Skip to main content.
Religion News Blog is a non-profit service providing academics, religion professionals and other researchers with religion & cult news
ReligionNewsBlog

Religion news articles about religious cults, sects, world religions, and related issues

Navigation:
Home | Site Menu | About RNB | RNB Store | Cult FAQ | Cult Experts | Apologetics Index | Cult Information Search Engine
A Random Image


 Search



 Share & Follow Religion News Blog


 Remember These Stories?


 Amazon

More articles about: International Churches of Christ:

Woman jailed for abducting, brainwashing children

Reuters, via the Toronto Star, Canada
Dec. 4, 2006
Allan Dowd
www.thestar.com

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Tuesday December 5, 2006

VANCOUVER, British Columbia — A woman at the center of a bitter international custody case was sentenced to 16 months in prison by a Canadian judge who said Monday she brainwashed her children and misled the French public with lies about her former husband.

Nathalie Gettliffe, who fled to France with her son and daughter in 2001, inflicted psychological abuse on them over a five year period by making them hate their Canadian father, British Columbia Supreme Court Judge Marvyn Koenigsberg said.

“Psychological abuse can be as harmful as physical abuse,” the judge told the court in Vancouver.

Gettliffe, a dual Canadian-French citizen, pleaded guilty last month to parental kidnapping. Under the sentence, she will likely spend only six more months in jail because of credit for the time she has already spent in custody since her arrest in April.

Gettliffe’s custody case generated wide interest in France, with her supporters saying she was protecting the children from an abusive father and his cult-like evangelical Christian church — allegations the judge said Gettliffe knew were false.

ICOC: a cult of Christianity

Theologically, the International Churches of Christ – which Gettliffe’s former husband belongs to – is a cult of Christianity.

Sociologially, the movement has many cultic elements as well.

“If she did not directly vilify the children’s father publicly then she did not disavow it,” Koenigsberg ruled, noting that at one point French officials worried the case might spark civil disobedience.

Gettliffe abducted the children to France after a Canadian divorce court refused to let her take them there for a 10-month visit on the grounds that it would harm their close relationship with their father, Scott Grant, who lives in the Vancouver area.

Koenigsberg said Gettliffe began making allegations against her former husband to avoid the consequences of having broken the law, and then over five years had “effectively brainwashed” the children to break their emotional ties to Grant.

Gettliffe, who last week apologized to the court, sat quietly in the prisoner’s box during the sentencing. Grant, who now has custody of the children, was also in court.

“It is a very sad case … for me it still goes on,” Grant said after the hearing, admitting he was still worried Gettliffe might try to abduct the children again after she is released from prison.

Grant said his children, who are now 12 and 11 years old, no longer hate him, but are still confused about the stories they were told about him and why their mother is in prison.

Gettliffe’s attorney Richard Fowler said she was relieved the case was over so she “can get on with her life.” Gettliffe gave birth while in prison awaiting trial and has a child in France from a husband there.

The judge said she would not object to Gettliffe serving some of her sentence and the post-prison three-year probation period in France.

Bookmark share or email this Religion News Blog page Bookmark, Share, or Email This Page

 

Read another article Read Another Article

Tags and keywords for this Apologetics Index entry Related News Articles

arrow

RSS Feed Subscribe to Religion News Blog updates

Religion News Find Related Information

Use our custom search engines to find additional research resources on religions and cults:
arrow ApologeticsSearch.com: Search for apologetics articles, books, videos, and other research resources across 135 Christian apologetics websites and blogs.
arrow CounterCultSearch.com: Search for information about (religious) cults, cult-like organizations, and cults experts -- as well as paranormal-, New Age, and pseudoscientific claims -- across 260+ websites, blogs and forums dedicated to cult research, spiritual abuse, ex-cult counseling & support.

Religion News Find Related Religion & Spirituality Books at Amazon.com

Religion News Possibly related... or Most Popular Religion News Articles

Religion News Search Search Religion News Blog