How a mantra ate justice
November 7, 2002
Paul Craig Roberts
In 1995 I wrote the first of my 28 columns about the Wenatchee, Wash., child
sex abuse witch hunt. Before national attention brought a halt to the worst
witch hunt in U.S. history, 43 adults were falsely arrested on 29,726 fabricated
charges of child sex abuse involving 60 children.
Parents, Sunday school teachers and a local pastor were indicted and many
were convicted of raping their own children and the children of other members
of a sex ring. Innocent people were railroaded into prison, and their children
were sold into foster care.
The witch hunt, which devastated so many lives at taxpayers' expense, was
launched in 1994 when a Child Protective Services supervisor told the local
Wenatchee office to find some cases to justify its budget.
A stench of evil hung about these cases. Not a scrap of physical evidence
of sex abuse was ever presented, an extraordinary fact considering that the
children, some mere infants, had allegedly suffered an average of 495 rapes.
One woman was charged with 3,200 counts of child sex abuse, which I wrote
at the time gave "nymphomania a new definition."
The cases were trumped up by Child Protective Services officials with an
eye on their budget and jobs and by a police detective, Bob Perez, with the
complicity of local prosecutors, judges, and political and media establishments.
My early columns were greeted with derision by the local radio station (KPQ)
and newspaper, the Wenatchee World.
The few witnesses in the cases, a single mother and two young girls, later
recanted in sworn court documents and before TV audiences.
The young girls described how they were threatened and beaten, with one apparently
suffering a broken arm, by Detective Perez, who used acts of violence to
coerce false accusations.
One young woman described how she was kidnapped by Detective Perez and locked
up in a psychiatric facility, where a "recovered memory" therapist gave her
mind-altering drugs in an attempt to get her to make false accusations against
her parents. The state American Civil Liberties Union later verified her
account.
In January 1997, single parent Michelle Kimble gave sworn court testimony
that Child Protective Services officials Kate Carrow and Tim Abbey and Detective
Perez coerced her on Dec. 17, 1996, into making false charges against the
Rev. Roby Roberson, who had spoken out against the witch hunt. Shortly thereafter
she repeated on NBC-TV that she was intimidated into making false allegations
by fear of being criminally charged herself and having her son seized by
Child Protective Services. CPS caseworker Paul Glassen told how he was forced
to flee to Canada with his family when he was put on Detective Perez's arrest
list for refusing to go along with the false accusations.
Despite these extraordinary revelations, Wenatchee stood behind the false
convictions.
Tom Grant, a local KREM 2 News TV reporter in Spokane repeatedly exposed
the frame-ups. Finally, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer assigned two investigative
reporters to the story. In 1998 its series, "the Power to Harm," documented
the extraordinary violations of law, procedures, civil rights and basic humanity
by public officials.
Spurred by the revelations of lawlessness in the system of criminal justice,
the University of Washington Law School formed the Innocence Project Northwest,
which has succeeded in obtaining the release of every adult victim of the
false prosecutions. But spiteful public officials still refuse to return
the children to their parents.
None of the public officials who broke the law, tampered with witnesses
and fabricated evidence in order to convict the innocent have been indicted.
However, civil cases have found the city of Wenatchee and Douglas County
negligent in the child sex abuse cases, and
multimillion-dollar judgments have been awarded. The state Department of
Social and Health Services and Chelan County have settled other civil cases
with large awards.
Last week Spokane County Superior Court Judge Michael Donohue reinstated
Pastor Roberson's civil lawsuit against Wenatchee. Judge Donohue ruled that
Wenatchee's defense lawyers had withheld documents and "blindsided and misled
the plaintiffs" and the court itself. Robert Van Siclen, the attorney who
successfully defended Mr. Roberson from false child sex abuse charges, said:
"These are smoking gun documents."
The Wenatchee witch hunt gained its opportunity from a liberal mantra that
3 out of 4 children are subjected to sex abuse by a parent, close relative
or child-care provider. This mantra spawned federal legislation, Child Protective
Services (an unaccountable agency with broad powers), an industry of child
advocates and therapists with financial incentives to find sex abuse in Johnny's
football bruises, and special prosecutorial units that need cases. These
mechanisms for the miscarriage of justice are in place in every city and
town in the U.S.
As early as Oct. 3, 1995, Washington Gov. Mike Lowry requested U.S. Attorney
General Janet Reno to send a U.S. Attorney to investigate the Wenatchee child
abuse prosecutions. Miss Reno, whose own claim to fame resided in false child
sex abuse prosecutions (now all overturned) and who was kept on a short leash
by Hillary "it takes a village" Clinton, steadfastly refused Gov. Lowry's
requests.
Liberals do not doubt that public officials can be trusted with power, but
liberals know parents cannot be trusted with children. This misplaced confidence
is responsible for the miscarriage of justice in Wenatchee. Will your community
be next?
Paul Craig Roberts is a nationaly syndicated columnist. |