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- NOTICE: This report is copyrighted 1989 by Robert Hicks and is Licensed to
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-
- United Wiccan Church
- P. O. Box 16025
- North Hollywood California, 91615-6025, U.S.A., NA.
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- FIDO 1:102/922
-
-
-
- Satanic Cults: A Skeptical View of the Law Enforcement Approach
-
-
-
-
-
- Rev. 9/89
-
-
-
-
-
- Adapted from a presentation given at the llth annual crime
- prevention conference of the Virginia Crime Prevention Association,
- Chesapeake, Virginia, June 23, l989
-
-
- NOTE: The views expressed herein are those of the author and do
- not necessarily reflect opinions of the Department of Criminal
- Justice Services or the Commonwealth of Virginia.
-
-
-
- Robert Hicks
-
- Criminal Justice Analyst/Law Enforcement Section
- Department of Criminal Justice Services
- 805 E. Broad Street
- Richmond, Virginia 232l9
- 804-786-842l
-
-
- I wish to alert you to a dangerous cult that has implanted itself not
- only in Virginia but throughout the country. This group, called the
- Tnevnoc cult, is a "communal, sectarian group affiliated with a large and
- powerful international religious organization."/1 I can communicate
- something to you of the methods and goals of the organization by describing
- the cult's recruitment and indoctrination practices. The cult aims to
- recruit young women, either teenagers or young adults, and does so openly
- at schools and colleges. Following indoctrination into the cult, young
- women eventually lose any power of will, succumbing entirely to the regimen
- of the cult.
-
- Cult members must abandon their former lives, even surrendering their
- outside friendships and personal possessions. Cult members' activities,
- then, involve the cult exclusively. Members must arise at 4:30 in the
- morning, wear prayer beads attached to their wrists, engage in long,
- monotonous chants and prayers, and in one of the most bizarre activities,
- members consumed food they were told represented the dead cult founder's
- body. Women must even pledge in writing absolute obedience to the cult.
- To further distance itself from worldly affairs, the cult assigns new names
- to members and designates as their birthdays the dates of their entry into
- the cult.
-
- After hours of performing menial tasks such as scrubbing floors
- coupled with the incessant recitation of ritualistic prayers, members might
- occasionally transgress rules which are punished harshly. For example,
- punishment might require women to go without food, having to beg on their
- knees for the crumbs from others' plates. But the most shocking ritual of
- all required members to become brides to the dead cult leader.
-
- I hope that I have sufficiently aroused your curiosity, if not your
- indignation and anger that such activities could happen in the United
- States. In case you haven't figured it out, Tnevnoc is Convent spelled
- backwards. I have just described the socialization of young women into
- Christian convents. But, you say, convents are harmless, in a criminal
- sense anyway, and in part comprise established religion in our society. In
- short, convents are legitimate.
-
- I have described the working of Christian convents in this way for a
- few reasons. First, I have used the jargon of police satanic cult seminars
- to describe a familiar phenomenon. Viewed in cult seminar terms, convents
- appear evil and pernicious. I sprinkled in the description words which are
- never defined by cult crime experts, that is, "cult" and "ritual." Cult
- crime experts, as they call themselves, by not defining such words, impart
- to them connotations of evil, the demonic, the supernaturally criminal. If
- you don't think my description of Christian convents provides a fair
- comparison to the way non-Christian religions are described at cult crime
- seminars, think again. When convents appeared in the United States during
- the last century, many citizens objected to their manipulative,
- authoritarian methods by describing the same practices in the same ways to
- arose public mortification. Similarly, one reads newspaper accounts
- nowadays of how officers investigate ceremonial sites with altars,
- pentagrams, melted candle wax in ritually significant colors, all
- frequently involving innocuous teenage antics but sometimes attributable to
- small non-Christian groups who show no criminal involvement.
-
- Law enforcement officals flock to training seminars about satanic
- cults and crime. The seminars offer a world view that interprets both the
- familiar and explainable--and unfamiliar and poorly understood--as
- increasing participation by Americans in satanic worship. The seminars
- further claim that satanism has spawned gruesome crimes and aberrant
- behavior that might presage violent crime. I suggest that the current
- preoccupation with satanism and cults involves nothing new: the phenomenon
- has a firm and documented historical and sociological context. I also
- suggest that the news media have largely defined the law enforcement model
- of cult activity since the evidence offered at cult seminars for cult
- mayhem is nothing more than newspaper stories. Frequently, though, the
- same news stories don't even attribute nasty incidents to cults, but the
- police have been quick to infer from them cause-effect relationships
- anyway. The law enforcement model of cult crime is ill-considered, based
- on nondocumented secondary sources or other unsubstantiated information,
- and is rife with errors of logic. Such errors include false analogies,
- faulty cause-effect relationships, and broad, unsupported generalizations.
- The cult crime model betrays an ignorance of a larger academic context of
- anthropology, sociology, psychology, and history.
-
- Even the law enforcement literature makes the same mistakes. For
- example, Law Enforcement News, a publication of the John Jay College of
- Criminal Justice in New York, began an article on cult crime with a
- titillating opener: "A l4-year-old Jefferson Township, N.J., boy kills his
- mother with a Boy Scout knife, sets the family home on fire, and commits
- suicide in a neighbor's backyard by slashing his wrists and throat.
- Investigators find books on the occult and Satan worship in the boy's
- room."/2 The article, then, implied some connection between reading books
- on the occult and the murder/suicide. But did the boy have a collection of
- spiders? A stack of pornographic magazines under his bed? A girlfriend
- who just jilted him? A history of psychiatric treatment for depression?
- Newspaper accounts never mention other attributes of a crime scene since
- only those touched by a nameless, faceless evil will suit the reader's
- hunger for an explanation of why good boys do terrible things. And the
- same newspaper article will be reproduced and circulated at cult seminars
- to substantiate the satanic connection.
-
- The cult crime model is in part driven by Fundamentalist Christianity.
- The most notable newsletter circulating among cult crime investigators, the
- File l8 Newsletter, follows a Christian world view in which police
- officers, who claim to separate their religious views from their
- professional duties, nevertheless maintain that salvation through Jesus
- Christ is the only sure antidote to satanic involvement, whether criminal
- or noncriminal, and point out that no police officer can honorably and
- properly do his or her duty without reference to Christian standards. But
- more of File l8 Newsletter in a moment. Other cult crime seminar speakers
- make a living at it: Thomas Wedge, a former deputy sheriff, maintains a
- Baptist line of thinking at his seminars by beginning with his brand of
- "Theology l0l."/3 And while cult seminar presenters caution about
- respecting First Amendment rights of citizens practicing unusual beliefs,
- the same officers can't help but inflict their bias on audiences: anything
- that is not mainstream Christianity is dubbed a "non-traditional belief."
- Cult officers distribute handouts at seminars showing symbols to identify
- at crime scenes, accompanied by their meanings. The cult cops attribute
- fixed meanings to the symbols as if satanists world-wide universally use
- the symbols in precise configurations with identical meanings. The
- handouts typically attribute no sources but many derive from Christian
- material. For example, the peace symbol of the l960's is now dubbed the
- "Cross of Nero." Someone decided that the upside-down broken cross on the
- symbol somehow mocks Christianity. In fact, common knowledge has it that
- the symbol was invented in the l950's using semaphore representations for
- the letters "n" and "d" for nuclear disarmament. But cult officers go on
- their merry way, uncritically disseminating borrowed, undocumented
- information.
