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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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Response to Critics
This Site has been criticized in two publications: (1)
by Dr. August Piper in Ethics and Behavior, and (2)
by Professor Richard McNally in Remembering Trauma
(Harvard University Press). Interestingly, Piper significantly
understated the number of cases in the Archive. He stated
that the Archive contained only 35 cases, although by
the time his article was submitted to Ethics and Behavior
in November 1998, there were 44 cases. When my response to
Piper was completed it
was published in the same issue as Piper's critique there
were 65 cases. The Archive was expanded to 80 cases in 2001
and it currently has 101 cases. McNally on the other hand,
overstated the number of cases in the Archive that had been
barred by the statute of limitations. A few such cases are
included in the Archive, but only with corroboration; but
those cases were by no means a significant portion of the
Archive then or now.
1. Piper (1999) Dr. August Piper, an Advisory Board
member to the misnamed "False Memory Syndrome Foundation",
published a critique of the Archive in Ethics and Behavior
(1999). Piper's response was filled with inaccuracies
or serious misrepresentations of fact. A detailed account
of those errors and omissions was published in the same
issue. See, Ross E. Cheit, "Junk
Skepticism and Recovered Memory: A Reply to Piper," (PDF
1.7MB) Ethics
and Behavior 9(4), 295-318. This file containing a lengthy
excerpt that documents Piper's misrepresentations
about the seven cases in the Archive which he responded
to.
2. McNally (2003) Harvard psychology professor Richard
McNally, in his new book Remembering Trauma, stated
that this Archive is an "important step toward providing
the evidence for recovered memory of traumas." While calling
the Archive "an important contribution," McNally offered
a few caveats. The first is that out-out-court settlements
should not be equated with admissions of wrongdoing. I agree.
But that caveat does not take into account that
all of the cases involving out-of-court settlements also
involved additional corroborative evidence. Still, I agree
that these cases do not carry as much weight as cases with
more fully developed evidence and a more definitive outcome.
It is likely that a much fuller investigation of the cases
that were settled out-of-court would result in some cases
appearing weaker than they do based on existing information
and some cases appearing to be stronger. While the former
possibility is raised by McNally, but the latter possibility
is never acknowledged.
McNally's primary objection concerns the possible financial
motives that people might have to claim recovered memory.
McNally argues that "state laws seldom permit people to
file suit against alleged perpetrators unless the memories
were entirely repressed." He concludes that this "is a
serious problem" for the legal cases in this archive because
people have a motive to claim recovered memory even if they
actually have continuous memory.
McNally is incorrect about the law. There is no need or
incentive to claim recovered memory in any of the states
that also stop the statute of limitations for psychological
delays in comprehending the significance of childhood abuse
that has been always remembered. Indeed, in those states,
one could bring an action as an adult without making a recovered
memory claim. Since a comprehension-based claim is not subject
to the same controversy as a recovered-memory claim, the "incentives" if
that was what truly motivated these cases would be
against making a claim of recovered memory in those states.
As it turns out, when Mary Williams did a careful survey
of these differences in statute statutes, published in 2000,
there were only six jurisdictions (including the District
of Columbia) that were "recovered-memory only."
See Williams, "History and Analysis of Delayed Discovery
Statutes of Limitation in Adult Survivor Litigation," Journal
of Aggression, Maltreatment & Trauma, 3, no. 2:
49-71. McNally's "serious problem," applies at best
to a handful of cases in the Archive.
Given McNally's strong concern about impure motives on the
part of claimants, it is surprising that he does not take
note of the many cases in which there was no financial claim.
There are criminal cases in the Archive that did not involve
a civil claim for damages. There are civil cases where the
claimant did not expect to collect anything, including a few
from the "recovered-memory only" states. And there are cases
where the recovered memory could never be subject to a financial
claim: that is, the murder cases. One might think that someone
so worried about impure motives would seek out the cases where
such motives cannot possibly be said to exist. But McNally
(and Piper before him) declined to identify, let alone examine,
the myriad cases in the Archive that contradict this concern.
Finally, it is curious to note that critics who are quick
to question the financial motives of anyone who might receive
compensation for a recovered-memory claim never seem to
raise the same concern when considering those who have recovered
enormous financial payments in "false memory" cases: the
so-called
"retractors." The one-sidedness of this skepticism
can best be explained as politics, not science.
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Page last updated
March, 2005
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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