Showing posts with label Scientology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scientology. Show all posts

Mar 24, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 3/24/2025 (Video, Scientology, Jehovah's Witnesses, LDS, Event, Traumatizing Narcissists, Dan Shaw)


Video, Scientology, Jehovah's Witnesses, LDS, Event, Traumatizing Narcissists, Dan Shaw

"Scientology is an odd religion (If it is even a religion). My friend Lindsey Medenwaldt knows a ridiculously random amount of information about this religion. So, naturally, I couldn't resist luring her onto my channel to spill the tea on all things Scientology. Where did this "religion" come from? What do they believe? And why are so many celebrities a part of the most bizarre cult in America?"

"In this ... episode, a former Mormon Church employee who worked with confidential records and the Strengthening Church Members Committee (SCMC) comes forward to expose the behind-the-scenes machinations of the LDS Church. From secret surveillance of members to how the Church tracks and manages dissent, to how the Church handles those who ask their names to be removed, this insider reveals ... details that the Church doesn't want you to know."

Event: The Rise of the Traumatizing Narcissists  (Dan Shaw)
Saturday, March 29th, 10am -1pm EST, Zoom

About the Event: The world is witnessing a surge of nationalist cults led by authoritarian demagogues who combine sociopathy with narcissism—malignant narcissists. Daniel Shaw developed the theory of traumatic narcissism from his experience with cult leaders and followers. After working with patients who described relationships similar to cult dynamics, Shaw profiled the traumatizing narcissist and how they use undue influence to subjugate and exploit others.

Shaw explores the traumatizing narcissist's "delusion of omnipotence" and outlines eight controlling behaviors they use to construct systems of subjugation. Anticipating his third book on the topic, Shaw's presentation will clarify for clinicians how to identify traumatizing narcissists and address challenges when working with their subjugated victims.

As more patients report abuse by unregulated figures—coaches, wellness gurus, psychics, healers, and facilitators of psychedelic journeys—the need for clinicians and patients to understand who the traumatizing narcissist is, what they do, and why they do it has never been greater.



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Feb 6, 2025

CultNEWS101 Articles: 2/6/2025 (Two by Twos, The Truth, Scientology, CVLT, Zizians)


Two by TwosThe Truth, Scientology, CVLTZizians
"New Zealand leavers of a secretive sect the FBI is investigating for historical child sexual abuse have formed the first support network for former members in this country.

They said recent publicity has helped lift the lid on the high-control religious group that has no official name or church buildings - weekly meetings are held in members' homes.

The group has many markers of a cult and is known to those who leave as the Two by Twos or The Truth.

Tristan Phipps grew up in the sect and left as a young adult more than a decade ago because he didn't believe in its teaching - including that people outside the group go to hell.

"Things just don't start to match up, you feel very lost and you get to a point where it sounds like a load of rubbish. It's very complex but also very simple at the same time."

It was a lonely time because so few people knew about the group or understood his experience.

He has helped establish the support network for leavers and says there are already 100 people connected online."

The Shrinking World of L Ron Hubbard
"Remastered from the best available source, this amazing show was produced by Charlie Nairn who tracked down Hubbard and approached him to do an interview.  Hubbard agreed, not knowing what how aggressive Nairn could be.  A true classic and a rare chance to see Hubbard when he was not in full control of his message."
"Two men were arrested today on charges of participating in a neo-Nazi child exploitation enterprise that groomed and then coerced minors to produce child sexual abuse material (CSAM) and images of self-harm. The group allegedly victimized at least 16 minors around the world, including two in Southern California.

Colin John Thomas Walker, 23, of Bridgeton, New Jersey, and Clint Jordan Lopaka Nahooikaika Borge, 41, of Pahoa, Hawaii, were arrested this morning pursuant to a grand jury indictment that charges them with one count of engaging in a child exploitation enterprise. They are expected to make their initial appearances in court later today in New Jersey and Hawaii.

