harassment:
 
Calof, D.L. (1998).  Notes from a practice under siege: Harassment,  
defamation, and  intimidation in the name of science, Ethics and Behavior,  
8(2) pp. 
161-187. Abstract: I have practiced psychotherapy, family therapy, and  
hypnotherapy for over 25 years without a single board complaint or law suit by 
a  
client.  For over three years, however, a group of proponents of the false  
memory syndrome (FMS) hypothesis, including members, officials, and supporters  
of 
the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, Inc., have waged a multi-modal campaign  
of harassment and defamation directed against me, my clinical clients, my 
staff,  my family, and others connected to me.  I have neither treated these  
harassers or their families, nor had any professional or personal dealings with 
 
any of them; I am not related in any way to the disclosures of memories of  
sexual abuse in these families.  Nonetheless, this group disrupts my  
professional and personal life and threatens to drive me out of business.   In 
this 
article, I describe practicing psychotherapy under a state of siege and  places 
the campaign against me in the context of a much broader effort in the  FMS 
movement to denigrate, defame, and harass clinicians, lecturers, writers,  and 
researchers identified with the abuse and trauma treatment communities. 
_http://ritualabuse.us/research/memory-fms/notes-from-a-practice-under-siege/_ 
(http://ritualabuse.us/research/memory-fms/notes-from-a-practice-under-siege/)  
 
Confessions of a Whistle-Blower: Lessons Learned Author: Anna C.  Salter  
DOI: 10.1207/s15327019eb0802_2   Published in:   Ethics & Behavior, Volume 8, 
Issue 2 June 1998 , pages 115 - 124   Abstract - In 1988 I began a report on 
the 
accuracy of expert testimony in child  sexual abuse cases utilizing Ralph 
Underwager and Hollida Wakefield as a case  study (Wakefield & Underwager, 
1988). 
In response, Underwager and Wakefield  began a campaign of harassment and 
intimidation, which included multiple  lawsuits; an ethics charge; phony (and 
secretly taped) phone calls; and ad  hominem attacks, including one that I was 
laundering federal grant monies. The  harassment and intimidation failed as the 
author refused demands to retract. In  addition, the lawsuits and ethics 
charges were dismissed. Lessons learned from  the experience are discussed.
_http://ritualabuse.us/research/memory-fms/confessions-of-a-whistle-blower-les
sons-learned/_ 
(http://ritualabuse.us/research/memory-fms/confessions-of-a-whistle-blower-lessons-learned/)
 
 
_http://ritualabuse.us/research/memory-fms/recovered-memory-data/_ 
(http://ritualabuse.us/research/memory-fms/recovered-memory-data/) 
 
Media Manipulation:
 
U-Turn on Memory Lane by Mike Stanton - Columbia Journalism Review -  
July/August 1997
 
The FMSF builds much of its case against recovered memory by attacking a  
generally discredited Freudian concept of repression that proponents of  
recovered memory don’t buy, either. In so doing, the foundation ignores the  
fifty-year-old literature on traumatic, or psychogenic amnesia, which is an  
accepted 
diagnosis by the American Psychiatric Association. In his 1996 book  “Searching 
for Memory,” the Harvard psychologist and brain researcher Daniel L.  
Schachter — who believes that both true and false memories exist — says there 
is  no 
conclusive scientific evidence that false memories can be created….The  
foundation and its backers “remind me of a high school debate team,” says the  
Stanford psychiatrist David Spiegel, an authority on traumatic amnesia. “They 
go  
to the library, surgically extract the information convenient to them and 
throw  out the rest.”….Many therapists, like their patients, hesitate to speak  
out.Recently, though, they have begun to make a more concerted effort to  
mobilize a response. One of the most outspoken critics of the false-memory  
movement is a Seattle therapist, David Calof, editor until last year of 
Treating  
Abuse Today, a newsletter for therapists. He has identified what he calls the  
movement’s political agenda — lobbying for more restrictive laws governing  
therapy and promoting the harassment of therapists through lawsuits and even  
picketing of their offices and homes. Calof himself has been the target of  
picketing so fierce that he has been in and out of Seattle courtrooms over the  
last two years, obtaining restraining orders. He was spending so much time and  
money fighting the FMSF supporters’ campaign against him, he says, that he was 
 forced to stop publishing the newsletter last year. He recently donated the  
publication to a victims’ rights group in Pennsylvania, which has resurrected 
it  as Trauma. The new publisher says that views part of its mission as 
reporting on  FMSF, since the mainstream media don’t.
 
Among journalists, perhaps the most relentless critic of the foundation is  
Michele Landsberg, a Toronto Star columnist. In 1993, she says, an Ontario  
couple, claiming to have been falsely accused, contacted her and asked her to  
write about their case. Unconvinced, she declined, and eventually started  
writing instead about the foundation.She attacked its scientific claims and  
criticized the sensational media coverage. She described how a foundation  
scientific adviser, Harold Merskey, had testified that a woman accusing a 
doctor  of 
sexual abuse in a civil case might in fact have been suffering from false  
memory syndrome. But the accused doctor himself had previously confessed to  
criminal charges of abusing her. Landsberg also challenged the credentials of  
other 
foundation advisers. She noted that one founding adviser, Ralph  Underwager, 
was forced to resign from the foundation’s board after he and his  wife, 
Hollida Wakefield, who remains an adviser, gave an interview to a Dutch  
pedophilia 
magazine in which he was quoted as describing pedophilia as”an  acceptable 
expression of God’s will for love.” Landsberg also wrote that another  adviser, 
James Randi, a magician known as “The Amazing Randi,” had been involved  in 
a lawsuit in which his opponent introduced a tape of sexually explicit  
telephone conversations Randi had with teenage boys. (Randi has claimed at  
various 
times, she said, that the tape was a hoax and that the police asked him  to 
make it.) “Why haven’t reporters investigated the False Memory Syndrome  
Foundation?” she asks. “It’s legitimate to examine their backgrounds –here are  
people who really do have powerful motivation to deny the truth.” 
_http://backissues.cjrarchives.org/year/97/4/memory.asp_ 
(http://backissues.cjrarchives.org/year/97/4/memory.asp) 
 
