Satan Wants You (2023)

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Satan Wants You (2023)

Post by bunniefuu »

I want to tell you

about a book that kept me awake

for two nights this week

as I read it.

It's one of those

you-can't-put-down books.

It was a journey of horror,

of sadism, and perversion.

A story

of brutality and death.

It is the story of a woman

who wrestled with the Devil...

and won.

[static crackles]

[Pringle] Joining me now

from Victoria is Michelle Smith,

a one-time victim of abuse

by a Satanic cult,

and Dr. Lawrence Pazder,

the psychiatrist

who helped her come to terms

with that nightmare.

They are co-authors of the book

Michelle Remembers.

The book

is called Michelle Remembers.

The authors are Michelle Smith

and Lawrence Pazder, M.D.,

who, acting as a psychiatrist,

extracted from her

bizarre childhood memories

of Satan...

which have shocked many people.

[reporter] Michelle Smith

created a sensation

with her story of abuse

at the hands of a Satanic cult.

This was

the first publicized account

of such rituals.

Now, you've mentioned evidence

which proves

some of the early things

you feel

that happened to her

as a small child

in Victoria, B.C..

I have to say

that the evidence is clear

that this came

from an experience

that Michelle had.

[Jack Webster]

Michelle, can I ask you

what it was that,

after four years of therapy

and this deep state

of consciousness,

that came out of your mind?

Uh, basically,

what I remembered

was a 14-month period of my life

at age five,

where I was given

to a group of people,

whom, at first, I wasn't aware

of what they were doing

other than, to a child,

they were adults doing things

I couldn't understand,

and it frightened me.

They would put me in cages,

they would

sacrifice animals,

they would have

a lot of candles,

and chanting,

and bizarre things

I had never seen.

Eating feces, and orgies,

and-- and, um...

dismembering fetuses--

these were things

that you experienced?

That's right.

Now, when you say

something like that,

that's alarming-- I mean,

people get terrified

by this sort of thing.

I mean,

are they rightfully terrified?

I think that, today,

that it's very, very wise

to take a good, hard look

at where

you place your children,

into whose care

you place your child.





[podcaster Sarah Marshall]

I have been interested

in the "Satanic Panic"

for years--

I researched it for years...

...and once I read

Michelle Remembers,

I could not

get it out of my head.



I did a five-part series

on Michelle Remembers.

To me,

it was important

to present a discussion

about it to people,

because this book

has helped shape the world

we now live in,

and whose contents we have

to have some understanding of

if we're going to know

how we got here, so...

I think

of Michelle Remembers

as the "Patient Zero"

of the Satanic Panic.

The book begins

when Michelle is in the hospital

following a miscarriage,

and Dr. Pazder comes--

because he, in the past,

has worked as her therapist--

and she tells him

about a dream

where there's an itchy spot

on her hand.

She scratches it,

and then...

countless tiny spiders

come surging forth,

and she's extremely upset

by this dream,

and so he decides,

based on this,

that it's time for them

to return to therapy.



[interviewer]

What went on in your childhood

that you discovered?

[Michelle] What, basically,

I began to remember

was a series of events

that stretched out

over about a 14-month period

in my life.

[interviewer] Was this

through hypnosis, Doctor, or--?

[Larry]

Actually, it's beyond hypnosis.

It's a method

that Michelle had devised

to go deep

into her depths.

[interviewer] How had

you devised this technique

yourself, Michelle?

[Michelle] It just came about

in the atmosphere

of Dr. Pazder saying to me,

"Just go where you have to go.

I'll be there with you."

I could then shut my eyes,

and through breathing

very deeply,

go way down inside.

It felt very much like falling

over backwards into the dark...

and that's where

I began to find the memories.

[click]

[Larry] Side "A"--

November 1976.

[Michelle gasping and sobbing]



[Michelle]

The first thing I remembered

was a night

when a group of people

were gathered to do...

I didn't know what.

They were doing dances

that were not like the dances

I was used to.

They had the walls

draped in black.

They had set up candles.

My mother was present...

but not in the ceremony,

not in the ritual,

she wasn't involved in that.

Her position seemed to be

one of giving me to this group.

They were dedicated

to doing a lot of seriously...

frightening kind of things,

and they sacrificed animals,

and they used fetuses of babies

in their ceremonies.



[Michelle sobs on tape]

[crying out]

No! No! No!

[screams unintelligibly]

No!



Incredible story.

Tell me about Michelle

and what, in fact,

you believe

happened to her

as a small child.

Well, I have to back up

a little bit.

I knew Michelle very well

through four years of therapy,

uh, intensive therapy,

and there was no evidence

of any of this kind

of material present,

but I knew her personality

and everything.

When she came to me a year after

it had been discontinued,

and went into a very deep level

of consciousness

and began to relive,

essentially--

to see, to hear, to feel,

and to tell me in detail--

these events,

for 14 months,

of what happened to her

as a child,

it was very difficult

for me to...

decide where

it was coming from.



[Charyl] Victoria

was very small in the 1950s.

I mean,

the population was 70,000--

that's it.

It was safe.

It was quiet.

Tertia's the oldest,

and then Michelle

is the middle child,

and I came along

five years later.

Tertia was pretty.

Michelle

was kind of a fuddy-duddy.

I was gorgeous.

[laughs]

No, I'm just joking!

But Michelle and I were

always getting into trouble.

I think that's because we had

such an up-and-down childhood.

My mom,

she didn't have an easy life,

raising three girls

on her own.

I mean, Dad was in and out.

You know, he was an alcoholic,

and he had

a gambling problem, so...

When you have a husband

that's an alcoholic,

you don't have friends.

You just don't.

So Mom spent a very lonely life.

My sisters talk about it now,

and it's-- they always say,

"Well, she always--

she would drink,"

and I said... [sighs]

"You know,

if I had three young girls,

and I sat down in the evening

and had a cold beer,"

you know, "I wouldn't classify

that as drinking," you know?

She just, she had

a lot on her plate.

We moved eight or nine times

in ten years

because of Dad.

Dad was quite violent.

And it always happened

Easter, Christmas, Thanksgiving.

We would all end up

at a hotel somewhere

because the police

would have to come and take us,

because Dad would

start to...

terrorize

and destroy the house,

and beat my mom up.

That was my childhood. Right?

You know, I just assumed

that's what everybody did--

got drunk

and had fights.

I don't know.

[click]

[Cheetie]

Larry liked the limelight.

You know,

everybody liked him

and he liked being liked...

and Michelle wasn't like that.

Michelle is like a Puritan,

you know?

No off-colour jokes, and...

not really any swearing,

and no alcohol.

But Michelle is

a caring,

loving,

gentle person

who cares about the whole world.

I worked with them

for about a year and a half,

and I only did it

because I love typing.

[click]

Larry had recorded everything

that Michelle said

in her reliving process.

[Larry Pazder speaking]

[Cheetie]

He took his reel-to-reels,

put it all on onto cassettes,

and I went through

the whole 14 months

from the beginning

to the end,

and filled in

as much missing words and sounds

as I could.

[typewriter clacking]

And so, what Larry did

was he clipped out, you know,

excerpts of the typing,

and he would put that,

and then put

his own writing underneath it,

and then he'd give it to me,

and I'd type it all and--

and send it off

to the publisher.

[Michelle, on tape,

increasingly distraught]

[Larry speaks]

[Michelle speaking]

[Cheetie]

To be 100% honest with you,

I listened to all the tapes

and I believe that something

happened to Michelle.

There isn't much doubt

in my mind.

Something definitely

happened to her, and...

I do believe

it was a group of Satanists,

and they had her

for those 14 months.

[Michelle cries out,

on tape]

[sobbing]

[Marshall]

As they get deeper

into these memories

of Satanic ritual abuse...

