Behind the Bastards - Part Two: The Finders: CIA Child Trafficking Cult or Just Normal Cult?
Episode Date: January 18, 2024After almost twenty years of quiet growth the Finders explode into public awareness when they are accused of sex trafficking children, possibly for the CIA. (Or the Devil.)See omnystudio.com/listener ...for privacy information.
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I'm Nicole Perkins, and in my new podcast, The Godmother,
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Calls of media.
I'm a PRAUX. You can spell pro that way.
Anyway, this is behind the bastard.
It's a podcast.
Bad people.
Tell you all about it.
Oh, is it?
I'm Robert Evans, and I'm enjoying a beautiful day here in the Bay in the city of San Francisco,
where I'm hanging out.
Jamie, how do you feel about San Francisco?
Jamie Loftus guest.
Host.
Not a movie.
I look, here's what I'll say.
Here's, I did nothing wrong.
Did I consider robbing a grave when I was seven?
Yes, but live laugh learn.
I like San Francisco, which I'm saying mainly
because I have a show coming up there
at the beginning of February.
So I'll tell you what I really think about February. I'll tell you what I think about that San Francisco truly off off my, but for public
facing purposes, what a town, what a moment.
What a great place.
What a great place.
What a great place.
What a place that didn't invite me to sketch fest this year.
So I'm angry.
Wow.
But more importantly, Jamie, it's a place where I suffered
easily the greatest trauma of my life. You know, you know, you know, you know,
jaws, you know, quint, the the shark hunter, who's, who's, who's, yeah, obviously, yeah, the
dead eyes, like a doll, to the world, eccentric, uncle to the world. You know how his character's
backstory is this was a real battle too in World War II He was like a Navy man and his ship got sunk and everyone but him got eaten by sharks
That's his backstory and like a madman the guy with the silver hair
Who's who's a lot of fun most of the time?
But he fought in the Pacific and so there's that one episode where those Japanese businessmen come in and he gets real uncomfortable
Very quickly. This is my version of that without the racism. Yeah, Roger Sterling, he gets
traumatized, right? I'm telling you my story of the thing that traumatized me and now has
forever ruined me.
Rob, okay.
Yeah, we're getting heavy, starting right off the gate. So, 2018, I go to Corgi con, which
is where all of the Corgis in the Bay area gather by the beach and romper round, several
hundred Corgis. Romper round and some would say start making plants.
Perhaps, perhaps.
I can't speak to that because I was being confronted with the worst thing that I have ever seen
that day, which is a makeshift sign outside of Korgicon that said, welcome to San Frinkorg
Skow. that said, welcome to San Francorg's go. Now Jamie, I wake up screaming
when I think about how angry that sign makes me.
Like San Francis Cigcorg was right there.
You've told this story on Mike before,
you were a story where you were a rapper.
Yeah, because it traumatized me, Sophie.
Yeah, this did permanent damage to my psyche, my soul,
my ability to trust and love people. It wasn't the pun.
It wasn't the pun.
It was that the pun was wrong.
It was a bad pun.
They picked the wrong pun.
See, I started to pray that there's going to be fucking sense.
Jamie, listen, if you wrote that sign and there's like a 20% chance you're listening to
this podcast right now.
I will find you and I will take my vengeance.
Robert, go ahead and get it together.
If you tell this, if you tell this story a third time, I will fire you.
I'm never going to stop telling the story.
You can't stop the signal.
Speaking of the signal.
No, Robert, I need to call you out really quick because you were able to describe an episode of
Mad Men in detail to Sophie and myself.
And moments before we started recording needed to guess three separate times before correctly
remembering what sport, ton your heart and play.
Just a reminder that we just live on different planets. Can anyone
tell the difference between a gymnast and a skier, a skater? She did one of the two.
They're the same thing. And you know, it's not just trying to. It's all it's all boring.
You know why? Because there's there's one actual sport, Jamie Loftus. And it is playing second edition shadow run with your friends in
1999. Oh my God. That's the one, the one real sport, Jamie. I thought you were going to
say that's what the Greeks played. I thought you were going to say it was Simon says and
then you were going to do the podcast. Are you going to do the podcast? No, I am going
to do the podcast. The only real sport is what happens between periods at the hockey game. The only field sport is the guy in the Zamboni.
I don't disagree.
I don't disagree with the take.
We show up for and we cheer for.
We're back on the same page,
and now we can actually get back on the same page
by talking about Mary and Petty and the founders.
Now, I'm a pretty tolerant guy.
I've lived in multiple communes. I've stayed in several more
communes multiple countries in fact of communes. I don't know if I would call you a pretty tolerant guy but continue.
Yeah, I'm very tough.
Flinch.
What are you? What are you? How am I not tolerant?
Um, I don't know. I've got like, I don't judge people except for that lady who made the
sign at the Corgi convention. Listen to what, yeah, listen to what you just said about the sign,
lady. Listen to what you just said about gymnasts and seniors. Or man, I don't know who made the
sign. Wow, that was problematic of me. Anyway, let's move on. Um, so far, nothing petty or the finders have done
is like abusive, weird, questionable,
definitely destined to in badly, right?
When you're telling people that they should hook up
or have kids and how they should raise them,
it's only a matter of time before that becomes a problem,
but it hasn't been a problem yet, right?
Here's where we get into the problems.
Now, what's interesting to me is that
because the reputation these guys have among conspiracy nuts
is this was like an evil sex traffic
in cult moving children across the country,
the like counter argument by people who rightly are like,
boy, the satanic panic was a real bad time,
is like, eh, they were weird, but it was pretty benign.
That's not true. This is definitely a cult and they definitely abuse people in really fucking weird ways.
It's just not the ways that they got famous for.
That's the, that's the QAnon way to identify an issue and make a big deal about things
that make no fucking sense.
Yeah.
Therefore, meaning they'll get away with shit forever.
Yeah, yeah, cause there's, and they did for a long time.
There's no evidence that the finders like
sexually trafficked children across,
you like fucking national boundaries
or state boundaries for that matter.
But we do know for a fact that they did the thing
all cults do, which is demand their members isolate
themselves from their families and then attack those families
when they tried to inquire as to whether or not their loved ones were okay.
That city paper article by John Cohen includes an interview with a man named David, whose
brother joined the finder's cult and then cut off contact with his family.
David, as you would, sends his brother a letter, just being like, hey man, just wanted to
make sure you're okay in this weird group where you're pretending to be spies
with your landlord.
You know, like not hard to see why he does this.
Yeah, any true crime document
or like any cult themed documentary
that's always like one of the saddest parts
when you see the family member that's like.
So yeah, she moved in with this lady
who called herself Mother god and I told.
And then she just wanted that.
That's a happy story though.
Everyone got what they wanted out of that one.
Good Lord.
So David sends this letter to his brother and he gets a response.
It's on the letterhead of a company that's like one of the game projects
for one of the members, right?
Petty tells one guy,
hey, make a company with this name.
And so the letter, he gets a response
on that company's letterhead,
but it's written by another cult member
who's basically Petty's secretary.
And I'm gonna quote from Cohen's article here.
The letter reads,
this is to testify that you are son Douglas,
aka Ernest Angel,
I better send Danny proper. Kenny Rogers is a true master of the art of fucking. The letter reads, this is to testify that your son Douglas, aka Ernest Angel, I betterson,
Danny proper, Kenny Rogers is a true master of the art of fucking.
The shape of his cock is unique and he is truly an artist at using it to give us the
most pleasure.
The depth, the width, the heights, no other man touches us this way.
His hands have magic as they stroke our slender limbs and I'm not going to continue
reading that.
