Diocese knew of abuses years before it claims to have first known.
Article Title

Lake Charles Diocese knew of abuses years before listed dates; helped priests continue careers

Link to Article:      https://www.theadvocate.com/acadiana/news/article_ec82f556-a8ce-11e9-8b08-7fb7c465b43c.html

Source:  Acadiana Advocate

Author(s):  Ben Meyers

Date:  July 19, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

The Diocese of Lake Charles joined its six Louisiana counterparts three months ago in releasing a list of clergymen from its jurisdiction who have been “credibly accused” of sexually abusing minors. The lists were intended to answer nationwide public demands for accountability and transparency.

But although the Lake Charles list named predatory priests, it did so in a way that was less than transparent. 

Church officials learned of the abuses of two priests, Gerard Smit and Mark Broussard, years before the dates shown on the new list, records show. The discrepancies conceal periods in which the bishop at that time, Jude Speyrer, and others were aware of allegations and helped abusers continue their pastoral careers. 

Current Lake Charles church leaders say the “dates allegations received” entries reflect when victims put accusations in writing. That threshold was intended to ensure a consistent standard and not to deceive the public, church officials told The Advocate. But it also overlooks clear evidence that the bishop and others knew of abuses and failed to act.

Speyrer, for example, acknowledged in a 1986 letter that he had recently received a complaint that Smit “had been involved in some improper fondling of some small girls about twenty years ago” — in the mid-1960s, in other words — and that Smit did not deny it.

So Speyrer sent Smit to a Catholic-run psychological treatment center in Jemez Springs, New Mexico, and then referred Smit to the Diocese of Wilmington, Delaware, the next year “in good standing.”

Nonetheless, the diocese’s list says it first received allegations against Smit in 2002, making no mention of the allegations Speyrer received 16 years earlier.

In 1988, two years after Smit was treated in New Mexico, Broussard, the other of the two priests, was shipped to the same facility. That’s the year Broussard has said repeatedly that he admitted his abuses to diocesan officials.

However, the new diocesan list says church officials first received allegations against Broussard in 1994, six years after he was sent away for treatment. During that six-year span, Broussard worked as a Lake Charles hospital chaplain and as pastor at St. Eugene Church in Grand Chenier.

Allegations later surfaced that Broussard abused children in both of those assignments.

Smit and Broussard had been exposed as abusers long before the diocese released its list. Smit has never faced criminal prosecution, but the Diocese of Wilmington identified him on its list of credibly accused clergymen in 2006. Smit landed on the Wilmington list after a man told the diocese that Smit had abused him at St. Anne Church in Youngsville in the early 1960s.

Broussard, meanwhile, was convicted by a Calcasieu Parish jury in 2016 of five counts related to sexually assaulting minors, and he is now serving two life terms plus 55 years at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola.

However, the men who knew about their abuse and allowed them to continue in the ministry have not faced the same public scrutiny. In addition to Speyrer, they include the Rev. Henry Mancuso, a well-known retired priest who comes from a prominent Lake Charles family. Mancuso arranged for Broussard to work as a hospital chaplain after Broussard disclosed to Mancuso in 1988 that he had abused several children, according to Broussard’s statements to church officials a decade later.

Mancuso, reached by telephone, refused to discuss his 1988 conversation with Broussard, though he did acknowledge trying to help the predatory priest.

“I did whatever I could do to help him move beyond his time at the place in New Mexico,” Mancuso said by telephone.

Asked if that had allowed Broussard to continue abusing children, Mancuso said he didn’t know. The Broussard case is “old history,” Mancuso said before hanging up.

Joseph Caramanno sues Archdiocese of New York for sexual abuse. (Marla Diamond/WCBS 880)
Article Title

Victim: Catholic Priests Kept Jobs Despite Sex Abuse Claims

Link to Article:      https://wcbs880.radio.com/articles/alleged-sex-abuse-victim-says-catholic-priests-kept-jobs-despite-complaints 

Source:  WCBS News Radio 880

Author(s):  Local News

Date:  July 16, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

A new lawsuit filed Tuesday claims two Catholic priest that were accused of sexually abusing minors were allowed to remain active at their churches despite complaints to the archdiocese.

