Ethics Complaints Filed Against Prominent FMSF Board
Member
APA Declines To Investigate
Usage Note
In December 1995, two women filed ethics complaints with the American Psychological
Association (APA) against Elizabeth Loftus, PhD, regarding her published statements about two
legal cases involving delayed memories of sexual abuse. Citing procedural considerations, however,
the APA has declined to investigate the women's ethics complaints.
Jennifer Hoult (a concert harpist living in New York) and Lynn Crook (a Washington State
consultant) each filed separate complaints with the APA, alleging that Loftus mischaracterized the
facts of their legal cases in published articles. Both women brought successful civil suits because of
the sexual abuse that the fathers (and the mother, in Crook's case) perpetrated against them during
their childhoods. At their trials, they presented corroborative evidence that met the requirements for
judicial proof of their allegations.
Loftus serves on the Scientific and Professional Advisory Board of the False Memory Syndrome
Foundation, Inc (FMSF). She also had been an active member of the APA since 1973, but she
resigned in January 1996, shortly after the filing of the complaints. In a brief telephone interview with
TREATING ABUSE TODAY, Loftus confirmed her resignation from the APA, but she denied any
knowledge of the ethics complaints. She also cautioned that TREATING ABUSE TODAY should
not state or imply that she resigned from the APA to avoid investigation of the ethics complaints.
When the ethic complaints were filed against Loftus, Jeffrey N. Younggren, PhD chaired the APA
Ethics Committee. During his tenure in this position, Younggren appeared as an expert witness in
many trials involving so-called "false memory syndrome," generally as a witness for accused
perpetrators or against therapists accused of implanting "false memories." At the time Hoult and
Crook filed their complaints, Younggren and Loftus were both working as expert witnesses on the
same side of the same case. When asked about this coincidence, however, Loftus stated that she
had no knowledge of the fact, because she worked on many cases simultaneously and didn't always
know which expert witnesses were scheduled to testify in any particular case.
Responding to a query from Crook regarding the relations between Loftus and Younggren,
Marguerite Schroeder, a senior investigator in the APA Ethics Office, stated that, if Younggren had
faced such a conflict of interest, he would have recused himself from the matter. She further stated
that Younggren hadn't been made aware of the ethics complaints against Loftus, and so had played
no role in the decisions regarding them. According, however, to the Rules and Procedures of the
APA Ethics Office, "complaints are evaluated initially by the Chair of the Ethics Committee
[Younggren] and Director of the Ethics Office" ("Rules," 1992, p. 1614). Crook and Hoult filed
their complaints on or before December 18, 1995, and Loftus submitted her resignation on January
16, 1996. In her response to Crook's query, Schroeder offered no explanation as to why
Younggren hadn't been informed of the two complaints, even though they were filed nearly a month
before Loftus's resignation.
According to both Crook and Hoult, Schroeder stated that APA policy generally bars the
resignation of members when they're under the scrutiny of the Ethics Committee. Schroeder,
however, further stated that Loftus hadn't yet come under the Committee's scrutiny, and that she
hadn't been informed of the complaints against her, even though Crook and Hoult filed their
complaints nearly a month before Loftus submitted her resignation.
Based on these procedural considerations, the APA Office of Ethics declined to investigate the
ethics charges. Schroeder told Crook and Hoult that it's "unusual" for a member to resign in the
timeframe between receipt of a complaint and a committee decision regarding appropriate action.
When such a resignation does occur, however, Schroeder indicated that the APA no longer has any
authority to pursue ethics complaints against the member.
Both Hoult and Crook have contested the APA's decision. In a strongly worded letter of objection
to Schroeder, Crook argued that APA policy clearly bars the resignation of a member under the
scrutiny of the Committee. She asked that the APA immediately rescind Loftus's resignation and
proceed with an investigation of her complaint. Hoult asked for the same actions, as well as asking
the Ethics Office to send her the procedures for filing an ethics complaint against the Ethics
Committee.