The indictment also charges two other defendants who are already in custody: Rohan Sandeep Rane, 28, of Antibes, France, and Kaleb Christopher Merritt, 24, of Spring, Texas. The indictment returned by a grand jury on Jan. 17 and unsealed today, also charges Rane and Walker with one count of engaging in a child exploitation enterprise.

According to the indictment, from at least 2019 to 2022, Rane, Walker, Merritt, and Borge were members of CVLT (pronounced "cult"), an online group that espoused neo-Nazism, nihilism, and pedophilia as its core principles. Members of the international enterprise engaged in online child sexual exploitation offenses and trafficked CSAM. Rane, Walker, and Merritt acted as leaders and administrators in the CVLT enterprise, hosting and running CVLT online servers and controlling membership for the group.

CVLT members worked collectively to entice and coerce children to self-produce CSAM on a platform run by CVLT members where they groomed children for the eventual production of CSAM through various means of degradation, including exposing the victims to extremist and violent content. CVLT specifically targeted vulnerable victims, including ones suffering from mental health challenges or a history of sexual abuse.

Victims were encouraged to engage in increasingly dehumanizing acts, including cutting and eating their own hair, drinking their urine, punching themselves, calling themselves racial slurs, and using razor blades to carve CVLT members' names into their skin. CVLT members' coercion escalated to pressuring victims to kill themselves on a video livestream.
When victims hesitated, resisted, or threatened to tell parents or authorities, CVLT members would threaten to distribute already-obtained compromising photos and videos of the victims to their family and friends. For victims who stopped participating in the CSAM, CVLT would sometimes carry through on their threats.
Rane previously was charged with several child exploitation and related offenses in France and has been in French custody since 2022. Merritt is currently in Virginia state custody, serving a 50-year sentence for child sex abuse crimes committed in 2020 and 2021.

If convicted, the defendants would face a minimum penalty of 20 years in prison and a statutory maximum penalty of life in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by U.S. Attorneys' Offices and the Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.

Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), the Los Angeles Police Department, San Bernardino County Sheriff's Office, Henry County Sheriff's Office (Virginia), Iowa State University Police, Police Nationale (France), the National Crime Agency (United Kingdom), the New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs, and EUROPOL are investigating this matter.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Catharine A. Richmond for the Central District of California and Trial Attorneys Justin Sher and James Donnelly of the National Security Division's Counterterrorism Section are prosecuting this case.

An indictment is merely an allegation, and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law."
" ... It appears to be a small group, highly educated, computer savvy, at times geographically scattered, and a number of them if not all of them appear to identify as trans or nonbinary — with their deadnames potentially being publicized widely as law enforcement releases information about the cases, as these are still their legal names. If we can call them a cult at all, they aren't the type who all lived together on a compound for extended periods — though if they had a compound, it was a pair of box trucks parked for three years on Curtis Lind's property on Lemon Street in Vallejo, a cul de sac in an industrial part of town.
Neighbors had seen the individuals walking around outside with gas masks, and they'd been seen walking in the nude as well. Otherwise they would be clad in black, and they'd been nicknamed "The Cult."

It's since come to light that they are all vegan, highly intellectual, concerned with the rise of artificial intelligence, and they were linked to a creepy protest action in Solano County in 2019 outside a retreat hosted by the Berkeley-based Center for Applied Rationality (CFAR) — with whom they, or at least the group's purported leader, has some previous ties.

Lind was killed earlier this month at age 82, three months before he was set to testify in the trial of two people who had allegedly attacked him with knives and a samurai sword in November 2022, causing him to lose an eye."

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Jan 8, 2025

Mike Rinder, Scientology spokesperson turned whistleblower, dies in Pinellas

Mike Rinder
Mike Rinder, left, and Leah Remini co-hosted the Emmy-winning television series “Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath.” (Courtesy of Claire Headley)

Mike Rinder, Scientology spokesperson turned whistleblower, dies in Pinellas
Groomed to become a high-ranking member of Scientology, he later exposed abuse in an Emmy-winning television series.

