 GERALDO RIVERA: SATANIC RITUAL ABUSE & RECOVERED MEMORIES
Many talk show hosts, including
Donahue, Geraldo Rivera, Oprah Winfrey, and Sally Jesse Raphael
have featured episodes which dealt with allegations of
Satanic
Ritual Abuse (SRA) and discussions of memories formed during
Recovered
Memory Therapy. Of these, Geraldo is unique, because:
- his programs probably had the greatest influence over
public opinion, and
- he was courageous enough to issue a retraction and an
apology for the damage that his programs had done to innocent
people.
"Satanic Cults and Children.", 1987-NOV-19
Prior to 1985, Geraldo Rivera worked for ABC News.
Subsequently, he hosted a number of national TV special programs
which, as one reporter wrote, (1) explored "the twilight
zones of American society." One such special discussed the
alleged ritual abuse of children by Satanic cults.
He stated: "Estimates are that there are over 1 million
Satanists in this country...The majority of them are linked in a
highly organized, very secretive network. From small towns to
large cities, they have attracted police and FBI attention to
their Satanic ritual child abuse, child pornography and grisly
Satanic murders. The odds are that this is happening in your
town."
A more accurate estimate of Satanic activity in the US is
probably:
- 10,000 adult members of
religious Satanic churches, temples and grottos
- 10,000 adult solitary practitioners of Satanism
- probably in excess of 100,000 transitory teenage dabblers
in Satanism
There is no evidence that
any
adult Satanist has committed a criminal act related to his
religious belief. However, teenagers dabblers have been shown to
engage in minor crimes. These include defacing buildings and
tombstones with graffiti. Rarely, they have been known to kill
small animals.
His mention of FBI involvement probably referred to the
work of
Kenneth V. Lanning, a Supervisory Special Agent in the
Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy in Virginia. He
had combated the sexual victimization of children since 1981.
Initially, he believed that Satanic ritual abuse was really
happening. But he reported in 1992: "...the number of alleged
cases began to grow and grow. We now have hundreds of victims
alleging that thousands of offenders are abusing and even
murdering tens of thousands of people as part of organized
satanic cults, and there is little or no corroborative
evidence."
Shortly after the Geraldo special, a rumor began to spread
through Jamestown NY. It was typical of the type of "Satanic
Panic" described in a book by the same name. (2) It might have
been triggered by the TV program, or its timing might have been
an unusual coincidence. People started to believe that some
teenagers had held a Satanic "Black Mass" in an abandoned
warehouse on Halloween. The humane society started receiving
calls about dogs and cats that had been ritually killed. A
Fundamentalist Christian minister wrote letters to the newspaper
about the sudden increase in Satanic activity in the area. Some
of the teens that were believed to be involved received
threatening phone calls. Groups of young thugs started to roam
around town, searching for people that they believed to be
Satanists, in order to beat them up.
In reality, there was no Satanic activity. Some teens wearing
dark clothes and offbeat haircuts had simply held a harmless
Halloween party. No dead pets were ever found.
The stories escalated several months later. The police began
receiving dozens of calls warning about the upcoming Friday the
13th (1998-MAY-13). They predicted that a Satanic cult would
kidnap a young blue-eyed, blond, virgin woman and ritually
sacrifice her. The day came, and passed uneventfully.
"Devil Worship: Exploring Satan's Underground", 1988-OCT-25
Geraldo hosted a special during prime time on 25-OCT, just
before Halloween in 1988. (3) The phrase Satan's Underground
presumably refers to the book of the same name by Lauren
Stratford. Cornerstone Magazine, an Evangelical Christian
periodical, exposed the book as a hoax in their Dec/Jan 1989/90
issue. (6) We believe that there were a number of authors of
anti-Satanic books on the show: Mike Warnke, Michelle and/or Dr.
Lawrence Pazder, and Lauren Stratford. All have been exposed as
frauds by various Christian, Neopagan and secular groups.
Geraldo's program lasted through two hours of prime time, and
reached an enormous TV audience. He discussed Satanism, which
was described as "this force that exalts evil and darkness."
