-Caveat Lector-

The Price of Bad Memories
Elizabeth F. Loftus
http://faculty.washington.edu/eloftus/Articles/price.htm
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After hundreds of articles on recovered memory therapy, one might have
thought there was not much left to say. But a November 1997 front-page
article in the New York Times headlined '"Memory' Therapy Leads to a Lawsuit
and Big Settlement" suggested that the repressed memory controversy had
broken new records (Belluck 1997).

The article reported on the case of Patricia Burgus, whose family had
accepted a $10.6 million settlement, the biggest to date in any lawsuit
accusing mental health professionals of implanting false memories into the
minds of patients. Burgus had been referred to a large Chicago hospital for
severe postpartum depression. Burgus alleged that while she was undergoing
psychiatric therapy from 1986 to 1992, she was persuaded that she had been
part of a satanic cult, had been abused by numerous men, had abused her own
children, and had had sex with John F. Kennedy. Drugs and hypnosis helped her
"recall" that she had cannibalized people. At one point, her husband brought
in some hamburger meat from a family picnic, and the therapists agreed to
test the meat to see if it was human.

Burgus was diagnosed with multiple personality disorder (MPD) and developed
numerous "alters" (alternative personalities). Even today, Burgus has trouble
remembering what they were, in part because her therapist would get her
alters mixed up with those of his other patients.

On the fourth day of her deposition, in December 1996, Burgus was trying to
recall some of the alters for the attorney who was questioning her (Burgus v.
Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center):

Q: Who did he ask to come out?

A : Little - Little One.

Q : Little Little One or just Little One?

A : I'm sorry. I stuttered. Little One. He - oh, just a second. There was . .
. something called - let me think - guardian keeper or - I later found out
that was someone else's personality, a different patient.

Q : Oh, he was mixing other people's personalities in with yours?

A : Yes.

She went on to explain that this would happen a couple times a month. Then
she relayed the following unusual therapeutic activity:

A : Well, there was one where he played a tape recording to me of someone
else's session, and it was a woman speaking in a child's voice. And later in
the session that I was listening to, the person switched back to a voice that
I recognized on the unit and realized that that was not me on the tape.

Burgus eventually realized that she did not have MPD after all. She had not
been an abused devil-worshipping cannibal. She had not abused her young
children, who had also been hospitalized for nearly three years because
doctors thought her disorder might be genetic. She sued her former
therapists, or mind "hackers," as they were called in a recent New Yorker
piece (Andersen 1997). The case was settled on the day that the trial was
expected to commence, six years after the case had been filed, and eleven
years after Burgus began her questionable therapy. Of the $10.6 million, the
medical center agreed to pay approximately $3 million and the psychiatrists
agreed to pay the remainder.

Within weeks of the Burgus settlement, there was another "first" in the long,
dreary repressed memory controversy. A federal grand jury in Houston, Texas,
returned an indictment against the administrator and four caregivers at the
former Spring Shadows Glen Hospital. The criminal charges accused the mental
health professionals (psychologists, psychiatrists, psychotherapists) of
exaggerating diagnoses and overstating the need for expensive treatment in
order to unjustly collect insurance payments.

The accusations are that the professionals convinced patients that they had
participated in satanic cults and that they had MPD. In the words of the
indictment: "It was further part of the conspiracy that the defendants and
others would and did fraudulently treat the insured patients for MPD caused
by unsubstantiated and unrealistic allegations and abuses, including satanic
ritual abuse and cult activity, while at the same time creating medical
records to substantiate such treatment" (United States v. Peterson et al.,
8).

Moreover, the indictment alleged that the defendants "did fraudulently elicit
statements of satanic ritual abuse and cult activities from the admitted
patients, through nontraditional treatment modalities, including the use of
leading or suggestive questions during therapy sessions while the patients
were: under hypnosis; under the influence of a drug or combination of drugs;
isolated from their families, friends, and the outside world . . ." (United
States v. Peterson et al., 8).

While the case against the Spring Shadows Glen professionals is believed to
be the first federal indictment involving allegations that therapists
instilled false memories, the civil case brought by the Burgus family follows
a long trail of similar cases.

