News Story of the Day

'I have to heal from this,' says woman who accuses Manitoba priest of sexually abusing her in 1970s

Retired priest charged in August with rape will plead not guilty if case goes to trial: lawyer

Constantin Turcoane was charged in August with rape and sexual intercourse with a person under 14. Police said at the time he was accused of sexually assaulting a 12-year-old parishioner at his western Manitoba church in the early 1970s. (Submitted by Romanian Orthodox Episcopate of America)

CBC

November 28, 2024

By: Santiago Arias Orozco

Warning: This story deals with allegations of sexual assault and discussion of suicide.

Shelley Trubiak says she suffered in silence for 52 years — but two years ago decided she couldn't do that anymore, after she started having flashbacks of the abuse by a priest she says she suffered while growing up in her small western Manitoba community.

Trubiak, who is now 66, went to the RCMP in 2022, triggering a two-year investigation that led to the issue of an arrest warrant in August for Constantin Turcoane, who was 81 at the time.

The retired priest was charged with rape and sexual intercourse with a person under the age of 14, after Trubiak alleged he sexually assaulted her in the early 1970s, when she was 12 years old and a parishioner at his church in Lennard, Man.

"I've been afraid and scared — all my life I went through this thing," Trubiak, who now lives in Saskatchewan, told CBC News this week. "I have to heal from this, [and] this is the only way I might.

"I just want to tell my story."


Catholic priest accused of sexual assault fathered children of victims, court hears

Revelation emerges at hearing for Anthony Odiong, 55, charged with several counts and held in Texas on $5.5m bail

Anthony Odiong after his arrest in Florida in July. Photograph: Waco police

The Guardian

November 26, 2024

By Charlie Scudder and Ramon Antonio Vargas

 

A Roman Catholic priest with links to Texas and Louisiana who is facing criminal charges for allegedly abusing his position of authority within the church to pursue sex with vulnerable women fathered at least two children with them, authorities have alleged.

The stunning information about Anthony Odiong surfaced at a bail hearing on Tuesday in Waco, Texas, where prosecutors have charged him with several counts of sexually assaulting women to whom he ministered.

Odiong requested a reduction of the $5.5m bail on which he is being held in custody. But a judge denied that request after prosecutors established Odiong had communicated plans to flee to his native Nigeria if he were released – while simultaneously airing the most complete account yet about the alleged double life he had built.


Vatican to consider classifying 'spiritual abuse' as new Catholic crime

VATICAN CITY, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Pope Francis has asked the Vatican to study whether the Catholic Church should classify "spiritual abuse" as a new crime in order to address cases where priests use purported mystical experiences as a pretext for harming others.
A statement from the Vatican's doctrinal office announcing the move did not name any specific cases of such abuse, but the Vatican has had to deal with several in recent years.
Cardinal Victor Fernandez, the Church's lead doctrinal official, met with Francis to discuss the proposal for a new crime of spiritual abuse on Nov. 22, according to the statement. The pope directed Fernandez to work with another Vatican office to consider the issue, it said.
The release quoted from new Vatican norms, approved in May, on evaluating alleged supernatural events, saying it was "morally grave" to use purported spiritual experiences to exert control over others.

Clergy Sex Abuse Survivor Reflects on His Reform Work

St. Louis man, David G. Clohessy, cites better victim support and resistant bishops among wins and losses in efforts to change the Catholic Church

As a child in Moberly, Missouri, David Clohessy and his siblings were abused by a Catholic priest. Although he suppressed that memory for years, eventually he got help and dedicated his life to forcing the Catholic Church to protect children and remove predator priests. (Courtesy | SNAP)

FLATLAND

November 24, 2024

By Bill Tammeus

 

A 2002 series of Boston Globe articles turned a scandal about Catholic priests who sexually abuse children (and bishops who protect those priests) into a national story.

The Globe, however, wasn’t the first newspaper to expose this reprehensible crime. Credit for that goes to the independent, Kansas City-based National Catholic Reporter. NCR was writing about this years before the Globe.