No, please stop.
It's really, it's really, it's like an extremely explicit letter where he's disagreeing.
Why don't you read so much of that?
I want it because you should feel uncomfortable, right?
Robert, just let me get to slender limbs.
Let me get to slender limbs and then I'll stop.
I didn't want to read moist.
You know what comes after moist in this letter, right?
I don't have to say.
He's like, is there just grabbing his dick like it's like a three story apartment building?
Like it's so, this is, this is, so you know how like the church of Scientology, you speak
out or like you leave or whatever and they have guys stalk you, the poison, your pets,
allegedly.
Yeah. guys stalk you, the boys in your pets, allegedly.
Yeah, their version of this, which is like, both a lot less fucked up and also still not good, is they will, when your family members are what not, like, try to contact you,
or if you leave the send letters to your loved ones describing what sex with you is like. And sometimes showing pictures
of you naked. Not it's not blackmail. Because they're not asking for anything. They're, well,
because they're not, yeah, there's no, it's what I can tell. They're not saying do anything or
stop doing something. They're just like, make, fucking with them, making them uncomfortable.
They're just like, fucking with them, making them uncomfortable. It's weird and it's definitely bad.
I'm not saying it's not bad, but I don't think there's an exchange attempted.
I know that, well, I don't know.
I feel like the discomfort is an exchange of sorts, where it's like, well, what is this
purer going to do to make it stop?
Like it's a weird tacit form of blackmail where they don't want an item,
but they want the behavior to change.
Look, I think that's probably fair.
It is pretty unique.
I haven't heard about this being done to anyone
and all of the cults I've read about.
And I find that kind of interesting.
I mean, it just sounds like proto revenge porn, basically.
It is a little bit of that.
Confusing.
It's definitely like a lot of bit of that, although all of it's not always pictures that exist,
right?
Some of it's just text.
Yeah, I'm trying to square myself with it because also some of the things I've read,
I don't know that everyone involved in the cult
Would have thought of it. I think petty sees this as revenge porn and is using it that way
It seems like a lot of the kind to to the extent that there's brainwashing
This is during that kind of like free love period shit
Like the all these people came out of that movement and I kind of think some of it maybe we need to shock the normies because they shouldn't feel uncomfortable and awkward about talking about
sex this way. You know, maybe this is our way of reaching them instead. Like, which is also bad and
unhinged, but I kind of get the feeling that's at least how this is justified internally so they
don't feel gross. We're not just being abusive to these, we're not trying to hurt these people. Like no one should have a problem with this stuff. And if they
can't take it, then you know, they need to mature as divine thinking beings or whatever. I don't
know. That's the feeling that I get reading stuff here. It's very uncomfortable. It's, yeah,
it's like the letters are like, they go on and on. That's the intersection of a lot of disgusting tactics. And also like the sort of thing
where it reminds me of like hearing stories about and like stuff that I've like of like how
people can get away with shit like that by not having a direct threat.
Stayed, not asking for anything clear. So you're like, well, what is legally actionable?
It's harassment.
But like usually if you report harassment,
all the fuck, all anyone will do is be like,
well, call us back when they threaten to kill you,
which a lot of people know better than do.
Like it's also like with a lot of these cases,
like in the case of this guy's family member,
it's not harassment technically,
right?
Because he sent the letter first.
They're responding to a letter.
So like legally, even, I'm not, again, it's not good what they're doing.
I'm saying legally, I don't know that you would have a leg to stand on if you tried to claim
harassment because they aren't just responding to a letter in a fucked up way, but.
That's why it feels like very, I don't know.
I mean, it seems like it's pretty, you know, like this whole organization is pretty
calculated. To what end?
I still don't understand.
No one does.
And you will not get an answer to that question.
No, because it is like, because it is, if your goal is to, you know, be
disgusting and scary in a way that it's like, there's not a direct way to nail you for
it. Like that's what they're doing.
I think again, a cult is an organization made up of multiple people.
So you can have there be multiple motivations for the same act that are
independent of each other.
Petty, I think, is doing this as a way to maintain control as a way to be
aggressive to attack his enemies.
I do believe based on what I have read of them, most
of his followers kind of buy that. Well, we're trying, this is about shocking the norm.
It's for a purpose too. We're not trying to shock these people to hurt them. They're,
it's healthy to not have hangups about sex. And we're trying to break through their unhealthy
so like I again, that's a good reason to see people make it pictures of their loved ones.
I'm saying I think that's how regular people in the cold justify this.
And are we still in the 70s at this point?
Because this all scans for like you guys are so like, this is happening.
I don't want to see a picture of your brother's dick.
You're like, you're so scared and your brother's huge throbbing cock.
We're all humans.
So you're like, uh, especially your brother and his unique shape, like,
unique, unique thing for them was like describing.
And they don't just do it with penises.
These are equal opportunity.
And to be fair, most of the people running the cult aside from petty are the women in the cult.
That's like universally agreed upon by former members that like this was not a misogynist cult.
They would describe your sister's body to you in a gross letter,
but they do the same for your brother, you know?
So, I don't know.
They're like, we'll be disgusting to anybody for wax.
They are described multiple times by the cops
and others as feminists,
as specifically a cabal of feminists.
Which is the cops.
That's very like, it's the cops.
Second way feminism.
They're like, yeah, second way feminism, you know,
run a cult queen.
One of the things that makes the finders interesting is they are, they are the nexus point of a
whole bunch of shit, right?
There's more than a little sign-in-on, like, you know, that, that, like, first get out of
drugs program that turns into a cult where they sit in a circle and scream at each other
and mail people rattlesnakes.
There's some of that in there.
There's a little bit of Scientology in here.
There's a lot of Keith Reneerie in here. He's definitely in descended from this guy. But there's also, there's
these really unique aspects of like new age, occultism, and kind of like spy pulp novels from
the 60s. It's such as an on-nix. There's so many different things going on. Like they're, I don't know.
I mean, the hearing that women were meaningfully included
in this, unfortunately, especially in new age,
Coltie movement, it's like the perceived inclusivity
that gets a lot of people interested.
I mean, and it's like that still happens now
on whatever way of feminism going on.
Final, because we have like three years to live.
When we talk about like how a lot of really
educated and successful people were in this cult
for the women who are that and in this cult,
that's part of what makes it make sense,
is that this is a lot less misogynistic of an environment
than the world of the 1970s,
like the mainstream society, right?
You are ordering men around, you run things like, you know, that's a part of the appeal to some of the people who find this thing.
Right.
So they're like, okay, so the, the, the cost of participation is I might need to send someone
a picture of their brother's dick.
Yeah.
And describe it in loving detail.
Yeah.
And they'll do more than that, Jamie.
Sorry.
You're right.
I'm getting hung up on that.
Yeah.
This is from a Maryland police report based on what happens once the story this cult explodes
and they talk to a bunch of former family members.
Detective Blank interviewed all the family members who were willing to talk.
Specifically, they all stated that Blank, probably petty, had brainwashed their children
and prevented any contact with either their children or grandchildren.
Members of the finders, according to family members,
would stop any contact by sending letters
describing explicit sexual acts of all
of the current members, including photographs and drawings.
In one case, members of the finders
attempted to take over blank family residents
and force blank out of her home.
We don't get more than that.
And I don't know, is this armed men showing up to steal someone's house?
Are they pushing her out of a property?
This detective sucks, by the way.
He also can't spell there, right?
So we don't get any, like, I don't know, was this some people showed up and harassed
her?
Was this like somebody called her on the phone and she felt uncomfortable and so she
moved?
