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Pennsylvania's Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal Sparks Inquiries Into Other States

(CNN) -- This month's grand jury report detailing abuse allegations against Catholic clergy members dealt solely with archdioceses in Pennsylvania.

But the report has already prompted other states to open their own inquiries.

The Pennsylvania report detailed documents from those Catholic dioceses showing more than 300 "predator priests" have been credibly accused of sexually abusing more than 1,000 child victims over seven decades, reigniting an international firestorm consuming the church on several continents.

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"For many of us, those earlier stories happened someplace else, someplace away," the report said. "Now we know the truth: it happened everywhere."

Other law enforcement agencies have taken notice, and several have opened inquiries into allegations of abuse by clergy.

Here's a look at these ongoing investigations:

Illinois
Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan announced plans to meet with the Chicago Archdiocese after at least seven priests with connections to her state were identified in the Pennsylvania grand jury report.

"The Catholic Church has a moral obligation to provide its parishioners and the public a complete and accurate accounting of all sexually inappropriate behavior involving priests in Illinois," Madigan said in a statement.

The Chicago Archdiocese has agreed to meet, Madigan said. The meeting hasn't been scheduled yet.

"I plan to reach out to the other dioceses in Illinois and have the same conversation and expect the bishops will agree and cooperate fully," she added. "If not, I will work with states' attorneys and law enforcement throughout Illinois to investigate."

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In a statement to CNN, the Chicago Archdiocese said it was looking forward to the meeting with Madigan.

"Since 2002, the Archdiocese of Chicago has reported all abuse allegations to the proper civil authorities," the statement noted, including to the Department of Children and Family Services.

The diocese's website has also listed the names of clergy with "substantiated claims of abuse against them," the statement said.

Missouri
Missouri's attorney general said his office had launched an independent review of the St. Louis Archdiocese and allegations of abuse by clergy "for the purpose of public transparency and accountability." The archdiocese has agreed to cooperate.

"Victims of sexual abuse of any kind deserve to have their voices heard and Missourians deserve to know if this misconduct has occurred in their communities," Attorney General Josh Hawley said in a statement. "By inviting this independent review, the Archdiocese is demonstrating a willingness to be transparent and expose any potential wrongdoing."

In a letter to Hawley, Archbishop Robert J. Carlson confirmed the archdiocese would cooperate with the review, saying it "has always taken the protection of children and youth as one of our highest priorities."

"To this end we have always cooperated with law enforcement in any investigation into these matters and we will continue to do so."

The letter also noted that Carlson had gotten a former member of the FBI to review the archdiocese's "safe environment protocols" for children.

"She found our protocols to be appropriate and robust," Carlson said.

Wyoming
In Wyoming, the Cheyenne police said it had reopened an investigation into allegations of sexual abuse by an unnamed church official, stemming from his time in the diocese from the 1970s through the 1990s.

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The Cheyenne Police Department didn't name the church official, but last month, Cheyenne Bishop Steven Biegler said the diocese had learned of "credible and substantiated" allegations that Joseph Hart, a retired Wyoming bishop, had sexually abused two boys.

The investigation of alleged abuse was opened in March, Biegler said in a statement. The police department didn't announce its investigation until last week when it asked for victims or witnesses to come forward and share any information.

Hart was a bishop and auxiliary bishop in the Cheyenne Diocese between 1976 and 2001, according to Biegler's statement. Hart has "consistently denied all allegations that he sexually abused minors" and has said he would cooperate with the investigation.

"I am confident these processes will, in the end, come to a similar conclusion," Hart said in July.

But an outside investigator retained last year concluded that the earlier district attorney's investigation was "flawed," Biegler said, and "substantial new evidence" suggested that Hart had sexually abused two boys in Wyoming.

The diocese later said in a statement a third person had come forward and claimed he had also been sexually abused by Hart in 1980. The allegation was reported to the Cheyenne Police Department, and the diocese is cooperating with the investigation, it said.

According to the Diocese of Cheyenne's statement, Hart declined a request to respond to the accusations when the diocese contacted him as part of its own investigation.

New York
The Buffalo Diocese has been roiled by old and new abuse allegations in the past week. The Rev. Robert Yetter was placed on administrative leave as an investigation continues into abuse allegations, according to the Buffalo Diocese.

"After receiving a new abuse complaint against Father Robert Yetter, Bishop Richard J. Malone has asked for and received the resignation of (Father) Yetter as pastor of St. Mary's of Swormville," the Buffalo Diocese said in a statement Monday. "(Father) Yetter has also been placed on administrative leave as an investigation continues."

The news comes amid a reported cover-up of sexual abuse allegations in the Buffalo Diocese and criticism that Malone mishandled the issue.

Malone released a statement Sunday admitting to failures and promising to do better in the future.

"Let me be clear. My handling of recent claims from some of our parishioners concerning sexual misconduct with adults unquestionably has fallen short of the standard to which you hold us, and to which we hold ourselves," he wrote.

"We can do better. We will do better."

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