None of this surprises David G. Clohessy, who lives in St. Louis but whose work frequently brings him to Kansas City. He’s been trying to ensure victims are heard and church officials are held accountable. He’s former national director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests, and currently volunteer director of Missouri SNAP.

But, developments in this scandal evolve slowly. Just a few weeks ago, the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors, 10 years after it was created, issued its first report, concluding that the church still fails to ensure that abuse cases are dealt with adequately and saying that the Vatican office charged with processing complaints is slow and secretive.


Legal win for clergy sex abuse survivors suing the Diocese of Buffalo

Posted 6:17 PM, Nov 22, 2024

BUFFALO, N.Y. (WKBW) — As bankruptcy proceedings continue for the Diocese of Buffalo, survivors of clergy abuse who are suing the Diocese in state court are celebrating a legal victory in federal court.

Their lawsuits that date back to 2020, can move forward, according to U.S. Bankruptcy Court Western District of New York, Judge Carl L. Bucki.


Seven more lawsuits were filed against the Diocese of Lafayette over clergy sex abuse

Nov 20, 2024

Former Catholic priest Gilbert Gauthe, who was convicted of child sexual abuse, is escorted out of the Lafayette Parish Courthouse after a hearing in 2000.

 

Seven lawsuits were filed in recent weeks against the Diocese of Lafayette by people alleging they were sexually abused by clergy when they were children, the latest wave of lawsuits since a June court ruling giving abuse victims more time to seek restitution.

Four of the seven lawsuits were filed in November, one on Nov. 12, in 15th Judicial District Court in Lafayette. Three others were filed Oct. 29.


Chapter 11 helps church officials, not kids or victims

Worshippers are pictured in a file photo at the Cathedral of Christ the Light in Oakland, Calif. The Diocese of Oakland filed a formal Chapter 11 reorganization plan Nov. 8 in an effort to settle some 345 claims of sexual abuse. (OSV News/CNS file, Greg Tarczynski)

 

by Timothy Hale

November 20, 2024

 

Fr. Stephen M. Kiesle of the Diocese of Oakland, California, was convicted of lewd conduct for tying up and sexually abusing boys and was later sent to prison for abusing a girl. In 2023, he pleaded no contest to killing a pedestrian while driving drunk.

Fr. Mark Kristy of the Diocese of Sacramento was convicted of molesting a girl under 14 for three years and in 2022 was sentenced to a year in jail. For most of the last decade, he lived in Napa County.


Survivors of clergy abuse urge Vatican to expand zero-tolerance policy beyond US

Copyright AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File

By Oman Al Yahyai with AP
Published on 19/11/2024 

The policy, which permanently removes priests for a single act of sexual abuse, is currently limited to the US.

Survivors of clergy sexual abuse called on the Vatican on Monday to extend the zero-tolerance policy adopted by the US Catholic Church in 2002 to apply to the global church, insisting that children worldwide deserve protection for predator priests. 


Now Church's No2 the Archbishop of York is urged to step down for 'ignoring 11 separate complaints' - after Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby was forced to quit

Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell, the CofE’s second most senior figure, is accused of ‘ignoring’ 11 separate complaints, some involving leading figures in the Church

Daily Mail

November 16, 2024

By CAMERON CHARTERS

 

The Church of England faced further turmoil last night after the Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell was urged to resign over his handling of abuse cases.

The demand comes after the CofE’s leader, the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, was forced to quit last week over a cover-up in a child abuse scandal.

Archbishop Cottrell, the CofE’s second most senior figure, is accused of ‘ignoring’ 11 separate complaints, some involving leading figures in the Church, including bishops.


A case study in how the Vatican’s abuse reform efforts have failed

Nov 18, 2024 Senior Correspondent
Façade of Saint Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City. (Credit: Vatican Media.)
ROME – Nearly 25 years after the explosion of clerical abuse scandals in the United States spurred a new “zero tolerance” attitude and almost six years after Pope Francis’s global safeguarding summit and the issuance of a swath of new norms, the question arises: Has any of it been effective?

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