Missing Pieces

The Family: A Cult of Control and Stolen Childhoods

36 min · Eilen
jakson The Family: A Cult of Control and Stolen Childhoods kansikuva

Kuvaus

"The Family" (also originally known as Santiniketan) was a highly manipulative and dangerous religious cult established in Australia around 1964 by a charismatic woman named Anne. Anne presented herself to her followers as the female reincarnation of Jesus Christ, promising them salvation and a new world order. The cult specifically targeted wealthy, educated individuals, including doctors, nurses, and psychiatrists, requiring them to surrender their vast personal wealth and estates to the group upon joining.A central mechanism of the cult's control involved severe medical and psychological abuse. The cult infiltrated a private psychiatric hospital near Melbourne called Newhaven, where vulnerable patients were subjected to extreme and unethical treatments. Cult members administered heavy doses of psychoactive drugs, primarily LSD, to the patients, while Anne personally guided their hallucinations to convince them of her divine status and recruit them. Furthermore, patients were subjected to electroconvulsive therapy, lobotomies, and deep sleep therapy—a dangerous practice where individuals were kept chemically unconscious for weeks, resulting in at least one death in 1975.The most tragic aspect of the cult was its systematic theft and abuse of children. Between 1968 and 1975, Anne acquired approximately 30 children, either through adoptions facilitated by the cult's lawyers or by coercing her adult followers into handing over their own offspring. The children were raised in severe isolation at a rural property, completely unaware of the outside world. To create the illusion of a single biological family, all the children were forced to wear identical, custom-made blue uniforms and had their hair constantly bleached platinum blonde. The children were strictly taught that Anne was their biological mother, while the other adult cult members were referred to merely as "aunts" and "uncles".The daily lives of these children were defined by control, starvation, and fear. They were fed a highly restricted diet consisting almost entirely of fruit, leading to severe malnutrition and stunted growth. Cruel punishments were violently enforced by the "aunts," who utilized physical beatings for minor infractions like bed-wetting, and imposed strict starvation diets as a form of torture. From a very young age, the children were routinely drugged with psychiatric medications to keep them docile and suppress any emotional outbursts. When they turned 15, they were forced into a terrifying "initiation" ritual, where they were administered massive doses of psychoactive drugs for three to five days straight while Anne manipulated their visions to cement their belief in her divinity.The cult's downfall began when Sarah, one of Anne's adopted daughters, developed a rebellious nature and openly challenged Anne's authority. Deemed a threat to the group's absolute control, Sarah was formally expelled from the cult at the age of 17. Sarah eventually cooperated with authorities, leading to a massive police raid on the rural compound on August 14, 1987. The children, found malnourished and heavily drugged, were finally rescued, and the cult's massive financial frauds and forged birth certificates were exposed.Despite the profound damage caused to dozens of lives, justice was severely lacking. Anne fled Australia and hid as a fugitive for six years before being arrested in New York. Shockingly, her only legal punishment for the extensive financial fraud and the destruction of the children's lives was a mere $5,000 fine. While Anne lived in comfort to the age of 98, passing away from dementia in a nursing home in 2015, her victims were left deeply scarred. Many of the children suffered from lifelong trauma and severe mental health issues, with some tragically taking their own lives because they could not adapt to the outside world. Sarah, who played a crucial role in exposing the horrors, struggled with severe mental health problems and physical ailments until her death in 2016. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity Missing Pieces-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

