Maciel’s Son to Sue Legionaries: Details abuse, Tells NCR 'Dad promised $6 million'

Jun. 20, 2010
A photograph believed to be of young Raul Gonzalez, and his sister, Normita, with Swiss Guards in a photo believed taken by their father, Marcial Maciel Degollado, in Rome in 1989.

Born in Mexico in 1980, Raul Gonzalez is a sturdy six-foot-one, with dark, close-cropped hair. He has a fair command of English, but faltered occasionally, searching for words, and at one point broke down and wept in describing the sexual abuse he endured, in childhood and adolescence, by his father, the late Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of an international religious order, the Legionaries of Christ.

Raul Gonzalez gave his account in a May 7 interview with NCR. A lawsuit scheduled to be filed today in Connecticut against the Legion of Christ alleges that the order facilitated Maciel's abuse of his son, adding a new chapter in a saga of deception and depravity, two years after the death of Maciel, who for decades wielded enormous influence in Vatican circles as a favorite of the late Pope John Paul II.

BREAKING NEWS: Maciel suit filed in New Haven, Conn. June 21.

The Legion of Christ and its supporters adulated the founder, Maciel, as “Nuestro Padre” (Our Father) and vilified the ex-Legionaries he sexually assaulted after they made their accusations public. Now, in an ironic twist, the Legion has begun to seek some manner of reconciliation with his victims. The current head of the order, Fr. Alvaro Corcuera, 52, traveled from Rome to New York for a May 13 four-hour meeting, trying to make amends with Juan Vaca, 73, one of the founder's oldest victims, who as a young priest several times beseeched the Vatican to oust Maciel. A Legion spokesman confirmed that the director general met with Vaca but said Corcuera would not comment further until the Vatican names a new commissioner to oversee the Legionaries.

Pope Benedict XVI, who in 2006 banished Maciel from active ministry to "a life of prayer and penitence," recently decided to install a commissioner over the Legion of Christ at their headquarters in Rome, after a year-long investigation by a panel of bishops. In May, the Vatican denounced Maciel for a “life devoid of scruples and authentic religious meaning.”

The lawsuit, seeking unspecified financial damages from the Legion and Maciel’s legal estate, will be filed in New Haven, because the Legion has its national headquarters in Connecticut, and because Maciel allegedly abused Gonzalez in several American states. The suit was prepared by St. Paul, Minn, attorney Jeff Anderson, who has represented hundreds of clergy sex abuse victims.

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This reporter videotaped an interview with Gonzalez May 7 in Stillwater, Minn the day after Gonzalez met with his attorney. Anderson was not present for the interview.

(A Brian Ross report scheduled for this evening's ABC Nightline will include interview excerpts.)

Gonzalez was previously interviewed March 3 on MSV Radio in Mexico City along with his mother, Blanca Lara Gutierrez, and older half-brother Omar.

A recurrent theme in the May 7 interview was that Gonzalez feared his father and the Legionaries of Christ, and that he had concern for the safety of his brother, Omar, 33, who was also allegedly abused many times by Maciel. Omar lives in Mexico and is aware of the suit, Anderson said.Photo believed to be of young Raul with Pope John Paul II. Raul believes his father, Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionariesof Christ, took the photo.Photo believed to be of young Raul with Pope John Paul II. Raul believes his father, Marcial Maciel Degollado, founder of the Legionariesof Christ, took the photo.

Raul was Maciel's natural son with Blanca Lara Gutierrez. She was 22 and Maciel 60 when Raul was born. Maciel provided her a home and support in Cuernavaca, Mexico. Omar, her son from a previous relationship was three years old when Raul was born. The father they knew as Raul Rivas “visited us maybe every four months,” said Raul.

On those visits, he said, his father always stayed in a hotel.

"I have memories," he continued. "Like, ‘my dad is coming.’ I was always at the front of my house waiting for his car to arrive. ... My dad told my mom that he was a CIA agent." Later, said Gonzalez, "Señor Raul," as neighbors called Maciel, told Blanca that he worked as a detective for Shell oil. "Señor Raul" and Blanca had another son, Christian, in 1993.

The Gonzalez Lara family lived comfortably on money Señor Raul sent; none of them, said Gonzalez, knew he was a priest until 1997 news reports of the ex-seminarians' charges. At that point, Gonzalez insisted that his mother not let Christian be alone with the father.

Maciel never appeared in family photographs, though he often took pictures, the son said.

In 1987, when Raul Gonzalez was 7, he traveled alone for the first time with his father, to Colombia. He said he resisted a single attempt Maciel made to have sex with him. "My human instinct tell me, you can't. And I moved and he stopped. He didn't force me."

He was about 9 when his father sent word to Blanca for Raul to meet him in Rome. "My mom trusted him because he was my dad," he said. "Well, okay, go with your dad -- go on a trip, no problem."

He recalls his father meeting him at the airport in Rome with a blue Mercedes, taking him to an apartment where "my dad told me these are your aunts and this is your sister." This was Normita, a little over a year old at the time, and her mother Norma Hilda Banos, Maciel's second common-law wife, whom he had met in Acapulco several years before, according to the publication El Mundo in Madrid. Maciel set up his partial, extended family for a month in Rome. A woman whose name Gonzalez can't remember assisted "Aunt Norma" with little Normita.

