WARNING: ARTICLE BELOW CONTAINS EXPLICIT MATERIAL ON SEXUAL PRACTICES AND RELIGIOUS/CULT ABUSE OF CHILDREN
Children of God leader David Berg, surrounded by his "Flirty Fish" female followers in Tenerife, Canary Islands |
The video opens with a young man sitting at a small,
cluttered kitchen table. Darkly handsome and clad in a red muscle-shirt, with a
shaved head and bulging biceps, he looks as if he could be a new Marine out on
his first liberty from boot camp. At first, he speaks haltingly to the camera,
referring to vague “frustrations that I’ve had” while he fiddles with some
objects on the table. He mentions something about an “opportunity” that’s just
come up for him, alludes to unspecified childhood traumas he suffered with
other kids, and muses on the proper way to commit suicide.
At about this time, the objects he’s been fussing with
come into clear view: they’re ammunition rounds, and he’s been loading them
into pistol magazines. He reaches to the side of the table, pulls out a Glock
23 semiautomatic, and praises the killing power of the .40 caliber round it
fires. He also produces a Ka-Bar military knife, and boasts that he’s sharpened
its edge to an angle perfect for “taking out the scum, taking out the fuckin'
trash.” Minutes later, he also mentions that he’s got a stun gun, an electric
drill, a soldering iron, duct tape and socks – all intended for use “to get the
information” out of some unnamed person – information that seems to concern the
whereabouts of “those sick fucks Mama and Peter,” and various other enemies.
Still, he admits he’s untrained in the dark arts of interrogation and homicide,
and may not be able to go through with it.
But the young man soon recovers his mettle. He says
people near him are “dropping like flies,” and that he’s going to wage war
against “…fuckin' perverts…[t]errorizing little kids.” After some more
ambiguous reminiscences and references to pedophilia and child abuse, he seethes:
“You know anger does not begin…to describe how I feel about these people and
what they've done. You know, I mean, rage!...And uh, that's gonna feel good to
do some damage even if it's not much. As far as I can go. That's what I'm gonna
do. It's gonna feel so fucking good -- liberating.”After a few more words, the
video runs blank.
Children of God "Divine Prince" Ricky Rodriguez. Several hours after this video was made, he murdered his old nanny, then took his own life. |
The young man on the video is Ricky Rodriguez, AKA
Davidito. Just three weeks shy of 30, he’s spent his entire life as the poster
child, Divine Prince and Future Leader of a controversial Christian sect with a
history of promoting open, “liberated” sexuality – even among small children.
And now he is about to make a final, brutal, bloody gesture against the pain
and rage he’s suffered since his earliest years.
Within 24 hours of making the video, he will lure his
old nanny Angela Smith (formerly Susan Joy Kauten) to his Tucson, Arizona, apartment, and
then stab her to death with the Ka-Bar knife. Then he will drive west, across
the Colorado River and into the desert town of Blythe, California, where he’ll
check into a motel around midnight. Minutes later, he will drive a few miles’
south of town, turn onto a dark desert road, park the car, and then blow his brains
out with the Glock pistol. He will leave behind a wife, a half-sister and a
circle of fellow “survivors,” as well as a series of email postings and the
video for law enforcement and the media to peruse.
The saddest and most shameful legacy of the Children
of God (AKA The Family) – the sect that Ricky grew up in – has come home to
California, where it started thirty-seven years earlier in a quiet coastal
suburb….
Hjalmer and Virginia Brandt Berg |
The Children of God was in
many ways the fruit of a Christian evangelist’s childhood traumas, combined with a serious midlife crisis. Its founder,
David Brandt Berg, AKA Moses or “Mo”, was born in 1919, the son of traveling
Christian revivalist Virginia Brandt Berg, who toured America with her husband
Hjalmer as the “Berg Evangelistic Drama Company.” When they weren’t on the
road, the Bergs conducted a large part of their ministry in Miami, where they
spent the mid-1920s working out of a 4,500-seat theater and billing Virginia as
“The Miracle Woman” and “A Modern Prophetess.”
Berg’s memories of his early
years were colored by his odd relationship with Virginia. He recalled that as a
child, he habitually masturbated, and was regularly scolded for this by his
mother (according to him, she once even hauled him before the rest of the
family, grabbed a knife and a washbowl, and threatened to emasculate him on the
spot if he didn’t stop abusing himself.) Berg also said that his babysitter, a
Mexican girl named Maria, would fellate him to sleep every afternoon until one
day when Mama Berg intervened, and threw her out of the house.
A 1931 Bible pageant features a young David Berg (second from right). His father Hjalmer is at the far left. |
As Virginia’s marriage with
Hjalmer disintegrated, her son David replaced him as both her lieutenant and
constant companion. When he turned sixteen, David Berg left school, got his
driver’s license, and then spent the next few years chauffeuring his mother to
various revival gigs across America, and acting as her sidekick in evangelism.
