Archive for the ‘Innocents’ Category

Coakley Should Apologize for Fells Acres Mistakes

Sunday, February 2nd, 2014

This editorial says what needs to be said about Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley, who — unfortunately — is now the leading candidate to become the next governor of the commonwealth.

“I see two moral or ethical lessons from this tragic case. The first is the continuing inability of the political ambitious and powerful to admit to a mistake. We do live in difficult media age where politicians are instantaneously crucified on Facebook, Twitter, political blogs, entertainment channels, and the 24/7 cable TV media. Underneath the criticisms, I do believe people are forgiving and would appreciate political honesty. Well, hopeful, anyhow.

“Secondly, the more frightening aspect of this tale is wholesale power we entrust to any one individual, especially when it comes to criminal prosecution, providing almost unlimited taxpayer-funded resources and authority shielded behind an elective office. The individual thus comes to symbolize or becomesthe state apparatus. True, nationally and in every state, this particular case that is such an egregious example.”

http://www.metrowestdailynews.com/article/20140201/OPINION/140209771/11609/OPINION

Slate reprises the Kellers, satanic panic, and NCRJ’s role in stopping it.

Thursday, January 9th, 2014

“It sounds laughable,” says Debbie Nathan, an investigative reporter who co-wrote Satan’s Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt about the panic and is now a director for the National Center for Reason and Justice, which took up the Kellers’ cause. But there is certainly historical precedent, going back even further than the Salem witch trials: Ancient Romans, for example, claimed that Christians ate babies; Christians later claimed that Jews used Christian babies’ blood in religious rituals.
From Slate There is also a video featuring NCRJ Advisor Dr. James Wood.

The Real Victims of Satanic Ritual Abuse

If you support our work, please consider a [intlink id=”16″ type=”page”]donation[/intlink].

Joseph Allen is in the Prison Infirmary

Tuesday, January 7th, 2014

Joseph called me yesterday. They were putting him in the infirmary because of his blood pressure. He was agitated; he felt that they hadn’t been giving him the proper medication.

He wasn’t sure how long he would be there. It might have been just overnight.

If you’d like to drop him a card or letter, here is his address:

Joseph Lee Allen #A293-486
Belmont Correctional Institution
P. O. Box 540
68518 Bannock Road
St. Clairsville, Ohio 43950

Joseph mentioned that it has been a bit difficult for him to write letters because he has so little privacy. But there is a system for corresponding with him by email. He encourages people to use it.

Go to jpay.com and open a free account.

Do an inmate search for Ohio, using his prison number: A293486.

Once you select him, you will be able to correspond by email.

The service isn’t quite free you have to buy electronic “stamps.” The cost is 20 to 30 cents per stamp, depending how many you buy.

When you send an email, you should use two stamps so that Joseph will have a pre-paid reply.

Let me know if you have any problems.

-Bob

.

USA Today and Time Magazine on the San Antonio Four and the Kellers

Thursday, December 19th, 2013

“This is not just a Texas problem. This is happening all over the country,” Saloom said. “Texas just happens to be a leader in its willingness to reconsider convictions based on such evidence.”

USA Today

The women, along with another on parole, and the Kellers have been professing their innocence in separate cases for almost two decades. Thanks to the nation’s first law recognizing advances in forensic science, they are out of prison with a chance at exoneration.

Time Magazine

Some Press About the Release of the Kellers and the San Antonio Four

Friday, December 6th, 2013
Fran and Dan Keller. Photo by Debbie Nathan

“Debbie Nathan – with Michael Snedeker, the author of Satan’s Silence: Ritual Abuse and the Making of a Modern American Witch Hunt (1995) – chronicled the nationwide hysteria that produced the widespread “satanic ritual” prosecutions, among them the Keller case. Her continuing work with the National Center for Reason and Justice has helped many others accused in similar circumstances.”

Point Austin: A Taste of Freedom from the Austin Chronicle

‘Ritual Abuse,’ the San Antonio Four, and Public Hysteria by NCRJ Director Debbie Nathan

Punishment Without Crime by NCRJ Director Judith Levine

Texas pair released after serving 21 years for ‘satanic abuse’ from The Guardian

FREEDOM!

