St. Joseph Cathedral, Wheeling WV
Article Title

West Virginia AG’s suit: Catholic diocese employed predatory priests

Link to Article:           https://www.dailyitem.com/news/west-virginia-ag-s-suit-catholic-diocese-employed-predatory-priests/article_6cbd982e-4a98-11e9-a61d-8ba15893332f.html

Source:  Register-Herald

Author(s):  Erin Beck

Date:  March 19, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

West Virginia’s Attorney General, Patrick Morrisey, filed a consumer protection lawsuit (on March 19, 2019) against the Catholic Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston — and former Bishop Michael Bransfield.   The suit alleges that the Diocese employed predatory priests while falsely advertising a safe environment at Catholic schools and camps.    

Morrisey is arguing the Diocese violated the state’s Consumer Credit and Protection Act.   According to him, “Every parent who pays a tuition for a service falling under our consumer protection laws deserves to know that their schools, that their children are attending are safe.”   

According to the article:

“In 2014, David Clohessy, director of the St. Louis chapter of the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP), had called on Bransfield to warn parishioners about a potentially predatory priest in West Virginia.   Bransfield remained silent.   Clohessy said Morrisey’s lawsuit was welcome because ‘real change won’t come from within’ the Catholic Church.”   

“The lawsuit accuses three bishops and the Diocese of knowingly employing admitted sexual abusers, hiring priests without adequate background checks, hiring priests credibly accused of sexual abuse of children, and hiring lay employees without adequate background checks.   It lists several cases that Morrisey called examples of a pattern of behavior.”   

“West Virginia’s consumer protection law has a four year statute of limitations for monetary damages.   So instead, Morrisey is asking for non-monetary ‘equitable’ relief.”   

Pope Francis, Global Child Protection Summit, Vatican, 02-24-2019 (Giuseppe Lami/AFP/Getty Images)
Article Title

Has the Catholic Church committed the worst crime in U.S. history?

Link to Article:      https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/has-the-catholic-church-committed-the-worst-crime-in-us-history/2019/03/12/1875bb84-44ee-11e9-8aab-95b8d80a1e4f_story.html?utm_term=.48122dcd474c 

Source:  Washington Post

Author(s):  George F. Will

Date:  March 13, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

In its official documents, the Catholic Church’s bureaucracy has a history of using euphemisms (such as “horseplay” for child rape) to camouflage the church’s “pattern of abuse” and conspiracy of silence “that goes all the way to the Vatican.”   

National outrage about sexual abuse of minors by Catholic clergy was kindled in Boston, but it exploded into furry in Pennsylvania in August of 2018 with the release of the interim statewide grand jury report, courtesy of state Attorney General Josh Shapiro.   

Nationwide, the Catholic Church continues to stonewall and cover up and to resist discovery “every step of the way.”   The church challenged Shapiro’s jurisdiction and fought the release of the grand jury report.   

The church’s crime wave is global — not limited to the United States, as Vatican officials once-upon-a-time asserted — nor limited to English speaking countries (like Australia, Canada, and Ireland) as they later asserted.   The global tsunami of Catholic clerical crime has washed over Europe and Latin America.   It will no doubt inundate Africa and Asia as well.   

According to the article:

“It is highly unlikely that the abuses and conspiracies of silence about them are confined to Pennsylvania.   Asked whether this might be, cumulatively, the worst crime in U.S. history, Shapiro says: perhaps, considering the power of the guilty institution, the scale and prolonged nature of the crime, and the ‘sophisticated criminal coverup.’   He speaks of charging the guilty — when possible; many predatory priests have died, and statutes of limitations shield others — “the way you would typically charge the mob.”

NY Child Victims Act Passes
Article Title

They Were Sexually Abused Long Ago as Children. Now They Can Sue in N.Y.

Link to Article:        https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/28/nyregion/child-sex-abuse-victims.html

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):  Vivian Wang

Date:  January 28, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

According to the article:  

For more than a decade, victims of childhood sexual abuse in New York have asked lawmakers here for the chance to seek justice — only to be blocked by powerful interests including insurance companies, private schools and leaders from the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Jewish communities.

As activists and Democratic officials pushed to strengthen protections for child abuse victims, those opposing interests — wealthy and closely tied to members of the then Republican-controlled State Senate — warned that permitting victims to revive decades-old claims could lead churches, schools and community organizations into bankruptcy. For 13 years, the  so-called Child Victims Act foundered.

But in November, Democrats won control of the Senate. And on Monday, both the Senate and Assembly overwhelmingly approved the Child Victims Act, ending a bitter, protracted battle with some of the most powerful groups in the state. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo has promised to sign the bill into law.

Every senator, Republican and Democrat, voted for the bill — even though it never even came to the Senate floor for a vote under the Republican majority. The bill passed the Assembly 130-3.

