2801 lines
146 KiB
Plaintext
2801 lines
146 KiB
Plaintext
File: FBIAbuse
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INVESTIGATOR'S GUIDE TO ALLEGATIONS OF "RITUAL" CHILD ABUSE
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January 1992
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Kenneth V. Lanning
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Supervisory Special Agent
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Behavioral Science Unit
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National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime
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Federal Bureau of Investigation
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FBI Academy
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Quantico, Virginia 22135
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1. Introduction.
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2. Historical Overview.
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-- a. "Stranger Danger".
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-- b. Intrafamilial Child Sexual Abuse.
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-- c. Return to "Stranger Danger".
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-- d. The Acquaintance Molester.
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-- e. Satanism: A New Form of "Stranger Danger".
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3. Law Enforcement Training.
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4. Definitions.
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-- a. What is Ritual?
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-- b. What is "Ritual" Child Abuse?
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-- c. What Makes a Crime Satanic, Occult, or Ritualistic?
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5. Multidimensional Child Sex Rings.
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-- a. Dynamics of Cases.
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---- (1) Multiple Young Victims.
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---- (2) Multiple Offenders.
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---- (3) Fear as a Controlling Tactic.
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---- (4) Bizarre or Ritualistic Activity.
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-- b. Characteristics of Multidimensional Child Sex Rings.
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---- (1) Female Offenders.
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---- (2) Situational Molesters.
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---- (3) Male and Female Victims.
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---- (4) Multidimensional Motivation.
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---- (5) Pornography and Paraphernalia.
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---- (6) Control through Fear.
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-- c. Scenarios.
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---- (1) Adult Survivors.
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---- (2) Day Care Cases.
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---- (3) Family/Isolated Neighborhood Cases.
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---- (4) Custody/Visitation Disputes.
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-- d. Why Are Victims Alleging Things that Do Not Seem to be True?
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6. Alternative Explanations.
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-- a. Pathological Distortion.
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-- b. Traumatic Memory.
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-- c. Normal Childhood Fears and Fantasy.
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-- d. Misperception, Confusion, and Trickery.
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-- e. Overzealous Intervenors.
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-- f. Urban Legends.
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-- g. Combination.
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7. Do Victims Lie About Sexual Abuse and Exploitation?
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-- a. Personal Knowledge.
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-- b. Other Children or Victims.
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-- c. Media.
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-- d. Suggestions and Leading Questions.
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-- e. Misperception and Confusion.
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-- f. Education and Awareness Programs.
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8. Law Enforcement Perspective.
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9. Investigating Multidimensional Child Sex Rings.
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-- a. Minimize Satanic/Occult Aspect.
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-- b. Keep Investigation and Religious Beliefs Separate.
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-- c. Listen to the Victims.
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-- d. Assess and Evaluate Victim Statements.
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-- e. Evaluate Contagion.
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-- f. Establish Communication with Parents.
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-- g. Develop a Contingency Plan.
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-- h. Multidisciplinary Task Forces.
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-- i. Summary.
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10. Conclusion.
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11. References.
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12. Suggested Reading.
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1. INTRODUCTION
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Since 1981 I have been assigned to the Behavioral Science Unit at
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the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia, and have specialized in
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studying all aspects of the sexual victimization of children. The
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FBI Behavioral Science Unit provides assistance to criminal justice
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professionals in the United States and foreign countries. It
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attempts to develop practical applications of the behavioral
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sciences to the criminal justice system. As a result of training and
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research conducted by the Unit and its successes in analyzing
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violent crime, many professionals contact the Behavioral Science
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Unit for assistance and guidance in dealing with violent crime,
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especially those cases considered different, unusual, or bizarre.
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This service is provided at no cost and is not limited to crimes
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under the investigative jurisdiction of the FBI.
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In 1983 and 1984, when I first began to hear stories of what sounded
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like satanic or occult activity in connection with allegations of
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sexual victimization of children (allegations that have come to be
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referred to most often as "ritual" child abuse), I tended to believe
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them. I had been dealing with bizarre, deviant behavior for many
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years and had long since realized that almost anything is possible.
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Just when you think that you have heard it all, along comes another
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strange case. The idea that there are a few cunning, secretive
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individuals in positions of power somewhere in this country
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regularly killing a few people as part of some satanic ritual or
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ceremony and getting away with it is certainly within the realm of
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possibility. But the number of alleged cases began to grow and grow.
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We now have hundreds of victims alleging that thousands of offenders
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are abusing and even murdering tens of thousands of people as part
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of organized satanic cults, and there is little or no corroborative
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evidence. The very reason many "experts" cite for believing these
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allegations (i.e. many victims, who never met each other, reporting
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the same events), is the primary reason I began to question at least
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some aspects of these allegations.
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I have devoted more than seven years part-time, and eleven years
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full-time, of my professional life to researching, training, and
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consulting in the area of the sexual victimization of children. The
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issues of child sexual abuse and exploitation are a big part of my
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professional life's work. I have no reason to deny their existence
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or nature. In fact I have done everything I can to make people more
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aware of the problem Some have even blamed me for helping to create
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the hysteria that has led to these bizarre allegations. I can accept
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no outside income and am paid the same salary by the FBI whether or
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not children are abused and exploited - and whether the number is
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one or one million. As someone deeply concerned about and
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professionally committed to the issue, I did not lightly question
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the allegations of hundreds of victims child sexual abuse and
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exploitation.
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In response to accusations by a few that I am a "satanist" who has
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infiltrated the FBI to facilitate cover-up, how does anyone (or
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should anyone have to) disprove such allegations? Although reluctant
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to dignify such absurd accusations with a reply, all I can say to
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those who have made such allegations that they are wrong and to
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those who heard such allegations is to carefully consider the
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source.
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The reason I have taken the position I have is not because I support
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or believe in "satanism", but because I sincerely believe that my
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approach is the proper and most effective investigative strategy. I
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believe that my approach is in the best interest of victims of child
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sexual abuse. It would have been easy to sit back, as many have, and
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say nothing publicly about this controversy. I have spoken out and
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published on this issue because I am concerned about the credibility
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of the child sexual abuse issue and outraged that, in some cases,
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individuals are getting away with molesting children because we
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can't prove they are satanic devil worshippers who engage in
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brainwashing, human sacrifice, and cannibalism as part of a large
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conspiracy.
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There are many valid perspectives from which to assess and evaluate
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victim allegations of sex abuse and exploitation. Parents may choose
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to believe simply because their children make the claims. The level
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of proof necessary may be minimal because the consequences of
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believing are within the family. One parent correctly told me, "I
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believe what my child needs me to believe."
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Therapists may choose to believe simply because their professional
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assessment is that their patient believes the victimization and
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describes it so vividly. The level of proof necessary may be no more
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than therapeutic evaluation because the consequences are between
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therapist and patient. No independent corroboration may be required.
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A social worker must have more real, tangible evidence of abuse in
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order to take protective action and initiate legal proceedings. The
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level of proof necessary must be higher because the consequences
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(denial of visitation, foster care) are greater.
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The law enforcement officer deals with the criminal justice system.
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The levels of proof necessary are reasonable suspicion, probable
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cause, and beyond a reasonable doubt because the consequences
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(criminal investigation, search and seizure, arrest, incarceration)
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are so great. This discussion will focus primarily on the criminal
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justice system and the law enforcement perspective. The level of
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proof necessary for taking action on allegations of criminal acts
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must be more than simply the victim alleged it and it is possible.
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This in no way denies the validity and importance of the parental,
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therapeutic, social welfare, or any other perspective of these
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allegations.
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When, however, therapists and other professionals begin to conduct
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training, publish articles, and communicate through the media, the
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consequences become greater, and therefore the level of proof must
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be greater. The amount of corroboration necessary to act upon
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allegations of abuse is dependent upon the consequences of such
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action. We need to be concerned about the distribution and
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publication of unsubstantiated allegations of bizarre sexual abuse.
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Information needs to be disseminated to encourage communication and
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research about the phenomena. The risks, however, of intervenor and
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victim "contagion" and public hysteria are potential negative
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aspects of such dissemination. Because of the highly emotional and
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religious nature of this topic, there is a greater possibility that
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the spreading of information will result in a kind of self-
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fulfilling prophesy.
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If such extreme allegations are going to be disseminated to the
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general public, they must be presented in the context of being
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assessed and evaluated, at least, from the professional perspective
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of the disseminator and, at best, also from the professional
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perspective of relevant others. This is what I will attempt to do in
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this discussion. The assessment and evaluation of such allegations
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are areas where law enforcement, mental health, and other
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professionals (anthropologists, folklorists, sociologists,
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historians, engineers, surgeons, etc.) may be of some assistance to
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each other in validating these cases individually and in general.
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2. HISTORICAL OVERVIEW
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In order to attempt to deal with extreme allegations of what
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constitute child sex rings, it is important to have an historical
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perspective of society's attitudes about child sexual abuse. I will
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provide a brief synopsis of recent attitudes in the United States
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here, but those desiring more detailed information about such
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societal attitudes, particularly in other cultures and in the more
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distant past, should refer to Florence Rush's book _The Best Kept
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Secret: Sexual Abuse of Children_ (1980) and Sander J. Breiner's
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book _Slaughter of the Innocents_ (1990).
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Society's attitude about child sexual abuse and exploitation can be
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summed up in one word: *denial*. Most people do not want to hear
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about it and would prefer to pretend that child sexual victimization
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just does not occur. Today, however, it is difficult to pretend that
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it does not happen. Stories and reports about child sexual
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victimization are daily occurrences.
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It is important for professionals dealing with child sexual abuse to
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recognize and learn to manage this denial of a serious problem.
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Professionals must overcome the denial and encourage society to deal
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with, report, and prevent sexual victimization of children.
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Some professionals, however, in their zeal to make American society
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more aware of this victimization, tend to exaggerate the problem.
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Presentations and literature with poorly documented or misleading
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claims about one in three children being sexually molested, the $5
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billion child pornography industry, child slavery rings, and 50,000
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stranger-abducted children are not uncommon. The problem is bad
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enough; it is not necessary to exaggerate it. Professionals should
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cite reputable and scientific studies and note the sources of
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information. If they do not, when the exaggerations and distortions
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are discovered, their credibility and the credibility of the issue
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are lost.
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-- a. "STRANGER DANGER".
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During the 1950s and 1960s the primary focus in the literature and
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discussions on sexual abuse of children was on "stranger danger" -
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the dirty old man in the wrinkled raincoat. If one could not deny
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the existence of child sexual abuse, one described victimization in
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simplistic terms of good and evil. The "stranger danger" approach to
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preventing child sexual abuse is clear-cut. We immediately know who
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the good guys and bad guys are and what they look like.
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The FBI distributed a poster that epitomized this attitude. It
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showed a man, with his hat pulled down, hiding behind a tree with a
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bag of candy in his hands. He was waiting for a sweet little girl
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walking home from school alone. At the top it read: "Boys and Girls,
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color the page, memorize the rules." At the bottom it read: "For
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your protection, remember to turn down gifts from strangers, and
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refuse rides offered by strangers." The poster clearly contrasts the
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evil of the offender with the goodness of the child victim.
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The myth of the child molester as the dirty old man in the wrinkled
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raincoat is now being reevaluated, based on what we now know about
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the kinds of people who victimize children. The fact is a child
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molester can look like anyone else and even be someone we know and
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like.
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There is another myth that is still with us and is far less likely
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to be discussed. This is the myth of the child victim as a
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completely innocent little girl walking down the street minding her
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own business. It may be more important to dispel this myth than the
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myth of the evil offender, especially when talking about the sexual
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exploitation of children and child sex rings. Child victims can be
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boys as well as girls, and not all victims are little "angels".
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Society seems to have a problem dealing with any sexual abuse case
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in which the offender is not completely "bad" or the victim is not
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completely "good". Child victims who, for example, simply behave
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like human beings and respond to the attention and affection of
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offenders by voluntarily and repeatedly returning to the offender's
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home are troubling. It confuses us to see the victims in child
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pornography giggling or laughing. At professional conferences on
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child sexual abuse, child prostitution is almost never discussed. It
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is the form of sexual victimization of children most unlike the
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stereotype of the innocent girl victim. Child prostitutes, by
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definition, participate in and often initiate their victimization.
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Furthermore child prostitutes and the participants in child sex
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rings are frequently boys. One therapist recently told me that a
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researcher's data on child molestation were misleading because many
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of the child victims in question were child prostitutes. This
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implies that child prostitutes are not "real" child victims. In a
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survey by the _Los Angeles Times_, only 37 percent of those
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responding thought that child prostitution constituted child sexual
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abuse (Timnik, 1985). Whether or not it seems fair, when adults and
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children have sex, the child is always the victim.
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-- b. INTRAFAMILIAL CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE.
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During the 1970s, primarily as a result of the women's movement,
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society began to learn more about the sexual victimization of
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children. We began to realize that most children are sexually
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molested by someone they know who is usually a relative - a father,
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step-father, uncle, grandfather, older brother, or even a female
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relative. Some mitigate the difficulty of accepting this by adopting
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the view that only members of socio-economic groups other than
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theirs engage in such behavior.
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It quickly became apparent that warnings about not taking gifts from
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strangers were not good enough to prevent child sexual abuse.
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Consequently, we began to develop prevention programs based on more
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complex concepts, such as good touching and bad touching. the
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"yucky" feeling, and the child's right to say no. These are not the
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kinds of things you can easily and effectively communicate in fifty
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minutes to hundreds of kids packed into a school auditorium. These
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are very difficult issues, and programs must he carefully developed
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and evaluated.
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In the late 1970s child sexual abuse became almost synonymous with
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incest, and incest meant father-daughter sexual relations.
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Therefore, the focus of child sexual abuse intervention became
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father-daughter incest. Even today, the vast majority of training
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materials, articles, and books on this topic refer to child sexual
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abuse only in terms of intrafamilial father-daughter incest.
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Incest is, in fact, sexual relations between individuals of any age
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too closely related to marry. It need not necessarily involve an
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adult and a child, and it goes beyond child sexual abuse. But more
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importantly child sexual abuse goes beyond father-daughter incest.
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Intrafamilial incest between an adult and child may be the most
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common form of child sexual abuse, but it is not the only form.
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The progress of the 1970s in recognizing that child sexual abuse was
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not simply a result of "stranger danger" was an important
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breakthrough in dealing with society's denial. The battle, however,
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is not over. The persistent voice of society luring us back to the
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more simple concept of "stranger danger" may never go away. It is
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the voice of denial.
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-- c. RETURN TO "STRANGER DANGER".
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In the early 1980s the issue of missing children rose to prominence
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and was focused primarily on the stranger abduction of little
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children. Runaways, throwaways, noncustodial abductions, nonfamily
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abductions of teenagers - all major problems within the missing
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children's issue - were almost forgotten. People no longer wanted to
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hear about good touching and bad touching and the child's right to
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say "no". They wanted to be told, in thirty minutes or less, how
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they could protect their children from abduction by strangers. We
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were back to the horrible but simple and clear-cut concept of
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"stranger danger".
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In the emotional zeal over the problem of missing children, isolated
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horror stories and distorted numbers were sometimes used. The
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American public was led to believe that most of the missing children
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had been kidnapped by pedophiles - a new term for child molesters.
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The media, profiteers, and well-intentioned zealots all played big
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roles in this hype and hysteria over missing children.
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-- d. THE ACQUAINTANCE MOLESTER.
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Only recently has society begun to deal openly with a critical piece
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in the puzzle of child sexual abuse - acquaintance molestation. This
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seems to be the most difficult aspect of the problem for us to face.
