Shortly after the sheriff’s request for tips, Utah County Attorney David Leavitt held a press conference in which he denied wrongdoing. Victim statements, however, accuse him and his family—“the Leavitts”—of indulging in horrific acts such as child abuse.
The media responded to the controversy with language about Q-Anon and the “satanic panic,” effectively discrediting the alleged victims without evidence.
The brutality and grotesque nature of the alleged incidents in Utah include severe child abuse at the hands of satanists. It’s not as if these are the ramblings of a conspiracy theorist either. In requesting tips, the sheriff previously said that “portions” of the broader investigation into ritualist child sexual abuse and trafficking were “confirmed.” Moreover, the victim statements appear to show multiple accounts corroborating the overall story, specific events, and names of alleged perpetrators.
We now know, after derisive media coverage, that two alleged victims have corroborated the account of a woman who claims to have been abused by Hamblin in the 1980s. The alleged victim claims to have lived in Hamblin’s neighborhood and, along with two other children, was told to perform oral sex on him at his house.
If this were a case of Hollywood sexual assault, media outlets would probably face massive backlash in line with the furor exhibited during the “MeToo” movement. But instead, they’ve been allowed to issue sweeping narratives that effectively step on victims and sympathize with their alleged abusers.
It’s disgusting, and the media should apologize for their articles. There are legitimate concerns about false allegations of satanic ritual abuse during the 1980s and ‘90s. My basic position is that these allegations should all be investigated while alleged perpetrators should receive due process and a presumption of innocence.
That doesn’t mean, however, that media outlets can simply dismiss victims’ claims or paint them as part of a purported social panic. Doing so egregiously impugns the psyche and character of people who have potentially undergone some of the most horrific abuse imaginable.
The idea behind SRA is that perpetrators inflict so much physical and psychological pain that children dissociate in order to cope with the trauma. According to therapists, this can create an amnesic barrier that may block memories of the abuse but doesn’t preclude certain symptoms of it.
Moreover, the study’s authors said that reporting agencies “overwhelmingly believed” the ritual abuse allegations. And while the authors concluded there was insufficient evidence of organized satanic networks abusing children, they noted physical evidence such as “tattoos, drawings, scars on a child’s or adult’s body, film, photos, ritual dolls, masks, costumes, etc.”
From the Franklin scandal to the McMartin Preschool trial, alleged victims have claimed to be raped or witness rape by politicians, military personnel, and other prominent figures in communities.
Worse, the Utah statements and numerous other testimonies allege law enforcement involvement in cults, as well as attempts to thwart legitimate investigations.
The allegations go on and on, often alongside mysterious occurrences—such as Franklin investigator Gary Caradori’s death or the “Conspiracy of Silence” documentary being pulled from broadcast—that would benefit alleged perpetrators.
The Franklin scandal, which led to a grand jury, involved children claiming that they were flown to Washington for sex trafficking to high-ranking politicians. The grand jury ultimately said the allegations were unfounded and indicted one of the purported victims on eight counts of perjury. But the investigation itself was tainted by severe mishandling, according to critics. Among other things, Troy Boner claims to have recanted his account of the trafficking ring under pressure from the FBI. In the “Conspiracy of Silence” documentary, he recants his recantation.
The controversy surrounding ritual abuse has no doubt been influenced by the “pizzagate” scandal. Many people have claimed that the John Podesta emails disclosed by WikiLeaks appeared to use pedophilic code words, such as “pizza,” “map,” and “handkerchief.”
Why exactly are the media so willing to publish a narrative that implies victim accounts are the result of a social panic? Media outlets have wrongly painted SRA as a narrative created by adults coaxing children into recalling nonexistent memories.
Instead, it might just be the story of our lifetimes.