CNN Anderson Cooper 360: Twisted Cult
Twisted Cult
CNN Anderson Cooper 360°/2007-12-04
- Download: CNN Anderson Cooper 360°: Twisted Cult (0:09:59.031, 32MB, xViD AVI) — 2007-12-04
ANDERSON COOPER, CNN ANCHOR: Plus, inside a bizarre cult. They preach pedophilia and turned that young man into a suicidal killer bent on revenge. The strange story in the hour ahead.
[Unrelated segments redacted]
COOPER: Also tonight: how this man snapped.
RICKY RODRIGUEZ: This is my weapon of choice.
COOPER: And his twisted upbringing in a cult that preyed on kids -- stalking, murder, suicide. But this strange and twisted story isn't over yet -- the latest, only on 360.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[Unrelated segments redacted]
COOPER: Up next, a story that is only now coming to light about a sect you simply would not believe could exist.
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
COOPER (voice-over): How this man snapped. His twisted upbringing in a cult that preyed on kids. He killed his nanny, tried to kill his mother, killed himself, and the story isn't over. Only on 360.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
[Unrelated segments redacted]
COOPER: Now cults in America, they prey on the young, the old, anyone, really. Tonight, we're going to take you inside one. It's a haunting up-close journey, and it will stay with you.
CNN's Randi Kaye reports.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
RANDI KAYE, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): You're watching a man unravel.
RICKY RODRIGUEZ: I'm just loading some of my mags here. I hope you guys don't mind if I do that while I talk.
KAYE: Ricky Rodriguez had belonged to a sect that called itself The Family International. He made this chilling tape two years ago.
RODRIGUEZ: This is my weapon of choice, the K-bar knife.
KAYE: Just days after this taping, two people will die. Ricky is planning to murder his own mother.
RODRIGUEZ: She's going to pay dearly, one way or another.
KAYE: His mother, Karen Zerby, had become leader of the sect in 1994 after its founder, David Berg, died.
The group, shown here in this documentary, called "The Love Prophet," was once called the Children of God. It sprang up in the 1960s communal free love era.
Berg was a charismatic, self-proclaimed prophet. Former cult members tell us both Berg and Ricky's mom, who Berg called his queen, encouraged adult/child sex. In fact, they wrote about it.
A manifesto they called "The Story of Davidito" was the foundation of their perverted beliefs, according to many former members, Berg's how-to guide for raising sexual children. The Family International now says all "questionable publications were officially renounced and expunged between the late 1980s and early 1990s."
These photos show Ricky's nanny, even his mother, were his sexual teachers.
DON LATTIN, AUTHOR, "JESUS FREAKS": It was an experiment in this strange kind of twisted child-rearing philosophy of David Berg.
KAYE: Don Lattin's just-released book "Jesus Freaks" talks of Berg's cult.
LATTIN: He wanted his child to embrace sexuality, to be a sexual being as an infant growing up.
KAYE: This woman, Davida Kelley, grew up with Ricky in the cult.
(on camera) What was David Berg like?
DAVIDA KELLEY, FORMER MEMBER, THE FAMILY INTERNATIONAL: He was a sick (EXPLETIVE DELETED) pedophile. He was just a sick (EXPLETIVE DELETED) pervert. He interpreted, like, the law of love and the Bible and religion into a sick, perverted way, and that meant being able to violate and abuse anyone and everyone.
KAYE (voice-over): Including her, she says, when she was just 5.
KELLEY: You were only required to have actual intimate intercourse with David Berg once you were, like, the mature age of, like, 12.
KAYE: Davida says Ricky was forced to have sex with dozens of adult women, including his own mother.
KELLEY: I actually witnessed Karen Zerby having intercourse with her own son, Rick Rodriguez, at age 11.
KAYE: Berg was apparently so obsessed with sex he used it to grow his group around the world. Former members say Berg sent women out to seduce men to lure them in to accept his gospel of Jesus.
LATTIN: Berg was God's pimp.
KAYE: The Family International refused an interview with CNN, but in a statement acknowledges Berg taught sexual liberty without instituting safeguards for the protection of minors, but it says, that was corrected in 1986, and any infractions are an excommunicable offense.
The group also told us all of Davida's allegations are false and that Karen Zerby never abused her son Ricky.
Ricky would later escape from the group and marry and try to establish a new life.
ELIXCIA MUNUMEL, RICKY RODRIGUEZ' WIDOW: He wanted the memory of his childhood to be gone.
