Skip to main content.
Related sites:
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:
Web religionnewsblog.com
Home | Site Menu | About RNB | RNB Store | Cult FAQ | Cult Experts | Apologetics Index | Cult Information Search Engine


Related

More news articles & news archive on The Body


Advertisements *

Advertise on Religion News Blog Advertise Here *
Simple steps to financial health and a good credit score


Elsewhere

The facts behind the Da Vinci Code fiction


The Body:

Doc calls cult mom `battered woman,’ controlled by sect

The Boston Herald, USA
Jan. 31, 2004
Dave Wedge
news.bostonherald.com
  • Article Tools  • Share This Story

ReligionNewsBlog.com • Item 5908 • Posted: Saturday January 31, 2004  

Click here... More articles on this topic: The Body

Attleboro cult mom Karen Robidoux is a “battered woman” who suffers from depression and post-traumatic stress disorder and was unable to flee the high-control sect - even as her baby starved to death right before her eyes, her therapist testified yesterday.

“She was unable to leave the group,” Taunton State Hospital psychiatrist Dr. Ronald Ebert said. “She was a battered woman. She was battered by the group.”

The Body

In early press reports, The Body was referred to generically as the “Attleboro cult” or “Attleboro sect.”

The group’s doctrines and practices have been heavily influenced by the teachings of Carol Balizet’s Home in Zion Ministries

The Body is a cult, both sociologicall and theologically. Theologically it a cult of Christianity

Robidoux, who faces second degree murder charges for the 1999 starvation death of her 11-month-old son, Samuel, broke down sobbing as Ebert told the Taunton Superior Court jury that she was unable to make rational decisions because the group manipulated and controlled her life.

“She was told that God would watch her if she left . . . (and) that her family outside the group was poison,” Ebert said. “She had nowhere to go.”

Ebert, who has met with Robidoux a dozen times over the past year, said, “She was trying to be a good member of the group. She wanted to belong. “There was nothing she could do. Suddenly, she had been told that God was angry with her because she was too vain, and that he was going to kill one of her children. It was overwhelming.”

Prosecutors say Robidoux’ sister-in-law, Michelle Mingo, delivered a prophecy that said Robidoux was “vain” and that God would take her unborn child if she didn’t switch Samuel from table food to breast milk. Robidoux, who was pregnant and nursing two babies at the time, was also to drink a gallon of almond milk a day, which Ebert said made her vomit.

Robidoux, 29, stopped eating and eventually produced no breast milk to feed her dying son.

“Her diet was impaired; she couldn’t eat; she wasn’t sleeping; and she was trying to be good,” Ebert said. “The baby couldn’t get milk and he was chewing the flesh out of her nipples. It’s hard to see how someone could function.”

Robidoux, Ebert said, became an outcast within the group starting at age 15 when she had her second child and was deemed “impure.” Ebert said the group’s relentless browbeating caused her to suffer flashbacks, nightmares, mood swings and uncontrollable breakdowns.

“Karen was the one who didn’t fit. She didn’t go along. She thought too much. She needed to be fixed,” Ebert said.

Prosecutor Walter Shea, however, has argued that Robidoux had a responsibility to save her son’s life. Under the law, the jury can convict Robidoux of second degree murder if they find a “reasonable person” would have known that their actions would lead to the child’s death.

“I believe the evidence has shown she knew her child would die,” Shea said outside the courtroom. Robidoux’s husband, Jacques, is serving life for the boy’s killing, while Mingo faces accessory charges.

Also yesterday, state police Lt. Robert Horman recalled how authorities, acting on information from the sect’s children, searched unsuccessfully three times for Samuel’s body in Maine’s sprawling Baxter State Park.

The boy’s body, and that of his stillborn cousin, Jeremiah, were found buried in a shallow hilltop grave in October 2000 with the help of cult member David Corneau.



Religion News Blog RSS feed Subscribe: Religion News Blog RSS feed  |  Religion News Blog RSS feed Subscribe by topic: The Body
more cult news articlemore religion news More articles about The Body

Like this story?

Today's Most Popular Articles

Doctor Says...

Share this

To share this page simply copy and paste one of these URL's:




Article and Site Tools

» PermaLink to: Doc calls cult mom `battered woman,’ controlled by sect
   Need a shorter link? You can remove everything after the final /
» More news articles + news archive on The Body
» More religion and cult news

Subscribe (RSS / Email) [What is RSS?]
» RSS News Feed - All Topics: Religion News Blog RSS Feed
» RSS News Feed - Single Topic: The Body
» Headlines by Email: Daily Religion News Blog Headlines

More Article Tools
• Bookmark / Tag: Del.icio.us
• Bookmark / Tag: Furl
Save this article
Email this article
Print this article [Temporarily out of order]

More Information
Books about The Body
Relevant books (and other goodies)

more religion news aboutmore Religion News Blog articles about

About Religion News Blog
Religion News Blog (RNB), published by Apologetics Index, highlights news items and other resources on world religions, cults, religious sects, alternative religions and related issues. RNB's non-profit news clipping service is used by - among others - Christian apologists, countercult professionals, anticult organizations, cult experts, teachers, religion professionals, reporters and other researchers.