We went to the Vatican," he recalls. "We were in a small chapel and Pope John Paul II was offering Mass there."

Maciel arranged for Legion supporters to attend private Masses in the Apostolic Palace by virtue of financial gifts he and the Legion steered to then-Msgr Stanislaw Dziwisz, John Paul II's close assistant. (See NCR two-part report, April 16th issue and April 30th issue, 2010.) He has since become a cardinal in Cracow.

Gonzalez does not recall receiving communion from the pope. He says that John Paul shook hands with the visitors. He does not recall where his father was during the Mass. "I was with Norma, the mom, and my little sister, Normita," he says. "I kissed [John Paul's] ring."

But the person who took the photograph of young Raul and Normita, holding hands with a Swiss Guard, was almost certainly Maciel. Raul retains possession of the photos. The man wanting to leave no visible trace with his Cuernavaca family took photos that mattered to him personally.

Gonzalez did not question Norma's relationship with his father; in the naiveté of a complex childhood he accepted things as they were.

The "family" traveled tout ensemble to Sorrento, Capri and Naples on a sunny holiday. In Rome, he said, "during the days, [Maciel] left and then he came home at night," presumably after tending to his duties at the Legion complex.

The boy returned to Mexico after a month. Over the years his father would call long distance and speak to the boys. "He always told us, 'Don't forget to go to Mass'...'Be good boys.' And to be honest, I appreciate those advices...[like] 'Don't lie.' That's the good thing he left us."

Not long after Raul's 10th birthday Maciel arranged for him to live with a family in Dublin, Ireland, attend private school and learn English. This was in 1990 when, he said, the severe suffering began.

Vaca’s vindication

If John Paul had acted on the allegations against Maciel that Juan Vaca detailed to the pope in a 1989 letter, in a request for dispensation from his vows as a priest, Maciel's career would have been derailed, cutting his access to Legion funds, and perhaps preventing Gonzalez from going to Ireland.

Vaca entered the Legion in Mexico in 1947, at age 10. Repeatedly abused by Maciel in Spain from age 12 through adolescence in Rome, the young priest went to Orange, Conn., as the Legion's U.S. director. In 1976, when Vaca left the Legion, joining the diocese of Rockville Centre, N.Y., he sent a blistering 12-page letter to Maciel, naming 20 other victims. With support of Bishop John R. McGann, he sent the letter to the Vatican in a formal protest, which achieved nothing. With McGann's support he petitioned the Vatican to punish Maciel again, sent via diplomatic pouch from the Vatican Embassy, without action. His final attempt in 1989, again through Vatican channels, included an impassioned cover letter to John Paul specifying what Maciel did. In 1993 Vaca received the dispensation; the allegations against Maciel were ignored until another ex-Legionary, Jose Barba, filed the canon law case in 1998.

Corcuera, the current Legion director-general, 52, comes from an upper-middle class Mexico City family. Upon being contacted by him, Vaca arranged to meet at Mercy College in midtown Manhattan where he is an adjunct professor of psychology and sociology. They met alone in a conference room, Vaca told NCR. "He embraced me in a manly, Mexican way and was about to kneel down in asking my forgiveness, but I said no, and had him sit at the head of the table, and I to his immediate right.

"He was relaxed, and kind. After a while, I called him Alvarito" – the way of changing a name into a term of endearment among Mexicans. Vaca, married for many years, said he assumed a paternal role, asking the younger priest about his background. Corcuera recalled his youth in a Legion school, inspired by Maciel, joining the order in Mexico, on to seminary in Connecticut, where he had had Vaca as a superior. (The campus is now up for sale.) Vaca did not remember Corcuera, telling him he had worked with many seminarians before leaving for the Rockville Centre diocese. "Alvaro said, 'You were nice to me.' He went on about how, when he became director-general in 2004, the election came as a surprise for him. I said: 'Well, Maciel trained you for the job’”

Vaca said Corcuera insisted he was elected at an open chapter, not hand-picked by Maciel. When Maciel stepped down in 2004 from the post he had held for decades, Cardinal Ratzinger had just ordered an investigation based on the 1998 case, which had hung in abeyance under pressure from then-Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Angelo Sodano, who had received financial gifts from the Legion [NCR April 16 issue and April 30 issue, 2010.]

Said Vaca, "I asked point-blank if Corcuera knew about Maciel's abuses. He said no. I said, 'You knew he sent money to the ladies,' meaning the mother in Madrid, Norma, and her daughter. He said, 'I learned after 2004.' He didn't give a specific date on when he learned it, and I didn't press him."

After letting Corcuera talk for an hour or so, Vaca recounted how Maciel had abused him and other seminarians decades ago, and how, he claimed, he pulled Maciel, passed out on morphine, from drowning in a hotel bathtub in Tetuan, Morocco, in 1957, a year before Corcuera was born. "He felt ashamed,” said Vaca of Corcuera. “He hung his head, whispering 'I do believe you.' He put his face in his hands."

