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Robert Kropinski v. World Plan Executive Council--us, et al., Appellants
Carter G. Phillips, with whom Rex E. Lee, Washington, D.C., was on the brief, for appellants.
Gerald F. Ragland, Jr., Philadelphia, Pa., for appellee.
Eugene D. Gulland and Sheldon E. Steinbach, Washington, D.C., were on the brief for amicus curiae American Council on Educ., urging reversal.
Before EDWARDS, SILBERMAN, and BUCKLEY, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge BUCKLEY.
BUCKLEY, Circuit Judge:
Robert Kropinski brought claims of fraud, negligence, and intentional tort against World Plan Executive Council and Maharishi International University. Kropinski alleges that as a result of defendants' misrepresentations, he was induced to study and practice a method of meditation that has caused him financial, physical, and psychological harm. Defendants moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted in part.
During the jury trial, Kropinski was allowed to introduce expert testimony that defendants' system of meditation involved the use of "thought reform." The jury found for Kropinski on the fraud and negligence claims. Defendants appeal the denial of summary judgment, the decision to allow Kropinski's expert to testify, and the judgment on the jury's verdict. We reverse in part and remand for a new trial.
Robert Kropinski's first contact with the transcendental meditation ("TM") movement was at a free, introductory lecture in 1972. As a result of representations that the practice of TM would yield a variety of personal and societal benefits, such as improved mental and physical health and the advancement of world peace through harmonious personal relationship, Kropinski enrolled in and paid for a seven-hour introductory course. At the time, he was a twenty-two-year-old high school graduate, had a steady job, and took college courses at night.
During the ensuing seven years, Kropinski enrolled in a variety of more advanced courses (including instruction in "Sidhi," in which he would learn, among other things, to levitate or "fly"); worked a total of four years full time for TM organizations in the United States and abroad in exchange for further instruction, room and board, and nominal pay; spent several hours per day, over extended periods, in meditation; and, in 1976, became an instructor in TM techniques. Although he spent most of his time during these years with TM practitioners, he saw his family frequently. At no time was Kropinski's freedom of movement constrained.
During the period from 1980 through 1983, Kropinski lessened his involvement in TM activities. He no longer taught TM and took fewer courses. Finally, in the fall of 1983, he stopped practicing TM after being informed by Swami Ji, founder of the International Society for Divine Love, that TM was an incorrect form of meditation.
Kropinski filed this suit on September 9, 1985, in which he asserts three basic claims. The first lies in fraud: defendants fraudulently promised that the practice of TM would confer certain personal and societal benefits; as part of this fraudulent scheme, the defendants claimed that the benefits of TM were "scientifically confirmed." Complaint at p 13. Second, as a result of defendants' negligent conduct in allowing him to persist in the practice of TM and Sidhi, he sustained psychological, physical, and emotional harm. Id. at p 50. Third, he alleges that by teaching him TM, defendants intentionally caused him emotional distress. Id. at p 53. He sought damages for the tuition, the value of the services he provided the defendants' organizations while employed by them, and compensation for his injuries.
Defendants moved for summary judgment on all claims. They asserted that the facts alleged by Kropinski failed to state a cause of action for fraud, negligence, or intentional tort. They also asserted that as this diversity action is governed by District of Columbia law, Kropinski's claims were barred by the District's three-year statute of limitations. D.C.Code Ann. Sec. 12-301(8) (1981).
The district court dismissed the claims concerning intentional tort and negligent infliction of emotional distress, which rulings Kropinski has not cross-appealed, but found the allegations and evidence sufficient to raise jury issues as to fraud and the negligent infliction of both physical and psychological injuries. The court also left the defendants' statute of limitations defense to the jury. Finally, the court ruled that Kropinski could present evidence that TM constituted a system of "thought reform" that changed its practitioners' world view, but only to prove the fraud and negligence claims. Memorandum on Summary Judgment, John Doe v. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, et al., 652 F. Supp. 203 (D.D.C. 1986) ("Memorandum") (the plaintiff initially brought the suit using a pseudonym). Record Excerpts ("Rec.Ex.") at tab C.
At trial, Kropinski introduced expert testimony by Dr. Margaret Singer, a psychologist. Defendants objected that Dr. Singer's theories on thought reform were scientifically unsupported. Defendants also objected that her testimony was irrelevant and inflammatory. The trial court admitted the testimony.
The jury awarded Kropinski $137,890 in damages on the fraud and negligence claims, Rec.Ex. at tab C, and the court entered judgment on the verdict. Id. The court granted defendants' request for an additional thirty days to file post-judgment motions. Within the time allowed by the court, but after the ten-day time limit established by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50(b) for such a motion, the defendants moved for judgment non obstante verdicto ("judgment n.o.v."). When defendants discovered that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(b) would not permit the enlargement of the time limit established by Rule 50(b), the court dismissed their motion for judgment n.o.v.
Defendants ask this court to remand with instructions to direct a verdict for them based on either their motion for summary judgment or their untimely motion for judgment n.o.v., arguing (with respect to the latter) that they should not be prejudiced for having acted in reliance on the district court's mistaken extension of time within which to file motions. Brief for Appellants at 12 n. 22.
