Apr 14, 2026
Vernon Katz and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, writing outdoors surrounded by books and papers
Apr 11, 2026
In The New this week (April 4–11, 2026)
This week (April 4–11, 2026), cult-related media is dominated by the release of a major documentary series uncovering a "False Prophet," new investigative books exploring the psychology of recruitment, and updates on high-profile cult trials.
Top News & Features
- Netflix's Trust Me: The False Prophet: This week’s biggest release, the four-part docuseries Trust Me: The False Prophet (April 8, 2026), exposes the rise of Samuel Bateman. Bateman declared himself the successor to imprisoned FLDS leader Warren Jeffs and was eventually sentenced to 50 years in prison for child sex crimes and kidnapping.
- Ongoing Control from Prison: New reports this week highlight that Bateman continues to exert "daily indoctrination" over his remaining adult followers through frequent phone calls from prison, raising concerns about the persistence of his influence.
- Survivor Interviews: Survivors like Nomz Bistline, one of Bateman’s former adult wives, have come forward in interviews this week to warn that "it can happen to anyone," describing the psychological isolation and eventual freedom found only after his arrest.
New Books & Investigative Reports
- "What Draws People Into Cults?": A widely discussed new book released this week tracks the journeys of two followers to answer why "smart, educated people" fall for high-control groups. It emphasizes that no one "joins" a cult; they join what they believe is an "alternative community" that gradually transforms.
- Warren Jeffs Update: On April 11, 2026, People published a deep dive into the life of Warren Jeffs nearly 20 years after his initial arrest, examining how his crimes and the FLDS community continue to impact the public consciousness decades later.
Legal Developments
- Hmong Prophet Sentencing: In Northern California, cult leader Vang is scheduled for sentencing on April 14, 2026, after being found guilty of molesting and raping followers in a community he built at the base of Table Mountain.
- Kenya Doomsday Cult Trial: Ongoing testimony in Kenya continues for the manslaughter trial of an evangelical pastor whose doomsday sect led to the deaths of hundreds of followers through forced starvation.
In The News
Recent News & Sentencing
Mormon Fundamentalist Leader Jailed: Samuel Bateman, a leader of an FLDS offshoot sometimes called the "Samuelites," was sentenced to 50 years in prison following an undercover investigation. He was convicted for child sex crimes and child abuse involving more than 20 "wives," many of whom were children.
New Evidence in Child Sex Crimes Case: A pastor of an alleged cult in Augusta was recently charged with child sex crimes after the feds searched for more victims
New Books & Commentary
The Oracle’s Daughter: A New York Times book review discusses Harrison Hill's exploration of how "tyrannical utopias" and the desire for religious freedom can transform into oppressive environments that sacrifice collective safety for a leader's control.
Memoirs of "Aggressive Christianity": A recent Guardian interview with Sarah Green detailed her survival within her mother’s cult, describing a regime where members were forced into locked sheds as "divine punishment".
Cultural & Political Analysis
Social Media & Evangelism: Discussions have surfaced about how modern social media platforms act as catalysts for "cult followings" by amplifying aggressive evangelism and making it easier for high-control groups to isolate themselves from mainstream views.
Documentary Releases
Apr 10, 2026
Imprisoned Leader of Egyptian-Themed UFO-Obsessed Cult Seeks Compassionate Release
Chris Harris
AOL
April 10, 2026
The leader of a Black supremacist Egyptian-themed cult is seeking early release from federal prison, claiming in papers filed last month that he suffers from a recurring medical condition that causes parts of his body to swell.
Dwight "Malachi" York, a former writer and musician, founded the UFO-obsessed United Nuwaubian Nation of Moors in 1967. He was arrested on May 8, 2002, after authorities raided the cult’s Georgia “Tama-Re” compound, and was accused of molesting dozens of children.
York, now 80, was convicted of transporting minors across state lines for sexual purposes and financial crimes. He has been in prison since 2004, serving a 135-year sentence at the ADX Florence Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado.
York's petition, filed February 13, claims he suffers from complications caused by hereditary angioedema, a rare condition that causes severe swelling that can kill if it affects the throat and constricts one's airway.
The filing claimed that the medical treatment York receives at the prison is substandard, at best.
"This motion is not about revisiting Mr. York’s past," his attorney, Judith Delus Montgomery, wrote in her client’s petition. "It is about his present reality: an elderly man with a serious and potentially fatal medical condition who requires care the prison system cannot provide."
