Showing posts with label Cult-awareness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cult-awareness. Show all posts

Nov 17, 2025

International ​Cult Awareness Day: November 18th

International ​Cult Awareness Day: November 18th
International ​Cult Awareness Day: November 18th

On November 18th, 46 years ago, over 900 individuals tragically became victims of a mass murder-suicide as members of the Peoples Temple cult. This event is commonly known as the "Jonestown Massacre" and is described as "one of the largest mass deaths in American history."

As we observe this date, it's essential to be sensitive and avoid exploiting those affected by this tragedy. International Cult Awareness Day raises awareness of the harms some have experienced in cultic systems. This year's observance focuses on reflecting upon the 46th anniversary of Jonestown with three key goals:

1. **Remember the Victims**: We honor the victims of tragedies that have occurred in cults, specifically highlighting the victims of Jonestown. Other tragic incidents have affected groups such as the Chinese Dragon Buddha, Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God, MOVE, Synanon, The Children of God, Alusi Okija, Aum Shinrikyo, Beasts of Satan, Faith Temple Church of the Apostolic Faith, Falun Gong, Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Remnant Fellowship Church/Weigh Down Workshop, Heaven's Gate, Word of Faith Fellowship, Solar Temple, Béchard Lane Eckankar, WACO, and many more.

2. **Spread Awareness**: We aim to increase awareness of the harm caused by cults.

3. **Provide Resources**: We offer resources for those who have been affected by these harmful practices.

Let us use this occasion to reflect and educate ourselves on these critical issues.


​​Join us this International Cult Awareness Day, November 18th, as we raise awareness about the dangers of coercive control and the impact of cults on individuals, families, and society.

Cults can take many forms, from seemingly harmless groups to high-demand organizations that exert undue influence over their members. They often isolate individuals from their support networks, exploit their resources, and undermine their critical thinking.

​This year, we encourage everyone to:


​Resources:


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery

Nov 12, 2025

International Cult Awareness Day



​Join us this International Cult Awareness Day, November 18th, as we raise awareness about the dangers of coercive control and the impact of cults on individuals, families, and society.

Cults can take many forms, from seemingly harmless groups to high-demand organizations that exert undue influence over their members. They often isolate individuals from their support networks, exploit their resources, and undermine their ability to think critically.

​This year, we encourage everyone to:


​By raising awareness, we can empower individuals to recognize and resist manipulative tactics, protect vulnerable populations, and support those on their journey to recovery.

​#CultAwarenessDay #CultAwareness #CoerciveControl #SupportSurvivors 


Resources:

International Cultic Studies Association

https://internationalculticstudies.org/


Graphics:

International Cult Awareness Day

















International Cult Awareness Day

















https://www.cultnews101.com/p/iternational-cult-awareness-day.html

Nov 10, 2025

Parliamentary inquiry probes experiences of children in high-control religious groups

ABC News Australia
November 5, 2025  

A Victorian parliament probe into the impacts of cults and organised fringe groups has heard lived experience testimony from two women who grew up in high-control religious groups. Their evidence has added to calls for a greater focus on the safety of children in religious groups.

What's next?

The inquiry will continue public hearings before releasing its findings in September next year.

At eight years old, Mirriam Francis remembers locking herself in the bathroom to avoid "auditing" — a series of intense interviews in which she was asked intrusive and sexual questions.
Fighting back tears, she recounted these sessions and her experiences within the Church of Scientology at a parliamentary inquiry this week.

"I lied and said I needed to pee. I ran the water in the sink while she knocked," she said.

"I lied and said I was hungry. She came back with pieces of cheese.

During auditing, which Scientologists say is about discarding "spiritual disabilities", an interviewee holds cans connected to a meter that measures small electrical changes.

The church says this helps an auditor to identify a person's thoughts, emotions and past experiences.
Ms Francis was born into Scientology in Sydney in 1984.

At the age of six, Ms Francis was moved to Los Angeles, where she says she lived in a Scientology facility with other children.

She called it "institutionalised care" — children sleeping on bunks or on the floor with limited adult supervision.

"I know what it is to be treated as an adult in a small body," she said.

"To bear adult expectations, to face adult exposures and to have adult experiences."

Returning to Australia in 2002 at the age of 17, she spent about a decade volunteering with the church before leaving in her mid-20s.

