Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catholic. Show all posts

Friday, June 14, 2019

U.S. Catholic Bishops Adopt New Accountability Measures

The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops announced yesterday that during its June 11-14 General Assembly it has adopted additional measures to deal with clergy accountability for sex abuse:
The first vote, Protocol Regarding Available Non-Penal Restrictions on Bishops, passed by 212 to 4 with 1 abstention. This form of accountability provides protocols for imposing limitations on former bishops who were removed from office for grave reasons. It also empowers the USCCB president to restrict bishops removed or resigned for reasons related to sexual abuse or abuse of power.
A second vote, Acknowledging Our Episcopal Commitments passed by 217 to 1 with 2 abstentions. This accountability measure implements a bishop code of conduct, including the affirmation that the Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People is expanded to include bishops as well as priests and deacons.
The third vote, Directives for the Implementation of the Provisions of Vos estis lux mundi Concerning Bishops and their Equivalents, presents a plan for optimal implementation of Pope Francis’s recent Motu proprio in the United States, including an outline for lay involvement. It passed by 218 to 1 with 2 abstentions.
Yesterday, the body of bishops passed another bishop accountability reform, voting for the establishment of a Third-Party Reporting System for receiving confidentially, by phone and online, reports of possible violations by bishops of Vos estis lux mundi. The action item commits to activating the system no later than May 31, 2020.

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Lesbian Couple Has Standing To Challenge Grants To Catholic Foster Care Agency

In Marouf v. Azar, (D DC, June 12, 2019), the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia held that a lesbian couple (as well as an organizational plaintiff) lack taxpayer standing to challenge federal grants to a Catholic non-profit organization which refuses to place unaccompanied refugee children for foster care with same-sex couples.  However, the court held that the couple does have individual standing to pursue their Establishment Clause, Equal Protection and Due Process challenges to the grants.  The court said in part:
According to the Federal Defendants, a federal agency cannot be held to account for a grantee’s known exclusion of persons from a federally funded program on a prohibited ground. That is an astonishing outcome. Surely, the government would not take this position if, say, Plaintiffs here were excluded from fostering a child based on their gender (both are women), national origin (Marouf is the daughter of Egyptian and Turkish immigrants), or religious faith (Marouf was raised a Muslim, Esplin a Mormon). Yet, despite conceding that there is no agency policy that prevents child placement with same sex couples ..., the Federal Defendants in this case wish to avoid the responsibility that comes with being good stewards of federal funds. They cannot do so.

Wednesday, June 05, 2019

Ecclesiastical Abstention Doctrine Applies To Controversy Over Rental of Catholic Community Center

In Sacred Heart Knanaya Catholic Community Center Building Board v. St. Thomas Syromalabar Diocese of Chicago, 2019 IL App (2d) 180792-U (IL App., May 30, 2019), an Illinois appellate court held that the ecclesiastical abstention doctrine applies to a suit against a Catholic diocese by a Catholic community center board for tortious interference with a business relationship. The diocese barred use of the community center by another Catholic church that had contracted to rent the Center for a Spanish Latin Rite Mass.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Court Issues Permanent Injunction In RLUIPA Land Use Case

In Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City v. City of Mission Woods, (D KS, May 10, 2019), a Kansas federal district court issued a permanent injunction requiring the city of Mission Woods to approve the Catholic Archdiocese's land use application to allow it to convert a house next door to St. Rose Church into a meeting house.  In the case, a jury had found that the city violated the equal terms provisions of RLUIPA and awarded damages.  But the jury found for defendants on the Archdiocese's RLUIPA substantial burden and nondiscrimination claims, its First Amendment claims, and its Kansas state law claims. The court here held that, nevertheless, this amounts to success on the merits which supports the grant of an injunction. The court rejected defendant's argument that limited success on the merits is not enough to support an injunction.

Friday, May 10, 2019

Advocacy Group Is Critical of Pope's New Directive On Reporting of Sexual Abuse

As previously reported, yesterday Pope Francis issued an Apostolic Letter titled Vos Estis Lux Mundi setting out new procedures for mandatory reportingof sexual abuse to ecclesiastical authorities. The advocacy group ECA responded yesterday with a Statement (full text) critical of the Pope, saying the Letter "appears to be designed to make no significant or meaningful change in how bishops and the Vatican deal with cases of child sex crimes by priests." The Statement says in part:
First, there will continue to be no mandatory reporting requirements for sex abuse to civil authorities by priests and bishops and no penalties for failing to do so.... [T]he Vatican often claims that mandatory reporting cannot be done in certain countries. If this is the case, the Vatican needs to identify which countries this would entail and why an exemption from reporting is necessary in that country....
Second, the process of reporting, investigating and determining a case remains entirely secret and in-house with the local bishop who will remain in complete control of the investigative process and all the information....
Third, and maybe most significantly, nothing in the document establishes or enacts zero tolerance for sexual abuse by priests....