Michelle learns

that her mother

is not merely dabbling

in this social scene.

She gave Michelle

to the Satanists

because she is a Satanist.

She belongs to these people.

[Michelle sobs and weeps]

[Marshall]

And essentially,

the bulk

of Michelle Remembers

is long descriptions

of a young child

being mercilessly tortured.

[Michelle, sobbing]

[weeping]

[Larry, quietly]

[Michelle speaks]

[Marshall]

Dr. Pazder and Michelle

were spending

more and more time together.

The sessions are getting

up to six hours long.

It's becoming

both of their worlds,

and yet, surprisingly,

each of them is going home

to a spouse each night--

Michelle to her husband, Doug,

and Dr. Pazder

to his wife, Marylyn.



[Charyl] I met Larry

at Michelle's wedding

when she was getting married

to Doug Smith.

She loved Doug.

They were happy, you know?

He was a kind, kind person.

Michelle had a huge imagination.

She always created things--

she was very creative.

So, she had made

her wedding dress

and she had made

her husband's suit.

But the wedding--

I remember Larry coming in,

and, uh,

I thought it was odd...

that a psychiatrist

would show up at a wedding

of-of-- of a patient,

but there must have been

a connection

between Michelle and him.

[church bell pealing]

[Marylyn] Well,

I was married to Larry Pazder.

We met when I was 13

and he was 17,

and we married in 1961,

when he graduated

from medicine

and I had graduated

from nursing.

Well, he was always lots of fun,

and always very happy

and cheerful,

and very charming.

My mom said,

"he could charm the birds

right out of the trees,"

and he collected friends

like a dog collected fleas.

[Theresa]

My dad was really religious

and we went to church

every Sunday.

He was very much, like,

"The Catholic Church

is the only church,"

but with my dad, like...

I was his princess, basically--

"Daddy's little girl".

So I was always really, really

tight with my dad.

Like, I knew

he was a psychiatrist,

and I think

that's one of the reasons why

I really looked up to him

because, like, a psychiatrist

was sort of seen

as somebody that was

kind of all-knowing

and expert in human behaviour

kind of thing.

You're a conventional

medical psychiatrist.

Absolutely.

How would you describe

what was done...

mentally and physically?

It was a very carefully

organized as*ault on Michelle,

on a physical, emotional,

intellectual,

and finally,

on a spiritual level.

Very organized.

-Very sophisticated.

-Who were these people?

Well,

they're a secret organization.

They're a secret society.

Uh, a secret society

does not reveal

the identity of the people

or the ways of their practices.

I was familiar with this type

of society firsthand

in Africa--

practicing general medicine

there--

and if one of the members

of that society

revealed who he was,

he was k*lled instantly.



[Marylyn] Larry had the camera

when we were in Nigeria--

for taking 16-millimetre.

He liked to record things

and he had all the latest

photographic equipment,

recording equipment--

everything like that.

He loved doing that.

Larry was a character,

and he told

these stories of Africa.



And he had some run-ins

with nuns down there.

Nuns kept telling him

that he was evil,

and he was full of voodoo,

and he should leave.



[Marylyn] There were

strange things there.

It was

a completely different culture.

Very, very different.

He did take some pictures

of this group dancing around...

and it was like as if

they were in a possession state.

He went in there

and took those pictures

of two big wooden masks...

and he really liked

that sort of thing.

He seemed to be

very fascinated with it

and just kind of drawn to that.

[Larry, on radio]

Well, I had worked in Africa

and done a lot of work

in transcultural psychiatry,

so I was familiar with cults,

and the degree of

sophistication

and organization

that these people

were using on Michelle

told me that they were

a serious cult, indeed.

[host] But they believe

in the other God--

-the Devil, right?

-The Devil.

They worship the Devil

to bring down anything good

that they know about.

[host] How do they do this,

Michelle, what rituals--?

Does the Devil appear?

Is that the idea?

[Michelle] Well, that is one

of their intents, of course,

is to summon a presence.

[host] And you quote

that the Devil always

talks in rhyme?

[Larry]

This is historically a fact

that was brought out to us

by the priest

who we had to call in

to help us understand

what we were experiencing.

[host] "But I'll be back--

you wait and see.

I'll be back

to take the world for me."

You heard this, Michelle?

[Michelle]

Yes. It was serious.

Father Guy said

that Michelle could never know

the symbology...

of what she was saying.

Like, mostly, when Satan

comes out of the fire

and he speaks in rhymes.

Father Guy was the priest

at the Catholic Church

that Larry and Michelle went to,

and so he helped

Michelle to understand

what she's seeing

and-- and what's happening

in that reliving process.

[Jack Webster]

"Michelle is saved

by the timely intervention

of the Virgin Mary."

What was that referring to?

I was literally

being frightened to death.

At that moment,

when I think I was dying,

a very soft white light came

and enveloped me,

much like the feeling of being

padded with cotton batting,

and out of that, a woman came

and stood beside me,

and took a hold of my hand,

identified herself

as "Ma Mre",

and basically told me

to hang on,

to help me understand

the situation I was in,

and how to get through it.

-"Ma Mre"?

-Ma Mre.

-The Virgin Mary?

-That's right.

[Cheetie] Mother Mary--

they referred to her

as "Ma Mre"--

visited Michelle

and talked to her in French.

She helped

to keep her going.

Father Guy...

felt concerned about it enough

that he took Larry and Michelle

over to his bishop,

which was Bishop Remi De Roo

at the time, and...

Bishop Remi De Roo decided

that her memories

had enough import

that they needed to go to Rome

and tell the Pope this...

and so they did!



[church bell tolls]

Larry and Michelle

and Bishop Remi De Roo

went there,

and they did

get to see the Pope...

...and they did tell him

Michelle's memories.

[Morningside host] It sounds

like Dante's Inferno--

hundreds of mutilated corpses.

-Now, you saw this?

-Mm-hmm.

Now, you've placed this

in the hands

-of the Catholic Church?

-That's right.

[Larry] The entire tapes

were transcribed

with a great deal

of time and effort.

There's some

million and a half words,

and these are presently

in the hands of the Church

for their study.

[host] And so, the Vatican

still has some pronouncements

to make upon this?

-Very much so.

-Yes.

[Larry] ...And they're

taking it very seriously.



[Cheetie]

It was October, in 1980...

as soon as the book came out,

Larry and Michelle started

this big publicity tour.

[Charyl] She was traveling

all over the place

for this whole book tour.

We didn't think

it would really get

as-- as big as it did,

but then it just--

I don't know how it did,

it just blew up.

I had a ton of articles

from all the papers

and everywhere that they went.

[Charyl] Michelle and Larry

were famous.

They were famous.

Everybody was talking about it.

I mean, in the newspapers

in San Francisco and Houston.

She was in Seattle, Dallas,

and New York.

She was everywhere.

I mean, they just went

right across the whole country,

and when they were

on the book tours,

they stayed in

all these really fancy hotels.

They had limousines.

And I lived in San Francisco

and they came down

on one of her many book tours,

and I mean, we had fun,

we had some wonderful dinners...

...and they wined and dined

whoever they were with.

I know they got $245,000 U.S.

advance for the book.

[Cheetie] And I know

it was translated

into a bunch of languages

other than just English,

so I know the book

must've sold a lot of copies.

The book's already

a big bestseller!

Who wrote it?

You wrote it?

-We wrote it together.

-We wrote it together.

[Charyl] But at that time,

I had to have surgery,

and so I had

just come out of surgery,

and I was lying there

and I was really groggy,

and I looked up at the TV,

and all of sudden,

there was my sister,

and I was like,

"Oh, my God."

[game show theme plays]



[host] I, Michelle Smith,

was turned over by my mother

at the age of five

to a group of

practicing Satanists...

who, for the next year,

held me c*ptive

and abused me

both mentally

and physically

as part of a demonic ritual

called the "Feast of the

Beast".