A review of the APA's published guidelines regarding investigation of ethics complaints seems to
bear out the objections lodged by Hoult and Crook. Information provided to complainants states
that "the date of filing is the date on which we [staff of the Ethics Office] receive the correctly
complete APA [ethics complaint] form" (APA, 1995, p. 2, emphasis added). The Rules and
Procedures further state, "Plenary ethics proceedings against a member are initiated by the filing of a
complaint" (APA, 1992, p. 1 622, emphasis added). These two statements taken together would
seem to indicate that Loftus came under the scrutiny of the Ethics Committee on the date of the filing
of the complaints, and thus the APA should have barred her resignation, as stated in the Rules and
Procedures.
REMEMBERING DUBIOUSLY
In her complaint, Hoult alleges that Loftus used distortion and misstatement of fact to seriously
misrepresent Hoult's legal case. In 1988 Hoult brought a civil suit against her father, alleging that he
had raped and otherwise sexually abused her throughout her childhood. After several years of legal
wrangling, the case finally went to trial in June 1993. On July 1, 1993, the jury returned a verdict in
favor of Jennifer Hoult, awarding her $500,000 for the suffering caused by her father's incestuous
abuse. All higher courts have upheld the jury's decision, including the first circuit appellate court.
When Hoult's father petitioned the US Supreme Court, his petition was rejected as untimely. At
some point during all these proceedings, Hoult's father joined the FMSF.
In the March/April 1995 issue of SKEPTICAL INQUIRER (a publication of the Committee for the
Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal, or CSICOP), Loftus published an article titled
"Remembering Dangerously." Subsequently, this article appeared as a resource document on
separate Internet home pages maintained for CSICOP, for the FMSF, and for Loftus at the
Department of Psychology, University of Washington. In the article, Loftus reviews a number of
high-profile cases involving delayed memories of child abuse. The introduction to the article, giving a
cartoon view of the legal process, indicates Loftus's general approach to the cases she reviews.
We live in a strange and precarious time that resembles at its heart the hysteria and
superstitious fervor of the witch trials of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Men
and women are being accused, tried, and convicted with no proof or evidence of guilt
other than the word of the accuser. Even when the accusations involve numerous
perpetrators, inflicting grievous wounds over many years, even decades, the accuser's
pointing finger of blame is enough to make believers of judges and juries. (p. 20)
Of the several cases reviewed in the article, Loftus includes "the case of Jennifer H" (p. 26). Though
Loftus ostensibly offers Hoult a degree of anonymity by using an initial for her last name, she actually
identifies Hoult by citing the case (Hoult v. Hoult) in the article. In an interview with TREATING
ABUSE TODAY, Hoult stated that Loftus's article distorts her case through a broad range of
unethical practices. Among others, Hoult asserts that Loftus misrepresents her competence,
expertise, and personal motivation to speak as an expert on trauma and abuse. As many others
have already pointed out, Loftus has never worked as a clinician and thus lacks training or clinical
experience in child psychology, trauma, the processes of traumatic memory, the evaluation of
alleged sex offenders, and child sexual abuse generally. In this regard, Hoult alleges that Loftus
violated a number of APA ethics guidelines, including the need for truthfulness and candor, misuse
of influence, and making claims outside the area of her expertise.
Hoult also alleges that Loftus used mischaracterization and omission of facts to misconstrue Hoult's
legal case against her father. She pointed out many inaccuracies that support this allegation. In the
article, for instance, Loftus claims that "Jennifer was a 23-year-old musician who recovered
memories in therapy of her father raping her from the time she was 4" (1995, p. 26). Actually, Hoult
began to remember the abuse at 24, at which time she was an artificial intelligence software
engineer. Records in the case show that the bulk of her memories emerged outside of therapy.
Furthermore, Hoult never stated that the rapes began when she was four, a "fact" apparently
created by Loftus for the purposes of her article.
In another passage, Loftus claims that Hoult "remembered one time when she was raped in the
bathroom and went to her mother wrapped in a towel with blood dripping" (1995, p. 27). A review
of court records, however, shows that Loftus has added two elements of her own making: the
memory of the rape itself (the trial transcript shows that Hoult never claimed to remember a "rape")
and the blood-soaked towel (again the transcript shows that Hoult only reported a small amount of
blood between her legs, which wasn't visible to the mother until Hoult dropped the towel from
around her body). Hoult argues that these misstatements by Loftus put her in violation of several
APA ethics guidelines, among them ethics in media presentations and ethics regarding matters of
law.
IT'S MAGICAL. IT'S MALLEABLE. IT'S...MISREPRESENTATION.
