Category: Minnesota

  • Gerald Funcheon … sued again

     

    A number of years ago, a family reached out to me asking for help. Their son had been abused by a priest named Gerald Funcheon, and the family wanted to know what happened to the Crosier cleric.

     

    Jerry Funcheon
    Jerry Funcheon

     

    At the time, I looked at the resources available. I saw a priest with huge holes in his assignment record and a couple of lawsuits. Other than that, he had simply vanished.

    How times have changed.

    This week, Funcheon (who had hidden assignments in Hawaii and California and very public assignments all over the country—including Indiana, where he was banned because of his “plans” to molest) was sued for sexual abuse by two more victims in Minnesota. That brings the victim tally to somewhere around 20.

    Funcheon was also the first predator exposed under Hawaii’s civil window. His video deposition—where he talks about abusing kids in Hawaii and elsewhere—was made public a few years ago.

    Funcheon now lives is a facility for offending clerics in Missouri. But he’s free to do whatever he wants.

    His victims? They are the ones who suffer for Funcheon’s crimes.

     

     

  • LA’s Vicar General poor choice for bishop

    The more things change … the more they stay the same.

    This morning the Vatican announced the appointments of three new auxiliary bishops for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

    And one of them is a problem: vicar general and moderator of the Curia of the archdiocese Joseph Brennan.

    LA’s vicars general have been a sorry lot.

    Let's give them a vicar general as bishop. What could possibly go wrong?
    Let’s give them a vicar general as bishop. What could possibly go wrong?

     

    Former vicar general Msgr. Michael Myers resigned in 2009 after a New York Times article showed that he allowed a self-admitted sex addict and molester to be a priest in the archdiocese.

    Another former vicar general, Msgr. Richard Loomis testified in 2009 that “Mahony ordered him not to inform parishes of allegations against the now defrocked Rev. Michael Baker.” So he didn’t.

    What did Brennan do as vicar general?

    Well, we know that he used LA’s Catholics to lobby lawmakers on behalf of Archbishop Gomez. In a 2013 email, he asked Catholics to write and call their state representatives and tell them to vote no on SB131, the California Child Victims Act. If passed, it would have opened the doors of the civil courts to victims of child sexual abuse.

    The bill ended up passing through both houses. It was vetoed by Governor Jerry Brown, at the behest of the bishops.

    It’s no secret why Gomez and Brennan lobbied so hard against the bill. A similar bill in Minnesota unearthed decades of child sex abuse and cover-up. The cover-up was so bad, in fact, that one archdiocese is subject to a criminal probe and St. Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop John Nienstadt just resigned in disgrace.

    Heaven forbid something like that happen in LA.

    Zavala: the ladies man
    Zavala: the ladies man

    But it gets better: one of the three new bishops will be assigned to head the San Gabriel Region. Its former bishop, Gabino Zavala, resigned in 2012 after it was discovered that he had fathered two children.

     

     

     

  • Twin Cities Archbishop resigns—or—Who is shrewd and who is brave?

    My email was flooded this morning with news that St. Paul and Minneapolis Archbishop John C. Nienstedt and Auxiliary Bishop Lee A. Piché had resigned. If you haven’t been following the news, the archdiocese has been hammered during the past two years as legal disclosures showed that Archdiocese officials knew about child sexual abuse and covered it up for decades.

     

    Having a bad week
    Having a bad week

     

    Less than two weeks ago, prosecutors filed criminal charges against the archdiocese. Although Nienstedt and Piché were not charged, the complaint outlined how both men knew about abuse and did little to nothing to protect children.

    This morning, the Vatican announced that they had accepted the men’s resignations.

    The resignations a positive moves and show a huge step in the right direction when it comes to punishing church officials who covered up abuse. Following on the heals of the resignation of Kansas City-St. Joseph Bishop Robert Finn, these ousters are well-needed, if not very overdue.

    But Francis is not a brave reformer.

    Before you wag your fingers at me and say, “Gee, Joelle! Why are you always so critical? Francis is doing great things. He’s different,” we need to take note of some very important facts:

    1) The Vatican was not the group that exposed the wrongdoing of these bishops.

    The ONLY reason we know about Finn is because brave prosecutors did the right thing and charged him with child endangerment. No one in the Vatican was going to do a thing. In fact, none of Finn’s fellow bishops called on law enforcement indict Finn for covering up child pornography. Even after the conviction, Finn’s fellow bishops said nothing in support of the victims.

    2) The only reason we know about the scope and scale of crimes in Minnesota is because of their three-year civil window for victims.

    Recently Minnesota passed The Child Victims’ Act, a three-year “window” that allows victims of child sex crimes to use the civil court to expose their abusers and get justice, no matter when the abuse occurred.

