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In California, a Question of Abuse; An Excess of Child Molestation
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Cases Brings Kern County's Investigative Methods Under Fire.
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The Washington Post, May 31, 1989, FINAL Edition
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BY: Jay Mathews, Washington Post Staff Writer
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SECTION: Style, p. d01
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STORY TYPE: News National
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LINE COUNT: 314 WORD COUNT: 3456
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BAKERSFIELD, Calif. - Only two of the children at the trial could even
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identify Gina Miller. She was Colleen Forsythe's friend, the only
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nonrelative in Bakersfield's infamous Pitts family child molestation and
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pornography ring.
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Identified or not, the jury found her guilty with the others in 1985 and
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sent the soft-spoken, auburn-haired fast-food worker to prison for 405
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years, forcing her to end abruptly the breast-feeding of her fourth child,
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10-month-old Tammra.
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After hearing the lurid allegations made during the seven-month trial,
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the 12 jurors from this San Joaquin Valley city of oil wells and fruit
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trees may have felt even the most severe punishment was insufficient.
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Children testified that several adult members of the Pitts family gathered
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regularly to sodomize and molest their own sons, daughters, nephews or
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nieces, often after forcing drugs or alcohol on them. Children said they
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saw cameras apparently filming the sexual acts.
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There had never been anything like it here, and in a city full of
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families from Oklahoma and the South who prided themselves on their
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Christian values and adherence to law and order, the reaction was horror
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and outrage. Children could not make up such stories, prosecutors
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repeatedly reminded the jurors and the public. "I can't conceive of a
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reason for something like this," said Superior Court Judge Gary T. Friedman
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as he pronounced sentences. "I doubt if our friends in the animal kingdom
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would treat their young in such a fashion."
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A few defense attorneys raised objections to the extraordinary prison
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terms. The total of 2,619 years for the seven defendants set a child abuse
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case record for California and probably the whole country. Defense
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attorneys noted that no adults had testified to witnessing the crimes, that
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there was no sign of the alleged pornographic films or videotapes and that
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the medical evidence was controversial. But such objections were buried in
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an outpouring of disgust at the trial testimony and a growing concern about
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mass child abuse cases materializing in many other parts of the country.
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Then, as months went by, a few Bakersfield residents began to wonder
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about the Pitts case and several other sexual abuse investigations that had
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been carried out for several years by a number of very active officials in
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the Kern County district attorney's and sheriff's offices. One analysis
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showed that in 1982 the county's rate of arrests for child molesting was
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twice the state average. Investigations that initially focused on just one
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or two children seemed to grow to include many more.
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Finally, a county investigation of an alleged satanic cult, a group that
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made the Pitts defendants appear kindly by comparison, careened irrevocably
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out of control. Child witnesses who had been repeatedly interviewed, much
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like the witnesses in the Pitts and several other cases, told investigators
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that the cult had not only molested children but conducted blood rites and
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even killed babies. Frantic efforts to discover the bodies proved
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fruitless, and then three young witnesses went one crucial step further.
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They identified as members of the satanic ring a sheriff's deputy, a social
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worker and a deputy district attorney--persons with impeccable reputations
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who could not possibly have been where the children said they saw them.
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This was the turning point. The credibility of both witnesses and
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investigators in the series of molestation cases began to come into serious
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question. Gina Miller, obsessed with thoughts of her children, said she
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felt her spirits lifting for the first time. Perhaps she had a chance to
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get out soon.
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Within months a special investigative team from the state attorney
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general's office had descended on Bakersfield and produced one of the most
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damning reports one California agency had ever written about another. The
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80-page document concluded that a county child sexual abuse coordinator and
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sheriff's deputies overinterviewed and pressured child witnesses, gave them
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opportunities to share accounts of the case, and assumed anything a child
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said was true. The report said this prompted investigators "to accept the
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children's statements without question, to neglect to verify those
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statements through additional questions of the victim and others close to
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the victim, and to fail to seek additional corroborative evidence to
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support the children's claims."
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The county's investigation, the report concluded, "foundered in a sea of
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unproven allegations, insufficient corroborative evidence, and bizarre
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allegations that in some instances were proven to be false and raised
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serious questions about the victims' credibility."
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The state's highest law enforcement officials had decided that, in
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Bakersfield at least, horribly detailed stories of abuse and molestation
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told by innocent children might not always be true. Not only did the report
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challenge an article of faith in the conviction of the Pitts family and
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other defendants here, but it was directly critical of methods used by
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investigators who had participated, at least in part, in gathering
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testimony used against the Pitts family and many others.