Berg said that on one cold Depression night in Northern California, the pair
shared a bed for warmth, and that he got sexually excited lying next to her – a
disturbing admission that foreshadowed his later alleged behavior.
In 1941 Berg, now 22, was
ordained to the Christian and Missionary Alliance. Four years later, after
serving in the Army Corps of Engineers as a conscientious objector, he met Jane
Miller at an Alliance Church in Van Nuys, California; they married shortly
thereafter, and eventually produced four children.
After the war, Berg moved his
family to the Alliance’s Valley Farms settlement in Arizona, a fundamentalist Christian
commune where he found work as a pastor. However, in 1951 he left the community
under a cloud of suspicion. Although Berg later maintained the split was over
doctrinal differences, others alleged he’d been caught having an affair with a
17-year old girl who lived at the Farms.
Berg soon found a new job
with Fred Jordan, one of the first televangelists. For the next sixteen years
Berg worked for Jordan, helping him with his “Church in the Home” TV and radio
shows, and managing one of his Soul Clinic missions. Years later, his eldest
daughter Deborah claimed that during this period, he’d attempted to molest her
several times, and had also started an incestuous relationship with her younger
sister Faithy.
The Berg family in 1961 |
Fired by Jordan in 1967, Berg
looked for other missionary outlets. The former traveling evangelist went back
on the road, this time with his family as a Christian singing group. Their act
bombed everywhere they went, and in early 1968, Berg and his family retreated
to Huntington Beach, California, where his mother was living.
Although retired, the elderly
Virginia Berg had continued her evangelical work – this time informally, among
the long-haired, scruffily-dressed young people who hung out along the beach
boardwalk and pier. While still a suit-clad “square,” her son joined her on her
missions to the beach town’s hippies and runaways. Many years later, he wrote
of a vision he had then for a whole new way of evangelizing the alienated youth
of late-Sixties America:
One dark night, as I walked the streets with these poor drugged and despairing hippies, God suddenly spoke to my heart and said, “Art thou willing to go to these lost sheep to become a king of these poor little beggars? They need a voice to speak for them, they need a shepherd to lead them, and they need the rod of My Word to guide them to the Light” And that night I promised God that I would try to lead them and do everything I could to save them and win them to the Lord and led them into His service…They’d been churched to death and preached to death and hounded to death by the System and it hadn’t done any good, so we just had to get out there and somehow love ‘em back to life.
Berg wasn’t the only
evangelist reaching out to the California Sixties counterculture. Three hundred
miles north of Huntington Beach, in San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district, a
small knot of converted hippies were witnessing to young people who’d been
alienated from both mainstream America and the various come-ons of the
“alternative culture.” Across the Bay, in radical Berkeley, Old-Time Religion
met the New Left as Jack Sparks’ Christian World Liberation Front preached an
activist Gospel that recast the Prince of Peace as a Che Guevara-esque
revolutionary whose teachings opposed the violence and decadence of a corrupt empire,
and who would lead oppressed peoples to freedom and equality. All over
California, small Christian communes formed, likening themselves to the
original cells of believers in first-Century Rome.
Dissatisfied with the Hippie counterculture, many "Jesus Freaks" turned on to Christ, tuned in to the Bible, and dropped out of mainstream America. |
The so-called “Jesus
Revolution” was underway, and its followers would be called “Jesus people,” or
more derisively, “Jesus freaks.”
For the most part, these
countercultural Christians identified not with the faith’s liberal or mystical
tendencies, but with the evangelical, fundamentalist strain of American
Christianity that stressed the “born-again” experience, literal Biblical
interpretation, and apocalyptic “end-times” theology. Like the hippies
themselves, this form of Christianity had been largely a mocked, marginalized
subculture in secularizing, sophisticated postwar America, until its earthy,
emotive spirituality was rediscovered by a generation of young people seeking
authenticity and truth. Though few would admit it today, much of American
Fundamentalist Christianity’s post-Sixties cultural and political power was
forged in this unlikely alliance between youth rebellion and religious
traditionalism.
Although nobody would become
more identified with the “Jesus freaks” than David Berg, he started out slowly
and modestly. After his mother passed away, he took over her ministry to
Huntington Beach’s hippies, and opened up a Christian youth center called the
Light Club at 116 Main Street, just steps from the beach and the pier. Every
night between 8 PM and midnight, young seekers gathered at the funky storefront
chapel, stretched out on its used furniture, sipped coffee and listened to
Berg’s children Aaron and Faithy perform original Christian folk-rock songs on
the low stage, which doubled as an altar in worship services.
But the real action at the
Light Club came when David Berg mounted the stage. Emulating his young
followers, he’d shed his three-piece suit in favor of jeans and a work shirt,
and had grown out his graying hair and beard in the best Old-Testament style. In
his sermons, the 50-year old father of four lambasted the “System”: the older
generation, and the established churches, government, capitalist economy, and military
that served their corrupt, worldly interests. Berg had rejected the role of
mere Christian pastor – now he was a self-proclaimed Prophet, preaching a
“Gospel of rebellion” and a “Revolution for Jesus.”