KAYE: But he had been too deeply scarred. He wanted revenge against his mother, which brings us back to his murder plan.
RODRIGUEZ: Maybe fate will smile on me, the God of war, the God of revenge. Maybe they will grant me happy hunting.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
COOPER: Coming up next, the final chapter. Ricky Rodriguez turned his rage on the two women who raised him and he says betrayed him. Part two of Randi Kaye's report, up close, right after this.
(COMMERCIAL BREAK)
(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)
RODRIGUEZ: This is my weapon of choice, the K-bar knife.
She's going to pay dearly. One way or another.
(END VIDEO CLIP)
COOPER: He is a troubled young man named Ricky Rodriguez. By the time he made that video, he was trying to break away from the cult that had raised him and start again. But it ended up in tragedy.
Once again, up close, CNN's Randi Kaye.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
KAYE (voice-over): David Berg referred to himself as Moses and was known as the Love Prophet. He encouraged free love and open sex between adults and children.
In some bizarre logic, he concluded the Bible called for raising a sexually enlightened child. Berg anointed this boy, Ricky Rodriguez, as his spiritual successor, but the sex abuse would take its toll on him as a man.
RODRIGUEZ: It's a need for revenge. It's a need for justice. Because I can't go on like this.
KAYE: Within hours of taping this in 2005, Ricky contacted his childhood nanny.
KELLEY: She was one of the many female adults that had intercourse with Rick Rodriguez.
KAYE: This is a picture of the two of them.
RODRIGUEZ: I don't think there's going to be much time to feel anything. Might hurt for a split second.
KAYE: In his first bloody act of revenge, Ricky murdered his nanny. He cut her throat, then left her body in his Arizona apartment. But he was not done. He was still looking for his mother.
KELLEY: He realized that he wasn't going to bring his mother to justice the way he wished he could have brought her to in a court of law.
LATTIN: Most of this abuse went on, like, 20 years ago, so the statute of limitations expired. Most of it happened outside the U.S., so it's very difficult to prosecute.
KAYE: A spokesperson for The Family told us its policy for the protection of minors was adopted in 1986. "We regret that, prior to the adoption of this policy, cases occurred where minors were exposed to sexually inappropriate behavior between 1978 and 1986."
Davida Kelley and others, who were children then, are still haunted.
(on camera) Tell me what's going on up here and in here.
KELLEY: Up here it's like -- up here it's like I'm so not OK. I'm not OK.
KAYE (voice-over): This Web site, set up by people who were children in the cult then says at least 30 of them have committed suicide, though CNN has no way of verifying that.
As for Ricky Rodriguez, he never found his mother, a failure, Ricky's wife says, he couldn't live with.
MUNUMEL: He's like, "Baby, you love me."
And I said, "Yes, I love you. You know I love you more than anything else in the world."
And he said, "Then come and die with me."
KAYE: On a deserted road, Ricky Rodriguez died alone, a single shot to the head four years after he fled the cult.
As for his mother...
KELLEY: She's still the leader of The Family, and she needs to be brought to justice.
KAYE: But first, she must be found. Until then, she'll remain in hiding.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
COOPER: I had no idea, Randi, that this group is still out there. In fact, his mother is the leader of it. Are there any charges against her anywhere?
KAYE: Not as of now. All we know is that these crimes happened decades ago. The statute of limitations, as you heard, has run out.
So these people have different aliases. The crimes happened around the world. They've changed their name dozens of times. And this makes it very difficult for the prosecutors and the investigators to go after them.
There were some raids on compounds years ago. There were trials. No convictions. But Anderson, that's one of the reasons why Ricky Rodriguez went on his own, seeking justice after his mother.
COOPER: And they call themselves Jesus freaks, right?
KAYE: They do. And that's part of the...
COOPER: What this has to do with Jesus, I can't understand.
KAYE: Well, everything that David Berg and everything that Karen Zerby now does is really in the name of Jesus. They believe that they can get away with all of this because it's in the name of Jesus.
COOPER: Unbelievable that it's still out there. Randi Kaye, appreciate it. Thanks very much, Randi.
The raw data on the cults is eye-opening. There are an estimated 3,000 to 5,000 in the U.S. they say. Each year they recruit an estimated 180,000 new members and up to seven million in America have once belonged to a cult at one time or another in their lives.
Response by The Family International
- The Family International: In response to CNN's "Young man's suicide blamed on mother's cult By Randi Kaye CNN" (airing December 4th on CNN) (3 pages, 29k) – 2007-12-04 — Response by Family spokesperson Claire Borowik