I am not absolutely sure, since conditinal ordinations are almost a masonic secret in the SSPX. I might as well be banned from receiving the sacraments, if I go around asking about it, since I will be seen as a troublemaker, who might disturb the consciences of the poor faithful.
What I do know for sure is that two Brazilian priests who were ordained in the Novus Ordo went and studied for about a year each on the La Reja (Argentina) seminary. After that, they became regular SSPX priests and were received formally into the congregation. Fr. Calderon has been a teacher there for decades. Oh, the irony.
I have already mentioned the names of these priests on this board. Fr. Reinaldo Barbosa and Fr. Fernando Pereira. There is also one certain Fr. Tiago Sancio, who is a "friend of the SSPX", who might join them in the future. This one I am certain that he has received no conditional ordination, since he said it himself to me by e-mail. He showed them his ordinations docuмents, and they said that a conditional ordination was not necessary. So much for the wise words of Fr. Calderon.
There is also an Irish priest, Fr. Aribe O'Reily (or something like that). He is also a Novus Ordo priest who lived in Brazil. He went back to Ireland, to study and join the SSPX, it seems. He will probably come back to haunt us once he is formally admitted.
They all seem to be nice people, and could be good priests if they studied all the seven years in the seminary and received a real ordination, but the leardership is obviously not worried about it.
All the same, I advise everybody to avoid any Novus Ordo priests who were admitted into the SSPX after 2012. There is of course the infamous case of a certain Fr. Stark, which was a factor in "the nine" being expelled from the SSPX way back in the 1980s, so, this is a problem that has existed for decades. You better avoid SSPX Novus Ordo priests altogether until you are certain that have been conditionally ordained.
Thanks for that GB, I didn't see it back in June when you wrote it for some reason.
Obviously it is not Fr Calderon who makes the decisions about conditional ordinations, but one wonders how he can watch on in silence if it is as you say.
That's the new Society... very troubling indeed.
The Fr Stark case, however, is altogether different, infamous only because of the betrayal and rebellion of the nine. It does not involve the question of the new rite of episcopal consecration and we know that Archbishop Lefebvre judged his ordination to be certainly valid.