The episode included discussions of: butchered infants, breeding
of babies for later sacrifice during Satanic rituals, ritual
sexual abuse of children, mutilation of infants, drinking of
blood, dismembered corpses, cannibal cults and sex orgies. There
were "gruesome rituals," and "gruesome memories,"
and "gruesome allegations," and "brutally violent,
horrible crimes," and acts "so incredibly outrageous, so
incredibly unbelievable," that he was reluctant to describe
them. "The most gruesome scenes are left out," Rivera
commented.
Throughout the show, Rivera kept telling his viewers that the
program was not suitable for young children to watch. He said
near the start: "The very young and impressionable should
definitely not be watching this program tonight...This is not a
Halloween fable." At various times, he said: Get them
away from the TV during the next report." or "I am
begging you...Please get them out of the room, or change the
station!" Unfortunately, such disclaimers often serve to
increase the number of child viewers. And the timing of the show
during prime time just before Halloween has moved some skeptics
to wonder about Geraldo's sincerity.
He showed a film clip of
Charles
Manson of "The Family" fame, who he introduced as
"today's top Satanic celebrity...That man is so repugnant...All
these Satanic murderers are." Nobody questioned whether
these alleged crimes actually happened. There was no discussion
of the
total lack of evidence of secret, criminal, abusive Satanic
cults. Nobody talked about the reality of
Satanism: that no criminal act motivated by Satan worship
has ever been shown to have happened, with the exception of
minor crimes by teenage dabblers.
Episode on Recovered Memories, 1991-SEP
One episode of the Geraldo show featured three women who
disclosed horrendous memories of their victimization as young
children. They recalled being tortured sexually and
psychologically almost from the time that they first learned to
walk. They had repressed these memories for decades, until the
recollections began to be restored during
Recovered
Memory Therapy. They recalled being forced to torture other
children. One woman claimed that she had murdered 40 children
during Satanic rituals in the presence of her family.
In late 1991-SEP, comedian Roseanne Arnold disclosed to an
audience of incest victims in Denver CO that her parents had
abused her when she was under the age of 12 months. Her story
received massive publicity, and prompted a denial by the rest of
her family.
If these events actually happened, then the memories from
infancy by Roseanne and the other women would be unique.
Researchers into memory have concluded that true memories before
the age of 3 are very rare, and that such memories before the
age of 24 months are unknown.
An article on Geraldo's program (4) quoted Dr. George K.
Ganaway, a specialist in psychiatric aberrations of memory from
Emory University. He said that new memories of Satanic cult
abuse have reached "epidemic" proportions while
independent verification is in short supply. Those claiming to
have been victims are not necessarily lying. Rather they have
been persuaded -- by friend, therapist or something they have
read or have seen on television -- to adopt a plausible
explanation for their emotional pain. For highly suggestible
people -- an estimated 5 percent to 10 percent of the population
-- it is a short step to vivid, albeit fantastic, memories of
things that never happened. Dr. Ganaway believed that poorly
trained therapists are partly responsible for the Satanic
sexual-abuse scare, and may also have
led
patients to believe that they were abused when they were
not. False memories can be planted through tone of voice or the
phrasing of a question.
Satanic Ritual Abuse Show, 1995-JUN-25
Geraldo's revisited the Satanic Ritual Abuse scare after an
absence of four years. He began with excerpts from earlier
programs, showing:
- quasi-Satanic graffiti;
- a desecrated cemetery;
- scenes from an ancient (1970's?) Church of Satan
film by its founder, Anton LaVey
- the cover of The Satanic Bible;
- an unidentified body being wheeled to an ambulance;
- picture of an unidentified dead body on a floor with
blood;
- lurid headlines;
- voice talking about Satanic cults everywhere, horrendous
crimes, child sexual abuse
- a man talking about a blood bath cleansing the world
- parent talking about animal sacrifices, human sacrifices,
sexual abuse of children
- voice over talking about people being unable to leave a
cult (they believe that they would be horrendously tortured
and killed if they did) and of a nationwide network of
Satanists.
- a movie clip of an allegedly demon-possessed woman.