-
- Fundamentalist Christianity motivates the proponents of cult crime
- conspiracy theories in other ways. For example, arguing against their
- theory is, to them, attacking their world view. Special Agent Ken Lanning
- of the FBI understands this quite well. Lanning, an agent who specializes
- in child abuse cases, has offered skeptical observations about satanic
- crime at many seminars, only to be branded a satanist himself by Christian
- groups. Lanning has noted the irony of this, since he raises his own
- family according to Christian principles. But to some cult crime officers,
- arguing against their model denies the existence of Satan as a lurking,
- palpable entity who appears to tempt and torture us. Satan becomes the
- ultimate crime leader: the drug lord, the Mafia don, the gang leader.
- Chicago police investigator Jerry Simandl has demonstrated the cult officer
- world view in his work. He doesn't just investigate crimes, he also
- interprets cult behavior--particularly that which threatens Christians--
- according to the cult seminar world view, interpretations that were once
- the province of crusading clergy. He can tell whether a church vandalism
- was mindlessly committed by kids or purposefully by a cult group: "For
- example, an organ might be vandalized by having its keys broken. That
- means the vandals were seeking to deny a congregation the ability to
- 'communicate with God' through music."/4 Simandl draws amazing inferences
- about a crime that experiences the lowest clearance rate because we are
- frequently left with no suspects and no evidence beyond the vandalism. And
- it apparently occurs to no one to link a church vandalism to, say, a bias
- crime, a term coming to the fore these days in law enforcement practice, a
- term now taking on a legal definition.* But no: the vandalism so shocks
- Christian sensibilities that the cult officer--armed with his new world
- view that cults cause crime--can only interpret the crime as satanic.
-
- As I noted before, cult crime officers do not define their terms: the
- words "cult," "occult," "satanic," and "ritual" find casual usage, the
- words imbued with demonic and evil associations. Evil is, indeed, the
- operative word. Law enforcers who meld cult crime theories with their
- professional world views have transformed their legal duties into a
- confrontation between good and evil. So back to the File l8
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------
- * "Bias crimes, or incidents of hate violence, are words or actions
- intended to intimidate or injure an individual because of his or her race,
- religion, national origin, or sexual preference. Bias crimes range from
- threatening phone calls to murder. The impact of these types of offenses
- is far more pervasive than impacts of comparable crimes that do not involve
- prejudice because the consequences frighten an entire group. The fear that
- such acts generate . . .can victimize a whole class of people." From
- Justice Research, November/December l987, p. l, published by the National
- Criminal Justice Assocation.
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Newsletter. The publication's editor, police officer Larry Jones, believes
- that a satanic network exists in all levels of society, a network that
- maintains extreme secrecy to shroud its program of murder. Defensive about
- the lack of physical evidence of cult mayhem, Jones states:
-
- Those who deny, explain away, or cover up the obvious
- undeniably growing mountain of evidence often demand
- statistical evidence or positive linkages between
- operational suspect groups. At best, this demand for
- positive proof of a 'horizontal conspiracy' is naive. . .
-
- Consider the possibility that the reason supposedly
- unrelated groups in different localities over various
- time periods acting-out in a similar manner, is that
- consistent directives are recieved [sic] independently
- from higher levels of authority. Instead of being
- directly linked to each other, these groups may be
- linked vertically to a common source of direction and
- control. This 'vertical conspiracy model' is consistent
- with the 'authoritarian'. . .structure seen in many cult
- and occult groups.
-
- Those who accept this theory as a reasonable possibility need to rethink
- the meaning, scope, and effects of the term conspiracy!/5 In other
- words, if the evidence doesn't seem to fit a particular conspiracy theory,
- just create a bigger conspiracy theory. Other hints of File l8
- Newsletter's Fundamentalist bias show through in other ways. Writer Arthur
- Lyons recounted receiving a copy of the newsletter accompanied by an
- article from a Christian magazine, Passport, entitled, "America's Best Kept
- Secret."/6 The article described the "best-kept secret" as the conspiracy
- of satanists in America among all classes and races, and the article
- further noted the "Wicca Letters," a spurious document which offers a
- blueprint for takeover by satanists. Jones has apparently not decided to
- abandon Passport of late: in a recent issue of File l8 Newsletter (Volume
- IV, No. 89-4) the Passport article is once again available with an
- accompanying videotape for "an effective training combination." But Jones
- and other cult officers impose any model they can contrive on a hodge-podge
- of ideas, claims, exaggerations, or suppositions.
-
- For example, cult investigators would have us believe that cult
- practitioners learn skills in the vivisection of livestock and household
- pets. One investigator, retired police captain Dale Griffis, says that
- "occultists will stun the animal on his back with an electric probe. Then
- they will spray freon on the animal's throat. . .The heart's still pumping
- and they will use an embalming tool to get the blood out. It's fast and
- efficient. Hell, the farmer heard the animal whine, and he was there
- within five minutes."/7
-
- A sheriff's investigator, in a memorandum about cattle mutilations,
- interviewed a young woman who claimed to be an ex-satanic cult member who
- had mutilated animals. Her cult, which consisted of "doctors, lawyers,
- veterinarians" were taught by the vets how to perform the fatal surgery.
- The animal's blood and removed organs, it seems, were used for baptismal
- rites. She further related:
-
- When using the helicopter [the cult members] sometimes
- picked up the cow by using a homemade. . .sling. . .and
- they would move it and drop it further down from where
- the mutilations occurred. This would account for there
- not being any footprints or tire tracks. . .When using
- the van trucks they would also have a telescoping lift
- which. . .was about 200 feet long mounted outside the
- truck and would use that to extend a man out to the cow,
- and he would mutilate it from a board platform on the end
- of the boom and would never touch the ground. . .They some-
- times do three or four cows./8
- Of course, the cult members went to such lengths because they delight in baffling the police.
-
-
- The sheriff's investigator reported to his supervisor each detail of
- this story from a convincing woman, but he was obviously unacquainted with
- a principle of logic, Occam's Razor. This principle suggests that when
- faced with two hypotheses for an explanation, each of which can explain the
- phenomenon, one chooses the simpler. The investigator never considered
- here the work of a predator, or even the action of a vandal. Of course,
- news accounts of such livestock deaths, particularly if related by cult
- officers, will attribute deaths to cultists, and newspapers will use one of
- my favorite adverbs for such activities: the animal was killed and organs
- were surgically removed. Did a surgeon do the work? Can a police officer
- tell the difference between a hole in a cow's head put there by a bullet,
- scalpel, or predator's bite? But back to Occam's Razor. Imagine the
- woman's story: trucks with 200-foot booms are not plentiful and would
- appear conspicuous in rural America, particularly when the cultists call in
- helicopter air support.
-
- In other areas, cult crime officers simply deny facts. For example,
- one of the recent murders dubbed satanic by cult officers was that of
- Stephen Newberry, a teenager from Springfield, New Jersey, whose friends
- bashed him to death with a baseball bat. Even though Larry Jones quotes
- local investigators, a prosecutor, a psychologist, and an academic cult
- expert who claimed that no satanic sacrifice of Newberry occurred but
- instead blamed drug abuse, Jones nevertheless offers the opinion that the
- experts
-
- do not give credit to the strong influence of the
- tenets of the satanic belief system over its initiates.