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The resulting furor has not drawn much attention outside California's
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San Joaquin Valley. Notable molestation cases like the McMartin Preschool
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trial in Los Angeles have preempted most national media attention. But the
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attorney general's report on Bakersfield paints a picture of what has to be
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considered one of the clumsiest and most destructive child abuse
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investigations in American history. The report leaves unanswered many
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questions about how to deal with such tragedies, and what to do about many
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other Kern County residents left in prison whose cases have not attracted a
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full-scale second look.
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For the attorney general's report said nothing directly about the Pitts
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defendants. Miller said she experienced a sinking feeling that the state's
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exposure of investigative clumsiness might not help them after all, and
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others raised the same concerns.
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Glenn Cole, a retired accountant who led the county grand jury from 1983
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to 1985, said he believes "innocent people are in jail right today" because
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children were "questioned to the point where they could not tell truth from
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fiction." He said he thinks the initial investigators were not properly
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trained and the attorney general's office should have done more to right
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the wrongs. "I try to put it out of my mind," Cole said, "but I get very
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emotional about it."
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Some attorneys, particularly those defending the Pittses, are beginning
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to compare many of the Bakersfield child abuse investigations to the Salem
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witch trials. They say they fear that instinctive loathing over unusually
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egregious accounts of child molestation has subverted the rule of law and
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due process and unnecessarily shattered dozens of lives, including those of
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several children.
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In some minds the parallels across three centuries are very close.
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Michael Snedeker, a San Francisco attorney representing one of the Pitts
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defendants, said the Salem trials began in 1692 with two children who,
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after repeated questioning, identified many local people as witches. "The
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Salem witchcraft fever did not break until the children made absolutely
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unbelievable accusations, pointing their damning fingers at the governor's
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wife," he said. "They also accused those most eager in the prosecution of
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witches. Once disbelieved in a few particulars, they lost the power to
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condemn they undoubtedly never sought."
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Bitter arguments have broken out here over the guilt or innocence of the
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Pitts defendants and several others jailed after investigations similar to
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the discredited satanic case. At the very least, the turmoil shows how
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damaging a misstep in a child abuse case can be, and how it may take years
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to erase the effects of overzealous interviewing and an unshakable belief
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in the veracity of children, even those under severe emotional pressure.
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In the last several months two of the alleged child victims in the Pitts
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case have recanted, saying nothing at all happened in the green house on
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Sycamore Street where the molestations were supposed to have occurred.
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The sudden shift in the cases sparked unusual tensions between many
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leading Bakersfield citizens. Andrew Gindes, a former prosecutor who
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handled the Pitts case, has sued Alfred T. Fritts, former
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co-publisher/editor of the Bakersfield Californian, for libel after the
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newspaper printed a story about one witness's recantation. Gindes'
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complaint alleged that Fritts was hostile toward him because Fritts feared
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his "own activities would be disclosed if a vigorous policy was pursued by
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law enforcement against child molesters." Dennis Kinnaird, an attorney
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representing Fritts and other defendants in the case, called the allegation
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"totally incorrect" and said, "We don't think it has any basis in fact."
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Gindes, in an interview, expressed outrage that the results of a lengthy
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jury trial were now being questioned, and accused attorneys for the Pitts
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defendants of organizing a "media hype." "I don't think the media should be
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used to conduct a public relations campaign to attempt to prejudice the
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judicial system," he said.
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Investigators and prosecutors here who handled most of the cases say
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that their evidence stands up, and bitterly denounce the decision to drop
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the satanic cult case. Kern County District Attorney Edward R. Jagels, who
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refused to prosecute the satanic case, still defends the investigative
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methods and lengthy prison sentences in the Pitts and other cases.
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Arguments against them, he said, "just don't hang together."
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Although some attorneys with the state attorney general's office
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privately express doubts about the evidence in the Pitts and other cases
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brought during the widespread molestation investigations of 1982 to 1985,
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they say they can do nothing to overturn jury verdicts. Deputy Attorney
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General Thomas Gede, who was assigned to the Pitts case on appeal, said
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that after reading all 14,000 pages of trial transcript he is convinced of
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the guilt of all seven defendants.
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While those verdicts are being appealed, the Pitts defendants and many
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others remain in prison with multiple life sentences, wondering if they
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will ever leave prison and, if they do, ever restore a semblance of their
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previous lives.
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Colleen Forsythe, sentenced to 373 years in the Pitts case, said her
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13-year-old daughter Windy, one of the two witnesses who have recently
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recanted, has been through several foster homes and returned more than once
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to the custody of juvenile authorities.
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During trial, Forsythe, now 30, insisted on her innocence. "There was no
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way I was going to say that I did something like that when I didn't," she
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said during an interview at the California Institution for Women in
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Frontera.
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Miller rejected an early offer of a lighter sentence in exchange for
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testifying against the others. "People think I was crazy for not taking
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that deal, but how could I take responsibility for all these people?" she
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said.