Thursday, May 09, 2019

Pope Francis Imposes New Reporting Procedures For Sex Abuse

Pope Francis today signed an Apostolic Letter titled Vos Estis Lux Mundi setting out new procedures for mandatory reporting to ecclesiastical authorities of sexual abuse of minors or vulnerable adults, of involvement with child pornography, and of interference with Church or civil investigations of abuse. Zenit has a summary, as well as the full text of the Pope's Apostolic Letter and the Vatican's accompanying statement, which says in part:
“Vos estis lux mundi” contains several innovative elements that aim to improve coordination between the dioceses and the Holy See. In particular, within a year all dioceses must establish stable and publicly accessible systems to report cases of sexual abuse and their cover up.
Furthermore, this Motu proprio obliges all clerics, as well as men and women religious, to report to the competent ecclesiastical authorities the abuses of which they become aware. The reported cases must thereafter be promptly verified and handled in accordance with canon law. As for reports regarding Bishops, the Motu proprio introduces procedural measures that, as a rule, charge the Metropolitan of the pertinent ecclesiastical Province with verifying what has been reported. Also established for the first time are time restrictions within which investigations must be carried out, as well as the procedures to be followed by the Metropolitan, who can make use of the specific professional contributions of the lay faithful.
Finally, the Motu proprio emphasizes the care of people harmed and the importance of welcoming them, listening to them and accompanying them, offering them the spiritual and medical assistance they need.
Vatican News reports on the new document. [Thanks to Tom Rutledge for the lead.]

Wednesday, May 08, 2019

New York's High Court OK's Removal Of Bishop Sheen's Remains To Illinois

New York's highest state court has dismissed sua sponte the appeal in In the Matter of Cunningham v. Trustees of St. Patrick's Cathedral, (NY Ct. App., May 2, 2019) (Order List). The decision allows the remains of the late Bishop Fulton J. Sheen to be removed from St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York and moved to Peoria, Illinois.  The move is seen by Sheen's heirs as the only way to advance the cause of sainthood for him. In a short opinion on March 5, 2019 (full text), New York's intermediate appellate court upheld the trial court's decision allowing exhumation. In its dismissal order last week, the Court of Appeals said that "no substantial constitutional question is directly involved." Peoria Journal Star reports on last week's court order.

Thursday, May 02, 2019

Georgia Institutes Investigation of Catholic Church Sex Abuse Claims

The Atlanta Journal Constitution reports that Georgia's Attorney General has announced an investigation into past sexual abuse claims in the Catholic Church. The investigation will be carried out by Georgia's Prosecuting Attorneys' Council. Atlanta Archbishop Wilton Gregory and Savannah Bishop Gregory Hartmayer both support the investigation. Other states have carried out similar investigations.

Tuesday, April 30, 2019

California Bishops Prevail In Part On Anti-SLAPP Defense To Abuse Concealment Claims

In Emens v. California Catholic Conference, (CA Super. Ct., April 17, 2019), a California state trial court granted a portion of an anti-SLAPP motion filed by the bishops of California's 11 dioceses seeking to strike a broad complaint filed against them charging that they have concealed clergy sex abuse. The complaint in the case (full text) filed last October charges that the concealment actions by the various bishops amount to a public nuisance, a private nuisance and civil conspiracy.  It asked for an order requiring release of the names of all clergy accused of child molestation and their history of abuse. California's anti-SLAPP law allows courts to strike a complaint that arises from acts in furtherance of free speech on a public issue unless plaintiff establishes there is a probability that he or she will prevail.

Finding that plaintiff has not established the probability of prevailing on the merits, the court struck portions of the complaint which allege actions in furtherance of free speech rights, but allowed plaintiff to move ahead on those claims that are not based on the exercise of free expression, saying in part:
Some of the conduct alleged does implicate the right of free speech, including the right not to speak. This would include the right not to publicly disclose the names of priests against whom allegations were made which were determined to be unfounded or lack credibility, and disclosing the names of priests against who allegations were made of conduct in the 1950’s where there was no investigation and where the priests have passed away.
The allegation that defendants attacked the credibility of victims does implicate free speech. Defendants may address the credibility of those making accusations against priests. 
Allowing child molesters to live in the community without notice to the community and transferring alleged molesters to new parishes without warning of the general public has First Amendment free speech implications. The actions are not permitting molesters to live in the community and transferring accused molesters, but doing this without notice to the affected communities. There are no allegations that the priests at issue had been convicted of any crime, or that notice was mandated. This would include accusations made against priests which were determined to lack credibility and to be without merit.
Concealing information regarding the actions of defendants and their agents from victims of past abuse also implicates free speech, as it is a general allegations as to all information regarding any reports of abuse, whether that information is connected to the abuse of a particular victim or there was any relation between the time of the abuse and the time of the information, and without regard to the credibility of the information. 
The remaining allegations do not involve the right to free speech or petition. There is no right to conceal sexual assaults from authorities. Protecting abusers from criminal prosecution is neither free speech nor petition. Making affirmative representations of the fitness of priests for assignments which included working with children while concealing information regarding the sexual misconduct of those priests is not an issue of free speech, but an issue of false speech.
Pacific Standard reports on the press conference held yesterday by the plaintiff and his attorneys who see the decision as a victory since it allows plaintiff to move ahead on some of his allegations.

