 |
|
|
|
|
The Secret of
Bryn Estyn: The Making of a Modern Witch Hunt
, Richard Webster, Orwell Press.
|
The Secret of Bryn Estyn, the
former children's home in North Wales that became
the focus of one of the biggest child abuse
scandals of recent years, is, according to Richard
Webster, the very opposite to the version of
events supplied by the police, the media, the
courts and the government. In a 700-page book, the
result of nine years of research, Webster claims
that, far from being members of a 'paedophile
ring', staff at the North Wales children's homes
were the victims of a modern witch hunt and
grotesque miscarriages of justice.
|
The bare bones of the Bryn Estyn
story, also supplied on the Orwell Press website
(1), are this. On 15 March 1992, 40 police
officers arrested 16 men and one woman in and
around Wrexham in North Wales. All but one had
worked at Bryn Estyn, a care home for adolescent
boys on the outskirts of Wrexham, which was closed
down in 1984. According to reports which began to
appear in the press in 1991, Bryn Estyn had lain
at the centre of a conspiracy which supposedly
involved the extensive homosexual abuse of
adolescent boys by a paedophile ring, whose
members terrorised their victims and subjected
them to a regime of violence and brutality.
|
This triggered the largest child
abuse investigation in Britain, which used a novel
method of police investigation: trawling former
residents of care homes for retrospective
allegations. This method means that, instead of
acting upon allegations of abuse made
spontaneously by individuals, the police contacted
those who were resident at the care home at the
time of the alleged abuse.
|
The trawling method resulted in
allegations from 650 witnesses, who accused 365
people of abusing them at homes throughout North
Wales. When only six prosecutions followed, with
only two new convictions for sexual abuse, the
police and the authorities were accused of
mounting a cover-up, with police officers said to
belong to the very paedophile ring they were
supposed to be investigating.
|
The story became a national
scandal. A senior police officer, publicly accused
of raping adolescent boys at Bryn Estyn, sued two
national newspapers, a magazine and a television
company for libel and won. However, rumours of a
cover-up persisted; and in 1996 the government set
up the largest Tribunal of Inquiry in British
history, under Sir Ronald Waterhouse. In February
2000, the Tribunal made damning findings of
extensive abuse in North Wales - although it did
not find evidence of a police cover-up. By then,
the police trawling operation which had begun
there had spread to the whole of Britain. Police
forces collected allegations against 5,000 former
care workers and teachers, and hundreds were
arrested.
|
What really happened? One purpose
of Webster's book is to conduct his own
investigation into the Bryn Estyn affair,
providing a powerful counter-narrative to the
officially endorsed story of widespread
institutional abuse. Webster argues that, while
there were cases of abuse at Bryn Estyn, and two
former members of staff pleaded guilty to physical
and sexual abuse respectively, many of the
allegations of abuse, and particularly those
related to supposed police cover-ups and
paedophile rings, simply could not be true. Using
an impressive volume of documentation and a tight
chronology of events, the book details
inconsistencies and implausibilities in many of
the allegations, and points out the flaws in
official procedures that prevented these from
being identified. He concludes that the 'secret of
Bryn Estyn' is that 'it was an ordinary community
home where the majority of the staff did their
best to look after the difficult adolescents in
their care' (p579).
|
This investigation is compelling,
and at times fascinating. But it is not the most
significant aspect of the book. While Webster's
writing skill makes the tome readable, what
Webster terms 'the story of the story' is
ultimately bewildering. Even when you make it
through the mass of names, dates, and places, all
of which are confused by the fact that Bryn Estyn
closed in 1984 but the police investigation did
not start until 1991, the gulf between the
official version of events and the version
uncovered by Webster's investigation is so wide as
to be incredible. The more persuasive Webster's
version seems, the harder it is to believe that
official procedures came to such different
conclusions. By page 581, when the appendices
start, you are left not really knowing what to
believe.
|
But that, in many ways, is the
point. For in exposing the difficulties in
attempting to prosecute for alleged cases of child
abuse that happened in the past, The Secret of
Bryn Estyn offers some undeniable truths.
Allegations of child abuse, solicited from damaged
young men by police officers and social workers
actively seeking such allegations, should not
simply be accepted as matters of fact. Changes in
the law, which have sought to make prosecutions
for child abuse more efficient and effective, make
people highly vulnerable to being convicted as a
consequence of false allegations. And these
changes have taken place in a climate of
insecurity and mistrust, which provides fertile
ground for witch hunts of the most dark and
dangerous kind. In these circumstances, not
knowing what to believe is far preferable to
accepting allegation as fact.
|
The police method of trawling for
allegations of abuse that happened is based, it
would seem, on a humane and commonsense notion:
that children who are abused often do not report
the abuse, with the result that their abusers can
get away with it. If an adult later reports that
they were abused as a child, it is even more
difficult to prove the abuse, and convict the
abuser. But by trawling the alleged victims'
peers, who would have also been in contact with
the alleged abuser, it is deemed possible to
ascertain whether the accused is likely to have
committed those crimes, or whether the individual
complainant is making a false allegation. In
short, the idea seems to be that if a lot of
people claim to have been abused by the same
person, they probably were.
|
 |
 |
Not knowing what to
believe is preferable to accepting allegation as
fact | |
Logically, this process seems to
make sense. However, it is fraught with dangers.
