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Gomez is the newly elected chair of the Committee on Migrants and Refugee Services for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. His new position in Los Angeles will give the former archbishop of San Antonio, a more visible platform on immigration while reflecting a large segment of the U.S. church. More than a third of the 65 million Catholics in the United States are Hispanic, as are nearly three-quarters of the 5 million-plus members of the three-county archdiocese. Gomez will also inherit remaining elements of the clergy sex abuse scandal that has dogged the Archdiocese of Los Angeles for years. In, 2007, Mahony agreed to a $660 million settlement with more than 500 alleged victims of clergy abuse, and a federal grand jury is investigating how the archdiocese handled abuse claims. Mahony is not a target of the investigation, according to his attorney. Mahony made no direct reference to that issue or any other problems. He did say the ongoing life of the church does not depend on him and added, "This does not relieve me or any of us of the responsibility to conform our lives more fully to Jesus, our Good Shepherd."
[Associated
Press;
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