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- This is 1 section from EIR's sepcial report on Satanism. This report can
- be obtained for $100 from EIR in Washington, DC. For further information
- call (202)457-8840.
-
- IX. Child murder in Atlanta
-
- In 1978, Larry Flynt was prosecuted in the State of Georgia for violation
- of the pornography laws; it is here that he was shot, receiving a crippling
- injury which has confined him to a wheelchair. Certainly, his enemies were not
- the Satanists: to the contrary, Satanism, drugs, pornography flourished in this
- evil city, and do so to this day. Atlanta is sometimes called a crime capital
- of America.
- According to drug enforcement experts, Atlanta became an important center
- for narcotics distribution with the upgrading and expansion of South American
- and Caribbean drug trafficking into Miami. The pattern is an expansion to
- routes into Georgia and Houston, Tex. Conjointly with this, Atlanta became more
- important as a center for drug cartel money-laundering operations.
- It is certainly a regional capital for an international Satanic network.
- We shall show that the coverup which occurred at the time of the Atlanta Child
- Murders, has allowed Satanism to flourish there virtually unchecked.
-
- - The Atlanta Child Murders -
- From July of 1979 to May of 1981, 29 black adolescent and young adult
- males were murdered in Atlanta, Ga. The circumstances of their death clearly
- indicated a ritual element, and extensive media play guaranteed an
- international spotlight. At the time, one credible motive for the murders
- appeared to be political: to foment racial tensions. The Satanic element
- gradually unfolded.
- The officially recognized victims were mainly adolescent black males, who
- were known to be involved in drug running and in male prostitution. There is
- every indication that pornographic photographs, and perhaps videos as well,
- were being produced. One possibility is that the young men and women were
- murdered during the course of the production of ``snuff'' films; another is
- that the deaths were part of some sacrificial ritual. Other motives suggested
- for the crimes included retribution for violations of the criminals' own
- internal code (for example, that the young people held back drug profits).
- There is a question whether the list of 29 child-murder victims is
- meaningful, since other bodies, both white and black, male and female, were
- found during the same time period; and deaths occurred fitting the pattern of
- the Atlanta Child Murders after the imprisonment of Wayne Williams, the man
- convicted for the crimes. Sixty-three other people were murdered in Atlanta
- between the years 1979 and 1982. Twenty-five of these occurred after the arrest
- of Williams, the supposed lone assassin. In 1979, Atlanta was known as the
- murder capital of the U.S., with 231 homicides, according to FBI statistics.
- The children were known to frequent the house of a black man named Tom
- Terrell, known to them as Uncle Tom. Here, they were paid $10 or $15 to perform
- oral sexual acts. The children were also sodomized. They were given marijuana
- and some other form of narcotic which was daubed on their faces. The existence
- of Uncle Tom's house never came out in the trial of Williams, despite the
- availability of eyewitness testimony.
- There was definite evidence that some of the dead children had spent time
- with their captors, perhaps days, before they were killed. They were wearing
- clothing different from that in which they were captured, and the remains of
- food taken from their stomachs showed that they had eaten meals after the time
- they were last seen by friends and family.
- The children were apparently smothered to death--one possibility is that
- they were smothered at the moment of orgasm, while performing oral sex. Sexual
- organs were missing on many of the remains, which had been left to moulder
- outdoors. The location where one boy's body was found was the same place where,
- some years earlier, homosexuals had been shot in a gang war over control of the
- homosexual entertainment industry. Later, there was also a spate of
- firebombings of homosexual and sexually oriented entertainment spots in
- Atlanta.
- The murders took place against a backdrop of racial-political tension in
- the city. When Maynard Jackson became mayor of Atlanta in 1973, he reorganized
- the heretofore lily-white police force. This created dissension, which was
- later reflected in the politics of the investigation around the murders.
- Jackson hired Reginald Eaves to run the Police Department, but he was
- ultimately forced to resign after charges of corruption charges were brought
- against him, and Lee P. Brown, who subsequently relocated in Houston (and now
- New York), took over the job. Brown had received a PhD in police
- administration, and had served in Portland, Ore. and San Jose, Calif. before
- coming to Atlanta.
- Brown was in charge at the time of the murders. Many people felt that the
- way that he handled the investigations was so incompetent as to suggest either
- corruption on his part--involvement in the homosexual circles who came under
- suspicion--and/or blackmail. Maynard Jackson also came in for criticism.
- The situation surrounding the investigation of the killings was so bad,
- that some of the parents of missing children expressed doubt that the remains
- which were found were actually those of their own children. They found things
- such as discrepancies in dental work between the remains and their own
- children's dental records. In one instance, it is reported that the police
- themselves tossed a coin in order to decide to which of two missing boys, the
- body before them belonged. In other cases, there were reports of sightings in
- other cities, of boys supposedly dead.
- One of the boys was found with a stab wound in the stomach, surrounded by
- five ceremonial cuts, according to an acknowledgement by a medical examiner,
- subsequent to the Wayne Williams trial. (No Satanic connections were brought
- out by the Williams defense.) Several parents reported to investigators that
- when they saw their children's bodies they had crosses carved on their
- foreheads or chests. Newspapers reported three such instances at the time.