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People seem more willing to accept a father or stepfather,
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particularly one from another socio-economic group, as a child
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molester than a parish priest, a next-door neighbor, a police
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officer, a pediatrician, an FBI agent, or a Scout leader. The
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acquaintance molester, by definition, is one of us. These kinds of
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molesters have always existed, but our society has not been willing
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to accept that fact.
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Sadly, one of the main reasons that the criminal justice system and
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the public were forced to confront the problem of acquaintance
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molestation was the preponderance of lawsuits arising from the
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negligence of many institutions.
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One of the unfortunate outcomes of society's preference for the
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"stranger danger" concept is what I call "say no, yell, and tell"
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guilt. This is the result of prevention programs that tell potential
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child victims to avoid sexual abuse by saying no, yelling, and
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telling. This might work with the stranger hiding behind a tree.
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Adolescent boys seduced by a Scout leader or children who actively
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participate in their victimization often feel guilty and blame
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themselves because they did not do what they were "supposed" to do.
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They may feel a need to describe their victimization in more
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socially acceptable but sometimes inaccurate ways that relieve them
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of this guilt.
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While American society has become increasingly more aware of the
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problem of the acquaintance molester and related problems such as
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child pornography, the voice calling us back to "stranger danger"
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still persists.
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-- e. SATANISM: A NEW FORM OF "STRANGER DANGER".
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In today's version of "stranger danger", it is the satanic devil
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worshipers who are snatching and victimizing the children. Many who
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warned us in the early 1980s about pedophiles snatching fifty
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thousand kids a year now contend they were wrong only about who was
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doing the kidnapping, not about the number abducted. This is again
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the desire for the simple and clear-cut explanation for a complex
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problem.
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For those who know anything about criminology, one of the oldest
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theories of crime is demonology: The devil makes you do it. This
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makes it even easier to deal with the child molester who is the
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"pillar of the community". It is not his fault; it is not our fault.
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There is no way we could have known; the devil made him do it. This
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explanation has tremendous appeal because, like "stranger danger",
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it presents the clear-cut, black-and-white struggle between good and
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evil as the explanation for child abduction, exploitation, and
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abuse.
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In regard to satanic "ritual" abuse, today we may not be where we
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were with incest in the 1960s, but where we were with missing
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children in the early 1980s. The best data now available (the 1990
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_National Incidence Studies on Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and
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Thrownaway Children in America_) estimate the number of
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stereotypical child abductions at between 200 and 300 a year, and
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the number of stranger abduction homicides of children at between 43
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and 147 a year. Approximately half of the abducted children are
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teenagers. Today's facts are significantly different from
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yesterday's perceptions, and those who exaggerated the problem,
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however well-intentioned, have lost credibility and damaged the
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reality of the problem.
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3. LAW ENFORCEMENT TRAINING
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The belief that there is a connection between satanism and crime is
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certainly not new. As previously stated, one of the oldest theories
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concerning the causes of crime is demonology. Fear of satanic or
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occult activity has peaked from time to time throughout history.
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Concern in the late 1970s focused primarily on "unexplained" deaths
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and mutilations of animals, and in recent years has focused on child
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sexual abuse and the alleged human sacrifice of missing children. In
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1999 it will probably focus on the impending "end of the world".
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Today satanism and a wide variety of other terms are used
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interchangeably in reference to certain crimes. This discussion will
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analyze the nature of "satanic, occult, ritualistic" crime primarily
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as it pertains to the abuse of children and focus on appropriate
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*law enforcement* responses to it.
|
|
|
|
Recently a flood of law enforcement seminars and conferences have
|
|
dealt with satanic and ritualistic crime. These training conferences
|
|
have various titles, such as "Occult in Crime", "Satanic Cults",
|
|
'Ritualistic Crime Seminar", "Satanic Influences in Homicide",
|
|
"Occult Crimes, Satanism and Teen Suicide", and "Ritualistic Abuse
|
|
of Children".
|
|
|
|
The typical conference runs from one to three days, and many of them
|
|
include the same presenters and instructors. A wide variety of
|
|
topics are usually discussed during this training either as
|
|
individual presentations by different instructors or grouped
|
|
together by one or more instructors. Typical topics covered include
|
|
the following:
|
|
|
|
-- Historical overview of satanism, witchcraft, and paganism from
|
|
ancient to modern times.
|
|
|
|
-- Nature and influence of fantasy role-playing games, such as
|
|
"Dungeons and Dragons".
|
|
|
|
-- Lyrics, symbolism, and influence of rock and roll, Heavy Metal,
|
|
and Black Metal music.
|
|
|
|
-- Teenage "stoner" gangs, their symbols, and their vandalism.
|
|
|
|
-- Teenage suicide by adolescents dabbling in the occult.
|
|
|
|
-- Crimes committed by self-styled satanic practitioners, including
|
|
grave and church desecrations and robberies, animal mutilations, and
|
|
even murders.
|
|
|
|
-- Ritualistic abuse of children as part of bizarre ceremonies and
|
|
human sacrifices.
|
|
|
|
-- Organized, Traditional, or Multigenerational satanic groups
|
|
involved in organized conspiracies, such as taking over day care
|
|
centers, infiltrating police departments, and trafficking in human
|
|
sacrifice victims.
|
|
|
|
-- The "Big Conspiracy" theory, which implies that satanists are
|
|
responsible for such things as Adolph Hitler, World War II,
|
|
abortion, illegal drugs, pornography, Watergate, and Irangate, and
|
|
have infiltrated the Department of Justice, the Pentagon, and the
|
|
White House.
|
|
|
|
During the conferences, these nine areas are linked together through
|
|
the liberal use of the word "satanism" and some common symbolism
|
|
(pentagrams, 666, demons, etc.). The implication often is that all
|
|
are part of a continuum of behavior, a single problem or some common
|
|
conspiracy. The distinctions among the different areas are blurred
|
|
even if occasionally a presenter tries to make them. The information
|
|
presented is a mixture of fact, theory, opinion, fantasy, and
|
|
paranoia, and because some of it can be proven or corroborated
|
|
(symbols on rock albums, graffiti on walls, desecration of
|
|
cemeteries, vandalism, etc.), the implication is that it is all true
|
|
and documented. Material produced by religious organizations,
|
|
photocopies and slides of newspaper articles, and videotapes of
|
|
tabloid television programs are used to supplement the training and
|
|
are presented as "evidence" of the existence and nature of the
|
|
problem.
|
|
|
|
All of this is complicated by the fact that almost any discussion of
|
|
satanism and the occult is interpreted in the light of the religious
|
|
beliefs of those in the audience. Faith, not logic and reason,
|
|
governs the religious beliefs of most people. As a result, some
|
|
normally skeptical law enforcement officers accept the information
|
|
disseminated at these conferences without critically evaluating it
|
|
or questioning the sources. Officers who do not normally depend on
|
|
church groups for law enforcement criminal intelligence, who know
|
|
that media accounts of their own cases are notoriously inaccurate,
|
|
and who scoff at and joke about tabloid television accounts of
|
|
bizarre behavior suddenly embrace such material when presented in
|
|
the context of satanic activity. Individuals not in law enforcement
|
|
seem even more likely to do so. Other disciplines, especially
|
|
therapists, have also conducted training conferences on the
|
|
characteristics and identification of "ritual" child abuse. Nothing
|
|
said at such conferences will change the religious beliefs of those
|
|
in attendance. Such conferences illustrate the highly emotional
|
|
nature of and the ambiguity and wide variety of terms involved in
|
|
this issue.
|
|
|
|
4. DEFINITIONS
|
|
|
|
The words "satanic", "occult", and "ritual" are often used
|
|
interchangeably. It is difficult to define "satanism" precisely. No
|
|
attempt will be made to do so here However, it is important to
|
|
realize that, for some people, any religious belief system other
|
|
than their own is "satanic". The Ayatollah Khomeini and Saddam
|
|
Hussein referred to the United States as the "Great Satan". In the
|
|
British Parliament a Protestant leader called the Pope the
|
|
Antichrist. In a book titled _Prepare For War_ (1987), Rebecca
|
|
Brown, M.D. has a chapter entitled "Is Roman Catholicism
|
|
Witchcraft?" Dr. Brown also lists among the "doorways" to satanic
|
|
power and/or demon infestation the following: fortune tellers,
|
|
horoscopes, fraternity oaths, vegetarianism, yoga, self-hypnosis,
|
|
relaxation tapes, acupuncture, biofeedback, fantasy role-playing
|
|
games, adultery, homosexuality, pornography, judo, karate, and rock
|
|
music. Dr. Brown states that rock music "was a carefully
|
|
masterminded plan by none other than Satan himself" (p. 84). 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.
|
|
|
|
In books, lectures, handout material, and conversations, I have
|
|
heard all of the following referred to as satanism:
|
|
|
|
-- Church of Satan
|
|
-- Ordo Templi Orientis
|
|
-- Temple of Set
|
|
-- Demonology
|
|
-- Witchcraft
|
|
-- Occult
|
|
-- Paganism
|
|
-- Santeria
|
|
-- Voodoo
|
|
-- Rosicrucians
|
|
-- Freemasonry
|
|
-- Knights Templar
|
|
-- Stoner Gangs
|
|
-- Heavy Metal Music
|
|
-- Rock Music
|
|
-- KKK
|
|
-- Nazis
|
|
-- Skinheads
|
|
-- Scientology
|
|
-- Unification Church
|
|
-- The Way
|
|
-- Hare Krishna
|
|
-- Rajneesh
|
|
-- Religious Cults
|
|
-- New Age
|
|
-- Astrology
|
|
-- Channeling
|
|
-- Transcendental Meditation
|
|
-- Holistic Medicine
|
|
-- Buddhism
|
|
-- Hinduism
|
|
-- Mormonism
|
|
-- Islam
|
|
-- Orthodox Church
|
|
-- Roman Catholicism
|
|
|
|
At law enforcement training conferences, it is witchcraft, santeria,
|
|
paganism, and the occult that are most often referred to as forms of
|
|
satanism. It may be a matter of definition, but these things are not
|
|
necessarily the same as traditional satanism. The worship of lunar
|
|
goddesses and nature and the practice of fertility rituals are not
|
|
satanism. Santeria is a combination of 17th century Roman
|
|
Catholicism and African paganism.
|
|
|
|
Occult means simply "hidden". All unreported or unsolved crimes
|
|
might be regarded as occult, but in this context the term refers to
|
|
the action or influence of supernatural powers, some secret
|
|
knowledge of them, or an interest in paranormal phenomena, and does
|
|
not imply satanism, evil, wrongdoing, or crime. Indeed,
|
|
historically, the principal crimes deserving of consideration as
|
|
"occult crimes" are the frauds perpetrated by faith healers, fortune
|
|
tellers and "psychics" who for a fee claim cures, arrange
|
|
visitations with dead loved ones, and commit other financial crimes
|
|
against the gullible.
|
|
|
|
Many individuals define satanism from a totally Christian
|
|
perspective, using this word to describe the power of evil in the
|
|
world. With this definition, any crimes, especially those which are
|
|
particularly bizarre, repulsive, or cruel, can be viewed as satanic
|
|
in nature. Yet it is just as difficult to precisely define satanism
|
|
as it is to precisely define Christianity or any complex spiritual
|
|
belief system.
|
|
|
|
-- a. WHAT IS RITUAL?
|
|
|
|
The biggest confusion is over the word "ritual". During training
|
|
conferences on this topic, ritual almost always comes to mean
|
|
"satanic" or at least "spiritual". "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.
|
|
|
|
Cultural rituals could include such things as what a family eats on
|
|
Thanksgiving Day, or when and how presents are opened at Christmas.
|
|
The initiation ceremonies of fraternities, sororities, gangs, and
|
|
other social clubs are other examples of cultural rituals.
|
|
|
|
Since 1972 I have lectured about sexual ritual, which is nothing
|
|
more than repeatedly engaging in an act or series of acts in a
|
|
certain manner because of a *sexual* need. In order to become
|
|
aroused and/or gratified, a person must engage in the act in a
|
|
certain way. This sexual ritual can include such things as the
|
|
physical characteristics, age, or gender of the victim, the
|
|
particular sequence of acts, the bringing or taking of specific
|
|
objects, and the use of certain words or phrases. This is more than
|
|
the concept of M.O. (Method of Operation) known to most police
|
|
officers. M.O. is something done by an offender because it works.
|
|
Sexual ritual is something done by an offender because of a need.
|
|
Deviant acts, such as urinating on, defecating on, or even
|
|
eviscerating a victim, are far more likely to be the result of
|
|
sexual ritual than religious or "satanic" ritual.
|
|
|
|
From a criminal investigative perspective, two other forms of
|
|
ritualism must be recognized. The _Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
|
|
of Mental Disorders_ (DSM-III-R) (APA, 1987) defines "Obsessive-
|
|
Compulsive Disorder" as "repetitive, purposeful, and intentional
|
|
behaviors that are performed in response to an obsession, or
|
|
according to certain rules or in a stereotyped fashion" (p. 247).
|
|
Such compulsive behavior frequently involves rituals. Although such
|
|
behavior usually involves noncriminal activity such as excessive
|
|
hand washing or checking that doors are locked, occasionally
|
|
compulsive ritualism can be part of criminal activity. Certain
|
|
gamblers or firesetters, for example, are thought by some
|
|
authorities to be motivated in part through such compulsions. Ritual
|
|
can also stem from psychotic hallucinations and delusions. A crime
|
|
can be committed in a precise manner because a voice told the
|
|
offender to do it that way or because a divine mission required it.
|
|
|
|
To make this more confusing, cultural, religious, sexual, and
|
|
psychological ritual can overlap. Some psychotic people are
|
|
preoccupied with religious delusions and hear the voice of God or
|
|
Satan telling them to do things of a religious nature. Offenders who
|
|
feel little, if any, guilt over their crimes may need little
|
|
justification for their antisocial behavior. As human beings,
|
|
however, they may have fears, concerns, and anxiety over getting
|
|
away with their criminal acts. It is difficult to pray to God for
|
|
success in doing things that are against His Commandments. A
|
|
negative spiritual belief system may fulfill their human need for
|
|
assistance from and belief in a greater power or to deal with their
|
|
superstitions. Compulsive ritualism (e.g., excessive cleanliness or
|
|
fear of disease) can be introduced into sexual behavior. Even many
|
|
"normal" people have a need for order and predictability and
|
|
therefore may engage in family or work rituals. Under stress or in
|
|
times of change, this need for order and ritual may increase.
|
|
|
|
Ritual crime may fulfill the cultural, spiritual, sexual, and
|
|
psychological needs of an offender. Crimes may be ritualistically
|
|
motivated or may have ritualistic elements. The ritual behavior may
|
|
also fulfill basic criminal needs to manipulate victims, get rid of
|
|
rivals, send a message to enemies, and intimidate co-conspirators.
|
|
The leaders of a group may want to play upon the beliefs and
|
|
superstitions of those around them and try to convince accomplices
|
|
and enemies that they, the leaders, have special or "supernatural"
|
|
powers.
|
|
|
|
The important point for the criminal investigator is to realize that
|
|
most ritualistic criminal behavior is not motivated simply by
|
|
satanic or any religious ceremonies. At some conferences, presenters
|
|
have attempted to make an issue of distinguishing between "ritual",
|
|
"ritualized", and "ritualistic" abuse of children. These subtle
|
|
distinctions, however, seem to be of no significant value to the
|
|
criminal investigator.
|
|
|
|
-- c. WHAT IS "RITUAL" CHILD ABUSE?
|
|
|
|
I cannot define "ritual child abuse" precisely and prefer not to use
|
|
the term. I am frequently forced to use it (as throughout this
|
|
discussion) so that people will have some idea what I am discussing.
