Satanism and Ritual Abuse - Case-by-Case Documentation
Saturday, February 14, 2009 (Check here for updates)
INTRODUCTION
Lt. Col.
Aquino was implicated in the following four cases
"Johns," in a very negative review of one of my books posted at Amazon site
(he gave it one star ... as opposed to the five stars he gave to The Psychic
Encyclopedia, books on channelling the dead, and the "alien" invasion), writes:
"The main thing I learnt from this book is that it is definitely better
sometimes to look through a book before buying it. ...
False Memory Syndrome
[FMSF: organized debunkers of satanism and ritual abuse accusations] is
described as 'the CIA's answer to the flat earth society. ..."
Twelve years later, I repeat the accusation.
The FMSF and media have been lying flagrantly about RA and intelligence ties to
cult activity for decades and are the CIA's answer to the flat-earth society
(as a believer in "aliens" and the channelling of spirits, "Johns" is qualified
to render an opinion on junk journalism.
The facts about satanism and RA as they stand ON THE PUBLIC RECORD, this side of
plausible deniability and ulterior motives:
The following cases detail legal proceedings held in juvenile, family, civil and
criminal courts around the world in which allegations of Satanism or the use of
ritual to abuse surfaced.
Any religion or organization can be used as a front to hide ritual abuse
activity, including Christianity, Buddhism, Shamanism, Hinduism, Masonry,
Mormonism, pagan and Satanic religions; however, not all Satanists commit crimes
and not all occultism is Satanism. It is imperative that investigators and
professionals familiarize themselves with cross-cultural belief systems so as
not to target any particular group.
This document will have regular updates; this present version is current as of
July 10, 2007. It is recommended that this archive be used as a resource only
and original documents be obtained from Lexis/Nexus or Westlaw with the
assistance of an attorney.
INTRODUCTION:
In the 1980’s adults and children came forward around the world disclosing that
they were victims/perpetrators of satanic ritual abuse [SRA] and/or were witness
to satanic ritual murders. These claims were routinely dismissed by FBI’s
Special Agent Ken Lanning and an organization called the False Memory Syndrome
Foundation which came into existence in 1992 stating there were no case
convictions or scientific evidence to prove that satanic ritual abuse existed.
Claims such as this should not go unchallenged because therapists across the
country have lost their licenses due to allegations that the memories of SRA
victims are too “bizarre” to be believed and are to be attributed solely to
“False Memory Syndrome.” It is apparent that these beliefs have been instigated
by the FMSF because they are a political and legal advocacy group acting on
behalf of accused perpetrators.
It has been documented that the FBI has been responsible
for not only ruining case investigations in several instances but intimidating
witnesses to recant their abuse. [See, Westpoint, Bonacci v. King, Finders
case]. In the Finders case it appeared that the FBI had a conflict of interest
because this organization was in their counter-intelligence files.
In regards to the scientific communities opinions about the reality of satanic
ritual abuse, it appears the Appellate Court in the State of Arkansas had the
last word about this subject. According to Echols vs. State (1996):
"Echols next contends that Dr. Griffis should not have been allowed to testify that the murders had the 'trappings of occultism' because there was no testimony that the field of satanism or occultism is generally accepted in the scientific community. The trial court did not allow the evidence to prove that satanism or occultism is generally accepted in the scientific community.
Rather, the trial court admitted the evidence as proof of the motive for committing the murders."
Entire families have been implicated in the ritual abuse of children which
proves the fact that generational Satanism exists. See Parker (1995)
Figured/Hill (1994) and Gallup (1991) Perpetrators have been found to be
professionals who work in law enforcement, the military or daycare, and
Christian fronts have been used in some instances as a means of hiding the
satanic motivation of the perpetrators. See Cannaday (1994) Wright (1992) Gallup
(1991) and Orr (1984). In several cases the perpetrators have confessed to the
satanic element of the crime or participation in prior satanic offenses. - See
Helms (2006) Cala (2003) Smith (2003) Delaney (2002) Morris (2001) South (2000)
Page (2000) T. Kokoraleis (1999) Bonacci (1999) Brooks (1996) Hughes (1996)
Penick (1995) Alvarado (1995) Ingram (1992) Rogers (1992) and Fryman (1988)
The FMSF and those affiliated with this organization have been using the
Appellate courts to overturn cases convictions involving ritual abuse themes.
The Appellate court cases in this archive are valuable because most opinions
have affirmed that Satanism was the motivation for the crime and the
introduction of that evidence has been routinely found to be probative and not
prejudicial. The author has chosen to describe the satanic element of the crime
only rather than every point of law that was appealed. This level of
documentation is important because, if published, the rulings of these courts
can be cited as case law. The majority of the appellate cases cited in this
archive are published opinions.
In addition to court documents this archive also references news articles that
document the ritual elements of the crime which include perpetrator confessions,
cannibalism, murder, mutilation in the context of Satanism, and there is ample
evidence to prove the existence of cult groups who sacrifice their victims as an
offering to Satan. This proves beyond doubt that unusual occult belief systems
exist and the bizarre acts committed by these individuals are not only not
usual, they are commonplace.
In some cases involving multiple defendants the legal histories have been
combined in the title of the case and are separated by semicolons, but in other
instances the histories are described separately.
This archive begins with a First Amendment case, filed on behalf of a prisoner,
regarding his use of the Satanic Bible [written by Anton La Vey of the Church of
Satan] and other accouterments of Satanism.
August 24, 1989, CHARLES MCCORKLE v. W. E. JOHNSON, WARDEN, JOSEPH KOLB,
CHAPLAIN, FREDDIE V. SMITH, COMMISSIONER, UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS,
ELEVENTH CIRCUIT, 881 F.2d 993, Denial of Satanic Material Affirmed
'
Overview: Appellate court documents state that Charles McCorkle, a state
prisoner confined in the Holman facility in Alabama, filed a complaint, seeking
redress for the deprivation of his first amendment rights to freely exercise his
chosen religion – Satanism. The prison officials denied his request to access
certain Satanic books and articles, including the Satanic Bible, the Satanic
Book of Rituals, and a Satanic medallion because they posed security threats and
were directly contrary to the goals of the Institution.
The court wrote: “The prohibition on Satanic materials such as those requested
by the plaintiff is justified by the defendant’s concern for institutional
security and order. It is an informed and measured response to the violence
inherent in Satan worship and to the potential disorder that it might cause
within the prison. ”
Testimony was given at an evidentiary hearing where the plaintiff, McCorkle,
recounted two of the rituals espoused by the Satanic Book of Rituals. The
fertility ritual included the sacrifice of a female virgin, preferably a
Christian. The initiation ritual called for wrist slashing, blood drinking, and
the consumption of human flesh – usually fingers. The candles preferred by the
plaintiff and other Satanists “are not made of wax or paraffin, instead they are
made from the fat of unbaptized infants.” The plaintiff had been observed
drawing his own blood, by slicing his wrists, and had asked other inmates for
their blood. One inmate was “highly irritated when the plaintiff requested that
he donate a vial of blood for use in the worship of Satan.”
The warden testified that upon review of the Satanic Bible, he concluded that
persons following its teaching would murder, rape, or rob at will without regard
for moral or legal consequences. He thought the prisoner’s safety would be at
risk if other inmates knew of the contents of the Satanic Bible. Anton Szandor
LaVey was quoted in a chapter from the Book of Satan, stating that “right and
wrong had been inverted too long,” and he challenged readers to “rebel against
the laws of man and God.” He declared that hatred of one’s enemies was of utmost
important and revenge should be a top priority.
The court noted that there were several Satanic sects represented at Holman
Prison who did not need these specific books to practice their religion and that
plaintiff’s right to freely worship Satan could be exercised only at significant
cost to guards, other prisoners, and society in general. Accordingly, he denied
plaintiff’s requests.
----
In State v. Freeman, 559 P.2d 152 (1976) it was the opinion of the expert
witness that revenge was the motivation for the murder that the defendant was
being tried for, and noted that the defendant had underlined certain passages in
the Satanic Bible addressing vengeance and revenge. He stated…that the language,
“not only sanctioned revenge, but required it.”
In Childs v. Duckworth, 705 F.2d 915 (1983) the plaintiff Donald Childs,
an alleged member of the “Satanic Church,” brought a Civil rights claim,
requesting permission for various Satanic items, including the Satanic Bible,
which the appellate court denied. Childs confessed to having sacrificed cats and
pigeons and casting spells to retaliate against others. The Warden and Director
both stated that Satanism was not recognized as a religion by that Institution.
The Court stated the authorities had legitimate reason for denying inmates
request and it did not deprive him of his Constitutional rights.
In Doty v. Lewis, 995 F. Supp. 1081 (1998) the court ruled that a ban on
high security prisoners possession of candles, incense, Baphomet tapestry, and
Satanic religious tracts, which advocated retaliation, sacrifices, spells and
racial separation, did not impinge on plaintiff Doty’s free exercise rights,
given rational reasons related to prison security for banning materials, and
despite the prisoner’s sincere belief in the Satanic religion. Materials
requested were not essential to practice his religious tenets, and there was a
rational connection between restrictions of these materials and prison security
concerns.
The inmate had thirty-one disciplinary actions reflecting an escalation of
violence and aggression each year, and he was trying to engage other prisoners
in violent behavior. It was thought that the Satanic Bible in the hands of this
particular prisoner would endanger the security of the prison.
The appellate court stated the Satanic Bible presented a serious threat to the
safety and security of the prison, that the book condoned human sacrifice and
the book’s philosophies were blatantly “vicious,” “selfish,” and brutal.” The
book “advocated hurting someone, who in the opinion of the Satanists, deserved
to be harmed and destroyed.” The plaintiff Doty admitted that he had engaged in
“sacrificing cows.”
In Burton v. Frank, 2004 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9603, the prisoner’s request
for the Satanic Bible was denied because the prison had shown that inmates
possession of the Satanic Bible posed a threat to the prison’s legitimate
interest in maintaining security and promoting rehabilitation. Passages from the
Satanic Bible book were quoted:
“The only time a Satanist would perform a human sacrifice would be if it were to serve a two-fold purpose; that being to release the magician’s wrath in the throwing of a curse, and more important, to dispose of a totally obnoxious and deserving individual.”
At least one Satanist inmate engaged in a ritual in which an effigy was tortured and “murdered.” The appellate court stated that the Satanic Bible outlined procedures for destroying enemies through the use of effigies.
The prison’s position was that the Satanic Bible promoted “violent and
illegal” behavior, and that “manipulation, disregard for laws and authority,
self-indulgence and revenge,” were inconsistent with criminal rehabilitation.
The court also noted that other Satanists in this particular prison kept a
notebook, called the “Book of Shadows,” which was filled with murderous
language.
Note: The Church of Satan claims they have never been associated with any
criminal activity. However, that is incorrect. Followers of Anton La Vey have
routinely requested the Satanic Bible while in prison, and in the majority of
cases their requests have been denied. As of 7/4/07 a Lexis Nexus search
revealed more than 30 appellate decisions in which the Satanic Bible was
mentioned. In Maine vs. Waterhouse (1986) the appellate court quoted passages
from the Satanic Bible to prove and uphold the satanic motivation for the crime.
In Adoption of Quentin (1997) the appellate court noted the perpetrator had read
the Satanic Bible.
[The source of cattle mutilations has remained unsolved in the United States
which makes the admission of the sacrifice of a cow in Doty vs. Lewis a point of
interest.] See “Mutilated Bull: No Blood, No clues,” Gallup Independent, May 5,
2007; “The Truth is Out There,” The Gallup Independent, May 5, 2007]
January 6, 2006, STATE OF IDAHO v. THOMAS WENDELL HELMS, COURT OF APPEALS OF
IDAHO, 137 P.3d 466, 2006 Ida App. LEXIS 3, Sentencing for Battery of a
Correctional Officer Modified
Overview: Appellant documents state that defendant Thomas Helms was
serving time in the Idaho Maximum Security Institution for grand theft,
possession of a dangerous weapon by an inmate, and battery with intent to
murder. He had a self-inflicted wound on his arm which had required stitches and
needed to be moved to another cell. When officers attempted to move him he threw
toilet water on them which then required tests to insure that the guards had not
contracted HIV or Hepatitis. Helms was charged with battery on a correctional
officer and received the maximum prison sentence after a jury trial, a sentence
which this appellant court reduced.
Defendant Helms had a history of disruptive behavior and had been placed in
increasingly restrictive confinements. He was self-mutilating, destroyed
property, exposed himself, and threw feces and urine. Helms had told
investigators about “feats” of murder and cannibalism during a brief period of
his life when he was not incarcerated, although it was not clear to the majority
opinion whether these were actual crimes.
The Dissenting Judge thought a stronger sentence should have been imposed and
remarked that the majority opinion minimized Helm’s behavior. He was in favor of
Helms never being released and cited the following evidence as reason why he
should be kept in confinement:
As a youth Helms had sexually violated a young girl and his younger brother. He
was designated a sexual predator shortly thereafter. His parole officer stated
Helms had no conscience. Helms slashed the throat of one inmate and planned to
murder another one. After the attack Helms told officers that if they had not
stopped him, he planned to eviscerate the victim, pull out his internal organs,
and eat some of them.
Helms repeatedly displayed a fascination with homicide, cannibalism, and
idolized Charlie Manson. In the year 2000, Helms told investigators that in 1994
he had been involved in the murder of a female African-American prostitute and
subsequently ate her heart after assisting in cutting up her body to pieces. He
also confessed to another murder at that time. When asked about the truth of
these statements in the year 2003, Helms again affirmed that these statements
were true, that he was part of a satanic cult at that time, and he had engaged
in murder and cannibalism.
Based on this evidence, the Dissenting Judge thought Helms would always remain a
danger to society.
May 26, 2005, THE PEOPLE v. RICHARD JOHN VIEIRA, SUPREME COURT OF CALIFORNIA,
25 Cal. Rptr. 3d 337, Death Sentence Affirmed on Three Counts; Remand to Trial
Court and Reversal of the Death Sentence for one count.
Overview: Appellate documents state a jury convicted Richard John Vieira
of Stanislaus County of four counts of murder and conspiracy which took place in
1990. Vieira and his co-defendants, David Beck and Gerald Cruz, all lived in a
camp where Gerald Cruz served as the leader. Cruz instigated the murders of four
individuals from a rival group.
Defendant’s sister testified that she lived with Cruz in 1987-1988, at which
time Cruz led others in the study of the occult and the performance of
supposedly occult rituals that included candles, robes and chanting. Cruz told
Young that “to sacrifice your first newborn was the greatest thing you could
ever do and that it was ‘for the satisfaction of Satan.’”
The defense solicited testimony regarding defendant’s cult membership and his
incapacity to form the requisite criminal intent. Testimony evidenced that
Vieira was a “slave” to other members of the group. Family members testified
defendant often appeared to have been “beat up” with black eyes, fat lips and
slashes on his arm. According to defendant’s diary he had been electroshocked
and beat up by members of the group.
A cult expert testified that Cruz directed a cult which had occult and satanic
underpinnings, they engaged in various rituals, and defendant was under mind
control at the time of the crime. Cruz directed the members of the group to read
and study the books of Alistair Crowley, of whom Cruz believed himself to be the
reincarnation. There were also reports that the defendants were part of a Nazi
or White Supremacist organization. The court ultimately rejected the defense’s
argument that the crimes were committed under duress.
The dissenting Judge wrote that he would have reversed the death penalty and
acknowledged that at the time of the murders the defendant was a submissive
member of a satanic cult led by Gerald Cruz.
“In this case, the evidence shows that defendant acted under the substantial
domination of cult leader Gerald Cruz, who controlled every aspect of
defendant’s life and threatened to kill anyone who did not follow his orders.
Absent the pernicious influence of a satanic cult leader, it is doubtful that
defendant would have committed murder.”
The dissent thought that the defendant was under mind control at the time of the
crime and noted that the expert explained how cults use isolation, sleep
deprivation, punishment, and occult ritual to dominate and control the minds of
their members.
March 18, 2005, TRACE ROYAL DUNCAN v. STATE OF ALABAMA, COURT OF CRIMINAL
APPEALS OF ALABAMA, 925 So.2d 245, 2005 Ala. Crim. App. Lexis 78, Affirmed in
Part, Remanded with Instructions; 827 So. 2d 838, 2005 Ala Crim App. LEXIS 116,
Court of Appeal Reversed the Death Penalty.
Appellate documents and news articles state four teenagers, Trace Royal Duncan,
17, Cary Dale Grayson, 19, Kenny Loggins, 17, and Louis Mangione, 16, kidnapped
and murdered hitchhiker, Vicki De Blieux, 37, who was traveling to her mother’s
home in Tennessee. The defendants picked her up and promised to take her to her
mother’s but instead took her to a wooded area. After she spurned their sexual
advances, they kicked and stomped her and threw her over a cliff. Carey Grayson
told Louis Mangione that he was going to “sacrifice the bitch.” Three defendants
then returned to the scene and proceeded to mutilate, cannibalize part of her
body, and remove all of her fingers, both to thwart identification, and to keep
as souvenirs. The defendants were arrested after Louis Mangione began showing
Ms. De Blieux’s fingers to friends. Kenneth Loggins and Carey Dale Grayson were
sentenced to death. Louis Christopher Mangione and Trace Royal Ducan received a
sentence of life imprisonment.
The medical examiner found that every bone in the victim’s face was fractured at
least once, her skull was broken open with most of the brain separated from it.
Large lacerations were found on the back of her head along with extensive
bruising on the head, her left and right ribs were fractured, there were at
least 180 stab wounds all over her body, two incised wounds were found in her
chest and abdomen, her left lung was removed by a knife, there was bleeding of
the tongue, and all her fingers and thumbs had been removed. The medical
examiner could not be certain what wounds were inflicted before and after death.
The satanic element of the crime was documented in Trace Royal Duncan’s appeal
and several news articles. Duncan’s trial counsel stated that his co-defendants
were Satanists and that Mr. Duncan “kicked the victim a few times in the head,”
and the other codefendants “returned to the victim’s body to mutilate it,
stabbing it over 180 times, removing organs and eating them and removing fingers
to thwart identification and to keep as souvenirs…” Counsel was able to
interject his theory that two codefendants were Satanists who instigated the
murder, committed most of the acts against the victim, and threatened to kill
the appellant if he told what happened. He attempted to portray codefendant
Grayson as the older instigator and leader who was a Satanist wanting to
sacrifice the victim to Satan. In closing arguments the defense stated that the
codefendants could have committed the murder as a satanic ritual.
The legal history of this case is as follows:
Trace Royal Duncan: 925 So. 2d 245, 2005 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 78; 827 So. 2d
839, 1999 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 224; 673 So. 2d 838, 1995 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS
350
Carey Dale Grayson: 954 So. 2d 1141, 2005 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 2676; 824 So. 2d
844, 2002 Ala. LEXIS 13; 824 So. 2d 844, 2001 Ala. LEXIS 167; 824 So. 2d 804,
1999 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 261; 665 So. 2d 986, 1995 Ala. Crim. Appl. LEXIS 71
Kenneth Loggins: 771 So. 2d 1093, 2000 Ala. LEXIS 217; 910 So. 2d 146, 2005 Ala.
Crim. App. LEXIS 57; 771 So. 2d 1070, 1999 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 52
Louis Christopher Mangione: 740 So. 2d 444, 1998 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 133; 796
So. 2d. 446, 1999 Ala. Crim. App. LEXIS 2553
News articles report that co-defendant Dale Grayson told newspaper reporters
that it was Trace Duncan who stabbed the woman, hacked open her chest and pulled
out an organ from her body. The police were told that Grayson was a Satanist who
drank the blood of his victim. See “Murder Suspect Claims he’s no Satanist,”
Birmingham News, April 29, 1994; “Grayson Says Friends Carved Woman’s Body,”
Birmingham News, May 5, 1994; “Trial Will Begin for Man Accused in Woman’s Sport
Killing,” Birmingham News, October 29, 1995
October 21, 2003, ANGLESEY, NORTH WALES, MATHEW HARDMAN, Appealing Conviction
for Murder
Overview: News reports state a teenager found guilty of murdering his
elderly neighbor and drinking her blood in a vampire ritual was attempting to
challenge his conviction. He was jailed in 2002 for a minimum of 12 years
following his trial. The jury was told the art student killed 90 year old Mabel
Leyshon and removed her heart in a satanic-style ritual in November 2001. His
first bid to appeal was rejected by the Court of Appeal in early 2003. See
”Vampire Killer to Challenge Conviction,” Press Association, October 21, 2003
September 11, 2003, BRASILIA, BRAZIL, Cesio Brandao aka Cesi Favio Caldas aka
Sergio Brandao, Sentenced for Murder and Attempted Murder
Overview: News articles report that five influential members of Brazilian
society went on trial in 2003 for the torture, castration, and murder of five
children, aged eight to 13, whose sexual organs had been removed and used in
rites of black magic between 1989 and 1993.