II. DENIAL OF JUDGMENT N.O.V.
Rule 50(b) prohibits an appellate court from directing a verdict in favor of a party who fails to move for judgment n.o.v. following trial. Jones v. Reliance Ins. Co., 607 F.2d 1 (D.C. Cir. 1979). Because a district court may not consider untimely motions for judgment n.o.v., Mickey v. Tremco Mfg. Co., 226 F.2d 956, 957 (7th Cir. 1955), we cannot act on defendants' motion.
Defendants argue that we nevertheless have the authority, under Thompson v. INS, 375 U.S. 384, 84 S. Ct. 397, 11 L. Ed. 2d 404 (1964), to grant their request because of the "unique circumstances" of their case. In Thompson, the Supreme Court allowed an appeal to lie because of the "unique circumstances" of the appellant's deferral of the filing of his appeal in reliance on the district court's assurances that his post-trial motions were timely when, in fact, they were not. In this case, defendants claim a similar reliance on the district court's erroneous grant of additional time for the filing of post-trial motions. Therefore, they say, their delay in filing their motion for judgment n.o.v. should be excused.
Even assuming the "unique circumstances" doctrine remains valid and is applicable to this case, cf. discussion in Houston v. Lack, --- U.S. ----, 108 S. Ct. 2379, 2388, 101 L. Ed. 2d 245 (1988) (Scalia, J., dissenting); Browder v. Director, Dep't of Corrections of Ill., 434 U.S. 257, 98 S. Ct. 556, 54 L. Ed. 2d 556 (1978), we would decline to apply it. As the decision to award a judgment n.o.v. lies within the province of the trial judge, we are reluctant to intrude into an area of judicial discretion that is generally exercised by that court. But more particularly, in Thompson, the doctrine was applied to save an appeal that would otherwise have been set aside. Here the appeal is not in jeopardy.
Defendants complain that the district court incorrectly denied summary judgment on the negligence claims, the fraud claim, and their statute of limitations defense. We conclude that the court erred in allowing one negligence claim and certain aspects of the fraud claim to go to trial; in all other respects, we affirm the district court.
The court allowed two negligence claims to be tried: negligent infliction of physical injury and negligent infliction of psychological injury. Kropinski asserted that he had suffered injuries to his foot, leg, and back as a result of his instructions "in the practice of 'flying,' " Complaint at p 50(g), which apparently involved hopping on the floor with legs crossed in the lotus position. The trial court properly found that Kropinski alleged sufficient facts to raise a jury question on negligent infliction of physical injury.
With respect to his claims of negligently inflicted psychological injury, Kropinski alleged that the practice of TM resulted in a loss of memory, psychological trauma, a diminished ability to concentrate, and arrested maturation and development. Complaint at Count Two (Negligence) (incorporating paragraphs 43, 45, & 47). In moving for summary judgment, defendants asserted that District of Columbia law prohibited recovery for psychological injuries that are not traceable to a physical injury, citing Asuncion v. Columbia Hospital for Women, 514 A.2d 1187, 1188-89 (D.C.1986). While the district court agreed that Asuncion precluded the claim for emotional injury under the present circumstances, it asserted, without explanation, that Asuncion's requirement of a causal physical injury did not apply in the case of "permanent psychological injuries." Memorandum at 12-13.
Asuncion affirms that "in [the District of Columbia], 'there can be no recovery for negligently caused emotional distress, mental disturbance, or any consequences thereof, where there has been no accompanying physical injury.' " Id. at 1188. We see no basis in the quoted statement for the district court's distinction between emotional and psychological injuries, as surely the phrase "mental disturbance, or any consequences thereof" is broad enough to encompass permanent as well as temporary traumata inflicted on the nervous system.
Kropinski argues, however, that the rule reaffirmed by Asuncion is an anachronism, and that the District of Columbia is likely to reject it. Brief for Appellee at 22. Since the argument of this case on appeal, however, the District of Columbia Court of Appeals has put such speculation to rest. In Williams v. Baker, 540 A.2d 449 (D.C.1988), the court engaged in an exhaustive study not only of its own precedents, but of the rule obtaining in other jurisdictions as well.
In the course of its discussion, the court reaffirmed Asuncion, noted that " [t]he District of Columbia was by no means the only jurisdiction to restrict the scope of claims for mental disorders not caused by physical injury resulting from the negligent conduct of another," id. at 452 (emphasis added), and reiterated this court's holding that a plaintiff must establish that his " 'nervous troubles were attributable to the [physical] injuries sustained.' " Id. (quoting Parrish v. United States, 357 F.2d 828, 829 (D.C. Cir. 1966) (emphasis added)). The Williams court "perceive [d] no valid reason ... for overruling the doctrines established by the courts of this jurisdiction." 540 A.2d at 457.
Kropinski neither alleges nor argues that his psychological troubles resulted from his physical injuries. He goes no further than to note that they were "concurrent," Brief for Appellee at 18, or had a common cause in his course in Sidhi. Complaint at p 50(g). As neither establishes the causal relationship required by Williams and Parrish, Kropinski's claim of psychological injury must be dismissed.
Kropinski alleged that defendants had represented that he would derive a multitude of benefits from the practice of TM, including reduced stress, a "purified" nervous system, improved memory, perfect health, reduced depression, increased academic ability, reversal of the aging process, and the ability to advance world peace. Complaint at p 12. He also alleged that defendants claimed that the knowledge he would gain from a course in Sidhi "would allow him to levitate or fly." Id. at paragraphs 19-20. Kropinski asserted that, as part of the fraudulent scheme, the defendants assured potential practitioners that the practice of TM was scientifically proven to confer the claimed benefits. Id. at p 13.