|
|
Use of the term, however, is confusing, misleading, and
|
|
counterproductive. The newer term "satanic ritual abuse"
|
|
(abbreviated "SRA") is even worse. Certain observations, however,
|
|
are important for investigative understanding.
|
|
|
|
Most people today use the term to refer to abuse of children that is
|
|
part of some evil spiritual belief system, which almost by
|
|
definition must be satanic.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Lawrence Pazder, coauthor of _Michelle Remembers_, defines
|
|
"ritualized abuse of children" as "repeated physical, emotional,
|
|
mental, and spiritual assaults combined with a systematic use of
|
|
symbols and secret ceremonies designed to turn a child against
|
|
itself, family, society, and God" (presentation, Richmond, Va., May
|
|
7,1987). He also states that "the sexual assault has ritualistic
|
|
meaning and is not for sexual gratification".
|
|
|
|
This definition may have value for academics, sociologists, and
|
|
therapists, but it creates potential problems for law enforcement.
|
|
Certain acts engaged in with children (i.e. kissing, touching,
|
|
appearing naked, etc.) may be criminal if performed for sexual
|
|
gratification. If the ritualistic acts were in fact performed for
|
|
spiritual indoctrination, potential prosecution can be jeopardized,
|
|
particularly if the acts can be defended as constitutionally
|
|
protected religious expression. The mutilation of a baby's genitals
|
|
for sadistic sexual pleasure is a crime. The circumcision of a
|
|
baby's genitals for religious reasons is most likely *not* a crime.
|
|
The intent of the acts is important for criminal prosecution.
|
|
|
|
Not all spiritually motivated ritualistic activity is satanic.
|
|
Santeria, witchcraft, voodoo, and most religious cults are not
|
|
satanism. In fact, most spiritually- or religiously-based abuse of
|
|
children has nothing to do with satanism. Most child abuse that
|
|
could be termed "ritualistic" by various definitions is more likely
|
|
to be physical and psychological rather than sexual in nature. If a
|
|
distinction needs to be made between satanic and nonsatanic child
|
|
abuse, the indicators for that distinction must be related to
|
|
specific satanic symbols, artifacts, or doctrine rather than the
|
|
mere presence of any ritualistic element.
|
|
|
|
Not all such ritualistic activity with a child is a crime. Almost
|
|
all parents with religious beliefs indoctrinate their children into
|
|
that belief system. Is male circumcision for religious reasons child
|
|
abuse? Is the religious circumcision of females child abuse? Does
|
|
having a child kneel on a hard floor reciting the rosary constitute
|
|
child abuse? Does having a child chant a satanic prayer or attend a
|
|
black mass constitute child abuse? Does a religious belief in
|
|
corporal punishment constitute child abuse? Does group care of
|
|
children in a commune or cult constitute child abuse? Does the fact
|
|
that any acts in question were performed with parental permission
|
|
affect the nature of the crime? Many ritualistic acts, whether
|
|
satanic or not, are simply not crimes. To open the Pandora's box of
|
|
labeling child abuse as "ritualistic" simply because it involves a
|
|
spiritual belief system means to apply the definition to all acts by
|
|
all spiritual belief systems. The day may come when many in the
|
|
forefront of concern about ritual abuse will regret they opened the
|
|
box.
|
|
|
|
When a victim describes and investigation corroborates what sounds
|
|
like ritualistic activity. several possibilities must be considered.
|
|
The ritualistic activity may be part of the excessive religiosity of
|
|
mentally disturbed, even psychotic offenders. It may be a
|
|
misunderstood part of sexual ritual. The ritualistic activity may be
|
|
incidental to any real abuse. The offender may be involved in
|
|
ritualistic activity with a child and also may be abusing a child,
|
|
but one may have little or nothing to do with the other.
|
|
|
|
The offender may be deliberately engaging in ritualistic activity
|
|
with a child as part of child abuse and exploitation. The
|
|
motivation, however, may be not to indoctrinate the child into a
|
|
belief system, but to lower the inhibitions of, control, manipulate,
|
|
and/or confuse the child. In all the turmoil over this issue, it
|
|
would be very effective strategy for any child molester deliberately
|
|
to introduce ritualistic elements into his crime in order to confuse
|
|
the child and therefore the criminal justice system. This would,
|
|
however, make the activity M.O. and not ritual.
|
|
|
|
The ritualistic activity and the child abuse may be integral parts
|
|
of some spiritual belief system. In that case the greatest risk is
|
|
to the children of the practitioners. But this is true of all cults
|
|
and religions, not just satanic cults. A high potential of abuse
|
|
exists for any children raised in a group isolated from the
|
|
mainstream of society, especially if the group has a charismatic
|
|
leader whose orders are unquestioned and blindly obeyed by the
|
|
members. Sex, money, and power are often the main motivations of the
|
|
leaders of such cults.
|
|
|
|
-- c. WHAT MAKES A CRIME SATANIC, OCCULT, OR RITUALISTIC?
|
|
|
|
Some would answer that it is the offender's spiritual beliefs or
|
|
membership in a cult or church. If that is the criterion, why not
|
|
label the crimes committed by Protestants, Catholics, and Jews in
|
|
the same way? Are the atrocities of Jim Jones in Guyana Christian
|
|
crimes?
|
|
|
|
Some would answer that it is the presence of certain symbols in the
|
|
possession or home of the perpetrator. What does it mean then to
|
|
find a crucifix, Bible, or rosary in the possession or home of a
|
|
bank robber, embezzler, child molester, or murderer? If different
|
|
criminals possess the same symbols, are they necessarily part of one
|
|
big conspiracy?
|
|
|
|
Others would answer that it is the presence of certain symbols such
|
|
as pentagrams, inverted crosses, and 666 at the crime scene. What
|
|
does it mean then to find a cross spray painted on a wall or carved
|
|
into the body of a victim? What does it mean for a perpetrator, as
|
|
in one recent case profiled by my Unit, to leave a Bible tied to his
|
|
murder victim? What about the possibility that an offender
|
|
deliberately left such symbols to make it look like a "satanic"
|
|
crime?
|
|
|
|
Some would argue that it is the bizarreness or cruelness of the
|
|
crime: body mutilation, amputation, drinking of blood, eating of
|
|
flesh, use of urine or feces. Does this mean that all individuals
|
|
involved in lust murder, sadism, vampirism, cannibalism, urophilia,
|
|
and coprophilia are satanists or occult practitioners? What does
|
|
this say about the bizarre crimes of psychotic killers such as Ed
|
|
Gein or Richard Trenton Chase, both of whom mutilated their victims
|
|
as part of their psychotic delusions? Can a crime that is not
|
|
sexually deviant, bizarre, or exceptionally violent be satanic? Can
|
|
white collar crime be satanic?
|
|
|
|
A few might even answer that it is the fact that the crime was
|
|
committed on a date with satanic or occult significance (Halloween,
|
|
May Eve, etc.) or the fact that the perpetrator claims that Satan
|
|
told him to commit the crime. What does this mean for crimes
|
|
committed on Thanksgiving or Christmas? What does this say about
|
|
crimes committed by perpetrators who claim that God or Jesus told
|
|
them to do it? One note of interest is the fact that in handout and
|
|
reference material I have collected, the number of dates with
|
|
satanic or occult significance ranges from 8 to 110. This is
|
|
compounded by the fact that it is sometimes stated that satanists
|
|
can celebrate these holidays on several days on either side of the
|
|
official date or that the birthdays of practitioners can also be
|
|
holidays. The exact names and exact dates of the holidays and the
|
|
meaning of symbols listed may also vary depending on who prepared
|
|
the material The handout material is often distributed without
|
|
identifying the author or documenting the original source of the
|
|
information. It is then frequently photocopied by attendees and
|
|
passed on to other police officers with no one really knowing its
|
|
validity or origin.
|
|
|
|
Most, however, would probably answer that what makes a crime
|
|
satanic, occult, or ritualistic is the motivation for the crime. It
|
|
is a crime that is spiritually motivated by a religious belief
|
|
system. How then do we label the following true crimes?
|
|
|
|
-- Parents defy a court order and send their children to an
|
|
unlicensed Christian school.
|
|
|
|
-- Parents refuse to send their children to any school because they
|
|
are waiting for the second coming of Christ.
|
|
|
|
-- Parents beat their child to death because he or she will not
|
|
follow their Christian belief.
|
|
|
|
-- Parents violate child labor laws because they believe the Bible
|
|
requires such work.
|
|
|
|
-- Individuals bomb an abortion clinic or kidnap the doctor because
|
|
their religious belief system says abortion is murder.
|
|
|
|
-- A child molester reads the Bible to his victims in order to
|
|
justify his sex acts with them.
|
|
|
|
-- Parents refuse life-saving medical treatment for a child because
|
|
of their religious beliefs.
|
|
|
|
-- Parents starve and beat their child to death because their
|
|
minister said the child was possessed by demonic spirits.
|
|
|
|
Some people would argue that the Christians who committed the above
|
|
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. Religion was and is used to justify such social
|
|
behavior as the Crusades, the Inquisition, Apartheid, segregation,
|
|
and recent violence in Northern Ireland, India, Lebanon and Nigeria.
|
|
|
|
Who decides exactly what "satanists" believe? In this country, we
|
|
cannot even agree on what Christians believe. At many law
|
|
enforcement conferences The _Satanic Bible_ is used for this, and it
|
|
is often contrasted or compared with the Judeo-Christian Bible. The
|
|
_Satanic Bible_ is, in essence, a short paperback book written by
|
|
one man, Anton LaVey, in 1969. To compare it to a book written by
|
|
multiple authors over a period of thousands of years is ridiculous,
|
|
even ignoring the possibility of Divine revelation in the Bible.
|
|
What satanists believe certainly isn't limited to other people's
|
|
interpretation of a few books. More importantly it is subject to
|
|
some degree of interpretation by individual believers just as
|
|
Christianity is. Many admitted "satanists" claim they do not even
|
|
believe in God, the devil, or any supreme deity. The criminal
|
|
behavior of one person claiming belief in a religion does not
|
|
necessarily imply guilt or blame to others sharing that belief. In
|
|
addition, simply claiming membership in a religion does not
|
|
necessarily make you a member.
|
|
|
|
The fact is that far more crime and child abuse has been committed
|
|
by zealots in the name of God, Jesus, Mohammed, and other mainstream
|
|
religion than has ever been committed in the name of Satan. Many
|
|
people, including myself, don't like that statement, but the truth
|
|
of it is undeniable.
|
|
|
|
Although defining a crime as satanic, occult, or ritualistic would
|
|
probably involve a combination of the criteria set forth above, I
|
|
have been unable to clearly define such a crime. Each potential
|
|
definition presents a different set of problems when measured
|
|
against an objective, rational, and constitutional perspective. In a
|
|
crime with multiple subjects, each offender may have a different
|
|
motivation for the same crime. Whose motivation determines the label
|
|
for the crime? It is difficult to count or track something you
|
|
cannot even define.
|
|
|
|
I have discovered, however, that the facts of so-called "satanic
|
|
crimes" are often significantly different from what is described st
|
|
training conferences or in the media. The actual involvement of
|
|
satanism or the occult in these cases usually turns out to be
|
|
secondary, insignificant, or nonexistent. Occult or ritual crime
|
|
surveys done by the states of Michigan (1990) and Virginia (1991)
|
|
have only confirmed this "discovery". Some law enforcement officers,
|
|
unable to find serious "satanic" crime in their communities, assume
|
|
they are just lucky or vigilant and the serious problems must be in
|
|
other jurisdictions. The officers in the other jurisdictions, also
|
|
unable find it, assume the same.
|
|
|
|
5. MULTlDlMENSlONAL CHILD SEX RINGS
|
|
|
|
Sometime in early 1983 I was first contacted by a law enforcement
|
|
agency for guidance in what was then thought to be an unusual case.
|
|
The exact date of the contact is unknown because its significance
|
|
was not recognized at the time. In the months and years that
|
|
followed, I received more and more inquiries about "these kinds of
|
|
cases". The requests for assistance came (and continue to come) from
|
|
all over the United States. Many of the aspects of these cases
|
|
varied, but there were also some commonalties. Early on, however,
|
|
one particularly difficult and potentially significant issue began
|
|
to emerge.
|
|
|
|
These cases involved and continue to involve unsubstantiated
|
|
allegations of bizarre activity that are difficult either to prove
|
|
or disprove. Many of the unsubstantiated allegations, however, do
|
|
not seem to have occurred or even be possible. These cases seem to
|
|
call into question the credibility of victims of child sexual abuse
|
|
and exploitation. These are the most polarizing, frustrating, and
|
|
baffling cases I have encountered in more than 18 years of studying
|
|
the criminal aspects of deviant sexual behavior. I privately sought
|
|
answers, but said nothing publicly about those cases until 1985.
|
|
|
|
In October 1984 the problems in investigating and prosecuting one of
|
|
these cases in Jordan, Minnesota became publicly known. In February
|
|
1985, at the FBI Academy, the FBI sponsored and I coordinated the
|
|
first national seminar held to study "these kinds of cases". Later
|
|
in 1985, similar conferences sponsored by other organizations were
|
|
held in Washington, D.C.; Sacramento, California; and Chicago,
|
|
Illinois. These cases have also been discussed at many recent
|
|
regional and national conferences dealing with the sexual
|
|
victimization of children and Multiple Personality Disorder. Few
|
|
answers have come from these conferences. I continue to be contacted
|
|
on these cases on a regular basis. Inquiries have been received from
|
|
law enforcement officers, prosecutors, therapists, victims, families
|
|
of victims, and the media from all over the United States and now
|
|
foreign countries. I do not claim to understand completely all the
|
|
dynamics of these cases. I continue to keep an open mind and to
|
|
search for answers to the questions and solutions to the problems
|
|
they pose. This discussion is based on my analysis of the several
|
|
hundred of "these kinds of cases" on which I have consulted since
|
|
1983.
|
|
|
|
-- a. DYNAMICS OF CASES.
|
|
|
|
What are "these kinds of cases"? They were and continue to be
|
|
difficult to define. They all involve allegations of what sounds
|
|
like child sexual abuse, but with a combination of some atypical
|
|
dynamics. These cases seem to have the following four dynamics in
|
|
common: (1) multiple young victims, (2) multiple offenders, (3) fear
|
|
as the controlling tactic, and (4) bizarre or ritualistic activity.
|
|
|
|
---- (1) MULTIPLE YOUNG VICTIMS.
|
|
|
|
In almost all the cases the sexual abuse was alleged to have taken
|
|
place or at least begun when the victims were between the ages of
|
|
birth and six. This very young age may be an important key to
|
|
understanding these cases. In addition the victims all described
|
|
multiple children being abused. The numbers ranged from three or
|
|
four to as many as several hundred victims.
|
|
|
|
---- (2) MULTIPLE OFFENDERS.
|
|
|
|
In almost all the cases the victims reported numerous offenders. The
|
|
numbers ranged from two or three all the way up to dozens of
|
|
offenders. In one recent case the victims alleged 400-500 offenders
|
|
were involved. Interestingly many of the offenders (perhaps as many
|
|
as 40-50 percent) were reported to be females. The multiple
|
|
offenders were often family members and were described as being part
|
|
of a cult, occult, or satanic group.
|
|
|
|
---- (3) FEAR AS CONTROLLING TACTIC.
|
|
|
|
Child molesters in general are able to maintain control and ensure
|
|
the secrecy of their victims in a variety of ways. These include
|
|
attention and affection, coercion, blackmail, embarrassment,
|
|
threats, and violence. In almost all of these cases I have studied,
|
|
the victims described being frightened and reported threats against
|
|
themselves, their families, their friends, and even their pets. They
|
|
reported witnessing acts of violence perpetrated to reinforce this
|
|
fear. It is my belief that this fear and the traumatic memory of the
|
|
events may be another key to understanding many of these cases.
