1070 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
1070 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
CultWatch Response
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Volume 2, Number 1
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From The Editor
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OCCULT CRIME- A GROWTH INDUSTRY
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By Vicki Copeland
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In our story on the Matamoros killings in the last issue of
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CWR, Kerr Cuchulain quotes an article from the Corpus Christi Times
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1/14/89 in which Lindell Bishop of the Central Texas Council of
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Governments said, "If we didn't do anything else but go into the
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business of conducting seminars on Satanism, we'd do a booming
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business". This started a train of thought on the "business" of
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"occult related crime". A survey of the material in the files of CWR
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yielded the following bits of information.
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From July 1986 to the present, we have documentation on no less than
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25 seminars on "occult related crime", ranging in length from 1 to 3
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days and in price from $30 to a whopping $489.00, plus room and
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board.. Frequent guests at these seminars include Lt. Larry Jones
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(Cult Crime Impact Network), Pat Pulling (Bothered About Dungeons and
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Dragons) Jack Roper (Christian Apologetics Research and Information
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Service) Joan Christenson (an "adult survivor of ritual abuse"), and
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Lauren Stratford (author of Satan's Underground). Sites for these
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seminars included Ft. Collins, CO, Cedar City, UT, Richmond, VA,
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Valencia, FL, Helena, MT, Warwick, RI, Killeen, TX, Malasoff, TX,
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Berkeley, CA, Cromwell, CT, and Leawood, KS, to name a few. One of
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these seminars even advertised a banquet with door prizes on Saturday
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night (the juxtaposition of a banquet with door prizes after a day of
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discussing alleged murders, animal mutilations, child abuse, etc.,
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seems at best macabre and insensitive to this author!).
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A wide variety of "training aids" on "occult related crime" are
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available from many different sources, ranging in price from $4.00 for
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"Witchcraft or Satanism" from BADD to $110 for the "Occult
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Investigation Slide Training Series and Script" sold by Writeway
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Literary Associates. Other significant offerings include: "A Basic
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Guide to the Occult for Law Enforcement Agencies" ($5.00 + $1.50
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postage from the Technical Research Institute); "American Focus on
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Satanic Crime" ($14.95 from Priority One Consultants); "Occult
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Awareness Manual" ($20.00 from the National Information Network);
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"Occultism, Satanism and Witchcraft in Our Schools and Society" ($5.00
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from Exodus S.A.) and "Occult Related Homicide Clues" ($13.95 from
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Writeway Literary Associates).
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Videotapes are also becoming a profitable item in this industry. We
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have received information on the following tapes: "Ritual Crime" (18
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min., $345, rental $75, from AIMS); "Massacre of Innocence" ($40.00,
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Contact America); "America's Best Kept Secret" ($19.95, Passport
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Magazine); "Rising to the Challenge" ($24.95 + $2.50 postage, Parents
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Music Resource Center); "Identification of the Ritually Abused Child"
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(40 min, $225, rental $60, Cavalcade Productions); "Treatment of the
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Ritually Abused Child" (25 min., $195, rental $50, Cavalcade
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Productions); "Ritual Child Abuse, A Professional Overview" (30 min,
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$194, rental $50, Cavalcade Productions) and "Revival of Evil" ($40,
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Cultivate Ministries).
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There are also numerous newsletters dealing with the issue of "occult
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related crime". Those we know of include File 18, Believe the
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Children, Eagle Forum, Exodus, and W.A.T.C.H. Network. Other
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organizations such as BADD mail out frequent lists of goods available
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for sale, and many ministries send out pamphlets and other flyers on
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"the occult" to those who regularly support them financially.
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Audio tapes are available from the various conferences, and many of
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the people who regularly speak at the conferences have tapes
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available. The CWR archives include tapes from the 1987 Exodus seminar
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in San Antonio Texas on occultism and various audio tapes of Christian
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talk shows featuring Larry Jones, Pat Pulling, etc. The Christian talk
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shows sell these tapes to the public for anywhere from $6-$10 each.
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Books also form an important part of the revenue from this industry.
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In the last two years, several have been published on the subject of
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Satanism and occult crime. Titles include Satan Wants You, by Arthur
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Lyons, Cults that Kill, by Larry Kahaner, Satan's Underground, by
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Lauren Stratford; The Edge of Evil, by Jerry Johnston, Satanism: Is
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Your Family Safe, by Ted Schwarz and Duane Empey, Devil on the Run, by
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Nicky Cruz, The Devil's Web, by Pat Pulling, Like Lambs to the
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Slaughter, by Johanna Michaelson, and Satanism; The Seduction of
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America's Youth, by Bob Larson. These books normally retail for $7-$10
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paperback, but can range as high as $15-$20 for a hardback version.
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There are also numerous old titles being sold by the various
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ministries and agencies involved with "occult related crime". These
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titles include The Satan Hunter, by Tom Wedge, The Satan Seller, by
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Mike Warnke, and Halloween and Satanism, by Phil Phillips.
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The final money making aspect of this growth industry is the public
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appearances. Talk show hosts such as Geraldo Rivera, Oprah Winfrey,
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and Sally Jesse Rafael have at least 2 shows a year each on this
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subject on the average. The same roster of guests appears on these
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shows, along with Zena LaVey and Dr. Michael and Lilith Aquino. Mr.
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Jones, Mrs. Pulling, and others who are authors or considered
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"experts" are also frequent guests on local television and radio talk
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shows. Add these revenues to those from books, tapes, newsletters, and
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their frequent appearances at seminars, and it is not hard to see why
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this is fast becoming a "growth industry".
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--------
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In This Issue:
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Rowan Moonstone reviews everything (well, almost), including Phil
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Phillips' book, Halloween and Satanism;
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Craig Pierce continues his series on his visit to an Exodus seminar;
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.. and much, much more ...
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--------
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CWR Questions Exodus
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by Craig Pierce, CWR correspondent
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As reports of Satanism grow, Texas investi- gators are often
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hampered by a complete absence of evidence when responding to publicly
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alleged claims of devil worship. Born-again cult buster groups making
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the claims are also causing questions to be raised regarding the
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legality of their methods of "exit counselling."
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In San Antonio, where the issue of teen Satanism has brought forth a
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group of such "counsellors" as Exodus S.A., police have no evidence of
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the criminally active group from whom that Exodus claims they are
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hiding survivors.
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"In the four years we've been around, we've gone from informing police
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and parents to a point where now we're hiding people," said current
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Exodus administrator, Craig Peterson.