It could really, anything could be kind of included in that.
It doesn't sound like a thing that got handled by the police
and so there's not a report on it.
I guess I'm not completely shocked,
but just like there seemed to be a number of critical moments
in this story where it's just unbelievably vague.
It was this.
That's the fun thing about the finders.
That's why they're the center of so many conspiracy narratives.
And so this like wasn't, this wasn't like a story that was, that there was any like public
interest in until the 80s, right?
So they're kind of just operate.
Yes.
Okay, so there's police records and cult member records.
Two of the least possibly like reliable sources you could ask.
Wow, okay.
And one of the other things about it is,
so there are a number of people who are abused
significantly and harassed significantly by this cult.
It does a lot of ugly things.
From what I can tell, most people who are in it
walk away even afterwards with a pretty good opinion
of their time in it, which is why we don't know much
because there's not a lot of narratives.
People didn't come out and be like,
here's what happened in this book.
They're like, yeah, it was fun like five years for me.
Yeah, it was like the best decade of my life,
you know, the time I spent on this cult.
That's more common than the bad cases.
Sure.
Which doesn't mean they weren't, again,
they were abusing and harassing people.
A lot of people say that about their time at improv theaters.
Yeah, it has that kind of improv wall of silence, right? The thin blue line,
as we call it, that's where that term comes from, is the Chicago school. Yeah. Yeah, that comes from
I.O. Yeah. So anyway, the 70s turns into the 1980s, which everyone would agree was a mistake.
Petty grows more and more vengeful and starts to get kind of increasingly aggressive.
They move on from just mailing people
or their family members' sex stuff
to like bombarding local media with graphic stories
about like people's behavior when they have again.
Again, yeah.
Why?
Because they're to some extent see,
I think some of it's him getting offended
that people might not always want to
follow his games, you know, and some of it's probably like, coat leader defending himself, whatever.
Right. So it is. So there it does it seem like it by the 80s, there is an element of like he's
just kind of unraveling, not unraveling. He's getting he's getting more obsessed with control.
He's still rattle. He's getting more obsessed with control. Okay. Right? That escalate. The more power you get as a cult leader, the more power you
tend to take, right? Up until there's a serious pushback.
Absolutely.
Yeah. This is the same way all of these people were.
Hold on.
Whether they become the president or run a rear little spy.
Power.
You saying this corrupts? Absolutely.
No, no, I would never say that. That's fucking hack is shit.
You're right, you're right.
I would say maybe we should keep given men like this power.
See what happens.
Well, this time it'll work.
It'll live well.
It'll live well.
We just need some nukes.
If this guy had nukes, there wouldn't have been any problems.
So yeah, I will say for petty sake,
I don't think his cult murdered anybody.
That said, it is very unclear how violent they got. Several ex members were threatened directly.
This is just beyond the, the weird sex stuff. From one police report that interviewed 21 former
members on their experience, quote, they stated that the organization began as an alternative lifestyle
in the 1960s and many of them became disenchanted with the quasi-military order under the direct supervision of Petty.
Many of the former members stated that they feared retribution from the finder's organization.
In the case of Blank, she needed police intervention to stop the harassment of the finders.
In the Blank case, such and such property was burned down and remains an open arson.
In the Blank blank case members of the
fighters attempted to infiltrate and then there's about a whole sentence blanked out.
I don't know what the fuck's going on there.
Oh my God.
In the United States.
In general, all members of the fighters who had left the group felt that harm would come
to them if they spoke out against petty or his organization.
So yeah, what did they infiltrate?
Also, I really want to know more about that arson.
Again, these are the cops, so you don't get a lot of that.
It's like, well, wait, what do you mean
a house was burned down and remains an open arson?
Like, I wouldn't, that seems like there should be more on that.
Now I feel like I'm getting conspiratorial.
Is there any way that like because of his connections
through his wife question mark,
who is probably not alive at this point,
that like he has any sort of shield or like institutional
yeah, protection.
Yeah, maybe.
Maybe it seems like not out of the question.
This is so much redacted.
There is some evidence that suggests that.
Yes.
Okay.
Okay.
Maybe this is again, part of why this is such a boon
for the conspiracy community is that something we,
there is a conspiracy here and we don't know all of the details of it, right?
Something really shady is going on and the extent of it is unclear.
I do get why people latch on to this fucking story, right?
Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, that's a lot.
I mean, I know that it is not unusual at all for there to be
stuff redacted, but it's like, this feels like, you know, they're not operating really in a way that is
advantageous to the state, so I don't understand. What's weird to me about this, because I've read
through, I don't know, like 200 pages, something like that of FBI files, because all of them got released fairly recently on this case. And if I were an FBI
agent trying to fuck with people by creating a case that was guaranteed to like have the
biggest impact in the conspiracy community. And in my fanfic you are.
I would have redacted it exactly this way. Like this is the perfect way you giving them
just enough. But like then cutting out just the piece that's going to like, if I'm writing a fucking book and I want to
like have a conspiracy, like bits of like include little pieces of police reports and stuff
to like make the true detective conspiracy case, this is how I redact it, right? Like it's
it's so on the nose. God. Yeah, this I understand why it's easy to fall down the water slide of like, what the fuck
is going on and why did they get away with this for so long?
Like, people will go away too far on the finders.
Yeah.
But it is an Epstein style thing where I'm like, oh yeah, I get why.
It's, you know, you're not irrational for being like, well, something's happening here
and we don't know it, You know, right, right.
This is a fucked up case.
Yeah.
Not in the same way, Epstein is, but yeah.
So again, definitely a fucking cult,
but a fairly careful cult.
I wouldn't actually be surprised if that
arson was unrelated to the cult,
just because it stands out.
I don't see any other allegations like that.
And they go 20 years without any
Serious media or law enforcement attention
Which suggests either most of their activities were benign or they were really good at keeping a lid on shit
You know, yeah, maybe for some of the institutional backing we had but they don't make a splash for a long time
Which unfortunately like that doesn't even move yeah That doesn't even move the needle a lot for a long time. Which unfortunately, like that doesn't even move.
Yeah, that doesn't even move the needle a lot for me, because both of those are very,
like, feel plausible.
You know what else is plausible, Jamie?
Oh, tell me, Robert.
I want you to think about all the problems in your life, every way in which your current
existence doesn't match, you know, your dreams for yourself, your beliefs of your own capability.
Don't worry.
Now, Jamie, you got that in your heart.
It was there anyways.
Do you want to know how you can solve all of that and finally become the being that you
were always meant to be by divinity?
Yes.
All you got to do, hand your credit card over to whoever advertises next.
Wow.
I hope it's something bad for me. That's almost a guarantee, Jamie.
I'm Nicole Perkins, and in my new podcast, The Godmother,
I'm inviting you to 1930s, New York.
At what would become known as the trial of the century,
infamous mob boss Lucky
Lugiano is finally taken down. But this is not Lucky's story. I want to tell you the
extraordinary story of Eunice Carter, the trailblazing black female lawyer who put Lucky Lugiano
behind bars. At a time when black history is being erased, telling Unis' story is more urgent than ever.
She took down the country's most notorious gangster, but somehow she's been largely
forgotten.
The influence that you have while you're alive matters, even if after you're gone everyone
forgets about you.
Listen to The Godmother, with me, Nicole Perkins, on theartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or whatever you get your podcast.
Hi, I'm Chris Turnie, and if you're like me, it's easy to read all the bad news about the climate and just
think, we're f*****t.
That's why I've started a new podcast called Unf**king for Future.
