957 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
957 lines
57 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
||
|
From CORNERSTONE magazine, volume 18, issue 90, pages 3-8:
|
||
|
|
||
|
S A T A N ' S S I D E S H O W
|
||
|
Gretchen & Bob Passantino and Jon Trott
|
||
|
|
||
|
Step right up! It's Satan's Underground!
|
||
|
A hundred thousand copies in print!
|
||
|
Featured on radio and TV, from "Geraldo" to the "700 Club"!
|
||
|
Stories of satanic rituals, snuff films, and human sacrifice!
|
||
|
Author Lauren Stratford survived to tell us all about it!
|
||
|
Now judge for yourself ....
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
THIS article is the extraordinary chronicle of how one woman's gruesome
|
||
|
fantasy was twisted into seeming fact. Perhaps the people who believed her
|
||
|
tale felt the illusion of evidence she offered was due to the desperate times
|
||
|
in which we live, times when little children are horribly abused and yet seem
|
||
|
to find no rescue or protection from the authorities or the courts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But we believe these child victims can be protected from further harm and
|
||
|
exploitation only if those who work on their behalf do so with absolute
|
||
|
integrity, honesty, and responsibility. Sensational stories may sell more
|
||
|
books, generate more television appearances, and provide more visibility to
|
||
|
one's cause, and one may believe them because "they're too bizarre not to be
|
||
|
true," but they should never be substituted for careful, accurate, and
|
||
|
truthful reporting.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the course of our research into the _Satan's Underground_ [1] story, we
|
||
|
talked with parents of children who had been ritually abused and who had
|
||
|
reason to believe Lauren Stratford's testimony was not true. We asked them
|
||
|
why they were willing to tell us what they knew, when, after all, her story
|
||
|
supported their children's statements. One parent spoke for them all:
|
||
|
|
||
|
We're so afraid that no one will believe our children. If this story
|
||
|
were true, it would be invaluable. But we know it's not, and the only
|
||
|
testimony worse for our children than no testimony is a testimony that's
|
||
|
not true. If we can't find the courage to speak out and tell what we
|
||
|
know about Lauren Stratford's story, then we're sitting ducks for the
|
||
|
people we know who are guilty and who are just looking for a way to
|
||
|
discredit our children. [2]
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hard evidence we have uncovered and which we present here speaks for
|
||
|
itself. The story of _Satan's Underground_ is not true. And the same
|
||
|
exploited children it may have been designed to help have been cheated of the
|
||
|
truth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
SATAN'S UNDERGROUND
|
||
|
|
||
|
A synopsis of the story told in _Satan's Underground_ is very difficult to
|
||
|
produce. The book is missing dates, places, outside events, and even the true
|
||
|
names of the principal characters necessary for placing the story in an
|
||
|
historical and geographical context. Stratford says, "In part this is for my
|
||
|
own protection, but it also serves to remind you that what I've endured is not
|
||
|
limited to one city or region. I have also changed names and descriptions of
|
||
|
many key figures in order to protect the victims." [3]
|
||
|
|
||
|
According to _Satan's Underground_, Stratford was born illegitimately and
|
||
|
adopted at birth by a "professional" couple. Her adoptive father left when
|
||
|
Lauren was four because of his wife's explosive temper and physical abuse
|
||
|
toward him. At six Lauren was raped in her basement by a day laborer. [4] The
|
||
|
rape was the mother's idea of a "fair wage" for the laborer's work. The rapes
|
||
|
continued by various "smelly" men, and under her mother's authority child
|
||
|
pornography pictures and bestiality were added when she was eight. Throughout
|
||
|
childhood, Lauren received the physical abuse her mother had previously heaped
|
||
|
on her husband. Several times Lauren tried to tell adults what was happening,
|
||
|
but neither her school counselor, pastor, youth group leader, nor a woman sent
|
||
|
by the police believed her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At fifteen, after a particularly brutal physical altercation with her
|
||
|
mother, Lauren collected bus fare donations from her school friends and
|
||
|
escaped to a city two hundred miles away. She ended up in juvenile hall and
|
||
|
was picked up by her father, whom she had not seen in eleven years. She moved
|
||
|
"across the country" with him rather than returning to live with her mother.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lauren had only lived with her father for a short time when her mother
|
||
|
called, insisting he allow "them" to come and get Lauren to continue the
|
||
|
pornographic abuse. She then realized the multistate extent of the
|
||
|
pornography ring her mother had inducted her into as a child.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By the time she turned twenty, Lauren had been living a "dual life" [5] at
|
||
|
home (with her father, at church, and in school) and at the pornographer's
|
||
|
studio (mostly on weekends). It was then she met the leader of the ring:
|
||
|
Victor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She learned that Victor's empire included pornography, prostitution, drugs,
|
||
|
sadomasochism, and child prostitution and pornography. Victor wanted her to
|
||
|
be his "woman," but she had to pass a test first. For several weekends in a
|
||
|
row she had to properly pleasure his best customers, no matter what their
|
||
|
perversions, demands, or tortures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She passed the test. Victor had his assistant hold her while he used a
|
||
|
razor blade on her forehead to initiate her as his "woman." The sexual
|
||
|
perversion didn't end, she just responded to Victor's whims instead of any and
|
||
|
all customers'. She managed to continue her college studies despite the drugs
|
||
|
and the torturous weekends with Victor. But Victor got bored. What was left
|
||
|
to excite and thrill him?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Satanism. It was, he told Lauren, the ultimate path to power and sexual
|
||
|
gratification. At first he forced her to attend satanic rituals [6] where he
|
||
|
and others sexually abused her. Then he demanded she participate in a child
|
||
|
sacrifice ritual. She refused and underwent brainwashing and torture for an
|
||
|
unspecified time. Finally Victor threatened he would ritually kill a baby
|
||
|
each week that she continued to refuse. After holding out for four weeks, she
|
||
|
was locked in a metal drum with the dead bodies of four babies who had been
|
||
|
sacrified. She finally gave in and evidently participated in an infant
|
||
|
sacrifice ritual on Halloween night. She says, "It was the last time I ever
|
||
|
participated in a satanic ritual." [7]
|
||
|
|
||
|
A later chapter in the book tells that sometime during her late teens and
|
||
|
early twenties she gave birth to three children. The first two were killed
|
||
|
shortly after birth in snuff films and the third, a son she calls "Joey," was
|
||
|
sacrificed in her presence at a ritual.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Lauren's father unexpectedly died, she realized she had no real reason
|
||
|
to stay in the area. Thus began her frantic flight from Victor and his
|
||
|
conspiratorial enforcers. She moved to many cities over the next few years,
|
||
|
[8] but Victor's men always found her and continued periodic threats to ensure
|
||
|
her silence. Her emotional and physical health deteriorated as a consequence
|
||
|
of the extreme abuse she had suffered. During one eight-year period she was
|
||
|
hospitalized more than forty times.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her "breakthrough," enabling her to begin the "healing process," began with
|
||
|
some sensitive hospital therapists. She learned that she didn't have to be a
|
||
|
victim any longer. But she was far from well.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then she saw Johanna Michaelson on television. Somehow Lauren knew that
|
||
|
her physical and spiritual healing would be accomplished through her. But it
|
||
|
was another eighteen months before she and Johanna met.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After their first meeting, Lauren moved in with Johanna. Johanna and her
|
||
|
entire family, including her husband, sister Kim, and brother-in-law Hal
|
||
|
Lindsey, ministered healing to Lauren. In a number of months a new Lauren and
|
||
|
a new book emerged from a fierce spiritual battle. The victim is beginning to
|
||
|
be left behind, the victorious counselor appears. The stage is set for the
|
||
|
counselor's handbook, _I Know You're Hurting_. Such is the story of _Satan's
|
||
|
Underground_.
