When I started the research for this blog I thought it would
be a fun Halloween topic. How can you go
wrong with a sociological event that sounds a lot like a crappy punk band circa
1986, right? Further intriguing me were
stories from people that had lived through the Satanic Panic of the 1980s
involving church groups with amazing propaganda videos that carefully
delineated the satanic influence of things as insidious as the Mister Ed theme
song (1). But, alas, as research
continued I
realized that this really was perfect for Halloween. The reasoning became singular: Satanic Panic really was terrifying. Just not in the way I had originally thought.
realized that this really was perfect for Halloween. The reasoning became singular: Satanic Panic really was terrifying. Just not in the way I had originally thought.
So let’s all prep our “are you fucking kidding me?” faces,
and jump into the Satanic Panic.
You mean “Satanic Panic” ISN’T a punk band?
It is not. Instead,
it is the colloquial term for what sociologists refer to as “Satanic Ritual
Abuse Scare”, or SRAS. It is a
widespread fear concerning Satanic ritual abuse in a given community (2). Technically, this occurs occasionally
throughout history—the Salem Witch Trials, for example are often considered an
SRAS. But what we are discussing today
is the SRAS that occurred in the United States in the 1980s. However, the parallels to the witch trials of
the late seventeenth century won’t be lost on anyone with even a tertiary
knowledge of them.
But let’s go back a little to give some context to
this.
The 1960s in America were a strange time. There was a war going on. There were fancy new drugs all over the
place, and women were wearing mini-skirts.
And then in 1966 Anton LaVey founded the Church of Satan in San
Francisco (3). Initially, no one was
entirely concerned since those in San Francisco are just strange to begin with,
but after a documentary in 1970, book in 1969, and some notable people getting
attracted to the church throughout the sixties, the church’s existence was
common knowledge by the mid-1970s. Which
was perfect since it was in the mid-1970s—1975, to be exact—that the Church of
Satan was confronted with a rival: the
Temple of Set (4). Both churches still
exist, and existed throughout the ensuing SRAS.
Anton LaVey (churchof satan.com) |
Neither of these churches, or any members of them (as far as
I could find) were ever charged or convicted of any crime associated with the
Panic itself, however, they served as a backdrop for what would ensue. Once these churches became household names,
average Americans became aware that actual Satanists existed in the United
States. Coincidentally, as the existence
of Satanists in North America became common knowledge, the number of working
parent households and single parent households began to rise, which meant more
kids were either “latch-key” kids, or in daycare at some point. Also happening in the early 1980s was the
rise of what was (and still is) termed the “moral majority”—a political
organization based heavily on Evangelical Christian values and rooted in the
Republican party.
And then shit got weird.
Suddenly, urban legends—those most accurate of societal fear
barometers—began focusing on child abduction.
And then the thing happened.
The Thing.
In 1980 Michelle Smith (a Canadian) and her then therapist
(now husband… and maybe still therapist… who the hell knows), Lawrence Padzer (also
Canadian) wrote and published the book “Michelle Remembers”. Nearly overnight it became an international
best-seller and spawned a movie offer and an official Vatican
investigation. Yes, you read that
right—AN OFFICIAL VATICAN INVESTIGATION.
Anyway. The book centered on
therapy sessions beginning in the late 1970s where Michelle began to recover
memories (5).
This is important. Recovered
memories play a huge part in this whole thing.
Recovered memories are the result of the aptly named “recovered memory
therapy” (RMT) which refers to various therapeutic methods to recover memories
that the patient does not currently remember due to dissociative issues,
trauma, or general forgetfulness. These
methods can range from talk therapy, to dream interpretation, to therapeutic
hypnotherapy. Today, it is generally
accepted that while this does exist, it is extremely rare and that the biggest
issues surrounding RMT is ensuring that the memories are genuine and that they
aren’t coached. Further, the American Psychiatric Association has conceded that
it is nearly impossible to tell the difference between a recovered memory and “pseudomemory”—a
false memory (6).
So back to the Canadians.
Michelle’s recovered memories were about the Satanic cult her mother had
inducted her into and in which she had been badly abused for the entirety of
her childhood. She described witnessing
murders, being abused sexually and physically, and witnessing the mutilation of
animals. And shit was officially on. (She also reported that Jesus and the Angel
Gabriel had come to her to heal her physical wounds before her very eyes, but
whatever….. SATAN!)
What ensued was nearly a decade of fear and paranoia that
Satanic cults were lurking around every corner ready to abduct and abuse the
children of unsuspecting adults and, further, that this had been happening for
a long time and only now were people recovering the memories.
But that’s not the scary part.
The scary part is that this wasn’t just a weird thing that
day time talk shows featured to scare bored housewives—though it was featured
on every talk show (day time or otherwise) from Sally Jesse Raphael to Donahue
to Larry King (seriously, check this shit out and make sure you hang on through
the part where the lady discusses giving birth to a daughter at age 11 who was
subsequently sacrificed to the devil: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mhJC_wq7kxM&list=PL9EDF24619F46D81B&index=1
). Rather, this was something that
resulted in arrests, trials and convictions.