Geraldo talked about the public being in denial, that some
unsubstantiated charges have been made in the past and that many
people are committing terrible crimes in Satan's name. The
introduction set the theme for the program: that a network of
underground Satanic cults, perhaps including members of the
Church of Satan, were killing people, abusing children etc. None
of this is true; there is no evidence that any religious
Satanist has engaged in any Satanically inspired criminal
activity. The graffiti shown involved "666" and drawings of
inverted crosses. These are not Satanic symbols. Rather they are
symbols created by Christian anti-Satanic writers. Nobody ever
had problems leaving a Satanic group; they simply stop attending
meetings.
The first guests were from a family: grandmother, grandfather
and boy "JR" aged 9 and a girl "Tabatha" aged 8. It is alleged
that the children were victims of SRA while in foster care. The
Grandmother talked about the children's disclosure of elements
of a Satanic ritual: table, candles, horns robes, and Miss Patti
(the welfare worker) helping to kill a baby. No criminal charges
were ever laid. Welfare believed children's stories to be
fantasies. Their story appears to be a typical case of a
counselor
implanting memories in children during therapy.
The second guests were also a family: mother Anne and sons
Matthew and Micky (17 and 15). The mother explained that she
married into an inter-generational Satanic cult. They fear for
their lives. Matthew was 3 to 4 years old during the abuse; he
recalls seeing his brother being tortured by adults making
incisions on his feet. Micky also recalled some of the abuse. It
is most unlikely that Micky's memories are of real events,
because he would have been 18 to 30 months of age at the time;
memories in children under 3 are very rare; under 24 months,
recollections are unknown. Annie later said that an elite group
of Satanist hurt, murder, do blood-pact dedications, and
coronate girls as princesses. She has seen the cut marks, the
water blisters. She remembers being drugged, and waking up on a
table next to a woman who gave birth and watched the baby die.
There was no indication during the program whether Anne's
memories were continuously present, or were recovered during
therapy. The latter is believed to be true.
The third guest was Carol, an obviously distressed woman in
her early 20's. She remembers being lured into what was
apparently a Christian prayer meeting at the age of 10 and
abused by the cult for 3.5 years. She believes that she
repressed the memories and recovered them during therapy. She
said that the cult told her that they were her family now. They
allegedly put her in a casket, lowered her into a grave and
threw earth on the casket. After a while, they freed her, saying
that her family of origin didn't rescue her, Jesus didn't rescue
her; they (her new family) did. These are typical false memories
that often arise during recovered memory therapy (RMT). Carol
was close to breaking down completely on the show. She appeared
to be all too typical example of a woman who had been
functioning well in life, who entered RMT and
became
disabled by the results of the counseling.
The fourth guests were the mother and father of a murdered 8
year old boy, Stevie, from West Memphis AR. Scenes were shown
from an earlier Geraldo program of the murder of three 8 year
old boys. Three teenagers were convicted of the multiple murder.
Jack Levine from Northeastern University is the author of
"Overkill - Mass Murder and Serial Killing Exposed". He
concluded that the killing was done by Satanists. "ritual
gives them the power, dominance and control that they crave."
Later, he commented that "Some kids are miserable enough to
kill and use Satanic rituals as an excuse." This may be very
close to the reality of situations blamed on Satanists: abuse is
perpetrated by non-Satanic sadistic child abusers, who use
Satanism as a cover.
An
analysis of the West Memphis case by a skeptic shows that:
- there was no evidence linking the three accused to the
crime scene
- an expert on the
the
Occult fed into the prejudices of the jury
- the police did not follow up on two other suspects who
appear to be more likely to have been involved in the crime.
- no Satanic or Occultic influences were involved in the
killings
- the real killer(s) are probably free and may have
committed a similar crime a few months after the West Memphis
killing while the accused teenagers were in jail
The three accused, particularly the ring-leader, were
show-offs. They appear to be Christians, not Satanists; they
talked briefly about heaven and God's judgment; these are
Christian concepts, not Satanic.
Father Lebar, a Roman Catholic cult expert for New York
Archdiocese. The Church believes that Satan is a fallen angel
whose role is to turn people away from God. He believes that
Satanic abuse has been going on for centuries. He discussed the
Matamoros Mexico killings which he believes was done by
Satanists. (In reality, the murders were done by a psychopath
with the help of a drug-running gang who were followers of
Christianity and various Caribbean religions, not of Satanism.)
