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.

February 29, 2020

Facing Sex-Abuse Claims, Buffalo Diocese Declares Bankruptcy

BUFFALO (NY)
The New York Times

February 29, 2020

By Jesse McKinley and Liam Stack

The diocese said it was seeking Chapter 11 protection because of old accusations revived under New York’s Child Victims Act.

The Diocese of Buffalo filed for federal bankruptcy on Friday, becoming the latest entity to seek financial protection after a 2019 state law allowed victims of historical childhood sexual assault to sue.

The Catholic diocese, the largest in upstate New York, cited the Child Victims Act in a statement posted on its website, saying that the maneuver was necessary “to continue uninterrupted its mission throughout Western New York, while working to settle claims with existing Diocesan assets and insurance coverages.”

The Child Victims Act was passed last year by the Democratic Legislature in Albany, after years of opposition from religious groups and private schools, among others. It created a so-called look-back window, starting in August and lasting one year, allowing old claims that had passed the statute of limitations to be revived.

Hundreds of lawsuits were filed against the Catholic Church in the days after the look-back window opened, with more than 1,000 complaints brought under the Child Victims Act by Jan. 31, according to victims’ advocates. The sheer volume of claims led to speculation that one or more of the eight dioceses in New York could declare bankruptcy.

In September, the Diocese of Rochester became the first to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, a month after the child victims law went into effect, and suggested that it was the best way to serve the growing number of plaintiffs. Buffalo is the second diocese to do so, and observers believe more could follow suit.

“I certainly wouldn’t be surprised to see other dioceses in New York file,” said Terence McKiernan, the president of BishopAccountability.org, which tracks claims of wrongdoing in the church. “That’s partly because of the enormous number of legal claims being brought under the Child Victims Act, but also because there is potential there to control various aspects of that process of accountability.”

“This is a way of managing their exposure,” he added.

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 Rev. Joseph Grasso, former Siena Academy principal, accused of molesting student

ROCHESTER (NY)
Democrat and Chronicle

February 28, 2020

By Sean Lahman and Steve Orr

Rochester diocese says no complaints about Grasso were ever received

Grasso taught in the late 1990’s at Bishop Kearney High School in Irondequoit

He assumed the principal position at Siena at the start of 1998-99 school year

A priest who served as principal at three area Catholic schools and taught at a fourth has been accused of sexually abusing a student in the early 2000s.

A lawsuit initiated late last week alleges that the Rev. Joseph A. Grasso abused the student at Siena Catholic Academy in Brighton and the adjacent St. Thomas More Church.

The male victim, who was not identified by name in court papers, was approximately 12 years old when the alleged abuse began in 2002. Legal papers say the abuse continued into the following year.

No other information about the alleged abusive acts was included in the lawsuit, which was amended Tuesday to correct an error in some of the dates that are cited.

Grasso, 64, told a reporter Friday he was not aware of the litigation or any allegations of abuse.

“I don’t know what this is all about,” said Grasso, who has been chaplain at the Stratton Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Albany since 2008.

Grasso later engaged a lawyer in Rochester, Michael Wolford, who said this week that his client denies he abused anyone.

“Father Joseph Grasso has had a stellar reputation in this community and other communities where he has worked and we are very disappointed that this unmeritorious lawsuit has been filed by these Buffalo attorneys,” Wolford said. “We intend to vigorously defend Father Grasso and ultimately I am confident he will be vindicated.”

A member of the Congregation of Missionaries of the Precious Blood religious order, Grasso was ordained as a priest in 1992.

Grasso taught in the late 1990’s at Bishop Kearney High School in Irondequoit before assuming the principal’s job at Siena at the start of the 1998-99 school year.

He was at Siena for six years before leaving to be principal at Aquinas Institute and then at DeSales High School in Geneva, though his short tenure at each school raised questions at the time about the reasons for his departure.

He spent less than a year at Aquinas, departing midway through the 2004-05 school session. In a statement at the time, the school said Grasso resigned “to pursue other interests” and Grasso himself told a reporter he left due to “reassignment — we’ll leave it at that.”

Three months after he left Aquinas, Grasso was introduced as principal at DeSales High School in Geneva, which was operated then by the Rochester diocese but has since closed due to declining enrollment.

Grasso would spend just two years there, departing in July 2007 in what appeared to be an unplanned move. He left to “pursue other work in his ministry for the Precious Blood order of priests,” according to a statement that summer from the diocese.

Red flags?

In a brief interview by phone Friday, Grasso acknowledged that his abrupt departures from the two schools were red flags in the context of the Catholic Church’s child sexual abuse scandal, where there is a long history of church leaders shuffling around priests who fall under suspicion.

But Grasso said allegations of abuse had nothing to do with either departure. He said he left Aquinas because he and the school’s board president “didn’t see eye-to-eye,” and he left DeSales because of a “difference of opinion” between himself and diocesan officials about the school’s operation.

A spokesman for the Rochester diocese, Douglas Mandelaro, said that “no complaint of sexual abuse of a minor was ever received by the diocese” against Grasso.

And Aquinas spokesman Joseph B. Knapp said this week that officials at that school had never been made aware of such allegations against Grasso until a reporter called this week about the lawsuit.

David Carapella, Siena’s current principal, said Wednesday that he was not at the school at that time and offered no other comment on the case.

The lawsuit seeks damages only from Grasso, not the school or the diocese.

That is likely due to the fact that the Rochester diocese has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection and civil suits against it for past abuse are legally barred. The plaintiff would be free to file a claim against the diocese or its school in the bankruptcy proceeding.

As of earlier this week, Grasso remained in good standing with the Precious Blood province in Toronto, Canada, of which he is a member.

“Joe has always been well-received wherever he was. When he left the schools, it was because of, how should I put it, ideological differences between him and staff or administration.” said the Very Rev. Mario Cafarelli, the order’s provincial director in Toronto. “I’m surprised. He has always been very careful. Knowing him, he would die before doing any of that.”

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.

Discorso del Santo Padre trasmesso ai partecipanti al Capitolo Generale dei Legionari di Cristo, e alle Assemblee Generali delle Consacrate e dei Laici Consacrati del Regnum Christi, 29.02.2020

[Address of the Holy Father to the participants in the General Chapter of the Legionaries of Christ, and to the General Assemblies of the Consecrated Women and the Consecrated Laity of the Regnum Christi, 29.02.2020]

VATICAN CITY
Vatican

February 29, 2020

Pubblichiamo di seguito il discorso del Santo Padre Francesco trasmesso ai partecipanti al Capitolo Generale dei Legionari di Cristo, e alle Assemblee Generali delle Consacrate e dei Laici Consacrati del Regnum Christi:

Discorso del Santo Padre

Cari fratelli e sorelle,

sono felice di questo incontro con voi alla conclusione di una tappa del cammino che state percorrendo sotto la materna guida della Chiesa. Voi, Legionari di Cristo, avete da poco concluso il Capitolo Generale e voi, Consacrate e Laici Consacrati del Regnum Christi, le vostre Assemblee Generali. Sono stati eventi elettivi dei nuovi governi generali, conclusione di una tappa del cammino che state facendo. Ciò significa che esso non è compiuto, ma deve proseguire.

I comportamenti delittuosi tenuti dal vostro fondatore, il P. Marcial Maciel Degollado, che sono emersi nella loro gravità, hanno prodotto in tutta l’ampia realtà del Regnum Christi una forte crisi tanto istituzionale quanto delle singole persone. Infatti, da una parte non si può negare che egli è stato il fondatore “storico” di tutta la realtà che rappresentate, ma dall’altra non lo potete ritenere come un esempio di santità da imitare. È riuscito a farsi considerare un punto di riferimento, mediante una illusione che era riuscito a creare con la sua doppia vita. Inoltre, il suo lungo governo personalizzato aveva in una qualche misura inquinato il carisma che originariamente lo Spirito aveva donato alla Chiesa; e ciò si rifletteva nelle norme, nonché nella prassi di governo e di obbedienza e nell’impostazione di vita.

[GOOGLE TRANSLATE: We publish below the speech of the Holy Father Francis sent to the participants in the General Chapter of the Legionaries of Christ, and to the General Assemblies of the Consecrated Women and the Lay Consecrated Persons of the Regnum Christi :

Speech of the Holy Father

Dear brothers and sisters,

I am happy with this meeting with you at the end of a stage of the journey you are traveling under the maternal guidance of the Church. You, Legionaries of Christ, have recently concluded the General Chapter and you, Consecrated and Lay Consecrated Persons of Regnum Christi , your General Assemblies. They were elective events of the new general governments, the conclusion of a stage on the path you are taking. This means that it is not accomplished, but must continue.

The criminal behavior of your founder, P. Marcial Maciel Degollado, which emerged in their gravity, produced in the whole wide reality of Regnum Christia strong institutional and individual crisis. In fact, on the one hand it cannot be denied that he was the “historical” founder of all the reality you represent, but on the other you cannot consider it as an example of holiness to imitate. He managed to make himself considered a point of reference, through an illusion that he had managed to create with his double life. Furthermore, his long personalized government had to some extent polluted the charisma that the Spirit originally had given to the Church; and this was reflected in the norms, as well as in the practice of government and obedience and in the way of life.

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.

Francis calls Legionaries of Christ to ‘continuous conversion’ at end of Rome meeting

VATICAN CITY
Catholic News Agency

February 29, 2020

By Hannah Brockhaus

Pope Francis Saturday told the Legionaries of Christ religious order to look toward the future as they continue to reform themselves, seeking continuous conversion under the guidance of the Church.

The pope’s message was sent to the religious order of priests at the end of the congregation’s 2020 Ordinary General Chapter in Rome, which began Jan. 20, to elect new leadership and to discuss handling of abuse.

The pope told the Legion there is still much that “must be discerned on your part. So the journey must continue, looking forward, not backward. You can look back only to find trust in the support of God, who has never failed.”

“Returning to the past would be dangerous and meaningless,” he said.

The nearly six-week-long meeting took place during a time of widespread public criticism of the Legionaries of Christ, which reported in December 2019 that since its founding in 1941, 33 priests of the congregation have been found to have committed sexual abuse of minors, victimizing 175 children, according to the 2019 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.

Pope urges Regnum Christi to continue along path of renewal

VATICAN CITY
Vatican News

February 29, 2020

By Devin Watkins

Pope Francis invites the Legionaries of Christ and Regnum Christi members to continue along the path of discernment to reform the Federation, in remarks prepared for an audience on Saturday.

The Legionaries of Christ recently held their General Chapter in Rome, as the wider Regnum Christi Federation held its General Assemblies.

Pope Francis was scheduled to address the group on Saturday, but had to cancel due to a “slight indisposition”. The Director of the Holy See Press Office, Matteo Bruni, said the Pope did celebrate Mass and keep his scheduled appointments in the Casa Santa Marta on Saturday morning.

Difficult past

In his prepared remarks which were read out to the group, Pope Francis said the “criminal behavior” of Father Marcial Maciel Degollado generated “a major institutional and personal crisis” within the Regnum Christi Federation.

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.

Pope tells scandal-marred Legion they still haven’t reformed

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

February 29, 2020

By Nicole Winfield

Pope Francis told the Legion of Christ religious order Saturday it still has a long road of reform ahead, making clear that 10 years of Vatican-mandated rehabilitation hadn’t purged it of the toxic influences of its pedophile founder.

In a prepared speech, Francis told the Legion’s new superiors a “very vast field” of work was needed to correct the Legion’s problems and create a healthy order. He encouraged them to work “energetically in substance, and softly in the means.”

“A change of mentality requires a lot of time to assimilate in individuals and in an institution, so it’s a continual conversion,” Francis said. “A return to the past would be dangerous and senseless.”

The Vatican took over the Legion in 2010 after revelations that its founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, sexually abused dozens of his seminarians, fathered at least three children and built a secretive, cult-like order to hide his double life.

Even though the Vatican envoy tasked to run and reform the Legion declared the order cleansed and reconciled with its past in 2014, new sexual misconduct scandals have called into question whether his mission was really accomplished.

Victims of other Legion priests have come forward, indicating that a culture of abuse extended far beyond Maciel’s crimes and involved a high-level cover-up by superiors who are still in power.

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.

List of Memphis clergy ‘credibly accused’ of child sex abuse released by Catholic Diocese

MEMPHIS (TENNESSEE)
Commercial Appeal

February 28, 2020

By Katherine Burgess

Months after promising survivors to release a list of clergy credibly accused of child abuse, the Catholic Diocese of Memphis has done so.

Its list includes 20 names. The list is predominantly made up of names already included in lists compiled by other dioceses or religious orders along with clergy named publicly by victims.

The two exceptions appear to be James Gilbert and Floyd Brey, who do not appear in ProPublica’s database compiling the lists released by dioceses and religious orders or on bishopaccountability.org, which lists 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.

Buffalo Diocese Embarks on Path Toward Reorganization

BUFFALO (NY)
Western New York Catholic

February 28, 2020

Chapter 11 filing aims to provide resolution for the most number of individuals who have been harmed by past by sexual abuse while continuing the work of Catholic ministry

The Diocese of Buffalo has formally filed for Chapter 11 reorganization under the U.S. Federal Bankruptcy code with a primary aim of enabling financial resolution for the most number of individuals who have filed claims under the Child Victims Act – a year-long window that opened on August 14, 2019 that suspends the statute of limitations related to allegations of past sexual abuse. A further objective of reorganization is that it allows the Diocese to continue uninterrupted its mission throughout Western New York, while working to settle claims with existing Diocesan assets and insurance coverages.

“We have no more urgent work than to bring about justice and healing for those harmed by the scourge of sexual abuse. The intense emotional, mental and spiritual pain inflicted on these innocent victim-survivors is a heavy burden they are forced to carry throughout their lives,” said Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger, Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Buffalo. “Our decision to pursue Chapter 11 reorganization – arrived at after much prayer, discernment and consultation with the College of Consultors and our Diocesan Finance Council – is based on our belief that this approach will enable the most number of victim-survivors of past sexual abuse in achieving fairness and a sense of restorative justice for the harm they have experienced. It will also allow the vital, mission-driven work of faith that is so essential to the residents of Western New York to continue uninterrupted.”

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.

Buffalo Catholic Diocese Files for Bankruptcy

BUFFALO (NY)
Wall Street Journal

February 28, 2020

By Ian Lovett

Diocese is second in New York to seek bankruptcy protections since state law temporarily lifted civil statute of limitations on child sexual abuse

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, N.Y., filed for bankruptcy on Friday, following a number of sexual abuse lawsuits filed against it since August.

Buffalo is the 22nd Catholic diocese to seek bankruptcy protections since 2004, when a wave of sexual abuse allegations against the church began, and the second in New York since a new state law last year temporarily lifted the civil statute of limitations on child sexual abuse. The law, known as the Child Victims Act, allows those who say they were sexually abused as children to sue, no matter when it occurred.

In the bankruptcy filing, the diocese estimated its total assets at between $10 million and $50 million and its liabilities at between $50 million and $100 million. It has at least 200 creditors, according to the filing.

The former bishop of Buffalo resigned late last year following accusations he covered up clergy sex 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.

Priest sexually abused me for years and N.J. diocese knew he was a danger, woman says in suit

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

February 28, 2020

By Anthony G. Attrino

A New Jersey woman has filed a lawsuit against the Diocese of Camden accusing a priest of sexually abused her decades ago when she was a child while church officials allowed it to happen.

Patricia Cahill, 67, of Bergen County, claims the Rev. Daniel Francis Marks Millard, sexually abused her from 1957 to 1965, according to the suit, filed Feb. 4 in Camden County Superior Court.