In October 1991, Lynn Crook brought a civil suit against her parents based on her delayed
memories of childhood sexual abuse perpetrated by her parents. Loftus testified as an expert
witness for the defense. On March 4, 1994, the judge in the case ruled in Crook's favor, awarding
her $149,580 in damages against her parents, who chose not to appeal the case to any higher court.
In the January/February 1995 issue of PSYCHOLOGY TODAY, Jill Neimark published an article
titled "It's Magical. It's Malleable. It's . . . Memory." In her article, Neimark quotes Loftus, who
gives an abridged and (according to Crook) seriously distorted account of her case against her
father. In this part of the article, at the heart of Crook's ethics complaint, Loftus summarizes the legal
case as follows:
Sometimes [Neimark states, summarizing Loftus] the memories become so seemingly
fantastical that they lead to court cases and ruined lives. [Quoting Loftus] "I testified in
a case recently in a small town in the State of Washington," Loftus recalls, "where the
memories went from 'Daddy made me play with his penis in the shower' to 'Daddy
made me stick my fist up the anus of a horse,' and they were bringing in a veterinarian
to talk about just what a horse would do in that circumstance. The father is ill and will
be spending close to $100,000 to defend himself." (Neimark, 1995, p. 80)
In an interview with TREATING ABUSE TODAY, Crook stated that Loftus's 79-word direct
quote describing her case contained nine misstatements. "Loftus reworded events I recalled, and
incorrectly claimed that a 'fantastical' memory had resulted in my filing this case." Crook pointed out,
for instance, that Loftus contradicted her father's own sworn testimony that his health was
"excellent." Crook also argues that Loftus should have pointed out that she (Crook) won the case,
after presenting evidence that included testimony from two of her sisters who also remembered
incestuous abuse perpetrated against them by their father.
Among other ethical concerns, Crook alleges that Loftus introduces the idea of memory progression
("from . . . to"), even though this claim had failed to hold up during the trial itself. During Crook's
trial, Richard Ofshe, PhD, another prominent FMSF board member who testified for the defense,
claimed to see a "progression" in her memories that called them into doubt. The judge in the case
specifically dismissed Ofshe's attempt to cry "false memory" based on memory progression:
Finally, Dr. Ofshe characterizes plaintiff's memories as a progress toward ritual, satanic
cult images, which he states fits a pattern he has observed of false memories. It
appears to the Court, however, that in this regard, he is engaging in the same exercise
for which he criticizes therapists dealing with repressed memory. Just as he accuses
them of resolving at the outset to find repressed memories of abuse and then
constructing them, he has resolved at the outset to find a macabre scheme of memories
progressing toward satanic cult ritual and then creates them. (Lynn Crook v. Bruce
Murphy and Lucille Murphy, Superior Court of the State of Washington In and For
the County of Benton, #91-2-0011-2-5)
Despite the judge's statement, rendered from the bench, Loftus resurrected the "progression theory"
in the PSYCHOLOGY TODAY article. According to Crook, Loftus should have indicated that her
opinion had been rejected by the court, and that her failure to do so constitutes a violation of APA
ethics guidelines dealing with truth and candor.
According to Crook, Loftus also transformed another memory, her recollection of the event
involving the horse. In the quoted passage, Loftus does seem to imply that the memory involving the
horse emerged as an elaboration and distortion of Crook's earlier memory involving her father, an
implication that Crook denies. Crook also points out that Loftus omitted important information given
by the veterinarian who testified during the trial. Though Loftus chose to present the possibility of
anal penetration of the horse as a wholly fantastical absurdity, the veterinarian (who testified for the
defense) pointed out that it's a common practice in veterinary medicine.
JUST TO BE BELIEVED
Crook told TREATING ABUSE TODAY that she hopes Loftus will be asked to corroborate all
cases that she reports to the media. "I'm dismayed," she stated, "that Loftus would use her position
as an expert witness in my case to try to prove to the public that I was yet another victim of
'repressed memory' therapy." Crook further stated that PSYCHOLOGY TODAY should have
contacted her to check the facts of the case before they published Neimark's article.
