, 2011

By Agence France-Presse

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VATICAN CITY–An international group for victims of sexual abuse by priests said Tuesday it had asked the International Criminal Court to prosecute Pope Benedict XVI for crimes against humanity.

The Chicago-based Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) said it had filed the complaint with the ICC with help from lawyers from the non-profit US Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR).

They called on the court to “take action and prosecute the Pope and three other high-ranking Vatican officials for their direct and superior responsibility for the crimes against humanity of rape and other sexual violence committed around the world.”

“Crimes against tens of thousands of victims, most of them children, are being covered up by officials at the highest level of the Vatican,” CCR lawyer Pam Spees said in a statement.

“In this case, all roads really do lead to Rome,” she added.

As well as the pope, SNAP asked that three other top Vatican officials be investigated: Cardinal Secretary of State Tarcisio Bertone, his predecessor Angelo Sodano and US Cardinal William Levada.

Levada is head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith, the Vatican office designated to investigate sex abuse cases forwarded to it by bishops.

“The Vatican officials charged in this case are responsible for rape and other sexual violence and for the physical and psychological torture of victims around the world both through command responsibility and through direct coverup of crimes,” Spees said.

“They should be brought to trial like any other officials guilty of crimes against humanity,” she added.

Vatican spokesman Federico Lombardi refused to comment.

Some international law experts suggested the case might not go very far.

Normally, the ICC prosecutor only investigates complaints if asked to do so by the United Nations Security Council; by a state that has ratified the Rome Statute; or on his own initiative.

But the CCR said in its statement that “the jurisdiction of the ICC names rape, sexual violence assault, and torture as crimes against humanity.

“It also provides for individual criminal liability for those with command or superior responsibility over those who directly commit such crimes.”

On this basis, members from Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands and the United States had travelled to The Hague to urge prosecutors to investigate the head of the Roman Catholic Church, it said.

The US-based victims network said it had submitted more than 20,000 pages of supporting material.

Megan Peterson, a 21-year-old SNAP member who spoke publicly of her abuse for the first time last week, was among those backing the initiative.

Describing her ordeal, she recalled: “When at age 15 I called the diocese to report the rapes they hung up on me.”

She called on the ICC to “take this case seriously and do the right thing.

“I don’t want any more kids to go through what I went through,” she said.

But Herman van der Wilt, professor of international law at Amsterdam University, told AFP he did not think the complaint stood much chance before the ICC.

“Firstly, a prerequisite for crimes against humanity is that it has to be perpetrated by a State, or ‘state-like’ organization,” he said.

“And secondly because the ICC would not be able to investigate any crimes committed before July 1, 2002, when its mandate commenced according to its founding statute,” he added.

The Roman Catholic Church is struggling to deal with rising anger and a string of lawsuits following thousands of child abuse claims in Europe and the United States.

The latest major crisis came in July, when the Irish Prime Minister launched a ferocious attack on the Roman Catholic Church’s “absolutely disgraceful” failure to deal with years of sexual abuse of children by priests.

Pope Benedict has expressed shame and sorrow over the clerical sex scandal and has called on bishops around the world to come up with common guidelines against paedophiles by May 2012.

But the issue shows no sign of going away.

On Tuesday an Australian senator, Nick Xenophon, named a Catholic priest who allegedly raped a teenage boy in assaults dating back about 50 years, after the Church refused his demand that they withdraw him from his post.READ MORE

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May 21, 2011

Catholic dioceses of El Paso, Las Cruces settle priest sex abuse lawsuit

EL PASO (TX)
El Paso Times

May 21, 2011

By Diana Washington Valdez / El Paso Times

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The Catholic Diocese of El Paso, the Catholic Diocese of Las Cruces and St. Genevieve Parish of Las Cruces settled a lawsuit filed by a man who allegedly was sexually abused by a priest, lawyers for the man announced Friday.

Terms of the settlement were not released. 

The priest, identified in the lawsuit as the Rev. Manuel Perez Maramba, served in the Diocese of El Paso in the 1970s. The suit, filed in the 3rd Judicial District Court of New Mexico, claimed that Perez Maramba sexually assaulted the plaintiff, called “John Doe” in the lawsuit, when he was a minor. 