The lawsuit alleges church officials either covered up or misrepresented the abusive histories of Father Donald Timone and Monsignor John Paddack, who Joseph Caramanno says abused him when he was a student at St. Joseph’s by the Sea on Staten Island.

“I personally wonder if –while I was in high school back in 2001, 2002 – was there someone that knew about Monsignor Paddack, was there someone that knew that he had, you know, done some things to others before me,” Caramanno said.

The allegations forced Paddack to resign from the Church of Notre Dame on the Upper West Side.

Timone is accused of sexually abusing the late husband of one of the plaintiffs when he was a teenager. The alleged victim died from an apparent suicide in 2015.

“The allegations against Fr. Timone and Fr. Paddack were shared with law enforcement, and both are currently out of ministry while the archdiocese investigates these new allegations against them,” the archdiocese said in a statement.

It notes that earlier claims against the two were investigated but “were found not to be substantiated.”

Former bishop Bransfield’s coat of arms
Article Title

Warnings about West Virginia bishop went unheeded as he doled out cash gifts to Catholic leaders

Link to Article:     https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/warnings-about-wva-bishop-went-unheeded-as-he-doled-out-cash-gifts-tocatholic-leaders-/2019/07/03/7efa27f4-8d4c-11e9-b162-8f6f41ec3c04_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.36a4eb68414b 

Source:  Washington Post

Author(s):  Robert O’Harrow Jr. and Shawn Boburg

Date:  July 3, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

Senior Catholic leaders in the United States and the Vatican began receiving warnings about West Virginia Bishop Michael J. Bransfield as far back as 2012. In letters and emails, parishioners claimed that Bransfield was abusing his power and misspending church money on luxuries such as a personal chef, a chauffeur, first-class travel abroad and more than $1 million in renovations to his residence.
“I beg of you to please look into this situation,” Linda Abrahamian, a parishioner from Martinsburg, W.Va., wrote in 2013 to the pope’s ambassador to the United States.

But Bransfield’s conduct went unchecked for five more years. He resigned in September 2018 after one of his closest aides came forward with an incendiary inside account of years of sexual and financial misconduct, including the claim that Bransfield sought to “purchase influence” by giving hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash gifts to senior Catholic leaders.

“It is my own opinion that His Excellency makes use of monetary gifts, such as those noted above, to higher ranking ecclesiastics and gifts to subordinates to purchase influence from the former and compliance or loyalty from the latter,” Monsignor Kevin Quirk wrote to William Lori, the archbishop of Baltimore, in a letter obtained by The Washington Post.

The previously unreported Quirk letter and the complaints from parishioners raise questions about when Catholic leaders first knew of Bransfield’s conduct and why they took no action for years. They also reveal the roots of a church financial scandal that exploded into public view in June with a Washington Post account of the findings of a Vatican-ordered investigation of Bransfield. 

Five lay investigators concluded early this year that Bransfield abused his authority by sexually harassing young priests and spending church money on personal luxuries, according to their final report and other documents obtained by The Post. Bransfield spent $2.4 million on travel, often flying in private jets, as well as $4.6 million in all to renovate his church residence, church records show. His cash gifts to fellow clergymen totaled $350,000, the records show. 

Bransfield drew on a little-known source of money for the diocese — millions of dollars in annual revenue from oil wells in West Texas, on land that was donated to the diocese a century ago. The wells have yielded an average of about $15 million annually in recent years.

Bransfield wrote more than 500 checks to other clerics during his 13 years in West Virginia, gifts for which he was reimbursed by the diocese. Recipients who also received parishioner complaints were Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, then the nuncio, the pope’s ambassador to the United States; Cardinal Raymond Burke, then the leader of the church’s judicial authority in Rome; Archbishop Peter Wells, then a senior administrator in the pope’s Secretariat of State at the Vatican; and Lori, who as Baltimore archbishop has some nominal responsibilities for overseeing the West Virginia diocese and who later supervised the Vatican investigation launched after Quirk’s account.

