I know, I know � the name is Simpson, not Spencer, as I wrote in the
previous subject lines. Please correct if you forward the last two messages.
                                                                 � Alex

Criminal Charges Filed in Recovered Memory Case
Psychiatrists Liable for Millions in Civil Suits

by Michael Jonathan Grinfeld

December 1997 
----------------
The stakes in the debate over recovered memories therapy ratcheted upward in
October with the indictment of five health care professionals, including two
psychiatrists, in Houston. Charged in a 60-count indictment-believed to be
the first of its kind in the United States-the former staff members of the
now defunct dissociative disorders unit at the Spring Shadows Glen
Psychiatric Hospital are accused of perpetrating a "scheme to defraud by
allegedly falsely diagnosing patients with multiple personality disorder
caused by their alleged participation in a secret satanic cult"; this
according to Larry Eastepp, an assistant United States attorney for the
southern district of Texas.

In a press release outlining the conspiracy and mail fraud charges, the
government is claiming that the defendants "brainwashed" patients, including
children, into "relating false experiences and memories about the cult, and
that false medical records were created to substantiate the false diagnoses
and treatment." The alleged conspiracy resulted in millions of dollars in
insurance payments, Eastepp asserted. The charges stem from an investigation
by the FBI and the Pension Welfare Benefits Administration of the Department
of Labor. 

Charged in the case were Judith A. Peterson, Ph.D., a licensed psychologist
and former clinical director of the unit; Richard E. Seward, M.D., a
psychiatrist and the clinic's medical director; George "Jerry" Mueck, the
former hospital administrator; Gloria Keraga, M.D., a psychiatrist
responsible for admissions to the unit; and Sylvia Davis, M.S.W., a licensed
psychotherapist specializing in a form of therapy called psychodrama.
Memorial Healthcare System, which now owns what was once Spring Shadows Glen
Psychiatric Hospital, is not connected to the allegations in the indictment.

Each of the 60 counts in the indictment carries a maximum penalty of five
years in prison and a $250,000 fine, and, if convicted, the defendants would
face sentences under federal guidelines that include no parole provisions.
The severity of the charges reverberated through the mental health
community, with some practitioners claiming the federal government has now
criminalized psychotherapy.

The allegations in the indictment center around the course of treatment
proffered to patients who recovered memories of satanic ritual abuse. The
indictment claimed that patients were diagnosed with multiple personality
disorder and treated for the illness based on "unsubstantiated and
unrealistic allegations and abuses, including satanic ritual abuse and cult
activity." It then goes on to allege that the defendants conspired to create
fraudulent medical records in order to obtain insurance payment.

Critics of repressed memories theories, who have coined the counter-malady
of "false memory syndrome," consistently argue that mental health
practitioners induce memories of abuse through inappropriate treatment
regimens. The indictment lends some credence to these claims by accusing the
defendants of fraudulently eliciting "statements of satanic ritual abuse and
cult activities from the admitted patients, through nontraditional treatment
modalities, including the use of leading or suggestive questions during
therapy sessions while the patients were: under hypnosis; under the
influence of a drug or combination of drugs; isolated from their families,
friends and the outside world; denied certain privileges and freedoms,
including uninterrupted sleep; held down by excessive or medically
unnecessary physical restraints; or, otherwise by the use of techniques
commonly associated with mind control and 'brainwashing,' in order to
conduct their fraudulent insurance payment enterprises."

The prosecution will now have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
treatment methods used by therapists engaged in recovered memories therapy
have no merit-a difficult task considering that the issue has polarized the
medical community for years.

The nonprofit International Society for the Study of Dissociation (ISSD), a
Glenview, Ill.-based organization that represents approximately 1,000
psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health practitioners,
criticized the government for criminalizing what to them is a civil issue
regarding standards of care. Claiming the indictment will have a "chilling
effect on psychotherapy," the organization also said that by prosecuting the
case, "the federal government is indicating their willingness to set
standards for diagnosis and treatment."