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Bakersfield tree surgeon Roy Nokes, who spent $50,000 in a successful
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fight to clear his son and daughter-in-law of molestation charges in
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another case, said he thinks some innocent people who lacked the necessary
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financial resources accepted shorter jail terms after seeing the huge jury
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verdicts against those in the Pitts case and others. His son,
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daughter-in-law and others are suing a prosecutor and an investigator for
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the alleged harm done them and their families.
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"They should be hit hard enough that they never do anything like this
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again," he said.
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The Pitts case began in 1984 when Ricky Lynn Pitts, now 36 and a former
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truck driver and bartender, and his wife Marcella were accused of molesting
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Marcella's three sons by a previous marriage. The new wife of Marcella's
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ex-husband told authorities the boys had reported being molested during
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weekend visits to the Pittses' house on Sycamore Street.
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Marcella Pitts, 34, serving a 373-year sentence in the case, said the
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wife of her ex-husband made false charges because "she knew I was going to
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fight for custody of those kids and she knew I'd win." But the boys'
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account led authorities to take custody of them as well as eight other
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children and, after weeks of interviews with the 11 children, to file
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molestation charges against the Pittses, Forsythe, Forsythe's husband Wayne
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(they have since divorced), Forsythe's mother Grace Dill, 55, Dill's son
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Wayne Dill Jr., 33, and Miller.
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At the trial, some children said they were injected with drugs, forced
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to drink urine and alcohol and to engage in sex acts with adults and other
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children while as many as three cameras recorded the scene. In some cases,
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Ricky Pitts was accused of threatening children with being tied to a board
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hanging on the wall.
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The seven defendants all insisted on their innocence, and four took and
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passed lie detector tests. But the prosecution produced testimony from a
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physician, Bruce Woodling, that there were signs of molestation in two
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children. The prosecution said it produced medical testimony on only these
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two because they were the only ones who denied being molested.
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Many child witnesses were interviewed repeatedly by Carol Darling, the
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district attorney's child sexual abuse coordinator, before telling stories
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of abuse and agreeing to testify. Darling, who declined to comment on the
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case, retired on a disability pension last year for excessive mental and
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emotional stress.
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Andrew Rubin, an attorney who represented Ricky Pitts, said he saw many
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inconsistencies in the children's testimony and thought it sounded as if it
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came from an outside source, but the jury seemed impressed by the medical
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testimony and one moment of courtroom drama.
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A 6-year-old girl witness, whom Pitts said he had disciplined in the
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past, began screaming hysterically, "Don't let him get me! Don't let him
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kill me!" when she was asked to identify him at the defendants' table.
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Uncontrollable, she ran into the arms of Judge Friedman, who said after the
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trial he felt "she was definitely traumatized, as were the other children."
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At that point in the trial, Rubin said, "I realized I was in serious
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trouble in this case."
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The defendants began serving their sentences in the summer of 1985.
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Their continued protestations of innocence were largely ignored until
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Christina Hayes, now 14, Ricky Pitts' niece and the eldest of the child
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witnesses, had a conversation with her guardian's wife during the 1986
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Christmas season.
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The wife, Mary Isabell, said she was concerned about the girl's hostile
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attitude and poor study habits. After a visit by Christina's grandfather,
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who firmly believed in the innocence of the Pitts defendants, Isabell
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invited Christina into her bedroom to discuss the trial.
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"I said, 'We have to talk about it,'" Isabell said in a taped interview
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with private investigator Denver Dunn, which is now part of the court
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record. "I told her, 'You have to tell me the truth. Good God, if it
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happened a little bit, not at all, a whole bunch, whatever happened, I need
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to know so that I can help you.'"
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After thinking about it for a moment, Christina changed her story and
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said that nothing had happened. In the course of several days of talk with
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Robert Hayes, the guardian she refers to as her father, and with Isabell,
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she said her trial testimony had emerged from hours of interviews with
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social worker Carol Darling and other investigators, in which she was told
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accounts of what other children were saying. She said Darling told her some
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potentially violent friends of the Pitts family were out to do her harm.
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"They told me that if I didn't cooperate they would take me away from my
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dad (Hayes) and put me in a foster home," Christina said in an interview
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conducted during a walk in her Bakersfield neighborhood with no other
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adults present. Her natural mother, Clovette Pitts, disappeared when the
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others were arrested.
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Hayes said he believes Christina is now telling the truth and noted that
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her grades and general attitude have improved. But Jagels, the county
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district attorney, and other county investigators said her new story is
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false, perhaps concocted to relieve tension in the family. They emphasized
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her lengthy, detailed testimony on the stand, which defense attorneys point
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out consisted mostly of short, affirmative answers to detailed prosecution
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questions. Jagels said he thought it significant that she could not specify
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precisely where and when she heard the details of the molestations she
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testified to. Jagels also noted her recantation came shortly after she
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learned her grandmother, Grace Dill, had broken her leg in prison.
