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Satanic ritual abuse (SRA) refers to the sexual abuse of children or non-consenting adults in the context of Satanic rituals. The term sadistic ritual abuse is sometimes used or suggested as a more descriptive synonym that makes no assumption of whether actual "Satanism" is involved. Allegations of SRA remain controversial and they have featured prominently in controversies over child abuse, memory and the law. Accusations and substantiated allegations of child abuse ocurring within the context of satanic rituals have been documented on all the continents but Asia, with a greater number and higher profile of cases being reported in the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia.
History
Freud
A number of psychologists have noted the similarities between modern accounts of SRA, and the disclosures of Emma Eckstein to Sigmund Freud whilst undergoing psychoanalytic treatment. Eckstein described to Freud experiences similar to the ritual abuse survivors of the 1970s, 80s and 90s, which included sexual abuse and ritual bloodletting. Freud was so disturbed by these disclosures that he stated "we may have before us a residue of a primaeval sexual cult".
In the 20th century
The phrase 'satanic ritual abuse' first arose in the mid-1980s to describe the disclosures of some children in child protection cases, and some adults in psychotherapy. In the early 1980s there was an exponential increase in child protection investigations in America, Britain and other developed countries due to mandatory reporting laws and increased public awareness of child abuse. In a small number of investigations, children disclosed alleged organised and ritualistic forms of sexual abuse by parents and carergivers, claims also made by adults in psychotherapy. These disclosures included descriptions of sexual abuse in the context of Satanic cults, rituals and the use of Satanic iconography, garnering the label "satanic ritual abuse" in the media and some professionals.
Accounts of SRA were amongst the first wave of autobiographical literature on child abuse that emerged in the early 1980s. One of the most well known is Michelle Remembers, published in 1980, written by Michelle Smith and her psychiatrist (and later husband) Lawrence Pazder. Since the publication of Michelle Remembers, a number of autobiographies and collections discussing organized abuse were published. Since that time, clinicians, psychotherapists and social workers have documented clients who describe a history of SRA and a body of literature on the treatment of ritually abused patients, much of which focuses on dissociative disorders, has emerged. The existence of SRA is believed by social workers, therapists, members of law enforcement, government and the general public, with varying degrees of proof, corroboration and testimony by individuals disclosing SRA.
Skepticism
There is a diverse body of skeptical literature on SRA. Sociologists and journalists noted the vigorous nature with which some evangelical activists and groups were using claims of SRA to further their religious and political goals. Other commentators suggested that the entire phenomenon may evidence of a "moral panic" over Satanism and child abuse. Skeptical explanations for allegations of SRA have included an attempt by 'radical feminists' to undermine the nuclear family, a backlash against working women, homophobic attacks on gay childcare workers, a universal need to believe in evil, fear of alternative spiritualities "end of the millennium" anxieties, or a transient form of temporal lobe epilepsy.
Skeptics have treated allegations of SRA as 'viral agents' or rashes spread through conferences, seminars, books, television programs and court cases, and professionals who believe in SRA.. Cases of SRA have been described as “psychogenic syndromes" or "hysterical epidemics", infectious “memetic” agents , symptoms of a “mediasomatic ailment”, or simply the “madness in the air” . When cases of ritual abuse emerged outside North America, journalists and researchers accused American child abuse researchers of "spreading" the epidemic of SRA allegations by mentioning it at international conferences and training workshops .
By the early 1990s, the phrase "satanic ritual abuse" was featured in media coverage of ritualistic abuse but its use decreased among professionals in favour of more nuanced terms such as "multi-dimensional child sex rings" "ritual/ritualistic", "organised" or "sadistic" abuse, that acknowledged the complexity of abuse cases with multiple perpetrators and victims without projecting a religious framework onto perpetrators. The issue is further obscured by the existence of 'pseudo-satanists' who do not believe in the rituals, but use the trappings to coerce and terrify victims.
Evidence
The prevalence of any form of sexual abuse is difficult to quantify, and this is particularly the case in regards to SRA. There is little consensus on a definition of SRA, and its existence is challenged in some quarters. Nonetheless, there are some research findings that shed some light on the prevalence of SRA.
Research in Australia and Britain suggests that between a third and a quarter of psychotherapists, social workers and counselors have encountered at least one client who discloses allegations of ritualistic abuse. These findings are supported by a comprehensive survey undertaken in America in 1996 in which a minority of psychologist members of the American Psychological Association who responded had encountered at least one client telling of "ritualistic or religion-related" abuse, and the majority believed their clients. Over 12 000 cases of clients with a history of organised and ritualistic abuse were reported by respondents, however, where the survey asked respondents to detail empirical or corroborating evidence for such histories, the researchers felt that there was insufficient basis to conclude that these histories were based on factual events. An estimated 93% of therapists working with alleged ritual abuse survivors in the early and mid 1990's believed that ritual abuse occurs. Studies have shown a connection between dissociative identity disorder and SRA, and researchers have found ritualistic abuse in substantiated cases of day care sexual abuse.