Corcuera told Vaca that Legionaries had recently begun circulating his 1976 letter denouncing Maciel, naming the 20 other seminary victims. If that is true, it marks a striking shift from last summer, when two Legion priests in Rome told this writer that Legion seminarians were being taught about Maciel's heroic life, even after news of the daughter, Norma.

"I accept your apologies," Vaca says he told Corcuera, "but this is not a solution." He said the Legion should provide "honest and fair compensation for all the harm and damages" to him and the other victims.

Corcuera replied that the Legion in Rome had formed a committee to explore the issue. He asked what he thought would be fair compensation, says Vaca. Vaca told Corcuera to look at what American dioceses had paid in victim settlements. "I said, 'The Legion had for years been slandering me. Think about that. Come up with an amount. I'm not going to tell you how much.'"

The Legionaries of Christ website began posting defenses of Maciel -- and criticism of the accusers -- after the Hartford Courant published a report critical of the Legion in 1997. Legionary Father Owen Kearns, publisher of the Legion-owned National Catholic Register, denounced the victims for "a coordinated conspiracy to smear Father Maciel." At the time he called Vaca "a proud, status-conscious man angered and disappointed at his professional failures," who had wanted "greater power in the Legion." Vaca, however, had resigned the Legion in his 1976 letter to Maciel.

The website came down in 2006 after the Vatican punished Maciel.

Kearns recently issued a general apology to Gerald Renner and this writer for his comments following the Hartford Courant report, but he did not identify victims by name.

With a master's degree in behavioral science from Long Island University, Vaca was a counselor for disabled students at York College in the City University of New York, on the fourth year of a 5-year tenure track position, when he was terminated in 1999. "I do believe that because of the Legion attack on my credibility and character, they did not renew my contract," he told NCR. His superior cited budget cuts for the job loss, explains Vaca. But he points to a Kearns statement that he never held the position of national director of the Legion, which was false and hurt him professionally, he says. He halted his doctoral studies for financial reasons, and at age 62 had to restart his academic career.

Corcuera and Vaca parted on cordial terms, he says, with the Legionary promising to work on the compensation issue. At Corcuera's request, Vaca provided names and contact information for men in Mexico whom, he said, Maciel had also abused.

Professor Jose Barba of Mexico City, who filed the 1998 canonical case, told NCR that Corcuera had made no attempt to reach him. Barba added: "I have made my views on him public and he knows I do not believe or trust him."

Jim Fair, the Legion spokesman, said that Corcuera has met privately with several victims in Mexico, "and leaves it to them to speak if they wish."

Memories of years of abuse

By Gonzalez's account, he was 10 when Maciel sexually abused him and Omar on a trip to Madrid, in 1989, and photographed them in the process. "My dad told me his uncle, this guy, used to masturbate him, and I have to masturbate him. ... Why do you say that to a kid?"

He was nearing eleven when Maciel arranged for Gonzalez to live in Dublin with an Irish family, attend private school and learn English. When the call came to join his father for a weekend in London, he was homesick for his mother. "I started crying. And I said, 'I want to see you, you know.''"

In London, "I saw my dad, and he took me for a walk."

At this point in the interview he began sobbing.

"I knew this was going to happen," he said, of his emotions.

He described a stroll in London as Maciel bought magazines, took him back to the hotel and showed him "hard-core pornography" to arouse and then abuse him.

After two years study in Dublin he returned to his home in Mexico.

Other vacations with his father often included Omar.

"When we were on holidays, one abuse converted to another abuse," he continued. "All the days that we stayed with my dad, on every trip, there were abuses." He said Maciel hired young prostitutes when they were on a beach trip to Colombia; he also, according to Gonzalez, had various sexual encounters with his sons in Florida and New York. The grooming rituals he described -- of Maciel claiming his leg was in pain, asking the boys for a comforting touch, then a massage, then more -- hauntingly echo the accounts of Vaca and the early seminary victims, decades before Raul's birth, teenage boys standing in Legion infirmaries as Maciel rubbed his abdomen in pain, asking them to massage him, guiding them into genital contact, telling many of the boys he had permission from Pope Pius XII for sexual relief because of his pain.

Although Raul spoke of loving his father, he says, "I was afraid all my life. ... Because my dad told me where he worked there were people really dangerous."

In 1997, as the Mexican media picked up on the Courant reporting of Maciel, a lowbrow magazine, Contenido, put Maciel on the cover with a digest of the allegations. On seeing that, Gonzalez called his father. "It's not me," Maciel said initially. But his father told him to buy up the magazines. "He sent a guy with this envelope, like $2000," which Gonzalez used to buy up copies. "But we never confront him. We were in shock. That's when we read that the congregation was...powerful." The family feared that "if we make a scandal, they are going to disappear us."

Learning Maciel's identity he likened to "whoom...a brain explosion."

With Blanca financially dependent on Maciel, the family refused to
confront him about being a priest. "Nine years of abuses and I was in shock," said Gonzalez. "I was angry. I was sad. I have a lot of feelings. ... The abuses of my brother, like I said, were really strong."

He described his brother's sexual abuse in graphic detail.