After my ordeal,

I lived normally and happily

until 1976,

when a strange sense of unease

led me to seek

psychiatric help.

All the terrifying memories

that were buried for so long

began to surface

and were recorded

by my doctor, Lawrence Pazder,

and Dr. Pazder and I

have told my story

in a book

called Michelle Remembers.

At first, I thought

I was imagining it--

I was hallucinating,

I thought I was, like,

"Man, that morphine

must be really good." [laughs]

When you relive these things,

was this just in your head,

the reliving?

No, this took place--

Oh, the reliving itself?

Yes. This, took--

This was in my head.

[Charyl]

It was just too strange...

and she told the whole story.

So who's the person that was

turned over to a Satanic cult

and had written a book?

The votes are all in--

now, we're gonna find out

which of these ladies,

in fact, did survive

this, uh, demonic, uh, uh...

possession, and we're gonna--

who better to pick her out

than the co-author of her book,

Dr. Lawrence Pazder?

Doctor, come down

and pick out Michelle,

if you would, please.

[crowd applauding]

And of course, she stood up,

and I was like,

"I can't believe this."

[laughing]

I think I called her

and I said,

"I can't believe I just saw you

on TV." [laughs]

[Ward]

Can you squeeze in there?

-Are you comfortable?

-Yes, indeed.

Um, Doctor, before we go on,

I'd like to ask, is there

any misinformation that emerged

from this particular, uh, spot

that you'd like to clear up?

Well, one of

the important things

is the, uh, journey

to the Vatican

was to bring the information

Michelle had seen

some special presences--

Ma Mre, who is thought

to be the mother of God.

[Charles Ennis]

The book came out in 1980,

and I heard about it

almost immediately

because I was

the first Wiccan priest

in law enforcement.

It was

a very, very popular book--

it still is, in some circles--

and she's

all over North America

in years following

the publishing of that book--

in front of police audiences,

in front of church audiences,

in front of

community audiences...

and they're both

being seen as an expert.

[Michelle] I knew

that it needed to be shared.

It's the average person that,

with this kind of information,

maybe we can make

some wiser decisions

about the kinds of things

that go on.

Maybe we won't get

so easily pulled into cults.

[Charyl]

She was everywhere.

They were plugging everything.

That's what they did for...

at least two years.

And he was all of a sudden

being asked to come and talk

because, apparently,

now he was the guru of...

being able to decipher

when a child has been abused.

So that's when they started

the speaking tours

for the psychiatric conventions.

[Debbie Nathan] In 1981,

there was an American

Psychiatric Association

annual meeting,

and Pazder talked about

the content

of Michelle Remembers,

and he started generalizing

that there was this phenomenon,

you know, beyond

that particular story--

that there was a phenomenon

called "Satanic ritual abuse."



[Ennis]

"Satanic ritual abuse"

was a theory

that people took as a fact,

that there's

a Satanic conspiracy

and there are children

who are kidnapped or stolen,

and sacrificed.

Children are involved

in graveyards and crematoriums,

in funeral parlours

because one of

the primary focuses

of these people

is death.

Everything is attempted

to be destroyed and k*lled

in that child,

and in society,

everything of goodness.

[click]

[grand theme rises]



I'm Gordon Coulter.

For many years,

I served as

a law enforcement officer.

Today, it's my privilege

to host this program

on a little-known area

in law enforcement.

It's the area of Satanic cults.

[Nathan] People would come in

and they'd be paid

to give these seminars

to the police,

or particularly

the mental health professions.

There were just

all kinds of seminars,

and, you know,

the problem was

that you could

get credits for these

and they'd get

their little certificate.

Now they know

all about Satanic ritual abuse.

[TV reporter]

A few months ago,

Chicago played host

to a conference

featuring ritual abuse.

One thing that's

super-important to remember,

I think the field is forgetting,

is these people

come from cults.

[TV reporter]

Like-minded social workers

and therapists

eagerly noted

the latest

on the Satanic threat.

Police are also being taught

how to "spot Satan".

I, um, do lectures

throughout the country.

In fact, I was in Canada.

Did a presentation, uh,

for about 150 multi-agency

personnel up there.

[Blanche Barton] We called them

"Cops for Christ"--

people who had

their own agenda,

and they created these seminars

and these materials

and presented as actual, uh,

scientific, confirmed fact.

[Ennis] There was an enormous

amount of time spent

dragging police

into conferences

to be taught

how to investigate this stuff.

All of that

can be directly traced back

to the Pazders' book...

and others, you know?

That's what fuelled that.

That's what made that happen.

[Nathan] Pazder said

that it was very widespread,

and he pretty much validated

that claim--

that Satanic ritual abuse

is a real concern. You know?

People panic

over this stuff.



[Charyl] Michelle and Larry

were always talking all the time

of Victoria,

in the church,

explaining Satanic cults...

and that's when someone said

that the child was gonna

be stolen from the hospital,

and it caused major havoc!

We stepped up our extra

security staff itself,

and we've taken

other certain precautions

within the hospital

that I can't discuss.

[Marylyn] It was in the paper

that Satanists

were going to take a baby

from the nursery.

People were really alarmed.

They were really upset.

The patrol guards

seem to be

wandering around

the halls constantly.

I've been up at times

during the night and seen them.

[local reporter]

Dr. Lawrence Pazder,

who works out of

this Victoria medical building,

expressed concern

the Satanists' threat

hadn't been checked

thoroughly enough,

and denied any connection

between it and his book,

the bestseller,

Michelle Remembers.

[Charyl]

People got caught up in it.

It was like a snowball,

you know?

The more interest it got,

the bigger it got,

and it was just...

it was a hot topic.

[Agent Ken Lanning]

Up until 1983,

I was not aware of

any of these cases...

and then it just began to grow

and grow and grow,

and I kept hearing about

more and more of these cases.

I'd say,

"Man, this is some weird stuff.

This is--

This is some really serious,

heavy-duty stuff here."

I didn't know what to call it!

I didn't say, "Wow!

That's Satanic ritual abuse."

I just heard people

start to refer

to these kinds of cases

as "Satanic ritual abuse..."

and it touched a nerve.

"Satanic! Oh!" Those--

"I knew those people were

involved in all this stuff!"

And ritual?

"Oh, yeah, what's that?

That sounds sinister and evil!"

And in Quantico, Virginia,

Special Agent Kenneth Lanning

of the FBI...

[Lanning] I became

an FBI agent in 1970,

and I was a regular FBI agent

for ten years.

Eventually, I was assigned

to the FBI

Behavioral Science Unit,

and I became the Bureau's

expert on Satanism,

the occult, cults--

the whole package.

[Barbara Frum]

Special Agent Lanning,

I'm going to ask you

to deal first with the belief,

which is quite widespread

out there now,

that there are just

too many people

telling too many stories

that all sound the same

for this not to be true.

Well, it's very interesting

that that argument--

the fact that there's

so many people

telling the same story,

so often...

As I began to respond

to these cases,

I started out with an open mind,

and I kinda thought

that this had to be going on,

because why would

these people be saying that

if it didn't happen?

Pretty soon,

somebody mentions Dr. Pazder

and the book,

Michelle Remembers ,

so I start to hear them

getting involved...

and the number of cases

that they were consulting on

in this area

just began to grow...

...and then somebody

called me up and told me

about the McMartin

daycare case.

The McMartin case

was one of these preschool-type

of cases,

the daycare cases,

and all of these kids

were making--

you know, ended up

making these accusations

about things

that supposedly happened

at a preschool

in Manhattan Beach, California.

[reporter] 41 youngsters

over a six-year period

had not just been

sexually molested,

but had also been forced

to participate

in Satanic rites.

There were also charges that,

to keep the children quiet,

animals had been mutilated

before their eyes.