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHO IS LAUREN STRATFORD?
|
||
|
|
||
|
LAUREN Stratford doesn't exist, except as the pen name of Laurel Rose Wilson,
|
||
|
and _Satan's Underground_ is only one of the stories she's told about her
|
||
|
life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel Wilson was born prematurely to Marrian E. Disbrow [9] on August 18,
|
||
|
1941, [10] in St. Joseph's Hospital in Tacoma, Washington. [11] She was
|
||
|
brought home after forty-four days in the hospital by her adoptive parents,
|
||
|
physician Frank Cole Wilson and schoolteacher Rose Gray Wilson, to a little
|
||
|
town called Buckley. The littlest Wilson joined her big sister Willow Nell,
|
||
|
who was five years older. Laurel's adoption by the Wilsons was finalized on
|
||
|
February 17, 1942, before her first birthday.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a signed statement Willow prepared for us, she described her parents:
|
||
|
|
||
|
My parents were devout Christians. They were both active members of the
|
||
|
Bible Presbyterian Church in Tacoma. Both of them were fully committed
|
||
|
to the Lord Jesus Christ. My sister and I were raised in a very
|
||
|
sheltered, strict Christian home. There was no place in our home for
|
||
|
anything remotely occult or pornographic. My mother continues as a
|
||
|
dedicated Christian, for many years now a member of _________ [12]
|
||
|
Church .... [13]
|
||
|
|
||
|
One assumes from _Satan's Underground that its author is an only child.
|
||
|
There is no mention of any sibling. The average reader would also assume that
|
||
|
Stratford's mother is probably dead, which would explain why Stratford neither
|
||
|
confronted nor reconciled with her mother as part of her spiritual and
|
||
|
emotional healing. Neither assumption is true.
|
||
|
|
||
|
LAUREL'S EARLY CHILDHOOD
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE Wilson home at 1624 "A" Street was not peaceful. Rose had an
|
||
|
unpredictable temper, and Frank, with an explosive temper of his own, was
|
||
|
often the brunt of her outbursts. His health was precarious, the result of a
|
||
|
heart attack, and the stress on him was taxing. Willow was Laurel's protector
|
||
|
and comforter, and many Saturday and Sunday afternoons were spent in the park
|
||
|
together, hiking or riding bikes. Willow remembers life for her and Laurel
|
||
|
during this time was very unpredictable. They never knew if Mother would be
|
||
|
in one of her rages or would take them to the beach for the day. But even the
|
||
|
anger Willow remembers is nothing like what _Satan's Underground_ describes:
|
||
|
|
||
|
My mother did have a temper. And she did have problems. But she loved
|
||
|
us. My mother was never involved with pornography. No, no. No, no, NO!
|
||
|
Mother would be absolutely appalled.... She's _very_ straightlaced. [14]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In actuality, Frank left the family in 1950, [15] when Laurel was nine
|
||
|
years old, not when she was four as _Satan's Underground_ describes. This was
|
||
|
after the family had moved from Buckley to 805 North "C" in nearby Tacoma.
|
||
|
Both Frank and Willow were living with Laurel and her mother during the time
|
||
|
period that Laurel wrote in her book she was being repeatedly raped and used
|
||
|
in child pornography and bestiality. "I was never part of a porno empire,"
|
||
|
Willow explains wryly. "And let me tell you, I was a very inquisitive little
|
||
|
kid, with my ear to the door. If there had been any sort of business going on
|
||
|
like that, believe me, I would have known about it." [16]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel was very musically gifted. Her adoptive parents plied her with
|
||
|
music lessons, including voice, piano, clarinet, and flute. One of her
|
||
|
singing competition judges wrote when Laurel was eight, "Outstanding
|
||
|
accomplishment for length of study. This must be a very intelligent and
|
||
|
musical girl." [17] Her report cards reflect almost straight A's. Her
|
||
|
attendance and grades precluded long absences from school such as would have
|
||
|
seemed necessary from the extreme sexual abuse described in _Satan's
|
||
|
Underground_. [18]
|
||
|
|
||
|
HER LATER CHILDHOOD
|
||
|
|
||
|
DURING Laurel's high school years, she was active in school clubs and
|
||
|
extracurricular activities. Returning from a singing engagement, Laurel and
|
||
|
two friends were involved in an auto accident. Laurel had a minor ankle
|
||
|
injury, and both members of the trio recall that she was extremely distraught
|
||
|
in the car and in the hospital, continually calling for her father. She
|
||
|
seemed bitterly disappointed that he didn't come. [19]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel ran away shortly after the accident. She stayed within the city of
|
||
|
Tacoma, at Raymond Juvenile Hall, until arrangements were made for her to stay
|
||
|
with her father in California. Not liking San Bernardino schools, she
|
||
|
returned to her mother, but soon moved in with her sister. By then, Willow
|
||
|
was married with two young children and living in Seattle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Laurel was seventeen, she told a friend at King's Garden High School
|
||
|
that she had been sexually molested by her brother-in-law, Willow's husband.
|
||
|
She sounded at the time as though that were the only sexual abuse she had ever
|
||
|
suffered. Her allegations were disproven and Willow contacted their dad and
|
||
|
received permission for Laurel to get psychiatric counseling. Willow and her
|
||
|
husband were told by the psychiatrist not to continue allowing Laurel to live
|
||
|
with them: "She's a danger to your children." [20]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel graduated from King's Garden [21] and enrolled in what was then
|
||
|
called Seattle-Pacific College in September of 1959. [22] Marie Hollowell,
|
||
|
the school's dean of women who had been a special friend to Willow, also took
|
||
|
an interest in "trying to draw Laurel out." [23] Laurel soon told a classmate
|
||
|
that she had been molested sexually, perhaps by members of the college staff,
|
||
|
and that her mother had driven her to "the bad side of town" to be a
|
||
|
prostitute. In a meeting with Marie Hollowell, Willow, and a psychiatrist,
|
||
|
Laurel admitted she had made the stories up to "impress" her new friend.
|
||
|
Because of this controversy, the school recommended psychiatric care for
|
||
|
Laurel. Soon after, she attempted suicide by cutting her wrists. [24]
|
||
|
|
||
|
YOUNG ADULTHOOD
|
||
|
|
||
|
BY September of 1960 Laurel was living in Southern California with her father,
|
||
|
Frank. He was a physician for the Santa Fe Railroad and had a private
|
||
|
practice in San Bernardino. When Laurel was nineteen, she wrote some of her
|
||
|
old friends that her father was sexually abusing her. [25]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Enrolled in the University of Redlands, Laurel majored in music. [26] She
|
||
|
directed the choir at First Assembly of God Church in Rialto, where she and
|
||
|
her father were members. [27] Though she gained acceptance through her
|
||
|
musical talent and skill, her emotional troubles were not resolved. Her
|
||
|
pastor, Eugene Boone, was called in numerous times because Laurel had cut her
|
||
|
arms in apparent suicide attempts. This went on over the six years Revered
|
||
|
Boone knew her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While still in college, during 1962, she met a Pentecostal evangelist
|
||
|
couple, Norman and Billie Gordon. Billie described her relationship with
|
||
|
Laurel this way:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I like to help people, that's what I'm about. But Laurel was a hopeless
|
||
|
case.... We met her after a service we testified at. A car pulled up in
|
||
|
our driveway. I opened my door and invited her in, but she didn't come
|
||
|
in. I closed my door. I heard her voice, so I opened my door again.
