Archive for November, 2019
Voice of the Faithful Focus News Roundup
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Voice of the Faithful on November 26, 2019
Nov. 26, 2019
TOP STORIES
Church sex-abuse boards often undermine victims, help clergy
“Facing thousands of cases of clergy sex abuse, U.S. Catholic leaders addressed their greatest crisis in the modern era with a promised reform: Mandatory review boards. These independent panels with lay people in each diocese would review allegations fairly and kindly. And they would help bishops ensure that no abusive priests stayed in ministry. But almost two decades later, an Associated Press investigation of review boards across the country shows they have broadly failed to uphold these commitments(link is external). Instead, review boards appointed by bishops and operating in secrecy have routinely undermined sex abuse claims from victims, shielded accused priests and helped the church avoid payouts.” By Reese Dunklin, Mitch Weiss and Matt Sedensky, Associated Press
Does the Church get it on sex abuse? Classic Catholic reply is, ‘sic et non’
“Since last summer’s twin eruptions of the Pennsylvania Grand Jury report and the scandals surrounding ex-cardinal and ex-priest Theodore McCarrick, many Catholics have found themselves wondering if anything’s truly changed in the Church vis-à-vis the clerical abuse scandals. After decades of crisis and repeated vows of reform, they ask, is it possible the Church still doesn’t get it?(link is external)” By John L. Allen, Curxnow.com
Catholic bishops’ new anti-abuse hotline to be ready soon
“A new national hotline to report sexual misconduct accusations against Catholic bishops in the U.S. could be operating by the end of February(link is external), three months ahead of the deadline set by Pope Francis. That forecast came Wednesday (Nov.13) from Anthony Picarello, general counsel for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, as the bishops concluded a three-day national assembly. The early start-up date would require all of the nearly 200 dioceses to be ready; church officials sounded optimistic that would happen.” By David Crary and Regina Garcia Cano, Associated Press
Cardinal Pell granted final appeal of conviction on sexual abuse charges
“Australia’s highest court has granted Cardinal George Pell leave to appeal his landmark conviction for sexually assaulting two choirboys(link is external) in the 1990s, setting the stage for a new round of hearings next year to evaluate the historical conduct of the Vatican’s former No. 3 official. The High Court of Australia announced the decision to allow the cardinal a final appeal the morning of Nov. 13 in Canberra. Pell, who was sentenced to six years in prison in March, will remain in jail pending the court’s decision on his appeal, expected to come in 2020.” By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
Catholic Church files to challenge law protecting sex abuse victims
“A Long Island Catholic diocese is suing to overturn the Child Victims Act(link is external), claiming the new law that protects sex abuse survivors, many of whom suffered at the hands of the church, is unconstitutional. The Diocese of Rockville Centre filed papers Tuesday in Nassau County Supreme Court against the act, which changed the statute of limitations for child sex crimes and opened up a year-long window where any child sex abuse victim can file a claim against their abuser, regardless of when the alleged crime happened.” By Gabrielle Fonrouge, New York Post
- A Catholic diocese in New York is trying to stop more child sex abuse survivors from suing(link is external), By Carter Sherman, Vice news
U.S. bishops elect L.A.’s Archbishop José Gomez as president
“Archbishop José H. Gomez of Los Angeles was elected by an overwhelming majority Tuesday (Nov. 12) to be the new president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops(link is external). Archbishop Gomez, born in Mexico and a naturalized U.S. citizen, is the first Latino elected to head the conference. Bishops meeting in Baltimore this week for their annual fall gathering also elected Archbishop Allen H. Vigneron of Detroit as vice president. The vice presidential election, which requires a simple majority of those bishops voting, took three ballots, with Archbishop Vigneron receiving the most votes on each ballot.” By Michael J. O’Loughlin, America: The Jesuit Review
- U.S. Catholic bishops elect Hispanic immigrant as leader(link is external), By Elizabeth Dias, The New York Times
Child sex abuse inquiry: Catholic Church ‘shocked to core by evil of clergy’
“The leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales has told an inquiry the Church was ‘shocked to the core’ by child sexual abuse(link is external) perpetrated by members of the clergy. The Archbishop of Westminster, Cardinal Vincent Nichols, said the community had struggled to cope with ‘the presence of evil embodied in its members.’” By BBC News
Catholic bishops’ agenda: immigrants, gun deaths, sex abuse
“US Catholic bishops received a challenging to-do list Monday (Nov. 11) as they opened their national assembly — notably to support immigrants and refugees, extend the campaign to curtail clergy sex abuse and work harder to combat gun violence(link is external). They also were urged by Pope Francis’ envoy to be more vigorous in promoting sometimes-divisive segments of the pope’s agenda. ‘The pope has emphasized certain themes: Mercy, closeness to the people… a spirit of hospitality toward migrants, and dialogue with those of other cultures and religions,’ Archbishop Christophe Pierre, the papal nuncio, told the bishops as they opened a three-day meeting. ‘Do you believe these are gradually becoming part of the mindset of your clergy and your people?’” By David Crary and Regina Garcia Cano
- USCCB Fall Assembly 2019(link is external), By National Catholic Reporter
ACCOUNTABILITY
Pennsylvania moves closer to overhauling child sex crimes after Senate passes ‘historic’ reforms
“Pennsylvania on Wednesday (Nov. 20) took one step closer to joining the ranks of states that have overhauled child sex crime laws(link is external). The state Senate approved measures that would open a pathway for adults who were sexually abused as children to seek legal recourse. By an overwhelming majority vote, the Senate passed two House measures that will broadly reform the statute of limitations and address the recommendations made by the scathing 2018 grand jury report into clergy sex abuse in the Catholic Church statewide.” By Ivey DeJesus, PennLive.com
Does Catholic Church move priests with credible accuse claims to keep them hidden?
Overview: What did WCPO I-Team find in investigation into sexual abuse in Catholic Church?(link is external)
Part 2: Does Catholic Church move priests with credible accuse claims to keep them hidden? (link is external)Part(link is external)
By Craig Cheatham, WCPO-TV9 News
- Status report on substantiated allegations of sexual abuse against clerics(link is external), By Archdiocese of Cincinnati
- Abuse survivors say statute of limitations keeps priests and the church from taking responsibility(link is external), By Craig Cheatham, Paula Christian and Dan Monk, WCPO-TV9 News
Pope’s point man on abuse to U.S. Church: be prepared for new revelations
“One of Pope Francis’s closest allies in fighting clergy sex abuse praised the American church for going ‘a step further’ than the Vatican’s new global guidelines for bishop accountability by requiring a third-party reporting system, which is set to take effect next year … At the same time, in remarks at the University of Notre Dame on Wednesday (Nov. 13), (Archbishop Charles) Scicluna warned that Americans must be prepared for further revelations similar to those in the 2018 Pennsylvania Grand Jury report(link is external), which chronicled decades of past abuse of minors at the hands of clergy, particularly as numerous states are undergoing their own similar investigations. By Christopher White, Cruxnow.com
Making ministry whole
“In a recent Commonweal article, my Dominican brother Michael Sweeney presented an excellent overview of the ‘paradigmatic clericalism’ that has marked Catholicism since at least the Council of Trent(link is external). This has persisted despite the theological shift that took place at Vatican II, which included such landmark developments as the emergence of ‘lay ecclesial ministry’ and the creation of the permanent diaconate. While these were important steps forward, much of the council’s promise to empower the laity remains unrealized. There are other post-conciliar developments, however, that may prove to be far more significant in declericalizing the church.” By Fr. Charles Bouchard, O.P., Commonweal
POPE FRANCIS
Pope taps fellow Jesuit as Vatican’s finance minister
“Pope Francis on Thursday (Nov. 14) appointed a fellow Jesuit to be the Vatican’s finance minister(link is external), filling a crucial position left vacant for more than two years after Cardinal George Pell left Rome to stand trial on sex abuse charges in his native Australia. The appointment of the Rev. Juan Antonio Guerrero Alves, a 60-year-old Spanish economist, came one day after Australia’s Supreme Court agreed to hear Pell’s appeal of his conviction for molesting two choirboys in the 1990s. Pell denies the charges.” By Nicole Winfield, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
McCARRICK INVESTIGATION
O’Malley: Vatican may ‘soon’ release details of McCarrick investigation
“In a brief presentation Nov. 11 to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Boston’s Cardinal Sean P. O’Malley told the bishops gathered in Baltimore the Vatican may publish what it knows about the ascent to power of now-disgraced former U.S. Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick by Christmas(link is external), or perhaps the New Year. McCarrick was dismissed by the Vatican from the clerical state in February following an investigation of accusations that he had abused children early on in his career of more than 60 years as a cleric, and that he also had abused seminarians as a bishop.” By Rhina Guidos, Catholic News Service
BISHOPS
French bishops back payments to sex abuse victims
“French bishops voted on Saturday (Nov. 16) in favor of a plan to offer payments to people who were sexually abused as children by members of the Catholic clergy(link is external). The French bishops conference said in a statement that each bishop would get in touch with victims they knew of to offer a ‘single lump sum of money.’ It added that neither the French legal system nor the Church required the payment of the money, and it was not intended to be a reparation.” By Reuters, in The New York Times
Bishop who investigated sex abuse accused of sex abuse
“A Roman Catholic bishop named by Pope Francis to investigate the church’s response to clergy sexual abuse in Buffalo, New York, has himself been accused of sexual abuse of a child(link is external), an attorney for the alleged victim notified the church this week. The attorney informed Catholic officials in New Jersey that he is preparing a lawsuit on behalf of a client who says he was molested by Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio in the mid-1970s, when DiMarzio was a parish priest in Jersey City. DiMarzio said there is no truth to the accusation.” By Michael Rezendes, Associated Press
- Diocese of Candem points to bishop DiMarzio’s record in fighting abuse(link is external), By The Tablet
U.S. bishops: consensus by bromides
“As the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops opened its plenary this morning (Nov. 11), and always they begin with morning prayer, the bishops had scarcely finished the Benedictus when Bishop Joseph Strickland of Tyler, Texas, approached one of the microphones to urge the bishops to focus on the defense of the deposit of faith(link is external). Looking around the room, I did not see any posters that read ‘Down with the Nicene Creed’ nor witness any bishops whispering against the hypostatic union. What was he talking about? The poor man has bought into the nonsense emanating from LifeSiteNews and EWTN, from Cardinal Raymond Burke and Kazakhstan Auxiliary Bishop Athanasius Schneider, the idea that Pope Francis is indifferent or even hostile to orthodoxy. It is bunk, of course, but bunk with a currency in certain well-funded conservative sectors of the church in the United States.” By Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter
Bishops’ priorities and plans: a nothing burger
“The U.S. bishops seem determined to turn their conference, once the model for other countries, into a nothing burger(link is external). Detroit Archbishop Allen Vigneron presented the 2021-2024 ‘Priorities and Plans’ and the consultation among the bishops that led to their formulation. The first item is ‘Evangelization: Form a joyful band of missionary disciples of Jesus Christ.’ The items under this heading were not earth-shattering, and they lacked the Holy Father’s heartfelt way of discussing evangelization. They were unobjectionable but nothing more.” By Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter
Embattled Buffalo bishop in Rome next week for ad limina visit
“Buffalo’s embattled bishop, Richard Malone, will be in Rome next week(link is external) (Nov. 11) as part of the New York region’s scheduled meetings with Vatican officials. Crux confirmed with Kathy Spangler, a spokesperson for the diocese, on Wednesday (Nov. 6) that Malone will be in attendance. The meetings, known as the ad limina visits, are part of the regularly scheduled meetings between bishops and officials from the Roman Curia.” By Christopher White, Cruxnow.com
Mexican prelate says bishops should admit moving predators was a mistake
“A Mexican archbishop has said it’s time for prelates to own up to the mistakes they’ve made handling clerical sexual abuse cases(link is external), including what he euphemistically called the “geographical solution” of simply moving predators from one assignment to another without addressing their behavor. “We bishops need to acknowledge the mistakes of the past: we weren’t conscious of the seriousness of the issue, and the solutions we gave weren’t the right ones,” said Archbishop Rogelio Cabrera, of Monterrey, president of the Mexican bishops’ conference.” By Inés San Martin, Cruxnow.com
PRIESTS
Most priests accused of sexually abusing children were never sent to prison. Here’s why.