Bransfield’s generosity with church money extended beyond the cash gifts. In 2013, Viganò accepted a half-hour ride on a jet chartered by Bransfield at a cost to the West Virginia diocese of about $200 a minute, documents and interviews show. 

John Paddack, Priest NY Upper West Side, accused of sexually abusing minors (New York Daily News)
Article Title

Upper West Side priest steps down amid sexual abuse allegations

Link to Article:        https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/manhattan/ny-paddack-notre-dame-cardinal-hayes-st-joseph-by-the-sea-allegations-20190702-rwb62iczzzgdhdunwtkcxhe7su-story.html

Source:  New York Daily News

Author(s):  Michael Gartland

Date:  July 2, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

A priest at an Upper West Side church is stepping down amid accusations that he sexually abused a number of children, a New York Archdiocese spokesman said.

Eight accusers have claimed they are victims of Monsignor John Paddack, who on Tuesday told parishioners at the Church of Notre Dame on W. 114th St. that he will be resigning his post there.

“Msgr. Paddack has written to his parishioners to tell them that, although he denies the allegations against him, for the good of the parish and the people, he has decided to step aside while the investigation into the allegation proceeds,” Archdiocese spokesman Joe Zwilling told the Daily News.

Paddack’s accusers claim he abused them at various postings throughout the city, including Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx, St. Joseph by the Sea High School on Staten Island and the Church of the Incarnation in Upper Manhattan.

Diocese of Little Rock settles with five victims for $790,000.
Article Title

Arkansas Catholic diocese settles abuse claims from 5 men

Link to Article:       https://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2019/06/28/Arkansas-Catholic-diocese-settles-abuse-claims-from-5-men/2121561719521/

Source:  UPI

Author(s):  Clyde Hughes

Date:  June 28, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

Arkansas attorneys say the Catholic Diocese of Little Rock has agreed to settle accusations from five men who said a priest abused them when they were children decades ago.

The accusations were made against priest John J. McDaniel, and the abuse occurred in the early 1970s, the complaints said.

Attorney Joshua Gillispie said the settlement is the first from the diocese over accusations of abuse by a priest.

The five boys were between the ages of 12 and 15 at the time of the purported abuse, and were students at Our Lady of the Holy Souls School, where McDaniel had access to them. The attorneys said most of the abuse happened in the priest’s rectory on campus.

“It is extremely likely that there many, many more victims,” Gillispie said.

Dolan, RC cardinal and archbishop of New York
Article Title

Cardinal Dolan Refuses to Remove Priest Accused of Sexually Abusing Eight Children

Link to Article:        https://pinellas.legalexaminer.com/legal/cardinal-dolan-refuses-to-remove-priest-accused-of-sexually-abusing-eight-children/

Source:  Legal Examiner

Author(s):  Joseph H. Saunders

Date:  June 26, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

For the second time in six month’s Cardinal Timothy Dolan, Archbishop of New York, refuses to remove a priest accused of sexual abuse.  The latest incident involves Monsignor John Paddack, stationed at Church of Notre Dame on W. 114th St. in  Manhattan.

The priest has been accused of sexual abuse by eight different individuals and the Archdiocese, and specifically Cardinal Dolan, has known about the allegations since 2012 but has stubbornly refused to take action.   

According to Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, this is the second time in the past year that Cardinal Dolan kept the vulnerable in harm’s way. Just six months ago it was revealed that Fr. Donald Timone, himself twice-accused of abuse, was able to stay on the job even though Catholic officials paid one of his victims a six figure settlement.