The settlement is the fourth reached with the Diocese of El Paso, the Diocese of Las Cruces and St. Genevieve Parish stemming from allegations of sexual abuse by Perez Maramba.

Perez Maramba, a Benedictine monk from the Philippines, worked at St. Genevieve in Las Cruces from 1976 to 1977 with the permission of then El Paso Bishop Sydney Metzger.

He also worked at the Newman Center in Silver City while working in the Diocese of El Paso. Perez Maramba was an accomplished musician in the Philippines, and his musical career led him to the United States, where he performed at Carnegie Hall at age 19.

He was recalled to the Philippines in 1977 by his abbey.

The lawsuit complaint also alleged that John Doe was inappropriately touched by the Rev. Rosario Lopez, also a Benedictine monk from the Philippines. Lopez served at St. Genevieve Parish before Perez Maramba’s arrival in 1976.

El Paso lawyers T.O. 

Gilstrap Jr. and S. Clark Harmonson represented John Doe in the litigation.

Diana Washington Valdez may be reached at dvaldez@elpasotimes.com; 546-6140.

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In the Philippines, Wolves Amidst the Sheep?

(PHILIPPINES)
Filipino Freethinkers [Metro Manila, Philippines]

April 21, 2010

By Mike Aquino

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A CONVICTION OVER A SEX ABUSE SCANDAL MORE THAN 20 YEARS AGO CONTINUES TO HOUND AN AMERICAN CATHOLIC PRIEST WHO WAS ORDAINED IN AND CONTINUES TO SERVE IN THE PHILIPPINES.

[JOSEPH] SKELTON WAS ORDAINED IN THE PHILIPPINES, WITH BISHOP LEOPOLDO TUMULAK ORDAINING HIM WITHOUT KNOWING ABOUT HIS CONVICTION.

Here’s my reaction to the sex abuse Catholic priest found in the Philippinesnot surprised.

I’m only surprised that our local media hasn’t caught on to the Filipino priests who have been accused of sexual abuse within our borders.

Based on this comprehensive (but almost outdated) 2004 report by the Catholics for Free Choice and Likhaannopriest accused of sexual abuse in the Philippines seems to have been successfully prosecuted.

Most of them have overcome their cases in different ways: settled out of court, acquitted, or moved to other parishes by their superiors, or have cases pending but are quietly reinstated to pastoral duties.

After acquittal, settlement, or a wait of a year or so, the priests mentioned in the report have mostly been reintegrated into active ministry within the Catholic Church.

Here’s a brief run-down of the priests mentioned in the report, and the results of a morning’s Googling of their names. Assuming the search hits reflect the same people mentioned in the Likhaan report (insert margin of error here), it’s my opinion that the Catholic hierarchy’s actions show a tendency to minister to the wolves at the expense of the sheep.

AGUSTIN CUENCA

According to the CFFC/Likhaan Report:

ON 1 AUGUST 1990, FR. AGUSTIN CUENCA, OFM, A PARISH PRIEST ASSIGNED TO THE OUR LADY OF THE ABANDONED CHURCH IN STA. ANA, MANILA, WAS ACCUSED OF SEXUALLY MOLESTING TWO OF HIS TEENAGED ACOLYTES. THE COMPLAINT ALLEGED THAT HIS ACCUSERS, 15 AND 16 YEARS OLD, WERE ABUSED SEXUALLY FOR A PERIOD OF TWO YEARS STARTING IN DECEMBER 1988 UNTIL JUNE 1990 BY CUENCA.

A certain Agustin Cuenca OFM is attached priest at St. Anthony Padua Shrine in Sampaloc, Manila. As of 2006, Cuenca was the director of the Franciscan Missionary Union. Claretian Publications lists a Fr. Cuenca as the house bursar of St. Gregory the Great Friary in Quezon City. Here’s a Flickr image of a Fr. Agustin Cuenca blessing a privately-owned icon of St. Anthony.