While NJ Advance Media does not typically name victims of sexual abuse, Cahill been speaking publicly about the alleged abuse for years. The lawsuit is another in the flood of litigation against churches and other groups since a two-year window opened on Dec. 1 under a new law signed by Gov. Phil Murphy that expanded the amount of time that victims of sexual assault may bring a lawsuit.

The abuse began when Cahill was age 5 and ended when she was age 13, the suit alleges.
Cahill, who was raised in a devout Roman Catholic family in Ridgewood, participated in youth activities and “developed great admiration, trust, reverence, and respect” for the church and Millard, the suit states.

The diocese placed Millard “in positions where (he) had access to and worked with children as an integral part of his work,” the lawsuit states.

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.

Fighting abuse in lay movements: Vatican mandates norms, guidelines

VATICAN CITY
Religion News Service

February 28, 2020

By Cindy Wooden

Organizations, Catholic or not, led by a charismatic leader who is followed uncritically and commands or demands control over members are at risk for cases of physical, sexual and psychological abuse, said Jesuit Father Hans Zollner.

The Vatican office that grants official recognition to international Catholic lay movements and organizations ordered the groups to develop detailed child-protection guidelines and norms for handling allegations of the abuse of minors and vulnerable adults.

The international organizations include hundreds of thousands of Catholics around the world, so “this is an important step,” said Father Zollner, a professor of psychology and president of the Centre for Child Protection at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome.

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Buffalo Diocese files for bankruptcy protection amid sexual abuse lawsuits

NEW YORK
WRGB-TV, Channel 6

February 28, 2020

According to the filing, the Diocese is claiming 10 to 50-million dollars in assets, and 50 to 100-million dollars in liabilities, saying they need financial help to settle many of the lawsuits.

The Buffalo Diocese officially filing for bankruptcy protection today in the wake of legal action regarding sexual abuse.

The Child Victims Act became law last August, allowing victims of sexual abuse to file lawsuits against their alleged victims.

MORE: Albany Catholic Diocese releases statement following Rochester Diocese filing Chapter 11

According to the filing, the Diocese is claiming 10 to 50-million dollars in assets, and 50 to 100-million dollars in liabilities, saying they need financial help to settle many of the lawsuits.

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.

Buffalo Roman Catholic Diocese seeks bankruptcy protection

BUFFALO (NY)
Associated Press

February 28, 2020

By Carolyn Thompson

The embattled Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo filed for bankruptcy protection Friday, taking another major step in its effort to recover from a clergy misconduct scandal that’s been the basis for hundreds of lawsuits, Vatican intervention and the resignation of its bishop.

With its filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court, the western New York diocese became the second in the state to file for Chapter 11 reorganization, and one of more than 20 dioceses to seek bankruptcy protection nationwide. Most recently, the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, filed Feb. 19.

The Buffalo diocese has faced particular turmoil in recent months, culminating in the Dec. 4 resignation of Bishop Richard Malone following a Vatican-mandated investigation. Malone had faced intense pressure from members of his staff, clergy and the public to step down amid criticism that he withheld the names of dozens of credibly accused priests and mishandled reports of misconduct against others.

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 Diocese releases list of 20 priests ‘credibly accused’ of child sexual abuse

MEMPHIS (TN)
Daily Memphian

February 28, 2020

By Bill Dries

The Catholic Diocese of Memphis has released a list of priests accused of child sexual abuse during their time in Memphis and West Tennessee.

The list of “credibly accused” priests spans more than 50 years and was compiled at the request of Bishop David Talley shortly after he became leader of the Diocese that covers West Tennessee including Memphis.

“Our Diocese of Memphis realizes the extent of damage caused by the sexual abuse of minors perpetrated by Catholic clergy,” Talley wrote in a letter posted on the website of the Diocese Friday, Feb. 28.

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.

February 28, 2020

Woman’s fraud case against LDS Church for alleged cover-up sent to settlement

UTAH
KUTV-TV, Channel 2

February 24, 2020

by McKenzie Stauffer

A woman, who accused The Church Of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints of covering up an alleged sexual assault by the president of its Provo Missionary Training Center, had the last two items of her lawsuit sent to a settlement hearing.

McKenna Denson’s allegations against Joseph Bishop and the Church were dismissed more than a year ago, because of the statute of limitations had passed.

A judge, however, ruled the two counts of fraud still stand because an alleged-cover-up was discovered.

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.

Erzbistum München beauftragt externes Missbrauchs-Gutachten

[GOOGLE TRANSLATE: Archdiocese of Munich commissions an external abuse report]

MUNICH (GERMANY)
Frankenpost.de

February 27, 2020

Der scheidende Vorsitzende der Deutschen Bischofskonferenz ringt im Missbrauchsskandal mit internen wie externen Kritikern. In seinem Münchner Erzbistum will Kardinal Marx nun mit einem neuen externen Gutachten für mehr Aufarbeitung sorgen – auch bis in höchste Ämter.

Google Translate: The outgoing chairman of the German Bishops’ Conference grapples with internal and external critics in the abuse scandal. In his Archdiocese of Munich, Cardinal Marx now wants to provide more work with a new external report – even to the highest offices.

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.

Ratzinger and the Pedophile Priest

GERMANY
Correctiv

February 26, 2020

A priest convicted of sexually abusing children says that, on a winter day, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger is standing on his doorstep. Now, an investigation conducted by CORRECTIV and Frontal21 reveals the ties of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI with the priest. The stories shared by alleged victims who came forward during the investigation show how the Catholic Church’s prosecution of sexual abuse within its own ranks is insufficient.

In the outskirts of the Bavarian town of Garching, the chapel in Simetsbichl is a whitewashed building with a gabled roof. Benches are lined up inside, where an aureoled Virgin Mary gazes from the apse to an altar with candles, flowers and guest books brimming with personal pleas: for healing, for a new job, to get pregnant. And then, on a yellow notepad in a child’s scrawly handwriting:

There is no date above the entry, so it is impossible to determine when the boy wrote his appeal to the Blessed Mother. Some requests in the books go as far back as the 1990s, but it is also possible to write at the back of an empty book. Maybe the boy wanted to hide his petition behind blank pages until newer prayers could catch up over time.

Today, Stefan’s note points to a time when Priest Peter H., one of the most widely known perpetrators of sexual abuse in the German Catholic Church, led the parish in Garching. Until 2008, the priest also lived and worked just 30 minutes away by foot at the Church of St. Nicholas in Garching. For decades, he abused minor boys at both congregations. In response, the Church simply moved him from parish to parish, allowing his behavior to continue.

In Garching and in Engelsberg, in Essen and in Bottrop, a new investigation by CORRECTIV and Frontal21 reveals how Priest Peter H. abused young boys at congregations throughout Germany.

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An Update on Abuse by Women Religious – Talk by Mary Dispenza

ROME
Archangel Foundation

February 25, 2020

Nun and priest sexual abuse survivor Mary Dispenza, who serves as the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests’ Leader on Nun Abuse, talks about the painful realities and statistics of abuse by nuns at the 2020 2nd Annual Survivors’ Summit in Rome.

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.

Rhode Island man says in lawsuit he was abused by priest

RHODE ISLAND
The Associated Press

February 28, 2020

A Rhode Island man alleges that he was molested as a child by a Catholic priest who also trafficked children for sex while church leaders looked the other way, according to a lawsuit filed against the Diocese of Providence.

Robert Houllahan, 51, of Providence, said in the suit filed Thursday that he was sexually abused by the late Father Normand Demers, who received the “protection and affirmative assistance” of the diocese and its leaders, The Providence Journal reported.

The diocese, current Bishop Thomas Tobin and retired Bishop Louis Gelineau are among the defendants named in the suit.

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 St. Xavier High School priest accused of psychological sexual abuse

SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP (OH)
WKRC

February 21, 2020

By Katherine Barrier

A former St. Xavier High School priest has been accused of psychological sexual abuse, according to the school.

Fr. Ed Pigott was part of the St. Xavier community from 1969 to 2018. After the school published a list of Jesuit priests, brothers and scholastics who had established allegations of sexual abuse against minors in 2018, allegations were brought against Pigott. The school said the reported abuse happened between 1992 and 1994.

After the allegations, Pigott was not allowed to have unsupervised access to students and was then removed from his duties at the school on Dec. 19, 2018.

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Catholics still don’t get it: sexual abuse is not about sex

VATICAN CITY
La Croix International

February 27, 2020

By Robert Mickens

Jean Vanier violated the Second Commandment, not the Sixth

We continue to hear of incidents that more than suggest that Catholics – and, in particular, their bishops – have learned very little from the clergy sex abuse crisis.

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.

Legion of Christ vows better abuse response amid new sex abuse scandal, cover-up

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

February 27, 2020

By Nicole Winfield

The Legion of Christ religious order is promising accountability and transparency after damaging new revelations of sex abuse and cover-up that have undermined its credibility, a decade after revelations of its pedophile founder disgraced the order.

The Legion vowed to investigate the confirmed cases of past abuse by 33 priests and 71 seminarians. The Mexico-based order said it would reach out to the victims, publish the names of those found guilty of abuse in either a church or a state court, and punish superiors responsible for “gross negligence” in the handling of abuse accusations.

The measures described in a statement late Wednesday were responding to a burgeoning new scandal involving the order. The Vatican took over the Legion 10 years ago following revelations that its late founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, raped his seminarians, fathered at least three children and built a secretive, cultlike order to hide his double life.

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.

Facing 250 sex abuse lawsuits, Diocese of Buffalo declares bankruptcy

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW

February 28, 2020

By Charlie Specht

Second diocese in New York to file

The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo, which is facing nearly 250 lawsuits involving clergy sexual abuse, has declared bankruptcy.

Aside from the obvious financial implications, the diocese’s formal Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing means that many of the victims of clergy sexual abuse may not anytime soon get the answers that have long been hidden in secret diocesan archives regarding pedophile priests.

But there is still a chance that those hidden files could be forced as part of a bankruptcy settlement, as has happened in other dioceses.

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.

Vatican task force offers help to church on abuse prevention

VATICAN CITY
The Associated Press

February 28, 2020

By Nicole Winfield

The Vatican is launching a task force of experts to help Catholic dioceses and religious orders develop guidelines to handle cases of sexual abuse by clergy and tend to survivors.

The initiative was proposed last year during Pope Francis’ summit on preventing abuse. It was considered necessary given Catholic leaders in some parts of the world — mostly poor, conflict-marred areas in Africa and Asia — have failed to comply with a 2011 Vatican directive to develop the guidelines.

Task force participants said Friday that the aim is to provide legal expertise and help to dioceses and religious orders that simply don’t have the professional resources or have otherwise neglected to comply with the 2011 directive.

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Congressman seeks investigation of church’s sex abuse deals

MISSISSIPPI
The Associated Press

February 27, 2020

A congressman is asking the Department of Justice to investigate settlements to two men who say they were victims of clergy abuse at a Catholic school in Mississippi.

In a letter, U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson says Catholic officials “exploited” the young men, The Clarion Ledger reported.

They were paid far less than what others have received through legal settlements with the church, the Mississippi Democrat said.

The request for an investigation comes after The Associated Press made details of the cases public in a story last year.

The two cousins told the AP they were repeatedly abused during the 1990s, as elementary school students at St. Francis of Assisi School in Greenwood, Mississippi. The cousins were each paid $15,000.

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Lori Falce: Why we write about sex abuse

PITTSBURGH (PA)
TribLive

February 27, 2020

By Lori Falce

“But why do you have to put it up there in black and white? Why does there have to be a headline? Why can’t you just let it go?”

I‘ve had this conversation before.

“Why do you have to write about Jerry Sandusky? It makes Penn State look bad.”

“Why do you have to write about the grand jury report? It makes the Catholic church look bad.”

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Pope urges church workers to fight child abuse, even when facing threats

ROME
Crux

February 25, 2020

By Inés San Martín

In a video message sent to an abuse prevention formation center in Mexico, Pope Francis condemned the fact there are people willing to hire a hit man to stop abuse prevention and child protection.

“You will be misunderstood, [some] will tell you are wasting your time,” Francis says in the video sent to the Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Formation for the Protection of Minors (CEPROME), an interdisciplinary center for child protection at the Pontifical University of Mexico. “You will be threatened, because there are those who are threatened. More than one will tell you that they are capable of hiring a hit man to clean up the field.”

“Be prudent,” he adds. “Take care of yourselves, but continue to be brave and work. Preventing the abuse of children, the abuse of those who are at a disadvantage due to their social situation or an illness, is an act of love.”

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Victims and survivors of abuse remembered by Church in Ireland

VATICAN CITY
Vatican News

February 28, 2020

The Annual Day of Prayer for Survivors and Victims of Sexual Abuse is being marked in Ireland on 28 February, the first Friday of Lent.

Candles of Atonement will be lit in Cathedrals and Parishes throughout the country.

On this day the Bishops of Ireland are asking people to remember and pray for all those who carry with them life long suffering as a result of abuse.

Speaking about the Day of Prayer, the CEO of the National Board for Safeguarding Children in the Catholic Church in Ireland, Teresa Devlin said, “it is one day in the year which is really important”, but she added that, “every day is important and we are consistently reminding Church leaders of the need to communicate their child safeguarding message.”

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‘Church is no longer a safe place:’ State prison for local priest in indecent assault of girl

ALLENTOWN (PA)
lehighvalleylive.com

February 25, 2020

By Sarah Cassi

A former Allentown priest was sentenced Monday to state prison for the indecent assault of a girl he met through his city parish.

Lehigh County Judge Maria Dantos noted it was a maximum sentence of one to two years in state prison for 31-year-old Kevin Lonergan, who has been free on bail in the case since he was charged.

Lonergan pleaded guilty in November to indecent assault of the girl, who was 17 at the time.

In addition to commending the bravery of the teen girl who came forward, Dantos took note of a prior accusation against Lonergan in another county.

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‘One step at a time’: The path to a new sex abuse bill

COLORADO
Colorado Politics

February 27, 2020

By Michael Karlik

For the first time in 14 years, both chambers of the Colorado General Assembly will consider eliminating the civil statute of limitations for victims of childhood sexual abuse — and, for that matter, a range of sexual misconduct against children and adults.

House Bill 1296 comes in the wake of an October 2019 report from the attorney general’s office detailing the extent of childhood abuse from Catholic clergy in Colorado and follows other scandals involving the Boy Scouts of America, USA Gymnastics and perpetrators outed through the #MeToo movement. The proposal would allow unlimited time for victims of sexual assault, sex abuse and unlawful sexual contact to sue their perpetrators or the institutions that harbored them, but only for future cases.

Currently, survivors generally have six years to sue their abuser after they turn 18, and two years to sue an institution.

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Lawsuit: Former Providence priest trafficked children for sex

PROVIDENCE (RI)
Providence Journal

February 27, 2020

By Brian Amaral

And, the suit says, the Diocese actively thwarted efforts to stop the predator priest, instead giving him a new assignment, to St. Martha Church in East Providence.

A priest in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence trafficked children for sex, using the guise of international charitable work to prey on boys at orphanages in Haiti and rectories in Rhode Island, a lawsuit filed Thursday says.

The diocese and its defenders looked the other way and actively thwarted efforts to stop the predator priest, the suit says. In one instance, a parishioner who later became associated with the diocese’s legal counsel reported leaving a party at a rectory because he was made uncomfortable by the presence of boys, some dressed in diapers, according to the suit.