Under the new law, prosecutors could bring criminal charges until a victim turned 28, and victims could sue until age 55. The bill would also create a one-year “look-back window,” during which old claims that had already passed the statute of limitations could be revived.

Article Title
NY Governor Cuomo supports proposed Child Victims Act (CVA). (Richard Drew / AP)

Cuomo says Child Victims Act will be in his budget plan; lawmakers say they may act on it sooner

Link to Article:      https://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/ny-pol-child-victims-act-cuomo-hoylman-rosenthal-20190111-story.html

Source:  New York Daily News

Author(s):  Kenneth Lovett

Date:  January 11, 2019 

Synopsis of Article 

Gov. Cuomo announced Friday he will for the second year in a row include language to create the Child Victims Act in the state budget he will propose on Tuesday.

But unlike last year, the Republicans are no longer in control of the Senate to block the measure and the Democrats in each chamber have made the issue a top priority.

“There has been a degradation of justice for childhood sexual assault survivors who have suffered for decades by the authority figures they trusted most,” Cuomo said. “That ends this year with the enactment of the Child Victims Act to provide survivors with a long-overdue path to justice.”

Legislative bill sponsors, including in the Assembly, which passed similar bills the past two years, say it could be taken up by the Legislature even before the budget is finalized in the spring.

The governor’s bill, which hues closely to what the legislative Democrats have pushed, would give child sex abuse victims up to their 50th birthday to bring a civil lawsuit while the statute of limitation to bring a felony case would increase to a person’s 28th birthday, up from the current 23.

The bill would also create create a one-year window to revive old cases that are time-barred under current law, something that was vehemently opposed by the Senate Republicans, the Catholic Church, Orthodox Jewish groups, the Boy Scouts of America and insurance companies.

Sean O’Malley, left; Timothy Dolan, right. (AP, left; AFP/Getty Images, right)
Article Title

Breaking ranks: why Boston’s cardinal intervened in an abuse case in New York

Link to Article:       https://catholicherald.co.uk/magazine/breaking-ranks-why-bostons-cardinal-intervened-in-an-abuse-case-in-new-york/

Source:  Catholic Herald

Author(s):  J. Arthur Bloom

Date:  January 10, 2019 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from Article 

On December 20, 2018 the New York Times ran a story (written by Sharon Otterman) describing a situation in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, wherein Donald Timone, a priest on whose account the Archdiocese paid two child sexual abuse settlements, has been openly exercising the faculties of his ministry (saying mass in public, hearing confessions, teaching at a university, and serving as a counselor for Catholics with same-sex attraction, encouraging them to refrain from acting on their homosexual urges). 

On 21 December 2018, Sean O’Malley (a.k.a. Archbishop of Boston and “Cardinal”) dispatched a letter to Christophe Pierre (a.k.a. the Papal Nuncio, or pope’s ambassador to the United States) in Washington D.C., calling his attention to Otterman’s New York Times article of the 20th, regarding Timone. In his letter O’Malley disclosed that he himself had received correspondence from someone in New York. In O’Malley’s letter to Pierre, the name of O’Malley’s New York correspondent is redacted. O’Malley in Boston wrote the following to Pierre in Washington:  “I note the seriousness of the allegations [redacted] presents with regard to Rev Timone and that today the New York Times has published an extensive report concerning the allegations against Rev Timone.”

According to the Catholic Herald article: 

Timone had been allowed to remain in ministry despite several settlements with people who had accused him of sexual misconduct. Church-watchers quickly concluded that O’Malley was, in effect, reporting New York archbishop Cardinal Timothy Dolan to the nuncio. 

One can safely assume that the nuncio does not need someone to read The New York Times for him, and this was more about O’Malley going on the record (at least to insiders) with his disapproval of the handling of cases in New York. Yet there is also what one might call a second track to this story. The main story is the Times report and the response to it, which revealed the settlements and questioned why the priest had been allowed to remain in ministry, and O’Malley’s decision to intervene. The second track, which played out in the Catholic press, concerns a small Catholic college trying to get a straight answer about Fr [“Father”] Timone. 

Here is the timeline of events: on December 13, administrators at John Paul the Great University in California received a letter of suitability for Fr Timone from the Archdiocese of New York, sent on December 4. Then, on December 20, the New York Times broke the news about ongoing investigations into Fr Timone, prompting the college to seek clarification from the Archdiocese of New York. On December 21, Cardinal O’Malley sent a letter to the papal nuncio to the United States, Archbishop Christophe Pierre. Fr Timone was removed from ministry.

According to Ed Condon at the Catholic News Agency, Fr Timone had taught on a yearly basis at the school for a decade. Suitability letters were sent every year, as is required of priests operating outside the diocese in which they are incardinated. Fr Timone had previously been investigated in 2002 and 2003. So the archdiocese did not disclose that Fr Timone was under investigation in any of the suitability letters it sent to the college. Officials at John Paul the Great evidently felt betrayed and spoke to reporters.