|
||
|
She said, "Please, come out and help me. I heard you testify tonight.
|
||
|
Please come and talk because I'm not the kind of person you want in your
|
||
|
house."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel ended up practically living with the Gordons for most of 1962.
|
||
|
During that time the stress was so intense that Billie went from 140 to 100
|
||
|
pounds. Her children begged her to ask Laurel to leave because Laurel was
|
||
|
consuming all of Billie's time and attention. There was nothing left for
|
||
|
anyone but Laurel. [28]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel told a series of stories to Billie and Norman Gordon. She told them
|
||
|
that Frank Cole Wilson was her natural father, and that her natural mother had
|
||
|
died when she was very small. Her father had quickly remarried, and her
|
||
|
stepmother had physically and sexually abused her ever since. The Gordons
|
||
|
assumed that Laurel was living with her father and stepmother. (In reality,
|
||
|
Frank and Laurel lived alone at 1580 North Vista in Rialto.)
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel also "became blind" while with them, and they prayed frequently for
|
||
|
her healing. However, they began to suspect she wasn't really blind. One day
|
||
|
when they were driving past the University of Redlands, Laurel pointed out a
|
||
|
landmark. Confronted, Laurel tried to say she'd felt a familiar bump in the
|
||
|
road, but finally admitted she had faked her blindness to obtain sympathy and
|
||
|
attention. Billie told us that one afternoon Laurel showed up with a huge red
|
||
|
bump and bruises on her forehead. She asked Billie to protect her--her
|
||
|
stepmother had hit her on the head with a can of peaches. [29] Again,
|
||
|
confronted by an unbelieving Billie, she confessed that she had hit herself
|
||
|
with the can to gain sympathy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel's break with the Gordons was precipitated by an incident that took
|
||
|
place in their home while Norman was out. Laurel, locking herself in the
|
||
|
bathroom, broke a glass vase and proceeded to cut her face in three places.
|
||
|
She then charged out of the room with the broken vase, straight for Billie's
|
||
|
neck. Billie's grown son wrestled the glass away from her. [30]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shortly after this, Laurel returned home to her father. A Woman who was a
|
||
|
member of the Hemet First Assembly of God church befriended her and attempted
|
||
|
to help Laurel, whom she considered troubled and emotionally depressed. (This
|
||
|
woman is the first of three of Laurel's closest acquaintances who asked to
|
||
|
have their names withheld. We have labeled them "Friend One," "Friend Two,"
|
||
|
and "Friend Three.") Friend One confirmed that Laurel cut her own arms
|
||
|
several different times.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When Laurel was twenty-two (1963), she told Friend One that she had been
|
||
|
seduced into a lesbian relationship with two church women. [31] On June 7,
|
||
|
1964, she graduated from Redlands with a bachelor's in music, with a special
|
||
|
secondary education teaching credential in music. [32] Soon after this,
|
||
|
Laurel disappeared from home. Later she told Friend One that she had run away
|
||
|
to Teen Challenge in Los Angeles and gone through their drug abuse program,
|
||
|
then had become a drug counselor. Her friend angrily pointed out that
|
||
|
Laurel's drug use was a lie. According to Friend One, Laurel admitted she had
|
||
|
never had a drug problem, but had made the story up for Teen Challenge. [33]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel was still living with her father when he died of a heart attack at
|
||
|
home. Dr. Frank Cole Wilson was pronounced dead at 8:45 a.m. on January 4,
|
||
|
1965. [34] Willow and Rose, their mother, came from Washington for the
|
||
|
services. Rose stayed on for a while, signing a probate paper with Laurel on
|
||
|
February 5 and attending Sunday services at the same First Assembly of God in
|
||
|
Rialto where Laurel was the choir director. Probate on Dr. Wilson's estate
|
||
|
took almost two years and wasn't finally settled until the end of 1967.
|
||
|
|
||
|
MID TO LATE TWENTIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
LAUREL met Frank Austin at church while she was living for a time at 208
|
||
|
Valley View in Hemet. He was almost one and a half years younger than Laurel
|
||
|
and was the son of a Pentecostal Holiness minister. [35] They dated three or
|
||
|
four times and then, Frank told us, she suggested marriage. "She seemed like
|
||
|
a nice Christian girl and it seemed like a good thing to do, so we did." They
|
||
|
were married on March 11, 1966, with Friend Two and Frank's father as
|
||
|
witnesses. [36]
|
||
|
|
||
|
At that point, what one wishes could have been the beginning of a happy
|
||
|
story instead led to only more pain and failure. Within a week the troubled
|
||
|
couple, their marriage still unconsummated, sought counsel from Friend One and
|
||
|
her husband. [37] Here we reluctantly include comments from Frank which are
|
||
|
very private. We do so only because _Satan's Underground_ claims that Laurel
|
||
|
had been raped and abused since childhood, had been involved in hard-core
|
||
|
prostitution for at least five years for at least five years, and had borne
|
||
|
three children by this time. Frank told us the marriage was eventually
|
||
|
consummated, and that Laurel "was a virgin until then." Frank and Laurel
|
||
|
agreed to an annulment, granted on May 17, 1966.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel's desperate need for attention was described by Friend Two:
|
||
|
|
||
|
I felt sorry for Laurel.... She called me one night at midnight. I went
|
||
|
over and found her cutting her arm with a paring knife. She had made
|
||
|
several cuts already.... She so desperately needed someone to say they
|
||
|
loved her, in Christian love. Laurel didn't have anybody, because she
|
||
|
would turn them against her by wearing them down. She would go from one
|
||
|
friend to the next, knowing they wouldn't be her friends for long.
|
||
|
That's sad.... There were a lot of times I had to be with her when I
|
||
|
wanted to be with my kids. I've apologized to my kids for that. I will
|
||
|
never allow anybody, ever again, to suck me in the way she did.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel turned twenty-five in August of 1966. She taught music at Hemet
|
||
|
Junior High School for one and one-half years, from September 1966 through
|
||
|
January 1968. [38] Her picture in the school yearbook shows her smiling next
|
||
|
to the choir. [39] This was the only public school teaching recorded for her,
|
||
|
although her renewed teaching credential is valid until 1991. [40]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel appears to have been employed at the California Institute for Women
|
||
|
in Chino, probably from 1969 to 1971. She says she was a correctional
|
||
|
counselor on her alumni report. She gave the same information to Willow and
|
||
|
others throughout the years. She told yet another friend that she had been a
|
||
|
guard. However, we have been unable to confirm either job with the Prison
|
||
|
Personnel Office or with the California Penal System Office of Past
|
||
|
Employment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During this time she was still active in various Assemblies of God churches
|
||
|
and gained a small popularity as a Christian singer in different churches.