|
|
|
|
---- (4) BIZARRE OR RITUALISTIC ACTIVITY.
|
|
|
|
This is the most difficult dynamic of these cases to describe.
|
|
"Bizarre" is a relative term. Is the use of urine or feces in sexual
|
|
activity bizarre, or is it a well-documented aspect of sexual
|
|
deviancy, or is it part of established satanic rituals? As
|
|
previously discussed, the ritualistic aspect is even more difficult
|
|
to define. How do you distinguish acts performed in a precise manner
|
|
to enhance or allow sexual arousal from those acts that fulfill
|
|
spiritual needs or comply with "religious" ceremonies? Victims in
|
|
these cases report ceremonies, chanting, robes and costumes, drugs,
|
|
use of urine and feces, animal sacrifice, torture, abduction,
|
|
mutilation, murder, and even cannibalism and vampirism. All things
|
|
considered, the word "bizarre" is probably preferable to the word
|
|
"ritual" to describe this activity.
|
|
|
|
When I was contacted on these cases, it was very common for a
|
|
prosecutor or investigator to say that the alleged victims have been
|
|
evaluated by an "expert" who will stake his or her professional
|
|
reputation on the fact that the victims are telling the "truth".
|
|
When asked how many cases this expert had previously evaluated
|
|
involving these four dynamics, the answer was always the same: none!
|
|
The experts usually had only dealt with one-on-one intrafamilial
|
|
sexual abuse cases. Recently an even more disturbing trend has
|
|
developed. More and more of the victims have been identified or
|
|
evaluated by experts who have been trained to identify and
|
|
specialize in satanic ritual abuse.
|
|
|
|
-- b. CHARACTERISTICS OF MULTIDIMENSIONAL CHILD SEX RINGS.
|
|
|
|
As previously stated, a major problem in communicating, training,
|
|
and researching in this area is the term used to define "these kinds
|
|
of cases". Many refer to them as "ritual, ritualistic, or ritualized
|
|
abuse of children cases" or "satanic ritual abuse (SRA) cases". Such
|
|
words carry specialized meanings for many people and might imply
|
|
that all these cases are connected to occult or satanic activity. If
|
|
ritual abuse is not necessarily occult or satanic, but is "merely"
|
|
severe, repeated, prolonged abuse, why use a term that, in the minds
|
|
of so many, implies such specific motivation?
|
|
|
|
Others refer to these cases as "multioffender/multivictim cases".
|
|
The problem with this term is that most multiple offender and victim
|
|
cases do not involve the four dynamics discussed above.
|
|
|
|
For want of a better term, I have decided to refer to "these kinds
|
|
of cases" as "multidimensional child sex rings". Right now I seem to
|
|
be the only one using this term. I am, however, not sure if this is
|
|
truly a distinct kind of child sex ring case or just a case not
|
|
properly handled. Following are the general characteristics of these
|
|
multidimensional child sex ring cases as contrasted with more common
|
|
historical child sex ring cases [see my monograph _Child Sex Rings:
|
|
A Behavioral Analysis] (1989) for a discussion of the
|
|
characteristics of historical child sex ring cases].
|
|
|
|
---- (1) FEMALE OFFENDERS.
|
|
|
|
As many as 40-50 percent of the offenders in these cases are
|
|
reported to be women. This is in marked contrast to historical child
|
|
sex rings in which almost all the offenders are men.
|
|
|
|
---- (2) SITUATIONAL MOLESTERS.
|
|
|
|
The offenders appear to be sexually interacting with the child
|
|
victims for reasons other than a true sexual preference for
|
|
children. The children are substitute victims, and the abusive
|
|
activity may have little to do with pedophilia [see my monograph
|
|
_Child Molesters: A Behavioral Analysis_ (1987) for a further
|
|
explanation about types of molesters].
|
|
|
|
---- (3) MALE AND FEMALE VICTIMS.
|
|
|
|
Both boys and girls appear to be targeted, but with an apparent
|
|
preference for girls. Almost all the adult survivors are female, but
|
|
day care cases frequently involve male as well as female victims.
|
|
The most striking characteristic of the victims, however, is their
|
|
young age (generally birth to six years old when the abuse began).
|
|
|
|
---- (4) MULTIDIMENSIONAL MOTIVATION.
|
|
|
|
Sexual gratification appears to be only part of the motivation for
|
|
the "sexual" activity. Many people today argue that the motivation
|
|
is "spiritual" - possibly part of an occult ceremony. It is my
|
|
opinion that the motivation may have more to do with anger,
|
|
hostility, rage and resentment carried out against weak and
|
|
vulnerable victims. Much of the ritualistic abuse of children may
|
|
not be sexual in nature. Some of the activity may, in fact, be
|
|
physical abuse directed at sexually-significant body parts (penis,
|
|
anus, nipples). This may also partially explain the large percentage
|
|
of female offenders. Physical abuse of children by females is well-
|
|
documented.
|
|
|
|
---- (5) PORNOGRAPHY AND PARAPHERNALIA.
|
|
|
|
Although many of the victims of multidimensional child sex rings
|
|
claim that pictures and videotapes of the activity were made, no
|
|
such visual record has been found by law enforcement. In recent
|
|
years, American law enforcement has seized large amounts of child
|
|
pornography portraying children in a wide variety of sexual activity
|
|
and perversions. None of it, however, portrays the kind of bizarre
|
|
and/or ritualistic activity described by these victims. Perhaps
|
|
these offenders use and store their pornography and paraphernalia in
|
|
ways different from preferential child molesters (pedophiles). This
|
|
is an area needing additional research and investigation.
|
|
|
|
---- (6) CONTROL THROUGH FEAR.
|
|
|
|
Control through fear may be the overriding characteristic of these
|
|
cases. Control is maintained by frightening the children. A very
|
|
young child might not be able to understand the significance of much
|
|
of the sexual activity but certainly understands fear. The stories
|
|
that the victims tell may be their perceived versions of severe
|
|
traumatic memories. They may be the victims of a severely
|
|
traumatized childhood in which being sexually abused was just one of
|
|
the many negative events affecting their lives.
|
|
|
|
-- c. SCENARIOS.
|
|
|
|
Multidimensional child sex rings typically emerge from one of four
|
|
scenarios: (1) adult survivors, (2) day care cases, (3)
|
|
family/isolated neighborhood cases, and (4) custody/visitation
|
|
disputes.
|
|
|
|
---- (1) ADULT SURVIVORS.
|
|
|
|
In adult survivor cases, adults of almost any age - nearly always
|
|
women - are suffering the consequences of a variety of personal
|
|
problems and failures in their lives (e.g., promiscuity, eating
|
|
disorders, drug and alcohol abuse, failed relationships, self-
|
|
mutilation, unemployment). As a result of some precipitating stress
|
|
or crisis, they often seek therapy. They are frequently hypnotized,
|
|
intentionally or unintentionally, as part of the therapy and are
|
|
often diagnosed as suffering from Multiple Personality Disorder.
|
|
Gradually, during the therapy, the adults reveal previously
|
|
unrecalled memories of early childhood victimization that includes
|
|
multiple victims and offenders, fear as the controlling tactic, and
|
|
bizarre or ritualistic activity. Adult survivors may also claim that
|
|
"cues" from certain events in their recent life "triggered" the
|
|
previously repressed memories.
|
|
|
|
The multiple offenders are often described as members of a cult or
|
|
satanic group. Parents, family members, clergy, civic leaders,
|
|
police officers (or individuals wearing police uniforms), and other
|
|
prominent members of society are frequently described as present at
|
|
and participating in the exploitation. The alleged bizarre activity
|
|
often includes insertion of foreign objects, witnessing mutilations,
|
|
and sexual acts and murders being filmed or photographed. The
|
|
offenders may allegedly still be harassing or threatening the
|
|
victims. They report being particularly frightened on certain dates
|
|
and by certain situations. In several of these cases, women (called
|
|
"breeders") claim to have had babies that were turned over for human
|
|
sacrifice. This type of case is probably best typified by books like
|
|
_Michelle Remembers_ (Smith & Pazder, 1980), _Satan's Underground_
|
|
(Stratford, 1988), and _Satan's Children_ (Mayer, 1991).
|
|
|
|
If and when therapists come to believe the patient or decide the law
|
|
requires it, the police or FBI are sometimes contacted to conduct an
|
|
investigation. The therapists may also fear for their safety because
|
|
they now know the "secret". The therapists will frequently tell law
|
|
enforcement that they will stake their professional reputation on
|
|
the fact that their patient is telling the truth. Some adult
|
|
survivors go directly to law enforcement. They may also go from
|
|
place to place in an effort to find therapists or investigators who
|
|
will listen to and believe them. Their ability to provide verifiable
|
|
details varies and many were raised in apparently religious homes. A
|
|
few adult survivors are now reporting participation in specific
|
|
murders or child abductions that are known to have taken place.
|
|
|
|
---- (2) DAY CARE CASES.
|
|
|
|
In day care cases children currently or formerly attending a day
|
|
care center gradually describe their victimization at the center and
|
|
at other locations to which they were taken by the day care staff.
|
|
The cases include multiple victims and offenders, fear, and bizarre
|
|
or ritualistic activity, with a particularly high number of female
|
|
offenders. Descriptions of strange games, insertion of foreign
|
|
objects, killing of animals, photographing of activities, and
|
|
wearing of costumes are common. The accounts of the young children,
|
|
however, do not seem to be quite as "bizarre" as those of the adult
|
|
survivors, with fewer accounts of human sacrifice.
|
|
|
|
---- (3) FAMILY/ISOLATED NEIGHBORHOOD CASES.
|
|
|
|
In family/isolated neighborhood cases, children describe their
|
|
victimization within their family or extended family. The group is
|
|
often defined by geographic boundary, such as a cul-de-sac,
|
|
apartment building, or isolated rural setting. Such accounts are
|
|
most common in rural or suburban communities with high
|
|
concentrations of religiously conservative people. The stories are
|
|
similar to those told of the day care setting, but with more male
|
|
offenders. The basic dynamics remain the same, but victims tend to
|
|
be more than six years of age, and the scenario may also involve a
|
|
custody or visitation dispute.
|
|
|
|
---- (4) CUSTODY/VISITATION DISPUTE.
|
|
|
|
In custody/visitation dispute cases, the allegations emanate from a
|
|
custody or visitation dispute over at least one child under the age
|
|
of seven. The four dynamics described above make these cases
|
|
extremely difficult to handle. When complicated by the strong
|
|
emotions of this scenario, the cases can be overwhelming. This is
|
|
especially true if the disclosing child victims have been taken into
|
|
the "underground" by a parent during the custody or visitation
|
|
dispute. Some of these parents or relatives may even provide
|
|
authorities with diaries or tapes of their interviews with the
|
|
children. An accurate evaluation and assessment of a young child
|
|
held in isolation in this underground while being "debriefed" by a
|
|
parent or someone else is almost impossible. However well-
|
|
intentioned, these self-appointed investigators severely damage any
|
|
chance to validate these cases objectively.
|
|
|
|
-- d. WHY ARE VICTIMS ALLEGING THINGS THAT DO NOT SEEM TO BE TRUE?
|
|
|
|
Some of what the victims in these cases allege is physically
|
|
impossible (victim cut up and put back together, offender took the
|
|
building apart and then rebuilt it); some is possible but improbable
|
|
(human sacrifice, cannibalism, vampirism ); some is possible and
|
|
probable (child pornography, clever manipulation of victims); and
|
|
some is corroborated (medical evidence of vaginal or anal trauma,
|
|
offender confessions).
|
|
|
|
The most significant crimes being alleged that do not *seem* to be
|
|
true are the human sacrifice and cannibalism by organized satanic
|
|
cults. In none of the multidimensional child sex ring cases of which
|
|
I am aware have bodies of the murder victims been found - in spite
|
|
of major excavations where the abuse victims claim the bodies were
|
|
located. The alleged explanations for this include: the offenders
|
|
moved the bodies after the children left, the bodies were burned in
|
|
portable high-temperature ovens, the bodies were put in double-
|
|
decker graves under legitimately buried bodies, a mortician member
|
|
of the cult disposed of the bodies in a crematorium, the offenders
|
|
ate the bodies, the offenders used corpses and aborted fetuses, or
|
|
the power of Satan caused the bodies to disappear.
|
|
|
|
Not only are no bodies found, but also, more importantly, there is
|
|
no physical evidence that a murder took place. Many of those not in
|
|
law enforcement do not understand that, while it is possible to get
|
|
rid of a body, it is even more difficult to get rid of the physical
|
|
evidence that a murder took place, especially a human sacrifice
|
|
involving sex, blood, and mutilation. Such activity would leave
|
|
behind trace evidence that could be found using modern crime scene
|
|
processing techniques in spite of extraordinary efforts to clean it
|
|
up.
|
|
|
|
The victims of these human sacrifices and murders are alleged to be
|
|
abducted missing children, runaway and throwaway children,
|
|
derelicts, and the babies of breeder women. It is interesting to
|
|
note that many of those espousing these theories are using the long-
|
|
since-discredited numbers and rhetoric of the missing children
|
|
hysteria in the early 1980s. Yet "Stranger-Abduction Homicides of
|
|
Children", a January 1989 _Juvenile Justice Bulletin_, published by
|
|
the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention of the
|
|
U.S. Department of Justice, reports that researchers now estimate
|
|
that the number of children kidnapped and murdered by nonfamily
|
|
members is between 52 and 158 a year and that adolescents 14 to 17
|
|
years old account for nearly two-thirds of these victims. These
|
|
figures are also consistent with the 1990 National Incident Studies
|
|
previously mentioned.
|
|
|
|
We live in a very violent society, and yet we have "only" about
|
|
23,000 murders a year. Those who accept these stories of mass human
|
|
sacrifice would have us believe that the satanists and other occult
|
|
practitioners are murdering more than twice as many people every
|
|
year in this country as all the other murderers combined.
|
|
|
|
In addition, in none of the cases of which I am aware has any
|
|
evidence of a well-organized satanic cult been found. Many of those
|
|
who accept the stories of organized ritual abuse of children and
|
|
human sacrifice will tell you that the best evidence they now have
|
|
is the consistency of stories from all over America. It sounds like
|
|
a powerful argument. It is interesting to note that, without having
|
|
met each other, the hundreds of people who claim to have been
|
|
abducted by aliens from outer space also tell stories and give
|
|
descriptions of the aliens that are similar to each other. This is
|
|
not to imply that allegations of child abuse are in the same
|
|
category as allegations of abduction by aliens from outer space. It
|
|
is intended only to illustrate that individuals who never met each
|
|
other can sometimes describe similar events without necessarily
|
|
having experienced them.
|
|
|
|
The large number of people telling the same story is, in fact, the
|
|
biggest reason to doubt these stories. It is simply too difficult
|
|
for that many people to commit so many horrendous crimes as part of
|
|
an organized conspiracy. Two or three people murder a couple of
|
|
children in a few communities as part of a ritual, and nobody finds
|
|
out? Possible. Thousands of people do the same thing to tens of
|
|
thousands of victims over many years? Not likely. Hundreds of
|
|
communities all over America are run by mayors, police departments,
|
|
and community leaders who are practicing satanists and who regularly
|
|
murder and eat people? Not likely. In addition, these community
|
|
leaders and high-ranking officials also supposedly commit these
|
|
complex crimes leaving no evidence, and at the same time function as
|
|
leaders and managers while heavily involved in using illegal drugs.