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Mo. Attorney General Urged to Investigate Baptists

JEFFERSON CITY (MO)
WORD&WAY

February 27, 2020

By Brian Kaylor

Groups that advocate for the survivors of clergy sexual abuse called on Missouri Attorney General Eric Schmitt to investigate clergy in the Missouri Baptist Convention for sexual abuse or misconduct — as he already has done with the Catholic Church. In a Feb. 26 rally outside the MBC’s headquarters in Jefferson City, advocates from two different groups addressed a specific case as they called for more proactive actions to weed out abusers and those who enable abusers.

“Sexual violence happens when those who commit or conceal it escape consequences. We fear that’s what’s happening now, in part, because of the Missouri Baptist Convention,” explained Cheryl Summers, an advocate with “For Such A Time as This Rally” that advocates for abuse victims within the Southern Baptist Convention. “When wrongdoing or alleged wrongdoing is ignored or rewarded, more people are apt to do wrong.”

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Disgraced Catholic order vows to turn page on abuse with new norms

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

February 27, 2020

By Philip Pullella

The new leader of the disgraced Legionaries of Christ Catholic religious order, whose founder was a serial sexual abuser, has promised to turn a page as the group enacted new norms to protect children.

Father John Conner, 51, an American who was elected this month as superior general, announced the changes on Wednesday night as he wrapped up a general chapter attended by 66 representatives from around the world.

Conner, the order’s first non-Mexican leader, said in a statement the Legionaries wanted a “change of the institutional culture that allowed so much suffering to occur”.

The chapter approved documents outlining commitments for the protection of minors and vulnerable adults and for reckoning with its scandalous past.

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Well-known ex-Jesuit employee Brother Everard Booth named a suspected sex abuser

LOUISIANA
NOLA.com

February 27, 2020

By Ramon Antonio Vargas

A religious brother who worked several years at Jesuit High School in New Orleans — and had an endowed scholarship set up in his honor — was among four names added Thursday to a list of members of the Jesuit order suspected of sexual abuse while they worked in a region including Louisiana.

The update to the list marks the first time Jesuit officials have acknowledged they believe Everard J. Booth, who died in 1986, was an abuser.

Booth was the subject of “more than one” credible allegation, the order said. It didn’t specify where the alleged abuse occurred but said the “estimated timeframe” was in the 1960s. In a separate statement, Jesuit High officials said Thursday that the allegations do not involve students or Booth’s work at the school.

Besides Jesuit High and regional administrative offices in New Orleans, Booth was stationed at St. Charles College in Grand Coteau in St. Landry Parish, as well as two colleges in the country now known as Sri Lanka.

Other names newly added to the Jesuit order’s list are priests Jose Angel Borges, James Loeffler and Benjamin Smylie, who are all dead. Of those three, Loeffler was the only one ever stationed in Louisiana, serving a stint at Grand Coteau’s Christ the King Parish.

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Statement by Cheryl Summers, founder of For Such a Time As This Rally

UNITED STATES
SNAPNetwork.org

February 26, 2020

We’re here to protect innocent kids and vulnerable adults. We’re not here to punish or persecute anyone. This is about public safety and victims’ healing. When those happen, then it may be time for forgiveness or redemption,which are, in fact, private actions, not public actions. Public actions are what will keep others safe and help others heal.

We start with a simple truth: Sexual violence happens when those who commit or conceal it escape consequences.

We fear that’s what’s happening now, in part, because of the Missouri Baptist Convention.

The Convention has tapped Dr. Mike Roy to be on the board of trustees at Southwest Baptist University.

–This all stems from the case of Shawn Davies, who pled guilty in 2007 to molesting boys at First Baptist Church of Greenwood. Roy was the senior pastor there. Davies was youth and music minister. https://www.snapnetwork.org/news/baptist/baptist_minister_convicted.htm

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Warning: Fr. Tetherow Is Back at an Independent Latin Mass Chapel

PENNSYLVANIA
Patheos: Through a Catholic Lens (blog)

February 27, 2020

By Fr Matthew P. Schneider, LC

A year ago, I reported on how the diocese had dealt well with a priest once child pornography was found on his computer. Fr. Virgil Bradley Tetherow, who also goes by Fr. Gabriel Francis, was quickly suspended and later defrocked. I think the diocese did what they could to deal with the situation and they can’t really do much except warn people once he’s defrocked.

When I wrote the article in January 2019, it looked like Fr. Tetherow was no longer involved in the independent Latin Mass chapel as his name had been scrubbed from their website and Facebook page. (I should have used the Wayback Machine to save this, but I did not think of it at the time and nobody else saved the clergy/pastor page either.) However, his name is back on the St. Michael the Archangel website as the pastor. (See the image on the right.) Also, regular homilies by Tetherow from the past year are posted on the site.

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Springfield Diocese names investigators for abuse allegations

SPRINGFIELD (MA)
Daily Hampshire Gazette

February 27, 2020

By Michael Connors

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield has appointed three people to its newly created team of investigators in its Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance.

Retired Springfield Police Capt. C. Lee Bennett, retired Springfield Police Lt. Norman F. Charest and Brenda Burge, an investigator for the state Department of Children and Families, have been named as the new investigators, according to a press release. They will serve as administrative investigators in abuse claims made to the Diocesan Review Board, the release said.

Jeffrey J. Trant, the office’s director, said in the statement released Monday that the hirings were part of a number of changesin how allegations of abuse are handled by the diocese. In 2019, the Berkshire Eagle reported that the Springfield Diocese tried to repress molestation accusations against Bishop Christopher J. Weldon by a former altar boy, who served in the 1960s. Last June, the diocese announced the reorganization of its Office of Safe Environment and Victim Assistance, saying the office will build on abuse awareness training, among other measures, to fulfill its mission.

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Suffern monastery priest sexually assaulted at least two congregants: Cops

SUFFERN (NY)
The Journal News

February 21, 2020

A priest in the Tagaste Monastery and Sacred Heart Church in Suffern sexually assaulted and raped multiple women, Suffern police said.

A woman congregant told a priest in the monastery that she was sexually assaulted by 51-year-old Fidel Hernandez in 2018, according to police.

The clergy member contacted the Archdiocese, which contacted the Rockland District Attorney’s Office.

During the course of a joint investigation by the Suffern police and DA’s office, a second victim came forward, saying she was sexually assaulted by Hernandez too.

Suffern Police Chief Clarke Osborn said, at this time, they don’t know of any other victims, but if there are, he urges them to come forward.

“This is an ongoing investigation and we ask that anyone that feels they were a victim or knows of a potential victim to come forward and contact either the Suffern Police Department or the Rockland County District Attorney’s Office,” Suffern police said in a statement.

The announcment of Hernandez’s arrest was made at last weekend’s masses, Osborn said.
Hernandez was arraigned today in Suffern village court on charges of first-degree rape, first-degree criminal sexual act, first-degree sexual abuse and forcible touching and released on $50,000 bail pending a future court date.

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Suffern priest accused of rape faces more charges following grand jury indictment

SUFFERN (NY)
The Journal News

February 27, 2020

By Christopher J. Eberhart

A Suffern priest accused of raping two women faces more charges after he was indicted by a grand jury in Rockland County Court on Wednesday.

Fidel Hernandez, 51, was indicted on charges of first- and third-degree rape as well as three counts of first-degree criminal sexual act and three counts of third-degree criminal sexual act.

He was originally charged with first-degree rape, first-degree criminal sexual act, first-degree sexual abuse and forcible touching.

[ARREST: Suffern monastery priest sexually assaulted at least two congregants: Cops]

“This indictment sends the message that this office will prosecute those whom are to be trusted by their congregants,” Rockland County District Attorney Thomas Walsh said in a statement. “We cannot turn a blind eye to clergy sexual abuse cases. I hope that this indictment encourages others who may have seen, suspected or suffered clergy sex crimes to come forward and make a report to their local police or district attorneys.”

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Legion of Christ vows better abuse response amid new scandal

VATICAN CITY
Associated Press

February 27, 2020

By Nicole Winfield

The Legion of Christ religious order is promising accountability and transparency following damaging new revelations of sex abuse and cover-up that have undermined its credibility, a decade after revelations of its pedophile founder disgraced the order.

The Legion vowed to investigate the confirmed cases of past abuse by 33 priests and 71 seminarians. The Mexico-based order said it would reach out to the victims, publish the names of those found guilty of abuse in either a church or a state court, and punish superiors responsible for “gross negligence” in the handling of abuse accusations.

The measures described in a statement late Wednesday were responding to a burgeoning new scandal involving the order. The Vatican took over the Legion 10 years ago following revelations that its late founder, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, raped his seminarians, fathered at least three children and built a secretive, cult-like order to hide his double life.

Recent revelations have shown the Legion’s abuse problem went far beyond Maciel. Newly public cases exposed generational chains of abuse and high-level cover-up by superiors who are still in power. The cases indicated that the Vatican envoy who was tasked with reforming and purifying the order was part of the cover-up.

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3 lawsuits accuse former Maryvale teacher of sexually abusing students

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 28, 2020

By Mike McAndrew

Three former Maryvale School District students have accused their music teacher of sexually abusing them decades ago, according to Child Victims Act lawsuits against the district.

Stanley Bratt, a Maryvale East Elementary School teacher who died in 1980, according to the school district, is accused of abusing a 9- to 12-year-old boy from 1968-1971, a 9- to 10-year-old student from 1970-71 and an 11- to 15-year old student from 1973-1977.

The plaintiffs were not identified in the legal papers.

Attorney Julia Hilliker, who represents the school district, said that the district received no complaints about Bratt abusing children prior to the lawsuits being filed.

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Sexually abused by a local priest? Here’s how you can file a claim

ROCHESTER (NY)
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle

February 28, 2020

By Steve Orr

Claimants must get their form to Stretto, a bankruptcy-support company based in California hired by the diocese to handle claims.

Aug. 13 deadline has been set as the deadline for filing claims against the Rochester diocese for past sexual abuse of minors by priests and other church ministers.

An order signed by U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Paul Warren on Tuesday also specified the means by which people can file claims and laid out a plan to advertise the process throughout New York state.

Diocesan officials have said they’ve received notice of more than 200 allegations of past abuse by church ministers, though the final number of claims is likely to be higher.

The deadline and other details of the claims process were set as part of the diocese’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding in which diocesan officials are hoping to raise funds to pay abuse claimants while preserving sufficient assets to continue their ministry.

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Boy Scouts may be forced to sell Rockwell paintings

UNITED STATES
USA Today

February 28, 2020

Money would help pay victims of sexual abuse

“Norman Rockwell is really an American icon. He hits the heartstrings of people when they see it. His images resonate with nostalgia.” Barbara J. Sussman an accredited member of the American Society of Appraisers

Potentially worth millions, artwork could be at risk of liquidation to satisfy creditors. Buried in the fine print of a document filed as part of the Boy Scouts of America bankruptcy last week is a brief mention of a potentially huge asset: “original Rockwell paintings.”

The disclosure that the organization owns works by Norman Rockwell, the American painter and illustrator, is hardly a surprise since the artist and Scouts have been linked for more than a century. But the acknowledgment of those valuable assets, potentially worth millions to creditors, could set off a legal fight over their future.

With the Boy Scouts estimating they’ll face about 1,700 lawsuits over alleged sexual abuse dating back decades, the nonprofit is under pressure to sell off its holdings to pay victims. By filing for bankruptcy, the organization has tried to provide itself a path to carry out that process in an orderly way.

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Buffalo Diocese files for bankruptcy

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 28, 2020

By Jay Tokasz

The Buffalo Diocese, awash with lawsuits alleging child sex abuse by priests, nuns and others, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on Friday, marking another chapter in a scandal that has rocked the Catholic Church in Western New York since early 2018.

The Buffalo Diocese already is named as a defendant in 260 cases, more than any other institution in the state, and potentially faces huge losses if the cases go to trial.

The filing puts the lawsuits on hold and stops efforts by debtors to collect from the diocese. It does not mean that the diocese or its parishes are going out of business.

The diocese’s voluntary petition for non-individuals listed assets of $10 to $50 million and liabilities of $50 to $100 million and said the diocese had between 200 and 999 creditors.

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February 27, 2020

La causa Ilarraz vuelve a discutirse en el Poder Judicial entrerriano

PARANá (ARGENTINA)
Análisis Digital [Paraná, Argentina]

February 27, 2020

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En la Sala Penal del Superior Tribunal de Justicia (STJ) de Entre Ríos, se discutirá un recurso extraordinario en el marco de la causa Ilarraz. El tribunal estará compuesto por los vocales Bernardo Salduna, Susana Medina y Juan Ramón Smaldone.

La audiencia será a las 9.30, en el Salón Oyhampé, en el primer piso de los tribunales paranaenses. Desde el área de comunicación se indicó que será un debate público, pero no se permitirá grabar ni transmitir en directo.

El cura Justo José Ilarraz fue condenado en mayo de 2018 a 25 años de prisión por Promoción a la corrupción de menores agravada y abuso deshonesto agravado. Las violaciones se cometieron contra jóvenes del Seminario Menor de Paraná, donde Ilarraz era una especie de guía o guardador espiritual, entre 1985 y 1993. 

La causa se abrió en 2012, tras la investigación periodística del director de este medio, Daniel Enz, que cosechó distintas menciones y premios. Pero en la causa hubo una larga discusión jurídica entre el Ministerio Público Fiscal y la defensa del cura: la prescripción. Es que la acusación pública asumió como política respetar el tiempo de las víctimas de abuso para denunciar, investigar y juzgar este tipo de delitos, teniendo como norte el interés superior del niño y los pactos internacionales a los que suscribe nuestro país. Esa disputa atravesó distintos estamentos en la provincia y la Nación. Y las decisiones fueron siempre entorno al juzgamiento del cura. Finalmente, luego del debate y la condena, la defensa continúa agotando instancias de revisión.    

Ilarraz se encuentra cumpliendo prisión domiciliaria en un departamento del centro paranaense.

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Deuda Social de la Iglesia Católica en materia de abuso sexual del clero

(ARGENTINA)
Red de Sobrevivientes Chile  [Santiago, Chile]

February 27, 2020

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A continuación reproducimos un informe de la Red de Sobrevivientes de Argentina a la situación actual de los abusos en la Iglesia Católica. La responsabilidad del Papa actual y del Estado Vaticano.

DEUDA SOCIAL DE LA IGLESIA CATÓLICA EN MATERIA DE ABUSO SEXUAL DEL CLERO

Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Argentina

Argentina, 25 de febrero de 2020

La Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Sexual Eclesiástico de Argentina, pone a disposición de la opinión pública un detallado informe sobre la situación del flagelo del abuso sexual eclesiástico en nuestro país.

Al final de este panorama general, desolador y desafiante ofrecemos bajo el título de Nuestro Aporte una síntesis del trabajo diario y sostenido que realizamos para dar una respuesta proactiva a la vulneración de derechos y a la revictimización que ejerce la Iglesia sobre víctimas y sobrevivientes.

El delito sistemático del abuso sexual del clero católico es un fenómeno mundial que no ha cesado, ni tiene intenciones de hacerlo. En especial, por el comportamiento institucional de la Iglesia Católica que, por su contumacia, se niega a ajustar su estructura, funcionamiento y organización al derecho internacional de los derechos humanos.