Amailton Madeira Gomes, son of a businessman, Carlos Alberto Santos, policeman,
and two doctors, Anisio Ferreira de Souza, and Cesio Brandao, aka Cesi Favio aka
Sergio Brandao were charged with the crimes. The fifth defendant, 75 year old
Valentina Andrade, a fortune teller and leader of a UFO group called the
Superior Universal Alignment, was tried for these crimes but was not convicted.
The five defendants, including Valentina de Andrade, allegedly used their
influence in efforts to stop the case from going to trial, intimidated victims,
and destroyed evidence. The prosecution asked for the trial to be moved to
another locale, Para State.
A total of 19 boys, aged eight to 14, were victimized. Five were mutilated and
died, three escaped with horrible injuries, six escaped before they were harmed,
and five have never been seen again. Some victims had their eyes gouged out,
wrists slit, and sexual organs cut off. The two doctors were accused of selling
the internal organs of the children and using their genitals in satanic rituals.
Two mutilated survivors, now adults, escaped from Brazil’s Amazon region where
they had been tied to trees after being doped and castrated. They both
identified Carlos Alberto Santos as the man who kidnapped them when they were
nine and 10 years old.
Brazil’s Special Secretary for Human Rights said the trial had symbolic
significance because of the influential professions of the defendants. The trial
was seen as a test of Brazil’s ability to bring justice to isolated areas where
it was suspected the legal system might be under the sway of powerful locals.
Carlos Albert Santos was sentenced to 35 years, Amailton Gomes was sentenced to
57 years, Anisio Ferreira de Souza was sentenced to 77 years, Cesio Brandao was
sentenced to 56 years. See “Trial Opens on Ritualistic Murders of Brazilian
Children,” Agence France Presse, August 29, 2003; “Two Sentenced in Mutilation
Murder Case in Brazil,” Associated Press, August 30, 2003, “Satanic Sect Leader
Denies Charges She tortured, Murdered Children in Brazil,” Agence France Presse,
November 19, 2003. See HYPERLINK "http://www" http://www.religionnewsblog.com
for articles: “Five on Trial for Child Ritual Murders,” August. 29, 2003,
“Doctor Gets 56 for Brazil Sect Killings,” September 10, 2003; “Brazil Jails
Occult Killers,” Aug. 31, 2003, “Brazil Court Finds 2 Guilty in Mutilation
Killings,” August 30, 2003, “Doctor Gets 77 Years for Brazil Sect Killings,”
Sept. 5, 2003
August 9, 2003, CHARLESTON, WEST VIRGINIA: KANAWHA COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
Case No. 93-F45, Louis Kelley Sentenced to 15 years in prison for Sexual
Assaults.
Overview: News reports state that Louis Kelley, 37, was sentenced by the
court to serve 15-30 years in prison for sexual assault and one to five years in
prison for sexual abuse of a boy. Kelly, who also called himself Damien Prince,
convinced the boy to participate in Satanic rituals and molested him numerous
times. Kelly pleaded guilty in February 2003 to the two counts related to an
incident on Halloween night in 1991. “Man to Serve 15 years for Sexual Assault
of Boy during Ritual,” Associated Press, August 9, 2003
June 19, 2003, MANASSAS, VIRGINIA, JUVENILE AND DOMESTIC COURT, PRINCE WILLIAM COUNTY, Case No. JA020390-02-00, Russell John Smith Plea-Bargained to Four Counts of Rape and was Sentenced to 48 Years.
Overview: News reports state that self-described Satanist Russell John
Smith, 38, a former guard at the Prince William County jail and founder of a
satanic worship group on the internet, plead guilty to four counts of rape. He
claimed that most of the sex acts with a 12 year old girl were part of his
Satanic rituals. Police who searched his home found numerous Satanic items,
including robes, black candles, goat’s skull, a pentagram and an altar. See
“Virginia Fugitive Arrested in Oregon,” Associated Press, Sept. 4, 2002;
“Self-described Satanist Sentenced to 48 years for Rape,” Associated Press, July
25, 2003; “Sentencing Delayed for Satanist who Raped Girl,” Associated Press,
June 19, 2003; “Metro in Brief,” The Washington Post, July 28, 2003
May 19, 2003, POWELL v. THE STATE, SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA, 581 S.E. 2d 13,
2003 Ga. LEXIS 478, Conviction for Murder Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state that on May 22, 1998, Keith Powell,
44, who had been living with his parents, shot his unarmed father during a
family dispute. Powell routinely carried a .45 caliber handgun in a holster on
his person while in the home.
Mr. Powell claimed that the shooting was in self-defense and that he feared his
father due to the abuse he suffered as a child. A friend of his testified to the
“positive” relationship that existed between Powell and his father but stated
that Powell had a lot of anger toward his mother, accusing her of abusing him in
a ritualistic satanic manner.
A psychologist opined that Powell had a delusional disorder, apparently due to
the fact he spoke of being beaten, drugged and threatened, supposedly because of
“gold” he had discovered at some point in his life.
Note: This case has been included because a diagnosis of “delusional
disorder” does not necessarily negate this defendant’s claim of alleged satanic
ritual victimization by his mother.
January 31, 2003, ROANOKE, VIRGINIA, ROANOKE CITY CIRCUIT COURT, Case No.
CR02000968-04, Terry Dale Duncan, Pleaded No Contest to Attempted Capital Murder
Overview: News report states Terry Dale Duncan, 30, a self-styled Satanic
high priest, pleaded no contest in an attempt to murder his one month old son.
His child would have died if not for the intervention of a nurse and social
worker after the child missed a doctor’s appointment. Duncan’s child had
suffered fractures to a leg, a shinbone, both collarbones, and bruises covered
his nose, forehead and eyes. The authorities also discovered a wound that
appeared to be a cigarette burn at the back of his throat.
The father said he decided to “sacrifice” the child because he believed he was
not the child’s father, so he tried to “disassemble” him. The father claimed he
used to injure victims in this manner when he was affiliated with an Oklahoma
based satanic cult. He told police that, “The majority of those States that we
done the sacrifices, some of them were immediate sacrifices to where the heart
was busted or the throat was enclosed to cause breathing to stop immediately and
cause instant death, and then we disassembled the bodies.”
He confessed to many satanic murders but the police stated law enforcement in
other communities did not respond to their request for information about any
unsolved homicides. See “Father Pleads No Contest to Abusing Infant,” The
Roanoke Times, January 31, 2003
January 8, 2003, FORT WORTH, TEXAS, TARRANT COUNTY JUSTICE CENTER, Case No.
0822743, Joseph Frank Cala II, Conviction for Murder
Overview: News reports state Joseph Frank Cala II, 41, pleaded guilty
to murder in the 2001 death of his 79 years old mother, Lydia M. Cala, after he
“beat her to death, sliced her open, and ate some of her heart.” After a
three-hour hearing, the District Judge chose the maximum of the 20-30 year
sentence range contained in a plea agreement.
The victim’s daughter testified that she went to her mother’s house the evening
of Oct. 15, 2001 after neighbors called and said windows had been shattered from
inside the house. She was afraid to enter the residence due to fear of her
brother, so she notified authorities. Officer Kevin Meador testified that when
he looked through a bedroom window, he saw a naked, bloody man standing over
what he learned later was a woman’s mutilated body. Another officer saw Cala eat
what appeared to be an organ, according to police reports. Meador and other
officers said they went inside and heard Joey Cala saying that he worshipped the
devil. When officers took him into custody, he told them they had interrupted
his “sacrifice.” The 76 pound woman, had a broken nose, teeth, collar bone, ribs
and multiple bruises and cuts likely caused by fist or feet, the medical
examiner said. After she died, “her chest and abdomen were cut open and some
organs were removed,” the medical examiner testified. Part of her heart
contained teeth marks and a piece was missing. See “Man Gets 30 Years for
Killing, Cannibalizing Mother,” Associated Press, January 8, 2003
March 13, 2002, MICHAEL DELANEY, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS GUARDIAN AD LITEM FOR
BRYAN DELANEY, JASON DELANEY AND JUSTYN DELANEY v. CAROL CLIFTON, PH.D AND MARY
ELLEN FARLEY, M.A., COURT OF APPEALS OF OREGON, 41 P.3d 1099, Dismissal of
Lawsuit Against Therapist Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state patient’s former husband and her
children sued professional counselor and clinical psychologists for professional
malpractice and the husband, a third party to the therapeutic relationship, sued
for intentional infliction of emotional distress.
As background, in 1993, Lee Ann, the wife of the appellant, began to attend
lectures and read books about Multiple Personality Disorder and Satanic cults.
She began to suspect she had been a victim of satanic ritual abuse. Her husband,
the plaintiff, also became convinced of the existence of the satanic cult, his
own involvement, and the validity of the therapy she was receiving.
In therapy, Lee Ann described “alters” that surfaced in response to
environmental cues and believed she participated in ceremonies in which people
and animals were tortured. Lee Ann was referred to a specialist who also
diagnosed her as MPD.
The plaintiff and Lee Ann divorced and the husband filed a claim for damages
against the therapist, alleging that the diagnosis of MPD was considered
“controversial and unreliable in the mental health profession” and the
therapists damaged the relationship between he and his wife. The local court
dismissed this claim because the husband was a third party to the therapeutic
relationship and Lee Ann had no complaint about her treatment. The appellate
court noted that the plaintiff called for the court to join a “national trend”
of jurisdictions that, in the context of MPD generally and memory retrieval in
particular, recognize negligence claims against therapists brought by persons
outside the therapist-patient relationship.”
The Appellate court wrote: “We are unconvinced that such a trend exists. More to
the point, however, we would have to depart from settled Oregon tort
jurisprudence to join the trend, if there were one. We decline to do so.”
Several other lawsuits have had successful outcomes for therapists after their
clients have recanted their disclosures of satanic activity:
November 30, 2000, Jones v. Lurie, 32 S.W. 3d 737. After a trial, no
negligence was found on the part of psychologist Lurie and they found her
treatment was within the standard of care. The client had disclosed that her
grandfather, father, and brother, had sexually abused her, and that her parents
took her to satanic rituals where she was physically and sexually abused by
other cult members. She claimed to remember murdering and cannibalizing babies
and believed “Nazi mind-control” methods were utilized on her, although she
later attributed these statements to her therapist. The client had been
diagnosed by all of her psychiatrists and treating psychologists with Multiple
Personality Disorder [DID]. A Dr. Johnstone, who was a witness for the client,
testified that there was no such diagnosis as multiple personality disorder and
that others professionals who wrote about MPD were ‘”quacks.” The court found
that the client was mentally ill long before Lurie treated her and affirmed the
judgment of the trial court that found no negligence on the part of the
therapist.
November 1, 2000, Bloom v. Braun, et al. 739 N.E. 2d 925. After her
mother recommended treatment with therapist/defendant Braun, who she was also
seeing in therapy, the client came to believe that she had a diagnosis of MPD
[DID] and was involved in satanic cult ritual abuse. The client alleged that the
therapist “misrepresented” as fact that satanic ritual abuse was proven to
exist, there was no objective evidence of such cults, and that since her mother
had recovered memories of participating in such rituals, she was also a
victim/participant in this activity. She claimed that her memories and the
resultant multiple personality disorder were actually caused by the therapy. The
appellate court dismissed Bloom’s complaint based on her failure to satisfy the
requirements of the legal disability exception to the statue of limitations.
August 22, 2000, Althaus v. Cohen, 2000 Pa. LEXIS 2017. After a jury
awarded monetary damages to the client and her parents, the therapist appealed.
The issue in this case was whether a therapist - after being referred by social
services - who treats a child for alleged parental sexual abuse owes a duty of
care to the child’s parents in a therapeutic setting where the child allegedly
has been abused by the parents. The child had accused her parents of incest,
murder, and leading a satanic cult. The appellate court found that the therapist
did not owe a duty of care to the client’s parents and reversed the jury’s
decision, resulting in the parents having to return the monetary award. However,
this decision did not affect the nominal amount of money awarded to the child.
August 19, 1998, Green v. Charter Pines Hospital, Wallace, Timmons, et al.,
No. 96-CVS-5235. Lawyer R. Christopher Barden argued that his client Susan
A. Green had been made to falsely believe she had been molested by her father
and by satanic cult members. He also stated that therapies which claim to
retrieve forgotten sexual abuse memories from deep inside the mind are based on
“junk science.” The jury rejected these claims and found in favor of the
psychologists and believed that the therapist’s therapeutic techniques were well
within the standard of care during the time the therapeutic relationship
occurred.
September 18, 1995, Stecks v. Young, 38 Cal. App. 4th 365. David and
Nancy Stecks brought an action for libel, slander, and intentional infliction of
emotional distress against psychologist Young after she made a report to child
protective services regarding the Steckses and others. Her client had alleged
that these individuals engaged in child abuse and participated in cult
activities such as human and animal sacrifice. The appellate court ruled because
the therapist was a mandatory reporter, she had absolute immunity.
July 15, 1998, Charter Peachford Behavior Health System, et al. v. Kohout,
504 S.E. 2d 514, 1998 Ga. App. LEXIS 995. The appellate court reversed the
judgment of the lower courts finding that therapists and hospital could be sued.
The client, Kimberly Kohout, had claimed that she was “brainwashed” into
creating “false memories” about being sexually and ritually abused by family
members in Satanic cult ceremonies. Kohout admitted to having contacted the
False Memory Syndrome Foundation about her “memories.” The court ruled that
instead of using a “subjective standard” of the patient’s awareness of
psychological harm, the court should use the objective one of when the patient
reasonably should have known about it. The suit was dismissed due to the statute
of limitations precluding a legitimate cause of action.
---------------
July 18, 2001, IN THE INTEREST OF S. C. P., A/K/A S. C. J, MINOR CHILD, M.C.P,
MOTHER, COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA, 2001 Iowa App. LEXIS 442, Termination of
Parental Rights Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that the mother, Mary, was diagnosed
with Multiple Personality Disorder (now called Dissociative Identity Disorder)
and other psychological disorders. Her child was a ward of the Juvenile Court
and they wanted to terminate parental rights. There was domestic violence
between her and the father of her child. The Courts concern was that “by
November 1999 Mary was stating she had been the victim of Satanic ritualistic
abuse.” She blamed her father for causing her mental illness. Mary’s therapist
testified that she might be able to care for her child within one year. Her
therapist stated she was working with the mother on her Dissociative Identity
Disorder, helping her to map and contain her identity.
July 16, 2001, JEFFREY DEWAYNE CLARK v. MICHAEL O’DEA, UNITED STATES COURT OF
APPEALS, SIXTH CIRCUIT, 257 F.3d 498, Conviction for First Degree Murder
Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state a Kentucky jury convicted Jeffrey Clark
and an accomplice of first-degree murder in 1995 for which he received a life
sentence. Rhonda Sue Warford was stabbed multiple times and one stab wound
pierced her brain stem. The medical examiner noted that an inverted cross was
tattooed below her left clavicle, and that her injuries were caused by a sharp
singled-edged instrument such as a knife. Both Keith Hardin and Jeffrey Clark
were questioned about the crime and they were both indicted for murder after
being jointly tried.
Several witnesses testified about Clark and Hardin’s Satanic worship. Jeffrey
Clark was also found to have an inverted tattoo on his shoulder. A witness
claimed he took her to an area where he said a number of animal sacrifices had
been made. Another witness testified that Clark always carried a knife with him
and called it his “sacrificial knife,” and stated he had admitted to sacrificing
an animal in front of a church. The victim’s sister testified, stating she too
knew that Hardin was involved in satanic worship.
Defendant Clark contested the admittance of Satanism at his trial, claiming
there was a lack of evidence to prove the murder was a ritualistic killing. The
State claimed it introduced evidence of Satanism to supports its theory that the
victim’s murder was motivated by the belief held by Clark and Hardin that they
would gain “power” by killing her. Testimony had been solicited about satanic
teachings and, according to a witness, certain worshippers could empower
themselves by killing other living beings by performing a human sacrifice.
The appellate court stated this evidence was probative as to the motive for the
killing.
April 12, 2001, SHARON LYNNE ARMSTRONG MORRIS v. JOEY FRANKLIN MORRIS,
SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI, 783 So. 2d 681, Judgment of Custody Decision
Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state the husband brought a divorce action
against his wife, a nurse, and the court awarded him custody of their three
children. The wife, Ms. Armstrong, filed an appeal. The husband alleged she
subjected him to cruel and unusual treatment, in part, because she had homicidal
thoughts of killing him and her mother. The record describes in detail mutual
conflict between the parties. The mother had blackouts and would not know how to
get home and would not recognize her husband and children. At times, she was
suicidal.
The appellate court noted that her mental problems likely stemmed from her
sexual abuse perpetrated by her grandfather from the ages of 8-12. The mother
admitted to a history of Satanic cult involvement. Her involvement was
reportedly at the insistence of her grandfather, and included “group sex, animal
sacrifices, cannibalism and perhaps caused the death of at least one
individual.” The court acknowledge that much of her emotional problems occurred
because of this sexual abuse and because she was made to participate in satanic
cult rituals as a child and raped as an adult. Consequently, the appellate court
affirmed the decision of the local court.
October 24, 2000, FORT LAUDERDALE, FLORIDA, BROWARD COUNTY COURT, Case No. 9900926-CF10A, Darrel Wayne Harris Convicted of Attempted Second Degree Murder
Overview: News reports state that Darrel Wayne Harris, a 17-year-old,
was charged as an adult and was arraigned on an attempted first-degree murder
charge in a stabbing attack that stemmed from a Satanic ritual, police said.
Harris allegedly stabbed Robert Menendez four to six times in the throat and
back with a carving knife after a ritual in which they cut their hands to let
their blood mingle and chanted lines from a satanic book together.
Menendez and Harris had been friends for about a year. Harris told him he had
prepared a “special alter” (sic) for satanic ritual at the site, Menendez
testified.
As they were chanting on April 21, they drew a pentagram in the dirt and Harris
told Menendez to look down at the symbol. As Menendez looked down, Harris
attacked him with the knife. "Somewhere along the line the culprit just started
to hack him with the knife," said Fort Lauderdale Detective Arturo Carbo. "The
victim told us that the stabbing was not part of the ritual and he firmly
believed he was going to die.” Harris and others left Mendez for dead but he
managed to crawl to a nearby area and get help. There was evidence that Harris
planned the attack. The victim was hospitalized for several days.
“Harris and Menendez were part of a network of 30 to 40 local young people who
were involved in Satanic activities," Carbo said. Menendez told police he and
Harris, who have known each other for at least 18 months, hung out at local
public libraries to use computers to access satanic Web sites and send e-mail to
each other. The group used online nicknames such as Natas, which is Satan
spelled backwards, Mindblower and Deathtrap.
On October 24, 2000, a jury convicted Darrel Wayne Harris for attempted second
degree murder. The victim formally testified in court that he had “dabbled in
the occult” and had read a book on Satanic ritual. He accompanied Harris out of
curiosity. Harris took a butcher knife and book on satanic rituals out of his
backpack. Using the knife, Harris cut his hand and Menendez’ hand and the two
mixed their blood. Harris carved a pentagram in the ground and stood behind the
cross-legged Mendez, telling him to stare at his hand and watch as the fingers
disappeared and reappeared. Harris using the butcher knife, stabbed Menendez
once in the neck, and three times in the back. See "Teen Charged as Adult in
Stabbing that took place during Satanic Ritual," Associated Press, May 28, 1999;
“Satanic Ritual ends in Stabbing: Teen Charged with Attempted Murder,” Sun
Sentinel, May 28, 1999; “Mom: Son Depressive Teen Charged with Stabbing in
Satanic Ritual,” Sun Sentinel, May 29, 1999; “Teen Guilty in Occult Ritual
Stabbing Garners Second-Degree Murder Verdict,” Oct. 25, 2000
October 12, 2000, EDDIE LEE SEXTON vs. STATE OF FLORIDA, SUPREME COURT OF
FLORIDA, 775 So. 2d. 923, 2000 Fla. LEXIS 1993; 697 So. 2d. 833 (1997)
Conviction and Death Sentence Affirmed;
Overview: Appellant documents state that Eddie Sexton’s criminal trial was
continued until August 1998 after the Appeals court in 1997 remanded the case
back to the local court because testimony about the abuse of his children
needlessly inflamed the jury. After the second trial, Eddie Lee Sexton was found
guilty and sentenced to death again on Nov. 18, 1998. The Supreme Court of
Florida affirmed the conviction and death sentence on October 12, 2000.
Eddie Sexton was convicted and sentenced to death for the participation in the
murder of his son-in-law, Joel Good. Joel was murdered by Sexton’s 22 year old
son, Willie, who strangled him to death under Sexton’s direction. Willie Sexton
testified against his father in exchange for his guilty plea to second-degree
murder.
The court noted Sexton moved to Florida in 1993 with his family and the victim
to avoid arrest and prevent authorities in Ohio from removing his children from
the home. His infant grandchild, who was the son of the victim and his daughter,
died under suspicious circumstances.