Putnam County Sheriff Howard Sills, who was part of the team that investigated the initial claims against the cult, objects to York's release.
“This man here is a serial rapist, a child molester that committed the most heinous of crimes in our society, short of torturous murder, and did it generationally,” Sills told WMAZ. “You don’t get, in my opinion, much worse than that.”
In addition to his convictions, York has also admitted to 40 counts of aggravated child molestation, 34 counts of child molestation, two counts of influencing witnesses and one count of sexual exploitation of a child.
Former U.S. Attorney Max Wood, who prosecuted York in federal court, told the station the petition mirrors a pattern he observed during the original case.
Wood said the York prosecution stands as “the most significant case in Middle Georgia for the last 50 years,” not only for its scale but for what it revealed about how major cases should be built.
“This was huge,” he said. “York was a master of having either a lawyer or a member of his cult just file something as a citizen. They filed all these things in the court system.”
https://www.aol.com/articles/imprisoned-leader-egyptian-themed-ufo-183829838.html
Prosecutors drop Chun Jae-soo Unification Church bribery case over time bar
Apr 8, 2026
For God's Sake, Recovering from Religious Trauma
Anna Clark Miller, LPC
Sheldon Press, 5th May 2026
Trade paperback $19.99 • 240 pp • ISBN: 9781399828413
“I feel guilty all the time, even when I'm not doing anything wrong...”
Are you navigating fear, shame, and isolation in the aftermath of harmful experiences in religion? Are you so used to suppressing your own needs and emotions that you don't know how to express them anymore?
For God's Sake: Recovering from Religious Trauma offers language to help you understand what you've experienced, process your hurt and anger, and start healing on your own terms. You'll learn how to turn your self-judgment into
curiosity, and your shame into self-compassion. Each chapter includes multiple inventories, checklists, and personal reflection prompts to help you connect more deeply with yourself and gain insight into how religious trauma has impacted you.
Grounded in research and counseling experience, Miller takes a religiously neutral approach to healing. She knows from experience that many religious trauma survivors are understandably anxious about perceived hidden agendas, particularly those tied to religion and spirituality. So whether you're looking to leave religion completely or seek a new, healthier relationship with your faith, For God's Sake can help you recover and explore who you are beyond religious trauma.
Anna Clark Miller, LPC, is a licensed counselor, author, speaker, and trainer who
specializes in recovery from religious trauma, spiritual abuse, and cults. Her
passion for healing from high-control religion started with her own experiences in
a fundamentalist belief system. She was raised overseas by evangelical missionaries, educated in religious universities, and worked in religious organizations for 10 years before recognizing the signs of religious trauma. After getting a degree in mental counseling, she started her career in trauma recovery with a focus on adverse experiences in high-control religious groups. She facilitates clinical training for therapists and social workers treating religious trauma and speaks at retreats and conferences for survivors.
For publicity and press inquiries, contact: Cassandra Murphy at Cassandra.Murphy@johnmurrays.co.uk
Apr 7, 2026
Health warning issued after sect allegedly told to give up jobs, school, ARVs
Apr 2, 2026
Religious Cult Responsible For Horrific Child Sex Abuse Is The Basis Of Netflix’s ‘Trust Me: The False Prophet’
Apr 1, 2026
Spiritual Bypassing
Spiritual bypassing is a term first coined by psychologist John Welwood in the 1980s. It describes the tendency to use spiritual ideas and practices to sidestep or "bypass" unresolved emotional issues, psychological wounds, and fundamental human needs.
It’s a "premature transcendence"—trying to rise above the messy, painful parts of being human before we’ve actually dealt with them.
Common Signs of Spiritual Bypassing
- Exaggerated Detachment: Using "it’s all an illusion" or "non-attachment" to avoid feeling genuine grief, anger, or hurt.
- Toxic Positivity: The belief that one should always be "high vibe" or that "everything happens for a reason," which silences healthy venting or necessary boundaries.
- Over-Spiritualizing Responsibility: Claiming "I attracted this with my thoughts" or "it’s their karma," which can shift focus away from addressing actual harm or systemic issues.
- The "Spiritual Ego": Feeling superior to others who are "unawakened" or "stuck in their ego."