BY GABRIELLE CALISE
Times Staff Writer

Mike Rinder, a former top Scientology spokesperson who later broke away and became one of the church’s most outspoken critics, died Jan. 5 in Palm Harbor due to esophageal cancer. He was 69.

Rinder, who once worked closely with church leader David Miscavige, was a crucial source in the St. Petersburg Times’ 2009 multipart investigation into Scientology, The Truth Rundown. Later, he went on to win two Emmys for his work on the docuseries “Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath.”

Rinder was born in Australia and raised as a Scientologist. His parents learned about the church from a neighbor who had gone to a talk by Scientology’s founder, L. Ron Hubbard. Rinder wrote that he started regularly attending a local Scientology center as a young child.

Though Rinder earned a scholarship to attend the University of Adelaide, his parents instead pushed him to join the Sea Organization, an elite group that lived and traveled with Hubbard aboard his ship.

“Really, my life was preordained into Scientology,” he wrote in his 2022 book, “A Billion Years.”

Life in the Sea Org

While part of the church, Rinder married a fellow Sea Org member and had two children, though he recalled in his book that he had little time to see them. His focus was working his way up to the top ranks of Scientology. Leading the Office of Special Affairs, he became one of the group’s most prominent spokespeople.

He later would write about how the job required him to smear critics of the church and work with high-profile members, including actor Tom Cruise. Rinder followed the Scientology tradition of “fair game,” attacking anyone who spoke out.

“My days were endless, crammed with keeping track of Scientology’s enemies, conducting programs to neutralize them, putting out fires on the internet, and dealing with the constant celebrity issues,” Rinder wrote.

Former Scientologist Karen de la Carriere said Rinder was a handsome man, with an Australian accent that charmed people.

“Even if a reporter was aggressive, they would kind of be a little bit seduced,” said de la Carriere, who became friends with Rinder in the 1970s. “Reporters can be very hard-nosed, but they’d start off aggressive and be more gentle with Mike Rinder.”

De la Carriere said Rinder suffered for Scientology, enduring beatings and verbal lashings from the group’s leader.

“Whenever you were close with David Miscavige, sooner or later you’re going to fall in extreme punishment,” she said. “There’s no such thing as making a mistake. You are deemed a criminal if error is made.”

Rinder would later go public with how he endured years of living in “The Hole,” a detention center in California where high-ranking members of Scientology slept under desks, ate scraps of leftover food and tortured each other. Rinder wrote about occasionally being removed by Miscavige to speak with reporters.

Mark Bunker, a former Clearwater City Council member and longtime critic of Scientology, remembers seeing Rinder in Clearwater after his time in the Hole.

“He had become so pale and gaunt and thin,” Bunker said. “Your reasoning has to be reshaped so much to have to put up with being in the Hole for two years before you finally break.”

Rinder’s escape

In June 2007, at age 52, Rinder left the church. He wrote about fleeing during a trip to London with “only a briefcase containing my passport, a few papers, a thumb drive and two cell phones.” He snuck away to Central Florida, then Virginia and then Colorado. Fellow defectors helped him find housing and work.

While he hoped his wife and children would come with him, they instead cut Rinder off, a practice known in the church as “disconnecting.”

Tampa Bay Times reporters Joe Childs and Tom Tobin found Rinder while he was living in Colorado. Initially, he declined to be interviewed about his experiences. Then Scientology tracked down Rinder, too.

Rinder wrote that the organization sent lawyers to threaten him and private investigators to keep track of his movements.

“They rented an apartment across from mine, in Westminster, Colorado, to watch me 24/7 through the windows with high-powered cameras and night-vision scopes,” Rinder wrote in his book. “They also took my trash and followed me around for $10,000 per week.”

After this, Rinder reported a determination to share his experiences in what would become The Truth Rundown series. He recounted physical and mental abuse he experienced, including the torture he suffered in the Hole.

Rinder later moved to Florida, where he continued to speak out against the church, from interviews with the media to assisting the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The attacks on him also continued.