- In some cases the subjects become involved with satanism . . .
- prior to the onset of family problems. . . [T]he only true and
- lasting solution to 'devil worship' or satanicinvolvement is a
- personal encounter with true Christianity . . ./9
-
- Jones's earlier guess that a "vertical conspiracy" might exist, that a
- higher authority directs groups to murder as a form of worship to Satan
- within an authoritarian cult led by a charismatic leader, is a ghost of the
- cult officer's mind: the police have identified no such groups.
-
- Characteristically, law enforcement cult seminars all parley the same
- model of satanic cults, circulating the same second-hand information, most
- of it without documentation or sources for quotations. The model convinces
- many because it takes phenomena familiar to the officer and imbues them
- with new meanings: officers learn a new vocabulary to describe old
- phenomena and therefore see the cult problem as a new threat to public
- order.
-
- The self-proclaimed cult experts who teach the seminars advise
- officers not to interfere with constitutionally-protected civil liberties,
- yet proceed to do just that. Investigator Bill Lightfoot, Richmond,
- Virginia, Bureau of Police, recommends confiscating books on the occult
- whenever law enforcers find them during investigations (ritual crime in-
- service seminar, Petersburg, VA, September l3, l988); other cult experts
- such as Dale Griffis have advised officers to ask public libraries to turn
- over to police lists of patrons who have borrowed books on the occult./10
- The same self-proclaimed experts take the bigoted stand that because a
- person commits a vile crime and identifies himself as a satanist, then by
- extension all satanists must have condoned the crime; the crime must be
- sanctioned by the satanic order or church. That relationship between the
- person and the belief, then, justifies police surveillance of non-Christian
- groups. By contrast, we don't follow the same reasoning when Christians or
- Jews commit crimes. In Richmond recently, police arrested a man who had
- years ago murdered his family. He had since been living under a new
- identity with a new wife. The fact that the murderer was a conservative
- churchgoing Christian did not lead anyone to label his acts as Christian
- crime, but if the man had professed a belief in Satan, or in any other so-
- called "non-traditional belief," such as Yoruba, voodoo or hoodoo, cult
- cops would be quick to label the crime as evidence of cult activity in
- America.
-
- Larry Jones provides an example. In his File l8 Newsletter, he
- discusses some "non-traditional" beliefs and ends up finding fault even
- where he can't connect crime with the belief. In a discourse on Wicca
- witchcraft, he posits, for example, that any belief system must set
- absolute standards of conduct. Relative ones won't do because they "open
- the door to excesses."/11 So in a treatment of Wicca he can only find
- fault by abstracting this standard of absolute conduct that measures
- somehow the legitimacy of belief systems. While concluding nevertheless
- that Wicca is benign and that its practitioners claim no connection with
- satanism, Jones lumps Wicca in with "Luciferian" Aleister Crowley with his
- ties to Black Magic organizations. Larry Jones forgets that if a belief
- system "opens its door to excesses," the history of Christianity provides
- no small example of excesses committed for holy purposes.
-
- One doesn't condemn Christianity because Jim Jones and his group--all
- Christians--committed mass suicide or because the Pope spurred a murderous
- crusade in the Middle East some centuries ago. Whether or not people can
- get criminal ideas from belief systems--whether from Buddhism,
- Christianity, voodoo, Islam, or anything else--has little to do with the
- belief system but rather with a person's own psychological make-up. And in
- this realm the police have no jurisdiction. It is not a law enforcement
- responsibility to guess at what might prompt a citizen to commit a crime.
- Police arrest people who commit crimes under the influence of alcohol, but
- we don't blame the alcohol. People who have domestic disputes live in
- homes with guns and knives, but we don't take away such weapons to prevent
- a crime.
-
- In the cult crime seminars, cult officers give a disjointed history of
- satanism and witchcraft and usually peg two contemporary satanists who have
- molded the philosophy of their movement: Aleister Crowley and Anton LaVey.
- Crowley, described in police seminars as an "influential satanist,"
- although indulging in pagan shenanigans during the early part of the
- century, promoted the Order of the Golden Dawn and the Ordo Templi
- Orientis, "the largest practicing satanic cult operating today," according
- to Griffis (advanced ritualistic crime seminar, Richmond, VA, September 22,
- l989). Further, say the police, the main belief fostered by groups
- deriving from Crowley's legacy involves "sexual perversion."
-
- LaVey, on the other hand, a former police photographer and circus
- performer, founded the Church of Satan in San Francisco in l966 at the
- zenith of Haight Ashbury hippiedom. Police officers teach that LaVey's two
- books, The Satanic Bible and The Satanic Rituals Book, can be dangerous.
- In particular, cult officers cite LaVey's nine principles of the Church of
- Satan which include:
-
- l. Satan represents indulgence, instead of abstinence!
-
- 5. Satan represents vengeance, instead of turning the
- other cheek!
-
- 8. Satan represents all of the so-called sins, as they
- lead to physical or mental gratification!/12
-
-
- Cult officers maintain that LaVey's dicta foster in his followers the
- attitude, "If it feels good, do it," thus justifying criminal acts.
-
- Aleister Crowley, apparently, added a more wicked dimension to this
- philosophy for in his Book of the Law he states, "Do what thou wilt shall
- be the whole of the law."/13 Taken in context, however, the book consists
- of a metaphorical jaunt through the ancient Egyptian pantheon full of
- erotic and Masonic allusions. What Crowley said was not meant to be taken
- literally, but figuratively.
-
- A reading of Crowley's text reveals that the damning statement refers
- to people inevitably moving through their lives according to their
- destinies, that people will act according to experience, impulse, and the
- "law of growth." In other words, people are going to do what people are
- going to do. Put another way, people are what they are. But Crowley did
- not worship Satan nor spur his followers to worship Satan.
-
- I heard Investigator Lightfoot (noted earlier) give a cult crime
- seminar (September l3, l988, Petersburg, VA) in which he held up a copy of
- Crowley's book and said that short of obtaining one from a member of the
- highly secretive Ordo Templi Orientis, one can only obtain a copy from an
- obscure Pennsylvania occult bookstore. He said that he could not reveal
- how he obtained his copy. I happened to examine the officer's copy, noted
- the reprinting publisher's name and address, and called their customer
- service representative. The company, Samuel Weiser, publishes quite a few
- books under the New Age category. I asked how to obtain a copy of Crowley:
- she replied that I need only send a check for $5.50 and I would soon
- receive one. When I told her what Lightfoot had said about the difficulty
- of obtaining a copy, she exclaimed, "But we'll sell it to anyone who asks!"
- She apologized, though, because the book was only available in soft cover,
- not hardback.
-
- LaVey, on the other hand, operates without mysticism or even a deity.
- To the Church of Satan, the Evil One is no deity but rather a symbolic
- adversary. The Church of Satan pulls a clever trick:
-
- 'What are the Seven Deadly Sins?' LaVey is fond of asking.