In the Context of High-Demand Groups
Spiritual bypass is often a foundational tool for manipulation. In these environments, it takes on a more predatory edge:
- Weaponized "Inner Jihad": Much like the concepts you've explored regarding the struggle against the ego, groups may use the idea of "killing the self" to force members to ignore their own intuition or survival instincts.
- Dismissing Trauma: When a member raises a concern about abuse or financial exploitation, leadership may frame their complaint as "a lack of surrender" or "attachment to the material world."
- Performative Spirituality: You’ve previously noted how spiritual practices can become social signaling. In high-demand groups, "looking" spiritual becomes a requirement for safety and status within the community, effectively masking deep psychological distress.
Why It’s Dangerous
The danger isn't the spirituality itself, but the dissociation it encourages. By labeling "negative" emotions as unspiritual, a person loses the ability to set boundaries. If you can’t feel anger, you can’t protect yourself; if you can't feel sadness, you can't heal.
Mar 30, 2026
Founder of ‘orgasmic meditation’ company gets 9 years in prison in forced labor conspiracy
From the Darkroom shows cult leader after deadly bus hijacking
The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killing and the Psychology of Genocide
Lifton’s research, based on interviews with former Nazi doctors and survivors, centers on the psychological mechanisms that allowed individuals sworn to "do no harm" to become "genocidal killers."
Core Psychological Concepts
1. Doubling
This is perhaps Lifton’s most famous contribution from the book. Doubling is the division of the self into two functioning wholes: a "prior self" (the traditional, ethical doctor/husband/father) and an "Auschwitz self" (the killer).
- Unlike "splitting," where the self is fragmented, doubling allows both selves to function autonomously.
- The Auschwitz self performed the "dirty work," while the prior self remained "clean," allowing the doctor to return home to his family without feeling like a monster.
2. The Healing-Killing Paradox
Lifton identified a distorted "biomedical vision" at the heart of Nazi ideology. The Nazis viewed the German nation (the Volk) as a biological organism.
- The Physician as "Racial Hygenist": Doctors saw themselves as "surgeons" for the nation.
- Killing as "Healing": To "heal" the Nordic race, they believed they had to "excise" the "cancers" (Jews, Romani, the disabled). In this twisted logic, killing became a necessary medical act to preserve the life of the state.
3. Psychic Numbing
Lifton describes a diminished capacity to feel or react to the surrounding horror. For doctors at the death camps, this was a functional necessity. By "numbing" their empathy, they could process "selections" at the train platforms as a routine administrative task rather than the mass execution of human beings.
4. Derealization and Denial
The doctors employed various cognitive shields to distance themselves from reality:
- Euphemistic Language: Using terms like "special treatment" (Sonderbehandlung) or "evacuation" instead of murder.
- Bureaucratization: Focusing on the technical efficiency of the gas chambers or the statistics of the "selections" rather than the human reality of the victims.
The Evolutionary Chain of Killing
Lifton traced a clear progression of how the medical profession was co-opted, moving from "merciful" rhetoric to industrial slaughter:
- Coercive Sterilization: Preventing "unworthy" genes from passing on.
- "Euthanasia" Program (Aktion T4): The killing of the mentally and physically disabled within Germany.
- The "Final Solution": Applying the techniques learned in the T4 program (gas chambers and medical supervision) to the entire Jewish population of Europe.
Significance of the Work
Lifton’s disclosure was a warning that genocide is not committed by "madmen" alone. He demonstrated that high-level professionals can be socialized into atrocity through psychological adaptation and a sense of "higher" ideological purpose.
Mar 27, 2026
EARLY-BIRD TICKETS NOW ON SALEICSA International Conference 2026
Mar 17, 2026
Hundreds to rally at Japanese Embassy in Washington in support of Family Federation Japan
Mar 13, 2026
International Trading Group (ITG)
Feb 6, 2026
Leader of cult-like group charged with murder claimed God spoke through her, former member says
Feb 5, 2026
What is coercive control?
Coercive control involves deliberate, repeated patterns of physical or non-physical abuse used to hurt, scare, intimidate, threaten or control someone.
Behaviour can include:
• Limiting freedom or controlling choices
• Harassing, monitoring and stalking
• Shaming, degrading or humiliating
• Social isolation
• Threats, violence and intimidation
• Emotional, financial or sexual abuse
• Systems abuse, such as making false reports to authorities
It carries a maximum sentence of seven years. The law currently only applies to behaviour after July 2024 towards current or former intimate partners.