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.

June 13, 2019

Dioceses: Accused priests keep retirement benefits, but not legal defense

DETROIT (MI)
Detroit News

June 13, 2019

By Beth LeBlanc

None of the priests facing sexual misconduct charges stemming from Attorney General Dana Nessel’s investigation into clergy abuse in Michigan will get help paying for their legal defense from the Michigan dioceses where they used to work.

Most will, however, continue receiving retirement benefits through their diocesan retirement plans because pensions are protected by federal law.

For others not yet of retirement age, Michigan’s various dioceses are required by canon or church law to provide “sustenance” for their priests leading up to and even after a potential guilty verdict.

In May, Nessel charged five priests who had worked in three Michigan dioceses with sexual misconduct charges as part of the attorney general’s investigation in clergy sexual abuse in Michigan’s seven dioceses. At the time, Nessel said the charges were “just the tip of the iceberg” and more legal action is expected.

The priests charged included the Revs. Neil Kalina, 63, and Patrick Casey, 55, who had served in the Detroit archdiocese; the Revs. Timothy Michael Crowley, 70, and Vincent DeLorenzo, 80, who served in the Lansing diocese; and the Rev. Jacob Vellian, 84, a visiting priest from India working in the Kalamazoo diocese in the 1970s at the time of the alleged incident.

None of the charged priests were involved in active ministry at the time Nessel announced charges. All of the priests, with the exception of Vellian, have been arraigned on their charges and face sentences that carry maximum penalties ranging from 15 years to life in prison.

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.

Wyoming diocese names 11 former clergy accused of sexual abuse

CHEYENNE (WY)
Casper Star-Tribune

June 13, 2019

By Seth Klamann

The Diocese of Cheyenne published Wednesday the names of 11 priests who have faced credible allegations of abuse, most of whom were accused of the misconduct while serving in Wyoming.

The Wyoming Catholic Register newsletter publicly acknowledged abuse allegations against 10 new priests, nearly a year after the diocese announced it had reopened an investigation into former bishop Joseph Hart and found the accusers of the former leader of the Wyoming Catholic church credible.

In a column accompanying the list of names, Bishop Steven Biegler apologized to those he said had been abused by clergy.

“On behalf of the church, I apologize to each victim, not only for the misconduct of those who committed sexual abuse, but also for the failure of any Church leader who did not take appropriate action after having received a report of an allegation,” Biegler wrote. “Finally, I pledge to do all that we can to assist with your healing and to learn from errors in our past.”

The release comes amid a period of renewed scrutiny for the Catholic Church across the country. Last year across several states, dioceses and state governments released the names of those accused of abuse. A diocese in southern Alabama named 29 men who were credibly accused. In August, a grand jury in Pennsylvania wrote that more than 300 Catholic priests had abused more than 1,000 children over a period of several decades. The Jesuits, a Catholic order, released their own lists late last year, which included the names of two priests who served for a time at St. Stephens, on the Wind River Reservation. The allegations in those cases stemmed from incidents that did not occur at the reservation school.

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.

U.S. bishops adopt new protocols for holding themselves accountable for sex abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
America Magazine

June 13, 2019

By Michael J. O’Loughlin

U.S. Catholic bishops voted overwhelmingly in Baltimore on Thursday to adopt new protocols aimed at holding themselves accountable for committing sexual abuse themselves and for mishandling accusations of abuse made known to them. While the new protocols are designed to include laypeople at every stage of an investigation—they advise that bishops “should” include laypeople by way of an office in their chanceries—lay reform groups and victim advocates say they are unsatisfied, as the new rules stop just short of requiring such involvement.

In response to a new Vatican law enacted in June, detailed in the motu proprio“Vos estis lux mundi,” which requires bishops around the world to create structures aimed at bishop accountability, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops voted to create a third-party reporting hotline; to adopt a procedure for receiving those complaints and include laypeople to investigate them; and to compile into one place existing measures that restrict the public ministry of retired bishops who leave office “for grave reason.” Bishops also approved a code of conduct that they say binds them to the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People.

According to one new protocol, a metropolitan bishop, who oversees bishops in a geographic area, “should” appoint “a qualified lay person to receive reports” from the hotline about misconduct by a bishop. If the report is deemed credible and if the Vatican orders an investigation into a bishop, the metropolitan “should appoint an investigator chosen from among the lay persons previously identified by the province.” Additionally, the metropolitan bishop “should also make use of qualified experts” who are “chosen predominantly from among lay persons.”

Cardinal Blase Cupich, the archbishop of Chicago and an adviser to Pope Francis who participated in the February meeting at the Vatican of bishops from around the world to discuss sex abuse, drafted the amendment that strengthened the language about including laypeople in investigations. But because the Vatican’s own law stops short of mandating lay involvement—though it does say laypeople can be involved—some U.S. bishops said they could not require lay involvement. Many bishops pointed out that they already rely on lay expertise for assistance in many areas and that it would be highly unlikely to to conduct an investigation without laypeople.

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.

Slowik: A Joliet bishop engaged in sexual misconduct. The diocese still displays his picture in the cathedral

CHICAGO (IL)
Chicago Tribune

June 13, 2019

By Ted Slowik

Walking into the Cathedral of St. Raymond in Joliet and seeing a display featuring the late Most Rev. Daniel Ryan triggers a flood of painful memories and unleashes a range of emotions.

I feel angry that the Roman Catholic Diocese of Joliet would prominently display a picture of a cleric who engaged in sexual misconduct. I feel frustrated by how little seems to have changed, despite platitudes by church leaders about how much they have done to protect children.

I feel sadness about the apparent lack of understanding by church leaders and empathy for the many people I met and listened to over the years who shared with me their experiences of Joliet clergy who had sexually abused children.

I feel that if church leaders understood the depth of pain felt by survivors of childhood sexual abuse and truly cared about creating a culture where children are safe from sexual predators, they would remove the photo of Ryan from the display in the entryway to the cathedral.

I began hearing the stories, researching court files and investigating clergy abuse in the Joliet Diocese in 2002 while working for a Joliet newspaper. The work was emotionally draining. I felt obligated to share the stories of survivors at a time when few people in positions of authority in the church or state would advocate on their behalf.

Seventeen years later, I feel diocesan leaders still fail to grasp how the display of Ryan’s picture might offend people who were sexually abused by priests.

“It is one thing to acknowledge that an abuser worked at the parish, but quite another for his image to be displayed prominently,” said Zach Hiner, executive director of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests.

“While it may seem minor to church officials, to survivors and supporters, small actions like this illustrate that church officials still do not fully understand the lifelong toll that abuse can have. If they did, they wouldn’t display these photos, prominently or otherwise,” Hiner 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.

Catholic bishops stop short of mandating lay involvement in abuse investigations

BALTIMORE (MD)
Religion News Service

June 13, 2019

By Jack Jenkins

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has passed a slate of long-awaited measures designed to combat sex abuse and hold church leadership accountable for mishandling cases, including creating a national hotline operated by an outside group for reporting incidents of abuse or their cover-up.

“I’m confident that the idea of doing (investigations) in-house is long gone,” said a cautiously upbeat Cardinal Joseph Tobin of New Jersey after the reforms passed Thursday morning (June 13) — informed by a recent papal document — at the bishops’ spring meeting.

But the bishops stopped short of handing power to lay Catholics or abuse survivors in those investigations, sparking a debate that revolves around whether doing so would overstep guidelines outlined in a document issued by Pope Francis after a Vatican summit on abuse in February.

Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich and other clerics were able to insert language into the resolutions stating that metropolitan bishops — who would oversee the investigations of fellow bishops — “should” rely on qualified lay persons. The inclusion of lay people is also among a moral “commitment” the bishops adopted Thursday morning on how to deal with sexual misconduct.

But the language fell short of requiring bishops to take lay input, an important distinction that left victims advocates saying stronger measures are needed.

Other clerics, such as Bishop William Shawn McKnight of Jefferson City, Mo., made clear that they support lay involvement regardless.

“I believe it should be mandatory that we involve laity in the investigation of any case of sexual abuse by a bishop — or corruption, cover-up, involving the same,” McKnight said during the second day of voting. “I believe we should do that because that is the Catholic thing to do.”

He added: “Lay involvement should be mandatory to make darn sure that we bishops do not harm the church in the way bishops have harmed the church — especially what we have become aware of this past year.”

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.

Tras 44 años denunció abuso de un sacerdote: lanzó campaña para que no prescriba

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Diario El Ciudadano [Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina]

June 13, 2019

Read original article

Benedetti, quien se reconoce como sobreviviente de abuso sexual eclesiástico, está peleando para reabrir una de las tres causas en las que Giménez fue denunciado

Un hombre que luego de 44 años pudo denunciar por abuso sexual a un sacerdote inició una campaña en Change.org, para que se declaren imprescriptibles las diferentes modalidades de pedofilia y la acción penal se extinga sólo en caso de la muerte del imputado

El petitorio fue iniciado por Ricardo Raúl Benedetti, uno los denunciantes del cura platense Héctor Ricardo Giménez, reunió casi 4.000 firmas en sólo dos semanas y se suma a la campaña que tres meses atrás lanzó la actriz Thelma Fardin.

Benedetti, quien se reconoce como sobreviviente de abuso sexual eclesiástico, está peleando para reabrir una de las tres causas en las que Giménez fue denunciado.

Bajo el hashtag #PedofiliaSinPrescripción, Benedetti reclama “que el Congreso trate los proyectos de ley sobre imprescriptibilidad del abuso sexual infantil”, entre los que destaca el de la diputada radical Lorena Matzen.

“Que se declare imprescriptible este tipo de delitos implicaría una sanación a la vez personal y como sociedad; pero además disponer de más herramientas para la prevención de estas acciones aberrantes”, dijo Benedetti, quien tenía 8 años cuando fue abusado pero recién pudo “tomar conciencia” de esto y “recordar los detalles” más de 40 años después.

“La Justicia tiene que tomar nota del proceso que hace toda víctima hasta que recuerda los hechos y se anima a denunciar, un proceso que tiene un tiempo que es diferente y personal para cada uno”, agregó al ser consultado por Télam.

El proyecto presentado el año pasado por Matzen establece “la imprescriptibilidad de las diferentes modalidades de abuso sexual infantil previstos en el Código Penal” descriptos en 14 diferentes artículos, entre ellos explotación sexual infantil, pornografía infantil, violación, corrupción de menores, exhibiciones obscenas y grooming.

“Cuando un niño o una niña sufren abuso de alguna manera se mata a ese niño o niña: es sumamente ultrajante y afecta a los derechos humanos. Suele transcurrir mucho tiempo hasta que pueden internalizar y exteriorizar el abuso, un tiempo que puede ser más largo que los plazos de la ley”, dijo Matzen.

“Por eso vemos tantos adultos denunciando cosas que les pasaron en la infancia, pero resulta que los jueces dan por prescripta la causa y encima el agresor les hace una demanda por daños y perjuicios”, precisó a Télam.

La prescripción del delito de abuso sexual infantil ya había sido modificada en 2011 -con la denominada “Ley Piazza”-, que fue reemplazada en 2015 por una nueva ley que prolongó los tiempos de la suspensión.

Mientras la Ley Piazza estableció que, en el caso de abuso infantil los tiempos de prescripción comenzaban a correr una vez que la víctima cumpliera 18 años, la ley 27.206 volvió a reformar el Código Penal para establecer que para este tipo de delitos el plazo empieza a correr a partir de la denuncia independientemente de la edad de la víctima.

“Estas reformas fueron un avance pero no contemplan casos como el mío, que son de larga data”, agregó Benedetti.

Más allá del camino legislativo, la imprescriptibilidad de este tipo de delitos está comenzando a ser reconocida por vía judicial, como ocurrió con la causa del cura Justo Ilarraz, condenado a 25 años de prisión por abusos cometidos entre 1985 y 1993. De todos modos, la justicia de Salta resolvió este miércoles dictar el sobreseimiento del sacerdote José Carlos Aguilera por considerar que los delitos de abuso habían prescripto.

“El Congreso tiene una deuda con eso”, afirmó Matzen.

No obstante, la legisladora destacó como “un avance” la reciente ley que estableció que el abuso sexual infantil es un delito de acción pública, ya que mientras fueron considerados del orden privado “se dificultaba mucho llegar a la justicia” a las víctimas, dado que solamente ellas o sus padres o tutores podían ser los denunciantes siendo que el “80 por ciento o más ocurren en el marco familiar”.

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.

Documents Released during the USCCB Spring General Assembly-June 13, 2019

UNITED STATES
USCCB

June 13, 2019

1.) Protocol Regarding Available Non-Penal Restrictions on Bishops

2.) Affirming Our Episcopal Commitments

3.) Directives for the Implementation of the Provisions of Vos estis lux mundi Concerning Bishops and their Equivalents

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.

Bishops approve changes in how they police themselves

BALTIMORE (MD)
Philadelphia Inquirer

June 13, 2019

By Jeremy Roebuck

The nation’s Roman Catholic bishops overwhelmingly — though not unanimously — approved a new framework Thursday for policing their own conduct, hoping it would be enough to stanch a series of scandals that brought to light sexual misconduct and inaction within their ranks over the past year.

The measures include a new code of conduct, guidelines for restricting the ministry of retired problem prelates and a new system through which the church will investigate bishops accused of mishandling abuse complaints or facing such allegations themselves. On Wednesday the bishops also approved a national hotline that would take allegations from victims of abuse by bishops.

But victims and their advocates responded with a collective shrug, saying the reforms still leave too much power in the hands of a hierarchy that has repeatedly failed to hold itself accountable.

Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro, whose investigation of abuse in Pennsylvania dioceses that was released last year, creating an international uproar, said Thursday in a statement on Twitter: “Clergy abuse victims should contact law enforcement – not a Church hotline. That only serves to cover up the cover up. Our clergy abuse hotline has received 1,803 calls. We follow up on every one of them. The Church cannot be trusted to police itself.”

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 bishops just voted to launch a national sex-abuse hotline. Next up: 3 more proposals to police themselves.

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Philadelphia Inquirer

June 12, 2019

By Jeremy Roebuck

Roman Catholic bishops in the United States voted Wednesday to launch an independent national hotline for fielding complaints of sexual abuse or cover-up involving members of the hierarchy.

Although many implementation details must be worked out, the decision is the most concrete step U.S. bishops have taken to hold themselves more accountable after a tumultuous year for the church.

The hotline is one of four proposals up for debate this week at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ annual spring conference. It had wide support among the prelates, although some prelates questioned the deadline approved Wednesday for activation — May 31, 2020.

“There’s an urgency to get this up and running as soon as possible,” said Cardinal Blase Cupich, archbishop of Chicago. “Corporations that man hotlines for crisis moments are able to do it quickly, and I would hope that we would be able to do it as well.”

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.

William Strampel first Michigan State official tied to Larry Nassar to be convicted

LANSING (MI)
Lansing State Journal

June 12, 2019

By Megan Banta

A jury on Wednesday found former Michigan State University dean William Strampel guilty of misconduct in office and willful neglect of duty.

That makes him the first former or current MSU official to be convicted following the Michigan Attorney General’s investigation into MSU and its handling of convicted sex offender Larry Nassar, who worked in the university’s sports medicine clinic.

After more than five hours of deliberation, jurors found that evidence supported the Attorney General’s argument that Strampel, 71, used his power as dean of MSU’s College of Osteopathic Medicine to proposition and control female medical students.

Jurors also determined there was enough evidence to support prosecutors’ argument that Strampel displayed “complete indifference” as to whether Nassar was following protocols meant to decrease risk for the university following a complaint of sexual assault in 2014.

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.

Pennsylvania court ruling may open door for future clergy sex abuse suits

PENNSYLVANIA
TribLive

June 12, 2019

By Deb Erdley

Lawyers for clergy sexual abuse survivors say a Pennsylvania Superior Court ruling handed down Tuesday could open a path for many old claims previously timed out to go to a jury.

Writing in a 38-page opinion, a three-judge panel overturned a Blair County judge’s decision to dismiss a clergy sexual abuse complaint as outside the statute of limitations for child sexual abuse, which expires at the alleged victim’s 30th birthday.

The judges said the church’s apparent failure to notify parishioners of abuse allegations raised the specter of conspiracy and fraudulent concealment as questions for a jury.

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.

Explainer: How could Bishop Bransfield misuse funds for years without raising red flags?

UNITED STATES
America: The Jesuit Review

June 12, 2019

By Ashley McKinless

I thought I had lost the capacity to be surprised by the misconduct of bishops after the past year of scandal. But as I read The Washington Post’s report on the financial abuses committed by Bishop Michael J. Bransfield, who was recently removed as head of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston in West Virginia, I could not believe what I was learning. Fueled by revenues from a Texas oil field donated to the diocese over a century ago, the bishop in one of this country’s poorest states was living a life of luxury and cutting four- and five-figure checks to fellow clerics—including certain priests who accused Bransfield of sexual harassment.

I knew who I needed to talk to process this news: my mom. And not just because she is the reason I am Catholic. Kathy McKinless also happens to have served as the acting chief financial officer for the Archdiocese of Washington, served on the volunteer finance council of the Diocese of Arlington, was an expert witness in a banking fraud trial and, as a partner at the accounting firm KPMG, audited dioceses and religious organizations. If anyone could explain to me how exactly a bishop could travel by chartered jet and decorate his office with $100 worth of fresh flowers each day—or at least reassure me this was not normal behavior—it was she.

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.

Religious organizations added to $82 million lawsuit in sex abuse case

CHESTERFIELD (VA)
WWBT NBC 12 News

June 10, 2019

By Kelly Avellino

Several religious organizations and church leaders face an $82 million lawsuit in a child sex abuse case involving eight boys, that stemmed in Colonial Heights and Chesterfield.

Attorneys with the law firm Breit Cantor says the boys were abused by a youth group leader at Immanuel Baptist Church between 2008 and 2015.

Added to the lawsuit on Monday were the following Baptist groups:
Southern Baptist Convention
Baptist General Association of Virginia
Petersburg Baptist Association

“They had the power to do more and to help protect these children and to warn these families of these abusers,” said attorney Kevin Biniazan, who represents the plaintiffs.

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.

Why survivors aren’t surprised by sexual abuse inside Southern Baptist churches

WASHINGTON (DC)
PBS NewsHour

June 12, 2019

The Southern Baptist Convention is the largest Protestant denomination in the U.S., with nearly 15 million members. Now, it’s facing a reckoning over allegations of sex abuse and concealment revealed by a Houston Chronicle investigation. Judy Woodruff speaks to Rachael Denhollander, a survivor of sexual abuse both by the church and Larry Nassar, about her optimism for the forthcoming reforms.

Judy Woodruff:

With nearly 15 million members, the Southern Baptist Convention is the largest Protestant denomination in the United States. Now it is facing a reckoning of its own over sexual abuse.

A Houston Chronicle investigation found hundreds of clergy or staff allegedly committed abuse or misconduct over two decades. This week, delegates of Southern Baptist churches approved changes for the first time to make it easier to expel churches that cover up sexual abuse cases.

Rachael Denhollander was the first woman to publicly accuse Larry Nassar. He’s the former sports doctor at Michigan State University who was convicted of assaulting multiple girls and women.

Denhollander spoke at the convention on a panel with fellow sexual abuse survivors and is on the denomination’s sex abuse study group. She is also the author of “What Is a Girl Worth?: My Story of Breaking the Silence and Exposing the Truth about Larry Nassar and USA Gymnastics.”

Rachael Denhollander, thank you very much for being with us.

So, you — we know now that the church has made these changes. You have been talking to a number of survivors. I want to understand what your sense is of just how widespread this abuse was.

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.

Retired Wyoming bishop to face Vatican trial on allegations of sex abuse

CHEYENNE (WY)
Catholic News Service

June 13, 2019

Retired Bishop Joseph H. Hart of Cheyenne will face a Vatican trial for allegations that he sexually abused several minors years ago.

Cheyenne Bishop Steven R. Biegler announced June 12 that such a trial of the retired prelate would take place. Bishop Biegler included Bishop Hart’s name in a list of all Catholic clergy with substantiated allegations of sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable persons for whom the diocese had files and who were in active ministry from 1950 to the present in the Diocese of Cheyenne.

Bishop Hart is one of 11 clergy on the list published on the diocesan website and in the June online issue of the Wyoming Catholic Register, Cheyenne’s diocesan newspaper. After the prelate’s name, the listing states: “Pope Francis imposed restrictions and authorized a penal process.”

“Our clergy are expected to be shepherds who guard and protect the flock, especially the least among us,” Bishop Biegler said in a letter to diocesan Catholics about the list. “They are called to imitate the Good Shepherd, who laid down his life for the sheep. Therefore, sexual abuse by clergy is an appalling sin and a reprehensible crime.”

“It contradicts everything we stand for. Each name on this list represents a betrayal of trust, a violation of the innocent and a human tragedy,” he added.

Bishop Hart, who retired as head of the Diocese of Cheyenne in 2001, has always maintained his innocence, “categorically and completely” denying any improper conduct.

The announcement of the Vatican trial follows the conclusion of a new investigation of the allegations against Bishop Hart that Bishop Biegler had ordered. Results of the investigation were sent to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, the Congregation for Bishops, the nuncio to the United States and Denver Archbishop Samuel J. Aquila, who is the metropolitan of the province that includes the Cheyenne Diocese.

In July 2018, Bishop Biegler said that, because of the results of the investigation, he would continue the restrictions placed on the public ministry of Bishop Hart first imposed by then-Bishop Paul D. Etienne when he headed the Cheyenne Diocese.

The accusation is that Bishop Hart sexually abused two boys from Wyoming after he became Cheyenne’s bishop in 1978. He was auxiliary bishop of the statewide diocese for two years before that.

In 2002, police and prosecutors in Cheyenne cleared Bishop Hart of any wrongdoing because they found “no evidence to support the allegations.”

But Bishop Biegler ordered the new investigation of the claims since there were “there no trials, no determination of guilt or innocence (and) the matter was not resolved,” the diocese said.

The Wyoming allegations came after several men alleged that Bishop Hart sexually abused them years earlier, when he was a priest in the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph, Missouri. He was ordained for that diocese May 1, 1956. He was accused of three instances of abuse dating to the late 1960s and early 1970s there.