“The Catholic Church has been under scrutiny from survivors, victims’ advocates and, in some cases, law enforcement, since early 2002, when the sex abuse crisis that involved church administration covering for thousands of priests first became public knowledge. In the last two decades, there’s been major church reform, including the 2002 Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People, which established guidelines for dealing with allegations of sexual abuse of a minor. Meanwhile, dioceses across the country have released lists of credibly accused priests, many of whom are deceased. Most of these men have never faced criminal prosecution, often because of statute of limitation laws(link is external) that advocates across the country are trying to change. And some claim they have been wrongly accused.” By Lindsay Schnell, USA TODAY
VATICAN
President of Vatican’s financial watchdog agency resigns in apparent surprise
“The head of the Vatican’s financial watchdog authority will be leaving his post by the end of the month(link is external), the city-state said in an unexpected Nov. 18 announcement adding to a months-long saga that has brought to light new questions about the Vatican’s economic controls. René Brülhart, a Swiss lawyer and former head of Liechtenstein’s financial intelligence unit, has led the agency, formally known as the Financial Information Authority (AIF), since 2014.” By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
Vatican youth seminary scandal grows with new abuse claims
“A scandal over alleged sexual molestation and abuse at the Vatican’s youth seminary is growing(link is external), with more former papal altar boys alleging inappropriate behavior by priests inside the Vatican walls. Le Iene, an Italian investigative television program, plans to air the new allegations Sunday; the show provided the broadcast to The Associated Press ahead of time. The Vatican announced in September that its criminal prosecutor was seeking to indict a former senior seminarian and the then-rector of the St. Pius X seminary on sexual abuse charges.” By Nicole Winfield, Associated Press
CHURCH FINANCES
Four Twin Cities women charged in scheme to steal more than $680,000 meant for Catholic Charities homeless
“Federal authorities have charged four more people in an elaborate scheme to steal hundreds of thousands of dollars from Catholic Charities(link is external). The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced Tuesday (Nov. 12) that they’ve charged four women with conspiracy to commit wire fraud to obtain more than $680,000 in charitable funds meant to help homeless people. The case is related to one that broke earlier this year when the U.S. Attorney’s Office charged five people with defrauding the nonprofit.” By Mary Lynn Smith, Star Tribune
CELIBACY& MARRIED PRIESTS
Almost nine in ten believe Catholic priests should be able to marry
“In a recent poll on IrishCentral, readers decided by an overwhelming majority that Catholic priests should be allowed to marry(link is external). In total, 320 of you voted with 87.5% saying that yes, priests should be allowed to marry within the Catholic Church. Voting against were 9.06% while 3.44% were unsure.” By IrishCentral
- Debate on whether Catholic priests can get married is again in the news. But the ban is a relatively new tradition(link is external), By Wyatt Massey, Chattanooga Times Free Press
VOICES
Will Pennsylvania legislators leave victims of priest sex abuse out in the cold?
“And what have legislative leaders, especially Sen. Joseph Scarnati, offered to these victims? The short answer is – essentially nothing(link is external). No window to identify hidden predators, and the ruse of an unlikely constitutional amendment. Fifteen years of offensive foot dragging, especially alarming given the risk to so many children. And what do they offer? A long, narrow and crooked road to justice, one treacherous path covered in thin ice of electoral instability and legislative uncertainty. A challenging road to nowhere.” By Kathryn Robb and Marci Hamilton
Editorial: May the Church embrace true transparency
“A variety of potentially divisive issues, ranging from immigration to gun control, were discussed by U.S. Roman Catholic bishops during a national meeting in Baltimore last week. Dealing with the elephant in the room ought to be at the top of their agenda(link is external). Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, who is archbishop of the Galveston-Houston diocese, is ending a three-year term as head of the national Conference of Catholic Bishops. Much of his time in the post has been dominated by controversy over the church’s handling of predator priests — and those with even higher positions in the church.” By The Winchester Star Editorial Board
Synodality isn’t just an option, it’s the only way to be church
“Last week, San Diego Bishop Robert McElroy delivered the 2019 MacTaggert Lecture at St. Mary’s University in San Antonio. In a manner in keeping with his typical erudite yet accessible articulation of church teaching and recognition of the pressing signs of our times, McElroy made a case for a broader embrace of what he called ‘the type of synodal pathway that the church in the Amazon has been undergoing(link is external).’ Drawing on his own experience as a participant in the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon Region last month and having overseen a local synodal process in the San Diego Diocese, McElroy identified four ecclesial characteristics that result from a more-synodal existence …” By Daniel P. Horan, National Catholic Reporter
The Editors: Evangelization, polarization and accountability among the most pressing issues for the U.S. church
“The bishops of the United States are wending their way to Rome in different groups over the next four months for their ad limina apostolorum(link is external) visits with Pope Francis and other Vatican officials. The visits, held every five years, allow bishops the chance to voice their specific concerns about their dioceses—and to get feedback from the Vatican as well. There are myriad issues that need discussion, including the ongoing sexual abuse crisis and the continued exodus of U.S. Catholics from the church. But the visits are short, and both the bishops and the pope necessarily have to choose among the other issues they want to discuss.” By The Editors, America: The Jesuit Review
Georgetown University issues report on sex abuse, makes recommendations
“In order to best address the twin crises of clergy sexual abuse and leadership failure(link is external), a report released Nov. 4 by Georgetown University recommends placing victim-survivors at the center of the response and confronting clericalism. The report titled, ‘Lay Leadership for a Wounded Church and Divided Nation: Lessons, Directions, and Paths Forward,’ was created by Georgetown’s Initiative on Catholic Social Thought and Public Life. It reflects and summarizes key ideas and proposals from a June 14-15 national convening here of more than 50 mostly lay Catholic leaders from across the United States.” By Jesse Remedios, National Catholic Reporter
CHURCH FINANCES
How Vermont’s Catholic Church stashed away a half-billion dollars in assets
“When Vermont’s Catholic Church recently came clean about its half-century-long history of child sex abuse claims against 10% of its clergy, many wondered how much money the state’s largest religious denomination had on hand to deal with a potential new wave of lawsuits. The statewide Diocese of Burlington’s latest public financial statement lists $16 million in unrestricted net assets. But that figure doesn’t include an estimated $500 million in property that church leaders stashed into trusts more than a decade ago to protect those assets from priest abuse settlements(link is external).” By Kevin O’Connor, VTDigger.com
Pope appoints Jesuit priest as Prefect of Secretariat for Economy
“The Holy Father has appointed Father Juan Antonio Guerrero as the Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy of the Holy See(link is external). Currently, the 60-year-old Jesuit, Father Juan Antonio Guerrero, is the Father General’s Delegate for Interprovincial Roman Houses and Works. He is also a General Councillor. ‘As a Jesuit, it is a joy to receive a mission directly from the Pope. It is a privileged way to realize my vocation,’ said Father Guerrero.” By Vatican News
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
Abuse survivors say statute of limitations keeps priests and the church from taking responsibility
“Christy Miller doesn’t want the Catholic Church’s money. She just wants the church to pay. ‘It was never about the money for me. It was about justice(link is external),’ she said. ‘If it hits their pocketbook, they’re more apt to change. That’s why the money plays a role.’ Miller sued the Archdiocese of Cincinnati in 2003, alleging her high school religion teacher, the Rev. Thomas Brunner, sexually abused her for two years in the mid 1980s.” By Dan Monk, Paula Christian and Craig Cheatham, WCPO-TV9 News
Victims of Catholic Church sex abuse want statute of limitations to be dropped
“An attorney who represents victims of sex abuse by Catholic priests called on Colorado legislators to drop the statute of limitations(link is external) on such crimes on Wednesday (Nov. 13). Jeff Anderson also presented names and photos of around 100 priests who served in Colorado who have been accused sex abuse. One name on the list was now-former Jesuit Father Patrick O’Liddy. CBS4 featured him in a news story several years ago.” By Rick Sallinger, CBS-TV4 Denver
CLERGY CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE
Catholic priest arrested after 11-year-old girl allegedly records herself being molested
“An 11-year-old Italian girl has been hailed as a hero after using her cell phone to document the alleged sexual abuse inflicted on her by a Catholic priest(link is external). Father Michele Mottola, 59, was arrested this week in Trentola Ducenta, near Naples, after audio recordings said to be of him and the girl were given to local press. The bishop of Aversa, Angello Spinillo, was made aware of the allegations as early as May 2018 and suspended Mottola at the time, as well as reporting the allegations to the Public Prosecutor of the Commissariat of Aversa. However, no further action was taken against the priest.” By Tareq Haddad, Newsweek
Sex abuse prevention expert says ‘no simple answers to complex problems’
“Last week, Father Hans Zollner, a German Jesuit who is a member of Pope Francis’s Commission for the Protection of Minors, showed an uncharacteristic moment of impatience during a Q&A when he was asked by a priest why he wasn’t focusing on homosexuality as the real cause of clerical sex abuse … In an interview following the event, he explained that he was a bit under the weather so he was off his game somewhat, however, he stood by the core of his response to the priest: ‘There are things that you can repeat over and over again and people don’t get it.(link is external) As I said in my response to him, it’s the same when people repeat over and over again that it is celibacy that causes the abuse.’” By Shannon Levitt and Inés San Martin, Cruxnow.com
Expert says some Latin American churches are doing ‘nothing’ about abuse
“When the Boston Globe released a shocking series of news stories about the clerical sexual abuse scandals in the city of Boston in 2002, Father Daniel Portillo was a seminarian(link is external). When Mexican Father Marcial Maciel, the disgraced founder of the Legionaries of Christ who was found to have abused minors, died in 2005, Portillo was in Rome and saw how some members of the order founded by the late priest still labeled him a saint.” By Inés San Martin, Cruxnow.com
Abuse crisis shows need for holiness, renewal in church, priests say
“Four Catholic priests who serve in various ministries and are on the front lines facing the aftershocks of the abuse crisis in the Catholic Church gave their perspective on helping the church address the problem(link is external). They participated in an Oct. 29 panel discussion sponsored by the Catholic Project, an initiative of The Catholic University of America. The event was held at the university’s Heritage Hall.” By Mark Zimmerman, Catholic News Service
LatAm activitsts aim to press beyond ‘cosmetic actions’ on sex abuse crisis
“Three years after a national congress regarding the sexual abuse of minors, the Pontifical University of Mexico in Mexico City is again hosting a conference discussing sex abuse in the continent’s Catholic communities(link is external). ‘The Latin American Church cannot expect significant change if we continue with the same things we’ve been doing,’ said conference organizer Father Daniel Portillo Trevizo, Director of the Center of Investigation and Interdisciplinary Formation for the Protection of Minors (CEPROME).” By Shannon Levitt, Chruxnow.com
COLORADO
Law firm releases report naming Colorado Catholic clerics accused of sexual abuse
“A law firm that has published more than two dozen reports about sexual abuse in the Catholic church released a report Wednesday (Nov. 13) that includes information about 102 clerics who are accused of child sexual abuse and worked within the Archdiocese of Denver(link is external), and the dioceses of Pueblo and Colorado Springs. The report from Jeff Anderson and Associates includes 95 names. Seven priests in the report are unidentified. It comes on the heels of an independent review from former U.S. Attorney Bob Troyer, which named 43 Catholic priests who were accused of sexually abusing children in those same three dioceses.” By Janet Oravetz and Marc Sallinger, 9News.com
KANSAS
Prosecutors: Kansas City Kansas priest in child sex case to get new trial date after jury deadlocks
“The Wyandotte County District Attorney’s Office intends to bring a new trial against a Kansas City, Kansas, Roman Catholic priest accused of child molestation(link is external). The trial against the Rev. Scott Kallal, 37, will likely be scheduled in April and held in May, Jonathan Carter, the office’s spokesman, told The Star on Wednesday. Kallal faces two felony counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child. His original trial, held in September, ended in mistrial after the jury could not agree on a verdict.” By Katie Bernard, The Kansas City Star
KENTUCKY
Covington Diocese to review priest files amid I-Team investigation into abuse in Catholic Church
“The Diocese of Covington hired two former FBI agents to review its records on priests over the past 59 years to determine if all allegations of child sexual abuse have been reported to authorities(link is external). A diocese spokeswoman announced the independent review on Tuesday, just days before the WCPO I-Team is scheduled to publish and air a three-month investigation into how local Catholic Church leaders handle allegations of priest sexual abuse.” By Craig Cheatham, WCPO-TV9 News
LOUISIANA
New molestation suit accuses Jesuuit of using parent, alumni donations to pay abuse settlements
“A former Jesuit High School student who says he was raped by a predator janitor on the school’s campus(link is external) in the 1970s alleges in a new lawsuit that Jesuit officials have used millions of dollars in parent and alumni money to cover abuse-related settlements. The 19-page suit is the latest in a series of complaints attributing acts of sexual abuse to Peter Modica, a former minor league baseball player who got a job on Jesuit’s groundskeeping staff despite having previously pleaded guilty to molesting two teenagers.” By Ramon Antonio Vargas, NOLA.com
Catholics form new group to fight for transparency and disclosure of secret records
“They call themselves Catholics of Louisiana for Church Reform. They are convinced the future of the church depends on total transparency concerning the sexual abuse scandal and cover-up(link is external). Despite the release of lists of credibly accused clergy, victims and their advocates have challenged the completeness and accuracy of the information made public in Southwest Louisiana and beyond. Luke Jones founded Catholics of Louisiana for Church Reform.” By KPLC-TV7 News
MARYLAND