166 jaksot

jakson The Family: A Cult of Control and Stolen Childhoods kansikuva

The Family: A Cult of Control and Stolen Childhoods

"The Family" (also originally known as Santiniketan) was a highly manipulative and dangerous religious cult established in Australia around 1964 by a charismatic woman named Anne. Anne presented herself to her followers as the female reincarnation of Jesus Christ, promising them salvation and a new world order. The cult specifically targeted wealthy, educated individuals, including doctors, nurses, and psychiatrists, requiring them to surrender their vast personal wealth and estates to the group upon joining.A central mechanism of the cult's control involved severe medical and psychological abuse. The cult infiltrated a private psychiatric hospital near Melbourne called Newhaven, where vulnerable patients were subjected to extreme and unethical treatments. Cult members administered heavy doses of psychoactive drugs, primarily LSD, to the patients, while Anne personally guided their hallucinations to convince them of her divine status and recruit them. Furthermore, patients were subjected to electroconvulsive therapy, lobotomies, and deep sleep therapy—a dangerous practice where individuals were kept chemically unconscious for weeks, resulting in at least one death in 1975.The most tragic aspect of the cult was its systematic theft and abuse of children. Between 1968 and 1975, Anne acquired approximately 30 children, either through adoptions facilitated by the cult's lawyers or by coercing her adult followers into handing over their own offspring. The children were raised in severe isolation at a rural property, completely unaware of the outside world. To create the illusion of a single biological family, all the children were forced to wear identical, custom-made blue uniforms and had their hair constantly bleached platinum blonde. The children were strictly taught that Anne was their biological mother, while the other adult cult members were referred to merely as "aunts" and "uncles".The daily lives of these children were defined by control, starvation, and fear. They were fed a highly restricted diet consisting almost entirely of fruit, leading to severe malnutrition and stunted growth. Cruel punishments were violently enforced by the "aunts," who utilized physical beatings for minor infractions like bed-wetting, and imposed strict starvation diets as a form of torture. From a very young age, the children were routinely drugged with psychiatric medications to keep them docile and suppress any emotional outbursts. When they turned 15, they were forced into a terrifying "initiation" ritual, where they were administered massive doses of psychoactive drugs for three to five days straight while Anne manipulated their visions to cement their belief in her divinity.The cult's downfall began when Sarah, one of Anne's adopted daughters, developed a rebellious nature and openly challenged Anne's authority. Deemed a threat to the group's absolute control, Sarah was formally expelled from the cult at the age of 17. Sarah eventually cooperated with authorities, leading to a massive police raid on the rural compound on August 14, 1987. The children, found malnourished and heavily drugged, were finally rescued, and the cult's massive financial frauds and forged birth certificates were exposed.Despite the profound damage caused to dozens of lives, justice was severely lacking. Anne fled Australia and hid as a fugitive for six years before being arrested in New York. Shockingly, her only legal punishment for the extensive financial fraud and the destruction of the children's lives was a mere $5,000 fine. While Anne lived in comfort to the age of 98, passing away from dementia in a nursing home in 2015, her victims were left deeply scarred. Many of the children suffered from lifelong trauma and severe mental health issues, with some tragically taking their own lives because they could not adapt to the outside world. Sarah, who played a crucial role in exposing the horrors, struggled with severe mental health problems and physical ailments until her death in 2016. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].

Eilen36 min
jakson The Curious Case of Natalia Grace: Adult or Child? kansikuva

The Curious Case of Natalia Grace: Adult or Child?

Christine and Michael Barnett, a couple from Lafayette, Indiana, had a seemingly perfect family with three biological sons, including one who was a child prodigy. When Christine was unable to have more children, the couple decided to expand their family through adoption. In May 2010, they quickly finalized the adoption of a girl named Natalia. Her birth certificate stated she was born in Ukraine on September 4, 2003, which made her around six or seven years old at the time. Natalia had dwarfism, a condition causing short stature, along with vision and spinal issues.Shortly after welcoming her into their home, the Barnetts noticed several alarming inconsistencies. Despite having spinal problems that supposedly affected her mobility, Natalia was seen running swiftly towards the ocean during a family trip. Christine noticed that Natalia’s physical development resembled that of a much older individual, and she soon began menstruating. Furthermore, Natalia possessed a sophisticated vocabulary typical of an adult, spoke without a foreign accent, and neither understood the Ukrainian language nor had any memories of her supposed home country.Medical professionals were brought in to investigate her actual age. Bone age tests in 2010 and 2011 suggested she was slightly older than her documents stated, but by 2012, doctors evaluating her overall physical and dental development concluded she was likely a teenager or even much older.Her behavior simultaneously grew violent and disturbing. Natalia drew pictures depicting the murder of her adoptive family, claiming she planned to roll them in carpets and bury them in the garden. She would frequently stand over the parents' bed in the middle of the night and simply stare at them. The situation escalated dangerously when she attempted to push Christine into an electric fence and allegedly tried to poison her mother's coffee with household chemicals.Following the poisoning attempt, Natalia was placed in a psychiatric facility in April 2012, where she reportedly confessed to a doctor that she was actually 18 years old. Prompted by this revelation, the Barnetts petitioned the court to formally change her age. In August 2012, the Supreme Court of Marion County, Indiana, legally changed her birth year to 1989, effectively acknowledging that she was an adult woman of nearly 23 years old.Now legally responsible for an adult, the Barnetts rented an apartment for Natalia, paid her rent, bought her groceries, and ensured she received state financial assistance due to her dwarfism. In 2013, the Barnetts moved to Canada so their prodigy son could attend university, but they continued to cover Natalia's rent and living expenses from afar. Eventually, Natalia stopped communicating with them and sought out a new family to adopt her, once again pretending to be a teenager.In a highly unusual legal twist in 2014, authorities arrested Christine and Michael Barnett. Even though the court had officially established Natalia as a woman born in 1989, the parents were bafflingly charged with abandoning a dependent child. This led to a prolonged and paradoxical legal battle over the alleged neglect of an individual legally recognized as an adult woman. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].