-
- - The occult connection -
- Atlanta has long been an occult center. Not only had the
- Process-Foundation Faith cult opened a chapter there, but there was a
- home-grown Wicca network run by a witch who called herself Lady Santana, and
- one Lord Merlin. Lady Santana was also known as Samantha Lerman.
- Lady Santana's Ravenwood Church of Wicca was granted tax exempt status in
- the State of Georgia. There is also another witchcraft coven operating openly
- there, known as The Avalon Center. It is run by a woman styling herself as Lady
- Galadriel, High Priestess of the Grove of the Unicorn. The Atlanta Wicca Church
- changed its name to the Church of the Old Religion in 1979, following the
- murder of a 15-year-old girl.
- Jolene Tina Simon was killed at Ravenwood House during an open house
- ritual. She was killed shortly before May 29, 1979, and a man named David Reese
- Williams, a 23-year-old unemployed paramedic, was subsequently indicted by an
- Atlanta grand jury for manslaughter. According to accounts, Williams coolly
- placed a gun to Simon's head and pulled the trigger, when she told him, ``Kill
- me!'' Williams claims not to remember the incident, and Wicca members who were
- present testified that the murder was accidental. A member of the Wicca Church
- from Ohio, who called herself Lady Circe, was also reported to be present in
- Atlanta during the time of the Child Murders.
- An independent investigative team in Atlanta, led by Dr. Sondra O'Neill
- (who was then teaching literature at Emory College in Atlanta), and including
- Albert Joiner and the sometime presence of Roy Innis, head of the Congress of
- Racial Equality (CORE), plus investigative journalist Ira Liebowitz, and a
- former Atlanta chief of police, developed many leads indicating a Satanic
- aspect to the crimes. (These individuals collaborated with each other on an
- informal basis but were by no means always in agreement.) Former Atlanta police
- officer Chuck Dettlinger published a book on the murders, {The List,}
- which is of interest because it documents a consistent record of police failure
- to follow up investigative leads.
- Dr. O'Neill was brought into the case by James Baldwin, who had been
- commissioned by {Playboy} magazine to write an article on the murders.
- She was already collaborating with the famous author on his biography. They
- hired two graduate students from the University of Pennsylvania to assist them.
- Later a New York investigator, Galen Kelly, was brought on the scene by Roy
- Innis. Kelly (who is prominent in Anti-Defamation League circles, and was
- indicted in New York City for kidnaping a member of a New Jersey cult,
- purportedly to deprogram the individual) systematically impeded O'Neill's
- investigations. Kelly has in the past worked closely with Rabbi Maurice Davis,
- as part of a purported anti-cult network; Davis, however, is the individual who
- originally helped sponsor Jim Jones of Jonestown fame.
- Because of Baldwin's prominence, many people from the local community came
- forward privately with information. One of these informants was subsequently
- gunned down by police on the flimsy pretext that he showed resistance to arrest
- when they sought to enter his house. Others were threatened. The major
- informant was one Shirley McGill (who subsequently came under the control of
- Innis and Kelly). McGill admitted to having been employed as a bookkeeper by a
- drug-trafficking operation that was based in Florida.
- In the summer of 1977 she became involved with Parnell Traham, who was
- working as a cab driver in the Miami area. He practiced voodoo. He had served
- in the Vietnam War, and it was apparently in Vietnam that he became involved in
- the drug traffic. The modus operandi of the operation was to purchase used cars
- in Miami, which were then loaded with drugs and transported by rural routes to
- Atlanta and to Houston.
- McGill was recruited by Traham to serve as a bookkeeper for his operation,
- and she was sent to Atlanta. O'Neill described the drug operation as operating
- in a cell formation, where individuals from one cell did not know those in
- other cells. McGill was introduced into an inner circle, who controlled the
- various cells. These people were also Satanists.
- In March of 1980, she was invited to a ceremonial ground in Atlanta. She
- was instructed to wear a long dress, with a scarf covering her head, but not to
- wear undergarments. An initiation ceremony took place, in which dope was smoked
- and there was some sexual activity. According to her account, McGill sought to
- keep her distance from the cult activities. When she did attend ritual
- ceremonies, she would volunteer to act as a guard on the perimeter of the area.
- While the members of the drug network with which she was involved were
- black, the high priest during the occult ceremonies was a white man, and white
- and black would participate in the rituals. The high priest would appear naked,
- wearing goat horns on his head, and would seem to appear from a cloud of smoke.
- A ring of candles would create a kind of altar, and these were placed
- surrounding the statute of a short, fat, seated man. The ceremonies which she
- witnessed included animal and human sacrifice, which included slitting the
- victim's throat and then drinking his or her blood from a chalice. The sexual
- orgy which would follow, included having sexual relations with animals. After
- this, people would bathe in a body of water adjacent to the ceremonial grounds.
- McGill identified several outdoor sites where rituals were held. Funeral
- homes were frequently used to dispose of bodies, which were placed in the
- closed coffins of people who were being buried from the funeral home. McGill
- also pointed out places from which the drug operations were run. One was a
- machine shop, another a barn or warehouse, and there was also a house.
