ABUSE TRACKER

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

October 26, 2013

The Fall of the Roman Imperium?

UNITED STATES
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Kevin O’Brien

St. Peter Damian was writing about child molesting priests and bishops who enabled them a thousand years ago. This paper on Damian by C. Colt Anderson makes the argument that the magisterium is not to be confused with the imperium – that the teaching authority of the Catholic Church (which we believe has the guarantee of infallibility on matters of Faith and Morals) is not the same thing as the ruling authority of the Catholic Church.

In other words, the bishops will, in the long run, teach authoritatively, but they may not manage or administer authoritatively. Indeed, the worldly jurisdiction of the Church is not something clearly spelled out in Scripture or anywhere else, as far as I know. Who Christ is, what He asks of us and how Salvation works – this the Church passes on with a Divine authority. But exactly how the Church is to function as a Thing in the world, and how we are to implement this Thing, we are largely left to work out for ourselves.

One thing we know – the Church is not to function as it is today.

I gave just one example in my most recent post – a known child molesting priest being passed from parish to parish, while a string of bishops, who were fully aware of the harm this man was causing his innocent victims, not only failed to warn parishioners, but lauded the man as being “pious”, praising his “character”: the pious character of a man who got a 13-year-old pregnant, who tried to perform a forced abortion on her, and who sexually abused dozens of boys over his 30-plus year career.

* How can such bishops, successors to the apostles, not only allow but enable and to an extent pave the way for such crimes?

* How can the infamous German “Bishop of Bling” spend $45 million dollars of Church funds to build himself a house?

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

Germany“Bling” Bishop’s 42 million Euros palace renovations…15 thousand Euros bathtub? Vatican Holy Shit!

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

German Catholics are required to give 10% of their salaries to the Catholic Church (if they want to be buried in the Catholic cemetery). Germany’s church tax, collected by the state and handed over to the churches, raised 5.2 billion euros for the Catholics in 2012. Germany is one of the richest countries in the world. So what does the Vatican Prince – German Bishop do with all that money coming into the Catholic Church treasury? He renovates his Bishop’s Palace with 42 million Euros which includes a 15 thousand Euros bathtub! Vatican Holy Shit!

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

He who Cannot be Trusted in Big Things …

ILLINOIS
Waiting for Godot to Leave

Kevin O’Brien

Across the river from where I live, the neighboring diocese of Belleville, Illinois is a trend-setter. They led the way with the sex abuse scandal in the Church long before the story broke nationally.

NCR reports about Fr. Kownacki, a diocesan priest from the Belleville diocese …

* In 1973, a 16-year-old girl, Gina Parks, contacted diocesan officials and claimed Kownacki, during a two-year period while he was pastor of a small parish in St. Francisville and later in a parish to which he was transferred in Washington Park, abused her sexually, had intercourse with her, even attempted to cause an abortion when she became pregnant. … Parks said Kownacki gave her alcohol, promised to help her get into art school and assured her sex was OK because God “wanted people to love each other.”

The bishop, knowing this, and knowing that Fr. Kownacki had molested a girl from Guatemala and that “twin boys from Guatemala were living in the Washington Park rectory and also involved sexually with Kownacki” transfers him to St. Theresa parish in Salem, and writes to the parishioners at St. Theresa’s of Kownacki’s “knowledge, piety, prudence, experience and general character”.

* The diocese gathers evidence that while Kownacki is at St. Theresa’s, he molests several boys, including an altar server who would later be awarded $5 million in compensation and punitive damages.

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

SNAP Calls Out Local “Bishop of Bling”

ST. LOUIS (MO)
CBS St. Louis

ST. LOUIS, Mo. (KMOX) – Does the St. Louis area have it’s own “Bishop of Bling?”

This week the Pope suspended a German bishop for his lavish expenses. David Clohessy, with the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) says a Belleville Bishop should be disciplined as well.

He says Bishop Edward Braxton has spent a small fortune renovating his home and taking trips to Africa.

“We’d like to think that if Bishops spent their money more prudently they could devote more resources to stopping abuse and to healing victims,” Clohessy said.

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

Bishop of bling

GERMANY
The Economist

THE faithful of Limburg, a diocese in Hesse, have been protesting in front of their Romanesque cathedral, a few even affixing “95 theses” to its door to make their views of their bishop unmistakable. But the prelate, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, had already gone to Rome, where he awaits a meeting with Pope Francis that will determine his future. The extent of his excesses is such that it is hard to say which detail most rankles Germans, and not only Catholic ones.

For some it is the petty lying. Last year the bishop flew first class to India to look at some do-goody projects. But when Der Spiegel, a news magazine, confronted him, he insisted that he had flown business class, even signing affidavits. On October 10th prosecutors in Hamburg indicted him for perjury.

For others it is the pomp and luxury. In 2010, two years after he became Germany’s youngest bishop at the age of 48, Bishop Franz-Peter began building a new residence next to the cathedral. The cost was estimated at €5.5m ($7.43m). Then his requests piled up. His bathtub cost €15,000. Instead of resting an advent wreath on an iron frame in his chapel, he wanted it suspended from the ceiling, requiring the roof to be cut open, at a cost of €100,000 instead of €10,000. In total, the cost estimates now run to €31m.

Germans usually expect to read about such clerical ostentation in history books about the Reformation. Pope Francis, who has chosen simplicity and modesty as his message, makes the incongruity even starker. In an increasingly secular Germany this latest scandal is disastrous for the churches.

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

The Nienstedt shuffle.

MINNESOTA
dotCommonweal

Grant Gallicho October 25, 2013

Yesterday, after shying away from the press for weeks, Archbishop John Nienstedt of St. Paul and Minneapolis responded to the disturbing revelations about the way his diocese has been handling priests accused of sexual misconduct. He apologized to victims and their families. He promised to do better. And he pledged “before God and in memory of my beloved parents”–whose deaths he recounts at the top of his weekly column–“to do all in my power to restore trust here in this local church.”

A tall order–made taller still by Nienstedt’s reluctance to come clean about the facts of the cases in question. (Last month, Nienstedt’s former top canon lawyer, Jennifer Haselberger, publicly revealed that the current and past archbishops of St. Paul-Minneapolis promoted a priest with a history of sexual misconduct–who later went on to abuse children–and failed to notify civil authorities when they learned that another priest had possessed “borderline illegal” images of what appeared to be minors.) In an e-mail interview with Minnesota Public Radio (MPR)–his first since they started reporting on this fiasco weeks ago–Nienstedt answers relatively straightforward questions with something shy of the whole truth.

MPR led by asking why Nienstedt didn’t go to the police after learning about the priest whose computer apparently contained “borderline illegal” photos. Here’s Nienstedt’s response:

NIENSTEDT: The analysis completed in 2004 did not find evidence of possession of child pornography. The images that [former chancellor for canonical affairs Jennifer] Haselberger showed to coworkers were of pop-up ads. Pop-up ads are unsolicited and often attach to the hard drive without the user’s awareness or permission.

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

Archdiocese of St.Paul and Minneapolis Searches for Firm to Review Clergy Files

MINNESOTA
KAAL

Top members of The Archdiocese of St.Paul and Minneapolis continue to search for a firm to review clergy files. Archbishop John Neinstedt called for the review in a post to the churches website Thursday. It is unclear if a law firm or other type of agency will carry out the review.

Legal experts tell KSTP TV that the key to this review will be transparency. Richard Painter of the University of Minnesota Law School said, “This happens in many contexts. In corporations, in government organizations and elsewhere. It is almost always better to confront problems earlier rather than later. To take steps to compensate people, take steps to hold those who are guilty accountable. If there is a cover up, the cost to be paid is going to be much more down the road.”

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

James Valladares, PhD presents new examination of abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
Digitial Journal

ADELAIDE, Australia (PRWEB) October 26, 2013

An insider’s perspective can sometimes be the most clear. Father James Valladares, takes a hard look at recent child abuse allegations against the Catholic church in his new book, “Hope Springs Eternal in the Priestly Breast: A Research Study on Procedural Justice for Priests-Diocesan and Religious” (published by iUniverse).

The book is a culmination of intense research and hours of candid conversations that Valladares facilitated among both priests and religious superiors. The goal, he says, was to determine a procedure for dealing with abuse allegations that would not compromise priest’s basic right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty as well as the sacred relationship between a priest and his superior.

“The deadliest attacks to the Catholic church are coming from within its own walls,” Valladares says. “I conducted this study to show that society is effectively tarring all priests with the same brush, using the allegations against a select few to discredit others.”

The procedure that Fr. Valladares developed, which is outlined in the book, is based on Scripture, Church traditions and teachings, as well as canon law, moral theology and pastoral praxis. Using this procedure, allegations can be promptly addressed without compromising the basic right of presumed innocence.

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

Mary Young: Bill would extend rights of child sex-abuse victims to sue

PENNSYLVANIA
Reading Eagle

State Rep. Mark Rozzi said he was talking to a group after a taxpayer rally in Harrisburg last month when someone asked him what else he was up to.

He told them about legislation he is co-sponsoring to raise the statute of limitations on the filing of civil suits in cases of child sexual abuse.

Afterward, one woman stayed behind and began crying.

Rozzi recalled her words: “Mark, I’m 75 years old. I was raped and abused by my uncle when I was 15. It was 60 years ago, and I have never forgotten one thing. I never told anybody.”

“We cannot forget,” said Rozzi, who alleges he was abused by a priest when he was 13. “It’s in your mind every single day.”

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

Hello and Goodbye – review

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Claire Kilroy
The Guardian, Friday 25 October 2013

Published in a flip-over format, Hello and Goodbye is billed as two Halloween horrors in a single volume: Patrick McCabe does Patrick McCabre, if you will, for McCabe is a master of both the demented narrative and demented narrator. Beneath the ghosts and ghoulies, however, lies a compassionate exploration of the aftermath of psychological damage.

The first novella, Hello Mr Bones, concerns a disgraced Christian Brother and an abused child. However – in a radical departure for Irish fiction – the abused child is the Christian Brother. As a boy, Valentine Shannon had been “interfered with” by the local psychopathic Anglo-Irish toff from the manor, “eccentric pervert” Balthazar Bowen, who styles himself as Mr Bones. Valentine goes on to join the Christian Brothers, only to be ejected after striking a student, one Martin Boan. In an effort to escape his past, he relocates to London and works as a lay teacher. His past, however, catches up with him when Valentine receives a phone call from Mr Bones. This call is even more disturbing than a call from one’s abuser might usually be, given that Bowen, or Bohen, or Boan, or Mr Bones, is now dead.

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

October 25, 2013

Cleveland priest indicted on felony soliciting charge; failed to reveal he was HIV-positive

OHIO
The Plain Dealer

By James F. McCarty, The Plain Dealer
on October 25, 2013

CLEVELAND, Ohio – A Cuyahoga County grand jury today returned a three-count criminal indictment charging the Rev. James McGonegal, the 68-year-old pastor of St. Ignatius of Antioch Church, with soliciting sex from an undercover ranger at Edgewater Park two weeks ago.

Because McGonegal is HIV-positive, and failed to tell the ranger that, the soliciting charge is a third-degree felony.

McGonegal also was charged with abusing harmful intoxicants and public indecency, both misdemeanors.

His lawyer, Henry Hilow, said he had just learned about the indictments and had not yet discussed them with McGonegal.

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

Three Prison Terms Added For Felon Priest

MISSOURI
KCUR

By DAN VERBECK

A Catholic priest serving a 50-year federal sentence on a Kansas City area child pornography conviction will absorb a new sentence while behind bars.

Reverend Shawn Ratigan pleaded guilty October 25 to state charges at Liberty, MO.

The burly and bearded Ratigan will serve three consecutive 7 year sentences on his admission he had obscene pictures of girls, some under the age of 12.

The priest took the photos during his tenure at churches and schools of the Kansas City- St. Joseph Diocese.

The sentences will not be added to the federal punishment.

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

MO- Files released on two predators

SPRINGFIELD (MO)
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Each abused in CA but spent time in MO
The clerics worked in Springfield-Cape diocese
And so did Missouri’s most notorious pedophile priest
Victims blast Spgfld Catholic officials for “continued secrecy”
SNAP to bishop: “Reach out to others who may be in pain right now”

WHAT
Holding signs at a sidewalk news conference, clergy sex abuse victims will urge Springfield – Cape Girardeau Catholic officials to

–publicly disclose the release of long-secret files about two child molesting clerics,
–announce the recent death of Missouri’s most notorious predator priest, and
–post the files and the announcement on diocesan websites and parish bulletins urging more victims, witnesses and whistleblowers to come forward (so that those who committed or concealed crimes will be prosecuted and kids will be safer and victims will get help).

