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LGBTQ Catholics make Holy Year pilgrimage to Rome and celebrate a new sense of acceptance

Hundreds of LGBTQ+ Catholics and their families participated in a Holy Year pilgrimage to Rome on Saturday, celebrating a new level of acceptance in the Catholic Church after long feeling shunned and crediting Pope Francis with the change.
The vice president of the Italian bishops conference, Bishop Franceseco Savino, celebrated Mass for the pilgrims in a packed Chiesa del Gesu, the main Jesuit church in Rome. He received a sustained standing ovation in the middle of his homily when he recalled that Jubilee celebrations historically were meant to restore hope to those on the margins.
“The Jubilee was the time to free the oppressed and restore dignity to those who had been denied it,” he said. “Brothers and sisters, I say this with emotion: It is time to restore dignity to everyone, especially to those who have been denied it.”
Several LGBTQ+ groups participated in the pilgrimage, which was listed in the Vatican’s official calendar of events for the Holy Year, the once-every-quarter century celebration of Catholicism. Vatican organizers stressed that the listing in the calendar didn’t signal endorsement or sponsorship.
The main organizer of the pilgrimage was an Italian LGBTQ+ advocacy organization, “Jonathan’s Tent,” but other groups participated, including DignityUSA and Outreach, another U.S. group.
“I was here 25 years ago at the last Holy Year with a contingent of LGBTQ people from the U.S. and we were actually detained as a threat to the Holy Year programs,” said DignityUSA’s Marianne Duddy Burke.
To now be invited to walk through the Holy Door of St. Peter’s Basilica “fully recognized as who we are and the gifts we bring to the church, and that we have both our faith and our identities combined, is a day of great celebration and hope,” she said.
Pope Leo XIV celebrated a special Jubilee audience Saturday at the Vatican for all pilgrim groups in Rome this weekend, but made no special mention of the LGBTQ+ Catholics.
A legacy of LGBTQ+ acceptance
Many of the pilgrims attributed their feeling of welcome to Francis. More than any of his predecessors, Francis distinguished himself with a message of welcome, from his 2013 quip, “Who am I to judge?” about a purportedly gay priest, to his decision to allow priests to bless same-sex couples.
He never changed church teaching saying homosexual acts are “intrinsically disordered.” But during his 12-year papacy from 2013 to 2025, Francis met with LGBTQ+ advocates, ministered to a community of trans women and, in a 2023 interview with The Associated Press, declared that “being homosexual is not a crime.”
John Capozzi of Washington D.C., who was participating in the pilgrimage with his husband, Justin del Rosario, said Francis’ attitude brought him back to the church after he left it in the 1980s, at the height of the AIDS crisis. Then, he said, he felt shunned by his fellow Catholics.
“There was that feeling like I wasn’t welcome in the church,” he said. “Not because I was doing anything, just because I was who I was,” he said. “It was this fear of going back in because of the judgment.”
But Francis, who insisted that the Catholic Church was open to everyone, “todos, todos, todos,” changed all that, he said.
“I was a closeted Catholic,” Capozzi said. “With Pope Francis, I was able to come out and say, ‘Hey, you know, I am Catholic and I’m proud of it and I want to be part of the church.”
A message of welcome and hope
Capozzi spoke during a standing room-only vigil service for the pilgrims Friday night at the Jesuit church. The service featured testimonies from gay couples, the mother of a trans child and a moving reflection by an Italian priest, the Rev. Fausto Focosi.
“Our eyes have known the tears of rejection, of hiding. They have known the tears of shame. And perhaps sometimes those tears still spring from our eyes,” Focosi said. “Today, however, there are other tears, new tears. They wash away the old ones.”
“And so today these tears are tears of hope,” he said.
Leo’s position comes into focus
Leo’s position on LGBTQ+ Catholics had been something of a question. Soon after he was elected in May, remarks surfaced from 2012 in which the future pope, then known as the Rev. Robert Prevost, criticized the “homosexual lifestyle” and the role of mass media in promoting acceptance of same-sex relationships that conflicted with Catholic doctrine.
When he became a cardinal in 2023, Catholic News Service asked Prevost if his views had changed. He acknowledged Francis’ call for a more inclusive church, saying Francis “made it very clear that he doesn’t want people to be excluded simply on the basis of choices that they make, whether it be lifestyle, work, way to dress, or whatever.”