In 2008, the Missouri diocese, then headed by Bishop Robert W. Finn, announced a $10 million settlement with 47 victims of sexual abuse by 12 clergy and former clergy of the diocese. The diocese did not name the 12 clergymen involved in the settlement, but at the time, attorneys for the victims said the group included Bishop Hart. Another financial settlement was reached by the diocese in 2014.

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.

Catholics aren’t the only congregation reckoning with sex abuse scandals

NEW ORLEANS (LA)
The Advocate

June 12, 2019

By James Gill

When the Baptists this week trooped off to Birmingham, Alabama, for their annual convention, for instance, sexual exploitation by clergy and staff was much in their thoughts. What used to be regarded as a Catholic curse has gone ecumenical. Thus, in April, repeat child molester Jonathan Bailey, former youth pastor at First Baptist Church in New Orleans, was sentenced to 23 years.

An investigation by the Houston Chronicle and the San Antonio Express-News identified Bailey as one of 400 Southern Baptist church officials — four of them in Louisiana — to have been accused of sex crimes in the last 20 years. “There seems to be a growing sense of vulnerability and a willingness to address this crisis,” the Rev. Russell Moore, the Southern Baptists’ head of public policy, has said.

It’s about time, but then the Catholics were in no hurry to come to grips with the sins of their ministry either. Even now, 34 years after the Rev. Gilbert Gauthe’s guilty plea in Lafayette first revealed how the church was protecting the pederasts in its ranks, the Vatican is not insisting that sexual predators be turned over to the police. The suspicion remains that the church’s first concern is its own.

The Catholic church has identified thousands more sexual transgressors than any other faith, but this, perhaps, is a result of universality rather than openness. Religion evidently offers a cover for many a pervert; Episcopalians have been confessing their sins in this area, too.

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.

Abuse victim advocates pledge to keep fighting for reform in the Southern Baptist Convention

BIRMINGHAM (AL)
Baptist News Global

June 12, 2019

By Bob Allen

While Southern Baptist Convention messengers inside the Birmingham Jefferson Convention Complex took first steps to punish churches that enable sexual abuse, survivors relegated to a sidewalk outside the meeting hall demanded a system to make it harder for clergy predators to move from church to church.

“You may force us to meet on street corners, but mark my words, we will not be silent,” abuse survivor and advocate Ashley Easter addressed SBC leaders in absentia at the second annual For Such a Time as This rally June 11.

The rally began moments after the denomination amended governing documents to clarify that churches indifferent to sexual abuse are not “in friendly cooperation” with the convention and to empower a standing committee to discern whether individual churches meet membership requirements, a responsibility now before the SBC Executive Committee.

Protesters outside the convention hall said they want more: establishment of a database to track and warn about known predators, mandatory training to recognize and address abuse and repudiation of a “low view of women” they say contributes to a culture of abuse.

“We have seen some progress, but there is a lot more work to be done,” said rally organizer Cheryl Summers.

“One year ago we held the first For Such a Time as This rally in Dallas,” Summers said. “One year ago there was no sexual abuse study group, and it exists today. One year ago training about abuse in the church did not exist for Southern Baptist churches, and this week the new Church Cares training protocol will be unveiled. One year ago Paige Patterson, the poster child for mishandling abuse disclosures, was scheduled to give the keynote address at the annual meeting. That never happened because people stood up and spoke up.”

“We will continue to speak for those who imagine they are the only ones living a private nightmare,” she said. “We will continue to speak because well-meaning pastors just don’t know what they don’t know, and they do tremendous damage to survivors.”

Christa Brown, an abuse survivor who has been calling for change in the Southern Baptist Convention’s abuse policy for 13 years, said her story is “dreadfully common.”

“Almost every Baptist survivor I have ever spoken with has said that the trauma from the institutional betrayal far exceeded the trauma from the abuse itself,” Brown said. “This massive institutional enablement of horror must be addressed on an equally massive scale.”

“The path forward is a database, an independently administered database of Southern Baptist clergy, those criminally convicted, those who have admitted to conduct constituting abuse and those who are credibly accused as determined by an independent panel,” Brown said.

“Many others are now urging the same thing,” Brown said. “It is so obviously what is needed, and yet the SBC still balks.”

Christa Brown talks to local media prior to the start of Tuesday’s For Such a Time as This Rally. (Photos by Bob Allen)

“So here’s what I want to know,” she continued. “How many kids will it take? Seven hundred victims documented by the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News. Three hundred and fifty more who have contacted them since then. Thank God for the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News.”

“How many kids could have been spared if SBC officials had taken action back in 2006 when a database was first proposed?” she wondered. “It’s been 13 years, and how many more kids will it still take before this convention will do what other faith groups do and at least begin keeping records on credibly accused clergy sex abusers. How many kids?”

David Clohessy, former head of an advocacy group that decades ago pushed for similar reforms in the Roman Catholic Church, described Brown as the “Rosa Parks of the Protestant child safety movement.”

“Just like Rosa Parks and other pioneers and social movement leaders, Christa has endured all kinds of persecution and harassment,” said Clohessy, former national leader of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. “It was literally 10 years ago that a top Baptist official, Paige Patterson, said of Christa and others who were pushing for change, said they were just as reprehensible as sex criminals.”

“That tells you something about the mindset that we’re up against,” 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.

Analysis: As USCCB meeting continues, what are lay Catholics looking for?

BALTMORE (MD)
Catholic News Agency

June 13, 2019

By J. D. Flynn

Nearly all U.S. bishops know by now that U.S. Catholics are experiencing crises of faith and confidence at a scale that far exceeds even the Church’s sexual abuse scandal in 2002. They were presented with data this week noting that the rate of Catholics defecting from the practice of the faith has risen dramatically in recent years, and they are reminded in their own dioceses that practicing Catholics, priests among them, are deeply discouraged of the last year, and struggling to trust.

But there is a disconnect between the work that bishops are doing this week in Baltimore to respond to those problems and the way that work is perceived by even faithful and engaged Catholics.

The mission of bishops is the salvation of souls. Their call is to proclaim the Gospel, to teach the faith, to celebrate the sacramental mysteries of grace, and to lead and coordinate the apostolic and evangelical work of priests, deacons, religious, and laity. Their ability to do those things convincingly and compellingly is hampered by the scandals of the last year.

But so is the ability of millions of other Catholics to do the work to which God has called them. Within the Church, the scandals have tainted the credibility of the bishops. Beyond the walls of the Church, the scandals have tainted the credibility of every Catholic who tries to explain, proclaim, or live the Gospel.

It is not the case that Catholic laity are the de facto moral superiors of their bishops. It is not the case that Catholic laity give consistent witness to the Gospel. It is not the case that laity are less likely to be motivated by the concerns of this world, less likely to engage in sexual immorality, less likely to live as they ought not.

But it is the case that bishops are uniquely public Catholic figures, and that the integrity of their actions is – fairly or unfairly- uniquely taken as a measure of the Gospel’s integrity.

None of that is new. What is new is the scope of their visibility in the social media era, and the degree to which the misconduct of some, and the broken ecclesial culture that fosters it, is manifestly clear to those who look toward it.

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.

Congregation of Holy Cross publishes names of priests accused of sexual abuse of minors

SOUTH BEND (IN)
The Tribune

June 13, 2019

By Caleb Bauer

The Congregation of Holy Cross, the Catholic religious order that founded the University of Notre Dame and Holy Cross College, on Wednesday released a list of priests credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors.

One of those priests, John Fitzgerald, worked as the director of campus ministries at Notre Dame beginning in 1980.

The move comes during the same week that the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops meets in Baltimore to consider instituting accountability for bishop misconduct amid calls for more transparency and further investigation.

The list names 14 Holy Cross priests and one seminarian, and was published along with a letter from the Rev. William Lies, the provincial superior of the U.S. province of the Congregation of Holy Cross. According to the congregation, the last incident of alleged abuse occurred in 1991.

“Over the last two decades, but particularly in the last year, we have all become more aware of the problem of sexual abuse of children within the Catholic Church and its mishandling,” Lies wrote. “I am profoundly sorry for the pain and suffering inflicted on anyone who has been abused or impacted in any way by the actions of any of our members.”

Who is on the list?
Of the 15 names on the list, 10 of the alleged abusers are dead and two have been removed from ministry. Three are no longer in the congregation, including Paul LeBrun, the former pastor at Little Flower Catholic Church in South Bend who currently is serving time in prison in Arizona for abusing minors.

Ten of the priests at some point were assigned in Indiana, though only three credible accusations came from survivors in Indiana, according to the Congregation of Holy Cross. Three of the accused priests were assigned to Notre Dame at some point during their careers.

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.

Southern Baptist Convention’s Rev. J.D. Greear ‘broken-hearted and angry’ over sex abuse

BIRMINGHAM (AL)
Associated Press

June 13, 2019

By David Crary and Jay Reeves

Sharing a stage with tearful survivors of sex abuse, the president of the Southern Baptist Convention apologized Wednesday for the abuse crisis besetting his denomination and outlined an array of steps to address it.

“We are broken-hearted and angry,” said the Rev. J.D. Greear as the largest U.S. protestant denomination neared the end of its two-day national meeting. “Give us the courage to make the changes that genuine repentance requires.”

In an impassioned speech, preceded by prayers of lamentation, Greear blamed the crisis on years of cover-ups. He praised a new anti-abuse curriculum is being offered to all SBC churches and seminaries, and he said the SBC must do better in screening potential pastors.

“Father, forgive us,” he prayed after calling out a litany of sins.

The Rev. Russell Moore, head of the SBC’s public policy arm, said the abuse crisis is a result of satanic forces at work in the church.

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.

Pittsburgh victim advocate, victorious attorney hail PA appeals court ruling

PITTSBURGH (PA)
WTAE TV

June 12, 2019

By Bob Mayo

Advocates for victims of clergy sexual abuse are taking heart from a Pennsylvania Superior Court decision that says, in view of alleged cover-ups, it’s possible for a jury to decide whether the statute of limitations should apply in lawsuits alleging abuse by predator priests.

While the case in question is against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, it may have impact across Pennsylvania.

“So, to put that decision in the hands of the jury, I think it gives the victims a chance to tell their story and to be given the justice that they deserve,” Frances Samber, Pittsburgh-area leader of SNAP, told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4.

SNAP is the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. Samber is active in memory of her late brother, Michael Unglo, a victim of a predator priest. Unglo later took his own life after the Diocese of Pittsburgh ended payments for his medical and counseling treatment.

Pittsburgh-area attorney Alan Perer won this breakthrough ruling in a suit against the Altoona-Johnstown diocese. He says the appeals court decision can affect cases in the Pittsburgh diocese and across Pennsylvania.

“This affects hundreds, if not thousands of victims. It’s the most wonderful victory for justice for all of these victims who were abused when they were children,” Perer told Pittsburgh’s Action News 4.

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.

Madison Catholic Diocese hires detectives to probe clergy sexual abuse

MADISON (WI)
State Journal

June 13, 2019

By Steven Verburg

The Catholic Diocese of Madison said Wednesday that private investigators have been hired to review personnel files in a probe of child sexual abuse by members of the clergy.

“The Diocese of Madison reaffirms its commitment to protect children and young people, as well as to be open and transparent with victims, faithful Catholics and the larger community,” the diocese said in a statement.

The Texas-based investigations firm Defenbaugh and Associates, founded by former agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, has been hired to review the diocese’s documents dating back to 1964, the diocese said.

The Madison diocese said in January it was considering an effort to learn how many substantiated sexual abuse allegations have been made against priests and other clergy in Madison after the Green Bay Diocese announced more than 40 of its priests had abused minors.

If the investigation firm finds evidence that more Madison clergy members abused children, it will flag it for further investigation. The diocese said if any allegations are against current priests, deacons or seminarians, they will be immediately removed from the ministry. To date, seven priests from the Diocese of Madison have had “credible” accusations made against them, according to the diocese.

Peter Isely, founding member of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), said he was not allayed by the announcement of the outside review. “They’re just reviewing these now?” he said.

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

June 12, 2019

Piden abrir causas contra un cura

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
Página/12 [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

June 12, 2019

Read original article

Un hombre pidió que la Justicia retome denuncias archivadas por prescripción. El cura vive en un Hogar de la iglesia.

Ricardo Benedetti presentó un recurso ante la Justicia bonaerense para que se reabra la causa contra el sacerdote Héctor Ricardo Giménez, quien habría abusado de él y de otras personas cuando eran niños, pero fue sobreseído porque prescribió la acción penal. Giménez tiene tres denuncias en su contra, pero sólo fue sancionado por la Iglesia de La Plata, que lo aloja en el Hogar de Ancianos Marín de la capital bonaerense.

Benedetti contó que fue abusado por el sacerdote en 1974 cuando tenía apenas 8 años, una semana antes de tomar la comunión, dentro del confesionario de la parroquia Santa Clara, ubicada en el barrio porteño de Flores. “El cura me preguntó qué malas palabras decía yo. Contesté ‘boludo’. Me dijo que eso era una enfermedad de ‘ahí abajo’ y me manoseó los genitales. Me quedé petrificado, no logré ni hablar”, recordó y aseguró que los abusos se repitieron durante mucho tiempo. 

Benedetti afirmó que decidió realizar la denuncia judicial el año pasado “cuando leí una nota de Télam sobre los abusos en la Iglesia”. “Fue como un tsunami de recuerdos. Ahí decidí hacer la denuncia penal, algo que fue tremendamente doloroso hasta desde lo corporal”, afirmó y agregó: “Este monstruo me metía la mano en el calzoncillo y me tocaba. Nunca pude hablar. Viví mi infancia encerrado en los libros y la televisión”.

El hombre sostuvo que permitir la prescripción de la causa es “una denegación de justicia”, especialmente teniendo en cuenta que hay “múltiples víctimas y hasta elementos probatorios celados en poder del Arzobispado de La Plata”.

Además de Benedetti, Giménez tiene dos denuncias por abusos, una de Julieta Añazco, una de las fundadoras de la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Argentina, y Valeria Regner. Ambas asistían a los campamentos de verano que el sacerdote organizaba en un campo de la localidad platense de Magdalena.

Añazco fue abusada en 1979 cuando tenía 7 años y “el Padre Ricardo” estaba por cumplir 50. “En el momento de la confesión (Giménez) nos hacía hacer una fila. Tenía una carpa chiquita que era el confesionario, y en la fila estábamos todos, nenas y nenes, todos los chicos que íbamos al campamento para confesarnos. Entonces ahí él nos apoyaba en su cuerpo y mientras nosotros le decíamos ‘los pecados’ nos tocaba todo el cuerpo. Totalmente impune”, contó la mujer el año pasado en una entrevista. Añazco se animó a realizar la denuncia contra el sacerdote en 2013 e incluso presentó un pedido de información al Arzobispado platense.

Según Añazco, Giménez abusaba de niños y niñas en otros ámbitos. “Había también una carpa muy grande donde dormíamos los más chiquitos, entrábamos cerca de quince niños. Dormíamos todos alrededor de él, y los que estaban más cerca eran los preferidos del cura. Todos veíamos lo que hacía, cuando nos bañaba también”, afirmó. 

Por su parte, Regner también fue abusada durante el campamento cuando tenía 7 años, pero apenas volvió a su casa le contó lo sucedido a su padre. El hombre fue a la Iglesia para denunciar el abuso, pero las autoridades eclesiásticas, recordó Regner, no hicieron nada. “Lo más significativo que logramos hasta ahora es que forme parte de la historia como lo que es, un delincuente sexual. Pero no es suficiente. Queremos evitar que esto le siga pasando a otras personas. Por eso pedimos que se desarchiven las causas”, señaló la mujer.Este artículo fue publicado originalmente el día 11 de junio de 2019

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.

Sex-Abuse Accusations Grow Against Catholic Clergy in Poland

WARSAW (POLAND)
Wall Street Journal [New York NY]

June 12, 2019

By Drew Hinshaw

Read original article

More people allege childhood incidents after YouTube video causes outcry, raising prospect of a public reckoning like Ireland’s

The Catholic Church in Poland has seen an uptick in accusations from people claiming to have been sexually abused by clergy as children, after a YouTube video sparked public anger at an institution that is at the political and social heart of this culturally conservative country.

The increase appears to have been prompted by the two-hour-long YouTube documentary about sexual-abuse allegations against Polish clergy, entitled “Tell No One,” which has been viewed more than 22 million times. Victims’ advocates say the film has shifted the mood in a country that, they argue, has been slow to address allegations of clerical sex abuse.

Since then, at least 21 people have stepped forward with new allegations, according to local church officials contacted at 24 of Poland’s 41 dioceses. Officials at the remaining dioceses didn’t return calls or emails, or declined to discuss the subject.

A local victim’s support group, Don’t be Afraid, said it had received over 100 emails detailing such accusations since “Tell No One” went online, though the group hasn’t yet determined how many of them were previously unknown.

On Wednesday, a statue of a priest—accused in the documentary of sex abuse—had been removed from the grounds of a basilica in central Poland.

“What we can certainly say is that we are dealing here with an increased number of people reporting cases of sexual abuse,” said Przemysław Śliwiński, a spokesman for the Archdiocese of Warsaw, which declined to put a number on the new cases. Another church spokesman said each diocese responsible for one of the clergy named in the film has appointed a delegate to review the film and see if there should be a formal investigation.

The public outcry has raised the possibility that Poland could follow the path of Ireland, where revelations of widespread sexual and physical abuse by priests and church employees has shaken society over the past two decades.

It also speaks to the power of nontraditional media, say advocates for abuse victims, who have for years pressed accusations through courts or mainstream news outlets with limited resonance.

In a 1997 newspaper interview, Karol Chum, a 45-year-old software engineer, first accused Cardinal Henryk Gulbinowicz, a much-loved figure who helped lead Poland’s anti-Communist movement, of having abused him as a child. The accusation drew no response from civil or church authorities at the time.

But when Mr. Chum repeated it on Facebook last month, it drew thousands of likes and shares and widespread media coverage. The Archdiocese of Wroclaw, in western Poland, said it launched an investigation within 24 hours of the post.

“Although it is difficult to consider a meme as a way to report a crime, we decided to treat it as a filed complaint,” an archdiocese spokesman said, referring to the Facebook posting.

Church representatives declined to make Cardinal Gulbinowicz, now in his 90s, available for interview or comment, citing his ill health and advanced age. The Polish episcopate declined to comment on the accusation.

The surge in cases will be a test of the resolve of the Vatican and the church’s Polish hierarchy to tackle sex-abuse allegations, which were the subject of a major Vatican summit in February. Under new rules that took effect June 1, Catholic clergy must expedite investigations of bishops accused of child sex abuse or covering up such crimes by their priests. The “Tell No One” documentary includes several victims who allege that the priests who abused them enjoyed protection from local bishops.

Archbishop Charles Scicluna, a senior official at the Vatican body that hears sex abuse cases, will speak with Polish bishops and other church officials about clerical abuse later this week during a visit to the country.

Church leaders in Poland have declined to follow the “zero tolerance” policy that was adopted in the U.S. in the 2000s, under which any priest found to have sexually abused a person under the age of 18 is permanently removed from the ministry. Church leaders in only a handful of countries have emulated the U.S.’s zero-tolerance policies.

As of February, at least nine priests convicted in court of child sex-abuse crimes continued to celebrate Mass publicly as priests in Poland.

The Polish episcopate said in an emailed response to questions that its bishops apologize to everyone affected by such abuse. “The Bishops warned against transferring the guilt of particular clerics to all priests,” the episcopate wrote.

Church leaders have taken some steps to counter abuse—for example, increasing the age of consent from 15 to 18 under church law. Later this month, Polish bishops are set to meet to discuss whether and how to tighten rules on how sex-abuse allegations are handled.

In a poll last month by Kantar, an international opinion-research firm, 60% of Polish respondents said the entire church was responsible for the sex-abuse scandals, not just individuals. In another survey this month, by Institute Pollster, 86% of Polish respondents considered pedophilia a real problem in the church. In that poll, only a third said they trusted the institution, and 57% said the YouTube documentary had negatively affected their opinion.

Previous polls seeking Poland’s general opinion of the church were considerably more positive toward it.

“So far, the dynamic was, we had scandals, news reports, and then slowly but surely this was fading away,” said Elżbieta Korolczuk, a Polish sociologist and prominent commentator on sexual-abuse issues. “Whereas today it seems we have this kind of synergy.…This kind of anger, disillusionment with the church as a structure is seeping in.”

The issue is posing a political riddle for Poland’s conservative, ruling Law and Justice party, which blends cultural conservatism and defense of the church with nationalism and cautious skepticism toward the European Union. Following the outcry, the government has stiffened penalties for child sexual abuse.

“We are strongly against this narrative that sexual crimes committed by men in frocks are somehow different, or worse than those committed by other pedophiles,” said Marcin Horala, a Law and Justice lawmaker. “We want to prosecute all pedophiles.”

Natalia Ojewska in Warsaw and Francis X. Rocca in Rome contributed to this article.

Write to Drew Hinshaw at drew.hinshaw@wsj.com

Corrections & Amplifications
A man has accused Cardinal Henryk Gulbinowicz of abusing him as a child. An earlier version of this article misspelled the cardinal’s first name as Hernyk in the article and a photo caption. (June 12, 2019)

Appeared in the June 13, 2019, print edition as ‘Poland’s Catholic Clergy Pressured on Abuse’.

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 Anchor: Gayle King and CBS News’ Plans to Steady a Once-Storied Ship

HOLLYWOOD (CA)
Hollywood Reporter

June 12, 2019

By Marisa Guthrie

Following a year of scandal and upheaval, King takes the lead (and a new three-year deal) at ‘CBS This Morning’ as she opens up on Charlie Rose, that R. Kelly interview, advice from Oprah and becoming the face of the news division: “I am now a part of that history. Let’s see what we do.”

On March 5, Susan Zirinsky was in her “crummy little office” along a dark corridor in the labyrinth of CBS News headquarters on West 57th Street. It was just a temporary spot, since it was technically only her second day on the job as president of CBS News. In reality, she had been steering the 91-year-old division since early January, when acting CBS Corp. CEO Joe Ianniello announced that she would succeed David Rhodes.

Zirinsky was watching the live feed of Gayle King’s interview with R. Kelly, the R&B singer charged with multiple counts of criminal sexual abuse of young women. As the world now knows, an unhinged Kelly leaped from his seat in an explosion of tears, spittle and profanity. King remained almost motionless, offering a motherly entreaty: “Robert.”