In 1998, Raul Gonzalez sank into a depression so deep that he could no longer sleep. "Your daddy always says, 'Go to Mass. Don't smoke. Don't drink.' ... So then you see that he's a priest."

Maciel arranged for psychiatric treatment in Madrid, yet in a highly manipulative way, according to the son. Gonzalez stayed the several months with his half-sister, Normita, and "Aunt Norma." Being reunited with "family," and pleasant memories of Rome, apparently reinforced his silence as an incest victim. In the sessions with the psychiatrist he says he was unable to reveal what father/Father had done, instead expressing fears that he was gay. The psychiatrist, he says, assured him: "You are not homosexual. This will pass." He prescribed anti-depressant medications which Gonzalez says he took over the several years, with care from a doctor on return to Mexico, until he became too drugged out.

Later, he traveled to Barcelona with Maciel, finally resisting the sexual advances. At that point, he said, Maciel lost sexual interest in him.

The last time Gonzalez saw his father was in 2000. They communicated by phone intermittently. In 2003 Maciel told him he had funds for him in a Swiss bank. "He always told me that his will is to give us $6 million...the trustee was going to be in Switzerland."

In 2004, when the Vatican investigation, stalled for years under John Paul and Cardinal Sodano, began under Ratzinger's order, the family in Cuernavaca heard from Maciel less and less. Although he paid for Gonzalez’s university studies in Puebla, Mexico, the household support ebbed. According to Gonzalez, Maciel had secured several small pieces of commercial property to provide Blanca some income.

They learned of his father's death in 2008 on TV news in their home. He and Omar "started crying. It is normal. It is our dad...That moment you put the abuses on standby and you focus now on the death of your dad. Why did you do it? Okay, I couldn't tell you in person. But I know that you can hear me. And tell me, why you did that, the abuses?"

After the news broke in 2009 of Normita's existence, and reports from Madrid describing the other family's financial security, the family in Mexico wanted compensation from Maciel's estate.

Gonzalez said he wrote the Legion in 2003 seeking confirmation of the trust account, but received no reply. Maciel, he continued, told him "that Señor Alvaro Corcuera or Señor Marcelino de Andreas were going to look after us after his death." He said that he called the Legion headquarters in Mexico City, leaving messages for both men, to no avail.


Meeting with Investigator

Last fall, Gonzalez said, he and his family had two meetings with Bishop Ricardo Watty, the Vatican-appointed visitator, or investigator, of the Legionaries in Mexico. He and Omar "gave to Ricardo Watty letters to Pope Ratzinger." He says they also asked to meet with Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, to no avail. In their first meeting with Watty, he says, they asked their mother to leave the room while the two brothers told the bishop how Maciel abused them. Watty "was okay, a good person," he continues. "He showed that he really felt sorry about what happened." Although they received no response from the pope, he says, Watty arranged for him to meet with Legionary Father Carlos Skertchly, an official at the order's Anahuac University in Mexico City. A long, circuitous series of meetings ensued, in which Gonzalez says he provided documents proving Maciel's relationship and intent of financial support.

On March 3, attorney Jose Bonilla in Mexico City told NCR that a trust fund Maciel supposedly established for the family turned up empty. The Legion gave Raul a copy of a trust they told him was taken away from Normita, the daughter, in Spain, according to Bonilla.

The day after the MSV interview, the Legion released a statement on Skertchly's meetings with Gonzalez, saying that the Legion rebuffed his demand for $26 million in which he had reputedly promised silence in return. Bonilla withdrew as legal counsel, citing professional ethics over a client bargaining silence for money. In the May 7 interview, Gonzalez faulted Bonilla for giving him poor advice in the Legion negotiation. The financial demand he made with Skertchly, he said, was for the $6 million Maciel said was in the trust in Switzerland, and $10 million each for himself and Omar as incest victims.

If Watty's rationale for putting Raul Gonzalez in direct dialogue with the Legion was to achieve reconciliation for a victim, the move not only backfired by showed the bishop being duped himself. The Mexican media coverage on Skertchly's letter spun favorably for the Legion, casting Raul Gonzalez as a spoiler, trying to squeeze big bucks out of a religious order that is a national institution in that country. No American lawyer would let a client negotiate for himself, even with a bishop setting things up.

In the following excerpt from the May 7 interview, which has been edited slightly, Gonzalez seemed genuinely taken aback by the first question on his dealing with the Legion.

So you asked him for $26 million. That's a lot of money.

”You think so for abuse?"

I think a lot of people would.

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“You can cry, the guys of the church can cry. Like Pope Benedict cried when he went to Malta. Tears dry. They dry. Your heart and your soul is affected all your life...

“The pain you feel. The rage you have inside your soul,” Gonzalez continued. “[Maciel] stole my soul. I'm the soul that pushes on my brother. I want to help him. Even if I die, I want to help my brother first.

“Pope Benedict in 2006 moved my father, my daddy, or Marcial Maciel to rest. To pray. Why didn't he bring him to jail?

“And Benedict, he tries to start to make it clean. He said, months ago, that he's going to start looking out for victims. Okay. Maybe it's not his job specifically -- that's the job of the Legion. But the pope has to tell those guys to start doing something,” Gonzalez said.