The criminal indictments come at a time when psychiatrists and other mental
health practitioners have received a drubbing in civil courts by individuals
suing after retracting memories recovered during therapy. In October, a jury
in a Houston federal district court awarded Lynn Carl, a 46-year-old mother
of two, $5.8 million after she underwent years of treatment based on
recovered memories of satanic ritual abuse. The verdict against Keraga, one
of the defendants in the criminal case, was handed down after the other
defendants either settled or were dropped >from the case. According to Skip
Simpson, Carl's Dallas-based attorney, Keraga agreed to a settlement after
the verdict for an undisclosed sum.

During the course of the trial, Carl testified that the psychotherapy she
received dredged up memories of perverse forms of abuse including
cannibalism, murder and rape. Her two children were also hospitalized for a
year, according to Simpson, who told Psychiatric Times that their own
lawsuits are scheduled for trial next February.

By the time Carl's ordeal-including two years of hospitalization-was over,
she ended up divorced from her husband and on the verge of suicide. Carl
recounted the fateful moment when she slit her wrists, only then realizing
she had been misled. "All of a sudden it hit me upside the head; I couldn't
do this to my kids and I wouldn't let those therapists win," Carl said in an
Aug. 9 Houston Chronicle article. She is now remarried to her former
husband. 

The fantastic nature of the allegations is what generates the high exposure
in these cases, Simpson said. Ultimately, like every other malpractice case,
the primary issue is the standard of care, he added. But when tales of
torture, murder, rape and mayhem that stretch the imagination to the
breaking point fill the courtroom, jurors are not easily convinced that
therapists acted in the best interests of their patient.

"What happens is when you have a group [of therapists] that get up on the
witness stand and say that they believe that there was a cult; that people
were eating babies; that there were many murders; that there were boxcars of
dead bodies; and that people were roasting and stripping down cadavers and
eating them for lunch with the cult, 12 Texans want to hear a little bit
more about what you did to corroborate that," Simpson said.

"When jurors asked psychiatrists, 'Did you believe it yourself?' and when
the psychiatrists said that they did, in fact, believe it and told their
patients that they believed it, then it was simply a matter of waiting for
the jury to come back and give you millions of dollars. It will happen every
time." 

Simpson may be right. In a front-page article last month, The New York Times
reported that the insurance companies for two Chicago psychiatrists and
Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital in which they worked paid Patricia
Burgus, a mother of two, $10.6 million to settle claims arising out of years
of therapy for repressed memories. Elva Poznanski, M.D., chief of child and
adolescent psychiatry at the hospital, and Bennett G. Braun, director of the
psychiatric trauma unit, did not admit liability and bristled over the
settlement. 

Calling the huge payout a "travesty" forced by his insurer, Braun said in
the Times article, "A patient comes into the hospital doing so bad that she
belongs in the hospital, and after several serious events in the hospital,
which I can't disclose because of patient confidentiality, she was
discharged and is doing much better. Where's the damage?"

Braun, the founding, former president of ISSD, has long been the target of
critics, especially the Philadelphia-based False Memory Syndrome Foundation
(FMSF), a group that has for years waged a public information and lobbying
campaign to discredit recovered memories therapy.

Pamela Freyd, Ph.D., FMSF's founder and executive director, essentially
declared victory in the organization's September newsletter, saying, "The
growth of the recovered/repressed memory movement has been stopped; the
number of new lawsuits against parents based only on recovered/repressed
memories is negligible. What is happening in the legal area now is critical
to how the mopping up will proceed."

That is exactly what has some psychiatrists concerned. David Spiegel, M.D.,
a professor of psychiatry and behavior science at Stanford University
Medical School in Palo Alto, Calif., and a nationally recognized expert on
posttraumatic stress and psychotherapy research, said in an interview with
Psychiatric Times that the huge verdicts and possible criminal liability in
the "extreme" cases could "spill over onto the mainstream."