In reliance on these representations, Kropinski purchased instruction in TM beginning in 1972 and sedulously practiced the technique until 1983. He also asserts that the defendants advised him that any physical or psychological discomfort he encountered in practicing TM was the result of "unstressing," a process by which his nervous system purified itself. Id. at p 29. Because of these assurances, he ignored warning signs of potential injury and instead took further TM courses. Eventually he became a teacher of TM and devoted several years of his life to advancing its use by others.
The district court concluded that Kropinski's claim of fraud satisfied each element of the five-part test set forth in Urban Investments, Inc. v. Branham:
(1) a false representation (2) in reference to a material fact (3) made with knowledge of its falsity (4) with the intent to deceive and (5) action taken in reliance upon the representation.
464 A.2d 93, 98 (D.C.1983).
Defendants object that Kropinski's claim was based solely on defendants' statements of opinion, not statements of fact. Under their theory, opinion statements do not "refer [ ] to a material fact "; nor do they constitute "representations" on which a person can be found to rely within the meaning of Urban Investments. Id. (emphasis added). They also urge that the First Amendment bars fraud claims based solely on statements of opinion, just as it bars claims of libel based on statements of pure opinion. E.g., Ollman v. Evans, 750 F.2d 970 (D.C. Cir. 1984), cert. denied, 471 U.S. 1127, 105 S. Ct. 2662, 86 L. Ed. 2d 278 (1985). The district court properly rejected these contentions.
a. Opinions as "Facts"
The operative rule is that " [o]pinions or predictions of future events do not constitute representations of material facts upon which a plaintiff successfully may place dispositive reliance." Howard v. Riggs Nat'l Bank, 432 A.2d 701, 706 (D.C.1981). As with most others, that rule has its exceptions. Opinions or predictions based "on facts that are unavailable to the listener either because he does not have access to them or because he is obviously incapable of interpreting them" may give rise to liability for fraud. Day v. Avery, 548 F.2d 1018, 1026 (D.C. Cir. 1976), cert. denied, 431 U.S. 908, 97 S. Ct. 1706, 52 L. Ed. 2d 394 (1978), cited with approval in Howard, 432 A.2d at 706. Such liability may also be based on predictions if the listener can demonstrate that the person predicting an event knew of facts that would prevent its occurrence. Day, 548 F.2d at 1027.
The district court properly allowed Kropinski's fraud claim under the Day exceptions. He alleged that defendants had represented that TM was scientifically proven to confer certain personal and societal benefits. He was clearly entitled to present evidence to prove that either the supporting scientific data was not available to him, or that he would have been unable to interpret the data if it had been. Furthermore, Kropinski might be able to prove that defendants knew that he could never achieve the advertised benefits. These are factual questions that a jury is competent to decide.
Of course, even if the allegedly fraudulent statements were found to fit within the Day exceptions, that case imposes the further requirement that a reasonable person would have found the fact on which the opinion or prediction rests to be one "upon which the recipient of a representation might prudently rely." Id. at 1026. We do not reach the question of whether Kropinski reasonably relied on the representations at the time he first began to practice TM because the question was not raised below and is not before us on appeal.
b. Opinions, Fraud, and the First Amendment
Defendants note that the First Amendment bars libel actions based solely on opinion statements and argue that the First Amendment similarly prevents opinion statements from forming the basis for a fraud action. True, the First Amendment has been found to protect opinion statements from attack as libel; because such statements are not "facts," their truth or falsity cannot be established. Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, --- U.S. ----, 108 S. Ct. 876, 879, 99 L. Ed. 2d 41 (1988). By contrast, the statements here at issue are alleged to have been based on facts. See Day, 548 F.2d at 1026-27. As it is the factual basis of the statements that is being challenged, the statements are not protected by the First Amendment.
Kropinski alleges that defendants relied on a system of thought reform, which he describes as "a method used by the Koreans to change the belief systems of prisoners of war," Brief for Kropinski at 10; that is to say, as "brainwashing." During the trial, the allegation was put to two uses. First, he asserted, as a substantive element of his fraud claim, that the application of thought reform created a dependency on TM and brought about a change in his beliefs, id., even though defendants had promised him that TM did not involve a particular set of beliefs. Transcript ("Tr.") 12/11/86 at 76. Second, Kropinski attempted to justify his failure to bring suit within three years of the time he first experienced doubts about TM's efficacy because thought reform had prevented him from perceiving the system's falsity until a later time. For a discussion of this second aspect of thought reform, see below at IV.B.
The district court concluded that "the plaintiff has claimed that the defendants and TM changed his beliefs and promoted thought reform." Memorandum at 17 (citing Complaint at paragraphs 32, 33, 34, & 50(l) ). We find no allegation of changed beliefs in the cited paragraphs, although they do reflect elements that Kropinski's expert witness later associated with the practice of thought reform. They allege that defendants "intimidated plaintiff so that he believed it was not possible to leave the movement," id. at p 32, created in him a state of "emotional and physical dependency" and "inability to think clearly" that prevented him from "realizing that the negative emotional, psychological and physical effects he was experiencing were the result of T.M. and the Sidhis," id. at paragraphs 33 and 34, and that they "negligently and recklessly induced" in him a state of dependency "such that plaintiff was incapable of functioning adequately in the real world," id. at p 50(l) .
