For some reason, I have been
exposed to this phenomenon of therapist implanted memories. It rose and fell over a decade long period
during the late eighties through the nineties when the excesses simply became
numerous enough to reveal the actual absurdity of what was happening. Like anyone, I lacked any science but am
naturally wary of the impact of any individual in a position of power on a
likely victim. This item discovers just
how bad it is.
Implanted false memories are
recalled as true memories in a susceptible population around an amazing twenty
five percent of the time. The effect is
very real and it is very dangerous. This
is a take home all should keep in mind when reviewing reports produced by
mental health workers in particular. One
can not be too skeptical when the science is that vulnerable.
The story here is about a far too
typical case in which an individual ultimately diagnosed as outright schizophrenic
develops a pattern of induced memories
that are outright wrong and readily proven so by any objective measure. The pressing question is just how much of this
false memory pattern was induced by the therapist and how much induced through
other external stimuli independent of the therapist.
At the very least, the therapist
should have confronted the parents with the allegations in order to establish a
time line for the fact trail been claimed, as any investigator will one way or
the other.
In the end there is no real
mystery but another story of the untimely disruption of a life through mental
illness. There is really no blame here
unless the possible foolishness of the therapist is blameworthy.
The mystery of Carole Myers
When she was found dead at 41, Carole Myers left a statement saying she
had suffered Satantic child abuse at the hands of her parents. But did she?
The girl we knew: Carole Myers as a newly qualified nurse, in the early
80s. Photograph: Will Storr for the Observer
At 9.02am Richard Felstead answered the phone; by 9.03am he was
breathless with crying. It was the coroner's assistant in Battersea with the
news that his sister, Carole, had died two weeks earlier. "I'm sorry it's
taken so long to notify you," she said. "Carole's next of kin told us
there was no family. But a letter was found –
from you."
Two minutes later, the phone rang again. A different caller, with a
strange voice, said, "I know you're not one of the ones that harmed
Carole."
"Who are you?" said Richard.
"I'm Carole's next of kin."
"What's your name?"
"That's not important."
"How did Carole die?"
"She had a very difficult childhood."
"What? No she didn't."
"The cremation's tomorrow. People have taken time off work.
It's very important it goes ahead."
Richard reacted furiously. The phone went dead.
The brothers gathered at their parents' Stockport
home: Richard, David, Anthony and Kevin, whose principal memory of the morning
of 14 July 2005 is his mother, "Finished. On the floor. Drained.
Shattered. Gone." They began talking. Who was the mysterious caller who
claimed to be Carole's "next of kin"? Why did she talk of a
"difficult childhood" when Carole was happy and popular? She had a
successful nursing career down in London .
How could she die at just 41? Why had it taken two weeks to be informed? How
could there be a funeral tomorrow?
Joseph, their father, stood up. "I'll put a stop to it."
"You can't stop a funeral, Dad!" said Kevin.
Joseph phoned the coroner's assistant. She brusquely informed him that,
now the family had been discovered, the funeral would be halted. She mentioned
a "life assessment", written by Carole. "It's very
upsetting," she said. It was six pages, typed. It said: "My parents
were abusive in every way imaginable − sexually, physically and emotionally. At
three years of age, my mother smothered my sister. She sat me on top of her
body and set the house on fire."
Joseph was astonished. "Had she been ill?" he said. "Had
she been sectioned?"
The coroner's assistant replied: "Yes."
Over the coming weeks there came more questions. They were told the
nameless "next of kin" had emptied Carole's flat and driven off in
her car. Officials kept mentioning a "psychiatrist friend" who
accompanied Carole to medical appointments. Joseph was speaking to a police
inspector when something occurred to him. "This psychiatrist and this next
of kin," he said. "Are they the same person?"
"That's right," said the inspector. "Dr Fleur
Fisher."