|
||
|
[41] She joined a singing group led by Delpha Nichols called "Delpha and the
|
||
|
Witnesses." The male singer, Ken Sanders, and his wife invited her to live
|
||
|
with them in Bakersfield. [42] She has lived in the Bakersfield area since
|
||
|
1971.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delpha, Ken, and Laurel sang at many churches and toured on a limited
|
||
|
basis. Ken remembers Laurel as a nice Christian woman with good values, but
|
||
|
who was also emotionally troubled. Though "The Witnesses" stayed with nearby
|
||
|
church people's homes while touring, Laurel insisted she needed a private
|
||
|
hotel room. One time, Ken related, she became frantic when told they would be
|
||
|
staying with nearby church people. Laurel attacked Delpha so violently "she
|
||
|
nearly clawed Delpha's dress off." Laurel got a hotel room. [43]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ken stated that Laurel did talk about her mother sexually abusing her and
|
||
|
offering her to various men, abuse which had church-related overtones:
|
||
|
|
||
|
One night, when Laurel was still living with us, I took out the Bible
|
||
|
for our family devotions. She jumped up and ran off into her room and
|
||
|
locked the door behind her. Later, she said it was because when they
|
||
|
used to do these perversions to her, that's how it would begin. "It was
|
||
|
in the name of Jesus they did this stuff."
|
||
|
|
||
|
HER THIRTIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
DELPHA and her husband Willie loved Laurel. They felt sorry for the girl
|
||
|
nobody seemed to love, and though she was an adult of thirty or so, they
|
||
|
legally adopted her and she called them her family. One of the many stories
|
||
|
Laurel told Delpha was that her mother had abused her so horribly she was
|
||
|
sterile and could never have children. [44]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel wrote many stories of her childhood and family in letters to Delpha.
|
||
|
Delpha saved them until Laurel contacted her more recently and requested she
|
||
|
burn them all. We asked Delpha why Laurel had wanted them burned. "She
|
||
|
didn't want anybody to see them, I guess.... She was telling me about her
|
||
|
past." Delpha continued, "There's a lot of things I don't understand. I'm
|
||
|
mixed up about a lot of things about Laurel like that."
|
||
|
|
||
|
By 1973, Laurel had written and copyrighted some Christian songs while with
|
||
|
the group. [45] "Delpha and the Witnesses" broke up in 1974. Ken calmly
|
||
|
observed, "It was because of Laurel, of course." Laurel and the Sanders
|
||
|
continued to go to the same church in 1974, pastored by David Joiner. [46]
|
||
|
Laurel was living at 1405 White Lane in Bakersfield. Though she still sang
|
||
|
some with Delpha, she also accompanied other Christian singers both at her own
|
||
|
church and others. During this time she gave private piano lessons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ken Sanders and Pastor Joiner both recalled Laurel and another church
|
||
|
member, Friend Three, leaving the church some time in 1975. (Ken didn't see
|
||
|
Laurel again until 1984, when he saw her at a special church service in honor
|
||
|
of Delpha and Willie.) Laurel told a number of stories to Friend Three, who
|
||
|
lived with her for a time. Among other things, Laurel told her that her scars
|
||
|
were from her mother's abuse. The friend explained to us what she how
|
||
|
believes to be the stories' real source:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Have you read the book _Sybil_? I didn't read it until I started taking
|
||
|
my psychology classes. I realized that most of the stories Laurel had
|
||
|
told me about her mom's abuse were taken literally from _Sybil_. You
|
||
|
know, the torture with enemas, the piano, the whole bit. Even the part
|
||
|
about the mom's abuse with small sharp objects that rendered her
|
||
|
incapable of having children.... Laurel took that directly out of the
|
||
|
book.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Friend Three explained to us Laurel's claim that the physical and sexual
|
||
|
abuse continued until she went to live with her father, and then it all
|
||
|
stopped. As the friend talked with us, she shared the destructive influence
|
||
|
Laurel had on her own life:
|
||
|
|
||
|
At that time I was pretty vulnerable. There were problems in my church,
|
||
|
my father had just been brain-damaged in a severe accident. My brother
|
||
|
was going through a very traumatic time, and my husband and I were
|
||
|
having trouble in our marriage. I had two small children, and I was
|
||
|
extremely unhappy. For me, I'm very interested in music. She
|
||
|
accompanied me when I sang. She was giving my daughter piano lessons,
|
||
|
and we started being friends.
|
||
|
She was very happy, always laughing, always very up. And gradually
|
||
|
... manipulation is what it is. Where I was the weakest, that's where
|
||
|
she worked her way in, and I was so involved. She tried to separate me
|
||
|
from my mom and dad, and at one point actually told them I didn't need
|
||
|
them anymore, she'd take care of me. She began to manipulate things so
|
||
|
I was really putting distance between myself and my husband, more and
|
||
|
more and more. And then I felt trapped.
|
||
|
How could I extricate myself from this awful mess I'd gotten into?
|
||
|
For me, it got so bad that my way out was, "I cannot deal with any of
|
||
|
this anymore, I'm never going to get free." The scariest part about it
|
||
|
was that it seemed so normal, "I'll just go to sleep and never wake up
|
||
|
again." I took every pill in the house. I had a bottle of sleeping
|
||
|
pills, I had a bottle full of pain tablets, another of valium, and I
|
||
|
took them all.
|
||
|
My family discovered me in time. I had to spend some time in a
|
||
|
mental hospital, but the Lord saw me through. I think she was scary
|
||
|
fifteen years ago ... and she still scares me. She does not, she really
|
||
|
doesn't know the truth. I suspected there were others she used like me.
|
||
|
Thank you, Lord, because I did find out in time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Through the latter part of the 1970s Laurel's physical and emotional health
|
||
|
deteriorated, incapacitating her from full-time work. She was able to live on
|
||
|
the small amount state disability paid plus offering private music lessons.
|
||
|
Laurel spent much of her time hospitalized. When Friend One from the Hemet
|
||
|
Assembly of God church visited her in the hospital in the late 1970s, Laurel
|
||
|
seemed helpless, physically and emotionally. She told her friend she had a
|
||
|
"rare blood disease shared by only nine people in the world." [48]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1978, Willow and her family visited Laurel at 2401 Christmas Tree Lane
|
||
|
in Bakersfield. Willow described the meeting as short and strained. Laurel
|
||
|
was distant and explained she had been very ill and in and out of the
|
||
|
hospital. She kept repeating that she had a new family now. "I got the
|
||
|
feeling she was telling us she didn't need me or Mother," Willow recalled.
|
||
|
This was the last time Willow saw or heard from her sister.