Leo met Monday with the Rev. James Martin, an American Jesuit who has advocated for greater welcome for LGBTQ+ Catholics. Martin emerged saying Leo told him he intended to continue Pope Francis’ policy of LGBTQ+ acceptance in the church and encouraged him to keep up his advocacy.
“I heard the same message from Pope Leo that I heard from Pope Francis, which is the desire to welcome all people, including LGBTQ people,” Martin told The Associated Press after the audience.
Savino said he too had received Leo’s blessing to celebrate the Mass for the LGBTQ+ pilgrims.
Del Rosario, Capozzi’s husband, said he now felt welcome after long staying away from the faith he was raised in.
“Pope Francis influenced me to return back to church. Pope Leo only strengthened my faith,” he said.
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Charlie Kirk: Trump ally shot dead at campus event in Utah

Pelosi and Giffords react to Kirk’s shootingpublished at 21:03 British Summer Time
US politicians are sharing their shock after the shooting of Charlie Kirk.
Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi, a Democrat, says she is praying for Kirk’s recovery.
“Political violence has absolutely no place in our nation.
All Americans should pray for Charlie Kirk’s recovery and hold the entire UVU community in our hearts as they endure the trauma of this gun violence,” she wrote on X.
Former US representative Gabby Giffords also posted, condemning violent responses to political differences. In 2011, Giffords was shot in the head during a meeting with constituents in a grocery store parking lot. She survived, but resigned from office due to a brain injury.
“Democratic societies will always have political disagreements, but we must never allow America to become a country that confronts those disagreements with violence,” she said.
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Shooting at Evergreen High School in Colorado leaves 3 students hurt; first responders “not certain how many shooters”

Three students were critically wounded on Wednesday in a shooting at Evergreen High School in the Colorado foothills. So far, it’s not clear who the shooter or shooters are, according to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office.
CBS
The shooting took place just after noon at the school located at 29300 Buffalo Park Road in Evergreen, which is 28 miles southwest of Denver.
JeffCo emergency communications said there are reports of “an active assailant in the area of Evergreen High School.” St. Anthony’s Hospital in Lakewood said there are three Evergreen High School students at the hospital who suffered gunshot wounds; all are in critical condition.
CBS
It’s still an active scene, and authorities asked those with students at the school not to go directly to the school at this time. Nearby, Wilmot Elementary School was also placed on lockdown just after 1:50 p.m.
Jacki Kelley, the Public Information Officer for the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office, said during a press conference that “We’re not certain how many shooters we have or where that shooter might be. I’m hoping to get more information to you quickly.” The sheriff’s office began receiving numerous calls coming from the school immediately following the shooting, she shared.
Kelley expressed her gratitude for departments from across the Denver metro area that self-deployed to help with the situation. She said multiple teams of law enforcement are in the process of clearing the school room by room. Kelley confirmed that the shooting happened on school grounds and said that, at this time, they believe it took place inside the school.
The school district provided an update around 1:30 p.m. that a reunification center will be located at Bergen Meadow Elementary School, located at 1928 S. Hiwan Dr.
Shortly following the shooting, an Evergreen High School teacher told CBS Colorado that they were on lockdown with some students inside a game room in the school. As of 1:45 p.m., students could be seen exiting the school single file.
Gov. Jared Polis released a statement Wednesday, saying, “I am closely monitoring the situation at Evergreen High School, and am getting live updates. State Troopers are supporting local law enforcement in responding to this situation. Students should be able to attend school safely and without fear across our state and nation. We are all praying for the victims and the entire community.”
This is a developing story; more information will be provided as it becomes available.
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Former top FBI officials sue, say Kash Patel fired them to stay in Trump’s good graces

WASHINGTON — Three former top FBI officials sued FBI Director Kash Patel and Attorney General Pam Bondi on Wednesday, saying their firings were mandated by the White House and Department of Justice and that Patel followed their orders to keep his job.
Patel, the suit claimed, “explained he had to fire the people his superiors told him to fire, because his ability to keep his own job depended on the removal of the agents who worked on cases involving the President. Patel explained that there was nothing he or Driscoll could do to stop these or any other firings, because ‘the FBI tried to put the President in jail and he hasn’t forgotten it.'”
Patel also stated that the firings were retaliatory, according to the lawsuit, which alleges that he told Driscoll that “all FBI employees who they identified who had worked on the cases against President Trump would be removed from their jobs, regardless of their retirement eligibility status.”
