The Defilers: November 2007

Winner of the 2005 Best New Canadian Christian Author Award.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

The story


When Boston native Linda Donner travels north to Canada in search of a better life, she has no idea how quickly her life will spin out of control. After joining the Mounties, she takes a posting in rural Nova Scotia, where the firebombing of a pastor's home and the murder of a sadistic cult leader draw her into a tangle of lies.

Now, to solve the mystery and find personal deliverance from her troubled past, Linda must lose herself in the shacks and trailers of a backwoods community to confront the evil that threatens everything she holds dear. But what will happen when she frames an innocent man in the process?

The Defilers is the gripping debut of Deborah Waters Gyapong, winner of the 2005 Best New Canadian Christian Author Award.

Visit Deborah's website and blog at www.deborahgyapong.com.

Monday, November 12, 2007

Number of exorcists in the U.S. has grown says priest

From KTVI - myFOXstl.com --

The 1973 horror film, "The Exorcist," is considered one of the scariest movies ever made. Surprisingly, the church says the movie is a fairly reliable guide in what to look for in possession. "Everything that appears in the film happened in some exorcism in history. Everything. Even the case of the demon going inside the priest,” said Father Jose Antonio Fortea, who is considered one of the world's leading authorities on exorcism. The priest from Madrid, Spain is a Vatican trained exorcist. He was in St. Louis recently, but would not say why. Dan asked if there are Catholic exorcists in St. Louis. "I will not say about names or dioceses where exorcists are but here in the diocese, of course, they will take care of every case, I assure you," the priest answered.

After writing a doctorate thesis on exorcism and demonic possession, Fortea wrote a book called "Interview With An Exorcist." He has performed dozens of exorcisms over the past ten years.

Fr. Fortea: "I have everyday."

Dan Gray: "Everyday?"

Fr. Fortea: "Everyday a knock at the door of my parish, people wanting to know if they are possessed or not."

Fortea says in every case the exorcist must look for four types of behavior to determine possession:

Superhuman Strength

"Very often you need four, six or even more people to restrain a person," Fortea said.

Fierce Reaction To Holy Things

Use Of Languages That The Person Normally Would Not Know

Hidden Knowledge

"I remember one case, she knew perfectly whole Bible," the priest said.

Fortea says in most exorcisms he confronts demons but one case was very different. He told Dan in an exclusive interview, "We continue praying and a terrible roar appear and he spoke with pride that we did not experience before. And when we ask tell us your name, in the name of Jesus, he say I am Satan."

The priest says during that exorcism Satan forecast the war in Iraq. "Before the war of Iraq, we did not ask to him but he say I won the war because I won suffering, destruction and death."

Fortea says there are now about 70 Catholic exorcists in the U.S, up from four just four years ago. The reason for the increase in possessions?

"Almost always is witchcraft, witchcraft or somebody related to a satanic cult that invoked demons to get that person. People that go to Satanic rock concerts that hear for hours and hours that kind of music then they are affected by unclean spirits. The whole evil that is in the world, the root is a spiritual root. If everybody go be fearful servant of God this world would be Eden."

Father Fortea says he meets people who are skeptical of demonic possession and he does consult psychiatrists to determine if a person who fears they are possessed has a mental problem. But he says some cases can't be explained by psychiatry. He says if people pray and read the Bible everyday, evil influences will disappear step by step.

Be sure to go to Dan Gray's Blog on myFOXstl.com to hear my more of his personal comments about interviewing an exorcist.

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Sunday, November 04, 2007

Did satanic panic result in wrongful convictions?

Most interesting story on how fears of satanic abuse contributed to a possible miscarriage of justice.

So, with that said, we now take a closer look at the trials that lead to the
convictions of the West Memphis Three back in 1994.


"These kids were throw away kids. They came from very poor families. They didn't have a chance," said Stidham.

The lack of money for Jesse Misskelly, Jason Baldwin, and Damien
Echols could have been the very thing that convicted them of murder 14 years
ago.


"The reason they were convicted is because of the satanic panic that
occurred and existed here back in 1993. These were very horrible crimes. It was
a national kind of crime that everyone was watching," said Stidham.

And with worldwide attention on the case, the pressure was on for police, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and most importantly the jurors.

"The result was verdicts based on fear and panic and not on anything reliable or scientific," said Stidham.


Now some 14 years later, DNA evidence could eventually overturn
convictions of the West Memphis Three, but that is something that would prove
mistakes were made and the killer or killers are still on the loose.

And in 1993 it was the desperation of finding the killers that led straight to the West
Memphis Three.


"Those three kids stuck out like a sore thumb in West Memphis
in 1993. They were the perfect patsies. All the stars and all of the moons lined
up, and what happened happened," said Stidham.

Read the rest here.

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