She has now given evidence to the Victorian parliament's inquiry into the recruitment methods and impacts of cults and organised fringe groups.

The inquiry is considering whether stronger laws are needed to deal with groups that "use manipulation or control".

"The inquiry is not about judging anyone's beliefs — it's about protecting people from harm," the inquiry said on its website

Scientology is a recognised religion and registered charity in Australia, meaning it does not have to pay income tax on profits.

This is something Ms Francis — now a director of the Olive Leaf Network, which supports people leaving high-control religious groups — would like changed.

"When the federal government supports the financial benefits from these activities, this is not negligence," she said.

"It is complicity. This is institutional child abuse backed by this country."

The Church of Scientology has previously responded to questions from the ABC by saying Ms Francis joined the church staff of her own choosing and left of her own choosing.
Growing up in the Children of God

Maria Esguerra, another director of the Olive Leaf Network, also addressed the inquiry.

She is a registered psychologist with training in cultic abuse, coercive control and complex trauma.

She was born into the Children of God church, now known as The Family International.

Like Ms Francis, she also wants a greater focus on child safety in religious groups.

"The committee must maintain a clear distinction between adults and children through this inquiry, recognising children's particular rights, protections and vulnerabilities," she said.

 "I was born an Australian citizen, yet I was raised with no access to the rights and protections I should have been afforded."

Ms Esguerra told the inquiry she had no access to education, vaccinations or medical treatment when she was a child.

"I broke my nose and never saw a doctor," she said. 

"I suffered many childhood illnesses and even my basic need for glasses wasn't addressed. I had debilitating migraines growing up."

The inquiry's public hearings have been running since July, with multiple witnesses reporting a lack of public understanding about these religious groups.

Ms Esguerra said within her former church, sex was called "sharing" — posing a risk that if a child reported to police that someone had shared with them, authorities might not know they were reporting an assault.

She also alleged that within the church, sexual assault was deemed as Godly or the fault of the child.

"My mother told me to pick my nose to turn off a perpetrator rather than intervening," she said.

In a 2023 statement to the ABC's Believing in Australia TV series, The Family International said it "has had a zero-tolerance policy in place for nearly four decades for the protection of minors, and is diametrically opposed to the abuse of minors in any form."

It also said it has issued official apologies on several occasions to anyone who was hurt in any way during their membership.

Inquiry hears calls for stronger laws
The inquiry has heard evidence from dozens of people, from representatives of churches to former members demanding changes to stop trauma in high-control groups.

But inquiry members have questioned how best to do that without impinging on religious freedoms. 

For many, it comes down to definitions of what a cult is and how to define coercive control.

MP and inquiry member Jackson Taylor said he would propose a national inquiry and a permanent independent watchdog, as well as lend his support to a new offence recognising group-based coercive control.

New Zealand-based journalist and author Anke Richter has been investigating cults for a decade.

She told the inquiry she wants shunning and group-based coercive control to be criminalised, helplines and safe transitional housing for people leaving cults, public awareness campaigns, and sustainable funding for grassroots organisations helping leavers.

She pointed to Europe, where there are support services for cult leavers, including Austria's Society against Sect and Cult Dangers.

"They are there to stop recruitment, to put up public information, to run information campaigns, to advise people who come and need support," she said.

The committee will continue public hearings before releasing its findings in September next year.

https:// www. abc. Net. au/news/2025-11-06/former-scientologist-fronts-cult-fringe-group-inquiry/105979444

May 31, 2025

Click, whirr.

"Click, whirr" refers to a mental shortcut or automatic response, often used in psychology and persuasion to describe a tendency to react quickly and without conscious thought to certain cues or triggers. This concept, popularized by Robert Cialdini in his book "Influence," suggests that when we recognize a specific situation or cue, we trigger a pre-programmed response. 

The "click, whirr" response is often a quick and efficient way to make decisions, but it can also lead to poor choices if we are not aware of the triggers and our own tendency to react without thinking.