Article Title
Demonstrators support New York’s proposed Child Victims Act (CVA) at the State Capitol in Albany. (Hans Pennink / AP file)

Catholic cardinal says any new NY law for abuse victims should avoid ‘breaking’ the church

With the New York state Senate now controlled by Democrats, it is expected to take up a bill that would lower the statute of limitations for abuse victims.

Link to Article:      https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/catholic-cardinal-says-any-new-ny-law-abuse-victims-should-n953966 

Source:  NBC News

Author(s):  Corky Siemaszko

Date:  January 2, 2019 

Synopsis of Article 

The New York State Legislature is considering a bill that would allow more victims of childhood sexual abuse by Catholic clergy to sue the Church. Timothy Dolan (a.k.a. Archbishop of New York and “Cardinal”) calls for a measure that will not “break” the Roman Catholic Church, among others, including government, educational, health, welfare, or religious organizations and institutions. 

Dolan has only partially endorsed a proposed “Child Victims Act.” He wants any compensation regime to be modeled on a program, established by five New York Catholic dioceses in 2016, which he claims ensures fair and reasonable compensation but avoids bankrupting public and private organizations, including churches.  

According to the article: 

Dolan’s words came as the church is faced with the likelihood that the state Senate, now in Democratic hands, could join with the state Assembly and governor to pass a Child Victims Actthat would do away with statutes of limitations that have prevented some alleged abuse victims from suing the church.

The bill also includes a one-year “look-back window” that would allow alleged victims who weren’t able to sue in the past to file claims.

Dolan has objected to the window in the past, decrying its potentially devastating impact, not just on churches, but on public and private organizations as well. 

More, according to the article: 

“No one should be fooled by Cardinal Dolan’s sudden recognition that passing the Child Victims Act (CVA), the vehicle for delivering that justice, is a ‘moral necessity,’” Rosenthal said in an email to NBC News. “Cardinal Dolan knows well that the true path to justice for adult survivors lies in the lookback window, in addition to extending the criminal and civil statute of limitations.”

Advocates also said that Dolan’s emphasis of the bill’s broad coverage of a range of organizations that serve minors is a way of ensuring the proposal doesn’t pass. “He knows that’s a poison pill,” said David Clohessy of the Survivor’s Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP). “This is not a change of heart. This is typical Dolan,” Clohessy added. “He doesn’t support a window, he would rather the church handle this internally by paying money and not revealing secrets. That is what they are most afraid of.”

Article Title
Donald Timone, Catholic priest, during mass at St. Joseph’s Church in Middletown, N.Y., in early Dec. 2018. (Dana Ullman for The New York Times)

Priest Who Was Still Saying Mass After Abuse Settlements Is Suspended

Link to Article:       https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/23/nyregion/father-donald-timone-suspended.html

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):  Sharon Otterman

Date:  December 23, 2018 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from the Article 

The Archdiocese of New York has suspended a priest who had continued his clerical duties despite two settlements paid for allegations of sexual abuse of teenage boys.

The Rev. Donald G. Timone, 84, is the subject of an internal investigation by the archdiocese, but had continued to celebrate Mass in New York and California, more than a year and a half after an archdiocesan compensation program paid settlements to the two men, as detailed last week by The New York Times. [See the entry in this chronology for 2018-12-20.]

A spokesman for the archdiocese, Joseph Zwilling, said on Friday that the archdiocese would no longer allow Father Timone to remain in ministry while it weighed permanently removing him. 

Those settlements did not trigger Father Timone’s removal from the ministry despite the archdiocese’s “zero-tolerance” policy on child sexual abuse, Mr. Zwilling said, because the compensation program functioned separately from the archdiocese’s own internal process for substantiating abuse allegations. 

“It’s reprehensible that Cardinal Dolan allowed this priest to minister for years to sexually vulnerable minors,” said Anne Barrett Doyle, co-director of BishopAccountability.org, which tracks clergy abuse. “The cardinal put other children at risk. And it raises the question: How many other accused priests is he concealing?”

Lidy Connolly, the vice president of administration at John Paul the Great Catholic University in California, where Father Timone has been working as a chaplain, spiritual adviser and teacher, said that the Archdiocese of New York had informed the university on Wednesday that Father Timone’s letter of good standing — a required credential for a priest — had been revoked. He was no longer working there, she said.

Donald Timone, Catholic priest, during mass at St. Joseph’s Church in Middletown, N.Y., in early Dec. 2018. (Dana Ullman for The New York Times)
Article Title

The Church Settled Sexual Abuse Cases Against This Priest. Why Is He Still Saying Mass?