WHEN
Saturday, Oct.26 at noon

WHERE
Outside the Springfield Catholic diocese headquarters (“chancery office”), 601 South Jefferson Ave., (corner of E. Harrison) in Springfield, MO

WHY
More than 200 pages of records about two predator priests who worked in the Springfield-Cape Girardeau diocese have recently been released.

More info about both men can be found at BishopAccountability.org and here:

http://www.semissourian.com/story/2005690.html

http://www.lorpb.com/documents/Clergy-September/Vincentians-(Farris).PDF

http://www.lorpb.com/documents/Clergy-September/Vincentians-(Ruhl).PDF

And last week, Missouri’s most notorious predator priest, Msgr. Thomas O’Brien passed away. He worked at St. Agnes parish in Springfield in the 1950s and has been sued dozens of times for sexually assaulting kids, mostly in the Kansas City area.

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

Canon lawyers hear from church prosecutor of sex abuse cases

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Thomas Reese | Oct. 25, 2013

The experience of the sexual abuse crisis, hopefully, will “help us become more humble, less arrogant and bossy in our ministry,” Bishop Charles Scicluna told members of the Canon Law Society of America on Oct. 16 at their annual meeting in Sacramento, Calif.

He described sexual abuse as “an egregious betrayal of sacred trust” that “has the power to stint the normal development of people” and “cause depression, post-traumatic disorders, loss of self-esteem and, most tragically, loss of faith.” It “is an expression of the anti-Gospel, a betrayal of the message of compassion and love.”

Scicluna began working as the first promoter of justice (roughly equivalent to chief prosecutor) at the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith in May 2002, when a “tsunami” of abuse cases hit his office.

As an official of the doctrinal congregation, Scicluna conducted the investigation of Fr. Marcial Maciel Degollado, the founder of the Legionaries of Christ. Despite opposition from some curial cardinals but with the backing of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Scicluna pursued the investigation until Maciel was suspended from priestly ministry in 2006. Scicluna also reviewed hundreds of case files of priests who eventually were dismissed from ministry for sexual abuse. He left the congregation in 2012 to become an auxiliary bishop in Malta.

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

Catholic Church considers ‘abuse victims as troublemakers’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Pia Akerman
From: The Australian
October 26, 2013

JOHN Ellis, whose lawsuit against the Catholic Church prompted a landmark ruling on the church’s liability in sexual abuse claims, has condemned the church’s Towards Healing process for treating victims like “troublemakers” and reviving their trauma.

In a submission released by the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, Mr Ellis and his wife Nicola describe their experience as solicitors who have acted for more than 200 victims of clerical sexual abuse.

They say participation in Towards Healing, which the church offers as an alternative to legal action, has led to “significant re-traumatisation” for many victims through its lack of transparency and accountability.

Mr Ellis himself has sought redress for being sexually abused by a priest in the 1970s, starting when he was a 14-year-old altar boy, and tried Towards Healing as an adult before suing the Sydney archdiocese trustees. The NSW Court of Appeal eventually ruled they could not be held liable for damages in abuse claims.

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

MO – Predator priest is sentenced but nothing changes, SNAP says

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday October 25, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

While today’s sentencing ends a legal chapter on one Catholic cleric who committed heinous child sex crimes, it ends nothing about several Catholic clerics who concealed these crimes.

The Kansas City diocese is still headed by a convicted criminal. Every Other person who hid Fr. Ratigan’s crimes and misdeeds is still on the church payroll. More lawyers have been brought in. More promises have been made.

But little has changed. Bishop Finn still fights tooth and nail against victims of priests, even those who are proven predators.

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

OH – Church must do outreach re arrested priest

OHIO
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday October 25, 2013

Statement by Barbara Dorris, SNAP Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

Cleveland priest charged with three felony charges
Fr. James McGonegal was arrested after soliciting sex from a uniformed park ranger.

It is important that anyone in his parish, St. Ignatius of Antioch, that has any more information come forward in order to provide prosecutors with as much information as possible to keep this predator away from children or other possible targets.

We hope Cleveland Catholics will continue to speak out about abuse and cover ups. We hope every single Cleveland Catholic or citizen who sees, suspects or suffers abuse will call police, expose wrongdoers, protect kids, deter cover ups and start healing.

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

Petition calls for resignation of Archbishop John Neinstedt

MINNESOTA
Fox 9

[the petition]

Updated: Oct 25, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
A St. Paul parishioner has started an online petition calling for the resignation of Archbishop John Neinstedt.

Thomas Lyons collected about 70 signatures on his petition by Friday afternoon.

In a column published Thursday in the online version of The Catholic Sprit, Nienstedt apologized and ordered an outside review of all clergy files at the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. The archbishop acknowledges “some serious mistakes” and vowed “prudent and ongoing disclosure.”

The archdiocese has been under intense scrutiny since whistleblower Jennifer Haselberger went to the Ramsey County attorney’s office with claims that church leaders mishandled and covered-up allegations of abuse by priests.

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

IN DEFENSE OF ARCHBISHOP NIENSTEDT

MINNESOTA
Catholic League

Bill Donohue sent the following letter today to Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganó, the U.S. Papal Nuncio:
Your Excellency:

This letter is in response to a missive sent to you by a motley group of dissident Catholics, as well as those no longer in communion with the Church, asking for the resignation of Archbishop John Nienstedt. The request is illegitimate: Those pressing this issue cite Canon law as the basis of their agenda, yet they themselves belong to organizations that expressly reject the teachings of the Catholic Church on many issues. That is why some U.S. bishops have excommunicated anyone who belongs to some of these rogue Catholic groups.

The Catholic Coalition for Church Reform never mentions the fact that the Archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis has no offending priests in ministry, or that he has taken exceptional steps to ensure the integrity of the archdiocese. Not surprisingly, some in the secular media are giving high profile to this orchestrated effort to unseat Archbishop Nienstedt. He deserves better.

The letter you were sent contains many factual errors, all intentionally designed to smear Archbishop Nienstedt. I am enclosing a piece that was published today by Joan Frawley Desmond in the National Catholic Register that accurately describes this issue.

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

Priest indicted for soliciting sex at park

OHIO
WKYC

CLEVELAND — The Rev. James McGonegal has been indicted on sex related felony charges.

He has now been formally charged with felony soliciting, abusing harmful intoxicants and public indecency.

The indictment stems from an Oct. 11 incident where McGonegal, 68, a priest at St. Ignatius of Antioch Church on Lorain Avenue.

McGonegal has already pleaded not guilty and has posted bond and is out of jail.

He is accused of soliciting sex from a park ranger at Edgewater Park Oct. 11 by offering to pay him $50 to touch him and exposed himself.

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

Local Priest Indicted on Sex Related Charges

OHIO
Fox 8

October 25, 2013, by Peggy Sinkovich

CLEVELAND- A priest is now facing felony charges after being indicted on sex related charges.
Rev. James McGonegal is accused of soliciting sex at Edgewater Park earlier this month.
The indictment was released shortly after noon Friday.

McGonegal is now facing three counts, including counts of soliciting and public indecency.

The 68-year-old has “stepped away from his duties” at St. Ignatius of Antioch parish to “attend to his personal matters,” according to a statement released by the Diocese of Cleveland.

A police report states that McGonegal asked a ranger at the park to get into his vehicle.

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

Catholic priest Ratigan pleads guilty once again in child porn case

MISSOURI
The Kansas City Star

October 25
BY GLENN E. RICE
The Kansas City Star

The final criminal chapter in the child pornography case against a Northland Catholic priest concluded Friday when the Rev. Shawn F. Ratigan pleaded guilty in Clay County Circuit Court to three counts of possessing child pornography.

Ratigan was sentenced to seven years in prison on each felony charge, with the 21-year combined sentence to run concurrent to the 50-year sentence that he recently received in federal court for producing child pornography.

“There are certain offenses that shock the conscience when the defendant takes advantage of people who are unable to defend themselves, and this is one of those cases,” Presiding Circuit Judge Larry D. Harman said when announcing the sentence in Liberty.

Earlier in the hearing, Harman asked Ratigan to explain in his own words the crimes he committed.

Ratigan simply stated, “I possessed them.”

Harman asked if Ratigan was aware that possessing child pornography was illegal.

“Yes sir,” the 48-year-old priest answered.

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

Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis Confronts Scandal

MINNESOTA
National Catholic Register

by JOAN FRAWLEY DESMOND 10/25/2013

MINNEAPOLIS — In 2002, Archbishop Harry Flynn of St. Paul and Minneapolis spearheaded the passage of the 2002 “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” the U.S. bishops’ landmark effort to overcome a scandalous legacy of clergy sexual abuse of minors and failed episcopal oversight.

Archbishop Flynn, who once chaired the U.S. bishops’ Ad Hoc Committee on Sexual Abuse, retired in 2008, but his successor, Archbishop John Nienstedt, now faces allegations that diocesan leaders, past and present, failed to remove troubled priests from ministry and to report suspected possession of child pornography. The archbishop has now called for an independent review of archdiocesan policies and procedures for handling clergy sexual misconduct.

The recent furor began when Jennifer Haselberger, a canon lawyer who previously worked for the archdiocese, alleged that Archbishop Nienstedt ignored her warnings about the past misconduct of a diocesan priest, Father Curtis Wehmeyer, who would later plead guilty to charges of criminal sexual conduct involving minors and possession of child pornography in November 2012.

Haselberger served as the archdiocese’s chancellor for canonical affairs and also managed the records department from Aug. 18, 2008, to April 30, 2013. After her voluntary departure, which she said was prompted by the archdiocese’s response to her concerns, Haselberger spoke with Minnesota Public Radio (MPR). Documents from the archdiocesan archives were supplied to local police and have been posted on MPR’s website.

She was also critical of instances where she believed the archdiocese failed to immediately forward concerns or allegations to local law enforcement, instead having chosen to conduct its own investigation in advance of such.

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

Wide-ranging reaction to Nienstedt apology: praise, gratitude — and more calls for resignation

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Beth Hawkins

Archbishop John Nienstedt’s apology to clergy sex abuse victims published Thursday drew reactions ranging from praise and gratitude to more calls for his resignation.

“The archbishop is offering humble, thoughtful and decisive leadership,” said Father Bill Deziel, a parish priest who earlier used his church bulletin to ask the archbishop to step down. After the archbishop’s statements, the priest said in an email: “I fully support him and his team and these meaningful steps that he is implementing to ensure that no children are ever put in harms way by abusive clergy.”

The Catholic Coalition for Church Reform (CCCR), meanwhile, wrote to Papal Nuncio Carlo Maria Viganó asking for Nienstedt’s resignation and to have a voice in his replacement [PDF].

“We have grave concerns that the pastoral needs of the archdiocese will be compromised by the amount of time, energy and money that Archbishop Nienstedt will expend as he defends himself and his previous actions in the ongoing sexual abuse and cover-up crisis,” the group’s leaders wrote.

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

MPR SHOWS BIAS

MINNESOTA
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on an interview that St. Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop John Nienstedt gave to Minnesota Public Radio (MPR):

It is not uncommon for the leader of any organization to be on the firing line for decisions made by his predecessor and his staff. But in this regard, bishops have no rival: sitting bishops are being held responsible to an absurd degree for the rulings made by those who preceded them.

Two days ago, MPR published the e-mail interview it had with Archbishop Nienstedt. There was one question that showed palpable bias: “Why haven’t you released the names of offending priests?”

The question suggests that MPR knows about a cover-up of guilty priests. It turns out that it does not, which is why it did not name names. Nienstedt replied, “There are no offending priests in active ministry in our archdiocese.” So why did MPR assume he was guilty?

Nienstedt then addressed the issue of falsely accused priests who have been exonerated—a subject that MPR, and the media in general, have been strikingly incurious about—saying that it “would be wrong to publicize their names as offenders when they have not been proven to be offenders.” Good for him.

Equal justice demands that if the leaders of other religious and secular organizations do not publicize the names of those who are accused, but not convicted, then neither should the bishops. Does MPR’s parent organization, NPR, go public with accusations made against its employees?

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

MN – Four more ways MN Catholic officials aren’t “transparent”

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, Oct. 25

Statement by Bob Schwiderski Minnesota SNAP Director, (952 471 3422, skibrs@q.com )

You can’t make this stuff up.