Nov 18, 2024

Mexican Authorities Shut Down Rehab Centers

November 18th is recognized as International Cult Awareness Day

2004 - San Diego Union-Tribune: Mexican Authorities Shut Down Rehab Centers
Mexican authorities have shut down three private U.S.-owned rehabilitation centers in Baja California that try to reform teenagers who have drug addictions and behavioral problems. Officials acted on complaints and reports that the youth were being physically and emotionally abused at Casa by the Sea, Casa La Esperanza, and Genesis.
___
Authorities have closed 10 unregistered drug rehabilitation centers in Ciudad Juarez and say they are going after others they fear may serve as cover or recruiting grounds for drug trafficking gangs in the violence-plagued city across from El Paso, Texas.
Gunmen have slaughtered 28 people this month at two rehab centers in Ciudad Juarez in separate attacks that investigators blame on a bloody struggle between rival drug gangs.
Sergio Belmonte, the spokesman for the Ciudad Juarez mayor’s office, says there is evidence traffickers are recruiting members through unregulated rehab centers.
“There are unregistered centers that they (traffickers) set up themselves, they are recruitment centers, because their most faithful soldiers are the addicts,” Belmonte said. “They give them drugs, draw them together and recruit them.”
Chihuahua state Gov. Jose Reyes Baeza said that while there are legitimate rehab centers, “there are others that have taken advantage of the situation to provide cover, while really doing other things.”
Reyes Baeza said irregularities have been discovered in at least 12 other centers, including a lack of permits, and he pledged “we are going to close” them.
Chihuahua state authorities said records showed the center attacked on Tuesday, Anexo de Vida, had not been registered with the government and may have been operating clandestinely. Ten other centers in Ciudad Juarez have been closed for operating illegally, although police would not say whether they may have been run by gangs.
Most of those closures occurred after a Sept. 2 attack that killed 18 people at a drug rehab center, which was not among those closed for being unregistered.
Drug-rehabilitation professionals worried that authorities could exacerbate the very social problems of addiction they are trying to fight.
“It is dangerous to demonize these centers. ... If these patients are put back on the streets, they are invariably going to return to their old behaviors,” said Alonso, an employee of the Ave Fenix recovery center, where neither counselors nor addicts are identified by their last names to avoid the stigma associated with addiction.
“Instead of closing them, the right thing to do would be to train them (the centers) so they can function correctly,” Alonso said.
Families have pulled relatives out of rehab centers because of the attacks. At least 41 people have been killed in attacks on Ciudad Juarez rehab clinics in the past year.
Javier, a 22-year-old drug addict, who refused to give his last name for fear of reprisals, has been in and out of rehab trying to cure a drug habit that began with marijuana at 14 and later progressed to cocaine. He is worried about the closures.
“There are rehab centers that really give you help, from the heart,” he said in an interview at the city’s Amarr clinic.
Authorities have blamed the latest shootings on a rivalry between the Sinaloa and Juarez cartels, although investigators have named no suspects.
The battle for both the local drug market and lucrative smuggling routes into the United States have made Ciudad Juarez the most dangerous city in Mexico, with at least 1,647 people killed so far this year.
That turf war, however, has changed since the government sent thousands of army troops and federal police earlier this year to patrol the city, Belmonte said.
Cartel lieutenants who once roamed the city in convoys of flashy SUVs, staging daylight shootouts on main boulevards, are now increasingly forced to take their battles to gritty back streets, in attacks that target lower-level operatives.
That may help explain why attacks on clinics have increased, Belmonte said.
“This is a war that was going on between the commanders, the leaders, and that is why they fought it out in the streets and the shopping malls,” he said.
“The joint operation has inhibited the battle they were openly fighting ... changing the method of attack,” he added. “It is now directed at the base level, the dealers.”
In an unrelated attack, four people – including a police officer and a 3-year-old boy – were injured when gunmen open fire on a people leaving an Independence Day parade in San Bartolo Tutotepec, a small town in the central state of Hidalgo, the state Public Safety Department said Thursday.
Police arrested a suspect in Wednesday’s shooting but had not established a motive.

#CultAwarenessDay #violence #exploitation #terrorism
#igotout #indoctriNation #religioustrauma #religiousabuse #manipulators #cultexpert #psychology #cultrecovery #cultsurvivors #cult #cultspecialist #suicide #AnexodeVida 
https://www.cultawarenessday.com/

Nov 17, 2024

Este año, recordaremos a las víctimas de la tragedia de Jonestown.

- Este año, recordaremos a las víctimas de la tragedia de Jonestown.

Queremos honrar las vidas arrebatadas. 

John Cobb, superviviente de Jonestown, ha creado un sitio conmemorativo y, con la ayuda de la Sociedad Histórica de San Francisco, ha proporcionado fotografías que muestran los rostros de las víctimas de la masacre. Las víctimas iban desde niños a ancianos y la gran mayoría eran afroamericanos. 

