-Caveat Lector-

http://www.holysmoke.org/wicca/san-diego.htm

"The Wallis case was the product of a Satanic scare that swept through
San Diego and many other communities a decade ago..."

======

Escondido case arose from story of Satanic threat

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THE SAN DIEGO UNION - TRIBUNE
Bill and Becky Wallis' perseverance pays off.

The sister -- from whom the Wallises were estranged following her
unsubstantiated claim against Bill Wallis of abuse in 1990 -- reported
through one of her multiple personalities that a terrible thing was
about to happen: Bill Wallis would sacrifice his young son during the
"Fall Equinox ritual," and the killing would be masked by a car accident
in which the boy's body would be incinerated. The sister based this on
her recently recovered "memory" from 20 years earlier of her father,
Dave Stecks, wearing a cult robe and chanting hypnotically, "On the
first full moon after two blue moons a child will be killed."

The threat here was considered so dire that San Diego County established
a Ritual Abuse Task Force.



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THE SAN DIEGO UNION - TRIBUNE
November 2, 2000


Parents of two seized kids to get $750,000.
Escondido case arose from story of Satanic threat.

Mark Sauer
Staff Writer


ESCONDIDO -- Police officers came in the middle of the night to take the
two young children away. The boy's third birthday coincided with the
impending fall equinox, and officials believed his family planned to
kill him that day as a sacrifice to Satan.

Now, nine years after their son and 5-year-old daughter were taken from
their beds, Bill and Becky Wallis will collect $750,000 from the city of
Escondido.

Perhaps fittingly, news of the federal court judgment arrived on
Halloween.

The money comes as a result of a lawsuit the family filed in 1992
against Escondido police, county social workers and a physician for
violating their constitutional rights to be free from "unreasonable
intrusions on their privacy, person and home."

Twice, a U.S. District Court judge ruled against the Wallises and
dismissed their lawsuit, and twice they appealed to a higher court and
had it reinstated.

Bill and Becky Wallis are elated that their perseverance paid off.

"We are so happy that Escondido finally admitted they were wrong. That
was the main thing for us, it wasn't about money," Becky Wallis said
yesterday. "Hopefully, what we went through in this case will keep it
from happening to someone else.

"The whole thing was so bizarre and such a shock to our family. It's
still unbelievable to us that anyone could have put stock in such a
story."

The Wallis case was the product of a Satanic scare that swept through
San Diego and many other communities a decade ago.

It was a time when certain psychotherapists, social workers, police
officers and prosecutors became convinced that secret cults were
subjecting children to all sorts of evil rituals, even murder.

The threat here was considered so dire that San Diego County established
a Ritual Abuse Task Force. But finding evidence was another matter, and
the task force disbanded without fanfare.

Court documents show that the Wallises' ordeal began during a September
1991 session in a psychiatric hospital between Becky Wallis' sister, a
schizophrenic with a history of severe mental illness, and Candace
Young, a psychotherapist who served on the Ritual Abuse Task Force.

The sister -- from whom the Wallises were estranged following her
unsubstantiated claim against Bill Wallis of abuse in 1990 -- reported
through one of her multiple personalities that a terrible thing was
about to happen: Bill Wallis would sacrifice his young son during the
"Fall Equinox ritual," and the killing would be masked by a car accident
in which the boy's body would be incinerated.

The sister based this on her recently recovered "memory" from 20 years
earlier of her father, Dave Stecks, wearing a cult robe and chanting
hypnotically, "On the first full moon after two blue moons a child will
be killed."

Young, a marriage and family counselor, reported this to Child
Protective Services.

Sue Plante, a CPS social worker involved with other alleged
'Satanic-abuse' cases, launched an investigation. Escondido police were
notified, along with a deputy district attorney, Jane Via.

According to court documents, Plante was told by Via that "we have
enough to pick up the kids." But social workers never formally
petitioned a judge, and no court order was ever issued to take the
children into protective custody.

Escondido Police Officers Diana Pitcher and Ralph Claytor, and their
supervisor Ken Burkett, however, testified about getting a call from CPS
saying a court had ordered the Wallis children to be picked up.

But even without the order, the officers testified, they believed the
children were in danger from Satanists and they acted reasonably.

Their investigation, they said, had turned up a curious fact about the
kids' grandfather: Dave Stecks, the alleged Satanic priest, lived on a
boat in Oceanside Harbor named the "Witch Way." Never mind that the
vessel was named that when Stecks bought it.

Foster families

The Wallis children were taken to Hillcrest Receiving Home, then
shuttled between foster families for the next 2 1/2 months.

A Juvenile Court judge discounted the Satanic-abuse allegations, but
kept the children from their parents because Dr. Mary Spencer reported
that the daughter showed signs of sexual abuse in an extensive physical
examination.

But that finding was reversed two months later when Dr. Susan Horowitz,
a child-abuse specialist at Children's Hospital, reported that her
examination of Spencer's records and photos of the Wallis girl revealed
no abuse.

"No one now contends that either child was ever sexually or physically
abused," a federal appellate judge wrote last fall.

After 68 days, during which Becky Wallis lost her job and about 20
pounds, and the children cried constantly for their parents, according
to court records, the brother and sister were sent home.

The Wallises sued.

In 1997, they settled for "a nominal amount" with the county of San
Diego. Spencer was dropped as a defendant after a ruling that she was
immune from the suit by law.

Now the Wallises have a stipulated judgment against the city of
Escondido. The case is not quite over, however.

A lawsuit remains against the individual police officers, including
Pitcher, who is still on the force, and Claytor and Burkett, both
retired. A motion by the city to dismiss the suit is to be ruled on
soon.

Actions defended

"I remain convinced that the actions our Police Department took were
consistent with custom and practice at that time," Mark Waggoner,
assistant city attorney for Escondido, said yesterday.

"What they had was a therapist telling them there was a legitimate
threat to the kids' safety, a CPS worker saying there was a court order
and a DA agreeing the threat needed to be taken seriously. Looking at
all that, I can see an officer saying, `I may be skeptical about this
Satanic stuff, but what if I don't take those kids and then something
happens?' "

In reinstating the lawsuit last year, the appellate court judge found
that the city had not conducted "any significant investigation" of what
were extraordinary allegations before seizing the children.

Donnie Cox, an attorney representing the Wallises, said the lawsuit
changed the law in that parents now must grant permission before
"doctors are allowed to do invasive examinations of their children."

Becky Wallis said the judgment sends a message to social workers,
prosecutors, police officers and others with power over the lives of
parents and children.

"I think such people are a lot more cautious when making such critical
decisions then they were back then. At least we hope so," she said.

"We were pretty trusting people once. We thought that bad things don't
happen to good people. But our kids learned at age 3 and 5 that life
sometimes is horribly unfair. We have all been through a terrible
experience and our lives will never be what they once were because of
all this."

++++++

M. F. Abernathy -- [[EMAIL PROTECTED]] -- 08/13/02

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