Yesterday, Archbishop John Nienstedt wrote “We must also be committed to honesty and transparency.”

[Archdiocese]

But he refuses to give interviews. And he and other top Twin Cities Catholic officials refuse to disclose

–who’s allegedly been hired to review archdiocesan clergy child sex abuse files

[Minnesota Public Radio]

–who’s allegedly been hired as the new outside archdiocesan public relations firm

–who’s allegedly investigating an accused predator priest at a Catholic university

[Star Tribune]

–who’s on the archdiocesan ‘review board’ that looks at specific child sex abuse reports and that found a child sex abuse report against Fr. Michael Keating lacks “sufficient evidence.”

[Minnesota Public Radio]

This is being “open and transparent?”

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Watykan wyda arcybiskupa do Polski? Chodzi o pedofilię

POLSKA
Dziennik

{Summary: Prosecutors are heading to the Vatican to seek help in its investigation of Archbishop Jozef Wesolowski, former papal nuncio to the Dominican Republic. Wesolowski allegedly abused minors in the Dominican Republic but he can be prosecuted in Poland under Polish law. The want to know if the archbishop is a national of the Vatican, are Vatican State authorities conducting their proceedings with respect to the allegations, is he covered by diplomatic immunity regarding acts of abuse of minors.]

Prokuratura Okręgowa w Warszawie kieruje do Watykanu kilka ważnych z punktu widzenia śledztwa pytań:

1. Czy arcybiskup Józef Wesołowski posiada obywatelstwo watykańskie?

2. Czy odpowiednie organy państwa watykańskiego prowadzą swoje postępowanie w sprawie czynów, o jakie podejrzewają byłego nuncjusza apostolskiego śledczy z Dominikany?

3. Czy prawo państwa watykańskiego dopuszcza możliwość ekstradowania swoich obywateli?

4. Czy czyny polegające na czynnościach seksualnych z wykorzystaniem osób poniżej lat 15 i utrwalaniu treści pornograficznych z małoletnimi poniżej lat 15 objęte były immunitetem dyplomatycznym przyznanym arcybiskupowi Józefowi Wesołowskiemu na Dominikanie, kiedy był nuncjuszem apostolskim. A jeśli tak, to czy po zakończeniu misji dyplomatycznej immunitet taki byłemu nuncjuszowi wciąż przysługuje?

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Will Churches Protect Themselves or Their Victims?

UNITED STATES
In a Mirror Dimly

A few years ago I attended a church that was on the brink of closing down. A previous pastor had left the church in a difficult situation that he’d successfully hidden until it was nearly too late. I was heart sick over the thought of losing our church.

Where would we go if it closed? Would we lose touch with all of our friends?

I really liked our pastor and the simple liturgy they used each Sunday with a focus on communion. They had a lot of great ministry partnerships with groups outside the church. I felt like I was surrounded by people who were on the same page with me.

This was the church where I began to heal from my previous wounds and missteps from evangelicalism in the past, and I hated the thought of losing it.

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Pembroke priest charged again

CANADA
The Daily Observer

By Sean Chase, Daily Observer
Friday, October 25, 2013

PEMBROKE – A Pembroke priest is facing more charges of gross indecency and indecent assault

Ontario Provincial Police announced this week that Father Dan Miller had been arrested on the new charges connected with historical sexual offences.

The 69-year-old was released on a promise to appear and will make his next court appearance in Pembroke on Nov. 26.

Miller has already plead guilty to five counts of gross indecency and indecent assault. The incidents involving the boys occurred between 1969 and 1980. Police charged him with six counts in February, 2012, however, the crown has since dropped one of the charges. Ordained in Renfrew in 1969, Miller served in parishes in Arnprior, Deep River, Eganville and Petawawa before 1999 when he was suspended by the Pembroke Diocese.

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A search for perspective on the Catholic Church

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

10:06 AM, October 25, 2013

Recent revelations about the handling of troubled or abusive priests in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis have led to calls for Archbishop John Nienstedt to resign. Already, key figures in the archdiocese have resigned their leadership positions in the aftermath of a series of reports by MPR News.

In answering questions for the first time in response to the MPR News reports, Nienstedt said Wednesday that he would not resign and he insisted that no offending priests remain in active ministry in the archdiocese. He said he regretted that parishioners and priests had lost confidence in him.

As that story continues to unfold, we take a look at the future of the Roman Catholic Church in Minnesota and beyond. What lies ahead for Nienstedt? How has the church in America changed since the scandal that shook the Boston Archdiocese more than a decade ago? And what can Pope Francis do to help repair the church?

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Our View: Archdiocese risks losing credibility

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Editorial

Speaking truth to power and doing what you say you will do are hallmarks of credibility — whether it’s a person or an organization.

In the case of the Archdiocese of Minneapolis/St. Paul, a person — the Rev. Bill Deziel — is speaking truth to power because an organization — the archdiocese — is not doing what it said it will do.

Kudos to Dezeil for his courage and credibility. As for the credibility of the archdiocese, well, it’s hanging in the balance.

The Star Tribune reported earlier this week that Dezeil, who leads the 6,000-member Church of St. Peter in the Twin Cities, is openly asking if Archbishop John Nienstedt should step down after recent news reports show archdiocese leadership has failed this decade at doing what it said it would do starting in 2002 — stop covering up clergy sex abuse.

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JOANNE McCARTHY: Guilt and redemption

AUSTRALIA
Newcastle Herald

THE last time I saw John was in late September.

He slipped into a public gallery seat in Newcastle Supreme Court. It was the final public hearing day of the NSW Special Commission of Inquiry into NSW Police and Catholic Church handling of child sex allegations.

John was one of the regulars. He nodded and smiled to others – victims of child sex abuse and their parents, like him – who have sat in the gallery since the inquiry started in May.

He smiled at me where I sat in seats taken over by journalists. I smiled back.

We first spoke in September 2007. I found his name in some documents and gave him a call. By that stage he wasn’t an employee of the Catholic Church any more.

He was guarded, careful.

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“I didn’t do enough.”

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

POSTED BY BARBARA DORRIS ON OCTOBER 25, 2013

That’s how one of the most heroic whistleblowers in Catholic history describes her efforts to expose predators and protect kids.

“I didn’t do enough.”

What haunting words. That must send a chill up the spine of anyone who works – or worked – for any Catholic entity in Minnesota.

That’s what Jennifer Haselberger told the Associated Press the other day.

[ABC News]

Haselberger was, for years, a high ranking archdiocesan chancery office staffer in the Twin Cities.

When she saw that her church colleagues and supervisors were ignoring or hiding evidence of possible crimes by predatory priests (including Fr. Jon Shelley and Fr. Curtis Wehmeyer), she spoke up and stepped down.

She’s done more to expose continuing clergy sex cirmes and cover ups than perhaps any Catholic employee since Fr. Thomas Doyle.

Even so, she now feels like she “didn’t do enough.”

Imagine how her former peers – in the chancery office, in parishes, in parochial schools – will feel years from now when the teacher or seminarian or nun or priest or brother who they suspected might have acted inappropriately with a child is arrested for child sex crimes (like Fr. Wehmeyer was) or for adult sex crimes (like Fr. Mark Huberty was) or found guilty in court (like Fr. Robert Kapoun was) or suspended (like Fr. Michael Keating was).

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A brave mother

CANADA
Sylvia’s Site

Most of you are aware by now that further charges have been laid against convicted molester Father Daniel Miller.

I urge anyone out here who has sex abuse allegations against Father Miller and has been struggling to come forward to seriously consider doing so now.

My thoughts and prayers are with all of you – those victims who are awaiting the sentencing from the first set of charges, the complainant who recently came forward, and those who may still be struggling.

I also want to draw your attention to another Victim Impact Statement which has just been posted, this by a mother whose sons were sexually abused by Father Dan Miller. This is the woman who went to see Father Miller down and smacked him across the face after she found out that he had molested her boys. She is the mother who – believe it or not – was told by a bishop that she needed anger management counselling!

Here is the VIS of this brave mother whose world came tumbling down when she discovered that the priest she had confided in and trusted had been molesting her boys:

17 September 2013: Victim Impact Statement by mother whose sons were sexually abused by Father Daniel Miller

I thank her for allowing me to share her statement with all of you.

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Child victim of former Chichester priest rejects compensation

UNITED KINGDOM
Bognor Regis Observer

THE VICTIM of child abuse by a former Chichester priest has rejected a compensation package from the diocese.

The man, who cannot be identified, was sexually abused as a boy between 1982 and 1984 in Chichester by Robert Coles, 71, who is now serving an eight-year jail term for the offences.

The victim told the BBC this week he wanted an amount ‘in proportion’ to his suffering.

He has rejected a six-figure sum from the diocese.

Coles pleaded guilty last December to 11 offences against this victim, and also two other boys, aged ten at the time.

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Is the Catholic Church still the world’s moral authority?

UNITED STATES
Fox News

By Christopher Snyder
Heard on Fox
Published October 24, 2013

The Catholic Church is more than 1 billion strong, but has been weakened in recent years by secularization and abuse scandals. While the church is growing globally, a recent Pew study found nearly one-third of Americans who were raised Catholic no longer practice the religion.

Fox News Chief Religion Correspondent Lauren Green asked former U.S. Ambassador to the Holy See Francis Rooney whether the Catholic Church is still the world’s moral authority.

Rooney says even with the child sex abuse, Vatileaks scandals and a declining number of faithful attending church each week, the church still has the power to lead. “The principles which compromise the Holy See’s diplomatic outreach are enduring … in many parts of the world where scandal hasn’t occurred … [the Catholic Church has] the greatest impact in areas that are marginalized, where Christians are persecuted, “said Rooney.

Pope Benedict XVI resigned as the leader of the Catholic Church in February 2013. Green asked if it

“I don’t think it was the scandals per say… you gotta remember that Benedict was part of the solution … he was the fella that changed the procedures to make sure that the Vatican would have a voice when these [sex abuse] cases came up and that Bishops wouldn’t be able to sweep them under the rug and avoid calling in the civil authorities,” said Rooney.

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Bishop of bling learns reform begins in washroom

UNITED STATES
St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Rev. Christopher W. Keating

As German bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst learned this week, church reform begins at home. More to the point, it often starts in the bathroom.

In fact, one could argue that’s exactly how the Protestant Reformation began.

The bishop’s upscale taste landed him in hot water with the Vatican. Tebartz-van Elst was suspended from his post after it was revealed that he had spent millions renovating his church-owned residence in Limburg. Among other excesses, the bishop had ordered a $20,000 bathtub. Rubber ducky sold separately.

Germans who are church members, incidentally, are required by law to give 8-10% of their income to the church.

The remodeling news came to light after it was revealed that the bishop had recently flown business class on a trip to India to visit impoverished communities. All of this seems to have garnered the attention of the pope, who has shunned a lavish lifestyle and drives a 20-year old clunker around the Vatican grounds. The pope’s commitment to simple living has been a hallmark of his papacy. I’m sure he takes quick showers, too.

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Accused takes the stand in Saskatchewan residential school abuse case

CANADA
Ottawa Citizen

BY THE CANADIAN PRESS OCTOBER 25, 2013

BATTLEFORD, Sask. – A former dormitory supervisor at a residential school in Saskatchewan has taken the stand in his defence and denied all charges of indecently assaulting students.

Paul Leroux, who is representing himself at trial, went through the list of allegations one by one Thursday and refuted them all.

He said one incident of sexual abuse couldn’t possibly have happened because the room one complainant alleges he was molested in didn’t exist at the time.

He said another alleged incident at a Saskatoon hotel couldn’t have happened because he never travelled to Saskatoon with the school’s choir or stayed in a hotel with them.

When his testimony was complete, Leroux finished by saying he wished all of his former students well, including his accusers.

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Commission for victims of violence Catholic Church

NETHERLANDS
NL Times

A special committee will compensate people who fell victim to excessive force in the Roman Catholic Church as minors, announced the church on Thursday.The committee already started on October 15, and will offer help, and acknowledge the suffering of the victims.

The church started this initiative in response to the call of Wim Deetman, who studied female victims of excessive force in the Catholic Church. Victims who already reported to Deetman or the RKK Sexual Abuse Hotline, will be informed about compensation after November 30.

The independent committee consists of René Westra, Wiel Stevens, Pieter Kalbfleisch, and Secretary Bert Kreemers. They will look into reports of violence against children to the RKK Sexual Abuse Hotline and the Deetman commission. The focus is on sexual abuse, for which there is a different arrangement.