1. kesä 202633 min
jakson The Case of Irene Garza kansikuva

The Case of Irene Garza

Irene Garza was a young, intelligent, and ambitious woman born on November 15, 1934, in McAllen, Texas. She was highly active in her community, winning the title of Miss South Texas in 1958, and working as a teacher dedicated to helping children from impoverished families. She often spent her own salary on books and clothing for her students. Faith played a central role in her life; she was a member of the Legion of Mary and frequently visited her church to find peace.On the evening of April 16, 1960, which was Holy Saturday, 25-year-old Irene drove her parents' car to the Sacred Heart Church in McAllen for confession. She told her parents she would return afterward, but she never came home. Her parents reported her missing the next morning, and her car was soon discovered parked near the church. On April 19, her purse, a left high-heeled shoe, and a lace garter were found near an irrigation canal. On April 21, Irene's body was recovered from the canal. An autopsy revealed she had been sexually assaulted and died from asphyxiation. A nearly new film projector was also found in the water near her body, which investigators believed was tied to her by the perpetrator to keep her from floating to the surface.The investigation quickly focused on John Feit, a 27-year-old priest at the church where Irene was last seen. Witnesses confirmed seeing Irene walking toward the rectory with Feit, and other clergy members noticed scratches on his hands and his unexplained absences that day. Furthermore, police received an anonymous note linking the discovered film projector directly to Feit. Suspicion deepened because, just three days before Irene's disappearance, a 20-year-old woman named Maria Guerra had been attacked in another local church by a man wearing a cassock. Guerra later identified Feit in a police lineup as her attacker. Feit failed polygraph tests regarding both incidents, yet he was not immediately charged for Irene's murder due to a lack of physical DNA evidence, as well as the immense political and social influence the church held at the time. Instead of facing justice, Feit was transferred to a monastery in Missouri as part of an alleged institutional cover-up. Feit eventually left the priesthood in 1972, moved to Phoenix, married, and started a family.The case remained cold until 2002 when a monk named Dale Tacheny came forward. Tacheny revealed that while counseling Feit at the Missouri monastery in 1963, Feit had confessed to Irene's murder. Feit admitted to taking Irene to the rectory for confession, attacking her, and suffocating her, further boasting that his superiors helped cover up the crime. Despite this damning testimony, a grand jury initially declined to indict Feit due to the lack of contemporary witnesses.The turning point came in 2014 when a newly elected District Attorney reopened the investigation. John Feit was finally arrested in February 2016 at over 80 years old. In December 2017, he was found guilty of Irene Garza's murder and sentenced to life in prison. Feit never publicly admitted to the crime and died in prison in February 2020. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].

31. touko 202646 min
jakson Small Evil: The Tragic Upbringing of Christa Pike kansikuva