Sexton objected to the testimony of 5 of his daughters, as cited in the
appellate opinion that he: "beat them, conducted 'marriage' ceremonies with his
daughters, had regular sex with them and fathered several of their children,
encouraged his children to have sex with each other, made his sons compare their
penis sizes and ridiculed them, practiced Satanism and engaged in other bizarre
conduct, threatened his children if they discussed family matters with others,
trained his children how to kill FBI agents, engaged in a standoff with police
in Ohio shortly before coming to Florida, fled to Florida to prevent his
children from being taken into custody, and directed the killing of his infant
grandchild.”
The States proposed motive for the killing was that Sexton's
son-in-law knew Sexton was the father of his own "grandchildren." The
prosecution wanted prior bad acts admitted to show the control this man had over
his children. The appeals court thought this testimony needlessly inflamed the
jury and so ordered a new trial.
News reports state that during the second trial, his son, Willie Sexton, said
his father convinced him he had Satanic powers and sexually abused him. He also
stated that he was tied up to his bed at night when he was a child, and the
father gave coins to the other children to call home if anyone spoke about the
abuse.
Sherri Sexton, daughter of Eddie Lee Sexton, discussed séances held in the home.
She told news reporters that her dead cat was placed on a table and “my dad had
all of us go around the table holding hands. He was talking weird. He was saying
he was Satan… He kept asking us to give our souls to him – to follow him to
Satan.”
Eddie Lee Sexton had been “ordained” by mail order at one time and had filed
incorporation papers for a “Calvary Church of God.” Mr. Sextons own father was a
“Free Will Baptist Preacher.” See “Children Tell of Life of Incest, Violence,”
Beacon Journal , February 6, 1994; "Court Revisits Murder Case, Son's Fears,"
St. Petersburg Times, September 2, 1998.
[Eddie Lee Sexton is the husband of Estella Sexton whose case is described
next.]
March 9, 1998, STATE OF OHIO vs ESTELLA SEXTON, COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO, FIFTH
APPELLATE DISTRICT, STARK COUNTY, 1998 Ohio App. LEXIS 1302; 1995 Ohio App.
LEXIS 1413, Convictions for Complicity to Rape, Felonious Sexual Penetration,
Gross Sexual Imposition, Complicity to Gross Sexual Imposition, and Child
Endangerment Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state that in April 1992
Machelle, one of Estella Sexton's daughters, alleged that their father, Eddie
Sexton, was molesting the three oldest daughters. There were 12 children in the
family. DHS took six of the children into custody, but three of the children
were returned to the mother under an agreement that she would keep the children
away from the father.
In December of 1992, Mrs. Sexton fled Ohio with the three children, and reunited
with Mr. Sexton at a hotel in Kentucky. On January 14, 1994, appellant and Eddie
Sexton were arrested in Hillsboro County, Florida. The three children were
returned to the custody of DHS.While living in Jackson Township, and in a camper
in Hillsboro County, Florida, appellant and her husband perpetrated acts of
sexual, physical, and mental abuse against all of the children. While living in
Jackson Township, Kim, Lana, and Machelle were forced to participate in a
wedding ceremony with their father. During the ceremony, Eddie engaged in a
French kiss with the girls. Appellant was present, and took pictures of the
ceremony.
The Court writes: "In the camper in Florida, appellant and Eddie gave Kim and
Chris little red pills and Nyquil to ingest every evening, despite the fact that
neither had a cold. On one occasion, Kim did not ingest the medicine and saw
appellant fondling Chris' penis while he was asleep."...The mother and father
inflicted "shaving rituals" on the girls. While living in Jackson Township, Lana
and Machelle were forced to experience a similar shaving ritual. Lana was taken
to the master bedroom for the purpose of punishment. Once inside the room,
appellant held Lana down, while Eddie shaved her entire body with a razor.
“While shaving her, Eddie cut her leg, put the blood on her finger, and made her
sign a paper, saying that she was selling her soul to the devil." During the
shaving, both appellant and Eddie Sexton fondled Machelle’s vaginal area.
Chris received beatings from both appellant and Eddie Sexton. He would beat
Chris once or twice a week, while appellant guarded the door. The beatings would
often leave bruises. Appellant and Mr. Sexton also punished Chris by having him
stand against the wall for five to six hours, holding a penny against the wall
with his nose. During this punishment, Chris was not permitted to go to the
bathroom. At age twelve, Chris was forced to participate in weekend parties
involving the family members in which he was given beer to drink.
According to Ohio vs. Estella Sexton, February 13, 1995, 1995 Ohio App. Lexis
1413, one of the children stated that family members were involved in satanic
rituals, invoking spirits, and "baby thingies and things like that." “We will
hold hands ... it mostly takes place after my grandmother died. They will bring
her spirit back. Sometimes they bring devils back. They come out of the table
and you see them floating around in the room ... we all hold hands while it’s
happening.” This testimony regarding Satanic ritual was found by the court to be
relevant to the proceedings.
Note: On October 11, 2005, COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO, FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT,
2005 Ohio App. Lexis 5150, upheld the finding of the local court that Estella
Sexton was a “Sexual Predator.”
September 30, 2000, MURFREESBORO, TENNESSEE, RUTHERFORD COUNTY JUDICIAL
BUILDING, Case No. 48444, Alonzo South Pleaded Guilty to Three Counts of
Aggravated Sexual Battery, Sentenced to 24 years in prison.
Overview: News articles state that according to the plea agreement Alonzo South, 31, admitted that on at least three occasions over the last two years he participated in satanic rituals in which a nude girl under the age of 10 was sexually touched. Court records say the child, who was the daughter of a woman involved in the Satanic group, was raped in a home, the nearby woods, a shed, a pickup truck and a car. See, "Man gets 24 years for Satanic-ritual rape of 10-year-old girl," The Tennessean, Sept. 30, 2000
August 10, 2000, PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOS v. PATRICK PAGE, SUPREME
COURT OF ILLINOIS, 737 N.E.2d 264, Death Sentence Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that Patrick Page was convicted of three
murders in approximately 1985-87. He confessed to committing these murders,
along with other defendants, Kenneth Cherney and Gerald Feinberg. One victim was
stabbed and set on fire. The second murder victim was also stabbed and a “fire
was started over the grave with lighter fluid.”
The third victim was stabbed, buried and a sheet and rug were burned over his
grave.
Defendant Page claimed that his trial counsel failed to include evidence
regarding his involvement in a cult as a mitigating factor because it would
explain to the jurors how he was associated with these murders, how others were
more culpable, and how he came to be able to be involved in such acts. He
claimed he needed to be in a hospital setting.
Defendant told one psychologist that he was engrossed in the study of black
magic and that he and several friends, led by a 24 year old warlock, held
services, conjured demons and cast spells. A prior police report quoted a
witness stating that “there are people who believe Mr. Patrick page is the Anti-christ,
and that Page derived a power from the location where victim was buried… and
indicated Page was a leader of a Satanic cult.” Another witness, and friend of
Page, also stated Page derived “power” from certain locations and she “provided
notes regarding defendant’s involvement in black magic, rituals and sacrifices.”
Defendant Page wrote in a an affidavit that he was involved in certain practices
from a young age and was still in fear of individuals who were involved and who
may still be involved in these practices. Mr. Page’s father and brother
submitted affidavits stating that when defendant was 16 year, he was involved in
some kind of cult or devil worship. Another psychologist and physician stated
that defendant was under the influence of a cult leader at the times he
committed these murders. The Doctors described the mind-control techniques used
by leaders of cults.
The court thought if this information had been submitted, far from being
mitigating evidence, it would probably have served as aggravating evidence.
“This evidence describes defendant’s involvement in devil worship and
ritualistic sacrifices.” Defendant wanted his case remanded back to the local
court so he could have Neurological Assessment and a cult-related Psycho Social
Investigation. The court denied this request and upheld defendant’s death
sentence.
April 1, 2000, WARSAW, POLAND, Tomasz Suszyna and Robert Krakowian Pleaded
Guilty to Murder
Overview: News articles state Tomas Suszyana, 22, and Robert Krakowian, 19,
plead guilty to a double murder and said the victims were an offering to Satan.
The victims, a 19-year-old woman and a 17-year-old boy, were killed during a
ritual Satanic mass in southern Poland, police said, after finding the cut up
and burned bodies. The two victims were members of a sect that staged the Black
mass in a disused bunker on the outskirts of the town of Ruda Slaska, but they
did not know they were to die. Another teenage cult member who survived was
taken to the hospital with multiple knife wounds. See "Teenage Cult Members
Killed in Satanic Mass," Agence France Presse; March 4, 1999 and "Polish
Satanists Jailed for Ritual Double Murder," Agence France Presse, April 1, 2000.
March 9, 2000, IN THE MATTER OF: SHAWN ELLIS, DEPENDENT MINOR CHILD,
(FRANKLIN COUNTY CHILDREN SERVICES, COMPLAINANT-APPELLEE, CARLA RICHARDSON,
RESPONDENT-APPELLANT) . IN THE MATTER OF: KIMBERLY DAVIS, DEPENDENT MINOR CHILD,
(FRANKLIN COUNTY CHILDREN SERVICES, COMPLAINANT-APPELLEE, CARLA RICHARDSON,
RESPONDENT-APPELLANT) COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO, TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT,
FRANKLIN COUNTY, 2000 Ohio App. LEXIS 849, Permanent Court Commitment of
Children Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state in May 1995 allegations of abuse
and neglect were filed against the mother, Carla Richardson, on behalf of her
two children. She failed to protect the children from being sexually molested by
a boarder in the home who was ultimately convicted of rape. After three and a
half years of offering services and receiving treatment from six different
counselors, the mother remained in denial about the abuse her children had
suffered. None of the parents complied with the reunification plans for their
children and the court stated Satanic occult practices were allegedly
commonplace.
The court noted that after being in counseling for over three years, appellant
continued to deny what happened to her children and claimed an inability to
remember the abuse. “There was even testimony that appellant could not recall
taking blood and hair from the children as part of satanic rituals."
February 24, 2000, NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE, Motion Withdrawn to Hold State in
Contempt of Court.
Overview: News articles report that a Federal judge was asked to hold the
State in contempt of court in February 2000 for its continued failure to provide
court-ordered and doctor-prescribed mental health services to a severely
traumatized 17-year-old victim of rape and occult ritual abuse.
Four months prior, State officials signed a federal consent decree in the
case which was known as Grier vs. Wadley to make sure Sarah C. received the care
she needed. While in the custody of the State, she was exposed to occult sadism,
was beaten, hung from walls locked for prolonged periods in closets, and raped
repeatedly. This all happened before the age of seven. A State advocacy group,
Tennessee Justice Center, filed a class action lawsuit against the state for
failure to properly administer the appeals procedure for the health care plan
enrollees of TennCare, (Tennessee Behavioral Health). The 17 yr. old victim was
just one of the people named in the settlement but she was left without proper
care until this motion was filed. In April, the state agreed to properly attend
to her care. See "Tenn. Could be in Contempt if Mental Care for Teen
Inadequate," The Commercial Appeal, February 24, 2000; “Foster Parents Say State
Failed to Care for Abused Girl in State Care,” AP, February 24, 2000; "Sarah C.
to Get Badly Needed Care," Knoxville News-Sentinel Co., April 18, 2000
October 21, 1999, SOUTH AFRICA, Ameriko Manyike Sentenced to Life in Prison
Overview: News articles state Ameriko Manyike, 32, mutilated a 15-yr-old boy and tried to sell his genitals which he had cut off. "Ritual or 'muti' murders are common in South Africa where people are prepared to pay well for potions made of human parts which they believe will bring good health or good fortune." See "Mozambican Jailed for Life in S. Africa for Ritual Murder," Agence France Presse, Oct. 21, 1999
August 18, 1999, STATE OF OHIO v. KENNETH J. SMITH, 1999 Ohio App. LEXIS
3794, Status as Sexual Predator Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that on June 4, 1991 Kenneth Smith pled
guilty to sexual imposition against a 10 year old child. Years later he appealed
the designation as a sexual predator. The trial court noted the nature of the
sexual conduct with the victim as indicated in the summary in the presentence
investigation report and found defendant’s conduct demonstrated “a pattern of
abuse.”
The court stated that in making its decision, the report indicated alcohol was
used, the defendant had threatened the victim, and that Satanic ceremonies had
been involved.
August 11, 1999, HELSINKI, FINLAND, Jarno Sebastian Elg, Terhi Johanna
Tervashonka, Mika Kristian Riska Sentenced for Murder
Overview: News articles state a court sentenced three alleged Satanists, including a 17-year-old girl, to prison terms for ritually killing a man and ingesting some of the body parts. Jarno Sebastian Elg, 24, was given a life sentence for killing a 23-year-old man in November and instigating others to participate in a ritual that included torturing the victim and listening to heavy-metal music. The Hyvinkaa District Court in southern Finland sentenced Terhi Johanna Tervashonka, 17, to two years and six months in prison and Mika Kristian Riska, 21, to two years and eight months in the case. The victim, who was not named, suffered prolonged torture and eventually was strangled to death, the court said. It also said the three people convicted "were strongly influenced by Satanism." The court declared most of the details of the case secret. See "Alleged Satanists Sentenced for Murder, Cannibalism," Associated Press, August 11, 1999
August 3, 1999, KIEV, Dmitry Dyomin was Sentenced to Death for Murder; His Accomplices, Valentin Chelyshev and Alexei Andreyev Sentenced to 13 and 8 yrs. in jail.
Overview: News articles state Dmitry Dyomin and his two accomplices,
Valentin Chelyshev and Alexei Andreyev, killed a 15-year-old girl whose tongue
was then boiled and ate. Dyomin belonged to a Satanic cult and with the help of
his two accomplices, he severed the girl's head with a kitchen knife. Dyomin
later lacquered the skull and kept it in his room. Skulls that he had taken out
of graves, and books on black magic, pentagrams, and upside-down crucifixes were
found during a search of the defendants home. See “Cannibal Satanists Get Death
Sentence,” ITAR-TASS NEWS Agency, August 3, 1999
July 24, 1999, UGANDA, AFRICA, Yunus Samanya, Francis Muwanga, Gloria Nagadya,
Sentenced to Death
Overview: News reports state that Yunus Samanya, 23, a native healer,
Francis Muwanga, 24, and his wife, Gloria Nagadya, 21, were sent to the gallows
for the ritual murder of a girl, Shamin Muhamad.
The girl’s head, tongue, private parts, and two fingers were cut off. The motive for the murder was that the perpetrators wanted to become “rich,” with the assistance of evil spirits, and a witchdoctor advised them to make a human sacrifice.
The article also mentioned that cases of child sacrifice had triggered public
outrage. See “Shamin Killers for the Gallows,” Africa News, July 24, 1999
Four companion cases are described below:
October 6, 1999, PEOPLE, STATE OF ILLINOIS v. ROBIN GECHT, SUPREME COURT OF
ILLINOIS, 720 N.E. 2d 1098, 1999 Ill. LEXIS 1423, Petition For Leave to Appeal
Denied
Note: Four members of a satanic cult, Andrew Kokoraleis, 23, Thomas
Kokoraleis, 26, Robin Gecht, 28, and Edward Spreitzer, 26, were convicted in a
series of murders, rituals, and acts of cannibalism over a number of years in
the mid 1980’s. The case broke after an 18-year-old prostitute was brought
unconscious to the local hospital after being found naked, bleeding profusely
and near death. Her left breast had been severed and she identified Robin Gecht,
a carpenter-electrician, as her attacker.
All the defendant’s appeals are in published decisions except for Robin
Gecht’s which is reported as a Table case.
Overview: News articles report that Robin Gecht, 28, a
carpenter-electrician was arrested on Oct. 20, 1982, in the vicious slashing of
an 18-year-old prostitute which “proved to be the opening of a Pandora’s box of
depravity, sadism, Satan worship and cannibalism that perhaps involved nearly a
score of Chicago-area women.” Within a week of Gecht’s release on bond for the
attack on the prostitute, another woman claimed to have been attacked by him. He
was then rearrested.
Following clues, the police had pulled a van over to the side of the road which
was driven by Edward Spreitzer, and which had Andrew Kokoraleis as a passenger,
who told them the van belonged to Robin Gecht. The gruesome link between many of
the slayings in which the remains were still identifiable was that victim’s
breasts had been mutilated or slashed off with a knife or piano wire. The three
suspects then began implicating each other.
“The first inkling that the killings might have been part of a cult ritual came
when a former neighbor of Gecht in Villa Park told authorities that Gecht
enjoyed reading books on torture practices of ancient cultures. ‘He told me that
he was reading about how the ancients cut off the breasts of women and saved
them for tobacco pouches,” she said.”
The police found six crosses, some black and some red, painted on the walls of a
tiny attic room in a house once occupied by Robin Gecht. Thomas Kokoraleis told
investigators that the room had contained an altar, made from a board covered
with red cloth, where cult members cut up animal parts, and sometimes human
parts, for sacrifice.
“All were found to have been legally sane at the time of the murders, but Gecht
was said by behavioral experts to exhibit multiple personalities, perhaps as a
ruse. For example, in their discussion with him he wandered. His voice changed.
He would speak as a small child, a teenager or a businessman. The experts said
it probably was a sham.”
Robin Gecht was ultimately convicted of the attack on the 18 year old
prostitute, and is currently serving a sentence of 120 years. Authorities
learned later that Gecht had worked twice for John Wayne Gacy doing construction
[the well-known serial murderer of 33 boys] See “Disappearances of Young Women
Formed a Path Into the Darkest Depths of the Human Psyche,” Chicago Tribune,
Oct. 11, 1987; “Trail’s End: Gruesome Clues Led to an Altar in an Attic,”
Chicago Tribune, Oct. 12, 1987
------------
March 15, 1999, THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS v. ANDREW KOKORALEIS,
SUPREME COURT OF ILLINOIS, 707 N.E.2d 1224, 1999 Ill. LEXIS 670; 637 N.E.2d 1015
(1994); 547 N.E.2d 202 ( 1989); 507 N.E.2d 146 (1987), Stay of Execution Allowed
Overview: Appellate documents state Andrew Kokoraleis was convicted of the
murder and kidnapping of Lorraine Borowski and Rose Beck Davis and was sentenced
to death for these murders which occurred in 1982. Lorraine Borowski’s skeletal
remains were discovered in a cemetery. Defendant told officers that he and his
alleged accomplices, Robin Gecht and Edward Sprietzer, engaged in intercourse
with the chest cavities of the victims after the breasts were removed. The State
presented evidence of defendant’s participation in two other murders, Linda
Sutton and Shui Mak, and the defendant ultimately confessed to 16 murders.
One of the victims, Linda Sutton, was found with her breasts and anterior chest
wall absent. The pathologist concluded that the condition of the body was
consistent with breast mutilation. The court agreed to exclude evidence of cult
involvement in this defendant’s case at the start of the proceedings but the
prosecutor told the jurors that the defendant lived out the “Satanic Bible.”
In 1994 Defendant Andrew Kokoraleis appealed his conviction and sentence of
death in the murder of Lorraine Borowski. He claimed ineffective representation
of counsel during his sentencing phase which resulted in the death penalty. He
argued that counsel did not independently investigate the psychological factors
that made him vulnerable in following co-defendant Robin Gecht, who “fancied he
possessed a Charles Manson-like persona, (who) subjected defendant to his will
to commit the crimes.”
Andrew Kokoraleis denied responsibility for the crimes committed and stated that
his statements to police were coerced and that he was “framed.” The court stated
that given the circumstances of this case, it was not unreasonable for his
attorney to not have investigated his “disturbed psyche” because the defense
strategy had been to “bar at the outset of trial the introduction of evidence
that defendant’s crimes were part of some cult ritual. It would have been
inconsistent with the strategy of barring that evidence for counsel to later
argue the very same evidence showed, in the sentencing phase, that defendant’s
culpability was due to a disturbed psyche. The fact that counsel did not
investigate sources to glean such evidence is therefore rendered strategically
inconsequential. Further, as already noted, arguing the lurid particularities of
the crimes as evidence of a psyche ripe for Gecht’s enslavement was inconsistent
with defendant’s sworn proclamations of innocence.”
On March 15, 1999, the Appeals court stayed Andrew Kokoraleis execution until
the Supreme Court reviewed the case. The Supreme Court denied his writ of
certiorari, and on March 17, 1999 Andrew Kokoraleis was executed.