- "Gluttony, avarice, lust, sloth--they are urges every
- man feels at least once a day. How could you set your-
- self up as the most powerful institution on earth? You
- first find out what every man feels at least once a day,
- establish that as a sin, and set yourself up as the only
- institution capable of pardoning that sin./14
-
-
- LaVey, then, tries to subvert Christianity by offering what Christian
- churches forbid. Since people's guilt, apprehension, and anxiety make them
- ill rather than the urges themselves, the Church of Satan offers people a
- release: indulge yourselves, says the Church, as long as you abide by the
- law and harm no one. Some members have even found the Church of Satan
- therapeutic: the Church engineered, for example, a psychodrama in which a
- woman afraid of her domineering husband role-plays him to help reduce his
- menacing effect on her. An anthropologist confirmed the therapeutic value
- of Church of Satan membership for some people years ago in an academic
- study based on months' long participant observation./15
-
- Church of Satan deities even invoke fictional sources, such as H.P.
- Lovecraft, H.G. Wells, and Ursula LeGuin. Writer Arthur Lyons observed,
- "In joining the Church of Satan, these people not only managed to inject a
- little mastery and exoticism into their otherwise banal lives, they
- achieved a mastery of their own fates by the practice of ritual magic."/l6
-
- If LaVey's ideology is contrived of fiction, symbolism, and a
- deliberate antidote to Establishment Christianity, and Crowley retailed in
- what we now call New Age thinking, why the law enforcement interest? Cult
- officers focus on these two because they have published, because their
- philosophies are within easy reach. They make easy targets. One article
- in a law enforcement journal even pointed out that LaVey uses a symbolic
- Satan and noted in context that the Church of Satan condemns sex crimes
- including bestiality, but nevertheless stated, "It seems contradictory for
- a group to encourage all forms of sexual expression, and at the same time
- place parameters on that activity."/l7
-
- Again, in the fashion of Larry Jones, law enforcers can't resist
- criticizing others' beliefs. Consider, for a moment, law enforcers
- teaching cult seminars by parading books by LaVey, Crowley, and others,
- noting the dangerous ideas these books represent. But what is this? Is
- this crime prevention? Is crime prevention served by providing officers
- with lists of dangerous books? If we wanted to alert officers to books
- that might incite people to slug it out, we'd also have to list The
- Autobiography of Malcolm X, Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler, the Bible, the
- Koran, to name a few.
-
- But some officers claim that books on the occult have some inherent
- force of evil, that weak-minded people may pluck criminal ideas from them.
- One law enforcement book went so far as to state, "[The authors] urge you
- to continue your education in [satanism] by reading as widely as possible
- on the subject. But note: intense study of resource books and materials by
- occult sources or practitioners is hazardous. Preferred is studying
- overviews and synopses. . .Study and/or experimentation are to be
- avoided."/l8 I have tried to show with Crowley and LaVey that their own
- purported guides to the occult hold no particular power or force other than
- what readers may impart to them. The satanic or occult books that cult
- officers use for show-and-tell either derive from scholarly sources or
- represent modern invention. Few can be traced to some remote, pre-
- Christian occult mysticism.
-
- Cult officers not only cite LaVey and Crowley as some compendia of
- occult knowledge rising from the dim horizon of ancient history, but also
- cite as dangerous the occult symbols on rock music albums, the songs'
- lyrics, and the fantasy characters that appear in the popular game,
- Dungeons and Dragons. Yet as the game's designers take pains to point out,
- the D&D gods derive largely from the imaginations of game designers and the
- encyclopedia./19
-
- Cult investigators have constructed four general levels of satanic or
- cult involvement. The outer, or fourth level, finds the "dabblers," mostly
- children, teenagers, or young adults who might play with satanic bits and
- pieces. Supposedly Dungeons and Dragons, heavy metal rock music, Ouija
- boards and the like rope kids into the occult. Investigator Lightfoot,
- like many other cult cops, maintains that satanic messages are present in
- rock lyrics when the music is played backwards. But cult officers don't
- distinguish between the presence of messages and their efficacy; they do
- not critically discuss what effect the messages have nor agree on their
- actual wording, and never describe how kids' brains are supposed to
- assimilate the messages anyway. No studies prove the efficacy of
- subliminal messages, satanic or otherwise.
-
- Cult officers strike at Dungeons and Dragons as the essential evil
- where kids are concerned, estimating that anywhere from 95 to l50
- documented deaths of children exist that can be attributed to the game.
- While similar figures appear in the press, the fact is that outside of
- reporters' suggestions, no documented killing or suicide exists directly
- attributable to playing the game. No reputable authority has ever detected
- a causal link between playing D&D and anything but a healthy adventure in
- the creative imagination.
-
- The next level of involvement includes self-styled satanists, the
- killers such as John Wayne Gacey or Henry Lee Lucas. These men, social
- isolates and psychopaths, invented or borrowed satanic trappings to justify
- their crimes. This idea is the single most plausible component of the cult
- crime model: sociopaths or psychopaths may choose an ideology that helps
- them reconcile their crimes with their conscience.
-
- The second level of satanists we have already discussed, the
- organized, public groups such as the Church of Satan or the Temple of Set.
- While cult officers are forced to admit that such groups have small, fluid
- memberships with doctrines that oppose violence and crime, the same
- officers recommend placing them under surveillance because they may harbor
- criminals or breed psychopaths. By this logic,then, we will have to do the
- same for most Christian churches. What's more, no one even knows how many
- cults exist in the United States. Estimates vary from 500 groups on up,
- with total memberships from l50,000 to over ten million. Which brings us
- back to the word "cult" and its lack of definition.
-
- What and who are cults? Notoriously lacking from cult seminars is the
- voice of the "non-traditional belief." Law enforcers declare themselves
- experts in and give seminars on groups whose members they've never met.
- They interpret signs and symbols of groups that may not even exist. The
- scholar of comparative religion Gordon Melton has noted that, "The term
- 'cult' is a pejorative label used to describe certain religious groups
- outside of the mainstream of Western religion."/20 Melton's approach to
- surveying cults, which he has published in The Encyclopedia of American
- Religions and Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America, prefers to remove
- bias and terms other beliefs as "alternative religions." I refer you to
- Melton for further discussion of cults, sects, churches, their definitions
- and attributes.
-
- Finally we reach the last level of satanic involvement, the real evil
- meanies, the traditional satanists. These folks belong not to different
- denominations of the same thing but rather to an international megacult
- tightly organized in a clandestine hierarchy. Dale Griffis has been
- selling law enforcers on the model of these people as driven by mind
- control methods, slavishly participating in cult ceremonies including
- sexual assault, mutilation, murder, to name the most important activities.
- These satanists' belief in magic propels them to sacrifice people: they
- release some primal energy force through killing which enriches the
- participants. The abuse of children itself is a form of worship. While
- these satanists use their own children for sacrifice, satanists sometimes
- collect their lambs for slaughter at daycare centers. For example,
- Lightfoot noted one daycare center at which parents dropped off their kids
- at the start of the day, whereupon the daycare staff herded the kids onto
- busses, took them to an airfield, flew them to a ceremonial site, used them
- for rituals, sexually assaulted them and so on, then returned them to the
- daycare center by the end of the day. The parents picked up their kids,
- none the wiser.
-
- Supposedly, then, we have much to fear from these satanists. Ex-
- deputy sheriff Thomas Wedge, who makes a living giving cult seminars, says,
- "It doesn't matter what you and I believe. It's what they believe that
- makes them dangerous . . .For the first time, we in law enforcement are
- dealing with something we can't shout at. . .can't handcuff."/21 Larry
- Jones has echoed the same sentiment, even pointing out that Christian
- police officers are particularly well qualified to confront the menace.