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Mr. Peterson made his comment during the opening address of the Exodus
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S.A. Occult Awareness Seminar in San Antonio on 14 April, 1989. During
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the keynote speech, Mr. Peterson also referred to his organization as
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a "deprogrammer group", a term which makes his wife, Exodus founder
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Yvonne Peterson, uneasy. Naturally, she doesn't want to be identified
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with the abrasive groups of the 70s that used brain washing techniques
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"for the greater purpose" on Krishnas and members of other "cults".
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"We practice de-indoctrination, not deprogramming," said Mrs.
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Peterson. "They (cult survivors) are not abused; not locked up."
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"I can see a similarity," said Jerry Rieder when asked which term he
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preferred. Rieder, a self- proclaimed former Satanic High Priest,
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directs youth seminars for Exodus S.A. He is also a former heavy-
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metal musician who urges kids to reject rock'n'roll for Jesus. "Music
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is a form of worship. You either worship God or the Devil, there is no
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in between," stated Rieder during a lunchtime interview with CWR on 15
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April, 1989.
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Jerry is a fair example of the born-again Satanic survivor that
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Americans have become accustomed to seeing on T.V. talk shows. He
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tells young audiences, teens and pre-teens, how he seduced kids into
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Satanism with drugs and heavy metal. At the April seminar, he alluded
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to many gruesome practices of his cult. He even related that he came
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home one day to discover that his wife had sacrificed their infant
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daughter. He says that shortly thereafter, he gave up Satanism and
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turned to Christianity.
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Drugs figured heavily during Mr. Rieder's "bad old days" as a Satanic
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recruiter, and he admits that they took a great toll on him. Like many
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others on T.V. who have come forward to talk about their cult
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experiences, he has memory lapses. He identified himself to me as an
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ordained minister during the interview, but then had trouble
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remembering who or what denomination had ordained him. He did,
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however, exhibit a very clear memory of events surrounding the alleged
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sacrifice of his daughter and claims that God has made him a "renewed
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man". "Jesus is the light of my life," says Jerry.
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Though Mr. Rieder has spoken at many Exodus seminars specifically
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aimed at the "education" of law enforcement professionals regarding
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the threat of Satanism, he claims he has never identified his former
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devil worshipping followers to the D.A. He also told me at the time of
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the interview that he had not given prosecutors the facts regarding
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the alleged infanticide performed on his own flesh and blood in Bexar
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county.
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When asked why his wife is not in prison for her part in the alleged
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sacrifice, Mr. Rieder looked uncomfortable. "I didn't know how to
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bring her to justice," he replied. When responding to the question
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about identifying former cult members to prosecutors, he said,"Nobody
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has contacted me about working with the D.A.'s office." His apparent
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discomfort grew when reminded that one who fails to report a murder is
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frequently considered an accomplice to that murder and that there is
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no statute of limitation on murder.
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To be fair to Jerry, it must be pointed out that he has publicly
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"testified" to his alleged experiences for years. That no officers
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have as yet gone out of their way to dispute him is hardly his fault.
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On the other hand, maybe they just don't believe him without more
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substantial proof.
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In a similar vein, Yvonne Peterson claimed at the conference that just
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one San Antonio teen "survivor" had witnessed over 100 human
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sacrifices by age 14. She declined to name or produce the lad, saying,
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as usual, that Exodus was hiding him from fellow cultists. Remaining
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mindful that about 130 homicides were reported in Bexar County in
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1988, this youngster would have been privy to a wave of murder that
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Charles Manson, John Gacey, and Jack the Ripper couldn't rival.
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Unfortunately, as with most claims made by the group, not one shred of
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physical evidence was brought forward and one could infer that Exodus
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is comfortable with 100 deaths unprosecuted in South Texas. Of course,
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if there is no evidence of a crime, there can be no investigation.
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Bexar County Deputy Sheriff's Investigator, Larry Quintanilla was at
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the Occult Awareness Seminar to express his department's point of
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view. Not surprisingly, he doesn't agree with Exodus on their
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statistics beyond the fact that Satanism does exist. He said that the
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"hard" evidence police usually look for in an investigation is absent
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from Exodus' fund of "proofs".
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"As far as victims go, they can't tell us where they are or who killed
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them," says this occult crime investigator. Det. Quintanilla also put
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to rest the myth regarding the disposition of sacrificial victims in
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"portable crematoriums". (According to many "cult- buster" groups,
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this is why there are never any remains,) Such "portable" units are
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the size of 18-wheelers, he pointed out. He then questioned where
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teen-age Satanists would buy or hide one, never mind covering up the
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odor: such units do not have all the features of stationary
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crematoriums.
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"We don't have any ritual sacrifices or murders here in Bexar County,"
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said the detective at the April conference.
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Although Mr. Quintanilla quietly blows the doors off of claims of
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Exodus's spokespersons by asking ,"where is the evidence?", it never
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seems to stop them from presenting the same unverified claims again at
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the next seminar. Thusly is the line between allegation and reality
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blurred by the very people who cry out for police and parents to do
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something about arcane crime.
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The investigative eye may in time actually turn back upon Exodus-style
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groups or other organizations of this ilk.
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Why?
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The laws of America and the law of their deity are not yet one and the
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same. For instance, both Mr. and Mrs. Peterson claim that the
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"ex-cultists" they are hiding do possess hard evidence of crimes they
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witnesses and/or participated in. In most states, to withhold
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evidence, even if it is the knowledge of the whereabouts of a witness
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to a murder, is to become an accessory to the murder; or at the very
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least an obstruction of justice. This is true whether the witness is
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"covered in the blood of Jesus" or not.
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When I asked Craig Peterson if the local D.A. was regularly informed
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or given access to the type of information Exodus uncovered, he gave
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us as passive an answer as Jerry Rieder. "You almost have to let them
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(the "ex-cultist") do that themselves," he said.
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If, as claimed by both Exodus' founder and administrator, Exodus is
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deprogramming/reindoc- trinating recalcitrant Satanic teens, then
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Exodus is responsible for the new set of values the kids have.
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Furthermore, these reprogrammers must be already aware that their
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"subject" won't go to law enforcement unless told to do so!
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What a loop! The Satan-worship alarmists, while self-admittedly
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concealing and indoctrinating their witnesses, are demanding that law
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enforcers do something, while on the other hand, the professionalism
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of Bexar County officers does not allow them to proceed without
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evidence or witnesses! Det. Quintanilla put it succinctly when he said
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to me, "We don't investigate religions, only crime."
