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From: "Alex Constantine" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Lloyd" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: "Lynn" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Ritual Abuse Cover-Up in San Diego
Date: Sunday, October 01, 2000 3:30 PM


PROBLEMS FOR VICTIMS OF RITUAL ABUSE IN SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA

Opinion Piece Submitted to the San Diego Union-Tribune,
by Ellen Lacter, Ph.D. on 9-29-2000

Mark Sauer's 9-24-00 article, "A Web of Intrigue", in the
San Diego Union-Tribune is his most recent in a series of
articles misrepresenting the facts on the subject of child
ritual abuse and attacking advocates for ritual abuse victims.
His articles have, over the past 10 years, contributed to
convincing a good portion of the San Diego community that
ritual abuse does not exist. This has had a devastating
impact on victimized children and adults, resulting in their
not being believed and reduced protection by law enforcement
and the courts.

Sauer's factual misrepresentations of 9-24-00 are as follows:

1. Sauer claims the debate over satanic ritual abuse ended
in the mid-1990's when it was "discredited by mental-health
experts and the courts". The truth is that psychological and
legal evidence of the existence of satanic ritual abuse is
substantial and that the debate is alive and well.

A review of the empirical evidence of ritual abuse can be found
in a book by James Randolph Noblitt and Pamela Sue Perskin
(Cult and Ritual Abuse, 2000, Chapter 6). One national survey
of 2709 clinical psychologists showed that 30% claimed to have
seen at least one case of "ritualistic or religion-based
abuse" and 93% of these psychologists believed the harm actually
occurred (Reference: Goodman, Qin, Bottoms, and Shaver, 1994,
"Characteristics and Sources of Allegations of Ritualistic
Child Abuse: Final Report to the National Center on Child
Abuse and Neglect").

The American Psychiatric Press published a text in 1997
explaining the importance of correct assessment and treatment
of ritualistic abuse survivors (The Dilemma of Ritual Abuse:
Cautions and Guides for Therapists, edited by G.A. Fraser).

Numerous court decisions (criminal, family, juvenile, and
civil) have been based on findings of ritual abuse. For
example, on February 27, 1999, the Honorable Warren K. Urbom,
Senior United States District Judge, Omaha, Nebraska, awarded
a million dollar civil judgement to Paul Bonacci against
Larry King (not the well-known talk-show host, Larry King),
based on King's sexual abuse (including pornography and
orgies) and false imprisonment, of Bonacci as a child, in
the infamous Franklin satanic cult/sex/drug ring case. Further
information on this case can be found in the book, "The
Franklin Cover-Up", by John De Camp, and on the Internet at:
http://www.stansolomon.com/gundrsn02.htm

The court finding list is archived, periodically updated,
and published on the world-wide web by "Karen Curio Jones".
Under this pseudonym, "Jones" has devoted herself to raising
public awareness of child ritual abuse on the Internet for
the past five years. Sauer claims to expose "Jones'" identity
in his 9-24-00 article.

Sauer globally denies the existence of satanic ritual abuse
while our recent history is marred with undeniable cases of
mass suicide/homicide by other kinds of cults and underground
groups. This past summer, almost 1000 people were found
murdered by an underground cult in Uganda, "Movement for the
Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God". Last year, in
Rancho Sante Fe, 39 people suicided from the cult, "Heaven's
Gate". In Jonestown, 22 years ago, more than 900 people
mass-suicided and were murdered of "The People's Temple".
Devastating world events originate in underground groups,
such as the Third Reich and Ku Klux Klan. High school students
are taught to remember the Nazi death camps lest such atrocities
repeat themselves. Given these examples, why does Sauer turn
a blind eye to the evidence of satanic cult abuse?

2. Sauer cites the McMartin Pre-school acquittals as evidence
that ritual abuse does not exist. He omits any mention of the
post-trial geological survey under the school's foundation that
yielded convincing corroboration of  the children's reports
of being taken through underground tunnels (See "The Dark
Tunnels of McMartin", by  Summit, R.C., 1994, The Journal of
Psychohistory, 21(4), 397-416.)

3. Sauer cites the "10-year investigation" by Special FBI
Agent Ken Lanning that concluded that satanic ritual abuse
does not exist. Sauer fails to mention that Lanning is a very
controversial figure. Noblitt and Perskin (2000, see above)
state: "In reality, there is no such study... my office
contacted the FBI and requested a copy of the alleged study.
The bureau responded in writing indicating that no such study
existed." (See page 179 of their book).