Wim Deetman proposed to establish such a committee in March. People who reported to the committee or Hotline will be informed after November 30 about the status of their report. The committee checks the validity of the report, and whether any additional information is needed from the victim.

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Nienstedt Says Mistakes Were Made, Offers Apology

MINNESOTA
WCCO

[with video]

MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) — Twin Cities Archbishop John Nienstedt acknowledged Thursday that “serious mistakes” have been made in how he’s handled allegations of clergy sexual misconduct. It’s his strongest wording yet over the ongoing scandal rocking the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis.

The Archbishop wrote his thoughts in the Catholic Spirit newspaper, titled “My Pledge to Restore Trust.”

In one sentence he writes, “with genuine sorrow, I apologize to all those who have been victimized, whether on my watch or not.”

In the lengthy column Nienstedt acknowledges that questions remain, specifically over policies and procedures used by the Archdiocese to identify and prevent clergy sexual misconduct. …

Bob Schwiderski was abused by a priest as a child. Today, as state director of SNAP, which represents similar victims, he says another task force isn’t what’s needed.

“We don’t need independent people without subpoena power. We need law enforcement looking at potential crimes. We don’t need independent people picked by him,” Schwiderski adds.

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Slachtoffers seksueel misbruik Kerk krijgen ongelijk

NEDERLAND
De Standaard

De katholieke kerk is niet aansprakelijk voor de ‘doofpotschade’ die de slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik hebben geleden. Dat heeft de Gentse rechtbank dinsdag beslist.

Verschillende slachtoffers van seksueel misbruik binnen de kerk stapten in groep naar de rechter en dienden een klacht in tegen de Heilige Stoel – de ‘ceo’s van de kerk’ – voor schuldig verzuim. Het ging de slachtoffers niet om de feiten van misbruik zelf, die al lang verjaard zijn, maar om het ‘onzorgvuldig beleid’ van de kerk, waardoor slachtoffers decennia in de kou zijn blijven staan. Ze eisten 1 miljoen euro schadevergoeding voor deze ‘doofpotschade’.

De Gentse rechtbank sprak de kerk dinsdag echter over de hele lijn vrij. De rechter volgde de verdediging van de kerk dat de Heilige Stoel niet kan vervolgd worden omdat die soevereine immuniteit geniet.

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Church-state issues and the Royal Commission

AUSTRALIA
Eureka Street

Frank Brennan | 24 October 2013

Address to the Australian Lawyers Alliance Conference, Rydges Lakeside, Canberra, 26 October 2013

Putting the case for state intervention in church affairs

On 31 October 2012, I was privileged to deliver the 2012 Law and Justice Oration at Parliament House in Sydney. I said:

You will all know that these are not easy times for Catholic priests; and they have never been easy times for those children in our society who have been sexually abused, a disproportionate number of them by Catholic priests. When in Sydney in July 2008, Pope Benedict XVI apologised in these words: ‘I…acknowledge the shame which we have all felt as a result of the sexual abuse of minors by some clergy and religious in this country. Indeed, I am deeply sorry for the pain and suffering the victims have endured and I assure them that, as their pastor, I too share in their suffering. These misdeeds, which constitute so grave a betrayal of trust, deserve unequivocal condemnation.’ I adopt his apology without demurrer.

Whatever our religion or none, whatever our love or loathing of the Catholic Church, what is to be done in the name of law and justice? Clearly, the Church itself cannot be left alone to get its house in order. That would be a wrongful invocation of freedom of religion in a pluralist, democratic society. The State may have a role to play. As our elected politicians prudentially decide how best to proceed, they need assistance from lawyers committed to justice, not lawyers acting primarily to protect the Church or to condemn it. The Catholic Church in Victoria has admitted that ‘in the past 16 years, about 620 cases of criminal child abuse have been upheld by the Church in Victoria’. In the Archdiocese of Melbourne alone, 301 complaints have been upheld since 1996.

Professor Patrick Parkinson, probably the nation’s most experienced academic lawyer in the field, having conducted the 2009 Study of Reported Child Sexual Abuse in the Anglican Church and having advised the Catholic Church on its Towards Healing protocol, informed the Victorian Parliament last month:

[T]here were 44 allegations of abuse [since 1990] within the Anglican diocese of Melbourne which fitted within the criteria of our study.

Archbishop Hart [the Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne] referred to 60 priests…of the archdiocese of Melbourne, who are substantiated offenders against children. We found 78 across the country against whom allegations were made in the Anglican Church. It gives you a sense of the scale of the problem.

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Catholic priest speaks out on child abuse in Syracuse visit

NEW YORK
CNY Central

[with video]

by Kellie Cowan
Posted: 10.25.2013

The Catholic Church has been rocked by child abuse scandals that have received plenty of publicity in recent years, but the only thing perhaps more scandalous has been the reaction from the church regarding the victims. Silence, high-level cover ups, even threats have left many to wonder who the church hierarchy are actually trying to protect.

Tonight Rev. Tom Doyle, a catholic priest and retired Air Force Major, spoke at All Saints Church in Syracuse about the need for reform in the way the Catholic Church handles sexual abuse cases.

“Victims are just swept under the rug,” said Parrish member Jane LeClair. “It’s like it’s all about trying to dismiss any embarrassment in the Catholic Church.”

Doyle hopes that an open and honest discussion about child abuse within the church, and the way in which the church treats victims, will create much needed change. Though he has spoken across the country and the world on church reform, the Catholic Church has been apprehensive at best to give Doyle a platform. Tonight Doyle divulged that All Saints Church is just the fifth catholic venue to allow him to speak on the topic of child abuse within its walls.

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October 24, 2013

Catholic Coalition for Church Reform Votes No Confidence in the Leadership of Archbishop John C. Nienstedt

MINNESOTA
The Progressive Catholic Voice

Minneapolis October 24, 2013 — Despite his statements of October 24 in The Catholic Spirit, the Catholic Coalition for Church Reform (CCCR) has urged Archbishop John C. Nienstedt to step down from his role as head of the Saint Paul/Minneapolis Archdiocese in a letter to him dated October 24, 2013.

At its meeting of October 16, 2013, the board of CCCR resolved to write to Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganó, the Vatican delegate to the U.S., stating its vote of no confidence in the leadership of the Archbishop. The Vatican delegate, whose office is at 3339 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington DC 20008, is charged with recommending episcopal appointments to the Vatican.

Also in its letter, CCCR sought recognition for lay consultation in selection of the archdiocese’s next bishop, whenever that happens. They asked the papal delegate “to seek recommendations from all the people of the Archdiocese—ordained and lay, as well as men and women religious—in the matter of a successor Archbishop or any bishops appointed hereafter.”

The letter to Archbishop Viganó was held pending the Archbishop’s statement in the Archdiocesan newspaper, The Catholic Spirit, October 24, then copied to Archbishop Nienstedt with the letter asking him to resign.

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Archbishop Nienstedt says no offending priests are in active ministry

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert

The archbishop has spoken … or at least written. Madeleine Baran of MPR continues her coverage of the church’s local problems saying: “Archbishop John Nienstedt said he accepts responsibility for addressing the unfolding clergy sexual abuse crisis and regrets that a growing number of parishioners and priests in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis have ‘lost confidence’ in him. However, he denied any abuse cover-up or illegal actions and repeated the archdiocese’s claim that there are no offending priests in active ministry. Nienstedt’s remarks came in an e-mailed response to questions from MPR News. It’s the first time the archbishop has answered questions about the scandal since MPR News began publishing investigative reports in late September. … Nienstedt wrote … ‘My highest priorities are to ensure the safety of our children and to restore the trust of Catholics and our clergy. I will do everything in my power to do so.’ ” Will this be before or after the next anti-gay campaign?

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Mistakes made in Catholic clergy sex abuse probes: Minnesota archbishop

MINNESOTA
WTAQ

Thursday, October 24, 2013
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) – The Roman Catholic archbishop of the Minneapolis-St. Paul Archdiocese said on Thursday that serious mistakes had been made in the archdiocese’s investigations of allegations of sex abuse by clergy and he has ordered a review of all of its files by an outside firm.

“To those who have been hurt, to the victims of clergy abuse and their family members, I can only tell you how sorry I am,” Archbishop John Nienstedt said in the archdiocese’s official publication. “I realize how damaging such actions are in violating the care of their human dignity.”

But David Clohessy, director of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, said Nienstedt’s review plan would only result in more secrecy and his statement did not reveal the names of sexual predators.

“He knows who should look at these records, the cops,” Clohessy said. “But he continues to act irresponsibly, to protect the predators and to endanger kids.”

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Slachtoffers kerk krijgen schadevergoeding

NEDERLAND
FOK

[Summary: Those who as minors were victims of excessive violence in the Catholic church may received compensation. A special committee will review the cases, the church announced Thursday.]

Mensen die als minderjarige slachtoffer werden van excessief geweld in de katholieke kerk kunnen een schadevergoeding krijgen. Een speciale commissie gaat zich daarover buigen, heeft de kerk donderdag bekendgemaakt.

De kerk komt met de stap tegemoet aan de oproep van Wim Deetman, die onderzoek deed naar vrouwelijke slachtoffers van buitensporig geweld in de katholieke kerk. Slachtoffers die zich al bij Deetman of het Meldpunt Seksueel Misbruik RKK hebben gemeld, worden na 30 november over de schadevergoeding geïnformeerd.

De commissie bestaat uit Pieter Kalbfleisch, Wiel Stevens en René Westra en wordt ondersteund door psychologen en deskundigen. Als alle gevallen zijn afgehandeld, zal de commissie publiekelijk verantwoording afleggen.

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Twin Cities archbishop plans outside audit of priest files

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

[Archbishop Addresses Media Questions – St. Paul and Minneapolis archdiocese]

[My pledge to restore trust]

By Emily Gurnon
egurnon@pioneerpress.com
POSTED: 10/24/2013

Archbishop John Nienstedt admitted to Catholics on Thursday that “some serious mistakes have been made” in the handling of clergy sex-abuse cases.

Nienstedt apologized to all victims of abusive priests and promised to institute changes, including “a review of all clergy files by an outside firm.”

An archdiocese spokesman said Thursday that he did not know who that firm is.

In a written statement titled, “My pledge to restore trust,” Nienstedt said that “sweeping changes” made in every diocese after the 2002 U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in Dallas led him and others to hope that clergy sex abuse was a thing of the past.

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Archbishop Nienstedt hires firm for external review

MINNESOTA
KARE

ST. PAUL, Minn. – Archbishop John Nienstedt has hired an outside firm to examine whether any priests in ministry pose a danger to children.

Writing in his weekly column, Nienstedt said he ordered the review after reading recent media reports and hearing from “so many Catholic faithful” that there is “real fear that some priests in ministry today constitute a danger to children.”

He said would never knowingly allow such a situation and decided to order a review of all clergy files by an outside firm.

The announcement comes after intense scrutiny over how Nienstedt has handled clergy misconduct in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. An MPR News investigation has found that church officials disregarded concerns over priest misconduct over the past ten years.

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Abuse Allegations Leave Twin Cities Archdiocese In Turmoil

MINNESOTA
NPR

[with audio]

by MADELEINE BARAN
October 24, 2013

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has been rocked in recent weeks by revelations from a top-level whistle-blower. The former official says church leaders covered up numerous cases of sexual misconduct by priests and even made special payments to pedophiles.

The scandal is notable not only because of the abuse but also because it happened in an archdiocese that claimed to be a national leader in dealing with the issue.

To understand what’s happening now, it helps to go back to 2002, when the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops faced a crisis brought on by its failure to remove abusive priests from ministry.

‘I Wanted Them To Do The Right Thing’

Archbishop Harry Flynn of St. Paul and Minneapolis emerged as a national leader on the issue, urging bishops at a now-historic conference in Dallas to root out what he called a cancer in the church.

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Priest abuse: the difference women can make

UNITED STATES
National Catholic Reporter

Robert McClory | Oct. 24, 2013 NCR Today

The recent story about Jennifer Haselberger, a former chancellor for the St. Paul-Minneapolis archdiocese who finally blew the whistle on long unreported allegations of sexual abuse by priests, calls to mind a similar key role some years ago played by a woman in the Belleville, Ill., diocese.