“In this melee of histrionics, she did not lose the story — the accusations, the judicial ramifications, these kids, their parents,” says Zirinsky. “She was able to maintain editorial clarity in a situation that would have unnerved the best. And I just thought … Wow.”

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.

Lawsuit Against the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown Revived, SNAP Responds

ALTOONA (PA)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

June 12, 2019

A case against one of Pennsylvania’s catholic dioceses has been revived following a review by the state’s Superior Court. We are grateful to the judge who made the decision to allow this case to move forward.

In this case, Renee Rice’s original claim against Fr. Charles Bodziak was thrown out because of statute of limitations reasons. However, Rice only became aware of the active attempts by church officials to cover up the crimes committed by Fr. Bodziak after the release of a state grand jury report in 2016. If a diocese is actively working to conceal crimes that have been committed, it stands to reason that it would be difficult for a young victim to prove her claims within the short, two-year window allowed by Pennsylvania’s statute of limitations at that time.

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.

Pa. court finds merit in lawsuit filed by victim of clergy sex abuse despite expired statute of limitations

PENNSYLVANIA
Penn Live

June 12, 2019

By Ivey DeJesus

An opinion issued by a Pennsylvania court this week is being hailed as a victory for survivors of clergy sex abuse who are seeking to sue Catholic Church officials and dioceses but are timed barred from the legal system.

The unanimous opinion issued on Tuesday by the Pennsylvania Superior Court finds merit in an amended complaint filed by an adult survivor of clergy sex abuse, which, instead of focusing on the predator priest, charges the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown with conspiracy, fraud and constructive fraud.

The opinion reverses an earlier decision by a Blair County Court judge dismissing the lawsuit because the statute of limitations had expired.

The amended lawsuit filed by Renee Rice claims the diocese committed conspiracy when it failed to protect her over its interests and that of the Rev. Charles Bodziak. The lawsuit also holds that the diocese had a fiduciary obligation to inform Rice (as a minor) and her parents of the priest’s predatory history and the diocese’s knowledge of it.

Attorney Richard Serbin argued that the questions raised in his client’s lawsuit amounted to jury questions and should not be determined by a court.

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.

Lawsuit against diocese revived

ALTOONA (PA)
Altoona Mirror

June 12, 2019

By Matt Miller

Superior Court overturns Blair judge’s dismissal of Bodziak case

A state Superior Court panel Tuesday reinstated a lawsuit against the Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown filed by a woman who claims a pedophile priest consistently molested her in the 1970s and ’80s.

That decision, outlined in an opinion by Judge Deborah A. Kunselman, overturns a Blair County judge’s dismissal of Renee A. Rice’s suit on statute of limitations grounds.

Rice claims her former priest at St. Leo’s Church in Altoona, the Rev. Charles F. Bodziak, began molesting her when she was about 9 years old in the mid-’70s. That mol­estation continued at the church, while she cleaned the rectory, in a graveyard and in Bodziak’s car until 1981, she contends. She said the abuse occurred as often as twice a week.

County Judge Jolene Grubb Kopriva dismissed Rice’s suit after agreeing with the diocese that she waited too long to file it. By the calculation of the diocese and Kopriva, the time limit for filing the case expired in October 1987, two years after Rice’s 18th birthday.

However, Kunselman’s panel revived Rice’s suit by citing a state Supreme Court ruling that was handed down 10 months after Kopriva issued the dismissal.

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.

New Pa. court ruling could open door for more decades-old clergy abuse suits

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

June 11, 2019

By Liz Navratil and Peter Smith

A child sex abuse survivor’s lawsuit against the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown — filed after a 2016 grand jury report revealed decades of abuse and coverup there — can proceed to a jury, a state appellate court ruled on Tuesday.

The unanimous ruling by a three-judge Superior Court panel could open the door for similar lawsuits over decades-old abuse to be filed against six other dioceses, including Pittsburgh and Greensburg, which were subjects of a similar grand jury report last year.

Altoona-area woman Renee Rice sued the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown and others in 2016 alleging fraud, constructive fraud and civil conspiracy, beginning with her sexual abuse as a child in the 1970s and 1980s and continuing as some in the church hid it.

While the diocese argued that the statute of limitations had expired in her case, Ms. Rice’s attorney, Alan Perer, argued that she had no way of knowing about the extent of the cover-up until after a grand jury report was released in 2016. On Tuesday, a panel of Superior Court judges sided with Ms. Rice, sending her case back to Blair County Common Pleas Court for a possible jury trial.

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.

US Catholic bishops, under fire, meet to consider proposals to police themselves

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Washington Post

June 11, 2019

By Michelle Boorstein and Julie Zauzmer

Facing double-barreled criticism of their handling of clergy sexual abuse and church finances, America’s Catholic bishops began their annual spring meeting Tuesday vowing to codify for the first time rules to hold themselves accountable for misconduct.

The strong possibility that the U.S. Church will vote this week to create a system of bishop oversight is historic, though critics and watchdogs remain worried about a possible weakness: In the measures under consideration, all future probes will remain in-house. Lay people can be involved but it’s not mandatory, and the pope retains full power over whether to keep or how to punish bishops.

“This week we continue a journey that will not end until there is not one instance of abuse in our church,” Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in opening the meeting Tuesday morning.

The past year has seen church leaders – especially in the Northeast – enmeshed in scandals involving cardinals and bishops accused of engaging in sexual harassment and financial abuse, or looking the other way when their fellow, high-ranking peers did so. Just last week, The Washington Post reported that a Baltimore archbishop investigating sexual and financial misconduct by a West Virginia bishop edited out part of the investigative report that included the archbishop 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.

Former UCLA Campus Gynecologist Charged With Sexual Battery, Exploitation

LOS ANGELES (CA)
KTLA5

June 10, 2019

By Erika Martin and Wendy Burch

A gynecologist who worked nearly 30 years at UCLA’s student health clinic, until retiring last year amid a misconduct investigation, is accused of sexually abusing patients, the university announced Monday.

James Heaps, 62, is charged with two counts of sexual battery by fraud and one count of sexual exploitation by a physician with two patients, according to Ricardo Santaigo, a public information officer with the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

Court records show the case was filed for warrant May 22 with a violation dated June 27, 2017.

Heaps pleaded not guilty at his arraignment Monday and was released without bail, the Associated Press reported.

The doctor surrendered to law enforcement Monday to face charges related his medical practice and encounters with two patients at UCLA Health in 2017 and 2018, UCLA said in a news release.

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.

Former UCLA gynecologist charged with sexual battery against 2 patients, school says

LOS ANGELES (CA)
KABC

June 10, 2019

By ABC7.com staff

A former gynecologist at UCLA has been arrested and charged with sexual battery, university officials disclosed Monday.

Dr. James Heaps is facing charges related to two patients he treated at UCLA in 2017 and 2018, the school said.

Heaps worked as an obstetrician-gynecologist at the student health center from 1983 to 2010 and then was hired by UCLA Health in 2014. He also held medical staff privileges at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center from 1988 to 2018.

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 Lori: Three Priests Named in Bransfield Report Have Been Reassigned

WHEELING (WV)
The Intelligencer

June 10, 2019

Acting in his capacity as Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, Archbishop William E. Lori Monday announced that three priests linked to former bishop Michael Bransfield — Frederick Annie, Kevin Quirk and Anthony Cincinnati — have resigned their administrative posts in the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston and assigned new duties.

The Rev. Frederick Annie resigned as Vicar General of the Diocese in September and has been assigned as Assistant Priest in Residence at St. Mary, Star City Parish in Morgantown.

The Rev. Anthony Cincinnati resigned as Vicar for Clergy and will continue serving as Pastor of St. Francis De Sales Parish in Morgantown.

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 Lori: Mistake Not to List Priests Who Received Gifts From Bransfield

WHEELING (WV)
The Intelligencer

June 7, 2019

Archbishop William Lori on Friday said he made a mistake in asking that his name and those of 10 other powerful Catholic bishops and priests who received financial gifts from former Wheeling-Charleston Diocese bishop Michael Bransfield be omitted from a preliminary report.

In an 8-minute video posted by the Diocese, Lori, who serves as apostolic administrator of the Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, addressed the matter after a Washington Post report revealed that Bransfield gave more than $350,000 in personal gifts to other priests — including Lori — and then had his compensation from the Diocese increased to cover the costs of the gifts.

The preliminary report said the personal gifts from Bransfield were part of a larger pattern of “excessive and inappropriate spending” that took place at the Diocese during his 13 years as bishop. Some examples include $2.4 million in travel by Bransfield — much of it personal travel — along with $4.6 million in renovations to his private residence — a home that soon will go up for sale, Lori said earlier this week.

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.

George Pell’s days of reckoning

AUSTRALIA
The Saturday Paper

June 8-14, 2019

By Russell Marks.

The two-day hearing of Cardinal George Pell’s appeal against child sexual assault convictions ended on Thursday. The most senior Catholic to be found guilty of child abuse now waits to see if he will be freed.

Perhaps the most significant trial in Australia this century, The Queen v George Pell returned to court this week in Melbourne as the cardinal appealed his six-year jail sentence over the abuse of two choirboys in the 1990s. The case has absorbed the world and become a proxy for the ongoing tension between the traditions of criminal law – some arcane, some vital – and the mores and technologies of our time.

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 Secret Truth About Boston Doctors

BOSTON (MA)
Boston Magazine

June 5, 2019

By Michael Damiano

Sexual misconduct, sloppy—sometimes catastrophic—mistakes, and a medical board that’s been known to look the other way. Local physicians keep getting away with bad medicine, but you may never know who they are until it’s too late.

When retired police sergeant Charles Antonio went under the knife of Michael Medlock, he was confident the neurosurgeon would eliminate the numbness in his fingers and toes, alleviate the pain in his legs, and improve his faltering balance due to compression in his spinal cord. After all, like many of us, Antonio believed Massachusetts had some of the best doctors in the country. He’d scoured the Internet for any information he could discover about his surgeon, though in truth he couldn’t find much: merely that Medlock was chief of neurosurgery at the Partners-affiliated North Shore Medical Center–Salem Hospital and had worked at Mass General, one of the top-ranked hospitals in the world. Now, on a gurney rolling toward the operating room, Antonio felt butterflies in his stomach, but he was comforted by the knowledge that the man who would be carving into his neck was a well-credentialed and experienced pro.

But things didn’t go as planned. Within days of the operation in September 2015, Antonio began suffering what he now describes as “ungodly pain” in his neck and shoulders. Antonio says he returned to Medlock, who prescribed opioid painkillers, ran some tests, and sent him home. Then things got worse. Antonio started hallucinating and verbally abusing his wife, Linda. He flushed the painkillers down the toilet, saying, “I’m not getting hooked on these. I’ve seen people addicted to drugs and liquor.” Still, the pain continued and his balance worsened, and by late October his condition had deteriorated to the point that he had to be hospitalized at the same facility where Medlock had operated on him a month earlier.

While Antonio was in his hospital room, he and Linda said another physician walked in with an update. The doctor knew Antonio was fond of Medlock and announced that Medlock was considering operating on Antonio again. Then the doctor offered a subtle yet chilling warning: “If I were you, Charlie,” Antonio recalls him saying, “I would find a new friend.”

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.

U.S. Catholic bishops convene to confront the church’s sex-abuse crisis

BALTIMORE (MD)
The Associated Press

June 11, 2019

By Regina Garcia Cano and David Crary

The nation’s Roman Catholic bishops convened a high-stakes meeting Tuesday under pressure to confront the child sexual abuse crisis that has disillusioned many churchgoers, with one scholar warning: “We find ourselves at a turning point, a critical moment in our history.”

How the bishops confront the problem “will determine in many ways the future vibrancy of the church and whether or not trust in your leadership can be restored,” Francesco Cesareo, an academic who chairs a national sex-abuse review board set up by the bishops, said as the four-day gathering began.

Key proposals on the agenda call for compassionate pastoral care for abuse victims, a new abuse reporting system, and a larger role for lay experts in holding bishops accountable. Votes on the proposals are expected on Wednesday and Thursday.

The deliberations will be guided by a new law that Pope Francis issued on May 9. It requires priests and nuns worldwide to report sexual abuse as well as cover-ups by their superiors to church authorities.

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.

When Should the Board Have Known?

WHEELING (WV)
Inside Higher Ed

June 11, 2019

By Rick Seltzer

Wheeling Jesuit board chair steps down in wake of confidential report revelations. But the timing of the departure — and major changes at the university — leave some wondering what might have been.

The board chairman at Wheeling Jesuit University is stepping down and leaving several other powerful positions at related Roman Catholic institutions in West Virginia, as church leaders announced a series of moves affecting high-ranking diocesan leaders Monday, days after details from a confidential report to the Vatican became public.

Monsignor Kevin Quirk announced his decision to step down as chair of Wheeling Jesuit’s Board of Trustees and president of the Board of Directors at Wheeling Hospital. He also resigned as judicial vicar and rector of the Cathedral of St. Joseph in the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston.

Also resigning from a top position at the diocese was Monsignor Anthony Cincinnati, who had been vicar for clergy. In addition, church leaders announced that Monsignor Frederick Annie resigned as vicar general of the diocese in September. All three will continue serving as priests in parishes.

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.

June 11, 2019

More protections coming under new NJ sex abuse law

NEWARK (NJ)
Star Ledger

June 11, 2019

By Michael G. Donahue

After nearly 20 years of advocacy, New Jersey recently passed a historic law providing new and extended protections for victims of sexual abuse by lengthening the statute of limitations to pursue a civil claim as a result of various sexual abuse related offenses. Those who have fought for these extended protections should be commended for their perseverance and courage in sharing their emotional and painful experiences for the betterment of our society.

The new protections, signed into law by Gov. Phil Murphy, will take effect Dec. 1, 2019. It features the following reform measures:

A two-year window from enactment for the filing of any civil case alleging adult or minor sexual abuse that occurred in the past;
Those who were sexually abused in the past as minors who miss the two-year filing window will be able to bring their cause of action until the age of 55; and
Those 55 and older who allege delays in connecting past abuse to damages will have an opportunity to seek justice through the courts, within seven years from the date they made that connection.

This new law additionally eliminates notice of deadlines and procedures for potential claims against government entities. By adopting this law, New Jersey has recognized that the mere passage of time should not be the sole basis used to silence a legitimate claim against a sexual abuser or the organization that allowed or concealed abuse.

New Jersey’s new law comes soon after the state’s five Roman Catholic dioceses released the names of 188 priests credibly accused of sexually abusing minors over decades and the Boy Scouts of America released names of leaders accused of similar crimes. In tandem, the state also announced the creation of a compensation fund for the victims.

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

Victim sues Diocese of Rochester over claims of sexual abuse by priest

ROCHESTER (NY)
WHAM TV

June 11, 2019

A new lawsuit was filed against the Diocese of Rochester and several other local Catholic organizations Monday evening over allegations of sexual abuse.

The lawsuit was filed Monday evening in Monroe County and names several prominent religious organizations as defendants, including the Catholic Youth Organization of Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Rochester, Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Rochester, Most Holy Redeemer Paris and St. Bridget’s Church.

According to the complaint, the allegations center around Father Francis Vogt, who is the brother of Monsignor Joseph Vogt. Francis Vogt has been the subject of previous sexual abuse accusations.

In 1969, the victim – whose name is not being disclosed by 13WHAM News due to the sexual abuse detailed in the lawsuit – was taken by Father Vogt to the Catholic Charities Catholic Youth Organization facility on Chestnut Street to swim. The victim was 5 years old at the time.

For two years, allegations detailed in the lawsuit claim Father Vogt sexually assaulted, abused and had sexual contact at both the Chestnut Street facility and at the victim’s home.

The victim says the Diocese of Rochester and St. Bridget’s “had a duty not to aid pedophiles such as Father Vogt by assigning, maintaining, and/or appointing them to positions with access to minors.” The lawsuit goes on to claim the defendants knew or should have known about the abuse and covered it up.

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.

Key takeaways about how Americans view the sexual abuse scandal in the Catholic Church

WASHINGTON (DC)
Pew Research Center

June 11, 2019

By Abigail Geiger

Reports of sex abuse by priests and other clergy are atop the agenda for two of America’s largest religious groups this week as both U.S. Catholic bishops and Southern Baptists gather for national meetings.

A new Pew Research Center survey examines Americans’ views on the sex abuse scandals in the Catholic Church, as well as in other religious groups. Here are six key findings from the report:

[bignumber]Vast majority of U.S. adults have heard about recent reports of sexual abuse in Catholic ChurchA clear majority of U.S. adults think recent reports of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church reflect problems that are still happening. Around eight-in-ten Americans (79%) say the reports of sexual abuse and misconduct by Catholic priests and bishops reflect ongoing problems, while far fewer (12%) think the reports reflect problems that happened in the past.

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 Talley says he’s ‘committed’ to releasing list of clergy accused of sex abuse

MEMPHIS (TN)
Commercial Appeal

June 11, 2019

By Katherine Burgess

Bishop David Talley of the Catholic Diocese of Memphis is “committed to publishing a list” of clergy who are credibly accused of sexual abuse of minors, according to a news release from the diocese.

The news comes a day after SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, called on the diocese to publish the names, photos and work histories of credibly accused clergy on its website.

According to the release, Talley has met twice with the review board of the diocese, which is tasked with examining and advising the bishop on matters of clergy sexual abuse of minors.

“In each of those meetings, Bishop Talley emphasized how much he values the work of the Review Board, the seriousness with which they take each allegation, and their dedication to ensuring the safety of children,” the release stated.

Two comprehensive reviews of the diocesan files on priests have already taken place, one by the former district attorney general of Shelby County, according to the release.

Talley has directed the lay members of the review board to do an independent review of the files “out of an abundance of caution and because he has arrived in Memphis so recently,” according to the release. Then, they will give Talley a list of names of credibly accused clergy.

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.

Survivors and advocates demand an embrace of secular investigations

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

June 10, 2019

Six months ago, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) met in Baltimore amidst a cascade of revelations about abuse and cover-up. They were poised to fulfill dramatic promises to American Catholics and the public to hold themselves accountable and transparent.

Instead, they did not enact any meaningful reform and failed to deliver on any of those promises. In the months following that failed meeting, Church officials – including Pope Francis – have spoken of the importance of reform. This week the bishops once again have addressing the abuse scandal at the top of their schedule.

The two likely measures the bishops will pass this week include setting up a nationwide “hotline” for information on misconduct by bishops and adopting the “Metropolitan” model to investigate themselves. Both of these measures are deeply flawed and unlikely to result in the change that parishioners and the public have demanding.

Any reform that leaves the ultimate authority for investigating abuse and cover up in the hands of Church officials instead of secular law enforcement is no reform at all. Rather, it is the continuation of how bishops have responded to cases of sex abuse since 2002, just updated and codified as a new policy. Yet new policies and declarations that do not make secular and independent investigations central to their design will never succeed.

Church officials promised in 2002 that “fraternal correction” would be the bulwark that would keep bishops in line. Instead, we have had two more decades of failure to curb sexual abuse. We continue to see – as recently as last week – high ranking Church officials ignoring their own protocols in cases of clergy abuse.

The bishops’ way of internal policing has been a disaster. Internal investigations are a cancer that allows and enables abuse and cover up. More of the same will not remedy the problem.

So, what does work? What kind of change is needed that will lead to a cure?

We believe the answer is secular involvement and investigations. The substantial and historic progress that has been made in the past six months has been due to ongoing revelations, investigations, and prosecutions by criminal and civil authorities. Nearly 20 states and the Department of Justice are now actively investigating clergy abuse. Several investigations – including those in Michigan and New Jersey – have already resulted in arrests. Several others have seized documents and records related to Church-led responses to cases of abuse, helping to pry back the veil of secrecy and force the transparency that bishops have promised since 2002.

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.

Another Priest from the Diocese of Fresno Suspended

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

June 11, 2019

Another priest has been suspended from the Diocese of Fresno due to allegations of sexual abuse. This time, the action was not taken due to recent allegations, but because a new person in charge took the time to review old cases.

We are glad that Church officials from the Diocese of Fresno are looking deeper at cases of abuse within their diocese. We are also glad that they are taking steps to remove priests – like Fr. Eric Swearengin – that may present a danger to their communities.

When a survivor, Juan Rocha, first reported the allegations against Fr. Swearengin to Bishop Steinbock and the Diocese of Fresno, Church officials declared the allegations “not credible.” Yet in 2006 and after reviewing the evidence, a jury determined that Fr. Swearengin had abused Juan Rocha. The priest should have been removed from ministry at that point, considering the “zero tolerance” pledge made by U.S. bishops in 2002.

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 protesters demand cardinal Daniel Dinardo step down as USCCB president

HOUSTON (TX)
Channel 39

June 11, 2019

By Courtney Carpenter

As the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops starts, some are calling for cardinal Daniel Dinardo to step down from his leadership role, saying he’s not qualified. Dinardo is president of the organization, which is supposed to be addressing the issue of sexual abuse in the church at its conference this week.

Some are saying that Dinardo is not qualified to lead discussions on how to hold priests accountable for sexual abuse or for covering up sexual abuse because of recent revelations of abuse in his own diocese.

About a dozen members of the Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests— or SNAP — gathered outside the Co-Cathedral of the Scared Heart Monday to call for Dinardo to step down.

“In our opinion, he’s not capable of leading, nor does he have the moral authority to lead us out of this issue,” protester Michael Norris said. “We’ve had four cases right here in houston where he has totally mishandled.”

One of the cases he’s talking about is one we told you about last week.

You may remember the exclusive Associated Press story on a local woman who claims she was sexually abused by Monsingor Frank Rossi, who was one of Dinardo’s highest ranking deputies. The woman said she was told he would never counsel women again, only to find out months later that he was moved to another parish to pastor there.

After the calls for Dinardo to step down from his position as USCCB president, the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston released a statement.

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.

Southern Baptists To Confront Sexual Abuse And Role Of Women In The Church

WASHINGTON (DC)
NPR

June 11, 2019

By Tom Gjelten

Southern Baptists, who in 1995 apologized for their past defense of slavery and in 2017 denounced white supremacy, are resolved once again to show their sensitivity to a pressing social concern. The 2019 convention in Birmingham, Ala., is focusing heavily on the problem of sexual abuse by church leaders.

Among the resolutions likely to be debated are proposals to discipline churches that mishandle abuse allegations. Dozens of Southern Baptist women in recent years have come forward with stories of clergy misconduct and of church officials failing to respond. Earlier this year, The Houston Chronicle and The San Antonio Express-News reported that nearly 400 male Southern Baptist leaders or volunteers had been accused of sexual misconduct over the past 20 years, involving more than 700 victims.