In the spirit of the times,
Berg and his flock took their message to the streets. They demonstrated at
mainstream churches throughout the Southland, accusing the established sects of
heresy. When some of his followers were arrested at a local college for
trespassing (they’d been leafleting students, and had refused to leave the
grounds), Berg sent a platoon of his people, clad in Biblical robes, to picket
the administration building.
Eventually the local
officials and “System” churches tired of Berg’s antics, and he was forced to
flee, with a few dozen followers, to his old haunts in Tucson, Arizona. There,
Berg, his family and a few of the faithful camped out in a 26’ RV as he plotted
his next move.
One of his closest followers
in Tucson was Karen Zerby, a 22-year old from a straitlaced Christian
background who’d joined his ministry to her more free-spirited peers. Soon she
and Berg were lovers; when their affair became common knowledge among his
flock, Berg justified it as a polygamous arrangement permitted for God’s true
prophets. His legal wife Janet, he later told his lieutenants, was “Old
Church,” and no longer relevant in his life, whereas young Karen Zerby (who was
now calling herself “Maria”) was the queen of the “New Church.” The explanation
seemed to satisfy both his followers and his wife, and Karen/Maria herself
remained Berg’s common-law spouse for the rest of his life.
When the brutal desert summer
arrived in mid-1969, Berg and about fifty followers traveled across the
continent, meeting at a campground in Quebec’s Laurentian Mountains. There, in his
best King James Version English, Berg declared himself the spiritual leader of
the world’s alienated youth – a latter-day Moses, with the hippies standing in
as the Children of Israel:
I
saw unto thee this night, my children of the hippie army, bow low before me,
for I will give unto thee that which I have long desired to bestow upon My
Children. I have said that in the Last Days, I would pour out My Spirit, yet
the world has seen but a little sprinkling of the mighty showers. During this
year to come right before you I shall pour out My Spirit in mighty waves upon
you as you witness to the lost children whom the churches have created by their
own whoredom.
Thou
shalt see it flow as rivers in the streets, parks and highways. Lo, servants,
My hippie children….I have seen thy tears in the night hours during all thy
childhood. I have seen the burdens of thy heart. I have seen the in all thy
struggles against the Evil One, and in thy heartaches, and when the Evil One
hath sought to take thy life, and did seek to destroy many of thee through
drugs. I waited for the congregations of the churches to minister unto thee. But
they hardened their hearts and forsook thee!
Berg’s movement gained a name
shortly thereafter. A reporter, writing about an encampment of Berg’s followers
in New Jersey, was told by one of them that the Christian hippies “were not
part of any church or group, just Children of God.” The name stuck, and became
the sect’s formal title for many years thereafter.
Jesus' Staves: Sackcloth-clad Children of God in a street demonstration. |
The reporter’s piece was just
one of countless media stories about the “Jesus Freaks,” and in particular, about
the Children of God and their charismatic leader. During that period Berg was
in full-on Prophet of Doom mode, telling both reporters and his followers that
a devastating earthquake would push California into the ocean, that Europe and
North America would incinerate each other in an orgy of mutually-assured nuclear
destruction, and that the youth of the world had to repent and save their souls
from the older generation’s Antichrist System. The Children, now growing
rapidly in numbers, began to appear at demonstrations and government offices, wearing
sackcloth, sporting wooden staves and ash-stained foreheads, and preaching
their leaders’ apocalyptic creed. Thousands of youths, disillusioned with the increasingly
drug-sodden, cynical and self-indulgent counterculture, followed them,
including Fleetwood Mac guitarist Jeremy Spencer, who abandoned his band at a
1971 Los Angeles gig to join the Children, and remained with them for the next
four decades.
By now, the main Children of
God operation was at Fred Jordan’s old compound in Tyler, Texas. Berg had
convinced his former employer to let him use the abandoned 400-acre ranch as an
evangelical boot camp, open to all seekers. He also linked up with, and then
absorbed a network of Christian communes organized by David Hoyt, a former Hare
Krishna who’d converted to Christianity and had ministered to San Francisco
hippies during the Summer of Love.
Scenes from the Children of God's Texas ranch, and evangelical work on the road |
Hundreds of drug casualties,
runaways and other young misfits were bused into these settlements by Children
of God evangelists. The ones who stayed were asked to turn all their worldly
goods to the group – such assets financed the Children’s growing number of
collective settlements, and their increasing outreach beyond America. Seekers
and camp-followers who fell in with the group’s communes and gypsy bands across
North America and Europe were usually under the impression they had joined a leaderless
radical Christian group, albeit one that stuck close to Fundamentalist
teachings and an ascetic lifestyle. Many had never even heard of David Berg.