In that case, a priest, Raymond Kownacki, was moved due to ecclesiastical indifference from parish to parish for more than 25 years despite a mounting host of allegations and complaints about his sexual activities with countless boys and at least one girl. During that time, three bishops of Belleville had to be personally aware of Kownacki’s well-documented history. As the chancellor of the diocese testified at a later trial, “Everyone at the chancery office knew Kownacki was sick and liked to molest children.”

Yet the parishes to which he was assigned were never given any warning. Bishops Albert Zuroweste, John Wurm and James Keleher sent these parishes glowing comments about Kownacki’s dedicated priestly service and confidence in his ability to carry out his duties. In 1988, Kownacki was sent to a Belleville church that had a grade school next door. No restrictions of any kind were placed on his ministry or other activities.

In 1993, the Belleville diocese finally adopted a policy about clerical sexual misconduct and set up a seven-member review board (three priests and four lay members), which was given access to the diocesan records. It did not take long for Margie Mensen, the board’s administrator and lone woman member, to see what had been going on. She viewed the evidence, met with parents, then firmly recommended that Kownacki be immediately removed from all ministry. The board unanimously supported her, and Kownacki was put on administrative leave, where he remains to this day. It is likely Mensen was the first woman to ever see that record of gross abuse that had been mounting for so many years.

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Irish orders falling short of aid for abuse victims

IRELAND
National Catholic Reporter

Dennis Coday | Oct. 24, 2013 NCR Today

Five years ago, 18 religious orders in Ireland pledged to set aside 110 million euros (about $160 million at the time) to pay for the treatment for survivors of institutional abuse, but to date they are about 40 million euros short of that figure, The Irish Independent is reporting.

The orders, which ran various schools and residential homes for children and vulnerable adults in Ireland, including the Christian Brothers and the Daughters of Charity, turned over only 72 million euros to the Residential Institutions Statutory Fund, or RISF.

Some 15,000 people are thought to be eligible for grants from RISF, which is to begin issuing funds in January.

The orders have blamed the depressed property market for the shortfall, according the The Independent, which quote an unnamed source as saying: “They made the commitment at the time based on property and property prices. Obviously, as we all know, their value has fallen since then.”

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

MN – Archbishop does “boilerplate PR”

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

MN archbishop will comment on his crisis today; SNAP responds

MN – What to look for today from Archbishop Nienstedt

MN archbishop’s answer: “I’ll hire more lawyers”

For immediate release: Thursday October

Statement by Barbara Dorris, Outreach Director, 314-862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

We agree with Nienstedt: he and his staff can “do better.” But they don’t.

Instead they posture. And they perpetuate the fallacy that child abuse is the root of this inexcusable horror.

It’s not.

Priests that sexually assault adults and kids are NOT the root of this crisis. All kinds of trusted adults sexually violate the vulnerable. (And it’s pretty hard to stop them, at least before the first offense.)

The cover up of those crimes that is the root of this crisis. (That’s what enables the second and 22nd offense. And that’s what enrages Catholics, citizens and victims – knowing that prompt, honest and responsible moves by Nienstedt and his staff would have prevented others from being hurt by at least some of the 34 publicly accused abusive Twin Cities clerics.)

And the cover up is what Nienstedt refuses to mention today. Conveniently, he focuses on just how bad those awful predator priests are, cleverly diverting attention from his actions that ignore, minimize, conceal and enable those predator priests to commit their heinous crimes.

It’s deliberate deception. It’s a carefully-devised public relations calculation designed to shift blame and attention to those who can’t control themselves (the predators) and attention away from those who won’t control them (their peers and supervisors, the Nienstedts, McDonoughs, Bairds, et al.)

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Archbishop orders outside review of all clergy abuse files

MINNESOTA
KMSP

by Mike Durkin

ST. PAUL, Minn. (KMSP) –
Archbishop John Nienstedt has ordered an outside review of all clergy files, while acknowledging “some serious mistakes” over the last decade in how the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis handled allegations of clergy sexual abuse.

Nienstedt’s comments and action plan were published Thursday in a column for The Catholic Spirit, titled, “My pledge to restore trust.”

“Having seen so many reports in the media and read the letters and emails of so many Catholic faithful as well as the general public, I am aware that there is real fear that some priests in ministry today constitute a danger to children. I could never knowingly allow such a situation,” Nienstedt wrote. “In order to demonstrate this fact, I have ordered a review of all clergy files by an outside firm. We need to ascertain the facts, and this will lead us to prudent and ongoing disclosure.”

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Specter of bankruptcy may loom over archdiocese

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

By Brian Lambert | 10/23/13

It was only a matter of time before the question came up. Tom Scheck of MPR reports: “Recent reports about clergy misconduct in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis threaten to put new financial pressure on an institution already under some financial strain. Even before recent revelations about alleged misconduct of priests, the archdiocese was concerned about the impact a new law could bring in dozens of new lawsuits against the church for clergy sex abuse. In fact, church officials met privately with attorneys to discuss ways to protect archdiocese assets from creditors. … Scott Domeier, a former accountant for the archdiocese, said bankruptcy was discussed openly among top officials. Domeier, who is serving three years in prison for filing improper tax returns and stealing more than $600,000 from the archdiocese, said church leaders constantly worried about legislation that would extend the statute of limitations for sex abuse victims to file a civil suit against their abuser.”

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Priest: I didn’t lure schoolgirl into sex

KENYA
Standard Digital

By Erick Abuga

A Catholic priest has denied luring a schoolgirl into bed with bananas and oranges for her sick mother.

Father Thomas Gori had allegedly been sending the 14-year-old girl with the fruits to her mother in hospital for three years before the sex attack.

On October 12 when he allegedly had sex with her in Ikuruma village, the priest had told the Standard 7 girl that he was going to pray for her, a Kisii court heard.

Resident magistrate Lucy Kaitani freed the priest on a Sh500,000 bond as he awaits trial.

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My pledge to restore trust

MINNESOTA
The Catholic Spirit

Archbishop Addresses Media Questions

Archbishop John C. Nienstedt | October 24, 2013

It was Dec. 13, 2007. I remember it well. I had just returned from a meeting of the college of consultors of the New Ulm Diocese, having presided over the selection of a new apostolic administrator to take my place as bishop. The phone rang and my brother said, “Dad is dead.”

I pulled the car over to absorb those words. Six weeks later I stood at my mother’s hospital bed and watched her die. It was an extremely painful time in my life, losing both parents within such a short period. My parents had been very close to me. They had a huge influence on who I am. I could not have asked for better parents.

I recall those moments now, because the pain and sorrow I felt then reflects that which I have heard from so many of you in your own suffering and disillusionment these past few weeks. I want you to know that I have been praying for all of you. I am experiencing that pain, too. The media have been filled with all kinds of accusations and unanswered questions. There is cause here for sadness, confusion and anger.

After almost a month, I have come to understand more clearly what has happened to bring us to this point. I am grateful to my leadership team, which has helped me process this understanding. Practically all of my senior leadership team is new, with an average tenure of less than a year. We have been searching for answers. And while there is more to do, we have arrived at a better picture of the truth.

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

Archbishop Nienstedt hires firm for external review of clergy files

MINNESOTA
Minnesota Public Radio

by Tom Scheck, Minnesota Public Radio
October 24, 2013

ST. PAUL, Minn. — Archbishop John Nienstedt has hired an outside firm to examine whether any priests in ministry pose a danger to children.

Writing in his weekly column, Nienstedt said he ordered the review after reading recent media reports and hearing from “so many Catholic faithful” that there is “real fear that some priests in ministry today constitute a danger to children.”

He said would never knowingly allow such a situation and decided to order a review of all clergy files by an outside firm.

The announcement comes after intense scrutiny over how Nienstedt has handled clergy misconduct in the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. An MPR News investigation has found that church officials disregarded concerns over priest misconduct over the past ten years.

“The first thing that must be acknowledged is that over the last decade some serious mistakes have been made,” Nienstedt wrote Thursday. “There is reason to question whether or not the policies and procedures were uniformly followed. There is also a question as to the prudence of the judgments that have been made.”

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Archbishop admits mishandling of misconduct cases

MINNESOTA
Pioneer Press

By AMY FORLITI Associated Press
POSTED: 10/23/2013

MINNEAPOLIS—The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis made serious mistakes in the way it handled allegations of clergy sexual misconduct in the last decade, Archbishop John Nienstedt acknowledged Thursday as he announced he has ordered an external review of all priest files.

Nienstedt apologized to victims in a column posted on the website of The Catholic Spirit, the archdiocese’s official newspaper, and said he knows the ultimate responsibility is his as head of the local church.

“My heart is heavy with the agony that these errors have caused,” he wrote.

The archdiocese has come under fire since a former employee claimed church leaders mishandled abuse allegations. Nienstedt’s top deputy has stepped down, police are investigating, and there have been public calls for Nienstedt to resign. …

David Clohessy, national director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, said Nienstedt’s words are just more of the same and any external review would not be independent if ordered by the archbishop.

“Nothing he can say will matter. Only what he does matters,” Clohessy said. “And today he exposes no predators, disciplines no enablers, reveals no secrets, and deters no cover ups. It’s just more promises from a bishop who has repeatedly broken promises.”

Clohessy said secrecy is a key part of the problem. His group has called for the archdiocese to make public a list of 33 priests it has identified as having credible allegations of abuse lodged against them.

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Activist says media helps fight abuse

UNITED STATES
Associated Baptist Press

“Something’s terribly wrong when ESPN is calling for the truth, but the church remains silent.”

By Bob Allen

A lifelong Baptist who advocates on behalf of clergy sex-abuse victims says the media is doing more to promote healing and children’s safety than pastors who try to keep it out of the headlines.

Amy Smith, Houston representative of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, reacted to recent remarks by a Southern Baptist seminary president that church members should “just accept” wrong and injustice rather than taking church matters to civil authorities or the press.

“We don’t take matters before unbelievers,” Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary President Paige Patterson said in a chapel sermon Oct. 15. “What goes on in the church of God doesn’t go to the press.”

Patterson didn’t specify what kind of internal matters he meant, but critics termed his blanket statement ill-advised and potentially dangerous given evangelicals’ poor track record of mishandling reports of known or suspected criminal abuse in churches.

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USA ambassador to Vatican – for what exactly? “Pray” with the pope in one office, in one basilica that equals “one country”?

UNITED STATES
Pope Crimes & Vatican Evils…

Paris Arrow

Updated October 24, 2013

On October 21, 2013, the Vatican Information Service publish the audiences that Pope Francis met – for a few minutes – and the new American Ambassador was one of them. It said a few words, Kenneth F. Hackett, the new ambassador of the United States to the Holy See, presenting his credential letters.

Credentials for what? Theology? Agreement for the Pope’s ultra conservative doctrines that are totally obsolete and useless for the poor of Christ!

We do not need to pay millions of dollars for some theological papaers that anyone can now read in Google.

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MN archbishop’s answer: “I’ll hire more lawyers”

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

MN archbishop will comment on his crisis today; SNAP responds

MN – What to look for today from Archbishop Nienstedt

For immediate release: Thursday, October 24

David Clohessy, Director, SNAP, Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, (7234 Arsenal Street, St. Louis MO 63143), 314 566 9790 cell ( SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

In response to scandal stemming from secrecy, Archbishop John Nienstedt proposes more secrecy.

[Catholic Spirit]

He does one thing today – he promises hiring more lawyers. That’s all. The rest of his column is just more promises from a powerful prelate who keeps breaking old promises.

Here’s the only real change: Soon the number of hand-picked, church-paid lawyers looking at predators’ files will go from six or eight to 12 or 14. That’s not progress.

Those files – all of them – must be turned over to law enforcement. Despite his protestations to the contrary, this is “clear” to Nienstedt. But he refuses to do it.

It doesn’t matter if they’re paid permanently or temporarily by Nienstedt. The lawyers he picks aren’t police or prosecutors. They’re regular employees or contract employees. They’re beholden to him. And they’ll help him keep his secrets secret, as church lawyers have virtually always done. (The one exception, obviously, is Jennifer Haselberger.)

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Archbishop Nienstedt apologizes to victims of clergy sex abuse

MINNESOTA
MinnPost

[Archbishop Addresses Media Questions – St. Paul and Minneapolis archdiocese]

By Beth Hawkins

As calls for his resignation swelled, Archbishop John Nienstedt issued a public apology this morning to victims of clergy sex abuse, saying that his understanding of the problem has become clearer over the last month.