“There’s a question of, ‘Can we trust our church leaders not only [not to abuse] but also to prohibit people who could be abusers from having a place where they could do it with impunity?’ ” says Pastor J.D. Greear, president of the Southern Baptist Convention. As one of his first acts after being elected at last year’s convention, Greear ordered the formation of an advisory council to draft recommendations for dealing with the abuse problem.

“You’re going to see a convention that is united in its agreement on the fact that this cannot be tolerated in our churches and that we have to do whatever it takes, regardless of what it costs us, to make our churches safe places,” Greear told NPR.

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.

Protesters call for removal of two members of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops

BALTIMORE (MD)
WBFF TV

June 11, 2019

Today, a a non-profit charity called Road to Recovery, Inc. will hold a press conference demanding the firing, removal, or resignation of two members of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, President Cardinal Daniel DiNardo of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston, Texas, and Bishop Curtis Guillory, Bishop of the Diocese of Beaumont, Texas.

The president of the charity, Robert M. Hoatson, says these removals must take place before the June 11-14, 2019 meetings of the USCCB begin on the morning of June 11, 2019.

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.

Opaque finances enable church’s abuse scandal

WASHINGTON (DC)
Washington Post

June 10, 2019

The breadth and depth of corruption in the Catholic Church seem boundless, and colored by the ongoing dysfunction arising from clergy sex abuse and the hierarchy’s inability to grapple with it. Some of the misdeeds and cover-ups have been facilitated by a law that exempts religious institutions and affiliated charitable entities from financial reporting that is required of other nonprofit organizations. Even as the Vatican, seeking to move beyond its protracted season of scandal, calls for a new era of transparency, the church’s finances in the United States remain opaque.

That apparent discrepancy between rhetoric and reality was highlighted by a stunning account in The Washington Post focusing on the opulent lifestyle, and extravagant palm-greasing, undertaken for years by now-disgraced former bishop of West Virginia Michael Bransfield. The story revealed that Archbishop William Lori of Baltimore, who oversaw an investigation into sexual harassment allegations against Bransfield, whitewashed the resulting report to expunge the fact that he – along with 10 other of the most prominent and influential clerics in the United States and the Vatican — were paid thousands of dollars from what amounted to a slush fund controlled by the bishop.

You read that correctly: The archbishop, having received substantial monetary “gifts” from the bishop, had that fact scrubbed from the report that he himself supervised. And he scrubbed more famous names, including those of current and former cardinals in New York, Boston, Washington and the Vatican, who were showered with cash from the same source.

The fact that the slush fund, which dispensed $350,000, was controlled by the free-spending, large-living bishop of West Virginia, one of the poorest states in the nation, is a self-evident irony. That the funds were lavished not just on cardinals but also on some of the young priests whom Bransfield is accused of abusing and molesting speaks to the conspiracy of silence at the heart of the church’s sex abuse scandal.

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

India child rape, murder case: 3 men get life sentences

BERLIN (GERMANY)
Deutsche Welle

June 11, 2019

An Indian court on Monday sentenced three men to life in jail for therape and killing of an 8-year-old Muslim girl, identified as Asifa, in the Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir.

The prosecution had sought the death penalty. Three others, including two policemen, were convicted of the lesser crimes of destroying evidence. They received five-year sentences.

A seventh man was acquitted for lack of evidence, while an eighth person, who was underage, is being tried separately.

“This is a victory for truth,” prosecution lawyer Mubeen Farooqi told reporters outside the court. “The girl and her family have received justice today. We are satisfied with the judgement.”

A lawyer representing the accused told reporters that they planned to appeal the verdict.

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 William Lori: Priests Listed in Bransfield Report Out

WHEELING (WV)
The Intelligencer

June 11, 2019

By Alex Meyer

Three high-ranking priests tied to former bishop Michael Bransfield have resigned from their managerial roles in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, Archbishop William Lori announced Monday.

The Revs. Frederick Annie, Kevin Quirk and Anthony Cincinnati resigned from their administrative posts in the diocese and were assigned new duties elsewhere in West Virginia. All three were mentioned in the diocese’s preliminary investigative report of Bransfield’s conduct, the details of which were made public last week by The Washington Post. That report recommended that the three, Bransfield’s closest aides, be removed from the diocese.

“By failing to take any action, the chancery monsignors enabled the predatory and harassing conduct of Bishop Bransfield, and allowed him to recklessly spend Diocesan funds for his own personal use,” the report states.

Bransfield, who served as bishop of the diocese for 13 years before retiring, has been accused of excessive spending of church funds, sexual harassment of adults within the church and using millions of dollars of church funds for personal gifts to other church officials, for personal travel and to renovate his church-owned residence.

Lori said that Annie resigned as vicar general of the diocese in September and has been assigned as assistant priest in residence at St. Mary Parish in Star City, just outside Morgantown.

Quirk resigned Monday as judicial vicar and rector of the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Wheeling. He also resigned from his position on the boards of directors at Wheeling Jesuit University and Wheeling Hospital.

Now, Quirk will serve as a priest in residence at the Mater Dolorosa (Paden City) and St. Vincent De Paul (New Martinsville) parishes and Holy Rosary (Sistersville) and St. Joseph (Proctor) missions, where he will assist Administrator Rev. Brian J. Crenwelge in his pastoral duties.

Per the report, both Quirk and Annie discussed concerns about Bransfield’s conduct with young men but did nothing to stop it.

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.

Michigan bill boosts spending to combat lead, abusive clergy

LANSING (MI)
Associated Press

June 11, 2019

A $28.8 million spending bill nearing legislative approval would allocate funding to combat lead in Michigan drinking water systems and investigate sexual assaults by clergy.

The Senate is expected to send the supplemental budget measure to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on Tuesday.

It includes $3 million for public health services needed as a result of Michigan implementing the nation’s toughest lead-in-water rules in the wake of Flint’s water crisis. There also is $635,000 for the state attorney general’s criminal probe of abuse by Catholic 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.

Prosecutors crack down on clergy abuse as bishops gather

DETROIT (MI)
Associated Press

June 11, 2019

By Juliet Linderman, Garance Burke and Martha Mendoza

Hundreds of boxes. Millions of records. From Michigan to New Mexico this month, attorneys general are sifting through files on clergy sex abuse, seized through search warrants and subpoenas at dozens of archdioceses.

They’re looking to prosecute, and not just priests. If the boxes lining the hallways of Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel’s offices contain enough evidence, she said, she is considering using state racketeering laws usually reserved for organized crime. Prosecutors in Michigan are even volunteering on weekends to get through all the documents as quickly as possible.

For decades, leaders of the Roman Catholic Church were largely left to police their own. But now, as American bishops gather for a conference to confront the reignited sex-abuse crisis this week, they’re facing the most scrutiny ever from secular law enforcement.

A nationwide Associated Press query of more than 20 state and federal prosecutors last week found they are looking for legal means to hold higher ups in the church accountable for sex abuse. They have raided diocesan offices, subpoenaed files, set up victim tip lines and launched sweeping investigations into decades-old allegations. Thousands of people have called hotlines nationwide, and five priests have recently been arrested.

“Some of the things I’ve seen in the files makes your blood boil, to be honest with you,” Nessel said. “When you’re investigating gangs or the Mafia, we would call some of this conduct a criminal enterprise.”

If a prosecutor applies racketeering laws, also known as RICO, against church leaders, bishops and other church officials could face criminal consequences for enabling predator priests, experts say. Such a move by Michigan or one of the other law enforcement agencies would mark the first known time that actions by a diocese or church leader were branded a criminal enterprise akin to organized crime.

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 who called on pope to resign now living in self-imposed exile

ROME (ITALY)
Washington Post

June 11, 2019

By Stefano Pitrelli and Chico Harlan

The retired Vatican ambassador to Washington wrote a bombshell letter last summer calling on Pope Francis to resign on the grounds that he had tolerated a known sexual abuser. As that letter was published, Viganò turned off his phone, told friends he was disappearing, and let the church sort through the fallout.

Nine months later, in his first extended interview since that moment, Viganò refused to disclose his location or say much about his self-imposed exile. But his comments indicate that, even in hiding, he is maintaining his role as the fiercest critic of the Francis era, acting either as an honourable rebel or, as his critics see it, as an ideological warrior attacking a pope he doesn’t like.

Viganò corresponded by email with The Washington Post over two months, writing 8,000 words in response to nearly 40 questions. He was blistering in his criticism of Francis, saying “it is immensely sad” that the pope was “blatantly lying to the whole world to cover up his wicked deeds.”

The Vatican has had little official response to Viganò. A communications official declined to comment for this story. But Francis last month responded for the first time to Viganò’s summer letter. The pope said he knew “nothing, obviously, nothing” about the misconduct of former cardinal Theodore McCarrick and could not remember if he had been personally warned about McCarrick by Viganò in 2013. Viganò claimed to have told Francis that McCarrick had “corrupted generations of seminarians and priests.”

“How could anybody, especially a pope, forget this?” Viganò wrote to The Post.

McCarrick was defrocked in February after the case exploded into public view and he was found guilty in a Vatican proceeding for “sins” with minors and adults.

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.

Bishops to return ‘gifts’ from disgraced Bishop Bransfield

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Catholic Herald

June 11, 2019

ByAaron Benavides

Cardinal Kevin Farrell and Archbishop William Lori are among senior clergy who received gifts from the bishop

Several cardinals, bishops, and priests, have said they will return money given to them by Bishop Michael J. Bransfield, the former head of the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, after an article published by the Washington Post reported lavish spending and gift-giving by the West Virginia bishop.

Cardinal Kevin Farrell, the Vatican Prefect of the Dicastery for Laity, Family, and Life, will return $29,000 given to him by Bransfield for renovations of his Rome apartment, reported the Washington Post.

Archbishop William E. Lori, the Archbishop of Baltimore and Apostolic Administrator of Wheeling-Charleston tasked with investigating Bransfield, said he would return $7,500.

The former Apostolic Nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, said he donated the $6,000 given to him shortly after he received the gifts from Bransfield.

Catholic News Agency reported that Cardinal Donal Wuerl, the former Archbishop of Washington, received $23,600 and is planning on returning the money to the diocese.

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.

Fresno Diocese places priest who previously served in Bakersfield on paid administrative leave

FRESNO (CA)
KGET TV

June 10, 2019

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno has placed a priest who previously served in Bakersfield on paid administrative leave due to information related to a civil case dating back to 2009, according to a statement from the bishop.

Rev. Eric Swearingen, pastor of Good Shepherd Catholic Parish in Visalia, was placed on leave June 5, according to the statement from Bishop Joseph V. Brennan read over the weekend to churches in the parish.

“I understand that this is very difficult information for you to receive; especially at a time when Fr. Eric is very seriously ill,” Brennan wrote. “Please be assured that we will do all we can to support Fr. Eric and maintain his level of medical care without interruption. I am deeply concerned for his well-being.”

The Visalia Times-Delta has reported Swearingen has brain cancer. the paper said Swearingen was accused in 2006 of molesting a teen altar boy “many years earlier” but no criminal charges were filed.

The alleged abuse, according to a report by Los Angeles-based law firm Jeff Anderson & Associates, occurred from 1989 to 1993 at Our Lady of Guadalupe in Bakersfield.

A civil jury found the priest likely abused the boy, the paper reported, but that the diocese had no prior knowledge of the abuse. A mistrial was declared.

The paper reported a second trial was scheduled but both sides agreed to binding arbitration.

The Anderson & Associates report lists several dozen former and current priests in the Diocese of Fresno who have been accused of sexual misconduct.

Among them is Msgr. Craig Harrison, placed on leave as pastor of St. Francis Church in Bakersfield earlier this year when allegations surfaced of misconduct at parishes where he previously worked. An investigation into the alleged misconduct is ongoing.

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.

As Deadline Looms, More Than 200 To File Clergy Sex Abuse Claims

ALBUQUERQUE (NM)
KUNM Radio

June 11, 2019

By Hannah Colton

More than 200 people are bringing claims of sexual abuse against the Archdiocese of Santa Fe as the church goes through a bankruptcy. Anyone who still wants to file a claim has until next Monday to do it.

June 17 at 5 p.m. is the cutoff to get in on the settlement that the archdiocese will negotiate with survivors of clergy sex abuse.

Cammie Nichols is a partner at the Rothstein Donatelli LLP, representing a couple dozen survivors. She says this deadline can be really difficult for people who aren’t sure if they’re ready to talk about what happened to them.

“We’re getting calls at like 1:45 in the morning on the paralegal’s cell phone and she tries to get back in touch but they hang up, and she can’t get back in touch with them,” said Nichols. “It’s like, they’re struggling to come forward, and they recognize the deadline, but they’re really having trouble.”

The bankruptcy system is set up to protect peoples’ identities, said Nichols, so claimants will remain anonymous unless they choose to go public. “We just encourage anybody who wants their voice to be heard and to be part of this process that they gather up the courage to do it and to call somebody.”

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.

June 10, 2019

Precisiones sobre el caso de un sacerdote de la diócesis de Chascomús

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
AICA - Agencia Informativa Católica Argentina [Buenos Aires, Argentina]

June 10, 2019

Read original article

El obispado de Chascomús precisó que el presbítero Roberto Barco fue investigado por la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, en la que se comprobó que no perpetró delito alguno ni pesa sobre él una sanción, tras una acusación recibida en 2016 en su contra respecto de una persona menor de edad.

El obispado de Chascomús precisó que el presbítero Roberto Barco fue investigado por la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, en la que se comprobó que no perpetró delito alguno, tras una acusación recibida en 2016 en su contra respecto de una persona menor de edad.

Tras indicar que por un acuerdo con la arquidiócesis de Puerto Montt (Chile), el sacerdote presta actualmente servicio pastoral en la parroquia María Inmaculada de Cochamó, de aquella jurisdicción eclesiástica chilena.

Ante noticias recientes de que el administrador apostólico de Puerto Montt ha dispuesto el no ejercicio del ministerio del presbítero Barco “a la espera de revisar toda la información al respecto”, el Obispado de Chascomús recordó que esta diócesis y la chilena han actuado “en todo momento” conforme a la normativa de la Iglesia.

Asimismo, reiteró que “según la información que poseen sólo hubo una acusación no probada por lo cual no se aplicó al sacerdote ninguna sanción”.

Texto del comunicado
Este Obispado informa en relación al Pbro. Roberto Barco, que la arquidiócesis de Los Ángeles (EE.UU), donde el sacerdote ejerció el ministerio, realizó en el año 2016 una investigación canónica como consecuencia de una acusación recibida en su contra respecto de una persona menor de edad.

Dicha investigación fue elevada a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, en conformidad con la normativa vigente, quien dio por cerrada la causa, porque no se comprobó delito alguno. No obstante, se advirtió al Pbro. Barco que si surgiese alguna acusación probada sería sancionado. Hasta el momento no se recibió ninguna acusación contra él.

En virtud de un acuerdo, entre el Obispo de Chascomús, Mons. Carlos H. Malfa, y el entonces arzobispo de Puerto Montt, Mons. Cristián Caro, el Pbro. Roberto Barco se encuentra prestando un servicio pastoral en la arquidiócesis de Puerto Montt (Chile), como administrador parroquial de la Parroquia “María Inmaculada” de Cochamó.

La información y antecedente referente a la situación del Pbro. Roberto Barco, que además era necesaria para poder cursar su designación, en su momento fue conocida por el entonces Arzobispo de Puerto Montt. Y recientemente, toda esta información fue nuevamente enviada al Administrador Apostólico de esa Arquidiócesis, Fr. Ricardo Morales Galindo, quien posee facultades de permitir o no el ejercicio del ministerio de un sacerdote en la jurisdicción de su propia diócesis, aún cuando no haya ninguna denuncia o sanción, tal como es el presente caso.

En tal sentido, el Administrador Apostólico de Puerto Montt ha dispuesto el no ejercicio del ministerio del Pbro. Barco a la espera de revisar toda la información al respecto.

El Obispado de Chascomús y la Arquidiócesis de Puerto Montt, en todo momento, han actuado conforme a la normativa de la Iglesia y reiteran que según la información que poseen sólo hubo una acusación no probada por lo cual no se aplicó al sacerdote ninguna sanción. 

Pbro. Lic. Lisandro I. Rodríguez
Canciller y Secretario General
Obispado de Chascomús
+

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.

Detallan situación de sacerdote argentino acusado de abuso sexual en Estados Unidos

LA PLATA (ARGENTINA)
ACI Prensa [Lima, Peru]

June 10, 2019

Read original article

La Diócesis de Chascomús (Argentina) informó sobre la situación del sacerdote argentino Roberto Barco, suspendido del ministerio sacerdotal público en Chile por supuesto abuso sexual cometido contra una menor en Estados Unidos. 

En abril de 2016 la Diócesis de San Bernardino en California (Estados Unidos) recibió una denuncia por supuesto abuso sexual cometido por el P. Roberto Barco contra una menor de edad en 2010, cuando ejercía labores pastorales en la parroquia San Salvador de Colton.

La Diócesis de San Bernardino comenzó una investigación y trasladó los antecedentes a la justicia civil; además le prohibió ejercer el ministerio, enviándolo de regreso a la Diócesis de Chascomús donde estaba incardinado.

Más tarde, por acuerdo entre el entonces Arzobispo de Puerto Montt, Mons. Cristián Caro; y el Obispo de Chascomús, Mons. Carlos Malfa; en mayo de 2018 el P. Barco asumió como administrador parroquial de María Inmaculada de Cochamó, sur de Chile.

En un comunicado de prensa del 10 de junio, la Diócesis de Chascomús admitió que en 2016 hubo una investigación canónica contra el P. Barco por supuestos abusos sexuales hacia un menor de edad. 

La investigación fue “elevada a la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, en conformidad con la normativa vigente, quien dio por cerrada la causa, porque no se comprobó delito alguno”.

“No obstante, se advirtió al Pbro. Barco que si surgiese alguna acusación probada sería sancionado. Hasta el momento no se recibió ninguna acusación contra él”, aseguró la Diócesis de Chascomús.

También, la diócesis argentina aseguró que para poder cursar la designación del P. Barco a Chile, los antecedentes fueron conocidos por el entonces Arzobispo de Puerto Montt, Mons. Caro.

“Recientemente, toda esta información fue nuevamente enviada al Administrador Apostólico de esa Arquidiócesis, Fr. Ricardo Morales Galindo, quien posee facultades de permitir o no el ejercicio del ministerio de un sacerdote en la jurisdicción de su propia diócesis, aún cuando no haya ninguna denuncia o sanción, tal como es el presente caso”, sostuvo. 

“El Obispado de Chascomús y la Arquidiócesis de Puerto Montt, en todo momento, han actuado conforme a la normativa de la Iglesia y reiteran que según la información que poseen sólo hubo una acusación no probada por lo cual no se aplicó al sacerdote ninguna sanción”, concluyó el comunicado.

Mientras el P. Roberto Barco permanece suspendido de sus funciones públicas ministeriales, el Arzobispado de Puerto Montt se encuentra revisando la información para comunicar su decisión del caso en los próximos días. 

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.

Diocesan board heard Bishop Weldon sexual abuse allegations, former member maintains

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Republican

June 11, 2019

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

When the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield initiated a review board in 1992 to hear testimony of clergy sex abuse victims, as well as that of alleged abusers, veteran clinical psychologist Patricia Martin was asked to volunteer as one of the initial members.

She did for six years, sometimes weekly, motivated in part as a mother of four children wanting to protect all youngsters from abuse, but knowing the board could only recommend to the bishop which allegations were credible to remove a priest from ministry.

Last year, Martin found herself involved with the review board again — this time in support of an alleged victim who told her by way of seeking advice that he had been abused multiple times and at multiple locations. He claimed he was abused at the hands of the late Bishop Christopher J. Weldon, as well as by at least two other now deceased priests, Joseph Clarence W. Forand and Edward Authier, at St. Anne’s Parish in Chicopee.

He wanted to know if he would be doing the right thing to go before the board to tell his story and asked Martin if she would she go with him if he did.

He did and what he said in terms of allegations against Weldon is now being disputed by the diocese as never having been made to the board. Martin, who had accompanied the man, recently told the Berkshire Eagle, which that broke the story, that the Springfield diocese is “lying” to protect Weldon, who served as its fourth bishop from 1950 through 1977 and built many of its schools and churches.

“This is the story he told,” said Martin of what the alleged victim told the board in June 2018. He confirmed it again through Martin on Monday for The Republican.

“In my 35 years of being a clinical psychologist, this was the worst abuse I heard of a darling little boy,” she said.

“This survivor had repressed memories that began to surface about six years ago and he came to feel he had to go to the church and tell them,” said Martin who said she felt the need to speak out as a practicing Catholic, as well as for the victim whom she said was not ready to be interviewed by the press, but was willing to have details of his abuse disclosed by her.

The alleged victim, after several years of counseling on his own, approached diocesan officials in 2015, Martin said. He told them of his abuse and sought reimbursement for his counseling.

In April 2018, she said he recounted his story to the investigator who meets with alleged victims on behalf of the review board. That same month, the man met with Martin and two of his friends to discuss appearing before the review board.

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.

Abuse victims blast Catholic officials

MEMPHIS (TN)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

They ‘out’ 2 more local abuser clerics

Both worked in Memphis but are ‘under the radar’

But the diocese won’t post a ‘credibly accused’ list

Most other bishops in the US have already done so

“Include a serial predator who was at a local school,” SNAP says

And group urges Tennessee’s AG to investigate all TN dioceses

WHAT:

Holding signs at a sidewalk news conference, clergy molestation victims will disclose the names and information about two more credibly alleged pedophile priests who were in Memphis, neither of whom have attracted any public or media attention in the area.

They will also blast Memphis Catholic officials for refusing to

–post names of credibly accused clerics and

–disclose a predator priest who was at a Memphis school.

They will call on Memphis’ bishop to reveal these alleged offenders’ names, photos, whereabouts and work histories immediately.

And they’ll call on current and former Catholic employees to ‘speak up’ about suspicions of child sex crimes and cover ups, in light of a new global church policy that says it’s their duty to do so.

WHEN:

Monday, June 10 at 200 p.m.