In the late 1980s, a BBC survey of British police forces found that, of 186 cases of network abuse where either multiple abusers or multiple abused children were known to each other, only five involved claims of ritual or satanic abuse. In another British study, 29% of the 211 cases of organised child sexual abuse reported to researchers by police, social and welfare agencies from the period of 1988 to 1991 were designated "ritual abuse" cases by respondents.
Though evidence for the existence for SRA is equivocal, professionals who work with people disclosing a history of SRA in therapy generally believe that these disclosures are indicative of genuine trauma, and research with these clients have found that they exhibit higher levels of trauma and symptoms compared to both non-abused and non-satanically abused peers; irrespective of the reality of SRA, individuals reporting SRA appear to be traumatized.
SRA in the courts
In America and Britain, defendants in a small number of cases of organised abuse successfully engaged journalists in framing the charges against them as evidence of “moral panic” and “mass hysteria”, whilst child protection workers and social workers involved in the cases were restricted from challenging these claims by professional codes of confidentiality. These criminal trials attracted significant media attention, and they were often characterised by acquittals, hung juries, and successful appeals. The failure of these high-profile cases generated worldwide media attention, and came to play a central feature in the growing controversies over child abuse, memory and the law. Public anxiety that an innocent adult could be subject to prosecution for sexual abuse based on false testimony was inflamed by the bizarre nature of children’s allegations in ritual abuse cases. Some community groups, such as the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, lobbied the press and policy-makers to contest accounts of organised and ritualistic abuse, whilst clinicians, police and healthcare workers struggled to accommodate cases of satanic ritual abuse within their professional practice.
During the early 1980s, some courts attempted ad hoc accommodations to address the anxieties of child witnesses in relation to testifying before defendants. Screens or CCTV technology are a common feature of child sexual assault trials today, children in the early 1980s were typically forced into direct visual contact with the accused abuser whilst in court. Convictions were overturned in one SRA case after a child witness was permitted to angle her chair away from the defendants, which was deemed unconstitutional under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which requires that a criminal defendant must "be confronted with the witnesses against him".
In the McMartin ritual abuse case, children as young as ten were subject to hostile cross-examination for over two weeks. The McMartin case sparked a program of legislative reform in recognition of the harm that children testifying in court and the justice system face. It also catalyzed a broad agenda of research into the nature of children's testimony and the reliability of their oral evidence in court. The findings of this research is somewhat ambiguous, suggesting that neither children nor adults are immune to suggestive interviewing techniques but even extremely suggestive techniques do not inevitably lead to false reports.
Dissociative identity disorder and SRA
In the 1980s, children and adults with a life history of ritualistic abuse experienced high levels of distress and trauma-related symptoms and exhibited high levels of dissociation, resulting in the diagnosis of multiple personality disorder (MPD, now labelled dissociative identity disorder). Originally introduced in the DSM III, MPD was a controversial diagnosis that had previously been considered extremely rare. Some skeptics claimed that the increase in MPD diagnosis on the 1980s and 1990s, and it's association with memories of SRA, were evidence that professionals providing care and support to people diagnosed with DID were engaged in malpractice.
Criticisms of DID have largely died away following numerous research studies and meta-analyses confirming the construct validity of the diagnosis, and the standardisation of evidence-based treatment for the disorder. DID has become less controversial since its introduction as a diagnosis though skepticism about the diagnosis is still significant in the scientific community. The reliability of memories of SRA elucidated by clients in treatment for MPD has been a major point of contention in the popular media and amongst clinicians. Some healthcare professionals continue to express ambivalence over the reliability of narratives of SRA provided by patients, although most acknowledge that such a narrative is likely to be indicative of serious victimisation and trauma.
Specific cases
Cases of SRA have been reported throughout the world. Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States have had several incidents of alleged SRA which received national and international news coverage.
Argentina
In 2006, a 12-year-old homeless boy was tortured and murdered during an 'eclectic' ritual that combined numerous elements of Afro-Brazilian satanic cults. Police also suspect that a baby found murdered in a similar manner in 2005 may also have been a victim of the cult.
Australia
Perth, Western Australia
In Perth, 1991, police claimed to have proven a link between "organised child sexual abuse and devil worship" following the confession of a self-professed Satanist and former Boy Scout leader to the sexual abuse of number of young boys in the context of Satanic rituals. The defence claimed that Scott Gozenton, 20, had been sexually abused as a child before being drawn into a group of people who practiced "Satanic" and ritualistic sex with adults and children. Gozenton's lawyer alleged that numerous "covens" were operating in Perth, and that Gozenton had sexually abused the boys in his Boy Scout troop in order to recruit them for the group. Gozenton's defence also claimed that Gozenton had been followed and threatened by "coven" members throughout the court proceedings.
Mornington Peninsula, Victoria
In the late 1980s, a number of children at a daycare centre in the Mornington Peninsula, Victoria, began disclosing experiences of organised and ritualistic sexual abuse to their parents and the police. Their disclosures included instances in which they were taken in a car from the creche to a nearby house, undressed by adults and sexually assaulted, video-taped and filmed while naked, and urinated and defecated upon by adults. The children disclosed that some of the abusers wore police uniforms, masks and costumes.
