Turbulent rape trial inspires new book
By Sarah Cooke
Of the Northwestern
The "Sarah" multiple personality rape case focused the
entire nation's
attention on the city of Oshkosh nearly 10 years ago.
A fictional book based off the case may do the same -
though perhaps
in a much different way.
Both the book, entitled "My Name is Legion," and the
1990 trial have
drawn attention to what psychologists now call dissociative identity
disorder.
The book, however, hopes to peel away the "freak-show"
stigma that the
author, former Winnebago County victim-witness coordinator Sheila
Martin
Berry, said the sensational trial attached to Sarah and others
afflicted
with multiple personalities.
"More than anything, I wanted people to see Sarah and
the 'Others' (Sarah's
personalities) the way I saw them," Berry said from her office in
Richmond,
Va., last week. "They were never fairly nor accurately portrayed in the
media. They were a side show and that broke my heart."
The trial revolved around an incident that took place
June 11, 1990,
at Fugelberg Park. Sarah, then 27, had gone out for coffee with
then-29-year-old
Oshkosh resident Mark Peterson, a man she had met earlier that week at
the park. Sarah told police she had introduced Peterson to several of
her
46 different personalities that day over coffee.
Later that day, when they were driving, Peterson asked
Sarah if he could
talk to Jennifer, whom Sarah described as a "fun-loving personality."
After
the personality surfaced, Peterson then asked her "Can I love you,
Jennifer?"
Sarah said Jennifer did not know what he meant, but
indicated "yes."
He then parked the car and the two had sexual intercourse. While they
were
having sex, Sarah's 6-year-old personality Emily kept surfacing.
After Peterson dropped her off at home, Sarah called
police and told
them two of her personalities had been sexually assaulted.
A highly-publicized, controversial and
sometimes-downright nasty trial
followed. Berry, known as Sheila Carmichael before she remarried in
1993, became
good friends with Sarah in 1990 after taking her in for a short time
before
the trial began that November. She was Sarah's victim advocate
throughout
the trial.
Peterson's second-degree sexual assault conviction was
vacated in December of that year after Berry revealed that District
Attorney Joe Paulus concealed key evidence in the case. Berry
left the area shortly after the district attorney office fired
her for making the disclosure.
Berry said she lost touch with Sarah shortly after
moving from the area
in 1991 and hasn't spoken with her since 1993.
"Sometimes I look back at how many experiences I've had
in my life period,"
Berry said. "Probably enough to fill 10 lifetimes. I still think of
Sarah.
I still miss them. It's like a special kind of family."
It was a turbulent, stressful time in the life of
everyone involved
with the case, Berry said. She's learned to put the past behind her
and,
essentially, to forgive and forget.
Berry began writing the book in 1996 as a "tribute," of
sorts to Sarah
and the "Others." The book, completed a year later, also helped heal
wounds
Berry wasn't aware she still carried six years after the trial, Berry
said.
The book focuses around "Mandie," a young
Vietnamese-American woman
who is modeled after Sarah, and "Cate Lawson," the head of a local rape
crisis center Berry originally authored to be very similar to herself.
The story occurs in Riverton, modeled in many ways after
Oshkosh. The
district attorney's name? Paul Josephson, very similar to current
District
Attorney Joseph Paulus.
"The 'Others' are drawn very, very closely to (Sarah's)
'Others,'" Berry
said. "Otherwise, that would have defeated the whole purpose to show
what
they're really like."
The book has received praise for showing multiple
personality disorder
in a non-clinical view that few made-for-TV movies and other books had
accomplished before, Berry said.
Others, like the Publisher's Weekly Review, have
criticized the book
for its "contrived plot," a criticism Berry laughs at since "it really
happened."
The Berrys are currently working on a non-fiction book
about the John
Maloney case. A 19 year veteran of the Green Bay Police
Department,
Maloney was convicted of murdering his estranged wife and setting her
house
on fire. Joe Paulus prosecuted Maloney.
Berry said she's not sure if Sarah knows of the book,
but added "I'd
like to think that she would like (the book) and that the Insiders
would
like it. It was something that I really wanted to do for them."
SARAH COOKE CAN BE REACHED AT (920) 426-6674.
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