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 Demands Transparency in Transfer of Msgr. Frank Rossi

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests

June 10, 2019

Beaumont’s Catholic bishop let a priest into his diocese who had been accused of sexually exploiting a vulnerable adult parishioner for years. Now, he must fully and publicly disclose what steps he took in vetting the cleric prior to assigning him to a parish.

Bishop Curtis Guillory accepted a close aide of Houston’s Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, Msgr. Frank Rossi, into the Beaumont diocese. The bishop then put him to work in an East Texas parish.

Yet a detailed Associated Press story, based in part on years of email exchanges, reveals that Msgr. Rossi reportedly manipulated and abused a devout married woman who he was counseling. In Texas and some other states, that is a crime.

A recent story in a Catholic publication confirms that a formal complaint about Msgr. Rossi’s alleged abuse has been filed with the Vatican.

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.

Zanchetta formally charged with abusing seminarians

LONDON (ENGLAND)
Catholic Herald

June 10, 2019

A bishop close to Pope Francis has been formally charged with sexually assaulting two seminarians.

Bishop Gustavo Zanchetta has been barred from leaving Argentina and must undergo a psychological evaluation later this week, according to InfoCatólica. He faces between three and ten years in prison if convicted.

Zanchetta, who was one of Pope Francis’s first appointments in his home country, was first accused of “strange behaviour” in 2015 when pornographic pictures, including naked selfies, were found on his phone.

The Vatican initially claimed it only knew of complaints against Zanchetta in 2018, but a former vicar general of the bishop’s diocese said he first reported Zanchetta in 2015.

“It was an alarm that we made to the Holy See via some friendly bishops. The nunciature didn’t intervene directly, but the Holy Father summoned Zanchetta and he justified himself saying that his cellphone had been hacked, and that there were people who were out to damage the image of the Pope.”

Pope Francis allowed Zanchetta to resign as Bishop of Orán in August 2017. The Vatican Press Office gave no reason for Zanchetta’s resignation at the time, but the bishop cited ill health. In December that year, Pope Francis appointed him to as Assessor to the Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, a position specially created for him.

In a recent interview, Pope Francis confirmed there is also a canonical investigation of Zanchetta. “Before I asked for his resignation, there was an accusation, and I immediately made him come over with the person who accused him and explain it,” the Pope 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.

Group to hold press conference calling on resignation of Cardinal DiNardio as president of U.S. bishops

HOUSTON (TX)
KHOU Channel 11

June 10, 2019

By Chloe Alexander

The Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, better known as SNAP, is expected to hold a press conference Monday afternoon calling for the resignation of Cardinal DiNardo as president of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, USCCB.

This comes after Cardinal DiNardo was accused of covering up a case in which his deputy allegedly manipulated a woman into a sexual relationship, even as the deputy counseled the woman’s husband on their marriage and solicited their donations, according to the Associated Press.

“We believe Cardinal DiNardo no longer possesses the moral authority to lead this organization,” the group said in a brief statement.

The allegations against DiNardo came days before he presides over the 2019 USCCB Spring General Assembly in Baltimore. The assembly, which will adopt new accountability measures, will be held from June 11-14.

The SNAP press conference will start at 3:30 p.m. in front of the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart.

We plan on streaming the press conference live on our website and our Facebook, Twitter and YouTube accounts.

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.

Californian exclusive: Suspended priest Craig Harrison, back from self-exile, formulates his defense

BAKERSFIELD (CA)
Bakersfield Californian

June 10, 2019

By Robert Price

“Welcome to the bat cave,” Monsignor Craig Harrison’s attorney announced. “Look up here.”

Three large, brown sheets of easel paper were taped to the wall of the small, bare office, furnished only with a simple desk and two facing, upright chairs. Harrison, wearing a crisply ironed short-sleeve shirt, slid into the chair facing his lawyer. He looked to be 10 pounds lighter than the Father Craig his parishioners would remember.

Kyle Humphrey gestured toward the wall, where the easel paper had been arranged into one giant, blue-felt-tip scrawl of numbered names and dates. Blue lines connected some of the names to other names and some of the dates to other dates.

This was more war room than bat cave. This was the bunker, just across the hall from Humphrey’s cluttered office, where, for weeks now, he has been formulating a defense for his most celebrated client, a popular priest suspended from his clerical duties while investigators look into allegations of sexual impropriety.

“Now look,” Humphrey said again, and the lawyerly lecture began.

Humphrey has looked at hundreds of cases, both as a prosecutor and, for most of the past 30 years, a defense lawyer, but none have been anything like this: a trial, of sorts, with no reliably traveled path to exoneration.

Harrison, a gregarious, highly visible monsignor, was suspended April 24 by the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno, which announced it was revisiting accusations that Harrison had inappropriately touched a teenager while working at a Catholic church in Firebaugh in the 1990s. A second man contacted the diocese a few days later, also alleging “inappropriate behavior.”

Harrison was still recovering from an exhausting succession of Masses and other Easter weekend events when, that Tuesday night, he received a call from the diocese requesting his presence in Fresno the next morning.

“He just said, ‘I need to talk to you,'” Harrison said of his phone conversation with Bishop Armando Ochoa. “‘Can you come down?’ I said, ‘I have a funeral (to officiate).’ And he says, ‘Can you get out of it?'”

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.

Regarding Reverends Patrick Casey, Lawrence Ventline and Neil Kalina, PIME

DETROIT (MI)
Archdiocese of Detroit [Detroit MI]

June 10, 2019

Read original article

The Michigan Attorney General on Friday announced criminal charges against Rev. Patrick Casey and Rev. Neil Kalina, PIME, as well as licensing action against Rev. Lawrence Ventline, priests who served in the Archdiocese of Detroit and previously had been removed from ministry. The Archdiocese of Detroit appreciates this update and offers the following information:

The allegation against Rev. Patrick Casey (photo), a priest of the Archdiocese of Detroit, was brought to the Archdiocese in 2015. The complainant was an adult at the time of the alleged incident. We removed Casey from ministry at that time and entered into the canonical process appropriate for this allegation. That process remains ongoing and is pending in Rome.

While restricted from ministry, Casey is prohibited from representing himself as a priest, wearing clerical attire or exercising any form of church ministry. Like any cleric restricted from ministry in the Archdiocese of Detroit, he is monitored to ensure compliance with church restrictions.The allegation was included in the material collected by the Attorney General’s Office in the fall of 2018.

Fr. Patrick Casey
Fr. Patrick Casey

The allegation against Rev. Lawrence Ventline (photo), a priest of the Archdiocese of Detroit, was brought to the Archdiocese in 2016. Per our agreement with the six-county prosecutors in the Archdiocese, we turned over the complaint to the Oakland County Prosecutor’s Office. We were authorized by Oakland County to move forward with our canonical review and Ventline was restricted from public ministry at that time. Prior to his restriction from ministry, Ventline had not been assigned to full-time parish ministry for nearly 20 years.

Since 2016, the Archdiocese of Detroit has worked with the Oakland County Sheriff’s Office, the local police department and the individual who reported abuse against Ventline. While restricted from ministry, Ventline is prohibited from representing himself as a priest, wearing clerical attire, exercising any form of church ministry. The Archdiocese had no authority to restrict his counseling license. Like any cleric restricted from ministry in the Archdiocese of Detroit, he is monitored to ensure compliance with church restrictions.

The allegation was included in the material collected by the Attorney General’s Office in the fall of 2018.

Fr. Lawrence Ventline
Fr. Lawrence Ventline

Rev. Neil Kalina, PIME was ordained in 1981 for the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions (PIME), which is a religious order that operates separately from the Archdiocese of Detroit. He left active ministry in 1993. The allegation against him was brought to the Archdiocese of Detroit in 2017. Per our agreement with the Macomb County Prosecutor’s Office, we turned over the complaint to the Shelby Township Police Department. In addition, we turned over the complaint to the PIME religious order.

The allegation was included in the material collected by the Attorney General’s Office in the fall of 2018.

Questions about the allegations and investigation should be directed to the Attorney General’s Office.

The Archdiocese of Detroit deeply regrets the pain inflicted upon victim-survivors, and offers continued prayers for their peace, healing and pursuit of justice. We continue to cooperate fully with all civil authorities, in the hope that these partnerships may pave the way toward a future of greater trust and transparency. One sinful, criminal act, especially against God’s most vulnerable and trusting children, is unacceptable and one suffering soul too many. We remain committed to preventing sexual abuse against anyone – especially children and vulnerable adults.

Individuals with knowledge of sexual abuse by clergy or other Church representatives are urged to contact local law enforcement and/or the Michigan Attorney General’s Office at (844) 324-3374 or aginvestigations@michigan.gov. Individuals also may contact the Archdiocese of Detroit by visiting protect.aod.org, calling the toll-free, 24/7 victim assistance line at (866) 343-8055 or by emailing vac@aod.org. There are no time limits or restrictions on individuals wishing to report abuse.

Editor’s Note: For additional information about how the Archdiocese of Detroit works to prevent and respond to sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable adults, please visit protect.aod.org.

Parish assignment histories

Father Patrick Casey

  • Ordained 1997
  • Chaplain, Cardinal Mooney High School in Marine City, 1997-2000
  • Parochial Vicar, St. Mary Queen of Creation Parish in New Baltimore, 1997-2000
  • Administrator, St. Dominic Parish in Detroit, 2000-2004
  • Administrator, St. Patrick Parish in Detroit, 2000-2004
  • Administrator, St. Thomas a’Becket Parish in Canton, 2004-2004
  • Pastor, St. Thomas a’Becket Parish in Canton, 2004-2012
  • Pastor, St. Theodore of Canterbury Parish in Westland, 2012-2015
  • Administrator, Divine Savior Parish in Westland, 2011-2015
  • Pastor, St. Damian Parish in Westland, 2012-2015

Father Lawrence Ventline

  • Ordained in 1976
  • Parochial Vicar, St. Raymond Parish in Detroit, 1976-1979
  • Parochial Vicar, St. Rene Goupil Parish in Sterling Heights, 1979-1981
  • Pastor, St. Christine Parish, 1981-1985
  • Parochial Vicar, Our Lady Queen of Peace Parish, 1985-1986
  • Chaplain, Madonna University, 1986-1987
  • Pastor, St. Joseph the Worker Parish in Lake Orion, 1987-1990
  • Parochial Vicar, St. Anne Parish in Warren, 1992-1994
  • Pastor, Our Lady of Sorrows Parish in Detroit, 1994-1995
  • Administrator, St. Mark Parish in Harsens Island, 1996-1997

Father Neil Kalina, PIME

  • Ordained in 1981
  • Granted faculties 1984
  • Resident at St. Kieran Parish in Utica, 1984-1986
  • Weekend assistant at St. Ephrem Parish in Sterling Heights, 1984-1986

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.

Southern Baptists’ Midlife Crisis

NEW YORK (NY)
The Atlantic

June 10, 2019

By Jonathan Merritt

In the summer of 1979, conservatives within the Southern Baptist Convention gathered in Houston for their annual meeting with the goal of seizing control of the nation’s largest Protestant denomination. These conservatives claimed that theological liberalism had taken root in the denomination’s seminaries and agencies and was taking the group down the path of heresy. Seminary professors were openly questioning the historical accuracy of some of the Bible’s miraculous stories such as Noah’s flood. Progressive churches were embracing the ordination of women and even debating accepting LGBTQ people into the life of the church. These “problems” could only be corrected by a disruptive overhaul of leadership.

To shift the balance of power, these conservatives implemented a strategy that was as simple as it was genius: recruit and assemble messengers who would attend the denomination’s annual meeting and vote for a handpicked conservative for the SBC presidency. The new president would, in turn, nominate only conservatives to serve on governing boards of seminaries and agencies. And finally, once conservatives controlled a majority share of these boards, they would replace establishment liberal leaders with conservative foot soldiers.

Some 15,000 Southern Baptist messengers gathered in Houston in 1979, and after the ballots were counted, a fiery 47-year-old conservative preacher named Adrian Rogers was elected president. His unparalleled command of rhetoric and uncompromising belief in the inerrancy of scripture made him the perfect person to inaugurate the conservative revolution. Rogers only received 51 percent of the vote over several other candidates, but that was enough. His election was the toppling of the first domino, triggering a purge of left-leaning leaders and churches from the denomination. Just like that, the Southern Baptist Convention was born again.

This week the group gathers in Birmingham, Alabama, exactly 40 years since the Southern Baptist Convention as we know it came into existence. Just like many individuals of similar age, the denomination is experiencing a bit of a midlife crisis, defined by lack of purpose and deep internal conflict. Our rapidly changing world has, in the words of Baylor University historian Barry Hankins, “thrust the group into the middle of an identity crisis.” In the early days of their revolution, conservative SBC leaders united around the common goal of defeating their left-leaning brethren. But the liberals are long gone now, leaving no enemies for these “battling Baptists” to fight—except themselves.

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.

Sexual abuse in the SBC: what will it take to prompt meaningful action?

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist News Global

June 10, 2019

By Christa Brown

For about six years between 2006 and 2012 I posted on a website the Southern Baptist clergy sex abuse cases that were publicly reported. During that time, I put together a small database of 167 cases, many with multiple victims.

With every case, I wondered: “Will this be enough? Will this finally be enough that Southern Baptist Convention officials will see the scope and horror of the problem and realize they need to do something?”

It never was. It was never enough.

Other bloggers also began posting Southern Baptist clergy sex abuse stories. And I wondered again, “Would it ever be enough?”

But it never was.

Last February, the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News published the first part of their “Abuse of Faith” series, documenting 700 victims who reported having been sexually abused by Southern Baptist clergy and church leaders.

Recent proposals “appear oriented more toward saving face for SBC officials than toward genuinely protecting kids”.

Yet again I wondered, “Would these 700 be enough?”

They weren’t.

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.

What Catholic bishops must do to prevent sexual abuse and hold clergy accountable

WASHINGTON (DC)
USA Today

June 10, 2019

By Tim Busch

Rarely do Americans pay attention to the biannual assemblies of the nation’s Roman Catholic bishops, but the gathering that starts on Tuesday in Baltimore will be different.

Millions of people, Catholic and not, are asking the same question: What new steps will the bishops take to clean up — or clean out — the church after years of sex abuse scandals?

This is a question the bishops take seriously. At its meeting last November, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) was ready to vote on measures that would increase accountability for church leaders. While the Vatican intervened at the 11th hour, it did so because it was preparing to release reforms of its own, which were unveiled in May.

The Vatican’s new policy is a big step in the right direction. Rome has also been working much closer with the U.S. church to penalize bad actors. But America’s bishops should see it as a starting point, not the final word. Building on Pope Francis’ good actions, the USCCB should pass long overdue reforms that give regular Catholics — known as “lay Catholics” — a greater role in keeping bishops and priests accountable.

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.

SBC advisory panel issues sexual abuse report

BIRMINGHAM (AL)
Baptist Press

June 8, 2019

By Tom Strode

The Southern Baptist Sexual Abuse Advisory Study issued a report Saturday after 10 months of work with the hope that God will use it to “spark a movement of healing and reform.”

The 52-page report — produced by a fluid study group formed last July by new Southern Baptist Convention President J.D. Greear — was released three days before the SBC’s annual meeting in Birmingham, Ala. Sexual abuse has been increasingly revealed to be a significant problem among Southern Baptists the last two years, and it will be a focus before and during the meeting. The Advisory Study will make a presentation at the SBC meeting Wednesday afternoon.

The Advisory Study, which worked in collaboration with the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC), conducted interviews with hundreds of sexual abuse survivors, as well as church leaders and national experts in the field, according to the report. The report — which includes testimonies from several survivors — seeks “to begin to educate our churches on the abuse crisis, equip our churches to care well for survivors, and prepare our churches to prevent abuse.”

While acknowledging the report is not intended to be either exhaustive or “fully prescriptive,” the Advisory Study says one of its aims “is to begin to illuminate the evil that has occurred within our midst by sharing the stories of survivors of sexual abuse.” The report expresses gratitude to the “brave men and women” who told their stories of abuse so the SBC could understand the scope of the “sexual abuse crisis” it faces.

“We must not rest until Southern Baptist churches are places where [the dignity of being an image bearer of God] has been restored to survivors of sexual abuse and where leadership at all levels fights against the scourge of sexual abuse in all its forms and never covers over or protects abusers,” the report says. “We are committed to becoming churches that are safe for survivors and safe from abuse.”

Greear said the report “is a good first step at capturing where we have come from and where we must go to serve the vulnerable.”

“At its core, the Gospel is about God’s commitment to protect the vulnerable,” Greear said in written comments for Baptist Press. “The cross shows us that He is a safe refuge for all who run to Him. What greater lie could we tell about the Gospel than for us not to be doing whatever it takes to make our churches a safe place for the vulnerable?”

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.

Top Catholic Priest Under Investigation for Relationship With Parishioner

Daily Beast

June 8, 2019

By Emily Shugerman

A top priest in the Texas Catholic Church is under investigation for allegedly carrying on a sexual relationship with a woman from whom he received confession, according to the Associated Press. Houston resident Laura Pontikes accused Monsignor Frank Rossi of coercing her into a sexual relationship while continuing to absolve her sins—one of the most serious crimes in Catholic law. She also accused Galveston-Houston Archbishop Daniel DiNardo—who is leading the church’s response to the sexual abuse crisis in the U.S.—of mishandling the case by allowing Rossi to stay in the ministry. Rossi was removed from the Houston parish following Pontikes’ complaint, but allowed him to return to another diocese after completing treatment. The Galveston-Houston archdiocese has criticized news reports of the issue as biased and one-sided, and maintains that the relationship was consensual. The archdiocese added this week that the confession aspect was a “new development” that would be “thoroughly reviewed in accordance with canon law.” Houston police are also investigating.

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.

‘Caring Well Challenge’ on abuse launched

NASHVILLE (TN)
Baptist Press

June 9, 2019

By Tom Strode

The Southern Baptist effort to address sexual abuse in churches has taken another step with the launch of the “Caring Well Challenge,” a joint call for congregations to become equipped to prevent predatory behavior and to care for survivors.

The Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission (ERLC) and the Sexual Abuse Advisory Study announced the cost-free initiative Thursday. They issued an invitation to all Southern Baptist churches to participate. All the convention’s entities, more than 35 Southern Baptist state conventions, and many Baptist associations and colleges have endorsed the “Caring Well Challenge,” according to an ERLC release.

The ERLC and the Sexual Abuse Advisory Study — which was named by Southern Baptist Convention President J.D. Greear — also have collaborated with LifeWay Christian Resources to produce “Becoming a Church That Cares Well for the Abused.” The new, free multimedia resource is a comprehensive training curriculum that consists of a handbook with 12 video lessons from experts in a variety of areas.

Regarding the “Caring Well Challenge,” Greear makes an appeal to churches to participate in a video on the initiative’s website, caringwell.com

“The ‘Caring Well Challenge’ provides your church with a pathway to start engaging the problem of abuse,” Greear says. “This is an opportunity for you to say, ‘Yes, yes, our church is ready to do whatever it takes to confront the abuse crisis and to care for the abused.'”

ERLC President Russell Moore acknowledged in a news release announcing the challenge, “There is no quick fix for an issue as complex as church sexual abuse. But this initiative is an outstanding step designed to join our churches together in a common cause.

“Over the last year, I’ve spoken with hundreds of pastors and leaders who are determined to make this issue a priority in their churches, but are looking for tools and training,” Moore said. “That’s exactly what this challenge is designed to provide.

It has been a joy to partner with so many survivors and experts across many fields to design training that will give churches tools to act immediately.”

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.

What to watch at the 2019 Southern Baptist Convention

HUEYTOWN (AL)
Capstone Report

June 9, 2019

The Southern Baptist Convention’s Annual Meeting takes place this week in Birmingham, Alabama. The meeting sessions begin Tuesday, June 11, and conclude Wednesday, June 12. Sex abuse scandals will no doubt be an important topic as the SBC wrestles the abuse problem in the church and the way Baptists should respond. Reports on this have already been prepared for messengers. Expect this to be where the mainstream press focuses their attention. Key question: Will it be PR or something substantive that arises out of Birmingham?

Activities around the Convention begin Sunday evening with the start of the Pastor’s Conference. During the Monday session of the Pastor’s Conference, McLean Bible Church pastor David Platt will speak. Platt warmly and respectfully prayed for President Donald Trump June 2, but then flubbed the aftermath giving credence to complaints from angry partisans. Jerry Falwell, Jr. told Platt to Act like a man during the furor that followed. Platt’s time in Birmingham will be calm in contrast to the political furor his error created. Of course, church staff are only making the troubles worse, as an Associate Pastor at McLean Bible Church insulted conservative Christians in a Facebook post.

Also, on Monday, there are two big events at the Westin Hotel Ballroom involving Founders’ Ministries—a seminar on Mature Manhood in an Immature Age followed by Founder’s Executive Director Dr. Tom Ascol debating Dr. Dwight McKissic on the topic of complementarianism and if women should preach. Monday evening, the G3 Conference is hosting a symposium on Social Justice and its dangers to evangelicalism.

These are important meetings on Monday at the Westin: Social Justice is a threat to evangelicalism and attention to it is important. The discussion of egalitarianism is now reaching a critical juncture in the Southern Baptist Convention. It should not surprise, that many of the Woke Social Justice Warriors are the same ones promoting women preachers. That’s how Intersectional allies operate. These meetings are part of an effort holding back the tide of Leftism sweeping into the Convention from the cultural sea. Worth watching what happens here.

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.

Harmful Language

PITTSBURGH (PA)
Post Gazette

June 8, 2019

Diocese of Providence Bishop Thomas Tobin said in a recent tweet “that Catholics should not support or attend LGBTQ ‘Pride Month’ events held in June. They promote a culture and encourage activities that are contrary to Catholic faith and morals. They are especially harmful for children” (June 4 online, “R.I. Bishop Tobin’s Stance Against Pride Month Spurs Criticism”).

He added that his “obligation before God is to lead the faithful entrusted to my care and to teach the faith, clearly and compassionately.”

Did Bishop Tobin speak out “clearly” when his own all-male brother bishops and cardinals were preserving their clerical power structure by moving around pedophile priests? His silence and that of others in his feckless fraternity was and is especially harmful to children. In fact, they violently tormented thousands of children. But he still enjoys the trappings of false institutional power in misleading the faithful. Their own sense about sexuality diverges significantly from the tone-deaf rantings of leaders like Bishop Tobin.

Comparing the love I have witnessed in the LGBTQ community with the abuses of power among the bishops, I have no doubt who better exhibits the “Catholic faith and morals.”