While researching this story, TREATING ABUSE TODAY contacted the magazine's editor, Hara
Moreno, to ask about the magazine's formal fact-checking policies. Oddly, Moreno became
extremely hostile. She demanded to know "on whose authority" we had undertaken our
investigation. She further stated that we didn't "know anything about anything," and that she would
only speak with the APA about the ethics complaint. We tried in vain to get Moreno to understand
that we didn't want her to discuss Crook's complaint, that we only wanted to know the formal
fact-checking policy of PSYCHOLOGY TODAY. We never did get an answer. The editor of
SKEPTICAL INQUIRER never returned our call to discuss that magazine's fact-checking policies,
despite a promise from Brian Karr, the executive director of CSICOP, that the editor would speak
with us.
In "Remembering Dangerously," Loftus warns that "supposedly de-repressed" memories could
"trivialize the genuine memories of abuse and increase the suffering of real victims who wish and
deserve, more than anything else, just to be believed" (1995, p. 29). Hoult argues that Loftus used
her scientific credentials in an unscientific effort to trivialize her memories of violent abuse. "I've
proven the charges against my father in a court of law," Hoult stated, "before a jury of his peers. I
am believed, by my family and my friends." Hoult went on to say that she expects ethical treatment
from people who call themselves scientists, including Loftus.
Loftus in fact cites scientific considerations as the reason for her resignation from the APA. In her
letter of resignation, she claims that the organization had "moved away from scientific and scholarly
thinking." Loftus further stated that she had decided to resign "to devote her energies to the
numerous other professional organizations that value science more highly and more consistently."
During her tenure as an APA member, Loftus served "as President of two distinguished divisions
(Experimental Psychology and Psychology/Law)," a fact she points out in her letter of resignation.
Alice Eagly, PhD, who presently chairs the APA Board of Scientific Affairs, expressed puzzlement
over Loftus's abrupt resignation from the APA. Eagly dismissed Loftus's attempt to draw a "global
judgment" regarding APA's commitment to science. She pointed out that the APA fosters a great
many scientific endeavors, and that it publishes the premiere scientific journals in psychology.
Loftus stated in her resignation letter that she resigned largely because of the increasing drift of the
APA "away from scientific and scholarly thinking and . . . towards therapeutic and professional guild
interests." The APA, however, recently approved the FMSF as a continuing education sponsor, [for
more information on the APA's action, please see "APA Approves FMSF as CE Sponsor" in the
same issue of TREATING ABUSE TODAY (Vol 5 No 6/Vol 6 No 1).] and one of Loftus's
colleagues on the FMSF Scientific and Professional Advisory Board (Ulric Neisser, PhD) also
serves on the APA Board of Scientific Affairs. Neisser declined to comment on Loftus's resignation.
TREATING ABUSE TODAY sent written requests for comment to the other members of the
Board of Scientific Affairs; with the exception of Eagly, none responded.
Peter Freyd, PhD, co-founder of the FMSF, issued a puzzling Internet statement (February 8,
1996) regarding Loftus's resignation. Under the subject heading, "It's their stupidity, stupid," Freyd
stated:
The RMT ["recovered memory therapy"] people certainly go in for believing whatever
rumors they like. For the record: there are no ethics complaints against Elizabeth
Loftus. She resigned from the APA because it has moved too far from science.
From his brief statement, Freyd appears to endorse Loftus's claim that the APA no longer holds a
strong, consistent commitment to science. The APA, however, recently recognized Freyd's
organization as a continuing education sponsor, a move that many see as evidence of Loftus's claim
that the APA has indeed moved away from science by entering into a partnership with an
organization (the FMSF) that promulgates pseudoscience. Pamela Freyd, PhD, the FMSF
executive director, declined to comment on the ethics charges filed against Loftus and her
resignation from the APA.
REFERENCES
American Psychological Association. (1995). INFORMATION FOR INDIVIDUALS FILING
APA ETHICS COMPLAINTS [Brochure]. Washington, DC: Author.
American Psychological Association. (1992). Rules and procedures. AMERICAN
PSYCHOLOGIST, 47, 1612-1628.
Loftus, E. (1995, March/April). Remembering dangerously. SKEPTICAL INQUIRER, 19, 20-29.
Neimark, J. (1995, January/February). It's magical. It's mystical. It's . . . memory. PSYCHOLOGY
TODAY, 28, p. 44-85.
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