MACARIO APUYA

According to the CFFC/Likhaan Report:

IN THE CITY OF DAGUPAN, NORTH OF METRO MANILA, FR. MACARIO APUYA, SVD OF THE SAINT THERESE PARISH, WAS ACCUSED OF TWO CRIMINAL CHARGES, ONE CHARGE OF RAPE AND ONE OF CHILD ABUSE AS DEFINED UNDER R. A. NO. 7610…. THE CASE HAD HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE SINCE IT WAS THE VERY FIRST TIME THAT A PRIEST WAS BEING PROSECUTED FOR PEDOPHILIA IN THE PHILIPPINES.

A priest with Apuya’s name is seen here celebrating the Jubilee Mass for the Divine Word Missionaries. A Macario Apuya is currently serving in Mary Consolatrix Convent in La Union – if it’s the same Apuya who was accused of raping underage girls, is it wise to have him running loose in a cloistered convent?

POLIENATO BERNABE

According to the report’s overview of reported cases of sexual abuse by priests: “Florida officials issued a warrant for the arrest of Fr. Polienato Bernabe, 61, a native of Pangasinan, who had been charged with sexually abusing an 8-year-old girl more than two decades ago in Gulfport, Florida.” Bernabe took shelter in the Philippines and died – avoiding  trial to the end – in 2006.

ARWYN N. DIESTA

The overview cites that Fr. Diesta was the subject of a request from a US lawyer regarding an accusation that Diesta had abused him when he was a boy. Another report, issued by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles, maintains that “Plaintiff reports that he was sexually abused by Fr. Diesta from approximately 1982-88.”

A certain Fr. Arwyn Diesta is still active in the Parish of St. Raymond Nonnatus in Sorsogon. Other Google search hits turn up a Fr. Arwyn Diesta who said a funeral mass in 2008. A Father Diesta is also mentioned as an English professor. A priest named Arwyn Diesta is seen here celebrating a Mass in Sorsogon in 2006 – the blog entry shows a clear picture of Fr. Diesta.

APOLINARIO MEJORADA

The overview cites the case of Fr. Apolinario Mejorada, who was accused of sexually abusing altar boys in Cebu between 1995 and 1998. “About a week later, Mejorada’s superiors admitted he was involved in some ‘transgression’ and paid Php 120,000 pesos in settlement.” Where is Mejorada today? All we know is that a certain Apolinario Mejorada is currently a parochial vicar somewhere in San Pedro, Laguna.

The following priests were involved in cases that went public AFTER the CFFC/Likhaan report was issued. 

JOSE BELCIÑA

In 2006, Jose Belciña was charged with rape and child abuse – the rape charges were later dropped for lack of evidence, but the child abuse charge was allowed to stand. Belciña laid low for a while – to quote SunStar columnist Bong Wenceslao: “When asked by the authorities on the whereabouts of Fr. Jose Belciña, Msgr. Achilles Dakay answered: I am not his custodian. Reminds me of Cain’s answer when asked about the whereabouts of his brother Abel: Am I my brother’s keeper?”

As of 2008, Cebu Archbishop Ricardo Cardinal Vidal has restored Belciña to pastoral duties in Minglanilla, southern Cebu – a move that has stirred up more controversy.

BENEDICTO EJARES

In 2007, Fr. Benedicto Ejares was accused of sexually harassing teenage girls under his charge in a “Life in the Spirit” seminar in Cebu. Despite orders not to publicly say Mass, Ejares did so in a government building in 2008. Ejares has contested a ruling finding probable cause in charging him with child abuse.

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April 8, 2010

Sex abuse case catches alumni by surprise

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

April 8, 2010

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MANILA (UCAN) — Reports of a settlement of a sex abuse case in the United States involving a Filipino priest has surprised and upset alumni of a Benedictine school in Manila.

The Manila Standard Today reported earlier this week that El Paso diocese in New Mexico had settled a third case involving Filipino Benedictine Father Manuel Perez Maramba.

The priest, now reportedly serving in the Abbey of Our Lady of Montserrat in San Beda College downtown Manila, was accused of abusing young boys while he was serving in the US Church between 1974 and 1977.

Staff at the Benedictine Provincial house told UCA News April 8 that Father Maramba was not at the abbey.