Every episode will speak to someone taking on the climate crisis in a clever way, like
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We're dealing with just a gargantuan force And the number one thing I've been trying to do
through the whole thing is just keep my sense of humor.
Ha ha!
The guest list is amazing.
UN Goodwill Ambassador Sabrina Elba,
Climber activist Bill McKibben, and Maggie Beard.
We even have Bill Niver's science guy.
If you go into this thinking,
we're gonna get overwhelmed and lose, then we will.
Tired out people.
Listen to I'm f***ing the future.
On the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
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We're on f***ing the future.
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God is good, you would say.
All the time.
If I said all the time, you would say,
God is good.
Absolutely.
We speak a language that you can't even learn
through us Moses.
How are they?
Welcome home, y'all.
Welcome home. Listen to Native Lamp-Hot, dropping every Thursday on the High-Hot Radio app, And we're back. This is again a podcast sponsored entirely by convincing Jamie to pay money for scams. It is what yeah, it's really some people get into podcasting to make money. I'm getting
into it to set it on fire and buy a lot of steel cups.
Yeah. Oh, I sell our Stanley Cup every week.
Every I have them mounted on my wall like something's wrong with me.
See that's the, this is one of those things
where I get frustrated.
There's this like thing on, I think it's big on left Twitter
if people like posting, mostly white women's collections
of Stanley cups, like the company that makes thermoses
and like being like, wow, this is an insane thing.
It's like, who gives a shit?
Who's a shit?
It's like, you have Funko pops or something
or like, that thousand copies of the same old marks book. It's fine, there's all sorts of like, bizzareal collections that people do that you could latch onto.
I'm curious why, like, stand like, why the cups are the ones that, like,
Twitter has picked up on.
There's so many collection, I don't know.
I have every bit of discourse around the cups.
I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, I'm just like, cups are the ones that like Twitter has picked up on. There's so many collection. I don't know.
I have every bit of discourse around the cups. I'm just like enough.
It's just 2024. If there is a well-made product, there is a group of people who center more
of their identity than is rational around it. And that's just the way it is.
It's like the free cup you get if you're in the hospital.
Yeah. Sure. Yeah.
cup you get if you're in the hospital. Yeah, sure.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I don't know.
I've seen every angle on the cup discourse and I was like, hmm, ultimately, I just...
I don't believe in having a cup unless you're in a place where you can't carry a weapon.
And so you want to have something that you could bash someone's skull.
You could bash a skull with a Stanley for a...
Yeah, I know that.
You could do some damage.
I have a similar cup that I only take out when I know I can't carry a gun
somewhere.
I have a fight in the cup.
I have one good cup and Sophie gave it to me for my birthday a couple of years ago and
I use it every day.
Yup, the end.
I knew a lady when I lived in Guatemala who's tactic.
She got mugged very badly once.
Whenever she was going out on the town,
she would have a full bottle of wine with her.
And she was like, because as an expatter,
whatever in a foreign city,
you never look weird carrying a bottle of wine somewhere.
But if you hit someone in the face with a bottle of wine,
it tends to disrupt whatever they're doing,
like pretty effectively.
I'm like, all right.
That's not an unreasonable way to look at it.
I like, I mean, in the best case scenario,
you have a bottle of wine.
Like you kind of, you get a buzz.
You're useless.
I mean, that, I can really get behind that reasoning.
And, you know, women have to innovate.
They just do.
Absolutely.
I believe in the Stanley Cups as a weapon. I have
no opinion on this round of discourse. I'm just excited for the new Ariana Grande album.
Ladies, if you have a weird Stanley thing, this is your podcast. I think there's probably a lot
of money in saying that. So that's why I'm saying it. Anyway, I think the only real Stanley Cup I observe is the one that comes out right after
the Zamboni at the end of the season.
That's the Stanley Cup that I like.
Anyways, what were we talking about?
What's the show?
Oh, man.
You know, we've gone too off too far, but I did hear from a friend recently that a hockey
player killed a guy by cutting his throat with the skates on accident.
Oh, come on.
And that sounded like a thing that would happen in a movie,
but it's real.
So I was this like I was like I bet was this like a long time ago.
And I think it's pretty recently.
It was really I was like my dad definitely probably
a guy skate energy, but it was a kill.
I think my dad talked about like some 80s critical injury
where that happened. This was a kill. This was a kill with the think my dad talked about like some 80s critical injury where that happened.
This was a kill. This was a kill with the skate. So it works.
Brutal. Occupational hazard.
Yeah. Back to the finders cult.
We know a few ex members made complaints to the police over the first 20 years or so of the cult.
And there's a couple of reports you get from cops after this all blows up into the big case
that we're building towards where police officers in like the DC area would be like, yeah, we knew about them.
They were weird. We kept trying to find a way to like arrest them all, but they weren't committing
any crimes. It's a very, they're all very cop quotes where they're like, yeah, we kept looking
into them, but couldn't find any justification to ruin their lives. So we just moved on.
But we're really happy something finally happened because we knew they were weird
Cup rain now over the course of almost 20 years of existence a number of children are born into the cult
They were raised communally
And they were known to tell interviewers when they were asked like who's your dad?
And they would say he's my dad and he's my dad and he's my dad and that sounds like it could be fine
There's got no thousands of cultures and societies
over the course of human life where like,
that's the way it worked to some extent in part
because they did not fully understand
the way genetic inheritance worked
and in part because like,
had different attitudes on monogamy and stuff.
Like that kind of thing has been done.
It's a way kids can be raised.
That's not fully what's happening here, right?
Because the kids are told that like,
oh, all of them in here are your dads.
But most of the men in the cult had no desire
to raise those children, right?
They're just being told by Perry,
all of the kids are your responsibility.
And they were like, share I guess,
and then didn't pay any attention to the children.
So as a result, it was not uncommon for kids to kind of get neglected
because the actual biological dad is being told all of the men are also their
father. So it's like, well, I don't have to work as hard.
And also all of the other men are like, well, I didn't have that kid.
I'm not going to take care of it.
So yeah, they, whatever you hear stories, I mean, I feel like it's
frequently called, but also just like it like, it takes a village logic, resulting in a whole herd of adults failing to take care of a child.
It's so frustrating.
Yeah, yeah. There's, there's like one of my favorite stories.
I think I caught, I think I read this in the book, Sex at Dawn, was this like indigenous group in,
I believe, somewhere in South America
where like, and this is, we're talking about
an older set of beliefs, but like their attitude was like,
it's not children aren't made by like one father, right?
Like once you're pregnant, you like sleep with other guys
who have skills that you like,
and they all contribute to the kid.
And the pragmatic result of this is that like,
well, this woman says that like,
well, these four men are the men who made that baby
and they're all responsible for taking care of the kid.
So it's an adaptive strategy
when you're dealing with like higher rates
of mortality in the community, right?
The kid doesn't have one adult looking after him or two,
it has like five or six and that's functional,
very much not what's happening here.
Yeah, okay. Yeah.
And that also just sounds like building a video game character,
not a, not even trying to.
I wish it worked that way.
Yeah.
It's a better way.
Like, well, this guy is a, you know, very, like handy.
Let me just go fuck a guy who is.
Yeah.
And that team's got a hammer.
I'm going to go fuck him real quick and really level up the kid.
I wish it was like that.
That would be great. You would be was like that. That would be great.
You would be having so much.
That would be so much better.
The greatest nine months of your life.
Just like creating super soldiers, just a crowd showing up outside of the Olympic
village every four.
My God. Okay. Well, that's a, I mean, that's a fun idea. I wish it was.
