
Recovered memories of incest - and the charge that those memories are false - may seem to be
an obscure topic. But judging the torrent of letters to The Star, with regards to my two recent
columns, the subject is dynamite. And, just as I indicated a couple of weeks ago, it's gunning
to explode right in the face of its inventors. Child Abuse accused parents who created the False
Memory Syndrome Foundation claim that unscrupulous therapists are creating completely false
recollections of incest in the malleable minds of previously happy young women. The reception
given to this rickety theory by the media - hundreds of articles, radio broadcasts, TV
interviews, documentaries and news releases - should give us pause. Notice: TGS HiddenMysteries and/or the donor of this material may or may not agree with all the data or conclusions of this data. It is presented here 'as is' for your benefit and research. Material for these pages are sent from around the world. If by chance there is a copyrighted article posted which the author does not want read, email the webmaster and it will be removed. If proper credit for authorship is not noted please email the webmaster for corrections to be posted.
The fact the public might be conned by an overly aggressive media campaign is unprecedented.
But that journalists themselves should so unquestioningly accept inflammatory, often luridly
biased, attacks on incest survivors is most disturbing. News reports echoing the foundations
propaganda, frequently denounce "aliens, witches, fairly tales, UFO's" in the same breath as the
agonizing memories of people who were raped in childhood.
True, some therapists may be inept and some accusations are surely mistaken or false.
Researchers estimate that about 5 per cent of any criminal allegations are false. That small
number, however, can't justify the huge publicity given to the proponents of "false memory
syndrome."
Dr. Elizabeth Loftus is another case in point. She is a prolific research psychologist - with no
clinical experience and no expertise in child sexual abuse or traumatic memory - who criss
crosses the continent as a highly paid witness for the accused. A current Psychology Today
profile practically drools with admiration, not least over her cream-colored Mercedes and fancy
home. Some observers estimate that, according to her own boasts, Dr. Loftus must have
earned between $3 million and $5 million as an expert witness - for hire - she even testified on
behalf of mass murderer Ted Bundy.
She's also a much-quoted and admired researcher into ordinary memory. Why, then, after 20
years of active commitment to the American Psychological Association (APA) - most recently
as a member of the task force on recovered memories of childhood abuse - did Dr. Loftus
suddenly quit the APA in January? Her resignation letter accuses the association of moving "far
from scientific thinking and more toward therapeutic and professional guild interests."
Only weeks earlier - in November and December of 1995 - two seperate ethics complaints had
been filled with the APA against Dr.Loftus. Jennifer Hoult, a concert harpist and former
software engineer from New York, and Lynn Crook, a Washington state education consultant,
had recovered memories of severe childhood sexual abuse, found corroborating evidence, sued
their fathers, and won. Hoult's father appealed the case as far as possible, losing each time.
She
was awarded $500,000 in damages and her father is now an active member of the False
Memory Syndrome Foundation.
Both women challenge the way Dr. Loftus wrote about their court cases.
The rule of the APA is that no member is allowed to resign while an ethics complaint is being
investigated.
Now the APA claims that Dr. Loftus did not know about the complaints when she
coincidentally resigned soon after they were filed. Therefore, the APA has accepted her
resignation and will not investigate the allegations. The senior ethics investigator admitted to
Hoult and Crook, in identical letters, that it's "unusual" for a member to resign in "the window
of time" between a complaint and its resolution.
"Unusual" is hardly the word. Many members have voiced astonishment and anger over the
association's conduct.
In last Sunday's column, I also referred to The Amazing Randi, a magician, and a member of
the False Memory Syndrome Foundation's scientific advisory board. A couple of readers took
me to task for apparently sneering at someone because he is a magician.
No. What I had hesitated to mention is that the colorful Randi has been involved in a number of
lawsuits. Part of the evidence brought against Randi was a tape of his telephone conversations,
of explicit sexual content, with teenage boys. Randi has at different times claimed that the tape
was a hoax made by his enemies to blackmail him, that he made the tape himself, and that the
police asked him to make it.
Whichever version is true, it's amazing indeed that such a person could be taken seriously as a
scientific adviser in an organization dedicated to denying claims of child sexual abuse.
Are these ad hominem arguments? If so, I'll accept the blame. It strikes me as urgent and
necessary to talk about the character and motives of those who are causing so much harm to
people who have already been grievously wounded.
Toronto Star Article: An Article by Michele Landsberg from Sunday, Febuary 11, 1996.
Michele Landsberg's column regularly appears in The Star Saturday and Sunday.
Related websites:
Randi Expert
Psy Zone's Randi Files
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