- McGill related three incidents which occurred apart from these ceremonies,
- one of them in a barn. A black man dragged what appeared to be a dead black
- child into the barn by a rope tied around the child's neck. Various individuals
- tried to get McGill to pull the rope but she refused. The child's body was then
- placed in the trunk of a car. On another occasion, McGill was working in the
- machine shop, when two men brought in a young black child who was bound. The
- boy knew McGill and appealed to her for help. He told her that he would be
- killed because he had withheld money from the sale of drugs. Later she
- witnessed his murder, when a plastic bag was placed over his head. On another
- occasion she saw on the floor of the barn a naked child, who appeared to be
- dead.
- According to McGill, a young woman named JoAnn was also murdered at the
- same time. On some occasions McGill intimated that she had been involved with
- this woman in scamming the drug overlords, and so she feared for her own life,
- and that was the reason that she had broken with the cult and sought out Dr.
- O'Neill and Roy Innis. At other times, she mentioned fears for the safety of
- her son, and she also suspected that she might be chosen as a sacrificial
- victim in cult ceremonies.
- McGill reported seeing one of the purported victims of the Atlanta Child
- Murders alive. The FBI also interviewed people who claimed to have seen this
- particular boy alive as late as December of 1981.
- Witnesses near the location of the abduction of one child on the official
- victim list, identified Parnell Traham as the driver of the car used in the
- abduction. In none of the abductions of the children, is there any indication
- that they resisted capture. This leads to the hypothesis that they knew their
- captors--in some instances, these may even have been family members, or
- respected members of the community. It is not credible that all of the murdered
- children had been holding back money, since in that event some would have
- resisted capture; furthermore, it should not have taken almost 30 murders to
- convince the young people, most of whom knew each other, of the dangers of
- scamming.
-
- - Other witnesses -
- Over the four-year period in which Dr. O'Neill conducted her on-site
- investigations, eight witnesses surfaced to describe what had occurred. They
- located three main sites, one in Cobb County. They described the sacrifice of
- hundreds of victims, not merely the children identified in the Child Murder
- cases. One witness was a black magic preacher who operated from the basement of
- his own father's church. In all, four different witchcraft covens were
- identified. These apparently shared two sites, which were identified by
- witnesses. Periodically, they would come together for ceremonials.
- The sites were near bodies of water, and they would made of boulders
- placed in semi-circular configurations. Old Indian burial sites were preferred,
- and trees played a part in the ceremonies.
- Circumstantial evidence suggests Process-Foundation involvement. Hairs of
- German shepherd dogs were found in some of the remains of child victims.
- Severed heads of dogs were also found in the vicinity of ritual sites. A
- volunteer named Don Laken, formerly from Pennsylvania, was active in
- ``assisting'' the police. He was known as the ``dog man'' because he ran a
- kennel where he trained a large number of attack dogs, mainly 90 German
- shepherds. Laken admitted to a member of Wayne Williams's defense team--which
- he claimed to be aiding--that he himself practiced Satanism. He was seen
- wearing gold jewelry, all symbolizing German shepherds, including a large
- shepherd's-head pendant which he wore around his neck. Laken was particularly
- active with the numbers of so-called psychics who flooded the police with their
- offers of help. It should be noted that the Foundation Faith definitely
- incorporated clairvoyance in its revised rituals.
- In January of 1981, an anonymous telephone call alerted searchers to the
- existence of an unoccupied house in southwest Atlanta. Here neighbors had
- observed an unusual pattern of activity. There was also a smell of decayed
- flesh around the house.
- Two Bibles were found nailed to the wall, one of these was opened to the
- Book of Isaiah, Chapter 1. (This choice of passage is reminiscent of a similar
- message left on the site where Roy Radin was found murdered in 1983.) In this
- passage, God chastises His children for their sin and disobedience. Verse 15
- reads: ``Your hands are those of murderers; they are covered with the blood of
- your innocent victims.'' Verse 16 reads, ``Oh wash yourselves! Be clean!''
- Verse 29 reads, ``You will blush to think of all those times you sacrificed to
- idols in your groves of sacred oaks.'' Chapter II, Verse 6 states, ``The Lord
- has rejected you because you welcome foreigners from the East who practice
- magic and communicate with evil spirits.''
-
-
- - Wayne Williams -
- Most investigators believe that Williams was involved to some extent in
- the murders. Most probably he was used as a pornography photographer. He
- operated as a small-scale talent scout, organized a musical group called
- Gemini, and may have enticed some of the child victims. After his arrest, the
- {Egyptian Book of the Dead} was found among his possessions, and he
- himself owned a German shepherd named Sheba. Shirley McGill claimed to know
- him.
- Various spectators in the courtroom at the Williams trial appeared to be
- wearing occult symbols. Information was made available to the defense team,
- naming two police officers who were reportedly in Williams's Satanic group.
- This did not surface at the trial; however, it coheres with McGill's assertion
- that the Satanists had police protection.
- The arrest of Wayne Williams came after the investigation appeared to be
- dead-ended, but after then-Vice President Bush made a trip to Atlanta,
- demanding that some action be taken. Williams himself was at first extremely
- confident that he would be quickly released. The evidence that he was a sole
- assassin is unconvincing, to say the least. No witness descriptions of alleged
- abudctors fit the description of Williams. In fact, he was charged with only
- two of the murders. Williams pleaded not guilty, and nothing in his behavior
- evidenced a criminal disposition--other than his privately admitted membership
- in the Satanic cult--nor was any motive for the crimes established.