Link to Article:       https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/20/nyregion/reverend-donald-timone-sexual-abuse.html

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):  Sharon Otterman

Date:  December 20, 2018 

Synopsis of / Excerpts from the Article 

The article describes a situation in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, wherein Donald Timone, a priest on whose account the Archdiocese paid two child sexual abuse settlements, has been openly exercising the faculties of his ministry (saying mass in public, hearing confessions, teaching at a university, and serving as a counselor for Catholics with same-sex attraction, encouraging them to refrain from acting on their homosexual urges). 

According to the article: 

The settlements paid by the Archdiocese of New York were for substantiated allegations that Father Timone had sexually abused teenage boys he was counseling, one of whom committed suicide after what his widow said was a decades-long struggle with what had happened to him.

The New York archdiocese is essentially allowing Father Timone to continue serving as a priest because of a bureaucratic technicality — a position that seems to fly in the face of the pledge by Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan, the archbishop of the New York Archdiocese, to aggressively handle sexual abuse accusations.

The archdiocese maintains that Father Timone has been allowed to remain because the church itself did not rule on his fitness; that judgment was made by a separate, church-sponsored panel, the Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program. The settlements were paid in 2017 through that program. 

The archdiocese has its own internal process for substantiating abuse claims. And though it initially suspended Father Timone and investigated an allegation lodged against him in 2002, its review board did not substantiate the accusation at the time, the spokesman for the archdiocese, Joseph Zwilling, said last week.

Responding to questions from The New York Times, Mr. Zwilling added that the case had now been reopened to determine if Father Timone should be removed from the ministry, but that he would not be suspended during that investigation. 

Article Title
Archbishop of Chicago, Blase “Cardinal” Cupich, center. (Tannen Maury/ European Pressphoto Agency)

Catholic Church in Illinois Withheld Names of at Least 500 Priests Accused of Abuse, Attorney General Says

Link to Article:  https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/19/us/illinois-attorney-general-catholic-church-priest-abuse.html

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):   Laurie Goodstein and  Monica Davey 

Date:  December 19, 2018 

Synopsis of Article 

Six Catholic dioceses in Illinois withheld names of 500 priests accused of sexually abusing minors.   The church neglected to investigate allegations. 

Issued on December 19, 2018 by Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan, the report, which is preliminary, concludes that “the Catholic dioceses in Illinois are incapable of investigating themselves and ‘will not resolve the clergy sexual abuse crisis on their own.’” 

Allegations were lodged against 690 priests but only 185 names were released as having been found to be credibly accused.  

Only nine pages long, the Illinois preliminary report does not identify the priests who have been accused or name specific bishops for negligence.

Diocesan files showed that three quarters of the abuse allegations were either not investigated by the dioceses or investigated but not substantiated. 

According to the article: 

A pattern emerged from the files in which dioceses often failed to find a claim credible if there was only one victim, the report said. They also failed to investigate at all if the accused priest was deceased or reassigned, or belonged to a religious order (such as the Franciscans, Marists or Jesuits). The dioceses often discredited survivors’ claims by “focusing on the survivors’ personal lives,” the report said.

“The priority has always been in protecting priests and protecting church assets,” Ms. Madigan said in an interview. “Time and time again, the church says, ‘Well, this all took place years and years ago.’ But it’s a crisis in the present for all the people who have had to live with it.”

 

Authorities raid the Chancery of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2018, in Houston.
Article Title

Investigators Raid Offices of President of U.S. Catholic Bishops

Link to Article:     https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/28/us/houston-catholic-church-raid.html 

Source:  New York Times

Author(s):  Laurie Goodstein

Date:  November 28, 2018 

Synopsis of Article 

On 28 November 2018 some 50 uniformed officers from US federal and Texas state law enforcement agencies descended upon the Houston headquarters of the Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston to conduct a surprise search for evidence pertaining to child sexual abuse allegedly perpetrated by clergy, and for evidence in a specific allegations that have impeached the reputation of the resident archbishop, Daniel DiNardo (a.k.a. Daniel Cardinal DiNardo), who is also the president of the US Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB). 

The Houston raid is symptomatic of the heightened aggressiveness prosecutors have displayed recently in their pursuit of any past or present efforts by the Catholic hierarchy to cover up child sexual abuse or to conspire to cover it up. This comes at a time when the Vatican has just undermined efforts by the USCCB to introduce reforms aimed at bringing more transparency, more accountability, and more concern for child victims to the way bishops handle sex abuse accusations against clergy. The Vatican intervened in the Fall 2018 meeting of the USCCB in Baltimore and restrained the bishops from voting on policy reforms. The reforms would have held the hierarchy to higher standards of accountability. 

The raid on the archdiocesan “chancery” was conducted by officers from the Texas Rangers, the Conroe Police Department, the Montgomery County district attorney’s office, and various (unspecified) federal agencies. The raid was authorized by a search warrant issued in a child sexual molestation criminal case involving a local Conroe former priest.