Jesus rebuked the hierarchy of his time as shown in Matthew 23: “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You give a tenth of your spices — mint, dill and cumin. But you have neglected the more important matters of the law — justice, mercy and faithfulness.” Before feeling a need to lead the faithful, Bishop Tobin should lead himself and his brother bishops in repenting for the church’s sins of complicity and silence. The spirit of God can lead the faithful just fine, thank you. And they wonder why the pews are emptying.

Scott Fabean
Mt. Lebanon

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.

Lawsuit: Chaplain for Department of Youth Affairs sexually abused 14-year-old boy

GUAM
Pacific Daily News

June 10, 2019

By Haidee V. Eugenio

A priest who was serving as a chaplain for the Department of Youth Affairs allegedly sexually abused one of the boys incarcerated at the Mangilao facility for young juveniles years ago, according to a lawsuit filed in federal court on Monday.

The lawsuit, filed by a plaintiff identified in court documents only as BBB to protect his privacy, says former Guam priest Andrew Mannetta abused the boy when he was 14 years old.

Mannetta invited BBB to accompany him to his room at the friary in Sinajana to change his clothes, the lawsuit says.

That’s where the priest abused the boy by touching his private part and doing a sexual act on him, the lawsuit says.

“Plaintiff resisted Mannetta’s act but was too small to stop the abuse,” the lawsuit says. The boy became resentful towards the DYA chaplain after the incident, the complaint says.

BBB, represented by attorney David Lujan, demands $5 million in minimum damages.

The plaintiff named Mannetta and the Capuchin Franciscans as among defendants, along with up to 47 other unnamed defendants.

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.

June 9, 2019

El acuerdo entre obispos que selló la llegada a Cochamó de sacerdote sancionado por abuso en EEUU

SALTA (ARGENTINA)
BioBioChile [Santiago, Chile]

June 9, 2019

By Manuel Stuardo

Read original article

“El sábado 5 de mayo asumió como Administrador Parroquial de la parroquia María Inmaculada de Cochamó, el presbítero Roberto Barco, procedente de la Diócesis de Chascomús (Argentina). La santa misa fue presidida por el Arzobispo, Monseñor Cristián Caro y participaron en ella el párroco saliente, P. Omar Sandoval, el Diácono Juan Gustavo Cárcamo, además de autoridades civiles y representantes de las comunidades que integran la parroquia, que abarca un total de 17 capillas”.

Así comienza la publicación de la página web de Iglesia.cl del 08 de mayo de 2018, cuando Roberto Barco asumió el cargo, sin embargo, no aparece ninguna mención sobre la sanción por abuso sexual a menor que pesaba en su contra, cuando se desempeñaba en la diócesis de San Bernardino de California, Estados Unidos. 

Según la página de la arquidiócesis norteamericana de Los Ángeles, en 2016 recibieron un informe de la diócesis local, que constataba la denuncia de una mujer de entonces 16 años, que acusaba haber sido violada por Barco cuando tenía entre 9 y 10 años.

Ese mismo año fue investigado y denunciado a la policía, sin embargo, no se presentaron cargos en su contra y fue devuelto a la Diócesis de Chascomús en Argentina, desde donde era oriundo.

Luego que esto se informara a las parroquias correspondientes, dos hombres denunciaron una posible mala conducta o acoso en la arquidiócesis, lo que terminó en que los documentos fueran revisados y enviados a su diócesis de origen.https://d1ab3bbf37bb27e943cbdb4ec1949147.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-40/html/container.html

Finalmente estas llegaron al Vaticano, desde donde recomendaron un proceso canónico.

Lista de sacerdotes acusados de abusos sexuales a menores

En octubre de 2018, la Diócesis de San Bernardino de California publicó un listado con sacerdotes acusados de abuso sexual infantildesde 1978.

De los 34 clérigos que aparecían publicados en la lista, 14 estaban muertos, a cinco se les prohibió ejercer el sacerdocio y otros 14 fueron excluidos permanente de la Diócesis de San Bernardino. Entre ellos estaba Roberto Barco.

Según el medio norteamericano The Desert Sun, en septiembre se agregaron ocho sacerdotes a otra lista de presuntos depredadores sexuales.

Gerald Barnes, obispo de la diócesis norteamericana, publicó un video confirmando la existencia de dicha lista y llamó a las personas a entregar información sobre sacerdotes acusados en caso de abusos. 

“He tomado la decisión de publicar una lista de los nombres de todos los sacerdotes que han ministrado en la Diócesis de San Bernardino que tienen acusaciones creíbles de abuso sexual de un menor durante nuestros 40 años como diócesis”, señaló Barnes en el video.

Barco llegó a Cochamó en 2018, luego que el arzobispo de Puerto Montt de ese entonces, monseñor Cristián Caro, llegara a un acuerdo con el monseñor Carlos Malfa, obispo de Chascomús en Argentina. 

Esto fue el 05 de mayo de 2018. Asumió el cargo frente a diversos representantes eclesiásticos, autoridades civiles y creyentes de la zona. 

El administrador apostólico de Puerto Montt, Ricardo Morales, confirmó que solicitaron más antecedentes, por lo que determinó suspender a Roberto Barco. 

Incluso señaló que en 2017 la Congregación por la Doctrina de la Fe determinó que el obispo de Chascomús amonestara al presbítero, luego que concluyera una investigación previa por abuso sexual contra un menor de edad. Esta no privó a Barco de ejercer como sacerdote.

Un punto no menor, es que se enteraron por la prensa de la sanción que pesaba en contra del sacerdote.

Ese mismo año, tras la renuncia de Cristian Caro, se destapó una serie de denuncias por encubrimiento en casos de abusos sexuales a menores en Puerto Montt, que tenían como principal protagonista al mencionado arzobispo. 

Según una publicación de Ciper Chile, la renuncia de Caro no habría sido coincidencia luego de la polémica que generó el caso de Juan Barros en Osorno, y que terminó con una investigación solicitada por el mismo papa Francisco y una reunión donde todos los obispos del país presentaron su renuncia.

En enero de 2019, tras la salida de Cristian Caro, el papa Francisco nombró como visitador apostólico a Jorge Carlos Patrón Wong, secretario de Seminarios de la Congregación, por denuncias de abuso, tráfico y apropiación indebida. 

Incluso Ricardo Morales fue quien denunció algunos de los casos relacionados a apropiación.

En el caso de Caro, este es acusado de limitar una investigación contra el sacerdote Marcelo González, acusado de abusar de dos menores de edad y de un seminarista. En éste último, el exarzobispo habría tomado la decisión de reunirlos, hacer que se tomen de las manos para que recen, superando con eso el “conflicto”.

Caro se defendió señalando que la investigación de las denuncias llegaban a la Santa Sede y que se le encargaba investigar a Ivo Scapolo, y que no pasaban por el Arzobispado de Puerto Montt.

Según el medio argentino La Nación, en Chascomús se rechazaron los cargos contra Barco en Los Ángeles. Incluso agrega que allá “no se registra ninguna denuncia de conductas impropias de Barco con personas menores de edad”. 

Desde la Conferencia Episcopal en Chile le señalaron a La Nación que ellos no recibieron formalmente alguna acusación contra Roberto Barco.

El aludido les dijo que espera “volver a Los Ángeles (EEUU)”.

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.

AS SAN FRANCISCO DISTRICT ATTORNEY, KAMALA HARRIS’S OFFICE STOPPED COOPERATING WITH VICTIMS OF CATHOLIC CHURCH CHILD ABUSE

TIJUANA (MEXICO)
The Intercept [New York City NY]

June 9, 2019

By Lee Fang

Read original article

Thanks to Kamala Harris’s predecessor, the San Francisco DA’s office had files on clergy sex abusers. But Harris refused to share them with victims.

KAMALA HARRIS, SURROUNDED by thousands of cheering supporters, kicked off her presidential campaign in Oakland earlier this year, declaring that she has always fought “on behalf of survivors of sexual assault, a fight not just against predators but a fight against silence and stigma.”

Fighting on behalf of victims of sexual abuse, particularly children, has been central to Harris’s political identity for the better part of three decades. Harris specialized in prosecuting sex crimes and child exploitation as a young prosecutor just out of law school. She later touted her record on child sexual abuse cases and prosecuting pedophiles in television advertisementssplashy profiles, and on the trail as she campaigned for public office.

But when it came to taking on the Catholic Church, survivors of clergy sexual abuse say that Harris turned a blind eye, refusing to take action against clergy members accused of sexually abusing children when it meant confronting one of the city’s most powerful political institutions.

When Harris became San Francisco district attorney in 2004, she took over an office that had been working closely with survivors of sexual abuse to pursue cases against the Catholic Church. The office and the survivors were in the middle of a legal battle to hold predatory priests accountable, and Harris inherited a collection of personnel files involving allegations of sexual abuse by priests and employees of the San Francisco Archdiocese, which oversees church operations in San Francisco, and Marin and San Mateo counties.

The files had been compiled by investigators working under the direction of Terence Hallinan, the radical district attorney who Harris ousted in a contentiouselection campaign. Hallinan’s team had prosecuted cases of abuse that had occurred decades earlier and had gathered evidence as part of a probe into widespread clergy sexual misconduct.

“It went from Terence Hallinan going hundred miles an hour, full speed ahead, after the Catholic Church to Kamala Harris doing absolutely nothing.”

Just six months before Harris took office, a U.S. Supreme Court decision overturned a California law that had retroactively eliminated the statute of limitations for criminal prosecution of child molestation cases. That shifted the focus to holding predators among the clergy accountable through civil cases and through a broader effort to bring attention to predators who had been shielded by the church.

Hallinan believed that the clergy abuse files were a matter of public record; Harris refused to release them to the public.

In her seven years as district attorney, Harris’s office did not proactively assist in civil cases against clergy sex abuse and ignored requests by activists and survivors to access the cache of investigative files that could have helped them secure justice, according to several victims of clergy sex abuse living in California who spoke to The Intercept.

“It went from Terence Hallinan going hundred miles an hour, full speed ahead, after the Catholic Church to Kamala Harris doing absolutely nothing and taking it backwards hundred miles an hour,” said Joey Piscitelli, a sexual assault survivor, who a jury found had been molested as a student while attending Salesian College Preparatory, a Catholic high school in Richmond, California.

Piscitelli had met with Hallinan’s office to discuss his case and the ongoing investigation into the church. But, he said, when Harris took over, his access to the office was shut off and his requests for clergy abuse files were ignored. Piscitelli resorted to handing out flyers and picketing outside the district attorney’s office on San Francisco’s McAllister Street.

Dominic De Lucca, a Burlingame, California, resident who says he was raped by a local priest when he was 12 years old, also said he was shocked that Harris declined to aggressively pursue clergy abuse cases and refused to release the files. “I remember Kamala Harris,” said De Lucca. “She didn’t want to have any meetings.” He went on, “She wanted the public to think this is an issue that happened years ago, that it doesn’t happen anymore. Let’s just move on.”

Terence McAteer, a resident of Nevada City, California, says he was raped as a child by Austin Peter Keegan, an infamous San Francisco priest. McAteer said he sees no value in Harris’s decision to conceal the clergy abuse files, which had been used to indict his abuser but remain secret to this day. “Why not tell the story?” said McAteer. “I have no problem with my file being released. I don’t have any great secrets. It’s already in the newspaper. I think the whole cloak of secrecy with the Catholic Church needs to be exposed.”

Kevin V. Ryan, the former U.S. Attorney for Northern California who worked with Hallinan’s office on the clergy abuse cases, also agreed that the files should be disclosed. “Credible allegations in my opinion should be released,” said Ryan. “I think they should be made public and I think it’s necessary not only for accountability but for the healing process to begin.”

Several survivors of clergy abuse said they believed that Harris had declined to release the files in deference to the Catholic Church, which has historically held sway as a major political force in San Francisco.

“The Roman Catholic Church is very powerful and I think they didn’t want to step on any toes, especially in San Francisco,” said De Lucca, citing the influence of former Archbishop William Levada, who oversaw the archdiocese when Harris was district attorney.

Harris’s presidential campaign did not respond to multiple requests for comment from The Intercept.

Mike Brown, director of communications at the San Francisco Archdiocese, said that his office has “cooperated with every district attorney and attorney general request for records every time.” Brown said he did not believe that the archdiocese attempted to influence the Harris’s decision not to release the clergy abuse files. He added that it was not his place to comment on her decisions. “What was in Kamala Harris’s head?” he said. “I don’t think I have any way of knowing that.”

The Catholic Church casts a long shadow over San Francisco politics, despite the city’s national reputation for social liberalism and counterculture. Generations of politicians have relied on the endorsement of the archdiocese, which maintained strong support among Irish, Italian, and Latin American immigrant communities.

David Talbot, a columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle and longtime observer of city politics, said, “The San Francisco Archdiocese certainly — through Kamala’s days as district attorney and through the current day — wields significant influence in the city power structure.”

THE NATIONAL FOCUS on clergy sex abuse came in large part as a reaction to the shocking revelations of the 2002 Boston Globe series on clergy sex abuse in the Boston-area. The investigation revealed that, under the leadership of Cardinal Bernard Law, the Boston Archdiocese covered up for more than 70 priests accused of sexually assaulting children. Following the Globe’s report, media outlets across the country began investigations and found that local church leadership in various locations similarly failed to inform law enforcement of known pedophiles in the clergy and, in some cases, shifted abusers from parish to parish.

Hallinan’s pursuit brought forward a wave of victims who said they had been raped or molested by clergy over the years.

Hallinan’s pursuit brought forward a wave of victims who said they had been raped or molested by clergy over the years.

Hallinan, in his role as district attorney, responded to the story by requesting that the San Francisco Archdiocese provide 75 years of personnel files relating to sex abuse cases. “We want anything they have in their records,” Hallinan told reporters at the time. “We will see if there are enforceable cases, and if there are, we will prosecute.”

The effort made headlines — and engendered some criticism. The San Francisco Chronicle, for instance, editorialized that the investigation was merely a “fishing expedition.” Hallinan’s pursuit, though, also brought forward a wave of victims who said they had been raped or molested by clergy over the years. Just months after opening his inquiry, Hallinan used a grand jury to begin issuing indictments.

The Catholic Church personnel files collected by Hallinan were used to indict Keegan. The internal church records suggest that Keegan may have molested as many as 80 local children over the years. Keegan presided over the funeral of McAteer’s father, a prominent local San Francisco politician, who passed away in 1967. Over the following summer, Keegan brought McAteer to the Disneyland Hotel, where he allegedly molested and sodomized him.

The San Francisco Archdiocese spent $2.4 million defending Keegan from previous lawsuits over molestation accusations and continued paying the former priest a $900-per-month stipend after he left the priesthood. The former priest relocated to an orphanage in Mexico and was later apprehended by FBI agents to stand trial in San Francisco over Hallinan’s criminal charges.

While Hallinan was pursuing his investigation, McAteer spoke to Kevin Ryan, the former federal prosecutor, about the case. “It was Kevin who phoned me up,” said McAteer, “to tell me Hallinan had just gotten all the records from the archdiocese and they opened up the files, and — Kevin’s words, I can still hear them: ‘The fattest file was Peter Keegan.’”

During the investigation, Hallinan’s office issued an indictment for Salvatore “Sal” Billante, who had allegedly molested a teenager and allegedly witnessed the abuse against Piscitelli in Richmond before working as a youth pastor in San Francisco.

Rev. Patrick J. O’Shea, another former priest indicted by Hallinan, had faced decades of accusations that he groomed altar boys at various Catholic institutions across San Francisco, including Mission Dolores Basilica. O’Shea was accused of regularly bringing children to a lake house outside the city, where he would ply them with alcohol and molest them.

De Lucca, one of several men who accused O’Shea, said the former priest molested him on a trip to the lake house in 1978 when he was 12 years old. Other victims have said they were molested over 100 times by O’Shea at church facilities in the city and at the lake house.

THE WAVE OF criminal indictments meant that the San Francisco Archdiocese, under Levada, was suddenly facing repercussions. It could not have come as a total surprise to Levada, who had his own history of dealing with alleged abuses in the clergy’s ranks.

Levada had previously served as the archbishop of Portland, a role in which he had briefly removed Joseph Baccellieri, a priest accused of molesting a child, in 1992 — only to restore him two years later. According to the newspaper SF Weekly, Levada quietly provided payments to three male victims in exchange for their silence and a pledge not to sue the archdiocese. The Portland Archdiocese later became the first Catholic diocese to file for bankruptcy over child sex abuse scandals as it paid out over $50 million to settle hundreds of claims.

A few years later, in 1995, Levada left Portland to become archbishop of San Francisco. He learned in 1996 that a Marin County priest, Gregory Ingels, had been accused of sexually assaulting a 15-year-old boy. Still, Ingels was allowed to continue working and the matter was not reported to police. Instead, Ingels’s career flourished as the priest became an adviser to Levada, helping the church leader shape his approach to clergy sex abuse issues. Ingels was later brought up on molestation charges, including molesting two teenagers in the 1970s.

Nonetheless, Levada’s star would continue to rise in the church. In 2005, Pope Benedict XVI named Levada as the guardian of church doctrine, elevating the archbishop to one of the most powerful posts in the Vatican.

Toward the end of Levada’s 10-year tenure in San Francisco, the church faced a reprieve from Hallinan’s investigations. As church officials and former clergy members faced a slew of criminal charges, prosecutors faced a setback when, in June 2003, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned a 1994 California law that had extended the criminal statute of limitations in sex abuse cases — the law under which indictments had been issued against clergy members. Following the Supreme Court’s ruling, hundredsof accused abusers across the state walked free, including priests and clergy indicted in San Francisco such as O’Shea, Ingels, Keegan, and Billiante. Because the criminal cases came to a halt, the accusations made against these clergy could not be tried, and no finding of guilt was ever made.

The high-court ruling closed the door on criminal prosecutions over abuse that occurred in the past, but a new avenue remained open for civil cases. As Hallinan’s investigations unfolded in 2002, state Sen. John Burton, who represented San Francisco, authored legislation to waive the statute of limitations in civil cases, allowing victims of childhood sexual abuse a chance to seek justice in court with a one-year window to file suit.

The church, then under the leadership of Levada, the archbishop, characterized the effort to extend the statute of limitations as a plot to line the pockets of trial lawyers. The archdiocese newspaper, Catholic San Francisco, responded to Burton’s law with an article warning of a “swarm of lawsuits” as “lawyers aggressively seek sex abuse business.”

But the law was quickly passed. In 2003, hundreds of survivors including Piscitelli filed civil lawsuits against their alleged abusers, under the condition that they could show that the employers of abusers had known of allegations of misconduct and failed to act.

AS THE DRAMA of the church sex abuse cases was unfolding in 2003, Kamala Harris waged a bitter campaign to win the district attorney’s office, alleging that Hallinan had been “soft on crime.” Much of the old guard of San Francisco’s political establishment, which had grown wary of Hallinan’s pugnacious style and investigations of political leaders and police misconduct, backed Harris. The election went to runoff, which Harris handily won.

As the dust settled over the election campaign, hundreds of survivors were shifting their focus to civil court, hoping that they could take advantage of Burton’s law to hold the Catholic Church responsible for shielding predators.

Because Piscitelli, De Lucca, and other survivors had spoken with Hallinan’s investigators, they were surprised when the new district attorney’s office appeared to shift course and declined to meet with them. “My jaw just dropped,” said De Lucca, who was by then working with the activist group Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. “SNAP was very upset about it.”

“We were told office policy was we can’t provide you with anything.”

Because Piscitelli, De Lucca, and other survivors had spoken with Hallinan’s investigators, they were surprised when the new district attorney’s office appeared to shift course and declined to meet with them. “My jaw just dropped,” said De Lucca, who was by then working with the activist group Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests. “SNAP was very upset about it.”

About a year after Harris took office, Piscitelli, whose lawsuit was already underway, wrote Harris to ask for assistance in his case against the Salesians of Don Bosco, the church institution that oversaw the school where he was abused. In the letter, which he shared with The Intercept, Piscitelli noted that his alleged abuser, Steven Whelan, was working at the Saints Peter and Paul Church in San Francisco, a position that placed him in an environment filled with children.

“I know you have files on clergy sex abusers in San Francisco, and you may have a file on him. Please send me that file,” wrote Piscitelli. “Several San Francisco Salesians, and other priests are being sued for sex abuse now, and you may be able to help their victims, and protect other kids from being new victims.”

When no response came, Piscitelli, who had become a volunteer activist with SNAP, began posting flyers and picketed the offices of the district attorney, accusing her of cozy ties with Levada, then the top Catholic official in the city.

Without any help from Harris, Piscitelli continued to pursue his case. During the trial, which took place in Contra Costa County in 2006, Piscitelli testified that when he was 14, Whelan, a teacher and vice principal at Salesian High School in Richmond, had masturbated in front of him while another priest, “Sal” Billante, had watched and expressed pleasure. The jury found that from 1969 through 1971, Whelan continued to molest and rape Piscitelli and told him that no one would believe him if he spoke out.

The trial made headlines as the church sought to discredit Piscitelli, but he won his case. In 2006, a jury awarded him $600,000 in damages. The Salesian order appealed the verdict, but an appellate court sided with Piscitelli.

By the time the judgment came down, Piscitelli had become a coordinator with SNAP and was continuing with his activism to highlight sexual abuse in the church. He picketed the church in San Francisco where Whelan had transferred and asked Harris to take action against other abusers he said were being sheltered by the church. Harris had under her control a tremendous cache of records related to abuse at the church, and even if criminal prosecution was no longer an option, Piscitelli felt that releasing them would ensure some measure of justice.

“It is not understandable that you have refused to release the documents that have been previously collected by DA Terence Hallinan, that spell out the names of the child rapists, and molesters who have wreaked havoc on children here,” Piscitelli wrote in a second letter to Harris in 2010, requesting the church personnel files.

Rick Simons, Piscitelli’s attorney, had served as a plaintiff’s liaison on the Clergy III consolidated lawsuit of over 100 similar cases. He said that he had received informal assistance from a number of district attorneys in the region, including Alameda County’s Nancy O’Malley, who had worked closely with victims and plaintiffs’ attorneys to suggest records to subpoena.

But Harris had stonewalled. Simons recalled phone conversations with Harris’s office in which no help was offered. He said, “We were told office policy was we can’t provide you with anything.”