The Felsteads' search for answers to the many mysteries surrounding
Carole's decline is now in its sixth year. Endless letters and FOI requests,
alongside hours of legal research and long nights on the internet, have
resulted in the collection of hundreds of documents and the generation of yet
more questions: angry ones about individuals they believe to have been malign
presences in her life; strange ones about startling and little-known corners of
human psychology; sad ones about
the life and death of the kind and sparky woman they still miss every day.
When I tell them I'd like to write about Carole, they pass me the
telephone number, discovered in Carole's phone records, of the woman whose role
in the tale is, they're convinced, both sinister and central: that of the
"next of kin", Dr Fleur Fisher.
"I'm not sure I want to talk about this," Fisher tells me.
"You'll have to let me think about it. That family – they're bloody
terrifying."
"You're frightened of them?"
"They're frightening people. And the things they've been
saying," she says, adding confusingly: "I'm not a therapist!" She
rings off, warning me darkly: "Tread carefully."
The house in which Carole grew up has mauve and dark-red rooms that are
shadow-struck and decorated with golden candlestick holders, old family
portraits and statues of dogs, birds and deer. Today Joseph sits glowering in
the lounge, his patriarch's hands gripping his armchair. Kevin – a softer
presence – informs me that Richard's at work, and Anthony's too distraught to
speak. Their mother, Joan, passed away last year. David's here, though,
friendly yet possessed of an anxious, wiry tension. Over the coming hours,
he'll answer questions with flumes of facts and furious analysis, fossicking in
boxes for the relevant document to illustrate his point.
For these men, Carole's life is as much a mystery as her death. She had
been a friendly, bolshy and academically successful teenager, who loved
watching M*A*S*H and wearing the tartan shorts beloved of her
favourite band, the Bay City
Rollers. She was popular at school and had a noted instinct for caring, going
out of her way to play with Michael, the neighbour with Down's syndrome, and
paying regular visits to a lonely old man down the road known as Mr Partridge.
At 15 she got a weekend job in a home for the disabled. At 21 she qualified as
a nurse at Stockport
College and rented a
nearby flat, making frequent visits back home to borrow milk and money, and
sunbathe in the garden. And then, in the mid-1980s, there began a silent drift
away from the family.
"Her attitude became hostile," says Joseph.
"You must have been worried?"
Joseph shifts in his seat.
"I was more cross than anything," he says. "It was ill
mannered."
In 1986 they discovered Carole had moved to Macclesfield. She'd still
send Christmas cards and ring occasionally, assuring them her career was going
well. But by 1992 she had moved to London
and changed her name from Carol Felstead to Carole Myers. They had to accept
that Carole, for some reason, had chosen to stay away.
After her death they discovered Carole had become mentally ill. Her
medical records revealed self-harm, alcohol abuse and stretches in psychiatric
wards. She'd frequently been suicidal.
They felt shattered about the claims she'd made in her life assessment
– and confused. She said she'd been abused by Joseph and his wife, who were the
high priest and priestess of a satanic cult, and that during her teens she'd
had six children – some fathered by Joseph – that she'd been forced to kill.
She also said she had an implant in her eye that would explode if she spoke of
the satanists, and that a friend she'd confided in was murdered in front of
her.
Carole's charges were easily proven to be false. The sister, whose
murder she'd apparently witnessed, actually died of heart problems two years
before Carole was born. The house fire, too, predated Carole's birth. And yet,
to the Felsteads' disbelief, it seemed the mental-health professionals rarely
challenged these impossible horrors. Worse, they'd concluded that Carole's
psychological problems came as a result of this fictitious abuse.
But the family is pointing the finger straight back at the clinicians.
They believe the blame for Carole's psychological downfall lies with credulous,
satanist-obsessed therapists who went along with her claims that she'd been
sexually menaced. After all, they point out, it's happened before – most
famously in Orkney in 1991, when nine children were forcibly removed from their
homes following interviews by social workers led by an individual who was
subsequently accused of being "fixated on finding satanic abuse".