See “Cult Murder Trial Opens in Du Page,“ Chicago Tribune, March 11, 1987;
“Mutilation Cult Suspect on Trial,” Chicago Tribune, Feb 5, 1985; “Kokoraleis
Found Guilty in Rape, Killing,” Chicago Tribune, Feb. 12, 1985; “Man Guilty in
Murder of Woman,” Mar 19, 1987; High Court is Asked to Set Killer’s Execution,”
Chicago Tribune, Dec. 10, 1998; “Gruesome Clues Led to an Altar in an Attic,”
Chicago Tribune, October 12, 1987; “Cult Murder Trial Opens in Du Page,” Chicago
Tribune, March 11, 1987; “Satanic Crime Police Say the Devil Made Some People Do
It,” Chicago Tribune, April 18, 1988; Book – “Deadly Thrills,” by Jaye Slade
Fletcher
------------
March 28, 1991, PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS v. EDWARD SPREITZER, SUPREME
COURT OF ILLINOIS, 572 N.E.2d 931, 1991 Ill. LEXIS 22; 525 N.E. 2d 30 (1988),
Dismissal of Post-Conviction Petition Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that Edward Spreitzer was found guilty
along with Andrew and Thomas Kokoraleis for the murder of Linda Sutton, whose
breast had been amputated. Edward Spreitzer confessed to the crime and
implicated Robin Gecht. He stated they had picked up a black woman and Gecht
dragged her into the bushes, cut off one of her breast, and had sex in the chest
cavity. Spreitzer retrieved a wire from their van at Gecht’s request, and Gecht
severed the woman’s other breast and had sex in that chest cavity. Spreitzer
later admitted to also severing the victim’s breast.
Defendant Spreitzer confessed to 4 other murders, including that of Shuk Mak,
Rose Davis, Sandra Deleware, and Raphael Tiradao. Several of these victim’s
breasts also had their breasts removed. The Appellate court stated that the
defendant filed a motion to exclude information about his “religious cult” in
which “ritualistic ceremonies“ were preformed with the amputated breasts in
Gecht’s attic. Due to the agreement, the prosecutor erred by raising the issue
of “devil worship,” but defendant did not object to it at the trial court.
Edward Spreitzer plead guilty and was sentenced to die for the slaying of Linda
Sutton, and for his part in the killings of Lorraine Borowski, Shui Mak, Rose
Beck Davis, Sandra Deleware and Rafael Tirado, but his sentence was commuted by
the Governor in 2003.
See “Prosecutors to Seek Death in Devil-Worship Killings,” Chicago Tribune, Feb
25, 1986; “Defendant to Tell About Mutilation Victim Was Dead, Lawyer Says,”
Chicago Tribune, March 4, 1986; “Defense Lawyer Admits Mutilation,” Chicago
Tribune, Feb 26, 1986; “Spreitzer Sentenced to Death,” Chicago Tribune, March
20, 1986; “The Push to Restore Wisconsin’s Death Penalty: Advocates Have New
Strategy, New Majority,” Madison Capitol Times, March 1, 2003
------------
January 25, 1990, PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS v. THOMAS C. KOKORALEIS,
APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS, SECOND DISTRICT, 549 N.E.2d 1354, 1990 Ill. App.
LEXIS 105; 501 N.E. 2d 207 (1986), Denial of Request to Withdraw Guilty Plea
Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that Defendant Thomas Kokoraleis was
convicted of the rape and murder of Lorraine Borowski. The Appellate court
overturned his conviction in 1986 and remanded the case back to court. Defendant
then plead guilty to murder in return for a 70 year sentence. Defendant sought
to withdraw his guilty plea but the court denied his request.
The Defense stipulated that if the case had gone to trial, the State would have
presented evidence to show that Borowski’s body was found with her left breast
removed; that the defendant admitted to police officers that he and his cohorts
had abducted Borowski;, removed her left breast with a piano wire, and killed
her; and that the defendant was part of a cult that would rape and kill women
and cut off their breasts. The Appellate Court ruled that because the Defendant
had falsely confessed to another murder it did not affect his admission of guilt
regarding two other murders which he plead guilty to.
News articles report that Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Richard Beuke
testified at Thomas Kokoraleis’s trial in Du Page County, stating that the
severed breast of the murder victims would be removed from a box and placed on
the altar. The rituals, while Gecht read passages from the Bible, involved
cannibalism. Police thought Robin Gecht was the leader of the group. See “Gang
Member Gets 70 Years in 1982 Slaying,” Chicago Tribune, July 17, 1987, and other
articles.
February 19, 1999, PAUL A. BONACCI vs. LAWRENCE E. KING, 4:CV91-3037, UNITED
STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEBRASKA; $1 Million Default Judgment
Awarded for Conspiracy, Emotional Abuse, Battery, False Imprisonment
Overview: Court documents and a book publication by Paul Bonacci’s
attorney, ex-senator John de Camp, state that Larry King organized groups of
children to sexually blackmail and compromise politicians and businessmen while
he served as Manager of the Franklin Credit Union in Omaha, Nebraska. King had
political ties that reached the presidency of the United States and he sang at
the 1988 Republican National Convention in New Orleans.
Paul Bonacci, who suffers from Multiple Personality Disorder (now called
Dissociative Identity Disorder), stated that as a youth, he had been transported
across the U.S., and was forced to have sex with various people, forced to
deliver drugs, and forced to participate in satanic snuff films, where Larry
King was present. He identified the Bohemian Grove in Northern California, a
well known gathering/meeting site for politicians, as the location of a satanic
murder, and he had inside knowledge about many satanic ritual abuse cases around
the country that he claimed to have been present at. These include a case in
Jordan, Minnesota, in which Jim Rud was the only defendant charged, and in
Bakersfield, California, another case in which several individuals were
criminally charged for the sexual abuse of children within the context of ritual
abuse.
The Omaha police chief, Robert Wadman and publisher of the local newspaper
Harold Anderson, were implicated in the sexual abuse allegations. The FBI
refused to investigate the child abuse allegations because the local FBI
representative, Nick O’Hara, claimed that Robert Wadman was his “friend.” A
Grand Jury was convened which labeled the children’s allegations as a “hoax,”
apparently due to the high-profile nature of the alleged perpetrators, the
ritual abuse allegations, and after one witness, Troy Boner, recanted his
statements about abuse. John de Camp states that his retraction was a key factor
in the Grand Jury’s findings that all the children had lied. Troy Boner later
claimed that the FBI threatened him into recanting.
One sexual molest victim, Alicia Owen, was charged with perjury due to naming
the police chief, Robert Wadman, as one of her abusers. She served prison time
for this charge but was released in the year 2000. Paul Bonacci claimed that the
sex ring that plunged him into Satanism and mind control was centered at Offutt
U.S. Air force Base, near Omaha. The main investigator assigned to this case,
Gary Cadiori, died in a suspicious plane crash shortly after he took statements
from the children.
Larry King was convicted in 1991 and sentenced to 15 years in prison for
embezzlement, conspiracy, and making false financial record entries. The Credit
Union was missing 40 million dollars and there were allegations that funds were
used to finance the Contras, and other clandestine operations by the CIA.
John de Camp linked Lt. Col. Michael Aquino, leader of the satanic group, the
Temple of Set, to mind control operations and writes:
“Child victims gave evidence in depth of the role of Lt. Col Michael Aquino in
this depravity. Aquino…was long the leader of an Army psychological warfare
section which drew on his expertise and personal practice in brainwashing,
Satanism, Nazism, homosexual pedophilia and murder.”
Noreen Gosch, mother of Johnny Gosch who was
kidnapped 20 years ago when he was 12, testified at Mr. Bonacci’s hearing on his
behalf on February 5, 1999 in this civil lawsuit against Mr. King. Ms. Gosch was
responsible for the passage of legislation on behalf of missing children, and
due to her efforts, the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children was
created. She carried out her own investigation about her son’s disappearance
over the years and observed at this hearing that if the FBI had actually done
their job in her case, it would have “opened up the biggest scandal in the
United States, bigger than the Iran-Contra story.” Paul Bonacci gave information
to Noreen Gosch about the kidnapping of her son, Johnny Gosch, and admitted to
participating in his kidnapping.
Ms. Gosch claimed her son, Johnny, visited her in March of 1997 and told her the
exact same story Paul Bonacci had, and asked her to make these claims public. He
said kidnapped children and others were being used by professional pedophiles
and some of those children were victims of mind control. In Ms. Gosch’s book,
“Why Johnny Can’t Come Home,” (2000) she wrote that he and three others claimed
that Lt. Col. Michael Aquino was involved in Johnny’s kidnapping. (pg. 223) Ms.
Gosch stated the following in the court hearing:
“There was a man by the name of Michael Aquino. He was in the military. He had
top Pentagon clearance. He was a pedophile. He was a Satanist. He’s founded the
Temple of Set. And he was also a very close friend of Anton LaVey. The two of
them were very active in ritualistic sexual abuse. And they deferred funding
from this government program to use this experimentation upon children …where
they deliberately split off the personalities of these children into multiples
so that when they’re questioned or put under oath or questioned under lie
detector, that unless the operator knows how to question a multiple personality
disorder, they turn up with no evidence.
They use these kids to sexually compromise politicians or anyone else they wish
to have control of…they were taken to be used by professional pedophiles. People
that have the money to buy what they want, take the kids wherever they want...
and by splitting the children’s personalities they could then train each one of
the personalities to do a different function. And the rest of the personalities
within that host personality would not be aware of it or remember it.”
The Circuit court wrote in its judgment against Larry King:
"Two counts are alleged against the defendant King in the complaint. Count V
alleges a conspiracy with public officers to deprive the plaintiff [Paul Bonacci]
of his civil rights, designed to continue to subject the plaintiff to emotional
abuse and to prevent him from informing authorities of criminal conduct. Count
VIII charges battery, false imprisonment, infliction of emotional distress,
negligence and conspiracy to deprive the plaintiff of civil rights. Between
December 1980 and 1988, the complaint alleges, the defendant King continually
subjected the plaintiff to repeated sexual assaults, false imprisonments,
infliction of extreme emotional distress, organized and directed Satanic
rituals, forced the plaintiff to 'scavenge' for children to be a part of the
defendant King's sexual abuse and pornography ring, forced the plaintiff to
engage in numerous masochistic orgies with other minor children. The defendant
King's default has made those allegations true against him. The issue now is the
relief to be granted monetarily.
The now uncontradicted evidence is that the plaintiff has suffered much. He has
suffered burns, broken fingers, beating of the head and face and other
indignities by the wrongful actions of the defendant King. In addition to the
misery of going through the experiences just related over a period of eight
years, the plaintiff has suffered the lingering results to the present time. He
is a victim of multiple personality disorder, involving as many as fourteen
distinct personalities aside from his primary personality. He has given up a
desired military career and received threats on his life. He suffers from
sleeplessness, has bad dreams, has difficulty in holding a job, is fearful that
others are following him, fears getting killed, has depressing flashbacks, and
is verbally violent on occasion, all in connection with the multiple personality
disorder and caused by the wrongful activities of the defendant King."
Larry King did not appear at this civil hearing and a one million dollar default
judgment was awarded to Mr. Bonacci.
See books which describes this case: “The Franklin Cover-up: Child Abuse,
Satanism, and Murder in Nebraska,” by John W. DeCamp, 1996; Why Johnny Can’t
Come Home, by Noreen Gosch, 2000; [See, Aquino vs. Stone, 1992, Aquino vs.
ElectriCiti, 1997], and news articles: “Judge Determining Damages in Bonacci
Lawsuit,” AP, February 6, 1999; “Owen is paroled: Served a 4 ½ year sentence -
The woman linked to the Franklin Credit Union sexual abuse investigation wants
to be a normal person.” Omaha World-Herald, Sept. 21, 2000
[The Franklin
Cover-up]
July 24, 1998, STATE OF OREGON v. MICHAEL JAMES HAYWARD, SUPREME COURT OF OREGON, 963 P.2d 667, 1998 Ore. LEXIS 593, Murder, Assault, Kidnapping, Robbery, and Burglary Affirmed, Death Sentence Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state that on April 10, 1994 Jason Brock, Daniel Rabago, Jason Brumwell, and Johl Brock, three of whom considered themselves to be Satanists and members of a "Death-Metal" band, decided to rob a Dari Mart. They listened to their Death-Metal music before they committed the crime, which included lyrics to "The Pick-Axe Murders," An Experiment in Homicide," "Hammer smashed face," Meat Hook Sodomy," "Gutted," and "Living Dissection." They planned their crime and went to a Dari Mart store, killed a female clerk, and brutally beat another one.
Jason Brock described the lyrics of “Cannibal Corpse,” as songs which
“explain or picture through words killing people.” Johl Brocks testified that
the death metal lyrics to which the group listened “described basic satanic
practices, ceremonies and stuff.” He also stated that the lyrics on the CD by
the band Decide is what led to the two of them “dabbling into Satanism.” Daniel
Rabago testified “we were all into evil and we were all pretty much deathers.”
The evidence of "Death-metal" music and Satanism was admitted into the court
testimony and was upheld because it partially explain the motive for the crime
and the motive for the degree of brutality used.
April 28, 1998, LUBUK PAKAM, INDONESIA, Achmad Suradji Sentenced to Death for
Murdering 42 Women.
Overview: News reports state an Indonesian sorcerer Achmad Suradji,
47, was sentenced to death for murdering 42 women as part of a bizarre attempt
to “boost his magical powers.” The case first came to light in April last year
when police, following up a missing person's report, found a body buried in a
sugar cane field near Suradji's house. When they went to question the sorcerer,
they found women's shoes and handbags. Over the next few weeks, a further 41
bodies were unearthed close to his village. According to the police, Suradji
said that he had a dream in 1986 in which the ghost of his father had told him
to kill a total of 70 women and then drink their saliva in order to enhance his
mystical powers. See "Sorcerer to die for 42 murders," The Daily Telegraph,
April 28, 1998 and "Witch Work; How an Indonesian lured 42 women to their
death," Asiaweek, June 13, 1997
March 25, 1998, MEXICO CITY, MEXICO, Elio Hernandez Rivera, David Serna
Valdes and Sergio Martinez Salinas, Sentences for Murder, Conspiracy, Drug
Trafficking and Weapons Violations Reduced
Overview: News articles state that reputed “Godmother,” Sara Maria Aldrete
Villarreal, a student at Texas Southmost College, and four other members of a
cult were sentenced to more than 60 years in prison for the ritual slaying of 13
people, including Texas College student, Mark Kilroy. After they appealed, an
appellate judge reduced the sentences of Rivera, Valdes, and Salinas from 67 to
50 years.
Mark Kilroy, 21, a pre-med student, was kidnapped on the streets of Matamoros on
March 14, 1989 during Spring Break. Police arrested cult member Serafin
Hernandez, a drug trafficker, after he drove through a federal judicial police
roadblock outside Matamoros believing he was rendered “invisible” by his cult’s
“black magic.”
Hernandez confessed to participating in the kidnapping and burial of Mark Kilroy
and took authorities to his remains on a ranch near the Rio Grande. Sara Aldrete
and other cult members had taken Kilroy there, where they ritualistically
murdered him, removed his brain and cut his body into pieces. The police also
discovered the remains of 13 other victims, including another U.S. citizen, and
a 9-year-old child.
Decomposed goat heads, parts of a rooster, bowls containing dried blood, a
cauldron with human remains, including a brain and a heart, and spines crafted
into necklaces, were found on the ranch. Authorities said Sara Aldrete was the
“Godmother” who presided over rituals along with “Godfather” and cult leader
Adolfo de Jesus Constanza. In 1989 Aldofo Constanza was killed by another cult
member at his request during a police shootout.
The group thought their self-styled religion, which drew from the Caribbean
Santeria and the African Palo Mayombe traditions, would render them bulletproof
and protect them from police and rival gang members which was the rationale for
why they “sacrificed” Mark Kilroy and others. See “I’ve Never Seen Anything Like
This Before,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 16, 1989; “Texan Arrested in Cult
Killings,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, April 18, 1989; “Behind Drug Cult Killings
in Mexico,” San Francisco Chronicle, February 7, 1991; “Cult Killers Given
Lighter Sentences,” San Antonio Express-News, March 25, 1998; “’Devil Ranch’
Priestess Still Says She’s Innocent,” San Antonio Express-News, March 21, 2004
March 18, 1998, SOUTH AFRICA, Naledzani Mabuda and his Wife Helen Madida
Confessed to Murder
Overview: News reports state the father, Naledzani Mabuda, 26, a traditional
healer and spiritual medium, and his wife, Helen, 22, confessed to ritually
killing their 23 month old son because Mabuda’s ancestors had threatened to
destroy him if he did not. Police found the boy's head, legs, hands and genitals
buried under various parts of the floor in the couple's house. Mabuda testified
in court that killing his son as a sacrifice to the family’s ancestors was
central to his role as a traditional healer and spiritual medium. Later searches
revealed the toddler's intestines, liver and other internal organs found in a
series of ritual "graves" on the nearby mountainside.
The couple were refused bail after another local traditional leader banned them
from the village. He testified that the couple had committed a crime of the
"greatest evil" and that the townspeople were terrified by the act. A series of
sangomas were asked to testify about ritual human sacrifices as part of
traditional African beliefs. See, "A Sangoma Couple in Court for Sacrificing
Child to Ancestors,” Africa News Service, March 18, 1998.
In January 1998
several of South Africa's witch-doctors, or sangomas, claimed that ritual
murders and killings related to the medicinal quest for body parts had decreased
by more than 90 percent. The news article reports that police estimate that
several hundred people, many of them children, are killed in South Africa each
year for their body parts. Female genitals, breasts and placentas are used for
infertility and good luck, while hands burned to ashes and mixed into a paste
are seen as a cure for strokes, and hearts for heart disease. Blood is given to
impart vitality and brains for political power and business success. However
"true sangomas eschew the use of body parts, treating physical and mental
ailments using herbal medicines." See "Witch-doctors not making a killing any
more: South African healers say ritual murders no longer in vogue." The Ottawa
Citizen, January 2, 1998
February 4, 1998, SEAN RICHARD SELLERS v. RONALD WARD, WARDEN OF THE OKLAHOMA STATE PENITENTIARY, UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS TENTH CIRCUIT, 135 F.3d 1333, 1998 U.S. App. LEXIS 1621; 728 P.2d 515 (1996); 889 P. 2d 895 (1995); 809 P.2d 676 (1991); Federal Habeas Corpus Relief Denied.
Overview: Appellate documents state in 1985 - 1986, at the age of 16,
Sean Sellers killed three people, including his parents. He was tried as an
adult and sentenced to death. Evidence of his Satanic belief system was admitted
by the defense at trial. His defense counsel had portrayed Sellers as the victim
of Satanism and said he was addicted to the game Dungeons and Dragons.
Sean Sellers appealed in recent years due to new evidence that he suffered from
Multiple Personality Disorder or (DID). Extensive medical documentation was
submitted to the court indicating that an "alter" committed the offenses. The
appeal was denied although the court was clearly disturbed by the ramifications
of Sean Seller's mental disorder.
“Although troubled by the extent of uncontroverted clinical evidence proving
Petitioner suffers from Multiple Personality Disorder, now and at the time of
the offenses of conviction, and that the offenses were committed by an “alter”
personality, we are constrained to hold Petitioner has failed to establish
grounds for federal habeas corpus relief. There was no evidence that Sellers
host personality was aware of or could not control the alter, and that alter
knew the difference between right and wrong at the time they committed the
crime.”
Note: Sean was executed on Feb. 4, 1999 despite appeals by Amnesty International
contesting the legal wisdom of executing a man for crimes he committed at age 16
and who suffered from a psychological disorder like MPD/DID.
November 26, 1997, STATE OF TENNESSEE vs. CHRISTA GAIL PIKE, COURT OF
CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE, AT KNOXVILLE, 1997 Tenn. Crim. App. LEXIS 1186
(First Degree Murder-Death Penalty) Conviction for First Degree Murder and
Conspiracy to Commit First Degree Murder Affirmed. Death Penalty Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Christa Pike killed another female
she felt rivalry with and carved a pentagram into her chest. A group of "others"
were named who helped her, but Pike did not provide information about them. Both
the Defendant and suspect Tadaryl Shipp wore pentagram necklaces and a “Satanic
Bible” was recovered from a search of Shipp’s room. The Defendant admitted that
she and another person carved the pentagram in the victim’s chest. The medical
examiner testified that all of the wounds prior to the final blow to the head
had been made while the victim was alive and conscious.
The psychiatrist involved thought there were Satanic elements to the crime but
believed that Pike was just a "dabbler" in Satanism. A witness stated that as
the Defendant described hitting Slemmer in the head with a piece of asphalt and
carving a pentagram in her chest, she danced around in a circle, smiling and
singing."
News articles report that an acquaintance of Pike stated she “seemed just like
us when she first got here…two weeks later she’s talking about the Satanic
Bible.”
Two years later another news report states Tadaryl Shipp was convicted for this
murder:
"A Knox County judge imposed consecutive prison terms Thursday for a young
Memphis man who took part in the torture slaying of a Knoxville Job Corps
student. Criminal Court Judge Mary Beth Leibowitz said public safety concerns
dictate that Tadaryl D. Shipp be imprisoned as long as the law allows. Shipp,
21, had no regard for human life when he helped murder Colleen A. Slemmer, 19,
the night of Jan. 12, 1995, the judge said. He treated her with "gross cruelty"
while at least partly satisfying an interest in Satanism, Leibowitz said.
See "Orange County Woman to Die for Tenn. Killing," The News & Observer, April
1, 1996; "Judge Orders Shipp to Serve Life in Slaying, Then Another 25-year Term
" Knoxville News-Sentinel, March 12, 1999
October 3, 1997, EQUATORIAL GUINEA, An Unnamed Individual was Condemned to
Death.