Sunday, April 28, 2019

New York Archdiocese Releases Names of 120 Credibly Accused Clergy

On Friday, the Archdiocese of New York released a list of 120 clergy who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing a minor or possessing child pornography, or against whom a claim was found eligible for compensation by the Archdiocese's Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program (IRCP).  Timothy Cardinal Dolan announced the release in a Pastoral Letter to members of the Archdiocese. Approximately 75% of the clergy on the list were ordained before 1970. Some 350 victims have been awarded compensation by the IRCP.  Only two cases have occurred since 2002. NPR reports on these developments.

Tuesday, April 23, 2019

3rd Circuit: Philly May Require Its Foster Care Agencies To Accept Same-Sex Couples

In Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, (3d Cir., April 22, 2019), the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals upheld against 1st Amendment challenges the City of Philadelphia's policy of refusing to contract with foster care agencies, such as Catholic Social Services, that will not place children with same-sex married couples.  The court said in part:
The City’s nondiscrimination policy is a neutral, generally applicable law, and the religious views of CSS do not entitle it to an exception from that policy. 
[A]t the preliminary injunction stage CSS shows insufficient evidence that the City violated the Free Exercise Clause. The Fair Practices Ordinance has not been gerrymandered..., and there is no history of ignoring widespread secular violations ... or the kind of animosity against religion found in Masterpiece. Here the City has been working with CSS for many decades.... And the City has expressed a constant desire to renew its relationship with CSS as a foster care agency if it will comply with the City’s non-discrimination policies protecting same-sex couples.
Philadelphia Inquirer reports on the decision.

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Catholic Agency Sues Michigan Over Adoption Agency Non-Discrimination Policy

As previously reported, last month Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel announced that the state has entered into a settlement agreement that calls for the state to enforce non-discrimination provisions in agreements with foster care and adoption agencies.  The settlement applies to any agency contracting with the state that discriminates against same-sex couples or LGBTQ individuals otherwise qualified as foster care or adoptive parents.  Yesterday suit was filed in a Michigan federal district court by a Catholic adoption and foster care agency, and by some of its clients, challenging Michigan's new policy.  The complaint (full text) in Buck v. Gordon, (WD MI, filed 4/15/2019), contends that the new policy violates plaintiffs' 1st and 14th Amendment rights as well as RFRA. The Federalist reports on the lawsuit.

Friday, April 12, 2019

Retired Pope Benedict Weighs In On Clergy Sexual Abuse of Minors

This week, publications around the world published translations of an unusual essay from emeritus Pope Benedict XVI on the Church's clergy sex abuse crisis.  As reported by the Washington Post:
Breaking years of silence on major church affairs, Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI has written a lengthy letter devoted to clerical sex abuse in which he attributes the crisis to a breakdown of church and societal moral teaching and says he felt compelled to assist “in this difficult hour.”
The 6,000-word letter..., laments the secularization of the West, decries the 1960s sexual revolution and describes seminaries that became filled during that period with “homosexual cliques.”
The pope emeritus, in emphasizing the retreat of religious belief and firm church teaching, provides a markedly different explanation for the abuse crisis than that offered by Pope Francis, who has often said abuse results from the corrupted power of clergy.
Catholic News Agency has published the full text in English.

Wednesday, March 20, 2019

Connecticut Diocese Settles Abuse Claims For $3.5M

The Catholic Diocese of Bridgeport, Connecticut announced yesterday that it has settled lawsuits filed last year by five victims of clerical sexual abuse.  The Maronite Order was involved in one of the cases.  The abuse took place almost 30 years ago.  The cases were settled through mediation for a total of $3.5 million. Most of the cost was covered by the Diocese's insurance. CT Post reports on the settlements.

