270 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
270 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Message #12 board "P_Metaphysical (Mag Articles)"
|
|
Date : 22-Jan-93 15:58
|
|
From : Simon Novali
|
|
To : All
|
|
Subj : Lanning (9 of 11)
|
|
|
|
occult (e.g. satanic symbols at crime scene). Does that
|
|
automatically make these satanic murders? It is my opinion that the
|
|
answer is no. Ritualistic murders committed by serial killers or
|
|
sexual sadists are not necessarily satanic or occult murders.
|
|
Ritualistic murders committed by psychotic killers who hear the
|
|
voice of Satan are no more satanic murders than murders committed by
|
|
psychotic killers who hear the voice of Jesus are Christian murders.
|
|
|
|
Rather a satanic murder should be defined as one committed by two or
|
|
more individuals who rationally plan the crime and whose *primary*
|
|
motivation is to fulfill a prescribed satanic ritual calling for the
|
|
murder. By this definition I have been unable to identify even one
|
|
documented satanic murder in the United States. Although such
|
|
murders may have and can occur, they appear to be few in number. In
|
|
addition the commission of such killings would probably be the
|
|
beginning of the end for such a group. It is highly unlikely that
|
|
they could continue to kill several people, every year, year after
|
|
year, and not be discovered.
|
|
|
|
A brief typology of satanic and occult practitioners is helpful in
|
|
evaluating what relationship, if any, such practices have to crimes
|
|
under investigation. The following typology is adapted from the
|
|
investigative experience of Officer Sandi Gallant of the San
|
|
Francisco Police Department, who began to study the criminal aspects
|
|
of occult activity long before it became popular. No typology is
|
|
perfect, but I use this typology because it is simple and offers
|
|
investigative insights. Most practitioners fall into one of three
|
|
categories, any of which can be practiced alone or in groups:
|
|
|
|
-- a. "YOUTH SUBCULTURE.
|
|
|
|
"Most teenagers involved in fantasy role-playing games, heavy metal
|
|
music, or satanism and the occult are going through a stage of
|
|
adolescent development and commit no significant crimes. The
|
|
teenagers who have more serious problems are usually those from
|
|
dysfunctional families or those who have poor communication within
|
|
their families. These troubled teenagers turn to satanism and the
|
|
occult to overcome a sense of alienation, to rebel, to obtain power,
|
|
or to justify their antisocial behavior. For these teenagers it is
|
|
the symbolism, not the spirituality, that is more important. It is
|
|
either the psychopathic or the oddball, loner teenager who is most
|
|
likely to get into serious trouble. Extreme involvement in the
|
|
occult is a symptom of a problem, not the cause. This is not to
|
|
deny, however, that satanism and the occult can be negative
|
|
influences for a troubled teenager. But to hysterically warn
|
|
teenagers to avoid this "mysterious, powerful and dangerous" thing
|
|
called satanism will drive more teenagers right to it. Some
|
|
rebellious teenagers will do whatever will most shock and outrage
|
|
society in order to flaunt their rejection of adult norms.
|
|
|
|
-- b. "DABBLERS (SELF-STYLED).
|
|
|
|
"For these practitioners there is little or no spiritual motivation.
|
|
They may mix satanism, witchcraft, paganism, and any aspects of the
|
|
occult to suit their purposes. Symbols mean whatever they want them
|
|
or believe them to mean. Molesters, rapists, drug dealers, and
|
|
murderers may dabble in the occult and may even commit their crimes
|
|
in a ceremonial or ritualistic way. This category has the potential
|
|
to be the most dangerous, and most of the "satanic" killers fall
|
|
into this category. Their involvement in satanism and the occult is
|
|
a symptom of a problem, and a rationalization and justification of
|
|
antisocial behavior. Satanic/occult practices (as well as those of
|
|
other spiritual belief systems) can also be used as a mechanism to
|
|
facilitate criminal objectives.
|
|
|
|
-- c. "TRADITIONAL (ORTHODOX).
|
|
|
|
"These are the so-called true believers. They are often wary of
|
|
outsiders. Because of this and constitutional issues, such groups
|
|
are difficult for law enforcement to penetrate. Although there may
|
|
be much we don't know about these groups, as of now there is little
|
|
or no hard evidence that as a group they are involved in serious,
|
|
organized criminal activity. In addition, instead of being self-
|
|
perpetuating master crime conspirators, "true believers" probably
|
|
have a similar problem with their teenagers rebelling against their
|
|
belief system. To some extent even these Traditional satanists are
|
|
self-stylized. They practice what they have come to believe is
|
|
"satanism". There is little or no evidence of the much-discussed
|
|
multigenerational satanists whose beliefs and practices have
|
|
supposedly been passed down through the centuries. Many admitted
|
|
adult satanists were in fact raised in conservative Christian
|
|
homes."