- There would appear to have been an agreement between the defense and the
- prosecution, to suppress the Satanic connection. Yet, in the case of stab
- wounds found on the bodies, two of the three victims so found, had wounds which
- were inflicted by a left-handed person; Williams is right-handed. Williams's
- own father, also believed to be a member of the cult, is left-handed. Perhaps
- Williams was induced to protect him.
- There were three other suspects held by the police, of whom two were
- released and one was committed to a mental institution. All three were
- dismissed as crazy by the police. The individuals had first contacted a
- minister to whom they appealed for help in their effort to reveal what they
- knew about Satanic cult activity.
-
- - Satanism in Atlanta today -
- Atlanta is currently the home of Fay Yager, founder of the Sanctuary
- Movement in the United States. Mrs. Yager has taken upon herself the painful
- task of organizing resources for parents who are seeking to protect their
- children from child abuse by their spouses or former spouses. She was drawn
- into this activity as she herself, and then her friends, found that the courts
- not only turned against them, and refused protection to their children, but
- actively supported the abusers.
- At first, she believed that the problem was primarily pedophiliac child
- abuse; only gradually did she begin to realize that three-quarters of the
- children who came to her attention for help, were in fact the victims of abuse
- by practicing Satanists.
- When her own daughter was 2 years old, Mrs. Yager found out that her
- previous husband, Roger Jones, was abusing her. She was unable to prevail
- against him in the courts, and only two years ago was she vindicated, when he
- was arrested for pornography and the rape of another child. In the meantime, he
- had been given custody of their daughter, who became pregnant as a
- teenager--and suffered miserably. The lawyer, Robert Fournoy, who defended Mrs.
- Yager's husband, became a judge, and in that capacity has continued to protect
- child abusers.
- Another Atlanta woman who now works with Mrs. Yager, Victoria Karp, has
- four grandchildren who were given by this judge into the custody of a father
- whom they reported to have been Satanically abusive to the three oldest. Mrs.
- Karp's daughter has chosen to hide out, rather than to release the children.
- The judge in this case was the same Robert Fournoy who had successfully
- defended Fay Yager's first husband.
- In the Karp case, it appears that the father was a member of a
- three-generational witchcraft family, and would be taken to the home of a
- great-aunt where ritual ceremonies took place. The children have drawn pictures
- of people being stabbed before altars. The mother did not realize what was
- happening, until she saw her daughter Alicia touching her own and her father's
- genitals during a church service. Over time, the children revealed that they
- had been taken to ceremonials in which young babies were murdered. The daughter
- herself had been filmed performing sexual acts.
- Testimony by the children was rejected by the court on the grounds that
- they were too young to be credible witnesses. At the time, the girl was 5, and
- the two boys 3 and 1. Alicia has said that she saw the parents of a little boy
- hand him over to be sacrificed and that that had really scared her. She said
- that she always believed that if something happened to her or her brothers, her
- Mom would come looking for her.
- This belief was shaken when her father told her that her mother knew
- everything. He also told her that everyone did these things, but just did not
- talk about them. Once, Alicia got really upset over something and wouldn't
- cooperate, insisting that it was time to go home; but she wanted to wait for
- her younger brother Gary. After a time, they brought her pieces of a little boy
- with red hair and told her it was Gary. After she became hysterical, the real
- Gary came out. Alicia doesn't know who the other little boy was.
- Gary told about going out ``hunting'' with his dad at night. He said that
- bank machines were good hunting grounds, but that sometimes, on a bad night,
- they would just go out and find street people to use in the rituals.
- He said that sometimes, kids were brought in by van and stored in houses
- or warehouses. The 3-year-old insisted that his great-aunt had a penis. He also
- said the adults would ``drown'' him by blindfolding him and shoving a ``hose''
- down his throat--lots of different people would stick hoses down his throat and
- then shoot liquid out of the hoses as they pushed the hoses deeper and deeper.
- All three children said that balloons were stuck inside them and blown up.
- (Later, during raids conducted by police on some of the sites described by the
- children, the police did find helium tanks. They said it was a common practice
- used to stretch the children's vaginal and anal openings without scarring them,
- in preparation for sexual abuse.)
- In all, Alicia reports witnessing an incredible 42 ritualistic murders.
- Some of these were of adults, some children, even some children who were turned
- over by their own parents to be sacrificed. There were also instances of babies
- who were bred for sacrifice right in Cobb County. She was able to tell when and
- where the murders occurred. Many of the sites which she described had been
- previously identified by Shirley McGill as places where she too, had witnessed
- Satanic ceremonies, including human sacrifices.
- (In another instances, another child whom Mrs. Yager is helping described
- a site where sacrifices occurred but he could not tell where it was. Dr.
- O'Neill suggested a location familiar to her from the Child Murders, and when
- the boy was brought to that neighborhood he immediately located the identical
- building, a funeral home.)
- The Cobb County police tried to investigate the case; however, the
- detective who was most active was taken off the case, and is now being sued by
- the cult. The therapist who had worked with the children is also being sued.
- The FBI claimed that it did not have the manpower available to investigate the
- child abuse; however, it is now extremely active in trying to locate Mrs.
- Karp's daughter, in order to return the children to the custody of their
- father.
- Fay Yager relates numbers of similar such cases throughout the country.