[Loftus] They're remembering

being abused

and Satanic rituals.

They're remembering

having to...

k*ll animals and breed babies,

and k*ll those babies,

and drink blood,

and all kinds of pretty wild

and bizarre things.

[reporter] The defendants

faced more than 300 counts

of sodomy, r*pe,

and oral copulation.

The evidence of abuse

was largely developed

by social worker

Kee MacFarlane,

who used puppets

to get the children--

who were between the ages

of two and six--

to reveal what had happened.

[Ennis] "Children's

Institute International,"

which was a group

that was involved

in trying to get

disclosures from children

from the McMartin

daycare case...

decided to bring down

Lawrence and Michelle

as "consultants"

to-- to assist in the process.

So they were directly involved

in getting these disclosures

and "recovering" memories.

Michelle Smith, what are

the goals of these cults?

They want to possess

the soul of the child.

It's not just they want

to capture them physically, um,

but they want to have

the child theirs.

And these are people

whose families

are either involved

in these cults

or who, because of you,

because of some connection,

fell into their hands?

Or through such, um, vehicles

as daycare centers,

where the chil--

they have access to the child.

[Cheetie]

They went down to the States

for the McMartin trial...

and I know Michelle spent

a lot of time with the kids

because that's what

she would talk to me about,

was the kids,

and how she related to the kids,

and helped the kids

remembering, reliving...

what had happened to them.

[reporter]

The mother of two children,

who admitted

that they were severely abused

while at the McMartin school,

agreed to talk to us on camera.

What actually happened

to your two children?

They were tied up,

sodomized,

um, they were taken

off the premises.

They were threatened...

by watching animals

being slaughtered.

Uh, they were sold

for prostitution.

[Lanning]

People wanted to validate

what children were saying,

and the problem is,

if you can't believe

everything that the child says,

what can you believe?

How do you decide what happened

and what didn't happen,

what might have happened?

Maybe the child

misremembered it.

Maybe it's distorted.

Maybe the child

didn't understand.

But I would estimate that,

as time went on,

during that time,

from '83

to maybe the late '80s,

I consulted on hundreds

and hundreds of these cases.

How alarmist would you be

about how we should

be dealing with this problem

and how widespread it is?

It's widespread.

It's a--

It's across North America.

We've had reports of it in--

in every province

and in every state.

It isn't, uh, just in California

or just on the West Coast here.



[Nathan]

As the daycare cases erupted,

which started

in about '83, '84...

there were police

who were investigating

these cases,

and prosecutors who were

deciding to take them to trial,

who were using

Michelle Remembers

as a kind of a checklist

to develop cases...

which meant that they would

try to come up with questions

based on

what had happened to Michelle

to ask the children.



Michelle Remembers

actually led to this panic

over children

being endangered.

People panic over this stuff.

They panic

because they think that

this is the end of the world.

[Lanning] It's known as

the "Satanic Panic"

from the 1980s and '90s,

and this stuff just spreads

like wildfire!

And, as an FBI agent,

I could step back,

and see cases from

all over the United States

and, eventually,

all over the Western

industrialized world.



[Ennis] Police officers

all over North America

went out looking for this stuff

and prosecuted people.

The Satanic Panic

was picking up steam

and it started to spread out

and affect more people.



It just... went viral.

And all of this was started

by this book.

[film projector whirs]



[Theresa]

Victoria was a great city.

Growing up here

was so much fun.

It was happy.

It was...

it was fabulous.

I was really lucky.

You know, my dad had

a great sense of humour.

He also had, like,

a bit of a twinkle in his eye,

and sometimes, at Christmas,

all the family would come over,

and there's a ukulele.

My dad would play

and my mom would sing and...

they were just so happy,

singing along together.

Those were good memories...

...but that was before the book.

[Marylyn] Before

he started on this book...

I was at home,

and I was sitting there,

watching that show--

Sybil , was on TV.

Sybil...

Oh...

please don't touch me.

It hurts.

[Nathan] Sybil is about

a woman who goes into therapy,

and she ends up

in extreme therapy,

like, five times a week,

and she gradually remembers

really horrific, sadistic

sexual abuse and t*rture

by her mother.

The book came out in 1973,

and it was just, like,

this instant wild success,

and then it was made into

a made-for-TV movie in 1976,

and I think about, like,

one-fifth of the American

population watched that.

[Marylyn] He said,

"I want to do the same thing,"

and he said, "I don't want to be

just an ordinary psychiatrist.

I want to be famous,"

and he said, "I've got

a patient just like that,"

and that's when he phoned her

and gave her the phone number,

and that's when it started.

It just took off from there.

[Theresa] The phone started

ringing in our house constantly,

and it was usually

really late at night.

You know, to have

a patient calling all the time

was just unusual.

No patient

had ever called before.

[phone ringing]

[Marylyn]

When she got the phone number,

she didn't stop phoning.

She'd phone several times a day.

When he came in the door,

I would watch the clock...

and sometimes,

it would get to maybe about

two minutes,

three minutes,

and then

the phone would ring.



And so I thought,

if we went to Mexico

for Christmas,

that he'd be able

to distance himself

in a more realistic way,

but she just phoned

and phoned

and phoned

and phoned and phoned,

and he did believe her.

There's no two ways about it.

He believed everything.



[Theresa] The big change

was that trip,

and when they came back,

I mean, all hell broke loose.

Michelle was, like, showing up

at all these different things

behind us,

and following us and...

it was frightening.

We went to Edmonton

to a wedding

and she followed us

all the way,

and I cried all the way,

because there she was,

right behind us.

His patient was everywhere.

[Michelle, on tape]

[Theresa]

We thought this was the story

that she used

to get his full attention.

It had him wrapped

around her finger.

No question.

You know, she was always there,

always reaching

into our house with the phone,

showing up

at the doorstep.

That was the Michelle we knew

before the book.

To us, she was like...

this stalker.

Although, I think he saw her

differently than we did.

Definitely.

I felt that she was...

deeply in love with him.

She was very protective of him,

and, you know...

all of us that--

that did the typing,

we all felt the same way,

that she just wanted Larry

to herself.

Essentially, this has become

a relationship where...

the boundaries

that exist

between doctor and patient

are no longer there,

and Dr. Pazder and Michelle

are first holding hands.

He's then sometimes placing

a hand on top of her head,

and gradually they move

from the couch

to a rubber mat

he has on the floor

so that they can both lie

on the floor together,

their bodies touching,

and according to this book,

this is "very necessary"

for the therapeutic experience.

She's experiencing

so much pain,

she's in so much distress,

that she needs to be held

in order

to continue remembering.



You know,

around that time,

my dad started sort of

disappearing quite a bit,

and we didn't know

where he was...

...and my mom

didn't know where he was.

I didn't...

I just knew all these weird

things were going on, and, uh...

he was making a lot of effort

to keep it secret.

So I started asking around,

and I found out Father Guy

was involved with it.

[click]

Larry had all tape recorders

and all kinds of equipment,

so I phoned

and recorded Father Guy.

[phone rings on tape]

[receiver picks up]



Father Guy said

many people

are going to be k*lled,

and many people

are going to be saved, and...

you know, there was

something wrong up there.

And Father Guy told me

that they were gonna make

a million dollars from the book

and there was

a lot of money involved.

So we went to see

the Bishop Remi De Roo,

and said, you know,

"Stop supporting this."

But I didn't realize

he went to Rome with him.

I didn't realize

that he was so mixed up in it

until the book came out,

but they obviously were

all believing all of this.

They were all for it...

but I can't understand

why anybody would believe it.

I don't know why these people

would follow such a stupid book.

[Charyl] One of

the first things that came out

after the book came out

was the article

in People Magazine,

and there she is,

lying on this couch,

and she's got her top off

and...