Berg was very much in control
of the movement, however, via private communications called “The Mo[ses]
Letters”. This was a series of hundreds of essays, screeds and rants written by
Berg over a 25-year period, and intended for his committed followers’
instruction and enlightenment. Eventually anthologized into several thick
volumes, the Mo Letters included such
peculiar pieces as “I Am a Toilet -- Are You?”, a 1972 homily where Berg turned the act of
defecation into a metaphor for Christian salvation, comparing himself to a bidet
that was catching “the waste of the system” to purify it in God’s name, and
urging the reader to become a fellow “Toilet for Jesus.”
A 1982 Mo Letter that reflected Berg's anti-Semitism |
Some of the Mo Letters’ nastiest materials concerned
Jews. Berg, who had named his movement’s divisions after the Judaic Twelve
Tribes, had gone to Israel hoping to establish kibbutz-style Children of God communities
there. The government, perhaps fearing mass evangelizing of the population,
turned him down. Berg never forgot the rejection, and for years afterward
peppered the Letters with
anti-Semitic vitriol, where he called the Jewish people “antichrist”, praised Hitler
for attempting to check their power, and claimed that the Holocaust was a hoax
designed to guilt-trip Christians into supporting Israel at all costs.
But Berg’s greatest troubles
were coming not from Jews, but from nominally-Christian Americans. In San
Diego, California, county government official Ted Patrick became alarmed when
his fourteen-year old son came back from a 1971 Fourth of July gathering and
reported that young people with “Bibles and guitars” had tried to lure him into
their circle, telling him that his parents were “of the Devil” and promising
him he’d never have to work or go to school again. Patrick investigated the
Children of God, and even spent several weeks with them undercover as a new
“disciple.” The experience convinced him that the Children were brainwashing
their followers, and he soon learned of families who had “lost” sons and
daughters to the cult, but couldn’t interest law enforcement in helping get
them back.
Ted Patrick (r) "deprograms" a COG member. |
Patrick invented the process
of “cult deprogramming.” For a fee, he and his associates would waylay members
of the Children and other offbeat sects, and then hold them in seclusion while
they confronted their captives, and tried to erase whatever indoctrination
they’d received. As controversial a practice as anything attributed to the groups
he fought, Patrick’s deprogramming work nevertheless earned him much fame, and brought
the Children’s aggressive evangelizing tactics and weird beliefs into widespread
public view. To mainstream America, David Berg looked less like a modern-day self-styled
Moses, and more like a Pied Piper leading its children into physical, mental
and spiritual slavery.
And the controversies were only
beginning. In early 1974, Berg started teaching what he called “The Law of
Love”: a doctrine that said the Children were “God’s last church…the last
chance to prove that the ultimate Church can be trusted with total freedom in
this last generation.” In this antinomian teaching, so long as one’s actions
were motivated solely by love for others and for God, all Biblical legal
restrictions were null and void – especially those pertaining to sex. One 1977
tract, “Love vs. Law!” proclaimed, “As far as the Bible says, for us there is no such thing as adultery!
There is no such thing anymore as a Biblical law against adultery, as long as
it is done in Love, because the ‘Law of Love’ supersedes all other laws!”
In the 1970s, Berg began to equate sexual and spiritual liberation |
The patriarch put this libidinous
doctrine into practice with a novel evangelical technique that would be forever
identified with his sect. On the move again, Berg and his close followers relocated
to England, and with the hippie movement largely passé, turned their missionary attentions to London’s clubs and
discotheques. When his female acolytes witnessed to single men at night spots, Berg
noted that the males seemed much more interested in Dionysian Eros than Christian Agape. Was it possible, he wondered, to literally seduce people into the Kingdom?
There was only one way to
find out. Berg instructed his female disciples that it was now their duty to
become “heaven’s harlots”, and sacrifice their bodies for Christ, that they
might bring men into the Church. Becoming something of a pastoral pimp, Berg instructed
his “girls” on what to wear, how to witness, and how to turn a simple
one-night-stand into a loving welcome into the Christian faith.
Mere necking wasn’t enough for potential converts. Berg went on record as telling his “hookers for Jesus” to perform “masturbation, sucking and actual intercourse…It's all, or nothing at all! Hallelujah!” He even told his female missionaries to expect situations where they might be raped, advised them to endure sexual assault as one might tolerate the greed of a starving child, and openly fantasized how forced gang-bangs could be an excellent opportunity for their victims to witness for the Lord.
Mere necking wasn’t enough for potential converts. Berg went on record as telling his “hookers for Jesus” to perform “masturbation, sucking and actual intercourse…It's all, or nothing at all! Hallelujah!” He even told his female missionaries to expect situations where they might be raped, advised them to endure sexual assault as one might tolerate the greed of a starving child, and openly fantasized how forced gang-bangs could be an excellent opportunity for their victims to witness for the Lord.