Private investigators installed GPS trackers in his cars. Members of the church “instructed my family members to send nasty letters to me … implying I should kill myself.” The church drew out his divorce to his first wife, Rinder explained, “as long as the case was not resolved ... lawyers overseeing it could demand continuously updated financial info from me to see who was supporting me.”

“I knew every move in the Hubbard Fair Game playbook,” he wrote. “It’s a mind game. If they didn’t succeed in getting into my head, I would win.”

Spreading the word

When the HBO documentary “Going Clear” premiered in 2015, Rinder’s profile increased even more. He heard from former Scientologists, elected officials and celebrity defectors like Lisa Marie Presley and Leah Remini.

Remini asked him to help her with a show exposing the abuse she’d witnessed in the church. Rinder became her co-host.

“Families torn apart. Children victimized. Women forced to have abortions. People defrauded. A literal trial of death and destruction,” Rinder wrote. “Many told us for the first time, we had personalized the abuses and given them real, believable faces.”

Despite legal threats and harassment, “Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath” ran for three seasons and won two Emmys.

“It really changed the way Scientology was perceived by the public, and it really helped to educate the press on how to talk about Scientology,” said Tony Ortega, a journalist who runs the Scientology blog The Underground Bunker. “I think it surprised everyone how much Mike Rinder became a star as well.”

Bunker said Rinder seemed much happier after he recovered from Scientology and dedicated himself to helping other “people who had been abused.”

“I think that was the healthiest thing he could have done,” he said. “Coming back to the real world was a really important thing for him to do and I think he got a lot of peace.”

Bunker recalled how Rinder helped members of local government understand the tactics used by Scientology.

“To have someone with inside knowledge on how David Miscavige operates and why they would do that was very important for our city manager and city attorney to understand,” Bunker said.

And after years of attacking journalists, Rinder became an ally to them.

“They spy on my wife. They spy on my mother. They’ve sent a private investigator to intimidate my mother. And one of the things was they tried to get my wife in trouble,” Ortega said. “When I told Mike, he was good enough to write a letter, saying ‘look, this is the kind of operation they do,’ and I was able to send that to my wife’s employer.”

The importance of family

After leaving Scientology, Rinder married Christie Collbran. A fellow former Sea Org member, she understood what he’d been through. They lived in Palm Harbor — raising her son, Shane, and a child they had together, Jack.

Before he died, Rinder wrote a statement for his family to share after his passing.

“I have been lucky — living two lives in one lifetime,” he said in his final blog post. “The second one the most wonderful years anyone could wish for with all of you and my new family!”

When he wasn’t working to expose abuse, Rinder sought comfort among others who had been through the same pain. Fellow defector and whistleblower Claire Headley, who has been friends with Rinder since 1991, was one of them.

Like Rinder, she had been cut off by family members who stayed behind in Scientology. Rinder and Christie became her new siblings.

“He had this vision that our kids would grow up in a family of choice as cousins, and that is what we’ve done. We’ve vacationed almost yearly with them,” Headley said. “Our kids are all the best of friends, and it’s a beautiful thing just to be able to have each other and to create this community.”

Rinder co-founded the Aftermath Foundation in 2018 as a way to support people trying to leave Scientology.

“He was a board member, participating in grant review, helping people with attorney connections, helping people get their money back from Scientology,” said Headley, who now serves as the foundation’s president. “It was a long list of advocacy work to help people getting out of Scientology get on their feet, who often have been so isolated from the outside world.”

Rinder never stopped thinking about the people he left behind.

He began his book with a letter written to his children Taryn and Benjamin, who are still involved in the church.

“Since I escaped I have been shouting back over the wall, throwing notes tied around stones, and skywriting to anyone who may look up — attempting to get the message through that there is a big, wide world out there. I hope you can discover the real world for yourselves, too,” he wrote. “No matter what you may think, it is never too late to start over.”

Contact Gabrielle Calise at gcalise@tampabay.com or 813-591-0548. Follow @gabriellecalise.

