Protesting Modern Witchunts
Justice Committee/January 7, 1997
By Carol Lamb Hopkins, Executive Director
As the widely acclaimed film adaptation of Arthur Miller's The
Crucible opens across the country, some 300 writers, scholars,
scientists, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and concerned citizens,
joined by individuals recently freed from wrongful imprisonment, will
gather early next week in Salem, Massachusetts, for the first-ever
national convocation on contemporary witch hunts.
The day-long event will address the reasons and remedies for the
nationwide epidemic of spurious accusations and prosecutions; those
based on testimony forced from children by flawed interviewing
techniques in sexual abuse investigations." therapeutically created
"recovered memories of supposed childhood incest, and those based on
false confessions extracted by police interrogators.
On January 14, 1697, five years after the famous "witchcraft trials."
the entire community of His Majesty's Province of the Massachusetts
Bay, in obedience to a proclamation, took part in a day of fasting and
remorse.
It was a rare and historic acknowledgment of the hysteria and judicial
errors that had led to "great hardship brought upon innocent persons"
--- including the 19 put to death.
On January 14, 1997, in an auditorium at Salem's Essex-Peabody Museum,
the far more extensive parallels of the injustices of three centuries
ago will be examined by a powerful lineup of experts on miscarriages
of justice. They will describe the modern forms of "spectral
evidence" used to condemn and incarcerate thousands of citizens for
crimes they did not commit.
Videotaped commentaries by playwright Arthur Miller and author William
Styron - prepared especially for the convocation, will set the stage
for presentations by such figures as:
- John Putnam Demos, Yale University history professor and descendent
of Salem accuser Ann Putnam.
- Alan Rubenstein. District Attorney Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and
author of the 1990 report. "Investigation into Breezy Point Day
School".
- Elizabeth Loftus, University of Washington memory researcher and
co-author of The Myth of Repressed Memory: False Memories and
Allegations Sexual Abuse.
- Debbie Nathan, journalist, co-author of Satan's Silence: Ritual
Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt.
- Paul Noel Chretien, Counsel, U.S. Department of Justice.
- Frederick Crews, University of California, Berkeley, Professor of
English, historian of psychoanalysis; principal author of
The Memory Wars.
- Pamela Freyd, University of Pennsylvania researcher, founder of the
False Memory Syndrome Foundation.
- Donald Connery, former Time-Life correspondent; author of Guilty
Until Proven Innocent and editor of Convicting the Innocent.
- Moira Johnston, author of soon to be published Spectral Evidence
on California's landmark Gary Ramona case.
- Robert Perske, advocate for persons with mental disabilities, author
of Unequal Justice? and Deadly Innocence?
- Richard Leo, University of Colorado sociology professor; creator of
the nation's first false confession data bank.
- Tom Grant, KREM-TV reporter, winner of the 1996 George Polk Award,
and finalist for this year's Columbia Dupont Award for his coverage
of the Wenatchee, Washington witch hunts.
Among the falsely accused former defendants who will attend the
convocation (and be available for interviews) will be:
- Kelly Michaels, teacher's aide imprisoned for five years in New
Jersey's Wee Care ritual abuse case before her 47-year sentence was
overturned on appeal.
- Peggy Ann Buckey and Ray Buckey, teachers accused and jailed in
Ca1ifornia's landmark McMartin Preschool case--the longest, costliest
trial in U.S.history.
- Cheryl and Violet Amirault, mother and daughter convicted in the
Massachusetts' Fells Acres Case: convictions recently overturned
after 14 years imprisonment.
- Bobby Fijnje l4 year-old Dutch citizen, a child-care worker tried
for ritual abuse by Dade County, Florida prosecutor, Janet Reno, now
U.S. Attorney General held without bail for over a year before his
acquittal.
- Pastor and Mrs. Roby Roberson, separated for years from their child,
then tried and acquitted in the Wenatchee Washington "sex ring"
scandal of false accusations.
- Brenda and Scott Kniffen, sentenced to 240 years each in the Kern
County, CA sex ring cases; convictions overturned this year.
"The analogy to Salem is by no means overstated." says Carol Hopkins
principal convocation organizer and executive director of The Justice
Committee in San Diego. "The witchcraft mentality is still with us" in
the forced accusations and confessions and as we see hundreds of men
and women languishing behind bars for such imagined crimes as
torturing and sacrificing babies during Satanic rituals. Our message
is "Enough".
These prosecutions must end and, just as importantly, we must release
the falsely convicted and make reparations to them. The convocation
will again echo the Justice Committee's demand for Congressional
hearings into these cases."
The January 14 conference, not open to the public, will be held at
theEssex-Peabody Museum, beginning at 8:30 a.m. On the previous day
starting at 1 p.m., two forums of experts will discuss social science
issues and legal and legislative remedies. On the night of the 13th,
at 6 p.m., attendees will walk by candlelight to Salem's memorial to
the witch trials victims and hold a vigil for today's prisoners of
hysteria and recklessprosecution. The public is welcome to join in the
vigil.
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