Overview: News reports state that an unnamed individual was condemned
to death after removing the eyes, tongues, ears, and genitals of his 10 year old
victim. Malabo radio reported that 17 ritual murders were committed in
Equatorial Guinea in August and September of 1997, according to official
figures. --- See "Ritual murderer of girl, 10, sentenced to death," Agence
France Presse, October 3, 1997.
Another news report cites a Spanish journalist and ethnographer, Jose Manuel
Novoa, an expert on the country who has conducted investigations in Equatorial
Guinea since 1979 and has written two books about cannibalism in the region.
Novoa claims that anthropophagy (eating human flesh) is widespread in the
country. He stated, "Eating human flesh was a tradition of warriors pertaining
to the ethnic group of the Fang, which lives in Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria,
Gabon and Cameroon ...as they conquered new territories, Fang warriors ate parts
of their victims to absorb desirable qualities such as youth and strength...
human organs are eaten by members of secret brotherhoods which practice sorcery
in forests at night. New members are initiated in ceremonies which invoke
spirits...bodies are obtained through murder and robbing them from cemeteries
...the secret groups are known as 'evu societies', because many Guineans believe
the human body to contain an organ known as the 'evu.'"... "The human brain is
known to be highly toxic, for which reason the cannibals seek to immunize
themselves by ingesting potent vegetal poisons in small doses... nevertheless,
the cannibalism is believed to have led to a disease known as the kuru." See
"Cannibalism still common in Equatorial Guinea, Spanish expert claims," Deutsche
Presse-Agentur, April 5, 1998.
In April of 1988, President Omar Bongo met with
leaders of the Catholic, Protestant and Moslem communities to discuss possible
action against imported beliefs and practice. This action was taken after an
admission by a witchdoctor, purporting to belong to a sect based in neighboring
Equitorial Guinea, that he had eaten six humans, including two of his own
children, over the past decade. The witchdoctor was a railway worker and his
followers had killed another victim, a teacher who was seeking help to solve
family problems. See "Bongo Denounces Sects in Wake of Gruesome Cannibalism
Tale." Reuters (Libreville), April 29, 1988
The following case involves the author of this archive
September, 23, 1997, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, Aquino v. ElectriCiti, Inc.,
Media Law Reporter, 26 Med. L. Rptr. 1032, No. 984751, Civil Suit Alleging
Defamation Dismissed
Note: Lt. Col. Michael Aquino sued internet
provider ElectriCiti, located in San Diego, California, for “defamation” due to
an anonymous person posting information about him on the internet. The author of
this archive, Diana Napolis, was this “anonymous” person, who debated with Lt.
Col. Aquino while using the pseudonym “Karen Jones” and “Curio” during the years
1995-2000. Lt. Aquino sued, claiming “defamation,” when it was clear he only
wanted the name of the owner of the account in question after military records
were posted to the internet, proving he had been processed out of the Army in
1990 after a ritual abuse investigation.
After the Internet provider reviewed the allegedly “defamatory” messages and
ascertained that no libel had occurred, they refused to divulge any account name
to Lt. Col. Aquino because they believed he was dangerous. ElectriCiti was sued
twice, but the claims were ultimately dismissed due to the Communications
Decency Act, which precluded internet companies from being held liable for
messages written by their customers.
The Media Law Reporter gave an overview of the complaint but unfortunately
quoted Aquino’s description of the “facts.” They wrote that “Curio” stated the
Aquinos were the “ring leaders of an international conspiracy to further the
satanic ritual abuse of children, and that they engaged in kidnapping,
cannibalism and murder of anyone who stood in the way of this international
conspiracy.”
Lt. Col. Aquino submitted this information to the Media Law Reporter for reasons
unknown, even though this author never made those particular statements at the
time. However, due to new information which has been have reviewed, namely a
publication by John de Camp, “The Franklin Coverup,” (1996) which alleges
criminal activity by Michael Aquino, Noreen Gosch’s book, “Why Johnny Can’t Come
Home,”(2000) and after viewing several internal Criminal Investigative Tapes of
the Army interviews of children in their investigation of Lt. Col. Aquino, it
does appear that the above statements are absolutely correct.
Lt. Aquino claimed he was not processed out of the Army in 1990; however,
according to a letter from the National Personnel Records Center, dated December
1, 2006, his dates of service in the Army were from June 14, 1968 to August 31,
1990. Aquino is known for frivolously suing anyone who mentions this fact.
[Aquino v. TimesWarner/Linda Blood, Aquino v. Lockwood, Aquino v. Raschke,]
An internet metasearch reveals 70 web pages which describe this lawsuit [Aquino
v. ElectriCiti.] See news articles: “Internet Provider Sued Over Postings,” San
Diego Union-Tribune, June 24, 1997; “Wired News Flash, Satanist Sues ISP to
Silence Usenet Poster,” San Francisco, Business Wire, May 22, 1997; Army
Transcript of CID Interview, dated 1989. [See cases in this archive: Aquino vs.
Stone, Presidio Army Base, People v. Daryl Ball, Jubilation Day Care Case]
A lawsuit is pending against Lt. Col. Aquino due to his continued efforts to
violate the authors First amendment rights to free speech.
May 13, 1997, J. P. v. CLARENCE CARTER, COMMISSIONER OF THE VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA, 485 S.E.2d 162, 1997 Va. App. LEXIS 310, True Finding of Child Molestation Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state that on May 8, 1993 the Arlington
County Police Department received a report that two children had been sexually
molested by appellant, their thirteen year old baby sitter. Their report
included claims that the appellant, J. P., conducted Satanic rituals, used a
“magic” crystal and a “magic” ring, as well as allegations of statutory rape,
sodomy, and aggravated sexual battery. The 13 yr. old female minor, J. P., was
found to have molested two children in the context of Satanic ritual ceremony
while she was babysitting them. The kids reported to their parents and
investigators that: "...[appellant] had undressed and fondled [one child] on
these two different occasions, performed oral sodomy, had [him] touch her breast
and sat on top of [him] and quote "hurt his penis." [Appellant] allegedly had
[the other child] draw a pentagram and circle and told [him] this is where to
love Satan while she fondled his penis. . . [The children's mother] said the
boys reported that [appellant] talked of Satan's power and that she would kill
them and their parents if they told anyone what happened. This minor's name was
submitted to the central registry as a founded sexual abuser.“
May 13, 1997, ADOPTION OF QUENTIN & OTHERS, SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT OF
MASSACHUSETTS; 678 N.E.2d 1325, 1997 Mass. LEXIS 104, Order Granting Petition to
Dispense with Consent to Adoption of Three Children Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Department of Social Services planned to
adopt out the children of the father and mother. The parent's appealed and the
court briefly describes Social Services case for neglect, sexual molestation,
and statements of the children. While describing the past history of the father,
the court writes:
"In 1983, the father joined a religious organization called Orlo Templi Orientis
and studied the so-called 'Satanic Bible.' In January, 1984, he was convicted of
grave robbing, and sentenced to two months in jail. After release, he returned
to his transient life-style, alternating between Los Angeles and San Francisco."
"The eldest child, E. was diagnosed as suffering from posttraumatic stress
disorder. During an interview with Dr. O'Connell, she stated that "her 'Daddy's
a witch;' that 'bad witches took my picture with no clothes on;' that '[Paul, a
friend of the father] calls me his girlfriend;' that [Paul] took pictures of her
with no clothes on; that [Paul] said not to tell; that she and her mother were
tied up together with no clothes on while her father had no clothes on; and that
the witches 'shared weenies' and tried to touch her with their weenies but that
she ran away." Two licensed social workers who evaluated the children testified
that they were suffering from effects of post traumatic stress disorder.
[Two companion cases are described below]
December 23, 1996, DAMIEN WAYNE ECHOLS AND CHARLES JASON BALDWIN v. STATE OF
ARKANSAS, SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS, 936 S.W.2d 509; 902 S.W. 2d 781 (1995),
Convictions and Sentencing for Murder Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin were jointly tried and convicted for killing three 8 yr. old boys. Their accomplice, Jessie Misskelley, confessed and implicated both Echols and Baldwin in the murders. Misskelley was tried separately. In an appellate opinion dated July 17, 1995 (902 S.W.2d 781) Echols had previously appealed his case but filed a motion specifically waiving all points concerning his death sentence. The appellate court ordered the case back to the lower court to address Echols competency to waive an appeal of the death penalty. Echols finally decided to appeal his death sentence but the sentence was upheld.
One jury member received a death threat, another had received a threatening phone call during the trial. In the courts overview of the sufficiency of the evidence arguments, there were detailed descriptions of the three victims bodies, they'd been beaten and stabbed, and there were injuries to the genital area, evidencing forced oral sex. There was evidence of castration regarding child victim, Christopher Byers. "The skin of the penis had been removed, and the scrotal sac and testes were missing."
When asked by police how he thought the boys had been killed, Echols gave them statements not yet publicly known. On the witness stand, Echols testified that he'd read these facts from the newspaper. When the newspapers were shown to him, Echols admitted the information he was referring to was not in them and he didn't access the information in question from the newspaper after all. Two witnesses testified they overheard Echols admit he killed the three boys and that he was going to kill two more. The state thought the killings had been performed in a satanic ritual and an expert witness on the occult gave that opinion also. Echols admitted to being involved in the occult, items in his home included journals that had references to "morbid images, spells, and dead children." His parents had concerns about his involvement in "devil worship."
Medical records contained statements by Echols about his belief system:
"People are in two classes, sheeps and wolves, and the wolves eat the sheep." He
thought he obtained power from drinking the blood of others, especially from his
sexual partners.
In regards to whether the field of satanism has scientific validity, the court
notes:
"Echols next contends that Dr. Griffis should not have been allowed to testify
that the murders had the 'trappings of occultism' because there was no testimony
that the field of satanism or occultism is generally accepted in the scientific
community. The argument is without merit, as the trial court did not allow the
evidence to prove that satanism or occultism is generally accepted in the
scientific community. Rather, the trial court admitted the evidence as proof of
the motive for committing the murders."
In regards to Jason Baldwin, a witness testified that Baldwin spoke of the murders. "He told me he dismembered the kids, or I don't know exactly how many kids. He just said he dismembered them. He sucked the blood from the penis and scrotum and put the balls in his mouth."
------------
April 1, 1996, JESSIE LLOYD MISSKELLEY, JR. v. STATE OF ARKANSAS, SUPREME
COURT OF ARKANSAS, 915 S.W.2d 702, Convictions for First and Second Degree
Murder Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state three 8 yr.old boys were brutally murdered, raped, and mutilated in Arkansas by Jesse Misskelley and two other accomplices-- Damien Echols and Jason Baldwin. The case against Misskelley was primarily based on his confession and supporting circumstantial evidence. "Misskelley stated he had been involved in a cult for three months, they met in the woods, they engaged in orgies and, as an initiation rite, the killing and eating of dogs. At one cult meeting, he saw a picture that Echols had taken of the three boys. Another witness testified that she had attended a Satanic cult meeting with Echols and Misskelley. A doctor offered testimony that the type of cuts in one of the victim’s genital area required the use of 'skill and precision.'"
October 25, 1996, ST. CLAIRSVILLE, OHIO, BELMONT COUNTY COURTHOUSE, Case No. 96CR-28, Nathan Brooks Found Guilty of Murder and Sentenced to Two Consecutive Life Terms.
Overview: News reports state Nathan Brooks was found guilty of the
mutilation slaying of his parents. He decapitated his father and his mother was
hacked to death. Brooks told the officers he used the head in a Black mass
ritual that he believed would increase his Satanic powers. He said he had also
planned to kill a younger brother, but the youngster was visiting a friend. See
"Man to be Jailed at least 43 Years in Satanic Killings,” Columbus Dispatch,
October 25, 1996; “Man Guilty in Parents Slayings: Deaths Were Part of Satanic
Ritual, Son said in Statement,” Columbus Dispatch, October 22, 1996
July 16, 1996, IN INTEREST OF P. J. M.,/E. C. M.,/J. W. M., MINORS, MISSOURI
COURT OF APPEALS, 926 S.W.2d 223, Termination of Parental Rights Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state this self-described Satanic family
had been in and out of social services for many years resulting in their
parental rights being terminated as to three of their seven children. The father
had hit their 3 months old child while striking at the mother, and knocked that
child to the ground. Later the child and mother fell from an automobile operated
by the father while attempting to avoid apprehension.
There was constant and severe domestic violence; the father continually abused
the mother, including using a cattle prod to electrically shock her, shot her
with a gun, cut her with a razor blade and violated her with a baseball bat. The
mother then claimed she made up the story, although physical evidence was
discovered, she had a stab wound in her side and she was bleeding internally.
She also related past abuse by the father, including being raped, shot, stabbed,
and of attempts to cut her throat and cut off her arm.
Both parents had been arrested for the rape of a teenager, but the witness
wouldn't testify so the charges were dropped. Both parents had tried to commit
suicide and were involved in drug usage, satanic worship, and they sacrificed
animals in front of the children. The mother admitted to this activity and to
giving the children drugs to forget the ceremonies. The children also stated
that this occurred.
February 29, 1996, BRIAN SIMMONS v. THE STATE OF NEVADA, SUPREME COURT OF
NEVADA, 912 P.2d 217, Conviction For First Degree Murder Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state Defendant Brian Simmons shot his high
school classmate, 15 year old Jason Kopack. Mr. Simmons had become preoccupied
with Satanism, mutilation, rape, and killing. The court notes that in
handwritten journals admitted into evidence, Simmons had copied Satanic
invocations from books and expressed his desire to please Satan by murdering and
mutilating people he knew. He reportedly told his victim’s girlfriend that if
Satan told him to kill someone, including Jason, he would do so. He had a list
of five other individuals he planned to murder.
The court found that a book concerning witchcraft, expressing satanic themes was
seized because it was considered relevant to the murder that was under
investigation.
February 6, 1996, SUZANNE HUGHES v. DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES ARLINGTON
COUNTY, COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA, 1996 Va. LEXIS 77, Termination of Parental
Rights Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state a baby was removed from the custody of the mother, Suzanne Hughes, after evidence of abuse. The mother was eventually diagnosed with Multiple Personality Disorder. The child was returned to her, but after further incidents of abuse and neglect, she was taken into custody again. The mother's counselor testified that the mother stated she was involved with a Satanic cult that killed adults and babies, and they had threatened her. She stated she was involved with them since she was 7 yrs. old and she reported members of the cult abducting and raping her.
Under cross-examination, the mother was asked about the maternal
grandparent’s failure in reporting her own abuse, and the court was concerned
that she was living at the maternal grandfather's home. The trial judge
expressed concern over the continued existence of the Satanic cult, appellant's
inability to help the police prosecute a member of this cult, appellant's
continued residence in the same family home where she had been verbally and
physically abused as a small child, and lack of family support that was missing
when appellant was an abused child.
The appellate court found that the evidence of Ms. Hughes participation in the
cult described was relevant to the proceedings.
December 19, 1995, JIMMIE LEE PENICK v. STATE OF INDIANA, SUPREME COURT OF
INDIANA, 659 N.E.2d 484, Conviction for Murder and Enhanced Sentence Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state four practitioners of Satanism, Jimmie
Penick, Mark Goodwin, Keith Lawrence, and David Lawrence, conspired and planned
to murder a prospective member, William Ault, of their "Satanic Church." All
worked at a County Fair. They were concerned that the victim, William Ault, knew
about a prior murder. They took him to what he thought was an initiation..."Ault
was asked to lay down on a door, which was being used as an altar. Keith
Lawrence read an invocation to Satan…Goodwin and the Lawrences made cuts on
Ault’s chest and abdomen in the form of an inverted cross, as well as other
cuts…Penick’s own words describe how the victim’s chest and abdomen were cut
open, how Goodwin tried to cut out victim’s heart before he died, and how the
victim remained conscious throughout this and responded to questions from the
defendant.
The Court found that the aggravators were that Penick rendered his victim
physically defenseless prior to torturing and killing him by painful and
torturous methods, he dismembered the victim’s body and orchestrated and
assisted in concealing the victim’s remains. There was evidence that victim’s
chest and abdomen were cut open, that a con-conspirator tried to cut out the
victim’s ear before he died, and that the victim remained conscious throughout.
Penick dismembered the victim’s head and hands and admitted he removed the head
to give the skull to a friend. Penick’s defense was that he acted under the
influence of his strong beliefs in Satanism but that he had converted to
Christianity while in prison.
Nov. 6, 1995, MCINTYRE v. THE STATE, SUPREME COURT OF GEORGIA, 463 S.E. 2d
476, Conviction For Murder Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state defendant Robert McIntyre was convicted
of murdering a young female victim who was a runaway because she spurned his
advances. Robert McIntyre was a member of a Satanic group of which a Terry
Chapman was the leader. Malisa Earnest and the victim were runaways who were
given shelter by Chapman.
After the victim rejected McIntyre’s sexual advances, McIntyre, Chapman and
Earnest discussed killing the victim and agreed to strangle her with a boot
lace. McIntyre then took the lace and tightened it around her neck. McIntyre and
Chapman sat on either side of the victim’s body… “Holding hands, they repeated a
Satanic chant.”
Terry Chapman and Malisa Earnerst were also tried and convicted.
The Court found that the evidence regarding Satanism was properly admitted as
motive for the crime.
November 15, 1995, STEVEN BRIAN ALVARADO v. STATE OF TEXAS, COURT OF CRIMINAL
APPEALS OF TEXAS, 912 S.W.2d 199, Convictions and Death Sentence Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Steven Alvarado killed two people, a mother and son, during a drug deal in 1991 when he was 17 years old. A year or so prior to the murder Alvarado had been in the hospital. The psychologist stated that at that time, based on her reports, the appellant was "violent and dangerous and that he had a full-blown antisocial personality disorder."... He had "no concern for the rights of others, and admitted selling illegal weapons, abusing and selling illegal drugs, sexually assaulting a woman, mutilating human infants in Satanic rituals, and committing numerous other crimes. He was discharged after twelve days in the hospital because he was felt to be a danger to the other patients and that he was not suffering from a mental illness that was treatable, and, therefore under the mental health code had to be discharged."
The Court found that these and other factors supported the jury’s finding at
the punishment stage of the trial on the future dangerousness of the defendant
August 24, 1995, EDWARD BENNETT v. THE STATE OF NEVADA, SUPREME COURT OF
NEVADA, 901 P.2d 676; 787 P.2d 797 (1990), Denial of Post Conviction Petition
Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Edward Bennett was sentenced to
death for killing a girl. Writings were seized as evidence. Some of the
statements included: "There's a problem in this country and has a lot to do with
being white. There's too many people with ugly skin."... "I need to kill
somebody or tear someone apart. I got to satisfy my need, cure this thirst for
blood. So as I make the sacrifice by doing it just for you and kill this child,
for it is a first born, I'm giving you my soul, Satan. Where is my reward? My
thirst for blood is now calm, but it shall rise again. My power is so strong I
need to cause some death. For Lucifer's inside of me, and I don't want to let
him out. I look in the mirror, I see him in my eyes. I feel his heart beating in
my chest, and I know it is not mine. For I feel so privileged for I'm with
number one. I'm so f_____powerful and my reign has just begun as I kill and kill
again. I feel my rewards come on. My power's growing even greater. I'm so f___
strong for I am the devil's right-hand man. I carry out his every chore. I make
this sacrifice in his name, Lucifer the Great, blood splattered on my face from
the kill I've just done.”
The prosecutor argued that the murder committed by Bennett was a “random,
ritualistic, satanic execution.” The Court found that the murder was
"ritualistic and satanic," and that was a proper interpretation of the evidence.
July 5, 1995, STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA v. MICHAEL ALAN PARKER, SR., COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA, 459 S.E.2d 9, 1995 N.C. App. LEXIS 523, Convictions for Multiple Counts of Child Molestation Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state the defendant Michael Parker
thought there should be a mistrial for several reasons, one of which was witness
testimony that he threatened to bomb the woman’s shelter his wife and family
were staying at. Defendant’s children all testified to several specific
instances of sexual abuse.
The Court described children’s testimony: “…Defendant pulled down S’s pants and
threw her on the floor and inserted a spoon into her vagina and moved it around.
Defendant took blood that was on the spoon, put it in a cup and drank it while
the others were standing around singing with lit candles.”…”S testified that
when defendant took her to the woods behind her grandmother’s house and abused
her in front of several people holding lit candles, another young girl, A
Robinson, “started screaming at first and then she jumped up and she had no
clothes on and she started running and her dad jumped up and started chasing
after her through the woods.”
On one occasion, defendant took M. to his grandmother’s house, where she
removed his clothes and got on top of him on the bed and jumped up and down on
his private parts. Defendant watched and did nothing. One of the spectators
Travis Gordon, put his penis in M’s mouth. Defendant also placed his penis in
M’s mouth. M. Testified to another similar incident with the same 4 people.
The grandmother, Mildred Parker, was named as a co-defendant and was convicted
for indecent liberties with a child.
