Prosecuting an Ex-Cult Member's Undue Influence Suit
Lawrence Levy, J.D.
Sherman Oaks, California
Abstract
The case of an ex-member of the
Church Universal and Triumphant (CUT) who sued the group for damages is reviewed
in order to illuminate practical issues in cult-related litigation. It is
important that the client be able to withstand the processes of extended and
emotionally draining litigation. Plaintiffs should avoid making cult beliefs an
issue, focusing instead on destructive behaviors, in this case "garden-variety"
torts. Similarly, the term "brainwashing," which connotes extreme physical
deprivation to the uninformed public, should be avoided. The legal concept of
undue influence was much more useful in this case. It is vital that the client
be thoroughly prepared. Attorneys should first educate themselves and then
educate judge and jury about the harmful cultic practices of the group in
question. Expert and lay witnesses are essential to describe these practices
and explain how they are destructive. Former cult members can be helpful in a
variety of other ways, including emotional support and research assistance. In
this case, the jury awarded $1,563,000 to the plaintiff, Gregory Mull, more than
$1,000,000 of which were punitive damages. The decision was upheld by the
California Appellate Court. The U.S. Supreme Court refused to grant CUT a writ
of certiorari, thus finally ending the case.
A penniless and damaged Gregory Mull asked me in l98l to
defend a suit against him in which the Church Universal and Triumphant (CUT)
claimed he owed the controversial new age group $30,000 in notes he signed in
its favor. But when I learned about the outrageous way in which CUT treated
Mull during his ten years' membership, we cross complained for, among other
things, fraud (duress, menace, and undue influence), extortion, intentional
infliction of emotional distress, common-law involuntary servitude (bondage
and/or peonage), unjust enrichment, and assault. We asked damages of $253
million.
Our suit got heard before CUT's because the church's action
against Gregory needed the evidence of our cause of action, which was a defense
against the complaint. All parties agreed that the jury might forget the CUT
case, which would have been disposed of quickly during the course of our
counter-suit, which looked as if it would take two months. This paper describes
some of the practical issues involved in this case and offers advice to
attorneys contemplating or involved in similar cases.
Evaluate the Client
The decision to take on a client who seeks damages from a
cult must not be taken without first considering several key factors. The first
is the condition of the would-be client: an in-depth evaluation of his or her
mental and physical condition must be made. He or she must be able to survive
a long and grueling process leading from early depositions through trial and
even on to lengthy appeals before the strain is relieved. This process, which
lasted over six years in the case at hand, may be too much for some former cult
members, who are especially tender, frequently unstable, and difficult to work
with following their cult experiences. They still may be using cult-learned
modes of thought and speech, which are difficult for outsiders to understand.
They are also especially vulnerable to the continuing psychological influence of
the cult, even to the cult's psychological warfare, throughout the litigation
process, and to harassment out of court, which is not uncommon. Gregory Mull,
when he first approached me, and for some time after, no longer really spoke
English. After a decade with CUT, he employed church jargon and church
references which, to an outsider, are virtually indecipherable. In addition,
his fear of CUT retribution, both real and metaphysical, was such that he rarely
spoke above a whisper about the group.
Lawyers contemplating litigation with cults must also be
aware that since such groups are typically businesses as well as religions, the
leaders, or "owners," are willing and able to spend a great deal of money -- on
depositions, motions, investigators, and experts -- to protect their share of
the spiritual marketplace. Indeed, they often cross the boundaries of ethical
legal practice. This sort of action, when combined with the indirect
psychological influence the group still wields over the client, makes your job
as an attorney anguished and difficult. You must determine with a fair degree
of confidence, then, your client's dedication to the proposed litigation, his
physical and psychological stamina, his ability to withstand the cult's
retaliation for his apostasy and "turning" on them, and the capacity of both you
and your client to sustain the expense of the effort. I was not fully sensitive
to all of these problems when I agreed to represent Gregory Mull, but after
listening to him explain how he had been grossly mistreated by CUT, and
believing what he said, I felt that the tragedy which had befallen him was
entitled to redress.
I was also outraged at how he had been rebuffed by lawyers
whom he approached before me. Lawyers with a Christian background usually said
that they could not "in good faith" oppose a "church." Jewish firms, on the
other hand, did not want to appear to be attacking a church that might be
Christian. Almost all of the firms who turned my client away thought that the
First Amendment might protect CUT from a damage suit.