Para la elaboración del presente informe se han seleccionado cinco criterios de evaluación a través de los cuales se analizará la problemática que nos ocupa:

  1. Contexto de privilegios y prebendas legales que dispone la Iglesia Católica en Argentina.
  2. Cumplimiento de Convenciones internacionales sobre derechos humanos en la organización eclesiástica.
  3. Acciones llevadas a cabo por el papa Bergoglio tendientes a consolidar el sistema de encubrimiento de sacerdotes abusadores.
  4. Vigencia de derechos humanos y garantía de defensa en juicio en las investigaciones y procedimientos canónicos. Respuesta de la iglesia en sede judicial estatal.
  5. Casos cuya atención fue solicitada a la Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Argentina.

1er. CRITERIO

Contexto de privilegios y prebendas legales que dispone la Iglesia Católica en Argentina.

Como es de público conocimiento en nuestro país no hay religión oficial ni de estado. Esta circunstancia no significa que no exista una institución religiosa que no cuente con un sistema de privilegios políticos, económicos y legales. Existe una que, además, presume de ser hegemónica: la Iglesia Católica.

El sistema de prebendas legales del que disfruta, se cimenta en cuatro pilares:

El art. 2 de la Constitución Nacional, que garantiza un anacrónico sostenimiento económico;

El Concordato de 1966, que permite la existencia de un enclave normativo que es un ordenamiento jurídico paralelo al del Estado;

El art. 146 inc. c del Código Civil y Comercial de la Nación, que le otorga el estatus de “estado dentro de otro estado”;

El conjunto de leyes de contenido económico surgidas de la última dictadura militar genocida, al que se suman millonarios privilegios fiscales y subsidios a la educación privada.

En materia de abuso sexual eclesiástico, interesa destacar el Concordato de 1966 ya que este permite el funcionamiento de los tribunales eclesiásticos,buna rémora siniestra de la Inquisición que actualmente mantiene el Vaticano, pero con el eufemismo de “Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe”.

En esos tribunales se legaliza el fuero personal, prohibido por la Constitución Nacional (art. 16), en el que curas juzgan a otros curas por delitos comunes disfrazados de “delitos canónicos”. Asimismo, se cometen violaciones a derechos humanos y garantías procesales de las víctimas de abuso sexual en las investigaciones y procedimientos que se inician ante la presentación de una denuncia, todo ello avalado por el Estado argentino ya que el referido Concordato le garantiza a la iglesia el no entrometimiento estatal en asuntos eclesiásticos.

Este esperpento jurídico sigue en pie y es garantía del abuso de poder, denegación de justicia y violación de derechos humanos de las víctimas y sobrevivientes. La iglesia justifica la existencia del Concordato en el ejercicio de la libertad religiosa, una falacia que se cae por sí sola ya que aquella es garantizada por la Constitución Nacional, no siendo necesario un tratado internacional que la legitime.

Cabe recordar que el ejercicio de la libertad religiosa no es absoluto, sino que está sujeto a limitaciones y regulaciones como cualquier libertad dentro del Estado Constitucional de Derecho. Por lo tanto, el Estado argentino debería denunciar en sede internacional el Concordato de 1966 y derogar la legislación nacional que permite su vigencia (leyes 17.032 y 26.939).

2do CRITERIO

Cumplimiento de Convenciones Internacionales sobre

Derechos Humanos.

A nivel mundial la Santa Sede ha suscripto poco más de una docena de los más de cien de instrumentos internacionales existentes sobre derechos humanos. Relacionados con el abuso sexual eclesiástico se encuentran la “Convención de los Derechos del Niño” y la “Convención contra la Tortura y Otros Tratos o Penas Crueles, Inhumanos o Degradantes”. En ambas la Iglesia se encuentra en estado de morosidad e incumplimiento, ya que debió presentar los informes de avance ante los Comités respectivos, pero a la fecha de publicación del presente informe no lo ha hecho.

Ante el Comité de los Derechos del Niño, debió hacerlo el 01 de septiembre de 2017, mientras que la presentación ante el Comité contra la Tortura el plazo venció el 23 de mayo de 2018. El mencionado Comité elaboró las “Observaciones finales sobre el segundo informe periódico de la Santa Sede” , con fecha 25 de febrero de 2014, donde constan las exhortaciones urgentes que le hizo al estado confesional:

“a) Garantizar que la Comisión creada en diciembre de 2013 investigue con independencia todos los casos de abuso sexual de niños así como la forma en que la jerarquía católica tramitó estos casos; considerar la posibilidad de invitar a la sociedad civil y las organizaciones de víctimas a participar en la labor de la Comisión, e invitar a los mecanismos internacionales de derechos humanos a apoyar su labor. El resultado de la investigación deberá darse a conocer para prevenir que se repitan los abusos sexuales de niños por miembros de la Iglesia Católica.

b) Separar inmediatamente del cargo a todas las personas de las que se sabe o sospecha que han cometido abusos sexuales de niños y remitir la cuestión a las autoridades pertinentes encargadas de hacer cumplir la ley para la investigación y el enjuiciamiento.

c) Asegurar el intercambio transparente de todos los expedientes que puedan utilizarse para exigir la rendición de cuentas de todas las personas responsables de abusos sexuales de niños, así como de las que encubrieron sus delitos y a sabiendas pusieron a los autores de estos delitos en contacto con niños.

d) Modificar el derecho canónico para que el abuso sexual de los niños se considere un delito y no una simple infracción moral y que se deroguen todas las disposiciones que podrían imponer la obligación de guardar silencio a las víctimas y a todas las personas que tienen conocimiento de estos delitos.

e) Establecer normas, mecanismos y procedimientos claros para que se denuncien todos los casos en que se sospecha el abuso y la explotación sexuales de niños a las autoridades encargadas de hacer cumplir la ley.

f) Garantizar que todos los sacerdotes, personal religioso y particulares sujetos a la autoridad de la Santa Sede tengan conciencia de sus obligaciones de informar de ello y del hecho de que, en caso de conflicto, estas obligaciones tengan precedencia sobre las disposiciones del derecho canónico.

g) Elaborar programas y políticas de prevención de tales delitos y de recuperación y reintegración social de los niños víctimas, de conformidad con los documentos finales aprobados en los Congresos Mundiales contra la Explotación Sexual Comercial de los Niños que se celebraron en Estocolmo, Yokohama (Japón) y Río de Janeiro (Brasil) en 1996, 2001 y 2008, respectivamente.

h) Elaborar programas educacionales preventivos para aumentar la conciencia de los niños sobre los abusos sexuales e impartirles las competencias necesarias para que puedan protegerse.

i) Estudiar la posibilidad de ratificar el Convenio del Consejo de Europa para la Protección de los Niños contra la Explotación y el Abuso Sexual”.

De todas ellas, la Santa Sede ha hecho recientemente un intento de cumplir con parte de la exhortación “d” levantando el secreto pontificio mediante el documento “Instrucción Sobre la confidencialidad de las causas”. Sin embargo, es un artificio porque la información que – supuestamente – transmitirá a las autoridades judiciales, será la relativa a cómo se vulneran en sede eclesiástica los derechos humanos y garantías procesales de las víctimas. El derecho canónico, principal eje donde se engarza todo el sistema de encubrimiento, se mantiene incólume, como se dará cuenta en el punto siguiente.

Respecto a la “Convención contra la tortura y otros tratos o penas crueles, inhumanos o degradantes” en las Observaciones finales sobre el informe inicial de la Santa Sede, la preocupación del Comité es la negativa “a facilitar a las autoridades civiles información relacionada con procedimientos sobre denuncias de que miembros del clero habían cometido violaciones de la Convención, a pesar de que, desde 2001, la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe, en la Santa Sede, tenía la responsabilidad de recibir e investigar toda denuncia de abuso sexual de menores perpetrado por miembros del clero” (pto. 14).

Esto es lo que a priori la Santa Sede “habría solucionado” con el levantamiento del secreto pontificio. Sin embargo como se explica en este informe y en los documentos anteriormente publicados por esta Red este sotiene graves y artificiosas irregularidades.

Finalmente, el Comité “está preocupado por las denuncias de que los concordatos y otros acuerdos negociados por la Santa Sede con otros Estados puedan efectivamente impedir el enjuiciamiento de presuntos infractores porque limitan la capacidad de las autoridades civiles para interrogar, exigir la presentación de documentos o enjuiciar a las personas relacionadas con la Iglesia Católica (arts. 2, 12, 13 y 16).

El Estado parte debe considerar la posibilidad de revisar sus acuerdos bilaterales concertados con otros Estados, como los concordatos, con el fin de cumplir sus obligaciones en virtud de la Convención e impedir que los acuerdos sirvan para proporcionar a personas que presuntamente hayan violado la Convención o que se crea que poseen información relativa a violaciones de la Convención, protección ante las investigaciones o enjuiciamientos por parte de las autoridades civiles, como resultado de su condición o pertenencia a la Iglesia Católica” (pto. 17). Como se advirtió en el punto 1, en Argentina la iglesia se ampara en el Concordato de 1966 para justificar su accionar antijurídico. Esto no ha cambiado en 2019.

3er. CRITERIO

Acciones llevadas a cabo por el papa Bergoglio tendientes a consolidar el sistema de encubrimiento de sacerdotes abusadores.

A fin de analizar exhaustivamente este punto, se adjunta un documento que se ofrece como ANEXO al presente informe.

4to CRITERIO

Vigencia de derechos humanos y garantía de defensa en juicio en las investigaciones y procedimientos canónicos.

Respuesta de la iglesia en sede judicial estatal. La reforma.

Como se sostuvo, las investigaciones y procedimientos canónicos no han sido modificados. Siguen vigentes las normas que avalan el oscurantismo, violación de garantías, traslados y encubrimientos de pederastas.

Hablamos de los cánones 1717 y 1719, declarados contrarios a la Constitución Argentina como también los que permiten institucional y normativamente que los sacerdotes sigan abusando sexualmente.

El canon 1341 que dispone: “Cuide el Ordinario de promover el procedimiento judicial o administrativo para imponer o declarar penas, sólo cuando haya visto que la corrección fraterna, la reprensión u otros medios de la solicitud pastoral no bastan para reparar el escándalo, restablecer la justicia y conseguir la enmienda del reo”.

Y el canon 1347 § 1.: “No puede imponerse válidamente una censura si antes no se ha amonestado al menos una vez al reo para que cese en su contumacia, dándole un tiempo prudencial para la enmienda. § 2. Se considera que ha cesado en su contumacia el reo que se haya arrepentido verdaderamente del delito, y además haya reparado conveniente los daños y el escándalo o, al menos, haya prometido seriamente hacerlo”.

Como puede apreciarse dichos cánones son engranajes del perverso mecanismo encubridor. Un obispo no iniciará investigación ni procedimiento alguno contra el sacerdote abusador sexual sin antes haber agotado la corrección fraterna, la reprensión, otros medios de solicitud pastoral.

Si aquellos medios no funcionan, puede amonestarse al abusador sexual, es decir, advertirlo y reprenderlo al menos una vez para que cese en su contumacia, dándole un tiempo prudencial para la enmienda. Es fácil advertir que durante todo ese período de tiempo el sacerdote pederasta puede seguir violando niños y niñas sin ningún tipo de obstáculos y con aval institucional.

Las reformas que la iglesia ha llevado a cabo en nuestro país se proyectaron a la elaboración de protocolos, líneas guías de actuación, documentos y medidas de profilaxis que lejos están de asegurar el ejercicio de derechos a las víctimas y sobrevivientes. Para destacar, los protocolos elaborados por los obispados de Salta y Entre Ríos, son un ejemplo de lo que sostenemos.

Todos estos instrumentos tienen dos objetivos: blindar la institución y aparentar cercanía con los sobrevivientes y su entorno familiar y de amistades. En este punto, esta Red elaboró un Protocolo de Actuación para evitar la manipulación y revictimización, al que remitimos. Destacamos que en ningún documento eclesiástico, sea elaborado por organismo vaticano, o conferencia episcopal, aparece mención alguna a los derechos humanos de las víctimas, mucho menos al principio jurídico rector “interés superior del niño”.

Respecto a las respuestas que la Iglesia Católica brinda a la justicia estatal, ahí se observa el verdadero rostro de su conducta abusiva, autoritaria y cruel. Los casos de los abusadores Juan Diego Escobar Gaviria, José Justo Ilarraz y Marcelino Moya (condenados a 25 años los dos primeros y a 17 el tercero) demostraron cómo la jerarquía eclesiástica evade el cumplimiento de obligaciones legales y procesales, invocando privilegios.

En el caso Cristo Orante, el obispo de la arquidiócesis con asiento en Mendoza, solicitó al Vaticano una “prórroga de jurisdicción”, justificado entre otros motivos en “evitar la judicialización de la causa canónica.” A este caso se suma el lamentable papel que les cupo al sacerdote Dante Simón y al obispo auxiliar de La Plata, Alberto Bochatey en la causa Próvolo. Este último fue el que, jugando el rol de comisionista inmobiliario, ofreció en venta al poder político el predio donde funcionaba el instituto educativo en el que se cometieron abusos aberrantes por los que en noviembre de 2019 fueron sentenciados dos curas a 42 y 45 años de prisión (Nicola Corradi y Horacio Corbacho) y el jardinero … Gómez a 17 años. En ese edificio actualmente funciona la Municipalidad de Luján de Cuyo.

Relacionado con el actuar ilegal de la iglesia frente al Estado, debe mencionarse la respuesta que el Arzobispado de Mendoza brindó en los Autos N° 303.957 caratulados “QUIROGA YOLANDA C/ ARZOBISPADO DE MENDOZA P/ DAÑOS DERIVADOS DE VIOLENCIA DE GÉNERO”, donde expresamente sostuvo: “Niego tener la obligación de cumplir con el Estado Constitucional de Derecho”.

Lo brevemente expuesto permite confirmar que en Argentina la Iglesia Católica mantiene un patrón de comportamiento institucional contrario al ordenamiento jurídico nacional.

5to Criterio

Casos cuya atención fue solicitada a la

Red de Sobrevivientes de Abuso Eclesiástico de Argentina

El listado que a continuación se detalla, se refiere a los casos que la Red de Sobrevivientes asesoró legalmente hasta Diciembre de 2019, sea con patrocinio letrado, articulación con profesionales que asistieron a las víctimas en sus lugares de residencia, o apoyo logístico, como también acompañamiento terapéutico desde la psicología, contención de pares e intercambio de experiencias así como tareas de activismo social.

Cabe aclarar que todos los mencionados son casos que han tomado estado público.

Se excluyen:

a) casos de violencia de género generados tanto por sacerdotes, como el comportamiento institucional de la Iglesia Católica;

b) casos en preparación para gestionar ante organismos públicos;

c) consultas que diariamente llegan a la Red, pero que por diversas razones no llegan aún hacerse visibles.

No se brinda información sobre la situación procesal en sede estatal y/o eclesiástica de los sacerdotes denunciados para no extender el informe. La misma queda a disposición de los medios que lo requieran.

Caso 1: Sacerdote Héctor Ricardo Giménez (La Plata, Buenos Aires). Obispos: Carlos Galán (fallecido), y Héctor Aguer.

Caso 2: Sacerdote Luis Brizzio (Santa Fe). Obispos: Edgardo Storni (fallecido) y José María Arancedo.

Caso 3: Sacerdote Domingo Jesús Pacheco (Corrientes). Obispo: Ricardo Faifer.

Caso 4: Sacerdote Raúl del Castillo (Mendoza). Obispo: José María Arancibia.

Caso 5: Sacerdote Jorge Luis Morello (Mendoza). Obispo: José María Arancibia.

Caso 6: Sacerdote: Alejandro Squizziatto. Obispo: Carlos María Franzini (fallecido).