“Six million dollars was my inheritance that my dad promised us,” he said. “And I will ask a question. If I offer you ten million dollars, would you let yourself be raped for nine years?”

Jason Berry is an author and producer of a film documentary on Maciel, "Vows of Silence." The Investigative Fund of the Nation Institute supported research for this report.

And then Maciel heard

And then Maciel heard confessions, and baptized children, and offered Mass for the wealthiest of the wealthy. And Pope John II, the soon to be sainted, honored him and called him an "efficacious guide to youth."

Praise All that is Holy that these men and their activities are being identified.

Will to forgive them and then prosecute the hell out of them.

"The evil that men do lives

"The evil that men do lives after them; the good is oft interred with their bones..."

It's a good thing JPII

It's a good thing JPII abolished the devil's advocate to make possible the canonization of Escriva. If there were a devil's advocate, he might bring up all this Maciel stuff to blight JPII's canonization.

When will Maciel be canonized?

This is a sad tale of the

This is a sad tale of the spiritual compulsion of lust! The spiritual compulsion of lust, contrary to our traditional understanding, resides in the quest for power and control of one person over another. Maciel obviously suffers greatly from this compulsion, to the point of being sociopathic. The fact that the Institution looked the other way and in many ways rewarded Maciel for his abuses is an atrocity, to say the least. Another in a long line of examples of the disease of the Institution. I pray for healing for the victims, accountability on the part of the Institution and faith that the Holy Spirit is working all of this for the higher good. As an Easter people, we must have faith that new life is coming as a result of these "deaths".

Lauri Lumby
Authentic Freedom Ministries
Wisconsin, USA
http://www.authenticfreedom.net

Joe Ratzinger is doing very

Joe Ratzinger is doing very little to look out for the victims. He could start by turning in some of his bishops and cardinals to the authorities, for their part in the cover-up. Prison time might be a good form of justice for these men.

Joe Ratzinger is doing very

Joe Ratzinger is doing very little to look out for the victims. He could start by turning in some of his bishops and cardinals to the authorities, for their part in the cover-up. Prison time might be a good form of justice for these men
__________________________________
He knows if he turns them in they just might turn him in.

HEAR! hEAR! NOW! NOW!

HEAR! hEAR!

NOW! NOW!

Can a Bishop be UNbishoped OR a Cardinal be UNcardinaled ???

All those that behave like

All those that behave like Pope Tarts should be sold for breakfast. If they have broken the law we should turn them into Pope Toasties!

"...the Vatican

"...the Vatican investigation, stalled for years under John Paul and Cardinal Sodano..."
who became as ADDICTED to Maciel's PAYOLA as he was to Demerol and little boys!

I cannot believe that the

I cannot believe that the Church has not completely shut down the Legionaires and everything connected with them. This is a cancer in the Church and will remain so until totally cut out. Why would anyone trust the theology that emerges from it? The National Catholic Register? What about their Vacation Bible School programs? Their formation for lay ministers? Etc.

It's all about

It's all about $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.

LoC is a tremendous cash cow for Vatican City.

THAT's why the LoC still exists.

And now the scamble to get a

And now the scamble to get a share of the cash cow, beginning with TV interviews.

## For a moment I thought LoC

## For a moment I thought LoC was webspeak for Lots of Cash.... :)

O, God, I love it :) Thank

O, God, I love it :)

Thank you mucho!!!

I have been spiritually

I have been spiritually helped by the Legion. Don't judge an entire order based upon one person! Or even a multitude of people. G-d can take bad things and make them good. One can't deny the benefit this organization has had spiritually, nor the benefit it could have UNDER THE RIGHT LEADERS. My own experiances in life show that the Legion can help people.

Brett, your point that an

Brett, your point that an organization should not be judged entirely by the misdeeds of one, who is corrupt, is a valid one. But it is really more than one person and, I fear, that it is structural. There would still have to be a complete review and adjustments made to many aspects of the Legion as well as to the kind of structure that exists in the Vatican that made it so attractive to ignore or deny so much for so long of what was happening. I wish I could feel confident that an objective review will take place and structural changes will be implemented, but I just can't see any reason to think this will happen, which saddens me greatly.

Not one single person in this

Not one single person in this organization can be trusted, none. Think about it. This vulture, Maciel, abused so many persons, and none of the others knew? Did it ever occur to you that the present spokespersons might be covering their own backs, by pretending to be ignorant of the corruption in their order? Why should they risk their comfortable life, and risking to have to struggle, out in the world for a living, or worse yet, facing criminal prosecution? The safety net gone and a supportive community? This people are not stupid. No, none of them are believable. Yes, the entire organization should be dissolve!

I read it all. Unbelievable.

I read it all. Unbelievable. The Pope knew about this? The kids came to the Vatican and had their pictures taken by "Father" Maciel with the Pope and Swiss Guards?? (the Pope not looking at the child I notice)? And the SISTERS in the US are being investigated by the Vatican??

In May, the Vatican denounced

In May, the Vatican denounced Maciel for a “life devoid of scruples and authentic religious meaning.”

Outrageous! How about a life of the most heinous crimes against innocent children. These statements from the Vatican are wretched, disgusting and make my stomach turn.