He talked about an international conference of Satanists in
Mexico in 1982 planning to take over the world. (This is
apparently a version of a well known urban folk-tale involving a
mythical organizations of
Wiccans
called W.I.C.C.A.)
This show had one novel guest. It is rare that a skeptic is
allowed to appear on a talk show dealing with Satanic abuse.
Jeffrey Victor, a sociologist and author of "Satanic Panic"
(2) was a phone-in guest. He stated that SRA is based on a
concoction of false memories, lies, misinformation, fantasy,
distortion of reality, a few real events, hype thrown in, and
sensationalism. He felt that Geraldo's show demonstrated this.
He accused Geraldo of exploiting children "in order to
entertain the audience. Very sad." The audience booed Victor
at this point. Geraldo repeatedly asked how her would explain
the Mephis murders. But Dr. Victor simply repeated how
irresponsible Geraldo was with his exploitation of the audience.
There was a complete breakdown of communication.
The Adverse Effects of the Geraldo Rivera Programs
Some experts in human memory speculate that the Geraldo shows
(and similar quasi-documentaries filled with misinformation)
have convinced large numbers of people that they might also have
been abused as children, and repressed the memories. One example
may have been the
Paul
Ingram case in Olympia WA. His daughters had watched a
Geraldo Rivera TV show on Satanic ritual abuse. Shortly
thereafter a police investigator suggested that their father
might have abused them during Satanic rituals. They
"enthusiastically agreed" (5) One sister recovered memories
of being forced to watch the ritual murders of 25 people. She
recalled her own aborted fetus being ritually dismembered. A
medical exam proved that she had never been pregnant. No babies
had ever gone missing. Ingram was convicted, in spite of his
protestations of innocence, an absolute lack of evidence of his
guilt, and an absence of proof that any crimes had actually
occurred.
Geraldo Rivera Recants and Apologizes, 1995-DEC-12
Geraldo hosted a program on CNBC with the theme "Wrongly
Accused & Convicted of Child Molest." The program was
broadcast on the night of the acquittal of Pastor Roby Roberson
and Connie Roberson in the Wenatchee WA sex abuse scandal.
Guests included Charlotte, "Tookie", and Violet Amirault of the
Fells
Acres Day School case, Georgetown Law School Professor Paul
Rothstein and Loyala Law Professor Stan Goldman. During a
discussion involving the legal panel, he stopped and said:
"I want to announce publicly that as a firm believer of
the 'Believe The Children'
movement of the 1980's, that started with the McMartin trials
in CA, but NOW I am convinced that I was terribly wrong... and
many innocent people were convicted and went to prison as a
result....AND I am equally positive [that the]
'Repressed Memory Therapy
Movement' is also a bunch of CRAP..."
Geraldo apparently had a change of heart at some time during
the latter half of 1995. He is to be commended for stating his
new belief in public. Unfortunately, a one minute apology and
recantation is hardly sufficient to reverse the damage done by
many hours of sensational programming, grounded on
misinformation.
References
- David O'Reilly, "America's Magic Cult of Ignorance",
San Jose Mercury News, 1993-AUG-8, Page 1L
- Jeffrey Victor, Satanic Panic, Open Court, Chicago,
1993
- Tom Shales, "Rivera's 'Devil Worship' was TV at its
Worst", San Jose Mercury News, 1988-OCT-31, Page 11B
- Irene Wielawski, "Victims of Memory...", Los
Angeles Times, 1991-OCT-7, Page 1C
- John Skow, "Can Memory be a Devilish Inventor?,
TIME Domestic 1994-MAY-16, Volume 143, No. 20
- Lauren Stratford's book was revealed as a hoax by an
Evangelical Christian investigation team, Harvest House, an
ethical Christian publisher, took the book off the market. It
has since been distributed by another publisher. See
"Satan's
Sideshow The real story of Lauren Stratford by Gretchen &
Bob Passantino and Jon Trott.
Copyright © 1998
& 2000 by Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance
Latest update: 2000-APR-15
Author: B.A. Robinson
|