Caso 7: Sacerdotes: Nicolás Bruno Corradi, Horacio Corbacho (Mendoza). Obispos: Héctor Aguer, Víctor Manuel Fernández (La Plata); José María Arancibia, Carlos María Franzini (fallecido) y Marcelo Colombo.

Caso 8: Sacerdote Félix Alejandro José Martínez. Obispos: José María Arancedo, Juan Alberto Puíggari, Jorge Mario Bergoglio y Antonio Marino.

Caso 9: Sacerdotes: Gustavo Ovelar, Francisco Bareiro, Superior Provincial, Francisco Carrillo, y Pedro Britez (Paraguay) Orden Misioneros Oblatos de María Inmaculada. Obispo: Ricardo Valenzuela.

Caso 10: Hermano Marista: Adolfo Fuentes (Chile). Provincial: Mariano Varona.

Caso 11: Sacerdotes: Abelardo Silva (fallecido), Obispo Justo Laguna (fallecido). Buenos Aires. Obispos: Mario Poli, Carlos Malfa.

Caso 12: Religiosa Bibiana Fleitas (Entre Ríos). Obispo: Juan Alberto Puíggari.

Caso 13: Sacerdote Justo José Ilarraz (Entre Ríos). Obispos: Estanislao Karlic, Mario Maulión y Juan Alberto Puíggari.

Caso 14: Sacerdote Marcelino Moya (Entre Ríos). Obispo: Juan Alberto Puiggari.

Caso 15: Sacerdote Mario Koessler (San Isidro, Bs. As.). Obispos: Oscar Ojea y Mario Poli.

Caso 16: Sacerdote Emilio Raimundo Lama (Salta). Obispo: Mario Cargnello.

Caso 17: Sacerdote Juan de Dios Gutiérrez (Catamarca). Obispo: Luis Urbanc.

Caso 18: Sacerdote Renato Rasjido (Andalgalá, Catamarca). Obispo: Luis Urbanc.

Caso 19: Sacerdote Carlos Alberto Dorado (Santiago del Estero). Obispo: Adolfo Uriona, Diócesis de Añatuya, Santiago del Estero.

Caso 20: Sacerdote Napoleón Sasso (San Juan). Obispo: Ítalo Di Stefano (fallecido).

Caso 21: Sacerdote Juan Diego Escobar Gavíria (Lucas González, Entre Ríos). Obispo: Juan Alberto Puiggari.

Caso 22: Sacerdote Néstor Monzón (Reconquista, Santa Fe). Obispos: José Masín y Rubén Martínez.

Caso 23: Superioras generales Herminia Stang y Vilma Oldani (Buenos Aires). Obispo: Raúl Primatesta (fallecido).

Caso 24: Sacerdotes Agustín Rosa Torino y Nicolás Parma. Monja Alicia Pacheco (Salta). Obispos: Mario Cargnello y Luis Stockler.

Caso 25: Sacerdote Carlos José (Provincia de Buenos Aires). Obispos: Guillermo Rodríguez Melgarejo y Sergio Buenanueva.

Caso 26: Sacerdote Juan José Crippa (Chaco). Obispos: Carmelo Giaquinta y Ramón Alfredo Dus.

Caso 27: Sacerdote Luxorio Ruiz Bilbao (fallecido) (Chaco). Obispo: Ramón Alfredo Dus.

Caso 28: Sacerdote Tulio Mattiussi (San Pedro, Buenos Aires). Obispo: Hugo Santiago.

Caso 29: Sacerdote Cristian Abel Vázquez (Río Grande, Tierra del Fuego). Obispo: Miguel Ángel D´Annibale.

Caso 30: Sacerdote Eduardo Lorenzo (La Plata, Buenos Aires). Obispos: Héctor Aguer y Víctor Fernández.

Caso 31: Sacerdote Moisés Pachado (Catamarca). Obispo: Luis Urbanc (Catamarca).

Caso 32: Sacerdotes Carlos Arce (Corral de Bustos, Córdoba). Obispos: Eduardo Eliseo Martín y Adolfo Uriona.

Caso 33: Sacerdote Walter Avanzini (Córdoba). Obispo: Adolfo Roque Esteban Arana (fallecido).

Caso 34: Monjes Diego Roqué y Oscar Portillo (Mendoza). Obispos: José María Arancibia, Carlos María Franzini (fallecido) y Marcelo Colombo.

Caso 35: Sacerdote José Padilla (La Pampa). Obispo Raúl Martín.

Caso 36: Sacerdote Mauro Henrique Cantanhede Ferreira. Obispo Carlos Alfonso Azpiroz Costa.

7. Conclusiones

a) El estado actual de la situación de los abusos sexuales eclesiásticos en la Argentina constituye un verdadero flagelo para la sociedad. Como en el resto del mundo el abuso de poder, la denegación de justicia y la violación de derechos humanos y garantías procesales para víctimas y sobrevivientes son denominadores lamentablemente comunes.

b) En nuestro país, la iglesia mantiene su funcionamiento dentro de un contexto de privilegios y prebendas políticas, económicas y legales. A las denuncias por abuso sexual, se las ventila en tribunales eclesiásticos, rémoras del colonialismo español, marcadamente inconstitucionales, donde se aplica la legislación canónica que también ha sido impugnada por inconstitucional conforme la jurisprudencia.

c) Las investigaciones y procedimientos canónicos son precedidos por largos períodos de encubrimiento de los pederastas, que tienen aval de sus autoridades para seguir violando niños, niñas, adolescentes y adultos vulnerables, bajo la excusa de la “caridad cristiana”.

d) Continúa ausente el cumplimiento de Convenciones Internacionales sobre Derechos Humanos en los espacios, entidades y organizaciones eclesiásticas. También en su accionar normativa y documentación.

e) Argentina participa de la misma situación mundial como consecuencia de que la Santa Sede es incumplidora serial de instrumentos internacionales, en especial, los que tutelan derechos de niños y mujeres. Respecto a estas últimas, es una de las principales usinas generadoras de violencia de género.

f) Jorge Mario Bergoglio, – papa Francisco -, ha llevado a cabo más de 70 acciones tendientes a consolidar el sistema de encubrimiento de sacerdotes y religiosas pederastas.

g) Las respuestas que la Santa Sede y la Conferencia Episcopal Argentina han dado al flagelo, en nada promueven un avance y reparación del daño del que son responsables. Mucho menos la extirpación de raíz del flagelo.

h) El conjunto de normas, documentos, líneas guía de actuación, cartas apostólicas y medidas de profilaxis elaboradas, no tienen otro objetivo que proteger y blindar la institución religiosa en desmedro de los derechos de las víctimas y sobrevivientes.

i) La última instrucción que levanta el secreto pontificio, si bien cumple mínimamente con exhortaciones de organismos internacionales, no representa un avance. Es una artimaña grosera que busca engañar a los sobrevivientes y a la opinión pública, consolidando la ilegalidad de las investigaciones y procedimientos canónicos.

j) Continúa la manipulación, abuso de poder y revictimización de las personas abusadas sexualmente, en especial, se observa en los hipócritas pedidos de perdón, discursos vacíos de contenido y acting del arrepentimiento. Se finge dolor. La última Cumbre Anttipederastia” fue un monumento a la discriminación y desprecio hacia víctimas y sobrevivientes.

k) El Estado argentino, es responsable no sólo de mantener los vergonzosos y anacrónicos privilegios y prebendas eclesiásticos que, en pleno siglo XXI, han perdido vigencia sociológica, histórica y jurídica. Además, es cómplice del incumplimiento de Convenciones Internacionales que la Iglesia Católica hace dentro de nuestro territorio.

Nuestro aporte

La Red, es un espacio de construcción constante, de retroalimentación, de enseñaje concepto con que el Dr. Enrique Pichon Rivière se refiere a la posibilidad de que todxs, a la vez, aprendamos y enseñemos acerca del tema que nos ocupa. De hecho es un espacio de sostén afectivo de pares, de cooperación e intercambio desde las experiencias que cada Sobreviviente ha atravesado. Es un pensar y repensar juntxs alternativas a la situación individual y grupal que faciliten su fortalecimiento y su sanación.

Es un permanente trabajo en Equipo, entre lxs Sobrevivientes, y lxs profesionales ya que ofrece asesoramiento legal y acompañamiento psicológico tanto a Sobrevivientes como a familiares. En su dinámica va diseñando diferentes dispositivos técnicos que responden a las necesidades que van surgiendo. Ejemplos de estos dispositivos son la creación del “Grupo de Jóvenes”(hijxs y hermanxs de Sobrevivientes), “Grupo de Madres”. A estos se suman grupos de sostén emocional específicos frente a situaciones que lo requieren, donde incluso participan Sobrevivientes que no pertenecen a la Red pero que son víctimas de una misma situación de abuso.

Otra de nuestras tareas es la construcción de articulaciones con organizaciones estatales y de la sociedad civil en materia judicial y de asistencia y acompañamiento a víctimas. Asimismo, colaboramos en la búsqueda de profesionales -abogadxs, psicólogxs, psiquiatras que estén próximxs al lugar de residencia de lxs Sobrevivientes. Con ellxs se efectúan intercambios profesionales, de intervención y de búsqueda de estrategias adecuadas. En caso de ser convocados también quienes son parte de esta Red participan como testigos de concepto en el marco de Juicios pertinentes a nuestro quehacer.

El abuso eclesiástico es un delito que produce gravísimas consecuencias en las personas afectadas, su familia y su entorno social. Es una estafa a toda una comunidad que le ha confiado educación y guía espiritual de sus hijxs a la Iglesia. Por ello debe ser abordado con absoluto respeto a la intimidad de lxs denunciantes. Sobre esta base promovemos el derecho a la información y el trabajo de la Red con todos los medios de comunicación es constante y fluido, con excelente recepción.

La producción de contenidos y la difusión de los mismos de diversos modos es otro de los desafíos de esta Red, entendiendo la importancia de compartir conocimientos y experiencias. Esta tarea permite visibilizar las distintas aristas que tiene este tema, las respuestas sistemáticas a bíctimas y Sobrevivientes que dan continuidad al antiguo accionar de la Instituciòn Iglesia y su sistema de encubrimiento e impunidad.

Nuestro compromiso fundamental es difundir y prevenir, haciendo conocer las características y perfiles de los curas y monjas abusadorxs, asi como su modus operandi para que no destruyan màs nuestras niñeces, adolescencias ni adulteces vulnerables.

________________

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Retired Catholic priest in southeast Mo. pleaded not guilty on child sex abuse charges

STODDARD COUNTY (MO)
KFVS-TV (Channel 12)

February 19, 2020

By Amber Ruch

A retired Catholic priest in the Heartland was charged with multiple counts of sexual abuse with children.

According to Stoddard County Prosecuting Attorney Russ Oliver, 76-year-old Frederick Lutz was arrested at his home in Springfield on a Stoddard County warrant for charges of forcible sodomy, two counts of statutory sodomy second degree and felony sexual abuse related to allegations of sex crimes that happened while Lutz served as the priest at St. Joseph Parish in Advance, Mo. His bond was set at $125,000 cash only.

He was taken to the Stoddard County Jail on Wednesday afternoon to be booked.

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Federal court sets deadline for filing claims against the Rochester Diocese

ROCHESTER (NY)
WXXI

February 26, 2020

By Alex Crichton

Law firms representing clients in sex abuse lawsuits against the Rochester Catholic Diocese are urging survivors to file their claim before August 13, a deadline handed down by the bankruptcy court presiding over the Diocese’s bankruptcy filing.

Last fall, the Rochester Diocese was the first in New York to seek bankruptcy protection due to numerous lawsuits filed against the diocese under the Child Victims Act. James Marsh, founder of the New York City-based Marsh Law Firm, says the bankruptcy court has issued an August 13 deadline, called a bar date, for survivors to file their claims. After that date, no further claims can be filed.

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Congressman Bennie Thompson asks DOJ to investigate Catholic sex abuse settlement

MISSISSIPPI
The Clarion-Ledger

February 24, 2020

By Sarah Fowler

Congressman Bennie Thompson has asked the Department of Justice to investigate settlements given to two victims of clergy abuse, saying in a letter that Catholic officials “exploited” the young men.

Last August, cousins La Jarvis Love and Joshua Love told The Associated Press they were repeatedly abused by Brother Paul West during the 1990s, when they were elementary school students at St. Francis of Assisi School in Greenwood, Mississippi.

West’s name is on the list of clergy members credibly accused of sexual abuse released by the Jackson Diocese last March.

In a letter dated Feb. 20, Thompson outlined the abuse inflicted on La Jarvis, Joshua and Raphael Love by West and the $15,000 settlement La Jarvis and Joshua Love each received from the Catholic Church.

Across the United States, settlements have ranged much higher. In 2006, the Catholic Diocese of Jackson, which includes Greenwood, settled lawsuits involving 19 victims — 17 of whom were white — for $5 million, with an average payment of more than $250,000 per victim.

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Congressman seeks investigation of church’s sex abuse deals

MISSISSIPPI
Associated Press

February 26, 2020

A congressman is asking the Department of Justice to investigate settlements to two men who say they were victims of clergy abuse at a Catholic school in Mississippi.

In a letter, U.S. Rep. Bennie Thompson says Catholic officials “exploited” the young men, The Clarion Ledger reported.

They were paid far less than what others have received through legal settlements with the church, the Mississippi Democrat said.

The request for an investigation comes after The Associated Press made details of the cases public in a story last year.

The two cousins told the AP they were repeatedly abused during the 1990s, as elementary school students at St. Francis of Assisi School in Greenwood, Mississippi. The cousins were each paid $15,000.

The settlements, Thompson wrote, were “far less than what many other sex abuse victims have received through legal settlements with the Catholic church.”

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Former Arizona Catholic priest dies before trial on child abuse charges

PHOENIX (AZ)
The Republic

February 26, 2020

By Lauren Castle

A former Catholic priest who was indicted on child sex crimes has died before his trial, according to the Roman Catholic Diocese of Phoenix.

John “Jack” Dallas Spaulding died Tuesday at the age of 75.

He was facing six counts of sexual misconduct with a minor and one count of molestation of a child. The two boys were under the age of 15 during the alleged incidents, which were reported to have occurred in 2003 and 2007.

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A pediatrician’s lament: My 30-year journey with clergy sexual abuse

CANADA
LaCroix Internationa

February 26, 2020

By Sister Nuala Kenny OC, MD

“See, O Lord, how distressed I am; my stomach churns, my heart is wrung within me (Lamentations 1:20)

‘I pray for this effort to finally address coherently the theologies necessary to reform the cultural and systemic factors operative in the clergy abuse crisis’

As a pediatrician, I know the devastating harms of the physical and sexual abuse of children and youth by family members and trusted others in society.

I have held the shaking and bleeding body of a raped 12-year-old boy and tried to comfort a seven-year-old girl terrified of being touched after assault.

As a religious sister, I have wept often in 30 years of work on sexual abuse by clergy.

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February 26, 2020

Diocese knew in 2002 of ex-Springfield priest’s sex abuse allegation. Why wasn’t he fired?

SPRINGFIELD (MO)
Springfield News-Leader

February 25, 2020

By Harrison Keegan

A spokeswoman said the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau was aware in 2002 that one of its priests had been accused of sexually abusing a teen.

But the accused clergyman was allowed to keep working as a priest for the next nine years, until he retired in 2011.

That now-former priest, 76-year-old Frederick Lutz, was arrested at his Springfield home last week on charges of forcible sodomy, statutory sodomy and sexual abuse for acts that allegedly occurred in 2000 in Stoddard County in southeast Missouri.

The criminal charges stem from those same allegations that the diocese says it found out about in 2002, involving a 17-year-old boy.

