I have to say that even if they don't find a body or any jars with notes, the accusations and thefound (the particular type) at Sr's home when they arrested him are good enough for me. Call me gullible if you like, I call it realism. I understand those things are not enough to prosecute a case on, but I'm just saying my burden of proof has been met.
Yeah - what you said, IWK!!!!
What kinda creeps keep mags like that around ??
How will they explain that kinda? Are they gonna say :rolling: "oh, I didn't *buy* it myself, I got it at the church white elephant gift exchange", or say "it's just a joke from the guys at work", or "it's not mine -- I was just keeping them for a friend because he didn't want his wife to find them".
I can hear their defense now. :furious:
Yes they are adults making these allegations, but if the allegations are based on "recovered memories" then even most experts agree those kind of memories aren't reliable. There have been a number of lawsuits successfully won in the "recovered memory" cases.I have to say that even if they don't find a body or any jars with notes, the accusations and thefound (the particular type) at Sr's home when they arrested him are good enough for me. Call me gullible if you like, I call it realism. I understand those things are not enough to prosecute a case on, but I'm just saying my burden of proof has been met.
I also want to say that to all the people who keep bringing up the CA Satanic-ritual abuse case from the 80's which was proven false - those kids were interviewed by police and social workers at the time, without any representation. Their parents were not allowed to be present and they were not interviewed in the correct manner, multiple times. They were CHILDREN telling these tales, and now, as adults, they admit they were harrassed into telling those stories by the police. These are ADULTS who apparently have been trying to tell this story for years and no one would listen. Apples and Oranges - IMHO.
Yes they are adults making these allegations, but if the allegations are based on "recovered memories" then even the experts agree those kind of memories aren't reliable. There have been a number of lawsuits successfully won in the "recovered memory" cases.
So the police better have some actual evidence rather than just "recovered memories."
Agree with you.The "Satanic ritual abuse" cases were by no means limited to the McMartin Pre-School case in California. This was a widespread phenomenon. Just off the bat, I can recall cases in Washington state and Oregon, a major one in Minnesota, another in Florida, one in Massachusetts---there were many. Every police department or sheriff's office seemed suddenly to have its own "expert" on demonology. Workshops were attended, conferences were held. As every case I know of resulted in dismissal of charges or overturned convictions, this alone wasted precious LE resources, and did so for many years. Families were broken, careers were ruined, jail time was served. The paperback market was innundated with titles like "Daddy was the Black Dahlia Killer," and "repressed memories" season was in its hey-day. Children turned in, and testified against, their parents. Adults "recovered" memories of events which never took place.
What bothers some of us about this case is that the elements herein---abortion, pedophilia, bestiality, minors forced to participate in murder, mock marriages, buried bodies, and more---uncannily mimic the charges made against many people 20 to 30 years ago.
And yet. And yet of course it could be true. But without the evidence LE has announced its seeking---the glass jars, the buried bodies---they're going to have a heck of a time convicting anyone of anything, and yes, I could believe that there was wrong-doing involved at some point in time, and at some level. But by sensationalizing the case during its very investigation, LE has upped the ante of what it must prove at trial. The kidnap/murder allegation in which three children are said to have participated particularly strains credulity to its breaking-point.
The "Satanic ritual abuse" cases were by no means limited to the McMartin Pre-School case in California. This was a widespread phenomenon. Just off the bat, I can recall cases in Washington state and Oregon, a major one in Minnesota, another in Florida, one in Massachusetts---there were many. Every police department or sheriff's office seemed suddenly to have its own "expert" on demonology. Workshops were attended, conferences were held. As every case I know of resulted in dismissal of charges or overturned convictions, this alone wasted precious LE resources, and did so for many years. Families were broken, careers were ruined, jail time was served. The paperback market was innundated with titles like "Daddy was the Black Dahlia Killer," and "repressed memories" season was in its hey-day. Children turned in, and testified against, their parents. Adults "recovered" memories of events which never took place.
What bothers some of us about this case is that the elements herein---abortion, pedophilia, bestiality, minors forced to participate in murder, mock marriages, buried bodies, and more---uncannily mimic the charges made against many people 20 to 30 years ago.
And yet. And yet of course it could be true. But without the evidence LE has announced its seeking---the glass jars, the buried bodies---they're going to have a heck of a time convicting anyone of anything, and yes, I could believe that there was wrong-doing involved at some point in time, and at some level. But by sensationalizing the case during its very investigation, LE has upped the ante of what it must prove at trial. The kidnap/murder allegation in which three children are said to have participated particularly strains credulity to its breaking-point.
I spent a lot of time on those SRA cases back in the day interviewing everyone involved and I think in some cases there was actual abuse but people like Ted Gunderson became involved to redirect attention away from the child abuse and on to the less believable and more sensational satanic ritual aspect of it, to cover it all up of course and force people to turn away in disgust. It worked for the most part and a lot of innocent people became ensnared.
Agree with you.
Police arrest multiple people on some serious allegations of murder and abuse. Supposedly a grown man was killed and buried in the backyard. Supposedly a baby (or babies) are buried on the property.
So they should go and find those bodies if they believe that is what indeed happened.
Shouldn't be that hard if it did happen to find a body of a 6 ft man buried in a shallow grave in a backyard.
Only thing is, this isn't just a backyard, it's 55 acres. All done 20 years ago. Can you remember everything you did 20 years ago? MOO.
Well if I killed someone then I am pretty sure I would.
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Thank you PAXIMUS. I tried to say the same thing and it didn't come out correctly. You stated what I wanted to say. I think that the Satanic thing doesn't even occur that often, it just gets twisted into that. Makes it all easier to write off. People can't accept that this goes on and want to turn it into Satan worship to make it easier to swallow and discount.
Well if I buried a body then I am pretty sure I would.
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Yes, I would say that would be a defining moment in one's life.
Yes they are adults making these allegations, but if the allegations are based on "recovered memories" then even most experts agree those kind of memories aren't reliable. There have been a number of lawsuits successfully won in the "recovered memory" cases.
So the police better have some actual evidence rather than just "recovered memories." If they found broken glass jar with no notes, and glasses during their digging, then I am sorry, that's not evidence. In a case where a murder is alleged, I think they need to find a body. Police have multiple people arrested, and I think it's only fair to ask what evidence they actually have.
SRA is real, make no mistake ....
I'd also like folks to keep in mind that memories of a small child are exactly that-- a small child...perspectives & proportions are seen differently thru the eyes of a little one.
For example, I have memories of a huge, cavernous-sized bedroom with a ginormous bed -- however, seeing that same bedroom as an adult, the room is actually small -- smaller than any bedrooms in my own home...and the bed was standard size -- not queen or king.
It may be hard to figure out distances because 100 yards could seem like a quarter mile to a little kid.
Just my $0.02.
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