“As the head of this local Church, I know that the ultimate responsibility here is mine. My heart is heavy with the agony that these errors have caused,” Nienstedt wrote in a column in the official publication of the Archdiocese, the Catholic Spirit.

“To those who have been hurt, to the victims of clergy abuse and their family members, I can only tell you how sorry I am,” he continued. “I realize how damaging such actions are in violating the care of their human dignity. And so, with genuine sorrow, I apologize to all those who have been victimized, whether on my watch or not.”

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Silenced priest Fr Iggy O’Donovan gets freedom of town honor in Drogheda

IRELAND
Irish Central

By NICK BRAMHILL, IrishCentral Staff Writer
Published Thursday, October 24, 2013

An outspoken Irish priest, who was removed from his post last month after performing an unconventional baptism, is to receive his former parish’s highest honor on Thursday.

Augustinian priest Fr. Iggy O’Donovan clashed with the Vatican on several matters, most recently after a complaint was made that he went against Catholic tradition by allowing godparents to pour water on a baby’s head during a baptism.

O’Donovan was hugely popular in Drogheda,a town of 40,000 30 miles from Dublin especially among young people . He is credited with saving many depressed young people from suicide.

The complaint, which was made without the knowledge of the parents who later said they fully supported the cleric, was addressed to Cardinal Sean Brady and subsequently forwarded to Rome.

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Archbishop Nienstedt calls for outside audit of priest files

MINNESOTA
Star Tribune

[Archbishop Addresses Media Questions – St. Paul and Minneapolis archdiocese]

BAIRD HELGESON , Star Tribune Updated: October 24, 2013

Twin Cities Archbishop John Nienstedt writes in a new column to the faithful that he is hiring an outside firm to review of clergy files at the archdiocese.

Twin Cities Archbishop John Nienstedt writes in a new column to the faithful that he is hiring an outside firm to review of clergy files at the archdiocese.

Nienstedt’s ordered the review after a new wave of allegations of priest sexual abuse and recent revelations that archdiocese leaders tried to keep the accusations private.

“This is unacceptable,” Nienstedt wrote in a column published Thursday in The Catholic Spirit, the official publication of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis. “As the head of this local Church, I know that the ultimate responsibility here is mine. My heart is heavy with the agony that these errors have caused.”

Nienstedt also apologized to victims, their families and to those who’s faith has been shaken by the allegations.

“To those who have been hurt, to the victims of clergy abuse and their family members, I can only tell you how sorry I am,” he wrote. “The sexual abuse of a minor or vulnerable adult is reprehensible, morally repugnant and goes against Christ’s teachings to promote goodness, life and light. This is not who we are as the Catholic Church.”

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Victim of sex-abuse priest Robert Coles rejects payout

UNITED KINGDOM
BBC News

A man who was sexually abused as a boy by a Church of England priest has rejected a six-figure compensation offer.

The man, who cannot be identified, was one of a number of boys abused by Robert Coles when he was a priest in Horsham and Chichester, in Sussex.

Coles, of Upperton Road, Eastbourne, was jailed for eight years in February after admitting 11 sex abuse charges.

The victim, now 45, says he wants a sum “in proportion” to his suffering.

‘Archbishop appalled’

He told the BBC: “I’ve been sectioned, I’ve self-harmed. I’ve tried to end my life.

“Numerous times I’ve been in intensive care.”

The man, who said he had reported the abuse to Sussex Police in 1997, says he is prepared to go to court to get the compensation he believes he deserves.

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Victims urge private funeral for KC priest accused of abuse

MISSOURI
National Catholic Reporter

Dennis Coday | Oct. 24, 2013 NCR Today

Msgr. Thomas J. O’Brien, subject of more than two dozen lawsuits alleging sexual abuse of minors, one of which ended in a $10 million settlement against the Kansas City-St. Joseph diocese, died this week according to his lawyer, The Kansas City Star is reporting. He was 87.

Leaders of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, SNAP, are asking Bishop Robert Finn of Kansas City-St. Joseph to keep funeral services for O’Brien discreet.

Six lawsuits against the diocese involving O’Brien are pending. In July the diocese settled a wrongful-death lawsuit for $2.25 million with the parents of a boy whose family claimed he took his own life 30 years ago because of repeated sexual abuse by O’Brien.

O’Brien, who was ordained a priest in 1950 and served in a number of Kansas City parish, was principal of a Catholic high school 1961-1968 and superintendent of Catholic schools for the diocese 1969-1971.

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Nienstedt Says Mistakes Were Made, Offers Apology

MINNESOTA
WJON

[Archbishop Addresses Media Questions – St. Paul and Minneapolis archdiocese]

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – St. Paul Archbishop John Nienstedt acknowledges “some serious” mistakes have been made in the way the archdiocese handled allegations of clergy sexual misconduct over the last decade, and he pledges new steps to protect the faithful.

Nienstedt made the comments in a column posted Thursday on the website of The Catholic Spirit, the archdiocese’s official newspaper.

The Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis has been under fire since a whistleblower went public with claims that church leaders mishandled abuse allegations. Nienstedt has denied interview requests from The Associated Press.

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“CHELSEA LATELY” LIBELS TWO GROUPS

UNITED STATES
Catholic League

Bill Donohue comments on last night’s episode of the E! show, “Chelsea Lately”:

Priests and Germans were libeled last night by two of Chelsea Handler’s guests, Kurt Braunohler and Moshe Kasher.

The objectionable part began with a discussion of Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, the German bishop who was suspended by Pope Francis for his opulent lifestyle.

Braunohler: “I love that the Catholic Church has like a zero tolerance policy on everything other than child abuse.”

Kasher: “It’s a German priest, so that’s a difficult set of circumstances. You know what I mean, it’s like-do I make out with that kid or do I kill that Jew.”

The remark by Braunohler came the day after the teachers unions, led by the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers, sought to stop a bill that would prohibit the hiring of convicted sex offenders in the public schools. The bill, which was approved by the House, is aimed at bringing the public schools up to speed so that they will have the same zero tolerance policy that Catholic schools have had for years.

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Archbishop Addresses Media Questions

MINNESOTA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis

Date:Thursday, October 24, 2013

In the Q&A below, Archbishop Nienstedt answers many questions that have been asked recently by the media.

Question: Since your arrival as archbishop, has the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis followed the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People and the Essential Norms?

Archbishop John Nienstedt: Yes.

Q: Why didn’t you go to police about the images found on Father Jon Shelley’s computer?

Archbishop: The analysis completed in 2004 did not find evidence of possession of child pornography. The images that Haselberger showed to coworkers were of pop-up ads. Pop-up ads are unsolicited and often attach to the hard drive without the user’s awareness or permission. The St. Paul police completed a 7-month review of the same material from the hard drive that was analyzed in 2004 and came to the same conclusion: there is no evidence of possession of child pornography.

Q: Why were priests such as Robert Kapoun receiving additional retirement payments? Who authorized those payments, why did they continue, and which priests are still getting additional payments? What action did you take when Jennifer Haselberger reported these payments to you?

Archbishop: Every bishop is required by canon law to provide financial support for priests of his diocese. In some cases, it was determined that offenders should be removed from active priestly ministry, be subject to compliance with our monitoring program, and required to undergo therapy and spiritual direction to avoid reoffending. These decisions were made due to a number of factors, including the projected likelihood that the priest would be not be able to find secular employment or be a candidate for laicization.

Q: Has anything changed with the monitoring of Father Robert Kapoun?

Archbishop: The monitoring program is modeled after probation programs that include periodic visitations and determination of compliance with expected restrictions. Fr. Kapoun has met all requirements of the program, despite the inferences made by the media. We have no reason to believe he is a danger to the community.

Q: Why do you need a new task force?

Archbishop: Our own investigations give us reason to believe that our policies and procedures may not have been uniformly followed and that is a serious issue we have been addressing. At the same time, we believe that we need truly independent analysis from a group of outside and impartial experts to help tell how we can do better. That may mean changes or additions to policies, procedures or practices. It may mean better auditing to ensure compliance with current policies, procedures and practices. The Task Force will have unprecedented authority to examine any and all issues associated with clergy sexual abuse. Its findings and recommendations will be welcomed and implemented.

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MN archbishop will comment on his crisis today; SNAP responds

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 24

Statement by Bob Schwiderski of Wayzata, SNAP Minnesota Director

Archbishop John Nienstedt is a coward. His archdiocese is embroiled in scandal. Already wounded clergy sex abuse victims feel re-victimized. And thousands of Nienstedt’s flock feels betrayed.

Based on the on-going recklessness, callousness and deceit by Nienstedt and his colleagues, those feelings are justified.

Yet the ‘shepherd’ of this ‘flock’ refuses to talk about the scandal he has largely created, despite repeated pledges, year after year, to be “open and transparent” about clergy sex crimes.

He answers a handful of questions, in writing, from Minnesota Public Radio yesterday and promises he’ll write about this crisis on his website today. Big deal.

That’s cowardice.

Nienstedt isn’t alone. Most accused wrongdoers Twin Cities Catholic circles are dodging the media.

St. Thomas University officials are keeping silent about their alleged investigation into a predator priest on their payroll.

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MN – What to look for today from Archbishop Nienstedt

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 24

Statement by Barbara Blaine of Chicago, president of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 312-399-4747, SNAPblaine@gmail.com )

Here’s what we think you can expect from Archbishop John Nienstedt’s column today when he writes about the continuing crisis in his archdiocese stemming from repeated clergy child sex crimes and cover ups of those crimes.

Look for lots of spin, hair-splitting and word-parsing.

Look for Nienstedt to imply that he and his staff made “mistakes,” instead of admitting that he and his staff deliberately and repeatedly took self-serving, deceitful and secretive actions.

Look for lots of sweeping promises designed to mollify his outraged flock, promises that will be broken once the heat of intense scrutiny fades, like his earlier promises have been.

Look for Nienstedt to use the word “allegations” to describe what are really “revelations.” He and his public relations team are trying to ‘spin’ actual church documents as “accusations” when, in fact, they are “disclosures.” (Lawsuits are “allegations.” Actual archdiocesan memos are not.)

Look for Nienstedt to subtly distance himself from predator priests, instead of admitting that most are still on his payroll yet are monitored and supervised

Look for no disclosures today. That’s significant – and tragic – because secrecy is what largely is causing this mess. But today, and in the future, Nienstedt and his staff will continue to practice secrecy, because their reputations and clerical careers matter most to them and if their secrets are revealed, their reputations and clerical careers may suffer.

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Praying Angry and Surviving Abuse

BROOKLYN (NY)
Social Science Research Council

By Marilyn McCord Adams

October 22, 2013

[Editor’s Note: This post is in response to “Praying Angry” by Robert Orsi.]

Robert Orsi, in his sensitive and insightful piece, brings out how “praying angry” is a necessary spiritual exercise for many who have been touched by God and abused by life. I say “many,” because abuse convinces some to give up on God. They trusted God to “be there” for them, to protect them from the worst that we can suffer, be, or do. They cried to the Lord in their trouble. But no rescue was forthcoming. For some, abuse makes belief in God psychologically impossible. Others conclude that even if God exists, God is not the kind of person they want to have anything to do with. Abuse is evidence that God is a deadbeat deity, that God is aloof and doesn’t care, that God is callous or cruel, even that God hates us. Still, for whatever psycho-spiritual reason, many who have been touched by God and abused by life, find themselves unable to let go. They are hurt. They feel abandoned and betrayed by God. But they aren’t finished with God. They can’t heal without confronting the authorities that allowed the abuse to happen. In imitation of the bible’s Job, praying angry calls God to account.

Sexual abuse of children by adults on whom they depend for love and nurture always digs deep into the human person. Physical violation is an outward and visible sign of role confusion and shattered expectations. Orsi’s wider work helps us to appreciate how this struggle amplifies when children are abused by priests. Especially pre-Vatican II, the Roman Catholic church set itself up as the sole institution chosen by God to open heaven’s doors. It proclaimed the sacred office of priesthood as necessary for salvation. Because God is above reproach, holy church is likewise above reproach, and her sacred ministers participate in this presumption. Moreover, not only does the Roman Catholic church enforce beliefs by catechetical instruction; it also uses an elaborate material cult presided over by priests to habituate the worshipper to postures and gestures, rote prayers and responses—all of which root religious feeling and conviction in the body and unconscious as well the conscious self.