The Issue of Religion
Religion was an important, though largely unspoken, issue
in the case. It must be carefully considered when litigating against a
religious group. Neither my client nor I addressed CUT religious beliefs in the
complaint or during subsequent proceedings. Gregory Mull would not do so out of
fear of human and supernatural sanctions, and I understood that First Amendment
protection of sincerely held religious beliefs must confine our discussion to
the harm that CUT had actually inflicted on my client. The attorney must be
prepared to argue in court the necessity of separating conduct from belief.
Prepare for this argument long before the trial, since it is sure to surface
during the trial. Case law supports my contention that conduct is everything
that occurs before one forms a belief and everything that occurs after the
formation of a belief, or in spite of it. For example, in U.S. v Reynolds (the
case involving Mormons and multiple marriage) the court said that you may
believe in the institution but, in this country, you cannot practice it.
Be prepared to submit affidavits to judges who brook no
attempt to question anything to do with a church or church activity regardless
of the type of church or the activity. Avoid judges who dominate trials and do
not allow attorneys to try their cases. Study judicial profiles or ask other
attorneys about their experiences with certain judges. It is well to remember
that judges are only legally trained people who bring their own prejudices with
them into court.
I never questioned the validity of CUT as a religion, and
the appeal court, while noting that CUT was a religion, agreed that this issue
had never been raised during the trial. CUT, on the other hand, made much of
the fact that it was a religion and that this justified the facts of its
relationship with Gregory. Indeed, their writ of certiorari to the U.S.
Supreme Court claims that what they did is absolutely protected by the First
Amendment. They said that the money Gregory gave to CUT was in response to a
Biblical injunction, and thus could not be questioned by the court. This was,
in fact, their main defense. I argued that money given by a member to CUT after
a two and one-half hour ritual browbeating -- "decreeing" -- is not protected,
and cannot be called a "donation." Gregory testified, quite rightly, that the
decreeing, which threatens supernatural sanctions, frightened him into giving
the money. But I never questioned the belief system, and I asked the judge to
instruct the jury that we were inquiring only into actions, in this case
extortion, breach of confidence, and more. If religious belief discussion was
broached by CUT, I asked for a jury caution that beliefs were not an issue, only
tortious conduct and its effects on Gregory. I discussed religion once or
twice, but only as it related to conduct. I did not even mention other noted
cult cases, so great was my effort to show as starkly as possible that we were
alleging only the commission of garden-variety torts.
Undue Influence
At the time of his ordeal, CUT was (and still is)
controlled by Elizabeth Clare Prophet, a very articulate and highly charismatic
leader, the great teacher, the nurturing mother, the source of all wisdom, and
the ultimate connection between members and their creator. Followers believe
the "ascended masters" -- great leaders of world religions of the past, both
Eastern and Western -- speak through her, and only her. Among the teachings
woven into CUT cosmology, which also shares many themes of the contemporary New
Age Movement, is the need for initiates to sever relations with their families
(especially when and if financial support from kin has ceased), obedience to
strict codes of conduct which Prophet has devised, and general unquestioning
acceptance of her dictates. In the end, she controls closely the financial
arrangements of followers as well as of the church. It is from these controls
that the mental, physical, and socio-economic damages of cults like CUT arise.
The attorney not yet initiated into the mysteries of cult
organizations finds it difficult to understand the basis of a damage claim by
someone whose involvement was apparently voluntary. He or she will often ask,
"If members don't like what's going on, why don't they leave?" Here, it is well
to remember what research into cults during our time has shown: people
frequently, if not usually, are so subtly manipulated to become involved that
they lose their ability to assess their situations critically. They can neither
leave nor fight back. In order to convince the court that this is the
situation, you must understand the indoctrination techniques employed by cults
generally, and particularly by the cult with which you are in litigation. To get
this knowledge, you must debrief your client thoroughly, read literature on
cults generally and about the cult in question (such material is becoming more
and more available), and interview other former members of the group, preferably
those who knew your client.