In 1992, a government inquiry ordered that the daycare centre be shut on the basis that there was significant evidence that the owner of the centre had either participated in the abuse or facilitated it. This include forensic evidence that some of the children had been sexually penetrated. The police never pressed charges against the couple, who later fled to Queensland and, in a serious breach of privacy laws, published the names and addresses of all the complainant children online.
In 2002, Chief Commissioner Christine Nixon refers complaints about the mishandling of the case by police to the Victorian Ombudsman. An officer from the Ethical Standards Department was stood down a year later from the Ombudsman's investigation for "incompetence" after failing to pass on information from two key witnesses, and claiming that he never spoke to them when phone records proved that he had. One of the witnesses referred to a tape of child pornography showing men in police uniforms sexually assaulting children from the daycare centre, however, this lead was never followed up by the police. Another witness identified the house in which the children had been assaulted as being owned by a police officer.
The principal of a private college on the Mornington Peninsula repeatedly told the Department of Human Services that a 12-year-old boy disclosed ongoing sexual abuse by an organised group of men wearing police uniforms. According to the principal, all records of the child's complaint vanished. A Victoria Police spokesman said he was not aware that files had disappeared. The police declined to press charges, saying the boy had been "too well groomed" by the pedophiles and probably would not testify in court..
In 2004, the Office of Police Integrity found that the police investigation into the abuse of the children at the preschool had been inadequate and ordered a re-opening of the investigation.
Dandenong Ranges, Victoria
In 2000, a journalist from the Herald-Sun interviewed three women who stated they had been subject to SRA, organised abuse, child pornogrpahy and child prostitution by their parents, who they allege were involved in a network of sexual abusers based in the Dandenong Ranges.
Melbourne, Victoria
In 1998, Robin Angus Fletcher was jailed for eight years after pleading guilty to the sexual and ritual abuse of two children. Fletcher had extensive involvement in a satanic cult, and previous convictions for false imprisonment, indecent assault, managing a brothel and living off earnings of prostitution. Along with his wife, he was found to have used hypnosis and ritualistic abuse to sexually abuse and prostitute two children in the mid-1990s. Whilst in jail, he attempted to have the two children murdered in order to prevent them from testifying against him .
In 2001, the Melbourne diocese of the Catholic Church acknowledged as "substantially true" allegations that a Melbourne priest took part in Satanic ritual abuse in which a number of deaths occurred in the 1960s, and paid compensation to a surviving victim.
Central Coast, New South Wales
In 1999, two journalists from the Sun-Herald claimed to have seen evidence of the ritual abuse of children. They interviewed six mothers whose children had disclosed experiences of SRA and organised abuse in New South Wales. The children's disclosures were corroborating, although they had never met one another, and they had been able to draw 'satanic' ritual sites which where similar to ritual sites uncovered by police on the central coast of New South Wales. One mother stated that her sons remembered being drugged and hypnotised. "He said they dressed in black robes and had eye and mouth pieces cut out," she said. "I know they're pretty dangerous people. I have had warnings outside the house telling me to stop investigations. We're fearful for our lives. The boys never want me out of their sight." .
Belgium
Main article: Marc DutrouxDuring the investigation of the very high profile Marc Dutroux case, a number of women approached police claiming to be adult survivors of a network of sexual offenders.. The disclosures of these women, known as the "X Witnesses", became the infamous "X-Dossiers", and they included accounts of SRA, child murder, child pornography and child prostitution by a number of men, including Dutroux. The X-Witnesses were widely dismissed by the Belgian media, although they solved a number of missing person's cases by directing the police to the bodies of murdered children and women and they knew unpublished details about a number of unsolved murders.
In relation to SRA, Regina Louf (Witness X1) stated in interview, " When they received new victims into their network, it was extremely important that they shouldn’t speak to anyone about what had happened to them. That’s why they organised ‘ceremonies’. They took the victim to a heavily guarded house and convinced her that it was ‘her’ party. There would then be a great performance with masks, candles, inverted crosses, swords and animals. Rabbits were disembowelled, the blood was poured on naked girls, and some men and women worshipped the devil ... The only aim of these rituals was to totally disorient the victims. They plagued these kids with a load of nonsense - ‘Now you are the wife of Satan’ – and also gave them coke, LSD or heroin. I can assure you that after that you feel completely outside the real world. That was the aim – that the victim herself should begin to doubt the fact that all this had really happened. The result was that the victims didn’t dare speak to anyone."
Brazil
In the early 1990s, Superior Universal Alignment, an Argentinian-based international cult, was implicated in the ritualistic murders of several children. One of the leaders of the group, Osvaldo Marcineiro, confessed to murdering a number of young children in Satanic rituals, in which the children were tortured, murdered and their body parts cannibalised. A number of prominent citizens were arrested in relation to the murders, and it later emerged that they had paid the cult to conduct the murderous ceremonies. A search on cult member's houses turned up cult registers, guns, hooded cloaks, 100 videotapes of cult ceremonies and satanist publications, including a 200-page book by cult leader Valentina de Andrade called "God, the Great Farce." Brazilian authorities suggested that the cult was connected to Satanic groups internationally.
