Tales of satanic ritual abuse, with well-organized cults sacrificing animals and babies and engaging in sexual perversion and cannibalism, is the stuff of tabloid television.

Now the first empirical study of its actual prevalence, based on information from district attorneys, social service workers, police officials and psychotherapists, suggests these tales are usually just that - figments of imagination.Athough the survey found occasional cases of lone abusers who used ritualistic trappings, it found no substantiated reports of well-organized satanic rings of people who sexually abuse children.

In a survey of more than 11,000 psychiatric and police workers throughout the country, conducted for the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect, researchers found more than 12,000 accusations of group cult sexual abuse based on satanic ritual, but not one that investigators had been able to substantiate. The organizers of the survey say it is the first authoritative national survey on the subject.

The Utah attorney general's office is also preparing a report on satanic abuse but, as yet, has released no details.

Accusations of molesting by cults have been made in thousands of cases over the past decade, and in retrospective claims by adult patients in psychotherapy who say they were abused as children.

Combined with sensationalistic press coverage, these lawsuits and other reports have led many people to believe that there is a nationwide network of satanic groups preying on the young.

"After scouring the country, we found no evidence for large-scale cults that sexually abuse children," said Dr. Gail Goodman, a psychologist at the University of California at Davis, who directed the survey.

"Since the McMartin preschool case there have been claims of ritualistic and sadistic child abuse in cases all over the country, and we've been concerned," said David Lloyd, director of the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect. "The survey was to see just how well-founded these concerns are - if these are just based on mistaken perceptions or there is some firm evidence."

The survey included 6,910 psychiatrists, psychologists and clinical social workers, and 4,655 district attorneys, police departments, and social service agencies. They reported 12,264 accusations of ritual abuse that they had investigated.

The survey found that there was not a single case among them where there was clear corroborating evidence for the most common accusation, that there was "a well-organized intergenerational satanic cult, who sexually molested and tortured children in their homes or schools for years and committed a series of murders," said Goodman.

But Goodman said her group did find "convincing evidence of lone perpetrators or couples who say they are involved with Satan or use the claim to intimidate victims." She added that they "unearthed a few cases where there were confessions or photographs."

One of the best-documented cases, reported by a district attorney in the South, involved four boys and a girl whose grandparents are accused of molesting them from age four into early adolescence; the case came to light when the children refused to visit their grandparents. "The grandparents had black robes, candles and Christ on an inverted crucifix - and the children had chlamydia, a sexually transmitted disease, in their throats," said Goodman, citing the district attorney's report.

But the overall results show little or no support for the more extreme claims, Goodman said. "While you would not expect to find corroborating evidence in many sexual abuse cases, you would expect it when people claim the rituals involved murders, and the reported cases come from district attorneys or police," said Goodman.

"If there is anyone out there with solid evidence of satanic cult abuse of children, we would like to know about it," she said.

There are, of course, people who will be unswayed by this new study because of their belief that abusive satanic groups do exist but are successful at eluding detection despite the efforts of the authorities.

Nonetheless, previous smaller studies done by the Michigan State Police, the Virginia Crime Commission and a study by the British government had similar findings.

In Britain, for example, of 80 cases where extensive, ritualized abuse was alleged, no evidence of any organized group involvement was found, although in a handful of the cases lone child molestors used "black magic" or satanic trappings to scare their victims.

Many psychotherapists who have been vocal about a supposed epidemic of sexual abuse by well-organized satanic rings have grown more cautious of late. "There's clearly been a contagion, a contamination of what people say in therapy because of what they see on TV or read about satanic ritual abuse," said Dr. Bennet Braun, a psychiatrist who heads the Dissociative Disorders Unit at Rush-North Shore Medical Center in Chicago. Braun used to lecture on ritual satanic abuse to psychotherapy groups, but stopped because of growing doubts of such abuse.

Braun said that over the past decade he had treated more than 200 patients who claimed to have been childhood victims of ritual satanic abuse. "In about 10 percent of cases I can document that it did not happen," said Braun. "And there's a significant percentage above that where I'm suspicious of the claims but have no proof. But then there's about 20 percent of cases where everything hangs together and I'd have to say it probably happened but I couldn't prove it." In Braun's opinion, problems arise when therapists ask leading questions because they suspect such abuse even though a patient has not claimed it. "Therapists need to be cautious," he said.

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Goodman contends that an atmosphere of hysteria has led to false claims that can have damaging consequences. "We don't want to discount anyone's true abuse experiences," said Goodman, "but extreme, undocumented, and unlikely claims of satanic ritual abuse risk undermining the credibility of those who actually were victims."

Why victims make such accusations is another issue. Dr. William Bernet, medical director of the Psychiatric Hospital at Vanderbilt University, organized a panel on Saturday at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, diagnosing patients who claim ritual abuse.

"There are several alternative diagnostic possibilities," Bernet said. "The patient may have actually been abused, but in some other way, such as by a psychotic parent. Or these may be false memories, lies, fantasies, or a hoax."

On the other hand, therapists who specialize in treating victims of trauma caution that too much skepticism by psychotherapists can be damaging. "We should preserve some sense of openness," said Judith Herman, a psychiatrist at Harvard and author of "Trauma and Healing" (Basic Books). In therapy, "the stance you take toward such claims is, I wasn't there, but I have to listen to help you make sense of this experience - neither to dismiss it nor to say, `I know what the real story is.' "

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