4. Sauer refers to the 1991-1992 San Diego County Grand Jury
"that blasted the child protection system after investigating
wide-ranging allegations of zealous social workers removing
children from their homes without cause". Sauer has widely
publicized the findings of that Grand Jury over the years.
Sauer fails to mention the 1992-1993 San Diego County Grand
Jury Report that strongly criticized the 1991-1992 report as
not being "in the best interest of threatened children", as
misrepresenting facts, and as having caused a dramatic decline
in the number of children removed from abusive and neglectful
homes in San Diego County, while these numbers climbed in
other California counties. The latter report also cites
preliminary evidence of an increase in infants' and  children's
deaths caused by abuse and neglect in San Diego County
following the former Grand Jury report, although the numbers
were too small for statistical analysis. Sauer has failed to
draw media attention to the second Grand Jury report over
the years. Such is an unconscionable omission.

5. Sauer sympathetically portrays Carol Hopkins, one of the
leaders of the 1991-1992 Grand Jury. Sauer fails to mention
that Hopkins was a member and central figure of that Grand
Jury, denounced by the 1992-1993 Grand Jury for increasing
the risk to children and misrepresenting the facts on child abuse.

Carol Hopkins created what she called "the Justice Committee".
Under these vague auspices, Hopkins interjected herself
into the Wenatchee, Washington sex ring case to organize
multiple protests on behalf of parents convicted of sex
crimes against their own and other children, including an
apple boycott of Washington in 1995 and a candlelight vigil
in Salem, Massachusetts in 1997.

After the apple boycott, Hopkins obtained guardianship in
her San Diego home of "Sam" Doggett, teen-age daughter of
Mark and Carol Doggett, both convicted at trial in the
Wenatchee case. Moving a child from Washington to the San
Diego home of someone attempting to overturn the parents'
convictions is a dangerous conflict of interest. Sauer
documented in a San Diego Union-Tribune article on 6-18-96
that once "Sam" Doggett resided with Hopkins, 17-year-old
Doggett joined Hopkins, Akiki and others in multiple media
events, claiming her parents were innocent and touting the
positions of Hopkins' "Justice Committee". The convictions
of Mark and Carol Doggett were later successfully overturned.

6. Sauer also glorifies Elizabeth Loftus as "an internationally
known expert on the workings of memory". Sauer writes that
Loftus "has testified for the defense in many trials
(including the Akiki case), explaining how memories - especially
those of young children - can be manipulated, even by
well-meaning people". Sauer neglects to explain that Loftus
and the "False Memory Syndrome Foundation", with which she
has been affiliated, have come under serious attack from
numerous psychologists and organizations. A formal complaint
was lodged with the American Psychological Association (APA)
in December, 1995, against Loftus alleging that she  deliberately
misrepresented facts in her published statements about two
legal cases involving delayed memories, a serious breach of
professional ethics. Loftus resigned from the APA a month later,
claiming her resignation was  unrelated to the complaint.

7. Sauer writes that "Loftus said she recently was invited
to deliver the keynote address at a convention of the
New Zealand Psychology Society and arrived to find herself
the center of controversy. Accusations that she conspires
to protect child molesters, many fueled by Curio's ["Jones'"]
Internet postings, led to a story in the Wellington Evening
Post and stoked the talk-show fires." Sauer is attempting
to paint "Jones", a small player, as the source of high-profile
Loftus' long-term high-profile problems. Essentially all
specialists in child abuse and memory research are aware
of the controversy surrounding Elizabeth Loftus.

8. Sauer portrays Michael Aquino as an innocent victim of
"Karen Curio Jones". Michael Aquino founded the "Temple of Set",
which Sauer characterizes as "a quasi-religious institution
that many consider satanic". This clearly evades the truth.
In the Winter of 1989-1990, the California Office of
Criminal Justice Planning, under Governor Pete Wilson,
published a Research Update (Volume 1, Number 6) which states:
"Founded in 1975 by a dissident member of the Church of Satan,
Michael Aquino, the Temple of Set is the second largest of all
contemporary organized Satanic churches. The Temple of Set
is a religious society dedicated to Set, the ancient Egyptian
god believed by some to be the model for the Christian Satan.
Aquino's many writings, especially The Book of Coming Forth
by Night, develops a sophisticated form of Satanism far beyond
that of LaVey's Church.