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Satanism, it has been said, will be the crime of the 90s. Certainly
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groups such as Exodus are right to be concerned, but Jesus alone won't
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get convictions. Professional law enforcement officers don't need
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Bible quotations to do their jobs; they need names, dates,and places
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of alleged criminal acts. Most importantly, they need witnesses to
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testify in court instead of in church. Vague yet gruesome testimony
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before PTA and youth groups must be replaced with hard evidence, and,
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when wild claims are disproven, they must be abandoned. Without
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substantive action on these crucial elements, the loop remains intact
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and violent cultists, few as they are, will remain free to damage
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society. Meanwhile, good cops may justifiably grow suspicious of
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religious deprogrammer/reindoctrinators' tactics as more of these
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groups spring up around the country.
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--------
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If You Were A Subscriber to CWR...
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...you would have received the revised edition of Rowan Moonstone's
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"The Origins of Halloween". All pamphlets published by CWR which are
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16 pages or less are included with your subscription. We will be
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publishing at least 4 pamphlets per year under this policy. Please
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subscribe now (see the coupon on the last page to enter your
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subscription).
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--------
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EX-CULTIST SOUGHT BY TEXAS AUTHORITIES
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CWR has received several articles from Texas concerning one
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Marti Johnston, who is associated with the Cult Awareness Council. In
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January, 1989, at a meeting in Anahuac, TX, she spoke of witnessing a
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child sacrifice of an 8-year-old girl from the Tomball, TX area eight
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years earlier. Shortly after this presentation, Tomball police officer
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Leroy Michna sought contact with Ms. Johnston in connection with this
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alleged crime. When his attempts were unsuccessful, he obtained the
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help of Harris County Assistant D.A. Casey O'Brian. In an article from
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the Daily Pasadena Citizen, Feb. 25, 1989, O'Brian is quoted as
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saying, "It was referred to me. I attempted to get hold of Marti
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Johnston. For whatever reason she won't talk to us. We don't know
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where she is."
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Authorities in the Tomball area say there are no reports of missing
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girls dating from the time period in which Ms. Johnston claims to have
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seen the child abducted and killed. "We have no homicide to link it
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to. Why she would make those claims and then be hesitant to talk with
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authorities is reason to question her motives," said O'Brian in the
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Houston Chronicle, March 6, 1989.
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Johnston's location is known to Dorothy Seabolt of the Houston Cult
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Awareness Council, according to the Chronicle article, but Ms. Seabolt
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refuses to disclose Ms. Johnston's location because of fear for
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Johnston's life. She claims that Johnston has received death threats,
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and has had to move numerous times in the past to avoid being killed
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by cult members.
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We here at CWR are most happy to see the police investigating these
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claims. If there is evidence, lets find those responsible for the
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crime and put them behind bars where they can hurt no one else. If
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there is no evidence, let's defuse the hysteria before somebody gets
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hurt.
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For further information on this case, refer to the following newspaper
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articles:
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"Crowd Hears About Satanic Cults", Anahuac (TX) Weekly, Feb. 8, 1989
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"Assistant DA Wants to Talk to Cult Expert", Humble Echo (Channelview,
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TX) Feb. 22, 1989
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"DA Seeking 'Sacrifice' Information", by Virginia Hahn, Daily Pasadena
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(TX) Citizen, Feb. 25, 1989
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"Tale of Child's Ritual Slaying Vexes Lawmen", by Bill Disessa,
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Houston Chronicle, March 6, 1989
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--------
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Don't overreact to so-called Satanism
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by Patrick Cox
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from USA Today, 9/12/89
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MENLO PARK, CA -- There was a time when most mental and neurological
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disorders were ascribed to evil spirits. Schizophrenics, epileptics,
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even political dissidents and social misfits were burned at the stake
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or hung on the gibbet to cure their "Satanism".
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Superstitious fundamentalism has,unfortunately, undergone a resurgence
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of late. Atavistic Christians and Shiite Moslems have found a perfect
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explanation for anything they don't understand -- Satanism. Curiously,
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however, the stated symptoms of the condition are largely
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indistinguishable from puberty.
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The rare criminal who says, "The devil made me do it" provides
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sufficient evidence of rampant devil worship for the folks who believe
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that Elvis is still alive and that UFOs are kidnapping thousands of
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people annually. Nevertheless, it is unclear how many of those
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criminals are truly psychotic and how many are simply clever enough to
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serve their sentences in mental institutions rather than the prisons.
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So-called television journalists have contributed to the phenomenon by
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publicizing the allegations of those who lack the ability or will to
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understand mental illness or artistic expression. But far more people
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are being killed in the name of God in Beirut and Belfast than have
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ever been murdered by psychotics claiming allegiance to Satan. The
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wild rumors of kids abused by Satanists pale compared to the number of
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adolescents actually molested by priests and ministers. And children
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regularly die because of the denial of food or medical care by
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Christian parents.
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Perhaps that's why both satanic and pagan trappings appear in the
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inevitable expressions of adolescent rebellion against authority. If
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it's shocking, some people will do it. If ours were a Satanist
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society, heavy-metal records played backward would contain Christian
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Scriptures.
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Though low-level law enforcement contains its share of fundamentalist
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paranoids calling for a new Inquisition, there's no evidence of any
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widespread Satanist movement. If we're going to establish new
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psychiatric institutions, maybe they should be used to treat those who
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hallucinate the devil behind every social anomaly.
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--------
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Reviews
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by Rowan Moonstone
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"Experts Say Tales are Bunk: Rumors Abound but nothing proves that
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cults exist", by Rex Springston, Richmond News Leader, April 6 & 7,
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1989
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Investigative reporter Rex Springston took on the volatile issue of
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the alleged Satanic Cult conspiracy and came to the same conclusion
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that increasing numbers of investigators are coming to; namely, that
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the story is an "urban legend".
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Interviewed in the course of investigating the story were FBI Special
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Agent Kenneth V. Lanning; Robert D. Hicks, Analyst for the Virginia
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Department of Criminal Justice Services; Dr. Shawn Carlson from the
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Committee for the Scientific Examination of Religion; Dr. Marc
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Galanter, a New York psychiatrist and author of a book on cults; Lt.
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Larry Jones, founder of Cult Crime Impact Network and editor of "File
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18"; Patricia Pulling, founder of Bothered About Dungeons and Dragons;
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Arthur Lyons, author of "Satan Wants You" and "Satanism in America";
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Dr. Martin T. Orne, Univ. of Pennsylvania psychiatrist and
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psychologist; and Dr. Jeffrey S. Victor of Jamestown (NY) Community
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College, who has just conducted a year-long investigation into Satanic
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rumors.
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The vast majority of the experts interviewed said that there is NO
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corroborating evidence for the allegations of national or
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international Satanic conspiracies. Says Lanning, "Total up the
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stories and people are alleging the murders of hundreds of thousands
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of people and we don't have a clue. If you believe this, this is the
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greatest - and I mean greatest by a thousandfold - criminal conspiracy
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in the history of mankind ... Nobody is this good."