Survivors of clergy sex abuse call for Church to release names of leaders accused of abuse
“Survivors of clergy sex abuse and their supporters are outlining their requests for Catholic Church leaders ahead of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which began Monday (Nov. 11) in Baltimore. Among the changes victims want to see are archdioceses nationwide releasing the names of clergy and anyone in the church who has been accused of abuse(link is external).” By Rachel Menitoff, WJZ-TV13 News
MICHIGAN
Priest sentenced in AG’s clergy abuse investigation
“One of six Catholic priests charged in an investigation by the attorney general’s office received his sentence Wednesday(link is external) (Nov. 20). Patrick Casey, 56, will serve 45 days in jail, one year of probation and have to register as a sex offender after pleading guilty to a charge of aggravated assault in October.” By FOX17Online.com
MINNESOTA
Sexually abused as a child, Minnesota priest feels revictimized by attorney’s disclosure
“Like any other Sunday, the Rev. Joseph Richards led Mass on Nov. 10 at St. Joseph’s Catholic Church in Fertile, a northwest Minnesota town in Polk County with almost 850 residents. But this was the first Sunday Richards would address the congregation since it was revealed he was sexually abused as a child by his great-uncle(link is external). It was also disclosed that he sought help after having sexual fantasies about children and that he admitted to inappropriately touching a 5-year-old when he was 14.” By April Baumgarten, Forum News Service, Duluth News Tribune
NEW MEXICO
Two new lawsuits accuse Jesuit priests of sexual abuse”
“Allegations of clergy sexual molestation of children struck at the heart of a Downtown Albuquerque church Friday(link is external) (Nov. 15) with the filing of two lawsuits claiming abuse by three Jesuit priests who once ministered there – one as recently as 2011. In one of the two cases, the alleged victim, now 25 years old, contends he was sexually abused eight years ago at Immaculate Conception Church in Albuquerque. His lawyer says he is one of the youngest survivors to come forward in recent years.” By Colleen Heild, Albuquerque Journal
NEW YORK
Outspoken gay Catholic priest Bernard Lynch accused of late-’70s sexual abuse of teen student at Bronx school
“An outspoken, internationally-known gay Catholic priest renowned for his work among New York’s AIDS patients in the 1980s was accused in a Wednesday (Nov. 20) lawsuit of sexually assaulting a teen student at a Bronx school four decades ago(link is external). The anonymous plaintiff, then a 16-year-old at Mount St. Michael Academy, alleged the sexual abuse occurred in 1978-79 when Father Bernard Lynch served as the school’s campus chaplain. Lynch was tried and acquitted of abusing a different student from the same school after a 1989 Bronx trial.” By Larry McShane, New York Daily News
Victims to share stories of impacts of childhood sex abuse
“‘Enlighten & Empower: An Evening with Survivors(link is external)’ will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday (Nov. 14) in the parish center of St. Mary’s Roman Catholic Church, 6919 Transit Road, Swormville. Survivors of childhood sexual abuse will discuss how the abuse has affected them over their lifetimes. The event is being organized by the Buffalo Survivors Group, formed by five men who said they were sexually abused as minors by priests in the Buffalo Diocese.” By Jay Tokasz, The Buffalo News
Lawsuit accuses priest of sexually abusing St. Sylvester’s student in 1960s
“A lawsuit accuses a priest who was a prominent member of the Augustinian Order on Staten Island of sexually abusing a child(link is external) at St. Sylvester’s R.C. Church in Concord in the 1960s. The Child Victims Act lawsuit was filed by Jeff Anderson & Associates on Aug. 14 in state Supreme Court in Manhattan on behalf of an anonymous alleged victim identified only as ARK63 DOE. Named as defendants in the lawsuits are the Archdiocese of New York, the Augustinian Order and related entities, including the former Augustinian Academy on Grymes Hill, and St. Sylvester’s Parish.” By Maura Brunlund, SILive.com
Retired State Supreme Court judge has strong words for Bishop Malone
“Buffalo Bishop Richard J. Malone is on his way to Rome for a face-to-face meeting with Pope Francis. It’s part of a regular visit to the Vatican by New York State’s Catholic bishops, but this time the visit comes on the heels of a massive sexual abuse scandal exposed in part by the 7 Eyewitness News I-Team over the last two years(link is external). Now, a state judge is taking the rare step of speaking out against a sitting bishop.” By Charlie Specht, WKBW-TV7 News
OHIO
Covington Diocese hires ex-FBI agents to perform independent priest sex abuse review
“The Diocese of Covington has hired two former FBI agents to independently review its priest files with an eye toward any potential sex abuse(link is external), according to an article in a Diocese-run publication. In August, Rev. David Glockner was removed from his ministry within the Diocese of Covington at Holy Redeemer Parish in Vanceburg, Kentucky. The 84-year-old priest was accused of inappropriately touching two high school girls, according to an Aug. 8 Enquirer article.” By Chris Mayhew, Cincinnati Enquirer
PENNSYLVANIA
Former altar boys sue Pittsburgh Catholic Diocese over alleged sexual abuse
“Two men who were formerly altar boys at St. Alphonsus Catholic Church in McDonald, filed a 28-page lawsuit on Tuesday (Nov. 19), alleging sexual abuse by a priest at the church in the 1980(link is external)s. Named as defendants in the lawsuit are the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh, current bishop David Zubik and St. Alphonsus Catholic Church. An attorney for the men writes the abuse began in the early 80s, with his clients joining St. Alphonsus Catholic School when they were 11 and 13 years old. Both soon became altar boys.” By Nick Matoney, WTAE-TV4 News
Lawyer for priest on trial says difference cleric abused the victim
“The trial for a retired Catholic priest on sexual abuse charges began with dramatic testimony and a contentious cross-examination(link is external) Wednesday (Nov. 6) after the priest refused a prosecutor’s plea-bargain offer and his defense attorney suggested a different, now-deceased priest is to blame. The Rev. Hugh Lang, 88, a former superintendent of schools for the Diocese of Pittsburgh, faces eight counts related to an alleged assault on an 11-year-old boy in 2001 at St. Therese Parish in Munhall, where Father Lang was a priest at the time.” By Peter Smith, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
VERMONT
Why survivors advocates, accused ex-priest find fault with Catholic Church’s abuser list
“An ex-priest in an Upstate New York diocese left the priesthood in 2000 after serving in various parishes for nearly a decade. Eighteen years later, the Catholic Diocese of Ogdensburg included the man’s name, James Larche, on a list of priests accused of sexual misconduct(link is external). Larche moved to Vermont in 2012 and got a job as a nurse at the University of Vermont Medical Center where he’s worked without incident ever since.” By Isaac Fornarola, Burlington Free Press
WISCONSIN
‘I was such a little kid’: as Wisconsin Catholic clergy accused of sexual abuse grows, the trauma lingers
“When she was 7, Patty Gallagher was chosen to bring the priest who served her parish and school in Monona, Wisconsin, his daily milk. The Rev. Lawrence Trainor was practically a member of the family. He came over for dinner and visited the family cottage. Gallagher’s father and Trainor played cards and drank together. Trainor, a priest at Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, ingratiated himself with her parents. And then, Gallagher said, he ‘raped me in every way possible(link is external).’” By Erica Jones, Wisconsin Watch
- Why we examined Catholic Church clergy sexual abuse in Wisconsin(link is external), By Dee J. Hall, Wisconsin Watch
Sentencing concludes long road to justice
“Thomas Ericksen, a former priest of the Diocese of Superior, was sentenced Sept. 26 in Sawyer County Circuit Court to the maximum 30 years in prison for molesting boys while serving in diocesan parishes decades ago. Although the church long ago settled the question of Ericksen’s fitness for the priesthood – he was removed from ministry in 1983, began a counseling program in the Twin Cities and was permanently removed from the priesthood through laicization in 1988 – Catholics may still have questions(link is external).” By Anita Draper, Catholic Herald of the Diocese of Superior
CANADA
Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver aware of 36 cases of clergy sex abuse since 1950s, CBC learns
“The Catholic Archdiocese of Vancouver was aware of 36 cases of abuse by clergy under its jurisdiction, including 26 involving children(link is external), results of an internal review of cases of clergy sexual abuse obtained by CBC’s The Fifth Estate show. The review, commissioned in 2018 by Archbishop Michael Miller, examined church files dating back to the 1950s. No Catholic entity in this country has ever made this kind of information public before. The Vancouver review also found three of their priests had fathered children.” By Laura Clementson and Gillian Findlay, CBC News
FRANCE
French bishops approve payments for church sex abuse victims
“French bishops on Saturday (Nov. 9) approved plans to financially compensate people abused sexually within the Roman Catholic Church(link is external). Any person recognized by their bishop as a victim will be eligible to receive money, they said, and the church will appeal for donations to foot the bill. Bishops also voted to allocate 5 million euros ($5.5 million) to an independent commission examining church sex abuse in France and to support prevention efforts.” By Claire Parker, The Associated Press
GREAT BRITAIN, SCOTLAND & WALES
Brothers of Stain John denounce sexually abusive founder
“The Brothers of Saint John, a Catholic movement launched in France in 1975, have officially renounced their sexually abusive founder Fr Marie-Dominique Philippe(link is external) and pledged to revise their rules without reference to him. A general chapter held near Lyon concluded the community could no longer recognise the Dominican priest as its inspiration.” By Tom Heneghan, The Tablet
Argentine court finds two Catholic priests guilty of sexually assaulting deaf children; first convictions in long-alleged abuse / The Washington Post
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Pope Francis, Vatican, Voice of the Faithful on November 25, 2019
The three-judge panel in the northwestern Argentine province of Mendoza ruled against the three defendants in 25 instances of abuse between 2004 and 2016. (The Washington Post)
“The landmark verdict related to the Provolo Institute for Deaf and Hearing Impaired Children in the western Argentine city of Luján de Cuyo is the latest stain on the church’s handling of sex abuse cases in Francis’s native Argentina. Argentine prosecutors last week requested an international arrest warrant for Catholic Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta — a longtime associate of the pope accused of sexually abusing two seminarians.
“A Washington Post investigation this year found years of inaction by the church in the case of at least one of the accused priests. The Vatican did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.
“The three-judge panel in the northwestern Argentine province of Mendoza ruled against the three defendants in 25 instances of abuse between 2004 and 2016.”
By Anthony Faiola, Chico Harlan and Stefano Pitrelli, The Washington Post — Read more …
Church sex abuse boards often undermine victims, help clergy / Associated Press
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on November 21, 2019
The AP checked all the roughly 180 dioceses in the U.S. for information, reviewed thousands of pages of church and court records and interviewed more than 75 abuse survivors, board members and others to uncover a tainted process where the church hierarchy holds the reins of power at every stage. (Associated Press)
Facing thousands of cases of clergy sex abuse, U.S. Catholic leaders addressed their greatest crisis in the modern era with a promised reform: Mandatory review boards.
“These independent panels with lay people in each diocese would review allegations fairly and kindly. And they would help bishops ensure that no abusive priests stayed in ministry.
“But almost two decades later, an Associated Press investigation of review boards across the country shows they have broadly failed to uphold these commitments. Instead, review boards appointed by bishops and operating in secrecy have routinely undermined sex abuse claims from victims, shielded accused priests and helped the church avoid payouts.
“The AP also found dozens of cases in which review boards rejected complaints from survivors, only to have them later validated by secular authorities. In a few instances, board members were themselves clergy accused of sexual misconduct. And many abuse survivors told the AP they faced hostility and humiliation from boards.”
By Reese Dunklin, Mitch Weiss and Matt Sedensky, Associated Press — Read more …
Study shows 65% of U.S. Dioceses post audited financial reports online, but 27% post no financial information
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Voice of the Faithful on November 21, 2019
Voice of the Faithful has completed its third annual study of U.S. Catholic dioceses’ online financial transparency. Among the study’s findings are that:
- 65% of U.S. dioceses have exhibited a commitment to financial transparency by sharing audited financial reports on their websites;
- The percentage of U.S. dioceses posting audited financial reports has increased from 56% in 2017 to 61% in 2018 to 65% in 2019;
- 8% of the dioceses provided only unaudited reports in 2019, and the remaining 27% posted no financial information at all;
- The average diocesan transparency score dropped slightly in 2019 due to tighter scoring criteria, but some dioceses achieved dramatic improvement; and
- Other dioceses have stopped posting audited reports, causing their scores to drop sharply.
The study concluded that, although a majority of dioceses have made a commitment to financial transparency, a sizable minority share little or no verifiable financial information with their members. The average overall score achieved by all 177 dioceses comprising the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops in Voice of the Faithful’s 2019 report was 65.25%.
Five dioceses received perfect scores of 100%:
- Archdiocese of Anchorage, Alaska;
- Diocese of Charlotte, North Carolina;
- Diocese of Erie. Pennsylvania;
- Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and
- Diocese of Rochester, New York.
Click here for VOTF’s “Measuring and Ranking
Diocesan Online Financial Transparency: 2019” …
Cardinal Pell granted final appeal of conviction on sexual abuse charges / National Catholic Reporter
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Clergy Sexual Abuse, Voice of the Faithful on November 13, 2019
He (Cardinal George Pell) is the first Vatican official charged by authorities on abuse allegations, the first convicted, and the first sentenced to jail. (National Catholic Reporter)
Australia’s highest court has granted Cardinal George Pell leave to appeal his landmark conviction for sexually assaulting two choirboys in the 1990s, setting the stage for a new round of hearings next year to evaluate the historical conduct of the Vatican’s former No. 3 official.
“The High Court of Australia announced the decision to allow the cardinal a final appeal the morning of Nov. 13 in Canberra. Pell, who was sentenced to six years in prison in March, will remain in jail pending the court’s decision on his appeal, expected to come in 2020.
“Pell was long the highest-ranking Catholic in Australia but was brought to Rome in 2014 by Pope Francis to restructure the Vatican’s finances. He is the first Vatican official charged by authorities on abuse allegations, the first convicted, and the first sentenced to jail.
