National Association of Adult Survivors of Child Abuse

National Association of Adult Survivors of Child Abuse

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NAASCA Highlights

EDITOR'S NOTE: Occasionally we bring you articles from local newspapers, web sites and other sources that constitute but a small percentage of the information available to those who are interested in the issues of child abuse and recovery from it.

We also present original articles we hope will inform the community ...
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  Famous Cases of Child Sexual Abuse

by Arkady Bukh

Child sexual abuse has always been around. In the 1950s when America was wrapped in the artificial setting of the perfect family as portrayed in “Ozzie and Harriet” and “Father Knows Best,” child sexual abuse was never discussed openly and seldom prosecuted.

When a spirit of liberation and sexual freedom started sweeping the country in the 1960s, the number of reports and prosecutions soared until they peaked in the early 1990s with 429,000 being prosecuted in 1991 alone.

The actual numbers may be higher. According to the National Committee to Prevent Child Abuse, most cases involve family members or friends and about a third of the accounts are substantiated.

Since then, predator's names like Sandusky and Polanski are well known. Some like Kitzman, aren't as well known, but their trial and conviction had an impact on the investigation of child sexual abuse cases and how alleged predators are prosecuted and tried.

Dr. Mark Kitzman

Although the case of child sexual predator Mark Kitzman may not be familiar, it is well-known in legal circles. Convicted of three instances of child sexual abuse, the physician appealed because his accusers did not face him in court. Two of the convictions were reversed and the practice which today is accepted — allowing victims to testify via closed circuit television -- was begun.

Three weeks after Kitzman was indicted , the Oregon Board of Medical Examiners suspended Kitzman's license. When he was released from prison his medical license was reinstated with the provision that he is not allowed to treat patients under age 18.

Jerry Sandusky

The most famous, recent, case is Jerry Sandusky. Sandusky was on top of the college football world as an assistant coach serving under the legendary Joe “Pa” Paterno at Penn State.

Sandusky was convicted of sexually abusing children, both at his home, and on Penn State campus. Sandusky was 68 when he was sentenced to 30-60 years when he was found guilty of 45 counts of child sexual abuse.

Sandusky met many of the children through his charitable foundation, “The Second Mile,” and, according to court documents, used money, tickets to Penn State games and other gifts as lures.

Sandusky still maintains his innocence. Recently he stated in an interview, “In my heart , I know I didn't do these disgusting acts.”

Hollywood

Tinsel Town has never had a shortage of oddballs, freaks and twisted thinkers. Since the first kinescope started turning out movies on the backlots , the city has also had its share of child sexual abusers. With children being dragged by the parents in the hopes of becoming the next Shirley Temple, there have been rumors and gossip of well-known stars sexually abusing starry-eyed hopefuls.

Since 2000, there have been cases of actors, managers, production assistants and others in the industry who have been accused, tried and convicted . Professionals who treat victims of child sexual exploitation say the people convicted in Hollywood rely on the glittery lure of Hollywood to draw in their prey of aspiring actors and models.

Unlike other situations, such as Little League, Scouts and school volunteers, where adults are required to be fingerprinted and go through a criminal history check, there are no such standards within the entertainment industry.

It's something that hasn't changed and there are several cases:

Jason Michael Handy

Handy, who once described himself as a “pedophile, full blown,” had taken over 1,000 images of girls at the school across the street from his home in California.

Handy also volunteered at a church in Malibu where he worked with six-year-olds . The majority of his victims came through his employment as a prominent producer of children's television programs at Nickelodeon , where he had access to child actors both on and off the set.

Handy was sentenced in 2004.

Martin Weiss

Weiss, a talent manager who represented young actors, was arrested and charged with eight felonies. Weiss' arrest came just weeks after a report that another talent manager, Jason James Murphy, had returned to his work helping aspiring actors despite having been convicted of the same offense 15 years earlier.

Weiss, who had placed child talent in movies including Jack and Jill and The Muppets, tried to defend himself as different from Sandusky, claiming that his (Sandusky's) victims did not want to participate.

Roman Polanski

Polanski has been hiding in the open in Europe since fleeing to Europe after pleading guilty in 1977 to having sex with a 13-year old girl. Polanski, who has become a naturalized French citizen, was temporarily arrested by Swiss police at the request of USA law enforcement. The Swiss, refusing America's extradition request, allowed Polanski to return to France. In 2011, Polanski issued an apology to the woman, then 45 years old.