In 2003, five members of the Superior Universal Alignment cult in the Amazonian town of Altamira were convicted for the ritualistic murders of three children and the castration of two others. The victims were aged between 8 and 13 years, and they were kidnapped, tortured or killed between 1989 and 1993. Their genitals were removed and used in Satanic rituals by 75-year old village clairvoyant, Valentina de Andrade, the leader of the Superior Universal Alignment cult . de Andrade had previously been sought by police in Argentina and Uruguay prior to her arrest in Brazil on suspicion of involvement in other satanic ritual killings.
Following the castration of victims, two doctors involved in the sect removed the victim's other organs for sale on the international black market . Other people sentenced in relation to the murders included a former police officer, a businessman and the son of an influential landowner. The charges related to the murders of three young children and the attempted murder of another, however, victim's families say that there were at least nineteen other murdered children. The cult is based in Argentina and has branches in Holland .
Ireland
In 2006, a jury at Dublin Country Coroner's court unanimously ruled that the infant found stabbed to death over three decades ago belonged to Cynthia Owen. The court found that the infant, Noleen, was fathered by Owen's father and murdered by Owen's mother shortly after birth.
During the trial, Owen detailed her childhood history of incest, organised abuse, and satanic ritual abuse orchestrated by her parents involving at least nine other men and her account was supported by her psychologist . She claimed that her brother and sister Michael and Therese were also abused, a charge that was denied by her older brother and father. Michael and Therese both committed suicide in 2005, and Therese's detailed 37-paged suicide note corroborated Cynthia's account. A friend of Therese's testified at the trial, stating that Therese had spoken to him at length about her sexual abuse in childhood. It also emerged in trial that Therese was the child of one of Owen's older sisters by Owen's father.
Following the findings of the Coroner's Court, Owen has raised questions regarding the disposal of her daughter's body and the failure of the police to investigate the murder. In particular, she has highlighted the fact that no blood or tissue samples were kept, that the bag and sanitary towels found alongside the murdered child have gone missing, that the records of the first inquest into the murder have gone missing, and that her daughter was buried in a mass grave alongside other infants that, it has recently emerged, were subject to illegal experimentation.
Italy
In 1998, six adults from the Emilia Romagna region were arrested for allegedly prostituting their children to a child sex ring. The arrests followed the conviction of eight people in the region in 2005 for their role on a child sex ring, and child witnesses in this case had tipped police off to the existence of second ring in the area. The child witnesses disclosed being taken to cemetaries and houses in the country for abuse by up to 30 adults, some of whom wore animal masks to conceal their identities. Alleged incidences of abuse included 'satanic' forms of abuse and the manufacture of child pornography. One child told of being taken to the cemetery with another child and a new born baby, when nine adults performed a funeral ceremony for the other children. "But I believed everything was just pretend," he said. "We were locked in a chest with a cross on top. We cried. We were really frightened. Inside there it was dark, the lid was heavy and we couldn't open it." At the end of the ceremonies the children were told that they too had become "children of the devil."
In 2002, four people were arrested for "Satanism and paedophilia" following a police operation in the central city of Pescara. Police believed that the group may have abused dozens of children in rituals involving bodies stolen from ceremonies. The cult leader was charged with a series of crimes, including sexual abuse, attempted kidnapping, violence, mistreatment and giving drugs to minors. His sister was suspected of destroying evidence, including hundreds of photographs, videotapes, amulets, chalices and tunics.
In 2006, five members of the cult "Beasts of Satan" were jailed for three ritualistic murders. . The victims included the girlfriend of the cult leader, a young runaway who had joined the group, and a woman apparently intended as a human sacrifice. Police speculated that the cult may have killed the two members for attempted to save the life of the woman they planned to sacrifice. Victims were shot, stabbed and buried alive.
In April of 2007, six people were arrested for sexually abusing fifteen children in Rignano Flaminio. The suspects were accused of filming the children engaged in sexual acts with 'satanic' overtones.
The Netherlands
In 1989, a group of parents reported suspected abuse in a school in the town of Oude Pekela, The Netherlands, with some individuals reporting Satanic abuse. Authorities investigated and found no proof of abuse. The original allegations and their analysis by researchers have been disputed by scholars. Further unrelated allegations in 1991 resulted in a workgroup to study the existence of SRA in the Netherlands. In 1994 the workgroup concluded it was unlikely SRA occurred in the manner described and that the stories were not wholly true, instead serving as a defence mechanism against other types of psychological trauma, produced in part by suggestive questioning by 'believing' therapists .
South Africa
Ritualistic child sexual abuse has been a feature of numerous sexual assault and homicide cases in South Africa over the last twenty years, in both 'satanic' and traditional tribal contexts.