Why would you give that picture

in the first place

to a-- to a magazine?

Like, you've got

a wife back home.

You're really

gonna get shit for this.

[Marylyn]

That was heartbreaking,

to think that he would

do that, you know?

So I realized

that there was no hope.

For me, that's...

that's where his...

affection was.

[Charyl] Michelle

was still married to Doug.

He had a good job.

You know,

Michelle got to stay home

and do what she wanted to do.

But they had

a really hard divorce.

Michelle wanted

everything her way

and he did not

see it coming at all.



[Theresa]

When that book came out,

it was really rotten,

and it was so hurtful

to see my mom at that time.

She was in bed

and she was, like,

destroyed.

My dad was her first boyfriend.

They had just been together,

like, her whole life,

that's the only person

she knew.

He definitely, like...

he broke her heart.

And yeah, no, he wasn't the same

with me at all.

He wasn't friendly.

He wasn't joking.

He kind of didn't have

that same look.

There wasn't that twinkle.

There's just a lot of sadness.

[Marylyn] I got so upset

that I just went down

and filed for a divorce.

I said forget it.

Forget it.

No way.

[Pringle]

Now, Michelle Smith,

you survived a year of abuse

by one of these cults

when you were five years old.

When you first

talked about these things,

I mean, did people think

this was a fantasy,

that y-you'd made this all up,

it was such hocus-pocus,

that it couldn't possibly

have happened?

Well, I was

one of the first to stand up

and start to recount

these kinds of things

and to bring it, um...

publicly,

and I think people

are so uncomfortable

and so afraid

of this whole subject

that, yes, I experienced

a lot of the uncomfortableness,

but what I also experienced

was a tremendous number

of people saying,

"this is true."

[Lanning] I'm a cynical person

who spent 30 years

in law enforcement.

I assume that people are lying

unless I know otherwise,

but a lot of therapists

have an opposite bias.

They assume that everybody's

telling the truth,

unless they know otherwise,

and actually, this becomes

a huge aspect

to these allegations

of Satanic ritual abuse,

particularly with what's called

the adult survivors,

and that's what

Michelle would be.

The things

in the adult survivor cases--

the stuff was even more weird

than it was

in the younger kids

at the daycare centres.

Bonnie, you were made pregnant

when you were 11 years old?

Yes. That child

was sacrificed within the cult

when she was

about six months old.

S-- Sacrificed how?

By being stabbed,

and I was coerced into

doing the act myself,

with my own child.

Uh, the police

never found out about this?

The groups are extremely careful

to cover up all evidence

through using crematoriums

and things like that.

At least that's how

I understand it.

[Loftus]

"Adult survivors"

are where you have an adult

who goes into therapy

without any memories

of horrific abuse

and comes out

with all of these allegedly

repressed and recovered

trauma memories.

That was some kind of

altogether...

different thing.

This wasn't just a little kid

and a fantasy.

[Marshall]

And you would have patients

who had essentially

the Michelle experience,

where suddenly,

you were logging enough hours

on the couch,

"in the depths,"

to qualify

as a full-time job,

and where a doctor

who you trust...

...is telling you

if there is

anything wrong with you,

it was a result of sexual abuse

that you had forgotten,

and probably Satanic abuse,

because apparently,

there's a lot of that,

and you can read about it

in this book

that was a bestseller.

We have so many cases

that essentially are the fruit

of this tree

that Michelle and Larry planted.

There are therapists

all over the country today--

many of them that

are not really qualified

to be therapists--

that are-are passing on

these stories.



They were salesmen.

They were going around

the country,

selling fear of Satan,

fear of Satanic cults,

and they were--

they made a living out of it.

Her therapy--

13 months of in-patient work

for misdiagnosed Satanic,

ritualistic, everything...

her therapy,

over $1,300,000 for her,

then they got both of

her teenage daughters in.

One daughter went in

for 11 months

of in-patient therapy.

[Barton]

I think it's very clear

that the therapists saw

the opportunity

to make some money

off of these wild accusations

and stories.

This wouldn't have happened

had it not been

for the therapists

who compromised their ethics

and encouraged their patients

to elaborate

further and further.

They cut us and made us

sign our names in blood

in The Satanic Bible.

That was the first ritual

that I remember.

I was informed that my parents

were in the occult.

[talk show guest]

She claimed

that we had a pizza delivery boy

come to our home.

We cut him up, grilled him,

and ate him.

[guest] I said,

"I know what you did.

You're the ringleader

of this cult

that I know

you m*rder*d babies,

and I know you made me

m*rder babies,

and eat babies,

and I know just what you are.

I know you

for the Satanist that you are."

And Sally,

most of these women

don't come forward

until their mid-30s,

after five or seven years'

worth of--

This is not a case in which

someone has repressed memory.

This is a courageous woman

who has--

[studio audience applauding]

[Nathan] I would run into

adult survivors

on, like, The Sally Show ,

and so many different kinds

of people--

including educated people--

believed

that this was happening,

and if you didn't believe it,

you were suspect--

I mean, at best,

of not caring about children,

and at worst,

that you are a Satanist.

Are you accusing me of

being a Satanist? Yes or no?

You're acting like--

You're acting like one.

Say it. Yes or no?

I'm saying you're acting like

a Satanist right now.

[Ennis] Some people suggested

that what they thought

was causing Satanism

was heavy-metal music,

and some of the people

who were trying

to investigate this stuff,

they thought

they were doing a good thing.

[reporter]

How often do you find

heavy-metal-music indicators

at the scene of a crime

involving Satanic worship?

Probably about 35 to 40%

of the calls.

-Regularly, then?

-Yes.

[Nathan] At the same time,

there was kind of a...

I guess you'd call it a rumour,

although it got picked up

by the press

and it was taken as absolutely--

as fact, to the effect that--

that, you know,

thousands and thousands

of children were missing.

Thousands.

You know, then,

the next question is, well, why?

I mean, who's taking them?

Supposedly, the Satanists

were taking the children.

I believe that they do.

I can't-- We can't prove

that they do,

but as

a law-enforcement officer,

I question two million children

missing in the United States,

knowing that many, many of those

are not runaways.

[Ennis] They were saying

two million children

are sacrificed every year

in the United States.

3.71 million children

were born every year

in the States.

You're telling me that 54%

of the children born

are all kidnapped

and sacrificed?

Really? Like...

no evidence of that, folks.

The hard evidence

is difficult to find,

because

if a child is sacrificed,

that child's body

isn't going to be left.

If it's

an orthodox Satanic cult,

they're going to burn the body

and they're going to eat it

during ceremony,

so they'll leave

no evidence around.

The proof

that we have had disappears.

W-What proof has disappeared,

that we had?

Okay, a good example

is I had, uh, baby wax.

What's "baby wax"?

Wax from a baby

that was burned.

A baby that was burned

and the wax was made

into a candle

of b-baby wax.

It's a very important thing

in the cult.

They make candles

out of babies?



It was part of the zeitgeist.

There was just

a complete lack of skepticism.

I mean,

Michelle Remembers had

something

to do with that, right?

Because in Michelle Remembers,

it's kind of,

"This is what's happening

to the babies."

[Barton]

Within Michelle Remembers,

they use the term

"Church of Satan"

to describe this...

cabal of

vile, terrible people

doing

these heinous criminal acts--

saying

that we sacrifice animals,

that we sacrifice babies...

but the whole point

of the Church of Satan--

what Anton LaVey founded

in 1966--

was liberation

and embracing

our strangeness, our uniqueness,

the things that make us

different from each other.

This is

a very selfish religion.

We believe in greed.

We believe in selfishness.

We believe in

all of the lustful thoughts

that motivate man

because this is man's

natural, uh, feeling.

This is based on

what man naturally would do.