“The court of appeal in the Australian state of Victoria had rejected an earlier appeal by the cardinal in a 2-1 verdict in August. The appeal granted by the high court Nov. 13 will be Pell’s last opportunity to contest his conviction.”
By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter — Read more …
Voice of the Faithful Focus News Roundup
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Voice of the Faithful on November 12, 2019
TOP STORIES
USCCB president disinvites Bishop Bransfield from fall assembly
“Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, in consultation with the members of the USCCB Administrative Committee, has taken the highly unusual step of disinviting a fellow bishop from the conference’s fall general assembly(link is external). The decision affects Bishop Michael J. Bransfield, retired bishop of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia, who left his position in September 2018 under a cloud of allegations of sexual and financial misconduct.” By Dennis Sadowski, Catholic News Service
Catholic bishops back ordination of married men as priests in Amazon region, a milestone
“ A summit of Roman Catholic bishops meeting at the Vatican recommended on Saturday (Oct. 26) that Pope Francis allow the ordination of married men as priests in the Amazon region(link is external), which would lift a roughly 1,000-year-old restriction and potentially revolutionize the priesthood. It is the first time a grouping of bishops convened by a pope has endorsed such a historic change to the tradition of a celibate priesthood. The proposal is limited to remote areas of South America where there is a scarcity of priests but could set a precedent for easing the restriction on married priests throughout the world.” By Jason Horowitz, The New York Times
- Synod votes to ordain married men and to protect Amazon’s indigenous peoples and rain forest(link is external), By Gerard O’Connell and Luke Hansen, S.J., America: The Jesuit Review
- Vatican synod proposes ordaining married men as priests in the Amazon(link is external), By Philip Pullella, Reuters
- Amazon synod calls for married priests, pope to reopen women deacons’ commission(link is external), By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
Synod calls for more church roles for women but stops short of diaconate
“Members of the Synod of Bishops for the Amazon asked that women be given leadership roles in the Catholic Church, although they stopped short of calling for women deacons(link is external). In the Amazon, like in the rest of the world, the essential roles women play within the family, the community and the church should be valued and recognized officially, members of the synod said in their final document.” By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service, in The Pilot
- Amazon synod final press briefing: the hope that comes from listening, reflecting, praying,(link is external) By Vatican News
Illinois chief justice distrusts church hierarchy to police itself on abuse
“Don’t count on the bishops to clean up sex abuse in the church(link is external), Anne Burke told the annual gathering of Voice of the Faithful here Oct. 19. Burke, chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court and a justice of the court’s First Judicial District, formerly served as interim chair of the National Review Board for the U.S. bishops’ conference; she last addressed Voice of the Faithful in 2012. At that time, she saw reason for optimism that the bishops were willing to address the sex abuse crisis.” By Peter Feuerherd, National Catholic Reporter
Voice of the Faithful surveys U.S. dioceses’ financial transparency
“Catholics in the icy north of Anchorage, Alaska, know the warmth of financial transparency in their local church, while Catholics in tropical St. Thomas, Virgin Islands, are getting the cold shoulder. Those two dioceses represent the polar opposites of this year’s financial transparency survey of American dioceses compiled by Voice of the Faithful(link is external). The Anchorage Archdiocese rated a perfect 100 score, while the St. Thomas Diocese rated the lowest, at 14 points. A total of 177 dioceses were rated. This is the third year of studies on financial transparency compiled by Voice of the Faithful …” By Peter Feuerherd, National Catholic Reporter
A New York diocese filed for bankruptcy, Will others follow?
“The Roman Catholic Diocese of Rochester was the first in New York to seek bankruptcy protection under the weight of new sexual misconduct lawsuits, but lawyers and church leaders say it may not be the last(link is external). All eight of the state’s Roman Catholic dioceses face financial pressures as a result of the state’s new Child Victims Act, which temporarily set aside the usual statute of limitations for lawsuits to give victims of childhood sexual abuse a year to pursue even decades-old claims. More than 400 cases have been brought against the dioceses since Aug. 14, when the law’s one-year “look back” period for such suits began.” By Carolyn Thompson, The Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
ACCOUNTABILITY
Church admits liability in child abuse case
“The Church has accepted legal responsibility for the sexual abuse of a child(link is external) by pedophile Gerald Ridsdale in a significant case that could open the floodgates for survivors seeking compensation. After denying any knowledge of Ridsdale’s offending before the nine-year-old boy was raped in a confessional box at Mortlake, in western Victoria in 1982, lawyers for the Church on Friday (Nov. 1) accepted an amended statement of claim from the survivor in the Supreme Court – in effect admitting legal liability for his crimes.” By CathNews.com
Pope accepts resignation of New York City bishop accused of abuse
“Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of a New York City bishop after he was accused of sexually abusing a teenage boy(link is external) in the 1980s. Auxiliary Bishop John Jenik is the latest head to roll in the ongoing abuse scandal. The Vatican announced his resignation had been accepted Thursday (Oct. 10). For decades the Vatican turned a blind eye to bishops and cardinals who abused minors and adults or covered up the crimes.” By Associated Press on Cruxnow.com
For the editor behind The Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigation, Colorado’s clergy abuse report is ‘eerily similar’
“It’s a group no one wants to be a part of: communities scarred by abuse in Catholic Churches(link is external). With the Attorney General’s office’s report, Colorado now has at least a partial accounting of child sexual abuse in the state’s three dioceses. The independent inquiry revealed that priests abused, at minimum, 166 children in Colorado over 70 years. The Centennial State is far from the first community that has already been down this path. A prominent one is Boston, where in 2002, the Boston Globe’s Spotlight investigation revealed widespread sexual abuse of children by priests in the Archdiocese of Boston and an ensuing cover-up by church leaders.” By Avery Lill, Colorado Public Radio
Catholic group calls on more diocese restructure following latest Bransfield report
“West Virginia Catholics are once again stunned by news about former Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston Bishop Michael Bransfield(link is external). The Washington Post recently reported that Bransfield took millions of dollars from church-owned Wheeling Hospital for the bishop’s fund. Mark Switzer, part of the Lay Catholics for Change said on Wednesday’s (Oct. 30) MetroNews ‘Talkline’ the reaction of church members has been much of the same with the most recent report.” By WVMetroNews.com
French bishops plan to open plenary meetings to lay participation
“France’s Catholic bishops plan to open their plenary assembly for the first time to lay participation(link is external) following the passage of a controversial bioethics law despite mass church-backed opposition. Constance Pluviaud, media relations officer of the French Catholic bishops’ conference, said Archbishop Eric de Moulins-Beaufort of Reims, conference president, ‘wants to change how our plenaries function and highlight themes common to both church and society.’ By Jonathan Luxmoore, Catholic News Service, in National Catholic Reporter
Bransfield extreme, but most U.S. bishops have no meaningful spending controls
“Michael Bransfield is the poster child for runaway clericalism. The former bishop of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia, represents the worst in the corrupted tradition of the priesthood over the centuries. He saw the church and its resources as his personal plaything(link is external). He saw the people of the church, both clergy and laity, as his servants. He sees himself as a feudal lord. Unlike Jesus, he did not see himself as a servant, especially to the poor … Why were there no controls? Most U.S. bishops have no meaningful controls on their spending.” By Fr. Peter Daly, National Catholic Reporter
- Bransfield used $21 million from Wheeling Hospital for ‘Bishop’s Fund(link is external),’ By WTRF-TV Staff on WOWKTV.com
Vatican cardinal stirs controversy by saying it’s time to ‘exit’ abuse scandals
“If (Cardinal Peter) Turkson wants an exit strategy, (Marie) Collins wrote, ‘He should recommend the Church institute a transparent process of accountability(link is external) for negligent/corrupt bishops, deal with the huge backlog of abuse cases lingering in the CDF, put in place universal mandatory reporting to civil authorities…stop fighting the extension of statutes of limitations, put in place strong normative child safeguarding policies in every country, stop the use of pontifical secret in abuse trials and implement REAL zero tolerance in all cases of a guilty perpetrator.’ And this, she said, is ‘just for a start.’” By Elise Harris, Cruxnow.com
POPE FRANCIS
Pope’s words ‘difficult to reconcile’ with Vatican’s lack of cooperation with abuse inquiry
“It was “very disappointing” the Vatican failed to give testimony during an investigation into sex abuse in the Catholic Church in England and Wales(link is external), according to the lead counsel to the inquiry. The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) investigation into the bishops’ conference’s response to the sex abuse crisis is taking place Oct. 28 – Nov. 8, and there has been frustration with the lack response from the Holy See to requests for information.” By Charles Collins, Cruxnow.com
Pope Francis criticized by child sex abuse inquiry after Vatican refuses to send crucial evidence
“The Pope has been criticized by the government-ordered child sex abuse inquiry after the Vatican refused to provide crucial evidence(link is external). The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) has repeatedly asked the Holy See about whether officials in Rome assisted convicted pedophile Laurence Soper while he was fugitive monk wanted in Britain for child abuse offences.” By Gabriella Swerling, The Telegraph
CARDINALS
English cardinal admits ‘extent of failures’ on abuse ahead of inquiry
“Cardinal Vincent Nichols has issued a statement admitting to ‘failures’ on handling abuse by church officials(link is external) ahead of a government-established inquiry into sex abuse in the Catholic Church in England and Wales. The Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse was established by the British Home Office – which oversees similar areas as the U.S. Departments of Justice and Homeland Security – in 2014. It is independent and does not answer to the government.” By Charles Collins, Cruxnow.com
CARDINAL PELL
Cardinal’s legal team objects to prosecutor’s response
“Cardinal George Pell’s legal team has accused the state’s top prosecutor of failing to properly respond to his High Court appeal bid(link is external). Cardinal Pell is fighting to overturn his convictions for the abuse of two choirboys and has lodged an application with the High Court seeking special leave to appeal. He has argued the Victorian Court of Appeal was wrong to dismiss his appeal in a 2-1 majority decision.” By CathNews.com
Australian prosecutors argue no grounds for ex-Vatican treasurer’s final sex crimes appeal
“Prosecutors have urged Australia’s High Court to refuse to hear a final appeal by former Vatican treasurer George Pell(link is external) against his convictions for sexually abusing two 13-year-old boys in the late 1990s. In opposing arguments put by Pell’s lawyers to Australia’s highest court, prosecutors said there was no error in the approach taken by the Victorian state Court of Appeal.” By Reuters
BISHOPS
What the U.S. bishops can learn from the Amazon synod
“As the U.S. bishops gather for their annual meeting in Baltimore next week (Nov. 11), they might take a page from the Vatican’s recently ended synod on the Amazon region(link is external). There are six major differences between the synod, which met in Rome Oct. 6-27, and the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ three-day meeting, which starts Nov. 11.” By Thomas Reese, Religion News Service, in National Catholic Reporter
- Bishops set to meet to discuss new leadership, U.S. politics and sex abuse crisis(link is external), By Michael O’Loughlin, America: The Jesuit Review
Financial records reveal questionable decisions about bishops fund within Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston
“Michael Bransfield’s salary as bishop of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston spiked sharply in 2016 — just more than a year after he created his own nonprofit Bishops Fund Inc. to channel money to various West Virginia projects(link is external). Bransfield’s pay increased nearly 60 percent to $215,571 after the Bishops Fund completed its first full year. At the end of 2016, the fund held more than $7.5 million in assets, according to IRS records that were filed by the organization.” By Mike Jones, The Intelligencer and Wheeling News-Register
U.S. bishops set to begin their ‘ad limina’ visits to Rome
“The bishops of every diocese in the United States have prepared detailed reports on the life of the Catholic Church in their dioceses(link is external) and have made or are making reservations to fly to Rome. The U.S. bishops’ visits ad limina apostolorum – to the threshold of the apostles – begin Nov. 4 with a group from Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont.” By Cindy Wooden, Catholic News Service, on Cruxnow.com
Upcoming bishops’ meeting reflects current state of U.S. church
“Two weeks from today, the U.S. bishops will gather in Baltimore for their annual plenary meeting and, in a sense, the gathering is a metaphor for the situation of the Catholic Church in our nation at this moment in time(link is external). The meeting, like the church, is traditional, but no one knows what to expect, it will largely be ignored by mainstream society, and it is difficult to feel much confidence in the current leadership. The biggest challenge is to get back to a sense of normalcy without downplaying the still potentially explosive issue of clergy sex abuse.” By Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter
- Fall meeting agenda sees U.S. bishops making plans to plan priorities, By Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter
- U.S. bishops to meet Nov. 11-13 in Baltimore; will elect new USCCB president, vice president, committee chairs, and vote on seven action items; Assembly to be live streamed, live tweeted, carried via satellite(link is external), By USCCB News Release
Vatican still investigating claims against former bishop
“The Vatican’s ‘administrative penal process’ into former Wyoming bishop Joseph Hart — which could see the cleric removed from the priesthood — has yet to resolve(link is external), the church said Tuesday (Oct. 22), and investigations in Kansas City are on hold until the process in Rome finishes. Current Wyoming Bishop Steven Biegler announced in June that Hart, who has been accused of sexual abuse by more than 10 men, would face adjudication by the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith. The body was first formed to safeguard church doctrine and to investigate heretics nearly 500 years ago.” By Seth Klamann, Caspar Star-Telegram
Tainted Kerala bishop faces fresh harassment charges
“A nun, who had filed a rape case against Catholic Bishop Franco Mulakkal, who is out on bail, approached the national and state Women’s Commissions and the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC), alleging that the priest and his supporters harassed her through various online platforms(link is external). ‘Attempts to intimidate and defame me and my colleagues through the social media were made by the bishop and his followers. False statements, imputations and fabricated stories tarnishing our reputation and character are being systematically spread through the YouTube channel, Christian Times, run by Bishop Franco and his aides,’ the complaint said.” By A.M. Abdussalam and Ashraf Padanna, Gulf Today
Synod appears to be moving toward ordination for married men in Amazon
“The synod of bishops meeting in Rome appears to be moving toward recommending the ordination of married men in the Amazon region(link is external). While no one can predict what the bishops will do, one Brazilian bishop recently estimated that two-thirds of the bishops at the synod will support ordaining ‘viri probati’ — a church phrase meaning ‘married men of proven virtue.’ Another participant told Religion News Service that only a couple of the 185 bishops spoke against the idea during the first week of the synod.” By Thomas Reese, Religion News Service
PRIESTS
Nouwen a witness to committed priestly ministry
“Today’s priesthood stands on shaky ground. Just who and what is a Catholic priest?(link is external) Since the Second Vatican Council, priests have struggled to come to terms with the implications of the council’s focus on baptism as the central, core and foundational sacrament of the Christian life. The ordained priest, like all the faithful, is called by his baptismal incorporation in the Christian family to discipleship and witness to the saving Gospel of Jesus Christ. And he meets this call not as one set apart, but as a servant leader embedded in the very heart of the Christian community.” By Donald Cozzens, National Catholic Reporter
WOMEN RELIGIOUS
Indian nun appeals to Vatican after dismissed following protests of bishop accused or rape
“A religious dismissed from her congregation after she took part in protests against a bishop accused of raping a different nun(link is external) has appealed the decision to the Vatican’s highest court of appeal. Sister Lucy Kalapura has asked the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura to allow her to present her case in person; she has also requested a personal audience with Pope Francis.” By Nirmala Carvalho, Cruxnow.com
Women religious should have vote at synod, theologian says
“While the Catholic Church has made strides to include the voice of women, especially in the Synod of Bishops for the Amazon, women should be included among synod voting members and in church leadership positions, a German theologian said(link is external). Medical Mission Sister Birgit Weiler, a member of the Peruvian bishops’ pastoral ministry for the care of creation, told journalists at a Vatican news briefing Oct. 11 that such changes would allow the Church to become ‘a community of sisters and brothers, sharing faith, discerning together.’” By Junno Arocho Esteves, Catholic News Service, on Cruxnow.com
WOMEN DEACONS
On Catholic women deacons, San Diego’s McElroy is ‘in favor of it’
“San Diego Bishop Robert McElroy said he supports allowing women to serve as deacons in the Catholic Church(link is external), in what appears as the first such public disclosure of a U.S. prelate since Pope Francis reopened consideration of the history of women’s diaconal ordination in 2016. In an NCR interview Oct. 27, McElroy said he hoped the pope’s surprise decision at the end of the Synod of Bishops for the Amazon to reconvene the Vatican’s study commission on women deacons would lead to ‘a conclusion that it is not prohibited to ordain women to the diaconate.’” By Joshua J. McElroy, National Catholic Reporter
Fordham symposium discusses possibilities of women deacons
“As the synod for the Amazon was entering its final week in Rome, scholars Phyllis Zagano, Meghan Clark and George Demacopoulos discussed the importance and need for women deacons(link is external), especially in the Amazon, at an Oct. 22 symposium at Fordham University here. Zagano, a member of the papal Study Commission on the Women’s Diaconate(link is external), said that the issue had also been discussed in previous synods. She recalled meeting women religious from around the world who were performing baptisms due to lack of priests. They didn’t want to be ordained for power, rather to prevent people from going ‘next door to the Pentecostals.’” By Sarah Salvadore, National Catholic Reporter
Support for women deacons ‘substantial’ at synod, says Brazilian bishop
“A sizeable group among the 185 Catholic prelates at the Vatican’s Synod of Bishops for the Amazon approve of ordaining women as deacons in order to address a lack of ministers across the nine-nation region(link is external), said one of the participating bishops. ‘There’s a lot of support for it,’ Bishop Derek Byrne told NCR in an Oct. 17 interview. “’Especially from bishops who are in this situation and who find that they just can’t serve their people.’” By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
WOMEN IN THE CHURCH
Catholic bishops agree: anything but a woman
“The modern Catholic Church is beset with serious problems. Among them is that not enough men want to be priests(link is external). Over the past three weeks, 184 bishops gathered at a Vatican summit to seek solutions for the Amazon region in particular, singled out because of myriad crises it is facing, including environmental devastation, violence and a shortage of priests to serve the needs of the faithful there. The bishops’ solution: Do anything other than ordaining women as priests.” By Sara McDougall, The New York Times
Women of the Church takes stock of Catholic chaos, urges women’s leadership
“Catholic women in the United States gathered to urge greater leadership roles for women in the church(link is external), even as bishops were discussing the possibility of women deacons at a synod in Rome. Organizers of the second Women of the Church conference could not have known that the diaconate for women, as well as the possibility of ordaining some married men, would be making headlines from the Synod on the Amazon at the same time they were meeting, Oct. 18-20, at St. Mary’s College here.” By Heidi Schlumpf, National Catholic Reporter
Conference hears how women’s voices can help strengthen Catholic Church
“The Church needs the voices of women wherever important decisions are made – and it needs their voices now more than ever(link is external), speakers said during the three-day Women of the Church Conference. The national conference, held Oct. 18 to 20 at St. Mary’s College in South Bend, drew 150 women of all ages – from college students to elderly religious – and a handful of supportive men.” By Marnie McAllister, Cruxnow.com
Amazon synod: bishops vote on women deacons
“A proposal to ordain women deacons has made it into the final document of the Amazon synod(link is external) which bishops will vote on at the end of this week, The Tablet has learnt. Church sources say the possibility of a female diaconate will be among the final proposals in the text, making it the first time that such a move has made it into a synod final document.” By Christopher Lamb, The Tablet
LAITY& THE CHURCH
Bishop highlights need for lay ministries in Amazon
“Lay men and women involved in ministry have been fundamental(link is external) in spreading the Gospel and furthering the Catholic Church’s mission in the Amazon, a Brazilian bishop said. Bishop Wilmar Santin of Itaituba, told journalists at a Vatican press briefing Oct. 10 that the formation of ‘ministers of the word’ among the Munduruku indigenous community in his prelature helped advance the church’s mission and presence.” By Junno arocho Esteves, Catholic News Service, in National Catholic Reporter
VATICAN
Vatican’s investigation of Buffalo Diocese finishes first week with 30 interviews
“The Diocese of Brooklyn has issued a statement, saying Brooklyn Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio visited Buffalo earlier this week (Oct. 11) and interviewed 30 people as part of his Apostolic Visitation. Bishop DiMarzio is investigating the Buffalo Catholic Diocese’s handling of sexual abuse cases(link is external). Movement to Restore Trust leader John Hurley said he was surprised the bishop had not contacted anyone from MRT, making him wonder about the nature of the investigation.” By Marian Hetherly, WBFO-FM Buffalo’s NPR News Station
CHURCH FINANCES
Vatican cash crisis: Sex abuse scandals are ‘driving away donations and have lost the Holy See €44m in a year’
“The Vatican is rapidly losing money with donations plummeting as sex abuse scandals damage the Catholic Church’s reputation(link is external), according to a new book. Gianluigi Nuzzi writes that the Vatican lost nearly €44million (£38million) last year while its property empire made a loss for the first time. The Italian journalist, whom the Vatican attempted to put on trial for publishing leaked secrets in 2016, said attempted reforms by Pope Francis were being ‘anaesthetised, blocked and sabotaged’ by Vatican insiders.” By Tim Stickings for MailOnline.com
Leaked documents detail $200 million Vatican deal for swanky London property
“Against the backdrop of a Synod of Bishops on the Amazon dedicated to the defense of some of the world’s most impoverished people, the Vatican finds itself rocked by yet another financial scandal(link is external) after publication Sunday (Oct. 20) of seamy details about a $200 million purchase of a swanky 183,000-square-foot apartment building in the Chelsea district of London. ‘Hundreds of millions of Euro destined for the least and the poor are still administered opaquely and with no transparency, as if the Vatican were a merchant bank in an offshore country,’ the report claims.” By John L. Allen, The Tablet
CHILD PROTECTION
Church continues to strengthen child safety practices
“The Church has made significant progress in responding to the royal commission into child sexual abuse(link is external), Archbishop Mark Coleridge said today (Oct. 22) on the anniversary of the National Apology to survivors and victims. On October 22 last year, Prime Minister Scott Morrison and then-opposition leader Bill Shorten delivered apologies on behalf of the Australian people to those who were sexually abused as children. They followed the final report of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, published in December 2017.” By CathNews.com
CLERICALISM
Reflections on the dangers of clericalism in the Church
“What is clericalism and how is it such a danger in our Church? There are many definitions of clericalism and yet they all come back to a basic reality. Clericalism is a culture and expectation that ordained ministers are better than and should rule over everyone else among the People of God. As Pope Francis said, this diminishes and undervalues the baptismal grace of our people. In doing so, it also downplays the equal dignity of every human being made in the image and likeness of God. Clericalism leads to many dangers in the Church and in the lives of all people, clergy and laity(link is external).” By Louis Arceneaux, CM, Famvin.org
CELIBACY& MARRIED PRIESTS
Dissenting note struck on married priests as solution for the Amazon
“For the first time in one of the Vatican’s daily news briefings during the Oct. 6-27 Synod of Bishops on the Amazon, a dissenting voice was struck Wednesday (Oct. 16) about the idea of ordaining married men to solve priest shortages in the region.(link is external) ‘I don’t see celibacy as the main problem’ in attracting young men to the priesthood, said Bishop Wellington Tadeu de Queiroz Vieira of Cristalândia in Brazil, emphasizing that nobody had appointed him a spokesman for the synod but nevertheless saying, ‘I think there are many who share my views.’” By John L. Allen, Jr., Cruxnow.com
- Amazon prelate floats alternative to married clergy: Send some Roman priests home(link is external), By Inés San Martin, Cruxnow.com
Pope’s path to allow married priests for Amazon straightforward, say canon lawyers
“If the prelates attending the Vatican’s Synod of Bishops for the Amazon ask that Pope Francis allow the ordination of married men(link is external) to address a lack of Catholic ministers across the nine-nation region, the path for implementing such a proposal is fairly straightforward, say four eminent canon lawyers. Although the canonists have slightly different ideas about the concrete method the pope could use to allow for married priests on a regional basis, they agree that the way forward is relatively easy, as celibacy is only a practice of the church and not a revealed dogma.” By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
FUTURE OF THE CHURCH
As U.S. ‘nones’ increase, we must start asking different questions
“Nearly nine years ago, I covered a full day symposium at Fordham University called ‘Lost? Twenty-somethings and the Church,’ sponsored by the university’s Center on Religion and Culture. The event was primarily concerned with three questions: Have young adult Catholics lost their way? Has the church lost twenty-somethings? And, if so, how do we get them back?(link is external) Those inquiries were apparently so urgent that the center had to open up a second auditorium and livestream the program to accommodate the overwhelming number of registrants.” By Jamie Manson, National Catholic Reporter
As lay ministers flourish, overworked ministers struggle with burnout