Battle Tactics of the False Memory Syndrome Foundation - Noel Packard - New  
School for Social Research, N.Y. History Matters Conference April 23-24, 2004  
Censorship is also a tactic that FMS Foundation adherents use to silence 
voices  they don’t agree with. Katy Butler, published a critical review of 
Ofshe’
s and  Watter’s book, Making Monsters (1994) in the Los Angeles Times. Later 
the  newspaper’s book review editor received a vague threat of a lawsuit from 
Ofshe’s  representative (K. Butler personal communication with Lynn Crook 
January 28,  2000). Later Butler was asked to write a story for Newsweek 
examining 
the  uncritical acceptance of Foundation claims and to provide documented 
cases of  recovered memory and traumatic amnesia. Upon learning of this 
assignment 
 Foundation Advisory Board members Richard Ofshe and Fredrick Crews, as well 
as  Peter and Pamela Freyd, wrote strongly worded letters of complaint to 
Newsweek  which effectively canceled Butler’s assignment (Stanton 1997). 
Although 
these  censorship activities were reported in Mike Stanton’s article “U-Turn 
on Memory  Lane” (1997) Nevertheless, Newsweek editors confirmed that the FMS 
Foundation  letters helped kill Butler’s article. Butler said at a national 
conference of  investigative reporters and editors in Rhode Island in 1996: “I’
ve worked hard  very hard to tell both sides of the story. What’s interesting 
to me about all of  this that telling both sides has started to seem like a 
risky act.” (Stanton  1997: 49)….In 1994 the editor of the Journal of 
Psychohistory Lloyd DeMause  wrote to many professional subscribers to inform 
them that 
he feared a lawsuit  by the FMS Foundation for publishing a special issue of 
his journal on cult  abuse. Dr. Jean Goodwin a psychiatrist at University of 
Texas Medical Branch  responded with a letter that conveys the overall feeling 
among the mental health  community in the early 1990s. Goodwin: From a 
Psychohistorical viewpoint it is  fascinating to watch this organization 
systematically limit freedom of speech in  this area. Their suits of publishers 
have 
driven many books out of print. Board  members have prevented publication of 
many 
articles. As far as I know you are  the first journal editor they have 
targeted. The slander suit stopped the  audio-tapping of many presentations in 
this 
area. The licensing attacks and the  malpractice suits threaten freedom of 
speech in the psychotherapy consulting  room, which is where it is supposed to 
be 
most free. Silence still is the  priority for the perpetrator (Goodwin 1994) 
Goodwin’s letter captures the effect  that Foundations’ tactics had on the 
therapy community in the early 1990s. Today  the overall effect of the 
Foundation’
s court cases and tactics is more muted.  One newly graduated MFT told me that 
as far as she knows the Foundation has had  no impact on the practices of 
MFTs at all. A social worker who teaches a  certification class on mandated 
reporting includes the Foundation topic in her  lectures, saying that the 
Foundation “made us clean up our act.” I’ve also heard  a seasoned MFT who 
teaches a 
class titled, “Counseling as a Career Option”  lament that practicing 
psychotherapy is becoming a profession only for the rich  (both as 
practitioners and 
clients). Perhaps this is due to recent constrictions  and costs associated 
with lawsuits, training programs, licensing and insurance  policies? It appears 
that the Foundations’ efforts to drive non-cognitive  therapy beyond the grasp 
of un-wealthy clients are having some success.  Kondora’s and Beckett’s 
studies indicate that the Foundation has been successful  in many of its 
efforts to 
manage public perception of child abuse victims,  therapists and the people 
accused of child abuse. Kondora and Beckett show that  not only has public 
perception of victimized children become skeptical, but in  fact, the press 
often 
goes beyond the Victorian custom of neutrality on all  fronts of the issue, to 
out-right sympathy for accused molesters. What began in  the 1960s and 1970s 
as a child welfare movement has arrived today as an accused  sex-offender 
welfare movement (Goldsmith 2003); and right in time for an era  when people 
are 
having more babies, less birth control and have easier ways to  create home 
based child pornography than ever before....The Foundation’s efforts  in and 
out 
of the court room have provided reasons for health insurance  companies to 
reduce insurance payments for mental health care and have tied  those payments 
generally to mental health diagnoses. Training programs for  clinical 
therapists 
have become more like the clinical training programs of the  cold-war years, 
more science oriented, more stringent, more biologically and  drug oriented, 
and less theory and talked based. Many of the support groups,  networks, 
newsletters, journals, and even significant names in the child welfare  
movement of 
the 1980’s and 1990’s have faded, vanished or been displaced by  on-line and 
other services of the FMS Foundation. Kondora, Lori L. 1997. A  Textual 
Analysis of the Construction of the False Memory Syndrome:  Representations in 
Popular Magazines; 1990-1995. Ph.D. diss. University of  Wisconsin, Madison. - 
Beckett, Katherine. 1996. Culture and the Politics of  Signification: The Case 
of 
Child Sexual Abuse. SOCIAL PROBLEMS, Vol. 43, No. 1,  February: 57-76. 
_http://www.newschool.edu/nssr/historymatters/papers/NoelPackard.pdf_ 
(http://www.newschool.edu/nssr/historymatters/papers/NoelPackard.pdf) 
 
 
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