Among its teachings is the belief that Judeo-Christian religions
have established Satan as a "straw man" to justify their
guilt for man's ejection from the Garden of Eden. Not much
more is known about Setians as the society is secret and most
of its writings are not available to the public at large" (p. 17).

Sauer writes, "In the late 1980s, Aquino was investigated in a
McMartin/Akiki-type case centering on  allegations of satanic
abuse at a day-care center at San Francisco's Presidio military
base" and "Aquino, who was a lieutenant colonel, was questioned
because of his satanic beliefs". To dismiss the Presidio case
as unfounded,  Sauer places it in the same category of the two
other cases he already discredited. He then expresses sympathy
for Aquino because his satanic beliefs may have raised the
suspicions of the investigators. Sauer ignores that satanic
practices have been found to be an element in many cases of
convicted child abuse.

Sauer omits important evidence of Aquino's involvement in the
Presidio case. The United States Army Criminal Investigation
Command (CID) stated that Michael Aquino was the subject of
an investigation for sexual child abuse and related crimes in
the Presidio case (www.illusions.com/opf/aquino02.htm). Aquino
brought an  action against Secretary Michael Stone of the Army
to remove his name from the title block of that investigation.
The 1991 Appellate decision of the United States District Court
allowed the title block to stand, finding that: "The facts in
the administrative record support the conclusion that the CID
decision not to remove plaintiff's [Aquino's] name from the
title block was not arbitrary or capricious. There was sufficient
evidence from which the Army decision maker could determine
that probable cause existed to believe that the plaintiff
committed the offenses". (reference: Aquino vs. Stone 768 F.Supp. 529).

Sauer includes a quote by Aquino portraying him as a concerned
husband/father threatened by the Internet postings of "Karen
Curio Jones"; "My basic interest was to identify an anonymous
person who, because of his/her obsessions and delusions, might
pose a threat to the safety of myself and my family."

What is the likelihood that Aquino, a man who has publicly
exposed himself as a Satanist, considers "Jones" a threat to
his safety and family vs. Aquino being motivated to silence
"Jones" through a law suit? Sauer omits reference to Aquino's
highly publicized law suit against an Internet service provider
(www5.electriciti.com/curious/) that threatens first amendment
freedom of speech. Why does Sauer align himself with this
well-known satanist?

9. Sauer paints "Jones" as a dangerous "cyberstalker", yet
quotes Detective Susan McCrary about "Jones": "She hasn't
made any physical threats. Everything's been done in a
public forum" (San Diego State Police Department (SDSU).
Sauer paints Loftus, Hopkins, Aquino, and others as "Jones'"
innocent victims. Yet, one need not dig very deeply into
Sauer's article to discover otherwise.

Michelle Devereaux is a woman who Sauer claims believed she
was abused by a satanic cult for eight or nine years, until
1999. Sauer's article extols Devereaux's high-tech "cybersleuth"
efforts to track down "Jones". This included Devereaux
rigging her computer to monitor the Internet to page her
every time "Jones" posted, tracking "Jones" from San Francisco
to San Diego, and the use of a lap-top computer with a hidden
camera, a  telephoto lens, and long-range monocular, to catch
"Jones" posting at SDSU. Sauer is also non-critical of
Devereaux's plan to "spook" "Jones" to get her to run to her
car from the library to photograph her license plate.

Why does Sauer laud these stalking-like tactics of Devereaux?
Devereaux is not law enforcement. Why does he side-step
Devereaux's encroachment of "Jones'" constitutional rights
to privacy and free speech? Sauer has availed himself for
10 years of these first amendment rights in his effort to
discredit abused children and adult survivors.

10. Sauer writes that Jones ignored his requests to interview
her for his article and that "whatever motivates her remains
pretty much a secret".

It is no surprise that "Jones" refused an interview with
Sauer. I would too. Anyone with knowledge of Sauer's slanted
reporting on child abuse issues will refuse an interview with
him. His articles have always aimed to discredit advocates
of ritual abuse victims rather than to represent both sides
of the story.