Hey, he was the kid's dad,

Hey, he was the kid's dad, fer Christ's sake!!!!!!!!!!!

And your point is? A child's

And your point is? A child's father has blanket-permission to do anything he feels like doing to his son? Did your father abuse you? Perhaps this is why the story seems so "normal" to you? I pray that some good will come out of these atrocities. Blessings!

I think you have misconstrued

I think you have misconstrued my (in hindsight, admittedly poor) attempt at sarcasm.

I hope this young man and any other kids of Maciel take the Legionaries to the proverbial "cleaners".

I'd rather his offspring get the money than Rome.

Sorry for poor phraseology on my part.

Believe me, I fully share your sentiments.

As always, Jason Berry's

As always, Jason Berry's report is so accurate and uncontrovertible, and his professional commitment to investigate the factual truth so extraordinary, that he should be awarded an international recognition for his journalism high standards and accomplishments. It is due such a recognition, especially in these days when our society is becoming the victim of cover-ups, misinformation, lies and slander to protect the power and authority abusers, as well as the criminals, like in the case of the monster Marcial Maciel and his enablers (John Paul II, then-Msgr. Dziwisz, Card. Sodano, Card. Dario Miranda, etc., etc).

How appropriate to see Juan

How appropriate to see Juan Vaca comment here, himself a survivor of Maciel's abusive molestation. Juan spoke at the VOTF conference where Jason was awarded the St. Catherine of Siena Distinguished Lay Person Award for his decades-long historic investigation of sexual abuse by Catholic priests. The courage of both men is profound as they confronted evil, and despite blistering attack, persisted until the truth is finally known.

VOTF's award to Jason needs to be augmented by the ultimate: Pulitzer's and their equivalent.

One of the most important ways to honor Jason's work and see Juan speak in depth is to order the DVD "Vows of Silence" at www.vowsofsilencefilm.com. See Sodano, JPII, Jeb Bush, et al prancing about honoring Maciel. Hear interviews with more survivors and Gerald Renner, Jason's co-author, who died before vindication came. The film is a keeper.

How terribly sad for the

How terribly sad for the children fathered and abused by this disturbed and perverted man. That he was a priest held in such esteem by Pope JPII, Ratzinger and Sodano, I find extremely troubling. There are probably similar stories that could be told by other sons of parental abuse, of lies told covering up other indiscretions, and learning of half brothers and sister. However, to have been sexually abused by your own father who you now learn is not just a priest but the founder of a powerful Order who had access to the Vatican, even the Pope must be extremely difficult. History has its share of similar stories of clerical hierarchy, even Popes who have fathered children or have had mistresses but the story of Maciel is one of the most depraved. I don't know how the Legion of Christ can ever recover from the perverted behavior of its founder, but a good start would be to do the right thing by making restitution to his children.

Anonymous, I agree with all

Anonymous, I agree with all that you say and I would not change a word of what you wrote. Yet, I still do have a difficult time understanding the 26 million dollar figure. Even with all of the lies and abuse, for me, it still has a sent of extortion to it.

John David....Twenty-six

John David....Twenty-six million has the "scent" of extortion to it?
Twenty-six trillion wouldn't be enough to compensate those sons or
any sexual abuse victim....John, try picturing yourself sexually abused
by YOUR Father and then tell me what extortion is....

Not by accident that all of

Not by accident that all of this comes to real light during the year of the Priest...and yet we hold on to 'celibacy' as a requirement for ordination...under the false assumption that it frees the men for ministry. Tell me again just why is it the those involved in a healthy and holy sacramental marriage are barred from the priesthood? This one is a real head-scratcher. Hopefully, this article will bring to light the real need for the purification of the catholic priesthood.

From the time I've heard

From the time I've heard about the Legionnairies and Maciel's abuse of seminarians, I've thought of him as evil and depraved, but what kind of human being sexually abuses his own son? Going further: What kind of Pope, Cardinal, Bishop, etc. enables such a man to be a leader in the church? This is proof positive that John Paul II is no saint. So the devil's advocate was abolished so that Jose Maria Escriva could be canonized? I wonder what one would find in Escriva's past that JPII didn't want anyone to know.

"What kind of Pope...enables

"What kind of Pope...enables such a man to be a leader in the church?"

A future canonized saint?

God help us!!!

REMEMBER ALL the priests,

REMEMBER ALL the priests, bishops, cardinals and lay persons who knew something was rotten about the culture of the Legionaires but did nothing. Reminds me of the typical responses in political societies like the Nazi Germany.

I don't think Pope John Paul II had any saintly relationship with God. Popes may not be so close to God afterall.

When do you think Pope Benedict will wipe out the Cult of the Legionaires, close their indoctrination schools and seminaries, shutdown their propaganda machines like the National Catholic Register, and disperse their priests to other religious orders or dioceses?

Never, I tell you, because the authoritatarian church loves militant, fanatical, rightwing cults.

"...because the authoritarian

"...because the authoritarian church loves militant, fanatical, rightwing cults."

Especially cults that rake in the "moolah" for Rome!

Talk about Vatican enabling!!!