Repeated attempts to speak with superior Father Tarcisio Maria Narciso and other officials at the abbey also failed.

Alumni of Benedictine-run San Beda College who knew Father Maramba said the report about the �respected� musician priest and liturgist surprised and �upset� them.

�I knew the priest as a respected and talented musician,� Augusto Pardo, who headed the 50th homecoming of his San Beda class in 2008, told UCA News.

There were never any rumors about priests being abusive, he said.

�Alumni I have talked with tell me they are angrier at the newspapers for printing the news than with the news itself,� Pardo said.

They ask why the news is being published more than three decades after the supposed abuse.

Others wonder why the school kept it secret.

�I was surprised,� Carlos Verzosa of San Beda Law Class of 1997 said.

The lawyer told UCA News April 8 he did not know enough about the case to comment on legal arguments, but he did not think the school was under any obligation to tell parents about cases against priests.

However, �they are bound to act and the school does owe parents an explanation if they knew about this the last 35 years and refused to act on it,� Verzosa said.

�Once the school knew of the charges against Father Maramba, there should have been a departmental hearing,� he said.

�Father Maramba should have had legal assistance, but once he was proven guilty by the court, he should have been thrown out of the college,� Verzosa believes.

PR09377/1596 April 8, 2010 36 EM-lines (371 words)

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April 2, 2008

The Role of Prayer and Trust in God emphasized at seminary graduation

CITY OF NAGA (PHILIPPINES)
Radio Veritas Asia [Quezon City, Philippines]

April 2, 2008

By UCA News

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Prepared for Internet by Radio Veritas Asia, Philippines

The role of prayer and trust in God was emphasized at a seminary graduation ceremony in the Philippines.

Naga City, Philippines (UCAN PL04753.1491 April 2, 2008) – The head of an archdiocese with many ordained priests has advised newly graduated seminarians to pray unceasingly while the country is in a “state of unrest”, trusting and relying on God.

Archbishop Leonardo Legaspi of Caceres gave this advice to 43 seminarians who graduated from the Rosary Major Seminary and Rosary Minor Seminary in Naga City, Camarines Sur province, 255 kilometers southeast of Manila.

He preached the homily on March 10, 2008, at the Good Shepherd Chapel of the major seminary, as 20 seminarians graduated from the only theological school in the Bicol region, in the province of Camarines Sur. The next day, 23 seminarians listened to the same homily at their university graduation Mass at the Caceres Cathedral, near the minor seminary.

“Pray for everyone every day,” the prelate advised both groups of seminarians, quoting from Pope John Paul II’s 2004 book Arise, Let Us Be On Our Way.

“John Paul II spoke of establishing, maintaining and nurturing an attitude of reverence for the world, of letting the world inform us rather than letting us define it first,” the archbishop noted. With such a perspective, he said, “everyone is important, everyone is a subject, no one is an object, everyone is valuable, everyone is a brother or sister, a child of the one God.”

He also said the graduation ceremony was taking place “while we are experiencing what is considered a peak of social unrest”.

Critics of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo are urging her to resign amid corruption allegations involving her husband and cabinet members.

Archbishop Legaspi also cited a “cycle of poverty, ignorance and classlessness” that pervades Philippine society. The Dominican prelate said various factors were to blame, including war, foreign oppression, cultural decadence, electoral fraud and corrupt politicians.

According to him, leaders “from all sectors of society,” including the Church, are responsible for this unrest. Moreover, the passage of new laws, elections or even “civil rights” cannot transform society if social institutions lose credibility. Prayer and trust in God are the “best way” to avoid the current despair, he said.

The Archdiocese of Caceres oversees Camarines Sur province, where 97 percent of the 1.28 million people are Catholic, according to 2006 archbishop statistics.

Father Peter Berina, rector of the minor seminary, told UCA News that of the 20 seminarians graduating from the theology course, seven from Caceres will be ordained deacons, and each will serve in two parishes before being ordained as priests next year. Five are from the Bicol region of the Society of the Mother of God the Trinity (SOLT), and two are from Papua New Guinea.