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Three weeks after Christina Hayes changed her story, district attorney's
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investigator Tam Hodgson interviewed Windy Betterton, Forsythe's daughter,
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producing a transcript that is now in the court record:
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Hodgson: "Okay. Those things that you testified to, are all of them
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true, some of them true, none of them true?"
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Betterton: "None of them are true."
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Her cousin, Sherril Boyd, told Hodgson that she had informed the girl of
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Christina Hayes' recantation and cautioned Windy to be sure she was telling
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the truth. Boyd said the girl began to cry, and then said "the people at
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the DA's office had kept asking, or saying over and over and over that they
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knew she had been molested. She had finally just made up something to keep
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them from questioning her anymore."
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In the satanic cases, the attorney general's report criticized Kern
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County investigators for interviewing "victims repeatedly, covering old
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ground, reiterating other victims' statements, failing to question the
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children's statements, and urging them to name additional suspects and
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victims." Despite state guidelines against multiple interviews, one child
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in the satanic case "was interviewed 24 times by sheriff's deputies and a
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total of 35 times in the investigation," the report said.
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Critics of the Kern County investigations, citing the attorney general's
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report, have focused on several other cases investigated about the same
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time by some of the same Kern County officials or by other officials using
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similar methods:
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Scott and Brenda Kniffen and Alvin and Deborah McCuan, two couples with
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two small children each, were given prison terms of 240 to 268 years for
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molesting their children, despite evidence that some of the children had
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falsely accused other adults and had come under the influence of a mentally
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disturbed relative who resented some of the defendants. Prosecutors used
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testimony from Woodling that was challenged by David Paul, an
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internationally recognized child abuse expert.
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David A. Duncan, a 39-year-old former oil field worker, was sent to
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prison for 60 years in 1984 on a molestation charge. Duncan was accused by
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child witnesses discovered during a sweep of a neighborhood in another
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investigation. The children were repeatedly interviewed before they
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testified, and testimony by a jail-house informant was also used against
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Duncan. He was released in late January after an appeals court reversed his
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conviction and the prosecutor dropped the charges.
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Howard L. Weimer, a 65-year-old former automobile repair shop owner, has
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been in prison for a year after a woman he and his wife cared for as foster
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parents years before accused him of molesting her. Eventually sheriff's
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deputies, in part through lengthy interviews, found four other former
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foster children of the couple who made similar accusations. The trial judge
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imposed a 42-year sentence.
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John A. Stoll, a 45-year-old former gas plant foreman, received a
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40-year sentence after being convicted of molestation on testimony from his
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son and some other children, including some who later recanted.
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Many investigators and attorneys who handled Bakersfield child abuse
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cases in the early 1980s vigorously defend their actions and ridicule the
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attorney general's report. "It was just junk," former deputy district
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attorney Gindes said in an interview. He said he still believed the satanic
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cult accusations might have merit.
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In a follow-up interview, Gindes denied criticizing the attorney
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general's attack on the satanic case investigation or saying he thought the
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satanic case might still have merit. He declined to say what his attitude
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toward the case was.
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Carol Darling's husband Brad, a lieutenant in the Kern County sheriff's
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office, has continued to speak to church groups about his belief in some of
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the satanic charges. He told one group, according to a transcript, that his
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witnesses "described things that I can't fathom a child knowing about or
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learning on television." The Darlings declined to be interviewed.
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Snedeker said an expert witness, University of California Irvine
|
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|
gynecologist R. David Miller, has concluded that the medical evidence used
|
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at the trial was meaningless. But appeals and new trials take time. Despite
|
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the widespread doubt about many of the Bakersfield molestation cases, the
|
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|
people sent to prison expect to be there for some time.
|
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Gina Miller said she is certain she will be free some day and thinks she
|
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|
can start a new life with her children in another state. Her friend Colleen
|
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|
Forsythe is less hopeful. When she is freed, she said, she may not try to
|
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|
retrieve her children from their new homes.
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|
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|
"I'm scared of kids. I'm scared to death of kids," she said. "I'm glad I
|
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|
can't have any more."
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CAPTIONS: Gina Miller, of the defendants in the Bakersfield trial.
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Grace Dill, Marcella Pitts and Colleen Forsythe in prison.
|
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Christina Hayes, eldest of the child witnesses, has since recanted her
|
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testimony. LV witnesses, has since recanted her testimony. LV
|
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|
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NAMED PERSONS: MILLER, GINA; FORSYTHE, COLLEEN; PITTS, RICKY LYNN;
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PITTS, MARCELLA
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DESCRIPTORS: Child molestation; Trials; California ;^ \ PMODEM FON ^ ABALON TXT 9* FORCE TXT
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