[Barton]

Anton LaVey blended

magic and science

and rationality,

and a lot of people,

especially in those early days,

found the Church of Satan

uniquely liberating,

for one reason or another.

They found Satanism

to be a celebration

of their differences.

It wasn't a tolerance.

It was a celebration.

And that's what

Satanism is to us,

to a Satanist.

Are you planning on training

a lot of little devils?

[laughter]

Only those that wish

to become little devils.

-Are you married?

-Oh, yes.

Do you have

any little devils?

Oh, yes. I have two.

Are you gonna raise them

as Satanic kids?

Certainly,

but not to go around

chopping people up

or sacrificing human beings.

[Barton]

One of the things

that Anton LaVey

was particularly miffed about

was how Michelle Remembers

was marketed--

that it was supposedly

a true story...

...but Michelle Remembers,

obviously,

is so chock full

of things that Satanism

very clearly isn't.

He said we are

an established religion,

protected by the Constitution

of the United States.

Here they were,

using it,

as if we were some international

criminal organization.

And that's why

the Church of Satan

brought a defamation suit

against them

in the court of law

in 1981.

And subsequent printings

of Michelle Remembers

did take out

most of the references

to the Church of Satan.

Hail Satan.

[congregation]

Hail Satan.

[Charyl]

I don't believe

that my mom

is that type of person

that would turn her child

over to a Satanic cult.

It was not part of my childhood

when I was a kid.

I couldn't see

my mom doing that.

I just couldn't...

As a mother,

your instinct

is to protect your child...

but when I was 10 years old,

my mom was diagnosed

with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma,

and so she died

shortly after that.

When my mom passed away,

her wish was

that she wanted to be cremated.

She wanted to have her ashes

put in the crypt.

This is how important

this church was to her.



It was important to Mom.

You know, her marriage

was not great,

so she came here for support.



In the book,

Michelle said that my mother

was this horrible person,

giving up her little girl

to a Satanic cult...

But I don't understand why

Michelle would even think that.

What is wrong with her?

[reporter] Why did you think

that there were others

who would have been

through this experience?

Because when I was

in that experience,

I wasn't the only child.

So there had to be others,

and I knew this wasn't

an isolated thing in--

in just Victoria.

I thought

maybe there would be...

you know, unrealistic,

30, 60 people out there

at the most,

not the hundreds...

[Lanning] It was in 1987,

and it was a conference

in Richmond, Virginia,

where I met Dr. Pazder.

So we sat in this room

and Dr. Pazder

was up at the podium

and Michelle was

off to the side there.

One thing

that really got me interested

is Dr. Pazder indicated

that he thought

that most of the alleged cases

were a bunch of nonsense,

but he then said something

that I was just

tremendously interested in.

"I'm gonna tell you

how to identify the real cases."

So I said, "Man, this could be

really valuable information,"

because I never was

one of those people who believed

they were all true

or they were all false.

There can be

a middle ground in here.

He would start

to describe these rituals

and began to talk

about Michelle.

But cops tend to ask

a lot of questions,

so the cops in the audience

began to raise their hand--

"What about this?"

"What about that?"

and-and I just

kinda began to notice

that every time

somebody asked a question,

Michelle never said a whole lot,

and he would always

answer the question,

and after a while,

after this happened

half a dozen times,

I just raised my hand,

I said,

"I'm curious, when people ask--

this all happened to Michelle.

"How come she doesn't

give the answer?

She turns to you."

He just said some version of--

I don't remember

his exact words--

something like, "Well, when

she first came to me,

she had no conscious memory

of it,

and through this therapy,

this story began to come out

over a year or more as time..."

and then he recorded it,

wrote it all down,

and documented it,

and then after that...

it kind of-- most of it

left her memory

and he was now

the keeper of the story.

I decided that

that greatly reduced the value

of what he was telling me,

so I put my pen down

and didn't take

as many notes after that.

Every time she entered

into a new area of working,

everything

that she had said before

was totally consistent,

and then, when she had

completed what she had done,

and was completely free of it...

it had a ring of truth to it,

that I said, you know,

"This is not accountable

from anything in the literature,

except from the fact

that she'd been

through that experience."

There's no other way

I can explain it.

[Lanning] During,

I think, the lunch break,

somehow, it just came out--

although,

he didn't try to hide it,

but it came out

that Michelle was now his wife,

and that was another factor

that caused me to think,

"Well, that's kind of

an inappropriate," you know,

"doctor-patient

kind of a thing.

How did that affect this story

that he's now telling?"

[Cheetie] I think

Michelle loved Larry.

She worshipped him.

But him and Michelle

were exact opposites,

and, uh...

I can't figure out

why Larry married her.

I really can't.

I-I...

You know,

would it come from a--

from needing to protect her?

I know he felt a need

to-to protect her

and look after her...

but marrying her

is a whole different ball game.

[Theresa]

We always thought

there was a reason

why he had to marry her.

You know,

he's a psychiatrist,

and he crossed the line

with her.

And she had tied him

into that lie so tightly

with that book,

that there was

no getting out of it.

[Marshall] We're never told

that a sexual relationship

begins between Michelle

and the doctor

at any time during therapy,

but regardless

of what you think

about what did

or didn't happen

or what we're not being told,

I think you can take

what they say

at face value

in this regard

and still see

a wildly unethical relationship.

[Charyl]

After they got married,

everything stopped.

She just wanted a normal life.

I know

that Oprah Winfrey called.

I was there at the house

when I picked up the phone,

and... and, uh, Michelle says,

"I don't want to talk to them."

You know, there are

thousands of men and women

who are secretly

worshipping the Devil.

The Devil!

If you'd like to join

that audience on Thursday

when we discuss Satanism,

call now

to reserve your seats.

[Barton]

The daily talk shows--

people, today,

I don't think realize

how pervasive

these opinions were.

[Maury Povich] Why, Doctor,

would you perform an exorcism

on a patient who came to you

to seek psychological help?

Well, because the patient

who was referred to me

by the State

was a Satanic ritual survivor.

[Barton] At the time,

these talk shows would be

several times a day,

and they were

very well respected,

but they were all

feeding on the Satanic Panic.

Explain to us

what really did happen

over these 17 years.

They started a Satanic cult

when I was five.

-Who did?

-My parents.

They would either

k*ll an animal,

sometimes they would

k*ll a baby--

[Sally] A baby?

Where would they get babies?

Um...

sometimes, people in the cult

would have them just for this--

[sobbing]

...and then when it was...

[sobs]

...when it was dead,

then people in the group

ate parts of it.

[Barton]

Dr. LaVey said, "I'd love

for somebody to call them

on their bullshit,"

but they wouldn't do it,

because it wouldn't

make good television.

In a nutshell,

there was a lot of craziness.

It was a fearful time,

and the one big promotion of it,

the one really big

promotion of it,

was Geraldo's

three-hour program

about Satanic cult crime

in the United States.

Of course,

millions of people saw it.

Millions of those people

who had preconceptions

believed it,

and it caused a lot of harm.

[Geraldo] These women say

they speak

from personal experience.

They claim to be breeders,

forced by covens

to bear children.

Did you give birth to infants

who were sacrificed?

My first two.

-Were sacrificed?

-Were sacrificed.

I was told it was

the highest honour

I could ever do as a woman

was to sacrifice

my first two.



There's a part of me

that wants to think

that these people

are just flat-out nuts--

and some of them are,

don't get me wrong!

And you look at this,

and you say,

"Are these people...?"

It is most common

for the heart

to be taken from the child...

and offered to Satan.



[Nathan]

Today, a lot of people

think that the Satanic Panic

was sort of a joke...

...but a lot of conditions

were created during that time

for people to get

more interested

in the idea that

evil, bad things were going on,

and you know,

one of those things

that you could really

hang your hat on

was Satan.

And... it was dead serious.