Every organization indoctrinates, but most do so in order
to educate. Cult indoctrination really consists of a kind of re-education which
leads to control of some of the initiate's thought processes and, thus, his
actions. CUT employed a very sophisticated indoctrination program during
Gregory Mull's association with the group. It began when a CUT member attended
a Bible study class that Gregory himself conducted at his own home. At the time
Gregory was a successful architect, a building designer with a moderate practice
that afforded him and his daughter a lovely home, travel, and a comfortable
lifestyle. He had developed his professional expertise and had received
national recognition for his work. He was also deeply religious.
In what amounts to a classic seduction, the newcomer
introduced Gregory to a few CUT teachings and then escorted him personally to a
CUT teaching center, where tried and true members -- in what is now recognized
as a classic cult recruitment style -- flattered, pampered, and cajoled him
until finally he agreed to attend a three-month session at CUT'S "university."
At the end of the three months -- replete with an organized program of sleep
deprivation, fasting, supposedly cleansing colonics (enemas), induction of
hypnotic states through "decreeing" (a form of chanting), segregation from
family and friends, isolation from his regular support groups, peer pressure,
and a barrage of new information designed to foster reliance on Elizabeth Clare
Prophet's wisdom -- Gregory Mull was captured. His subservience to Prophet's
undue influence was complete. He relied on her for his direction, his truth,
and his salvation. This new situation in which Greogry Mull found himself was
important to us when we sued CUT because the result to him was physical,
psychological, and socio-economic damage.
To show the effects of undue influence, I adduced
testimony to demonstrate that Gregory, while controlled by CUT and Prophet,
divorced a wife, lost a business, ruined his health by overwork, and virtually
always did what was in her best interest and not his own. I illustrated that
this sort of control was common in CUT: how Elizabeth Clare Prophet was the
"parent" and the members were her "children"; how she made all their decisions
on who could marry and when, what sexual practices were acceptable, who should
divorce, and when; how her followers withheld all decisions until she had
"cleared" everything. I also showed the effects of Gregory's indoctrination by
illustrating the personality changes that paralleled the downward spiral of
events in his life.
A Word to Avoid
In making such a case, however, I did not use the term
"brainwashing." To uninformed judges and juries, the word connotes processes
found in Chinese prison camps during the Korean War. The defense will point out
that cult life is different, and if you insist on using the term you may well
lose your argument about undue influence and coercive manipulation. Whenever
CUT counsel brought up the term, implying that we were accusing CUT of
brainwashing, I said that I never used the term and would never inquire into the
inculcation of religious belief. Thus, we denied CUT'S attempt to make
"brainwashing" an issue. Interestingly, CUT moved at one point to prevent use
of the word "cult," which many consider to be a pejorative term, and prejudicial
to the defense, but the judge ruled that it was simply descriptive and should be
allowed.
Preparing the Client
The first and most important object of the trial attorney
is to prepare the client for the possible long road ahead. Such preparation
includes educating the client about the legal system, which means, among other
things, insisting on the truth and absolutely no exaggeration. In order to show
that your client underwent harmful changes of various kinds as a result of his
cult involvement, draw a time-line noting major life events and lifestyle
before, during, and after the cult involvement. The comparison between what
your client was before and after the involvement will focus on the cult-related
reasons for the differences and provide a rationale for the damages asked.
Development of the client's personal history -- the
importance of which cannot be overstated -- should precede discovery because it
will be needed there as well as in court. (Gregory was deposed eleven times and
required to answer reams of interrogatories before the trial.) How your client
answers during long hours of hostile depositions can come back to haunt you. As
most lay juries are unfamiliar with cults, I spent hour upon hour asking
questions of Gregory and other former cult members who testified, until they
answered in easily understood, straightforward language without references to
CUT-speak, so that our witnesses appeared honest and straightforward. As
Gregory's story came out during his examination, the jury could see and assess
his truthfulness. He never waivered. He never avoided the tough questions. He
never excused what he had done in CUT and did not try to blame anyone else for
his actions. Indeed, I had to persuade him to see that much of what had
happened was the result in part of subtle victimization. He was believable and
was believed, and two days of cross-examination by the church's attorney did not
impeach his testimony.
Educating the Court
As witnesses must be specially prepared, the judge and the
jury must be specially educated by counsel in cult-related cases. Most people,
whether lay or professional, know little more about cults than that they exist,
or that they are bizarre. You must communicate your own new-found knowledge to
the court throughout the trial. You must widen the court's perspective so it
understands the phenomenon that is causing the harms you allege, and then focus
on the particular manifestations of the general principles that have led to harm
to your client. You must not seek to hide unpleasant facts about your client --
in cult-related cases especially they will exist and come out.