In 1990, the prime suspects in the disappearances of several young girls, Gert van Rooyen and his partner, Joey Haarhoff, committed suicide whilst on the run from police. Van Rooyen's son Flippie, arrested a year later for the mutilation and murder of a Zimbabewean teenager, claimed that his father had abducted several young girls, sexually abused them in Satanic rituals, murdered those who weren't obedient and sold the others into sexual slavery overseas . His bizarre claims were lent some credibility when animal bones were found buried at van Rooyen's house in accordance with Flippie's claims of animal sacrifice and the recent discovery of human remains in a location where Flippie had claimed his father had buried two of the abducted children . The similarities between the van Rooyen case and the Marc Dutroux scandal in Belgium sparked speculation from the South African police, the Federal Bureau of Investigations, and the European Union regarding links to an international smuggling ring in prostituted children and body parts .
In 2003, Robin Classen was found guilty of sexually assaulting and torturing three children in the context of satanic rituals. The children disclosed being abducted by Classen, sometimes drugged, tortured, indecently assaulted, forced to eat insects and drink Classen's blood and animal blood .
In August 2007, Theunis Olivier was sentenced to life in prison for the murder of six-year-old Steven Siebert.. He had previously served a jail term in Zimbabwe for indecent assault and rape before entering South Africa, where he kidnapped, raped and murdered Steven Siebert in 2005. In his testimony, Olivier claimed to have been abused in a Satanic cult from a young age , that he suffered from Multiple Personality Disorder and that the murder had been undertaken by one of his personalities, Theo. .
United Kingdom
There have been a number of cases in the United Kingdom in which SRA has been alleged. Some of these cases have garnered significant media attention, and they are listed below.
The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children affirmed the reality of ritual abuse in 1990, with the publication of survey findings that, of 66 child protection teams in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, 14 teams had received reports of ritual abuse from children and seven of them were working directly with children who had been ritually abused, sometimes in groups of 20.
Rochdale
In 1990 there was a case in Rochdale which around twenty children were removed from their homes by social services who alleged the existence of SRA after discovering 'satanic indictators'. No evidence was found of satanic apparatus' and charges were dismissed when a court ruled the allegations were untrue. The children who were removed from their homes sued the city council in 2006 for compensation and an apology.
Orkney
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In 1990-1991 nine children suspected of being sexually abused by their families and an alleged pedophile ring were removed by social services in Orkney. The abuse was also alleged to involve "ritualistic elements". The parents approached the media and made the case national and international news. In April 1991, a sheriff ruled that the evidence was seriously flawed and the children were returned home. In June, social services successfully appealed the sheriff's ruling, but the case was not pursued to the criminal courts.
In 1992, the case was subject to an official inquiry which was very critical of professionals involved in the case. The report found that the conduct of the workers during the removal was proper. However, a 1994 government report based on three years of research found that there were no foundation to the many claims of Satanic abuse.
Broxtowe
In Nottingham, a Broxtowe family was charged with multigenerational child sexual abuse and neglect. A 600-page report on the incident concluded that there was no evidence of the claims made by children or corroborating adults. Though the children may have been 'sadistically terrorized', allegations of organized satanic abuse were found to be baseless and the indicators used by the Social Services department were without validity.
Lewis
In 2003 allegations by three children in Lewis, Scotland resulted in the arrest of eight people for sexual abuse occurring between 1990 and 2000. A 2005 investigation by the Social Work Inspection Agency found extensive evidence of sexual, physical and emotional abuse and neglect. Police investigation resulted in allegations of an island-wide "Satanic paedophile ring", though charges were dropped nine months later following an inconclusive investigation.
A key witness who had implicated her family in the abuse and whose evidence was "vital" to the case of satanic abuse recanted her testimony in 2006 and the media raised questions about the nature of the police interviewing techniques. with a police spokesperson replying that the witness was questioned appropriately and that allegations were made by numerous witnesses.
United States
Main article: Kern County child abuse cases Main article: McMartin preschool trial Main article: West Memphis 3In the United States, major allegations of Satanic ritual abuse occurred in the Kern County child abuse cases, McMartin preschool trial and the West Memphis 3, which garnered world-wide media coverage. Other high-profile court cases involving allegations of SRA dominated coverage on child abuse throughout the 1980s to 1990s.
Jordan, Minnesota
The first such case occurred in Jordan, Minnesota, in 1983, where several children made allegations against an unrelated man and their parents. The man confessed and then identified a number of the children’s parents as perpetrators. Ultimately twenty four adults were charged with child abuse though only three went to trial with two acquittals and one conviction. During the investigation, the children made allegations of manufacturing child pornography, ritualistic animal sacrifice, coprophagia, urophagia and infanticide, at which point the Federal Bureau of Investigation was alerted. No criminal charges resulted from the FBI investigation, and in his review of the case, the Attorney General noted that the initial investigation by the local police and county attorney was so poor that it had destroyed the opportunity to fully investigate the children’s allegations. Supreme Court Justice Scalia referred to the Minnesota case in his summation on a later case, and stated, "here is no doubt that some sexual abuse took place in Jordan; but there is no reason to believe it was as widespread as charged," and cited the repeated, well-intentioned but coercive techniques used by the investigators as damaging to the investigation. The bizarre allegations of the children, the ambiguities of the investigation and the unsuccessful prosecutions were widely covered by the media. A number of accused parents confessed to sexually abusing their children, received immunity, and underwent treatment for sexual abuse, whilst parental rights for six other children in the case were terminated.