News articles describe the children testifying that Parker raped and sodomized
them in the family’s trailer near Saluda and in nearby woods, often while other
people wearing black pants and white shirts chanted. One child testified that on
one occasion, defendant placed a brush handle into her vagina. Medical
examinations of the three victims corroborated each of the victims testimony and
indicated a diagnosis of sexual abuse. See “Dad Guilty of Abusing Children
Sexually, Eight Life Sentences,” Greensboro News and Record, Feb. 6, 1994
June 29, 1995, ATHENS, GREECE, Asimakis Katsoulas and Manos Dimitrokallis
were Found Guilty of Kidnapping, Rape and Murder. They were Sentenced to Life
Imprisonment. Dimitra Maryetti was Found Guilty of Complicity and Sentenced to
23 years.
Overview: News reports state Satanic cult leader Asimakis Katsoulas and his
“high priestess,” confessed to leading a 20 member Satanic cult which had
conducted animal and human sacrifices for three years. They were found guilty of
kidnapping, raping and murdering a 30 year old woman and a 15 year old girl
during occult ceremonies. The first victim was killed at her initiation
ceremony. Katsoulas claimed he was the vehicle for “ancient demons.” Another
witness was abducted when the murderers told her they were police officers who
wanted to question her. See “Two young men confess to Rape, Murder of two women
as part of a Satanic cult ritual, police said,” AP, Dec. 28, 1993 and “Court
convicts, sentences two to life terms for murder,” AP, June 30, 1995; “Dark
Trial of Yong Greek Satanists Grips Public,” June 29, 1995
December 30, 1994, IN THE MATTER OF HEATHER BARKER, NEGLECTED CHILD, COURT OF
APPEALS OF OHIO, SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT, HARRISON COUNTY, 1994 Ohio App.
LEXIS 6100, Juvenile Court Decision to Grant Permanent Custody to DHS affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that at the age of 5 years Heather
Barker was taken into custody by DHS due to physical injuries to her genital
area. Cumulative testimony proved to the court that she had been sexually
molested by clear and convincing evidence, although there was no obvious
perpetrator to hold accountable. The mother was cited for neglect and was given
18 months reunification services but that did not alleviate the problems which
brought the child into custody. Social Services did not believe the mother could
protect the child. The child was prone to “trance-like” states after
unsupervised visits with the mother and other unusual behavior. Both a treating
psychologist and social worker evaluated the child and thought she had been
ritually sexually abused based on her statements. A trial took place contesting
these matters and the court amended the abuse complaint, based on clear and
convincing evidence, to a finding of neglect as well.
September 10, 1994, ARIZONA, PINAL COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT, STATE OF ARIZONA
vs. EDWARD G. CANNADAY, DEFENDANT, Sexual Conduct with a Minor, Sentenced to 20
years // Co-Defendant, STATE OF ARIZONA, PLAINTIFF, vs. SHARLOTTE ANN BROWN,
DEFENDANT, Case No. CR 16909, Convicted of Contribution to the
Delinquency/Dependency of a Minor, Sentenced to Probation
Overview: News articles state the children of Edward Cannaday, 38, a former
pastor, claimed that their father and his three retarded brothers were part of a
satanic cult that sacrificed animals, babies and children, and engaged in family
group sex in the desert west of Coolidge in 1988. Cannaday was accused of having
sex with and fondling his daughters and step-daughter, then 5, 10 and 11, and
molesting his 6 year old son. All of the children were placed in foster homes.
Police heard reports during the late 1980’s that dozens of dead bodies had been
seen, but none were found, and no charges were filed, but still unexplained were
bone fragments, bits of clothing and scraps of duct tape that were found.
Five other relatives were indicted on charges ranging from aggravated assault to
child molestation but charges against the three younger brothers were dropped
when they were declared incompetent to stand trial.
After a three-week trial Edward Cannaday was convicted of sexual molestation of
a child. The defense attorney didn’t dispute that the children were chronically
abused which testimony and medical evidence suggested. His co-defendant and
sister, Sharlotte Ann Brown, was convicted for contributing to the delinquency
of a minor.
See “Man Could Get 162 Years in Molestations,” The Arizona Republic, September
10, 1994; Ex-Pastor Sentenced On child-Sex Charges, The Arizona Republic,
November 19, 1994
October 26, 1994 , PEOPLE OF TEXAS v. FRANCES AND DANIEL KELLER, COURT OF
APPEALS, Both Cases Upheld on Appeal No. 3-92-603-CR and No. 3-92-604-CR,
Convicted for Aggravated Sexual Assault on a Child upheld; Sentenced to 48 years
Overview: Appellate documents and news articles state Defendants Dan and
Frances Keller were indicted in Travis County, Texas. They arranged to surrender
to police but fled to Las Vegas instead after Dan Keller dyed his hair. The
police tracked them down and arrested them in Las Vegas. The Kellers had a joint
trial after which a jury found them guilty of sexually abusing a three year old
girl. A doctor had found lacerations to the labia and hymen of the child that
were consistent with an allegation of sexual abuse.
News reports state that more than one child was thought to have been abused at
"Fran's Day Care" in Austin, Texas, operated by the Keller's, but this
particular case cites their conviction of only one 3 ½ year old child. A
6-yr-old child, who also claimed to be a victim, testified on the behalf of the
3 1/2 year old and called Fran's Day Care, "Fran's Hate Care." About eight
children were in therapy due to the abuse.
The children described ritual acts: being terrorized in a graveyard, seeing
animals killed, being buried alive with animals, painting pictures with bones
dipped in blood, being shot and resurrected, being stuck with needles and
drugged, and seeing bodies dug up and mutilated with a chainsaw. A child led an
investigator to a graveyard where they found animal bones. Parents reported that
the children were terrified of baths, children who believe they must kill
themselves on their birthday, children who were afraid of ponies, fearful they
will be put in jail, and children who could conduct a séance, complete with
otherworldly “chants.”
Children spoke of being forced to close their eyes while the Kellers took a meat
cleaver and pretended to chop off their fingers and toes. One child peeked and
saw Dan Keller pull a bone from a bag and smear it with blood from a jar and
realized the perpetrator had tried to fool him. The child was forced to paint a
picture with “Satan’s arm” dipped in blood.
They spoke of seeing the Kellers place infants in the backyard swimming pool and
letting them sink. Frances Keller would then remove the baby from the bottom of
the pool, baptize it with blood, and offer it to Satan. The Kellers reportedly
killed a baby named Rachel by cutting her heart out. The heart was placed in a
child’s hand who described it going “thump, thump, thump until it stopped.” The
body was put in the swimming pool, and its skin and eyeballs buried in a hole.
One boy said a gun was held to his head while he was forced to molest his infant
sister. When the pornographic movie was replayed for him, the gun was not
visible and he realized he’d been tricked. At least three children developed an
“eerie habit of behaving like cats. In sudden realistic transformations, parents
say, the children would crawl, meow, hiss and demand food from bowls.” One
parents stated her daughter told her they were taken to an actual jail cell, and
she was put in there with a kitten, and then it crawled through the bars and the
perpetrators stomped on the cat, cut it up, and told them if they told, that’s
what would happen to them. They would show the children their parent’s payment
in check and would say, “See? Your mommy pays us to do this to you.” The
children then hatched a plan to try to kill Dan Keller. Texas Ranger Johnny
Waldrip said he believed the kids wholeheartedly, and thought they were
subjected to ritualistic acts so they would be discredited. A therapist and
expert witness testified about the reality of ritual abuse for the jury.
The defense lawyers used videos showing some the younger child recanting, saying
the abuse never happened, in efforts to try to undermine the case. The defense
also stated that the claims were "too outlandish to be believed" because the
children also spoke of going on airplane rides and seeing a baby killed. The
parents claimed that one of the perpetrators was flashing threatening hand
signals during the child's testimony.
Another mother said,"I put my son in a mental hospital as a result of this abuse
(by the Kellers), and it's only been through over a year of intensive
psychotherapy that he's begun to partially heal."
Three other people were indicted for sexually abusing children at this daycare.
They were Douglas Perry, a Travis County road maintenance worker, Janise White,
a Travis County constable – Perry’s wife, and Raul Quintero, another Travis
County constable and Whites partner. Douglas Perry was originally given immunity
but denied any knowledge of events on the witness stand. Prosecutors then
introduced a statement written by Perry on July 7, 1992 which was read to the
jury. The statement described sexual activities with two children by the
aforementioned individuals. He confessed to tearing a head off a doll and
threatening the children that if they told, their heads would come off the same
way.
Perry eventually pleaded guilty to a charge of indecent acts with a child and he
received 10 years probation.. Indictments against White and Quintero were
dismissed. Parents of two children filed a civil suit holding these three people
accountable for not reporting the abuse, but the case was dismissed.
See “Speaking the Unspeakable/Nightmares of Fran’s Day Care Stalk Families,”
Austin American-Statesman, Dec. 13, 1992; "6-yr-old Testifies he Witnessed Abuse
of girl," Nov. 24, 1992, and "Kellers Found Guilty of Sexual Assault," Austin
American Statesman, Nov. 26, 1992; “Therapist Describes Ritualistic Abuse
Claims,” Austin American Statesman, Nov. 20, 1992.
August 16, 1994, STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA v. PATRICK S. FIGURED, COURT OF
APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA, 446 S.E. 2d 838, Convictions Affirmed For First
Degree Sexual Offenses
Overview: Appellate documents and news articles state Patrick Figured, 41, a
former executive of an electronics company, entered an Alford plea of guilty to
three counts of first degree sex offenses. The State agreed to dismiss the
charges against a co-defendant, Sonja Hill, 34, who was Figured’s girlfriend.
In July of 1990, the outgoing DA re-indicted Sonja Hill on the same charges.
Figured filed a motion to have his guilty pleas set aside due to the DA
violating terms of the agreement. On March 9, 1992, the Grand Jury re-indicted
Figured for three counts of first degree sex offenses which occurred in 1988.
The Court noted that each child who testified stated that the defendant inserted
a screwdriver in his or her anus. Physicians found physical abnormalities in
these children. Two of the children testified that the defendant made a dog
urinate and forced the children to drink it. The Jury heard how Figured and his
girlfriend, Sonja Hill, would drug and then molest the children at the
unlicensed child care center in the Smithfield home of Hills’ mother, Virgina
“Polly” Byrd. The children testified that there were video cameras present when
Figured sodomized them. Figured was then convicted of all charges.
Sonja Hill was convicted of indecent liberties with a child on 7/28/93
News articles describe this case as one involving child pornography, satanic
rituals, and animal abuse. Parent of one of these abused children filed a civil
suit against Sonja Hill and her mother, Polly Byrd, who ran the daycare center.
They alleged that their children had been forced to participate in Satan worship
while being abused. The kids spoke of having to drink blood, their abusers
burned Bibles, and wore masks and capes. Mr. Figured told the children that he
did not believe in God.
Sonja Hill and her mother did not respond to the lawsuit, but a Johnston County
jury awarded a $10.5 million judgment to the parents who did not believe they
would ever collect the money but wanted other people to know that these acts do
occur. See “Johnston Couple Win Child Sexual Abuse Suit,” News and Observer,
March 27, 1990
April 12, 1994, IN RE: CHRYSTAL AND TASHA, SUPERIOR COURT OF CONNECTICUT,
JUVENILE MATTERS, 1994 Conn. Super. LEXIS 1061, Termination of Parental Rights
Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state that children Chrystal and Tasha were in
several placements over a period of 4 years after a finding of neglect in
Juvenile court. The mother was in and out of prison due to drug usage and sales.
A Social worker who had worked with Tasha four days out of the week in the
hospital noted that one of the children had been diagnosed with Multiple
Personality Disorder and had been subjected to Satanism. The Court said that
because of the introduction of evidence of ritual or Satanic sexual abuse, which
came to light only after that child’s commitment in 1989, it could account for
her fragile emotional condition. It was not clear whether the incidents took
place with the biological mother or in the foster homes the child was in over
the years where allegations of abuse had been confirmed.
The Social worker could not eliminate the mother’s home because Tasha identified
her mother as a “ghost” and expressed fear of her. The child had referred to her
mother as “Natas,” which is Satan spelled backwards. Tasha recognized her mother
as “Mama Dawn,” one of the “Mamas” who involved her in the terrifying
experiences she recounted from the Satanic ritual abuse connected with the
Church, and feared her. Contact with her mother was suspended when the child
began exhibiting negative behaviors after visitations or after other types of
communication.
March 22, 1994, COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA v. RICKIE JAY GADDIS, SUPERIOR
COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA, 639 A. 2d 462, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 963, Sentence
Affirmed, Fine Vacated
Overview: Appellate documents state that the consolidated appeals were taken
from the judgments of sentence imposed on February 9, 1993 against the father,
Rickie Gaddis. He was found guilty in two separate trials of more than 150
counts of aggravated assault; recklessly endangering another person; terroristic
threats; endangering the welfare of children; corruption of minors; false
imprisonment; simple assault; prohibited offensive weapons; rape; statutory
rape; involuntary deviate sexual intercourse; aggravated indecent assault;
indecent exposure; incest; and criminal conspiracy.
The charges arose from the “horrific sexual, physical and emotional” abuse and
neglect by Rickie Jay Gaddis, of his minor children. Gaddis was sentenced to
“235 to 470” years in prison. The appellate court affirmed his sentence but
vacated his fine. There had been concern he was going to capitalize on his
crimes by selling a book.
News reports quote the police, stating the children were subjected by their
parents and neighbors to ritualistic torture that included bloodlettings with a
sword, Satanic ceremonies, hot needles under their fingernails, sodomy,
stretching and tattooing. The children told police of Satanic rituals in which
their 34 year old father used ceremonial swords to draw blood from adults and
children to pour on the grave of a daughter killed in a fire three years ago.
Also arrested were a 39 year-old man and three juveniles who lived with him, a
41 year-old man, and a 29 year-old man, visitor to the house.“
Rickie Gaddis’ wife, Debbie Louis Gaddis, 33, was also convicted.
In news reports dated 2006, Ricky Gaddis requested release from prison due to
health woes but the Judge denied his request. He was described as a notorious
child rapist/torturers and quoted his children’s testimony about how he ruled
over them with the claim of having “special powers.” See “Pa. couple is charged
with torturing children: Police say neighbors also took part in abuse,” The
Atlanta Journal and Constitution, November 26, 1991; “Pennsylvania Couple
Charged with Brutalizing their children,” The Washington Post, November 26,
1991; and “Parents charged with Torturing their Children,” Associated Press,
Nov. 25, 1991; “Gaddis Released Denied: Judge unmoved by health woes,”
Tribune-Democrat, December 9, 2006; “Child Abuser Seeks Prison Release,”
Tribune-Democrat, September 30, 2006
Dec. 27, 1993, WASHINGTON D.C., U. S. News and World Report, “’Through a
Glass, Very Darkly’: Cops, Spies and a Very Odd Investigation”
Overview: This news article cites that the Justice Dept. was reinvestigating
the Finders case and that some of the unresolved questions were allegations that
the Finders Group were linked to the Central Intelligence Agency and they wanted
to know whether or not the investigation into their activity had been closed
inappropriately. “The many unanswered questions about the Finders case now have
Democratic Rep. Charlie Rose of North Carolina, Chairman of the House
Administration Committee, and Florida’s Rep. Tom Lewis, a Republican, more than
a little exercised. Could our own government have something to do with this
Finders organization and turned their backs on these children? That’s what all
the evidence points to,” says Lewis, and there’s a lot of evidence.”… “Law
enforcement sources say some of the Finders are listed in the FBI’s classified
counterintelligence files.”
As background, in early Feb. 1987, six children were taken into custody in
Tallahassee, Florida. Two men were charged with child abuse, but charges were
dropped. The men said they were transporting these children to Mexico to a
school for brilliant children. Their mothers were located in a group called the
Finders. At the same time, Washington, D.C., police and U.S. Customs Service
agents raided a duplex apartment building and a warehouse connected to the
group.
Customs Reports dated 2/12/87 and 4/13/87 cite that among the evidence seized
were detailed instructions about obtaining children for unknown purposes around
the world, child trafficking, instructions to keep the above six children
moving, and how to avoid detection. There were several photographs of nude
children that appeared to “accent” the child’s genitals, photographs of children
involved in animal rituals, an altar, jars of urine and feces, and a staging
area, all of which appeared to the Custom’s Agents as an “indoctrination” center.
Custom’s agents were told to drop their investigation because it had become a
“CIA internal matter” a fact which is documented in the Custom’s documents.
According to U.S. District court records, a confidential police source reported
that the Finders were a “cult” that used “brainwashing” techniques. The source
told of being recruited by the Finders with promises of financial reward, sexual
gratification, and of being invited by to explore satanism with them.
Officials of the U.S. Customs Service, called in to aid in the investigation,
said that the material seized included photos showing children involved in
bloodletting ceremonies, of animals, and one photograph of a child in chains.
Customs officials said they were looking into whether a child pornography
operation was being conducted. See Officials Describe ‘Cult Rituals’ in Child
Abuse Case,” The Washington Post, Feb. 7, 1987
December 14, 1992, THE STATE OF TEXAS vs. PHIL STANLEY ROGERS; CASE NO. 18, 738, Charged and Pleaded guilty to "Indecency with a Child, Younger than 17 years, Committed During the Course of a Ritual." Jury sentence – 99 years.
Overview: Court documents and a news article state that Phil Stanley
Rogers plead guilty to Indecency with a Child during the course of a Ritual. The
rituals began with the purchase of a Ouija board. Items taken as evidence
included books covering Satanic topics, pentagram symbols, candles, daggers and
wands. An Abilene Police specialist on the occult explained how the items were
used to gain “power and control.” The 15 year old victim, a relative of the
defendant, cried as she testified that the rituals began with the purchase of a
Ouija board, chanting, and meditation were next. See “Man Admits Indecency with
Child During Course of a Satanic Ritual,” Abilene Reporter News, Dec. 15, 1992
Note: Mr. Rogers was convicted under a ritual abuse law that was in the Texas
penal code in 1992 but it has since been rescinded.
April 29, 1992, IN THE MATTER OF THE WELFARE of J. M. P., COURT OF APPEALS OF
MINNESOTA, 1992 Minn. App. LEXIS 436, Termination of Parental Rights Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state the mother of J. M. P, Sharon
Pieske, challenged the trials court’s termination of her parental rights. The
court noted that her past included "years of sexual and physical abuse, parental
neglect, early and long-standing addiction to numerous drugs, serious mental
health problems, and involvement in a Satanic cult." Her child was taken into
custody after two hospitalizations due to overdosing. The mother was involved in
four incidents, three involving criminal convictions, which caused harm to the
children, including J.M.P. The child was enuretic, periodically preoccupied with
themes of violence and bodily injury, and her “disorder is not curable.” The
mother tried to commit suicide, and was diagnosed with borderline personality
disorder.
May 9, 1992, ORLANDO, FLORIDA, ORANGE COUNTY COURTHOUSE, James L. Wright,
Case No. CR0911814-A, was Convicted of Raping and Fondling Five Children; Margie
Wright, Case No. CR0911814-B, Pleaded No Contest to Three Charges of Attempted
Sexual Battery and Two Charges of Attempted Lewd Acts and was Sentenced to 5 1/2
years in Prison.
Overview: Three news articles describing this case state that Jim
Wright, 36, and Margie Wright, 29, were charged with molesting children in the
context of Satanic rituals. The victim's parents met the Wrights through their
Church and Bible classes they attended together. The children reported that they
saw Wright sacrifice a stray dog, slit its throat and stomach, and remove some
entrails. He held up the entrails for the children to see and said the same
thing could happen to the children if they “tattled.” Sheriff's investigators
found the dog's skeleton near the Wright's trailer.
A psychological evaluation of three boys said there were strong symptoms of
sexual abuse associated with the cult activity. A 9 year old girl told
investigators that Jim Wright forced her to have oral sex with him at gunpoint.
“I didn’t tell because I was scared,” said a child. “Jim had a gun and said he’d
kill my family, and he put a bad curse on us. Jim said devil words to us.”
The Wright's molested children during their "Magic Show"; the victims said he
pulled a gun out of a hat and made their underwear “disappear.” The children
described Satanic symbols, chalices filled with blood, and a box containing a
corpse.
The parents of three of the victims moved residences and the prosecutor
expressed concern because the children had been threatened by the cult not to
testify. The parents said cult members had come to their house to take the
children to stop them from testifying against the Wrights. The children had to
be moved to a secure location due to the threats.
Maggie Wright testified against her husband while she pleaded no contest to
reduced charges. See “Convict's Wife Sentenced for Trying to Molest Kids,"
Orlando Sentinel Tribune, May 9, 1992; "A Family Fears That Satanic Cult will
try to Silence their Sons," Orlando Sentinel Tribune, August 10, 1991; "Child
Abuse Suspect Trades Testimony for Lesser Charges," Orlando Sentinel Tribune,
January 31, 1992
January 22, 1992, THE STATE OF WASHINGTON v. PAUL ROSS INGRAM, COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 13613-9-II, Division Two, Confession to Sexual Molestation and 20 yr. Exceptional Sentence Affirmed.