Dec 18, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/18/2024 (Jesuits, Sensory Stimulants, Catholics, Scientology, Andrew Cohen)


Jesuits, Sensory Stimulants, Catholics, Scientology, Andrew Cohen

JSTOR: Making Scents of Jesuit Missionary Work
The use of sensory stimulants like incense gave Jesuits a common framework with the North American nations they encountered on missionary trips.

"Missionaries operating in cultures very different than their own often find themselves trying to communicate across a wide gulf. For Jesuits who arrived in parts of North America claimed by France in the seventeenth century, writes historian Andrew Kettler, one thing that helped bridge the gap was the fact that they and the Indigenous societies they hoped to convert to Catholicism shared a deep respect for the power of scent.

Kettler writes that, from the beginning, smells played a significant role
Catholicism. Incense was a crucial part of the immersive experience of worship. Pleasing or terrible smells could also signify holiness or evil. For example, when the fifteenth-century saint Lydwine of Schiedam became gravely ill, she was said to have vomited out parts of her internal organs, which emitted holy scents.

The Reformation called for controlling the "lower" senses of smell and taste, replacing sensual aspects of Catholic worship with the reading of scripture. But the Jesuits continued to valorize the sense of smell, using multi-sensory stimuli including scents during their periods of seclusion and arguing that a sufficiently purified person could recognize good and evil on Earth by their respectively sweet and sulfurous scents.

Kettler writes that the Jesuits who arrived in "New France" in 1625 followed the networks created by French fur traders toward the interior. They set up their central mission, Saint-Marie, on Huron land. As they introduced themselves to Native nations across the region, they marveled at the Indigenous people's sensory capacities, particularly their ability to locate fires from a great distance away. The Italian Jesuit missionary Francesco Giuseppe Bressani described people he encountered as having 'a rare sense of smell.'"

Where Peter Is: What Faithful Catholics can learn from Ex-Scientologists
" ... Mike Rinder's journey from a high-ranking official in Scientology to a vocal critic offers valuable insights for faithful Catholics. His story underscores the importance of discernment and personal integrity in one's faith journey. Rinder's eventual departure from Scientology, prompted by his recognition of systemic abuses, highlights the necessity of critically evaluating our own religious leaders — as well as our groups and practices — to ensure that we aren't being coerced or manipulated into unhealthy spiritual practices and ways of thinking.

As Catholics, it is important to engage in continuous self-examination and to uphold the moral principles of our faith, even when faced with institutional challenges. Rinder's advocacy for transparency and accountability resonates with the Catholic call for transparency and accountability from our leaders within the Church and the broader community. His commitment to exposing wrongdoing, despite personal costs, exemplifies the courage required to confront issues that may arise within any religious institution. Ultimately, Rinder's experience encourages Catholics to balance faithful adherence with critical reflection.

I have argued in the past that although Catholicism as a whole is not a cult, there are many cult-like groups within Catholicism. Identifying and exposing spiritually abusive groups and leaders is absolutely necessary for the health of our Church. Rinder's work serves to remind us of this principle.
But the most important lesson we might take from Mike Rinder's life journey is that people can change. After spending most of his life working on behalf of a destructive and corrupt organization, he spent his final years working to bring the truth to light.

One of the most poignant moments for me in watching Scientology and the Aftermath was in the final episode of season one, in which cult expert and former Moonie Dr. Steven Hassan was interviewed. After describing cult mind-control tactics in groups like Scientology and the Moonies, Hassan remarked that he had seen every episode of the program to that point, and then he started to become emotional. Hassan said, "Scientology has threatened me, gone through my trash … They've had people in Nazi uniforms picketing outside my office, telling my neighbors that I'm evil person, I'm an anti-religious bigot."

He then turned and looked directly at Mike Rinder and said, "I have to say, I was scared shitless of you for so many years. I love that you are modeling for ex-members of thousands of other cults that you can be a leader. You can do horrible things and you can wake up and be a human being. … I just think that what you're doing is heroic."