Como se indica en el sitio conmemorativo, los familiares y amigos de las víctimas se reunirán en el acto conmemorativo anual de Jonestown, que se celebrará en el cementerio Evergreen de Oakland, California, a las 14:00 horas del viernes 18 de noviembre de 2022. 

El acto conmemorativo también se retransmitirá en directo a través de la página de Facebook Jonestown Memorial.

- Concienciación sobre los afectados por las sectas...

Las sectas se convirtieron en noticia de primera plana tras la catástrofe de Johnstown en 1978, que fue la plataforma de lanzamiento de discusiones y debates en los que académicos, familiares, activistas y otras personas aportaron diferentes perspectivas sobre cómo abordar a quienes se encontraban en entornos sectarios, así como conceptos que existían en esos entornos, como el de "lavado de cerebro" (Langone, 2015).

Definición de "secta

Históricamente, el término "secta" se ha definido de forma ambigua entre los profesionales del sector. 

Debido a este desafío, un enfoque alternativo ha sido identificar los efectos de los entornos grupales destructivos, que pueden situarse en un continuo, que puede encapsular muchos tipos diferentes de grupos destructivos, desde grupos explotadores extremos hasta aquellos que mienten

grupos destructivos, desde los grupos explotadores extremos hasta los que se sitúan en la "zona gris" (Aronoff, Lynn, & Malinoski, 2000, p. 94). Es importante señalar que la masacre de Jonestown se situó en el extremo del continuo de daños que pueden producirse en las sectas, y que tales extremos son minoritarios.

Dado que las sectas pueden abarcar una amplia gama de entornos psicológicamente abusivos, también pueden denominarse sistemas totalistas, entornos de grupos destructivos, entornos de grupos abusivos y definirse como:

"Un grupo o movimiento que exhibe una gran o excesiva devoción o dedicación a alguna persona, idea o cosa y que emplea técnicas de persuasión y control manipuladoras poco éticas (por ejemplo, aislamiento de antiguos amigos y familiares, debilitamiento, uso de métodos especiales para aumentar la sugestionabilidad y el servilismo, poderosas presiones grupales, gestión de la información, suspensión de la individualidad o del juicio crítico, promoción de la dependencia total del grupo y miedo a abandonarlo...), diseñadas para avanzar en los objetivos de los líderes del grupo, en detrimento real o posible de los miembros, sus familias o la comunidad" (West & Langone, 1986, pp. 119-120).

Prevalencia

¿Cuántas personas participan en sectas? Las cifras varían.

En 1982, Margaret Singer, profesora de psicología, sugirió que entre "300.000 y tres millones" de personas a nivel nacional estaban implicadas en sectas.

Informes más recientes de los investigadores Saldaña, Rodríguez-Carballeira, Almendros y Escartín (2017) sugieren que hay aproximadamente 2.500

implicados en sectas y más de 5.000 grupos destructivos en toda Norteamérica.

Conciencia de los daños

Los supervivientes de estos grupos que se encuentran con profesionales de la recuperación de sectas suelen ser aquellos que han sufrido daños en un entorno de grupo destructivo y buscan recursos. Sin embargo, es importante reconocer que la experiencia de un individuo en un grupo es única y puede ser desde benigna hasta extremadamente dañina. 

Desafortunadamente, aquellos que han experimentado entornos de grupo destructivos son a menudo estigmatizados por sus asociaciones debido a la falta de comprensión de la influencia indebida y el control coercitivo. Es esencial ser consciente de por qué las personas se unen a las sectas, tal y como se indica en Cult Recovery 101 (Recuperación de sectas 101):

"Cuando se encuestó a ex miembros (en los talleres de recuperación de ICSA), éstos dieron sistemáticamente las siguientes razones para unirse a sus grupos: Idealismo, Amistad, Amor, Libertad, Comunidad, Misión, Sinceridad, Salvación, Iluminación, Elevación espiritual. La gente no se une a sectas. Se involucran en grupos que les hacen creer que representan estos altos ideales". 
- Rosanne Henry, MA, LPC

- Recursos para quienes han sido perjudicados en una secta

Nov 16, 2024

International Cult Awareness Day

 


  1. This year, we will remember the victims of the Jonestown tragedy…


We want to honor the lives that have been taken. 