The False Memory Syndrome Foundation (FMSF) published the results of its
survey of the outcomes of recent malpractice suits against therapists in its
December 1997 newsletter ( False Memory Syndrome Foundation 1997). An
analysis of 105 malpractice suits flied by former patients against their
therapists for development of false memories revealed that one case was
dropped, forty-two were settled out of court, fifty-three are still pending,
and nine went to trial. Of the cases that went to trial, all ended in a
verdict in favor of the plaintiff (patient) against the defendant
(therapist).

A few of the specific trial outcomes were mentioned in a sidebar to the
survey results: In 1994, a Pennsylvania jury awarded $272,232 to
seventeen-year-old Nicole Althaus and her parents. In two separate Minnesota
cases against the same psychiatrist, Vynnette Hammane was awarded
approximately $2.6 million (in 1995) and Elizabeth Carlson was awarded $2.5
million (in 1996) against the psychiatrist, whom the women claimed had used
hypnosis, guided imagery, sodium amytal, and other methods to get them to
develop false memories of childhood sexual and ritual abuse. In 1997, a Texas
jury awarded $5.8 million to Lynn Carl, who claimed she was misdiagnosed as
an MPD with five hundred alters and treated for satanic ritual abuse.

What can we expect in the coming years? First, there will be more civil
suits, as once-destroyed families find themselves reconciling. As for
criminal indictments, it is hard to know whether more will follow. One
organization to which at least one of the indicted therapists belongs, the
International Society for the Study of Dissociation (ISSD), issued a news
release objecting to the criminal charges and soliciting financial assistance
for the defense. The ISSD said that the legal development could have a
chilling effect on the provision of health care in the United States. The
organization further said that prosecutions on charges of this kind show that
"the Federal government is indicating their willingness to set standards for
diagnosis and treatment" and that the government has decided the
professionals involved "purposely created false memories" and has "seemingly
decided that the patients' memories were not accurate."

The ISSD further invited readers of its news release to imagine when the
criminalization scenario is generalized to other patients and other
professionals: "Will any patient who is unhappy with the outcome of any form
of therapy be able to allege that purposeful criminal fraudulent therapy was
performed and cause a therapist to be indicted? Will the government now seek
to imprison doctors treating patients who allege Agent Orange exposure, Gulf
War Syndrome, unknowing exposure to government radiation testing, or other
events that the government has not wished to acknowledge? Will mental health
providers risk jail time for treating those traumatized by combat activities
that the government prefers to deny? Will a physician be subject to prison
time for mistakenly diagnosing indigestion in a patient who is having a heart
attack? If these things can occur, then what professionals in their right
mind will want to remain as providers of health care?"

Clearly some therapists are threatened by the very prospect, not to mention
the reality, of criminal prosecution, and will take steps to make sure this
doesn't happen again. Time will tell.

The problems that our society has had to face over the repressed memory
controversy have changed to some extent, but they are still not over.
Compared to the early 1990s, there are fewer cases of people suing
individuals based on claims of massive repression and recovery of abuse.
There are more cases of people suing their former therapists for planting
false memories. There is the prospect of criminal prosecution based upon
fraudulent practices. But can we walk away from this controversy now? There
are still hundreds, perhaps thousands of families who have been devastated by
repressed memory accusations. There are elderly parents who have one wish
left in life - simply to be reunited with their children. There are talented
mental health professionals who have found their profession tarred by the
controversy. And there are the genuinely abused patients who have felt their
experiences trivialized by the recent sea of unsubstantiated, unrealistic,
and bizarre accusations.

There is still much to be done to fix these remaining problems.

References

Andersen, Kurt. 1997. Speak, memory. The New Yorker, November 24, p. 56.

Belluck, Pam. 1997. Memory therapy leads to a lawsuit and big settlement. New
York Times, November 6, pp. A1, A10.

Burgus, Burgus, Burgus and Burgus v. Rush-Presbyterian-St Luke's Medical
Center, a corp. et al. Deposition of Patricia Burgus, taken December 4, 1996.

False Memory Syndrome Foundation. 1997. Newsletter, 6 (11), December, pp.
7-9.

United States of America v. Peterson, Seward, Mueck, Keraga, and Davis. U.S.
Dist. Ct., Southern District, Texas, No. H-97-237.

Bio:

Elizabeth Loftus is in the Psychology Department, University of Washington,
Seattle, Washington 98195-1525. She coauthored The Myth of Repressed Memory
(St. Martin's Press) and is
president-elect of the American Psychological Society.

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