Hang the Witch Hunters

Xen

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Saturday, 7th January 2006
Satanic abuse scandal kids take action
by neal snowdon

A DOZEN of the children who were snatched from their parents by Rochdale social workers in the so-called "Satanic abuse" scandal in 1990 are seeking compensation.

The youngsters, who are now all adults, were among 20 seized from their homes on Middleton's Langley estate in dawn raids over allegations that youngsters had been involved in Satanic rituals.

They were eventually allowed back to their parents after a High Court judge condemned the judgment of Rochdale council's social services department, which was also heavily criticised in a report by the Social Services Inspectorate.

The council's social services director Gordon Littlemore resigned over the controversy. No evidence of any ritual or Satanic abuse was ever found.

Now 12 of the 20 children at the centre of the scandal have started a legal action against Rochdale council, demanding a formal apology for what happened and compensation for what they were put through. They are now aged between 18 and 29. Their case is being handled by specialist child welfare lawyer Richard Scorer, a partner at Manchester-based solicitors Pannone and Partners.

He expects the case to go to court in about a year's time - unless Rochdale council agrees a settlement before then.

He said: "When these events happened in 1990 these people were children who had no idea what was happening to them as they were being taken away from their families. Now they have all reached adulthood they are coming forward to speak about what they went through and they want the record put straight, which has led to this legal action.

"When they were eventually returned home, they had to put up with bullying and taunts from other children, massive family upheaval and, in some cases, parents splitting up.

"It has caused them enormous damage. This legal action is being brought because they want a proper apology from Rochdale council, and because they deserve compensation for the psychological damage, disruption to family life and long-term suffering caused by events which they did not understand and were never explained to them."

Their legal action will feature in a BBC1 documentary, When Satan Came to Town, next Wednesday at 9pm. The programme features interviews with six of the children at the centre of the controversy, with some of them allowing themselves to be identified - the first time any of them have been allowed to be named by the media.

The programme will also name and blame two social workers it believes were responsible for the scandal. Neither still works for Rochdale council although one is still believed to work in child protection in Greater Manchester.

All 12 of Mr Scorer's clients still live in Greater Manchester. The 20 who were seized came from six families.

In a statement released for the programme, Rochdale council said: "Following the judgement, the local authority took immediate steps to ensure the mistakes made in this case would not be repeated. The practice of interviewing children is now conducted in accordance with carefully researched and reviewed national guidelines."

http://www.manchesteronline.co.uk/men/news/s/197/197948_satanic_abuse_scandal_kids_take_action.html

I've heard that the investigation that was made was pathetic int he extream- though part of the problem was "american specialists' in these matters- horrible, the entire thing. I'm no friend to the wiccans mind you, as a good polytheist myself, I think most of what they do is a mockery of the old ways- but if thats what these guys were doing, and I assuem they had to be other wise nothing of this sort would have happend, then those responsible for the blunder should be brought to proper justice.
 
A government exercising judgement over families where no abuse has been proven to exist? And then covering it up for 16 years and censoring the children from telling their side of the story?

Appalling.
 
Xen, why do you even mention Wicca or witches? I'm not familiar with this case, but nothing in the article hints at anyone involved being either one, and in similar American cases, the people accused were never Wiccans, either.

This is an interesting article, though. The things that happened in the early 90s were unimaginably evil, and all caused at root by good intentions. The kids affected do deserve some form of acknowledgment of the damage done, IMO.

Edit: I read your post again -- and no, you assume wrong, I think. Accusations of satanic ritual abuse didn't come out of people practicing any form of modern witchcraft; they came out of hysteria over sexual abuse of children by family members. Kids who acted at all strangely were subjected to manipulative forms of interrogation that induced them to fabricate stories of abuse that had never happened. Often the children came to wholeheartedly believe in their own stories; they created false memories. Sometimes even the adults, when confronted with their childrens' accusations and subjected to the same methods of questioning, came to believe that they'd harmed their children.

The satanic ritual abuse stuff came out of the manipulative questioning, and it always seemed to be believed by the "experts" doing the questioning, no matter how insanely farfetched. (Ten year old girls saying they'd been impregnated by demons and forced to give birth to, then cannibalize, the child, that sort of thing. And despite doctors' examinations showing the girl had never been pregnant.) Nobody could believe the children would lie, and no one would listen to anyone who argued that the children's memories might have been manipulated, because clearly memories of such traumatic events could never be false. Lives were literally destroyed by the sex abuse/ satanic abuse hysteria. People were jailed, committed suicide, children were taken from their families, made to believe in horrible things that weren't true, damaged for life -- and all in a misguided effort to protect them.

There's books on it, some of which I've read. It's incredible stuff, if disturbing on a number of levels.
 
Renata said:
Xen, why do you even mention Wicca or witches? I'm not familiar with this case, but nothing in the article hints at anyone involved being either one, and in similar American cases, the people accused were never Wiccans, either.

primarilly because I know that the wiccans arouse suspision where they go very often, in the US- unwarrented, but undestandable, IMO- but I honestlly cannot figure how anything other then wicca would be mistaken for witchcraft in the modern era.
 
Er, Xen, even if Satanic ritual abuse was involved in these cases, Wicca and Satanism are NOT the same thing, as your posts seem to imply.

Sorry if I've misread you, can always happen:)
 
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