We read these paragraphs simply as part of plaintiff's explanation for his delay in recognizing the fraud and the causes of his injuries. They do not assert changes in belief or subjection to thought reform as substantive elements of Kropinski's claims for damages. Therefore on remand, evidence of changed belief and thought reform may not be admitted as a substantive basis for Kropinski's claims. Evidence of thought reform may be admitted, however, to establish why he failed to detect the fraud and persisted in his practice of TM after the injuries now complained of first became apparent.
C. Statute of Limitations and the Motion to Dismiss
Kropinski filed his complaint on September 9, 1985. Therefore, under District of Columbia law requiring that actions to recover damages for fraud be brought within three years after "the time the right to maintain the action accrues," D.C.Code Sec. 12-310(8), his fraud claim is barred if the cause of action accrued before September 9, 1982.
Defendants argue that Kropinski must have realized by 1976 or 1977 that he was not obtaining the personal or societal benefits attributed to TM; and as he discovered, or should have discovered, the purported fraud well before September 1982, his claims are barred. Kropinski counters that because defendant employed thought reform, his ability to perceive the fraudulent nature of their representations had been impaired; and as he had attended one of defendants' courses in January 1983 and continued to practice TM until the fall of that year, his suit was timely. He also asserted that the defendants reassured him that his physical discomfort was part of TM "unstressing," and that he reasonably relied on those assurances.
The district judge noted, when he ruled on their motion for summary judgment, that defendants may be estopped from asserting a statute of limitations defense if they "lulled" the plaintiff into inaction. Memorandum at 8 n. 7 (discussing Alley v. Dodge Hotel, 551 F.2d 442 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, 431 U.S. 958, 97 S. Ct. 2684, 53 L. Ed. 2d 277 (1977)). He properly concluded that it was for the jury to decide when Kropinski discovered or, under the exotic circumstances of this case, should have discovered the fraud. Id. at 7.
Two negligence claims were tried and submitted to the jury: the first for physical injuries, and the second for psychological injuries. The verdict sheet submitted to the jury, however, did not distinguish between the two negligence claims. Rec.Ex. at tab C. As a result, it is impossible to determine whether the finding of negligence applied to the infliction of physical injury, psychological injury, or both. Furthermore, the verdict sheet did not require the jury to allocate its award of damages among the several claims. As we have ordered the dismissal of the claim of psychological injuries, we must also remand for a new trial on the claim of physical injury and a new determination of damages, if any, to be awarded on that claim.
When one person defrauds another, there will be a delay between the time the fraud is perpetrated and the time the victim awakens to the fact. Accordingly, in a fraud case, the statute of limitations will not begin running until the date the fraud is discovered, or reasonably should have been. King v. Kitchen Magic, Inc., 391 A.2d 1184, 1186 (D.C.1978); see Richards v. Mileski, 662 F.2d 65, 71 (D.C. Cir. 1981) (due diligence test applied to reasonableness of claimant's efforts to uncover existence of a claim). In some cases, most notably medical treatment cases, the running of the statute is tolled beyond the discovery date if the tortfeasor reassures the victim that the negative effects should be expected as part of the treatment, and if a reasonable person would believe such reassurances. See Page v. United States, 729 F.2d 818, 823 & n. 36 (D.C. Cir. 1984).
At trial, there was evidence that Kropinski had realized, by 1976 or 1977, that he would not receive the benefits attributed to TM. Tr. 12/15/86 at 544-46 (Kropinski testimony). Also, defendants argue that as Kropinski asserts that he had been deliberately misled by his instructors when he began his study of TM in 1972, and as he began to each TM in 1976, Tr. 12/16/86 at 580-82, he must have known by then which, if any, of the TM claims were fraudulent. Therefore, they conclude, the statute must have begun to run by 1976.
Kropinski meets these arguments with evidence that when he complained of adverse physical and psychological effects, defendants assured him that "something good was happening," and that he believed them, Tr. 12/15/86 at 407-08. He also asserts that he had been deprived of the ability to determine the source of the "negative emotional, psychological and physical effects" he was experiencing. See, e.g., Complaint at paragraphs 33-34. Thus, by analogy to the medical treatment cases, Kropinski argues that he reasonably accepted defendants' reassurances despite the negative effects. Consequently, his cause of action did not accrue until the fall of 1983 when he finally learned the falsity of defendants' representations and stopped practicing TM.
As the district court correctly noted when it denied defendants' motion for summary judgment, it was for the jury to decide when Kropinski discovered the fraud, or reasonably should have. But instead of presenting that question to the jurors, the court instructed them as follows:
Defendants contend that plaintiff's claims are barred by the statute of limitations. That is to say, that plaintiff ceased participation in the defendant's [sic] activities more than three years before suit was filed. This is an affirmative defense. If defendants have established this then you should find for the defendants as to all of plaintiff's claims. On the other hand, if plaintiff's evidence establishes some participation in or contact with defendant's [sic] activities after September 8, 1982, which is three years before suit was filed, then you should continue your consideration of these instructions.
Tr. 1/12/87 at 22-23 (Jury Instructions) (emphasis added).