SF WEEKLY, THE local alternative newspaper, pressed Harris to release the church abuse personnel files in 2005 and again in 2010. In both cases, her office refused. The newspaper revealed that shortly after being elected, Harris had worked with church officials and other prosecutors to conceal the clergy records, electing to only divulge clergy abuse files over the course of a criminal investigation, a possibility forestalled by the Supreme Court ruling.

Several California prosecutors signed a controversial protocol at the time with the Catholic Church to conceal similar sexual abuse documents. SF Weekly reported that the “protocol basically puts church officials on the honor system for turning over materials that they determine may be of relevance to the district attorney.”

Hallinan expressed outrage at the agreement and supported the effort to release the files. He told the magazine that he “wouldn’t do a deal like that for [the archdiocese] any more than I would if it were an Elks Club with a bunch of pedophiles. Those are the kinds of deals that have allowed the church sex scandal to go on as long as it has.”

Protestors stand in front of St. Mary’s Cathedral while Archbisop William Levada delivers his final mass in San Francisco on Aug. 7, 2005.

“District Attorney Harris focuses her efforts on putting child molesters in prison,” Harris’s office responded in a statement to the paper. “We’re not interested in selling out our victims to look good in the paper. When this case was brought under Terence Hallinan, prosecutors took the utmost care to protect the identity and dignity of the victims. That was the right thing to do then and it’s the right thing to do now.”

The response baffled victims’ advocates and Hallinan, who reiterated his support for releasing the files. “It was just a flat-out insult,” said Piscitelli. “She could have redacted the names, blacked out the names and left them out.”

Joelle Casteix, founder of Survivors Taking on Predators, a national advocacy group for victims of clergy sexual abuse, said she was disappointed with the Harris statement. “Sunlight is the greatest disinfectant,” said Casteix. “Victims come forward because they are afraid that the person who hurt them is still out there, hurting other kids, or someone from the diocese is still lying about it. I haven’t met a single survivor who’s said, ‘Boy, am I glad they kept the documents for my case secret.’”

Elliot Beckelman, a former prosecutor in the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office who initially oversaw the clergy abuse files and handled the criminal investigation of clergy abuse, said he did not recall that the attorneys for survivors requested the documents. He did remember opposing the effort to release the documents to the press. “The only thing I remember is the SF Weekly asking,” said Beckelman.

“It was just a flat-out insult. She could have redacted the names, blacked out the names and left them out.”

Still, he said, he believes that Harris made the right choice in declining to release the documents. “I don’t think a district attorney should float that out there if a person can’t defend themselves,” Beckelman continued. “It’s a very serious charge, a sex crime.”

“The Catholics, like other minorities, feel picked upon, and I thought for the integrity of the investigation that we don’t have running press conferences to make out that the Catholics are worse than the Jews — which I am — or worse than the Hindus,” Beckelman said. “There’s always a balance that comes to sexual assault investigations.”

Others in the San Francisco District Attorney’s Office, however, recall getting requests for files from victims. “I certainly remember receiving phone calls from attorneys representing victims and I can’t remember what we actually did,” said Erin Gallagher, a former investigator who worked with Beckelman on the clergy abuse cases at the district attorney’s office. “I don’t recall letters requesting documents, but as I said, but I do remember having a number of phone conversations. I don’t remember how those played out.”

The decision to conceal the San Francisco Archdiocese clergy abuse files stands in stark contrast to recent investigations into Catholic sex abuse across the country.

Over the last year, prosecutors have reopened wide-ranging investigations into systemic clergy sex abuse. Attorneys general in Iowa, New Mexico, Michigan, Illinois, and other states have asked the Catholic Church to produce internal files of clergy accused of sexual abuse.

Last August, Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro released a 900-page report from a Pittsburgh grand jury listing 300 priests credibly accused of sexual misconduct. The report included internal church personnel documents, redacting the names of the victims, detailing dozens of cases of confidential letters making clear that incidents of clergy rape, molestation, and other forms of child sex abuse had been reported to high-level church officials. In case after case, church officials were made aware of misconduct and responded by moving the accused priests to parishes around Pennsylvania.

McAteer, one of the survivors who spoke to The Intercept, said his abuser had continued to rape children well after he had reported the incident. “I went to the church in ’77, wrote the archbishop, met with the archbishop, told him the story of what happened when I was raped by Father Keegan,” said McAteer. The church, he said, “covered it up” and allowed his abuser to continue raping children. With the church failing to report the abuse to authorities, Keegan was moved to Santa Rosa, California, where he was accused of raping or molesting at least 50 other children.

“I think the whole problem with this Catholic Church scandal is very rarely has anyone come clean. Finally, we saw in Pittsburgh — finally they said, ‘Let’s tell it like it is,’” McAteer said. “I know the San Francisco files are egregious as well. Why not tell the story so the Catholic Church can clean its act up?”

Piscitelli supports the Pennsylvania probe, as well as the other investigations of Catholic Church sex abuse in other states.

Last year, Piscitelli wrote a letter to current California Attorney General Xavier Becerra demanding that Becerra open an inquiry into clergy sexual abuse. Within weeks, Piscitelli received a response and a request to meet with state investigators. Becerra soon set up a tip line for other survivors to come forward and has demanded clergy abuse records from all 12 Catholic Church dioceses in California.

While previous prosecutions of clergy sex abuse have focused on individual priests or employees of the church, some are hoping the latest round investigations will lead to a more systemic look at the scandal. Kevin Ryan, the former federal prosecutor who worked closely with Hallinan’s office, said prosecutors could pursue charges under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, a statute used to prosecute organized crime.

“There are still civil RICO potential charges, potential criminal RICO charges if there is a cover-up and it is ongoing,” said Ryan. “We need to know, we need accountability, and certainly we need to be prosecuting the cases we can and anyone involved in this activity should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

The San Francisco Archdiocese has told reporters that it is in discussions with an outside organization to review 4,000 personnel files over clergy abuse allegations, but has so far declined to release a list of priests accused of sexual abuse. Mike Brown, the spokesperson for the archdiocese, told The Intercept that he expects a list of names to be released over the summer this year.

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.

AS SAN FRANCISCO DISTRICT ATTORNEY, KAMALA HARRIS’S OFFICE STOPPED COOPERATING WITH VICTIMS OF CATHOLIC CHURCH CHILD ABUSE

The Intercept

June 9, 2019

By Lee Fang

KAMALA HARRIS, SURROUNDED by thousands of cheering supporters, kicked off her presidential campaign in Oakland earlier this year, declaring that she has always fought “on behalf of survivors of sexual assault, a fight not just against predators but a fight against silence and stigma.”

Fighting on behalf of victims of sexual abuse, particularly children, has been central to Harris’s political identity for the better part of three decades. Harris specialized in prosecuting sex crimes and child exploitation as a young prosecutor just out of law school. She later touted her record on child sexual abuse cases and prosecuting pedophiles in television advertisements, splashy profiles, and on the trail as she campaigned for public office.

But when it came to taking on the Catholic Church, survivors of clergy sexual abuse say that Harris turned a blind eye, refusing to take action against clergy members accused of sexually abusing children when it meant confronting one of the city’s most powerful political institutions.

When Harris became San Francisco district attorney in 2004, she took over an office that had been working closely with survivors of sexual abuse to pursue cases against the Catholic Church. The office and the survivors were in the middle of a legal battle to hold predatory priests accountable, and Harris inherited a collection of personnel files involving allegations of sexual abuse by priests and employees of the San Francisco Archdiocese, which oversees church operations in San Francisco, and Marin and San Mateo counties.

“It went from Terence Hallinan going hundred miles an hour, full speed ahead, after the Catholic Church to Kamala Harris doing absolutely nothing.”

The files had been compiled by investigators working under the direction of Terence Hallinan, the radical district attorney who Harris ousted in a contentious election campaign. Hallinan’s team had prosecuted cases of abuse that had occurred decades earlier and had gathered evidence as part of a probe into widespread clergy sexual misconduct.

Just six months before Harris took office, a U.S. Supreme Court decision overturned a California law that had retroactively eliminated the statute of limitations for criminal prosecution of child molestation cases. That shifted the focus to holding predators among the clergy accountable through civil cases and through a broader effort to bring attention to predators who had been shielded by the church.

Hallinan believed that the clergy abuse files were a matter of public record; Harris refused to release them to the public.

In her seven years as district attorney, Harris’s office did not proactively assist in civil cases against clergy sex abuse and ignored requests by activists and survivors to access the cache of investigative files that could have helped them secure justice, according to several victims of clergy sex abuse living in California who spoke to The Intercept.

“It went from Terence Hallinan going hundred miles an hour, full speed ahead, after the Catholic Church to Kamala Harris doing absolutely nothing and taking it backwards hundred miles an hour,” said Joey Piscitelli, a sexual assault survivor, who a jury found had been molested as a student while attending Salesian College Preparatory, a Catholic high school in Richmond, California.

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.

US bishops under pressure to reform clergy abuse oversight

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

June 9, 2019

By David Crary

As the Roman Catholic Church’s sex abuse scandal grows ever wider in scope in the U.S., bishops convene for a national meeting in Baltimore on Tuesday under heavy pressure to acknowledge their oversight failures and give a larger role to lay Catholics and secular authorities in confronting the crisis.

The pressure comes not only from longtime critics of the church’s response to clergy sex abuse, but also from insiders who now voice doubts that the bishops are capable of handling the crisis on their own.

“My biggest concern is that it’s going to end up being bishops overseeing bishops,” Francesco Cesareo, chairman of a national sex-abuse review board set up by the bishops, told Catholic News Service. “If that’s the case, it’s going to be very difficult for the laity to feel any sense of confidence that anything has truly changed.”

Events of the past year have created unprecedented challenges for the U.S. bishops. Many dioceses have become targets of state investigations since a Pennsylvania grand jury report in August detailed hundreds of cases of alleged abuse.

In Baltimore, the bishops will be guided by a groundbreaking new law issued by Pope Francis on May 9. It requires priests and nuns worldwide to report clergy sexual abuse and cover-ups by their superiors to church authorities. It also calls for any claim of sexual misconduct or cover-up against a bishop to be reported to the Vatican and a supervisory bishop in the U.S.

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.

La Luz del Mundo Church Leader Accused of Sex Crimes

MEXICO CITY (MEXICO)
Santa Barbara Independent [Santa Barbara CA]

June 9, 2019

By Blanca Garcia

Read original article

Former Santa Maria Pastor Naasón Joaquín García Charged with 25 Felony Counts 

Former Santa Maria pastor and La Luz Del Mundo church leader Naasón Joaquín García, 50, was arrested June 3 and is being accused of rape, sex abuse, and sexual trafficking for the production of child pornography. He and three female codefendants, Alondra Ocampo (36), Azalea Rangel Melendez, and Susana Medina Oaxaca (24), are being charged with 26 felony counts involving three minors and one adult. The codefendants and victims are members or children of members of the international Pentecostal church, said California Attorney General Xavier Becerra. It is alleged that García coerced victims into complying with his demands by leveraging his power as church leader. The alleged crimes took place between 2015 and 2018 in Los Angeles County. However, during a press conference on June 6, Becerra said that he believes there are many more victims. 

Several chapters of the church have formed in Santa Barbara County, including one in Santa Maria, where García served as a pastor in the early 2000s, and a church in the City of Santa Barbara. García used to frequent the Santa Barbara church when he was the pastor in Santa Maria, but he hasn’t visited in about 10 years, said Ismael Mendez, the Santa Barbara chapter pastor. 

In a sit-down interview with Mendez and his wife, Evelia Mendez, the church leaders expressed to the Independent their unfaltering commitment to García’s presumption of innocence. “We welcome an investigation” they said. “We pray for the investigators so that they may discover the truth.” Before the interview, Mendez led about 30 members in their Thursday service, in which they prayed for García and asserted his presumption of innocence. “I can tell you with my eyes closed that [García] is pure,” said Mendez, who knows García personally. García is always traveling and surrounded by many people, the couple said, and they questioned when he would have had time to commit these crimes.

Garica is currently being held on a $50 million bail, the highest amount ever imposed on an individual in L.A. County, according to Becerra. The bail amount is in part due to the seriousness of the allegations and also out of concern that his congregation would raise the money to bail him out. The church has at least seven million members in more than 50 countries, said Mendez. The great majority of the members share Mendez’s sentiment that García, who is regarded as the living apostle of God, is being wrongly accused. Mendez and his wife interpret the high bail as a sign of intolerance against the organization. “That bail amount isn’t even set that high for terrorists,” said Mendez. 

This is not the first time the church has faced these types of allegations. Under Samuel Joaquín Flores, García’s father, the church and Flores were also accused of sex trafficking and sexual abuse. Flores was never convicted of any of the charges. “We are not afraid,” said Mendez about the charges against García. This is not new, he said, and happened to the apostle Paul and even to García’s father. 

The church responded to the allegations against García with a press release backing García: “The Church categorically rejects each and every allegation made against him,” it reads. Mendez and his wife added that García always instructed them to conduct themselves with high morals, family values, and ethics. “He taught us the church should be pure,” they said. “He instructed us to never be with young people alone or women alone and to treat everyone with respect. That is why we’re sure he is innocent.” 

When asked by the Independent how abuse is handled within the church, Mendez and his wife responded in unison. “We immediately report to the authorities and encourage our members to report to authorities, even abuse between spouses,” they said. “Immoral things are not allowed in the church,” added Mendez. “If we serve God, we must be pure in all aspects.” 

The complaint against García alleges that he took advantage of the devotion church members have to the church. “There are many people that depend on this church,” said Becerra, as he encouraged additional victims to come forward. While Becerra acknowledged defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty, he added that an individual cannot be charged without evidence. “We have that evidence,” he said, “and we will act vigorously to prosecute the individuals.” The three female codefendants are alleged to have worked in tandem with García to commit the alleged crimes. Two of the women, Ocampo and Medina Oaxaca, are in custody but Rangel Melendez is still at large. 

Becerra urges victims or anyone who may have information about the case to come forward and call (323) 765-2100 or submit an anonymous tip at oag.ca.gov/clergyabuse.

Those in custody are scheduled to be arraigned on Monday, June 10, in Los Angeles County Superior Court. 


The Mendez and Luz church quotations have been translated from English to Spanish

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.

Diocese whistleblower attends Bishop Malone’s first listening session on abuse crisis

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

June 8, 2019

By Lou Michel

The woman who leaked documents on clergy sex abuse in the Buffalo Catholic Diocese attended Bishop Richard J. Malone’s first listening session with the laity Saturday.

One of about 200 Catholics in attendance at the two-hour session at St. Gregory the Great Catholic Church in Amherst, Siobhan O’Connor said the gathering left her with a sense of concern that Catholics are divided — including whether the bishop should remain as head of the diocese.

Several prominent local Catholics and public officials have called for Malone to step down for his handling of sex abuse by clergy, but he has said he has no intention of resigning.

“I was just really taken that there is such polarization. If we are divided, we’ll be less effective as members of the church,” O’Connor said after the session.

O’Connor, who had served as the bishop’s executive assistant until she released reams of confidential documents to WKBW-TV last year, said she felt an obligation as a Catholic to attend the session and learn more about where fellow Catholics stood on church issues.

She said a tightly scripted format for the listening session did not allow that to happen.

Since she released the documents and left her job at the chancery, O’Connor said she has not spoken with the bishop.

“This is the closest I’ve been to him. I was a little more than a table away from him. I believe he saw me. I’m trying to be respectful. My presence might not have been welcome,” she said.

She noted a divide among the attendees over whether the bishop should resign or stay.

“There were people calling for the bishop to resign at my table and a handful of others,” she 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.

SUMMER OF SCANDAL II–IN HELL WE’LL BE IN GOOD COMPANY

Patheos blog

June 9, 2019

By Msgr. Eric Barr

Great bluegrass song out called “In Hell I’ll Be In Good Company.” By the time summer ends, we Catholics will be humming it as we grapple with the crisis in the Church once again. Looks like last year’s Cardinal scandal will have a sequel this year after the Washington Post’s expose of Bishop Bransfield of West Virginia. But before we get on the bandwagon of bashing priests, bishops, etc. again, perhaps we Catholics could all agree to share the guilt. Just a thought. It’s controversial. I should know. For fifteen years I was either the Vicar for Clergy or the Vicar General delegated with the responsibility for ministering to the priests, educating the junior clergy and clergy of the diocese, and helping out or disciplining priests who found themselves with serious problems. I mention all that to establish some street cred. Why? Because this column might cause us all to rethink our presuppositions.

Sharing The Blame
The crisis in the Church centering on the misuse of episcopal authority and the sexual abuse by priests is a horrible and terrible scandal. It has led to the worst crisis in the Church since the Reformation. Granted. But it does no good for the laity simply to savage guilty priests or bishops (though they richly deserve it), call for the abolition of the priesthood, or even seek a reform of the priesthood. The Church has a lot of problems but the crisis is not specifically the problem of the ordained. All Catholics have to take some responsibility. In fact, it’s bigger than all the members of the Church. Here’s why.

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.

Southern Baptists will address clergy sex abuse; victims plan rally

BIRMINGHAM (AL)
Birmingham News

June 9, 2019

By Greg Garrison

Southern Baptists from across the country have arrived in Birmingham and more are on the way.

The Southern Baptist Convention, the annual meeting of the 14.8-million-member denomination, gathers Tuesday and Wednesday at the BJCC Legacy Arena. It’s the first time the Southern Baptist Convention has met in Birmingham since 1941.

It will be an opportunity for many Southern Baptists in Alabama to attend for the first time.

“So many wanted to go as messengers who have never been,” said the Rev. Joe Godfrey, former president of the Alabama Baptist Convention.

The number of messengers, or voting delegates, allowed from each Southern Baptist church depends on its size.

“It’s based on church membership or giving record,” Godfrey said. “The maximum number is ten from each church.”

The Rev. J.D. Greear, 46, senior pastor of The Summit Church in Durham, N.C., will preside at the meeting after being elected president last year. He has made addressing sexual abuse by clergy a priority issue.

“We need to have a posture of lament,” Greear said this past week on a Facebook live video. “Whether or not it’s happened to me, to somebody I know or somebody in my church, it’s happened to churches that bear the name Southern Baptist, and we need to lament that, lament the pain of victims and grieve with them. Lament that it happened on our watch.”

Greear announced a Sexual Abuse Advisory Study in July. More than half of study group is women.

Initial recommendations of the study group include calling for repentance “for decades of inaction.”

A group of sexual abuse survivors and victims’ advocates plans to protest outside the Legacy Arena on Tuesday about 6 p.m. They requested display space in a meeting hall, and permission to rally on the plaza, but were denied by the convention, said the Rev. Ashley Easter, a spokesperson for the rally who grew up in an independent Baptist church and is now an ordained minister in the Progressive Christian Alliance.

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.

Welcome to Syracuse Catholic Diocese’s new spiritual leader

SYRACUSE (NY)
Post Standard

June 9, 2019

Last week, Central New York met the priest with the potential to lead the Roman Catholic Diocese of Syracuse for the next 20 years: Bishop-elect Douglas Lucia, 56, a parish pastor and canon lawyer in the Ogdensburg Diocese. His elevation represents a pivot to a younger generation of leadership by an institution seeking to renew itself, regain the trust of its members and remain relevant in an increasingly secular world.

Lucia will take over from Bishop Robert J. Cunningham, whose decade as the spiritual leader of the Catholic Church in Syracuse was dominated by the clergy sexual abuse crisis and its fallout.

In his first public comments on the crisis, the bishop-elect expressed compassion for victims of clergy sexual abuse. “I just want to be a healing presence,” he said Tuesday at an introductory news conference.

He also signaled a willingness to be transparent about the perpetrators of sexual abuse. In a wide-ranging Q&A with staff writer Julie McMahon, Lucia said he favors releasing the names of priests with allegations against them.

It’s a point of view his predecessor came around to only as his time in office neared an end due to mandatory retirement. In December, Cunningham broke years of silence and released the names of 57 priests with credible accusations of sexual abuse against them. The bishop also created an independent process to compensate victims of clergy sexual abuse. The diocese has paid nearly $11 million to 79 victims, so far.

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.

June 8, 2019

In video, archbishop overseeing West Virginia probe expresses regret

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

June 8, 2019

By Rhina Guidos

After a major newspaper published a story about alleged financial and sexual misconduct by a West Virginia bishop, a prelate overseeing the investigation for the Vatican expressed regret that he redacted his name out of documents detailing financial aspects of the scandal.

In an 8-minute video released June 7, Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore, who was tasked with overseeing the investigation in West Virginia, said mistakes were made and one of them was redacting his name, along with the names of other bishops and high-ranking church officials who received personal financial “gifts” from the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston’s former bishop, Bishop Michael J. Bransfield.

Lori, who was appointed apostolic administrator of the West Virginia diocese after Bransfield resigned last fall amid allegations of sexual and financial misconduct, said in the video that transparency requires admitting mistakes.

“If I had to do it over again, especially at a time when we’re trying to create greater transparency and accountability, the report would have included the names of those bishops who received gifts, including my own, with some notation that there was no evidence to suggest that those who received gifts reciprocated in any way that was inappropriate.”

The preliminary investigation, he said, found that allegations of sexual misconduct by Bransfield toward adults were found to be “credible,” and it also determined that “during his tenure, he engaged in patterns of excessive and inappropriate spending, misused church funds for personal benefit,” that included travel, liquor, dining, financial gifts and luxury goods.

“There is no excuse nor adequate explanation that will satisfy the troubling question of how Bishop Bransfield’s behavior was allowed to continue for as long as it did without the accountability that we must require from those who have been entrusted with so much, both spiritual and material, as pastors,” Lori 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.

Southern Baptist Convention due to focus on sex abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

June 8, 2019

The Southern Baptist Convention gathers for its annual national meeting Tuesday with one sobering topic — sex abuse by clergy and staff — overshadowing all others.

Inside the meeting hall in Birmingham, Ala., delegates representing the nation’s largest Protestant denomination will probably vote on establishing criteria for expelling churches that mishandle or cover up abuse allegations. They also may vote to establish a new committee, which would review how member churches handle claims of abuse.

Outside the convention center, abuse survivors and other activists plan a protest rally Tuesday evening, demanding that the church move faster to require sex-abuse training for all pastors, staff and volunteers, and to create a database of credibly accused abusers that could be shared among its more than 47,000 churches. They will also be urging the church, which espouses all-male leadership, to be more respectful of women’s roles — a volatile topic that’s sparked online debate over whether women should preach to men.