According to the lawsuit, Patel — a Trump loyalist and former White House and DOJ official — told Driscoll that he knew such firings violated FBI rules designed to protect agents from being fired or otherwise retaliated against for having worked on specific investigations.
“Patel acknowledged that this would be in direct violation of internal FBI processes,” the lawsuit says. “He again commented that he knew the nature of the summary firings were likely illegal and that he could be sued and later deposed.”
Patel’s private statements as alleged in the lawsuit would be in direct contradiction to his testimony during his Senate confirmation hearing. Speaking under oath, Patel told senators that “all FBI employees will be protected against political retribution.”
The lawsuit was filed by Driscoll; Steven Jensen, former assistant director in charge of the Washington field office; and Spencer Evans, former special agent in charge of the Las Vegas field office. News of the lawsuit was first reported by NPR and MSNBC.
The lawsuit also says that certain agents were singled out for removal. For instance, it alleges that Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino ordered Jensen to fire a specific agent who was a target of the Trump White House.
The agent, Walt Giardina, had worked on Jack Smith and Robert Mueller’s special counsel probes of Trump. But Giardina, who had a good reputation among fellow agents, had also investigated both Democrats and Republicans in other public corruption cases, the suit says.
Political loyalty test
The suit also says that when the Trump transition team vetted Driscoll to potentially serve as acting deputy FBI director he was asked questions that he considered a political loyalty test.
Driscoll said he was asked which candidate he had voted for in recent elections, including whether he had voted for any Democrats. He was also asked if he agreed that agents who searched Trump’s Florida property, Mar-a-Lago, for classified documents should be held “accountable.”
Patel later told Driscoll that he would need to pass a review by the transition team if he was interested in serving in the FBI’s headquarters. Patel, according to the lawsuit, said that “as long as Driscoll was not prolific on social media, did not donate to the Democratic Party, and did not vote for Kamala Harris in the 2024 election, the ‘vetting’ would not be an issue.”
According to the suit, Driscoll declined to answer all of the questions that he considered inappropriately political. He ultimately was appointed to the acting director position because Emil Bove, who was at the time set to be acting deputy attorney general, said that Driscoll could be trusted. A former FBI agent, Michael Clark, also vouched for Driscoll and Robert Kissane, who was appointed acting deputy director.
Bove’s search for Jan. 6 investigators
Bove later played a central role in carrying out what the lawsuit says were retaliatory firings. According to the suit, Bove told Driscoll a week after Trump took office that Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff, was pushing him to carry out firings in the FBI on the same scale as Bove had conducted in the Justice Department.
In a meeting in late January, Bove told Driscoll and Kissane to give him a list of all FBI employees who were associated with investigations of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. Bove also asked for the names of what he called a “core case team,” but no such team existed, according to the lawsuit.
Driscoll said that thousands of FBI agents had been involved in the investigations and warned that if such “a list were ever leaked or made public,” the FBI staffers on it “would potentially face threats.” Bove replied that he believed there was “cultural rot” within the FBI, according to the lawsuit.
Driscoll and Kissane said they would not provide the list to Bove without being given a lawful reason to do so. Bove responded that “he was above Driscoll and Kissane in the chain-of-command,” the suit says, that “he was giving them a direct order to provide the list of names” and that “he could terminate FBI personnel even in the absence of an allegation of misconduct.”
After consulting with the FBI’s legal counsel, Driscoll and Kissane compiled and handed over the list.
Bongino’s social media focus
The lawsuit also says that Bongino, who had been a Secret Service agent and then a pro-Trump podcaster before being named deputy director this year, considered certain investigations with political significance to be priorities.
Bongino asked Jensen for briefings on the search for the individual who planted a pipe bomb on the morning of Jan. 6, the leaker of the Supreme Court’s decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, and the discovery of cocaine in the White House during the Biden administration.
The suit says that Bongino frequently discussed those three cases in media interviews and on his social media feed, as well as internally.
During certain briefings, according to the suit, “Jensen became alarmed at Bongino’s intense focus on increasing online engagement through his social media profiles in an effort to change his followers’ perception of the FBI. Jensen was concerned that the emphasis Bongino placed on creating content for his social media pages could risk outweighing more deliberate analyses of investigations.”
Driscoll, Jensen and Evans want a federal judge to declare their termination from the FBI “a legal nullity,” want a “name-clearing hearing,” and want their jobs back.
The FBI declined to comment on the suit. A representative for the Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
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