- Cult officers say that the ranks of secret satanists boast the
- intelligentsia of our society, hence the moneyed power behind the rituals.
- Patricia Pulling, a mother whose son committed suicide which she attributes
- to playing Dungeons and Dragons and who founded Bothered About Dungeons and
- Dragons (BADD), maintains that satanic ranks include "doctors, lawyers,
- clergymen, even police."/22
-
- Despite this large-scale conspiracy, police still have uncovered no
- evidence of cults' murderous activities. Police say that the lack of
- evidence owes to the cults' success: cultists eat bodies or dispose of
- them without a trace. FBI's Ken Lanning has pointed out many times that
- human history cannot produce a single example of any large scale organized
- murder (on the order of 50,000 human sacrifices a year, as some cult
- officers claim) without someone breaking ranks sooner or later. No such
- enterprise has ever existed, one that can commandeer so many people to
- carry out for so long thousands and thousands of violent crimes. People in
- any group change their minds, get jealous, build empires, develop
- rivalries, disagree, ally themselves in factions. Why should satanists be
- any different?
-
- Cult officers cite two prime examples of the work of traditional
- satanists: cult survivors' stories and child abuse cases. Cult survivors
- are the offspring of satanic parents bred to a life of abuse and witnessed
- murders. The prototype survivor is Michelle Smith who, with her
- psychiatrist husband, Lawrence Pazder, wrote Michelle Remembers (l980). By
- her own admission, Smith endured a rough, unhappy childhood with a violent,
- alcoholic father. After years of psychotherapy with Pazder, a new story
- emerged. Without prompting, Smith entered a trance in which she regressed
- to a childhood persona. In that persona, she told of ceremonies she had
- witnessed replete with black candles, black drapes, goblets, dismembered
- bodies, sexual abuse, having dismembered baby limbs rubbed on her,
- imprisonment in a snake-infested cage, confrontations with red spiders, and
- watching satanists rend kittens with their teeth. And all of this through
- the introduction of Michelle to satanism by her mother. Some curious loose
- ends remain, though. Smith's father denied the incidents, Smith loved her
- mother very much, as did her two sisters, not mentioned in the book, who
- never witnessed any satanic involvement. One sister has been deeply
- distressed at Smith's representation of her mother. Not mentioned either
- was the Catholic Pazder's divorce, Smith's conversion as a Catholic and her
- own divorce in order to marry Pazder, practices frowned upon by the
- Catholic Church, yet the book extols Catholic ceremonies and ritual as a
- way to combat Smith's terror./23
-
- Nevertheless, Pazder reacts to the lurid stories of his patient thus:
- "'I happen to believe you. . .for many reasons . . .but mostly for what I
- feel with you. It feels real. . .I think the way you are expressing the
- experience is very touching. It is authentic as an experience."/24
- Remember, this is a psychiatrist's talk, not a police officer's. Feeling
- the authenticity of Smith's experience may aid a physician's clinical work.
- Police officers must approach such stories differently. Smith is cited as a
- Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD) sufferer, a complex phenomenon that
- afflicts some genuinely abused people, but not others. For a fuller
- clinical description consult the DSM-IIIR, or Diagnostic and Statistical
- Manual of Mental Disorders, third edition, revised, l987. Recent research
- even reveals that distinct physiological changes accompany personality
- changes in MPD sufferers. Such changes include rapidly appearing and
- disappearing rashes, welts, scars, switches in handwriting and handedness,
- allergies, vision changes and even color blindness. Such symptoms might
- easily confuse and alarm an investigator.
-
- The preoccupation of cult officers with MPD sufferers presents police
- with some contradictions. On the one hand, police cite the growing number
- of cult survivor stories and their sameness as evidence of the satanic
- underground (that is, people who have never met telling identical tales).
- Yet most MPD sufferers, usually young women, do not present verifiable
- stories. None has yielded physical evidence of crime other than
- physiological symptoms which are part and parcel of MPD anyway. Hypnosis
- for police purposes produces no results. MPD sufferers can take years to
- interview to ascertain even a few facts.
-
- But another interpretation of cult survivors' claims can be offered.
- As Ken Lanning has noted, he has been unable to find accounts by cult
- survivors of Smith-like tales before the publication of her book. The mass
- media have fanned Smith's experience through the tabloids and TV sets of
- the world, supplemented by the slasher films and television shows that
- produce quite creative and believable monsters. Some MPD sufferers
- describe ceremonies and rituals that can only be traced to fiction since
- many of them have no historic derivation.
-
- Stories of ritual abuse (that is, abuse committed incidental to a
- ritual as a form of propitiation, as cult officers use the term) present no
- new phenomena, as folkorist Jan Harold Brunvand has described in his
- popular books about urban legends, The Choking Doberman (l984) and The
- Mexican Pet (l986). Stories of abduction and mutilation of children, plus
- regular appearances of Satan pervade European and American history.
- Brunvand describes urban legends as "believed oral narratives," though not
- necessarily believed wholely by their narrators all of the time. Some
- stories are rumor, or "plotless unverified reports" as opposed to the
- legend, or the "traditional believed story." Most importantly, "urban
- legends. . .often appear to be 'new' when they begin to spread, but even
- the newest-sounding stories may have gone the rounds before. A 'new urban
- legend,' then, may be merely a modern story told in a plausible manner by a
- credible narrator to someone who hasn't heard the story before, at least
- not recently enough to remember it."/25
-
- One can find abundant folklore literature--particularly the
- dictionaries of folkore motifs--which contain all the satanic stories that
- appear in the cult seminars, folklore with a very long history. I'll give
- an example of a recurring urban myth the spreading of which takes place
- every few years. A spurious police circular found its way through South
- Carolina a few years ago telling of an LSD-impregnated Mickey Mouse
- transfer, thus endangering children./26 Without verifying the circular,
- the Pendleton, South Carolina, Police Department warned the community about
- the transfers. After the public sufficiently worried itself, someone
- checked out the source and found it was bogus. The same story, with the
- same anonymous police circular, recently traveled throughout New Jersey
- alarming citizens and police./27
-
- In some cases, police have tried to keep citizens from believing
- macabre stories about garden variety violence. In Eloy, Arizona, a
- murdered man turned up in a trash bin, having died of head injuries, his
- throat slashed. Nevertheless, the police had been powerless to stem local
- rumors which persisted in creating the story that the victim had his chest
- opened up, his heart ripped out, his blood sucked./28 In Roanoke, high
- school faculty and some law enforcers have perplexedly tried to locate a
- gang of violent youths, The Posse, to whom students attribute much violence
- and disruption, but the local police have begun to suspect that the gang
- doesn't exist. The Roanoke County Sheriff said, "All you have to do is get
- two kids talking at a table in the cafeteria. Two other kids at the next
- table hear half the conversation, and a rumor is spread."/29
-
- Sociologist David Bromley of Virginia Commonwealth University
- classifies such tales into three categories, one of which is the subversion
- myth where many satanic tales fit. These myths are "cautionary tales,"
- stories that reveal tensions which "emanate most directly from pervasive
- anxieties about dangers to children."/30 Another sociologist, Jeffrey
- Victor, tracked down satanic rumors in western New York, stories which
- became widespread and publically accepted, stories Victor likened to a
- "collective nightmare." Throughout the region, rumors of cult meetings,
- animal killings, ritual drinking of blood, and an impending sacrifice of a
- "blond, blue-eyed virgin" reached a peak of hysteria on Friday the
- thirteenth of May, l988./31 In this case, the Jamestown, New York, Police
- Department acted with remarkable restraint and insight and even forestalled
- a mob bent on vengeance. The police headed off a group of armed and angry
- citizens that showed up at a rumored cult site. But another site, a
- warehouse rumored to harbor cult meetings, received thousands of dollars in
- damage.
