- The Country Walk case in Dade County, Florida
- Ugandans drum
alarms to rescue abducted children (ritual killings)
- India’s ‘Temple
Slaves’ Struggle to Break Free
Myths About the Country Walk
Case Ross E. Cheit David Mervis
ABSTRACT
The Country
Walk case in Dade County, Florida was long considered a model for how to
prosecute a multi-victim child sexual abuse case involving young children. In
the past 10 years, however, a contrary view has emerged that the case was
tainted by improper interviewing and was likely a false conviction. This is the
first scholarly effort to assess the competing views of this case. Critics of
this case advance three primary claims: (1) the positive STD test result from
Frank Fuster’s son was unreliable; (2) highly suggestive interviewing produced
the children’s claims; and (3) Frank Fuster’s wife, Ileana, was coerced into
testifying against her husband. On close examination, all three claims prove to
be false. This article documents the reasons why these claims constitute myths
and why those findings are significant in the larger debate on children as
witnesses.
CONCLUSIONS
Three major claims that have been advanced to
challenge the conviction of Frank Fuster do not stand up to close factual
scrutiny; they stand only as myths. As such, they inform us about our cultural
fears and they alert us to our cultural blind spots. This is not an explication
of all the evidence in the case. A longer version of this analysis, covering
virtually every claim advanced at the trial and since, will be published as a
chapter in a forthcoming book. This analysis covers enough of the evidence to
generate a hypothesis about the previously unrecognized problem of
disconfirmation bias. Ceci and Bruck (1995) “believe that the evolution of many
of the mass-allegation day-care cases” are caused by the phenomenon of
“interviewer’s bias,” also known as “confirmation bias” (p. 93). A close
examination of the Country Walk case, however, reveals that a reverse kind of
bias is apparently at work. Disconfirmation bias involves a selective
examination of evidence with a predisposition toward the child-suggestibility
defense.
The persistence of all three myths analyzed in this article
seems to ex-
emplify disconfirmation bias. These myths can be believed only
by ig-
noring available evidence to the contrary. The exaggerated claim
on
error rates and STD testing can be uncovered by reading the
sources
cited in Whittington’s affidavit. So, too, the child-suggestibility
defense
can be debunked by reading the trial transcripts....
Journal
of Child Sexual Abuse, Vol. 16(3) 2007
doi:10.1300/J070v16n03_06
http://blogs.brown.edu/pols-1821t-2010fall-s01/files/2010/12/Country_Walk_Myths.pdf
http://goo.gl/dqXW7j
Ugandans drum alarms to rescue abducted children Mon Jun
23, 2014
By Rodney Muhumuza AP Writer
BUIKWE, Uganda — When a child
goes missing in this central Ugandan district, villagers beat drums into a
pulsing rhythm that sends rescuers scampering through bushes. Others, riding
motorcycles, try to block exit routes.
In response to the kidnappings and
ritual killings of children here, the traumatized community has created a
rudimentary but effective abduction alert system that has saved at least two
children so far this year.
Although the problem of children being killed
as human sacrifices is reported in several parts of Uganda, Buikwe has gained
notoriety recently as the country’s witchcraft capital. One in three households
here keeps a shrine — a thatched hut in which so-called witchdoctors can be
consulted — a frightening statistic that explains the prevalence of
superstitious practices that threaten the lives of many children and even
adults....
Eight children have been abducted and ritualistically killed
in Buikwe this year, their mutilated bodies dumped in bushes and sugarcane
plantations, according to local officials.
Across Uganda, at least 729
children were abducted in 2013, according to a Ugandan police report that also
cited a 39 percent increase in crimes against children over the previous
year.....
http://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/ugandans-drum-alarms-to-rescue-abducted-children/article_ddac5238-2ba8-512e-a0f8-9056ba3925c1.html
http://goo.gl/yMc1M2
India’s ‘Temple Slaves’ Struggle to Break Free By Stella
Paul Tuesday, June 24, 2014
NIZAMABAD, India, Jun 22 2014 (IPS) - At 32,
Nalluri Poshani looks like an old woman. Squatting on the floor amidst piles of
tobacco and tree leaves that she expertly transforms into ‘beedis’, a local
cigarette, she tells IPS, “I feel dizzy. The tobacco gives me headaches and
nausea.”
At the rate of two dollars for 1,000 cigarettes, she earns about
36 dollars a month. “I wish I could do some other job,” the young woman says
longingly.
But no other jobs are open to her in the village of Vellpoor,
located in the Nizamabad region of the southern Indian state of Telangana,
because Poshani is no ordinary woman.
She is a former jogini, which
translates loosely as a ‘temple slave’, one of thousands of young Dalit girls
who are dedicated at a very young age to the village deity named Yellamma, based
on the belief that their presence in the local temple will ward off evil spirits
and usher in prosperity for all.
Poshani says she was just five years old
when she went through the dedication ritual.
First she was bathed,
dressed like a bride, and taken to the temple where a priest tied a ‘thali’ (a
sacred thread symbolising marriage) around her neck. She was then brought
outside where crowds of villagers were gathered, held up to their scrutiny and
proclaimed the new jogini.
For several years she simply lived and worked
in the temple, but when she reached puberty men from the village – usually from
higher castes who otherwise consider her ‘untouchable’ – would visit her in the
night and have sex with her.
Poshani says she was never a sex worker in
the typical sense of the word, because she was never properly paid for her
‘services’. Rather, she was bound, by the dedication ritual and the villagers’
firm belief in her supernatural powers, to the temple....
According to
official records, there are an estimated 30,000 joginis – also known as devdasis
or matammas – in Telangana today. An additional 20,000 live in the neighbouring
state of Andhra Pradesh.....
http://www.ipsnews.net/2014/06/indias-temple-slaves-struggle-to-break-free/
http://goo.gl/9CnsuQ