McMartin Preschool

In 1983, Judy Johnson, a mother of one of the preschools young students went to the police with a bizarre story. According to Johnson, the people at the preschool had numerous sexual encounters with animals and one of the teachers, Ray Buckey, had levitated in the dayroom. The police sent out a form letter to over 200 parents asking them to question their children about sexual abuse at the preschool and the hysteria started.

The McMartin Preschool trial as a well-known case in the 1980s. Members of the McMartin family who operated a preschool in California were accused of child sexual abuse involving children left in their care. The accusations were made in 1983 and the arrests and pretrial investigation lasted from 1984 until 1987. A three-year trial followed and after six years of trials, investigations and charges, no one was convicted. All of the charges were dropped in 1990, but the case, which had been the longest and most expensive in American history, was to change the way child sexual abuse cases are investigated and tried.

The case influenced how very young children were questioned for evidence in court cases with a focus on their capacity for suggestibility. Now, standard police procedure is to record using video, tape and notes when interviewing alleged victims.

Whatever became of Judy Johnson? Diagnosed with acute paranoid schizophrenia, she was found dead in 1986 of complications of chronic alcoholism.

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  The Worst Case of Child Abuse In US History – The Murder of Baby Brianna (GRAPHIC)

by letsfindthem -- January 17, 2013

Brianna Lopez who is also known to many as “Baby Brianna”, was a baby girl who was born in a New Mexico hospital on Valentines Day, 2002 to her mother, Stephanie Lopez and her father, Andy Walters. She would have turned eleven years old on February 14, 2013 but sadly, she never made it.

When Baby Brianna left the hospital after her birth she moved into a home in Las Cruces, N.M. shared by her parents and Uncle, Steven Lopez. The abuse started almost immediately. Instead of hugs and kisses Brianna received slaps and pinches. 

She was tormented on a daily basis, both verbally and physically. Slapped, kicked, punched, pinched, thrown, raped, etc. You name it this infant endured it.

When Brianna would cry at the pain that was inflicted on her, her abusers would laugh and stuff her mouth with clothing to muffle her screams. Her own mother would bite and pinch her when she got frustrated by the crying, but for the most part it was the infant's father and uncle who tormented her while Stephanie sat back and ignored her daughter's cries.

Medical examiners would later report the marks as being both old and new which proved prolong abuse. Brianna also had bleeding on her brain, both old and new, as well as broken ribs, broken legs, broken arms, lacerations to her fingers, vagina and anus. She had been abused everyday of her short life.

Baby Brianna was what many would consider a strong baby because she managed to survive 153 days despite coming into this cruel world weighing only several pounds.

On the evening of July 18th, 2002 Andy went out to purchase beer and when he came home they all proceeded to get drunk. Stephanie claimed to have had only a few beers before heading to bed in the same room the others were in. During this time both Andy and Steven decided to play their own sick, demented game where they would toss Brianna up in the air, let her hit the ceiling and watch her tumble to the ground. They would later tell authorities that Brianna was screaming and wailing when this was happening. Apparently the baby's mother didn't hear her daughter screaming and crying in agony.

Early the next morning on July 19, 2002 at approximately 7:15a.m. Stephanie awoke to Brianna crying and noticed fresh bruises on her and asked the others what happened. They told her that they may have been “a little to rough with her last night”. She accepted their answer and ignored her child's injuries.

That same morning Stephanie noticed Brianna needed a diaper change and Andy volunteered to do it.  During the diaper change he wrapped a baby wipe around his finger and inserted it into Brianna's anus. He also sodomized her with foreign objects. When Stephanie noticed Brianna near death she ignored it and decided to wait several hours before calling an ambulance. When she did find the time to call them, she lied and told them her daughter had fallen from her high chair. Apparently she was delusional enough to think authorities would by that story.

Brianna was rushed to the hospital where she was pronounced dead at 11:10AM. She was just 5 months and 5 days old.

The first officer to see baby Brianna in the hospital was Detective Lindell Wright. He remembers one thought going through his mind:   “I've got a lot to do.” 

“Literally bruised from head to toe, from the top of her head all throughout her body all the way to the big toe on her right foot.” said Governor Susana Martinez who prosecuted Brianna's family.

They took sadistic joy out of torturing this infant. Not one family member cared about her, not one of them attempted to protect her and there's zero proof to suggest she was ever shown love in her short life. She was there for their own sadistic amusement.