The rector said 16 of the 23 university graduates are from Caceres and seven are from SOLT. Thirteen will continue their theological studies, two will take a year off and one has left the seminary.

Father Augusto Angeles, executive secretary of the bishops’ Seminary Commission, estimates that Caceres has had an average of six to 10 priestly ordinations a year over the past five years. He ranks the diocese among the “leading dioceses” in terms of the number of priestly ordinations each year.

His Daet Diocese, which oversees Camarines Norte province northwest of Caceres, ordained three priests this year and “hopes to have 24 priests ordained in the next five years,” Father Angeles told UCA News in late March 2008.

The Archdiocese of Cebu, in the central Philippines, and the Davao region in Mindanao, in the southern Philippines, also have “a lot” of priestly ordinations each year, the priest said. The St. Francis Xavier Regional Seminary in Davao City, 965 kilometers southeast of Manila, hopes to ordain 12 priests this year for eight southern dioceses and two religious congregations.

Manila’s San Carlos Seminary hopes to ordain eight priests. Two are for Manila, four are for other Asian countries, and two are for two dioceses in the northern Philippines. Seven priests are to be ordained at the Jesuits’ San Jose Seminary for Diocesan Priesthood, while the Dominicans’ Santo Tomas Seminary has 10 seminarians from various Philippine dioceses preparing for ordination.

At the 2004 National Clergy Conference near Manila, Bishop Luis Tagle of Imus told reporters that there are about 8,700 priests serving some 65 million Filipino Catholics.

UCA News

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October 24, 2007

Piscataway priest charged with criminal sexual conduct

METUCHEN (NJ)
NJ Advance Media - nj.com [Iselin NJ]

October 24, 2007

By Tom Haydon | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com

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Rev. Edgardo Abano

A priest at a Catholic church in Piscataway was arrested and charged with repeatedly inappropriately touching a man working for the Diocese of Metuchen, Middlesex County Prosecutor Bruce Kaplan announced today.

The Rev. Edgardo Abano, 51, pastor of Saint Francis Cabrini Roman Catholic Church on Netherwood Avenue, was arrested Tuesday and charged with criminal sexual conduct, a fourth-degree crime that carries a maximum sentence of 18 months prison upon conviction.

Authorities began investigating Abano on Sept. 25, after receiving information from the diocese, Kaplan said in a statement released today. The employee told investigators that Abano touched him inappropriately on the chest and buttocks on various occasions in 2005, Kaplan said.

All of the incidents occurred at the church rectory, authorities said. Abano, who was ordained a priest in May 1985, was released on $1,500 bail.

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May 25, 2007

Woman withdraws rape charge against priest

ILOILO CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Gulf News [Dubai, United Arab Emirates]

May 25, 2007

By Ulyssis Israel, Correspondent

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Iloilo City: A woman who wanted to work abroad and live a normal life withdrew the rape case she filed against a Roman Catholic priest in central Philippines in February this year, a prosecutor said.

The case against Father Martin Alarcon was dismissed because of the complainant’s “lack of interest”, said prosecutor Bernabe Dusaban of Iloilo City, in a resolution dated May 2 which was belatedly released this week.

The priest’s self-confessed mistress sent a letter to Iloilo’s provincial prosecutor, saying, “I cannot attend the hearings, I am not interested any more in prosecuting the case.”

Her lawyer, Edeljulio Romero, explained, “She has suffered from anxiety and she has expressed her desire to end the case and live a normal life.”

Beyond doubt

“She has also said she might not be able to prove the guilt of the priest she has accused beyond reasonable doubt,” said the lawyer, but did not give more details.

The complainant claimed that Alarcon raped her on February 1 and 6 at the latter’s house in Leganes, Iloilo, when she tried to end their illicit love affair. Earlier, she also withdrew a case for obstruction of justice and illegal detention that were filed against three priests and a nun.

Reacting to the dismissal of the case filed against him, Alarcon said he will take an indefinite leave. The media attention that the case has attracted has tarnished his name, the priest said. 

Earlier, he said his accuser was lying, adding that her charges were based on weak allegations. But he was relieved of his duties at the Carles parish church after his accuser told her story to the media. An eight-member tribunal that was convened by Jaro Archbishop Angel Lagdameo investigated the woman’s allegations.