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE YEARS BEFORE _SATAN'S UNDERGROUND_
|
||
|
|
||
|
LAUREL read _Stormie_, [49] a book chronicling author Stormie Omartian's abuse
|
||
|
as a child, and contacted Omartian. Laurel and a close friend, Sherry DeLynn
|
||
|
Williams, began a support group for women called Victims Against Sexual Abuse.
|
||
|
The local Bakersfield press covered the group's activities, and author Joyce
|
||
|
Landorf Heatherly invited Laurel to be a guest on her radio program. Laurel
|
||
|
talked about child and spouse abuse and related her own stories. [50]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In 1985 the Bakersfield area was rocked by charges concerning a large
|
||
|
ritualistic child abuse ring operating in Bakersfield. The story received
|
||
|
national media attention. At that time, Laurel was giving private piano
|
||
|
lessons to the child of one of the Bakersfield investigators, Sgt. Bob Fields.
|
||
|
[51] At one point she contacted Colleen Ryan, the District Attorney handling
|
||
|
prosecution of the case. Ryan told us, "She called me a couple times .... I
|
||
|
don't really remember what her link was, except she was somehow entwined with
|
||
|
the two women [defendants] in the case." [52] Ryan's office and the
|
||
|
investigators found her testimony useless. [53]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel then met Pat Thornton, a foster mother caring for some of the
|
||
|
children whose family members were implicated in the child abuse case. Laurel
|
||
|
told Pat she had personal knowledge of what was going on and was afraid for
|
||
|
her life. Pat told us:
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a short period of time, I was like Laurel's mother. She would call
|
||
|
me at all hours of the day or night, hysterical, and I had to drop
|
||
|
everything I was doing to go to her or at least talk her through her
|
||
|
hysteria on the phone. She almost consumed my life. It was very
|
||
|
difficult for me, because I was trying to help the children I was caring
|
||
|
for, too. It was like she was another one of the kids.
|
||
|
|
||
|
During this time Laurel _first_ began mentioning satanism as part of her
|
||
|
story. According to Laurel, she was still being harassed and threatened by
|
||
|
satanists (this would have been in 1985 and 1986). In fact, she claimed they
|
||
|
were still picking her up late at night and forcing her to watch their
|
||
|
rituals, including ritual child abuse. She told Pat this as the basis for her
|
||
|
inside knowledge of the Bakersfield cases. There was no Victor in Laurel's
|
||
|
stories to Pat. Instead there were two men, "Elliot," who was the leader of
|
||
|
this massive ritualistic abuse and pornography ring; and "Jonathan," to whom
|
||
|
she had been a "love slave" for many years.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel told Pat that Jonathan had branded her forehead with a circular red
|
||
|
hot brand so everyone would know she was his love slave. That's why, Laurel
|
||
|
said, she always wore bangs to cover her forehead--even though Pat couldn't
|
||
|
tell the scar from typical forehead wrinkles. One night, Laurel called Pat
|
||
|
hysterically claiming that Jonathan had run her off the road in a murder
|
||
|
attempt. [54]
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of the most macabre stories Laurel told Pat was that she had a cassette
|
||
|
tape of her son Joey's death screams during the satanic ritual in which he was
|
||
|
killed, and a black-and-white photograph of baby Joey that had been taken
|
||
|
after his death. Laurel never showed Pat the picture or let her hear the
|
||
|
tape, explaining they would upset Pat's sensitive nature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Concerning Laurel's own history, Laurel claimed she had become pregnant for
|
||
|
the first time when she was fourteen, and that the many scars on her arms were
|
||
|
caused by the pornographers and satanists torturing her. Laurel said her
|
||
|
father had died in 1983, and his death had freed her from the hold the ring
|
||
|
had on her--but it took almost three years for her to realize it and finally
|
||
|
try to break away. [55]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel said she also had personal knowledge of the McMartin Preschool
|
||
|
ritual child abuse case in Manhattan Beach, California, near Los Angeles. She
|
||
|
wondered if Pat knew anyone associated with that case. In the spring of 1986
|
||
|
Pat introduced Laurel to Judy Hanson, an investigator who was working with
|
||
|
some of the parents in the McMartin case. Judy described her first meeting
|
||
|
with Laurel:
|
||
|
|
||
|
She told me she was terminally ill and in very great pain. She had a
|
||
|
wheelchair in the back of her car and she was using oxygen. Her
|
||
|
apartment was immaculate. During our conversation, she told me the pain
|
||
|
was too much for her to continue. She had me get a bottle filled with
|
||
|
thick white liquid out of the refrigerator for her. She told me it was
|
||
|
morphine for her pain. I didn't notice any difference in her speech or
|
||
|
actions after the medicine.
|
||
|
Laurel claimed she'd been abused as a child, and had been trapped in
|
||
|
this ritual child abuse ring, both in Bakersfield and with the McMartin
|
||
|
group in Los Angeles. She said she could give us names, places, dates,
|
||
|
and events, but that she was afraid of physical harm or even death at
|
||
|
the hands of the ring if they suspected she was talking. [56]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Laurel gave Judy a manuscript containing her stories, and a tape of two
|
||
|
Joyce Landorf Heatherly shows she appeared on. According to Judy, she
|
||
|
arranged for Laurel to record her experiences in a video tape done by Bob
|
||
|
Currie. [57] Bob, one of the parents whose children were involved in the
|
||
|
McMartin abuse case, had been looking for a credible adult witness or victim
|
||
|
to give support to the children's testimonies. The video was made in multiple
|
||
|
sessions at a Bakersfield motel. Respecting Laurel's concerns about her own
|
||
|
safety, Bob never revealed more than her mouth and chin in the video.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the taping was completed, Bob took the video home. But he never used
|
||
|
it. Other McMartin parents who saw the video or who were present during the
|
||
|
taping told us they agreed with Bob: "Laurel's story wasn't credible." We
|
||
|
asked parent Leslie Floberg why she distrusted Laurel's story concerning the
|
||
|
Manhattan Beach activities. She replied:
|
||
|
|
||
|
That's just it. She seemed to be telling us exactly what we wanted to
|
||
|
hear. Whatever we thought was happening, she said she had witnessed it.
|
||
|
She described most things in very general terms. The only things she
|
||
|
described in detail were incidents that had already been described in
|
||
|
detail on a recently aired CNN television special about our case.
|
||
|
Somebody who knew nothing about the case, but who had watched that
|
||
|
television program, could have given us as credible a "testimony."
|
||
|
|
||
|
We asked Pat Thornton, who was present during the taping, why she didn't
|
||
|
believe Laurel's video:
|
||
|
|
||
|
She didn't give concrete, specific, testable details that hadn't been
|
||
|
reported in the news. It was almost like she felt safe in repeating
|
||
|
what we already knew from other sources, but she didn't want to say
|
||
|
something new we could test. I got the feeling that she didn't really
|
||
|
have any firsthand knowledge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The stories Laurel told on the video for the McMartin parents are very
|
||
|
different from the stories in _Satan's Underground_. In the video she said
|
||
|
that both of her parents, mother and father, were involved in pornography and
|
||
|
satanism. She told how, when she was a child, even after her father left
|
||
|
home, the three of them would meet at the satanic abuse rituals. She said
|
||
|
that she lived in the basement of a farmhouse with farm animals (the same
|
||
|
animals she was forced to pose with for the pornographic pictures). Laurel
|
||
|
explained her many scars by saying that her mother forced her to pleasure her
|
||
|
sexually, and that if she did not do so quickly enough, her mother would take
|
||
|
razor blades and slice her arms and legs to punish her. Laurel also explained
|
||
|
that she had spent two years of her life in a warehouse on Wilshire Boulevard
|
||
|
in Los Angeles with other "baby breeders," where she had two children killed
|
||
|
in ritualistic snuff films. [58]
|
||
|
|
||
|
All six parents who witnessed the video and/or its filming attested to us
|
||
|
that she said she had participated in an ongoing lesbian relationship with
|
||
|
Virginia McMartin, then the star defendant in the McMartin preschool case.