Jonestown survivor, John Cobb, has created a memorial site, and with assistance from the San Francisco Historical Society, provided photographs that show the faces of massacre victims. The victims ranged from children to seniors and the vast majority of them were African Americans. 


As stated on the memorial site, family members and friends of victims will be gathered at the annual Jonestown Memorial Gathering which will be held at the Evergreen Cemetery in Oakland, California at 2:00 pm on Friday, November 18th, 2022. 


The memorial will also be live-streamed on the Jonestown Memorial Facebook site.



  1. Spreading awareness of those harmed by cults…


Cults became front-page news after the catastrophe of Johnstown in 1978, which was the launchpad for discussions and debates in which academics, family members, activists, and others yielded different perspectives on how to approach those in cultic environments as well as concepts that existed in those settings such as "brainwashing" (Langone, 2015).


Defining “cult”


The term ‘cult’ historically has definitional ambiguity amongst professionals in the field. 


Due to this challenge, an alternative approach has been to identify the effects of destructive group settings, which can lie on a continuum, which can encapsulate many different types of destructive groups, from extreme exploitative groups to those who lie in the "gray zone" (Aronoff, Lynn, & Malinoski, 2000, p. 94). It is important to note that the Jonestown massacre was on the extreme end of the continuum of harm that can occur in cults, and such extremes are in the minority.


Because cults can encompass a broad range of psychologically abusive environments, they can also be referred to as totalist systems, destructive group settings, abusive group settings and defined as:


“A group or movement exhibiting a great or excessive devotion or dedication to some person, idea, or thing and employing unethically manipulative techniques of persuasion and control (e.g., isolation from former friends and family, debilitation, use of special methods to heighten suggestibility and subservience, powerful group pressures, information management, suspension of individuality or critical judgment, promotion of total dependency on the group and fear of leaving it…), designed to advance the goals of the group’s leaders, to the actual or possible detriment of members, their families, or the community” (West & Langone, 1986, pp. 119–120).


Prevalence


How many are involved in cults? The numbers vary.


In 1982, Margaret Singer, a professor of psychology, suggested that "300,000 to three million" individuals nationally were cult-involved.


More recent reports from Researchers Saldaña, Rodríguez-Carballeira, Almendros, and Escartín (2017) suggest that there are approximately 2,500,000 people involved in cults and over 5,000 destructive groups throughout North America.



Awareness of harms


Survivors of these groups who encounter cult recovery professionals are typically those who have been harmed in a destructive group environment and are seeking resources. However, it is important to recognize that an individual's experience in groups is unique, and can range from benign to extremely harmful. 


Unfortunately, those who have experienced destructive group settings are often stigmatized for their associations due to a lack of understanding of undue influence and coercive control. It is essential to be aware of why individuals join cults as provided by Cult Recovery 101:


“When ex-members had been polled (at ICSA Recovery Workshops) they consistently gave these reasons for joining their groups: Idealism, Friendship, Love, Freedom, Community, Mission, Sincerity, Salvation, Enlightenment, Spiritual high. People don’t join cults. They get involved in groups they are led to believe represent these high ideals.” 

— Rosanne Henry, MA, LPC


  1. Resources for those who have been harmed in cults…


As we look ahead into the new year, in conjunction with International Cult Awareness Day, we wanted to mark May 18th 2024 as International Cult Recovery Day.  


Cult recovery resources will be added to Cult Recovery Day’s social media handles including Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook pages leading up to February 1st. Please follow, like, and share content recovery resources that will be added between now and February 1st by our sponsors and co-sponsors.

Nov 15, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 11/15/2024 (United Nation of Islam, Legal, Cult Awareness Day, Anne Hamilton-Byrne, Australia)


United Nation of Islam, Legal, Cult Awareness Day, Anne Hamilton-Byrne, Australia

"Following a 26-day trial, a jury in Kansas recently convicted Kaaba Majeed, 50, Yunus Rassoul, 39, James Staton, 62, Randolph Rodney Hadley, 49, Daniel Aubrey Jenkins, 43, and Dana Peach, 60, of conspiracy to commit forced labor. The jury additionally convicted Kaaba Majeed of five counts of forced labor. Two other co-defendants, Etenia Kinard, 48, and Jacelyn Greenwell, 45, previously pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit forced labor.