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June 9, 2003

Fr. Jing cleared of sex rap: money hunt

CEBU CITY (PHILIPPINES)
Wayback Machine Internet Archive [San Francisco CA]

June 9, 2003

By Kathy Shaw

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CEBU — The complaint for acts of lasciviousness against former Basilica del Sto. Niño rector Fr. Apolinario “Jing” Mejorada was thrown out by the prosecutor’s office. 

The Office of the Cebu City Prosecutor, in a resolution dated June 9, 2003, decided to dismiss the case, pointing out that the complainant was out for “extortion.” 

Upon review, City Prosecutor Jose Pedrosa reversed the findings of Associate Prosecuting Attorney Rogelio del Prado, who originally recommended that the priest be charged with allegedly sexually abusing former altar boy Michal Gatchalian. 

Pedrosa instead upheld the comments submitted by the office’s reviewing prosecutor Nicolas Sellon, who described the complainant as having gone “money hunting” in running after Mejorada. 

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October 23, 1991

HEARING ON FATHER MANSMANN´S ALLEGED RAPE CASE IS STALLED

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

October 23, 1991

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The National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) has delayed its hearing on an alleged rape by a priest in Davao City, 975 kilometers southeast of Manila.

NBI officials at their Davao regional office told UCA News the agent assigned to the case needed more time for a “proper investigation” of the allegations. The hearing had been set for Oct. 17.

Passionist Father Rex Mansmann, director of Santa Cruz Mission in Lake Sebu, South Cotabato, 1,000 kilometers southeast of Manila, was accused of rape by a 13-year-old T´Boli tribal girl.

The girl, Loyda Toyot, told the press here Father Mansmann raped her in his convent Sept. 18. Toyot was presented to the press by the Office of Southern Cultural Communities (OSCC), a government organization that has tried to close down Santa Cruz Mission on several occasions.

In Manila, a press conference at Christ the King Seminary in Quezon City Oct. 19 presented denials of the allegations on the missioner´s behalf.

Samuel Loco, a T´Boli and former student at the mission, said at the forum that he knows Toyot personally and that people who are pressing the case are not in any way related to her. 

Loco, now municipal councilman, said, “Loyda has no relatives. Her neighbors are excited over the case because they believe they would get something from settlement proceeds.”

OSCC claimed Toyot´s father filed the rape complaint.

According to Father Mansmann the charges came after the Sept. 24-27 Tribal Filipino Workshop-Consultation hosted by the mission. House Bill 3381 introduced by the Diocese of Marbel was presented to legislators, government officials, foreign dignitaries and civic leaders.

The bill seeks to secure tribal Filipinos´ ancestal domain and, if approved, would abolish OSCC.

In a statement he sent from Pennsylvania, United States, where he is undergoing medical checkup, Father Mansmann said: “The attack on my name and reputation is the latest attempt of the OSCC-PANAMIN clique to harass … and destroy Santa Cruz Mission.”

Father Mansmann says that PANAMIN (Presidential Assistance for National Minorities) was “discredited and disbanded” in 1986, only to be established again under President Corazon Aquino as OSCC, which consists mostly of former PANAMIN employees. 

He said in 1974, PANAMIN instigated a vicious campaign against Santa Cruz Mission and himself.

The missioner had criticized the office´s alleged exploitation of ethnic Filipinos to gain funds and its alleged unlawful exploitation of natural resources in the area.

Twice in the past Father Mansmann was accused of rape, and in 1989, he was branded as an agent of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency. Later he was accused of being a member of the Communist-led New People´s Army. All the charges were dismissed.

“They can no longer accuse Father Mansmann of other crimes … so they have to use a moral ground,” Father Wilfredo Estraza, vice provincial of the Passionist congregation said at the Quezon City forum.

He said the Passionist community will defend their colleague who has been “indicted through the local media and dailies.”

“I am not the only victim. It is obvious to me that the girl bringing the charges has no motive of her own but was sought out and coached by the OSCC of the provincial and regional levels,” Father Mansmann wrote.

END

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