|
||
|
They also agree that she claimed to have been present while ritual abuse of
|
||
|
children went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
According to Bob Currie, he provided the access Laurel wanted to Johanna
|
||
|
Michaelson, Christian author of _The Beautiful Side of Evil_. (Michaelson had
|
||
|
talked briefly with a few of the McMartin parents.) After Laurel became close
|
||
|
to Johanna, she asked for her video back from Bob.. Bob hand-delivered the
|
||
|
original video to Johanna. Laurel then broke off all communication with Judy
|
||
|
Hanson, Pat Thornton, Bob Currie, and the other McMartin parents involved.
|
||
|
Only a few months later, Laurel's story of _Satan's Underground_ was published
|
||
|
by Harvest House with Johanna Michaelson's strong encouragement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Johanna Michaelson admitted to us that she had viewed the video, including
|
||
|
the segment concerning Virginia McMartin. She first explained to us that the
|
||
|
legal ramifications of the McMartin story were too complex to deal with, but
|
||
|
when we asked point-blank if she believed the lesbianism story, she replied,
|
||
|
"I don't know." We asked if it seemed odd to be unsure if Laurel's McMartin
|
||
|
story was true, yet believe totally in and help publish another equally
|
||
|
fantastic tale from the same source. Johanna did not answer the question.
|
||
|
[59]
|
||
|
|
||
|
Parent Leslie Floberg concluded our conversation in an angry outburst.
|
||
|
"Put this in your magazine; I feel raped by the so-called Christians who've
|
||
|
promoted Lauren Stratford as a victim just like our children."
|
||
|
|
||
|
WHAT PROOF EXISTS OF LAUREL'S TESTIMONY?
|
||
|
|
||
|
OUR inclination has always been to give Laurel the benefit of the doubt, to
|
||
|
presume her story was true until proven otherwise. If Laurel's story were
|
||
|
true, many people would be wholly ignorant of the torment she had lived
|
||
|
through. There would also be details which could never be verified on paper
|
||
|
or other documentaton. Yet at the same time, there would be a number of
|
||
|
mundane details that couldn't escape outside notice. As we proceeded, we used
|
||
|
this basic principle: if a person proves trustworthy in the "normal" details
|
||
|
of their lives, it is easier to trust them when they make claims about events
|
||
|
which cannot be verified.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There were two considerations: First, what evidence exists or would exist
|
||
|
if Laurel's story is true? In other words, can her story be verified?
|
||
|
Second, are there any evidences or facts which contradict or cast doubt on her
|
||
|
story? Can her story be falsified?
|
||
|
|
||
|
One more thing must be said. We believe that when extreme or extraordinary
|
||
|
claims are presented as objective truth, the burden of proof lies on the
|
||
|
claimant to give evidence of what he or she affirms. This should especially
|
||
|
hold true for Christian authors and publishers. In our opinion, _Satan's
|
||
|
Underground_ manifestly falls into such a category.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the beginning, we were led to believe that substantial validation of
|
||
|
Laurel's testimony exists. Laurel's book contains a moving portrayal of how
|
||
|
safe she felt when Hal Lindsey publicly warned satanists to stay away from her
|
||
|
because he had the goods on anyone who might retaliate. [60] (Johanna
|
||
|
Michaelson, however, told us that Hal was "bluffing" when he said this. [61])
|
||
|
Laurel claimed she had passed the untold facts (e.g. Victor's name, etc.)
|
||
|
along to people like Johanna Michaelson and Ken Wooden. [62] Harvest House
|
||
|
told us they possessed documentation more than sufficient to prove her story.
|
||
|
[63]
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, the most stunning element of the true Laurel Wilson story is that
|
||
|
no one even checked out the main details. When we contacted Laurel's mother,
|
||
|
sister, brother-in-law, cousin, church friends--in fact, anyone who would have
|
||
|
known Laurel during the book's most crucial years--we were shocked to discover
|
||
|
that, in nearly every case, we were the first people to have contacted them!
|
||
|
[64]
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had a lengthy conversation with Laurel, asking for any documentation of
|
||
|
her story. She told us that many parties, including Johanna Michaelson and
|
||
|
ohters "from the U.S. Justice Department on down," had advised her not to give
|
||
|
us anything. She then warned us that further research on our part would be
|
||
|
futile. "The trail's been cold for over twenty-five years," she said. "You
|
||
|
can't hope to find confirmation now." [65]
|
||
|
|
||
|
In our conversation, Laurel said John Rayben was one of her advisers and
|
||
|
implied he was from the Justice Department. Johanna Michaelson and Lyn
|
||
|
Laboriel (a kind woman who believes Laurel's story) also used Rayben's name as
|
||
|
a defense for Laurel's story. So we called him. Rayben actually represents
|
||
|
the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a respected
|
||
|
organization which is not an agency of the U.S. Department of Justice, nor any
|
||
|
federal office. Raybe also disavows being on any advisory board, much less
|
||
|
Lauren Stratford's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have never seen any objective documentation for Lauren's story," he
|
||
|
stated, and "I do not consider her story credible." He told us Laurel had
|
||
|
called him in September, asking his advice on whether she should provide us
|
||
|
with documentation. Rayben asked her what kind of documentation she would
|
||
|
provide. She said the problem was that "she didn't have names, dates, places,
|
||
|
etc." Rayben's reply was, "Well, you can't very well give it to them, can
|
||
|
you?" [66]
|
||
|
|
||
|
"PLEASE SHOW US THE EVIDENCE"
|
||
|
|
||
|
SINCE we had already (twice) attempted to confront Laurel with our questions,
|
||
|
we felt our only remaining Christian duty was to Harvest House, Laurel's
|
||
|
publisher. Upon contacting them, we explained that the evidence we had
|
||
|
collected was virtually overwhelming, and asked them as responsible publishers
|
||
|
to carry the burden of proof. "Please show us the evidence which led you to
|
||
|
publish _Satan's Underground_."
|
||
|
|
||
|
For instance, we asked them if it was possible to produce an eyewitness to
|
||
|
any of Laurel's pregnancies. If we accept that Laurel had three children by
|
||
|
brutal rape, whose births were unrecorded and who had been secretly killed,
|
||
|
she still had a "public" life which included attending high school and
|
||
|
college, church attendance, and playing concert piano. Since her pregnancy
|
||
|
would have to have been "showing" during her high school and college years,
|
||
|
there should have been an abundance of witnesses. After all, first one should
|
||
|
have proof that a child existed before asking others to believe that the child
|
||
|
was murdered. Eileen Mason, editor-in-chief at Harvest House, informed us
|
||
|
that Laurel "could not produce such a witness."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It strains one's credulity to think that no one would notice a teenager who
|
||
|
was pregnant three times, yet never ended up with a baby. Remember, this all
|
||
|
supposedly took place in the late 1950s or early 1960s, while she was singing
|
||
|
with Pentecostal church groups, attending Christian schools, and living with
|
||
|
family members other than her mother. In reality, at least ten people who
|
||
|
knew her quite well during that time are emphatic: Laurel was never pregnant
|
||
|
during her teens or early twenties.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Harvest House explained what they felt constituted proof of her testimony.