|
|
Probably the closest documented example of this type of alleged
|
|
activity in American history is the Ku Klux Klan, which ironically
|
|
used Christianity, not satanism, to rationalize its activity but
|
|
which, as might be expected, was eventually infiltrated by
|
|
informants and betrayed by its members.
|
|
|
|
As stated, initially I was inclined to believe the allegations of
|
|
the victims. But as the cases poured in and the months and years
|
|
went by, I became more concerned about the lack of physical evidence
|
|
and corroboration for many of the more serious allegations. With
|
|
increasing frequency I began to ask the question: "Why are victims
|
|
alleging things that do not *seem* to be true?" Many possible
|
|
answers were considered.
|
|
|
|
The first possible answer is obvious: clever offenders. The
|
|
allegations may not seem to be true but they are true. The criminal
|
|
justice system lacks the knowledge, skill, and motivation to get to
|
|
the bottom of this crime conspiracy. The perpetrators of this crime
|
|
conspiracy are clever, cunning individuals using sophisticated mind
|
|
control and brainwashing techniques to control their victims. Law
|
|
enforcement does not know how to investigate these cases.
|
|
|
|
It is technically possible that these allegations of an organized
|
|
conspiracy involving taking over day care centers, abduction,
|
|
cannibalism, murder, and human sacrifice might be true. But if they
|
|
are true, they constitute one of the greatest crime conspiracies in
|
|
history.
|
|
|
|
Many people do not understand how difficult it is to commit a
|
|
conspiracy crime involving numerous co-conspirators. One clever and
|
|
cunning individual has a good chance of getting away with a well-
|
|
planned interpersonal crime. Bring one partner into the crime and
|
|
the odds of getting away with it drop considerably. The more people
|
|
involved in the crime, the harder it is to get away with it. Why?
|
|
Human nature is the answer. People get angry and jealous. They come
|
|
to resent the fact that another conspirator is getting "more" than
|
|
they. They get in trouble and want to make a deal for themselves by
|
|
informing on others.
|
|
|
|
If a group of individuals degenerate to the point of engaging in
|
|
human sacrifice, murder, and cannibalism, that would most likely be
|
|
the beginning of the end for such a group. The odds are that someone
|
|
in the group would have a problem with such acts and be unable to
|
|
maintain the secret.
|
|
|
|
The appeal of the satanic conspiracy theory is twofold:
|
|
|
|
---- (1) First, it is a simple explanation for a complex problem.
|
|
Nothing is more simple than "the devil made them do it". If we do
|
|
not understand something, we make it the work of some supernatural
|
|
force. During the Middle Ages, serial killers were thought to be
|
|
vampires and werewolves, and child sexual abuse was the work of
|
|
demons taking the form of parents and clergy. Even today, especially
|
|
for those raised to religiously believe so, satanism offers an
|
|
explanation as to why "good" people do bad things. It may also help
|
|
to "explain" unusual, bizarre, and compulsive sexual urges and
|
|
behavior.
|
|
|
|
---- (2) Second, the conspiracy theory is a popular one. We find it
|
|
difficult to believe that one bizarre individual could commit a
|
|
crime we find so offensive. Conspiracy theories about soldiers
|
|
missing in action (MlAs), abductions by UFOs, Elvis Presley
|
|
sightings, and the assassination of prominent public figures are the
|
|
focus of much attention in this country. These conspiracy theories
|
|
and allegations of ritual abuse have the following in common: (1)
|
|
self-proclaimed experts, (2) tabloid media interest, (3) belief the
|
|
government is involved in a coverup, and (4) emotionally involved
|
|
direct and indirect victim/witnesses.
|
|
|
|
On a recent television program commemorating the one hundredth
|
|
anniversary of Jack the Ripper, almost fifty percent of the viewing
|
|
audience who called the polling telephone numbers indicated that
|
|
they thought the murders were committed as part of a conspiracy
|
|
involving the British Royal Family. The five experts on the program,
|
|
however, unanimously agreed the crimes were the work of one
|
|
disorganized but lucky individual who was diagnosed as a paranoid
|
|
schizophrenic. In many ways, the murders of Jack the Ripper are
|
|
similar to those allegedly committed by satanists today.
|
|
|
|
If your child's molestation was perpetrated by a sophisticated
|
|
satanic cult, there is nothing you could have done to prevent it and
|
|
therefore no reason to feel any guilt. I have been present when
|
|
parents who believe their children were ritually abused at day care
|
|
centers have told others that the cults had sensors in the road,
|
|
lookouts in the air, and informers everywhere; therefore, the
|
|
usually recommended advice of unannounced visits to the day care
|
|
center would be impossible.
|
|
|
|
6. ALTERNATIVE EXPLANATIONS
|
|
|
|
Even if only part of an allegation is not true, what then is the
|
|
answer to the question "Why are victims alleging things that do not
|
|
*seem* to be true?" After consulting with psychiatrists,
|
|
psychologists, anthropologists, therapists, social workers, child
|
|
sexual abuse experts, and law enforcement investigators for more
|
|
than eight years, I can find no single, simple answer. The answer to
|
|
the question seems to be a complex set of dynamics that can be
|
|
different in each case. In spite of the fact that some skeptics keep
|
|
looking for it, there does not appear to be one answer to the
|
|
question that fits every case. Each case is different, and each case
|
|
may involve a different combination of answers.
|
|
|
|
I have identified a series of possible alternative answers to this
|
|
question. The alternative answers also do not preclude the
|
|
possibility that clever offenders are sometimes involved. I will not
|
|
attempt to explain completely these alternative answers because I
|
|
cannot. They are presented simply as areas for consideration and
|
|
evaluation by child sexual abuse intervenors, for further
|
|
elaboration by experts in these fields, and for research by
|
|
objective social scientists. The first step, however, in finding the
|
|
answers to this question is to admit the possibility that some of
|
|
what the victims describe may not have happened. Some child
|
|
advocates seem unwilling to do this.
|
|
|
|
-- a. PATHOLOGICAL DISTORTION.
|
|
|
|
The first possible answer to why victims are alleging things that do
|
|
not *seem* to be true is *pathological distortion*. The allegations
|
|
may be errors in processing reality influenced by underlying mental
|
|
disorders such as dissociative disorders, borderline or histrionic
|
|
personality disorders, or psychosis. These distortions may be
|
|
manifested in false accounts of victimization in order to gain
|
|
psychological benefits such as attention and sympathy (factitious
|
|
disorder). When such individuals repeatedly go from place to place
|
|
or person to person making these false reports of their own
|
|
"victimization", it is called Munchausen Syndrome. When the repealed
|
|
false reports concern the "victimization" of their children or
|
|
others linked to them, it is called Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy. I
|
|
am amazed when some therapists state that they believe the
|
|
allegations because they cannot think of a reason why the "victim",
|
|
whose failures are now explained and excused or who is now the
|
|
center of attention at a conference or on a national television
|
|
program, would lie. If you can be forgiven for mutilating and
|
|
killing babies, you can be forgiven for anything.
|
|
|
|
Many "victims" may develop pseudomemories of their victimization and
|
|
eventually come to believe the events actually occurred. Noted
|
|
forensic psychiatrist Park E. Dietz (personal communication, Nov.
|
|
1991) states:
|
|
|
|
"Pseudomemories have been acquired through dreams (particularly if
|
|
one is encouraged to keep a journal or dream diary and to regard
|
|
dream content as 'clues' about the past or as snippets of history),
|
|
substance-induced altered states of consciousness (alcohol or other
|
|
drugs), group influence (particularly hearing vivid accounts of
|
|
events occurring to others with whom one identifies emotionally such
|
|
as occurs in incest survivor groups), reading vivid accounts of
|
|
events occurring to others with whom one identifies emotionally,
|
|
watching such accounts in films or on television, and hypnosis. The
|
|
most efficient means of inducing pseudomemories is hypnosis.
|
|
|
|
"It is characteristic of pseudomemories that the recollections of
|
|
complex events (as opposed to a simple unit of information, such as
|
|
a tag number) are incomplete and without chronological sequence.
|
|
Often the person reports some uncertainty because the pseudomemories
|
|
are experienced in a manner they describe as 'hazy', 'fuzzy', or
|
|
'vague'. They are often perplexed that they recall some details
|
|
vividly but others dimly.
|
|
|
|
"Pseudomemories are not delusions. When first telling others of
|
|
pseudomemories, these individuals do not have the unshakable but
|
|
irrational conviction that deluded subjects have, but with social
|
|
support they often come to defend vigorously the truthfulness of the
|
|
pseudomemories.
|
|
|
|
"Pseudomemories are not fantasies, but may incorporate elements from
|
|
fantasies experienced in the past. Even where the events described
|
|
are implausible, listeners may believe them because they are
|
|
reported with such intense affect (i.e. with so much emotion
|
|
attached to the story) that the listener concludes that the events
|
|
must have happened because no one could 'fake' the emotional aspects
|
|
of the retelling. It also occurs, however, that persons report
|
|
pseudomemories in such a matter-of-fact and emotionless manner that
|
|
mental health professionals conclude that the person has
|
|
'dissociated' intellectual knowledge of the events from emotional
|
|
appreciation of their impact."
|
|
|
|
-- b. TRAUMATIC MEMORY.
|
|
|
|
The second possible answer is *traumatic memory*. Fear and severe
|
|
trauma can cause victims to distort reality and confuse events. This
|
|
is a well-documented fact in cases involving individuals taken
|
|
hostage or in life-and-death situations. The distortions may be part
|
|
of an elaborate defense mechanism of the mind called "splitting" -
|
|
The victims create a clear-cut good-and-evil manifestation of their
|
|
complex victimization that is then psychologically more manageable.
|
|
|
|
Through the defense mechanism of dissociation, the victim may escape
|
|
the horrors of reality by inaccurately processing that reality. In a
|
|
dissociative state a young child who ordinarily would know the
|
|
difference might misinterpret a film or video as reality.
|
|
|
|
Another defense mechanism may tell the victim that it could have
|
|
been worse, and so his or her victimization was not so bad. They are
|
|
not alone in their victimization - other children were also abused.
|
|
Their father who abused them is no different from other prominent
|
|
people in the community they claim also abused them. Satanism may
|
|
help to explain why their outwardly good and religious parents did
|
|
such terrible things to them in the privacy of their home. Their
|
|
religious training may convince them that such unspeakable acts by
|
|
supposedly "good" people must be the work of the devil. The
|
|
described human sacrifice may be symbolic of the "death" of their
|
|
childhood.
|
|
|
|
It may be that we should anticipate that individuals severely abused
|
|
as very young children by *multiple* offenders with *fear* as the
|
|
primary controlling tactic will distort and embellish their
|
|
victimization. Perhaps a horror-filled yet inaccurate account of
|
|
victimization is not only not a counterindication of abuse, but is
|
|
in fact a corroborative indicator of extreme physical,
|
|
psychological, and/or sexual abuse. I do not believe it is a
|
|
coincidence nor the result of deliberate planning by satanists that
|
|
in almost all the cases of ritual abuse that have come to my
|
|
attention, the abuse is alleged to have begun prior to the age of
|
|
seven and perpetrated by multiple offenders. It may well be that
|
|
such abuse, at young age by multiple offenders, is the most
|
|
difficult to accurately recall with the specific and precise detail
|
|
needed by the criminal justice system, and the most likely to be
|
|
distorted and exaggerated when it is recalled. In her book _Too
|
|
Scared to Cry_ (1990), child psychiatrist Lenore Terr, a leading
|
|
expert on psychic trauma in childhood, states "that a series of
|
|
early childhood shocks might not be fully and accurately
|
|
'reconstructed' from the dreams and behaviors of the adult" (p. 5).
|
|
|
|
-- c. NORMAL CHILDHOOD FEARS AND FANTASY.
|
|
|
|
The third possible answer may be *normal childhood fears and
|
|
fantasy*. Most young children are afraid of ghosts and monsters.
|
|
Even as adults, many people feel uncomfortable, for example, about
|
|
dangling their arms over the side of their bed. They still remember
|
|
the "monster" under the bed from childhood. While young children may
|
|
rarely invent stories about sexual activity, they might describe
|
|
their victimization in terms of evil as they understand it. In
|
|
church or at home, children may be told of satanic activity as the
|
|
source of evil. The children may be "dumping" all their fears and
|
|
worries unto an attentive and encouraging listener.
|
|
|
|
Children do fantasize. Perhaps whatever causes a child to allege
|
|
something impossible (such as being cut up and put back together) is
|
|
similar to what causes a child to allege something possible but
|
|
improbable (such as witnessing another child being chopped up and
|
|
eaten).
|
|
|
|
-- d. MISPERCEPTION, CONFUSION, AND TRICKERY.
|
|
|
|
Misperception, confusion, and trickery may be a fourth answer.
|
|
Expecting young children to give accurate accounts of sexual
|
|
activity for which they have little frame of reference is
|
|
unreasonable. The Broadway play _Madame Butterfly_ is the true story
|
|
of a man who had a 15-year affair, including the "birth" of a baby,
|
|
with a "woman" who turns out to have been a man all along. If a
|
|
grown man does not know when he has had vaginal intercourse with a
|
|
woman, how can we expect young children not to be confused?
|
|
|
|
Furthermore some clever offenders may deliberately introduce
|
|
elements of satanism and the occult into the sexual exploitation
|
|
simply to confuse or intimidate the victims. Simple magic and other
|
|
techniques may be used to trick the children. Drugs may also be
|
|
deliberately used to confuse the victims and distort their
|
|
perceptions. Such acts would then be M.O., not ritual.
|
|
|
|
As previously stated, the perceptions of young victims may also be
|
|
influenced by any trauma being experienced. This is the most popular
|
|
alternative explanation, and even the more zealous believers of
|
|
ritual abuse allegations use it, but only to explain obviously
|
|
impossible events.
|
|
|
|
-- e. OVERZEALOUS INTERVENORS.
|
|
|
|
*Overzealous intervenors*, causing intervenor contagion, may be a
|
|
fifth answer. These intervenors can include parents, family members,
|
|
foster parents, doctors, therapists, social workers, law enforcement
|
|
officers, prosecutors, and any combination thereof. Victims have
|
|
been subtly as well as overtly rewarded and bribed by usually well-
|
|
meaning intervenors for furnishing further details. In addition,
|
|
some of what appears not to have happened may have originated as a
|
|
result of intervenors making assumptions about or misinterpreting
|
|
what the victims are saying. The intervenors then repeat, and
|
|
possibly embellish, these assumptions and misinterpretations, and
|
|
eventually the victims are "forced" to agree with or come to accept
|
|
this "official" version of what happened.
|
|
|
|
The judgment of intervenors may be affected by their zeal to uncover
|
|
child sexual abuse, satanic activity, or conspiracies. However
|
|
"well-intentioned", these overzealous intervenors must accept
|
|
varying degrees of responsibility for the unsuccessful prosecution
|
|
of those cases where criminal abuse did occur. This is the most
|
|
controversial and least popular of the alternative explanations.
|
|
|
|
-- f. URBAN LEGENDS.
|
|
|
|
Allegations of and knowledge about ritualistic or satanic abuse may
|
|
also be spread through *urban legends*. In _The Vanishing
|
|
Hitchhiker_ (1981), the first of his four books on the topic, Dr.