-
- - The strange case of Mark David Chapman -
- On Dec. 8, 1980, rock star John Lennon was gunned down in front of the
- apartment building where he lived in New York City by Mark David Chapman, a man
- with no apparent motive for the murder. Chapman admitted his guilt, and was
- intermittently repentant. He claimed that he had been led to commit the act
- because he was possessed by the Devil. He also claimed to have found direction
- in J.B. Salinger's novel, {Catcher in the Rye,} which he had in his
- possession at the time of the murder.
- He was not known to have been concerned with the career of John Lennon, in
- the past; nor, except in the period just preceding the murder, had he been seen
- with the book. The apartment building outside which Lennon died was, ironically
- enough, the Dakota--the scene at which the film {Rosemary's Baby} had
- been filmed.
- Chapman was born in 1955, in Atlanta. During his early teens he was such a
- heavy drug abuser that he was known as a ``garbage head,'' someone who would
- take any drug indiscriminately. Chapman reformed in 1971, when he was ``saved''
- by a California evangelist named Arthur Blessed. He worked as a summer
- counselor for Blessed's group, and he also had overseas assignments for it. In
- 1975, he spent a month in Beirut, and in 1978, he did a world tour, staying at
- YMCA hostels. In 1975 he also worked at a camp for Vietnamese refugees, run by
- the Y in Arkansas.
- Chapman was apparently prevented from making a career with the YMCA,
- because he was unable to get a college degree. He appears to have had some sort
- of breakdown while in college. In 1989, Fenton Bresler wrote a book about
- Chapman, titled {Who Killed John Lennon,} in which he strongly hints
- that Chapman was a bisexual who was heavily involved in a homosexual circle in
- Atlanta. One long-term friend of Chapman was a deputy sheriff in Georgia, Gene
- Scott. It was Scott, in fact, who provided Chapman with the explosive,
- hollow-point bullets which he used to kill Lennon. Scott and Chapman shared
- quarters while Chapman was living in Atlanta.
- In 1976, Chapman decided to move to Hawaii. While there, he attempted to
- kill himself. He was employed at the center where he went for treatment after
- this attempt, and then later worked as a security guard. It is not clear how he
- might have funded his 1978 world tour, which took him to Tokyo, Seoul, Hong
- Kong, Bangkok, Delhi, Israel, Geneva, London, Paris, Dublin, Atlanta, and then
- back to Hawaii, where he married the travel agent who had booked it for him.
- Supposedly he financed the trip with a credit-union loan.
- His new wife, Gloria Abe, had been involved in occultist circles, but she
- is supposed to have converted to Christianity after their romance began. At
- this time, Chapman borrowed money in order to invest in art.
- Chapman told the police that, had he not succeeded in shooting Lennon,
- other possible targets were Johnny Carson, Walter Cronkite, Jacqueline Kennedy,
- or George C. Scott. Bresler's thesis is that Chapman was brainwashed by the CIA
- as part of the MK-Ultra project, because John Lennon was felt by conservatives
- to be a potential new John Kennedy.
-
- - The Lennon connection -
- To our mind, it is far more likely that Chapman's claim to being
- demonically possessed indicates that he had been drawn into Satanic networks
- while he was still a young man in Atlanta. The possible involvement of some
- respected individuals, whether from the YMCA or the sheriff's office, in these
- same networks, would agree with the pattern of coverup in the Atlanta Child
- Murders, which occurred during the same period as the Lennon murder.
- John Lennon and Yoko Ono themselves were deeply involved in occultism. In
- May of 1979, Lennon and Yoko Ono ran a paid advertisement in New York, London,
- and Tokyo: ``Sean [their son] is beautiful. The plants are growing. The cats
- are purring. More and more we are starting to wish and pray.... Wishing is ...
- effective. It works.... Magic is real. The secret of it is to know that it is
- simple, and not to kill it with an elaborate ritual which is a sign of
- insecurity. We love you.'' Lennon and Yoko contributed $100,000 at this time to
- set up a non-profit organization they called the Spirit Foundation.
- When Chapman shot Lennon he might have walked away, and perhaps escaped
- arrest, but he stood around. This suggests a magical interest in being present
- at the moment of death.
- When Chapman worked as a security guard and then maintenance man, his job
- site was located directly opposite the Scientology headquarters in Honolulu. It
- was thought that he was responsible for making phoned death threats to the
- Scientologists. He also played Beatles records loudly enough to disrupt their
- activities. Three other men were also involved in harassing the Scientologists
- at the time. This targeting of the Church of Scientology is suggestive of the
- Process Church feud with Scientology. Charles Manson also developed enmity to
- the Church, whom he believed to be persecuting him. It is the case that a
- Scientologist living near one of the Manson Family hangouts helped two members
- of the family to free themselves from Manson's influence.
- John Lennon was a heavy LSD user, and he was involved in England with the
- occult circles led by Kenneth Anger which included the Process Church. In the
- winter of 1966, Lennon began studying the writings of Timothy Leary, including
- his version of the {Tibetan Book of the Dead;} however, it was Yoko Ono
- who solicited the services of Caribbean {curanderos} and employed her
- own, virtually resident, witchdoctors in New York City. (Anger, perhaps not
- coincidentally, is reported to have been lecturing in Honolulu at a time when
- Chapman could have met with him.)