Hosanna Church, New Orleans
In 2007, a state district court jury in Amite voted unanimously Monday to convict Austin "Trey" Bernard III in the rape of his 2-year-old daughter, and 11 of the 12 jurors found him guilty in the rape of a 12-year-old boy. Ten votes were needed to convict. Bernard had pled not guilty, however, he had previously confessed three times, and written about the ritualistic sexual abuse of the children in a detailed 230-page diary supplied to the jury. There are currently six remaining defendants awaiting trial in relation to the case, and they have been accused of organised and ritualistic abuse of three children at Hosanna Church.
The activities at the church became known when one of the defendants walked in to the local sheriff's office, and described to investigators how he and other church members had molested children, taught them to have sex with each other, as well as with a dog, and engaged in SRA. He told the detectives that he drank cat blood and poured it on the bodies of his young victims.
At Bernard's trial, Federal prosecutor Lisa Marie Freitas testified to the fact that Bernard had confessed to the sexual abuse of the complainant children in Satanic rituals. "According to Bernard, the rituals took place in what was called “the room,” which was the church's youth room ... The rituals had a Satanic theme, including a Pentagram, the use of animals and animal parts such as chicken feet and the use of animal blood ... The youth room was pitch black when the lights were out, said, but the room was equipped with a black light. When Bernard turned it on, the light revealed writings on the walls from ceiling to floor. “Every inch, from top to bottom, was writing,” Freitas said. The writing consisted of songs, lyrics and Biblical verses. Some of the words were inverted or changed, she said. Using a special chemical, a search team found signs of body fluids all over the carpet, she said."
See also
References
- ^ "Ritual Abuse of Children" (html). Retrieved 2007-10-22.
- Brown, D. (1998). D. Brown, A. W. Scheflin, D. C. Hammond (ed.). Memory, Trauma Treatment and the Law. New York; London: W. W. Norton and Company. pp. 21–65. ISBN 0393702545.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) - ^ Perskin, Pamela Sue; Noblitt, James Randall (2000). Cult and ritual abuse: its history, anthropology, and recent discovery in contemporary America. New York: Praeger. ISBN 0-275-96665-8.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link), Hudson, P. "Ritual Abuse: Discovery, Diagnosis and Treatment", Saratoga, CA, R&E Publishers, 1991 Cite error: The named reference "Noblitt" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page). - Masson, J.M. The Complete Letters of Sigmund Freud to Wilhelm Fliess, 1887-1904. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press. ISBN 0-674-15421-5.
- Hechler, David. The Battle and the Backlash: The Child Sexual Abuse War. Macmillan Pub Co. ISBN 0-669-21362-4.
- Cozolino, L. (1989). "The ritual abuse of children: Implications for clinical practice and research". The Journal of Sex Research. 26 (1): 131–138.
- ^ Van Benschoten, S.C. (1990). "Multiple personality disorder and satanic ritual abuse: The issue of credibility". Dissociation. 1 (3): 13–20. Cite error: The named reference "Van1990" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- Conte, Jon R. (2002). Critical issues in child sexual abuse: historical, legal, and psychological perspectives. Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications. ISBN 0761909125.
- Examples include:
- Becky, Lane (1995). Where the Rivers Join: A Personal Account of Healing from Ritual Abuse. Press Gang Publishers. ISBN 0889740437.
- Laura Buchanan. Satan's Child: A Survivor Tells Her Story to Help Others Heal. Compcare Pubns. ISBN 0-89638-327-X.
- Anna Richardson. Double Vision: A Travelogue of Recovery from Ritual Abuse. Pasadena, Calif: Trilogy Books. ISBN 0-9623879-7-5.
- Examples include:
- Ryder, Daniel. Breaking the Circle of Satanic Ritual Abuse: Recognizing and Recovering from the Hidden Trauma. Compcare Pubns. ISBN 0-89638-258-3.
- Smith, Margaret (1993). Ritual abuse: what it is, why it happens, and how to help. : HarperSanFrancisco. ISBN 0-06-250214-X.
- ^ Sinason, Valerie (1994). Treating survivors of satanist abuse. New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-10543-9.
- ^ Jonker, F. (1991). "Experiences with ritualist child sexual abuse: a case study from the Netherlands". Child Abuse and Neglect. 15: 191–196. PMID 2043971. Retrieved 2007-10-20.
{{cite journal}}
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suggested) (help) - Fraser, George C. (1997). The Dilemma of Ritual Abuse: Cautions and Guides for Therapists. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press. ISBN 0-88048-478-0.