These instructions are flawed because they fail to instruct the jury that the statute of limitations begins to run "at the time when a prospective plaintiff knows or should know through the exercise of due diligence of [his] right to recover." Baker v. A.H. Robins Co., 613 F. Supp. 994, 996 (D.D.C. 1985). See also Richards v. Mileski, 662 F.2d 65, 71 (D.C. Cir. 1981) ("The test of due diligence measures the plaintiff's efforts to uncover his cause of action against what a reasonable person would have done in his situation given the same information."). As the jury was improperly instructed, and as the defense made a timely objection, Tr. 1/9/87 at 42-44, we remand for a new trial on the fraud claim.
Defendants also challenge the admission of testimony by Kropinski's expert witness on the subject of thought reform. First, they assert that because Dr. Singer's particular theory of thought reform is not "generally accepted" in the scientific community, she was not qualified to testify under the Frye standard. Brief for Appellants at 33-34 n. 55 (quoting Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013 (D.C. Cir. 1923)). Second, they argue that her testimony is irrelevant and prejudicial.
Frye requires as a precondition for the admission of a particular expert's testimony that " [the] scientific principle ... from which the [expert's] deduction is made must be sufficiently established to have gained general acceptance in the particular field in which it belongs." Frye v. United States, 293 F. 1013, 1014 (D.C. Cir. 1923) (emphasis added).
We have recently held that "Frye is still the law in this Circuit." United States v. Shorter, 809 F.2d 54, 59-61 (D.C. Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 108 S. Ct. 71, 98 L. Ed. 2d 35 (1987). We note, however, that Frye and Shorter involved criminal trials, as have all the other cases in this circuit that have applied the Frye standard. We also note that certain commentators have suggested that a less rigorous standard may be appropriate in civil cases. See, e.g., 1 D. Louisell & C. Mueller, Federal Evidence Sec. 107 (1977).
We decline to decide on this record whether Frye's "general acceptance" requirement should be limited to criminal cases and a less demanding one, such as "substantial acceptability," applied in civil cases such as this. See E. Cleary, McCormick on Evidence Sec. 203 at 605-09 (1984). Kropinski, however, has failed to provide any evidence that Dr. Singer's particular theory, namely that techniques of thought reform may be effective in the absence of physical threats or coercion, has a significant following in the scientific community, let alone general acceptance.
The evidence of Dr. Singer's qualifications offered by plaintiff at trial was unfocused. See Tr. 12/11/86 at 92-99 (voir dire of Dr. Singer) (reciting Dr. Singer's academic background, awards received for work unrelated to her theory of thought control, and her experience working with individuals who have been involved in cults and the TM movement). Defendants' cross-examination at voir dire centered on Dr. Singer's theory of cults. The basis for the defendants' challenge to Dr. Singer was not fully explained because the court interrupted counsel and admitted Dr. Singer as an expert. Id. at 103. Later, during Dr. Singer's direct testimony on thought reform, defendants objected to the admissibility of her theory. Id. at 119.
During their cross-examination, defendants asked Dr. Singer to elaborate her thought reform theory but did not inquire into its acceptance by others in her profession. Id. at 178-84. On redirect, Dr. Singer's explanation of her theory again did not address its acceptability. Id. at 189-90. Defendants' expert, psychiatrist Dr. Melvin Prosen, testified that although Dr. Singer is a respected psychologist, her theory of thought reform found virtually no support among others in the field. Tr. 12/22/86 at 118.
Because of the uncertainty about the acceptability of Dr. Singer's thought reform thesis, we cannot sustain the trial court's decision to admit her testimony. On the record before us, however, we are unable to conclude that her views are not accepted. If, on retrial, the plaintiff wishes to present Dr. Singer's thought reform theory, the trial judge must be satisfied of its scientific acceptability and that her testimony would serve the purposes of Federal Rule of Evidence 702. We leave it to the district court in the first instance to determine the applicability of Frye in a case of this sort.
Defendants also object that even if Dr. Singer's views are admissible, they should have been excluded as irrelevant and inflammatory. As we find that Dr. Singer's testimony should not have been admitted, we do not need to address these other issues. If, however, she or another expert is properly qualified to present expert testimony at a new trial, we will rely on the discretion of the trial judge to ensure its relevance and maintain the appropriate balance between the probative value of any evidence offered on the subject of thought reform and its possible prejudicial effects.
We do not address defendants' argument that plaintiff's theory of thought reform would burden their First Amendment rights. As Kropinski's changed beliefs and defendants' advocacy of their beliefs are not at issue in this case, neither is the First Amendment.
Robert Kropinski can proceed against the defendants on his claims of fraud and negligent infliction of physical injury. The jury must be instructed on the discovery rule as part of its consideration of the statute of limitations defense for both claims. Expert testimony in the TM system's use of thought reform may not be admitted absent proper proof of the expert's qualifications. The opinion of the trial court and its judgment are
Reversed in part and remanded.
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20 Influence Techniques
Manipulative techniques of influence often exploit basic human psychology, social norms, or cognitive blind spots to alter someone's behavior, beliefs, or decisions without their full, conscious awareness.
Exploiting Relationships & Emotion
• Love Bombing: Overwhelming someone with intense affection, praise, and attention early on to create deep emotional dependency, only to later withdraw it as punishment or control.