“Sue Antoinette, a retired youth minister in Cincinnati, spent her career being attentive to others’ needs. But she didn’t always receive the same in return. Because Antoinette worked with kids, she found that people tended to take her work less seriously. She even remembers a time when a priest patted her on the head. In 2005 lay ministers working in parish settings outnumbered diocesan priests for the first time in the United States(link is external), according to the Center for Applied Research in the Apostolate.” By Teresa Coda, U.S. Catholic
VOICES
West Virginia Catholics confronting Bransfield scandal
“Most Christians know well a verse in 2 Corinthians 9:7 that comes to mind when the collection plate is passed: ‘God loves a cheerful giver.’ But many congregants of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston find themselves somewhat reluctant tithers these days because of the scandal surrounding former Bishop Michael Bransfield(link is external).” By Hoppy Kercheval, WVMetroNews.com
Married priests and women deacons: It’s about law, not doctrine
“The Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon region discussed two new-old ideas during its October Rome meeting: married priests and women deacons(link is external). News flash: It’s about law, not doctrine. The custom of ordaining only celibate men as priests and the refusal to restore women to the ordained diaconate are practices rooted in legal, not doctrinal determinations. Each is what canon lawyers call a ‘merely ecclesiastical law.’” By Phyllis Zagano, National Catholic Reporter
Money shapes the U.S. Catholic narrative
“The Catholic Church in the United States is for sale(link is external). In quiet investments over a period of decades, wealthy entrepreneurs and flush nonprofits have supplanted elements of church life that once were the province of official church organizations. Church leaders have watched as individuals and groups with substantial resources became the voice of the church in the public square, fashioning a Catholic narrative for the wider culture.” By National Catholic Reporter Editorial Staff
A tale of two synods: putting the people of God first, 14 years later
“What a difference prioritizing the people of God makes!(link is external) At this writing, a majority of the small group reports from the Synod of Bishops for the Amazon are discussing ordaining married men and women deacons. Ten of 12 small groups discussed married priests while seven of 12 reference female deacons with four recommending ordination and three others suggesting the need for further study. According to Bishop Derek Byrne of the Diocese of Primavera do Leste-Paranatinga, Brazil, among the synod’s 185 prelates there is ‘substantial support’ for ordaining women deacons.” By Christine Schenk, National Catholic Reporter
Justice shouldn’t have an expiration date
“Survivors of childhood sexual abuse may soon win the right to prosecute their cases in court no matter how long ago their trauma occurred(link is external). Pennsylvania’s Senate Judiciary Committee held a forum on Oct. 2 to debate whether or not to eliminate the state’s statute of limitations — a law set that restricts how long an alleged victim has to bring a case to court — for sexual abuse civil cases.” By Grace McGuinness, The Pitt News
CHURCH FINANCES
Johnson County Catholic priest pleads no contest to stealing over $42,000 from church
“A Johnson County Catholic priest accused of stealing more than $42,000 from his Gardner parish pleaded no contest to felony theft(link is external) Friday (Oct. 25). The Rev. Joseph Cramer’s trial was set to start on Monday (Oct. 28) before he pleaded. He was originally charged with one count of theft and two counts of computer crime. The computer crime charges were dropped Friday. Cramer, 68, was charged in May 2018 after he was placed on leave from Divine Mercy Parish months earlier for ‘financial irregularities.’” By Katie Bernard, The Kansas City Star
Contributions to Catholic Church plunge amid sex abuse crisis as Vatican ‘faces default’ over financial failings
“Worldwide donations to the Catholic Church have plunged in the wake of sex abuse scandals that have eroded faith in the Vatican(link is external), a new book claims. The Church’s finances are in such a dire state – a result of a toxic mix of incompetence, internal wrangling and corruption – that the Vatican risks a default by 2023, according to the expose.” By Nick Squires, The Telegraph
- Vatican denies risk of default over structural deficit(link is external), By Nicole Winfield, Associated Press
Can the Vatican Bank be reformed? After the latest raid, doubters multiply
“Earlier this month, gendarmes raided the offices of the offices providing oversight to the Vatican Bank in search of ‘documents and electronic devices,’ a move casting doubt on the six-year reform process for what must be the world’s most mysterious and high-profile small bank(link is external). Information about the raids trickles out daily. The latest investigation was triggered by a series of wire transfers connected to paying off the mortgage on a building in London’s tony Sloane Square neighborhood. That the London building was partially owned by the Vatican’s Secretariat of State raised the suspicions of investigators.” By Eric J. Lyman, Fortune
Cardinal Becciu at center of Vatican financial investigation
“The recent raid of Vatican offices is connected to an investigation into charges that Vatican money financed the development of luxury properties in London(link is external), and led to a windfall for the Vatican’s investment managers, according to an October 14 report from Financial Times. According to Financial Times, Vatican police and prosecutors are investigating the possibility of improprieties in a 2014 $200 million investment made through Athena Capital, a Luxembourg investment fund, which financed a stake in the development of a luxury apartment project in London.” By Ed Condon and J.D. Flynn, Catholic News Agency, in Catholic Herald
- Vatican police chief resigns over leaks about raid on Secretariat of State(link is external), By Joshua J. McElwee, National Catholic Reporter
- Vatican cardinals linked to missing million and financial scandal(link is external), By Ed Condon, Catholic News Agency
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
California governor signs legislation giving huge victory to childhood sex abuse survivors
“California Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law a bill that will provide a 3-year window for old sexual abuse cases(link is external) previously barred by the current statute of limitations. This means that previously barred survivors can bring abuse lawsuits against the institutions that aided and abetted the perpetrators. In anticipation of the Governor’s signing six of the 12 California Catholic dioceses have introduced a compensation program hoped to stem the tide of future lawsuits.” By Joseph H. Saunder, The Legal Examiner
Advocates rally for change to statute of limitations laws for victims of sexual abuse, investigation into abuse by Catholic priests
“A group that provides resources to victims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests is demanding the Louisiana Attorney General’s office launch an official investigation(link is external). The group is called the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “I was abused at Jesuit High School in New Orleans as well by a priest and a janitor,” said Richard Windmann. Windmann is vocal as to what he allegedly happened to him on the Jesuit High School campus in the 70′s.” By Kiran Chawla, WAFB-TV9 News
‘I am not going to take their hush money’: clergy sexual abuse victim calls for statute of limitations reform
“A victim of the first priest sentenced to prison time as a result of the state Grand Jury investigation into clergy sexual abuse says statute of limitations reform is necessary. Disgraced retired priest, Fr. John Sweeney, of the Diocese of Greensburg, was sentenced nearly a year ago to 11½ months to five years in prison. Now, one of his victims, who Sweeney admitted to abusing, is calling for changes to the statute of limitations process(link is external).” By KDKA-TV2 News
- Abuse survivor calls on Greensburg Diocese to support window of opportunity for clergy abuse victims(link is external), By Deb Erdley, TribLive.com
Survivors of child sex abuse by Catholic priests call for Colorado statute of limitations reform
“Survivors of child sex abuse by Catholic priests are calling for reforms to Colorado’s statute of limitations(link is external) for such crimes in the wake of a damning report detailing decades of sexual abuse and cover-up in the church. Such reforms could allow survivors to use lawsuits to expose more child sex abuse than was included in the 263-page report.” By Forest Wilson, The Colorado Independent
- Former AG Coffman endorses statute of limitations change following clergy abuse report(link is external), By Michael Karlik, Colorado Politics
CLERGY CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE
Church urged to boost response to needs of clergy sexual abuse survivors
“A Chilean survivor of clergy sexual abuse pleaded for Catholic Church leaders to follow the example of a Wyoming bishop who continues to seek justice and answers for other survivors(link is external). Juan Carlos Cruz expressed support for the work of Bishop Steven R. Biegler of Cheyenne, Wyoming, during a panel discussion at Georgetown University Nov. 4, saying the prelate’s efforts to resolve questions surrounding a retired predecessor’s alleged abuse demonstrates that someone within the church cares enough to raise up the needs of survivors.” By Dennis Sadowski, Catholic News Service
‘By the Grace of God’ explores the church’s unimaginable betrayal of child victims of sexual abuse
“For a member of the clergy to sexually violate a child is one of the most stark and cruel betrayals imaginable(link is external). That an institution would prevaricate and dissemble about these betrayals rather than take immediate, decisive action to pursue justice and provide restitution creates a greater betrayal. After years of such actions, betrayal reaches a near-unimaginable level. And yet, we don’t have to imagine. In the Roman Catholic Church, these violations have been rife, and the stories behind them are appalling.” By Glenn Kenn, The New York Times, in Minneapolis Star Tribune
Accused of sexual abuse, a priest left Colorado for a safe haven: San Diego
“In 1953, the Rev. Walter Buetzler was accused of molesting a fifth-grade boy after hearing the child’s confession(link is external) at St. Joseph Parish in Monte Vista, Colo. After the boy’s father complained to the parish council and later to the Diocese of Pueblo’s bishop, Buetzler left the state. He quickly secured a new job: professor of classical languages at the San Diego College for Men, then part of the University of San Diego.” By Peter Rowe, The San Diego Union-Tribune
Irish ex-priest who raped a abused at least 25 kids in California is arrested in Portugal for child pornography
“A pedophile Irish ex-priest who raped and abused at least 25 children(link is external) in California, has reportedly been arrested on the Algarve. Portuguese police sources confirmed on Thursday (Oct. 24) Oliver O’Grady, 74, the subject of a 2006 documentary film called Deliver Us from Evil, was the man they had arrested.” By Gerard Couzens, Daily Mail
What is owed to victims of abuse in the Catholic Church? That’s up to Kenneth Feinberg to decide.
“It’s a difficult job, but one attorney Kenneth Feinberg has taken on — again and again. After 9/11, the Boston Marathon bombings and the Aurora Theater shooting, Feinberg has been responsible for deciding how much money is owed to victims(link is external) of those tragedies and others. By his own admission they aren’t easy decisions. ‘This is a judgment that one has to make based on the credibility of the claim, the nature and scope of the abuse and the damage suffered by the victim,’ Feinberg said.” By Anthony Cotton, Andrea Dukakis, and Alex Scoville
Insurance firm sues Buffalo Diocese to avoid paying for sex abuse claims
“A Chicago-based insurance company has launched an opening salvo in what are expected to be bruising legal battles between the Buffalo Diocese and its insurers over payouts on clergy sex abuse claims under the Child Victims Act and the legal costs of defending the diocese against the claims. Continental Insurance Company is arguing in court papers that insurance policies it may have issued to the diocese more than 40 years ago don’t apply to childhood sex abuse(link is external) lawsuits being filed now against the diocese.” By Jay Tokasz, The Buffalo News
Orsolits abused kids after Buffalo Diocese’s cover-up of assault, lawsuits say
“The Buffalo Diocese removed the Rev. Norbert F. Orsolits from a South Buffalo Catholic parish in 1968, shortly after parents complained that Orsolits had molested a 14-year-old boy in the back seat of his car at a drive-in theater. But Orsolits quickly wound up in another Buffalo parish(link is external). And he went on to molest other boys across Western New York, according to several lawsuits filed over the past two months.” By Jay Tokasz, The Buffalo News
ARIZONA
Tucson bishop responds to Oklahoma City Archdiocese abuse report
“Bishop Edward Weisenburger of the Tucson Diocese has responded to a recent report involving clergy abuse in the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City(link is external). Weisenburger served as Vicar General in Oklahoma City from 1998 to 2012, and helped investigate claims of misconduct. The Archdiocese of Oklahoma City received a letter from a former resident of Oklahoma regarding abuse by a priest in August of 2018, according to our Oklahoma City sister station, KFOR-TV. The church announced they would review and report all similar allegations.” By KVOA-TV4 News
ARKANSAS
New sexual abuse survivors group forms in Arkansas
“A new support group for survivors of abuse will soon be available to people of any faith through the Catholic Diocese of Little Rock(link is external). The Maria Goretti Network will hold the first meeting of its Arkansas chapter at St. Joseph Catholic Church in Conway in November. Miguel Prats, a sexual abuse survivor, co-founded the Texas-based nonprofit with the Rev. Gavin Vavarek in 2004.” By Francisca Jones, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
CALIFORNIA
Sacramenyto Catholic Diocese helped accused priest obtain clergy position in Mexico, lawsuit claims
“A new lawsuit filed on Tuesday (Oct. 15) claims the Catholic Church’s Sacramento diocese assisted one of its priests in obtaining a new position with a parish in Mexico after sexual abuse accusations in Northern California(link is external) in the 1980s. The lawsuit includes a letter allegedly written by Diocese of Sacramento attorney Louis N. Desmond and indicates that former Bishop Francis A. Quinn approved a request by Priest Jose Antonio Pinal Castellanos to begin working in Mexico.” By Bob Moffitt, Capital Public Radio, Sacramento, Calif.