- Ross, Colin A. (1995). Satanic Ritual Abuse: Principles of Treatment. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-2857-8.
- ^ "Report of Utah State Task Force on Ritual Abuse" (PDF). Utah Governer's Commission for Women and Families. 1992-05-01. Retrieved 2007-11-26.
- ^ Noblitt, Randy (1998). "An Empirical Look at the Ritual Abuse Controversy". (privately published). Retrieved 2007-11-22.
{{cite conference}}
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- Deyoung, M. (1996). "A painted devil: Constructing the satanic ritual abuse of children problem". Aggression and Violent Behavior. 1 (3): 235–248. Retrieved 2007-11-20.
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Snedeker, Michael R.; Nathan, Debbie. Satan's Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt. Lincoln, Neb: Authors Choice Press. ISBN 0595189555.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Hood, Lynley. A City Possessed: The Christchurch Civic Creche Case. Longacre Press. ISBN 1877135623.
- Frankfurter, D. (2001). "Ritual as Accusation and Atrocity: Satanic Ritual Abuse, Gnostic Libertinism, and Primal Murders". History of Religions. 40 (4): 352–380. Retrieved 2007-11-20.
- La Fontaine, J. S. (1998). Speak of the Devil: allegations of satanic abuse in Britain. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521629349.
- ^ Showalter, Elaine (1997). Hystories: hysterical epidemics and modern media. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0231104596.
- Paley, J. (2001). "Satanist abuse and alien abduction: A comparative analysis theorizing temporal lobe activity as a possible connection between anomalous memories". British Journal of Social Work. 27 (1): 43–70. ISSN 0045-3102.
- Nathan, D. (1990). "Never Forget the McMartin Case." The San Francisco Chronicle. 12 August: 20/Z1, Guilliatt, R. (1995). "Daughter Claims Memory of Ritual Abuse." Sydney Morning Herald. 13 May, Goodlin, L. (2002). "Recovered Memory; Unproven strategy to find evidence of past sexual abuse." The Post-Standard Syracuse. 24 September, New York: A9, Radford, B. (2004). "Canadian Defendants Victorious in Ritual Abuse Case." Skeptical Inquirer 28(2): 12
- Ross, S. E. (1999). ""Memes" as Infectious Agents in Psychosomatic Illness." Annals of Internal Medicine 131(11): 867-71.
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- e.g. see Waterhouse, R. (1991). "Therapists Role in Notts Child Abuse Case." Independent on Sunday. 7 April: 3, Witham, L. (1994). "Satanic ritual abuse: Modern horror or hoax? Credibility of 'survivors' is under attack." The Washington Post. 15 June: A9, Guilliatt, R. (1996). "The Devil's Advocates." Sydney Morning Herald. 31 August, Frankfurter, D. (2001). "Ritual as Accusation and Atrocity: Satanic Ritual Abuse, Gnostic Libertinism and Primal Murders." History of Religions 40(4): 352 - 80.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - Hudson, Pamela S. (1991). Ritual child abuse: discovery, diagnosis, and treatment. Saratoga, Calif: R&E Publishers. ISBN 0882478672.
- ^ Bibby, Peter A. Organised Abuse: The Current Debate. Aldershot, England: Arena. ISBN 1-85742-284-8.
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - Carroll, Robert Todd (April 6 2006). "Satanic Ritual Abuse". The Skeptic's Dictionary.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - Medway, Gareth (2001-11-01), Satan in suburbia (html), Fortean Times, retrieved 2007-10-23
- Andrews, B. (1995). "The recovery of memories in clinical practice: Experiences and beliefs of British Psychological Society practitioners". The Psychologist. 8: 209–214.
{{cite journal}}
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ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - Creighton, S.J. (1993). "Organized abuse: NSPCC experience". Child Abuse Review. 2: 232–232.
- Schmuttermaier, J. (1999). "Counselors' beliefs about ritual abuse: an Australian study". Journal of Child Sexual Abuse. 8 (3): p45-63. Retrieved 2007-10-22.
{{cite journal}}
:|pages=
has extra text (help); Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - ^ Bottoms, B.L. (1996). "An analysis of ritualistic and religion-related child abuse allegations" (PDF). Law and Human Behavior. 20 (1): 1–34. Retrieved 2007-10-22.
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - van Benschoten, Susan C. (1990). "Multiple personality disorder and Satanic ritual abuse: the issue of credibility" (pdf). Dissociation. 3 (1): 22–30.
- Brindle, D. (1990-10-19). "Ritual abuse occurs 'in 1 in 40 child sex rings". The Guardian.
