Agnostic.com

5 8

LINK A victim of the "Satanic Panic," Melvin Quinney has finally been exonerated

After 30 years, a man whose life was ruined by the “Satanic Panic” has finally been exonerated. The Innocence Project of Texas announced that the conviction of Melvin Quinney, which led to him spending over 20 years behind bars, had officially been vacated.

BREAKING: IPTX client Melvin Quinney has been exonerated. Melvin & his children were swept up in the Satanic Panic of the 80's & 90's. In 1991, Melvin was convicted & sentenced to twenty years in prison for a crime that never happened.

The story of what happened to him is predictably horrifying. It requires a basic understanding of the "Satanic Panic," a conspiracy theory that really took hold among a certain kind of Christian in the 1980s.

Perfectly innocent people were accused of ritualistic child abuse, bad behavior was blamed on the devil, and the modern-day witch hunt ruined countless lives. No evidence ever proved this organized abuse was occurring—certainly not the way accusers insisted it was—but as with so many conspiracy theories, its power had nothing to do with the facts.

In Quinney’s case, according to the Innocence Project of Texas, when he and his wife were going through a divorce in 1990, she accused the 43-year-old Quinney of leading a Satanic cult that murdered people. (No evidence of this was ever discovered.)

His kids were soon taken into custody by Child Protective Services. John, his 10-year-old son, accused Quinney of sexual abuse.

After weeks of coercion from therapists, their <strong>mother</strong> and other adults, Sarah and John developed “memories” of abuse and occult rituals.  John came to believe that their father was the leader of a satanic cult that had committed murder and sexually abused him and his sister Sarah as part of satanic rituals.  Melvin was arrested in 1990 and charged with indecency with a child.  John testified at trial about his “memories” of his father’s abuse of himself and Sarah.  Like so many other Satanic Panic cases, the outlandish stories of murder and occult rituals from the children were not part of the trial. Melvin was convicted in July of 1991 and sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Quinney wasn’t released from prison until 1999. (The early release was due to good behavior.) Even then, however, he was forced to register as a sex offender, depriving him of the kinds of opportunities that would allow him to get his life back on track.

It wasn’t until 2012 that he finally attempted to get back in touch with his kids (who had grown up believing their father abused them).

In 2020, John and Sarah and other people familiar with the Satanic Panic testified that there was no evidence that Quinney ever did those thing for which he had been accused. John told the court he realized much later that those stories were entirely fictional, fed to him by his mother, her evangelical friends, and other adults working against his father as a way to override the "good memories” he had of him.

Even after his father was convicted, [John] Parker said his <strong>mother</strong> still him and his siblings convinced that a cult was after them.

“Our whole life revolved around ‘a Satanic cult was after us,’” Parker said. His mom died in 1999.

Another account of that trial offered even more details of how this could have happened:

Parker told the court of many times he met with his <strong>mother</strong>’s church friends, investigators, CPS workers and therapists, whom he said would ask him questions until he gave them the answers they wanted to hear.

“If I told them stories, the crazier, the darker the story, the more they liked it,” Parker said.

One by one, three psychologists who studied the case said Parker never had a narrative of how the alleged abuse occurred. He just seemed to answer questions posed to him.

“John never really gave a narrative, a story, to anything,” Dallas psychologist Alexandria Doyle told the court. “You have to get children to give you a narrative of the situation, describing the event that actually happened.”

A district court judge sent a writ for exoneration to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals last September. And on Wednesday, that writ was granted. It vacated Quinney’s conviction. He no longer has to registered as a sex offender because he never was one and the record no longer says otherwise.

There’s no plan to punish any of the (still living) Christians whose initial lies led to this entire debacle.

This comes a few years after another couple, Dan and Fran Keller, were exonerated after spending more than two decades is prison after being accused and convicted of similar “Satanic Panic” abuse charges. They eventually received $1.68 million each for the 21 years they spent behind bars.

The whole situation with Quinney is a reminder that conspiracies don't just end when the facts are known. The problem with the Satanic Panic has always been that no matter how many bad faith actors use Satan as a metaphor for what they hate, there are many pastors who spend every week convincing their congregations that Satan is real and needs to be eradicated from their lives. They'll never admit they're lying because they genuinely don't believe they are. As long as that belief perpetuates in churches, it's next to impossible to convince people that Satan and the abuse associated with Satan are entirely fictional.

That means, much like sin itself, conservative Christians have invented their own problem out of thin air while presenting themselves as the only solution.

If you’re curious to learn more about Quinney, the podcast American Panic aired a season about his story back in 2020:

snytiger6 9 Feb 17
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

5 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

1

The Innocence Project has a real good series on NetFlix. Not too many episodes.

What struck me was that at least 2 of the falsely convicted men who were finally released, and are now FREE, decided to use what happened to them (& the money they got) as a pulpit to fight for people wrongly behind bars.

One man in OK however, said that "god" would get him out of there....he's still there

twill Level 7 Feb 22, 2023
3

I remember the Satanic Panic very well. So many people believed it with no evidence of any kind. I lived in Texas at the time.

3

The children are the ones that had to suffer as well. Thankfully at least one seems to have worked his way out of the cult to realize that he was used as a tool to confine his father.

7

While I'm glad for Quinney's exoneration and release, I'm totally pissed off that no one is going to be held accountable for their actions leading to his unlawful incarceration.
His wife, and everyone involved should be charged.

ALL religion is EVIL.

1

Women will say and do anything to win a divorce. It's a racket.

Not all women are as spiteful, it sounds like you had a bad experience

@Sweed I'm really, really, tired of people replying "NOT ALL" or "I'm not like that" to comments about humans. We are all pathetic, including me (I'm divorced, thankfully), so chin up. ALL HUMANS ARE SPITEFUL. Larry David did a whole season (10) on that idea and it was funny because everyone relates. I think marriage is an economic racket for many, many, many, women. Get the guy successful and then divorce him and get at least half the money. If you want all of it accuse him of child abuse.

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:710153
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.