Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Gerald Mayo v. Satan and His Staff, 54 F.R.D. 282 (W.D. Pa. 1971), [1] was a federal court case in which a prisoner filed a lawsuit in United States District Court against Satan and his servants. [2] The case's class-action status was dismissed on procedural grounds.
United States ex rel. Gerald Mayo v. Satan and His Staff was a 1971 case filed before the United States district court for the Western District of Pennsylvania in which Gerald Mayo alleged that "Satan has on numerous occasions caused plaintiff misery and unwarranted threats, against the will of plaintiff, that Satan has placed deliberate obstacles in his path and has caused plaintiff's ...
This page was last edited on 17 February 2021, at 08:51 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Hampstead Hoax was a series of false accusations originally made in 2014, alleging that a satan-worshipping paedophile ring of about "175 parents, teachers and religious leaders" were sexually abusing, killing, and eating children and babies in the Hampstead area of north London. [74]
The lawsuit was originally filed in 1996 but delayed until 2000 when the killers' trial was concluded. The initial case was originally thrown out, the judge stating, "There's not a legal position that could be taken that would make Slayer responsible for the girl's death.
In his court order rejecting plaintiff's motion to proceed in forma pauperis in the lawsuit United States ex rel. Gerald Mayo v. Satan and His Staff, 54 F.R.D. 282 (1971), Judge Gerald J. Weber cited this story as the sole, though "unofficial", precedent touching on the jurisdiction of U.S. courts over Satan.
Dale Akiki was born with Noonan syndrome, a rare genetic disorder which left him with a concave chest, club feet, drooping eyelids and ears. [1]Akiki served with his wife as a volunteer babysitter at a church in San Diego County, California.
The Satanic panic in Utah is part of a broader moral panic that began in the 1980s as children in the United States, subjected to coercive interviewing techniques at the hands of zealous social workers, made unsubstantiated allegations of bizarre Satanic rituals and horrific sexual and physical abuse at the hands of day care workers.