|
|
|
|
_Washington Post_ editor Walt Harrington reported in a 1986 story on
|
|
Anton LaVey and his Church of Satan that "sociologists who have
|
|
studied LaVey's church say that its members often had serious
|
|
childhood problems like alcoholic parents or broken homes, or that
|
|
they were traumatized by guilt-ridden fundamentalist upbringings,
|
|
turning to Satanism as a dramatic way to purge their debilitating
|
|
guilt" (p. 14).
|
|
|
|
Some have claimed that the accounts of ritual abuse victims coincide
|
|
with historical records of what traditional or multigenerational
|
|
satanists are known to have practiced down through the ages. Jeffrey
|
|
Burton Russell, Professor of History at the University of California
|
|
at Santa Barbara and the author of numerous scholarly books on the
|
|
devil and satanism, believes that the universal consensus of modern
|
|
historians on satanism is (personal communication, Nov. 1991):
|
|
|
|
"(1) incidents of orgy, infanticide, cannibalism, and other such
|
|
conduct have occurred from the ancient world down to the present;
|
|
(2) such incidents were isolated and limited to local antisocial
|
|
groups; (3) during the period of Christian dominance in European
|
|
culture, such groups were associated with the Devil in the minds of
|
|
the authorities; (4) in some cases the sectaries believed that they
|
|
were worshiping Satan; (5) no organized cult of Satanists existed in
|
|
the Christian period beyond localities, and on no account was there
|
|
ever any widespread Satanist organization or conspiracy; (6) no
|
|
reliable historical sources indicate that such organizations
|
|
existed; (7) the black mass appears only once in the sources before
|
|
the late nineteenth century."
|
|
|
|
Many police officers ask what to look for during the search of the
|
|
scene of suspected satanic activity. The answer is simple: Look for
|
|
evidence of a crime. A pentagram is no more criminally significant
|
|
than a crucifix unless it corroborates a crime or a criminal
|
|
conspiracy. If a victim's description of the location or the
|
|
instruments of the crime includes a pentagram, then the pentagram
|
|
would be evidence. But the same would be true if the description
|
|
included a crucifix. In many cases of alleged satanic ritual abuse,
|
|
investigation can find evidence that the claimed offenders are
|
|
members only of mainstream churches and are often described as very
|
|
religious.
|
|
|
|
There is no way any one law enforcement officer can become
|
|
knowledgeable about all the symbols and rituals of every spiritual
|
|
belief system that might become part of a criminal investigation.
|
|
The officer needs only to be trained to recognize the possible
|
|
investigative significance of such signs, symbols, and rituals.
|
|
Knowledgeable religious scholars, academics, and other true experts
|
|
in the community can be consulted if a more detailed analysis is
|
|
necessary.
|
|
|
|
Any analysis, however, may have only limited application, especially
|
|
to cases involving teenagers, dabblers, and other self-styled
|
|
practitioners. The fact is signs, symbols, and rituals can mean
|
|
anything that practitioners want them to mean and/or anything that
|
|
observers interpret them to mean.
|
|
|
|
The meaning of symbols can also change over time, place, and
|
|
circumstance. Is a swastika spray-painted on a wall an ancient
|
|
symbol of prosperity and good fortune, a recent symbol of Nazism and
|
|
anti-Semitism, or a current symbol of hate, paranoia, and adolescent
|
|
defiance? The peace sign which in the 1960s was a familiar antiwar
|
|
symbol is now supposed to be a satanic symbol. Some symbols and
|
|
holidays become "satanic" only because the antisatanists say they
|
|
are. Then those who want to be "satanists" adopt them, and now you
|
|
have "proof" they are satanic.
|
|
|
|
In spite of what is sometimes said or suggested at law enforcement
|
|
training conferences, police have no authority to seize any satanic
|
|
or occult paraphernalia they might see during a search. A legally-
|
|
valid reason must exist for doing so. It is not the job of law
|
|
enforcement to prevent satanists from engaging in noncriminal
|
|
teaching, rituals, or other activities.
|
|
|
|
9. INVESTIGATING MULTIDIMENSIONAL CHILD SEX RINGS.
|
|
|
|
Multidimensional child sex rings can be among the most difficult,
|
|
frustrating, and complex cases that any law enforcement officer will
|
|
ever investigate. The investigation of allegations of recent
|
|
activity from multiple young children under the age of seven
|
|
presents one set of problems and must begin quickly, with interviews
|
|
of *all* potential victims being completed as soon as possible. The
|
|
investigation of allegations of activity ten or more years earlier
|
|
from adult survivors presents other problems and should proceed,
|
|
unless victims are at immediate risk, more deliberately, with
|
|
gradually-increasing resources as corroborated facts warrant.
|
|
|
|
In spite of any skepticism, allegations of ritual abuse should be
|
|
aggressively and thoroughly investigated, This investigation should
|
|
attempt to corroborate the allegations of ritual abuse. but should
|
|
*simultaneously* also attempt to identify alternative explanations.