Much like the
Salem chaos two-hundred years previous, children (often coached by adults) flung wild allegations at adults who were subsequently taken to trial, convicted of horrific crimes, and sentenced to the maximum penalties under the law.
Salem chaos two-hundred years previous, children (often coached by adults) flung wild allegations at adults who were subsequently taken to trial, convicted of horrific crimes, and sentenced to the maximum penalties under the law.
Don’t believe me?
Watch this shit….
Unsubstantiated and False Cases
*The McMartin Preschool Case: In 1984 over a dozen children came forward to
accuse seven preschool employees of sex abuse.
As the case became more well known the number of accusers increased to
more than one hundred and the allegations expanded to include being flown to
undisclosed locations to take part in Satanic rituals, watching the torture and
death of animals, and various other terrifying sounding—yet highly implausible—crimes. In March of that year the seven accused were
arrested and jailed pending what would become the most expensive trial in
American history at the time.
Eventually, less than a dozen children testified, two of the accused—Peggy
McMartin Buckey and Ray Buckey—served MORE THAN FIVE YEARS IN JAIL while
awaiting trial before being fully acquitted in 1990. In 2005 one of the accusers, Kyle Sapp,
formally apologized and acknowledged that he had not only knowingly lied, but
had been coached in his testimony (7).
*The Little Rascals Scandal:
This scandal has nothing to do with how adorable that movie was. It instead refers to a day care center in
North Carolina where the two co-owners were accused, in 1989, of nearly 250
charges—EACH—including child abuse, physical abuse, and torture. Over 90 children came forward after being
evaluated for signs of abuse to describe how the two owners, Robert Kelly and
Betsy Kelly, had not only molested, raped, and tortured them, but had also
forced them to watch while they not only killed and tortured small animals, but
also killed other children as part of their Satanic rituals. Betsy was kept in jail for two years awaiting
trial before she accepted a plea bargain in exchange for a seven year prison sentence. Which was probably a good idea considering
her husband’s trial had ended in a conviction on nearly all counts and a
sentence of… Are you ready??? TWELVE
CONSECUTIVE LIFE SENTENCES. Seriously on
the word of fucking toddlers the dude was sentenced to not one, not three, not
ten, but TWELVE. TWELVE FUCKING LIFE
SENTENCES. To be served consecutively,
which means that one does not begin until the one before it ends. Meaning this man would never again walk
free. In 1995 the convictions were
overturned and both defendants were finally set free (8).
But that’s not even the scariest case the hysteria
spawned. Brace yourselves….
*Oak Hill SRA Trial: In 1991 a three year old girl told her
parents that she was spanked at the daycare facility she attended. After the child was taken to a psychologist
the allegations expanded to include rape.
Other parents were encouraged to talk to their children and look for
signs of abuse and soon Fran and Dan Keller were accused and arrested on
allegations that they had sexually and physically abused multiple children
while running the Oak Hill Daycare center in Austin, Texas. The accusations included dismembering
children, molestation, rape, torture, taking children to Mexico to be abused as
part of their Satanic cult, forcing children to exhume bodies from a local
cemetery, and throwing children into a pool of sharks. No word was given
on how the owners of an in-home child care facility got access to said pool of
sharks. The accusers ranged in age from
as young as three years old, to as old as eight. A year later, following a short six day trial
that relied heavily on memories recovered in children through the help of
therapists associated with the “Believe the Children” campaign (started by
accusers in the McMartin Trial, see above), both Fran and Dan Keller were
convicted and sentenced to 48 years in prison.
Each. In 2013, after each defendant had served
TWENTY-ONE YEARS IN PRISON, a key witness recanted, and the new District
Attorney agreed that they had been denied a fair trial, both Fran (now 63) and
Dan (now 72) were released to their families (9).
In all of the above cases adults were arrested and
investigated on the word of children.
In some cases these people were convicted and sentenced to lengthy
prison terms based on the modern equivalent of the “spectral” evidence that was
so central to the Witch Trials we’ve all been forced to read about in any given
English Lit class. Not only were
individual lives ruined, but untold millions of dollars were spent on
investigating charges as amazingly outlandish as “kids were thrown into a pool
of sharks" (the McMartin trial alone cost over $15 million to investigate).
Actual page from "Don't make me go back, mommy" |
The nation itself was in the grips of a mass hysteria that
we tend to only attribute to older, less enlightened times. In 1989 a children’s picture book entitled “Don’t
make me go back, Mommy” was released as a way to explain SRA to children. It is important to note that this children’s
book was not meant to explain the hysteria, it was meant to teach children how
to identify and talk about Satanic Ritual Abuse (10). No one was really left untouched, not even
that most untouchable of American institutions—Oprah. Yes, even Oprah was sucked in—in the late
1980s she ran a series of shows that featured victims of SRA (11). Sally Jesse Raphael did the same, as did
Geraldo, Donahue, the aforementioned Larry King, and the list goes on. CNN (established in 1982) provided twenty-four
hour coverage of each trial. Unsolved
Mysteries featured no less than four deaths potentially attributed to SRA. Televangelists,
eager to attach themselves to the one thing scarier than televangelists themselves,
prayed continuously and accepted copious donations that would somehow drive
Satan from the United States and our daycare facilities. And countless newspapers ran scathing
headlines sure to terrify any parent.