• Guilt Tripping: Making a person feel entirely responsible for someone else’s unhappiness, distress, or failure, forcing compliance to relieve the psychological discomfort.
• Playing the Victim (Inversion): Deflecting personal accountability for harmful actions by claiming to be the one who is actually being mistreated or targeted.
• Trauma Bonding: Alternating severe emotional abuse or stress with intense periods of warmth and safety, creating a powerful, addictive psychological attachment.
• Isolation: Systematically cutting a person off from external support networks—like family, friends, or trusted objective sources—so they become entirely dependent on the influencer for validation and reality-testing.
Distorting Reality & Information
• Gaslighting: Systematically undermining someone's perception of reality, memory, or sanity by denying objective facts, inventing false narratives, or insisting things didn't happen the way they did.
• Moving the Goalposts: Continuously changing the criteria for approval, success, or safety just as the target is about to reach the previous benchmark, ensuring they remain in a perpetual state of trying to please.
• Double Bind (No-Win Situation): Offering a choice where every option leads to a negative consequence or criticism, leaving the person stuck and wrong no matter what they decide.
• Information Control: Deliberately restricting, filtering, or compartmentalizing accessible information to ensure the target only sees a highly curated narrative that benefits the influencer.
• Lying by Omission: Leaving out critical pieces of context or facts that would completely change the target's understanding of a situation, while technically avoiding a direct lie.
Social & Psychological Pressure
• Fear-Uncertainty-Doubt (FUD): Instilling vague, negative, or alarming information to trigger anxiety and erode confidence, making the target more compliant or risk-averse.
• The "Foot-in-the-Door" Technique: Starting with a tiny, easy-to-grant request to establish a baseline of compliance, making it psychologically harder for the person to refuse a much larger, subsequent demand.
• The "Door-in-the-Face" Technique: Making an intentionally extreme, unreasonable request that is sure to be rejected, followed immediately by a smaller, "compromise" request that seems reasonable by comparison.
• Shaming and Public Humiliation: Weaponizing social disapproval, mockery, or public exposure to pressure an individual into falling in line with a group norm or standard.
• The Bandwagon Effect: Creating a false sense of overwhelming consensus ("everyone is doing this" or "everyone agrees") to trigger the human instinct to conform and avoid exclusion.
Identity & Cognitive Manipulation
• Loaded Language: Using emotionally charged, highly polarizing terms or thought-terminating clichés designed to bypass critical thinking and trigger an instant, gut-level emotional reaction.
• Milieu Control: Directly controlling the physical, social, and communicative environment to completely govern how an individual receives, interprets, and processes ideas.
• Demand for Purity: Establishing an impossible, black-and-white standard of perfection or ideological alignment, creating constant anxiety about failing to measure up.
• Deceived Commitment: Trickling out the true scope, cost, or reality of a commitment (such as a job, a group, or an agreement) only after the person has made the initial decision to join or participate.
• Identity Striping: Breaking down an individual’s existing sense of self, personal values, or independent history, and replacing it with a rigid, collective identity defined entirely by the influencer or group.
The 20 techniques listed are drawn from foundational research across social psychology, clinical psychology, and the study of coercive control and high-demand groups.
The origins and primary frameworks for these techniques map out across several seminal works:
1. Robert Jay Lifton's Eight Criteria for Thought Reform
Several of the core environmental and language techniques come directly from psychiatrist Robert Jay Lifton’s seminal 1961 study, Thought Reform and the Psychology of Totalism: A Study of "Brainwashing" in China.
• Milieu Control: Directly named by Lifton as his first criterion; it involves the total control of communication and environment.
• Loaded Language: Lifton's term for "thought-terminating clichés"—complex ideas reduced to brief, highly definitive, unchallengeable phrases.
• Demand for Purity: Lifton’s third criterion, which establishes a radical, black-and-white moral standard to induce chronic guilt.
2. Robert Cialdini's Principles of Persuasion
The techniques tracking social dynamics and compliance triggers are rooted in the work of social psychologist Robert Cialdini, detailed in his classic 1984 book, Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion.
• The "Foot-in-the-Door" & "Door-in-the-Face" Techniques: These are classic compliance-gaining strategies heavily researched by Cialdini and his contemporaries to demonstrate how sequential requests alter psychological baselines.
• The Bandwagon Effect: Explored under Cialdini's core principle of Social Proof (or consensus), where people mirror others' actions to find safety or correctness in a group.
3. Margaret Thaler Singer's Models of Coercive Persuasion
The structural breakdown of identity-stripping and tactical commitment comes from clinical psychologist Margaret Thaler Singer, particularly her extensive research published in Cults in Our Midst (1995).
• Identity Striping: Singer’s work extensively documents the systematic erosion of an individual's past identity, history, and independent judgment to replace it with a controlled, collective persona.
• Deceived Commitment (Boundaries & Information): Singer highlighted how high-demand groups manipulate the sequence of disclosure, ensuring a recruit commits to a small, idealized premise before the true, high-cost demands are revealed.
• Isolation: A foundational pillar in Singer's conditions for mind control, requiring the physical or psychological removal of an individual's external validation system.
4. Psychological, Clinical, and Relationship Literature
The remaining interpersonal and emotional manipulation tactics are widely cataloged within clinical psychology, family systems theory, and domestic abuse research (including the Duluth Model of domestic violence):
• Trauma Bonding: Coined by Patrick Carnes in 1997 (Against the Betrayal Bond), describing the powerful neurochemical and emotional attachments formed through alternating cycles of abuse and reinforcement.