[TV reporter] The Essex County

Prosecutor's Office says

26-year-old

Margaret Kelly Michaels

is a manipulative,

sadistic, child...

Preschool teacher Michaels

was convicted

of molesting 19 children.

Molesting them in bizarre ways,

and in the middle

of this crowded

New Jersey school

without any teacher or parent

noticing anything.

[Nathan] I covered

the Kelly Michaels' case

and I walked into that jail,

and it was so filthy,

and I interviewed her,

and it was terrible

to see this happen

to a young woman,

because, you know, I felt like

that could have been me.

I mean, I could've gone,

worked in a daycare centre

when I was in my early 20s.

It was very vicious,

what was done to her.

They say you inserted objects,

including LEGO blocks,

forks, spoons, serrated knives

into their anuses, vaginas--

And a sword, that was in--

-...And a sword?

-Yeah, yeah.

That you made children

drink your urine,

that you made kids

take their clothes off,

and licked

peanut butter off them?

It's very hard to believe,

yet the jury believed it

and not you.

No one is willing

to doubt a child.

[Barton] There were people

who went to jail

as a consequence

of the Satanic Panic.

Certainly,

Michelle Remembers --

[stammers]

...all of it can't be laid

at the foot

of one book,

two people,

but they sure didn't help.

They did

an enormous amount of damage.

They ruined people's lives.

They cost them

enormous amounts of money.

They put misinformation

out there knowingly.

Tell as big a lie as possible

with a straight face,

and just keep tellin' it.

It works,

to a certain extent--

it works until those of us

who are...

...paying attention

stand up and challenge it.



[Lanning] It's a very

interesting question

when people talk about

where this began...

...and so, Dr. Pazder's ex-wife

sent me a letter.

She had heard my name

was out there,

and she knew I was

looking into all of this,

and she said

that she could tell me

and explain to me

how all of this evolved

and how all this came to be.

[Marylyn] We didn't know

that people had gone to prison

because of the book...

and that was, I think,

about 1990 that I realized.

It was just a terrible shock.

It was just terrible.

We were--

It was just terrible.



But I felt that,

if people were in jail,

it's our responsibility

to do everything that we can

to help those people.

So anybody

that came to Victoria...

I would just help them

the best I could.

[Theresa]

My mom started looking into it,

and she went to the house,

she went to the neighbours,

she went to the school records.

[Marylyn]

I went to the registry.

We found out

every place she lived,

where she was,

went to the neighbours,

and we gave that evidence

to the different

investigations in the States

and that sort of thing.

[Nathan]

They were very specific claims,

Michelle Remembers ,

about a certain period of time,

and she named the time--

I believe it was 1955--

where she was gone,

she was held c*ptive

by these Satanists,

and so we thought

it should be pretty easy,

you know,

to see whether we can find her

during that time.



[Marylyn]

We just went to the school...

...and asked them

for the yearbook.

They have a collection

of all the yearbooks.

Her picture was right there.

And they said the picture

was taken in the fall,

while she was supposed

to be locked up.

She wasn't.

Her picture was right there.

There she was.

You can't deny it.

[Ennis] Could this

possibly have happened?

Is there any truth

to any part of this?

You go, okay, you're describing

these rituals in which

you are severely treated.

They cut you up with knives

and they sew things

onto your body

that are ripped off,

and they knock out your teeth,

and they do all these things...

[deep breath]

...and then...

miraculously,

the Angel Michael comes

and takes all your scars away?

[stammers and sighs]

This is ridiculous, you know?

I mean...

the Virgin Mary appears

and speaks to you in French.

What?

[snickers and laughs]

[radio host] "Ma Mre"

is really the Virgin Mary?

-Yes, the Virgin Mary.

-She spoke in French?

[Michelle speaking]

[Michelle laughs]

Well, throughout

the experience--

[Larry speaks]

[Charyl]

I remember hearing my sister

on the radio broadcast,

and she said, "Oh, but I--

I never knew French."

I was like, "Yes, you did.

You took it in high school,

for one thing,

and you won an award for it,

because you were so good."

Plus, my grandfather

spoke fluent French

and she used to converse

with him,

and she said, "I've never spoken

French ever in my life,

and it just poured out of me."

You know, just like

the lies poured out of her.

[Loftus] There's just

a variety of things

that can go on

in therapy

that we now know

can lead people

to false memories.

Guided imagination is one.

Using hypnosis

is another one.

Particular kinds

of dream interpretation

can lead people

to false memories.

Suggesting things

to the patient.

Reinforcing the patient

with, you know,

attention and interest

and other kinds of rewards

when the patient remembers

what the therapist

wants the patient to remember,

and sometimes,

the more lurid, the better,

in terms of producing a reward

for that patient.



The Michelle Remembers story

does seem to be a case

that has all these ingredients

that are known

to lead people

to think they have

repressed memories

they've recovered,

but then there's

this weird little thing

about how they get married.

So, um...

I-I don't know what to think

about the sexual,

romantic element.

That-That's a little different

than what you see in the typical

repressed memory case,

but that could mean

there was even greater interest

on her part

to do whatever she presumed

her romantic interest

would like to be done.



[Ennis] In the book,

very, very often

what is happening

is she's telling a story

and then Lawrence

is interpreting it

in terms of his experiences

in West Africa,

where he did

medical missionary work

for a while,

and he keeps mentioning that

this is like those practices.



We know that he witnessed

some tribal ceremonies,

he filmed them...

but you look at it

and you go,

"Okay, I believe you saw this,

but I don't believe

you understood

what you were looking at,"

but she has

grabbed pieces of it

and is pulling

this information out of it

and incorporating it

into her story

so that he can recognize it,

and then try

and make the connection,

and, like, put this--

this story together,

this false story

of these memories.

You know, people see

what they want to see.

I mean...

he's very Catholic,

so what does he want to see?

He wants to see angels.

He wants to see demons.

He wants to see

that sort of stuff.

[Marshall] This book features

an extraordinary number

of dead babies.

By the end,

it's just

a baby slaughterhouse,

and...

if your patient

starts seeing you again

because they're feeling

extreme grief

over a miscarriage,

and if they are telling you

again and again these stories

about dead babies,

I would imagine

that this patient

could be feeling

incredible, unresolved guilt

about the miscarriage.

But Dr. Pazder is Catholic...

...and so he decides

that whatever Satanic image

appears to Michelle

connects to something

that literally, physically

happened to her...

and I think

one of the things that stories

about demonic possession,

stories about Satanism

tell us,

is that there's a very clear

answer for all of this,

and it's God.

[Theresa]

My dad was convinced

that this was

a really big thing.

I really think

he thought he was on

some kind of mission

from God.

And I lost my faith completely.

Like, I saw the Church

as being a part of it.

The Church is, you know,

drinking this in,

and encouraging it.

[Nathan]

We found some documentation

about the fact that the book

was actually subsidized

by the local Catholic church.

Whether that was

a local project

or whether it went beyond local,

I don't know...

but it certainly,

you know, seemed like

it was a inspirational book

for Catholics--

Michelle Remembers --

and to the point where

the Church

was willing to subsidize it.

I don't have a problem

with Christianity--

I have a problem

with Church-ianity.

It's a business.

They're making money, right?

It's got nothing to do

with being devout.

Most of the people involved

in putting this out there,

they actually are interested

in three things--

power, influence,

and money...

...and they realize this is

a way that they can get it.

"I know that I can

use this information

to make you fearful

and pay me money.

I don't care that it's a lie.

I know it's a lie,

but it's not important.

I need your money.

I'm gonna get it.

I need your attention.

I want to get it.

I need power over people.

You will give it to me,

because you'll see me

as your saviour." Okay?

Over and over and over again.



[Lanning]

"Ironic," I guess,

is the word

that some people would use.