Sex abuse already was a high-profile issue at the 2018 national meeting in Dallas, following revelations about several sexual misconduct cases. Soon after his election as Southern Baptist Convention president at that meeting, the Rev. J.D. Greear formed an advisory group to draft recommendations on how to confront the problem.

Ivonne Gordon-Vailakis isn’t just a 25-year-long Spanish and Latin American lit professor. She’s also a rockstar mentor.

However, pressure on the church has intensified in recent months, due in part to articles by the Houston Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News asserting that hundreds of Southern Baptist clergy and staff have been accused of sexual misconduct over the last 20 years, including dozens who returned to church duties, while leaving more than 700 victims with little in the way of justice or apologies.

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.

What Southern Baptists must do to fight clergy sex abuse

HOUSTON (TX)
Houston Chronicle

June 8, 2019

By Christa Brown

The “Abuse of Faith” series documented at least 700 people who reported having being sexually abused by Southern Baptist clergy and church leaders. Nearly all of them were children at the time they were abused.

Since the Chronicle and San Antonio Express-News first published the series in February, more than 350 others have contacted the investigative reporters with additional stories of abuse and cover-ups among Southern Baptists.

These stories stand as a collective testament to a chilling reality. For decades, Southern Baptist pastors have been sexually abusing kids, and all the while, other Southern Baptist leaders have known and turned a blind eye. This has been the status quo in the Southern Baptist Convention.

But now, the dam is broken, and there is hope in that.

As the pent-up waters of long-silenced voices continue to rise, the Southern Baptist Convention must choose a higher ground.

The old way was always unholy – shaming and blaming victims while denying and minimizing the problem. Now the old way is also institutionally untenable.

With decades of entrenched patterns to confront, the SBC will not meet this challenge with any feeble half measures. Nor will it meet this challenge with resolutions, platitudes, image-polishing press statements, or pious preaching.

Rather, this massive institutional enabling of horror must be addressed on an equally massive institutional scale.

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.

Greedy Clergy Who Took Cash From Disgraced American Bishop Will Give it Back

ROME (ITALY)
Daily Beast

June 8, 2019

By Barbie Latza Nadeau

A Vatican cardinal is among a handful of Catholic clerics who pledged to return cash gifts bestowed upon them by disgraced W. Virginia Bishop Michael Bransfield, according to the Washington Post. Bransfield, who has been removed from active ministry after credible allegations of sexual misconduct, is alleged to have written personal checks for a total of $350,000 to 137 clerics over a dozen years.

Among them is Cardinal Kevin Farrell, who Bransfield gave $29,000 to renovate his Rome apartment, and who said Friday he would return the money to the W. Virginia diocese.

The Washington Post has learned that Bransfield was reimbursed by the church for the money he gave to the prelates, including two young priests he is credibly accused of molesting.

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.

Christa Brown Writes an Open Letter to Tommy Gilmore, the SBC Pastor Who Sexually Abused Her

Wartburg Watch blog

June 7, 2019

Do you know who Christa Brown is? If not, you should. She has been the shining light behind Stop Baptist Predators for years. She was blogging while I was merrily skipping along in the evangelical world, not realizing the extent of sexual abuse in my tribe.

Although the site is no longer adding stories, it is being maintained so researchers can find the wealth of information contained therein. This was the first blog I visited to get a picture of the ongoing abuse in the SBC. She posted the news release of the predator in my former church who was arrested and convicted.

Christa endured serious pushback for her website. She didn’t have a network of likeminded writers when she started blogging Also, since that time, many people have become aware of the abuse problem due to #metoo #churchtoo #sbctoo. So there is more broad support for those exposing abuse. She powered on with little support and a lot of downright abuse.

Next week, Christa is going to be honored for her pioneering work by those attending the *For Such a Time is This Rally* outside of the SBC convention. It is rather fitting that the SBC refused to allow this rally inside of their hallowed halls. It is the same response that Christa received when she started writing. *Not allowed.*

The following is her story of abuse. I am deeply grateful for her dedication in spite of the trauma she endured. She is a hero.

I want to challenge those of you who attend any of the churches mentioned in this story to approach your church leadership and give them a copy of Christa’s story. I plan to email copies of it to the mentioned churches, challenging them to reach out to Christa.

Also, does anyone know the required ethics of licensed realtors? I’m thinking about checking into this. Can you imagine this guy is selling real estate?

Finally, how many of you know about the secret Baptist file of known predators? I didn’t. Click on the link in the story.

Open letter to Tommy Gilmore, the Southern Baptist pastor who sexually abused me as a kid:

Have you ever felt any remorse for what you did to me? That’s the question I always wonder about.

It’s been on my mind a lot lately because I’ll be speaking on June 11 at the For Such a Time as This Rally outside the SBC’s annual meeting in Birmingham, urging that the denomination institute better safeguards against predatory pastors like you. The horror of what I experienced from your abuse and from the keep-it-quiet cover-up responses of church and denominational leaders ultimately launched a long period of advocacy efforts on my part, because no child should ever experience the horror of what you did to me, and no adult should ever have to go through such a nightmare to try to expose a child-molesting minister.

The most difficult part of this kind of advocacy work is that it sometimes resurrects horrific memories. I did an interview with a reporter just the other day and, when she asked if I could talk a little about what happened to me as a kid, my mind was suddenly a jumble of disjointed flashbacks, and there it was again, that urge to vomit and run.

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.

Springfield Diocese restructures child protection office

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
The Republican

June 7, 2019

By Anne-Gerard Flynn

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield has renamed its department that oversees clergy sexual abuse allegations — as well as matters related to child protection and victim outreach —and made two new appointments.

Effective June 10, Jeffrey J. Trant will serve as director of the newly designated Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance, and Li-Ling Lam-Waller is its compliance officer.

The appointments are designed to improve outreach to victims following feedback from parish sessions Bishop Mitchell T. Rozanski held earlier this year. The sessions followed concerns about how this diocese handles clergy sex abuse allegations in the wake of a number of national and international investigations into clergy abuse.

The announcement also comes in advance of Rozanski’s attendance next week at the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Spring General Assembly in Baltimore. It will focus on bishop accountability measures to address the abuse crisis.

“The re-naming of the former office of Child & Youth Protections is to better define the mission of the office,” diocesan spokesperson Mark Dupont said.

He added, “It doesn’t immediately change any of the reporting procedures, but with the addition of a compliance coordinator it will allow more time for the director to work directly with victims as well as evaluate what other changes might be necessary for the office to be more effective. This new structure was brought about by an internal evaluation which began back in January and from what we heard at the listening sessions from victims and their advocates.”

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.

Why Catholics Are Up in Arms Over the “Hostile” California Confession Bill

NEW YORK (NY)
Slate

June 7, 2019

By Ruth Graham

The capital of California was named for a river that was in turn named for the Catholic sacrament of the Eucharist. So it’s notable that last month state senators in Sacramento passed a bill that some say will force Catholic priests to violate a different Catholic sacrament: confession, also known as the sacrament of reconciliation.

Confession, as shown in a zillion pop cultural depictions, is a private conversation between a priest and an individual, meant to encourage Catholics to examine their consciences and request forgiveness from God. The format varies—for example, the two parties may sit face to face, or with an opaque screen between them—but the penitent is encouraged to offer a full inventory of her sins since her last visit. In return, the priest is bound by an ironclad oath of secrecy called the “seal of confession.”

Historically, American law has protected that seal, carving out a “clergy-penitent privilege” for the confessional that is similar to attorney-client privilege. But a bill making its way through the California state Legislature would ever-so-slightly crack the seal open. SB 360, which passed the state Senate in May, would require priests to report suspicions of child abuse obtained through confession in some circumstances. The bill is expected to be voted on by the lower house of the state Legislature in September, according to Catholic News Service. And many Catholics are not happy about it.

Clergy are already among the many professionals deemed mandated reporters for child abuse in California. But state law makes an exception for “penitential communications” obtained in settings where the cleric has a sacramental duty to maintain secrecy. As reporter Jack Jenkins recently pointed out, California’s pathbreaking 1990 law designating clergy as mandated reporters included a confessional carve-out that many other states added when they later adopted similar laws.

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.

Allegations against top priest under review after report

ROME (ITALY)
Associated Press

Jun 8, 2019

By Nicole Winfield

The Catholic Church in Texas says it is reviewing allegations that a top monsignor continued to hear a married woman’s confessions after luring her into a sexual relationship, a potentially serious crime under church law.

The announcement was issued by the Galveston-Houston Archdiocese led by Cardinal Daniel DiNardo, president of the U.S. bishops’ conference, after the woman broke years of silence to denounce his handling of her case in an Associated Press investigation this week. The archdiocese has defended DiNardo’s handling of the case as swift and just. But it said Friday that the issue of confession was a “new development” presented by Laura Pontikes in the AP report and would be “thoroughly reviewed in accordance with canon law.”

Pontikes has accused Monsignor Frank Rossi, DiNardo’s former deputy, of exploiting her emotional dependency on him to manipulate her into a sexual relationship, even as he heard her confessions, counseled her husband on their strained marriage and solicited hundreds of thousands of dollars from them in donations for the church. The archdiocese removed Rossi from the Houston parish, but allowed him to return to ministry in another diocese after he completed a treatment program.

Pontikes protested to the archdiocese and went to police in August. After AP inquiries last week, Rossi’s new bishop placed him on leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

Rossi’s lawyer has said he is cooperating with the police investigation but declined to comment further. The archdiocese has defended him, saying the relationship was consensual and did not involve intercourse. Pontikes claims it did.

The case is significant because DiNardo heads the U.S. Catholic Church’s response to the clergy sex-abuse scandal, which exploded anew last year worldwide. As president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, DiNardo will lead a meeting next week of U.S. bishops to approve new measures for accountability over abuse.

The “absolution of an accomplice” crime in confession, one of the most serious in canon law, occurs when a priest absolves someone with whom he has engaged in a sexual sin. It must be reported to the Vatican and can carry the penalty of excommunication.

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.

Mixed Views on Next Steps for Roman Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston

DENVER (CO)
Crux

June 8, 2019

By Alex Meyer

Opinions are mixed about what should happen to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston after new revelations about Michael J. Bransfield’s conduct while bishop here were made public this week.

Some called for the diocese to reform from within while others asked the West Virginia Attorney General’s Office to take further action, but all agreed: something needs to change.

On Wednesday, Archbishop William E. Lori admitted in a letter that the diocese found “credible” accounts of sexual harassment from Bransfield and that he further engaged in a pattern of “excessive and inappropriate” spending during his tenure.

Judy Jones, midwest regional leader of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, or SNAP, said she wasn’t surprised by the latest developments regarding Bransfield.

“What is so sickening is how this went on for so long and people knew about it. Bransfield kept getting away with it,” Jones said. “We at SNAP applaud the brave victims for coming forward and getting (his) wrongdoings exposed and stopped.”

Jones said the problems with the diocese and the church illuminated by Bransfield’s misconduct need to be “fixed from the outside” by law enforcement.

“The church officials can’t police themselves,” she said. “They can’t fix the problems themselves. It’s not going to change.”

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.

June 7, 2019

Hierarchy and theology alike are caught up in Catholic disruption

ROME (ITALY)
National Catholic Reporter

June 7, 2019

By Massimo Faggioli

Editor’s note: Following is the transcript of a June 7 talk given by Massimo Faggioli at the annual conference of the Catholic Theological Society of America held in Pittsburgh.

Institutional Church and Academic Theology in a Time of Catholic Disruption

1. The church in a time of disruption

Once, Catholicism was a synonym for status quo; now, it could be disruption. The institutional church is not exempt from the crisis that is affecting all institutions today: a social and political crisis, in part a response to growing inequality, which in many countries has brought to power parties and political leaders harboring xenophobic if not racist sentiments; a crisis of globalization in terms of a redefinition of international political alliances and alignments; a cultural and intellectual disruption where the emergence of a social-media-driven public discourse shapes a redefinition of the role of knowledge and scholarship, together with the crisis of authority of cultural institutions and education.

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.

Morrisey calls for Catholic Church to release Bransfield report

CHARLESTON (WV)
West Virginia Record

June 7, 2019

By Kyla Asbury

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey urged the Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston to release its investigative report on former Bishop Michael Bransfield’s alleged misconduct.

Morrisey said it was important to disclose the report immediately.

“While we appreciate the fact that our investigation and lawsuit is causing the Wheeling-Charleston Diocese to disclose new improprieties about Bishop Bransfield, we believe it is imperative that the Diocese immediately disclose its investigative report about the Bishop,” Morrisey said. “It’s time to come clean and release the Bransfield report—and no longer hide pertinent information from our office and the public.”

Morrisey said much of the information being released by the Diocese would never have been released if his office hadn’t issued subpoenas, investigated and, ultimately, filed a lawsuit.

“The Diocese did not issue its list of initially 31, now 40, credibly accused priests until after issuance of our first subpoena in the fall of 2018, and today’s disclosure comes approximately two weeks after the filing of our amended complaint,” Morrisey said. “Now is the time for full disclosure. I repeat my call for the Diocese to stop fighting our efforts to get to the bottom of the sexual abuse scandal, come clean and end the secrecy – including release of the full Bransfield report.”

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.

Former Dallas Bishop Kevin Farrell Received Cash From Pill-Popping, Sexual Predator Priest

DALLAS (TX)
D Magazine

June 7, 2019

By Tim Rogers

Hopefully you either subscribe to the Washington Post or you haven’t yet this month used up your free visits. Because the paper broke a big story about an out-of-control Catholic bishop in West Virginia. Dude spent a lot of money getting drunk and buying jewelry. Oh, and Michael Bransfield sexually harassed other men. And handed them cash. It was all fueled by revenue from mineral rights generated by land in West Texas. Some highlights from the story:

Another said Bransfield let him drink alcohol before he was legally of age, exposed himself, pulled the young man against him and ran his hands over the seminarian’s genitals. … Throughout his tenure, Bransfield abused alcohol, oxycodone and other prescription drugs, which “likely contributed to his harassing and abusive behavior,” the report says. … During his 13 years as bishop in West Virginia, one of the poorest states in the nation, Bransfield spent $2.4 million in church money on travel, much of it personal, which included flying in chartered jets and staying in luxury hotels, according to the report.

And what does this have to do with Dallas? Kevin Farrell was the previous bishop of the Dallas Diocese (he left in 2016). By all accounts, he is a good man who cleaned up the mess that his predecessor, Charles Grahmann, left behind. However, the Post story notes this about Farrell, who now works at the Vatican:

Cardinal Kevin Farrell, a high-ranking Vatican official who served for years in the District, received two checks totaling $29,000 for expenses related to an apartment in Rome, documents show. … A Vatican spokesman confirmed that Farrell received “voluntary donations” from Bransfield and others for the renovation of his apartment in the Vatican and said that Bransfield “received nothing in exchange.”

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.

Scottish Child Abuse Inquiry: Boys raped by priests at ‘satanic parties’

LONDON (ENGLAND)
BBC News

June 7, 2019

A child abuse inquiry witness has told how he was raped by priests during “satanic” drink-fuelled sex parties.

Dave Sharp also described a catalogue of sexual, physical and emotional violence at St Ninian’s in Falkland, Fife, between 1971 and 1975.

Mr Sharp from Glasgow, said the abuse had left him with “lifelong trauma”.

The independent Scottish Child Abuse inquiry is looking in detail at historical abuse of children in residential care.

Mr Sharp urged inquiry chairwoman Lady Smith, to piece together the “jigsaw” of victims’ accounts and called for a “national discussion” on the subject.

The 60-year-old, who has waived his right to anonymity, was put into care after his mother died when he was aged one.

He stayed in several institutions before going to the Catholic-run care home in Fife.

He told how he was groomed by one of the religious brothers, who would tell him he loved him, which “no-one had ever done” before.

The inquiry heard the then-12-year-old was later raped.

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.

Fargo Diocese says clergy abuse claims date back ‘several decades’

FARGO (ND)
KFGO TV

June 7, 2019

By Jim Monk

The Diocese of Fargo has been investigating allegations of clergy sex abuse of minors that date back “several decades.” The information was revealed to KFGO News in response to a question regarding when the diocese plans to release a list of credibly accused priests.

The statement, from Bishop John Folda, says the diocese is “conducting a review of possible allegations of abuse of minors going back several decades.” Folda says a report will be released after the review is complete.

Diocese Spokesman Paul Braun says a timeline for releasing the list has not been determined. “Not at this time. We want to make sure we have everything in order and completed first.”“All the Catholic bishops, including the bishop in the Diocese of Fargo are feeling intense public pressure” according to Jeff Anderson, a St. Paul based attorney who advocates for clergy sex abuse victims across the nation.“I’m glad to hear they’re working on it. I’m despaired that they haven’t done more sooner” Anderson said. “There’s a fierce urgency for Catholic bishops to come cleaner than they have.”

Folda also says the Diocese of Fargo will review its policies to make sure they are in conformity with the new norms issued by Pope Francis as well as the guidelines approved by the U.S. conference OF catholic bishops.

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.

Try, try again: Bishops to address abuse, accountability among their own

WASHINGTON (DC)
Catholic News Service

June 7, 2019

By Greg Erlandson

When the bishops gather in Baltimore June 11-14, their meeting will be anything but pro forma.

Instead, they will have some major decisions to make that may determine how quickly they are able to rebuild trust with their fellow Catholics following a series of recent exposes, allegations and scandals regarding bishops themselves.

“This is going to be a working meeting,” said one observer, implying the likelihood of vigorous discussion and debate as the bishops seek to approve a series of proposals dealing with the investigation of abuse or cover up of abuse by bishops.

The attention of the bishops and the dozens of news media who will be following the proceedings will be focused on four action items.

The most important of these, and perhaps the one most likely to be debated, concerns the directives for the implementation of the recent “motu proprio,” or church law, issued by Pope Francis and governing complaints directed against clergy or church leaders regarding the sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable persons.

The “motu proprio,” known by its Latin title “Vos estis lux mundi” (“You are the light of the world”), grew out of the extraordinary gathering of the presidents of the world’s bishops’ conferences Feb. 21-24 in Rome. The “motu proprio” modified existing church law to bolster laws regarding clergy sexual abuse, including protection for whistleblowers and condemnation of any sort of cover-ups of such abuse.

While many of the directives of the “motu proprio” regarding clergy have already been implemented in the United States with its 2002 “Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People,” the action items before the bishops concern allegations of abuse or negligence on the part of bishops. Bishops were not explicitly included in the charter because authority over the bishops and their discipline rests with the pope 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.

A Suicide Attempt, an Order to Keep Silent: A U.S. Agency Mishandled Sex-Abuse Claims

NEW YORK (NY)
Wall Street Journal

June 7, 2019

By Christopher Weaver

When employees at a U.S. Indian Health Service facility here saw a video of their maintenance man disappearing with a 16-year-old patient into a private bathroom, they strongly suspected he was sexually involved with her.

After two staff members questioned the girl, she dragged a chair to the bathroom shower and tried to hang herself from the curtain rod, according to internal documents and people familiar with the September 2016 incident.

Although suspected sexual abuse of minors on Indian reservations is supposed to be reported to law-enforcement officials and social workers, several employees said an IHS manager told them not to say anything.

Months later, the maintenance man, then 47 years old, was told he was fired over the incident—then unfired. He returned to work at the Unity Healing Center, a teens-only residential substance-abuse treatment facility, although by then there was a federal investigation into his conduct. His duties included reviewing safety incident reports, including those about sex abuse.

The IHS, which provides health care for 2.6 million Native Americans has allowed employees accused of sexual misconduct to continue working and has struggled to meet U.S. requirements for reporting such allegations, a Wall Street Journal investigation found. At Cherokee, no one contacted law enforcement about the maintenance man until about seven months after the incident, and senior agency officials didn’t intervene.

In February, the Journal and the PBS series Frontline reported that IHS pediatrician Stanley Patrick Weber had sexually assaulted young male patients, and that the agency ignored warnings and tried to silence whistleblowers over two decades. The day the Journal/Frontline report was published, the IHS announced a written policy to improve its handling of sexual-abuse allegations.

Yet in interviews in early April, more than two months after the new policy was enacted, employees of the North Carolina facility said they hadn’t yet gotten any details about the new policy or received any training. The Cherokee case suggests that some of the problems that enabled Mr. Weber’s misconduct persist.

Beverly Cotton, the IHS leader of the region that includes North Carolina, said in an interview she thought the subsequent federal investigation of the Cherokee incident had failed to substantiate the misconduct allegations, and that Unity’s policies complied with federal law. “If there was a report of sexual misconduct and a supervisor advised another licensed provider not to report that, both of them hold responsibility,” she said. Law-enforcement officials said the federal investigation is continuing.

A White House task force is investigating the Weber case and the agency’s policies for handling sexual abuse. At a meeting in Albuquerque, N.M., in May, task force members discussed weaknesses they had discovered in the agency’s sex-abuse reporting practices, including confusion among staff members, and a lack of standard policies.

“There is a lack of clarity when it comes to the immediate steps that need to be taken to report suspected child abuse,” said Trent Shores, the U.S. attorney for the Northern District of Oklahoma and a task force leader. He said the task force is examining whether IHS employees understood their legal obligation to report child abuse, and whether any supervisors might have discouraged such reports.

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.

Broken trust in a broken clerical system

PARIS (FRANCE)
LaCroix International

June 7, 2019

By Robert Mickens

“If you want to be priest, lie!”

That was supposed to be a punch line in “Mass Appeal,” a comedy-drama written by American Catholic playwright Bill C. Davis.

First staged in 1980, it was made into a film four years later.In the screen version Jack Lemmon stars as Father Tim Farley, a popular pastor of an affluent parish in Connecticut. He’s a friendly, feel-good type of priest whose homilies are carefully designed to avoid challenging or upsetting his generous parishioners.

Fr. Farley drives a late-model Mercedes-Benz, loves his wine and Scotch, and spends his day-off at the racetrack. He is “considered to be one of the best priests” in the diocese.

One day he’s asked to mentor Mark Dolson (Željko Ivanek), a highly idealistic young deacon who risks being blocked from priestly ordination because he hasn’t toed the line in the seminary.

Mark’s main offence is that he strongly defended two seminarians that were expelled for a suspected homosexual relationship.

The seminary rector (Charles Durning) thus suspects Mark is also gay.

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.