|
||
|
They had a three-part test: (1) several staff members talked with Laurel at
|
||
|
different times and got the same stories from her, and all of the staff
|
||
|
members were impressed with her sincerity; (2) they talked with "experts" who
|
||
|
confirmed that such things have happened to others; and (3) they gathered
|
||
|
character references for her from her supporters. [67]
|
||
|
|
||
|
These tests can establish consistency and plausibility, but they are not
|
||
|
tests to establish the validity of actual historical events. Over the past
|
||
|
ten years, we have heard stories from several "victim impersonators" that
|
||
|
paralleled those of real drug dealers and cult members, but this similarity
|
||
|
was not proof that the victim impersonator's particular story was true. [68]
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the other hand, we know that Laurel's book conflicts with known history,
|
||
|
and over the past twenty years, she has not only given contradictory stories,
|
||
|
but those who knew her testify that she has been disturbed and manipulative.
|
||
|
If genuine evidence for the major facets of Laurel's testimony exists
|
||
|
anywhere, we are still willing to examine it. In light of the inability of
|
||
|
those supporting Laurel's story to provide such evidence, the overwhelming
|
||
|
weight of our evidence must stand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As believers, our concepts of ethics and truth should be higher, not lower,
|
||
|
than those of the secular press. When a publisher issues a testimony which he
|
||
|
knows is likely to be sensationalistic, we believe he is obligated to ask what
|
||
|
constitutes verification of that testimony. Certain claims and assertions
|
||
|
require greater validation than others. This is not to lay all the blame at
|
||
|
the doors of Harvest House. Other Christian publishers have recently released
|
||
|
equally sensationalistic "survivor stories."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though publishers have the responsibility to test a story before offering
|
||
|
it to the public, we as readers are also accountable. If we exercised the
|
||
|
gift of discernment more often, publishers would be persuaded to offer books
|
||
|
that can stand the test. As individual Christian readers, we cannot
|
||
|
investigate every questionable testimony. However, we should encourage the
|
||
|
publishers whose books we buy to do that job for us. It is not wrong to
|
||
|
question a story which initially seems fantastic and offers no corroboration
|
||
|
or documentation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This article is not a condemnation of Laurel Wilson. Though we don't know,
|
||
|
and may never know, the true causes of her problems, Laurel evidently has been
|
||
|
emotionally disturbed for most of her life. Emotionally disturbed people
|
||
|
should receive compassion and empathy from their friends and other Christians,
|
||
|
and constructive, biblical therapy from Christians whose special gifts are
|
||
|
conuseling. [69] Laurel Wilson needs her Christian friends to comfort her in
|
||
|
her distress, to love her enough to commit themselves to helping her resolve
|
||
|
her problems according to biblical principles. The story of _Satan's
|
||
|
Underground_ is not true, but Laurel's emotional distress is real. Our prayer
|
||
|
is that she gets the help she needs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, when Laurel Wilson wrote _Satan's Underground_ and Johanna
|
||
|
Michaelson and Harvest House promoted it, the story stepped from the world of
|
||
|
therapy to the world of testimony. _Satan's Underground_ has become the
|
||
|
basis, the foundation, for Lauren Stratford's authority as an expert on
|
||
|
ritualistic abuse and as a counselor of other victims. Because the story is
|
||
|
not true, the foundation is illusory, and her expertise and counseling
|
||
|
qualifications are nonexistent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That is why this investigation had to be conducted, and this article had to
|
||
|
be written. As Laurel's old friend who nearly ended her own life told us, "I
|
||
|
don't want to see her counseling anyone. If she counsels other people as she
|
||
|
did me, there are going to be a lot of people in real trouble." [70]
|
||
|
|
||
|
----------
|
||
|
Sidebar:
|
||
|
|
||
|
C O N T R A D I C T I O N S
|
||
|
|
||
|
* HER FATHER: Variations in stories ... Frank Cole Wilson was her natural
|
||
|
father/left home when she was four/she didn't see him again until she was
|
||
|
fifteen/he was present at satanic rituals she attended throughout childhood/
|
||
|
had an incestuous relationship with her/was part of the satanic and
|
||
|
pornographic ring/died in 1983. The truth is, he was her adoptive father,
|
||
|
left when she was eight or nine, and saw her many times in the intervening
|
||
|
years, during vacations and holidays. Christian doctor who died in 1965.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* HER MOTHER: Often called stepmother. Stories of mother's abusive behavior
|
||
|
have varied from physical only to sexual/selling Laurel into pornography/
|
||
|
prostitution/satanism. In truth, mother adoptive, strict Christian woman who
|
||
|
sometimes had temper.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* HER SISTER: Laurel has claimed to be an only child/in 1975 claimed sister
|
||
|
named Betty "wants to either put me in a mental institution or kill me." Real
|
||
|
sister, Willow, a missionary. Laurel raised with Willow, lived with her, her
|
||
|
husband, and family during high school.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* ABUSE: Laurel says 1985 first time able to admit she was abused. Yet
|
||
|
multiple accusations of abuse over thirty years against mother/father/brother-
|
||
|
in-law/school personnel/lesbian church members/pornography and prostitution
|
||
|
rings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* SATANISM: 1985 first mentioned involvement with satanism, after two major
|
||
|
satanic ritual abuse cases became news. This contradicts all her previous
|
||
|
abuse stories.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* HER SCARS: Blamed on mother/pornography/prostitution leaders/and/or
|
||
|
satanists. Actually three people observed her cutting herself, others told by
|
||
|
Laurel her wounds were self-inflicted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* HER "CHILDREN": Various stories: she's sterile/had two children killed in
|
||
|
snuff films/three children killed, two in snuff films, one in satanic ritual/
|
||
|
says she had children during teenage years/her twenties/lived two years in a
|
||
|
breeder warehouse. In reality, no evidence she was ever pregnant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* RITUAL INVOLVEMENT: States in _Satan's Underground_ ritual involvement
|
||
|
ended after her father's death (1965)/vs. story of involvement in satanic
|
||
|
rituals through 1985-86 (McMartin ring and others). Truth is no proof found
|
||
|
for any involvement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
* CHILD PORN: States in _Satan's Underground_ she was involved in child porn
|
||
|
films and magazines during the forties and fifties. According to FBI expert,
|
||
|
child porn films and magazines were all but nonexistent during this time. [71]
|
||
|
|
||
|
----------
|
||
|
Photo captions:
|
||
|
|
||
|
1. Frank, Laurel, Rose, and Willow Wilson.
|
||
|
2. Infant Laurel and Rose.
|
||
|
3. Laurel at 14 years (1955).
|
||
|
4. Willow's 11th birthday (Laurel second from right).
|
||
|
5. Car license dated 1947, two years after _Satan's Underground_ says her
|
||
|
father left Laurel behind.
|
||
|
6. Laurel in her late teens, Laurel's birth certificate.
|
||
|
|
||
|
----------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Endnotes: 1. Lauren Stratford, _Satan's Underground_ (Eugene, Oreg.: Harvest
|
||
|
House Publishers, 1988). 2. Bob Currie, in conversation with us. Note: we
|
||
|
interviewed dozens of persons in the course of research for this article. In
|
||
|
most cases, we talked with people several times, and double-checked our
|
||
|
quotes. To avoid confusion, we do not list the exact dates of conversations in
|
||
|
this article. The reader is safe to assume that the conversations took place
|
||
|
between 7 September and 10 November 1989. 3. Stratford, _Satan's
|
||
|
Underground_, 17. 4. _Satan's Underground_ is one of the most sexually
|
||
|
explicit and violently graphic contemporary Christian books we know. Those
|
||
|
descriptions are not necessary in this synopsis. 5. Including being drugged
|
||
|
almost continually. 6. Lauren says she was never a satanist because she had
|
||
|
become a Christian as a young child and was only at the rituals because she
|
||
|
was forced to be. 7. Stratford, _Satan's Undergound_, 114. 8. And managed to
|
||
|
finish her college education. 9. According to Pierce County adoption records,
|
||
|
on file. Marriage records show that Marrian Disbrow married Carl H--- one
|
||
|
month later. 10. According to Pierce County birth certificate, on file. 11.