It is a fun idea, at least a good short story in that. Yeah. Yeah. That's a George,
that's it. That's a George Saunders B site waiting to have. Yeah.
So kids in this cult are kept out of schools and given an eclectic education.
It's one of those things where like, it kind of depends when in the cult and like what
Adults you're around because they're in a couple of locations. Some of those kids learn a lot of stuff, right?
They're around really smart educated people who take it upon them to like train those kids. They hang out and like,
you know, helping to start these businesses. You do these spying missions. I'm sure they learn a lot and other kids
run around on like a farm and don't learn how to read, right? Like it's a mix of those things are all happening.
What a beautiful gradient.
Yeah, this will become meaningful later,
but on one occasion, the cult slaughters a pair of goats
and like, oh, let the kids kind of help in that process,
play around with the remains too.
What is it with this group and remains?
It's just, I don't know, kids like dead animals.
You know, that's classic.
That's why the famous gift you get a kid, you know, a dead animal, bring them to a child,
lock them in a room together.
That's how parenting works.
Kids like goo.
Maybe that's what it is.
I love goo.
Kids do like goo.
I like goo.
Yeah, don't we all like goo. That's why starship troopers was such a such a hit. So George
George petty Mary and son would later give a description of the cult's child rearing practices to the Washington post.
Quote, he said the lives of the children are unpleasant because group members rear them collectively. Frequently, Mary andty now 66 would assign a follower to a game,
or adventure, overseas, or in another city. And the group member would not see his children for
months. George Petty said the group engaged in constant babysitting. I wouldn't want to be a
child there without a reliable day-in-day out parent figure. He said if the children found in the
van in Florida, I bet you a buck you'll find their biological mothers live in W Street,
that's the cult's other location.
And if they're not up there now, they're off on some adventure.
This is later when those kids get found as I open the episode, right?
Like he's saying basically, these kids are neglected a lot.
I don't think there ever, there's no goal to abuse them.
They believe things because Petty has all these theories about child rearing
that wind up not being great for these kids, but they're not like going out of their way to harm
them, right? It's just weird bad social experiment. Yeah. And again, like
the goal, the goal that is leading to these children being neglected is so mysterious.
Like, I just don't understand.
I might not agree with that, Jamie,
because like, what I think is happening here,
all these people is called are raised
between the 20s and the 40s.
Not a famously great time for raising kids.
A lot of problems.
A lot of kids getting the shit beat out of them,
very authoritarian education,
or kids being pulled out of education to like make money, of them, very authoritarian education or kids being
pulled out of education to like make money, you know, for their families or their starve.
Yeah, being enlisted, being forced into labor to young.
Sure.
And so I don't think it's unreasonable that these people are like, I bet there's a better
way to raise kids.
I think what's unreasonable is that they say and we'll let this one guy decide what it is
Yeah, that's where the problem comes in. Yeah, that is interesting I've never heard of like alternative parenting like IE
semi-abuse of parenting techniques being framed in that way that makes a lot of sense
Yeah, this is what it is right. Yeah, right like. Well, it's almost like bad boyfriend logic.
We're like, well, it's not what happened to the last time.
So let's see if it works.
And it's usually, it usually doesn't.
Yeah.
Might as well change it up.
Yeah.
So yeah, that article, that Washington Post article, also includes some quotes from neighbors
who visited the petty family farm early in the cult's life.
And they, this is like some random man the petty family farm early in the cult's life.
And they, this is like some random man on the street encounters towards how the cult raised
children that I found interesting.
In the summer, neighbors saw as many as a dozen children at the farm.
There was always hollering and screaming going on said, Wilma Richards, they were always
hollering about mama and daddy.
One time I heard one say, I want milk.
Another person said, shut up.
You ain't going to get it.
Oh, bad journal is in there because it's like, what was that? One time I heard one say, I want milk. Another person said, shut up, you ain't gonna get it.
Again, bad journal isn't there,
because it's like, was that a kid saying,
shut up, you ain't gonna get it?
Cause that does kind of sound like a kid
being angry at another kid.
Whereas then an adult saying,
fuck you, you don't get milk.
In which case, that's a more abusive scenario.
Right.
Yeah, I don't know.
Yeah, but, you know, these kids,
this is not, I don't think the ideal way to raise kids,
just keeping them boxed to learn a farm
and not educating them.
I'm gonna bravely say I think they're doing
a pretty horrible job of raising these kids.
Not a good job with these kids.
Yeah, although again, it's the 70s.
Is this worse than an average parent?
Sure, is this massively worse than a lot of people are doing?
Well, I don't know.
I, I've just, I think they're doing a bad job,
but they're doing, I am, in the context of like,
they're doing a different bad job
than the previous generation.
Because there's a wave of new parenting that ends up,
you know, fucking, I don't know.
We're just fucked. We're't know, we're just fucked.
We're just fucked.
Yeah, we're just fucked.
Again, this is bad.
It's not surprising.
We all, I'm gonna guess everyone listening to this,
new kids were friends with kids whose parents took variations
of this attitude.
We're like, we're different.
We don't, watch over our kids.
Like, we have this more enlightened attitude
towards child rearing, but that was just a way of them justifying, I don't pay any attention to my child as opposed
to actually trying to give them more freedom, which is good.
Like parents who just like had no idea what was going on with their kids, you all knew
that kid.
We were, or you were that kid, right?
Like what I'm saying is that this is not great child rearing, but it's not weird, right?
This is, yeah.
In the same way that, like, I don't know, I think about like growing up in like an age child rearing, but it's not weird, right? This is a- Sure, yeah.
In the same way that, like, I don't know, I think about, like, growing up in, like, an age
of, like, helicopter parenting being on the come-up and having some parents that, like,
just were like, well, I don't do that.
I'm doing this brave new thing called not paying attention to my child at all.
You're like, surely we can split the difference.
Come on.
Literally never met my child.
Yeah.
In 1986, Petty had an idea for a new game.
For reasons that aren't somewhat obscure to me,
he ordered the membership to split into an all male
and all female dwelling.
Some women who lived independently
were ordered to live separately from the men.
The closest thing that I found to an explanation
as to why they did this is that some of the women
had complained that their baby daddies were using the cult's attitude towards child rearing
as an excuse to ignore their kids.
So this is kind of a mark in the less abusive thing as like, yeah, they did this for a few
years and like the men were ignoring the kids.
So they changed shit up.
And the way they changed it is petty has all of the women move into separate apartments
from the men.
They live in a separate house
and the men are living with the kids
and taking care of them, right?
He's basically saying, okay,
you may have been shirking your job.
We're gonna cut the women out of it.
They're all gonna go off and have an adventure
and you have to focus on raising the kids right now.
Which is, again, not misogynist.
Now, is it a good idea for those kids?
To put it with these guys, you don't know what they're doing?
Maybe not.
Yeah, there's many things that are true here.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's a complicated situation because it is like,
that is progressive from a gender standpoint,
but also really not very responsible.
But we got to vet these dads.
We just got to vet these dads.
We can't count on them learning on the job.
They need, look, again, it's not fair that like because the women are the ones who have
kept these kids from dying, they should have stayed involved in keeping them from dying,
but you know, you probably should have had like training keeping them from dying. But, you know,
you probably should have had like training wheels on the guys, right? That's all I'm saying.
Yeah. No, I mean, it's like the child wearing is always going to unfairly fall to women.
Yes.
That's something we all know. But it's also like, if I'm leaving my child to a guy that doesn't
know how to like exactly, you know, that's, I think about like when my parents,
I mean, and I love my family very much,
but when my parents got divorced and I was like,
my dad doesn't know how to do laundry.