Cardinal Dolan has spoken publicly about his concern for survivors of sexual abuse by priests but his actions belie his words.  When the NY state legislature was considering helping survivors by enacting statute of limitations reform, the Cardinal had his lobbyists spending money and fighting vigorously against the measure.  Fortunately, this year, the legislation finally passed and NY sex abuse survivors can now hold the Archdiocese of New York and other dioceses in NY accountable for aiding and abetting abusive priests.

What makes Dolan’s refusal to remove these priests from ministry is his arrogant flaunting of the bishops Dallas Charter which clearly states that such priests should be removed from ministry.  It’s a Charter which he said he supports and helped create when the bishops met that summer in Texas.

Dolan’s history of protecting abusive priests as well as the church’s assets is long and worth noting.  In 2013, a NY Times opinion piece related, “Tragic as the sexual abuse scandal in the Roman Catholic Church has been, it is shocking to discover that Cardinal Timothy Dolan, while archbishop of Milwaukee, moved $57 million off the archdiocesan books into a cemetery trust fund six years ago in order to protect the money from damage suits by victims of abuse by priests.

Cardinal Dolan, now the archbishop of New York, has denied shielding the funds as an “old and discredited” allegation and “malarkey.” But newly released court documents make it clear that he sought and received fast approval from the Vatican to transfer the money just as the Wisconsin Supreme Court was about to open the door to damage suits by victims raped and abused as children by Roman Catholic clergy.

 

Sexual abuse allegations against Catholic priests have doubled in the last 12-month reporting period.
Article Title

Catholic Church reports number of sex-abuse allegations has doubled

Link to Article:       https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/catholic-church-reports-number-of-sex-abuse-allegations-has-doubled

Source:  Associated Press

Author(s):  David Crary

Date:  May 31, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

Quantifying its vast sex-abuse crisis, the U.S. Roman Catholic Church said Friday that allegations of child sex abuse by clerics more than doubled in its latest 12-month reporting period, and that its spending on victim compensation and child protection surged above $300 million.

During the period from July 1, 2017, to June 30, 2018, 1,385 adults came forward with 1,455 allegations of abuse, according to the annual report of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ Secretariat of Child and Youth Protection. That was up from 693 allegations in the previous year. The report attributed much of the increase to a victim compensation program implemented in five dioceses in New York state.

According to the report, Catholic dioceses and religious orders spent $301.6 million during the reporting period on payments to victims, legal fees and child-protection efforts. That was up 14% from the previous year and double the amount spent in the 2014 fiscal year.

The number of allegations is likely to rise further during the current fiscal year, given that Catholic dioceses in New Jersey and Pennsylvania have started large compensation programs in the wake of a scathing Pennsylvania grand jury report released in August. The grand jury identified more than 300 priests in six of the state’s dioceses who have been credibly accused of child sexual abuse committed over many decades.

Since then, attorneys general in numerous states have set up abuse hotlines and launched investigations, and a growing number of dioceses and Catholic religious orders have released names of priests accused of abuse.

“Victims are coming forward now because of real progress by secular authorities,” said the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. “Lawmakers are increasingly getting rid of archaic, predator-friendly laws and 16 attorneys general have launched investigations, so many victims are feeling hopeful.”

 

 Article Title 

Catholic Church Sexual Abuse Scandal: 7 Excerpts From the Grand Jury Report

Link to Article:        https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/14/us/catholic-priests-pennsylvania-church-jury.html?action=click&module=RelatedCoverage&pgtype=Article&region=Footer
Link to Grand Jury Report:         PA 40th Statewide Investigating Grand Jury Report 1 Interim Redacted __ 2018-08-14

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):  By the New York Times

Date:  August 14, 2018 

Synopsis of Article 

“We…need you to hear this,” say the members of the Pennsylvania 40th Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, regarding their 900-page report, which documents the findings of their two-year long investigation into allegations of child sexual abuse by Catholic clergy and cover up of that abuse by Catholic hierarchy, in six of Pennsylvania’s eight Roman Catholic dioceses. Some 300 abusive priests preyed upon at least 1000 identifiable victims (probably many times that number, in fact).