- Yoko Ono got involved with {curanderos} in 1974. She first decided
- that her apartment at the Dakota was haunted and needed to be exorcised. She
- became a client of Santeria practitioner John Green. She also followed the
- guidelines of a Japanese occultist Takashi Yoshikawa, whose cult followers may
- have included Gloria Abe. Chapman and the Lennons were in Tokyo at the same
- time in 1978.
- John Green hooked up with a corrupt art dealer named Samuel Adams Green,
- Jr., and the two men worked a scam on Yoko Ono, selling her paintings at
- excessively high prices. In March of 1977, Yoko connected with a witch named
- Lena, whom Sam Green had met in the Caribbean, at St. Tropez. The meeting with
- the witch took place in Cartagena, and included a pact with the Devil, and
- blood sacrifices.
- At the time of Lennon's death it was rumored that he had planned to
- separate from Yoko Ono. Clearly, if this is so, from a financial point of view
- at least, she benefited from his death.
-
- - The Hand of Death -
- Serial murderers have in general been treated as lone assassins, despite
- their often open connections to Satanists. For example, the serial murderer
- Richard Ramirez, known as the ``Night Stalker,'' bragged that he was in the
- service of the Devil. Henry Lee Lucas is another case in point.
- Lucas operated across the whole of the United States, committing rapes and
- murders, apparently working as an operative for a Satanic Murder, Inc. group.
- His attempts to warn the world that he had operated as part of a Satanic secret
- society calling itself the Hand of Death, have gone largely unheeded.
- With a background similar to that of Charles Manson, and of a similar age,
- Lucas was born near Blacksburg, Va. on Aug. 23, 1936. His mother, Viola Lucas,
- was a hillbilly prostitute who was married to an invalid and local moonshiner.
- (Manson was born two years earlier to a mother in similar circumstances.)
- Lucas's upbringing, like Manson's, was brutal, and by the time he was 23 years
- old he had served two terms in prison.
- Eventually, Lucas was arrested and charged with the murder of his mother,
- and in March of 1960 sentenced to 40 years in jail. He was, however, paroled 10
- years later. Just three blocks from the prison, he raped and murdered a woman.
- Although this Michigan murder never caught up with him, Lucas did spend four of
- the next five years, from 1970-74, in Jacksonville Prison in Florida on a
- kidnaping conviction. The prison system was remarkably generous to both Lucas
- and Manson.
- Drifting around the Mid-Atlantic area, Lucas wound up in Carbondale,
- Penna., where, on Aug. 6, 1975, he met up with Otis Toole. Toole, a homosexual,
- was already a member of the Satanic cult. The two men traveled the country
- robbing, raping, and murdering. Toole showed himself to be a cannibal, during
- this time.
- During this initial six months of association, Lucas and Toole did two
- contract killings for pay, both of which were arranged through Toole. After
- this spree, Toole brought Lucas back to his home in Orlando, Fla. and
- introduced him to his family. Based in Orlando, Lucas and Toole made several
- other trips out of the area carrying out robberies, rapes, and murders. In
- Orlando, they connected with a man who offered them the job of transporting
- stolen cars across country. They would be given $1,000 for each trip, to drive
- cars to Chihuahua in northern Mexico and then fly back to Shreveport to pick up
- the next car. They refused this. This sounds very similar to the operation to
- transport drugs, described by McGill.
-
- - The cult -
- In October 1978, Toole informed Lucas that he was working with the Satanic
- Hand of Death cult, and offered to introduce Lucas into it. In an
- autobiographical account of his life, Lucas's description of his induction to
- the cult, sounds like a rerun of the recruitment methods of Constanzo. That
- Lucas knew of the existence of Satanic burial sites in the Matamoros
- area--before the police discovered them--suggests that the similarity may not
- have been fortuitous.
- First, according to Lucas, the initiate is warned that once one joins,
- there is only one way out--death. Toole, who urged Lucas to join, told him that
- the Satanic ritual practiced by the Hand, ``Gives us the power to do anything
- we want as long as we obey the master.''
- Once Lucas agreed to join the Hand of Death, he, was driven directly to
- the training camp, which was located in the Everglades area. On his arrival,
- the first task which he was given was the murder of one of the ``students,'' a
- young black homosexual who had betrayed his oath to the Devil. He slit the
- man's throat and later that same evening, a Satanic ritual was performed in
- which the dead man's heart was cut out, his blood drained, and his body
- dismembered. All of the initiated members of the Hand drank the dead man's
- blood and ate pieces of his flesh. The remains of the body were then burned at
- an altar.
- According to Lucas's account, there were several hundred students at the
- Hand of Death training camp, coming from six different countries; over half of
- them were women. The camp provided unlimited access to all kinds of
- drug-taking, which was encouraged recreational activity. Liquor was available,
- and after evening ritualistic sacrifices, there would be a drug/sex orgy
- involving all the campers.
- The daytime part of the program included a full curriculum of training
- courses in murder, rape, car theft, drug trafficking, and every other form of
- organized criminal activity. Each student had already been assigned a partner
- and a sponsor, who paid the cost of the training. Lucas's training lasted for
- seven weeks. After leaving the camp he was assigned to work on kidnaping
- operations run by the organization.