What are we gonna do?
We're gonna die.
I'm not making a general statement about like,
I'm not saying that like men should not be allowed,
I'm saying that in this specific case,
these men had ignored these kids for years
and you shouldn't just give the kids to them
without having someone there to make sure
they know what they're doing, right?
Yes.
Yeah. That's all I'm saying.
Yes, I mean, there's, yeah, obviously,
there's good male parents, just not in this group,
it doesn't sound like that.
It doesn't seem like a lot of good ones in this group.
Now, what the men are actually pretty good at and and I think the women too, is making money.
And this is an interesting thing.
I think this quote doesn't steal most of the money it gets from its members.
Members when they join, fold their finances into a big account.
But there are a number of claims from members who are like, if you wanted to take your money
out, you could.
Nobody stopped you, right?
That will change eventually. But for the first like 20 years or so, it's like a big bank. And the money that
people are putting in, they're starting businesses. And some of those businesses are pretty successful.
And the idea initially, from petty, is that like the children that we're having and raising
within the cult will inherit these businesses. and they'll continue on our mission.
It's never clear what the mission is, but like that's the idea.
We're pooling our resources, starting business, and then we'll make money that will pass
on to these kids who are going to raise to be super enlightened, you know, people, right?
Right.
Now, Petty obviously is not a guy with any experience running businesses and he has no real interest
in running businesses.
A lot of what they do is like training people on computers.
There's a lot of computer engineers and the finders and Petty doesn't know any of that
shit.
So a lot of the management tasks fell on the shoulders of Robert Toby Terrell who writes
the book that is a major source for a lot of our details on Marion's life.
Terrell is a former IRS employee who became a venture capitalist and wound up owning
an oil company like he's wealthy.
See, I know anytime you throw a three name in there, something is about to go wrong.
Toby's his nickname that he got in the cult, but yes, that does count.
Yeah.
So Perry's an early member.
He joins in 71 and he abandons his family and ordered like he's got a family.
He's got a business. He's got like a house and he just like meets this guy and leaves it all behind
He would later say quote I was looking for a more meaningful life
I had already made a pretty big pile of money and I couldn't just go on making more
There wasn't really much point in that petty offered a more personalized life more community oriented
Reestablishing the kind of extended family that the human species evolved under. And I'm not 100% clear. Did he like leave his kids and wife or like,
is he still involved in their life? It kind of sounds like he was like, hey, here's your
money. You've got some money. I'm going to go leave to be an occult now. God, for the
right bad parent could be the blessing. Honestly, I love what a problem just resolves itself like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So things are going pretty well by cult terms for the finders right up until the end of 1986.
Now the cult at this point has started looking at Tallahassee Florida as a possible place to
expand their operations. It's net cults in Florida. Go together like, well, there's nothing
that goes together better than that, but it goes together well. They go together real good.
Several adult male members then decide to drive down to Florida in a van to check out possible
location. They're scoping out like, are we going to expand to here, right? And because of the
aforementioned shift in child rearing that had occurred, they had a bunch of kids with them,
right? So you get two men in a van with a bunch of small children,
neither of those men know much about taking care of small children.
They are feeding them a vegan diet.
It sounds like which you can do with a little kid,
but you need to be careful about it
to make sure they're getting proper nutrition.
And I don't think these men know much
other than to hand a two-year-old a carrot.
I, the optics are objectively bad.
Yes.
But this is not going to look good.
I am not surprised that these guys attracted attention.
Yeah.
So, the gist of what happens next is that a group of two adult men in suits are spotted
by some busy body in Florida with children who seem dirty.
She gets angry and she reports them to the police
because she's sure that something is wrong.
The police are like, we're the police.
The last thing we care about is anything.
Fuck off.
So she starts adding details, right?
She's like, okay, they don't care that these two men
and suits are around a bunch of dirty kids.
So she starts adding shit.
And she's, you know, the kind of Floridian lady who calls the police when she sees some men and suits that
look like hippies. Um, so she's, hey, don't limit that to Florida. There's a lot of neighbor,
there's neighbor ladies all over this great nation need to call the cops for any reason. Yeah, and this is the late 80s,
so the satanic panic is in full swing, right?
Yeah, right?
So after a couple of phone calls,
the cops don't bite.
She starts folding in claims that these people are sadness,
to try to make them do something, okay?
And I'm gonna read to you an excerpt
from a police report on the arrest
that happens after this,
because it shows how much this woman who calls them really
forced, how she's like building consciously building
a story to force the cops to do something.
In December of 1986, the woman's name
called the Intelligence Division and reported
that she had information concerning a cult operating
in the District of Columbia.
Blank was advised that the detective blank of this office
handled cult investigations and was currently out of town, but would contact her after
his return. She was contacted in late December by Detective Blank by
telephone and advised that she wished to be interviewed concerning this cult
Detective Blank and Detective Blank of the Maryland Park Police. She claims to
these guys that a section of the cult was operating in Maryland. They
interview her at a residence and she says that like, yeah, now after, you know,
making her initial call, she starts claiming that like,
oh, these guys actually tried to bring me into the cult,
and they tried to recruit me,
and the police are like, well, that's interesting,
but that's still, there's nothing illegal
with trying to get someone to join a cult,
so call back when you have more.
So in January of 87, the next month,
she calls back again, being like, okay,
these guys are satinists, I'm aware that they're satinists, and the detective month, she calls back again, being like, okay, these guys are Satanists.
I'm aware that they're Satanists.
And the detective, to his credit, is like, well, that's still not a crime.
But then he's like, wow, base, base police, base, base police.
But he is interested, like, I want to figure out what's happening.
So he calls another detective and is like, let's keep in the loop about this in case something
happens.
So there's like, there's some interest in the police about these guys and they get yet another call
on February 4th, 1987 and decide to send some police out to check on the matter, right?
And the call comes in from someone in the neighborhood who sees like there's these
group of men dressed as a scob and with a van full of dirty children. I called that woman a busy body because like she calls the police repeatedly over these
guys and keeps kind of bugging them about it.
Well, and I feel like there is an element of, I mean, I could think of people like shitty
neighbors throughout my life as well who like once the police engage with them, they
feel, you know, they seem empowered to be like,
oh, I'm a part of, I'm a part of this, you know, and continue to engage. It's sometimes like an
increasingly nonsense way is. Yeah, yeah. And it's also, this is kind of the most important thing
for me to note, is that like not everyone who lives in this neighborhood where these guys have
their van and these kids sees anything sinister here. One of the articles I found sites, a college professor who
lived in the area, John Matthews, who is like, yeah, you know, there were like a close-knit group
of feminists who like to help people. They're not a cult. You know, people talk about them because
of their lifestyle, but I think they're pretty harmless. So there's like, not everyone. There's like, it seems to be this woman specifically thought something was wrong here.
Now, to be fair to her, these kids do seem to be like dirty and perhaps not well cared for.
Right.
Right.
Like she's not totally off base.
She's not totally off base for the wrong reasons.
Yeah.
And it's weird that she like lies about satanism, basically.
Maybe she believed it.
But if you see kids that you think are being abused
and the police repeatedly won't do anything,
maybe that's the action you take, I don't know.
I mean, or just, I mean, given how low the bar was
to believe someone was a satanist in the 80s,
I mean, who, she could be going off
with any number of faulty yardsticks there.
So finally, February 4th, after repeated calls,
the police send a couple of officers
to check on these guys.
And they find two men living with six kids aged two to seven.
The kids are described as being really dirty.
They have a lot of bug bites, the cops,
I think initially described them in cops, I think, initially described
and at least one cop initially describes them as malnourished. The van is kind of smelly.
