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Legal Considerations: Regaining Independence and Initiative
Herbert L. Rosedale
Excerpted from
Recovery From Cults, Help For
Victims of Psychological and Spiritual Abuse
Controversies between zealots and society are not new.
They go back to the establishment of the social contract and relate to many
of its subsequent implications. Aspects of the controversies surfaced during
the period of accommodation between ideological monarchies and the middle
classes and during the period of division between secular and
ecclesiastical authority with divergent claims to fealty. The controversies
renew from time to time when beliefs of individuals or groups are so strong
that they lead them to ignore or violate secular law. These conflicts arise
over a wide range of legal issues that arouse strong passions and,
consequently, particularly stimulate zealots of many different stripes.
Examples include the injustice of racially discriminatory laws, conflicts
over right-to-lifers' attacking abortion clinics, and orchestrated efforts
to nullify laws offensive to a particular group for ideological or economic
reasons. In contemporary society, controversies relating to destructive,
totalistic cults have expanded markedly during the past 15 years.
When I first started to speak out about cults
approximately 10 years ago, I was one of an extremely small group of lawyers
who were willing to address cultic groups' broad range of challenges to
individual freedom and personal liberty. The podium had in fact been largely
forfeited to a strident, well-organized clique of "civil libertarian"
experts who discoursed at length upon the inviolability of the First
Amendment and the rights, vulnerabilities, and vitality of so-called new
religious movements.
Those who challenged totalistic groups were concerned
with the deception and manipulation of recruits and members and the
existence of psychological, financial, and sometimes even physical abuse
within the groups without informed consent. The critics' priorities were
education and deterrence. Critics believed that individuals could be
quickly and decisively deprived of their ability to think critically and to
make independent judgments and that the process of deprogramming could
restore cultists' ability to independently choose a general course of
conduct that could either involve return to the group or to their pre-group
life-style and values.
Early debates focused on a number of questions: Did
these groups obtain membership through volitional though nontraditional
religious conversions or through coercive manipulation or fraudulent tactics
that deprived the new member of his or her freedom of choice? Could
totalistic groups, in claiming members' complete allegiance and obedience,
demand and enforce termination of all familial communications? Could such a
group require a member to isolate children and grandchildren from family
members outside the organization? Was action initiated by perceived
emotional and physical risk of a new member justified by necessity in the
face of criminal charges of kidnapping when a group member was involuntarily
removed from the group? Did counseling of any kind, whether consensual or
nonconsensual, violate civil rights of members of totalistic groups, who
claimed they were being subjected to faith-breaking presentations? Did
religious motivation immunize noncriminal injurious activities? In short,
legal analysis and discussion addressed at length questions of irrational
conversion, the nature of free will and volition, and the extent of
protection that should be afforded to bizarre religious groups., These
questions were addressed by, among others, Delgado (1977, 1979, 1982),
Dressler (1979), Lucksted and Martell (1982), and Shapiro (1983).
Recently, however, using the First Amendment as an
absolute icon has become more difficult. It is now generally accepted that
the right to religious freedom does not confer upon anyone the concomitant
right to injure another or deprive persons of freedom under the guise of
religious motivation. Indeed, recent decisions appear to have given more
weight to the primacy of other socially validated concerns, such as
monogamy, family structure, and the prohibition of mind-altering drugs, over
the desire to engage in a religious practice.
In recent years it has become far more evident that
destructive cultic groups are not limited to those who claim religious
bonds. The same issues arise and must be dealt with when a leader exercising
power and control over members requires politically correct ideas, dictates
behaviors for achieving psychological or physical well-being, or prescribes
an absolute course of subordinate conduct in order to become wealthy,
healthy, or wise.
As the field has broadened so has its perspective
lengthened so as to consider legal problems arising after a person emerges
from a cult and struggles to regain independence and a sense of self-worth.
I have personally dealt with several dozen such people for whom such
concerns were primary. A person's ability to help former cult members deal
with the legal issues that arise is necessarily predicated on an
understanding of the process to which they were subjected. In this chapter I
examine such legal issues rather than look back to the older debates in this
area.