    As more and more victims came forward to file child sex abuse and cover-up lawsuits, their attorneys were able to get access to and expose THOUSANDS of secret internal church documents that outlined how men like Nienstedt and former vicar general Kevin McDonough knew about abuse and abusers and did NOTHING to protect children at risk.

    Documents exposed in the civil proceedings—proceedings started by brave VICTIMS using the CIVIL COURTS—are the reason that these bishops were exposed and are resigning. The Vatican did not turn over the documents. Nienstedt did not hand them over voluntarily. It was only because of a victim-friendly civil law and brave survivors.

    3) Francis is not the reformer. Survivors who use the civil courts are the true reformers in this story. Francis is only reacting to bad press.

     

    Shrewd? Yes. Brave? Nah, not really.
    Shrewd? Yes. Brave? Nah, not really.

     

    Pope Francis is coming to the US later this year. He and his astute PR team saw the writing on the wall. They realized that if they did nothing, the entire trip would be marred by questions about abuse and cover-up (especially in the case of Finn, who was convicted of child endangerment). Instead of interviewing happy Catholics and gushing US leaders, the press would focus on victims’ groups and advocacy organizations who (rightfully) demand change.

    In accepting these bishops’ resignation, the Vatican made the shrewd move.

    But remember: Survivors made the BRAVE move.

     

     

  • Bar date set for St. Paul/Minneapolis abuse victims

    A federal bankruptcy judge has set an August 3 deadline for victims of child sexual abuse in the Archdiocese of Minneapolis/St. Paul.

    Having a bad week
    Archbishop to public: Let’s just get this over with, okay?

    The deadline, called a BAR DATE, is the final day and men and women abused as children can file claims against the Archdiocese to expose their abuser and get justice and accountability.

    The Archdiocese filed for bankruptcy protection earlier this year, after approximately 140 men and women came forward to file sex abuse and cover-up lawsuits under Minnesota’s civil window. The civil window, enacted in 2013, allows victims of child sexual abuse to use the civil courts for justice, no matter when the abuse occurred.

    Since the civil window opened, the Archdiocese has been pounded in the media and by victims for covering up child sex abuse. The pounding was well-justified.

    From MPR news:

    For decades, leaders of the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis have been reassigning, excusing and overlooking sexually abusive priests among their ranks. Some received additional retirement benefits. In August, a top church lawyer, shocked at what she saw, brought the story to MPR News. What happened next is still unfolding.

    An important note: The Archdiocese bankruptcy and bar date deadline do NOT affect victims of other entities in Minnesota. So, for example: Victims from Shattuck/St. Mary’s, other dioceses in Minnesota, religious orders, churches, or other private entities have until May 2016 to come forward.

    For more information about the bar date, click here or here.

    I am not an attorney and do not have the authority to dispense legal advice. But let me say this: if you are considering filing a claim in the bankruptcy, talk to an attorney who is familiar with the process. Be sure that your rights are protected.

     

     

  • Shattuck-St. Mary’s Part Three: Inside the mind of a predator

     

    I give you two predators: One fictional. One real.

    The similarities will stun you.

    Tom Riddle, predator
    Tom Riddle

    “It’s very boring, having to listen to the silly little troubles of an eleven-year-old girl,” he went on. “But I was patient. I wrote back. I was sympathectic, I was kind. Ginny simply loved me. No one’s ever understood me like you, Tom …I’m so glad I’ve got this diary to confide in … It’s like having a friend I can carry around in my pocket. …

    “If I say it myself, Harry, I’ve always been able to charm the people I needed”

    -Tom Riddle (AKA Voldemort) Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

    Lynn Seibel
    Lynn Seibel

    “I was the guru, so to speak. And … and it was part of my nature to be manipulative. Which is what happened. And I manipulated these young men into doing things that … that were gratifying for me …

    And … and the students were very curious about sex. And I was just … it just … played into my need for attention …

    I had a good reputation. That’s the point. They trusted me … and I betrayed them …

    Every one of those kids … I gave the impression that this wasn’t about sex. I gave them the impression that this was Professor Seibel teaching them how to make [their penises larger] … that I had no interest in them sexually. They had no idea … I was abusing them …

    They were innocent and I betrayed them. The shame … I don’t want them to have to live with that …

    This is a terrible thing I did and none of them should have to take any blame. None of them should have to take any of it on themselves. I did it. Manipulated them. I’m a master of manipulation and I did it for my own … I did it for me …

    It’s not [the boys’] fault. No.”

    – Convicted child predator Lynn Seibel in a sworn 2014 deposition

    Lynn Seibel was convicted of sexually abusing six Shattuck-St. Mary’s students in 2013. He was sentenced to 52 months in prison. This deposition is a part of the victims’ civil case, which charges that Shattuck-St. Mary’s officials covered up child pornography and sexual abuse.

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    Shattuck-St. Mary’s, home of a child sex scandal and cover-up