I ask the Felsteads when the first mention of mental-health problems
appear in Carole's medical records. In August 1985, it turns out, she received
therapy for insomnia and nightmares related to "family abuse". Soon
afterwards a 1986 letter mentions further "psycho-sexual counselling"
by someone whose name sends a cold stun of recognition through me. It's her:
the next of kin; the woman who baffled me by abruptly – perhaps defensively –
announcing: "I'm not a therapist!" It's Dr Fisher.
Arriving back in London
I'm in no doubt that Carole's abuse claims were untrue. But is it really
possible, as the Felsteads insist, for a person to have memories
"implanted" by a therapist? Professor Elizabeth Loftus, of the University of California , certainly believes so. In
one famous study she sought to examine the process by which a therapist can
generate a memory of an event simply by suggesting it. Loftus told 24 adults to
write detailed descriptions of four childhood events supplied earlier on by a
family member. Unbeknown to them, one of those events never actually happened.
But six participants – 25% of the group – remembered the false
event. When asked to choose which memory was fiction, five got it wrong.
"Since then," says Loftus, "I and many others have planted
bizarre memories of accidents: animal attacks, nearly drowning, witnessing
demonic possession. What we've found is absolutely stunning. False memories can
be very detailed, and people can be very emotional about them. A lot of these
therapists say: 'I believe she was abused because every time she talks about it
she cries,' as if somehow the emotion is proof that it's true. It's not."
False memories don't even require a therapist. Any trusted source –
a book, friend, TV personality – can suggest the possibility of abuse. Your
mind might then produce a fragment – an image of something bad
happening. What was that? You recall it again.
You fill in the details. "Repetition makes it more vivid and
familiar," explains Kimberley Wade,
associate professor of psychology at Warwick
University . "It'll
start to feel like a memory."
Wade has generated false memories using doctored childhood photos.
"On average 35% of our participants develop a rich memory of their fake
event," she says. "They describe how it happened, where they were,
how they were feeling."
In the journal Advances in Psychiatric Treatment I find a
description of false memory syndrome, or FMS. Sufferers, it says, often make
claims involving satanic abuse and are told to stay away from their family. FMS
can take place as a result of "recovered memory therapy", an umbrella
term for a witchbag of techniques, many involving dream interpretation and
hypnotherapy, widely discredited in the 1990s.
The concept of repressed memories itself is, according to psychologist
Chris French of the University
of London , highly
questionable. "There's a divide on this in psychology," he says.
"But these 'recovery' methods are also used in the context of alien
abduction accounts. If you're going to accept recovered memories of abuse, you
should also accept the alien claims."
While chatting with French, I mention a psychotherapist who saw Carole
called Valerie Sinason. Unexpectedly he lets out a guttural, melancholy groan.
"Oh Gooooodddd," he says.
If the Felsteads are right, Carole is likely to have had some form of
recovered-memory therapy in the mid-80s – roughly the time her behaviour began
to sour. But the only person I know who might be able to answer this question
of whether she did is Dr Fisher. Since our last chat, she's vanished. She's
changed her mobile number and has ignored several emails. Instead I arrange an
interview with Valerie Sinason who, according to the records, saw Carole for
psychotherapy biweekly for eight months in 1992. I want to know if she'll fit
the description Professor Loftus gave of the therapists she's come across in
legal cases who have involved false memory – that of a highly credulous
believer in satanic abuse who has a tendency to believe ritual damage in
patients.
Sinason arrives, in her north London counselling room, tanned and
relaxed in a loose smock, dark leggings and trainers. There's a chaise longue
with a crowd of teddies resting in its crook. On the floor, shoved beneath
a table, a large cloth boy gazes sadly into space. We're joined by her husband
David, who takes notes throughout our talk.
Sinason insists she doesn't use recovered-memory techniques. "I'm
an analytic therapist," she says. "The idea of that is someone
showing, through their behaviour, that all sorts of things might have happened
to them." Signs that a patient has suffered satanically include flinching
at green or purple objects, the colours of the high priest and priestess's
robes. "And if someone shudders when they enter a room, you know it's not
ordinary incest."