-
- I'll give you another example of the police response to myth and
- hysteria. The Allenstown, New Hampshire, Police Department received
- reports a few months ago that six cats had been found hanging from a tree,
- a decapitated dog turned up nearby, and the sound of drums could be heard
- in a state park at night. A woman walking her dog came upon what was
- described as a makeshift altar supporting a carcass of a mutilated beaver.
- The beaver had been skinned. Another beaver turned up, found upright
- surrounded by stakes. The police decided to turn to cult officer Sandi
- Gallant, San Francisco Police, for help, who--though in San Francisco and
- unable to inspect the animals--interpreted the findings as indicative of
- satanic rituals. Since the carcasses were found near May l, the cult
- officer said that the recent Walpurgis Night, a satanic holiday, probably
- stimulated the sacrifices. The sergeant in charge of the investigation
- worried about these events, linking those who sacrificed animals to drug-
- taking, listening to heavy metal music, a view confirmed by a local Baptist
- minister who believed the devil responsible. The sergeant wanted to find
- the satanic group behind this. Characteristically, he said, "Their freedom
- of worship is protected. . .but we want to monitor them."/32 The next day,
- the Manchester, New Hampshire, Union Leader ran an editorial which stated,
- "We have reached a sorry state of affairs when following the Devil is
- defined as 'worship'. . ."/33
-
- Within a few days, the mystery unravelled. In fact, no dead cats were
- found in trees. The beavers were legally trapped in the state park. Other
- dead animals reported by local residents were ones killed on the road and
- stacked off the road for later pick-up./34 But even though the phenomena
- turned out to be mundane, other law enforcers didn't remember the follow-up
- news story but only the original news report. After the whole incident
- passed from the headlines, the mayor of Manchester tried to ban the
- appearance of a heavy metal band in town because they would stimulate more
- incidents similar to what occurred in Allenstown, forgetting that the
- Allenstown events had non-satanic explanations./35
-
- In another incident, a few years back in Brown County, Indiana, a New
- Age group called the Elf Lore Family (ELF) arranged to have a public
- gathering at a public park. ELF posters around town mentioned camping,
- feasts, dancing, "New Age workshops," "bardic tales and tunes," and other
- similar events. Many of the organizers described themselves as witches and
- even distributed "witchcraft fact sheets" to explain their beliefs./36 So
- far, no problem. But by the ELF weekend gathering, a local church group
- had planned a strategy to proselytize the ELFers, and the local sheriff's
- department became involved through a deputy who had attended a cult seminar
- given by two Indiana state police officers, self-proclaimed experts, who
- had in turn received their information from cult consultant Dale Griffis.
- Following the weekend, the local newspaper reported the event under the
- title, "Satanic rites held at Yellowwood Forest," the article discussing
- animal sacrifice, drinking blood in rituals, nude dancing, or dancing by
- people in "devil-like costumes." Finally, the ELFers were seen eating "raw
- flesh." The news reporter used one source for the article: the deputy
- sheriff. Neither a local Baptist minister nor the park conservation
- professionals nor the ELFers at all could corroborate the sacrifices, blood
- drinking, nude dancing, or any of the other sensationalistic claims of the
- local sheriff's department. The article dutifully noted, though, that
- "[the sheriff's department] could not stop the satanic rites because of the
- Constitutional right to freedom of religion that protected the
- worshippers." But the ELFers are not satanic. The satanism was created by
- the seminar-trained police who spent much time and effort watching the
- ELFers simply because they were not Christians celebrating in a
- conventional way. The sheriff's department, by feeding information to a
- gullible journalist, created a new myth: the news article then becomes a
- cult seminar handout proving that satanic activity is rampant in the USA.
- An Indiana University folklorist who documented the event noted, "The
- influence of second-hand opinions proved especially strong among the law
- enforcement element." The preconceptions of the law enforcers colored
- their perceptions of an innocuous camp-out, and thereby created a legend.
-
- Thus far I have mentioned cult expert Dale Griffis in several
- contexts. Although Griffis appears to act out of concern for improving law
- enforcement's handling of bizarre crimes, and although he certainly earns
- no big bucks on the lecture circuit, his effort misleads and confuses.
- Griffis, a retired police captain, used the title, "Ph.D." and other cult
- cops refer to him as "Doctor Griffis." In truth, Griffis holds a doctorate
- from Columbia Pacific University in California, a non-accredited non-
- resident campus that offers low-cost degrees with only several months of
- effort (according to the CPU brochure and detailed by John Bear in How to
- Get the Degree You Want, Ten Speed Press, l982, and by William J.
- Halterman, The Complete Guide to Nontraditional Education, Facts on File,
- New York, l983). Primarily, CPU offers credit for life experiences, the
- type of institution currently under scrutiny by Senate Bill l90 in
- California which aims to tighten licensing standards for such "diploma
- mills" (detailed in Community Crime Prevention Digest for May, l989, p. 8).
- Griffis's degree is in law enforcement, based on a doctoral thesis, Mind
- Control Groups and Their Effects on the Objective of Law Enforcement, which
- carries no date and is even signed by Griffis with his title, "Ph.D."
-
- The dissertation reveals Griffis's cult pitch: almost a fourth of it
- contains an ad misericordium argument that his message is grounded in
- sincerity, fidelity to the police brother-and sisterhood, and concern for
- our posterity. The following statement is typical: "I am a veteran member
- of the 'Thin Blue Line'. that which lies between chaos and democracy" (p.
- 88). Griffis relies heavily on the work of Robert Jay Lifton (Thought
- Reform and the Psychology of Totalism) to argue a priori that cults,
- nebulously defined, deceptively recruit members, place them under control
- of a charismatic leader, and direct members to commit crimes. To Griffis,
- the link between the existence of cults and crime is also a priori.
- Griffis even takes excursions into psychology with odd results: "Let it be
- noted that a common factor among recruits is that a high percentage suffer
- from sub-clinical depression" (p. 52). Griffis does not substantiate this
- assertion, but as proof he offers that "recruiters carry out their
- assignments with trained skills and precise detail. One only has to travel
- through O'Hare Airport to see this in operation" (p. 53). Of the estimated
- 3000 cults in the USA (Griffis's estimate, not substantiated), he asserts
- that "the interest, purpose, magnitude and ultimate goals differ from cult
- to cult; however, all demand in common devotion, obedience, and ultimately,
- submission" (p. 5l). Again, Griffis offers such statements repeatedly but
- without substantiation, no critical review of pertinent literature on
- cults, nor with any professional correspondence with academic experts. And
- his dissertation has become his cult seminar platform. While the CPU
- degree might academic standing somewhere, officers attending cult seminars
- point to Griffis as the man with credentials in both worlds--the police
- front line and the academy--to justify his role as cult ideologue.