|
|
Jan Harold Brunvand defines urban legends as "realistic stories
|
|
concerning recent events (or alleged events) with an ironic or
|
|
supernatural twist" (p. xi). Dr. Brunvand's books convincingly
|
|
explain that just because individuals throughout the country who
|
|
never met each other tell the same story does not mean that it is
|
|
true. Absurd urban legends about the corporate logos of Proctor and
|
|
Gamble and Liz Claiborne being satanic symbols persist in spite of
|
|
all efforts to refute them with reality. Some urban legends about
|
|
child kidnappings and other threats to citizens have even been
|
|
disseminated unknowingly by law enforcement agencies. Such legends
|
|
have always existed, but today the mass media aggressively
|
|
participate in their rapid and more efficient dissemination. Many
|
|
Americans mistakenly believe that tabloid television shows check out
|
|
and verify the details of their stories before pulling them on the
|
|
air. Mass hysteria may partially account for large numbers of
|
|
victims describing the same symptoms or experiences.
|
|
|
|
Training conferences for all the disciplines involved in child
|
|
sexual abuse may also play a role in the spread of this contagion.
|
|
At one child abuse conference I attended, an exhibitor was selling
|
|
more than 50 different books dealing with satanism and the occult.
|
|
By the end of the conference, he had sold nearly all of them. At
|
|
another national child sexual abuse conference, I witnessed more
|
|
than 100 attendees copying down the widely disseminated 29 "Symptoms
|
|
Characterizing Satanic Ritual Abuse" in preschool-aged children. Is
|
|
a four-year-old child's "preoccupation with urine and feces" an
|
|
indication of satanic ritual abuse or part of normal development?
|
|
|
|
-- g. COMBINATION.
|
|
|
|
Most multidimensional child sex ring cases probably involve a
|
|
*combination* of the answers previously set forth, as well as other
|
|
possible explanations unknown to me at this time. Obviously, cases
|
|
with adult survivors are more likely to involve some of these
|
|
answers than those with young children. Each case of sexual
|
|
victimization must be individually evaluated on its own merits
|
|
without any preconceived explanations. All the possibilities must be
|
|
explored if for no other reason than the fact that the defense
|
|
attorneys for any accused subjects will almost certainly do so.
|
|
|
|
Most people would agree that just because a victim tells you one
|
|
detail that turns out to be true, this does not mean that every
|
|
detail is true. But many people seem to believe that if you can
|
|
disprove one part of a victim's story, then the entire story is
|
|
false. As previously stated, one of my main concerns in these cases
|
|
is that people are getting away with sexually abusing children or
|
|
committing other crimes because we cannot prove that they are
|
|
members of organized cults that murder and eat people.
|
|
|
|
I have discovered that the subject of multidimensional child sex
|
|
rings is a very emotional and polarizing issue. Everyone seems to
|
|
demand that one choose a side. On one side of the issue are those
|
|
who say that nothing really happened and it is all a big witch hunt
|
|
led by overzealous fanatics and incompetent "experts". The other
|
|
side says, in essence, that everything happened; victims never lie
|
|
about child sexual abuse, and so it must be true.
|
|
|
|
There is a middle ground. It is the job of the professional
|
|
investigator to listen to all the victims and conduct appropriate
|
|
investigation in an effort to find out what happened, considering
|
|
all possibilities. Not all childhood trauma is abuse. Not all child
|
|
abuse is a crime. The great frustration of these cases is the fact
|
|
that you are often convinced that something traumatic happened to
|
|
the victim, but do not know with any degree of certainty exactly
|
|
what happened, when it happened, or who did it.
|
|
|
|
7. DO VICTIMS LIE ABOUT SEXUAL ABUSE AND EXPLOITATION?
|
|
|
|
The crucial central issue in the evaluation of a response to cases
|
|
of multidimensional child sex rings is the statement "Children never
|
|
lie about sexual abuse or exploitation. If they have details, it
|
|
must have happened." This statement, oversimplified by many, is the
|
|
basic premise upon which some believe the child sexual abuse and
|
|
exploitation movement is based. It is almost never questioned or
|
|
debated at training conferences. In fact, during the 1970s, there
|
|
was a successful crusade to eliminate laws requiring corroboration
|
|
of child victim statements in child sexual abuse cases. The best way
|
|
to convict child molesters is to have the child victims testify in
|
|
court. If we believe them, the jury will believe them. Any challenge
|
|
to this basic premise was viewed as a threat to the movement and a
|
|
denial that the problem existed.
|
|
|
|
I believe that children *rarely* lie about sexual abuse or
|
|
exploitation, if a lie is defined as a statement deliberately and
|
|
maliciously intended to deceive. The problem is the
|
|
oversimplification of the statement. Just because a child is not
|
|
lying does not necessarily mean the child is telling the truth. I
|
|
believe that in the majority of these cases, the victims are not
|
|
lying. They are telling you what they have come to believe has
|
|
happened to them. Furthermore the assumption that children rarely
|
|
lie about sexual abuse does not necessarily apply to everything a
|
|
child says during a sexual abuse investigation. Stories of
|
|
mutilation, murder, and cannibalism are not really about sexual
|
|
abuse.
|
|
|
|
Children rarely lie about sexual abuse or exploitation. but they do
|
|
fantasize, furnish false information, furnish misleading
|
|
information, misperceive events, try to please adults, respond to
|
|
leading questions, and respond to rewards. Children are not adults
|
|
in little bodies and do go through developmental stages that must be
|
|
evaluated and understood. In many ways, however, children are no
|
|
better and no worse than other victims or witnesses of a crime. They
|
|
should not be automatically believed, nor should they be
|
|
automatically disbelieved.
|
|
|
|
The second part of the statement - if children can supply details,
|
|
the crime must have happened - must also be carefully evaluated. The
|
|
details in question in most of the cases of multidimensional child
|
|
sex rings have little to do with sexual activity. Law enforcement
|
|
and social workers must do more than attempt to determine how a
|
|
child could have known about the sex acts. These cases involve
|
|
determining how a victim could have known about a wide variety of
|
|
bizarre and ritualistic activity. Young children may know little
|
|
about specific sex acts, but they may know a lot about monsters,
|
|
torture, kidnapping, and murder.
|
|
|
|
Victims may supply details of sexual and other acts using
|
|
information from sources other than their own direct victimization.
|
|
Such sources must be evaluated carefully by the investigator of
|
|
multidimensional child sex rings.
|
|
|
|
-- a. PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE.
|
|
|
|
The victim may have personal knowledge of the sexual or ritual acts,
|
|
but not as a result of the alleged victimization. The knowledge
|
|
could have come from viewing pornography, sex education, or occult
|
|
material; witnessing sexual or ritual activity in the home; or
|
|
witnessing the sexual abuse of others. It could also have come from
|
|
having been sexually or physically abused, but by other than the
|
|
alleged offenders and in ways other than the alleged offense.
|
|
|
|
-- b. OTHER CHILDREN OR VICTIMS.
|
|
|
|
Young children today are socially interacting more often and at a
|
|
younger age than ever before. Many parents are unable to provide
|
|
possibly simple explanations for their children's stories because
|
|
they were not with the children when the events occurred. They do
|
|
not even know what videotapes their children may have seen, what
|
|
games they may have played, or what stories they may have been told
|
|
or overheard. Children are being placed in day care centers for
|
|
eight, ten, or twelve hours a day starting as young as six weeks of
|
|
age. The children share experiences by playing house, school, or
|
|
doctor. Bodily functions such as urination and defecation are a
|
|
focus of attention for these young children. To a certain extent,
|
|
each child shares the experiences of all the other children.
|
|
|
|
The odds are fairly high that in any typical day care center there
|
|
might be some children who are victims of incest; victims of
|
|
physical abuse; victims of psychological abuse; children of cult
|
|
members (even satanists); children of sexually open parents;
|
|
children of sexually indiscriminate parents; children of parents
|
|
obsessed with victimization; children of parents obsessed with the
|
|
evils of satanism; children without conscience; children with a
|
|
teenage brother or pregnant mother; children with heavy metal music
|
|
and literature in the home; children with bizarre toys, games,
|
|
comics, and magazines; children with a VCR and slasher films in
|
|
their home; children with access to dial-a-porn, party lines, or
|
|
pornography; or children victimized by a day care center staff
|
|
member. The possible effects of the interaction of such children
|
|
prior to the disclosure of the alleged abuse must be evaluated,
|
|
Adult survivors may obtain details from group therapy sessions,
|
|
support networks, church groups, or self-help groups. The
|
|
willingness and ability of siblings to corroborate adult survivor
|
|
accounts of ritual abuse varies. Some will support and partially
|
|
corroborate the victim's allegations. Others will vehemently deny
|
|
them and support their accused parents or relatives.
|
|
|
|
-- c. MEDIA.
|
|
|
|
The amount of sexually explicit, occult, anti-occult, or violence-
|
|
oriented material available to adults and even children in the
|
|
modern world is overwhelming. This includes movies, videotapes,
|
|
television, music, toys, and books. There are also documentaries on
|
|
satanism, witchcraft, and the occult that are available on
|
|
videotape. Most of the televangelists have videotapes on the topics
|
|
that they are selling on their programs.
|
|
|
|
The National Coalition on Television Violence News (1988) estimates
|
|
that 12% of the movies produced in the United States can be
|
|
classified as satanic horror films. Cable television and the home
|
|
VCR make all this material readily available even to young children.
|
|
Religious broadcasters and almost all the television tabloid and
|
|
magazine programs have done shows on satanism and the occult. Heavy
|
|
metal and black metal music, which often has a satanic theme, is
|
|
readily available and popular. In addition to the much-debated
|
|
fantasy role-playing games, there are numerous popular toys on the
|
|
market with an occult-oriented, bizarre, or violent theme.
|
|
|
|
Books on satanism and the occult, both fiction and nonfiction, are
|
|
readily available in most bookstores, especially Christian
|
|
bookstores. Several recent books specifically discuss the issue of
|
|
ritual abuse of children. Obviously, very young children do not read
|
|
this material, but their parents, relatives, and therapists might
|
|
and then discuss it in front of or with them. Much of the material
|
|
intended to fight the problem actually fuels the problem and damages
|
|
effective prosecution.
|
|
|
|
-- d. SUGGESTIONS AND LEADING QUESTIONS.
|
|
|
|
This problem is particularly important in cases stemming from
|
|
custody/visitation disputes involving at least one child under the
|
|
age of seven. It is my opinion that most suggestive, leading
|
|
questioning of children by intervenors is inadvertently done as part
|
|
of a good-faith effort to learn the truth. Not all intervenors are
|
|
in equal positions to potentially influence victim allegations.
|
|
Parents and relatives especially are in a position to subtly
|
|
influence their young children to describe their victimization in a
|
|
certain way. Children may also overhear their parents discussing the
|
|
details of the case. Children often tell their parents what they
|
|
believe their parents want or need to hear. Some children may be
|
|
instinctively attempting to provide "therapy" for their parents by
|
|
telling them what seems to satisfy them and somehow makes them feel
|
|
better. In one case a father gave the police a tape recording to
|
|
"prove" that his child's statements were spontaneous disclosures and
|
|
not the result of leading, suggestive questions. The tape recording
|
|
indicated just the opposite. Why then did the father voluntarily
|
|
give it to the police? Probably because he truly believed that he
|
|
was not influencing his child's statements - but he was.
|
|
|
|
Therapists are probably in the best position to influence the
|
|
allegations of adult survivors. The accuracy and reliability of the
|
|
accounts of adult survivors who have been hypnotized during therapy
|
|
is certainly open to question. One nationally-known therapist
|
|
personally told me that the reason police cannot find out about
|
|
satanic or ritualistic activity from child victims is that they do
|
|
not know how to ask leading questions. Highly suggestive books and
|
|
pictures portraying "satanic" activity have been developed and
|
|
marketed to therapists for use during evaluation and treatment.
|
|
Types and styles of verbal interaction useful in therapy may create
|
|
significant problems in a criminal investigation. It should be
|
|
noted, however, that when a therapist does a poor investigative
|
|
interview as part of a criminal investigation, that is the fault of
|
|
the criminal justice system that allowed it and not the therapist
|
|
who did it.
|
|
|
|
The extremely sensitive, emotional, and religious nature of these
|
|
cases makes problems with leading questions more likely than in
|
|
other kinds of cases. Intervenors motivated by religious fervor
|
|
and/or exaggerated concerns about sexual abuse of children are more
|
|
likely to lose their objectivity.
|
|
|
|
-- e. MISPERCEPTION AND CONFUSION.
|
|
|
|
In one case, a child's description of the apparently impossible act
|
|
of walking through a wall turned out to be the very possible act of
|
|
walking between the studs of an unfinished wall in a room under
|
|
construction. In another case, pennies in the anus turned out to be
|
|
copper-foil-covered suppositories. The children may describe what
|
|
they believe happened. It is not a lie, but neither is it an
|
|
accurate account of what happened.
|
|
|
|
-- f. EDUCATION AND AWARENESS PROGRAMS.
|
|
|
|
Some well-intentioned awareness programs designed to prevent child
|
|
set abuse, alert professionals, or fight satanism may in fact be
|
|
unrealistically increasing the fears of professionals, children, and
|
|
parents and creating self-fulfilling prophesies. Some of what
|
|
children and their parents are telling intervenors may have been
|
|
learned in or fueled by such programs. Religious programs, books,
|
|
and pamphlets that emphasize the power and evil force of Satan may
|
|
be adding to the problem. In fact most of the day care centers in
|
|
which ritualistic abuse is alleged to hate taken place are church-
|
|
affiliated centers, and many of the adult survivors alleging it come
|
|
from apparently religious families.
|
|
|
|
8. LAW ENFORCEMENT PERSPECTIVE.
|
|
|
|
The perspective with which one looks at satanic, occult, or
|
|
ritualistic crime is extremely important. As stated, sociologists,
|
|
therapists, religious leaders, parents, and just plain citizens each
|
|
have their own valid concerns and views about this issue. This
|
|
discussion, however, deals primarily with the law enforcement or
|
|
criminal justice perspective.
|
|
|
|
When you combine an emotional issue such as the sexual abuse of
|
|
children with an even more emotional issue such as people's
|
|
religious beliefs, it is difficult to maintain objectivity and
|
|
remember the law enforcement perspective. Some police officers may
|
|
even feel that all crime is caused by evil, all evil is caused by
|
|
Satan, and therefore, all crime is satanic crime. This may be a
|
|
valid religious perspective, but it is of no relevance to the
|
|
investigation of crime for purposes of prosecution.
|
|
|
|
Many of the police officers who lecture on satanic or occult crime
|
|
do not even investigate such cases. Their presentations are more a
|
|
reflection of their personal religious beliefs than documented
|
|
investigative information. They are absolutely entitled to their
|
|
beliefs, but introducing themselves as current or former police
|
|
officers and then speaking as religious advocates causes confusion.
|
|
As difficult as it might be, police officers must separate the
|
|
religious and law enforcement perspectives when they are lecturing
|
|
or investigating in their official capacities as law enforcement
|
|
officers. Many law enforcement officers begin their presentations by
|
|
stating that they are not addressing or judging anyone's religious
|
|
beliefs, and then proceed to do exactly that.
|
|
|
|
Some police officers have resigned rather than curtail or limit
|
|
their involvement in this issue as ordered by their departments.
|
|
Perhaps such officers deserve credit for recognizing that they could
|
|
no longer keep the perspectives separate.
|
|
|
|
Law enforcement officers and all professionals in this field should
|
|
avoid the "paranoia" that has crept into this issue and into some of
|
|
the training conferences. Paranoid type belief systems are
|
|
characterized by the gradual development of intricate, complex, and
|
|
elaborate systems of thinking based on and often proceeding
|
|
logically from misinterpretation of actual events. Paranoia
|
|
typically involves hypervigilance over the perceived threat, the
|
|
belief that danger is around every corner, and the willingness to
|
|
take up the challenge and do something about it. Another very
|
|
important aspect of this paranoia is the belief that those who do
|
|
not recognize the threat are evil and corrupt. In this extreme view,
|
|
you are either with them or against them. You are either part of the
|
|
solution or part of the problem.