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Missouri Baptist trustee tussle returns spotlight to old allegations of mishandled abuse

MISSOURI
Baptist News Global

February 26, 2020

By Bob Allen

Advocates for survivors of clergy sexual abuse criticized the Missouri Baptist Convention for electing a university trustee accused in 2005 of not cooperating with police in what media at the time described as Missouri’s biggest clergy sex-abuse case to date.

The Survivors Network for those Abused by Priests and the For Such A Time As This Rally announced Wednesday they will urge Missouri’s attorney general to launch a statewide investigation into Baptist child sex crimes and cover ups similar to one conducted last year involving the state’s four Roman Catholic dioceses.

Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri, announced Feb. 24 that trustees will launch their own investigation into whether a newly elected trustee “imposed” on the university by the Missouri affiliate of the Southern Baptist Convention mishandled child sexual abuse allegations against one of his staff members in 2005.

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La Iglesia chilena a dos años de la misión Scicluna: lo que cambió y lo que quedó

[The Chilean Church two years after the Scicluna mission: what changed and what remained]

CHILE
La Tercera

February 21, 2020

By Juan Paulo Iglesias/Sergio Rodríguez

El 19 de febrero de 2018 el prelado de Malta llegó, enviado por el Papa Francisco, para ver qué pasaba con el obispo Juan Barros. Terminó recibiendo decenas de testimonios de abusos, que detonaron la crisis. Dos entidades laicas analizan lo recorrido

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Child sexual abuse survivors deal with bankruptcy, old evidence after laws extend statute of limitations

UNITED STATES
USA TODAY

February 24, 2020

By Kevin McCoy

Raul Diaz envied the kids from his New York City neighborhood who’d joined the Boy Scouts of America during the 1960s. Hoping to go on camping trips, too, he convinced his mother to let him sign up.

The decision led to a half-century-long saga — not of pitching tents, paddling canoes and earning merit badges, but of anguishing over the sexual abuse he suffered.

Diaz, now 60, is among thousands of people who have taken advantage of sweeping legal changes that extend statutes of limitations to allow the abused to sue their attackers.

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Would your church offerings be used to settle sex-abuse claims in Harrisburg Diocese?

HARRISBURG (PA)
York Daily Record

February 25, 2020

By Sam Ruland

As the sun began to go down and the shadows of the church vanished from the sidewalk, Shannon Bailey hustled up the steps of St. Patrick’s Church of York, eager to get a good seat before the service started Sunday.

A lifelong Catholic, Bailey, 54, attends Mass weekly, praying for everyone she knows — her dozens of nieces and nephews, the neighbors in the house next door, her daughter’s volleyball team, the feral cats that infiltrate her back yard. She hasn’t let her faith be dissuaded by the sex abuse crisis that’s engulfed the Catholic Church.

It’s not her place to pass judgment, she said.

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Detroit Catholics say archdiocese fabricated rape charge against pastor

DETROIT (MI)
CNA

February 25, 2020

By JD Flynn

A group of Detroit Catholics has filed a lawsuit claiming that the Archdiocese of Detroit fabricated an allegation of rape against their pastor in order to avoid media criticism about its handling of abuse allegations, and has mishandled the canonical case against him.

The Archdiocese of Detroit said it can not speak on the specifics of the case, but that it takes allegations of clerical abuse very seriously.

The lawsuit alleges that an archdiocesan official “twisted…allegations and fabricated a rape charge against Fr. Perrone in order to force the AOD to remove Fr. Perrone, and, thereby, shield the AOD and [Msgr. Michael] Bugarin from a negative AP story.”

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Former priest in Dansville, Avon named in new child sex abuse lawsuits

LIVINGSTON COUNTY (NY)
Livingston County News

February 26, 2020

By Matt Leader

A former Catholic priest who served at churches in Avon and Dansville in the 1980s is named as a defendant in two Child Victims Act lawsuits, filed earlier this month in Livingston County Supreme Court.

Joseph Edward Larrabee, who was ordained in 1980, is accused of sexually abusing two teenagers at least 19 times between 1982 and 1984 by exploiting his position as a priest at St. Agnes Church in Avon.

Larrabee could not be reached for comment. The former priest’s accusers, now in their 50s, brought their civil suits Feb. 4. They’re both represented by Simmons Hanly Conroy, a national firm with offices across the country, and the Law Offices of Mitchell Garabedian, a Boston firm that’s represented victims of the Catholic Church for decades. Larrabee’s accusers are both demanding jury trials.

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Boy Scouts’ bankruptcy could result in compensation for more abuse survivors

UNITED STATES
PBS

February 24, 2020

By Pamela Foohey

The Boy Scouts of America has filed for bankruptcy to figure out how to fairly compensate thousands of survivors of alleged sexual abuse who accuse the Scouts of neglecting to protect them.

Revelations regarding decades of the abuse of children and long-running institutional failures to stop the abuse are raising questions about the future of the Boy Scouts and what will become of its troops. The Scouts’ initial bankruptcy documents state that 275 lawsuits are pending in state and federal courts across the country, and that attorneys for survivors estimate another 1,400 claims will be filed. The Scouts disclosed that they have spent $150 million on settlements and legal fees between 2017 and 2019.

I’m a legal scholar who has studied the bankruptcy cases filed by hundreds of nonprofits, including religious ones like Catholic dioceses. Based on what I’ve observed, I anticipate that this step may allow the Boy Scouts to continue operating and to establish an effective way to adjudicate and pay sexual abuse survivors.

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School for the Deaf Reports Dozens of Decades-Old Sexual Abuse Cases

NEW YORK (NY)
The New York Times

February 25, 2020

By Neil Vigdor

The oldest school for the deaf in the United States has reported dozens of cases of sexual and physical abuse by nine former staff members that it said took place over more than three decades — including instances in which some students were forced to eat until they vomited or were confined in closets as a form of corporal punishment.

The learning institution, the American School for the Deaf, which was founded in 1817 in Hartford, Connecticut, detailed the pattern of abuse in a report after a yearlong investigation by an outside lawyer hired by the school.

The report, which was released Friday and based on interviews with 81 alumni, former faculty and staff members and other witnesses, said the abuse occurred from the 1950s through the 1980s at the main campus, now in West Hartford, and at the school’s Camp Isola Bella summer facility in Salisbury, Connecticut.

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No, Jean Vanier is not ‘like all of us’

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 25, 2020

By Jamie Manson

Since the news broke Saturday morning that Jean Vanier had coercive, nonconsensual and abusive sexual encounters with at least six adult women, my social media feeds have been filled with folks trying to make sense of these revelations.

I admit that Vanier was not someone I looked to for spiritual inspiration. Though he was not a priest, my years of experiencing the clericalism of both the clergy and the laity had made me weary and wary of the Catholic tendency towards hero worship, particularly of grand older men.

The fact that I did not have an emotional tie to Vanier may have helped me take an unflinching look at L’Arche’s 10 page report on the abuses that he and his mentor, Dominican Fr. Thomas Philippe, perpetrated against vulnerable women.

L’Arche should be commended for its support of Vanier’s victims and for its fearless transparency about its founder’s misconduct. Tina Bovermann, national leader/executive director of L’Arche USA, has modeled for all church leaders how to deal with abuse with integrity and compassion.

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Bishop shakeup: West Virginia Catholic diocese issues audit

CHARLESTON (WV)
Associated Press

February 24, 2020

By John Raby

The net assets of West Virginia’s Catholic Diocese dropped by $4.8 million during a fiscal year that coincided with the resignation of its bishop amid allegations of sexual and financial misconduct, an audit shows.

The Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston released the audit last week spanning the period from June 30, 2018, to June 30, 2019. Net assets totaled $352.3 million, down from $357 million a year earlier, according to the findings made public by current Bishop Mark E. Brennan. Liabilities totaled $70.3 million, up from $65.2 million.

Brennan’s predecessor, Bishop Michael Bransfield, resigned in September 2018 and has denied wrongdoing.

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Australian High Court releases submissions for Cardinal Pell’s appeal

CANBERRA (AUSTRALIA)
Catholic News Service

February 24, 2020

Australia’s High Court has released the full set of submissions for Cardinal George Pell’s March 11 and 12 final appeal hearing against historic child sexual abuse crimes.

The first appeal by Pell – who continues to claim he is innocent – was dismissed 2-1 by a panel of judges of the Victorian Supreme Court in August. The documents released in late February show that the High Court requested submissions from Pell’s counsel about the fact that the three judges of the Victorian court decided to view the original video testimony from Pell’s only living victim as they considered his appeal.

As the only living witness to the crime, the victim’s testimony sits at the center of Pell’s conviction. The other victim, one of two 13-year-old choirboys he is convicted of assaulting in 1996 while archbishop of Melbourne, is deceased. The victims’ identities remain secret due to their age at the time of the offenses.

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MBC Backs Embattled Trustee

JEFFERSON CITY (MO)
Word&Way

February 25, 2020

By Brian Kaylor

Leaders of the Missouri Baptist Convention defended a pastor accused by police of not properly handling a case of a staff member sexually abusing boys. However, they did not address the key allegation, and they misrepresented the nature of the claims.

After old allegations against a Baptist pastor resurfaced over the weekend, Southwest Baptist University in Bolivar, Missouri, announced Feb. 22 it would investigate the claims involving Mike Roy, who was elected by the MBC in October to serve as an SBU trustee. Roy was among five trustees chosen by the MBC’s Nominating Committee after that committee rejected nominees by SBU and misled MBC messengers about the nomination process.

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MINNESOTA LAITY LAUNCH WEBSITE TO PURIFY THEIR DIOCESE

CROOKSTON (MN)
Church Militant

February 25, 2020

By Martina Moyski

Crookston faithful call for prayer, fasting, sacrifice, witnessing

Working to reverse the tide of corruption in their scandal-wracked diocese, laity in the northern Minnesota diocese of Crookston launched a website Feb. 24 to rally the faithful to prayer.

The website, called TruthDOC (Truth Diocese of Crookston), has been designed and is financed entirely by faithful lay people of the diocese “who are committed to praying, fasting, sacrificing and witnessing for truth, purification, conversion and justice.”

The initiative comes amid a series of controversies — chief among them, allegations of clerical sex abuse cover-up by Crookston Bp. Michael Hoeppner, who has the distinction of being the first prelate in the world to be investigated under the new Vatican protocol designed to hold Catholic hierarchy accountable for concealing the crimes of predator priests.

A project organizer told Church Militant that multiple purposes for the website exist, one being to give Catholics a “big picture” of what’s going on in the Church rather than “bits and pieces of incomplete information.”

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CHILD USA and SNAP Film Screening

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Catholics4Change

February 19, 2020

By Kathy Kane

Join CHILD USA and SNAP on Wednesday 2/26 for an exclusive sneak peak of ‘A Peloton of One,’ a documentary following Dave Ohlmuller’s journey across the country to bring awareness to child sex abuse advocacy and statute of limitations reform. As part of the CHILD USA Film Series, the screening will be followed by a panel discussion moderated by Professor Marci A. Hamilton, featuring grassroots activist Art Baselice and Executive Producer/Survivor Joe Capozzi, co-directors John Bernardo and Steve Mallorca. Viewers are invited to stay for a complimentary reception afterwards!

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Padre pervert: in the US, loving the boys, the priest was impersonating a girl in social networks

UNITED KINGDOM
The Saxon

February 24, 2020

By Maria Batterbury

Despite the fact that the Catholic Church is determined to deal with cases of sexual abuse of priests on young parishioners, cases of exposure lustful pedophiles in cassocks are constantly growing.

Another scandal, sexual violence occurred recently in the United States, where a Catholic priest from the city of Strongsville (Ohio) charged with possession of child pornography.

In addition, arrested Robert McWilliams also suspected of involvement in a number of other sexual crimes, reports news portal WTRF.

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Catholic diocese mulls options, including bankruptcy, amid clergy abuse lawsuits

OGDENSBURG (NY)
Adirondack Daily Enterprise

February 25, 2020

Catholics in northern New York received a message from the Diocese of Ogdensburg on Sunday.

A one-page letter, which was either handed out to churchgoers or included in the bulletin, was not distributed by all parishes Sunday. Some will distribute the letter on March 1.

The letter details the struggles the diocese has faced in the wake of the passage of the Child Victims Act which opened a one-year window for victims of childhood sexual abuse to bring lawsuits that were previously barred due to statutes of limitation. That window closes on Aug. 13.

Since the window opened, 23 lawsuits have been filed against the Diocese of Ogdensburg, headed by Bishop Terry LaValley.

“We want to be transparent,” Diocese Director of Communications Darcy Fargo said. “The diocese is made of the people who reside in the 12,000 square miles the diocese encompasses, and they deserve to know where we stand.”

“We anticipate that more lawsuits may be filed, and we are unable at this time to determine the total number of claims that will be made while the CVA window is open,” the message read.

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S. Dakota kills bill from survivors of Catholic school abuse

PIERRE (SOUTH DAKOTA)
Associated Press via National Catholic Reporter

February 25, 2020

By Stephen Groves

Louise Aamot Charbonneau couldn’t make her annual trip to the South Dakota Legislature this year to confront lawmakers with her story of surviving childhood rape and abuse at the hands of priests and nuns at a boarding school for Native Americans during the 1950s and 1960s.

The 69-year-old died suddenly three weeks ago. But her sisters, bonded both through family and survival, showed up, along with their daughters and granddaughters.

They continued their push for lawmakers to open a two-year window for victims of childhood sexual abuse to file lawsuits against organizations in which the abuse occurred. The proposal has died every year, but they keep coming back to confront lawmakers with their testimony that priests and nuns at St. Paul’s Indian Mission School systematically perpetrated rape, abuse and even forced abortions.

For nearly a decade, Charbonneau, along with her eight older sisters, has made their case to lawmakers. Geraldine Dubourt, one of the sisters, said in some ways she was glad her sister Louise died peacefully at her home so she didn’t have to continue the fight.

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Survivors stunned after Bishop Scharfenberger celebrates Mass with abusive priests

BUFFALO (NY)
WKBW-TV

February 25, 2020

By Charlie Specht

Survivors of sexual abuse by priests in the Diocese of Buffalo reacted with outrage and despair Tuesday to news that interim Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger celebrated Mass the day before with multiple priests the diocese admits are credibly accused of child sexual abuse.

Scharfenberger invited priests of the diocese to Mass and lunch at St. Leo the Great in Amherst on Monday. At the Mass, dozens of priests dressed in robes and concelebrated, or shared the Mass and Eucharist with, the Rev. Fabian J. Maryanski.

“I’m so very sad and confused today,” said Stephanie McIntyre, who said she was abused by Maryanski starting when she was 15 years old. “This is an all time low moment that hit me just when I thought I was ready to begin healing.”

Maryanski had been accused of abusing McIntyre decades ago at a parish in Barker, and he denied the allegations. But on Jan. 7, 2019, the diocese included both Maryanski and the Rev. Mark J. Wolski on its official list of “priests with substantiated allegations of child sexual abuse.”

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‘Make your voices heard’: Gonzaga lecturer urges strong response to priestly sexual abuse crisis

SPOKANE (WA)
Spokesman-Review

February 25, 2020

By Jared Brown

Jennifer Beste acknowledged the message she brought to Gonzaga University on Tuesday evening wasn’t going to leave her lecture audience in a good mood.

It was a message about how the Catholic Church has the power and wealth to address the ongoing clergy sexual abuse crisis and is complicit in abuse as long as it doesn’t act.