-
- I can't discuss myths and legends without referring to the Matamoros
- drug killings. When the news accounts first appeared in early April
- concerning the discovery of bodies on a Mexican ranch near the Texas
- border, the Associated Press dubbed the killings "satanic." That adjective
- graced many newspaper headlines for weeks. Now, information concerning the
- murders continues to be ambiguous because we have depended on second- and
- third-hand information about them. The Mexican police promptly placed
- their suspects before cameras to tell gruesome tales. We do not know much
- of the backgrounds of the murderers in the drug gang, but recent evidence
- suggests that the drug leader, Adolfo de Jesus Constanzo, hobnobbed with
- the Mexican city elite, providing drugs and limpias, or folk "cleansing
- rites," recruited assistants from the northern Mexican prosperous families,
- mostly young adults./37 Apparently, Constanzo did not employ the semi-
- literate impoverished Mexicans from the northern part of their country, the
- same type recruited for other criminal activities: gun and stolen vehicle
- running and herding illegal aliens into the USA.
-
- Where does the satanic label come from? Rex Springston, a reporter
- for the Richmond News Leader, decided to trace the label. In talking to
- the American investigators cited in the news releases, he learned that none
- of them classified the murders as satanic. Only the Texas attorney
- general's assistant responded that the attorney general might have used the
- label early on. So officials don't view the killings as satanic. Officials
- now think that most of the murders victimized rival drug dealers, not
- innocent people snatched off the street. The drug gang leader, Constanzo,
- according to current thinking, was a Charles Manson who gathered whatever
- symbolism and ritual he could to intimidate rivals and his own lackeys. So
- he invented his own symbology (not a belief system, which he did not
- invent) to justify his behavior, to offer his workers protection which he
- was in fact powerless to provide, to convince people to risk their lives to
- become involved with drug dealing where the monetary rewards for most are
- meager. Matamoros represents violence associated with the drug trade with
- a hint of borrowed religious ritual, nothing more. No evidence exists--
- insofar as details of the incident have been made public--of any
- participation by Constanzo and his group in satanic activities, involvement
- with a satanic organization, or human sacrifice to propitiate the devil.
- By April l7, even the mass media had begun to focus on the incident as
- drug-related, not satanic, almost one week after the first reports of the
- killings./38
-
- But although the Matamoros story is far from over, at least one local
- police investigator still misrepresents the events, thus creating urban
- myth. Detective Don Rimer, Virginia Beach Police, recently gave a seminar
- citing the Matamoros killings as satanic. Rimer was quoted in the
- newspapers as saying that the Matamoros killings "prove that human
- sacrifices by Satanists are not simply 'urban myths.'"/39 "'Now, those
- people who talked about the 'urban myth' and asked, 'Where are the bodies?'
- are silent," the officer said to a citizens' group. Well, the Matamoros
- business displaces nothing about urban myth, proves nothing about satanism,
- and should be properly viewed in the context of Mexican border drug running
- and its associated violence.
-
- The central aspect of satanic crime which has seared the American
- conscience is child abuse. Beginning with a daycare center in Manhattan
- Beach, California and another in Jordan, Minnesota, in l983, stories of
- ritual abuse of children in daycare centers has spread to over l00 American
- cities. At the core of such stories, one finds stories by children. The
- same stories, uncorroborated by physical evidence or adult testimony, have
- resulted in indictments of innocent people, their careers forfeited to the
- publicity. In the most comprehensive and critical examination of such
- investigations to date (conducted by the Memphis, Tennessee, Commercial
- Appeal), investigative journalists found that the system of prosecution
- fostered the spread of unfounded allegations. One social worker observed,
- "During the course of the investigation, virtually every name that was ever
- mentioned became a suspect." Alarmed at the manner in which parents and
- therapists prompted and rewarded children's testimony, a psychiatrist
- commented, "If [the investigator] got a child to the point where they
- believe [the child] helped kill a baby or eaten flesh, I want to know
- whether you're a child abuser."/40
-
- The Jordan case, for example, began with a single child's allegation
- of molestation and quickly thereafter 60 children began to claim the same
- abuse. The phenomena reported by the children included being bussed to
- ceremonial sites, digging up coffins, dismembering bodies, being thrown
- into shark pits, cooking and eating babies, nude photography, and having
- foreign objects inserted into a rectum or vagina, performing oral sex on
- daycare staff, and sacrificing animals. In the end, though, after heated
- accusations, the FBI concluded that the children made up the stories of
- murders and noted that the investigations had been so flawed that people
- truly guilty of child molesting may have gone free.
-
- So what has happened? Many states conduct trials unhampered by rules
- of evidence that apply to adults: all states have dropped the requirement
- that children's stories be corroborated by evidence or adults' testimony.
- Therefore an opportunity develops to suggest the story to the child: their
- stories evolve through coaxing until a coherent narrative emerges.
- Psychiatrist and child therapist Dr. Lee Coleman has noted that
-
- [i]n all too many cases, the interviews with the
- children are horribly biased. The interviewers assume,
- before talking with the child, that molestation has
- taken place. The accused persons are assumed to be
- guilty, and the thinly disguised purpose of the inter-
- view is to get something out of the child to confirm
- these suspicions. It is all too easy, with repeated
- and leading and suggestive questions, to get a young
- child so confused that he or she can't tell the
- difference between fact and fantasy./41
- Dr. Coleman provided the Commercial Appeal with the
-
-
- following interview between a social worker and a four-year-old:
- Interviewer: What's Miss Frances doing while children are in the other
- room?
-
- Child: I don't know.
-
- Interviewer: Come here. . .I want to talk to you a second. (Boy's name),
- you do know. Look at me. Look at me. You know about the secret. But
- see, it's not a secret any more, because (another child) told us about it
- and (another child) told us about it, and your parents want you to tell us.
- . .You can be a very good boy and tell us about it. . .
-
- Child: I don't know.
-
- Interviewer: Yes, you do. [Later, near the end of the interview, the
- social worker asks if the same things happened to the boy that were
- reported by other children.)
-
- Interviewer: She did it to you, too.
-
- Child: No. She didn't do it to me.
-
- Interviewer: It's not your fault, OK?
-
- Child: She didn't do it to me.
-
- Interviewer: Yes, she did; yes, she did (stroking the child's head).
-
- Some therapists and counselors--and police officers--inject into these
- cases an ideology that presumes that children don't lie about abuse. We
- have even created aids to encourage and facilitate children's stories.
- Anatomically-correct dolls have proven useful, but not exclusively so: the
- dolls themselves can constitute leading questions by suggesting abuse, or
- the dolls themselves may have bodies so disproportionate and bizarre that
- children can't use them. And recently two psychologists have estimated
- that "for every person correctly identified as a child sexual abuser
- through such techniques, four to nine are incorrectly identified."/42 In
- abuse cases, children may undergo up to fifty interviews, most by parents
- and therapists even before the police become involved. Again, the same
- parents or therapists feel that the children must be believed because they
- have neither the experience nor vocabulary to talk about sexual
- molestation. But the parents and therapists ask leading questions, offer
- rewards, and refuse to accept children's denials that molestation occurred:
- the kids are called "dumb" for not admitting to abuse.
-
- Law enforcers must remember that they themselves and the therapists
- pursue different goals in these investigations. Therapy overcomes trauma;
- police investigate offenses for prosecution. Of danger to law enforcement,
- one criminal justice academic noted that if in interviews, "children denied
- victimization, then it was assumed they were concealing the truth, which
- must be drawn out by some inducement or reinforcement. The therapeutic
- process thus became an infallible generating mechanism for criminal
- charges. . ."/43 Police must not simply believe the children; rather, as
- FBI's Lanning urges, police must listen. Don't ignore the possibility of
- bona fide molestation by losing a case in the pursuit of Satan.