He then turned and looked directly at Mike Rinder and said, "I have to say, I was scared shitless of you for so many years. I love that you are modeling for ex-members of thousands of other cults that you can be a leader. You can do horrible things and you can wake up and be a human being. … I just think that what you're doing is heroic."
I have been moved deeply by the stories of Catholics who have had the courage to speak out after leaving high-control groups in the Church, from charismatic communities to the traditionalist movement. Speaking out for the truth comes at a high cost. These are the people "who hunger and thirst for righteousness." Jesus said they will be satisfied."

Arkansas Times: Former cult leader's name still on public art in downtown Little Rock
"A disgraced former cult leader's name is still on a piece of public art in Little Rock, despite a city spokesperson's assurance in July that the name would be removed.

"Responding is spirit in action. We are the change agents that give rise to the possibilities that don't exist," the quote reads. Engraved on a basalt pillar in Inspiration Plaza, the newest piece of public art in downtown Little Rock, the quote and its origins are puzzling.

The quote is attributed to a man named Andrew Cohen — a self-proclaimed guru and spiritual teacher accused of physical and mental abuse and financial exploitation by many of his former students and followers, including his own mother — but it isn't clear if he ever actually said it.

So why is the quote etched in stone in a statue garden by the Arkansas River? Because At-Large City Director Dean Kumpuris' wife chose it. (This article from July will catch you up on the convoluted details.)
Essentially, Cohen's name made it all the way on to the statue, seemingly without anyone checking who he is, if the quote is his, or if the quote is even real. During our reporting, a spokesperson for the Little Rock Parks and Recreation Department provided a statement that said the city would replace Cohen's name with "Anonymous" but leave the quote itself intact, since staff liked its message and, in researching it, could not find where it came from."

News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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Dec 13, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/13/2024 (Scientology, Guru Jagat, Documentary, Witchcraft, Australia, Solar Temple)


Scientology, Guru Jagat, Documentary, Witchcraft, Australia, Solar Temple

"It is one of the world's most secretive and controversial cults… brought to light by one of Hollywood's biggest stars, Tom Cruise. Since its creation in 1953, Scientology has won millions of disciples, up to 40,000 in France alone, according to its leaders.

Scientologists follow the teachings of a former bestselling Science Fiction author, L. Ron Hubbard. They believe in reincarnation and undergo extraordinary practices to gain enlightenment. Scientology is also an institution plagued by headline-grabbing scandals when former members go public about their experiences with the sect. While it is recognized as a religion in some countries, others consider it a dangerous cult.

How does this organization, often convicted of fraud, manage to recruit and retain followers? What are its beliefs? Who was L. Ron Hubbard, its charismatic proto-messiah? How did Scientology become a recognized religion in the United States? And what influence does it have in France? Join experts and former high-ranking scientology members as they unmask one of the most powerful self-proclaimed religious organizations on the planet… the church of scientology."

"In a spiritual world dominated by men, a young girl from Colorado was determined to be her own guru, and that's what she did… Katie from the suburbs became Guru Jagat. Having been anointed by a spiritual Kundalini master, Guru Jagat was ready to change the world. She wrote a book, spoke at Harvard, and was CEO of 7 businesses - including three global yoga studios where Hollywood housewives and celebrities like Kate Hudson and Alicia Keys flocked. But somewhere along the way, the girlboss facade began to fade… This is a story about luxury, fraud, businesses becoming massive empires, a cult-like work environment and much more… This is the story of a guru's fall from grace."

Daily Mail: Horrifying cult 'massacre video' shows final moments of mass-murdering leaders and their disciples
" ... The cult drew people in with slick propaganda videos showing families enjoying simple lives on an idyllic farm in Canada, while other videos featured Jouret, who regularly did speaking tours, pontificating on the benefits of 'dying to be reborn'.

OST convinced many of its more than 600 followers that they could live in a utopian community and when the time was right shed their Earthly bodies to be reincarnated on an unnamed planet orbiting the Dog Star, Sirius.
But in reality, many handed over their life savings to Di Mambro and Jouret, with the sect's conniving leaders living off their followers' wealth as they lived frugal lives.