|
|
The only debate is over how much investigation is enough. Any law
|
|
enforcement agency must be prepared to defend and justify its
|
|
actions when scrutinized by the public, the media, elected
|
|
officials, or the courts. This does not mean, however, that a law
|
|
enforcement agency has an obligation to prove that the alleged
|
|
crimes did not occur. This is almost always impossible to do and
|
|
investigators should be alert for and avoid this trap.
|
|
|
|
One major problem in the investigation of multidimensional child sex
|
|
rings is the dilemma of recognizing soon enough that you have one.
|
|
Investigators must be alert for cases with the potential for the
|
|
four basic dynamics: (a) multiple young victims, (b) multiple
|
|
offenders, (c) fear as the controlling tactic, and (d) bizarre or
|
|
ritualistic activity. The following techniques apply primarily to
|
|
the investigation of such multidimensional child sex rings:
|
|
|
|
|
|
-- a. MINIMIZE SATANIC/OCCULT ASPECT.
|
|
|
|
There are those who claim that one of the major reasons more of
|
|
these cases have not been successfully prosecuted is that the
|
|
satanic/occult aspect has not been aggressively pursued. One state
|
|
has even introduced legislation creating added penalties when
|
|
certain crimes are committed as part of a ritual or ceremony. A few
|
|
states have passed special ritual crime laws. I strongly disagree
|
|
with such an approach. It makes no difference what spiritual belief
|
|
system was used to enhance and facilitate or rationalize and justify
|
|
criminal behavior. It serves no purpose to "prove" someone is a
|
|
satanist. As a matter of fact, if it is alleged that the subject
|
|
committed certain criminal acts under the influence of or in order
|
|
to conjure up supernatural spirits or forces, this may very well be
|
|
the basis for an insanity or diminished capacity defense, or may
|
|
damage the intent aspect of a sexually motivated crime. The defense
|
|
may very well be more interested in all the "evidence of satanic
|
|
activity". Some of the satanic crime "experts" who train law
|
|
enforcement wind up working or testifying for the defense in these
|
|
cases.
|
|
|
|
It is best to focus on the crime and all the evidence to corroborate
|
|
its commission. Information about local satanic or occult activity
|
|
is only of value if it is based on specific law enforcement
|
|
intelligence and not on some vague, unsubstantiated generalities
|
|
from religious groups. Cases are not solved by decoding signs,
|
|
symbols, and dates using undocumented satanic crime "manuals". In
|
|
one case a law enforcement agency executing a search warrant seized
|
|
only the satanic paraphernalia and left behind the other evidence
|
|
that would have corroborated victim statements. Cases are solved by
|
|
people- and behavior-oriented investigation. Evidence of satanic or
|
|
occult activity may help explain certain aspects of the case, but
|
|
even offenders who commit crimes in a spiritual context are usually
|
|
motivated by power, sex, and money.
|
|
|
|
-- b. KEEP INVESTIGATION AND RELIGIOUS BELIEFS SEPARATE.
|
|
|
|
I believe that one of the biggest mistakes any investigator of these
|
|
cases can make is to attribute supernatural powers to the offenders.
|
|
During an investigation a good investigator may sometimes be able to
|
|
use the beliefs and superstitions of the offenders to his or her
|
|
advantage. The reverse happens if the investigator believes that the
|
|
offenders possess supernatural powers. Satanic/occult practitioners
|
|
have no more power than any other human beings. Law enforcement
|
|
officers who believe that the investigation of these cases puts them
|
|
in conflict with the supernatural forces of evil should probably not
|
|
be assigned to them. The religious beliefs of officers should
|
|
provide spiritual strength and support for them but should not
|
|
affect the objectivity and professionalism of the investigation.
|
|
|
|
It is easy to get caught up in these cases and begin to see
|
|
"satanism" everywhere. Oversensitization to this perceived threat
|
|
may cause an investigator to "see" satanism in a crime when it
|
|
really is not there (quasi-satanism). Often the eye sees what the
|
|
mind perceives. It may also cause an investigator not to recognize a
|
|
staged crime scene deliberately seeded with "satanic clues" in order
|
|
to mislead the police (pseudo-satanism). On rare occasions an
|
|
overzealous investigator or intervenor may even be tempted to plant
|
|
"evidence of satanism" in order to corroborate such allegations and
|
|
beliefs. Supervisors need to be alert for and monitor these
|
|
reactions in their investigators.
|
|
|
|
-- c. LISTEN TO THE VICTIMS.
|
|
|
|
It is not the investigator's duty to believe the victims; it is his
|
|
or her job to listen and be an objective fact finder. Interviews of
|
|
young children should be done by investigators trained and
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
--- msgedsq 2.1a
|
|
* Origin: The Northern Lights 916-729-0304 (1:203/444)
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|