But I've been involved

in many, many cases

involving Catholic priests

who are molesting kids,

and yet,

I've had people tell me--

devout Catholics say,

"Yes, you know these priests

who are molesting kids?

You know who they are?"

I said, "Who are they?"

"They are Satanists

who have infiltrated

the Catholic Church

to destroy it."

Okay.

[chuckles]



[Barton] As the Satanic Panic

wound down,

like, around '91, '92,

a lot of it had to do

with insurance companies,

because the therapists

and psychiatrists

and psychologists,

they were being paid,

sometimes covered

by insurance companies,

for these--

for this endless counselling,

and the insurance companies

started investigating.

They said,

"We're not gonna pay anymore."

[Loftus]

Some of these patients

began to realize

their memories were false

and that they had been planted

by the psychotherapy.

Some of them

sued their therapists

for planting false memories,

and they ended up

with these huge settlements.

I could not stand...

what was happening

to my brain,

and the memories,

and the thoughts,

and the pictures.

[reporter]

Although Dr. Hosen claimed

that he did nothing wrong,

his insurance company

settled

and they paid

Nadine Gould $2.4 million.

I didn't even know...

that this doctor was a fraud

until recently.

And it didn't happen

to just us.

It happened to our children,

our significant others,

our spouses or ex-spouses,

to our family.

The issue is that counsellors

and therapists

are leading people astray

and destroying families.

We need laws.

We need things changed.

They need to be made accountable

for what they're doing.

[Barton]

Also, things got laughable.

[crowd applauds]

There was the Church Lady

from Saturday Night Live.

Who could it be?

Oh, I don't know...

[laughter]

...Satan?

All of this has to do

with the changing zeitgeist,

and people understood then

that this was all pretty--

pretty absurd and out-there.



[Ennis] A bunch of people

were falsely prosecuted.

They wasted millions of dollars,

police chasing after ghosts.

All right.

We are ready for the jury.

[reporter] Raymond Buckey

and his mother, Peggy,

were the only McMartin

defendants to stand trial.

We, the jury,

in the above entitled action

find the varied defendants

not guilty.

[reporter] Preschool

teacher Michaels served

five years in jail

until this year,

when her conviction

was overturned

by an appeals court

that questioned the reliability

of the children's testimony.

Childhood sexual abuse

does happen,

but there

is something else going on,

and that is whether

some therapists

are actually

encouraging individuals

to believe in abuse

that didn't happen.

[Lanning] A lot of these things

simply didn't happen.

But the thing

that really scares me

is that, as people say,

if you don't study history,

you are doomed to repeat it.

[Jones] We're not

covering Pizzagate enough

to expose the Satanism

and the occult.

[Nathan] We have

these strange allegations now

of "Pizzagate"

and things like QAnon--

the idea that thousands

and thousands

and thousands of babies

are missing, you know?

It's all sort

of coming up again.

QAnon...

with its claim

that "Satan-worshiping

pedophile elites"

are running our lives.

"Oh, boy.

Here we go again."

I mean, that--

that's exactly what I thought.

"Oh, no, not again."

[news host] Man showed up at

that pizza parlour with a g*n

demanding to know more,

and now this has become

the centre of a national debate

over fake news.

[Lanning]

I came to realize

this story is one of

the most relevant topics

that you could ever talk about

in today's world--

it's just not about

Satanic ritual abuse

of children,

but this problem

of what people believe

when there's no real objective,

professional evidence of it,

is an amazing thing

to behold.

[Nathan]

It's not going to go away.

I used to think it was.

I used to think,

"Well, all you have to do

is debunk the stuff

in a rational way,

and I'll just

be a good journalist,

and I'll do that,"

you know?

And, uh...

it just happens again.

This has been kind of difficult

for me,

to tell you the truth,

to see that none of that stuff

really mattered.

None of what we did

really seems to have made

much of a difference.

[Theresa] We had to deal

with the "Bride of Satan".

All the time--

we had to deal with her.

And we had to live

under the shadow of that book.

We had to live

under the shadow of her.

Once they married,

you know...

we couldn't get

close to him anymore.

It was really hard,

and I think that's why

I really made an effort--

"I'm gonna call you

every Sunday."

I really, really

pushed for that.

During that time,

the phone calls

started changing a lot.

He was kind of

pulling away from her...

and I think

there was things coming up,

like, different things

that made me realize...

...that, you know,

that he was coming around.

You know, he had said,

you know,

"What if it weren't true?"

[Charyl] I was at work.

My sister, Tertia,

came up to my office

and she goes,

"Larry's dead."

And I was in shock.

I was just, like...

I said, "What happened?"

She said, "He got up,

went to the bathroom,

and fell."

Apparently, the ambulance

took a long time to get there,

but he was dead anyways.

He had a massive heart attack,

they said.

Michelle discovered

that he'd kept all his pictures

from his marriage to Marylyn.

Michelle was really upset

about that one,

and she said that, "He was not

the man I thought I married."

[Cheetie]

I went to the funeral

and I connected with Michelle

and I stayed with her

for a few days,

and then,

when I was leaving,

this little deer came

around the side of the house,

and it just stood there

and looked at me,

and it was weird.

I felt like it had

something to do with Larry,

like-- ah,

it's breaking me up right now--

and, um...

I don't know,

I just felt like it was Larry,

you know,

standing there.

I felt like he was asking me

to look out for Michelle...

so I did.

I said that to myself,

that I would look out for her,

for him,

and I've kept that promise.

[chuckles]

She's a good person.

She had her life ruined,

first, by whatever experience

she did go through--

I am convinced

it's not mismemory

or false memory,

and then, the book,

you know?

It's ruined her life.

She hates the book,

because when people see her,

that's all they see.

And if anybody

should have blame,

as much as I loved Larry,

and I'm not even big on men,

but I loved Larry,

and he...

I think, was responsible

for the book.

[Larry]

I believe in the pain

that they experienced

as a child,

the details

of what they present.

I'm not there

to believe or not believe.

I'm there to try

and understand

what they're trying to tell me

of an experience,

and those experiences

are not simple to separate

from whether that has

actually happened to them

or that is their way

of trying to express

a profound pain

that they've experienced

beyond their body,

in their very heart,

in their very soul.



[Theresa] I always hung on

to that dad

that I grew up with...

and I think that's what

made it hurt so much,

is that you hang on to it.

You really love.

But he did

take her out of my life,

and that was the only good thing

about his death.

You know?

I-I, um...

[voice wavers] It was...

really good to have her gone.

It was, um...

I think that's when

I started to feel

that that whole chapter

was over.

[laughs]

It wasn't one chapter.

It was a book.

Literally.

[Marylyn] It was more than

any type of an affair.

Far more than that.

They were both obsessed

with each other...

...and she was

in love with my husband.

And maybe she saw our happiness

and she wanted it for herself.

But you see, you can't

get that for yourself,

because it doesn't belong to,

and it never will be yours,

because you-- if you try to take

somebody else's happiness away,

everybody's going to be unhappy

all the way around,

because it's not yours

to be had.

You make your own Heaven or Hell

right here on this Earth.



[Charyl] I think

she's living in hell...

...because the story has haunted

my family for years.

We could pretend

that we're a family,

but there's always

that feeling of,

"How could you do the damage

that you did

by telling a story

that wasn't true?"

If she came along

and said to us,

"Hey, I made it all up.

I'm sorry," you know?

Then we would understand,

but she hasn't.

She's never apologized.

She's never, you know...

Nothing.

Whether she made it up

or whether Larry and her

made it up together,

I don't know...

but she was able to do it.

You know,

she had a motive.

Her motive was

that she wanted Larry

as her husband.

[Michelle, on tape]

[Larry speaks]

[Michelle sobs]

[Michelle speaks]

[Larry speaks]

[Michelle sobbing]

[Michelle cries out]

[click]
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