Day-care sex-abuse hysteria
Day care sex abuse hysteria was a phenomenum of the 1980s involving false accusations of sexual abuse. They often involved bizzare accusations of satanic ritual abuse and other logic defying events. A prominent case in Kern County, California began the hysteria, and the panic lasted for almost a decade. The initial accusations, and the further accusations of those that came to the defense of the accused paralleled the classic witch hunts of the 1600s, and the Red scare of the 1950s.
Kern county child abuse cases
The first prominent case of ritualized sex abuse of children was in 1982 when Debbie and Alvin McCuan were accused of abusing their children. The charges were made by Mary Ann Barbour, who was the children's step-grandmother. Mary had a history of mental illness. Using coercive techniques the children told of their abuse by their parents. In 1982, the girls further accused McCuan's defense witnesses: Scott Kniffen, his wife Brenda, and his mother. Mary Ann Barbour reported that the children they had been used for prostitution; used in child pornography, tortured, made to watch snuff films, and fmade to let animals eat food out of their vaginas. The McCuans and the Kniffens, were each sentenced to over 240 years' imprisonment in 1984. The convictions of the McCuans and Kniffens were overturned in 1996.
Hysteria spreads
The sensational accusations began a wave of copycat accusations that started in California and spread thoughout the country.
McMartin preschool trial
The McMartin preschool trial started in 1983 when a mother with a history of false accusations, and possibly mental illness accused the McMartin family of sexually abusing her child. After seven years of criminal trials, no convictions were obtained, and all charges were dropped in 1990. It is one of the most famous of all the sexual abuse cases and it is as of 2006 the longest and most expensive trial in the history of the United States.
Fells Acres Day Care Center
The Fells Acres Day Care Center was a new case in 1984, when a 5-year old boy told a family member that Gerald Amirault, the bus driver at the Fells Acres day care center, had touched his penis. The boy's mother notified the authorities and Gerald was arrested. The children told fantastic stories which included being abused by a clown and a robot in the secret room at the day care center. They told of watching animals being sacrificed. One girl claimed Gerald had penetrated her anus with the twelve-inch blade of a knife. In the 1986 trial, Gerald was convicted and sentenced to 30 to 40 years in state prison.
Wee Care Nursery School
At the Wee Care Nursery School in April of 1985, a nurse took the temperature of a 4-year-old boy with a rectal thermometer and the boy said: "That's what my teacher does to me at nap time at school." The comment was reported to the local authorities. The following accusations were heard from the children: 23 year old Kelly Michaels forced the children to lick peanut butter off her genitals; she penetrated their rectums and vaginas with knives, forks and other objects. In August of 1988 after 11-months of trial, she was convicted of 115 counts of sexual abuse and sentenced to 47 years in the New Jersey state prison. After five years in prison her appeal was successful and she was released. The New Jersey Supreme Court upheld the lower court's decision and declared "the interviews of the children were highly improper and utilized coercive and unduly suggestive methods."
Cleveland child abuse scandal
In the Cleveland child abuse scandal allegations of child sexual abuse were being made by Marietta Higgs, a pediatricians at a Middlesbrough, United Kingdom hospital. She had read about a novel diagnosis known as the reflex anal dilatation test. In 1987 she diagnosed 121 children by this examination and claimed they were sexually abused. Once allegations were made, social workers were compelled by law to remove the children from their families and place them in foster homes. Initially public opinion favored the doctor and the social workers but as the number of cases increased a Public Inquiry was enacted, led by Justice Butler-Sloss who dismissed most of the cases.
Little Rascals Day Care Center
The Little Rascals Day Care Center was in Edenton, North Carolina. In April of 1989 Bob Kelley was arrested and charged with child sexual abuse. By the end of the investigation 6 other people were charged, including a woman who was in a child custody case with her police officer husband, who had no connection to the facility or the Kelleys. On May 23, 1997, the prosecution dropped all charges related to the Little Rascals case against Bob Kelley and his wife.
Causes
There is always anxiety over leaving your young children with strangers. The creation of large numbers of day care centers and more mothers taking jobs created a climate of anxiety and guilt.