This booklet explained "Flirty Fishing" -- sexual seduction of potential COG members -- to preteens |
The sexual-missionary practice
would be dubbed “flirty fishing,” or FF’ing, after Christ’s declaration in
Matthew 4:19, “Follow me, and I will make you fishers of men.” Berg would issue
many Mo Letters on the theory and
practice of this Christian sacred-whoredom, such as King Arthur’s Nights – a novella describing how his wife Karen and
several other Children seduced Englishman Arthur Lindfield into the sect.
Another memorable title on the subject was The
Little Flirty Fishy, a children’s comic book that explained the practice to
Berg’s preteen followers. The Mo Letters,
as well as various public tracts, began to sound less like the Pauline Epistles, and more like The Penthouse Forum.
Berg’s entourage of Flirty
Fishers followed him to Spain’s Canary Islands in 1974, where both female and
male Children turned their evangelical and erotic attentions to the region’s
many tourists. Working out of several communal houses in Tenerife, the Children
not only FF’ed many new disciples into the sect, but quickly gained international
media coverage, as both Time and Stern magazines did pieces on Berg, his followers, and their paradoxical melding
of Christian witness with Swinging-Seventies sexuality.
One of many instruction manuals Berg provided for FF'ers |
Once again, however, the exposure
brought unwanted attention. This time it was from Spain’s conservative Catholic
hierarchy, who complained to local officials about the cult’s presence in the
Islands. Called into Tenerife court in
March 1977, Berg instead fled to mainland Europe, where his followers now
numbered in the thousands. European Children had established colonies in
England, Holland, Scandinavia, West Germany, and Switzerland, and had even
converted an Italian nobleman, Count Victor Emmanuel Canevaro, Duke of Zogli,
who let the cult use his palatial coastal estate near Genoa as a commune.
With the Children’s numbers
and notoriety growing, Berg moved to reorganize the group. Since the name
“Children of God” had become synonymous with both spiritual and sexual
manipulation in much of the media, Berg renamed his movement “The Family of
Love,” or more simply, “The Family.” He also centralized the cult, ousting his
various regional lieutenants and organizing the Family as a system of cells
with elected leaders that answered directly to him.
Berg got even more paranoid
in late 1978, when the Jonestown mass-suicide brought negative attention on
unusual religious groups with charismatic leaders and strange practices. Fearing
that the Family would be hounded or legislated out of existence in the
countries that hosted its cells, Berg organized the “National Reorganize
Securitywise Revolution” (NRS). He urged members to either go underground and
stay on the move from the System, or infiltrate mainstream Christian churches
and slowly inject his teachings into their practices. He also refocused the
group’s missionary efforts on the Third World; the Family’s real future, he
said, lay in developing countries where the System’s media and churches held less
sway, and the suffering masses yearned for delivery from oppression.
The transformation of the
Family into a centralized global spiritual guerrilla movement, as well as the
increasing emphasis on sexuality and separation from “the world,” cost Berg thousands
of followers. Those who remained were even more committed to Berg’s vision of erotic
evangelism and Christian world revolution, and although the group became less
visible, its practices were more radical than ever.
"Davidito" with David Berg |
No person more symbolized the
ideals of Berg and the Family than Karen-Maria Zerby’s son, Davidito. Born on
January 25, 1975 in Tenerife, he was the child of the cult’s “Queen” and a
Canarian hotel worker whom she’d “flirty-fished.” Although the boy’s legal name
was Richard Peter “Ricky” Rodriguez, Berg, who’d arranged the coupling,
christened him Davidito (“little David”) and proclaimed that the boy and his
mother were the “Two Witnesses” mentioned in Revelation 11 that would usher in the Apocalypse. The aging
patriarch raised little Ricky/Davidito as both his own son and his ostensible
heir to the throne – a Divine Prince who would be a living symbol of the
Family’s commitment to create a new kind of human being.
As a cult leader living in a
private cell of compliant young females, Berg indulged his sexual-liberation
ideals fully in the raising of “Davidito.” From birth, Ricky grew up in an
erotically-supercharged environment, and as the movement’s prince, was
encouraged to embody Family-style sexual freedom. His early years were
thoroughly documented in a 1982 Family-published book called The Story of Davidito – a compilation
of Berg’s Mo’s Letters about
parenting that was bound and distributed to Family enclaves around the world,
and offered as a guide to raising the cult’s children, many of whom, like
Ricky, had been conceived in flirty-fishing expeditions.