- Gallagher, B (1996), The nature and extent of known cases of organised child sexual abuse in England and Wales
{{citation}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help); in Bibby, P. (ed.). Organised Abuse: The Current Debate. Arena. ISBN 1857422848.{{cite book}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - Goddard, C. R. "'The organised abuse of children in rural England: the response of social services: part one'", Children Australia, 19, 3, 1994, 37-40, Kitzinger, J. Framing Abuse: Media Influence and Pubic Understanding of Sexual Violence Against Children. London; Ann Arbor, MI, Pluto Press, 2004, Summit, R. C. "Ritualistic Child Abuse: A report on the seminar presented by Professor Roland Summit for the New South Wales Child Protection Council, Sydney", NSW Child Protection Council, 1994
- Hammond, D. Corydon; Brown, Daniel P.; Scheflin, Alan W. (1998). Memory, trauma treatment, and the law. New York: W.W. Norton. ISBN 0393702545.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Kitzinger, Jenny (2004). Framing abuse: media influence and public understanding of sexual violence against children. Pluto. ISBN 0745323316.
- Weber, D (1995-08-30). "Pair in day care molest case get 2nd trial". Boston Herald. p. 3. Retrieved 2007-11-20.
{{cite news}}
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ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) (abstract) - Flynn, G (1985-03-01). "Parents plead to spare molested kids new pain". The San Diego Union-Tribune. pp. 1–4.
- Ceci SJ, Kulkofsky S, Klemfuss JZ, Sweeney CD, Bruck M (2007). "Unwarranted Assumptions about Children's Testimonial Accuracy". Annual review of clinical psychology. 3: 311–28. doi:10.1146/annurev.clinpsy.3.022806.091354. PMID 17716058.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Noblitt JR (1995). "Psychometric measures of trauma among psychiatric patients reporting ritual abuse". Psychological reports. 77 (3 Pt 1): 743–7. PMID 8559911.
- Pendergrast, M. (1995). Victims of Memory: Incest Accusations and Shattered Lives, Upper Access Books
- Elzinga, B.M. (1998). "Three controversies about dissociative identity disorder". Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy. 5 (1): 13–23. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1099-0879(199803)5:1%3C13::AID-CPP148%3E3.0.CO;2-J.
{{cite journal}}
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ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - Barach, P.M. (1994). ISSD Guidelines for Treating Dissociative Identity Disorder, Multiple Personality Disorder, in Adults, 1994. ISSD.
- Sno HN, Schalken HF (1999). "Dissociative identity disorder: diagnosis and treatment in the Netherlands". Eur. Psychiatry. 14 (5): 270–7. PMID 10572357.
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- Cite error: The named reference
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - Schmuttermaier, J. and A. Veno "Counselors' beliefs about ritual abuse: An Australian Study", Journal of Child Sexual Abuse, 8, 3, 1999, 45 - 63.
- "Boy killed and mutilated in macabre ritual". The Herald Sun. 2007-11-15. Retrieved 2007-11-21.
- David Humphries, "Child Sex Abuse Linked With Satanism: Police", Sydney Morning Herald, 1991
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- Matt Doran, Justice is too late for family, Mornington Peninsular Leader, 4 May 2004, p 1 - 8)
- Gary Hughes, Police files on sex abuse ‘vanished’, The Age, April 19 2004
- Gary Hughes, Police 'failed' on child sex abuse cases, The Age, 8 July 2004, p1
- Mark Dunn, Breaking Free From Cult, Herald-Sun, 10 November 2000, p 21
- Fletcher's involvement in a satanic cult is detailed by police files, printed in the chapter "The Satanist" in Vicki Petraitis, "Rockspider, the danger of paedophiles - untold stories", Ormond, Vic. : Hybrid, 1999
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- More information on allegations of satanic child sacrifice in the Superior Universal Alignment cult can be found at the Apologetics Index
- Darren Boyle, Alleged Abusers 'still risk'
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Three women teachers were among six people arrested yesterday accused of sedating and sexually abusing children as young as 3 at a school near Rome. The teachers — two of whom are grandmothers who had taught at the school and at Sunday school for decades — are said to have part in the repeated abuse of 15 children aged 3 and 5 for a year, filming them in sexual acts with satanic overtones at the teachers' homes and in a wood.
{{cite news}}
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(help) - Beetstra, Tjalling A., Massahysterie in de Verenigde Staten en Nederland: De affaire rond de McMartin Pre-School en het ontuchtschandaal in Oude Pekela, in: Peter Burger and Willem Koetsenruijter (Eds.), Mediahypes en moderne sagen: Sterke verhalen in het nieuws, Leiden, Stichting Neerlandistiek Leiden, 2004, p. 53-69; Tijdsein (EO), 14 June 1989.
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{{citation}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ Crawford, Alan (2005-10-09). "Three children on the Isle of Lewis were sexually abused for years". The Sunday Herald. Retrieved 2007-11-13.
- ^ Martin, Lorna. "Satanic abuse key witness says: I lied". The Guardian. Retrieved 2007-08-21.
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{{cite web}}
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and|date=
(help)
External links
- Kenneth V. Lanning: Investigator's Guide to Allegations of Ritual Child Abuse (1992 report by FBI agent)
- Ritual Abuse Bibliography - Articles from periodicals and journals
- Persons Against Ritual Abuse-Torture (Advocacy group for people who have experienced non-state actor torture, including ritual abuse)