Thankyou, Jason Berry, for

Thankyou, Jason Berry, for your faith and persistence in shedding the light of Christ's truth onto this mentally disordered closed-system of males obsessed by power, addicted to its "high" in place of the true love of Christ. It is astonishing that over the centuries, these crimes have been committed and kept secret in the name of protecting the Church. Finally, all over the world, the innocent and spiritually abused are less and less in fear of disclosing the evil done to them and the people are more and more coming out of their denial and listening. The abuse of power from this closed-system takes many forms, but the sexual abuse is the most depraved. Signed, "a mental health professional" who has listened over more than 30 years to the pain and the efforts to heal.

How can the work of this

How can the work of this priest ever be considered the work of God? This is so incredibly distressing and sad to think that so many priests and people looked up to such a disturbed man. "The truth shall set us free"

Lord, to whom shall we go?

Lord, to whom shall we go? This revelation makes me sick in the stomach. I was sexually abused by by own father, so I know something of what Marciel's victims must feel. Thanks be to God, I was able to find true comfort in Jesus' Church. I pray that Marciel's victims can find it in their heart to distinguish between Marciel's sins (which cry out to God for vengeance), and the Goodness of Jesus Christ. For Jesus is the only one who can save us from this misery. Jesus alone has the words of everlasting life.

If the alleged quote of Paul

If the alleged quote of Paul VI about the "smoke of Satan" was in any doubt, this gives it an historical and factual foundation. Maciel was devious and insidious. For how many years did the Vatican ignore the pleas of the victims?? As long as his money talked, those around John Paul II turned a blind eye. How sickening!

This is NOT a celibacy issue.

This is NOT a celibacy issue. This is a case of pure evil perpetrated against vulnerable women and children by a depraved sexual predator and those who refused to confront the situation because of the love of money (the root of all evil).. When will the Church ever rise from the ashes of these sins to a new life of truth, justice and transparency? When will the victims be vindicated by the Christ who truly loved the little children and the denigrated women of His time? When will Church become synonymous with the Jesus who walked among us 2,000 years ago? The "Rock", it appears has turned to sand which tortures those whose sandals authentically walk in the footsteps of the Risen Lord. Who will arise among us to save our Church? Where are our prophets?

The following is my very

The following is my very perosnal, highly hypotetical and naively audacious thingking about the conduct of Pope JP II toward Marciel.
The secret seal of the Sacrament of confession!
1) Marciel might have had the help of those around JP II to obtain a secret meeting for confesion.And after that. you might know, that JP II's mouth and hands would have been tied up for ever.
2) If I am not wrong, I remember that JP II promoting the frequenting to the Sacrament of Confession, offered himself available to hear confessions in the St.Peter Basilica and Marciel might have had taken that advantage to reach the Pope for confession and ................

There are no adequate words

There are no adequate words to express the revulsion experienced yet again while reading through Mr. Berry’s latest edition of investigative reporting,   and then watching the Nightline program.     The floor of hell will indeed be paved with the skulls of bishops,   …and popes.
.
Maciel’s debauchery is just the tip of the centuries-old iceberg of privileged clerical corruption in the historical records — from castrati to mistresses to boy-toys — whatever power and money could obtain.     Clerics who have had such voyeuristic interest in the sexuality of laity,   are themselves dalliers in sexual deviancy and/or enabling.     The system has not changed,   scoundrels continue to find sanctuary within the Vatican walls   (Law,   Levada,   Dziwisz,   Sodano,   Bertone,   Castrillón Hoyos,   Somalo,   et al.,   — far too many culprits to name),   …the pope and his bishops worldwide continue in their vowed allegiances and self-protection as they always have.     The majority belong in jail,   either as predators,   direct accomplices of predation,   or for being such moral cowards that they looked the other way,   or took bribes,   while up to their clerical collars in sewage.
.
Benedict is no better than the rest of them.     As an archbishop he was MIA as a shepherd,   being more concerned with his books and obsessed with chasing supposed “heretics” — criminal assault and rape by his clerics were not high on his “to do” list.     As Prefect of CDF and privy to the innermost circles of Vatican power,   he knew what was going on — criminal behavior at every level — but chose to play the political game for his own purposes.     Now that he has made it to the pinnacle of Roman power,   he promotes JP2 (Maciel’s accomplice) for sainthood.     As pope,   he could have promptly laicized Maciel and handed him over to the authorities to be prosecuted in every country where he committed his crimes.     Maciel’s “banishment” was a pitiful token gesture that still allowed him to live very well and die a priest…   still a part of the 'old boys club' who protect each other above all else.     An additional perk of Maciel’s coddling:   the Vatican was able to keep an eager hand in the LC money pot.
.
Of course if Benedict had removed two thirds of his bishops/criminal accomplices and imposed serious punishment proportionate to their crimes,   he would have few remaining in his royal court — and he would also have to account for his own behavior when those bishops turned on him.     It’s no wonder that the pope and his bishops have renewed their mutual allegiances,   their assertion of power,   and are demanding blind obedience to their every word among laity,   …all while continuing to parse words and dodge serious temporal consequences for the harm they have done.     Apologies and crocodile tears are meaningless.
.
The Lord of the Church has been crucified again by these men who have made a sordid mockery of the office they hold…   and only God knows what else they are hiding.     We can no longer deny the reality:   this is not an "oops" or a few isolated incidents — it's an ongoing pattern deeply entrenched in Vatican politics,   power   and   money.     During my six decades as a Catholic Christian,   I have never felt so heartsick and disgusted.