Small Evil: The Tragic Upbringing of Christa Pike

Christa Pike's life story is a harrowing account of severe childhood trauma, untreated mental illness, and a tragic culmination in a brutal crime. Born prematurely in March 1976, she suffered from hyaline membrane disease and experienced respiratory failure, leading to a stay on a ventilator and early developmental issues. Later medical evaluations revealed severe damage to her frontal lobes, fundamentally impairing her ability to regulate her emotions.Her upbringing was defined by extreme neglect, instability, and a lack of proper role models. Her parents were entrenched in substance abuse and tumultuous relationships, providing a chaotic home environment. Her mother frequently prioritized abusive romantic partners over her daughter and treated Christa more like a peer and a drinking companion than a child. Her father was largely absent, started a new family, and was physically abusive towards Christa, frequently beating her with a leather belt buckle. Christa was constantly shuffled between family members, finding fleeting comfort only with her paternal grandmother, whose death when Christa was 12 left her deeply traumatized and suicidal.Throughout her youth, Christa endured repeated sexual assaults by a neighbor, a stranger who knocked her unconscious with a rock, and her mother's boyfriends. Tragically, her mother constantly dismissed her pleas for help and accused Christa of lying to ruin her relationships, leaving the young girl feeling completely isolated and unprotected. This profound lack of support, combined with an untreated bipolar disorder diagnosis, led to escalating behavioral issues, severe mood swings, multiple school expulsions, and time in a juvenile detention center.At age 18, hoping to finish her education, Christa joined a government-funded Job Corps program in Knoxville, Tennessee. There, she became fiercely dependent on Tadaryl Shipp, a young man with a troubled past who claimed to have dark, magical occult powers. When Christa returned from a holiday visit, Tadaryl claimed that a 19-year-old classmate, Colleen Slemmer, had pressured him into a romantic encounter. Around the same time, Christa’s dorm room was vandalized, an act she baselessly blamed on Colleen.Deciding she would "no longer be a victim," Christa orchestrated a gruesome revenge. In January 1995, under the guise of making peace and sharing marijuana, Christa, Tadaryl, and a friend named Shadolla Peterson lured Colleen to an isolated area near an abandoned power plant. For nearly an hour, Christa and Tadaryl brutally tortured Colleen, culminating in her murder. Christa kept a piece of the victim's skull as a trophy and openly bragged about the killing around the campus, leading to their swift arrests.Christa was convicted and sentenced to death, becoming the youngest woman to receive the ultimate penalty. While incarcerated, her violent tendencies continued; she nearly killed another inmate and participated in a foiled escape plot orchestrated with a prison guard in 2012. Her case remains highly controversial, with advocates arguing that her severe brain damage, untreated mental health disorders, and extensive history of profound abuse should serve as mitigating factors to commute her sentence to life imprisonment. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].

30. touko 20261 h 4 min
jakson The Case of Girly Chew and the Doctor of Deception kansikuva

The Case of Girly Chew and the Doctor of Deception

Girly Chew, a bright and independent woman from Malaysia, met a charismatic man named Diazien Hossencofft while vacationing at a water park in Texas in the early 1990s. Diazien presented himself as a wealthy, Swedish-born cardiothoracic surgeon and geneticist who had studied in Tokyo. The couple fell in love, married in 1993, and settled in Albuquerque, New Mexico, where Girly found a steady job at a bank.However, Diazien's entire life was a massive fabrication. Born Armando Chavez in Texas, he had completely faked his medical credentials, legally changed his name, and operated as a con artist. He scammed terminally ill patients by convincing them he had discovered a miraculous cure for cancer, charging them exorbitant sums of money for fake treatments consisting of vitamin B6 and his own blood. During their marriage, Diazien was continually unfaithful. He even brought home a baby boy named Dmitri, falsely claiming to have adopted him from Mexico. Girly eventually discovered that Dmitri was actually Diazien's biological son, conceived with a Japanese tourist whom he had manipulated into giving up the child.When Girly uncovered her husband's web of lies, including his fake identity and infidelity, Diazien violently attacked and choked her. Terrified for her life, Girly filed for divorce in 1999, moved into a secure apartment, and warned her coworkers to call the police immediately if she was ever even ten minutes late for work.Meanwhile, Diazien began a relationship with Linda Henning, a local woman deeply obsessed with UFOs and paranormal conspiracy theories. He manipulated Linda by convincing her that he was an immortal, 2,000-year-old reptilian alien, and promised that she would become a reptilian queen in a coming new world order.On September 10, 1999, Girly failed to show up for work, prompting her colleagues to immediately contact the authorities. Police entered her apartment to find a strong smell of bleach and luminal-positive bloodstains on the carpet, indicating a violent struggle and a subsequent cover-up. Shortly after, a highway worker found a blood-soaked tarp and Girly's clothing discarded 200 kilometers away. Investigators discovered the DNA of both Diazien and Linda in Girly's apartment, and Linda's hair was found alongside Girly's blood on the tarp. DNA belonging to another friend from their UFO group, Bill Miller, was also found at the apartment.Diazien was arrested and ultimately pleaded guilty, receiving a life sentence. In a bizarre confession, he claimed that Miller had killed Girly to practice combat for an upcoming alien invasion, and that Diazien had only gone to the apartment to clean up, accidentally planting a vial of Linda's blood as a decoy. Linda Henning was convicted for her involvement and sentenced to 73 years in prison. Despite disturbing rumors that her remains were consumed, prosecutors believe Girly's body was buried in the desert, and she has never been recovered. Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support [https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/missing-pieces--6886558/support?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=rss].

29. touko 202655 min