They seem to have been hyping up how like the fact that they were malnourished, further
reporting and like medical investigation did not show the kids were in like bad health.
And like one of the officers who responds is a woman and she actually kind of pushes
back at the idea that the kids were particularly dirty
because all of the news reports
when this blows up are like,
filthy children, uncared for in the back of a van.
And this lady officer is like,
my first impression is that they were dirty,
but I would not say they were unusually dirty for kids, right?
Like, yeah, they're kind of like gross, but that's children,
you know?
Interesting.
I still don't know where to lay that. Because it's just like it's such a, yeah, it's such
a front issue and it's like anyone could, everyone sounds like they're a degree of right
in this situation.
Yeah, yeah.
And I think that is kind of where we are because like I actually can't blame the police for
being like, all right, well, there's this lady really concerned that these kids are being mistreated and they're dirty.
We should probably check in and like, they're negligent to do nothing.
And it's kind of like the police to do nothing.
Yeah.
Let's check in on this, right?
And so they do.
And they find, you know, one of the men is the biological father of one of the children.
The other guy has nothing to do biologically with any of the kids. None of their other parents.
But he said, but he had sex with a pregnant woman and thinks that that would make one of
these kids good at basketball. Yeah, it's it's it's good stuff. One of the office, the responding
female officer wrote this in her report. This writer spoke to suspect one who stated that he and suspect two were teachers from
Washington, DC and they were in root to Mexico with the children.
Suspect one stated that they were going to Mexico to set up a school for brilliant children.
When asked about the parents of the children, suspect one became very evasive and stated
that the children's parents were in Washington, DC.
So this is the lie and it will later come out that Petty had told them
that if the cops ask you why you're driving on these kids, say you're taking them to Mexico
to start a school for geniuses. Like that's that's his lie that he comes up with to tell
the cops. You're you're taking these other people's kids to Mexico to make a baby Harvard. That is like crime mad lives.
That's so funny.
That's escaping the country mad lives.
Yeah.
If you just said like, yeah, we're watching some friends kids, you know, we're all about
to move down here.
We're looking for a house.
Like cops probably leave, but you're like, we're taking them to Mexico to make baby
Harvard.
Well, you have, of course, you're getting arrested now. That's clearly sex criminal stuff.
She says, okay. So, so there, I mean, it's like, are they, what? I don't know why I'm trying
to understand why they would say this. Everyone's been behaving weird for two decades. And this
is the first time people seem to care. It's happening. Baby Harvard, that is just that's just a step too far.
We have to draw the line of baby Harvard says the police.
I'm always saying that and so are the police.
Yeah.
And you know what else the police are saying, Jamie?
Oh, no.
Don't buy the products that support this podcast.
We the police hate them.
Yeah.
The perfect crime. Well, I just took my wallet out.
My wallets never been in my pants even once.
Let's not think too deep into the optics of that. I don't know. Uh-huh.
Okay. I actually don't have a wallet. Yes.
I just keep my cards loose in my pants.
I just keep my cards loose in my pants.
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If I said all the time, you would say, God is good.
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So the cops are talking to these people the finders members come up with their brilliant lie written by Petty that they're just taking
these kids to Mexico.
And the police are like where are their mothers?
And so the men tell the lie that Petty had told them to say, which is that they're being
weaned off of their mothers.
Again, every bit of this is like exactly what you would say if you wanted the police to
think you're sex criminals.
Yeah, it really is a master class in what not to say.
In a situation where I think that they are being set up to get away with it, whatever it
is.
Yeah, that or petty wanted to create a conspiracy theory.
And so he sent these guys off to get in trouble.
I don't know.
I don't know.
So the officers at this point decide to arrest these guys on
suspicion of child abuse, not necessarily unreasonable, given what they've been told.
Yeah, I just, you have to say it. And it's particularly reasonable because they're
doing this so that they can have medical professionals talk to and inspect the kids, right? Are they
malnourished? Have they been beaten? Have they been molested?
That's pretty important to know given everything that's happened here.
Sure.
And so they tell the men like you're under arrest on suspicion of child abuse and one of the men
pretends to faint. And this is the police officer describing it.
The guy just did a fake faint. I've seen it several times. Women are real good at doing it.
Usually when a guy really faints, you don't bend the knees. This guy did the scarlet o' hair at I just did a fake faint. I've seen it several times. Women are real good at doing it.
Usually when a guy really faints,
you don't bend the knees.
This guy did the Scarlet O'Hara thing.
I checked him.
I looked at his eyes to make sure
he wasn't diabetic or something.
I said, get up.
I know you're faking this mess.
And he wouldn't get up.
It was like a child playing.
Like when you go to check if they're asleep at night.
These are, this cult is not finding very strong soldiers.
Oh, they're just like you.
Oh, my stars and stripes.
I'm being accused of what?
Like how molestation.
This is just it.
Oh, God, everyone in this scenario is flopping.
Let's get these kids out of here away from the police,
away from these guys. Yeah. yeah, let's do it.
Yeah. So while this is all happening, this guy's fake fainting the cops are doing their
arrest thing. A group of local teens sees the commotion and one runs home to get their
video camera returning just in time to film the arrest. It became a local story and people
tipped off the news who immediately jumped on a possible tale of a pedophile van. Because the initial complaint from that woman said
they were Satanists, that's what came out in some of the first coverage of the event
and the story snowballed from there. The fact that fired everybody up and insured this
became a media circus was that a police spokesman had stated at a press conference that quote, physical examinations showed sexual abuse to one of the children.
Now, this is extremely serious.
Allegations do not get much worse than that, right?
And that is a serious thing if a child was found who have been sexually abused.
Whether or not that's the whole cult or one guy in it who was given like control over
children because of petty, weird game, Either way, serious problem, right?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Much of the reputation of the finders of why they're part of conspiracy theory centers around
this statement, right?
That's specifically one of these children was found who have been abused.
Here's the problem.
That is not an accurate statement based on what the cops had been told at that point.
Now, okay.
In this case, it's not fully their fault
because a health and human services case worker had told a police officer that two of the children
were confirmed sexual assault victims. Now, a couple of things here. Number one, that means the
police are still wrong because they said that one child had been abused and they were told by
the health and human services rep that two children had been. But also the health and human services representative
had not been told that a child
was a confirmed sexual assault victim.
That was also a lie to the police.
Not a lie, a misstatement at the very least.
It's unclear as to why that misstatement was made,
but I'm gonna quote from reporter John Cohen here.
The doctor's dictation, the doctor who inspected the kids
transcribed the day after the exam,
cautiously described possible sexual abuse of one boy and one girl.
He described abnormal characteristics of one girl's hymen and one boy's anus that might
be evidence of assault, but were not diagnostic of it.
In other words, the doctor did his job.
He looked at these kids and he found two kids who had physical symptoms that might have been the result of past sexual abuse.
But here's the thing, you know, the hymen, we know that like that is a thing that can be broken when somebody with a vagina loses their virginity,
but like horseback riding. You could, yeah, you could go jamin style and break it on a bike seat.
Yeah, on a bike seat. Very painful. Likewise, this boy, there were characteristics of irritation
in his anus that sometimes our evidence
of past of sexual abuse.
But also like, if you have diarrhea
because like the guy is watching you
or like feeding you old vegetables and like don't,
not really giving you a good diet.
Perhaps your anus becomes irritated, right?
It's not diagnostic. We don't know.
I hate that we have to get into the what aboutism of determining what constitutes child abuse.