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But Jones and Pulling dispute this attitude. Jones claims that
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"Satanists perform thousands of sacrifices a year - perhaps 50,000 or
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more." And Pulling states, "the number of Satanic sacrifices could be
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10 a year and could be as many as 10,000 and up ... We have no way of
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knowing."
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Hicks says, "Lots of police hours have been spent looking for evidence
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of cult survivors' stories, digging up parking lots (for bodies and
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bones) and things like that. To my knowledge, no cult survivor story
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has been verified." Lanning and Lyons attribute the "survivor" stories
|
||
to the book "Michelle Remembers", which was written by Dr. Lawrence
|
||
Pazder and his then-patient (now wife) Michelle Smith in 1980. The two
|
||
men claim there are no survivor stories which became public before the
|
||
publication date of the book.
|
||
|
||
When asked about specifics to the Richmond area, Pulling replied that
|
||
she had confidential police information but said to talk about local
|
||
sacrifices would be "overstepping my bounds". Ms. Pulling made other
|
||
accusations as well that could not be substantiated. For instance, she
|
||
and Officer Lawrence E. Haake of the Richmond Police Department allege
|
||
that there are criminal Satanists who are doctors, lawyers, law
|
||
enforcement officers and other prominent people, yet neither could
|
||
cite one case in which a person had been proven to be a Satanist
|
||
involved in serious criminal activity.
|
||
|
||
Pulling also alleged that 8% of the Richmond area was involved with
|
||
Satanic worship. Mr. Springston points out that this number is
|
||
approximately 56,000 - more than the number of United Methodists in
|
||
the Richmond area and nearly the entire population of Hanover County.
|
||
Pulling then amends her statement to say that this figure was
|
||
including everyone involved in any way with the occult. When asked as
|
||
how she arrived at the figure, she stated that she estimated that 4%
|
||
of the teens and 4% of the adults were involved. When informed that
|
||
this works out to an overall number of 4%, she replied that it didn't
|
||
matter, as the estimate was probably conservative anyway.
|
||
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
"Satanism: Where are the Folklorists?", by Phillips Stevens Jr., and
|
||
"A Rumor-panic About a Dangerous Satanic Cult in Western New York", by
|
||
Jeffrey S. Victor, New York Folklore, Vol. XV, 1-2 1989 , pp.1- 22
|
||
|
||
In the editorial "Satanism: Where are the Folklorists?", Mr. Stevens
|
||
goes into the history of scares and panics and notes the Inquisition
|
||
in Europe, the Proctor and Gamble "Man in the Moon" incident, and the
|
||
1950's communist "witch-hunt".
|
||
|
||
After a lengthy history of Satanism, the concept of the Millennium is
|
||
addressed. He points out that there are great sociological
|
||
similarities to the rumors we are seeing now, and the events in Europe
|
||
as the year 1000 approached.
|
||
|
||
Of great interest to me was the illustrations he gave of two cases
|
||
broadcast on Buffalo television stations, declaring that Satanic
|
||
activity was rampant in the area. On closer inspection and
|
||
investigation, these allegations were found to be false ... but, no
|
||
follow-up report was done to inform the public of this fact. I wonder
|
||
just how many other cases of this kind are occurring around the
|
||
country?
|
||
|
||
tevens is particularly upset that the Native American beliefs and the
|
||
Afro-Caribbean beliefs, such as Santeria and Voudoun, are being lumped
|
||
in the "Satanic" category. He notes numerous articles and incidents in
|
||
which the ignorant perpetuate rumors with no truth to them whatsoever
|
||
which result in the persecution of practitioners of such beliefs.
|
||
|
||
Those who come in for the most criticism from Mr. Stevens are those he
|
||
labels "the experts"; he cites poor scholarship, lack of credentials,
|
||
and downright greed as points of contention. One interesting question
|
||
he raises concerns funding for the individual law enforcement officers
|
||
to attend training seminars on occult crime. Simply put,"These
|
||
seminars are advertised among police agencies; were the fees paid out
|
||
of public funds?" (Is anybody listening?)
|
||
|
||
Folklorists should get involved NOW, he insists, before someone gets
|
||
hurt in the panic. He sees a great need for study and research and
|
||
explanation of what is and more importantly, what is NOT happening,
|
||
and explanations for it all in light of history and mythology. In his
|
||
words, "the folklore of Satanism is snowballing, and it is in serious
|
||
need of explication by people who know what they're talking about."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Victor's article addresses a problem that CWR has treated with
|
||
before: tracking an "urban legend" (CWR # 5). He narrows the focus of
|
||
the Satanic rumor-mongering to one specific outbreak in the Jamestown
|
||
N.Y. area in the spring of 1988. Through interviews with hundreds of
|
||
students, parents, police, ministesr, and newspaper reporters, Dr.
|
||
Victor and his sociology students tracked this rumor, beginning with
|
||
an Oct. 31, 1987 Halloween party.
|
||
|
||
The flames of rumor were fanned by an episode of the "Geraldo Show" on
|
||
Nov. 19, 1987, dealing with "Satanic Cults and Children". This show
|
||
prompted telephone calls to local ministers by concerned parents, and
|
||
the Thomas Sullivan case in January of 1988 further inflamed public
|
||
sentiment. Other ministers began to speak to their congregations about
|
||
the possibility of Satanic involvement by teens, and by May 13, the
|
||
full blown rumor was that a Satanic cult was seeking victims for a
|
||
human sacrifice.
|
||
|
||
The community response to this rumor surprised Victor; "many parents,
|
||
for example, held their children home from school out of fear that
|
||
they might be kidnapped by 'the cult'. Absences from elementary
|
||
schools were three or four times greater than average. Over 100 cars
|
||
showed up at a rumored ritual site in a wooded area, where they were
|
||
stopped by police barricades. Some of the cars had weapons in them:
|
||
clubs, knives and hunting guns. Several teenagers who were falsely
|
||
rumored to be in 'the cult' received telephone death threats from
|
||
adults. At a warehouse rumored to be another meeting place of 'the
|
||
cult' about $4,000 of damage was done to musical equipment and
|
||
interior walls. The police, school officials, and the youth bureau
|
||
received hundreds of telephone calls reporting bizarre incidents.
|
||
People reported seeing things that did not exist and having knowledge
|
||
about events that did not occur."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Victor goes on to speak about myths and why and how they are
|
||
created and what function they serve in society. He treats
|
||
specifically with scapegoats such as Jews, Witches, Blacks, etc. and
|
||
their relation to those myths. As Victor is a sociologist, he offers
|
||
some interesting sociological insights as to why this myth is
|
||
re-appearing in our culture at this time. The piece is exquisitely
|
||
detailed and documented and is HIGHLY recommended. New York Folklore
|
||
can be obtained by writing:
|
||
|
||
Phillips Stevens, Jr.