The Story of Davidito, and other COG publications that followed the "Divine Princes" hyper-sexualized childhood |
Along with accounts of his
more mundane activities, The Story of
Davidito was filled with anecdotes about little Ricky’s precocious sexual
escapades with both other children and his many female nannies. Page after page
recounted how Ricky’s nannies would parade around naked, or have sex with male
Family members, in front of the little boy. How Ricky would imitate them by
attempting to mount little girls, including his younger half-sister “Davida,”
another child conceived by Karen/Maria’s flirty-fishing. How Ricky would be
present during adult orgies, wandering between the bodies and crying for
attention. And how Ricky’s nannies would lie naked with the boy and let him
fondle and suck their breasts, or would fellate him to sleep. All of this was advocated and encouraged by
Berg who, no doubt remembering his own dysfunctional childhood, wanted Ricky
and all other Family children to be raised without the taint of sexual guilt or
shame.
Amazingly, The Story of Davidito even contained
photos of Ricky in sex play with both the nannies and other Family children,
including one picture that depicted an adult female sucking the toddler’s penis.
In that shocking photo, as in all the others in the book, the adults’
identities were disguised with cartoon-like faces that had been drawn over
their real likenesses – a weird touch that made the book all the more
unnerving. The facial obscuring was done largely because Berg and his
associates were on the move across Europe and Asia, and didn’t want to be
identified by authorities as they shuttled between Family safe houses, often
hiding behind phony identities and faked passports to conceal their movements
and locations.
Davida, Davidito, and Berg |
If Davidito was the Family’s
Prince – the “little child [that] shall lead them” into the time of Prophecy –
then his half-sister Davida was the Princess that symbolized childhood sexual
liberation. Unfortunately for her, as she testified years later, this meant
being the focus of spiritual father Berg’s lecherous attentions. Davida said
that during her childhood years, Berg would fondle and perform oral sex on her
(there was no penetration, since years of hard drinking had rendered him
impotent). He also loved having her dance nude for him, and ordered his many
female disciples across the globe to send him “nudie cuties”: videos of
themselves swaying suggestively while topless or naked.
Berg's granddaughter, Merry "Mene" Berg. She testified that her grandfather had sexually and physically abused her. |
But Davida wasn’t Berg’s
only young victim. In the early 1980s, when Berg and his followers were staying
at a secret compound in the Philippines, the sexagenarian sect leader
continually molested his granddaughter Merry, AKA Mene, the daughter of his son
Aaron’s second wife Shula. Berg also forced her to have sex with Ricky, since
he wanted her to get pregnant and continue his family line. When she resisted Berg, he “exorcised” her by
tying her to her bed, beating her with a rod, and spanking her bare bottom in
front of her friends and Family leaders. Astonishingly, the Family transcribed
the “exorcism”, published it in a Mo Letter called The Last State, and made it required reading for all sect members.
By this time, hundreds of
Family children, born of marriages, trysts, and flirty-fishing, and raised
inside the cult according to Berg’s principles, were now reaching puberty.
Within Family colonies, Berg set up groups known as Teen Combos to
indoctrinate, educate and socialize the adolescents, and crush any rebellion
they might display towards him, the sect or their way of life. Troublemaking
teens were sent to so-called “Victory Camps” in the Philippines, Japan, Brazil
and Macao, where they were kept in isolation from the rest of the Family, and
subject to the drunken, mercurial Berg’s arbitrary and ever-changing rules on
behavior and discipline. Reports of beatings and sexual abuse, especially in
the dreaded Macao compound, began to filter through the close-knit world of the
Family.
Manuals like Heavenly Helpers helped COG parents and elders control rebellious children. |
In the late 1980s, Berg ran
the camps, as well as the rest of the sect, from “The Heavenly City” – a
secretive Family settlement in Japan that also housed Ricky and the rest of
Berg’s extended entourage. Initiated into full sexual intercourse at age 12,
Ricky spent his teens living out Berg’s ideal of sexual freedom, making love to
both other adolescents and adults, including (according to Davida) his own
mother.
A Children of God "topless feast" (note the cartoon-obscured faces). |
Years later Ricky vehemently
denied he had an Oedipal relationship with Karen/Maria. But he did testify in
detail about the orgiastic conditions at the Family compounds. One especially
lurid story concerned the time when Berg & Co. occupied a compound in the
Philippines that featured a swimming pool with a glass-walled subterranean
observation room, where voyeurs would watch Berg and others couple with their
multiple partners in the water.
In 1993, the now 18-year old
Ricky traveled to the United States just long enough to visit Washington State
and legally change his name to “Richard Peter Smith.” He continued his
globetrotting with Family hierarchs for another year, then returned to the USA
and changed his name back to “Richard Peter Rodriguez.” (Identity-switching was
a common practice among Family faithful, who used aliases and pseudonyms to
confuse immigration authorities, and often chose common shared surnames like
“Smith” to pass as married couples or legal-family members.)
By this time, the Family was
once again generating media interest – most of it highly negative. Now an
adult, Merry Berg went on NBC TV’s “Now” news show in September 1993, and
discussed her sexual and physical abuse at the hands of Berg and other Family elders.