If the priest is an alter Christus, then predator priests send the message that God is a predator, that Christ is a pederast. The consecrated host stuck up the girl’s vagina turns the really present Christ into a sexual molester. [McCord is referring to the Cudemo case.] John Paul II’s encyclical insists that priests are not only sacrificers but shepherds. Predator priests advertise God as handing over the flock to hirelings who care nothing for the sheep, who sacrifice the lambs to meet their own needs.

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MO – Victims want private funeral for priest

MISSOURI
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Victims want private funeral for priest
He’s accused of molesting dozens of kids
Abuse group writes Catholic bishop for help
“Please prevent more pain,” SNAP urges Finn

For immediate release: Thursday, Oct. 24, 2013

For more information: David Clohessy (314) 566-9790 cell, SNAPclohessy@aol.com, Barbara Dorris (314) 862-7688 SNAPdorris@gmail.com

A support group for clergy sex abuse victims is writing the Diocese of Kansas City – St Joseph’s top Catholic official asking him to make sure that a priest’s funeral is private, not public.

Leaders of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, are asking Bishop Robert Finn to keep services discreet and out of the parish’s spotlight for the funeral of a credibly accused predator clergy member.

Msgr. Thomas O’Brien was sued at least 20 times for sexually abusing boys and had worked in Springfield MO, Independence MO, as well as Kansas City.

[BishopAccountability.org]

“Dozens of boys who were sexually assaulted by Msgr. Thomas O’Brien have suffered enough. And thousands of Catholics who were scandalized and betrayed – by Msgr. O’Brien’s crimes and church cover ups – have suffered enough,” said David Clohessy of St. Louis, SNAP’s director. “Please do not add to their pain. Please do not let Msgr. O’Brien be buried in a Catholic cemetery with full honors in a public ceremony. ”

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IRE – Irish Catholic officials betray their flock again

IRELAND
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, October 24, 2013

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests ( 314 566 9790, SNAPclohessy@aol.com )

Irish Catholic religious orders are refusing to live up to promises they made years ago to help victims of abuse. Shame on them.

[Irish Independent]

These selfish and cold-hearted church officials are victimizing the already-wounded for the third time. First, these innocent boys and girls were violated as kids. Second, they were violated again when a callous Catholic hierarchy ignored their pleas for help, openness and healing. Now, they are violating these still-suffering adults by breaking their promises of help.

Catholic officials are blaming the depressed property market for the shortfall.” That’s baloney. The Catholic church is a huge, wealthy monarchy. The hierarchy almost always seems to find money for its pet projects. When a pope visits a nation, all of that country’s Catholic entities “chip in”, pool their funds to make sure they can capitalize on the energy and attention a papal visit brings.

When it’s advantageous for them, they claim the church is a world-wide institution in which Catholic entities help one another financially. When it’s advantageous to claim the reverse – that each Catholic entity is entirely separate – they claim the reverse. It’s utterly deceitful.

We believe “Where there’s a will, there’s a way.” In Boston, the now-disgraced Cardinal Bernard Law had the decency to at least borrow money (some $25 million) from the Knights of Columbus to help hundreds of victims. These religious orders can and should do the same if necessary.

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The “Bling Bishop” Exits… Of Sorts

GERMANY
Whispers in the Loggia

Saying Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst “cannot, at the present moment, continue to exercise his episcopal ministry” after months of embarrassing revelations on the prelate’s lavish spending for a new diocesan compound, while it was anything but surprising that Rome moved yesterday to depressurize the fraught situation in Limburg, the solution reached was a remarkable departure from the standard course of action.

Instead of accepting the 53 year-old prelate’s resignation or announcing his forced removal from office, the Vatican instead relayed that Tebartz-van Elst was being “authorized” to spend “a period outside the diocese,” pending the outcome of an investigation by the German bishops’ conference. In addition, “by decision of the Holy See,” a new vicar-general previously named by the embattled prelate and scheduled to take office in January was placed in post immediately to oversee the diocese in the absence of the so-called “luxury bishop.”

With some 700,000 Catholics, the Limburg church encompasses the far larger city of Frankfurt and much of its sprawling metro area.

After disclosures that Tebartz-van Elst spent $475,000 on walk-in closets and $20,000 on a bathtub among other big-ticket items for his residence in the new facility adjacent to his cathedral, the Vatican’s handling of the fallout is extraordinary on several fronts. First, because it precisely isn’t the “suspension” that has been widely misreported – nor, indeed, is the move a formal canonical act of any kind – but likewise as it’s a substantive instance of the anticipated fresh push for collegiality by Pope Francis. In other words, far from derailing a locally-called probe to impose a definitive, permanent resolution from on high, the Holy See has indicated that, in essence, the final verdict on Tebartz-van Elst’s future lies with his confreres at home.

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Top lawyer Patrick Parkinson says Catholic Church still tainted by rotten apples

AUSTRALIA
7 News

ABC News

BY KERRY BREWSTER –
October 24, 2013

A senior lawyer has warned that the Catholic Church will not win back public trust and confidence until its current “tainted” leaders have gone.

Patrick Parkinson, who reviewed the church’s Towards Healing protocol for dealing with victims of sexual abuse, has previously described allegations of the church’s cover-up of sexual abuse as amounting to organised criminality.

In a speech on Thursday night, the University of Sydney lawyer, a non-Catholic, declared there were still some rotten apples among the church’s hierarchy.

“There are those still apparently who fail to understand their civic duty as citizens of this country to cooperate with the police,” he said.

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Most new sex abuse complaints ‘historic’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JOHN FERGUSON THE AUSTRALIAN OCTOBER 24, 2013

THE Catholic Church in Victoria has received nearly 100 sex abuse complaints in the past financial year as the state’s inquiry into the issue appears to have prompted victims to seek redress after many years of silence.

There is now a growing body of evidence to suggest the overwhelming majority of cases relate to decades ago, suggesting that the church has faced, and dealt with, the worst of the scandal.

New figures show the church’s two dispute resolution processes have received 53 new complaints in Victoria in the past financial year related to the parliamentary investigation.

Of these, only seven people have referred the matters to police, underlining the reluctance of many victims to seek justice through the drawn-out process of the courts. A further 42 complaints were made directly to church entities, such as three religious orders and the dioceses that appeared before the inquiry.

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Catholic Church must go further on child sex abuse

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

October 25, 2013

Patrick Parkinson

There ought to be little doubt that as a society, our record of dealing with child sexual abuse is one of shocking moral failure. It is a reasonable estimate to say that one in four Australian girls and one in 10 boys growing up in the 1970s and ’80s experienced some form of sexual abuse before the age of 16. These are truly shocking figures.

Some of that abuse has occurred in church contexts. By far the most of these cases have been in the Catholic Church. Figures produced by the Victorian police of cases since 1950 indicated there were 10 times as many cases in the Catholic Church as in the Anglican Church, which was the next largest group. If that history were not bad enough, the cover-up of those crimes has been a scandal.

In the court of public opinion, the judgment has already been delivered. It is only the consequences of that judgment which are still being worked out in the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Yet there is still a need to understand why these failures occurred. The reality is that no church or other community organisation is free from reproach. In Australia, there have been three inquiries established by the Anglican Church into its past failings in dealing appropriately with child sexual abuse cases. Much has changed since the mid-1990s, and child protection is typically taken very seriously in churches. Nonetheless, there is no room for complacency in any community organisation.

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Remove church’s ‘rotten apples’

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

DAN BOX THE AUSTRALIAN OCTOBER 25, 2013

A LAW professor who has worked closely with senior Catholic Church officials to review their response to child abuse by priests says some of its current leaders are “rotten apples” who need to be removed.

The University of Sydney’s Professor Patrick Parkinson, who gave last night’s annual Smith Lecture in Sydney, was recently cited by the Archbishop of Sydney, Cardinal George Pell, as a leading authority who twice reviewed the church’s Towards Healing protocols on child sexual abuse.

“There remain a few rotten apples in the church’s fruit bowl, and they have yet to be called to account. Those who still apparently fail to understand their civic obligations as citizens of Australia in terms of co-operation with the police. Those whose greatest concern would appear to be to protect their organisation from scandal rather than the children in their care,” he said.

Professor Parkinson, who has publicly withdrawn his support from the church’s National Committee for Professional Standards over its handling of his 2010 review, said many within the church have acted honestly and with compassion.

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The Bishop of Bling and the Bishop Who Should be Bounced

UNITED STATES
National Survivor Advocates Coalition

EDITORIAL

Pope Francis suspended the German bishop, tagged as the bishop of bling, for his lavish spending not only on his mansion but as a way of life including his first class airline ticket to visit the poor in India.

Bishop of Limburg Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, spent a reported $42 million in renovations for his home.

Here’s a link to the story:

[USA Today]

All well and good that he’s been removed – at least temporarily – to go to a hopefully less lavish room and think about what he’s done.

Now, where’s the action on convicted Bishop Robert Finn of the Diocese of Kansas City- St. Joseph?

Without action by Pope Francis the message is and will continue to hang heavy in the air if you get caught putting on the ritz you’re bounced, but if you’re convicted of knowledge of and non-reporting as a mandated reporter of a priest who was hip boot deep into child pornography and who is now serving a 50 year sentence in a federal prison for production of child pornography – it’s business as usual?

Germans were outraged about the bishop of bling and showed it.

Where is the outrage for what Bishop Finn failed to do?

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Rules tightened for residential schools settlement lawyers

CANADA
CBC News

This story may trigger painful memories for former residential school students. If that’s the case for you, we encourage you to tell someone you trust about how you are feeling. You can also find help from the toll-free 24-hour crisis line for victims: 1-866-925-4419.

Federal authorities are tightening rules to protect Indian Residential School claimants from being taken advantage of by lawyers.

The new rules will curtail lawyers from giving clients high interest cash advances, charging finders fees, or billing for improper expenses.

Click here to listen to Dan Shapiro explaining the rule changes on The Trailbreaker with Loren McGinnis

“The vast majority do excellent work they’re ethical and very professional,” says Dan Shapiro, chief adjudicator for the independent assessment secretariat, and the man responsible for making sure the settlement process is being handled appropriately. “There are, however, a handful of lawyers that have engaged in conduct that we feel is unconscionable and in some cases illegal.”

Across the country, more than $2 billion has already been given out in compensation for victims of residential schools. The new rules aim to get rid of the bad apples in that process, to make sure unscrupulous lawyers don’t skim more than they are entitled to from victims.

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New measures announced to protect residential school claimants

CANADA
Nunatsiaq Online

The chief adjudicator of the Independent Assessment Process for residential school survivors announced new measure this week designed to protect claimants from lawyers who engage in illegal conduct.

The IAP is specifically for former students of residential schools who experienced serious physical, sexual, or emotional abuse during their time at school — distinct from the common experience payments, which were designed for anyone who attended residential school.

But the Indian Residential Schools Adjudication Secretariat, which oversees the IAP, became aware of a small number of lawyers who were bilking clients.

Complaints emerged about one particular Calgary-based lawyer, prompting an investigation.

“The vast majority of lawyers representing claimants in the IAP are diligent and do excellent and highly ethical work,” Dan Shapiro, the chief adjudicator, said in a news release.

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Fallout at U. of St. Thomas on Sex-Abuse Allegations Elsewhere

MINNESOTA
Inside Higher Ed

October 21, 2013
The University of St. Thomas, in Minnesota, is facing fallout from a series of allegations about sexual abuse by Roman Catholic priests. The abuse is not alleged to have taken place at the university, but St. Thomas has been drawn into the scandal.

* The Rev. Michael Keating, a professor of Catholic studies, is on leave following the filing of a lawsuit by a woman alleging that he abused her in the late 1990s when she was 13 to 15 years old. While Father Keating has not spoken about the allegations, his lawyer has denied the allegations. Minnesota Public Radio has reported that documents it obtained suggest that church leaders may have planned to communicate with the university about the allegations as early as 2006.

* The Rev. Harry Flynn, a former archbishop of St. Paul and Minneapolis at a time that many victims say the church didn’t do enough about abuse allegations, has resigned from the St. Thomas board.

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Minnesota Sex Abuse Scandal …

MINNESOTA
Cardinal Newman Society

Minnesota Sex Abuse Scandal Entangles University of St. Thomas; Leads to Clergy Resignations

October 23, 2013, at 9:49 AM | By Matthew Archbold

The University of St. Thomas in Minnesota has found itself in the middle of the ongoing sex abuse crisis in Minnesota, according to Inside Higher Ed. While none of the allegations of abuse took place at the university, several clergy implicated in the scandal either were employed at the institution or served on its board.