ERISA Pre-Empts Jesuit Order's Claim For Proceeds of Priest's Retirement Account

In Wisconsin Province of the Society of Jesus v. Cassem, (D CT, March 18, 2019), a Connecticut federal district court dismissed breach of contract claims brought by a Jesuit Province against relatives of a deceased Jesuit priest in a suit over the proceeds of the priest's retirement accounts.  Four years before his death, the priest changed the beneficiaries of the accounts from his Jesuit Order to two of his relatives. The court describes the claim at issue:
Plaintiff alleges that the change in beneficiary designation was improper because Fr. Cassem’s vows prevented him from legally acquiring personal property and, therefore, he never owned the Accounts. Plaintiff alleges that “Fr. Cassem’s final vows constitute an enforceable contract among and between the Province and Fr. Cassem, through which Fr. Cassem fully and finally renounced and assigned any and all property then owned or later acquired to the Province.”... The Province argues that because Fr. Cassem was not entitled to retain or direct property for the benefit of any party other than the Province, the original designation of the Province as the beneficiary of the Accounts remains valid and enforceable. 
The court held, however, that plaintiff's contract claim is pre-empted by ERISA, saying in part:
The statute is intended to protect beneficiaries relying on long-accumulated benefits from having to fight challenges to those benefits under disparate standards.
The court rejected the Order's argument that ERISA pre-emption violates its rights under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, saying in part:
whether or not the statute can apply to cases between private parties, RFRA certainly cannot be used as a procedural mechanism to legitimize a cause of action that contravenes federal law for a plaintiff that is contesting dismissal.... In any event, even if RFRA is applicable in the present case, it does not preclude ERISA preemption because ERISA does not impose a “substantial burden” on Plaintiff’s free exercise of religion.

Sunday, March 17, 2019

Catholic Student Who Objects To Chicken Pox Vaccination Requirement Sues

ABC News reports on a state court lawsuit filed last week against the Northern Kentucky Health Department by a high school student who has religious objections to receiving the chicken pox vaccine. There have been 32 cases of chicken pox since February at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Elementary School.  To stop the spread, health officials have, among other things, ordered the related Assumption Academy to bar all students who are not vaccinated or otherwise immune from the disease from participating in extra-curricular activities.  Subsequently health officials ordered the schools to exclude all non-immune students entirely from school until the spread ends, and to end other outside activities until then.  Eighteen year old Jerome Kunkel and his family, who are conservative Catholics, object to the vaccine because it was originally developed in the 1960's using cell lines from two aborted fetuses.

Wednesday, March 13, 2019

Cardinal Pell Sentenced By Australian Court To 6 Years In Prison On Sex Abuse Charges

As previously reported, last December a court in Australia convicted Catholic Cardinal George Pell on five counts of child sexual offenses dating back decades. As reported by CNN, yesterday the 77-year old Cardinal who was a top Vatican advisor was sentenced by the court to six years in prison.

Friday, March 01, 2019

Reporting On Cardinal Pell Conviction Is Examined

Get Religion published a piece today examining media coverage of the child sex abuse charges against Australia's Cardinal George Pell, as well as the outcome of his trial.  Reporter Julia Duin begins her report as follows:
I hadn’t been following the child abuse charges against Australian Cardinal Pell all that much because I assumed, based on the evidence, that they were somewhat plimsy and would never stick.
But they did — in a series of trials that are as odd as they come. At the heart of the proceedings there was a single witness and what appeared to be “recovered memories” of abuse. 
The end result? A cardinal is now in jail and a bunch of journalists have been handed the Aussie equivalent of contempt-of-court charges.
(See prior related posting.) Perth Now reports on Pell's appeal of his conviction.

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Australian Court Convicts Cardinal Pell On Child Sex Abuse Charges

With the lifting today of a gag order that had been imposed by Australian courts,  NPR reports on the conviction last December of Australian Catholic Cardinal George Pell on five counts of historical child sexual offenses dating back decades.  Pell, now 77, once served as Archbishop in Melbourne. Pell had been a top advisor on the Vatican's budget to Pope Francis. He was removed from the College of Cardinals last October. Pell will be sentenced tomorrow. (Reports had surfaced outside of Australia last December of the conviction.)  [Thanks to Steven H. Sholk for the lead.]

Sunday, February 24, 2019

Pope Francis Addresses Bishops' Summit On Protection of Minors

New York Times reports today:
Pope Francis ended a landmark Vatican meeting on clerical sexual abuse with an appeal “for an all-out battle against the abuse of minors,” which he compared to human sacrifice, but his speech did not offer concrete policy remedies demanded by many of the faithful.
Zenit has both extensive excerpts and the full text of the Pope's remarks ending the Summit on the Protection of Minors in the Church, Feb. 21-24, 2019 attended by some 190 bishops.