Role of Law in the Recovery Process
After a person leaves a totalistic group, he- or-she
often turns first to the question of how to restore the essential legal
trappings of individual independence. First and foremost, the person
addresses changes that occurred in his or her family during the period of
group involvement.
Marriage
Dissolving a marriage entered into while a member of a
group to someone who has remained in the group is frequently a first order
of business. This is not always easy, because sometimes the spouse is
physically inaccessible (geographically or otherwise) to the one who left
the group. On the other hand, the spouse who remains in the group may not
wish to stay married either since retention of ties to someone outside the
group poses a potential danger to the group, as it may provide a source of
outside information and disruption encroaching upon the leader's ability to
control the member remaining in the group. Continuation of the marriage may
also prevent a new union with another group member.
First, the ex-member should determine whether the
marriage was legally contracted or merely ceremonial. If the marriage was
legal, there are various ways to dissolve it, usually by divorce or
annulment. No-fault consensual divorce is the most common method, but
annulment is sometimes available when it can be proved that the marriage
was not entered into knowingly or voluntarily or that there was fraud in its
inducement. Since some ex-members will want an annulment rather than a
divorce because of religious values and moral precepts, the possibility of
annulment should be fully explored. In a recent case, an annulment was
granted based on a professional's testimony that the marriage had been
ordered by the cult leader, and therefore the marriage had not been entered
into with the couple's free will and consent.
Children
A second aspect of family structure that often must be
addressed deals with children. Child custody, visitation rights, education,
and religious practices are among issues that may arise (Greene, 1989;
Kandel, 1987/1988). Cases dealing with the dissolution of marriages of
persons with mixed religious faiths offer guidance and legal precedent.
If the ex-member seeks legal custody, visitation
rights, or restrictions on the cult member's activities, much will hinge on
expert testimony about the practices of the group and their effects on the
child. Depending on a child's age and circumstances, it may be shown that
the group's practices may be harmful to the child's best interest. With
proper use of expert testimony, decisions have been made in which the parent
emerging from the group has been granted sole custody and, in some
instances, limitations have been placed upon the child's contacts with the
parent remaining in the destructive group, or participation in the group's
activities.
It is necessary to carefully document actual and
prospective harm before going into a judicial hearing (Greene, 1989; Kandel,
1987/1988). Sometimes agreements are able to be reached between spouses when
there is a cooperative willingness to deal with the best interests of the
children. I am aware of many cases in which membership in a group has not so
dominated the views of parents that they are unable to perceive the jeopardy
to their children's welfare posed by the children's continued participation
in certain of the group's practices.
A difficult issue receiving current attention is how to
treat children who have spent major developmental portions of their lives in
a group that restricted their ability to interact with people in the outside
world. Very little study has been done to document this problem (see Chapter
17, Children and Cults, in the book
Recovery From Cults).
Further study is needed, and comparisons to other groups living in separate
communities may be helpful.
The law is on the edge of establishing the rights of
grandparents to have communication with their grandchild. The thrust and
pace of this development in the law differs from state to state, in some
instances relying on statutes, in others being a matter of case-by-case
decisions. These issues arise most frequently when parents are members of a
group and grandparents, who are not members, seek communication or contact
with their grandchild and enrichment of their grandchild's life through
exposure to extended families. Issues also arise when grandparents discover
serious deficiencies in the medical treatment or education their grandchild
receives in or because of the practices of the group.
The decisive legal issue is the welfare of the
grandchild. What is important is the development of the law and its
recognition of the value of communication between children and all members
of their families, including grandparents, even in the face of parental
opposition. While much is left uncertain, this recognition should give
great hope to the grandparent in this situation who is hoping to gain access
to the grandchild. I also believe, although I know of no legal authority,
that one should not reject out of hand a potential assertion of aunts' and
uncles' rights asserted by a sibling of a parent in a cult.
Severing Contractual Commitments
It is usually necessary to sever cult-related
contractual commitments made while the person was a cult member. For
example, the member's lawyer may have been chosen by the group as a way of
subordinating that person's rights to group control. This lawyer may
primarily represent the group's best interests. Termination of that
lawyer-client relationship as soon as possible is essential, for it places
shackles upon the will of the emerged person.