• Love Bombing: Originally identified in the 1970s by researchers studying the recruitment tactics of new religious movements, and later adopted by clinical psychologists to describe narcissistic abuse patterns in interpersonal relationships.
• Gaslighting: Derived from Patrick Hamilton's 1938 play Gas Light, it became a formal clinical term in psychological literature to describe the systematic erosion of an individual's confidence in their own memory and perception.
• Guilt Tripping, Playing the Victim, and Moving the Goalposts: Long studied within family dynamics and transactional analysis as indirect defense mechanisms and covert aggression strategies used to enforce compliance without overt conflict.
CultNEWS101 Articles: 5/28/2026
Domestic & True Crime
The article from Front Page Detectives details the escalating controversy surrounding actor and musician Jared Leto, focusing on how Hollywood ignored warning signs about his behavior for decades.
The key points from the summary include:
- The "Cult" Image: For years, Leto (frontman of Thirty Seconds to Mars) leaned into a "cult leader" persona as a marketing tactic. He hosted high-priced annual "Mars Island" fan retreats in Croatia costing up to $6,499, where devotees dressed in matching white clothing, received band tattoos, and engaged in spiritual activities. Although the public originally dismissed the imagery as harmless performance art, it has faced severe scrutiny following serious allegations.
- 2025 Air Mail Investigation: In June 2025, Air Mail published an investigative report featuring testimonies from nine women who accused Leto of sexual misconduct, unsolicited sexual messaging, and predatory behavior at private parties.
- Allegations Involving Minors: Multiple women alleged they were minors when Leto targeted them. The catalyst for the investigation came when DJ and music producer Allie Teilz posted that Leto had assaulted and traumatized her when she was 17. Another woman alleged that in 2006, when she was 16 and didn't even have a driver's license, Leto approached her in Los Angeles, took her number, and initiated late-night sexual phone calls.
- An Open Secret in Hollywood: The article notes that rumors about Leto’s behavior had been an open secret since at least 2005, when Page Six published a piece titled "Jared Leto Likes 'Em Young." However, Hollywood largely ignored the rumors, allowing his eccentric public persona to act as a cover for his behavior.
- Professional Fallout: Unlike past controversies that faded, Leto is experiencing tangible fallout. A film project he was developing, The Talented Dr. Grey, has reportedly been put on hold, and his involvement in Disney’s Tron: Ares remains fluid.
Ultimately, the article concludes that the controversy exposes an industry that gave a powerful celebrity "a very long leash," using his known eccentricity as an alibi to ignore predatory behavior.
International News9News: Exclusive Brethren sect denies telling members to kill their pets
"A prominent sect has denied telling members to euthanise their pets, but confirmed they have been urged to get rid of them.
Members of the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church, better known as the Exclusive Brethren, were told households needed to be "freshly cleansed" of animals after a relative of church leader Bruce Hales was attacked by a dog last month.
The Sydney Morning Herald reports a letter was read from church leadership to meetings across the country earlier this morning with the directive.
"The ownership of such an animal, let alone it being kept at a brother's home, is clearly wrong," the letter read.
"There are reports of some Brethren reverting to owning pets, including dogs and other animals, a practice that has been clearly spoken against in ministry.
The letter specified that birds, mice and cats were also included in the directive, not just dogs.
In the 1960s the sect instructed members to euthanise their pets, stating that giving them away was sinful.
One blind man was reportedly cast out of the church for refusing to get rid of his guide dog. But the sect has now issued a statement denying reports members were told to euthanise their pets."
News, Education, Intervention, Recovery
Intervention101.com to help families and friends understand and effectively respond to the complexity of a loved one's cult involvement.
CultRecovery101.com assists group members and their families make the sometimes difficult transition from coercion to renewed individual choice.
CultNEWS101.com news, links, resources about: cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.
The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not imply that Patrick Ryan, Joseph Kelly or Ashlen Hilliard endorse the content. We provide information from multiple perspectives to foster dialogue.
Panacea Society
At its height in the 1920s and 1930s, the society grew from a localized commune into an international movement with thousands of external members, bound together by unique eschatological beliefs, a global healing ministry, and an incredibly persistent public advertising campaign.
Core Origins and the 'Visitation'
The theological roots of the Panacea Society rested on Southcottianism, a lineage of English prophetic tradition tracking back to Joanna Southcott (1750–1814), a self-proclaimed Devonshire prophetess. Southcott had declared that an imminent Millennium (a 1,000-year era of divine peace) was coming and that a final female spiritual avatar would appear before Christ’s return.
The Panacea Society was organized around the belief that this line of revelation, known as "The Visitation," was actively manifesting through their own leader:
• Mabel Barltrop (Octavia): The widow of an Anglican clergyman, Barltrop emerged as the group's absolute spiritual authority. Her followers identified her as the "Divine Daughter of God" and the eighth prophet of the Visitation, giving her the name Octavia
• The Daily Script: Every evening, Octavia delivered written revelations—the "daily script"—prescribing both divine prophecy and strict, meticulous rules dictating how her followers should dress, behave, and maintain their households.
The Two Pillars of Activity
The group is remembered historically for two massive, highly funded initiatives that reached across the globe.