- He and Toole were instructed to kidnap three babies and deliver them to a
- ranch located in the Mexican state of Chihuahua, which was a four-hour drive
- from Juarez. Next they kidnaped two young girls, approximately 11 and 13 years
- of age, who were to be used as porno actresses in a snuff movie. Over a
- 10-month period, the Lucas-Toole team traveled around fourteen states in the
- United States.
- After 10 months, at his request, Lucas was reassigned to contract
- killings, and over the period of one year he participated in six professional
- assassinations, which he claims were of a Spanish Army general, a politician in
- Mexico City, a Canadian in Toronto, two Houston millionaires, and a politician
- from west Texas. In a subsequent assassination, Lucas and Toole were dispached
- to murder the ``money man'' at the Chihuahua ranch, who was considering
- ``retiring'' from the kidnaping and ``kiddy-snuff'' business.
- The Hand of Death is also in league with organized crime in
- drug-trafficking operations. In part, the members of the Hand themselves are
- regular drug users and therefore need their personal supplies. Lucas describes
- carrying out drug deliveries between Midland and Stoneburg, Tex. (in the north
- central part of the state).
- Lucas claims that he was sent on behalf of the Hand to deliver vials of
- poison to Jim Jones's People's Temple shortly before the mass suicide there. He
- has described traveling to Guyana on a chartered plane and delivering the
- poison. He also says that he was approached to carry out an assassination of
- President Jimmy Carter, a job which he declined although the price tag was
- obviously very lucrative. He also says that rumors circulated among Hand of
- Death members that Lee Harvey Oswald had been a member.
- Lucas eventually was picked up by the police and claims to have had a
- religious conversion. The Sheriff of Williamson County, Tex., Jim Boutwell,
- began an extensive debriefing/interrogation of Lucas in August 1983, which led
- Lucas to reveal information about the Hand of Death. As a result, a Lucas Task
- Force was created involving county sheriffs, the Texas Rangers, and the FBI.
-
- - The cult resurfaced? -
- An ugly case in Virginia, which broke in August of 1989, suggested that
- the same networks are still in operation. At that time, in a move which may
- have actually averted more important revelations from surfacing, U.S. Attorney
- Henry Hudson revealed the existence of a Satanic pedophile ring which was being
- tracked by California detectives and an FBI task force.
- Two men were arrested and charged with being part of a national conspiracy
- to kidnap children in order to sexually abuse them. According to Hudson, 100
- FBI agents had been involved for six months in tracking Dean Ashley Lambey of
- Richmond, Va. and Daniel T. Depew of Alexandria, Va.
- The two men were charged with conspiracy to unlawfully seize, confine,
- inveigle, decoy, kidnap, abduct, or carry away and hold for ransom and reward
- and otherwise use a person unwillingly transported in interstate and foreign
- commerce. They were caught when they responded to a computer bulletin board
- advertisement placed by the San Jose, Calif. police, who pretended to advertise
- for a young boy.
- Officer James Melvin Rodrigues, Jr. of the San Jose Police Department
- Sexual Assault Investigation began a probe of computer bulletin board services
- in February. Some bulletin board services, available to anyone with a personal
- computer, a modem, and a telephone line, are used to facilitate contacts among
- those interested in Satanic practices and/or deviant sexual partners. Rodrigues
- posted a public message with a bulletin board called Chaos, on Feb. 28: ``From:
- Bobby R. To: All. Subject: Youngsters. Looking for others interested. Hot and
- need someone. I'll travel if we can set something up. Pics or the real thing
- better. I like taking photo and being the star. Hope someone is interested.''
- He received an answer the next day from a Dave Ashley, later identified as
- Dean Ashley Lambey: ``Your message caught my interest. Think we may have
- something in common but need to explore more. Want to Talk?? P.S. I like REAL
- youngsters!!'' In subsequent phone conversations Lambey expressed a sexual
- preference for pre-adolescent Caucasian males, ages 8 to 13, with blond hair
- and blue eyes. He wanted the real thing but was also interested in pornography.
- He also suggested they might make their own films.
- On March 13, he wrote to Officer Rodrigues: ``When I mentioned that we
- could make our own, I was only half serious. Unfortunately, I don't have `raw'
- materials needed to produce something, but I sure wish I did. Although I guess
- if I had the materials, I wouldn't care about any videos!!! Depending on your
- morals and such, I guess we could go find the necessary ingredients, but that
- would be {real} kinky!!! Of course, by now you probably think that I'm
- a real nut case, but what the hey, at least I'm honest, right??''
- The scheme, as it emerged, with the encouragement of the police officer,
- was for Lambey to purchase or abduct a minor boy, hold him in captivity for up
- to two weeks, videotape acts of sexual molestation and the ultimate murder of
- the child, and thereafter dispose of the body. The financial rewards from
- marketing the video were also discussed.
-
- - Again the Florida angle -
- Lambey advised Rodrigues that he knew someone in Florida in the business
- of selling minors. He thought the price to be approximately $12,000 per child,
- with a $5,000 refund if the child were returned. He claimed to be in weekly
- phone contact with this child-seller. Both the late-1970s Atlanta Child
- Murders, and the recent Satanic killings in Matamoros, Mexico, had a Florida
- angle, as did the Hand of Death cult.
- In a face-to-face meeting with undercover police from San Jose, Lambey
- implicated Depew in his plans. He reported Depew to be a sado-masochist who
- liked to subject his victims to ``cigarette burns and choking them till they
- pass out. Slap them around when they wake up and starting all over again.