|
|
|
|
Overzealousness and exaggeration motivated by the true religious
|
|
fervor of those involved is more acceptable than that motivated by
|
|
ego or profit. There are those who are deliberately distorting and
|
|
hyping this issue for personal notoriety and profit. Satanic and
|
|
occult crime and ritual abuse of children has become a growth
|
|
industry. Speaking fees, books, video and audio tapes, prevention
|
|
material, television and radio appearances all bring egoistic and
|
|
financial rewards.
|
|
|
|
Bizarre crime and evil can occur without organized satanic activity.
|
|
The professional perspective requires that we distinguish between
|
|
what we know and what we're not sure of.
|
|
|
|
The facts are:
|
|
|
|
-- a. Some individuals believe in and are involved in something
|
|
commonly called satanism and the occult.
|
|
|
|
-- b. Some of these individuals commit crime.
|
|
|
|
-- c. Some groups of individuals share these beliefs and involvement
|
|
in this satanism and the occult.
|
|
|
|
-- d. Some members of these groups commit crime together.
|
|
|
|
The unanswered questions are:
|
|
|
|
-- a. What is the connection between the belief system and the
|
|
crimes committed?
|
|
|
|
-- b. Is there an organized conspiracy of satanic and occult
|
|
believers responsible for interrelated serious crime (e.g.,
|
|
molestation, murder)?
|
|
|
|
After all the hype and hysteria are put aside, the realization sets
|
|
in that most satanic/occult activity involves the commission of *no*
|
|
crimes, and that which does usually involves the commission of
|
|
relatively minor crimes such as trespassing, vandalism, cruelty to
|
|
animals, or petty thievery.
|
|
|
|
The law enforcement problems most often linked to satanic or occult
|
|
activity are:
|
|
|
|
-- a. Vandalism.
|
|
|
|
-- b. Desecration of churches and cemeteries.
|
|
|
|
-- c. Thefts from churches and cemeteries.
|
|
|
|
-- d. Teenage gangs
|
|
|
|
-- e. Animal mutilations.
|
|
|
|
-- f. Teenage suicide.
|
|
|
|
-- g. Child abuse.
|
|
|
|
-- h. Kidnapping.
|
|
|
|
-- i. Murder and human sacrifice
|
|
|
|
Valid evidence shows some "connection" between satanism and the
|
|
occult and the first six problems (#a-f) set forth above. The
|
|
"connection" to the last three problems (#g-i) is far more
|
|
uncertain.
|
|
|
|
Even where there seems to be a "connection", the nature of the
|
|
connection needs to be explored. It is easy to blame involvement in
|
|
satanism and the occult for behaviors that have complex motivations.
|
|
A teenager's excessive involvement in satanism and the occult is
|
|
usually a symptom of a problem and not the cause of a problem.
|
|
Blaming satanism for a teenager's vandalism, theft, suicide, or even
|
|
act of murder is like blaming a criminal's offenses on his tattoos:
|
|
Both are often signs of the same rebelliousness and lack of self-
|
|
esteem that contribute to the commission of crimes.
|
|
|
|
The rock band Judas Priest was recently sued for allegedly inciting
|
|
two teenagers to suicide through subliminal messages in their
|
|
recordings. In 1991 Anthony Pratkanis of the University of
|
|
California at Santa Cruz, who served as an expert witness for the
|
|
defense, stated the boys in question "lived troubled lives, lives of
|
|
drug and alcohol abuse, run-ins with the law ... family violence,
|
|
and chronic unemployment. What issues did the trial and the
|
|
subsequent mass media coverage emphasize? Certainly not the need for
|
|
drug treatment centers; there was no evaluation of the pros and cons
|
|
of America's juvenile justice system, no investigation of the
|
|
schools, no inquiry into how to prevent family violence, no
|
|
discussion of the effects of unemployment on a family. Instead our
|
|
attention was mesmerized by an attempt to count the number of
|
|
subliminal demons that can dance on the end of a record needle" (p.
|
|
1).
|
|
|
|
The law enforcement investigator must objectively evaluate the legal
|
|
significance of any criminal's spiritual beliefs. In most cases,
|
|
including those involving satanists, it will have little or no legal
|
|
significance. If a crime is committed as part of a spiritual belief
|
|
system, it should make no difference which belief system it is. The
|
|
crime is the same whether a child is abused or murdered as part of a
|
|
Christian, Hare Krishna, Moslem, or any other belief system. We
|
|
generally don't label crimes with the name of the perpetrator's
|
|
religion. Why then are the crimes of child molesters, rapists,
|
|
sadists, and murderers who happen to be involved in satanism and the
|
|
occult labeled as satanic or occult crimes? If criminals use a
|
|
spiritual belief system to rationalize and justify or to facilitate
|
|
and enhance their criminal activity, should the focus of law
|
|
enforcement be on the belief system or on the criminal activity?
|
|
|
|
Several documented murders have been committed by individuals
|
|
involved in one way or another in satanism or the occult. In some of
|
|
these murders the perpetrator has even introduced elements of the
|
|
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
|
|
experienced in such interviews. Investigators must have direct
|
|
access to the alleged victims for interview purposes. Therapists for
|
|
an adult survivor sometimes want to act as intermediaries in their
|
|
patient's interview. This should be avoided if at all possible.
|
|
Adult survivor interviews are often confusing difficult and
|
|
extremely time-consuming. The investigator must remember however
|
|
that almost anything is possible. Most important the investigator
|
|
must remember that there is much middle ground. Just because one
|
|
event did happen does not mean that all reported events happened,
|
|
and just because one event did not happen does not mean that all
|
|
other events did not happen. Do not become such a zealot that you
|
|
believe it all nor such a cynic that you believe nothing. Varying
|
|
amounts and parts of the allegation may be factual. Attempting to
|
|
find evidence of what did happen is the great challenge of these
|
|
cases. *All* investigative interaction with victims must be
|
|
carefully and thoroughly documented.
|
|
|
|
-- d. ASSESS AND EVALUATE VICTIM STATEMENTS.
|
|
|
|
This is the part of the investigative process in child sexual
|
|
victimization cases that seems to have been lost. Is the victim
|
|
describing events and activities that are consistent with law
|
|
enforcement documented criminal behavior, or that are consistent
|
|
with distorted media accounts and erroneous public perceptions of
|
|
criminal behavior? Investigators should apply the "template of
|
|
probability". Accounts of child sexual victimization that are more
|
|
like books, television, and movies (e.g. big conspiracies, child sex
|
|
slaves, organized pornography rings) and less like documented cases
|
|
should be viewed with skepticism but thoroughly investigated.
|
|
Consider and investigate all possible explanations of events. It is
|
|
the investigator's job, and the information learned will be
|
|
invaluable in counteracting the defense attorneys when they raise
|
|
the alternative explanations.
|
|
|
|
For example, an adult survivor's account of ritual victimization
|
|
might be explained by any one of at least four possibilities: First,
|
|
the allegations may be a fairly accurate account what actually
|
|
happened. Second, they may be deliberate lies (malingering), told
|
|
for the usual reasons people lie (e.g. money, revenge, jealousy).
|
|
Third, they may be deliberate lies (factitious disorder) told for
|
|
atypical reasons (e.g. attention, forgiveness). Lies so motivated
|
|
are less likely to be recognized by the investigator and more likely
|
|
to be rigidly maintained by the liar unless and until confronted
|
|
with irrefutable evidence to the contrary. Fourth, the allegations
|
|
may be a highly inaccurate account of what actually happened, but
|
|
the victim truly believes it (pseudomemory) and therefore is not
|
|
lying. A polygraph examination of such a victim would be of limited
|
|
value. Other explanations or combinations of these explanations are
|
|
also possible. *Only* thorough *investigation* will point to the
|
|
correct or most likely explanation.
|
|
|
|
Investigators cannot rely on therapists or satanic crime experts as
|
|
a shortcut to the explanation. In one case, the "experts" confirmed
|
|
and validated the account of a female who claimed to be a 15-year-
|
|
old deaf-mute kidnapped and held for three years by a satanic cult
|
|
and forced to participate in bizarre rituals before recently
|
|
escaping. Active investigation, however, determined she was a 27-
|
|
year-old woman who could hear and speak, who had not been kidnapped
|
|
by anyone, and who had a lengthy history of mental problems and at
|
|
least three other similar reports of false victimization. Her
|
|
"accurate" accounts of what the "real satanists" do were simply the
|
|
result of having read, while in mental hospitals, the same books
|
|
that the "experts" had. A therapist may have important insights
|
|
about whether an individual was traumatized, but knowing the exact
|
|
cause of that trauma is another matter. There have been cases where
|
|
investigation has discovered that individuals diagnosed by
|
|
therapists as suffering from Post-Vietnam Syndrome were never in
|
|
Vietnam or saw no combat.
|
|
|
|
Conversely, in another case, a law enforcement "expert" on satanic
|
|
crime told a therapist that a patient's accounts of satanic murders
|
|
in a rural Pacific Northwest town were probably true because the
|
|
community was a hotbed of such satanic activity. When the therapist
|
|
explained that there was almost no violent crime reported in the
|
|
community, the officer explained that that is how you know it is the
|
|
satanists. If you knew about the murders or found the bodies, it
|
|
would not be satanists. How do you argue with that kind of logic?
|
|
|
|
The first step in the assessment and evaluation of victim statements
|
|
is to determine the disclosure sequence, including how much time has
|
|
elapsed since disclosure was first made and the incident was
|
|
reported to the police or social services. The longer the delay, the
|
|
bigger the potential for problems. The next step is to determine the
|
|
number and purpose of *all prior* interviews of the victim
|
|
concerning the allegations. The more interviews conducted before the
|
|
investigative interview, the larger the potential for problems.
|
|
Although there is nothing wrong with admitting shortcomings and
|
|
seeking help, law enforcement should never abdicate its control over
|
|
the investigative interview. When an investigative interview is
|
|
conducted by or with a social worker or therapist using a team
|
|
approach, law enforcement must direct the process. Problems can also
|
|
be created by interviews conducted by various intervenors *after*
|
|
the investigative interview(s).
|
|
|
|
The investigator must closely and carefully evaluate events in the
|
|
victim's life before, during, and after the alleged abuse.
|
|
|
|
Events to be evaluated *before* the alleged abuse include:
|
|
|
|
---- (1) Background of victim.
|
|
---- (2) Abuse of drugs in home.
|
|
---- (3) Pornography in home.
|
|
---- (4) Play, television, and VCR habits.
|
|
---- (5) Attitudes about sexuality in home.
|
|
---- (6) Extent of sex education in home.
|
|
---- (7) Activities of siblings.
|
|
---- (8) Need or craving for attention.
|
|
---- (9) Religious beliefs and training.
|
|
---- (10) Childhood fears.
|
|
---- (11) Custody/visitation disputes.
|
|
---- (12) Victimization of or by family members.
|
|
---- (13) Interaction between victims.
|
|
|
|
Events to be evaluated *during* the alleged abuse include:
|
|
|
|
---- (1) Use of fear or scare tactics.
|
|
---- (2) Degree of trauma.
|
|
---- (3) Use of magic deception or trickery.
|
|
---- (4) Use of rituals.
|
|
---- (5) Use of drugs.
|
|
---- (6) Use of pornography.
|
|
|
|
Events to be evaluated *after* the alleged abuse include:
|
|
|
|
---- (1) Disclosure sequence.
|
|
---- (2) Background of prior interviewers.
|
|
---- (3) Background of parents.
|
|
---- (4) Co-mingling of victims.
|
|
---- (5) Type of therapy received.
|
|
|
|
-- e. EVALUATE CONTAGION.
|
|
|
|
Consistent statements obtained from different multiple victims are
|
|
powerful pieces of corroborative evidence - that is as long as those
|
|
statements were not "contaminated". Investigation must carefully
|
|
evaluate both pre- and post-disclosure contagion, and both victim
|
|
and intervenor contagion. Are the different victim statements
|
|
consistent because they describe common experiences or events, or
|
|
because they reflect contamination or urban legends?
|
|
|
|
The sources of potential contagion are widespread. Victims can
|
|
communicate with each other both prior to and after their
|
|
disclosures. Intervenors can communicate with each other and with
|
|
victims. The team or cell concepts of investigation are attempts to
|
|
deal with potential investigator contagion. All the victims are not
|
|
interviewed by the same individuals, and interviewers do not
|
|
necessarily share information directly with each other. Teams report
|
|
to a leader or supervisor who evaluates the information and decides
|
|
what other investigators need to know.
|
|
|
|
Documenting existing contagion and eliminating additional contagion
|
|
are crucial to the successful investigation and prosecution of these
|
|
cases. There is no way, however, to erase or undo contagion. The
|
|
best you can hope for is to identify and evaluate it and attempt to
|
|
explain it. Mental health professionals requested to evaluate
|
|
suspected victims must be carefully selected. Having a victim
|
|
evaluated by one of the self-proclaimed experts on satanic ritual
|
|
abuse or by some other overzealous intervenor may result in the
|
|
credibility of that victim's testimony being severely damaged.
|
|
|
|
In order to evaluate the contagion element, investigators must
|
|
meticulously and aggressively investigate these cases. The precise
|
|
disclosure sequence of the victim must be carefully identified and
|
|
documented. Investigators must verify through active investigation
|
|
the exact nature and content of each disclosure outcry or statement
|
|
made by the victim. Second-hand information about disclosure is not
|
|
good enough.
|
|
|
|
Whenever possible, personal visits should be made to all locations
|
|
of alleged abuse and the victim's homes. Events prior to the alleged
|
|
abuse must be carefully evaluated. Investigators may have to view
|
|
television programs, films, and videotapes seen by the victims. It
|
|
may be necessary to conduct a background investigation and
|
|
evaluation of everyone, both professional and nonprofessional, who
|
|
interviewed the victims about the allegations prior to and after the
|
|
investigative interview(s). Investigators must be familiar with the
|
|
information about ritual abuse of children being disseminated in
|
|
magazines, books, television programs, videotapes, and conferences.
|
|
Every possible way that a victim could have learned about the
|
|
details of the abuse must be explored if for no other reason than to
|
|
eliminate them and counter the defense's arguments.
|
|
|
|
There may, however, be validity to these contagion factors. *They
|
|
may explain some of the "unbelievable" aspects of the case and
|
|
result in the successful prosecution of the substance of the case.*
|
|
Consistency of statements becomes more significant if contagion is
|
|
identified or disproved by independent investigation. The easier
|
|
cases are the ones where there is a single, identifiable source of
|
|
contagion. Most cases, however, seem to involve multiple contagion
|
|
factors.
|
|
|
|
Munchausen Syndrome and Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy are complex and
|
|
controversial issues in these cases. No attempt will be made to
|
|
discuss them in detail, but they are documented facts (Rosenberg,
|
|
1987). Most of the literature about them focuses on their
|
|
manifestation in the medical setting as false or self-inflicted
|
|
illness or injury. They are also manifested in the criminal justice
|
|
setting as false or self-inflicted crime victimization. If parents
|
|
would poison their children to prove an illness, they might sexually
|
|
abuse their children to prove a crime. "Victims" have been known to
|
|
destroy property, manufacture evidence, and mutilate themselves in
|
|
order to convince others of their victimization. The motivation is
|
|
psychological gain (i.e. attention, forgiveness, etc.) and not
|
|
necessarily money, jealousy, or revenge. These are the unpopular,
|
|
but documented, realities of the world. Recognizing their existence
|
|
does not mean that child sexual abuse and sexual assault are not
|
|
real and serious problems.
|
|
|
|
-- f. ESTABLISH COMMUNICATION WITH PARENTS.