When police searched the home they couldn't find one toy or even a photo of Brianna laughing or smiling.  No evidence to indicate she enjoyed one moment of her life.

Many relatives including Brianna's grandparents knew what was occurring but ignored it. They knew their granddaughter was being raped by both her father and uncle, they knew she had pinch marks from head to toe in different stages of healing, they knew she was being tormented and had marks, cuts and lacerations but they turned a blind eye and let it continue for five, going on six more months until baby Brianna's little body couldn't handle the abuse any longer.

Officer Wright has seen alot during his career but Brianna's case will haunt him for life.

“I cried my eyes out. It will stay with me for the rest of my life.  It tests you to the point you're not sure you can speak,””You're afraid that the emotion will take over.” said Wright.

At the time Brianna was murdered a person who committed intentional child abuse resulting in death faced a maximum of 18 years in prison.

“Eighteen years for the life of a child?” State Sen. Mary Jane Garcia of Doña Ana said. “I thought it was absurd.”

It took three years of trying and in 2005, Senate Bill 166, also known as the “Baby Brianna Bill” was officially signed into law by Governor Bill Richardson. The bill made child abuse, which results in death, a first degree felony in New Mexico and set the mandatory minimum sentence at 30 years in prison.

Three relatives, including her grandparents, were sentenced to 30 days in jail for failing to report the abuse. The maximum is one year.

Stephanie Lopez was convicted of negligent child abuse after she failed to do anything to help her child.  The New Mexico Corrections Department said that she could be released as early as September 28, 2016. Less than 15 for her daughter's torture death. The New Mexico State Parole Board said that it's almost certain that she'll be released, provided that she finds a suitable home and can meet the requirements of her release conditions.

The public was outraged when they heard about the possible release. Dozens created petitions which quickly gained signatures and many called the Governor.

Thousands of people in the community weeped over Brianna's horrific death. Mourners who never had the chance to meet Brianna in life came together for the baby girl in her after-life. They paid for her casket and burial and claimed her body when nobody else did. Her gravesite became a memorial site with dozens of toys and flowers, something Brianna's family didn't approve of.

Brianna's family and relatives didn't put a penny towards the child's funeral, burial and grave-stone. Heck, they didn't even claim her, the community did. Her family didn't want Brianna to receive love even after her death and went out of their way to purchase a cage to go over her gravestone in an attempt to shield her. The cage is a mess, unkempt and full of trash.

The community refused to let Brianna and her story simmer and still placed flowers around the cage. They've also created another memorial site to visit and remember the little girl who never had a chance.

When asked why they put a cage over Brianna's grave-site, Brianna's family had little to say.

“They were asked, and they said they just wanted to be left alone and they wanted Brianna to be left alone, ” Martinez said.

“My first thought was, ‘Let's not talk about what's occurred here,'” Lopez said.

The community vows to not let that happen.  People still visit and leave flowers and have built another marker as well.  Brianna's story has been told dozens of times and is still being told over a decade later on websites and online memorials including Brianna Lopez Last Memories and Facebook memorials such as  In Loving Memory of Baby Brianna.

Detectives, social workers and prosecutors who worked on her case will also remember Brianna.

“Before they started the autopsy and her little face was lying on a white sheet and I thought she looks asleep,” Wright said. “So I just took the picture.”

The picture was photo-shopped to edit out all the marks, bruises and scars she had.  It's the Brianna the community likes to remember.

“There's a photograph of her to carry on of her little life,” Wright said.

“It's a reminder, of course, of why we do what we do,” Martinez said. “If you forget you'll either become calloused or you will become Jell-O.  “You can't do this job well unless you are in the middle, and that's just a good reminder why we do it.”

Brianna is never far from the detective either.  “It drives me to work harder to prevent, to be a voice for every child of abuse,” Wright said. “That's what it does.”

~~~

Brianna Lopez – Find A Grave – Brianna Mariah Lopez was buried at Dõna Ana Cemetery in Dona Ana County, New Mexico, USA

July 19, 2012 marked the 10th anniversary of the death of Baby Brianna. She would be turning 11-years-old in three weeks. RIP Brianna M. Lopez

HOME
why we started this site
RECOVERY
together we can heal
RESOURCES
help stop child abuse
ABOUT
a little about us
CONTACT
join us, get involved