Wednesday, November 27th, 2013

FREEDOM! Fran Keller, of the infamous, 1993 satanic daycare case in Austin, was freed a few minutes ago after 20+ years in prison! This is a National Center for Reason and Justice-sponsored case. Many parallels to the San Antonio Four case, including junk science medical evidence now discredited. Her husband, Dan, is slated to be freed next week.

http://kut.org/post/austin-woman-set-be-released-prison-satanic-ritual-abuse-case

Please support our work: http://ncrj.org/donate/

Joseph Allen has Been Moved

Saturday, November 23rd, 2013

Here is Joseph’s new address:

Joseph Lee Allen #A293-486
Belmont Correctional Institution
P. O. Box 540
68518 Bannock Road
St. Clairsville, Ohio 43950

In his most recent letter, Joseph expresses thanks for the cards and letters he has received:

“Thanks for the cards and letters. They mean a lot to me during this difficult time. Tell everyone I say “Hi!” and that I thank all of them for their letters and cards and prayers.

“May God bless and keep you all well and in good health I pray.

“Joseph Lee Allen”

San Antonio Four Segment on Anderson Cooper

Friday, November 22nd, 2013

We’ve been informed that a long segment on the San Antonio Four will be featured Monday November 25th on Anderson Cooper. 8 P.M. Eastern on CNN.

The San Antonio Four Speak

Thursday, November 21st, 2013


See Also
Finally Free, San Antonio 4 Want Full Exoneration from Texas Public Radio

Board Member Debbie Nathan talks about the Mission of the NCRJ

From NBC.com:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Please support our work: http://ncrj.org/donate/

San Antonio 4 Case: the Big, National Picture

Wednesday, November 20th, 2013

photo: debbie nathan

(Kristie Mayhugh, Cassandra Rivera, Elizabeth Ramirez, Anna vasquez — photo by Debbie Nathan)

The National Center for Reason and Justice has sponsored the San Antonio 4 since we learned about their plight, in 2008. Before Anna, Cassie, Kristie and Elizabeth found us, they’d written to other groups asking for help but were turned down.

NCRJ is a unique, watchdog group. One of our missions is identifying false allegations of harm to children, including sexual abuse. We investigated the San Antonio 4 case and discovered that the medical evidence which helped convict the women was severely flawed. We were the first to receive a call from one of the alleged victims when she came forward to recant her accusations. We recruited the Innocence Project of Texas (IPTX) to do legal work.

NCRJ is overjoyed that, with our assistance and IPTX’s, as well as that of a growing and vibrant support community, these women are on the road to freedom and hopefully exoneration.

But the road is long. In America, anyone accused of hurting children is automatically condemned as the lowest of the low. Such people find it almost impossible to get help to preserve their due process rights, even from those who otherwise passionately defend civil and human rights.

This has to change. This is why NCRJ sponsors cases like the San Antonio 4 and others nationwide. We do this to help free innocent people and make the criminal justice system more rational, humane, and just. We do it so people can learn about the larger issues embedded in these cases, then confront them. What are these issues?

For one, what happened to the San Antonio 4 shows how easy it is in America for ordinary people to be falsely accused, denied due process, and banished from society. All kinds of ordinary people get caught up in our justice system. Some are more vulnerable than others.

Anna, Kristie, Elizabeth and Cassie are lesbians. The authorities knew that back in 1990s. As their case shows, gay people are not always protected by the criminal justice system. On the contrary, they can be targeted. The San Antonio 4 are low-income people of color—also easy targets for our culture’s growing anxieties and tendency to maintain order by accusing, punishing, and ostracizing.

As the criminal justice system can railroad the innocent, it tramples the civil and human rights of people who have committed crimes. Child sex abuse is a terrible crime. But using society’s revulsion for this crime, the system has employed sex offenders as a wedge to treat every accused person with increasing harshness both in prison and afterward—sometimes for a lifetime.

Even guilty people have human and due process rights. Yet even when they have served their time and paid their debt to society, they are typically banished from the community, undermining their ability to reintegrate as law-abiding people, and hurting their families and communities.

One form of banishment is the sex offender registry and accompanying restrictions on housing, work, travel, and social life. These policies do not protect children. In fact, studies show that they may put children at increased risk. These rules are often senselessly cruel.

More than two million people are in prison in the U.S. Per capita, and in pure numbers, we incarcerate more people than any other country. Many good people are disturbed by this. Many worry about the barbaric way that the accused and convicted get treated. But when confronted with people labeled as child abusers, many good people stop thinking.

This situation endangers us all. As long as we allow some people to be turned into pariahs, the justice system will be able to get away with injustice—denying due process to anyone and everyone.

That’s why the San Antonio 4 case is nationally important. That’s why NCRJ is proud to support Anna, Cassie, Kristie, and Elizabeth.

Please support our work: http://ncrj.org/donate/