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Ricky Rodriguez,
aka Davidito (legal names: Richard Peter Rodriguez,
Richard Peter Smith and David Moses Zerby) (January
25, 1975 - January 9, 2005) was a former member of the Children of
God (COG), now known as The Family International (TFI), who
committed a murder-suicide in 2005.
Childhood and
sexual abuse
Rodriguez was born in Tenerife, one of the
Canary Islands. He was the natural son of Karen Zerby and a
Spanish hotel employee whom she "Flirty Fished". He was considered
to be the adopted son of David Berg, Zerby's partner and leader of
the COG, although no official adoption ever took place.
Rodriguez later developed a deep-seated
resentment towards Berg and Zerby, due to the sexual abuse he had
suffered as a child. His sister Christina Teresa Zerby (aka Techi),
whom he grew up with and who is still a member of The Family, does
not hold the same views.
The group published a childcare manual in
January 1982 that described the education, home life, and care
of Rodriguez. The 762-page book also included at least a dozen
photographs depicting the child engaged in sexual activity with
his governesses, particularly Sara Kelley (also known as Sara
Davidito or Prisca Kelley). The COG later ordered this book to
be heavily sanitized and, eventually, destroyed completely. In
the late 90s, it was reprinted in heavily sanitized form. Copies
of the original still exist in the collections of former members,
some of whom have provided them to law enforcement agencies.
Adulthood and
murder-suicide
When Rodriguez grew to adulthood, he married
Elixcia Munumel, and together they separated from TFI in 2001.
Shortly after this, Rodriguez wrote an article on the Web site
MovingOn.org, in which he described David Berg's deviant sexual
activity involving a number of women and children.
In September 2004, after separating from his
wife, he moved to Tucson, Arizona, and worked as an electrician.
According to accounts by his friends and relatives, he moved there
because he heard his mother had visited and he wanted to find her,
her location being secret even to him, due to his speaking out
about his childhood.
In January 2005, he arranged a meeting with a
former associate of his mother's who was involved in his childhood
sexual molestation, Angela Smith (formerly Susan Joy Kauten), and
stabbed her to death in his apartment. He then drove to Blythe,
California, where he shot himself in the head. He released a video
to be distributed to friends, family and former members explaining
his actions.
According to an article in the New York
Times, in the video, "he said he saw himself as a vigilante
avenging children like him and his sisters who had been subject to
rapes and beatings." "There's this need that I have," he said. "It's
not a want. It's a need for revenge. It's a need for justice,
because I can't go on like this."
Dispute regarding
child sexual abuse
The extent to which Rodriguez was subject to
child sexual abuse is disputed. In a 1994 interview with David
Millikan regarding the incidents recorded in the "Story of
Davidito", Rodriguez, who was still a member of TFI at the time,
said, "People feel that the sexual activities I had occurred so
much more than it really did. They believe it had a bigger
emphasis and played a greater part than it did. If they think my
early life revolved around sex it's going to seem very weird, but
I know this wasn't the case, so it was not such a big deal to me."
Millikan also writes: "I pointed out to him that under most legal
definitions of sexual abuse, Sara and the other women who
participated in sex with him would be found guilty."
A book titled Sex, Slander and Salvation,
was funded and edited by TFI. In this book, Lawrence Lilliston
wrote:
The Davidito book does relate David's early
witnessing of sexual behavior and encouragement to explore his
own sexuality, and while these experiences would be
characterized as sexually abusive or neglectful by most child
abuse experts, there is no report of his having been actively
molested or abused by adults. Moreover, there is no evidence of
long-term negative effects on David. The first author, a
clinical child psychologist with thirty years of experience,
recently administered a psychological evaluation to David, who
is now nineteen, and found him to be a bright, well-adjusted,
and emotionally strong young man.
However, when Lilliston attempted to submit his
conclusions as testimony in a child custody case involving TFI in
the UK, presiding judge Lord Justice Sir Alan Ward stated:
[Lilliston's observations of another young
man born in the Family] seem to me to be superficial and to lack
academic credibility. Likewise his conclusion about Davidito.
This was an opportunity to explore exactly what had taken place
in Berg's household. He merely touched upon these matters and
Davidito made it obvious he was not prepared to talk about it.
Nor did they talk about the reasons which impelled that young
man [Ricky Rodriguez, aka Davidito] to make attempts on his life
said by The Family to have been caused by Satanic influences.