Overview: The Appellate court stated Paul Ingram, former Thurston
County Chief civil Deputy Sheriff and 16-year law enforcement officer, was
arrested on November 28, 1988 following allegations of sexual abuse made by his
daughters, then 18 and 22 years old. Ingram waived his right to counsel and made
incriminating statements. After six months of further investigation and
interrogation, Ingram was charged by amended information with six counts of rape
in the third degree - three counts per daughter - covering July through October
1988. He tried to withdraw his guilty plea but that was denied.
In May of 1989,
Ingram signed a statement pleading guilty, acknowledging that he had sexually
abused his daughters. The trial court had meticulously questioned Ingram about
each element of the crime. Ingram stated on the record that the plea was
voluntary. In October of 1989, Ingram sought to withdraw his guilty plea. He
claimed that the original plea was the result of influences, including
deception, brainwashing, religious and familial coercion. Dr. Richard Ofshe, a
sociologist, testified for Ingram, stating that he thought the plea had not been
entered in a knowing matter but was the result of fantasies created from
intensive coercion. However, the three psychologists who testified for the State
all agreed that Ingram’s statements were real recollections and not the products
of any trances or hypnosis. Bill Lennon, originally hired by the defense,
eventually submitted a report that reflected statements made by Ingram,
acknowledging long term abuse of his children and involvement in incest, sodomy,
and homosexual activity.
“Ingram’s Nov. 28 statement to officers were made before any contact with
psychologists, his wife’s pastor, or his wife’s attorney, and contains virtually
uncontestable evidence of guilty. Ingram confessed to using sex practices to
prevent pregnancy with one of his daughters and of that daughters abortion in
another county when she became pregnant by him, and of having anal intercourse
with the daughter during her menstrual period so that the bed wouldn’t get
‘messed up.’”
Aggravating factors found were that Ingram threatened to kill his victims and
the court concluded that the threats demonstrated deliberate cruelty.
Note: Paul Ingram, ostensibly a Christian man, confessed to police officers that
he ritually abused his children in the context of Satanic ceremony, which his
daughters also claimed took place. Richard Ofshe of the FMSF tried to talk
Ingram out of his confession by claiming he confessed in a "trance-like" state
and "proved" that by suggesting to Ingram a case scenario which very well could
have occurred. Both Ofshe and Elizabeth Loftus, of the False Memory Syndrome
Foundation, testified at Ingram's clemency hearing trying to assist in obtaining
his release. According to news articles and the Clemency Board Transcripts,
dated June 7, 1996, Ingram's son also attended that particular hearing and asked
the board to keep his father in prison because he had been physically and
sexually abused by him, which the board did. See: “Felons Hope for a Parting
Gift from Lowry," Seattle Times, Dec. 12, 1996, Clemency Court Transcripts can
be ordered at: (360) 753-6780.
For documentation of the satanic allegations, see “Remembering Satan - Part I,”
The New Yorker, May 17, 1993; “Remembering Satan - Part II,” The New Yorker, May
24, 1993, by Lawrence Wright. The conclusions Mr. Wright reaches are closely
aligned with the False Memory Syndrome Foundation. However, because this
organization does not believe in the existence of SRA, their observations about
individual case are not particularly important.
Lt. Col.
Aquino was implicated in the following four cases:
February 26, 1992, MICHAEL A. AQUINO v. MICHAEL P.W. STONE, SECRETARY OF THE
ARMY, UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT, 957 F.2d 139; 768 F.Supp. 529 (1991),
Titling of Officer Affirmed;
Overview: Appellate documents, court documents, news articles, and Criminal
Investigative Division [CID] transcripts state Michael Aquino, founder of a
Satanist group, Temple of Set, was a Lt. Col in the Army Active Reserves. After
an investigation at the Presidio Army base where he was stationed, he sued the
Army after they "Titled" him under an investigatory report, which was released
two months after the criminal statue of limitations ran, for indecent acts with
a child, sodomy, conspiracy, kidnapping, and false swearing, and for his
dismissal from the active reserves. The standard for Titling is “probable
cause,” and in 1990 Lt. Col Aquino was processed out of the Army after a ritual
child abuse investigation. Only one child victim, the daughter of the Chaplain
of the Presidio, was named in the victim block although the word “children” was
mentioned throughout the reports.
The child had identified Aquino as “Mikey” and his wife, Lilith, as “Shamby”
after she sighted them at an Army PX on August 12, 1987. She told her mother
that “Mikey was the ‘blood man’ because he had put blood on her and licked it
off.” The CID investigators showed photographs to the child:
“Photographs do show a number of items that corroborate Kinsey’s and other
children’s descriptions of the house where they were taken: (1) masks (2) guns
(4) toy animals or dinosaurs (4) a lion picture on the wall and lions on the
Egyption throne (5) a computer (6) camera (7) a black room with soft walls and
(8) a robot.”
The investigation of Lt. Col Aquino, a very wealthy man, and his wife, Lilith,
involved multi-jurisdictions and several children interviewed identified him
from photo lineups as their alleged abuser, but the identification of Lilith
Aquino was not persuasive. A child stated that during their abuse “Mikey” was
dressed in woman’s clothes and “Shamby” was dressed in men’s clothing.
On March 15, 1989 the CID interviewed a child victim who gave details of that
child’s sexual molestation in the context of satanic rituals by members of a
“devil worship club,” during the years 1985-86, which the child said involved
Lt. Col. Aquino. The child described the children being forced to chant that
they “Hated God,” and “Loved the Devil,” before and after being molested which
was filmed, in addition to providing detailed descriptions of murder and
cannibalism. The bodies were reportedly kept in a basement and then “dumped” in
a lake. The child gave detailed descriptions of the Aquino’s residence which
matched the descriptions of other children - - black walls with crosses on the
ceiling.
*An article dated Nov. 16, 1987 entitled “Second Beast of Revelation” in
Newsweek magazine described the Presidio Daycare case and noted that Lt. Col.
Aquino referred to himself as the Anti-Christ and he had an interest in the Nazi
SS.
*In 1994, Temple of Set member Lillian Rosoff filed a restraining order against
Michael Aquino, claiming he harassed her for leaving his “Church” after being a
member for 18 years. [San Mateo County Superior Court Case #CIV-388423 – Case
Sealed].
Internal court documents to Aquino vs. Stone can be ordered from: Office of the
Clerk, Albert V. Bryan, US Courthouse, 401 Courthouse Square, Alexandra,
Virginia, 22314-5798. Michael Aquino has also been associated with the case of
Paul Bonacci, [See US District Court v. Paul A. Bonacci, 1999], and the
following three cases in this archive.
See “Sect Founder Says Accuser Not a Member,” San Francisco Chronicle, June 25,
1994. See, CID Army Child Interview Tape, March 15, 1989 [can be ordered from
the author] “Satanic Chief tied to Mendocino Sex Abuse,” Press Democrat, May 15,
1989; “Preschool Child Sex Abuse: The Aftermath of the Presidio Case,” Journal
of Orthopsychiatry 62 (2), April 1992, by Diane Ehrensaft, Ph.D; Books: “The New
Satanists,” by Linda Blood, 1994; “Why Johnny Can’t Come Home,” by Noreen Gosch,
2000
1989, SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA, PRESIDIO ARMY DAY CARE CASE, Monetary
Settlement with parents
Overview: News reports state that on Jan 5, 1987 Gary Willard Hambright,
Presidio Daycare employee, was indicted for molesting one child who had been
sodomized, but after a year of investigation, more than 30 victims at the
Presidio Army Base had been identified. Children gave statements about being
ritually abused, they were taken off base, and they claimed other perpetrators
were involved in their abuse. The children alleged they were sexually abused,
taken to private homes, forced to urinate and defecate on Gary Hambright – and
he would do the same to them - and they were forced to drink urine and eat feces.
One child said she played “pop poo baseball” at the home of one of her female
teachers. Some children said they had blood smeared on their bodies, had guns
pointed at them, and were threatened that if they told about the abuse their
parents would be killed. Many children said their abuse occurred during satanic
rituals. Inside a concrete bunker behind the Military Intelligence Building at
the Presidio, the words “Prince of Darkness” were painted. Another wall was
covered with the numerals 666 and occult drawings.
In the early 1980’s, a gardner’s shack adjacent to the Presidio was raided. They
found a pentagram on the floor and dolls heads on the ceiling. Two investigators
were given permission to set up surveillance on the shack but they were then
told to call it off. “We were sitting there, we’ve got a cult on the Presidio of
San Francisco and nobody cares about it,” said one investigator.
Three months after the indictment of Hambright, charges were dismissed without
prejudice. The court would not allow hearsay evidence and ruled the victim could
not qualify as a witness because of his age. Hambright was reindicted on Sept.
30 1987 for molesting 10 children. At that time he suggested there were other
people involved. The US Attorney was criticized for not including children in
the case who had persuasive evidence of molestation, but she did not want to
present the more “bizarre” elements before a jury. She decided that Federal
Jurisdiction in the case ended at the boundaries of the Presidio, which meant
children who claimed they were taken off base could not be used as witnesses,
and the case was dismissed. Gary Hambright later died of AIDS. The parents
alleged a cover-up, and after the investigation 23 children filed a $55 million
claim against the Army.
Lt. Col. Michael Aquino was questioned in this case. [See Aquino vs. Stone]
See “Satanic Priest Questioned in New Sex Case,” San Jose Mercury News, May 13,
1989; “CHILD ABUSE AT THE PRESIDIO, THE PARENTS AGONY, THE ARMY’S COVER-UP, THE
PROSECUTION’S FAILURE, San Jose Mercury News, July 24, 1988. The settlement with
the Army is documented by Presidio parent Sue Dorsey.
September 21, 1988, PEOPLE v. DARYL T. BALL, SR. AND CHARLOTTE THRAILKILL,
SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SONOMA, SCR 14750-C, Pleaded no contest
to lewd and lascivious acts
Overview: This case was described by the prosecutor
as involving multi-victims/perpetrators and ritual abuse although only Daryl
Ball and Charlotte Thrailkill were the only ones charged. In an arrangement
designed to spare the children the ordeal of testifying, Dary T. Ball and
Charlotte Thrailkill pleaded no contest to a total of nine counts involving lewd
and lascivious conduct with six children. Ball was sentenced to 24 years in
prison, Thrailkill was given a 14 year prison term.
Officials who interviewed and examined the children said there was no question
they had been the victims of repeated and severe sexual assaults. The probation
officers who wrote the presentencing evaluations said the children were in
psychological treatment but the damage might be “irreparable.”
The prosecutor described the extreme terror the children experienced and how
difficult it was for them to testify. During the 18 month preliminary hearing,
the children testified that they were threatened to keep quiet or the
perpetrators would eat their mothers hearts and make them eat it too. They
described being given injections (or were bled), and being tied up. Daryl Ball
threatened witnesses to keep them from testifying. The children also described
being molested while being filmed with a banner in the background reading "Super
Duper Child Molest Day." They were forced to watch the video of their own molest
afterwards. A plea bargain was struck, reportedly to spare the kids from having
to testify further.
The Criminal Investigative Division of the Army interviewed some of these same
children in this case in their "Titling" investigation of Michael Aquino of the
Temple of Set. (Case above).
A May 17, 1989 San Jose Mercury news article reports the statements of several
parents:
“Ritual Sex Abuse of children has been under investigation in Mendocino County
since at least 1984, when several children at the Jubilation Day Care Center in
Fort Bragg said they had been sexually abused, tortured and forced to drink
blood and eat feces. Debi Withrow, a Ukiah mother of two children who told
police and Army investigators that Aquino abused them, said parents hope that
their ‘children will have their day in court.’ Another parent, Dee Hartnett of
Santa Rosa, said her daughter also told authorities that Aquino was one of the
people who abused her in Mendocino County in 1986. The daughter testified
against two of her abusers in a case in Santa Rosa that resulted in plea
bargains last year. One of the accused Daryl T. Ball was sentenced to prison for
4 years in connection with the abuse of Hartnett’s daughter and five other
children. The other, Charlotte Thrailkill, was sentenced to 14 years in prison.”
See “Child Sexual Abuse case ends with Prison Terms,” The Press Democrat, Sept.
21, 1988; “Mendocino County Cops, Parents seek Help in Child Abuse Probe,” San
Jose Mercury News, May 17, 1989
**In Sept. 1998, Charlotte Thrailkill was
declared a violent sexual predator -- the first female to have that distinction
in California and she was sent to a State Hospital. See, "Thrailkill a Sexual
Predator, Ex-SR Woman First in State with Designation," Santa Rosa Press
Democrat, Sept. 9, 1998
1984, FORT BRAGG, CALIFORNIA, Barbara and Sharon Orr’s Daycare Closed by
State, License Permanently Revoked.
Overview: Pamela Hudson, L.C.S.W. assessed and treated over 27 children from
a Fort Bragg daycare case called the Jubilation Daycare in Mendocino County
between the years 1983 and 1990. The children stated the daycare operators and
their “friends” abused them. Ms. Hudson described having no prior experience or
training about ritual abuse but came to understand it after many years of
treating these particular victims. Some of the symptoms the children exhibited
were defecating on the floor in certain patterns and lying spread-eagled on the
floor as if in crucification. She described children reporting being locked in a
cage, their parents were threatened, they were buried in the ground in “boxes,”
held under water, threatened with guns and knives, injected with needles, bled
and drugged, photographed during the abuse, tied upside down over a “star,” hung
from poles and hooks, had blood poured on their heads, and witnessed the ritual
sacrifices of babies, after which they were forced to chant “Baby Jesus is
dead.”
Jubilation Daycare, operated by Sharon and Barbara Orr (who presented themselves
as Christians who held “Bible Study” meetings) was closed in 1984 and their
license was permanently revoked after the State Department of Social Services
investigated and found sufficient evidence of “child endangerment.” There were
no medical facilities in that immediate area that could evaluate child sexual
abuse, but of all the children taken out of county to medical facilities, all
were diagnosed with sexual molestation. Because the perpetrators had four months
advanced warning, no other evidence was found, and no criminal charges were
filed.
Children from this case also identified Lt. Col. Aquino as one of their abusers.
From a 1989 Press Democrat news article:
“Local authorities for almost four years have insisted their investigations are
inconclusive about repeated allegations from Debi and Greg Withrow that his two
sons, from a former marriage were victims of ritual molestation during
ceremonies witnessed by a large group of adults…”
“Last week, criminal investigators with the Army reportedly questioned lt. Col
Michael Aquino the satanic priest implicated in the Presidio case, about
allegations he was involved in molestation cases in Mendocino and Sonoma
counties. Besides the Withrow angle, Aquino was questioned about sexual abuse at
the Jubilation Day Care Center in Fort Bragg.”
Lt. Col. Michael Aquino and Lilith Aquino were open satanists and High Priest
and Priestess of their own cult, the Temple of Set, for 20 years while Aquino
served in the Armed forces. They have never been criminally convicted of any
crime.
See book publications: “Treating Survivors of Satanist Abuse,” edited by Valerie
Sinason, pgs. 71- 81, 1994, and “Ritual Child Abuse: Discovery, Diagnosis and
Treatment,” by Pamela S. Hudson L.C.S.W., Jan 1, 1991; “Satanic Chief tied to
Mendocino Sex Abuse,” Press Democrat, May 15, 1989; “Ukiah Pair Keep Molest Case
Alive,” Press Democrat May 16, 1989;
August 28, 1991, STATE OF OREGON v. MARY LOU GALLUP, COURT OF APPEALS OF
OREGON, 816 P2d. 669, 1991 Ore. App. LEXIS 1266, Conviction Remanded //
September 6, 1989, STATE OF OREGON v. EDWARD J. GALLUP, SR., 779 P.2d 169,
Conviction for Sodomy Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state Mary Lou Gallup sought reversal of her
conviction for sexual abuse in the first degree. The Appeals Court found error
in the local courts ruling that material contained in the District Attorney file
was work produced, and exempt from discovery, which resulted in her conviction
being vacated.
Mary Lou Gallup operated a private kindergarten in Roseburg, Oregon, called the
Gallup Christian Daycare center. Her husband, Edward J. Gallup, an ex-minister
of the Nazarene church, operated a separate preschool in that same vicinity.
Their son, Edward (Chip) J. Gallup, operated a preschool in Winston, Oregon.
In 1987 defendant Ed Gallup Sr. was indicted for sexually assaulting a young boy
who was a student as his preschool, and his son, Chip, was ultimately indicted
on six separate charges for sexually assaulting six other preschool students.
Chip Gallup was ultimately found guilty of three charges.
In February, 1988, defendant Ed Gallup Sr. and his wife were indicted on new
charges for sexually assaulting another child. Ed. Gallup Sr. appealed, claiming
that publicity in his case prevented him from having a fair trial. He objected
to a State’s witness’ testimony and the fact that he wasn’t allowed to question
his expert witness on re-direct. He also objected to the State’s psychologist
statement that children who have been sexually abused will very often not report
the incident if they have been threatened by the abuser. The appellate court
affirmed the conviction of Ed Gallup Sr.
According to a documentary about this case the children reported having to
participate in the killing of animals, they were put in cages, the Gallup’s
“dunked” children’s heads in buckets of blood, they threatened the children,
telling them that if they disclosed their abuse their parents would be killed.
The Gallup’s would take toothpicks and make crucifixes or crosses out of them,
and would ask, “Who are we worshipping today?... Jesus.” Then on other occasions
they would turn the crosses upside down and ask, “Who are we worshipping today?”
and the Gallup’s would say “Satan.” A child was worried that she would not go to
heaven because she believed she participated in the killing of another person.
See “Introduction to Children at Risk: Ritual Abuse in America,” 1992, Narrated
by Mike Farrell, for documentation of the ritual abuse aspects of this case.
Ordering information is at: HYPERLINK "http://www.cavalcadeproductions.com/index.html"
http://www.cavalcadeproductions.com/index.html
July 30, 1991, COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA v. JASON L. ENDERS, ET AL., SUPERIOR
COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA, 407 Pa. Superior Ct. 201, Conviction for False
Imprisonment Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Jason Enders and
three co-defendants Scott Francis Liptak, Alexander O. Steinberg and Daniel
Nelson were convicted of false imprisonment stemming from their participation in
a Satanic cult ritual. The victim stated he wanted nothing to do with them but
he was forcibly taken to an abandoned barn and tied to stakes in the ground over
a pentagram drawn in the dirt. He had a leather collar with nails placed around
his neck and a Satanic ritual was performed over him. One of the defendants
punctured the victim’s neck by pressing on the nails, and placed his fingers in
the victim's blood, and then to his lips. A medical expert testified to treating
wounds to the victims neck. The victim was then released after being warned he
would be killed if he told anyone about what had been done to him. Skulls and
books on the occult were taken from the perpetrators homes as evidence.
The court described the crimes as ritualistic acts and stated that admitting
evidence of the belief in and involvement in Satanism at the time was relevant
and probative.
June 11, 1991, NEW YORK, WESTPOINT MILITARY ACADEMY DAYCARE CASE, Monetary
Settlement with Parents, Court File Sealed
Overview: News articles state that in 1984-85 a 3 yr. old child from
Westpoint’s daycare was diagnosed with physical findings of molest - a lacerated
vagina. 50 children who attended West Points Army daycare were then interviewed
by the FBI and several of them alleged sexual abuse. The parents in this case
alleged a cover-up because no criminal charges were filed. The Times Herald
Record reported on June 11, 1991 that the incidents unfolded against a backdrop
of satanic acts, animal sacrifices and cult-like behavior. A parent complained
that the Army was not prepared to treat satanic abuse and the FBI “botched” the
investigation. “The specter of Satanism would later spur U.S. Military Academy
officials to change the West Point child-care center’s building number from 666
to 673.”
San Jose newspaper reporter Linda Goldston, who covered the Presidio case,
described the Westpoint case as one involving ritual abuse. The children said
they had excrement smeared on their bodies and were forced to eat feces and
drink urine. They said they were taken away from the day care center.
At that time, U.S. prosecutor Rudolph Giuliani declined to indict any alleged
perpetrators and was criticized for potential conflict of interest because he
was also defending West Point for the government against civil suits brought by
the parents against the Army.
In 1985, the parents of 11 children filed a $110 million civil suit against the
Army alleging their children were sexually abused. The Army concluded the case
in 1991 by negotiating a monetary settlement with the parents, but no other
facts are known because the court case was sealed. See “West Point case provoked
$100 million Civil Suit,” San Jose Mercury News, August 9, 1987; “A Legacy of
Pain,” The Times Herald Record, June 11,1991“The People v. R. Giuliani,” The
Record, Sept. 27, 1987; “CHILD ABUSE AT THE PRESIDIO, THE PARENTS AGONY, THE
ARMY’S COVER-UP, THE PROSECUTION’S FAILURE, San Jose Mercury News, July 24, 1988
April 29, 1991, STATE OF MONTANA v. LEON LLOYD WHITCHER, SUPREME COURT OF
MONTANA, 810 P.2d 751, Conviction For Sexual Intercourse Without Consent
Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state, Leon Lloyd Whitcher, 30, a
self-described "high priest" of a Satanic cult, had sexual intercourse with a 14
yr. old without her consent. Prior to the assault, he asked her a series of
questions about initiation into his satanic cult, whether she wanted "power,"
and if she'd "obey a high priest." He told the victim about a creature with a
cat head and human body who would protect her.
