The Witch-Hunt Narrative:
Politics, Psychology, and the Sexual Abuse of Children
by Ross E. Cheit (Author)
In the 1980s, a series of child sex abuse cases rocked
the United States. The most famous case was the 1984 McMartin preschool case,
but there were a number of others as well. By the latter part of the decade,
the assumption was widespread that child sex abuse had become a serious problem
in America. Yet within a few years, the concern about it died down
considerably. The failure to convict anyone in the McMartin case and a widely
publicized appellate decision in New Jersey that freed an accused molester had
turned the dominant narrative on its head. In the early 1990s, a new narrative
with remarkable staying power emerged: the child sex abuse cases were
symptomatic of a 'moral panic' that had produced a witch hunt. A central claim
in this new witch hunt narrative was that the children who testified were not
reliable and easily swayed by prosecutorial suggestion. In time, the notion
that child sex abuse was a product of sensationalized over-reporting and far
less endemic than originally thought became the new common sense.
But did the new witch hunt narrative accurately
represent reality? As Ross Cheit demonstrates in his exhaustive account of
child sex abuse cases in the past two and a half decades, purveyors of the
witch hunt narrative never did the hard work of examining court records in the
many cases that reached the courts throughout the nation. Instead, they treated
a couple of cases as representative and concluded that the issue was blown far
out of proportion. Drawing on years of research into cases in a number of
states, Cheit shows that the issue had not been blown out of proportion at all.
In fact, child sex abuse convictions were regular occurrences, and the crime
occurred far more frequently than conventional wisdom would have us believe.
Cheit's aim is not to simply prove the narrative wrong, however. He also shows
how a narrative based on empirically thin evidence became a theory with real
social force, and how that theory stood at odds with a far more grim reality.
The belief that the charge of child sex abuse was typically a hoax also left us
unprepared to deal with the far greater scandal of child sex abuse in the
Catholic Church, which, incidentally, has served to substantiate Cheit's thesis
about the pervasiveness of the problem. In sum, The Witch-Hunt Narrative is a
magisterial and empirically powerful account of the social dynamics that led to
the denial of widespread human tragedy.