While this may seem self-evident, I offer as an example
a bizarre case in suburban New York. The judge in that case asserted that by
the act of discharging a group-chosen lawyer, a former cult member may have
evidenced a lack of independence of will. During this contest the
group-chosen lawyer, against the expressed intent of the ex-member, sought
to stir up claims against the ex-member's parents and interfered with her
relationship with her newly chosen lawyer. The judge ordered her to have a
psychiatric examination to determine her mental capacity. Despite arguments
that firing one's lawyer is not a sign of insanity, the woman was compelled
to undergo a psychiatric examination. Luckily it all worked out, but it was
a humiliation the ex-member should never have been subjected to.
Another area of concern may be contracts that the
person signed as a group member, some of which by their terms last millions
of years. An objective reading will show that it is absurd to think that
these contracts are legally enforceable documents. However, when a person
emerges from a totalistic commitment, he or she needs to be assured that
these contracts are legally unenforceable. In order to free the person from
the oppressive fear that the contracts constitute morally or legally binding
obligations, it is also important to explain to the ex-member why the
contracts are not legally valid, so the person can view them in a newly
independent rational context, restoring his or her respect for the legal
system and deepening the person's understanding of his or her exploitation
by the group.
It is very important that all contracts made as a group
member be reviewed by a lawyer before the ex-member continues to honor them.
Some contracts may be voidable because the person was fraudulently induced
to sign them, or because the contract requires the person to perform illegal
acts or unenforceably restricts the person from taking desired action.
Sometimes the group will seek to pressure a former member to ratify a
contract by asking the ex-member to honor a commitment as a demonstration
of goodwill. If a former member, after leaving a group, continues to carry
out his or her duties under a contract, a court might rule that the
contract has been ratified, even though it could have been avoided. This
might occur, for example, when the group bills the former member for
"unpaid" donations and the person pays these bills after leaving the group.
Contracts may also require unenforceable donations of services or agreements
to commit or refrain from certain activities.
It is essential that ex-members be able to turn to a
lawyer and supporter of their own choosing. Nothing should be done between
the ex-member and the group without consulting counsel.
Recoupment of Financial Losses
After severing their contractual burdens, former cult
members often try to recoup the financial losses they incurred during
membership. For example, a member may have been underpaid as an employee of
one of the group's businesses, may have been swindled out of money, or may
have paid money for services that were not completely used.
Group businesses must comply with applicable
regulations and labor laws. Groups operate gas stations, fur shops,
newspapers, restaurants, printing plants, publishing houses, and sell
flowers and books. These businesses must observe minimum wage laws and laws
governing hours and conditions of employment.
Numerous former members have won legal redress based on
the group's noncompliance with these laws, but claims must be made promptly
because of short statutes of limitations. In this area government agencies,
such as state and federal Departments of Labor, will frequently aid in the
formulation of a claim and effect a recovery; in such an instance, a lawyer
is needed only to guide the complainant through the appropriate state
agencies. Additionally, an injury that may have been incurred as a result of
unsafe conditions of employment may provide grounds for appropriate recourse
and may likewise be enforced by state agencies. Losses may have been
incurred through job exploitation, such as fraudulently induced donations or
investments in a cult-related enterprise based on sales representatives.
Alternatively, the member may have paid money to be set
up in a business franchise using the name of the group or a name owned by
the group. In such circumstances, the ex-member may be legally entitled to
full reimbursement if the group failed to comply with applicable laws at the
inception of the arrangement. Additionally, if a legally required
"cooling-off' period was not granted to allow the member to change his or
her mind, certain types of contracts may be void. In cases where the member
was given a "license" to use some of the trappings of the group or its
"technologies," failure to comply with state laws may invalidate the
agreement. In other cases, where the ex-member prepaid for services never
received, the ex-member may be able to recoup part of the money attributable
to the unused portion of the services.