|
||
Dept. of Anthropology
|
||
SUNY at Buffalo
|
||
Ellicott Complex
|
||
Buffalo, NY 14261
|
||
|
||
New York Folklore is to be commended for the painstaking research and
|
||
documentation on these two fine articles.
|
||
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
"SATANIC, OCCULT, RITUALISTIC CRIME: A LAW ENFORCEMENT PERSPECTIVE" by
|
||
Kenneth V. Lanning, Supervisory Special Agent, Behavioral Science
|
||
Instruction and Research Unit, FBI Academy, Quantico, Virginia (June,
|
||
1989)
|
||
|
||
In the almost 5 years that I have followed this subject, rarely has
|
||
such a complete, informative, well- thought-out, and well-researched
|
||
document crossed my desk. Mr. Lanning has done a superb job of
|
||
pinpointing the problems associated with the current approach to the
|
||
problem of so-called "occult crime".
|
||
|
||
He begins with a overview of the general curriculum of an occult crime
|
||
training seminar, noting that the topics covered include an historical
|
||
overview of Satanism, Witchcraft and Paganism, fantasy role-playing
|
||
games, heavy metal music, "stoner" gangs, teen suicide, crimes by
|
||
self-styled satanic practitioners, ritualistic child abuse, organized
|
||
Satanic groups, and the "Big Conspiracy" theory. These topics are all
|
||
strung together, implying that (1) there is a continuum of behavior,
|
||
and (2) this material is all documented. The remainder of the paper is
|
||
devoted to debunking those two implications.
|
||
|
||
Noting the lack of definition of key words, such as "satanic",
|
||
"occult", and "ritualistic", he says, "simply put, for some people,
|
||
satanism is any religious belief system other than their own". A list
|
||
of items, including Freemasonry, Rock Music, the KKK, and Hinduism,
|
||
have been labeled as "Satanism" at these seminars. In addition to this
|
||
listing, Mr. Lanning references a book entitled Prepare for War by Dr.
|
||
Rebecca Brown which lists as "doorways" to satanic power horoscopes,
|
||
fraternity oaths, and acupuncture, and concludes, "the ideas expressed
|
||
in this book may seem extreme and even humorous. This book, however,
|
||
has been recommended as a serious reference in law enforcement
|
||
training material on this topic."
|
||
|
||
Mr. Lanning states, "Ritual can refer to a prescribed religious
|
||
ceremony, but in its broader meaning refers to any customarily
|
||
repeated act or series of acts. The need to repeat these acts can be
|
||
cultural, sexual, or psychological as well as spiritual." Included in
|
||
those rituals are those familiar to all of us, such as the traditional
|
||
Christmas and Thanksgiving family gatherings.
|
||
|
||
In the context of social ritual, he addresses the concept of sexual
|
||
ritualism and says that "deviant acts, such as urinating on,
|
||
defecating on, or even eviscerating a victim, are far more likely to
|
||
be the result of sexual ritualism than religious or 'satanic'
|
||
ritualism." This type of behavior is most often connected with a
|
||
psychological condition known as obsessive-compulsive behavior. The
|
||
paper goes on to discuss this topic in some detail and concludes, "the
|
||
important point for the criminal investigator is to realize that most
|
||
ritualistic criminal behavior is not motivated simply by satanic or
|
||
religious ceremonies."
|
||
|
||
Addressing the problem of ritualistic child abuse, Lanning points out
|
||
that not all spiritually- motivated ritualistic activity is satanic.
|
||
Many things that some parents would consider a part of their normal
|
||
religious activity, such as corporal punishment, or kneeling on the
|
||
floor while reciting prayers, might be considered ritualistic
|
||
activity, but not necessarily satanic.
|
||
|
||
The next question addressed is "What makes a crime satanic, occult, or
|
||
ritualistic?" Rejected as answers to this question are the presence of
|
||
certain symbols, the bizarre and cruel nature of the crime, or the
|
||
date of the crime -- the presence of these elements would beg the
|
||
question: what then does it mean if a crucifix is found at the site,
|
||
or if the crime is committed on Christmas, Easter, or Thanksgiving? He
|
||
also cites cases in which psychotic killers mutilated their victims
|
||
with no evidence of any type of "satanic" involvement whatsoever.
|
||
|
||
Many times the handout material given at occult training seminars to
|
||
law enforcement officers is conflicting and undocumented. As an
|
||
example, he cites handouts and reference material that show a range of
|
||
the number of satanic or occultic holidays from 8 to 110 days a year
|
||
(plus birthdays, and up to 3 days on either side of these holidays)!
|
||
|
||
Following this he lists various things that have been done by
|
||
Christian parents, justified by use of the Bible, which the rest of us
|
||
might view as child abuse, and comments, "Some people would argue that
|
||
the Christians who committed the crimes misunderstood and distorted
|
||
their religion while satanists who commit crimes are following theirs.
|
||
But who decides what constitutes a misinterpretation of a religious
|
||
belief system? The individuals who committed the above- described
|
||
crimes, however misguided, believed that they were following their
|
||
religion as they understood it."
|
||
|
||
Mr. Lanning states that he has been unable to clearly define a satanic
|
||
crime. "Each potential definition presents a different set of problems
|
||
when measured against an objective, rational, and constitutional
|
||
perspective." Many times, the facts of the crime are quite different
|
||
from the media reports and "actual involvement of satanism or the
|
||
occult in these cases usually turns out to be secondary,
|
||
insignificant, or nonexistent". But then, ordinary crime doesn't sell
|
||
newspapers!
|
||
|
||
"What is the justification for law enforcement officers giving
|
||
presentations on satanism and the occult to citizen groups, PTA's, or
|
||
school assemblies? Is it public relations, a safety program, or crime
|
||
prevention? "This is a very confusing question for a civilian to
|
||
answer, and Lanning brings out that by introducing themselves as
|
||
current or former police officers and speaking as religious advocates,
|
||
these "experts" only confuse the public. He recommends that "officers
|
||
who believe that the investigation of satanic/occult crime puts them
|
||
in conflict with supernatural forces of evil should probably not be
|
||
assigned to these cases." Indeed, it has known to happen that an
|
||
officer who does NOT believe such things has been suspected of being a
|
||
cultist.
|
||
|
||
One of the most perceptive points made in this paper reads, "satanic
|
||
and occultic crime has become a growth industry. Speaking fees, books,
|
||
video and audio tapes, prevention material, television and radio
|
||
appearances all being egoistic and financial rewards."