Because I conclude that Dr Lilliston was not too concerned
critically to examine The Family's past, I cannot be sure I get
an accurate picture from him.
Wikipedia.org
Ricky Rodriguez,
aka Davidito (legal names: Richard Peter Rodriguez,
Richard Peter Smith and David Moses Zerby) (January 25, 1975 -
January 8, 2005) was an ex-member of the Children of God (COG),
now known as The Family, when he committed a murder-suicide in
2005.
Rodriguez was born in Tenerife, one of the Canary
Islands. He was the natural son of Karen Zerby and a Spanish
hotel employee whom she "Flirty Fished". He was considered to be
the adopted son of David Berg, Zerby's partner and leader of the
COG, although no official adoption ever took place.
Rodriguez
later developed a deep-seated resentment towards Berg and Zerby,
because of the sexual abuse he had suffered as a child and the
unconventional upbringing, although his sister with whom he grew
up does not hold the same views.
The group published a childcare manual in January
1982 that described the education, home life, and care of
Rodriguez. The 700-page book also included a dozen or so
photographs depicting the child engaged in sexual play with his
governesses, particularly Sara (also known as Sara Davidito,
Sara Kelley, or Prisca Kelley).
This book was removed from
circulation and reprinted without the offending pages. Copies of
the original still exist in the collections of former members
who have given them to law enforcement agencies. Some pages have
been posted on the Internet here: Story Of Davidito.
The extent to which Rodriguez was subject to
inappropriate sexual activity is disputed. In a 1994 interview
with David Millikan, regarding the incidents recorded in the
"Story of Davidito", Rodriguez said, "People feel that the
sexual activities I had occurred so much more than it really
did. They believe it had a bigger emphasis and played a greater
part than it did. If they think my early life revolved around
sex it's going to seem very weird, but I know this wasn't the
case, so it was not such a big deal to me."
Millikan also writes: "I pointed out to him
that under most legal definitions of sexual abuse, Sara and the
other women who participated in sex with him would be found
guilty."
In Sex, Slander and Salvation, a book
funded and edited by The Family, Lawrence Lilliston wrote: "The
Davidito book does relate David's early witnessing of sexual
behavior and encouragement to explore his own sexuality, and
while these experiences would be characterized as sexually
abusive or neglectful by most child abuse experts, there is no
report of his having been actively molested or abused by adults.
Moreover, there is no evidence of long-term negative effects on
David. The first author, a clinical child psychologist with
thirty years of experience, recently administered a
psychological evaluation to David, who is now nineteen, and
found him to be a bright, well-adjusted, and emotionally strong
young man."
However, when Lilliston attempted to submit his
conclusions as testimony in a child custody case involving The
Family in the UK, presiding judge Lord Justice Sir Alan Ward
stated: "[Lilliston's observations of another young man born
in the Family] seem to me to be superficial and to lack academic
credibility. Likewise his conclusion about Davidito. This was an
opportunity to explore exactly what had taken place in Berg's
household. He merely touched upon these matters and Davidito
made it obvious he was not prepared to talk about it. Nor did
they talk about the reasons which impelled that young man [Ricky
Rodriguez, aka Davidito] to make attempts on his life said by
The Family to have been caused by Satanic influences. Because I
conclude that Dr Lilliston was not too concerned critically to
examine The Family's past, I cannot be sure I get an accurate
picture from him."
Rodriguez wrote an article on the Web site
MovingOn.org in which he describes Berg's deviant sexual
activity involving a number of women and children.
When Rodriguez grew to adulthood he left the
group, married Elixcia Munumel (his girlfriend who left with
him). In September 2004, after separating from his wife, he
moved to Tucson, Arizona and worked as an electrician. According
to accounts by his friends and relatives, he moved there because
he heard his mother had visited and he wanted to find her, her
location being secret even to him, due to his speaking out about
his childhood.
In January 2005, he arranged a meeting with a
former associate of his mother's who was involved in his
childhood sexual molestation, Angela Smith (formerly Susan Joy
Kauten) and stabbed her to death in his apartment. He then drove
to Blythe, California where he shot himself in the head. He
released a video to be distributed to friends, family and former
members explaining his actions.