Soon afterwards, Merry also testified in a high-profile British child-custody
case involving the Family that exposed much of their hyper-sexualized culture
to public view. Other Family children were also coming forward with their own
horror stories about being raised in the cult, many of which corroborated
Merry’s testimony. And on Halloween 1993, film star and former Family child
River Phoenix, who once claimed he lost his virginity at the age of four, died
in a Hollywood gutter of a drug overdose – hardly a fitting tribute to Berg’s
idealization of childhood sexuality.
Along with the personal
revelations, documented evidence of the Family’s sexual shenanigans surfaced as
well. Part of The Story of Davidito
was leaked to the press – hard proof that at least one child had been
systematically molested at Berg’s orders, as an example to his followers. An
even bigger bombshell hit the sect when one of its defectors turned over
sixteen trunks’ worth of pilfered top-secret Family videos and literature to
reporters. The treasure trove of damning materials documented the widespread
advocacy and practice of child sex in the cult.
One of many COG publications that seemed to endorse precocious sexuality |
The Family went into
high-gear damage-control mode. The sect commissioned an independent study of
Ricky and other Family kids that seemed to conclude there was no hard evidence
of maladjustment or molestation among them. They also pointed out that despite
all the seeming evidence against them, nobody in the cult had ever been
convicted of any crimes or misdemeanors against children. As for Merry, Family
spokespeople claimed she was a delusional mental case who had been lying and
“fucking the Devil” since she was a small child.
First page of official COG replay to allegations of abuse. |
The sect also claimed that they’d
renounced their more extreme doctrines about childhood sex, and that such
practices hadn’t continued into the 1990s. Even flirty-fishing, according to
Family literature, had been abandoned in 1987 when AIDS made the practice too
dangerous. The Family also scored a public-relations victory when the British child-custody
case was resolved in their favor in November 1995, although the presiding judge
urged the sect to denounce Berg and his sexual teachings.
But the Family patriarch
wasn’t around to suffer such an indignity. At an unknown date in 1994, the 75-year
old Berg died at a Family commune in Costa de Caparica, Portugal of undisclosed
causes.
Those who had hoped the
Family would jettison its “weirdness” in his wake were disappointed. Karen/Maria immediately took over the reins of
leadership, and during 1995 issued a bizarre stream of “prophecies” from her
late husband and Jesus, as well as beyond-the-grave messages from Genghis Khan,
Jerry Garcia, River Phoenix, and even Art Linkletter (a miracle in itself,
since the former TV host was very much alive at the time).
The channeled spirit of Berg
insisted that his Queen marry Family executive leader Stephen Douglas Kelly,
AKA Christopher Smith, AKA Peter Amsterdam, and make him King and
second-in-command in the new cult dynasty. Kelly, who Merry Berg had identified
as one of her childhood tormentors, became Karen/Maria’s common-law spouse – an
arrangement that continues to this day.
"Queen" Karen Zerby, circa 2000. |
In these prophecies, Karen/Maria
also clarified post-Berg Family doctrine. Although she emphasized that the days
of flirty-fishing and kiddie-sex were long past, she stressed that the Law of
Love – the pro-sexual freedom teaching that had made the Family unique among
Christian sects – was still very much in effect.
Part of living the Law
involved a new teaching called “Marriage of the Generations,” where young
(adult) Family members were encouraged to sleep with members of their parents’
generation, in order to promote harmony and unity in the sect. Another one of
Karen/Maria’s revelations, “Loving Jesus!” had Christ himself urging Family
members to masturbate while praying to him, saying, “We shall have a great
feast and we shall have great love, and we shall have a great, great, great big
orgy together! This is My call to all the young virgins: Come unto me. I want
to marry you. I want you in the bed of my love…” To critics of the Family, as
well as disgruntled defectors, it seemed as if the sect hadn’t reformed at all,
that it was deliberately recreating the same erotic-evangelistic environment
that had caused all the trouble and heartache in the first place.
Three decades after the
Family’s beginnings in Huntington Beach, the action was once again shifting to
California – this time, to the little town of Dulzura in the mountains east of
San Diego. Dulzura was the home of the Family Care Foundation, a nonprofit fund
group whose top officers were all Family members, and which raised nearly $10
million in a six-year period from big donors and government grants. Along with
its work with orphans and disaster victims, the Foundation funneled $70,000 to
the youth charity “From the Heart”, run by Family member Philip Slown, who had
been accused of continually molesting two girls born into the sect. Another
Foundation employee and beneficiary was Paul Peloquin, who had allegedly abused
Merry Berg and produced pornographic videos for the Family while running the
sect’s “Music With Meaning” youth project.
For a few months in 2000, the
Dulzura compound housed the Family’s most famous second-generation member:
Ricky Rodriguez. But he wasn’t there for long; now married to a Hungarian
Family member named Elixcia, the Divine Prince had become thoroughly sick of
both Family life and his role in it, and finally denounced and quit the sect at
the end of the year. He then relocated to Washington State with his wife, moved
into a small apartment and found work on a fishing boat.