The Court described “a pentagram, a satanic symbol in the form of a five-sided
star inside of a circle with an eye in the center of the star that was painted
on the floor of a large room in the house.” Whitcher told the victim to change
into a black robe, lie down, and stare at a pentagram painted on the ceiling
before he assaulted her.
April 13, 1991, SANTA ANA, CALIFORNIA, SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY
OF ORANGE, B. , ET. AL V. ROE, ET. AL, Case # 590362: Civil Suit for Child Abuse
Won Against Parent
Overview: News reports state a pair of anonymous sisters, Bonnie, 48, and
Patty, 38, who said their parents worshiped Satan and forced them to perform
incest, ritual abuse and murderous deeds, won a lawsuit against their mother.
The daughters told of human sacrifice and sexual abuse by a network of satanic
cult members across Southern California who scared them into repressed silence
for more than 30 years. They also accused their mother of sexually abusing her
granddaughter, then 11 years old. “This [case] involved brainwashing, mind
control and hypnosis,” the daughters attorney told an Orange County Superior
Court jury. “We’re talking about sick people who enjoy inflicting pain – who get
their jollies from being sadistic.”
No monetary damages were awarded, but the jury found that the two daughters
suffered abuse and found that the mother was negligent. During the trial, Bonnie
told jurors she was 12 when her parents forced her to kill an infant she
conceived after being raped by a cult leader. She said her father cut up and
burned the child. Patty also testified she was forced to kill a homeless man
when she was 12. See “Mother to Trial, Alleging Ritual and Sexual Abuse,” Orange
County Register, March 19, 1991; “Sisters Win Suit on Satanic Abuse,” The San
Diego Tribune, April 13, 1991
March 12, 1991, STATE OF MISSOURI v. THERON REED ROLAND II , COURT OF APPEALS OF MISSOURI, WESTERN DISTRICT, 808 S.W.2d 855, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 371, First Degree Murder Conviction Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Theron Reed Roland was convicted for the murder of his friend Steven Newberry. According to Roland, he murdered him after becoming involved in Satanism, began using drugs, and after listening to groups like "Megadeth" which advocated sexual and physical violence. After an abusive childhood, he began hallucinating, practiced self-mutilation, tortured and killed animals and "chanted" to Satan for power. He developed a mentor relationship with another teen Satanist and they both decided to sacrifice Steve Newberry by clubbing him to death.
Roland believed this human sacrifice would "cause Satan to appear and give
them power." Roland wanted the defense expert on the occult to testify about the
effects of Satanism on the mind. The court let the expert testify to other
aspects of the occult but didn't feel that he was qualified to testify on
psychiatric aspects of the case. The expert, Carl Raschke, testified that
Satanists abhor everything that Judeo-Christian morality deems good, and deems
good everything Judeo-Christian morality abhors. A Catholic priest, and
authority on Satanism, explained the differences between satanic groups for the
jury.
December 17, 1990, PEOPLE v. CLIFF ST. JOSEPH, 226 Cal. App. 3d 289, DISTRICT
COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA, HABEAS PETITION DENIED,
Conviction For First Degree Murder Perpetrated by Torture Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents stated defendant, Cliff St. Joseph, was
convicted of the murder by torture of John Doe No. 60, and the sodomy and false
imprisonment of Ricky Hunter. At trial, the court permitted an accomplice, Mr.
Bork, to testify under a grant of immunity to the charges.
As background, four people were arrested for disturbing the peace. One of the
parties arrested, Mr. Hunter, had been taken to the apartment two days before by
appellant. Ricky Hunter claimed St. Joseph and the others had held him against
his will and assaulted him; there was talk of Satanic worship and the other
three people had been speaking of "sacrificing" him. At the apartment he was
restrained and repeatedly assaulted by appellant, Mr. Bork, and another person
by the name of Mr. Spela. Bork was present in the apartment when the murder
victim arrived. He left the apartment after he heard screaming from the bedroom
and saw appellant slashing the victim’s chest.
A body was later discovered in San Francisco, California on June 15, 1985. "John
Doe" had multiple stab wounds, genital injuries, and a pentagram had been carved
into his chest. The court notes that there was "substantial evidence" that it
was a sadistic, ritualistic human sacrifice consisting of whipping with a chain,
slashing the victim's lips, dripping wax into the victim's eyes, burning and
carving the victim's flesh with a knife, multiple stabbings, tying the limbs
with guitar wire, and genital mutilations. The identity of the victim was never
established. One of the offenders stated he had been present when St. Joseph had
"John Doe" in his home and he helped St. Joseph dispose of the murdered victim
described above. The court found that there was sufficient evidence proving that
the injuries had been inflicted on the victim while he was still alive. The
Coroner testified that some of the wounds inflicted were consistent with
sadomasochistic practices, but the Court made a point of highlighting that the
manner in which the victim was murdered, along with inferred intent, indicated
that this was a ritualistic sacrifice.
July 14, 1990, DETROIT, MICHIGAN, Agustin Pena and Jaime Rodriguez Jr.,
Convicted of First-Degree Murder, Sentenced to Life in Prison
Overview: News reports state that Agustin Pena and his cousin, Jaime Rodriguez
Jr., were convicted of killing Stephanie Dubay in 1991.
Prosecutors described the slaying as ritualistic activity and part of
Rodriguez’s devil worship. Both Pena and Rodriguez lost their appeals in the
State court system in the mid-1990’s. The Medical examiner said Dubay, a 15 year
old runaway, was killed in a ritual crime, based on her tattoos, wounds and the
“meticulous mutilation” of her body.
Dubay was decapitated, her skull skinned and saved in a freezer, and her tongue,
right index finger and spleen were removed, all with surgical precision. Dubay
had been stabbed 10 times in the back and chest and dismembered in the basement
of Pena’s house. Body parts were buried in three plastic bags in a shallow
grave, and a fourth bag was found in the front seat of a car in the garage. Law
enforcement experts stated that each of these acts had a significance in some
satanic belief systems They believe that extraordinary powers can be captured
and controlled through stylized sacrifice, mutilation, or taking specific body
parts. See “Dismemberment Skills Hint at Other Crimes, Police Say, Detroit Free
Press, July 14, 1990; “Beheading Murderer Seeks to Overturn Conviction,” The
Macomb Daily, August 27, 2006
February 22, 1990, STATE OF UTAH v. ALAN B. HADFIELD, SUPREME COURT OF UTAH, 788 P.2d 506, Convictions for Sodomy and Child Molest; Remanded Back to Court for Evidentiary Hearing.
Overview: Appellate documents state Alan Hadfield was convicted of
sodomy and sexual abuse of his children after his children testified against
him. He appealed based on claims of "newly discovered evidence." This was an
allegation by a paralegal who stated that therapist Barbara Snow, who was
involved in counseling Hadfield’s children and others in this Mormon community,
was the common factor in these cases, and inferred that the therapist was
responsible for the allegations.
The appellate opinion cites that at "least fifteen adults and fifteen children
were identified as participants in various unusual sexual activities, including
instances of group abuse of children by adults. The activities described by the
children involved Satanic ritual, costumes and masks, photography equipment, men
dressing in women's clothing, and frequent episodes of playing with and
consuming human excrement. A specific instance of abuse related to Dr. Snow by
W. and described by her at trial for example, involved defendant's removing
feces from W.'s rectum with a spoon and forcing him to play with it." The court
stated that the defendants strategy of undermining the believability of the
children by attacking the practices of the therapist was ultimately unsuccessful
with the jury.
The appellate court remanded the case back to court for an evidentiary hearing
to see if the affidavit by the paralegal had merit.
Note: On 9/2/98 Assistant
Attorney General Robert Parrish stated to this author that the Judge reviewed
the information about claims against the therapist and found that there was no
evidence to support the claims of the paralegal. Alan Hadfield's conviction
still stands and he was released from probation in 1998. See: Video “Promise not
to Tell” which documents the Hadfield case. Ordering information can be found at
HYPERLINK "http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0889650/maindetails"
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0889650/maindetails
November 26, 1989, GIBREVILLE, GABON, Mba Ntem was Found Guilty and Sentenced to
Death for Murder and Leading Cannibalism Rites.
Overview: Several members of a
religious cult were found guilty of aiding in "cannibalism ceremonies by serving
human flesh to worshippers." A victim's mutilated remains were found in another
town, and a photo was published of the high priest with a knife in his teeth and
a jar containing pieces of a victim's tongue in his manacled hands. In the
ceremony led by Mba Ntem, members of the cult ate the victim's stomach, liver,
heart, lungs, tongue and genitals in what their leader called a "sacred plate."
Some of the worshippers were unaware of the contents, Ntem told the court. The
court prohibited other details from being released. The news article states that
"Animism" is a loose religious belief popular in central Africa and other parts
of the word that a spirit or force resides in every animate and inanimate
object. See "Death Sentence for High Priest in Cannibalism Trial," Associated
Press, November 26, 1989.
April 6, 1989, HAROLD GLENN SMITH v. THE STATE OF TEXAS, COURT OF APPEALS OF
TEXAS, 1989 Tex. App. Lexis 794, Conviction for Murder Affirmed.
Overview: Appellant documents state that Harold Smith was one of a
group of young people who planned and carried out the brutal murder of their
friend, Dennis Keith Medler. A group tricked him into accompanying them to a
cemetery where they tortured him. Forensic evidence established that Medler died
from lack of oxygen due to blockage of the airway by foreign objects, his own
teeth and blood. Medler’s torturer repeatedly beat him with their fists and
kicked him, fractured both his upper and lower jaw, caused two teeth to lodge in
his trachea, cut and stabbed him with a knife, burnt his hair, choked him by
using a bandana and pipe tourniquet, and used the same pipe to pierce one of his
eye sockets in an attempt to gouge out the eye. Medler begged his murders to
“knock him out,” once he realized they planned to kill him.
A witness testified that Smith compared the planned murder of his victim with
animal sacrifice rituals he had carried out before and the prosecution presented
evidence of his Satanic belief system. Mr. Smith appealed this issue but the
Court upheld references to Satanism as motive for the crime.
December 30, 1988, STATE OF OHIO v. JOHN L. FRYMAN, COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO, TWELFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT, BUTLER COUNTY, 1988 Ohio App. LEXIS 5296, Conviction for Murder Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state John Fryman took the victim Monica Lemen to his "sorcery room where he had erected an altar for Satanic worship." He then shot her in the head. The next day he cut off the woman's legs above the knees and disposed of them behind an old church. The rest of the body was never found. Fryman claimed that he had killed her because she had insulted him by bringing another magician to his trailer, and that he disposed of her legs behind the church because "it was the place he practiced magic. By throwing her legs there he increased the power of that spot." November 25, 1988, SINGAPORE, Adrian Lim, Tan Mui Choo, and Hoe Kah Hong hanged for murder.
Overview: News reports state three cult members, Adrian Lim, 46, his wife,
Tan Mui Choo, 34, and his girlfriend Hoe Kah Hong, 33, were convicted in 1983 of
murdering Agnes Ng Siew Heok, eight, and Ghazali Marzuki, 10, in 1981. The three
perpetrators belonged to a cult that believed sacrificing children could bring
“good luck.” The three drank the children's blood after suffocating them in a
bathtub.
Another news report states that the "macabre ritualistic killings included
drinking the children's blood, trances, and electric shock 'treatments.'" See
"Three Singaporeans Hanged for Cult Murder of Children," Reuters, November 25,
1988 and "Three hanged in Singapore for ritual killings" UPI, Nov 25, 1988
July 7, 1988, IN THE MATTER OF DANIEL "DD" ET AL., ALLEGED TO BE ABUSED AND NEGLECTED CHILDREN, CHEMUNG COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES; ALICE “DD”, SUPREME COURT, APPELLATE DIVISION, THIRD DEPARTMENT, 530 N.Y.S.2d 314, Finding of Neglect Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state the mother was appealing an order
from Family Court finding she had neglected her children in New York State. She
had allowed visitations to continue between the father and his girlfriend even
though she knew that the girlfriend’s children had been removed from the home
for sexual abuse, but she did not question the situation until the father and
girlfriend were arrested on sexual abuse charges.
Social Services discovered that all children had been forced by threats of
physical abuse to engage in acts of sexual intercourse among themselves and with
adults. In addition, they described participation in forced acts of bestiality,
as well as involvement in Satanic rituals involving the sacrifice of animals and
the drinking of blood. The court cites there was evidence that the mother may
have been involved in these activities as well but that was never proven.
March 30, 1987, HAMILTON, ONTARIO, FAMILY COURT, Children Declared Wards
of the Court
Overview: A legal publication reports that two children, “Janis,” 7 years,
and “Linda,” 5 years old, were voluntarily placed in foster care by their mother
“Sharon Wells” after she had a nervous breakdown. The children began disclosing
information about their abuse in satanic rituals to their foster parent after
which the foster parent recorded the details in an 165 page journal. The
children spoke of being lowered into coffins with rotting corpses, of being
forced to eat flesh from freshly murdered children, and starring in child
pornography. Disbelieving the young girl’s stories, the police declined to
thoroughly investigate their allegations.
The Wardship hearing lasted 17 months, with 150 hearings days, 15,000 pages of
transcripts, 61 witnesses and 142 exhibits, including 45 hours of audio and
videotaped session s of the children in play therapy. After nine days detailing
her traumatic life on the witness stand, the mother collapsed, screaming on the
courtroom floor, and had to be taken away by ambulance.
Family Court Judge Thomas Beckett summed up the horrific elements of the case
in his ruling:
“The Court heard allegations of murder, of cannibalism, of graveyard rituals,
and acts of bestiality. Allegations so horrible, so gruesome, so loathsome, that
no one, including myself, wanted to believe any of it. In fact, I wanted very
much to believe that none of the allegations made by the two little girls could
be true.”… “The descriptions of midnight graveyard scenes with dancing and
singing, people with masks, opening of graves and coffins, together with gross
sexual acts, suggest cult activities …“And why did the children speak of the
number “666” – the symbol used in the Book of Revelations?”… “To say they ‘lied’
or that it was fantasy falls far short of explaining how such things could have
been in their minds”… “The children gave graphic descriptions of the murder of
children as well as adults, of dismemberment, of cutting flesh from bones.”
Judge Beckett ordered police protection for the mother after she alleged her former husband threatened to kill her, the judges, and lawyers in the case.
On March 30th 1987, Judge Becket ruled that the two girls were sexually abused and forced to eat feces by their parents and the mother’s former boyfriend. He made the girls Crown Wards and also ordered the third child, born to the mother during the hearing, be made a ward of the court as well.
News articles report that in 2006 the mother, Sharon Wells, publicly asked
her now two grown daughters to donate a kidney to her, in order to “save her
life.” See “The Cannibal Case,” Canadian Lawyer, March 7, 1989; “Questions of
Satanism: Tales of ritual Abuse are Common,” MacLean’s, April 21, 1997; ”Sick
Mom, Much Sicker Story- Daughters asked to Donate Kidney to Ailing Mother they
Accused of Horrific Sexual Abuse,” The Toronto Sun, January 29, 2006
August 15, 1986, STATE OF MAINE v. SCOTT WATERHOUSE, SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT
OF MAINE, 513 A.2d 862, 1986 Me. LEXIS 862, Murder Conviction Affirmed
Overview: Appellate documents state Scott Waterhouse was convicted for
the murder of a 12 yr. old girl. The presence of semen on the victim’s clothing
indicated that the perpetrator masturbated over the victim’s body.
Defendant
claimed that the trial court erred in admitting evidence of his belief in
Satanism. The Appeals Court disagreed. The State admitted a taped conversation
between defendant and police officer in which defendant described at length both
Satanism and the extent of his involvement with that belief. In addition, the
State introduced into evidence portions of the “Satanic Bible.” The defendant
described sex and destruction rituals as part of the system of satanic beliefs.
He stated that Satanism represented the darker side of humanity and urges
indulgence of man’s carnal needs rather than abstinence. He characterized the
“seven cardinal sins” of the Christian faith as representing abstinence.
The portions of the Satanic Bible that were introduced as evidence were:
*Satan represents indulgence, instead of abstinence!
*Satan represented all of the so-called sins as they all lead to physical,
mental, or emotional gratification!
*Are we not all predatory animals by instinct? If humans ceased wholly from
preying upon each other, could they continue to exist?
*Death to the weakling, wealth to the strong!
*Blessed are the powerful, for they shall be reverenced among men -- cursed are
the feeble, for they shall be blotted out.
The court stated: “Defendant could view commission of the heinous crime involved
in this case as a means of achieving ‘physical, mental or emotional
gratification,’ similarly he could believe that a demonstration of strength by
domination of a weaker person would bring ‘reverence among men.’ At the expense
of who, ‘being weak, deserved his fate.”
Both evidence of Satanic beliefs was considered probative of motive and the
identity of the perpetrator.
[Two companion cases are described below]
March 12, 1986, COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSSETT v. CARL H. DREW, SUPREME
JUDICIAL COURT OF MASSACHUSETTS, 489 N.E.2d 1233, Murder Conviction Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state Carl Drew was convicted of the
first degree murder of one of his Satanic cult members in Fall River. The
victim, Karen Marsden, was identified by a portion of the skull, clumps of hair,
clothing, and jewelry. Evidence was admitted describing Marsden and another
prostitute Doreen Levesque who were killed.
According to witness testimony... "The killing was performed as a diabolic
ritual during which the soul of Marsden was purportedly given to Satan."
Earlier, Marsden had tried to sever relationship with the cult. Drew threatened
to kill her on several occasions, which he finally did. "Murphy dragged Marsden
by the throat and hair into the woods. As she did this, the defendant walked
alongside while Fletcher and Davis followed close behind. Murphy and the
defendant then began striking Marsden with rocks. After further brutalizing
Marsden, the defendant ordered Murphy to slit Marsden's throat and Murphy
complied. The defendant then tore the head from the body and kicked it."
Carl Drew later told another person that he had killed Marsden because "she
wanted to leave the cult and that he wanted her to feel pain." Several witnesses
testified to the defendant’s cult practices and he was asked to remove his
jacked to exhibit a tattoo on his arm of a devil’s head with the partially
obliterated inscription “Satan’s Avengers.” The Court described the defendant
chanting in a low, scratchy voice during rituals, purported to conjure Satan’s
presence.
The court specifically stated Drew's involvement in Satanism and the victim's
desire to leave the cult was evidentially important to detail the context of the
crime to the jury, as opposed to viewing the murders as just random acts of
violence.
------------
May 28, 1982, WILLIAM SMITH v. COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT OF MASSACHUSETTS, 436 N.E.2d 377, Immunity for Witness was Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state William Smith contested immunity for witness, Robin Murphy, who was to testify against him for the murder of Doreen Levesque. The appellate opinion states "These murders were among a series of ritual killings performed in the Fall River area by members of a Satanic cult.” The witness described the ritual that accompanied the murder, and named various participants. The witness also recanted several times before finally testifying but finally admitted that she had been involved in the murder. She described the practices of the Satanic cult and indicated that both victims, Karen Marsden and Doreen Levesque, had been connected with the cult, either as devotees of the faith, or as associates in a prostitution enterprise.
February 19, 1986, COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA v. FRANK G. COSTAL, JR., SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA, 505 A.2d 337, Murder Conviction Affirmed.
Overview: Appellate documents state expert testimony regarding Satanism and mind control was admitted into the court record to explain the killings of a mother and her 4 yr. old daughter by Frank Costal. The killings appeared to be in retaliation for the mother's interference in a drug deal and homosexual relationship between her husband and Costal. The state submitted evidence that the murders were performed in a "ritualistic manner." The victims were stabbed in a similar fashion, in the same pattern. Ceremonial robes, books, posters, plastic skulls and bats, and marriage licenses drawn up by Costal and signed by him as a "high priest" of Satan were seized from his apartment. A witness testified that Costal told him of attendance at human sacrifices and that 17 was the number of stab wounds required at these ritualistic killings. December 3, 1983, DETROIT, MICHIGAN, Arzell Jones was convicted of first-degree criminal sexual conduct, single counts of kidnapping and using a firearm during a felony. Linda Greene was convicted of two counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct. Overview: News reports state Arzell Jones, a private investigator, and Linda Greene, a Detroit policewoman, were convicted of sexually assaulting a 31-year-old woman who was held for more than three days and forced to take part in Satanic rituals. The prosecutor stated the woman was a victim of some "cultism and some ultimate psychological warfare." See: "Judge Says Victim was Subjected to 'Reign of Terror' Man, Policewoman Guilty of Sexual Assault in Satanic Rituals," Detroit Free Press, December 3, 1983.