COLORADO
Colorado releases new report on Catholic sex abuse in state
“Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser has unveiled a new independent report detailing allegations of sex abuse(link is external) against at least 166 children by 43 Roman Catholic priests over the course of 70 years. Weiser announced the more than 250-page report during a news conference on Wednesday (Oct. 23), describing the documented abuse of children by Catholic priests going back decades as ‘unimaginable.’” By Jack Jenkins, Religion News Service
- At least 166 children have been sexually abused by Catholic priests in Colorado since 1950, new report finds(link is external), By Jennifer Brown and Jesse Paul, The Colorado Sun
- Colorado report accuses 43 Catholic priests of child sex abuse(link is external), By Liam Stack, The New York Times
- Review on abuse looks at 70 years’ worth of Colorado dioceses’ files,(link is external) By Julie Asher, Catholic News Service, in National Catholic Reporter
- Catholic sex abuse report’s most prolific offender worked in Colorado Springs(link is external), By Steve Rabey, The Gazette
CONNECTICUT
Demonstrators demand accountability for Catholic clergy sex crimes
“A small group of demonstrators stood outside the Cathedral of Saint Patrick(link is external) on Sunday (Nov. 3) to mark All Survivors’ Day, which recognizes survivors of sexual abuse. As men and women in military dress exited the Cathedral following the 28th annual Red, White & Blue Mass’s reception, they strode past the group of demonstrators, which fluctuated between four and eight survivors and their supporters.” By Sten Spinella, The Day
FLORIDA
Diocese of Venice faces second suit alleging priest sexually assaulted female parishioners
“The Diocese of Venice is facing its second $15 million suit this month(link is external), alleging that the Rev. Nicholas McLoughlin, 77, formerly of Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church in Avon Park, sexually assaulted a female parishioner. Both suits were filed in the 12th Judicial Circuit by Fort Lauderdale-based attorney Adam Horowitz.” By Earle Kimel, Herald-Tribune
IDAHO
Catholic church updates list of credibly accused priests
“Catholic church leaders in Idaho have updated their list of priests the church says were credibly accused of child sex abuse since the 1950s(link is external) to include more details about where the clergy served when the incidents occurred. The known allegations of child sex abuse involve 15 priests and one deacon, and they span the state geographically, including parishes in Boise, Twin Falls, Idaho Falls, Caldwell, McCall, Moscow, Soda Springs, Kamiah, Aberdeen, DeSmet, Wallace, St. Maries and Kellogg.” By Rebecca Boone, Associated Press, in National Catholic Reporter
Credible allegations of child sexual abuse against six former priests, one deacon in Boise Diocese
“Since the 1950s, there have been six priests and one deacon that have credible allegations of child sexual abuse(link is external) while assigned or associated with the Diocese of Boise, according to a list released by the Diocese. Incidents date back to 1950, with some as recent as 2018. The Diocese said the incidents are dated to the approximate time that they happened. The list also includes the years that the abuse was reported to the church.” By KTVB-TV7 News
Catholic Church strips Boise priest of title, cuts ties with sex offender
“The Vatican has formally cut ties with W. Thomas Faucher, a former Boise priest who pleaded guilty last year to some of the most violent, depraved child pornography seen in recent Ada County history(link is external). Faucher, 74, pleaded guilty to five felonies and was sentenced in December to 25 years in prison without the possibility of parole.” By Ruth Brown, Idaho Statesmen
ILLINOIS
Joliet Diocese is sued over Catholic priest accused of sexually assaulting a man who has a disability at residential center in Kankakee
“The Diocese of Joliet is facing a lawsuit in connection to a priest who is accused of sexually assaulting a man who has a disability(link is external) while visiting a Kankakee development center to minister to residents there. Richard Jacklin, 67, was criminally charged in 2017 after a nurse reported walking in on Jacklin performing a sex act on a 39-year-old man who was living at the Shapiro Developmental Center, prosecutors said. The center provides housing and care for people with intellectual disabilities. The man is paralyzed and has an intellectual disability.” By Madeline Buckley, Chicago Tribune
INDIANA
Suspended Indianapolis priest charged with sex crimes
“A suspended Catholic priest in Indiana is facing charges alleging he sexually abused a child in 2016(link is external). The Rev. David Marcotte of Indianapolis is charged in suburban Hamilton County with child solicitation, vicarious sexual gratification and dissemination of matter harmful to minors. The Indianapolis Archdiocese suspended the 32-year-old Marcotte from public ministry in February after its victim assistance coordinator learned of the abuse allegations.” By Associated Press
IOWA
Ex-N’West Iowa priest accused of sex abuse
“A Catholic priest with N’West Iowa ties who died in May has been accused of sexual abuse(link is external). In a 13-page civil complaint filed on Wednesday, Oct. 9, in Woodbury County District Court in Sioux City against the Diocese of Sioux City, 60-year-old Samuel Heinrichs accused the Rev. Dale Koster of physically and sexually abusing him when he was about 10 years old.” By Mark Mahoney, NWestIowa.com
KENTUCKY
Allegations against Catholic priest lead to his resignation
“A Catholic priest in Kentucky has resigned as pastor of a church following allegations of inappropriate contact made by two men(link is external). The Lexington Herald-Leader reports that in a letter Tuesday (Oct. 15), Bishop John Stowe accepted the resignation of the Rev. Alan Carter as pastor of Saints Peter and Paul Church in Danville. Catholic Diocese of Lexington communications director Don Clemmer says Carter was removed as vocations director of the diocese last month following the first allegation, which Clemmer says dates back to when Carter was ordained seven years ago.” By Associated Press on WKYT-TV News
MASSACHUSETTS
Two Fall River Diocese priests placed on leave over alleged misconduct
“Two Massachusetts priests have been placed on administrative leave(link is external), according to a statement from Fall River’s Catholic Diocese. Father Richard E. Degagne, pastor of Immaculate Conception Parish in Easton, and Father Daniel W. Lacroix, co-pastor of St. Joseph-St. Therese, St. Mary, and Our Lady of Fatima Parishes in New Bedford, have been placed on leave because of alleged misconduct that is said to have occurred decades ago.” By Mike Manzoni, NBC-TV10 News
Msgr Francis Strahan placed on leave after allegation of abuse
“The Archdiocese of Boston announced Oct. 25 that it has placed Msgr. Francis V. Strahan, the pastor of St. Bridget Parish in Framingham, on administrative leave after receiving an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor(link is external). Msgr. Strahan has served as pastor of St. Bridget’s since 1983 and was named a monsignor by Pope John Paull II in 1998. Earlier this year, he celebrated his 60th anniversary of priestly ordination.” By Gregory L. Tracy, The Pilot
Springfield diocese looking to hire clergy sexual abuse investigator
“The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield is seeking to hire a new investigator to look into reports of clergy sexual abuse of minors for the Diocesan Review Board(link is external). Jeffrey L. Trant, who was recently appointed to lead the diocese’s newly designated Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance that oversees such allegations, said the person hired will succeed the first person to hold the position, retired State Policer Officer Kevin Murphy. An active search for his successor is underway.” By Anne-Gerard Flynn, Springfield Republican
MICHIGAN
Diocese of Lansing releases report on priest accused of sexual misconduct
“The Diocese of Lansing admits it did not properly handle allegations of sexual misconduct made against a priest in 1990(link is external). The Diocese released the results of an external review into two allegations against Fr. Pat Egan. Egan was banned from the Diocese in March following an internal investigation. Egan is a priest of the Archdiocese of Westminster in England. He’d been serving as an extern priest for the Lansing Diocese since 1983, living off-and-on in Ann Arbor.” By WILX-TV10 News
- Diocese of Lansing apologizes for mishandled 1990 sexual abuse case(link is external), By Justine Lofton, MLive.com
MINNESOTA
Judge approves $40 million settlement with Duluth Diocese
“A judge’s approval of a nearly $40 million settlement with the Diocese of Duluth(link is external) was welcome news to the tearful survivors of clergy sexual abuse who crammed into a federal courtroom here Monday (Oct. 21). It meant their suffering was recognized. It meant the church was being held accountable. ‘It means that perhaps they’re going to start keeping an eye on these people,’ said Eugene Saumer, 80, who described struggling throughout his life with the memories of being abused while he temporarily lived in a Catholic orphanage at age 9.” By Pam Louwagie, Star Tribune
NEW YORK
Suit claims retired Albany bishop told sex abuse victim to ‘forget about it’
“A newly filed lawsuit claims retired Bishop Howard Hubbard told a teenage boy more than 60 years ago that he should ‘forget about’ alleged sexual abuse he suffered at the hands of another priest(link is external) who had what Hubbard allegedly described as ‘a moment of weakness.’ The suit, filed Monday (Nov. 4) in state Supreme Court in Albany, claims Father Edward Leroux groomed and abused a 16-year-old boy in the summer of 1956 while the teenager was working weekends at the Jesuit Retreat House in Glenmont.” By Cayla Harris, Albany Times Union
Buffalo diocese investigation ends, DiMarzio will send report to Vatican
“Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio has completed his Apostolic Visitation of the Diocese of Buffalo. A statement released by DiMarzio’s own Diocese of Brooklyn on Thursday (Oct. 31) confirmed that the visitation had concluded(link is external) and he will submit a report to the Holy See. The bishop offered no comment on his findings in the scandal-hit Buffalo diocese. The visitation, a canonical inspection and fact-finding mission, was ordered by Cardinal Marc Ouellet of the Congregation of Bishops in Rome, the Vatican department responsible for overseeing the personal and administrative conduct of bishops.” By Catholic News Agency
Plantiffs claiming sexual abuse from the 1960s file civil suits against Diocese of Rockville Centre
“A total of five lawsuits were filed Tuesday (Oct.22) against the Diocese of Rockville Centre alleging priest sex abuse(link is external) from decades ago. Sheryn Silvestre and Joanne Jack made the allegations in February that they were abused by staff at St. Agnes Parish in the 1960s. Joanne’s brother, Alexander, has now joined the case, alleging that he too was sexually abused.” By News12 Long Island
In bad faith: child sex abuse and the Catholic Church
“They say that Father John Paddack – who was ordained in 1984 and had been ministering in New York until he was suspended in July – molested them during confession and counselling sessions(link is external) in different Catholic schools across the city. The men allege years of abuse by Paddack, sparking the latest revelations in a decades-old scandal that has shaken the Catholic Church to its foundation.” By Faultlines on Aljazeera.com
- Abuse claims put Catholic Church in New York City under scrutiny(link is external), By Paul Abowd, Aljazeera.com
Man relives past abuse by Plattsburg priest
“The day M.G. turned 23, he lost the chance to sue his childhood abuser. Now, nearly three decades later, the Child Victims Act has returned his voice(link is external). Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo signed the legislation earlier this year, loosening up some state regulations surrounding child sexual abuse claims. A key piece of the act was its one-year revival period, which beginning mid-August temporarily lifted New York’s statute of limitations on such cases, allowing victims of any age to step forward.” By Adirondack Daily Enterprise
Former pastor in area accused of child sex abuse
A longtime area Catholic priest has been placed on administrative leave following an allegation of child abuse(link is external) from years ago. Monsignor Edward Weber, the director of Priest Personnel Office in the archdiocese, is one of four priests in the Archdiocese of New York to be placed on leave following new allegations, said an article in the Catholic New York, the archdiocese’s newspaper.” By Kathy Reakes, White Plains Daily Voice
Four archdiocese priests on leave amid new church sex abuse accusations
“As the sun shines down on Holy Rosary Church in Hawthorne, N.Y., a cloud of suspicion hovers over its parish priest and three other priests in the New York archdiocese(link is external) now facing allegations of abusing children several decades ago. The four clergy of the Archdiocese of New York have been accused of abuse with minors, cases not included in the special investigation released two weeks ago.” By CBS-TV News New York
Diocese’s insurer: If you conceal abuse, we don’t have to pay
“The Diocese of Buffalo’s insurance company is arguing in court that it is not liable for sex abuse judgments because the diocese concealed the abuse for decades(link is external). In documents recently filed in state court, Continental Insurance Company — whose predecessor insured the diocese for much of the 1970s — says that its policy only covers ‘accidents’ which are reported in a timely manner to the insurer.” By Charlie Specht, WKBW-TV7 News
NORTH CAROLINA
List of Catholic priests in western North Carolina accused of sexual abuse to come in December
“The Catholic Church in western North Carolina is conducting a review of personnel documents going back to the creation of the diocese in 1972 to release a list of priests accused of sexual abuse(link is external). The plan is to release the list by December. On Wednesday (Oct. 23), the Rev. Patrick Winslow, the vicar general and chancellor for the Diocese of Charlotte, came to St. Aloysius Catholic Church in Hickory to discuss the review process.” By Megan Suggs, Record & Landmark
Former mountain priest pleads guilty to child sex charges, survivor forgives
“A former mountain priest is sentenced to a dozen years in prison(link is external). 78-year-old Howard White pleaded guilty to multiple child sex abuse charges during his tenure at Waynesville’s Grace Church in the Mountains. White was rector at the church from 1984 until 2006.” By WLOS-TV13 News
Five clergy who worked in Charlotte Diocese on list of allegation of abuse
“Five clergy who worked in the Charlotte Diocese were named on a list of credible allegations of abuse of a minor or vulnerable adult(link is external). The list was put together by Glenmary, which is a Catholic religious institute of priests and brothers. It put together the list of 11 names where it found credibleallegations of abuse of a minor or vulnerable adult.” By Allison Latos, WSOC-TV9 News
OHIO
1,300 people sign petition for Pope to intervene in Father Drew scandal
“A Cincinnati organization recently began a petition asking for the Pope to intervene in the scandal surrounding a former Cincinnati pastor. Father Geoffrey Drew(link is external), 57, pleaded not guilty to nine counts of rape. He is held in lieu of $5 million bond at the Hamilton County jail. Monday (Oct. 28), the organization Concerned Catholics announced a petition with nearly 1,300 signatures that made its way to Vatican City asking Pope Francis to investigate ‘Archdiocesan commitment to the Decree of Child Protection.’” By Sarah Hager, Fox19Now.com
Toledo Diocese rules Catholic priest accused of sex abuse unfit for duty
“The Diocese of Toledo has unanimously decided that Father Nelson Beaver is not suitable for priestly ministry. The decision was announced today. Father Beaver was put on administrative leave in October of 2018 after an allegation of sexual abuse of a minor(link is external) dating back over 25 years. Three additional allegations linked to the sexual abuse of a minor were also made and according to the diocese, substantiated against Father Beaver.” By ABC-TV13 News
OKLAHOMA
Church report provides lesson on transparency
“With its approach to determining which of its priests may have committed sexual abuse, the Archdiocese of Oklahoma City impressed even a group that’s been one of the Catholic Church’s most vocal critics(link is external) throughout the clergy abuse scandal. There’s a lesson to be learned here. Zach Hiner, executive director of Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, said the archdiocese’s report ‘goes into much greater detail than most other reports commissioned by church officials.’” By The Oklahoman Editorial Board
PENNSYLVANIA
Greensburg Diocese paid $4.35 million in sexual abuse claims
“The Greensburg Catholic Diocese paid $4.35 million to settle claims with 57 adults who suffered child sexual abuse at the hands of clergy(link is external), church officials announced Thursday (Oct. 17). Greensburg was among five Pennsylvania dioceses and one archdiocese that established compensation funds for survivors of clergy child sexual abuse following last year’s release of a statewide grand jury report detailing allegations of abuse against 301 priests over seven decades.” By Deb Erdley, TribLive.com
Allentown Diocese taps little of its $300 million in Lehigh Valley real estate to compensate abuse victims
“Five months ago, the Allentown Diocese opened a window for people who were abused by priests to apply for a payout from the church. To the hundred or so people who already had reported abuse, the diocese sent information about applying for compensation. To those who had kept silent, they extended an invitation. On Sept. 30, the window closed, capping the amount of money the diocese will be offering victims(link is external).” By Emily Opilo, The Morning Call
- Allentown Diocese removes priest over sex abuse allegation(link is external), By Nicole Radzievich, The Morning Call
Lehigh County priest removed from ministry following allegations of sexually abusing a minor
“Authorities are investigating allegations that a Lehigh County priest sexually abused a minor(link is external).