In no circumstances should financial losses be
abandoned; a lawyer should review the matter to see if legal recourse
exists. However, the law does not provide a right to the recoupment of all
losses. An honest case assessment should be made before an ex-member heads
down the ofttimes costly road of litigation, seeking a large recovery for
real but nonrecoverable loss. There are some losses that are simply too hard
to prove or too remotely connected to a wrongful act to be able to be
recovered through the courts. That does not mean the injury and pain of loss
is not real. It merely means that the law's reach does not extend as far as
the greedy grasp of a destructive group.
Emotional or Consequential Loss
In many instances the most severe loss that a member
has suffered is an emotional damage incurred as a consequence of abuse. In
such cases recovery of damages is extremely difficult and often speculative.
Again, this does not mean that the injury is not real. What it means is that
these cases may not readily be settled by the group, and the time from
inception to financial recovery may stretch out over many, many years.
Lawyers will be very reluctant to take on such litigation because of the
expense in prosecuting it. While some lawyers do accept cases based upon
sharing in a recovery, most will reject such an arrangement where the
recovery is long deferred or requires too much time and expense to achieve.
Also, during the process of litigation cult groups seek to make recovery of
a judgment extremely difficult so that even a victory may not be translated
into dollar recoupment. In recent periods we have seen a number of
significant recoveries against cult groups go up and down on appeal in the
highest courts of the Supreme Court, while a plaintiff who has won verdicts
remains uncompensated.
An additional factor in undertaking such litigation is
the emotional stress and strain upon the former cult member. The cult, in
their defense, will not hesitate to assert that the group was not the cause
of the plaintiff’s pain and loss. In doing so, the cult will use - to its
benefit and to the detriment of the former member -whatever private and
confidential information it has regarding the ex-member and his or her
families, friends, and acquaintances.
The time necessary for the ex-member's participation in
the litigation, as we know, can often be substantial and dragged out over
long periods of time, providing yet another impediment to the process of
recovery and the ability of the former member to reorganize his or her life.
I do not unqualifiedly discourage litigation, and note
that a few people made it work for them by achieving appropriate legal
redress for harm done, and others have gained a significant degree of
self-esteem by having the opportunity to confront their oppressor in the
legal arena.
Broader Societal Issues
In addition to the immediate legal issues that arise
when a member leaves a destructive group, there are larger social questions
as well.
Abuse of Women and Children
Within totalistic groups there is a pattern of
victimization of the weak by the strong. Most prevalent is the systematic
abuse of women and children (see Chapters 17, Children and Cults, and
Chapter 18, Ritualistic Abuse of Children in Day-Care Centers, in the book
Recovery From Cults)
through the exercise of arbitrary power and the demand for perfect
performance. The very first resolution unanimously adopted by the Interfaith
Coalition of Concern about Cults in the New York metropolitan area was the
condemnation of the abuse of women and children by destructive totalistic
groups.
It has become clear that the perpetration of such abuse
is not limited to religious groups. Exploitation of the weak, the naive, the
credible, and the vulnerable is an issue troubling our society and other
societies worldwide. Groups working to protect victims of destructive cults
are working more closely with groups representing those victimized by other
forms of familial or societal abuse.
In a number of states, governmental action has been
successful in extricating children from abusive groups to save them from
further injury. In some instances, courts have supported the government's
interest in the health and welfare of minors over the opposition of a parent
who submits to the group leader's unquestioned authority with unconditional
obedience. Other cases, unfortunately, have not succeeded in rescuing these
children. Significant controversy still remains concerning the denial of
medical treatment to children (see Chapter 17, Children and Cults, in the
book
Recovery From Cults)
Progress with respect to sexual abuse and victimization
of women has been slow. More and more evidence of this type of abuse has
surfaced, much of it related to abuses of power and destructive rituals.
Many Varieties of Abusive Groups
The years of public education undertaken by critics of
totalistic groups have increased public awareness of the destructive
consequences for those who surrender their own independent judgment to
cultic groups. Education and publicity have also increased awareness of the
risk in abusive psychological groups that are not full-fledged cults.
Indeed, such abusive practices may occur in groups that seek a good purpose,
such as a cure for drug abuse or weight reduction. Similarly, we have become
more aware of abusive techniques in psychological well-being groups, "sport
clubs," and certain masters or "Svengalis" in the arts. Nothing more
graphically illustrates the irrelevance of the cults' professed purposes
than the examination of the variety of subject matters covered by them.