- Hanging them real slowly.'' He also reported that Depew had admitted to
- murdering a 17-year-old runaway after having had sexual intercourse with him.
- Depew later met with the policemen himself, and confirmed his interest in
- participating in making a snuff film of a 12-to-13-year-old boy.
-
- - The case of Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald -
- In 1979, Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald was convicted of the murder of his wife and
- two children, and sentenced to life imprisonment. There are many indications
- that he did not receive a fair trial, but of interest here is the fact that,
- whatever the guilt or innocence of Dr. MacDonald, the existence of a Satanic
- network, connected to drug trafficking and operating on Army bases was
- definitely established.
- The murders occurred on Feb. 17, 1970. The brutal slaughter appeared to be
- a repeat of the Manson Family atrocities. Dr. MacDonald was serving as a doctor
- with the Army Special Forces unit at Fort Bragg, N.C. He was sleeping on his
- living room couch when, he claims, a band of hippies invaded his house,
- assaulted him, and then killed his wife and two children, who were sleeping
- upstairs. His wife and children received multiple stab wounds, and the word
- ``pig'' was written in blood on one of the walls. MacDonald reports that he
- heard chanting to the effect of ``Acid is groovy, kill the pigs.''
- Dr. MacDonald, who himself received several stab wounds, survived the
- brutal assault only to be accused of the crime. This, despite the fact that
- MacDonald was able to describe the members of the group, particularly one young
- woman who had long blond hair and wore a floppy hat. These people were seen in
- the vicinity of the MacDonald house at the time of the crime. Despite
- circumstantial evidence which supported Dr. MacDonald's story, he became the
- prime suspect. The search for a band of Manson-type killers was not pursued.
- The case initially came under the jurisdiction of the Army's Criminal
- Investigations Division (CID). The CID was ill-equipped to deal with forensic
- evidence, as was proven when the FBI forensic laboratories were brought into
- the picture. More striking was the fact that the crime scene itself was
- tampered with, when a shocked soldier attempted to straighten the living room.
- The neatness of the room seemed, at first, to belie the doctor's story that he
- had been assaulted.
- On Sept. 12, 1970, the case against MacDonald was dropped by the Army,
- because of insufficient evidence. Despite this, investigation continued--still
- targeting MacDonald. On Aug. 1, 1974, the Department of Justice directed the
- FBI to investigate the unsolved murders, and six months later, on Jan. 24,
- 1975, MacDonald was indicted by a federal grand jury in North Carolina. Despite
- the fact that the doctor, with reason, claimed double jeopardy, the case came
- to trial on July 16, 1979. Dr. MacDonald was found guilty of two counts of
- second-degree murder, against his wife and one of his children, and one count
- of first-degree murder, and sentenced to three life terms, to be served
- consecutively. He won an appeal on the basis of denial of speedy trial, but
- this was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court, and he is now serving his
- sentence.
-
- - The Satanic angle -
- Evidence substantiating the existence of a Satanic cult in the area,
- fitting Dr. MacDonald's description, was kept from the jury, on the pretext
- that this was hearsay. This included confessions by at least three members of
- the group that they had been involved in the killings. One member of what
- turned out to be Helen Stoeckley's Satanic circle at Fort Bragg, told friends
- that he had been involved with the murder. He died of an apparent drug
- overdose. (Stoeckley was accurately described by MacDonald as wearing a floppy
- hat and having long blond hair. She in fact frequently wore such a blond wig.)
- She told many friends that she had been present at the crime scene. She
- said that she and some fellow drug users had begun to dabble in Satanism. On
- the night of the crime, they were all ``high'' on drugs. According to her
- account, they had intended to frighten the MacDonalds but the situation went
- out of control.
- Stoeckley described herself as a witch to friends and family. She died in
- suspicious circumstances of apparent sudden liver failure, after she gave a
- taped confession to the defense. She had a young child, whom she cared for
- carefully; yet when she died her child was left unattended. It is surprising
- that she had not sufficient forewarning that she was seriously ill, to have
- provided care for her child. Indeed, she was in the midst of cooking a meal
- when she apparently collapsed.
- She was, in fact, a police informer who had been responsible for over 100
- prosecutions of drug offenders. She was the child of Army personnel on the
- base, and was herself a drug addict. She privately admitted to her presence on
- the crime scene during the murders, but requested immunity before she would
- implicate herself further. This was denied by the government.
- Stoeckley described how drugs were being transported from Vietnam to U.S.
- Army bases, hidden in the stomachs of dead soldiers. Only after the drugs had
- been removed would the soldiers' bodies be sent home to their families.
- According to Stoeckley, the drug network had a high level of protection. She
- also described how many members of the network were also involved in Satanic
- cult activity. According to her, this Satanic cult operated covens across the
- country that had been threatening her with death should she talk.
- From the time the murder was reported, the Army made no attempt to
- apprehend the criminals described by MacDonald. Not even the simple step of
- setting up a roadblock was taken, although, according to witness reports, had
- this been done, individuals fitting MacDonald's description might well have
- been immediately apprehended. This raises the question of whether there a
- coverup was immediately put in place to protect Army top brass who were
- implicated in the drug trafficking. It is of interest that Michael Aquino
- served at this base soon after the murders.
-
-