The Most Rev. Harry Flynn, the archbishop emeritus of the St. Paul and Minneapolis Archdiocese, recently resigned from the board amid allegations that he did not do enough to prevent the abuse. Flynn, according to the university, had served as board chair since 1995.

The board elected Michael Dougherty as interim chair. Dougherty, who has served as a trustee since 2003, said in a press release,“On behalf of the board of trustees, I want to thank Archbishop Flynn for his many years of dedicated service to the board and to the university.”

The Rev. Michael Keating, professor of Catholic studies, is also on leave from the university following the announcement of a lawsuit by a woman alleging abuse in the late 1990s when she was still a minor. Keating’s lawyer has denied the allegations.

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AUDIENCES

VATICAN CITY
Vatican Information Service

Vatican City, 24 October 2013 (VIS) – Today, the Holy Father received in audience:

– His Royal Highness Prince Guillaume, hereditary Grand-Duke of Luxembourg, with Princess Stephanie and entourage.

– Archbishop Paul Richard Gallagher, apostolic nuncio to Australia.

– Archbishop Giuseppe Pinto, apostolic nuncio to the Philippines.

– Archbishop Jose Horacio Gomez of Los Angeles, U.S.A.

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Bishop’s suspension a symptom of German Catholic Church’s wealth

GERMANY
The Salt Lake Tribune

By NELE MAILIN OBERMUELLER And JABEEN BHATTI | Religion News Service
First Published Oct 23 2013

Berlin • The $20,000 bathtub and $482,000 walk-in closets ordered by “Bishop Bling-Bling” — the moniker of Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst, the now-suspended bishop of Limburg — have scandalized the German public.

But Tebartz-van Elst, 52, is only the latest German clergyman to run into trouble since Pope Francis took the helm of the Roman Catholic Church. Francis temporarily suspended the bishop on Wednesday while a church commission investigates the expenditures on the $42 million residence complex.

As the new pontiff tries to reform the way the church does business, German dioceses, which reportedly include the world’s wealthiest in Cologne, are chafing under the new direction as membership numbers continue to dwindle.

“Tebartz-van Elst is just the tip of the iceberg,” said Christian Weisner, spokesman for the German branch of We Are Church, an organization advocating Catholic Church reform. “There is a real clash of cultures between Germany’s current cardinals and bishops — nominated under John Paul II or Benedict XVI — and Pope Francis.”

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Suspended ‘Bishop of Bling’ was bound to irk austere Pope Francis

GERMANY
Los Angeles Times

By Carol J. Williams
October 23, 2013

When Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Germany traveled to India last year to minister to poor slum dwellers, he reportedly flew first class.

This year, renovations of the Roman Catholic bishop’s church-owned residence in the city of Limburg ran massively over budget to cover $620,000 worth of artwork, $1.1 million in landscaping and last-minute design revisions — $42 million in all, billed to the Vatican and German taxpayers, Hamburg’s tabloid daily Bild reported.

Dubbed the “Bishop of Bling” by European media that have been avidly tracking the bespectacled clergyman’s lavish lifestyle, Tebartz-van Elst was suspended from his post by Pope Francis on Wednesday in a clear sign that the new pontiff is serious about diverting resources from the “princes of the church” to the paupers in its congregations.

Tebartz-van Elst flew to Rome this month — on budget carrier easyJet, Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported — to explain his finances to the pope after a Vatican delegation was dispatched last month to investigate what had become an embarrassing scandal for the church.

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Profile: Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst

GERMANY
BBC News

Dubbed the “bishop of bling” by German media, Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst has been suspended by the Vatican over claims of excessive spending.

The Bishop of Limburg was ordered to leave his diocese for an “appropriate period” after a meeting with the Pope following a scandal about the spiralling costs of a multi-million-dollar renovation of his official residence.

He is accused of spending 31m euros (£26m; $42m) on the development, which was originally costed at 5.5m euros.

The bishop – and his alleged spending habits – has become infamous in Germany, where many people pay tax to the Catholic Church. …
Bishop Tebartz-van Elst was born in the village of Twisteden in north-west Germany in 1959.

He has described himself as being a loner as a child, preferring to read rather than help on his family’s farm, according to the German newspaper Der Zeit.

He was ordained as a priest in 1985 and named auxiliary bishop of Munster in 2003 by Pope John Paul II.

In an article for Deutsche Welle, German Catholic theologian David Berger says Bishop Tebartz-van Elst was a “professor of liberal ideas” while in Munster.

But this changed under Pope Benedict, he says, and he came to believe in the dominant authority of bishops.

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‘Bling bishop’ ordered to leave German diocese

GERMANY/VATICAN CITY
RTE News

Pope Francis has ordered the German Roman Catholic prelate known as the “bishop of bling” for spending around €31m on a residence to leave his diocese for an unspecified period.

The move, just short of a resignation, was taken against Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Limburg.

It comes two days after he met the pope to discuss the scandal in the German church at a time when the pontiff is stressing the importance of humility and serving the poor.

The renovation costs went from an initial €5m to over €30m, with an additional €10m also likely due because of damage to surrounding streets and structures caused by the construction work.

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Vatican suspends Germany’s ‘bishop bling’ after multimillion-dollar renovation

GERMANY/VATICAN CITY
NBC News

By Becky Bratu, Staff Writer, NBC News

A senior member of the Catholic Church known as the “luxury bishop” has been suspended from his diocese in Germany while the Vatican investigates a house refurbishment that reportedly ran into the millions of dollars.

Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Limburg, who had been under pressure to resign, will leave his diocese for an unspecified period, the Vatican said in a statement on Wednesday. Monsignor Wolfgang Roesch will be in charge of the diocese during the bishop’s absence, the Vatican added.

Tebartz-van Elst “cannot presently exercise his episcopal ministry,” the statement said.

The Vatican also said it would audit spending on renovations to the bishop’s residence, which Germany’s Spiegel magazine reported cost up to 31 million euros ($42.70 million).

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Pope boots out ‘bishop of bling’ over £26m luxury home

VATICAN CITY/GERMANY
Telegraph (UK)

[with video]

Pope Francis has ordered Germany’s Bishop of Limburg to leave his diocese after spending millions of Church money on refurbishing his home

The Vatican on Wednesday suspended indefinitely a German Catholic cleric dubbed the “bling bishop” for his luxury lifestyle, despite multiple calls in Germany for the prelate to be dismissed.

The bishop flew to Rome last week with low-cost airline Ryanair to explain himself to Pope Francis – following accusations he took an expensive ticket on a trip to India and squandered money.

His private quarters in a new diocesan building are reported to have cost up a €31 million (£26.4 million), and included a 63-square-metre dining room and a £12,000 bathtub – using the revenue from a religious tax in Germany.

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Pope Francis gets tough with ‘Bling Bishop’

VATICAN CITY/GERMANY
Irish Examiner

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Pope Francis has banished a German Catholic prelate known as the “Bling Bishop” from his diocese for spending €31m of Church funds on his residence at a time when the pontiff is stressing austerity.

By Philip Pullella Vatican City

However, the pontiff stopped short of dismissing him outright, a step which many German Catholics and the media had called for.

In a highly unusual move, Bishop Franz-Peter Tebartz-van Elst of Limburg was ordered to leave his diocese while an investigation and audit into cost over-runs is held, a Vatican statement said.

The bishop, who met the Pope on Monday, “was currently not in a position to carry out his episcopal ministry”.

It said he should stay outside his diocese “for a period,” and that it would be administered in his absence by a vicar-general.

The issue has proven a major embarrassment for the Pope, who has called for a more austere Church that sides with the poor. He has told bishops not to live like princes, and has also promised to clean up the murky finances of the Vatican bank.

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Children still at risk from abuse in institutions, warns report by crime agency

UNITED KINGDOM
Telegraph

By David Barrett, Home Affairs Correspondent
24 Oct 2013

Organisations are at risk of being “complacent” about tackling abuse because of a tendency to concentrate on historic cases, the new law enforcement agency has concluded in its first major report.

It said abusers can hide their grooming of children if they are working for institutions that are highly regarded or respected.

Poor leadership also makes it less likely that colleagues will raise concerns about suspected paedophiles, it said.

The report comes after a series of scandals involving high-profile institutions including the BBC and the Roman Catholic Church, as well as a number of care homes.

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Children still at risk of abuse in schools, clubs and care homes, report warns

UNITED KINGDOM
The Guardian

Press Association

Children in institutions such as schools, churches and care homes are still not safe from abuse, child protection experts have warned in a new report.

More has to be done to keep children in institutions including sports clubs, youth groups and charities safe, the report published on Thursday by the National Crime Agency (NCA) warns.

The report, called The Foundations of Abuse, found that children are not only at risk from abusers but from “bystanders” who are aware of abuse but fail to report it.

And it warned that child sex offenders often manipulate victims into believing the attention they get is an “honour”, making it hard for them to report abuse.

The report, carried out by the NCA’s Child Exploitation and Online Protection (CEOP) Command, is the first “thematic assessment” published by the agency since it was launched three weeks ago and looked at the risk of child sexual abuse by adults in institutions.

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I’ll quit priesthood if Vatican censures my book, vows D’Arcy

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SARAH MACDONALD – 23 OCTOBER 2013

BROADCASTER and columnist Fr Brian D’Arcy has said his censure by the Vatican “destroyed” him “as a human being and as a priest” and almost caused him to leave the priesthood.

In his new book, ‘Brian D’Arcy’s Food for the Soul’, the 68-year-old said it has been “the most devastating faith crisis of my life”.

Recalling the events that led to his rap on the knuckles from the Vatican, Fr D’Arcy said that in 2010 he was formally censured by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF).

The then head of the CDF wrote to the Superior General of his religious order, the Passionists, accusing him of being “a source of great scandal”.

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Fr D’Arcy – ‘I’ll quit Church if censured’

IRELAND
Herald

GREG HARKIN – 23 OCTOBER 2013 02:30 PM

FATHER Brian D’Arcy is prepared to quit the Church if he is censured by the Congregation of the Faith over his new book.

In his new book, Brian D’Arcy’s Food for the Soul the cleric reveals that he almost walked away in the past – only for his mind to be changed by thousands of letters he received pleading with him not to give up the priesthood.

However, he has warned that if the Vatican attempts to censor his latest writings: “That would be it.”

He explained: “The fact is there is nothing in it that Pope Francis hasn’t said.

“I don’t believe there would be any grounds for censoring me again or any attempt to shut me up.

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The pope’s financial reforms

UNITED STATES
Religion News Service

Michael J. O’Loughlin | Oct 23, 2013

That Pope Francis has shaken up and reinvigorated parts of the Catholic Church is well known, but what may be less apparent are the changes he is implementing at the Vatican bank, reforming the once perennially corrupt institution to bring it up to international banking norms.

Earlier this month, the bank, known officially as the Institute for the Works of Religion, published an annual report for the first time in its 125-year history and highlighted its reforms. The bank’s new president, Ernst von Freyburg, told Vatican Radio that the bank has “reviewed our procedures for taking on clients to make sure that no money laundering can happen at the institute. We do have a new handbook, we do have new procedures, and we are also ready for inspection by third parties.”

To that end, the bank has contracted with US-based Promontory Financial Group to review all 19,000 accounts, totaling nearly $9 billion, held by the bank. This follows a 2012 evaluation by Moneyval, a European anti-money laundering organization, which praised the Vatican for “coming a long way in a short time.” According to the National Catholic Reporter’s John Allen, Promontory “currently has about twenty inspectors stationed inside the Vatican bank,” and Allen observes that a “new day is apparently dawning at the bank, where the old climate of trust is being leavened with a strong dose of ‘but verify.’”

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Orders still €40m short of cash pledged over abuse

IRELAND
Irish Independent

SHANE PHELAN PUBLIC AFFAIRS EDITOR – 24 OCTOBER 2013

A scheme set up to pay for the treatment for survivors of institutional abuse faces being cut short after Catholic orders failed to stump up almost €40m in promised funding.

The 18 religious orders pledged €110m towards the Residential Institutions Statutory Fund (RISF), which will pay for mental health, social, educational and housing services for survivors.

However, the Irish Independent has learned just €72m has been received by the fund, which is due to begin issuing grants in January.

The scheme was initially anticipated to last up to five years, but this period may now have to be shortened due to the funding shortfall.

In contacts with the Department of Education, the religious orders – with the Christian Brothers and the Daughters of Charity to the forefront – have blamed the depressed property market for the shortfall.

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