|
||
|
||
He points out that law enforcement officials have a job to listen to
|
||
the facts of a case and to look for evidences of a crime. If crimes
|
||
are really going on, history and human nature are on the side of
|
||
exposing the crimes. People make mistakes and leave evidence. The
|
||
recent incidents at Matamoros, Mexico are proof enough of that.
|
||
|
||
In closing, Lanning says, "Until hard evidence is obtained and
|
||
corroborated, the American people should not be frightened into
|
||
believing that babies are being bred and eaten, that 50,000 missing
|
||
children are being murdered in human sacrifices, or that satanists are
|
||
taking over America's day care centers. No one can prove with absolute
|
||
certainty that such activity has NOT occurred. The burden of proof,
|
||
however, as it would be in a criminal prosecution, is on those who
|
||
claim that it has occurred. As law enforcement agencies evaluate and
|
||
decide what they can or should do about satanic and occult activity in
|
||
their communities, they might also consider how to deal with the hype
|
||
and hysteria of the 'anti-satanists'. The overreaction to the problem
|
||
can clearly be worse than the problem."
|
||
|
||
As a researcher, I cannot agree with this more. CWR has printed
|
||
articles describing the hysteria surrounding this issue; it is only a
|
||
matter of time before someone is hurt if this continues. As a Witch
|
||
whose beliefs are oftentimes lumped into the "Satanic" scare, I would
|
||
like to applaud Mr. Lanning for a voice of sanity amidst the hysteria.
|
||
|
||
The author may be reached at:
|
||
|
||
Kenneth V. Lanning
|
||
Supervisory Special Agent
|
||
FBI Academy
|
||
Behavioral Science Unit
|
||
Quantico, VA 22136
|
||
|
||
This article is Public Domain, and reprints are available from CWR.
|
||
Send $2.00 (ppd.) for each copy ordered to CWR, P.O. Box 1842,
|
||
Colorado Springs, CO 80901- 1842.
|
||
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
"Satanic Cults: a Skeptical View of the Law Enforcement Approach"
|
||
(Presentation given at the 11th annual crime prevention conference of
|
||
the Virginia Crime Prevention Association, Chesapeake, Virginia, June
|
||
23, 1989) by Robert Hicks, Criminal Justice Analyst/Law Enforcement
|
||
Section, Department of Criminal Justice Services
|
||
|
||
Mr. Hicks begins this informative and enlightening piece with a
|
||
description of the activities of a convent, using the jargon that he
|
||
says is common in satanic cult seminars. The use of these terms make
|
||
the lawful and harmless activities of convents seem sinister and
|
||
pernicious. The point Mr. Hicks makes is that words such as "cult",
|
||
"occult", "satanic", and "ritual" being bandied about in the satanic
|
||
cult seminars are never defined.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Hicks takes his readers inside the atmosphere of the police
|
||
training seminars and points out areas in which he sees
|
||
counterproductive and alarming tendencies -- and they are rampant, if
|
||
his account is to be believed. Some of the shortcomings listed include
|
||
insufficient background given on cases used as illustration, the heavy
|
||
influence of Judeo- Christian values in the presentations of many of
|
||
the "experts", lack of clear definitions of terms, lack of
|
||
corroborating evidence for the claims of the "experts", and imprecise
|
||
or misleading descriptions of crimes.
|
||
|
||
On the subject of the "experts", Mr. Hicks is even more explicit. He
|
||
cites the double standard used by the cult crime instructors when
|
||
pointing to "satanic crime", yet failing to refer to "Christian crime"
|
||
or "Jewish crime", stating: "Whether or not people can get criminal
|
||
ideas from belief systems -- whether from Buddhism, Christianity,
|
||
voodoo, Islam, or anything else ... has little to do with the belief
|
||
system but rather with a person's own psychological make-up." Mr.
|
||
Hicks also cites the jumbling together of beliefs such as Wicca and
|
||
Voudoun with the "Satanic" belief systems.
|
||
|
||
What Mr. Hicks sees as the most disturbing in all this seems to be the
|
||
lack of evidence to back up the cult "experts'" claims. He cites
|
||
normal dynamics of groups (such as personality conflicts, rivalries,
|
||
jealousies, etc.) as reasons why the large scale conspiracy of the
|
||
international evil Satanic cult is, at best, an "urban legend".
|
||
|
||
Mr. Hicks' observations on the book Michelle Remembers were quite
|
||
interesting -- he made the following comment concerning some points
|
||
the book raised: "Some curious loose ends remain, though. (Michelle)
|
||
Smith's father denied the incidents, Smith loved her mother very much,
|
||
as did her two sisters, not mentioned in the book, who never witnessed
|
||
any satanic involvement. One sister has been deeply distressed at
|
||
Smith's representation of her mother. Not mentioned either was the
|
||
Catholic Pazder's divorce, Smith's conversion as a Catholic and her
|
||
own divorce in order to marry Pazder, practices frowned upon by the
|
||
Catholic Church, yet the book extols Catholic ceremonies and ritual as
|
||
a way to combat Smith's terror."
|
||
|
||
The subject of ritual abuse is dealt with here by citing the rich
|
||
abundance of folklore which surrounds Satanism through the centuries;
|
||
virtually every example of satanic stories found in the cult seminars
|
||
can be found in the folklore of Satanism.
|
||
|
||
The media does not avoid Hicks' critical eye either. He cites numerous
|
||
examples where an overanxious media published stories which they
|
||
claimed to have "satanic" involvement; when later thorough
|
||
investigation disproved the satanic theories, the damage remained
|
||
done. Nobody pays much attention to retractions, which have been few
|
||
regardless of the facts of these cases. The most graphic example of
|
||
this is an incident in Indiana several years ago, which involved a
|
||
legal, non-violent Pagan gathering at a public park. One sheriff's
|
||
deputy (who had been to an "occult crime" seminar) talked to a
|
||
reporter (who did not bother to verify anything told to him, and
|
||
talked to no other source). The resultant story proceeded to describe
|
||
"animal sacrificing, drinking blood in rituals, nude dancing, or
|
||
dancing by people in 'devil-like costumes' ... and eating raw flesh."
|
||
The facts of the case were not even remotely similar to the story,
|
||
Hicks says, and the group was "not satanic. The satanism was created
|
||
by the seminar-trained police who spent much time and effort watching
|
||
the (group) simply because they were not Christians celebrating in a
|
||
conventional way."
