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More articles about: Satanic and/or ritual abuse:

Satanic panic attack


ReligionNewsBlog.com • Friday August 2, 2002

The Globe and Mail (Canada), Aug. 1, 2002
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/

By MARGARET WENTE
Thursday, August 1, 2002 – Page A21

On June 3, 1992, Saskatchewan police launched a mass arrest in a shocking case of child sex abuse. Among the nine people they rounded up was John Popowich, a police officer. He was accused of forcing children to engage in anal intercourse and fellatio at gunpoint.

The children all had one thing in common: a babysitting service in Martensville, a sleepy little town near Saskatoon with some strongly religious citizens. The day after the arrests, Martensville’s mayor and police chief held a news conference to appeal for national support in its time of crisis.

The panic that swept through Martensville was being repeated throughout North America. Each case featured bizarre accusations, alleged Satanic cults, grossly inept questioning of children, and hysterical adults who believed every impossible tale wrung from them.

The panics have been thoroughly debunked. But Mr. Popowich’s nightmare lasted for a decade. It didn’t end until last month, when he finally won an apology from the government and a $1.3-million settlement. “The most important part,” he told me yesterday, “was getting my name cleared.”

The hysteria in Martensville began with a complaint from parents, who told police that their two-year-old had been sexually assaulted at the babysitting service. The file wound up in the hands of a rookie officer named Claudia Bryden, who promptly began to interview all the children and their families. The children began accusing various adults, including the owners and their son. One investigator, suspecting police involvement, showed a child a book of photos of officers in the Saskatoon police department. He picked out a picture of Mr. Popowich.

By that time, Satanic panic had swept the town.
(…)

Meantime, a team from the RCMP and the Saskatoon police took over the investigation. The new team soon found that the evidence was weak, to say the least. In fact, there wasn’t any. There were only the wild stories of the children. One investigator told the Crown prosecutors flatly that he thought Mr. Popowich was innocent. The prosecutors pressed on anyway, and Mr. Popowich and several other people went to trial.

Mr. Popowich had never met any of the children. When they couldn’t identify him in a lineup, the charges against him were stayed. But he could still be charged again and, in the eyes of much of the community, he was still guilty. “If you’re charged, people feel there’s got to be something to it,” he says.

In 1994, he launched a lawsuit against the government for malicious prosecution. The province fought back tenaciously. The documents amounted to 100,000 pages. He battled countersuits. Meantime, the two people who’d been found guilty had their convictions overturned.

Mr. Popowich’s case against the province was to finally reach the trial stage next October. But this spring, a pre-trial judge told the government it would lose. It was a clarifying moment, and the government quickly settled.

Mr. Popowich, now 56, is among the lucky ones. Unlike many of the men and women caught up in the child-abuse hysteria across North America, he never did do jail time.

Saskatchewan has now completely reversed itself. Justice Minister Chris Axworthy personally met Mr. Popowich and his family to apologize, and says the province expects to settle quickly with the other wrongfully accused who are suing over Martensville. (He also promised that no one involved in prosecuting the Martensville case would lose their jobs.)

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