Case after case was disturbing and tragic — even bizarre.

The report did not spare the Catholic hierarchy, heretofore comparatively unscathed by the abuse scandal. 

Church authorities often protected abusers, sympathizing with them instead of the victims.  

The report details the unholy career of Edrward R. Graff, 45 years a priest, who raped scores of children.

Church authorities documented numerous reports about abuse committed by Graff over the years. But when his abusive record was revealed to the public, the diocese down played and denied its knowledge of the sordid details. 

Some priests preyed upon multiple members of the same family. 

The grand jury reported that it had uncovered a ring of predatory priests in the Pittsburgh diocese who “shared intelligence or information regarding victims,” created pornography using the victims, and exchanged victims among themselves. “This group of priests used whips, violence and sadism in raping their victims,” the report states.

 
Article Title 
Victims of childhood sexual abuse and family members react at press conference held by PA Attorney General on August 14, 2018. (Matt Rourke/ Associated Press)

Catholic Priests Abused 1,000 Children in Pennsylvania, Report Says

Link to Article:      https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/14/us/catholic-church-sex-abuse-pennsylvania.html  
Link to Grand Jury Report:         PA 40th Statewide Investigating Grand Jury Report 1 Interim Redacted __ 2018-08-14

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):  Laurie Goodstein and Sharon Otterman

Date:  August 14, 2018 

Synopsis of Article 

Over 300 abusive priests, over a thousand identifiable victims abused while they were still minors (many of them young children), over 70 years of manipulating victims and their families to not report abuse and persuading civil authorities and law enforcement not to investigate it. That is the bottom line in the Pennsylvania grand jury report (40th Statewide Investigative Grand Jury, Report 1, Interim-Redacted) released in Harrisburg on August 14, 2018. The grand jury worked for two years to compile the evidence and write the report, which covers six of Pennsylvania’s eight Roman Catholic dioceses. 

The report said there are likely thousands more victims whose records were lost or who were too afraid to come forward.

The instances of abuse cataloged in the report are horrific:  “a priest who raped a young girl in the hospital after she had her tonsils out; a victim tied up and whipped with leather straps by a priest; and another priest who was allowed to stay in ministry after impregnating a young girl and arranging for her to have an abortion.” 

The report’s criticism of the Catholic hierarchy is scathing:  

“Despite some institutional reform, individual leaders of the church have largely escaped public accountability,” the grand jury wrote. “Priests were raping little boys and girls, and the men of God who were responsible for them not only did nothing; they hid it all. For decades.” 

The grand jury said that while some accused priests were removed from ministry, the church officials who protected them remained in office or even got promotions. 

The report is unlikely to lead to new criminal charges or civil lawsuits under the current law because the statute of limitations has expired. Only two of the cases in the report so far have led to criminal charges.

Attorney General Josh Shapiro, whose office initiated the investigation, said in a news conference, “They protected their institution at all costs. As the grand jury found, the church showed a complete disdain for victims.” He said that the cover-up by senior church officials “stretched in some cases all the way up to the Vatican.”

The utter depravity documented in the report is shocking:

Mr. Shapiro was surrounded on Tuesday by about 20 abuse victims and their family members, who gasped and wept when he revealed that one priest had abused five sisters in the same family, including one girl beginning when she was 18 months old.

The New York Times article provides the following additional details:

The Pennsylvania grand jury met for two years, reviewed 500,000 documents from dioceses’ secret archives, and heard testimony from dozens of victims and the bishop of Erie. The report covers the dioceses of Allentown, Erie, Greensburg, Harrisburg, Pittsburgh and Scranton. Two of the dioceses — Greensburg and Harrisburg — tried to quash the grand jury investigation last year, but later backed off that stance.

The report lists each of the accused priests and documents how they were sent from parish to parish, and even sometimes out of state. The grand jury said that while the list is long, “we don’t think we got them all.” The report added, “We feel certain that many victims never came forward, and that the dioceses did not create written records every single time they heard something about abuse.”