I feel the same way Aileen.

I feel the same way Aileen. I think Ratzinger became Pope, at least in part as a means to greater immunity for himself from transnational lawsuits. As the front man for the CDF he must have known legal challenges were coming.

Some one should start the schism and make it formal. We need an open ecumenical and gender inclusive AMERICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH that ordains women and allows priests to be married.

Marcial Maciel built an evil

Marcial Maciel built an evil empire and nobody knew? Can you believe that absolutely nobody knew about this? I can't. Obviously, there were accomplices, some member of his congregation and/or the Vatican who kept quiet. Why? That is a good question. The example of Marcial Maciel reflects a culture of impunity sponsored by the Vatican. Now, you pay your price. I pray for the innocent victims of this evil Roman Catholic priest.

The case only gets more

The case only gets more bizarre. I thought he had experienced some sort of sexual orientation change, moving from boys to women in later life. But it seems that he had kids with these women so that he could abuse them. Perhaps his cover was sort of blown in the Legion & he needed to find another fertile field to continue the abuse of boys. That seems to be his game plan. And all the money from the Legion enabled things like him having the mistresses. From the psychological angle we have an extremely obsessed & driven pedophile. It's an interesting case study. Tragic of course for the lives of those who encountered him. But how could everyone be so blind? No one can split their personality completely in two. The abuse aspect had to color his religious persona.

His many victims can take some solace in the words of scripture that it would be better for a person to have a milestone tied around his neck & thrown into the sea than to lead a little one into sin. Hopefully, these words are being applied to him now. Those who are eventually saved are predestined to it. And it is very hard to imagine this character being predestined to salvation!

I should also add that his

I should also add that his modality in sexual abuse seems to be incestuous. The Legion after all was his family after his birth family & then he created more families to faciltate abuse. He wasn't the type of pedophile to linger around school playgrounds, etc. But for the record, his complete profile is an incestuous pedophile/ephebiophile of a homosexual nature.

Also, one should not try and extrapolate all sort of things about sexual abuse in the Catholic Church from the Maciel case which was unique & bizarre. Let us also remember that Maciel was removed from power by Pius XII to be put under investigation & he was never returned to power by Pius. The Legion claims that not one charge of sexual abuse was made against Maciel in the initial removal. However, I have read that a bishop in Mexico removed Maciel's priestly faculties in 1947 after a credible charge of sexual abuse involving a minor placed in Maciel's care. The boy's father reported this to the bishop. Notice the swift action of a Catholic bishop in a case like this back in 1947. Notice as well his removal from power by the saintly pontiff, Pius XII.

There is an awful lot about

There is an awful lot about Maciel's early story and his irregular ordination by an uncle that would lead one to believe that clerical sexual abuse of young boys was the 'family' story Maciel grew up in. Abuse in Maciel's case could almost be considered a form of familial enculturated prefences rather than orientation. I would not be the least bit surprised if we subsequently learn the other clerics in his family kept mistresses and were abusers of their young male relatives. This is all old generational evil.

Infallibility of the popes

Infallibility of the popes and the magisterium?? Really? Did the large sums of money from Maciel drown out the special infilling of the Holy Spirit, which those anointed ones claim to be endowed with (much more than we plain laity, according to them?) It is amazing that the Church has endured this long, since these scandals have been ongoing all through history. It is certainly not thanks to the men in dresses, cracking the whip over the faithful in the pews. It seems the ordinary practicing Catholics have given much better witness of the faith than than the clergy have, any time. Yet, it is bishops, and men in general, who are making the ranks of declared saints. It is rather ironic, isn't?

the person who needs to be

the person who needs to be questioned in all of this Cardinal Sodano and his role in protecting Marciel. Cardinal Sodano has a lot to answer.

Cardinal Sodano might have a

Cardinal Sodano might have a lot to answer for but you better believe that he will be protected. Why do you think that they go after the nuns and not guys like Maciel? Loyalty. Because it seems that loyalty is more important than truth. Sure they knew some of what Maciel did but money talks. Look at the difference between how Father Maciel was treated by the Pope and the Vatican and how Father Thomas Doyle was treated. Father Doyle probably never gave a penny to any of the big boys. He was too concerned about the people.

Dear Mark from PA: If you

Dear Mark from PA:
If you have read my opinion "The following is my......." for this article, I hope you would imagine that Maricel went to confess his sins to all those high officials in the Vatican and all the leaders and high officials of his LC. My opinion is that is the why all are silent or deny to have knowledge of Marciel's affairs. The Seal of Secrets of the Sacrament of Confession.

TO Mark from PA: When

TO Mark from PA: When Benedict visited the US a few years ago he named the two most important virtues for a Catholic. You might be thinking, compassion, charity, forgiveness. But Benedict said "Loyalty and Obedience to the Church." That about sums it up.

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