|
||
|
||
CWR would like to thank Mr. Hicks for a well-researched, factual
|
||
presentation. Copies of this transcript may be obtained by writing to:
|
||
|
||
Robert Hicks
|
||
Criminal Justice Analyst
|
||
Law Enforcement Section
|
||
Department of Criminal Justice Services
|
||
805 E. Broad Street
|
||
Richmond, Virginia, 23219
|
||
|
||
-----
|
||
|
||
THE DEVIL'S WEB: WHO IS STALKING YOUR CHILDREN FOR SATAN?
|
||
By Pat Pulling with Kathy Cawthon
|
||
|
||
Pat Pulling, founder of Bothered About Dungeons and Dragons (B.A.D.D.)
|
||
has based this book on her experiences of seven years in dealing with
|
||
the problem of teen occultism . Ms. Pulling became involved with the
|
||
issue after her then-16-year-old son "Bink" committed suicide in what
|
||
she describes as a "Dungeons and Dragons related death". From this
|
||
beginning of investigating fantasy role-playing games, Ms. Pulling has
|
||
gone on to investigate such areas as heavy metal music and its
|
||
relation to crime, violence in entertainment, and the phenomenon of
|
||
ritualistic child abuse.
|
||
|
||
Ms. Pulling's research is not what I would call either thorough or
|
||
reliable. A brief look at some of the citations from the book will
|
||
give the reader an idea of the quality of the scholarship involved: On
|
||
page 44, she notes:
|
||
"There are certain dates which occultists consider 'high holy
|
||
days' in Satanism and Witchcraft ... These dates are January 1
|
||
(traditionally a Druid feast day)..." The Druids celebrated
|
||
Nov. 1 as their New Year, and it was a major feast; Jan. 1 had
|
||
no particular significance.
|
||
|
||
Further evidences of poor research appear in the glossary at
|
||
the back of the book. On page 196, she defines the following
|
||
"Warlock: Originally meaning 'one who breaks faith'. It is
|
||
more often used by non- witches to refer to a male witch." On
|
||
the same page, a few lines down, we find the following
|
||
"Witches Sabbath: Meeting of a witches' coven held in order to
|
||
perform magical rites and ceremonies. A large number of
|
||
witches and warlocks who would gather around a bonfire or
|
||
cauldron, light black candles, and perform sacrifices. The
|
||
Sabbath would culminate in a sexual orgy." Contrary to this
|
||
assertion, the meaning of the word "warlock" has never
|
||
changed, and therefore such a one would not be invited to any
|
||
Witches' Sabbat.
|
||
|
||
Then on page 191 she defines "Sabbat: Seasonal assembly of
|
||
Witches in honor of the Archfiend." Use of the word "Sabbath"
|
||
(incorrect) for one reference and "Sabbat" (correct) for
|
||
another is rather strange, for one, and in almost 10 years as
|
||
a Witch, I have never honored anything that could be called
|
||
"the Archfiend".
|
||
|
||
Many other researchers in this field have taken issue with Ms. Pulling
|
||
in the past; in Chapter 4, "The Satanic Network", she addresses this
|
||
issue. Referring to an article which appeared in the Richmond News
|
||
Leader (reviewed elsewhere in this issue of CWR) she states the
|
||
following: "The reporter had gone to a great deal of trouble to find a
|
||
number of 'authorities' who would support the angle of his article ...
|
||
The two-part series quoted a number of people who have set themselves
|
||
up as experts on the subject of occult activity and used these quotes
|
||
to argue the statements made by the police officer and me. The
|
||
reporter failed to mention, however, that one of his naysaying sources
|
||
is a former member of the Church of Satan whose current level of
|
||
involvement is unknown. Another source has been 'investigating' this
|
||
subject for less than a year and his 'research' consists of little
|
||
more than reading a smattering of articles and books."
|
||
|
||
What Ms. Pulling fails to mention in her book is that the "naysayers"
|
||
she talks about here include the following:
|
||
- FBI Special Agent Kenneth Lanning, who works extensively
|
||
with the issue of occult crime and with the National Center
|
||
for Missing and Exploited Children, and has for many years;
|
||
|
||
- Robert Hicks, Analyst for the Department of Criminal Justice
|
||
Services in Richmond, who holds a Masters Degree in
|
||
Anthropology, and who presented a paper to the 11th annual
|
||
conference of the Virginia Crime Prevention Association, June
|
||
23, 1989. CWR has obtained a copy of the transcript of his
|
||
speech and has found that it is entirely consistent with the
|
||
research of Mr. Lanning and our own staff;
|
||
|
||
- Dr. Shawn Carlson, who is a member of the Committee for the
|
||
Scientific Examination of Religion (see CWR, Vol. I, Issue 4);
|
||
|
||
- The "former member of the Church of Satan" mentioned was
|
||
Arthur Lyons, who has written two books on the subject of
|
||
Satanism through two decades of first-hand research. Mr. Lyons
|
||
states that Anton LaVey would not talk to him unless and until
|
||
he paid $20 to join; he likens this to an FBI agent joining
|
||
the KKK for investigative purposes;
|
||
|
||
- One can only assume that the source she scoffed at for
|
||
spending less than a year in research on the subject is Dr.
|
||
Jeffrey S. Victor of Jamestown, NY. Dr. Victor is a
|
||
sociologist who has spent a year of intensive study on the
|
||
subject of Satanic rumor-mongering in his area of NY state.
|
||
His research findings parallel the findings in "Tracking an
|
||
Urban Legend" (CWR, Vol. I, Issue 5).
|
||
|
||
Dr. Victor describes this research as follows: "My research methods
|
||
included interviews I conducted with a wide variety of community
|
||
authorities, including police, school officials, youth group workers,
|
||
ministers, psychotherapists, and newspaper reporters. The Jamestown
|
||
Police Department was exceptionally helpful in providing me with
|
||
non-confidential information regarding their own investigations of the
|
||
various rumor stories. I also interviewed newspaper reporters from
|
||
other towns in the region, who covered the story. Students from one of
|
||
my classes conducted interviews with 49 local area teenagers, parents
|
||
and informal authority figures (such as teachers and ministers),
|
||
shortly after the rumor-panic occurred. One student, on an independent
|
||
study project, did a research study of teenage peer group conflict in
|
||
Jamestown in reaction to the rumors, interviewing 30 teenagers from
|
||
different youth sub-cultures. Another student, who is a minister, is
|
||
currently conducting interviews of fundamentalist and mainline
|
||
Protestant ministers, relative to the reactions to the rumor stories.
|
||
I also have information from my own participant observation ... having
|
||
a teenage son in the local high school at the time. As a teacher in a
|
||
community college, most of my students (youth and adults) are from the
|
||
local area. Many of them talked to me at length about the rumors. I
|
||
also obtained useful information from documents, including school
|
||
attendance records and reports from local government agencies." (From
|
||
"A Rumor-Panic About a Dangerous Satanic Cult in Western New York", by
|
||
Jeffrey S. Victor, New York Folklore Magazine, Vol. XV Nos 1- 2, 1989,
|
||
p. 25 & 27.)