1. The Campaign to Open Joanna Southcott’s Box
Joanna Southcott had left behind a famous, tightly sealed wooden box containing her final prophecies. She left specific instructions that it must only be opened during a time of dire national crisis, and crucially, only in the presence of 24 bishops of the Church of England who were expected to spend days studying its contents.
The Panaceans believed the chaos of WWI and the interwar period was the exact crisis Southcott foretold. They spent vast sums of money on national billboard campaigns, newspaper advertisements, and petitions demanding that the Anglican episcopate fulfill its duty. They even purchased a large property adjacent to their headquarters specifically designed to host and house the 24 bishops when they finally arrived. The bishops, however, consistently ignored the requests.
2. The Universal Healing Ministry
The society adopted the name Panacea in 1923 to reflect a healing cure they offered freely to the world to eradicate all physical and mental illness.
The cure relied entirely on ordinary tap water energized by pieces of linen over which Octavia had breathed and prayed. The society shipped these small squares of linen completely free of charge to anyone who wrote to their Bedford headquarters. Recipients were told to immerse the linen in a pitcher of water to create "Water A," which they drank four times a day or diluted into bathwater ("Water B"). Remarkably, between 1924 and 2012, the society mailed out these healing packets to over 130,000 applicants across 90 countries, maintaining meticulous archives of the letters sent back by believers reporting their recoveries.
The Bedford Campus and Eden
The society acquired a series of Victorian villas along Albany Road in Bedford, creating an intentional, enclosed community campus. The members believed that Bedford was the literal, original geographic site of the Garden of Eden.
Within this secure enclave, they prepared for the apocalypse with pristine domestic order. They even meticulously maintained an end-of-terrace house known as The Ark, keeping it fully furnished, empty, and ready to serve as the immediate residence for the Messiah upon the Second Coming.
Evolution into a Modern Trust
Following Octavia's death in 1934 and the subsequent passing of her successor Emily Goodwin in 1943, the community’s resident numbers steadily dwindled. However, because early members had systematically signed over their personal wealth and real estate legacies to a formal structural framework established back in 1926, the society became extraordinarily wealthy.
By the early 2000s, the society held millions of pounds in property assets but had only a single digit number of surviving members. The last resident member, Ruth Klein, passed away in 2012.
Following her death, the organization officially closed its religious era and transformed into the Panacea Charitable Trust. Today, the historic campus operates as The Panacea Museum in Bedford, preserving the extensive archives of scripts, global healing correspondence, and the famous unopened box, while using its substantial endowment to fund local social initiatives and mental health services.
SHAME-SEX ATTRACTION: SURVIVORS’ STORIES OF CONVERSION THERAPY!
May 27, 2026
The Gulf Harbour Tragedy: Inside "The Ark" and the Trial of Kaixiao Liu and Lanyue Xiao
The Ark Case: Leadership, Beliefs, and Ongoing Trial in New Zealand
Recent court proceedings in Auckland, New Zealand, have brought international attention to a small religious group known as “The Ark,” and its leaders Kaixiao Liu and Lanyue Xiao. The case centers on serious criminal charges connected to the death of a follower and has raised broader questions about religious authority, group dynamics, and accountability.
Who Are Kaixiao Liu and Lanyue Xiao?
Kaixiao Liu is described in court documents and reporting as a leader of a religious group, while Lanyue Xiao, his wife, held an influential position alongside him within the same community.
•Liu reportedly referred to himself using titles such as “Lord,” “master,” or “teacher.”
•Xiao was described as being referred to as “Queen.”
According to prosecutors, multiple followers—primarily women—lived within this household under structured conditions, with Liu as the central authority figure.
The Ark: Structure and Reported Practices
Public reporting provides limited verified detail about the belief system of this specific group. However, court testimony and investigative reporting describe aspects of its internal structure:
•Members reportedly lived communally at the Ark residence.
•Some women were described as living in “servitude” to Liu and his family, according to prosecution claims.
There are also references to religious framing:
•Followers came to New Zealand seeking “religious instruction” from Liu.
•Separate reporting notes Liu creating Christian-themed worship music, suggesting at least some connection to Christian concepts.
The case centers on the death of Shulai Wang, a 70-year-old woman who traveled from China reportedly to study under Liu.
•Wang allegedly attempted to leave the group and was subsequently restrained and punished for breaking rules.
•Prosecutors say she was confined, deprived of food, and physically disciplined before her death.
•Liu, Xiao, and Liu’s parents are charged with kidnapping and manslaughter; all have pleaded not guilty.
The Ark residence and its internal practices have become a central focus of the trial, which continues in the Auckland High Court as of May 2026.
This case has gained attention beyond New Zealand for several reasons:
•It highlights how isolated religious communities can operate with internal authority structures.
•It raises questions about vulnerability of followers seeking spiritual guidance, particularly across international borders.
•It underscores the role of the legal system in examining alleged abuse within private ideological groups.
At this stage, all allegations remain subject to judicial determination, and the defendants maintain their not guilty pleas.
References & Sources
•RNZ News – Gulf Harbour body trial
•Stuff NZ – Investigation into The Ark and rice bag evidence
•Otago Daily Times – Religious group accused
•Indian Weekender – Trial summary and allegations
•ODT – Liu’s music and religious expression