Power and profit are the sole unifying common elements.
Political Threats
A flickering of awareness of the political threat to
our society posed by totalistic and cult-controlled groups is developing.
Activities of the New Alliance Party, Lyndon LaRouche's political parties
and front groups, and Transcendental Meditation's Natural Law Party have
recently sparked meaningful debate. All these groups siphon support from
federal sources. The Unification Church has come under scrutiny for its
politically active front groups and its funding of ultraconservative
political organizations here and abroad. Additionally, attention has been
directed toward the practices of a number of groups that seek to create or
cleanse society on religious or ethnic grounds, and seek to co-opt and
corrupt with cash offers in exchange for power and control.
Religious Groups
During this period of time many conventional religions
have become aware and concerned about groups that have become abusive.
Concern about them and the harm they foist upon their members frequently has
become a subject of discussion among mainline religious leaders (see Chapter
12, Guidelines For Clergy, in the book
Recovery From Cults).
Hopefully, this concern evidences a trend away from using religious
motivation as an immunity toward a recognition of civic responsibility
regardless of religious motivation.
Economic Power and the Legal System
Totalistic groups wield economic power and use it for
social and legal leverage. There is no counting the number of people who
have discovered that holding a valid legal right is worthless against a
group that can make it economically impractical to enforce. As a lawyer, I
am keenly aware of the deficiency in our legal system when one side has a
"deep pocket" of economic resources. An opponent with fewer resources may
be prevented from obtaining justice because of a seemingly limitless horde
of opposing lawyers imposing overwhelming costs and obtaining interminable
delays.
I have been approached by many people who possess
written acknowledgment that sums are due them from certain groups, yet they
cannot enforce their rights because the legal fees would cost more than the
amount involved. Sometimes groups are willing to spend far more than is at
issue to defeat and delay recovery on a claim, just to deter others.
It is not that a new set of laws is needed. Totalistic
groups can be brought within the legal system rather than allowed to remain
outside or above it. Totalistic groups are not entitled to special treatment
or protection. They should become responsible members of our community.
The Present and the Future
The role of the legal system in addressing problems
arising out of the presence of destructive cults in our society has gone
through a period of slow evolution. Existing legal modalities have been
adapted to deal with the problems created by destructive cults (Rosedale,
1989). In reaching these conclusions significant controversies remain
concerning the following: relationships among family members, the balance
between church and state, the preservation of individual liberty and freedom
of thought, and the application of laws governing fraud and
misrepresentation without regard to the motive of the person or group
committing these acts.
In many instances the legal system comes up short of
being just. It is hobbled by the economic cost of enforcing legal rights. It
is limited by the effort required to cut through the use of myth and the
perversion of language common to totalistic groups. An example of this
appeared in an exchange of letters (Rosedale, 1992; Small, 1992) in The
American Lawyer after its publication of an article (Home, 1992) about the
Church of Scientology's legal representation. A lawyer who had represented
the church pointed out that in his view the differences between the Church
of Scientology and ordinary litigants was that the church made decisions "as
a matter of principle" and was willing to litigate over principle more
vigorously than other citizens. His statement is morally neutral until you
determine what the principle is. If the "principle" is to crush dissent or
financially punish critics by using the legal system as a weapon, then the
morally neutral statement becomes a road map for oppression. When I
confronted a lawyer about his tolerance of his client's criminal conduct in
a Scientology-related case, he told me, "You do what you have to do to win."
So much for "principle."
I understand all too well that the decisions of
totalistic groups to fight their critics to the death may be a matter of
principle. That principle is anathema in our pluralistic society and in an
adversarial legal system which still requires commitment to the survival of
the disenfranchised.
The legal system provides some aid to those in the
process of recovery and disengagement from totalistic groups. It does not
provide emotional satisfaction in redressing a wrong, nor does it adequately
compensate for harm done. However, over a period of time it has enabled
people who left totalistic groups to at least partly pull themselves out of
the morass that they have entered into, to readjust their family
relationships, to complete their severance, and to impose upon the
totalistic groups a degree of accountability previously unknown. In this,
the system has performed a useful function, provided its limitations are
acknowledged and understood. As we move forward, I hope that the law will
continue to address the wrongs that have occurred and that it will be an
instrument of private redress and a vehicle for the reformation of behavior
through accountability.