And there’s one case left to discuss here. That of Frank Fuster.
In 1984 Frank Fuster and his wife Ileana were accused of
what by now has become the usual story—while caring for other people’s children
in their home, each allegedly raped and molested multiple children as part of
ritualized Satanic activities. Eventually,
over 20 children would report against the Fusters and the case would be largely
built on this evidence. In the interest
of full disclosure, Frank had been previously convicted of fondling a minor and
his wife, Ileana, confessed to the abuse.
Ileana then served three years in prison and was deported to Honduras
where, in 1994, she recanted her confession.
Regardless, Frank Fuster remains in prison as of the time of this writing,
serving out the 165 year prison term he was sentenced to (12).
Now, I’m not jumping to defend Frank Fuster, only to point
out that, again on the word of toddlers, a guy was sentenced to 165 years in prison. According to many still involved (yes, in
2015) in untangling the ridiculous web of accusations, charges, and convictions
that stemmed from the Satanic Panic, the Fuster case remains as the last
remnant of a truly terrifying time—that time when we as a nation allowed people
to be convicted of hideous charges based on circumstantial, and highly suspect,
evidence.
Now it was initially my intention to discuss true cases that
existed during the Satanic Panic—those cases where self-proclaimed “Satanists”
actually did bad things to people in the name of the Dark Lord.
I couldn’t find any.
But I found one that was kinda sorta close:
*The Florida Vampire Killings (13): In 1996 Rod Ferrell and an accomplice broke
into the house of a female friend and bludgeoned her parents to death with a
crowbar by way of assisting in her running away. Rod had convinced about five followers that
he was, in actuality, a 500 year old vampire named Vesago and it is often cited
that his accomplice(s) went along with the crime (and put up with his shit)
because they were part of a vampire cult headed by Rod/Vesago. So, why is this only kinda-sorta a Satanic
Panic thing? Well, the end of the
Satanic Panic is usually cited as the mid-1990s and this occurred in 1996. Also, it wasn’t a Satan thing, it was a
vampire thing (which is pretty similar to me, but if you ask any Satanist or
self-proclaimed Vampire, it’s completely different and trying to persuade them
that they’re wrong will only get you to a place where you have both Satanists
and Vampires pissed at you. Just trust
me here…. Sigh… Research….). Also, this wasn’t sex abuse which is actually
important. While murder did factor into
many of the cases that typified the Satanic Panic era, the era itself revolved
around sex abuse, specifically, the sexual abuse of children. Thus, this story doesn’t fit the criteria of
the Satanic Panic. But it would be irresponsible not to mention it.
So, there you have it.
Satanic Panic. Definitely not a
shitty punk band, yet still scary as hell.
The Panic itself died out in the late 1990s, however, some things remain
and there are still people sitting in prisons as a result of the panic.
Let’s not do this again.
References:
1. Check out the
YouTube video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oc0iP_VGrI4
2. Virginia
Commonwealth University. Cults That Never Were: The Satanic Ritual
Abuse Scare. Retrieved from: http://www.people.vcu.edu/~dbromley/undergraduate/spiritualCommunity/SatanicCults.html
3. Official Church of
Satan website. Churchofsatan.com
4. Temple of Set
official website. Xeper.org
5. The London
Mail. 9.30.1990. Michelle Remembers: The Debunking of a Myth. Retrieved from: https://xeper.org/pub/pub_wh_michelle.html
6. American
Psychological Association. Questions and Answers About Memories of
Childhood Abuse. Retrieved from: http://www.apa.org/topics/trauma/memories.aspx
7. Linder,
Douglas. 2003. The
McMartin Preschool Abuse Trial. University of Missourti-Kansas City School
of Law. Retrieved from: http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/mcmartin/mcmartin.html
Nathan, D.
2005. I’m Sorry. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved from: http://articles.latimes.com/2005/oct/30/magazine/tm-mcmartin44
8. PBS. 1997. Innocence Lost. Retrieved from: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/innocence/etc/sum.html
9. McRobbie, L.R.
2014. The Real Victims of Satanic Ritual Abuse. Retrieved from:
slate.com/articles
10. You can still
find it on Amazon! http://www.amazon.com/Dont-Make-Back-Mommy-Childhood/dp/0880703679
11. Gotta love
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rh2yCle-LhY
12. PBS. A
Summary of the Frank Fuster “Country Walk” Case. Retrieved from: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/fuster/frank/summary.html
13. Dellert,
Christine. 2006. Was cleared in her
parents’ 1996 murder in Eustis. Now married
and living out of state, she reflects on a tragic time. Orlando
Sentinel. Retrieved from: http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2006-12-17/news/WENDORF17_1_ferrell-vampire-eustis-high
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