"What I do worry about is that there is such a vigorous, aggressive
anti-psychotherapy tinge to some of this," Spiegel said. "I'm not worried
about the Texas case, and I'm not worried about the Chicago case, because I
think these were outliers where there are serious questions about what they
were doing. I am worried, though, that there is a militant, aggressive
advocacy group that is encouraging all kinds of restrictions on therapy,
including requirements for disclosures, consent forms and restriction on
ordinary, everyday, sensible psychotherapy, and that part of it bothers me."

John Bush, the executive director of the Texas Society of Psychiatric
Physicians, acknowledged that after the National Medical Enterprises
scandal-in which the psychiatric hospital chain was ultimately convicted for
numerous violations of federal law arising out of alleged abuses in
connection with its treatment of patients-the backlash included legislation
that, in the view of psychiatrists, inappropriately restricted the use of
electroconvulsive therapy. Following the Carl case and the criminal
indictment, Bush anticipates that "the enemies [of psychiatry] will take
anything and then take it further."

"I know that there will be something that comes out of this. I don't know
what it will be," Bush said. "We object to the legislature practicing
medicine." He is concerned that while issues surrounding recovered memory
therapy require medical research, the development of practice guidelines and
the enforcement of professional standards-situations that cause the
legislature to micromanage the practice of medicine-create poor precedent.

But for John Cannell, M.D., a private practice forensic psychiatrist in Los
Osos, Calif., who testified for the plaintiffs in the Carl case, the day of
reckoning for therapists who lead patients on what he views as "fantasy
journeys" that have no therapeutic value has been long in coming. He
disagrees that taking a firm stance in the "egregious cases" will lead to
attacks on competent practitioners. Rather, cases like Carl's seek to
prevent the damage that can be caused by inappropriate interventions.

"The cult doctors in Spring Shadows Glen and other places around the country
believe in this transgenerational, organized satanic cult that the FBI has
found no evidence for, and that seems to exist only in the minds of a number
of patients and therapists," Cannell said. "As I listened to the trial
unfold, what was happening to Lynn Carl and her family was that they were
being interrogated by these doctors to try to find out where the satanists
were." 

Cannell, who is also a staff psychiatrist at California's Atascadero State
Hospital but whose comments only reflected personal opinions, said that the
murkiness pervading the treatment of what is now called dissociative
identity disorder is a result of the absence of sufficient empirical
understanding of the mental illness.

"We should be cautious about any process in which we begin the conversation
by asking the other person whether they believe in it," Cannell said. "When
I practice psychiatry it has to be more than a belief, I hope."

"Medicine has never attempted, before the recovered memory phenomenon, to
destroy families," Cannell said, describing his view of what some
psychotherapists are doing to patients. "There is nothing healing about
encouraging a woman to discover these vicious memories and confronting, for
example, her elderly father then watching the destruction. ...That's
politics." 

Louis Jolyon West, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at the University of
California, Los Angeles School of Medicine who is considered an expert in
cult behaviors, agreed that "there are certainly some recovered memories
that ought to raise the index of suspicion more than others."

Nevertheless, he also urged that the profession avoid intransigence. "With
regard to satanic cultic activity, there's a tendency to take a position of
all or nothing when the answer is only to be generated by continued digging
for the truth," West said. "The danger for science is that we become
arbitrary and think that we have all the answers when we don't. In our field
there are still many spheres in which we don't have all the answers yet."

(In October, the Royal College of Psychiatrists in Britain issued guidelines
warning psychiatrists not to try to uncover forgotten memories of childhood
sexual abuse through hypnosis, dream interpretation or regression therapy,
according to an article from the British Press Association. Under the
guidelines, psychiatrists are encouraged to "share with patients whatever
doubts they may have about the historical accuracy of recovered memories of
previously forgotten abuse." The report recommends that psychiatrists be
wary of accepting uncorroborated claims of previous sexual abuse by people
who show signs of multiple personality disorders. However, mandatory
reporting is considered "entirely appropriate when children spontaneously
describe current or recent abuse"-Ed.)
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