|
||
|
||
Compared to the above sources, this reviewer would love to know how
|
||
Ms. Pulling's credentials stack up. The use of the phrase, "people who
|
||
have set themselves up as experts", when referring to the above
|
||
persons, would seem inaccurate at best and either arrogant or
|
||
self-serving at worst.
|
||
|
||
Ms. Pulling does make some good points in the area of parent-child
|
||
communications. She stresses that parents should be aware of what
|
||
their teens are doing, and whom they are associating with; wise advice
|
||
from whatever quarter. But her allegations of Satanic rituals in which
|
||
sexual orgies and murder take place (and, she claims, are videotaped)
|
||
are as yet unfounded.
|
||
|
||
All in all, this is NOT a book which I could reccomend for either
|
||
scholarship or informative content, as it is entirely too full of
|
||
unfounded rumor, speculation, and downright sloppy research. Real
|
||
information is available from reliable sources; it is too bad that Ms.
|
||
Pulling has disregarded it apparently because it does not fit her
|
||
Satanic conspiracy theories.
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
HALLOWEEN AND SATANISM
|
||
By Phil Phillips and Joan Hake Robie
|
||
Starburst Publishers, Lancaster, PA 1987
|
||
|
||
This book is highly recommended by many organizations as being the
|
||
definitive reference book on Halloween for the Christian and police.
|
||
While Rev. Phillips has done more historical research than the average
|
||
Christian investigating pre-Christian religious customs, his work
|
||
falls far short of what I would term adequate. Perhaps the most
|
||
disturbing thing about the book is the lack of references for the
|
||
first two chapters, which contain the majority of the historical
|
||
information.
|
||
|
||
Phillips persists in such inaccuracies as stating that Stonehenge was
|
||
built by Druids (scholars now agree that the structure had stood on
|
||
the plain for many hundreds of years before the arrival of the Celts
|
||
with their Druidic priesthood), that Halloween was originally held in
|
||
honor of a Celtic deity called "Samhain" (while Samhain was the name
|
||
of the festival, there is no evidence to indicate that the name was
|
||
ever applied to a deity. See "The Origins of Halloween" by Rowan
|
||
Moonstone, available from CWR), and that the Celts also worshipped a
|
||
deity named "Muck Olla". Muck Olla was mentioned by W.G. Wood-Martin
|
||
in Traces of the Elder Faiths of Ireland , but the practice is limited
|
||
to one small area of the British Isles in the villages of Ballycotton
|
||
and Trabolgan and is unknown outside this small geographic area. There
|
||
is no indication that Muck Olla was a sun god, as alleged by Phillips.
|
||
The native inhabitants of the British Isles did have solar deities;
|
||
the Irish deity was Lugh and the Welsh was Llew.
|
||
|
||
Phillips then proceeds to go into several chapters on the evils of
|
||
everything from Pennsylvania hex signs to ouija boards and tarot
|
||
cards. While this might have relevance in his Christian belief system,
|
||
it has nothing whatsoever to do with Halloween or law enforcement.
|
||
Police should be concerned with CRIME, not the religious practices of
|
||
individuals.
|
||
|
||
As proof that the things he alleges in the book are true, Phillips
|
||
uses testimony from three women who have written books on the subject.
|
||
I have read all of these books.
|
||
|
||
Roberta Blankenship in her book "Escape From Witchcraft" alleges that
|
||
in England in the 60s and 70s there was a huge organized underground
|
||
of "black witches" who met to do all sorts of evil things. She claims
|
||
to have risen to be their High Priestess and Witch Queen, and then
|
||
abdicated after she became a Christian.
|
||
|
||
Johanna Michaelson wrote of her experiences as an assistant to a
|
||
psychic surgeon in Mexico in "The Beautiful Side of Evil". By far,
|
||
hers is the most well-researched and documented book, although I
|
||
personally find the concept of psychic surgery difficult to believe.
|
||
|
||
The third woman, "Dr." Rebecca Brown, is the author of 2 books
|
||
entitled "He Came To Set The Captives Free" and "Prepare For War",
|
||
published by Starburst (the publisher of Phillips' book). CWR has
|
||
learned that Dr. Brown's original name was Ruth Bailey, and that while
|
||
a physician in the state of Indiana, she had her license revoked by
|
||
the state Medical Board on Oct. 2, 1984. Listed reasons for the
|
||
revocation include citations that she "knowingly and intentionally
|
||
misdiagnosed her patients including, but not limited to ... Edna
|
||
Elaine Moses ... That on numerous occasions she stated to her patients
|
||
that she was 'chosen' by God as the only physician able to diagnose
|
||
certain ailments and conditions which other physicians could not
|
||
because the other physicians ... were in fact, 'demons,devils and
|
||
other evil spirits' themselves. That on numerous occasions Respondent
|
||
misrepresented and falsified prescriptions ... That Respondent has
|
||
stated on numerous occasions that she possessed the capability of
|
||
'sharing' her patients' illnesses in fighting demons, devils and other
|
||
evil spirits. That without a valid therapeutic reason the Respondent
|
||
self-diagnosed and self-medicated herself with non-therapeutic amounts
|
||
of Demerol." The Board revoked Dr. Bailey's license, and she has not
|
||
applied for reinstatement in any state to date. (quoted from legal
|
||
transcript of the case of Ruth Bailey, M.D. Medical Licensing Board of
|
||
Indiana Cause No. 83 MLB 038) As is customary, no reason was given for
|
||
her name change.
|
||
|
||
It strains credibility and insults the intelligence of the reader to
|
||
be asked to rely on a work of such sloppy research and shaky
|
||
foundations as a "reference work".
|
||
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
Editorial Policies
|
||
|
||
CultWatch Response is published by CultWatch Response, Inc., a
|
||
non-profit Corporation under the laws of the State of Colorado. We
|
||
publish many original works in the interest of supplying law
|
||
enforcement officials with information on the Craft in the United
|
||
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|
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other sources.
|
||
|
||
Each issue is distributed to our mailing list, including subscribers,
|
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|
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|
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|
||
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|
||
|
||
We welcome articles, reviews, etc. We do ask that our contributors not
|
||
UNFAIRLY promote any race, cultural group, either sex, or any magickal
|
||
group or tradition above another. We emphasize careful research and/or
|
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|
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|
||
|
||
CultWatch Response, Inc., is supported only by subscription revenues
|
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|
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|
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|
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|
||
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
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|
||
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