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Purpose; Academic and Clinical Studies
Background
History of this project
The Archive
101 corroborated cases of recovered memory
Response to Critics
Dr. August Piper (1999)
Dr. Richard McNally (2003)
FAQs
Other Scholarly
Resources
Bibliographies, links
to websites by four
doctoral-level
psychologists
Supportive
Information
For those with personal
questions & concerns
about sexual abuse &
those interested in
political & social
responses to sexual
abuse
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The Archive > 43
Cases from Legal Proceedings
1-10 | 11-20
| 21-30 | 31-40 | 41-End
31. Martinelli v. Diocese of Bridgeport (1997 Connecticut
civil jury verdict). Frank Martinelli's adult recollections
of sexual abuse by Father Laurence Brett at St. Cecilia
Church in Stamford between 1962 and 1964. "Martinelli, who
is married and has a young son, testified during the eight-day
trial that he repressed his memory of the abuse until 1991,
when it all came back to him like a "wave" while he was
on the telephone with a friend who told him he had also
been abused by Brett as a child." Daniel Tepfer, "Diocese
must pay; Jury awards $750,000 to victim," Connecticut
Post (August
27, 1997): A1."Probably the most damaging evidence of the
trial was a memo of a meeting that took place among diocese
officials on Dec. 2, 1964, regarding an assault by Brett
on a 19-year-old male Sacred Heart University student. The
memo states the teen had gone to Brett to discuss a sexual
problem and Brett ended up performing oral sex on him. The
memo goes on to state that Brett was being sent away for
treatment, and, 'A recurrence of hepatitis was to be feigned
should anyone ask,' it read." Id.
32. Peter VanVeldhuizen's memories of childhood sexual
abuse from 1966 to 1968 by Reverend J. Van Zweden of the
Netherlands Reformed Congregation Church. VanVeldhuizen
v. Netherlands Reformed Church of Rock Valley (Iowa District
Court for Sioux County; 1997). VanVeldhuizen repressed the
memory and did not recall the abuse until February 1991,
while undergoing psychotherapy.
To avoid litigation, Dr. VanVeldthuizen agreed to the request
of the Netherlands Reformed Church to submit the claim and
all related evidence to the Institute for Christian Conciliation.
In a 9 page letter,
the Executive Director noted that, "[I]n the twelve years
that I have been working in sexual abuse cases, I do not recall
meeting a more credible witness." Dr. VanVeldhuizen introduced
a variety of corroborating evidence, including (1) testimony
that Rev. Van Zweden sexually abused his grandson, and (2)
eyewitness testimony to one of the incidents of sexual abuse
of Peter VanVeldhuizen by Rev. Van Zweden. The mediator concluded
that, "Peter has more than met the highest biblical standard
of proof, which is actually required only in capital offenses,
namely, that the sin be confirmed by the testimony of at least
two witnesses."
After insisting on Christian Conciliation, the Church refused
to go along with the findings. Dr. VanVeldhuizen sued and
proved his case (again) in court. A
Sioux County jury awarded compensatory and punitive damages,
after VanVeldhuizen proved that Albert Bakker, a church official
at the time, witnessed the acts but did nothing to stop then
or to report them to the appropriate officials.
33. Lee Roy Donnell's conviction for sexual battery.
"Father Guilty of Assault," Washington Post (September
10, 1992): B3.
34. State v. Warner (July, 1998). Criminal conviction
for first-degree rape and for first-degree rape by instrumentation.
The victim, "now 18, was 12 years old when she was molested
by Warner. She told counselors of the abuses in 1997." She
recalled the events only under intensive counseling. "Judge
Sends Rapist Up for 20 years," The Daily Oklahoman
(July 13, 1998), p.3
35. The criminal conviction of a 67-year-old grandfather
in Canada, whose name was blocked from publication, for
sexually assaulting four daughters over 21 years. At least
one of the daughters recovered her memory as an adult. One
daughter told someone at the time and had a lock installed
on her bedroom door. The father ultimately begged for mercy
and told the court he "had "changed." He pleaded guilty
to molesting three daughters and to "violating two daughters
with a wooden hand file. He blamed Satan for his actions."
This undoubtedly helps explain the ritualistic elements in
the daughters' accounts. See, Ciaran Ganely, "Incest
Dad Jailed for 6 Years; Born-Again Christian Begs for Mercy,"
Toronto Sun (August 8, 1996), p. 19. See also, Philip Lee-Shanok,
"'Guilt' Notes Sent to Sex Victims," Toronto Sun (June 21, 1996), p. 4.
36. T. Jeffrey Haines's recovered memory of sexual
abuse by Rev. J. Faulton Hodge of the Episocpal Diocese
of Western North Carolina. Mr. Haine's memories were corroborated
by Jesse Hickaman, who was molested by Hodge in 1989 and
1990. Clark Morrison, "Lawsuit Accusing WNC priest of child
sex abuse settled," Asheville Citizen-Times (April 15,
1995), p. 1A.
37. A criminal case based on a 28-year-old woman's
flashbacks of repeated rape by her step-father during the
1970s. "On April 15, 1996, Associate Justice Frank J.
Williams denied a motion to block certain evidence derived
from the alleged victim's 'repressed' memories, saying
that the credibility of the evidence is a matter for the
jury to decide." C.J. Chivers, "Ex-police captain's rape
trial set to begin this summer," Providence Journal (April
16, 1996). The defendant pleaded no contest to Indecent
Assault of a Child on May 30, 1996. See case P1-1995-1329A
in the online database on Rhode Island criminal court
records.
38. Kelly Scaglione's recovered memories of a sexual
assault by Master Cpl. Harold MacLean of the Canadian Armed
forces. "After repressing the memories of the assault for
years, Scaglione pressed charges against McLean in 1995.
McLean was convicted of indecent assault in April 1997." McLean
subsequently settled a civil case for damages. Philip Lee-Shanok, "Army
Blamed in Assault; Private Held NCO Attacker in Awe, Trial
Court Told," Toronto Sun (February 26, 1999), p.48
39. Henry Bachmann's recovered memories of being
sodomized in 1964 by Rev. James Gummersbach in the basement
of the Church of Immaculate Conception in St. Louis. In March
1999 a jury awarded $1.2 million in this repressed memory
case, the first such civil trial in Missouri. The plaintiff's
lawyers introduced corroborating evidence that the archdiocese "knew
of Gummersbach's propensity to harm children and did nothing
about it." "Man Awarded $1.2M in Abuse Case"
(AP-NY-03-02-99 1504 EST).
40. Diane Bowman's "long-buried memories of her mother's
death [which] resulted in her father being convicted of
murder."
Adam Powell, "After 24 years a daughter's memory sends killer
to jail." (London) Daily Mail (July 24, 2002), p. 37
read more cases > 1-10 |
11-20 | 21-30
| 31-40 | 41-End
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Page last updated
July, 2003
Project Director
Professor Ross E. Cheit
Taubman Center for Public Policy & American Institutions
at Brown University
67 George Street
Box 1977
Brown University
Providence, RI 02912
Tel: 401-863-2201
Fax: 401-863-2452
 
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