While religion is not an issue in the complaint, you must
question jurors about their attitudes toward religion and indoctrination, but do
not accept simple yes and no answers. Determine, inoffensively, their church
affiliations, frequency of attendance, and belief (or not) in God. You have to
be fair so they won't think you are against religion as the opposition may wish
the jury to believe. The CUT lawyer asked jurors if they believed bizarre
religions had rights, thus setting up his defense based on religious rights.
Eliminate very young people from a jury because they tend
to see things in black and white and almost always miss the shades of gray,
which is where cult-related cases are decided. Young, atheistic, non-achievers
should be very carefully examined and evaluated because they have a tendency to
believe that "there is no free lunch," and that a cult victim should have
anticipated the worst and should not now be entitled to redress for damages.
Education of the jurors must continue throughout the
trial. Emphasize, by example, the destructive nature of cults, and the best
example is your client's story. Cause and effect works well. What did the cult
do? What was your client required to do? What was the damaging effect? In
almost every cult-related case, the cult leader and his or her total control of
the victim must be a focus.
Lay Witnesses
After examining Gregory Mull, thus setting the context for
the case, I called Elizabeth Clare Prophet to the stand as an adverse witness in
order to show the contrast between him and her. When your client is likeable
and his adversary is dominating, overbearing, egotistical, as cult leaders are
wont to be, the jury can see the difference, and ought to as early in the trial
as possible. Cult witnesses can hang themselves and prove the charges of undue
influence by their own testimony. By contrast, an ex-CUT member and friend
testified that before Gregory's move to CUT's main facility ("Camelot"), he was
physically and mentally sound, well-dressed, active, and always on the go,
socially as well as professionally. When Gregory was kicked out of Camelot, he
had become a physical and emotional wreck, and had lost his livelihood. Having
suffered in similar ways, other ex-members are often more than willing to help.
Some, however, may not want to, fearing retribution, or simply wanting to put
the experience fully behind them and avoiding renewed trauma.
The number of witnesses should be decided not only by
availability but by the likely value of their testimony. Four or five strong,
articulate witnesses are better than the l8 or 20 cults often produce to parrot
the party line. CUT brought in witness after witness saying essentially the
same things. Ex-members of CUT who testified on Gregory's behalf told me that
the church rehearsed its witnesses, more often than not without the knowledge of
their own legal counsel. The result, of course, was that their witnesses
appeared to be actors playing roles. The haughty Elizabeth Clare Prophet hanged
herself. In an irritable fit during a deposition, she had said that she ran
CUT, oversaw its finances, and made all final decisions. At the trial, in
response to one of her own attorney's questions seeking to distance her from
alleged control over Gregory, she said that she knew nothing of finances,
management, or details of the church's dealing with him. Imagine her shock when
I introduced her deposition testimony to impeach her trial testimony. I believe
that many cult leaders, like Elizabeth Clare Prophet, come to believe in the
extraordinary powers they claim, and in their invulnerability. This can lead to
damaging contradictions and revelations in litigation.
Expert Witnesses
The use of expert witnesses in cult-related litigation is
no longer an option; it is mandatory. Cults across America have spent huge sums
on their own experts, and an attorney litigating with a cult can be sure that
the opposition will have a battery of experts at hand. During the Mull case, I
myself interviewed eleven experts before selecting two. I chose people who were
personable, articulate, unflappable under pressure, and possessed of impeccable
credentials (which greatly impress juries). Both of my experts spent many hours
with Gregory before the trial, and during it. When not speaking in court about
the effects of the cult experience on him, they concentrated on the nature of
the social structure and culture of the cult. One expert had interviewed and
counseled other ex-CUT members and thus spoke with special authority, among
other things, about the personal dynamics and psychological consequences of cult
membership. Another expert, a clergyman and experienced counselor to the
cult-affected, stressed the long-term ill-effects of association with a cult.
Both experts refused to be drawn into a debate about religious belief.