The fact that allegations of abuse collected by
trawling are not made spontaneously immediately
introduces the power of suggestion into the
proceedings. This can be compounded by certain
psychological theories to do with the denial of
abuse by its victims and the need for
'disclosure'. This assumes that victims of abuse
often initially deny they are abused, and
therefore need to be prompted, or questioned
several times, in order to disclose the 'truth'
that they were in fact abused. It is not hard to
imagine that individual police officers, working
to build a case, can sometimes inadvertently steer
their witnesses in a particular direction.
|
Major press coverage, with lurid
stories of unimaginable horrors allegedly suffered
by former care home residents, appeared at the
time of the North Wales investigation. The offers
of financial compensation to those who had been
abused during their time in care could, one would
think, easily sway young men with little money at
their disposal towards making allegations when
they might not otherwise - and how much more so
when law firms realise the potential rewards of
seeking compensation on behalf of those who could
be victims.
|
All of this creates a situation
ripe for false allegations of abuse - which, it
should be stressed, often does not mean stories
that are consciously or systematically made up.
False allegations are fundamentally untrue.
However, in a climate where individuals are
continually confronted with the possibility they
may have been abused and the awareness that their
peers were allegedly abused, and when they are
offered rewards for saying they were abused, they
become highly suggestible, to the point where it
is possible for them to believe that they were
abused by a particular person in a particular way,
even if it never happened in reality.
|
This is especially the case when
dealing with such a vulnerable group as the former
care home residents in North Wales. For the most
part, these were young men with troubled
backgrounds, who often ended up in care because of
their brushes with the law and gained criminal
records when leaving care. The significance of
finding oneself suddenly on the other side,
treated with respect by the police officers who
would normally be arresting you, and hailed as a
victim/hero, should not be underestimated.
|
As Webster writes: 'People who
have previously felt overlooked and insignificant
may suddenly find themselves the centre of
attention, concern and sympathy. At the same time
the idea that they are now engaged in a battle
against evil, in which many other people,
including counsellors and social workers, are
fighting alongside them, can be a source of great
emotional energy. It may give people both a raison
d'etre and a feeling of strength and
solidarity which they did not previously have.'
(pp131-132)
|
This is not to say that police
trawling operations, such as the one in North
Wales, will solicit nothing but false allegations.
Some allegations will be true. The difficulty lies
in sorting which cases of abuse actually happened
from which did not. But this is where Webster's
criticisms of the legal process used to prosecute
child abuse cases comes into play.
|
As Webster notes, different
alleged offences are normally tried separately in
order to protect innocent defendants against the
presumption of guilt. However, in certain
circumstances, if crimes are sufficiently similar
they can be tried together under the rules
governing 'similar fact' evidence - meaning that
testimony about one crime can be offered as
corroboration of another. Again, this makes a
certain logical sense - and it is easy to see how,
if somebody stands accused of indecently
assaulting several children in a similar way a
long time ago, to try the crimes together appears
to be both an efficient use of resources and the
only possible way to secure a conviction.
|
But what if the allegations are
false? Focusing on the sheer volume of allegations
of depravity against an individual must surely
sway a jury in a particular direction, and when
many allegations are being dealt with, the quality
of the specific allegations comes under less
scrutiny. A crime that, because of the lapse of
time between the alleged abuse and the allegation,
is necessarily a case of the defendant's word
against the complainant's, is tried on the basis
of a defendant's word against that of several
presumed victims. At worst, this invites the
possibility that false allegations are collected
against individuals who are not guilty of the
charges they face, and these false allegations are
used as corroborative evidence that other false
allegations are true. How can somebody hope to
defend himself against that?
|
A report by the House of Commons
Home Affairs select committee in 2002, titled The Conduct of
Investigations into Past Cases of Abuse in
Children's Homes, included in its conclusions
a caution against the increased use of the
'similar fact' principle, for precisely these
reasons:
|
'Whilst we accept that the
criminal justice system needs to be more sensitive
to the needs of victims and witnesses, we are
concerned that the proposed removal of safeguards
for the defendant…may further prejudice the
defendant in historical child abuse trials. We are
particularly concerned about the proposed
relaxation of the rules of evidence, which may
allow for greater admission of "similar fact"
evidence. In our view, given the sensitive and
difficult nature of investigating allegations of
historical child abuse, there is a strong case for
establishing special or additional safeguards for
the exclusion of prejudicial evidence and/or
severance of multiple abuse charges.' (2)
|
 |
 |
All residential care
home workers have become
demonised | |
As the Select Committee's report
indicates, since the North Wales children's home
scandal the law has been gradually moving further
in the direction of relaxing the legal safeguards
that presume defendants to be innocent, in order
to secure convictions of sexual abusers whom it
would otherwise be very difficult to convict. The
trouble is that the extent to which these
developments rightly punish sexual offenders for
heinous crimes, and the extent to which they
imprison innocent people on the basis of false
allegations, we will probably never know.