Another warning, she says, is the patient saying: "I don't
know." "What they really mean is: 'I can't bear to say.'" A
patient who "overpraises" their family is also suspicious. "The
more insecure you are, the more you praise. 'Oh my family was wonderful! I
can't remember any of it!'"
In the medical records, Sinason noted that Carole was her first chronic
sadistic-abuse patient. Today, when I ask about her first patient, Sinason
describes the arrival of two medical professionals – a nurse and a psychologist
– one of whom was limping.
"I just had that nasty feeling," she says. "It's her,
and she's been hurt by them."
"You could tell that from the limp?" I ask.
"Yep."
Soon, we get to the actual satanism. Sinason talks of a popular ritual
in which a child is stitched inside the belly of a dying animal before being
'reborn to satan'. During other celebrations, "people eat faeces,
menstrual blood, semen, urine. There's cannibalism." Some groups have
doctors performing abortions. "They give the foetus to the mother and
she's made to kill the baby."
"And the cannibalism – that's foetuses?" I clarify.
"Foetuses and bits of bodies."
"Raw or cooked?"
"The foetuses are raw."
"Not even a bit of salt and pepper?" I ask.
"Raw. And handed round like communion. On one major festival, the
babies are barbecued. I can still remember one survivor saying how easy it is
to pull apart the ribs on a baby. But adults are tougher to eat."
She describes large gatherings in woodlands and castles, with huge
cloths being laid out. "That's normally when there's a sacrifice,"
she notes, "and because the rapes are happening all over the place.
There's a small amount of cannon fodder in terms of runaways, drug addicts,
prostitutes and tramps that are used. There's sex with animals. Horses, dogs,
goats. Being hanged upside down. In the woods, on a tree."
"How do they get an animal to have sex with a human?" I
wonder.
Sinason's husband thinks for a moment. "Well," he says,
"plenty of dogs have a go at people's legs." "True," says
Sinason, adding poignantly: "However horrible it sounds, the dog, at
least, is friendly afterwards."
"Because at least the dog's had a good time," I say.
"And the child loves the pet," Sinason nods. "The pet is
made to have sex with the child – but the pet, at least, is still their
friend."
Having experienced the Sinasons' wild kaleidoscope of beliefs, it seems
obvious to me that the Felsteads are right in suspecting that Carole's
therapists had some dramatically unlikely views. But Sinason doesn't enter
Carole's story until the early 1990s. Her abuse memories – at least the initial
ones – cannot be blamed on her. I'm more determined than ever to ask Dr Fisher
if Carole underwent recovered-memory therapy.
David Felstead emails me a home number for Fisher, but it goes to the
answerphone of another family. When, out of desperation, I dial it a final
time, someone picks up. To my astonishment, she says: "Yes, people call
for Fleur Fisher sometimes. I'll give you her number."
Dr Fisher lives in Plymouth ,
and is a former head of ethics at the British Medical Association. She speaks
with the all the authority that such a position suggests. Sometimes confident,
sometimes wary, sometimes maudlin and resigned, she actually has good reason to
fear the Felsteads. After discovering she'd taken Carole's possessions, they
reported her to the GMC and the police. Neither found sufficient evidence to
act against her.
Fisher admits she had no legal claim to be Carole's "next of
kin", but denies the Felsteads' accusations that she stole her property.
She emptied the flat, she says, because the property managers were demanding
it. As she cleared up, she found the letter from Richard. "Honourably,
I gave it to the police," she says. "Otherwise the family
would never have known. Never, never, never!" The clearout
happened on 7 July 2005, a date, of course, that became known as 7/7. The
terrorist explosions crippled the public transport network, which is why she
needed to take Carole's car to get home. It was soon returned to London .
I ask why she phoned Richard on the day the Felsteads were informed of
the death. She did so, she says, because the coroner mentioned how crushed he'd
sounded. "Concern for somebody else's distress sometimes overcomes
you," she says. "I was foolish. Unwise."