The Rev. Robert J. Potts, 82, pastor of St. Ursula Church in Fountain Hill, has been removed from ministry services. Potts is accused of sexually abused a child in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the Diocese of Allentown announced Sunday. Potts owas the pastor at St. George Parish in Shenandoah during the time of the alleged abuses.” By Virginia Streva, PhyllyVoice.com
Woman sues Greensburg diocese, bishops, claiming sexual assaults by pries in 1970s
“A woman has sued the Catholic Diocese of Greensburg, along with its current and most recent bishops, alleging in graphic terms that she was sexually abused by her parish priest dozens of times while a child(link is external) in the 1970s. The suit, filed Wednesday in Westmoreland County Common Pleas Court, accuses the late Rev. George R. Pierce of “grotesquely abusing” and sexually assaulting the woman in various ways, starting when she was 10 or 11 years old and lasting until she turned 15.” By Jonathan D. Silver, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
TEXAS
Jesuit Prep sued again over sex abuse, this time involving a priest and coach
“A fourth former student at Jesuit College Preparatory School of Dallas has filed a lawsuit alleging he was abused by priests(link is external) when he was a student there. The plaintiff, a Dallas lawyer in his 50s, filed the lawsuit this month against the school and the Catholic Diocese of Dallas, among others, saying he was sexually abused in the early 1980s by two Jesuit Prep priests.” By Jennifer Emily, The Dallas Morning News
Jury finds former priest not guilty of sexual abuse charges
“A Parmer County jury found Peter Wafula, the former priest accused of sexual abuse of a child, not guilty today(link is external) (Oct. 23). The courtroom heard the closing statements today before the jury went into deliberations. During the closing statements, the defense told the courtroom, ‘There is no greater crime on earth than to convict an innocent man.’ On the other hand, the prosecution said, ‘A person who knows he should never be alone with a child has him alone in a place where he has control.’” By Kaitlin Johnson and Arianna Martinez, KFDA-TV10 News
- ‘He begged me not to call the police’: Trial begins for former priest accused of sexual abuse(link is external), By Arianna Martinez and Kaitlin Johnson, KFDA-TV10 News
VIRGINIA
Virginia priest admits to having contact with child in ’90s, diocese says
“A Catholic priest at a Northern Virginia church admitted he had sexual contact with a minor at another church and has stepped down(link is external) from his position as pastor, according to a letter from the Diocese of Arlington. Father Christopher Mould was the pastor of St. Andrew the Apostle Church in Clifton. Mould told Bishop Michael Burbidge on Tuesday (Oct. 15) the sexual contact happened ‘on one occasion’ when he was parochial vicar at St. Thomas à Becket Church in Reston from 1992 to 1995, Burbidge said in the letter to parishioners.” By Gina Cook, NBC-TV4 News
- Diocese removes priest who confessed contact with minor(link is external), By Associated Press on Cruxnow.com
WYOMING
Wyoming sex abuse queries lacked victim cooperation
“Two Catholic Church officials who succeeded a Wyoming bishop accused of sexual abuse(link is external) say a lack of victim cooperation hampered the investigations. The Casper Star-Tribune reports at least 16 men said they were abused by former Bishop Joseph Hart, who retired in 2001.” By Associated Press on Cruxnow.com
AUSTRALIA
Extra jail time for rapist ex-priest who assaulted boy at summer camp
“A former Catholic priest who was jailed for raping a boy at a notorious Victorian boarding school(link is external) will spend more time in prison for sexually assaulting another child. Michael Aulsebrook, a one-time deputy principal at Salesian College Rupertswood, is in prison after he was last year found guilty of raping an 11-year-old boarding student at the Sunbury school in 1988.” By Adam Cooper, The Sydney Morning Herald
CANADA
Historic judgement against Basilian Fathers means easier road to justice for all abuse victims
“Rob Talach has been battling the Catholic Church for a long time(link is external). He has earned the monicker the Priest Hunter, and in his career at Beckett Personal Injury Lawyers, he has launched 395 suits against the church. But an award of punitive damages and one for loss of income in the case of Rod MacLeod, a former student at St. Charles College in the 1960s, has set a new standard, Talach said in an interview with Sudbury.com.” By Darren MacDonald, Sudbury.com
Catholic diocese admits liability in sex assaults
“The Catholic diocese in Kamloops is admitting liability at the civil trial involving a priest accused of repeatedly sexually assaulting a school teacher(link is external) more than 40 years ago. On Wednesday (Oct. 9), John Hogg, a lawyer for the Roman Catholic Bishop of the Diocese of Kamloops, made the admission of vicarious liability by the defendant diocese for the conduct of Rev. Erlindo Molon, the priest in question.” By Keith Fraser, Vancouver Sun, on TimesColonist.com
EL SALVADOR
El Salvador archbishop apologizes over priest sex abuse cases
“El Salvador’s top Roman Catholic cleric apologized Sunday (Nov. 3) for the alleged sexual abuse by a priest of an unidentified minor 25 years ago(link is external). ‘We have apologized to the victim and now I am repeating it publicly, and we also ask for forgiveness from the community for the scandal that this has caused,’ San Salvador Archbishop José Luis Escobar Alas said in a news conference after celebrating Mass.” By The Associated Press on ABCNews.go.com
FRANCE
Francois Ozon on dramatizing the biggest abuse scandal to hit the French Catholic Church
“For most film directors, the nail-biting action unfolds on screen. Not, however, for François Ozon. The theatrics over his latest film played out in the French courts as he fought a last-minute attempt to stop it being released and found himself at the center of a legal and national controversy. Today, Ozon can almost but not quite laugh about his starring role in the off-screen drama that earlier this year came perilously close to having his €5.9m (£5.2m) film By the Grace of God – the story of a real-life scandal involving a pedophile priest(link is external) – canned.” By Kim Willsher, The Guardian
French abuse victims urge Vatican to have archdiocese pay compensation
“Victims of sexual abuse by a Lyon priest have urged the Vatican to recognize the responsibility of his archdiocese in the affair(link is external), which could open the door to compensation payments by the Church. About 15 of them sent their demand to the Vatican after the admitted abuser, Bernard Preynat, was removed from the clerical state in July. The archdiocesan court said at the time that he could now concentrate on considering the financial demands of his victims.” By Tom Heneghan, Reuters, in The Tablet
GREAT BRITAIN, SCOTLAND & WALES
Catholic priest planned to sexually abuse 2-yesr-old boy
“A Catholic priest is being jailed for more than three years after police say he planned to sexually abuse a 2-year-old boy(link is external). BBC News reports Matthew Jolley, 32, admitted to trying to arrange for sexual activity with a child in the United Kingdom. According to Metro, Jolley told an undercover Cheshire police officer — who he thought was a 36-year-old man — that he was sexually attracted to children. Through messages on the Grindr dating app, the newspaper said Jolley revealed he would be interested in meeting up with the fictitious man’s 2-year-old son and proceeded to send an indecent picture of himself.” By BBC News on WTSP-TV10 News
GUAM
Guam clergy sex abuse survivors may receive payments in 2020
“Officials say Guam’s clergy sex abuse survivors could begin receiving compensation from the Catholic Archdiocese of Agana in the first half of 2020(link is external). The Pacific Daily News reported a U.S. District Court judge has given the archdiocese more time to calculate payment amounts to nearly 280 clergy sex abuse survivors and other claimants. Officials say victims and church officials are scheduled to go into mediation Oct. 30, with a church reorganization plan to follow.” By Associated Press on Cruxnow.com
- From a culture of silence to cover-ups: how Guam ended up with 280 clergy sex abuse claims(link is external), By Haidee Eugenio Gilbert, Pacific Daily News
INDIA
Mysuru priests accuse bishop of sexual misconduct, corruption, shoot letter to Pope Francis
“A group of 37 priests from the Mysuru Diocese has written a letter to Pope Francis requesting his urgent intervention in the affairs of the Bishop of Mysuru KA William. The priests have demanded that the Bishop be removed(link is external) over his alleged involvement in criminal offences, misappropriation of funds and sexual misconduct. The Bishop has also been accused of practising factionalism, favouritism and also getting married.” By Nolan Pinto, India Today
NEW ZEALAND
The Church’s procedures to deal with complaints against bishops
“Pope Francis published his motu proprio ‘You are the Light of the World’ (Vos Estis Lux Mundi) on May 10, 2019. A ‘motu proprio’ is a legislative document Popes use, meaning ‘at my own initiative.’ This motu proprio introduces mandatory reporting within the Church for cases of sexual abuse(link is external). As well, Vos Estis Lux Mundi outlines the procedures to deal with complaints of sexual abuse by bishops, or failures of bishops and religious leaders to deal properly with complaints in either canon or civil law.” By NZCatholic.org
Man fights to hold Catholic Church accountable for abuse
“One drunken night in 2013 in Melbourne, Marc wrote an email to the Catholic Church in New Zealand. He was drunk a lot back then. ‘I could drink half a bottle of vodka right now and probably still have a lucid conversation with you,’ he said. Not now, now he’s dry. He was a functioning alcoholic back then, but still, he couldn’t remember sending the email. ‘The first line, and this was five years ago, was, ‘If there’s ever a Royal Commission in New Zealand, I will come back and give evidence(link is external).’” By Phil Pennington, Radio New Zealand
PHILIPPINES
U.S. priest who gave out gifts in Philippines accused of abuse
“The American priest‘s voice echoed over the phone line, his sharp Midwestern accent softened over the decades by a gentle Filipino lilt. On the other end, recording the call, was a young man battered by shame but anxious to get the priest to describe exactly what had happened in this little island village(link is external). ‘I should have known better than trying to just have a life,’ the priest said in the November 2018 call. ‘Happy days are gone. It‘s all over.’” By Tim Sullivan, Associated Press, in Casper Courier
POLAND
Polish court orders compensation for 1980s victim of pedophile priest
“The appeals court in the northern city of Gdansk ordered the accused priest, his former parish and diocese to pay 400,000 zlotys (92,500 euros) to Marek Mielewczyk, 50, the victim of sexual abuse(link is external) from 1982-87. ‘Sexually abusing minors unaware of the criminal nature of the acts perpetrated on them is to treat others in a humiliating and inhumane manner, which is the same as torture,’ judge Dorota Gierczak said, according to the PAP news agency on Tuesday, October 8. The judge said the statute of limitation did not apply because it involved ‘acts incompatible with the rules of society.’” By Agence France-Presse on Rappler.com
UKRAINE
Ukrainian Catholic Church urges victims of abuse to not be silent
“Victims of violence need consolation, healing and justice, the Ukrainian Catholic Church said in a pastoral letter on safeguarding. Reaffirming a commitment to preventing and fighting ‘any manifestation of violence in our church structures(link is external),’ the bishops urged anyone who may have experienced or witnessed abuse in any forms or its cover-up, to not be silent.” By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service, on CatholicPhilly.com
- Head of Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church says sex abuse victims deserve justice(link is external), By Inés San Martin, Cruxnow.com
USCCB president disinvites Bishop Bransfield from fall assembly / Catholic News Service
Posted by Voice of the Faithful in Catholic Bishops, Voice of the Faithful on November 6, 2019
“The people of this diocese would be very upset and angry to think he (Bishop Bransfield) would be participating in decisions that might well affect them,” Bishop Brennan explained. (Catholic News Service)
Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, in consultation with the members of the USCCB Administrative Committee, has taken the highly unusual step of disinviting a fellow bishop from the conference’s fall general assembly.
“The decision affects Bishop Michael J. Bransfield, retired bishop of Wheeling-Charleston, West Virginia, who left his position in September 2018 under a cloud of allegations of sexual and financial misconduct. Pope Francis accepted Bishop Bransfield’s resignation Sept. 13, 2018.
“The USCCB meets Nov. 11-13 in Baltimore.
“The action comes under one section of the recently adopted “Protocol Regarding Available Non-Penal Restrictions on Bishops.”
“Bishop Mark E. Brennan, who succeeded Bishop Bransfield, said he initiated the process under the protocol soon after he was installed Aug. 22 to head the West Virginia diocese.”
By Dennis Sadowski, Catholic News Service — Read more …