It's just so, I don't know. And especially during this era with the satanic panic,
there's just a whole history of sensationalism and and and that goes through the Q
and on era that just it just makes it makes me so mad because it just like cases like this
lead to like real act like actual allegations being completely blown off and like that's
why these movements are so counter intuitive
to actually, I mean, I know I'm like a broken record
with this shit, but it's just,
it's so unbelievably frustrating that it's like,
you have to get that granular to, you know,
make sure that these children are actually safe
without empowering a fucking cult that they, like,
it's just, yeah.
It's very frustrating because like, what the doctor has done here is
his job, which is like, yeah, we should look into what's happening to these kids
more because this could be evidence of sexual abuse, which is a responsible thing
to say a health and human services rep hears that and then just says, yep,
we've confirmed two kids were raped. And then the cops say, yep, we've confirmed one kid was raped. It's just this like this chain of every adult,
but the doctor in this situation, just being dipshit. And as a result, suddenly the news
comes out and America believes these men were caught taking kids to Mexico and molesting
them, right? And that that's confirmed. We know that, right? Which is not the case.
Now, is this evidence of abuse or neglect,
definitely neglect?
I think we definitely have neglect here, right?
Absolutely, yeah.
That's clear.
Maybe even abuse.
Would not be impossible that one or both of the men
traveling with these kids did something fucked up too,
but they will be found innocent.
Well, and that sounds like it's completely because of how incompetent
the investigation is. Yes. So, you know, I would say you should probably investigate further
when something, you know, like this happens before you talk to the press, but the police just
go to the press and say, yep, we've confirmed a kid was raped, and the press is off to the races.
I'm going to quote here from that city paper article.
The Miami Herald in Washington Post ran page one stories, three days in a row.
The state New York Times reported that some of described the finders as bizarre cult of
devil worshipers.
Everyone got it on the act.
Connie Chung, Larry King, CNN, even the BBC.
And like, that's so from the New
York Times that such a fucking New York Times thing to be like, well, there's no evidence
of anything yet, just a very unclear case. But some random lady in Florida said their
Satanists. So let's just say some of describe them as a cult of devil worshipers.
So people are talking about, yeah, Do the people say just know anything?
No, but it's just like the most like satanic panic sensation.
I mean, that still continues, but that's yeah.
And it's like for what?
And this is like, this sounds like the first time in media, at least, where there is some
purpose being ascribed to this cult.
Like, you know, they maybe they were relieved to find out
that they were evil Satanist,
because they're like, we're not really sure what
we were supposed to be doing.
Yeah, yeah, it's,
we just let this grave robbing child like
gamify our lives for some reason
and now we're starting baby Harvard.
To be, to be a conspiracist here, again,
it's not beyond
possibility that petty was the one who orchestrated the call to the police
because he wanted to create a media circus. Like, that's not impossible. Um,
I don't have any evidence for it, but he he's going to send once the press gets on
this, he has some members of the finders give statements to the media
that are like purposefully crazy or bizarre.
Like usually not just like unhinged,
but like weird in a way that will make people more suspicious
because it's part of a game to him.
Like these women's, six women's children
have been taken into custody
or multiple women's children, because I think one of them had to children have been taken into custody or multiple women's children because I think one of them had to
Have been taken into custody and are words of the state for a period of weeks their mothers can't take them home
And he's like, oh, I'm a merry prankster. Let's keep fucking with the press
We'll give the police conflicting statements. What fun this all is as these moms are like losing their minds,
because their kids are locked away from them.
It's their fucking kids.
Like, and then also that it makes it clear that like to whatever degree this neglect
or abuse is happening, he's a give a shit.
He's like cosplaying as like the fucking lobotomy joke.
Yes, yes, like Jamie.
Yes.
I'm not a great person.
Do I think it sounds fun to convince the police that you're like running some sort of
satanic conspiracy?
Of course.
But once children get taken by the state of Florida, it's time to stop playing.
If you don't want children in the clutches of the state of Florida, that's even worse
than these guys watching them, right?
The situation keeps getting worse.
Uh, it is very funny.
The police are clearly like just thrilled that they're getting all this attention.
There's like quotes from police officials about like, I'm going to be on Connie Chong,
hot dog.
So like, yeah, you won't be surprised to hear that like as this becomes a huge media thing,
the police who'd kind of been like,
all right, well, let's figure out what's happening.
It's not super clear what's going on,
let's do an investigation or immediately like,
all right, it is time to carry out a series of raids
across the country on every property these people own.
Because, you know, this might be,
this could be a career maker, right?
If this is a devil sex cult thing,
we could really do well by
getting big on this stuff. And, you know, so a series of raids are launched. The police
start going after finders properties, you know, up in the northeast or in the DC area.
And because these kids have crossed state lines and there's allegations at least, there's
some sort of child traffic in going on. That's interstate commerce.
And when interstate commerce gets involved, that means that the feds who are going to get
involved are the customs department, right?
So it's customs that's carrying out a lot of these raids.
And that's going to be a real problem because one of the customs agents who gets involved
in this is a shall we say conspiracy enthusiast. And he's really gonna really
gonna cause some fun for us in in the next part. But Jamie, yes, that's all we've got
for this week. I think there's going to be one more. That's a lot. That's a lot. Maybe
two, but probably just one. But we'll get to that next week. This week. This we're done.
This is a crazy. This is this is a fucking crazy one.
I was like, there's so many, so many conversations we've had over the years are just straight
up clearly bad.
This one is like, it feels, it doesn't feel like it happened 35 years ago.
It feels like it happened recently, unfortunately.
This, this stinks.
I'll bravely say this stinks.
Well, that's good.
I agree.
It does stink.
But you know what doesn't stink, Jamie?
What?
Podcasts, particularly the podcast you're about to launch
for us.
It's true.
Where you, yeah, what are you doing in that podcast, Jamie?
What are you gonna be doing?
Thanks for the T.O. Robert.
Well, I've got a new show coming out on CoolZone Media,
ever heard of it that you and Sophia are letting me make. It's called 15 minutes. It is about
the sort of some of the most notorious, particularly main characters of the internet, but people who had a strong impression on people for one or two days.
And we see where they're at, what happened to them, if they had impact on the world, and if they are upset that they are remembered as, for instance, 30 to 50 Farrell Hogs guy.
Who I intend to maybe get justice for, I don't know. We got to talk to him. But
anyways, that comes out in March. And Jamie, is that a weekly podcast? Oh, yeah, it is. And
it's a weekly podcast. Yeah. Because there's just so many of these motherfuckers. I often get asked,
how do you, how do we get more Jamie Loftus? And it's a greenland a weekly Jamie Loftus podcast.
You're welcome.
Yes.
And soon you'll never be asking that question again.
You'll be asking, could I have less?
And how do I avoid?
And I'm happy to help out there as well.
Well, that's all a good time.
Well, everybody, that's going to do it for us here at
behind the bastards this week.ards this week, you know?
Until next week, if you start what might be
some sort of sex cult or might just be basically D&D
for you and your friends, don't let children
get taken into custody by the state of Florida.
It's not worth it.
Just a thought.
The one takeaway. Yeah, yeah, that's where I am.
Hi.
Behind the bastards is a production of Cool Zone Media. For more from Cool Zone Media,
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I'm Nicole Perkins and in my new podcast The Godmother, I'm inviting you to 1930s
New York.
I want to tell you the extraordinary story of Eunice Carter, the trailblazing black female
lawyer who put New York's most notorious gangsters behind bars.
Somehow she's been largely forgotten.
Listen to the godmother with me Nicole Perkins on the iHeartRadio app Apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts.
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