Ironically, it was her discovery of Richard's letter that led to the
funeral's cancellation. Was she upset when she heard it had been halted?
"You can't even imagine," she says. "I just screamed and
screamed."
Finally, we get to the question of whether Carole's memories of satanic
abuse were recovered. Initially Fisher refuses to speak about Carole. "I
have a duty of confidentiality, even after a patient has died. I was never her
psychiatrist or psychotherapist or anything like that." She raises her
voice. "I'm not a psychotherapist, for God's sake!"
"According to her medical notes, she saw you for
counselling," I say.
"No."
"I have the letter here, dated 27 November 1986, that says: 'She
required to see Dr Fisher for psychosexual counselling.'"
There's a silence. "Psychosexual is the wrong term," she
says.
"What's the correct term?"
"Uh, I really don't know. People come and tell you things that
have happened to them."
"Things like abuse?"
"Things that have happened to them," she repeats, crossly.
"I'm not saying anything else. It's not right that this woman's privacy
should be breached in this way." She's shouting now. "She's dead!
She's goddamned dead!"
Was she ever worried that Carole had lapsed into fantasy?
"Never," she says.
By 1997, I tell her, Carole was claiming a government minister had
raped her with a claw hammer in Conservative Central Office. "That's not
something I knew about," she says. "It may have been fantasy. I
couldn't say. In general she was a common-sense woman."
"Are you aware of any evidence that any of Carole's
claims actually happened?"
"I never looked for any evidence."
"Then what made you believe her?"
"She's not the only patient I've had who told the same kinds of
stories."
"About ritual abuse?"
"It turned out to be that, yes. The people didn't remember at
first. They weren't aware. They were memories they'd had a long time and they
just came out."
And that, I decide, is as close as I'm going to get. Before I ring off,
I ask Fisher what Carole was like. "She was a feisty, brave, intelligent
woman. She was funny. A good laugh." And then, softly at first, she starts
crying.
Finally, I seek advice from Dr Trevor Turner, a consultant psychiatrist
at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London .
A former vice president of the Royal
College of Psychiatry,
Turner is an expert in schizophrenia. I wanted to speak with Turner because
I've heard that delusions and paranoias like the ones Carole suffered are a
common facet of the condition. Turner confirms this, adding: "Another
thing that's a part of the schizophrenic illness syndrome is the idea that your
body has been interfered with," he tells me. Carole's slow withdrawal from
the family, it turns out, is also typical. "If you're thinking things are
being done to you, you blame those around you," he says. "Families of
people who have got schizophrenia are commonly accused of things by the
patient."
Assuming that Carole was suffering from schizophrenia, I wonder what
effect it might have had on her, having therapists validate her darkest
delusions. What would it be like for a paranoid psychotic to have it confirmed
that, yes, there really are satanists out there, trying to get you?
"Absolutely terrifying," he says. "It's highly likely it would make
it worse."
A week later I ask Sinason if Carole was the patient she'd described,
with the limp. She denies this and refuses to answer questions about her,
citing confidentiality. Despite the medical records, she insists she never
treated Carole, admitting only to having seen her as part of a study into
ritual abuse for the Department of Health. I put it to her that telling a
patient with paranoid delusions that her fears are real would be extremely
dangerous. "It would cause real damage," she concedes, but denies doing
this. "The purpose of therapy," she says, "is not to act as
judge or jury."
On 21 June 2005, after years of silence, Carole unexpectedly phoned her
brother Richard, saying she was lonely and wanted to move back to the family in
Stockport . Just over a week later, she died.
That same day, Richard wrote the letter discovered by Dr Fisher that triggered
the family's search for truth. He recounted the latest news – about his
business, his brothers, his dad's heart attack – and finished with a flourish
that, in retrospect, seems haunting and prescient. "One shouldn't maintain
too great a distance," he wrote, "as once the moment is gone, it is
gone."
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