FBI Documents Show Alleged Child Sex Abuse
WARNING: This article sensationalizes and exagerates even lies about what is actually in the FBI’s vault. But it also reflects the testimonies true, or not of those witnesses who spoke to the FBI. It will stay on this website until a better article summing up the FBI’s records is made public. So the reader is advised to look at source material and contrast it with the vast amount of information, ex-members’ accounts, legal documents, academic writings, professional investigations, Twelve Tribes own material such as teachings, etc.
Source of article: The Epoch Times.com
Source of FBI records: FBI.gov
FBI records on Twelve Tribes in PDF file you can view and download: FBI files Twelve Tribes Part 01 of 01
June 28, 2019 Updated: June 30, 2019
The FBI released redacted documents this week on the cult community known as the “Twelve Tribes,” revealing numerous allegations against the group, including child sexual abuse, drug trafficking, ritual abuse, and forced labor.
The 61-page document—released by the bureau’s Vault library on June 25—included separate complaints detailing the alleged crimes, mostly against children. The cult has communes all over the United States, including Vermont, New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Florida, California, Tennessee, and more.
In 2013, a preliminary investigation was conducted by the FBI, based on a complaint the bureau received from the Alexander County Sheriff’s Office in North Carolina that children were being “sexually exploited” at a Twelve Tribes compound in the town of Hiddenite. The case was closed the same year.
Twelve Tribes has communes around the world, with the Hiddenite location being one of its training centers.
Documents showed that drugs were used at the commune and placed into “ritual” bread—usually LSD and hallucinogenic plants, as well as heroin and meth. There were also ritual ceremonies once a month that involved the bread being broken and gang rapes.
Punishment within the cult involved being beaten with a rod and having the wife or children of the accused being sexually assaulted by other cult members. The sheriff’s office had been aware of the Hiddenite location since 2006 and that much of the land in the area was owned by the cult, since families who joined had to turn over their property.
Members of the Hiddenite compound also allegedly were forced to go to a location and work all night and day for “three straight days,” in what was known as a “push” that involved three or six members. Those working were allowed to drink coffee that may have had something added to it to keep them awake.
In a prior complaint included in the released documents, a name that was redacted had contacted the public access line to report child sexual abuse in a Twelve Tribes commune located in Manitou Springs, Colorado. The person had said children were threatened not to tell the police or anyone else about the beatings or sexual abuse, and that the cult ran a restaurant in the area.
Yet another document, one from 2010, detailed how a former member was allegedly sexually and physically abused by cult members as a child but had repressed the memories. In 2009, the former member had seen a psychologist, who reported the abuse to local authorities, and had also contacted national leaders of the cult to inform them of her abuse. The former member also attended personal meetings with the cult leaders.
After a meeting on a date that was redacted, the former member was killed in a car crash that “was not accidental” and was allegedly “orchestrated” by cult members to prevent the woman from “propagating the claims of abuse.”
In the Twelve Tribe cult, members were also “allowed to punish any child belonging to the community.” The FBI document detailed how members would take their children to be “wooped,” meaning beaten, if they smiled at another child during a gathering, or if they were “horsing” around.
“Bigger children have missed ‘gathering’ for a couple of days at a time because they were beaten so badly and left in a condition where they could not attend,” the documents said, based on an interview with an FBI agent.
One former member said that they were once “locked in a cellar, beaten, and deprived of food.”
The release of the FBI documents came days after Keith Raniere, the former leader of purported self-help organization NXIVM was found guilty on all charges at a Brooklyn federal court on June 19.
NXIVM Collapse
A federal jury, made up of eight men and four women, deliberated for less than five hours before finding Raniere guilty of all 7 criminal counts including sex trafficking, forced labor conspiracy, and racketeering.
Raniere listened attentively but showed no visible reaction as he learned the verdict. His sentencing is scheduled for Sept. 25.
The accusations against Raniere center around a secret society within the group—which he allegedly created in 2015—named DOS, an acronym for the Latin “dominus obsequious sororium,” loosely translated as “master of the slave women.”
Prosecutors say Raniere was the “highest master” of DOS and forced other members—all women—to have sex with him. Many of the DOS members were branded with a cauterizing pen while naked and being filmed.
Days ago, during closing arguments in the high-profile trial, assistant U.S. Attorney Moira Penza alluded to the prosecution’s May 7 opening statements, telling the jury that Raniere was chiefly after “sex, money, power.”
Penza brought up the testimony of former NXIVM members, including one identified by prosecutors as “Daniela,” who had spoken about being locked up in a room for nearly two years after Raniere found out she had kissed another man. Another member, identified as Sylvie, testified about being forced into a sex act with the leader. Another, a senior board member, detailed Raniere’s manipulation and fraud.
The verdict comes after a 7-week long trial. Raniere could face a maximum sentence of life in prison.
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i really hope anyone here who sees this, reads the full fbi document, it is redacted but quite shocking.
Im a Ex tribe member and while i was there for 2 years i never saw any drugs or anything that caused me to suspect child molesting was going on.
Sounds like a bit of truth and a LOT of disinformation.
On another note, I bought a book years ago called “Cannibals and Evil Cult Killers” published by TimeWarner books:
https://pictures.abebooks.com/isbn/9780751536652-us.jpg
Oddly enough on page 545 of this book it goes on for 9 pages about “Yoneq” and the 12 Tribes Commune.
Very weird. I think powerful interests want to exagerrate claims made about the Community. (?)
Yes it’s a cult with bad doctrine… but drugs in the bread and ritual abuse sound very far-fetched to me.
This car crash is still being questioned. It occured after a higher up member left the community..within hours of him leaving and threatening the elders that he was going to the police. Yes this happened. We do not know who drove him off the road.. it’s alleged it was a yr member. It will be revealed..I pray
As a Ex member I can say I’ve discovered many things the Tribes believe in are profoundly true however I found many errors in their teachings that when compared to the word contradicts scripture. Find out beyond any shadow of a doubt by gogeling and reading….The commonwealth of deceit. We are in the last days foretold about in Timothy when they will not endure sound doctrine but put up for themselves teachers according to their own desires. Is it no wonder then so many are being deceived a d led astray as Mathew 24:24 and 2 Thesolonians chapter 2 warns about in these last hours, watch out.