11. Sauer refers to quotes by Aquino and Hopkins in an effort
to portray "Jones" as deluded. Sauer writes that Aquino said;
"Now that this person has been identified, that 'faceless'
threat no longer exists. She is now just another woman with
'satanic ritual-abuse' sexual fantasies." Sauer writes that
Hopkins likens "Jones" to "the mythical Japanese soldier
stumbling out of the jungle still fighting World War II."
Sauer's representation of "Jones" in this manner and reliance
on these suspect sources for his psychological opinions of
"Jones" raises important questions about his motives.

Under the guise of objective reporting, Sauer has used his
9-24-00 article to launch a personal assault on "Karen Curio Jones"
and her advocacy for victims of ritual abuse. He writes;
"Who is Curio and why is she saying such nasty things about
us [emphasis added] on the Internet?" "Us" represents Sauer,
Hopkins, Loftus, and Aquino. An 8-20-98 San Diego Reader
article, "The Memory Wars" describes a social relationship
between  Sauer, Hopkins, and Loftus. Should Sauer publish an
ostensibly objective newspaper article when he feels personally
attacked by one of the players and is on a friendly basis with
her opponents? He abuses his power as a reporter in doing so.

Why hasn't there been a community uproar about Sauer's long-term
misrepresentations of the facts?

It is my opinion that the media campaign of Sauer and Jim Okerblom,
a previous Union-Tribune writer who also wrote a number of
articles discrediting victims of ritual abuse, and the related
media campaign of the "False Memory Syndrome Foundation",
have succeeded in intimidating and silencing most local medical
and mental health providers treating ritual abuse victims, public
agencies designated to protect children, protective parents of
child victims, and adult survivors. I base this opinion on my
long-term affiliation with professionals working with abused
children, including law enforcement, mental health practitioners,
child protection workers, and attorneys. These professionals
have anticipated media attacks from Sauer and Okerblom and
lawsuits by the "False Memory Syndrome Foundation" whenever
they speak on the existence of ritual abuse or pursue legal
remedies on behalf of its victims.

This letter is likely to result in Sauer publishing an attack
on my professionalism in the San Diego Union-Tribune,
threatening my credibility, safety, license to practice, and
livelihood. Civil suits of libel against me by Mark Sauer or
the "False Memory Syndrome Foundation" are also very likely.
Most practitioners do not want to expose themselves to these
risks. Practitioners who have come under attack have stopped
treating ritual abuse victims, changed fields, or retired early.
As a consequence, victims of ritual abuse have great difficulty
finding therapists to help them.

It is my opinion that the local media campaign of the past
10 years, driven largely by Sauer and Okerblom, has contributed
to turning much public opinion against the plight of abused
children in San Diego. Also affected are professionals who
have relied on Sauer and Okerblom as a reliable source of
objective information without researching the literature in
their fields. I also believe there has been reduced reporting
of child ritual abuse to law enforcement and child protection
by health and mental health professionals due to fear of law
suits and complaints to licensing boards. This has had a
devastating impact, including reduced protection of abused
children by law enforcement, social services, and the courts.

Adult victims and protective parents of ritually abused
children tend not to view law enforcement as a resource based
on a fear of not being taken seriously or being seen as
delusional, and feeling vulnerable to retaliation by abusers
without protection by the police or courts. Family law
attorneys counsel parents to not even raise allegations of
ritual abuse in Family Court based on the expectation of an
incredulous or hostile response by the court. District
attorneys attempt to omit evidence of ritual abuse in child
abuse cases for fear that the issue will destroy their case.

Although victims of ritual abuse are the hardest hit,
victims of non-ritualistic child abuse have also been
discredited in San Diego by Sauer's media campaign and by
the campaign of the "False Memory Syndrome Foundation"
nationally. At the same time, "Believe the Children", an
organization that advocated for abused children, was sued
into nonexistence. What should we tell our children to do
if they are abused? Who will believe them?

Why am I willing to take this public position? A number of
victims of ritual abuse have come through my office door.
I have been touched by their trauma more deeply than
anything I have ever encountered. Therapists maintain
objectivity in making treatment decisions. But therapists
also genuinely care about the suffering of their clients
and of people in general. My commitment is fueled by their
suffering. I can not and will not turn my back on these
victims.

Ellen P. Lacter, Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist, California


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