Checklist for Post-Cult Legal Issues
Family Issues
Marriage
ü
Does the ex-member want to dissolve a marriage to someone
still in the cult?
ü
Was the marriage legally binding or just ceremonial?
ü
If legal marriage, can it be annulled because it was induced
by fraud or coercion?
ü
If not, is it possible to obtain a divorce?
Children
ü
Are there or does the ex-member anticipate child custody
conflicts with a spouse in the group?
ü
What custody arrangement is in the best interest of a child
who has one parent in a cult and one parent who has left the group?
ü
Would custody or visitation by the parent in the group be
harmful to the child because of the group's practices? If so, testimony by
expert witnesses is crucial for success in court.
ü
Do the grandparents wish to have contact with a grandchild,
one or both of whose parents are in a restrictive group?
Financial Issues
Contracts
ü
Are there loans, obligations, or contracts that ought to be
reviewed, either to avoid further obligations or to recover past payments?
This should be done as soon as possible by a lawyer of the ex-member's
choosing. The ex-member should be advised how to respond to pressure from
the group to fulfill a contract.
ü
Did the former member enter into damaging contracts with the
group that are legally unenforceable?
Financial Losses
ü
If the ex-member worked in a group business, has the group
violated wage and hour laws? Was the ex-member appropriately paid for
services rendered to the group? Because legal deadlines for pursuing these
types of claims are short, the ex-member must act rapidly.
ü
If the former member signed a contract giving the group money
or property, were state laws regulating contracts (such as the required
"cooling-off" period) violated so that the contract is void?
ü
Does the ex-member believe he or she might have been misled,
defrauded, or otherwise exploited in business dealings with the group or its
leader?
ü
Is the group interfering with contractual arrangements
between the ex-member and persons remaining in the group?
Physical and
Psychological Abuse
ü
Is the group violating laws that protect children and adults
from physical abuse?
ü
Is the government empowered to remove children from abusive
groups?
ü
Does the ex-member have reason to believe that he or she
suffered unusually severe emotional distress or residual physical injuries
as a result of the group involvement?
References
Delgado, R. (1977). Religious totalism: Gentle and
ungentle persuasion under the First Amendment. Southern California Law
Review, 5(1),1-97.
Delgado, R. (1979). A response to professor Dressler.
Minnesota Law Review, 63, 361-365.
Delgado, R. (1982). Cults and conversion: The case for
informed consent. Georgia Law Review, 16(3), 533-574.
Dressler, J. (1979). Professor Delgado's "brainwashing"
defense: Courting a determinist legal system. Minnesota Law Review, 63,
335-360.
Greene, F. (1989). Litigating child custody with
religious cults. Cultic Studies Journal 6(1), 69-75.
Home, W. W. (1992, July/August). The two faces of
Scientology. The American Lawyer, pp. 74-82.
Kandel, R. F. (1987/1988). Litigating the cult-related
child custody case. Cultic Studies Journal 4/5(1), 123-131.
Langone, M. (1993),
Recovery From Cults: Help For
Victims of Psychology and Spiritual Abuses W. W. Norton
Lucksted, 0. D., & Martell, D. F. (1982, April, May, &
June). Cults: A conflict between religious liberty and involuntary
servitude? FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin, 51(4, 5, 6), pp. 16-20,
16-23, 16-21.
Rosedale, H. L. (1989). Legal analysis of intent as a
continuum emphasizing social context of volition. Cultic Studies Journal,
6(1), 25-31.
Rosedale, H. L. (1992, September). Letter to the
editor. The American Lawyer, pp. 17-18.
Shapiro, R. (1983). Of robots, persons, and the
protection of religious beliefs. Southern California Law Review, 56(6),1277-1318.
Small, T. (1992, September). Letter to the editor.
The American Lawyer, pp. 17-18. |