-
- So where do we stand? Child abuse does exist. Some people commit
- violent crimes while invoking the power of Satan. Such people may act with
- others. But law enforcers cannot demonstrate the existence of a widespread
- satanic conspiracy: the evidence doesn't exist. No evidence links fantasy
- role-playing games to teen suicides. No evidence supports the idea that
- daycare workers subject children to abuse in propitiation of Satan. No
- evidence exists supporting the literal truth of cult survivors' claims.
- Officers can and should stick to the Constitutional basics: they
- investigate irregular behavior based on a well-founded and legally-defined
- reasonable suspicion; they arrest based on probable cause. No one expects
- police to ignore pentagrams drawn in blood at a homicide scene: complete
- documentation of crime scenes has always been the rule. But we have no
- justification for carrying on unwarranted explorations of the beliefs of
- the unpopular few, or from waving books at seminars and pronouncing them
- dangerous.
-
- Law enforcers have taken on the role of religious theorists. As
- Gordon Melton observed sadly:
-
- The Satanic literature has been carried almost
- totally by the imaginative literature of non-
- Satanists--primarily conservative Christians who
- describe the practices in vivid detail in the
- process of denouncing them./44
-
- Law enforcers do have tools adequate to do their jobs, if not always the
- money to buy them. Advances in criminal investigation from the Automated
- Fingerprint Identification System or from DNA typing promise to
- revolutionize the business. The FBI's serial crime psychological profiling
- model incorporates, without the satanic bias, the proper questions to ask
- to correlate a possible criminal ideology to ritualized (that is, committed
- similarly on multiple occasions) violent crimes.
-
- In short, law enforcers must remove the "cult" from cult crime and do
- their jobs accordingly. Thank you.
-
-
- References Cited
-
- 1/Bromley, David G., and Shupe, Anson D., Jr. The Tnevnoc Cult.
- Sociological Analysis, 40(4): 36l-366. l979
-
- 2/Clark, J.R. The macabre faces of occult-related crime. Law Enforcement
- News, XIV (279, 280). October 3l, November l5, l988.
-
- 3/Hyer, M. Blue Knights and the Black Art. The Washington Post, April l8,
- l989.
-
- 4/Clark, op. cit. 5/File l8 Newsletter, IV (89-l), l989. 6/Lyons, Arthur.
- Satan Wants You. The Mysterious Press, New York, l988, p. l49. 7/Kahaner,
- Larry. Cults That Kill. Warner Books, New York, l988, p. l46.
-
- 8/Ibid., p. l48.
-
- 9/File l8 Newsletter, op cit.
-
- 10/ American Library Association, Office of Intellectual Freedom,
- Memorandum, January/February, l988. 11/File l8 Newsletter, III (88-3),
- l988, p. 7.
-
- l2/LaVey, Anton. The Satanic Bible. Avon Books, New York, l969, p. 26.
-
- l3/Crowley, Aleister. The Book of the Law. Samuel Weiser, Inc., York
- Beach, Maine, l976 (reprint), p. 9.
- l4/Lyons, p. lll.
-
- l5/Moody, E.J. Magic therapy: an anthropological investigation of
- contemporary Satanism. In I.I. Zaretsky and M.P. Leone (eds.), Religious
- Movements in Contemporary America. Princeton University Press, New Jersey,
- l974.
-
- l6/Lyons, p. ll6.
-
- l7/Barry, R. J. Satanism: The Law Enforcement Response. The National
- Sheriff, XXXVIII (l): 39, l987.
-
- l8/Smith, Lindsay E. and Walstad, Bruce A. Sting Shift. Street-Smart
- Communications, Littleton, Colorado, l989, p. l04.
-
- l9/Stackpole, Michael. Game Manufacturers' Association. Personal
- communication, l988.
-
- 20/Melton, J. Gordon. Encyclopedic Handbook of Cults in America. Garland
- Publishing Company, New York, l986, p.3.
-
- 21/Hyer, op. cit.
-
- 22/Briggs, E. Satanic cults said to entice teens with sex, drugs.
- Richmond Times Dispatch, March 5, l988.
-
- 23/Things that go bump in Victoria. Maclean's, October 27, l980.
-
- 24/Smith, M. and L. Pazder. Michelle Remembers, Congdon and Lattes, Inc.,
- New York, l980, p. l93-4.
-
- 25/Brunvand, Jan H. The Choking Doberman and Other "New Urban Legends" W.
- W. Norton, New York, l984, p. 4-5.
-
- 26/Ibid., p. l62.
-
- 27/Kolata, G. Rumor of LSD-Tainted Tattoos Called Hoax, The New
- York Times, December 9, l988.
-
- 28/Satanism reports mostly rumor, detectives say. Tucson Citizen
- (Arizona), December l9, l988.
-
- 29/Hammack, L. Fears grow as rumors spread. Times and World News (Roanoke,
- Virginia), November 25, l988.
-
- 30/Bromley, David. Folk Narratives and Deviance Construction: Cautionary
- Tales as a Response to Structural Tensions in the Social Order. In C.
- Sanders (ed.), Deviance and Popular Culture, in press, p. ll.
-
- 31/Victor, Jeffrey S. A Rumor-Panic About a Dangerous Satanic Cult in
- Western New York. New York Folklore, XV (l-2): 23-49, l989.
-
- 32/Recounted in Noonan, Veronica. Satanic Cult Killed Animals in
- Allenstown, Police Say, Union Leader (New Hampshire), May 3, l989.
-
- 33/Satanism in NH. Editorial in the Manchester Union Leader, May 4, l989.
-
- 34/Zitner, Aaron. N.H. police chief discounts alleged signs of cult
- activity, The Boston Globe, May 5, l989.
-
- 35/Zitner, Aaron. Cult scare seen as overrated, The Boston Globe, May 28,
- l989.
-
- 36/Guinee, William. Satanism in Yellowwood Forest: The Interdependence of
- Antagonistic World Views. Indiana Folklore and Oral History, l6(l): l-30,
- l987.
-
-
- 37/Miller, Marjorie, and Kennedy, J. Michael. Potent Mix of Ritual and
- Charisma. Los Angeles Times, May l6. Also, Debbie Nathan, investigative
- reporter, El Paso, l989.
-
- 38/Applebone, Peter. On North-South Line, Violence Grows, The New York
- Times, April l7, l989.
-
- 39/Crocker, Bonnie. Detective warns of Satanism, Daily Press (Newport News,
- Virginia), June l0, l989.
-
- 40/Charlier, T., and S. Downing. Justice Abused: A l980s Witch--Hunt, The
- Commercial Appeal (Memphis, Tennessee). Six-part series printed in
- January, l988.
-
- 41/Coleman, L. Therapists are the real culprits in many child abuse cases,
- Augustus, IX(6): 7-9, l986.
-
- 42/Moss, D.C. "Real" Dolls Too Suggestive. American Bar Association
- Journal, December l, l988, p. 24-26.
-
- 43/Jenkins, P. Protecting Victims of Child Sexual Abuse: A Case for
- Caution, The Prison Journal, Fall/Winter l988: 25-35.
-
- 44/Melton, p. 76.
-
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