|
The Secret of
Bryn Estyn is invaluable in reminding us of
these legal trends, and the dangers they can pose
to people wrongly accused of abuse. It is also a
timely commentary on cultural trends, and the
dangers that the contemporary obsession with child
abuse pose to the fabric of our society.
|
Towards the end of the book,
Richard Webster details the numerous
investigations into alleged abuses at children's
homes that were triggered by the investigations in
North Wales, again involving massive trawling
operations. As a consequence, residential care
home workers - whether they find themselves
accused of abuse or not - have become demonised.
Such is the suspicion that now surrounds anybody
working with children in such a setting, and so
nervous have these workers become that they might
face an allegation of abuse, that it is hard to
imagine why anybody would choose to work in this
low-pay, high-risk sector. Indeed, it is now
assumed that the only reason why somebody would
choose such a job is because they have a base
motive for living in close quarters with
children.
|
What this reveals, Webster argues,
is 'one of the most terrible instances of
collective ingratitude' towards people prepared to
help the minority of troubled, abandoned young
people our society produces (p574). And we have to
ask what the general suspicion of care workers
does to the young people in their charge. How does
it affect young adults, having left care to gain
jobs and families of their own, to be the subject
of trawling operations that tacitly encourage them
to think about their childhood in terms of abuse?
Five minutes of fame and some small financial
reward cannot compensate for the emotional
pressure this must bring to bear: indeed, in the
five years following the North Wales police
investigation, three former residents committed
suicide.
|
Moreover, the more false
allegations of abuse that are solicited by police
trawling tactics, the more this leads to what
Webster describes as an 'inflationary spiral of
disbelief', which sheds doubt upon any allegation
of abuse. As Webster argues: '[O]ne of the
greatest failings of the modern child protection
movement is that, in its zeal to believe all
allegations, it has betrayed the very children it
seeks to protect and ushered in the return of the
climate of disbelief that it sought to banish for
ever.' (p552)
|
Residential care workers are not
the only group to find themselves vulnerable in
this climate. An excellent review in the Times
Educational Supplement encourages teachers to
read Webster's discussion of 'similar fact
evidence' with care, as teachers too are
'potentially vulnerable to allegations' (3).
Daycare workers, too, have found themselves
accused of the most depraved acts, and been unable
for several years to clear their names, despite
acquittal early on by the criminal courts (see Child
protection questions: Issues raised by the Lillie
and Reed case, by Jennie Bristow). Where can
this lead, except to a situation where we do not
trust anybody to care for children without abusing
them? Is this the kind of society that we want to
create?
|
Introducing his book, Webster
argues that 'of all of the misconceptions about
historical witch hunts, perhaps the most important
is the notion that they were driven forward by the
common people - that they were based on the
untutored instincts of the mob. This is the very
opposite of the truth …[The witch hunts of the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries] were sent in
motion not by ordinary people but by an educated
elite consisting of bishops, ministers,
magistrates and judges… Historically, indeed,
witch hunts have always relied upon judges and
magistrates, and on official inquiries, in order
to maintain their power and authority'
(pp9-10).
|
Occasionally, our society does
worry that it is in the grip of a 'paedophile
panic', and points to illiterate mobs on housing
estates running intimidation campaigns against the
local paediatrician. The Secret of
Bryn Estyn reminds us that the real danger
comes, not from the passionate mob, but from the
higher echelons of the British state. However the
North Wales children's home scandal started, in
the end the protagonists were politicians, the
police, and the law courts.
|
In the name of protecting children
and punishing perverts, the state was able to
embark on a crusade to cleanse society of an
unspeakable evil, overturning core principles of
truth and justice as it went, regardless of the
wider damage this could cause to care workers
around the country and those who had grown up in
children's homes. And now, it takes a book like
Webster's to force us to think what has become the
unthinkable: that not every residential care
worker is a paeodophile just waiting to get
caught.
|
The Secret
of Bryn Estyn: The Making of a Modern Witch
Hunt by Richard Webster is published by the
Orwell Press. Buy this book from Amazon
(UK).
|
(1) See the Orwell
Press website. The Orwell Press is Richard
Webster's own imprint
(2) Home Affairs -
Fourth Report, House of Commons
(3) No smoke
without fire, Times
Educational Supplement, 18 March 2005
|
| | |
|
|
What is
spiked? spiked is an online publication
with the modest ambition of making history as well as
reporting it. spiked stands for liberty,
enlightenment, experimentation and excellence.
Read
on...
| |
|
| |