She said young adults have the power to sway Church leaders as fewer young people stay religiously affiliated.

“The Catholic bishops are acting differently than they did the first decade of the 2000s. They are apologizing. They are trying to gain the trust of the laity,” Beste said.

And she urged people to turn those feelings of anger and exasperation into action because a majority of Catholics are necessary to sway the opinion of Church leaders.

“I ask you to please make your voices heard,” Beste said. “We need to organize. We need to protest.”

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In aftermath of sexual abuse scandal, DC-area churches see slight dip in attendance

WASHINGTON D.C.
WTOP-TV

February 26, 2020

By Dick Uliano

In the aftermath of the clergy sexual abuse scandal, churches in the D.C. area report there has been a decrease in church attendance, but not by much.

“From my perspective, we have not lost a lot of people going to church, we have lost some,” said Monsignor John Enzler, a priest in the Washington Archdiocese and the president and CEO of Catholic Charities of the Archdiocese of Washington.

Parish donations in the D.C. area are also remaining steady, he said.

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Explained: Why the Boy Scouts Just Filed for Bankruptcy – It’s not a good situation.

UNITED STATES
The National Interest

February 26, 2020

by Pamela Foohey

The Boy Scouts of America has filed for bankruptcy to figure out how to fairly compensate thousands of survivors of alleged sexual abuse who accuse the Scouts of neglecting to protect them.

Revelations regarding decades of the abuse of children and long-running institutional failures to stop the abuse are raising questions about the future of the Boy Scouts and what will become of its troops. The Scouts’ initial bankruptcy documents state that 275 lawsuits are pending in state and federal courts across the country, and that attorneys for survivors estimate another 1,400 claims will be filed. The Scouts disclosed that they have spent US$150 million on settlements and legal fees between 2017 and 2019.

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Timlin defends attending installation Mass in Philly

PHILADELPHIA (PA)
Citizens’ Voice

February 26, 2020

By Joseph Kohut

Barred from representing the Diocese of Scranton at public functions, retired Bishop James C. Timlin dressed in his clerical attire and sat among his peers at last week’s installation Mass of Philadelphia’s new archbishop.

Diocese spokesman Eric Deabill confirmed Tuesday that Timlin attended the Feb. 18 installation of Archbishop Nelson J. Pérez but added “he wasn’t representing the diocese in any way.”

Video footage taken at the Mass and posted by CatholicPhilly.com, the archdiocese’s digital news organization, show Timlin entering the church dressed in clerical attire, including his bishop’s mitre.

Reached at Villa St. Joseph in Scranton, Timlin, 92, said he did not violate any restrictions laid down by Scranton Bishop Joseph C. Bambera.

“I am free to live my life,” Timlin said.

He said he does not represent the diocese and does not attend public events within the Diocese of Scranton.

He stressed he is still a bishop, however, and will attend events outside the diocese.

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February 25, 2020

Pope urges church workers to fight child abuse, even when facing threats

DENVER (CO)
Crux

February 25, 2020

By Inés San Martín

Rome – In a video message sent to an abuse prevention formation center in Mexico, Pope Francis condemned the fact there are people willing to hire a hit man to stop abuse prevention and child protection.

“You will be misunderstood, [some] will tell you are wasting your time,” Francis says in the video sent to the Center for Interdisciplinary Research and Formation for the Protection of Minors (CEPROME), an interdisciplinary center for child protection at the Pontifical University of Mexico. “You will be threatened, because there are those who are threatened. More than one will tell you that they are capable of hiring a hit man to clean up the field.”

“Be prudent,” he adds. “Take care of yourselves, but continue to be brave and work. Preventing the abuse of children, the abuse of those who are at a disadvantage due to their social situation or an illness, is an act of love.”

CEPROME works with the Center for Child Protection at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian University.

Standing next to Francis in the video is Father Daniel Portillo, president of CEPROME, who was in Rome recently and who met the pope to discuss the center’s ongoing initiatives.

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Western Massachusetts priest pleads guilty to child pornography possession; diocese reveals abuse allegation

NEW YORK (NY)
Episcopal News Service

February 24, 2020

By Egan Millard

Western Massachusetts priest pleads guilty to child pornography possession; diocese reveals abuse allegation

The Rev. Gregory Lisby, a priest in the Diocese of Western Massachusetts, pleaded guilty to possession of child pornography on Feb. 21, having been charged after FBI agents raided the rectory where he was living in September. The same day, the diocese also revealed that, since Lisby’s arrest, it has “received devastating credible evidence” that Lisby sexually abused a teenager.

Lisby had been living with his husband, then the rector of St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Worcester, in the church’s rectory with their two children when the FBI found nearly 200 images and videos of child pornography in a Microsoft account Lisby used, according to court records.

At the time, Lisby was working as a kindergarten teacher in a public school in Holyoke, having been suspended in 2018 from his position as rector of All Saints Church in Worcester “for an inappropriate relationship with an adult that did not involve sexual contact,” Western Massachusetts Bishop Douglas Fisher wrote in a letter to the diocese shortly after Lisby’s arrest. Fisher added in that letter that the diocese had “no reason to believe that children in our diocese have been victimized in this situation.”

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Attorney General’s inquiry leads to sex abuse charges against retired Missouri priest

ST. LOUIS (MO)
Post-Dispatch

February 25, 2020

By Nassim Benchaabane

https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/attorney-general-s-inquiry-leads-to-sex-abuse-charges-against/article_14ce172f-38a6-59a3-9c6b-9a5b4cdddfe8.html

A retired southeast Missouri priest charged with sexually abusing a teen 20 years ago is the first to be prosecuted in connection with a yearlong investigation by the Missouri Attorney General’s office into sex abuse in the Catholic Church.

At least 11 other cases have been referred to county prosecutors, said Chris Nuelle, with the attorney general’s office.

A spokesman for the Archdiocese of St. Louis said Monday that the archdiocese could not confirm whether any former priests here were included in Attorney General Eric Schmitt’s referrals.

Schmitt, Missouri’s top prosecutor, began the referrals in November, following a yearlong statewide review of church records dating to 1945 that reported 163 former clergy had been credibly accused of sexual abuse of a minor.

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Former Danbury priest accused of sexual abuse pleads not guilty

DANBURY (CT)
News Times

February 24, 2020

By Kendra Baker

Not guilty pleas have been entered in the case against the former priest accused of sexually assaulting one boy and groping another.

Jaime Marin-Cardona, 51, is charged with three counts of fourth-degree sexual assault, three counts of risk of injury to child and three counts of illegal sexual contact.

Marin-Cardona turned him in to Danbury police on a warrant Jan. 3.

The warrant alleges that he groomed two boys over the course of four years, and sexually abused one of them over the same period of time.

The alleged abuse began in 2014 — the same year Marin-Cardona became a priest at Our Lady of Guadalupe Church on Golden Hill Road.

He was placed on administrative leave Dec. 11, after the Diocese of Bridgeport’s Sexual Misconduct Review Board learned that the state Department of Children and Families had substantiated allegations of abuse against him.

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‘The church we so believed in abandoned us,’ mom of assault victim says at sentencing of Allentown Diocese priest

ALLENTOWN (PA)
Morning Call

February 24, 2020

By Laurie Mason Schroeder and Daniel Patrick Sheehan

https://www.mcall.com/news/police/mc-nws-allentown-diocese-priest-sentenced-sex-assault-20200224-zqrgadp5o5efjovdrxemzx6jqi-story.html

After the father of a 17-year-old Allentown Central Catholic High School student who was groped by an Allentown Diocese priest lamented to Lehigh County Judge Maria L. Dantos that he was unable to do more to protect his daughter, the judge posed a question:

“Would it surprise you to learn that he was transferred here in 2016 after a similar incident?” she asked the father.

It was a stunning moment in an emotional hearing that ended with the Rev. Kevin Lonergan, 31, being sentenced to one to two years in state prison, the maximum allowed by law.

Lonergan, of Pottsville, will also be a registered sex offender under Megan’s Law for 15 years.

While the prior allegation did not lead to Lonergan’s arrest and was previously revealed in a 2018 news release and letter to parishioners, the judge still had strong words for the Catholic Church, noting that the practice of moving troublesome priests from one church to another has been condemned since the early 1980s.

“We are still transferring priests that molest children?” she asked, her voice raised. “If he had been sanctioned and fired, this victim would not be a victim.”

The diocese said in a statement that it wasn’t accurate to say it transferred a priest who committed an offense.

“Father Lonergan received a new assignment in 2016 only after Northampton County Children and Youth determined that the accusation was unfounded,” the diocese statement said.

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Clergy Abuse Survivors Mark Summit Anniversary With Protest at Vatican

DENVER (CO)
National Catholic Register

February 24, 2020

By Edward Pentin

According to the victims, there has been insufficient progress in making meaningful changes since the 2019 summit.

Vatican City – A group of clerical abuse survivors gathered in Rome on Feb. 21, one year after the Vatican summit of bishops on clerical sex abuse, to accuse Pope Francis of knowing about the abuse of Argentine deaf children by an Italian priest but not acting to stop it.

The group, who included some of the Argentinian survivors as well as advocacy leaders for abuse victims, also said little progress had been made since the Feb. 21-24 summit last year on protection of minors in the Church.

In a Feb. 13 statement, the survivors argued that the Vatican and Pope Francis could have acted to prevent the widespread sexual and physical violence perpetrated against them at the Antonio Provolo Institute, an educational and religious institution for the deaf in the province of Mendoza, Argentina.

More than 20 deaf victims testified last year to being sexually assaulted and physically abused at the Institute from 2005 to 2016, some from the age of five. Nine more alleged offenders are expected to go on trial, including two nuns, later this month.

Italian priest Father Nicola Corradi, 83, was identified as the ringleader of the pedophile ring who his accusers say had already been reported to the Vatican in 2009 for molesting deaf children in Verona, Italy. Both he and Argentine priest Father Horacio Corbacho, 59, were convicted in November and respectively sentenced to 42 and 45 years in jail.

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After abuse scandals, seminarians pledge to ‘get it right’

NEW YORK (NY)
Associated Press

February 16, 2020

By Matt Sedensky

Wynnewood PA – The seminarians walk along a hallway lined with photos of classes of priests who came before them. Some are pious alumni who have become their teachers and mentors; others climbed the Catholic hierarchy to be revered as bishops and cardinals.

But there are others: Raymond Leneweaver, Class of 1962, subject of at least 14 victims’ reports of abuse, who even made matching T-shirts for those he raped and molested. And Edward Avery, Class of 1970, who pleaded guilty to molesting a 10-year-old altar boy in a church sacristy. And Francis Trauger, Class of 1972, who admitted to molesting a boy in a seminary shower, according to grand jurors.

The 156 young men who call St. Charles Borromeo Seminary home are deeply aware of both the sacred and the profane. They appear unflinchingly optimistic, reverent and committed, yet they prepare to enter ministry at a time when scandals have driven the faithful from pews, shaken the church’s highest tiers and cast doubt on the motivations of those who say they’re answering a call to serve.

“If anything, it probably made the desire to respond to God’s call even more urgent,” says Tucker Brown, a 27-year-old seminarian for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia who finished medical school but felt drawn to the priesthood when it came time to apply to residencies. “It was really a desire to be what a priest is supposed to be, to be a spiritual father and really a source of healing.”

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February 24, 2020

Priest placed on leave after Oakland Diocese acknowledges earlier sexual impropriety allegation

SAN FRANCISCO (CA)
San Francisco Chronicle

February 23, 2020

By Matthias Gafni

The Catholic Diocese of Oakland has placed an embattled priest on leave and opened a new investigation into a sexual misconduct allegation against him after The Chronicle informed church officials of a 2002 complaint by a parishioner who says he groped her.

The discipline came after the diocese had previously told this newspaper that the Rev. George Alengadan — who has been moved out of two parishes since July after five women came forward alleging sexual harassment and Alameda police opened a criminal probe — had no earlier allegations of sexual impropriety.

The parents of the alleged victim said they reported the 2002 fondling allegations to the diocese in the immediate aftermath, deciding against going to police because they trusted the church to handle it internally. But they said they never received a response. The mother again alerted the diocese of the complaint in 2016, sending an email to Bishop Michael C. Barber, but said again nothing was done.

It was only after an inquiry from The Chronicle and a series of articles about its controversial reassignment of the 67-year-old priest that the diocese acknowledged the earlier claim. In a town hall at Christ the King Church in Pleasant Hill on Wednesday night, furious parishioners fumed at how the diocese had quietly moved the priest there, many asking how the church could continue such actions almost two decades after the Catholic priest sex abuse scandal broke in Boston.

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All Saints priest says he is unaware of any alleged abuse by Lisby in Worcester

WORCESTER (MA)
Telegram & Gazette

February 23, 2020

By Brad Petrishen

The top priest at All Saints Episcopal Church said Sunday that he has not heard any allegation that former rector Gregory Lisby abused anyone in Worcester.

Lisby, a rector at the Irving Street church from about 2015 to 2018, was accused by his diocese Friday of abusing a teenager at an undisclosed location sometime after he became a priest in 2007.

The Episcopal Diocese of Western Massachusetts made the revelation in a letter to congregants ahead of Lisby’s guilty plea in U.S. District Court in Worcester to one count of possession of child pornography.

It is not clear whether Lisby, who was a kindergarten teacher in Holyoke at the time of his September 2019 arrest, has been investigated by police in connection with the diocese’s allegation.

The diocese – which said it received “devastating credible evidence” against Lisby after his arrest – has declined to release further details or say whether police are involved, citing the alleged victim’s privacy..

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Bishop visits Swormville church to reassure pastor, parishioners

BUFFALO (NY)
Buffalo News

February 23, 2020

By Jonathan D. Epstein

Hoping to smooth tensions, Buffalo’s interim bishop paid a visit Sunday afternoon to a church whose pastor has been outspoken in his criticism of the Catholic Diocese of Buffalo and even withheld payment of the church’s annual assessment.

Bishop Edward B. Scharfenberger, apostolic administrator for Buffalo, spoke to 150 to 200 parishioners and answered questions at St. Mary’s Church on Transit Road in Swormville for nearly an hour, before presiding over 6 p.m. Mass.

He sought to reassure those in attendance that he took their complaints and pain seriously, and would work to respond to their concerns. And he cited the need to heal and reunite as a community.

“Each and every one of us has the right to feel they are part of who we are. We’re a family,” he said.

Paul Snyder, a prominent deacon in the church who was among the first to openly criticize former Bishop Edward Malone and call for his ouster, said he liked what he heard so far. But he still wants to see that translate into actions, noting that the community is suffering from pain and betrayal.

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L’Arche International announces findings of Independent Inquiry

PARIS (FRANCE)
L’Arche International

February 22, 2020

[With links to report annd documents.]

https://www.larche.org/en/web/guest/news/-/asset_publisher/mQsRZspJMdBy/content/inquiry-statement-test?_101_INSTANCE_mQsRZspJMdBy_redirect=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.larche.org%2Fen%2Fnews%3Fp_p_id%3D101_INSTANCE_mQsRZspJMdBy%26p_p_lifecycle%3D0%26p_p_state%3Dnormal%26p_p_mode%3Dview%26p_p_col_id%3Dcolumn-1%26p_p_col_count%3D1

On February 22nd, 2020, the leaders of L’Arche International sent a letter to the Federation of L’Arche Communities, which operates in 38 countries worldwide, publishing the results of an inquiry that had commissioned from an independent organization. The inquiry included testimony implicating its founder, Jean Vanier, and his historical link to Father Thomas Philippe, who he thought of as his spiritual father.