|
|
|
|
The importance and difficulty of this technique in extrafamilial
|
|
cases involving young children cannot be overemphasized. An
|
|
investigator must maintain ongoing communication with the parents of
|
|
victims in these abuse cases. Not all parents react the same way to
|
|
the alleged abuse of their children. Some are very supportive and
|
|
cooperative. Others overreact and some even deny the victimization.
|
|
Sometimes there is animosity and mistrust among parents with
|
|
different reactions. Once the parents lose faith in the police or
|
|
prosecutor and begin to interrogate their own children and conduct
|
|
their own investigation, the case may be lost forever. Parents from
|
|
one case communicate the results of their "investigation" with each
|
|
other, and some have even contacted the parents in other cases. Such
|
|
parental activity is an obvious source of potential contamination.
|
|
|
|
Parents must be made to understand that their children's credibility
|
|
will be jeopardized when and if the information obtained turns out
|
|
to be unsubstantiated or false. To minimize this problem, within the
|
|
limits of the law and without jeopardizing investigative techniques,
|
|
parents must be told on a regular basis how the case is progressing.
|
|
Parents can also be assigned constructive things to do (e.g.
|
|
lobbying for new legislation, working on awareness and prevention
|
|
programs) in order to channel their energy, concern, and "guilt".
|
|
|
|
-- g. DEVELOP A CONTINGENCY PLAN.
|
|
|
|
If a department waits until actually confronted with a case before a
|
|
response is developed, it may be too late. In cases involving
|
|
ongoing abuse of children, departments must respond quickly, and
|
|
this requires advanced planning. There are added problems for small-
|
|
to medium-sized departments with limited personnel and resources.
|
|
Effective investigation of these cases requires planning,
|
|
identification of resources, and, in many cases, mutual aid
|
|
agreements between agencies. The U.S. Department of Defense has
|
|
conducted specialized training and has developed such a plan for
|
|
child sex ring cases involving military facilities and personnel.
|
|
Once a case is contaminated and out of control, I have little advice
|
|
on how to salvage what may once have been a prosecutable criminal
|
|
violation. A few of these cases have even been lost on appeal after
|
|
a conviction because of contamination problems.
|
|
|
|
-- h. MULTIDISCIPLINARY TASK FORCES.
|
|
|
|
Sergeant Beth Dickinson, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department,
|
|
was the chairperson of the Multi-Victim, Multi-Suspect Child Sexual
|
|
Abuse Subcommittee. Sergeant Dickinson states (personal
|
|
communication, Nov. 1989):
|
|
|
|
"One of the biggest obstacles for investigators to overcome is the
|
|
reluctance of law enforcement administrators to commit sufficient
|
|
resources early on to an investigation that has the potential to be
|
|
a multidimensional child sex ring. It is important to get in and get
|
|
on top of the investigation in a timely manner - to get it
|
|
investigated in a timely manner in order to assess the risk to
|
|
children and to avoid hysteria, media sensationalism, and cross-
|
|
contamination of information. The team approach reduces stress on
|
|
individual investigators, allowing for peer support and minimizing
|
|
feelings of being overwhelmed."
|
|
|
|
The team approach and working together does not mean, however, that
|
|
each discipline forgets its role and starts doing the other's job.
|
|
|
|
-- i. SUMMARY.
|
|
|
|
The investigation of child sex rings can be difficult and time
|
|
consuming. The likelihood, however, of a great deal of corroborative
|
|
evidence in a multivictim/multioffender case increases the chances
|
|
of a successful prosecution if the crime occurred. Because there is
|
|
still so much we do not know or understand about the dynamics of
|
|
multidimensional child sex rings, investigative techniques are less
|
|
certain. Each new case must be carefully evaluated in order to
|
|
improve investigative procedures.
|
|
|
|
Because mental health professionals seem to be unable to determine,
|
|
with any degree of certainty, the accuracy of victim statements in
|
|
these cases, law enforcement must proceed using the corroboration
|
|
process. If some of what the victim describes is accurate, some
|
|
misperceived, some distorted, and some contaminated, what is the
|
|
jury supposed to believe? Until mental health professionals can come
|
|
up with better answers, the jury should be asked to believe what the
|
|
*investigation* can corroborate. Even if only a portion of what
|
|
these victims allege is factual, that may still constitute
|
|
significant criminal activity.
|
|
|
|
10. CONCLUSION.
|
|
|
|
There are many possible alternative answers to the question of why
|
|
victims are alleging things that don't seem to be true. The first
|
|
step in finding those answers is to admit the possibility that some
|
|
of what the victims describe may not have happened. Some experts
|
|
seem unwilling to even consider this. Most of these victims are also
|
|
probably not lying and have come to believe that which they are
|
|
alleging actually happened. There are alternative explanations for
|
|
why people who never met each other can tell the same story.
|
|
|
|
I believe that there is a middle ground - a continuum of possible
|
|
activity. Some of what the victims allege may be true and accurate,
|
|
some may be misperceived or distorted, some may be screened or
|
|
symbolic, and some may be "contaminated" or false. The problem and
|
|
challenge, especially for law enforcement, is to determine which is
|
|
which. This can only be done through active investigation. I believe
|
|
that the majority of victims alleging "ritual" abuse are in fact
|
|
victims of some form of abuse or trauma. That abuse or trauma may or
|
|
may not be criminal in nature. After a lengthy discussion about
|
|
various alternative explanations and the continuum of possible
|
|
activity, one mother told me that for the first time since the
|
|
victimization of her young son she felt a little better. She had
|
|
thought her only choices were that either her son was a pathological
|
|
liar or, on the other hand, she lived in a community controlled by
|
|
satanists.
|
|
|
|
Law enforcement has the obvious problem of attempting to determine
|
|
what actually happened for criminal justice purposes. Therapists,
|
|
however, might also be interested in what really happened in order
|
|
to properly evaluate and treat their patients. How and when to
|
|
confront patients with skepticism is a difficult and sensitive
|
|
problem for therapists.
|
|
|
|
Any professional evaluating victims' allegations of "ritual" abuse
|
|
cannot ignore or routinely dismiss the lack of physical evidence (no
|
|
bodies or physical evidence left by violent murders); the difficulty
|
|
in successfully committing a large-scale conspiracy crime (the more
|
|
people involved in any crime conspiracy, the harder it is to get
|
|
away with it); and human nature (intragroup conflicts resulting in
|
|
individual self-serving disclosures are likely to occur in any group
|
|
involved in organized kidnapping, baby breeding, and human
|
|
sacrifice). If and when members of a destructive cult commit
|
|
murders, they are bound to make mistakes, leave evidence, and
|
|
eventually make admissions in order to brag about their crimes or to
|
|
reduce their legal liability. The discovery of the murders in
|
|
Matamoros, Mexico in 1989 and the results of the subsequent
|
|
investigation are good examples of these dynamics.
|
|
|
|
Overzealous intervenors must accept the fact that some of their
|
|
well-intentioned activity is contaminating and damaging the
|
|
prosecutive potential of the cases where criminal acts did occur. We
|
|
must all (i.e., the media, churches, therapists, victim advocates,
|
|
law enforcement, and the general public) ask ourselves if we have
|
|
created an environment where victims are rewarded, listened to,
|
|
comforted, and forgiven in direct proportion to the severity of
|
|
their abuse. Are we encouraging needy or traumatized individuals to
|
|
tell more and more outrageous tales of their victimization? Are we
|
|
making up for centuries of denial by now blindly accepting any
|
|
allegation of child abuse no matter how absurd or unlikely? Are we
|
|
increasing the likelihood that rebellious, antisocial, or attention-
|
|
seeking individuals will gravitate toward "satanism" by publicizing
|
|
it and overreacting to it? The overreaction to the problem can be
|
|
worse than the problem.
|
|
|
|
The amount of "ritual" child abuse going on in this country depends
|
|
on how you define the term. One documented example of what I might
|
|
call "ritual" child abuse was the horror chronicled in the book _A
|
|
Death in White Bear Lake_ (Siegal, 1990). The abuse in this case,
|
|
however, had little to do with anyone's spiritual belief system.
|
|
There are many children in the United States who, starting early in
|
|
their lives, are severely psychologically, physically, and sexually
|
|
traumatized by angry, sadistic parents or other adults. Such abuse,
|
|
however, is not perpetrated only or primarily by satanists. The
|
|
statistical odds are that such abusers are members of mainstream
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|
religions. If 99.9% of satanists and 0.1% of Christians abuse
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|
children as part of their spiritual belief system, that still means
|
|
that the vast majority of children so abused were abused by
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|
Christians.
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|
|
|
Until hard evidence is obtained and corroborated, the public should
|
|
not be frightened into believing that babies are being bred and
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|
eaten, that 50,000 missing children are being murdered in human
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|
sacrifices, or that satanists are taking over America's day care
|
|
centers or institutions. 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.
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|
|
|
The explanation that the satanists are too organized and law
|
|
enforcement is too incompetent only goes so far in explaining the
|
|
lack of evidence. For at least eight years American law enforcement
|
|
has been aggressively investigating the allegations of victims of
|
|
ritual abuse. There is little or no evidence for the portion of
|
|
their allegations that deals with large-scale baby breeding, human
|
|
sacrifice, and organized satanic conspiracies. Now it is up to
|
|
mental health professionals, not law enforcement, to explain why
|
|
victims are alleging things that don't seem to have happened.
|
|
Professionals in this field must accept the fact that there is still
|
|
much we do not know about the sexual victimization of children, and
|
|
that this area desperately needs study and research by rational,
|
|
objective social scientists.
|
|
|
|
If the guilty are to be successfully prosecuted, if the innocent are
|
|
to be exonerated, and if the victims are to be protected and
|
|
treated, better methods to evaluate and explain allegations of
|
|
"ritual" child abuse must be developed or identified. Until this is
|
|
done, the controversy will continue to cast a shadow over and fuel
|
|
the backlash against the validity and reality of child sexual abuse.
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|
|
|
XI. REFERENCES.
|
|
|
|
American Psychiatric Association, _Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
|
|
of Mental Disorders_ (3rd Ed., Rev.). Washington, DC: 1987.
|
|
|
|
Breiner, S.J., _Slaughter of the Innocents: Child Abuse Through the
|
|
Ages and Today_. New York: Plenum Press, 1990.
|
|
|
|
Brown, R., _Prepare for War_. Chino, CA: Chick Publications, 1987.
|
|
|
|
Brunvand, J.H., _The Vanishing Hitchhiker_. New York: Norton, 1981.
|
|
|
|
Harrington, Walt, "The Devil in Anton LaVey". Washington, D.C.: _The
|
|
Washington Post Magazine_, February 23, 1986, pages #6-17.
|
|
|
|
Lanning, K.V., _Child Molesters: A Behavioral Analysis_ (2nd Ed.).
|
|
Washington, D.C.: National Center for Missing and Exploited
|
|
Children, 1987.
|
|
|
|
Lanning, K.V. (1989). Child sex rings: A behavioral analysis.
|
|
Washington, DC: National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
|
|
|
|
LaVey, Anton, _The Satanic Bible_. New York: Avon Books, 1969.
|
|
|
|
Mayer, R.S., _Satan's Children_. New York: Putnam, 1991.
|
|
|
|
Michigan Department of State Police, _Occult Survey_. East Lansing,
|
|
Michigan, 1990.
|
|
|
|
_National Coalition on Television Violence (NCTV) News_, June-
|
|
October 1988, page #3.
|
|
|
|
_National Incidence Studies on Missing, Abducted, Runaway, and
|
|
Thrownaway Children in America_. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department
|
|
of Justice, 1990.
|
|
|
|
Prattanis, A., "Hidden messages", _Wellness Letter_. Berkeley,
|
|
California: University of California, January 1991, pages #1-2.
|
|
|
|
Rosenberg, D.A., "Web of Deceit: A Literature Review of Munchausen
|
|
Syndrome by Proxy", _Child Abuse and Neglect_ #2, 1987, pages #547-
|
|
563.
|
|
|
|
Rush, E., _The Best Kept Secret: Sexual Abuse of Children_. New
|
|
York: McGraw-Hill, 1980.
|
|
|
|
Smith, M., & Pazder, L., _Michelle Remembers_. New York: Congdon and
|
|
Lattis, 1980.
|
|
|
|
Siegal, B., _A Death in White Bear Lake_. New York: Bantam, 1990.
|
|
|
|
"Stranger-Abduction Homicides of Children", _Juvenile Justice
|
|
Bulletin_. Washington, D.C.: U. S. Department of Justice, 1989.
|
|
|
|
Stratford. L., _Satan's Underground_. Eugene, Oregon: Harvest House,
|
|
1988.
|
|
|
|
Terr, L., _Too Scared to Cry_. New York: Harper & Row, 1990.
|
|
|
|
Timnik, L., "The Times Poll", _Los Angeles Times_, August 25-26,
|
|
1985.
|
|
|
|
Virginia Crime Commission Task Force, _Final Report of the Task
|
|
Force Studying Ritual Crime_. Richmond, Virginia.
|
|
|
|
|
|
12. SUGGESTED READING.
|
|
|
|
-- a. Cooper, John Charles, _The Black Mask: Satanism in America
|
|
Today_. Old Tappen, N.J.: Fleming H. Revell Company, 1990.
|
|
|
|
Probably the best of the large number of books available primarily
|
|
in Christian bookstores and written from the Christian perspective.
|
|
This one, however, is written without the hysteria and
|
|
sensationalism of most. Recommended for investigators who want
|
|
information from this perspective.
|
|
|
|
-- b. Hicks, Robert D., _In Pursuit of Satan: The Police and the
|
|
Occult_. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books, 1991.
|
|
|
|
Undoubtedly the best book written to date on the topic of satanism
|
|
and the occult from the law enforcement perspective. Robert D. Hicks
|
|
is a former police officer who is currently employed as a criminal
|
|
justice analyst for the state of Virginia. Must reading for any
|
|
criminal justice professional involved in this issue. Unfortunately,
|
|
in the chapter on "Satanic Abuse of Children", the author appears to
|
|
have been overly influenced by extreme skeptics with minimal or
|
|
questionable credentials in this area. The book is easy to read,
|
|
logical, and highly recommended.
|
|
|
|
-- c. Richardson, James T.; Best, Joel; & Bromley, David G.; Eds,
|
|
_The Satanism Scare_. NY: Aldine de Gruyter, 1991.
|
|
|
|
The best book now available on the current controversy over satanism
|
|
written from the academic perspective, The editors and many of the
|
|
chapter authors are college professors and have written an
|
|
objective, well-researched book. One of the great strengths of this
|
|
book is the fact that the editors address a variety of the
|
|
controversial issues from a variety of disciplines (i.e., sociology,
|
|
history, folklore, anthropology, criminal justice). Because of its
|
|
academic perspective it is sometimes harder to read but is well
|
|
worth the effort. The chapter on "Law Enforcement and the Satanic
|
|
Crime Connection" contains the results of a survey of "Cult Cops"
|
|
and is must reading for law enforcement officers. The chapter on
|
|
"Satanism and Child Molestation: Constructing the Ritual Abuse
|
|
Scare" was written, however, by a free-lance journalist who seems to
|
|
take the position that these cases involve little or no real child
|
|
abuse.
|
|
|
|
-- d. Terr, Lenore, _Too Scared to Cry: Psychic Trauma in
|
|
Childhood_. New York: Harper and Row, 1990.
|
|
|
|
An excellent book written by a psychiatrist that provides important
|
|
insights into the nature and recallability of early psychic trauma.
|
|
For me, Dr. Terr's research and findings in the infamous Chowchilla
|
|
kidnapping case shed considerable light on the "ritual" abuse
|
|
controversy.
|