According to the evidence presented in court during the course of the trial, the defendants were all former high-ranking members of the United Nation of Islam (UNOI), or were wives to the UNOI founder, Royall Jenkins.

"The United Nation of Islam and these defendants held themselves out as a beacon of hope for the community, promising to educate and teach important life skills to members, particularly children," said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division. "Instead, the defendants betrayed this trust, exploiting young children in the organization by callously compelling their labor. Prosecuting this case is a testament to the Justice Department's unwavering commitment to hold human traffickers accountable. The Justice Department will continue to vigorously investigate and prosecute parasitic criminals who target vulnerable victims to finance their lifestyles."
"The bravery shown by victims of the United Nation of Islam is inspiring, because they spoke up about heinous atrocities committed against them as vulnerable children," said U.S. Attorney Kate E. Brubacher for the District of Kansas. "In childhood, they suffered physical and emotional abuse, were denied a proper education, and were subject to forced labor. As adults, these victims found the strength and courage to pursue justice and face their abusers."

"Under the guise of false pretenses and coercion, these victims, some of whom were as young as 8 years old, endured inhumane and abhorrent conditions," said Special Agent in Charge Stephen Cyrus of the FBI Kansas City Field Office. "Today's convictions should serve as a stark warning that forced labor will not be tolerated by the FBI."

UNOI principles included many rules that members had to follow, required "duty" or unpaid labor and emphasized the negative eternal religious consequences of noncompliance. UNOI operated businesses in various cities around the United States, including Kansas City, Kan.; New York City; Newark, N.J.; Cincinnati, Ohio; Dayton, Ohio; and Atlanta, among other locations.

In their former leadership roles in UNOI, the defendants agreed to compel the labor and services of over a dozen victims, including multiple minors, some of whom were as young as eight years old, between October 2000 and November 2012. The victims worked in UNOI-owned and operated restaurants, bakeries, gas stations, laboratory and a clothing and sewing factory, often up to 16 hours a day. The victims also provided child care and domestic services inside defendants' homes. None of the victims was ever compensated for the years of work they performed at UNOI businesses or at the behest of the defendants. The victims all lived in deplorable conditions, in overcrowded facilities often overrun with mold, mice and rats. In contrast, the defendants and their immediate families lived comfortably."

November 18th is recognized as International Cult Awareness Day
2007 - Adam House

In 2007, in Mymensingh, Bangladesh, a family of nine, all members of a novel "Adam's cult", committed mass suicide by hurling themselves under a train. Diaries recovered from the victims' home, the "Adam House", related they wanted a pure life as lived by Adam and Eve, freeing themselves from bondage to any religion, and refusing contact with any outsiders. After leaving Islam, they fell out of boundaries of any particular religion.

"Anne Hamilton-Byrne was a charismatic and dangerous cult leader who convinced followers she was Jesus Christ reincarnated. She had an obsession with raising children as her own, isolated from the outside world.

The group dubbed The Family lived in a secluded property outside Melbourne Victoria and was prominent in the 1960s and 70s.

Former detective Lex de Man investigated The Family for more than four years and helped rescue dozens of children.

Lex de Man unpacks his investigation of The Family on Crime Insiders:

"Under the drug LSD. They were indoctrinated that they were seeing the Messiah. They were seeing Anne Hamilton-Byrne," Man said.
Hamilton-Byrne was obsessed with the Von Trapp family from The Sound of Music. She acquired children through adoption scams, dressed them in matching outfits and dyed their hair peroxide blonde.

The children, after suffering years of abuse at the hands of Hamilton Bryne and her followers, were eventually rescued after a police raid in the mid-80s.

Lex de Man came face to face with Hamilton-Byrne on the tarmac at JFK airport, New York while extraditing her back to Australia.
Crime Insiders: Detectives host Brent Sanders asked, "That first time that you saw Anne Hamilton-Byrne, you were described as looking into the eyes of the devil?"

"She's the most evil person that I've ever come across in my personal and professional life, and I stand by that," Man said."


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


CultEducationEvents.com

CultMediation.com   

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.

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Cults101.org resources about cults, cultic groups, abusive relationships, movements, religions, political organizations, and related topics.


The selection of articles for CultNEWS101 does not mean that Patrick Ryan or Joseph Kelly agree with the content. We provide information from many points of view to promote dialogue.


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