The investigation was carried out by GCPS, an independent U.K. consultancy which specializes in improving procedures for the prevention and reporting of abuse. In addition, L’Arche International established an Independent Oversight Committee made up of two former senior civil servants in France, to assess the integrity and reliability of the inquiry’s process and findings. Following their review of the report they stated: “We have no reason to question the methodology of the inquiry and the seriousness with which it was carried out. We therefore consider these conclusions to be well founded.”

The inquiry received credible and consistent testimonies from six adult women without disabilities, covering the period from 1970 to 2005. The women each report that Jean Vanier initiated sexual relations with them, usually in the context of spiritual accompaniment. Although they had no prior knowledge of each other’s experiences, these women reported similar facts associated with highly unusual spiritual or mystical explanations used to justify these behaviors. The relationships were found to be manipulative and emotionally abusive, and had a significant negative impact on their personal lives and subsequent relationships. These actions are indicative of a deep psychological and spiritual hold Jean Vanier had on these women and confirm his own adoption of some of Father Thomas Philippe’s deviant theories and practices.

The inquiry made no suggestion that Jean Vanier had inappropriate relationships with people with intellectual disabilities.

Alongside the GCPS inquiry, L’Arche International commissioned a major piece of historical research based on previously unseen archives. Analysis of the various archives reveals the sources of Jean Vanier’s attitude towards these women, and confirms that he adopted some of Father Thomas Philippe’s deviant theories and practices.

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Report finds Catholic charity founder sexually abused women

PARIS (FRANCE)
Associated Press

February 22, 2020

By Sylvie Corbet

A respected Catholic figure who worked to improve conditions for the developmentally disabled for more than half a century sexually abused at least six women during most of that period, according to a report released Saturday by the France-based charity he founded.

The report produced for L’Arche International said the women’s descriptions provided enough evidence to show that Jean Vanier engaged in “manipulative sexual relationships” from 1970 to 2005, usually with a “psychological hold” over the alleged victims.

Although he was a layman and not a priest, many Catholics hailed Vanier, who was Canadian, as a living saint for his work with the disabled. He died last year at age 90.

“The alleged victims felt deprived of their free will and so the sexual activity was coerced or took place under coercive conditions,” the report,commissioned by L’Arche last year and prepared by the U.K.-based GCPS Consulting group, said. It did not rule out potential other victims.

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Founder of French Charity Is Accused of Pattern of Abuse

NEW YORK (NY)
New York Times

February 23, 2020

By Eva Mbengue

The French-based charity, L’Arche International, revealed that its founder, Jean Vanier, had engaged in “manipulative sexual relationships” with women from 1970 to 2005.

Feb. 23, 2020

Paris – The founder of a French charity who helped improve the lives of people with learning disabilities for over half a century had also engaged in “manipulative sexual relationships” with at least six women, the charity has revealed in a new internal report.

The report, released last week by the French-based charity, L’Arche International, said that Jean Vanier, the charity’s founder, had relationships with women from 1970 to 2005 that were at turns “inappropriate,” “coercive” or “non-consensual.” It also said he had a “psychological hold” over some of the victims.

None of the women who said they had been abused by Mr. Vanier had a disability. Some worked in the community, and some were nuns, according to the Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail.

Mr. Vanier, a Canadian religious leader who founded the charity in 1964, died in Paris last year at age 90.

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Renowned Catholic figure Jean Vanier has been accused of sexual manipulation and abuse

WASHINGTON (DC)
Vox

February 22, 2020

By Anya van Wagtendonk

Once considered a near-saint, Vanier is accused of sexual abuse by six women.

L’Arche founder Jean Vanier speaks at a London press conference in 2015. Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images
A man venerated in Catholic circles and beyond is alleged to have sexually abused six women over the course of decades, according to an internal report commissioned by the charity that he founded.

Jean Vanier, a Canadian who founded the nonprofit L’Arche to serve adults with intellectual disabilities, and who died last year at age 90, engaged in “manipulative and emotionally abusive” sexual relationships with at least six women under the guise of providing spiritual guidance, according to a report conducted by L’Arche and released on its website Saturday.

Between 1970 and 2005, Vanier allegedly exerted a “psychological hold” over his alleged victims, all women living in France, and none of whom had disabilities themselves. The report does not conclude whether there were additional alleged victims beyond the six who came forward and detailed their abuse.

“The women each report that Jean Vanier initiated sexual behaviours with them, usually in the context of spiritual accompaniment. Some of these women have been deeply wounded by these experiences,” reads a summary of the report released by L’Arche International. The report found the allegations to be “credible.”

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David Joseph Perrett to stand trial on historical sex abuse charges

TENTERFIELD (NEW SOUTH WALES, AUSTRALIA)
Tenterfield Star

February 24, 2020

By Laurie Bullock

A former Catholic priest, accused of sexually abusing or molesting children while he was working in the New England region, will face trial early next year.

David Joseph Perrett appeared in Armidale District Court on Friday morning where a trial date was set down for two weeks, from January 18, 2021.

But the court head the trial could be as long as four weeks, with hearing days to only run for three or four hours due to Perrett’s poor health.

Perrett had been facing charges in relation to 37 separate complainants, but his defence counsel requested the case be reduced to three or four complainants and be heard before a judge alone rather than a jury.

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One year after abuse summit, church reviews progress, additional needs

DENVER (CO)
Crux

February 23, 2020

By Carol Glatz

Rome – Since Pope Francis convened a historic summit at the Vatican one year ago to address clergy sex abuse and accountability, much has been done, but advocates say more is needed.

Dozens of experts, abuse survivors and their advocates came to Rome the same week as the summit’s anniversary to emphatically reiterate the need to never let ignorance, complacency or denial ever take hold again and to make the church safe for everyone.

The advocacy groups held media events and worked on talking to as many Vatican officials and religious leaders as possible to highlight still unaddressed concerns such as abuse by women religious, transparency in past and current Vatican investigations of known abusers and the likelihood of ever seeing “zero tolerance” for known predators.

However, significant measures have been rolled out piecemeal over the year. Here is a rundown of the most major changes:

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Mexican bishops back repeal of statute of limitations for sexual abuse cases

DENVER (CO)
Catholic News Agency

February 22, 2020

Mexico City, Mexico – The Church in Mexico has expressed its support for several bills to eliminate the statute of limitations for the sexual abuse of minors, which stands now at ten years. The bills were introduced in the country’s Federal Congress and would only apply to future, not past cases.

The Mexican bishops do not anticipate that reported abuse cases will be comparable in number to those seen by the Church in the United States, and the Church in Mexico has not seen lawsuits filed on a comparable level.

Speaking to ACI Prensa, CNA’s Spanish language news partner, Bishop Alfonso Miranda Guardiola, secretary general of the Mexican bishops’ conference, said the country’s bishops support lawmakers’ efforts to eliminate the statute of limitations for the sexual abuse of minors and have been “respectfully proposing to members of the House and Senate to introduce this kind of proposal.”

“These new legislative proposals are a good thing for the nation,” he said, since “they are legal instruments to take actions, correct, eradicate the evil, care for the victims and prosecute the perpetrators,” Miranda said.

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Siaya priest arrested after being found with girl in lodging

NAIROBI (KENYA)
Daily Nation

February 23, 2020

By Dickens Wasonga

Police in Siaya County have arrested a priest accused of defiling a primary school girl.

Sub-County Police Commander Justus Kucha said 38-year-old Isaac Omondi was taken to Siaya police station.

Mr Kucha said members of the public called police after the priest was seen with the girl at a lodging house in Siaya town.

“Our officers promptly responded and arrested the priest together with the juvenile at around 3pm on Saturday,” the police commander said on Sunday.

He said the two were examined at Siaya County Referral Hospital and the minor given medication and handed over to her parents.

She is expected to testify in court once investigations are completed.

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February 23, 2020

Priests of disgraced Legion face trial for obstruction claim

MILAN (ITALY)
Associated Press

February 17, 2020

By Nicole Winfield and Maria Verza

The Vatican effort to reform the disgraced Legion of Christ religious order is coming under new scrutiny, with four Legion priests and a Legion lawyer due to stand trial on charges they tried to obstruct justice and extort the family of a sex abuse victim.

The preliminary hearing is scheduled for March 12 in Milan. The case is significant because it calls into question the effectiveness of the Vatican reform since the alleged crimes occurred at the end of the Holy See’s four-year effort to turn the Legion around.

In addition, evidence obtained during the investigation, including documents seized when police raided the Legion’s Rome headquarters in 2014, showed an elaborate cover-up that stretched from Milan to Mexico, the Vatican to Venezuela, prosecutors say.

The charges at the heart of the Milan trial center around a settlement proposal offered by the Legion to Yolanda Martinez on Oct. 18, 2013, to compensate for the sexual abuse her son suffered at the hands of a Legion priest at the order’s youth seminary in northern Italy.

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Deaf Argentine victims of clergy sexual abuse protest at Vatican

VATICAN CITY
Reuters

February 21, 2020

By Philip Pullella

Victims of sexual abuse by Catholic priests at a school for the deaf in Argentina staged a protest at the Vatican on Friday to bring attention to an upcoming trial of more alleged abusers.

Last November a court in the province of Mendoza convicted two priests and the former gardener at a Catholic Church-run school on 28 counts of sexual abuse and corruption of minors.

Trials for about 10 others who worked at the Antonio Provolo Institute for the deaf, including teachers and a nun, are expected to start in a few months. They are accused of abetting the abuse by the priests.

About 20 people, including several former students, held up signs reading “Zero Tolerance,” “Don’t Forget,” and “We Are Not Going Away” in front of the building housing the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine for the Faith, which handles abuse cases. The victims’ lawyers and other victims of abuse were among those who joined the protest.

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Study identifies 16 child sex abuse rings in Victorian Catholic Church

MELBOURNE (VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA)
The Age

February 23, 2020

By Debbie Cuthbertson

A three-year research project into paedophile Catholic clerics in Victoria has identified 16 child sex abuse networks operating over six decades involving 99 priests and Christian Brothers.

The investigation found that clergy paedophile rings shared patterns of behaviour with criminal gangs, the Mafia, terrorist cells, corrupt police, drug dealers, money launderers and price-fixing cartels.

The research showed their abuse was facilitated and reinforced by church hierarchy, including five successive archbishops of Melbourne from Daniel Mannix, appointed in 1917, through to George Pell (himself appealing against a conviction for child sex abuse) in 2001.

The researcher, Sally Muytjens, spent more than three years investigating “dark networks” of paedophile clergy in Victorian dioceses. She published the research late last year, receiving a doctorate from Queensland University of Technology.

Muytjens’ research found the largest and most active dark networks were at schools including St Alipius in Ballarat and Salesian College, Rupertswood, and orphanages including St Vincent de Paul’s in South Melbourne and St Augustine’s in Geelong.

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Boy Scouts’ Bankruptcy Deals a Blow to Catholic Families

DENVER (CO)
National Catholic Register

February 21, 2020

By Peter Jesserer Smith

The BSA now joins Church dioceses in filing for bankruptcy over sex-abuse claims, although the legal contexts are different in some respects.

Buffalo NY – For Jennie Marinaro, a Catholic and a scouting parent, the Boy Scouts of America’s announcement of bankruptcy as a result of decades of failures to protect children from sex abuse was heartbreak upon heartbreak.

“It bothers me now that two organizations I am involved with are involved in covering up sexual assault,” Marinaro told the Register. The Buffalo-area mom said she had stopped donating money to the Catholic Church as her own diocese goes through a painful reckoning of the sex-abuse scandal. And while she feels her own scouting troop cares about protecting children, the bankruptcy announcement has her feeling deeply conflicted.

The Boy Scouts of America filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Delaware on Feb. 18. The 110-year-old youth organization is seeking to put an end to hundreds of sex-abuse lawsuits as well as protect from further litigation its 261 local councils and hundreds of local organizations chartering its youth units.

The BSA put up a special website that explained the national organization filed for bankruptcy in order to restructure and fulfill two mandates: first to “social and moral responsibility to equitably compensate all victims who were abused during their time in scouting” and “a duty to carry out our mission for years to come.”

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Employee pay, millions of dollars in assets discussed at first Harrisburg Diocese bankruptcy hearing

HARRISBURG (PA)
WHTM

February 21, 2020

By Priscilla Liguori

Up for debate in federal court Friday were the assets of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Harrisburg. It was the first of multiple hearings in the Chapter 11 proceedings.

This comes less than 48 hours after the diocese filed for bankruptcy, and months after it paid more than $12 million to survivors of clergy sex abuse.

No church leaders were at the hearing the Ronald Reagan Federal Building and Courthouse.

For now, the diocese’s 177 employees will continue to be paid, as operations go on as normal.

The diocese says it has 200 creditors and estimated liabilities between $50 million and $100 million, with assets of less than $10 million.

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February 22, 2020

One year after global abuse summit, reaction mixed on progress made

DENVER (CO)
Crux

February 22, 2020

By Elise Ann Allen

Photo Caption: Abuse survivors and advocates from the organizations of SNAP, Ending Clergy Abuse and Bishops Accountability stand in front of the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith on Friday, Feb. 21, 2020 to demand action on the anniversary of Pope Francis’s global summit on child protection.

Rome – As the Boy Scouts of America slide further into scandal with allegations of widespread sexual abuse continuing to go public, the Catholic Church also finds itself on the public hot seat again one year after a global summit on child protection.

Exactly 12 months after Pope Francis’s historic Feb. 21-24 abuse summit, attended by the presidents of all episcopal conferences worldwide, both survivors and experts have reflected on what the institution has accomplished, and what has yet to be done.

Speaking to Crux, German Jesuit Father Hans Zollner, who was part of the summit’s organizing committee, called the event “a milestone” in both recognizing and accepting that the abuse of children and vulnerable people is a global problem, and that the Church “must be at the forefront” of developing and implementing best practices for safeguarding.

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How a committee report offered comfort to sex abuse survivors

KANSAS CITY (MO)
National Catholic Reporter

February 22, 2020

By Mark Redmond

In 2018 Bishop Christopher Coyne of Burlington, Vermont, announced that he would be forming a committee comprised of lay people to produce a report which would list those priests who had been credibly accused of abusing children. When I read that, I emailed him offering to serve on the committee. I have spent my entire career, almost 40 years, in the field of child protection and safety, I am a Catholic, and I knew Bishop Coyne from prior matters. He emailed back, “Thank you, because I was going to ask you.”

There were seven of us on the committee, including one survivor of abuse by a priest. At the first meeting, Coyne announced that this report was ours and only ours to write and that he would not attend future meetings unless we invited him. He vowed not to change one name, one comma. He also promised us total and complete access to any file of any priest: living, deceased, retired, active — it did not matter, we could see them all, at any time.

A lawyer, a retired state’s attorney, was named head of the committee, but in short order he had to take time off for medical reasons, and I was asked to take over, which I accepted. We started meeting in October of that year and predicted to Coyne that our report would be complete by the end of the year. Once we started digging into the 50-plus files, some of which dated back to the 1940s, we had to tell him we would need many more months. “Take the time that you need in order to get it right,” was his response, which we all appreciated.

The first thing we had to establish was our definition of “credibly accused,” because unfortunately we learned there is no one universally accepted definition among Catholic dioceses. We reviewed reports already done by other dioceses and settled upon that used by the Diocese of Syracuse, New York, which is that an allegation that, based upon the facts of the case, meets one or more of the following thresholds:

1. Natural, reasonable, plausible and probable
2. Corroborated with other evidence or another source
3. Acknowledged/admitted to by the accused

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