But Ricky had spent too many
years in the Family, and been wounded too deeply by his elders, to ever forget
the past and settle down to a “normal” life. By mid-2002, he had discovered the
Internet, and had become a regular poster on ex- and anti-Family bulletin
boards, describing his bizarre childhood and networking with other defectors
and critics.
As he became more obsessed
with his past, he drifted apart from Elixcia, and moved back to California in
2004, rooming with another Family escapee in San Diego and training for work as
an electrician. His Internet postings started getting both more fatalistic, and
more militant:
I was under the mistaken impression that having written [about my story] I could leave it all behind, start a new life that had nothing to do with the cult, and really ‘move on’ with my life. I know now that will never happen. I can’t run away from my past… Something has to be done to stop these child molesters…Every day these people [who] are alive and free [are] a slap in the face to the thousands of us who’ve been methodically molested, tortured, raped, and the many who they have as good as murdered by driving them to suicide.”
Ricky was obsessed with
finding his mother, Karen/Maria. In September 2004 he moved to Tucson, Arizona,
thinking that the peripatetic Family leader might land in her old hometown to
visit her sister Rosemary. Ominously, he started speaking and writing about
killing the Family Queen, and backed up his threats by purchasing a Glock
pistol and training with it at a local shooting range.
Finally, on January 7, 2005,
he made a rambling confessional video of himself in his kitchen, recounting his
sufferings at the hands of the Family, and wavering between thoughts of
suicide, threats of vengeance, and doubts that he could carry out either path
of action. The next day he got in touch with Sue Kauten AKA Angela Smith, a
close associate of his mother’s and one of the first flirty-fishers. An old
nanny of Ricky’s, who appeared in Story
of Davidito photos playing sex games with the little boy, the 51-year old Smith
agreed to meet Ricky that evening in Tucson, ostensibly for a dinner date.
Sue Kauten AKA Angela Smith -- murdered and possibly tortured by Ricky Rodriguez |
She met Ricky at his
apartment on the evening of January 8th, but never left it alive. Ricky might
have tortured Smith for info on his mother’s whereabouts, but the coroner’s
report on her death was inconclusive about secondary injuries. It did however
determine that she had been killed with a single lethal neck wound, and had
also been stabbed on her torso.
While Smith’s bloodied corpse
was still warm, Ricky grabbed some belongings, jumped into his car, and headed
west to California. On the road, he called his wife Elixcia in Washington
State, confessed the murder and told her about his video, begging her to “come
die with me” (she refused, and instead called the police). When night fell,
Ricky crossed the state line into the desert town of Blythe, checked into a
motel, changed out of his blood-spattered clothes, downed a few beers, and then
got back in the car and drove south in the dark desert night, turning onto a
dirt access road. There, at about 2:00 AM on January 9th, he parked
the car, put the Glock semiautomatic to his head, and squeezed the trigger. His
bullet-shattered corpse was found in the morning by an irrigation worker.
The murder-suicide once again
put the Family in the headlines, and brought home the reality and damage of the
cult’s sexual excesses and abuses. Many
people both inside and outside the sect wondered if Alicia Smith had given up
Ricky’s mom’s whereabouts, and if he had crossed into California to stage some
sort of massacre at the Dulzura compound, only to lose his nerve, as he’d
feared he would in the video he made just before the killings. Most, however,
felt that Ricky had burned out on life completely – he had mentioned suicide repeatedly
on both his swan-song video, and his Internet postings – and had killed Sue
Kauten as a last symbolic bloody gesture to the Family before he sent a bullet
through his own skull.
Current Web page for The Family (formerly the Children of God) |
As with all the other
scandals that beset it, the Family weathered the Ricky Rodriguez
suicide-murder. Today, if one peruses its slickly-designed Web site, it seems
to be just another evangelical Christian organization spreading the Good News
and doing humanitarian work across the globe. But its critics and “survivors”
maintain that it has never officially repudiated Berg’s doctrines, and that it
continues to preach and practice in his spirit, often behind the cover of front
groups. The Family remains controversial and the subject of regular
investigations and exposes by both journalists and various national
governments.
The seeds that were planted
on the Huntington Beach boardwalk over forty years ago have long since brought
forth creeping tendrils that have circled the world, sometimes entangling young
and innocent victims in its vines. Whether the Family is an innocent (if
strange) growth, or a noxious weed, will ultimately be determined by the
Harvester that David Berg claimed to represent during his time as a modern-day
Prophet and Patriarch of the world’s alienated youth.
Sources/Links
xFamily.org (massive collection of COG/Family materials by former members. The source of most of the illustrations used here.)
Chancellor, James D. Life in the Family: An Oral History of the Children of God. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2000.
Lattin, Don. Jesus Freaks: A True Story of Murder and Madness on the Evangelical Edge. New York: HarperOne, 2007.
Melton, J. Gordon. The Children of God -- "The Family". Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1997.
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