In addition to these experts, Gregory's medical doctor as
well as a family counselor, who were qualified as experts, spoke primarily about
his medical and psychological history. They testified, simply and compellingly,
exactly how CUT's actions toward Gregory had harmed him mentally and
physically. None of CUT's experts had had any personal contact with Gregory
before the trial, so their testimony was limited to educated guesses about him,
his experience, and what it had done to him. Experts used by cults do not
usually have impressive credentials. Thus, CUT's attorney in the Mull case,
knowing the outstanding qualifications of our experts, sought to stipulate to
these qualifications in order to avoid having the jury hear about their vast
knowledge and experience in regard to cults. I refused, and read into the
record details of our experts' education, awards, experience, publications, and
national repute in cult-related matters. The jurors then had a solid basis on
which to decide whose experts to believe
Other Resources
Ex-cult members, who often network in order to support
others who are exiting, offer a mine of knowledge and experience that can assist
litigation. In the case at hand, ex-CUT members and former members of other
cultic groups provided us with biographies of CUT witnesses, both lay and
expert, which helped impugn testimony of the defense witnesses. Another
ex-member, now an exit-counselor and educator, assisted by providing emotional
support, transportation, and valet service for an ill Gregory. Most valuable of
all, he provided insight into the cultic mindset for me. In yet another
instance, the mother of a current CUT member was always on hand to provide both
Gregory and me with emotional support and encouragement throughout the trial,
and after. Still another ex-member provided scholarly articles which he had
researched and which allowed me to do my job better in what was, at first, a
very puzzling area of both law and human psychology, Such aid from ex-members is
especially welcome since the clerical work and footwork necessary to do the kind
of things they did would have been impossible on our budget. I wholeheartedly
encourage you to solicit ex-member aid, support, and participation in your
litigation.
These are but a few examples of the best of all resources
-- the people who care. Everyone I contacted before and during the pendency of
the litigation taught me a great deal and I was able to utilize most of what
they taught me about cults and their destructive nature during the trial. To
name all of them is impossible and as I fear overlooking any of them I won't
attempt to name them all. But a few were exceptional, and to Kathleen, David,
Steven, Margaret, Marilyn, Rachel, and Donald -- my very personal and
profoundest THANK YOU.
The Verdict
The jury awarded Gregory Mull $l,563,000 in 1986 in a
general verdict: $52l,000 in compensatory damages, which bore a rational
relationship to the general damages, and $52l,000 in punitive damages from both
CUT and Elizabeth Clare Prophet. In early 1989, the California Appellate Court
upheld the decision and, with finality, vindicated Gregory's case, saying that
CUT conduct toward him had been "shameful, despicable, and reprehensible." The
appeal court, responding to a CUT claim that the jury's decision had been too
emotionally based, said the decision indicated logic and a lack of emotion.
Pending a decision on CUT's appeal to the U. S. Supreme Court, the church paid
jury fees and placed the verdict amount in a locked account. I now expect the
funds to be released following the high court's recent refusal to grant CUT a
writ of certiorari, thus finally ending the case.
My Client's Death
Three months after the verdict, Gregory Mull died. Only
the will to strike a blow on behalf of other cult victims, as he put it, held
him together through the ordeal, for in addition to the stress of an action
against an organization and leader to which he had once been in thrall, he had
begun to suffer severe symptoms of multiple sclerosis. The disease first became
clear when, prior to the trial, Gregory told local building inspectors that CUT
structures were not earthquake safe. This led to tremendous harassment against
him. Threatening calls to his home 24 hours a day and vandalism to his car,
among other actions, stimulated a stroke-like incident (which was not, at the
time, identified as an MS symptom). He was in acute physical distress day after
day in court, but was determined to continue. A subsequent declaration by
Elizabeth Clare Prophet that Gregory was "the beast of blasphemy " (a signal
that he should be "destroyed") stimulated another stroke. His doctors then
determined that Gregory was suffering from MS. His speech patterns had slowed,
he walked with a cane, and often required physical assistance. Although I never
accused CUT of causing the MS, a physician testifying to the physical effects of
membership on Gregory said that the pressures he faced before the trial may have
exacerbated a dormant MS. Throughout his life, Gregory Mull sought to do God's
work. And in the end, he did. For by telling the truth about CUT, he has
helped to enlighten millions who know nothing about the destructiveness of a
cult experience. Sadly, it may have cost him his life.
Lawrence Levy, JD, is a sole practicing attorney
from Sherman Oaks, California.
Reprinted from: Cultic Studies Journal, Vol. 7, No. 1,
1990
|