|
||
|
According to hospital records, on file. 12. Some non-crucial details have
|
||
|
been omitted to protect certain persons' privacy. 13. Statement dated 9
|
||
|
September 1989, on file. 14. Willow, in conversation with us. 15. Years
|
||
|
resident in Calif., listed on his death certificate, on file. Frank and Rose
|
||
|
never divorced, and Frank left a substantial portion of his estate to Rose as
|
||
|
his wife. 16. Willow, in conversation with us. 17. Washington State Music
|
||
|
Teachers Association Auditions, Spring 1949, on file. 18. Copies of her grade
|
||
|
school, junior high, and high school report cards are on file. 19. Her father
|
||
|
had moved to Calif. six years earlier. 20. Willow and Willow's husband, in
|
||
|
conversation with us. 21. Documentation on file. 22. Enrollment confirmed by
|
||
|
Seattle-Pacific. 23. Willow and Marie Hollowell, in conversation with us. 24.
|
||
|
Willow and Billie Gordon, in conversation with us. 25. Laurel's mother, Rose,
|
||
|
in conversation with us. 26. Enrollment confirmed by Redlands. 27. Reverend
|
||
|
Boone, formerly of First AG Church, Rialto, in conversation with us. 28.
|
||
|
Billie Gordon, in conversation with us. 29. She told the same story to
|
||
|
"Friend Two." 30. Billie Gordon, in conversation with us. 31. "Friend One,"
|
||
|
in conversation with us. 32. Record confirmed by University of Redlands
|
||
|
Registrar and Alumni Office, on file. 33. "Friend One," in conversation with
|
||
|
us. 34. San Bernardino County death certificate and probate record, on file.
|
||
|
35. Confirmed by Riverside County marriage certificate record, on file. 36.
|
||
|
Information supplied by Frank Austin, "Friend One," and "Friend Two." 37.
|
||
|
"Friend One," in conversation with us. 38. Confirmed by the Hemet School
|
||
|
District Personnel Office. 39. Picture on file. 40. Confirmed by the
|
||
|
California Commission on Teacher Credentialing. 41. Confirmed by "Friend
|
||
|
One," "Friend Two," and the Archers, a couple involved at the Hemet AG Church.
|
||
|
42. Ken Sanders, Willie and Delpha Nichols, in conversation with us. 43. Ken
|
||
|
Sanders, in conversation with us. 44. Delpha Nichols, in conversation with
|
||
|
us. 45. "You've Done So Much For Me Lord" and "Beholding His Beauty,"
|
||
|
copyright 1972; "He Owes Me Nothing," copyright 1973. On file. 46.
|
||
|
Information supplied by Ken Sanders, Reverend David Joiner, and "Friend
|
||
|
Three." According to her church membership card, Laurel had previously been a
|
||
|
member of Glad Tidings Assembly of God in Mira Loma, Calif., near San
|
||
|
Bernardino. 47. Flora Rheta Schreiber, _Sybil_ (New York: Warner
|
||
|
Communications Company, 1973). 48. "Friend One," in conversation with us. 49.
|
||
|
Stormie Omartian, _Stormie_ (Eugene, Oreg.: Harvest House Publishers, 1984).
|
||
|
50. Information supplied by a tape of Joyce Landorf Heatherly Programs, and
|
||
|
from additional comments Laurel taped at home concerning statements she made
|
||
|
during the program which were not aired. 51. Confirmed by Bakersfield
|
||
|
Sheriff's Dept. Lt. Brad Darling and Sgt. Fields in conversation with us. 52.
|
||
|
Bakersfield District Attorney Colleen Ryan, in conversation with us. 53.
|
||
|
Information provided by Brad Darling and Colleen Ryan. 54. Pat didn't get out
|
||
|
of bed. 55. Pat Thornton, in conversation with us. 56. Judy Hanson, in
|
||
|
conversation with us. 57. Our conversation with Bob covered a lengthy meeting
|
||
|
in person as well as by telephone. 58. Information from video corroborated by
|
||
|
a number of McMartin parents and (partly) Johanna Michaelson. 59. Information
|
||
|
supplied from two and one-half hour phone conversation involving Randolf and
|
||
|
Johanna Michaelson, Jon Trott, and Bob Passantino, on 20 October 1989. 60. On
|
||
|
his television program, as quoted in _Satan's Underground_, 166. 61. Johanna
|
||
|
Michaelson, in conversation with us. 62. Laurel Wilson, in conversation with
|
||
|
us. 63. Eileen Mason, in conversation with us. She told the skeptical John
|
||
|
Stewart of KKLA (30 March 1988), "We have plenty of evidence in many places."
|
||
|
64. Apparently no one considered the fact that, if Laurel is not telling the
|
||
|
truth, her mother and family become the abused. 65. Laurel Wilson, in
|
||
|
conversation with us, 22 September 1989. 66. Chuckling, John Rayben
|
||
|
concluded, "I would have liked to see that documentation myself!" 67. Eileen
|
||
|
Mason, in conversation with us. 68. One such impersonator was "escaping the
|
||
|
Moonies." She lived with us, and her story was so good it took us a month to
|
||
|
discover she was not 16 years old, but 30, and had never been a Moonie.
|
||
|
Later, she appeared on _Oprah Winfrey_ as a victim of Multiple Personality
|
||
|
Disorder. More recently, we ran across her while she was trying to convince a
|
||
|
church group that she was an adult survivor from a satanic cult! 69. The
|
||
|
therapist doesn't initially have to know whether or not the story is true,
|
||
|
only that the person is hurting and needs help. 70. "Friend Three," in
|
||
|
conversation with us. 71. (See "Contradictions" sidebar.) Information
|
||
|
supplied (enough for an article in its own right) by FBI experts Ken Lanning
|
||
|
and Homer Young.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|
||
|
|
||
|
Another file downloaded from: NIRVANAnet(tm)
|
||
|
|
||
|
& the Temple of the Screaming Electron Jeff Hunter 510-935-5845
|
||
|
The Salted Slug Strange 408-454-9368
|
||
|
Burn This Flag Zardoz 408-363-9766
|
||
|
realitycheck Poindexter Fortran 510-527-1662
|
||
|
Lies Unlimited Mick Freen 415-583-4102
|
||
|
Tomorrow's 0rder of Magnitude Finger_Man 415-961-9315
|
||
|
My Dog Bit Jesus Suzanne D'Fault 510-658-8078
|
||
|
New Dork Sublime Demented Pimiento 415-566-0126
|
||
|
|
||
|
Specializing in conversations, obscure information, high explosives,
|
||
|
arcane knowledge, political extremism, diverse sexuality,
|
||
|
insane speculation, and wild rumours. ALL-TEXT BBS SYSTEMS.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Full access for first-time callers. We don't want to know who you are,
|
||
|
where you live, or what your phone number is. We are not Big Brother.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Raw Data for Raw Nerves"
|
||
|
|
||
|
X-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-X
|