'While the followers were breaking rocks and growing lettuce, the leaders were really enjoying themselves,' Swiss journalist Arnaud Bedat, who worked extensively on the case, told the BBC documentary.

'They travelled first class, they went to beautiful hotels, famous restaurants. For more than ten years the cult leaders lived in opulence, accumulating villas all over the world, collecting Ferraris and Lamborghinis with the followers' money,' he said.

But the early 1990s, the mask began to slip. Cult members began to leave, and many wanted the money they had invested back.
One of the key members to turn his back on the cult was Tony Dutoit. He had been loyal to Di Mambro for some 15 years and served him as a special effects technician, turning ceremonies into mystical experiences to trick the cult's followers into believing their 'masters'' powers.
Before he left, he revealed the truth to Di Mambro's son Elie, who went on to confide in other cult members and was branded a traitor by his father.

Di Mambro went into a 'paranoid spiral', insiders said, and started monitoring everyone, even wire tapping their phone calls.
'Those who were living their lives with the followers' money knew that they had to be held accountable and that they couldn't do it anymore,' Swiss police chief Pierre Nidegger said."

News AU: Modern-day witchcraft is on the rise in Australia as support for organised religion plummets
A new "religion" is rapidly becoming mainstream, with tens of thousands of Australians suddenly embracing the exploding trend.

"Dressed head-to-toe in black, Owlvine Green's fingers hover over a steaming cauldron as a cat looks on, ominously.
Candles flicker, casting eerie shadows on the wall. Incense smokes, and a spell book — filled with mystical, arcane symbols — is laid open in front of her.

It's a scene that wouldn't look out of place in a Harry Potter film. But this isn't a movie. This is an unassuming home in suburban Melbourne, and Owlvine is a real-life witch.

"We're everywhere — young and old, in the inner city and out in the middle of the bush," the 36-year-old told news.com.au.
"You could be sharing a desk with one of us, or living on the same street."

From the Wizard of Oz to The Craft, the black-caped, cackling witch has been a fixture in popular culture — sand a subject of fascination and fear — for centuries. But if you think that these magical beings belong only within the pages of a storybook or on the big screen, think again.

Today, tens of thousands of Australians identify as witches and globally, we're in the midst of a bona fide witchcraft boom."


News, Education, Intervention, Recovery


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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.

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Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.


Dec 11, 2024

CultNEWS101 Articles: 12/11/2024 (Munchausen by Proxy, Order of the Solar Temple, Scientology)


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Munchausen by Proxy, Order of the Solar Temple, Scientology 
"Andrea Dunlop, author and host of the podcast "Nobody Should Believe Me," is an expert on Munchausen by Proxy. Munchausen by Proxy is a form of mental illness and child abuse where a caregiver, typically a parent, induces or fabricates symptoms in their child to make them appear sicker than they actually are. It's, in Andrea's words, a "cult of one." Muchahusen by Proxy has found its way into the mainstream through the Maya Kowalski case and the story of Gypsy Rose, which was adapted into a documentary and Hulu limited series, "The Act." In today's episode, Andrea explores Munchausen by Proxy abuse, its recent coverage in the news, including the Maya Kowalski court case, and how it could forever impact the medical system."

The Guardian: TV tonight: chilling documentary about a horrific death cult
This documentary is like watching a horror movie brought to life. It speaks to people who investigated the Order of the Solar Temple – an apocalyptic cult in which, during the 1990s, 74 of its members died – starting with macabre footage of what they found when they investigated seemingly unrelated fatal house fires in Canada and Switzerland. Former members also give their disturbing accounts.

OK: Laura Prepon Revealed What She Felt After Joining the Church
"In a 2021 interview with People, Laura Prepon revealed she had not practiced Scientology "in close to five years."
"I've always been very open-minded, even since I was a child. I was raised Catholic and Jewish. I've prayed in churches, meditated in temples. I've studied Chinese meridian theory. … [Scientology is] no longer part of my life," said Prepon."

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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.


Please forward articles that you think we should add to cultintervention@gmail.com.