According to an article in the New York Times,
in the video, "he said he saw himself as a vigilante avenging
children like him and his sisters who had been subject to rapes
and beatings." "There's this need that I have," he said. "It's
not a want. It's a need for revenge. It's a need for justice,
because I can't go on like this." "Murder and Suicide Reviving
Claims of Child Abuse in Cult", Laurie Goodstein, New York
Times, January 15, 2005.
The Tragic Legacy of the
Children of God
New
Book 'Jesus Freaks' Explores Motives Behind a Violent Revenge
By Jay Schadler and Karson Yiu -
ABC News
Nov. 1, 2007
On Jan. 7, 2005, 29-year-old Ricky Rodriguez recorded his final
thoughts as he prepared to embark on a violent rampage of revenge.
"Some of the things I'm going to try to do are rather shocking,
and maybe not right in a lot of people's books," he said on a
chilling videotape. "I'm just loading my mags here. Hope you guys
don't mind if I do that while I talk."
Raised to be a prophet and a savior, Ricky was
about to become an executioner, and a grim lesson in religious
fanaticism.
"There is this need that I have," he said on
the tape. "This need. It's not a want. And I wish it wasn't. But
it is. It's a need for revenge. It's a need for justice. Because I
can't go on like this."
His attempt to exact justice led to two violent
deaths, including his own.
Rodriguez was once in line to be the next holy
prince in the infamous Christian sect Children of God, now known
as the Family International. San-Francisco-based reporter Don
Lattin has been reporting on the sect since the early 1970s, and
Rodriguez's chilling video pushed him to spend the last two years
investigating the motives behind Rodriguez's violent legacy. The
result is his just-released book "Jesus Freaks."
Lattin says he was intrigued by the video of
Rodriguez, "the drama of loading the bullets and sharpening his
knife. He loved action movies so, you think, he almost saw this as
a movie. I just had to get to the bottom of this. What was really
behind this?"
"What could turn a kid, who was raised to be
prophet in this group that claimed to be Christian, claimed to
have love and compassion for mankind … What could turn him into a
kind of raging monster?" said Lattin.
Children of God
In the late 1960s David Berg -- the self-proclaimed
prophet and Children of God founder -- began preaching a bizarre
brew of sex and scripture. In writings and preaching, Berg
advocated free love among his disciples, including adult-child
sex.
"Berg was actually a genius because he would
test drive these bizarre theologies, bizarre teachings, within his
own inner circle," said Lattin. "So very early on, still in the
late '60s, he would start having these sharing parties where he
would go around naked with a bottle of the wine saying all things
are pure and they'd have these orgies but no one knew that outside
of the inner circle."
"These guys don't just drop out of the sky,"
Lattin said of Berg's appeal. "So why are people following this
guy if he's a monster and a drunk and a maniac? [Because] Berg
came directly out of the Christian evangelical tradition."
Though that notion infuriates most
evangelicals, Lattin points to Berg's own mother, Virginia
Brandt Berg, who was one of the first famous radio evangelists.
Berg failed in the pulpit early on, spending years on the road
as an itinerant minister. But when the tumultuous 1960s rolled
in, Berg finally found his voice.
"There were
these two very strong social forces going on," said Lattin. "There
was the countercultural, the youth movement. All these people
living on the street, in the road with backpacks, lot of drugs.
And there was the beginnings of this evangelical revival in the
country."
By the 1970s, Berg's following grew into the
tens of thousands. His so-called "law of love" urged young women
to win converts to the group by prostituting themselves, something
he called "flirty fishing."
Ricky Rodriguez's mother was Karen Zerby, a
close confidante of Berg's, and together they anointed Rodriguez "Davidito"
-- the future prophet of the sect.
The Second Generation
Other children in the inner circle were given
their own roles, including ex-member Davida Kelley, who became the
princess to Rodriguez' prince.
"We were both raised and nurtured to be the
future leaders of the Family or the End Time prophets, so to speak,"
Kelley said. "We were programmed to believe that."
"Going way back, I think we could refer to my
generation as the second generation and … I would say we were
experimental, test-tube kind of babies so to speak," she said.
Kelley says Berg was "obviously very inspired,
very possessed and very fanatical, but he was also a pedophile."
In fact, provocative adult-child photos and stories lace the pages
of group's manual, entitled "The Book of Davidito." And according
to Kelley, sexual interaction between adults and children was not
just an expectation, it was a commandment.
"At that time, myself or other young girls who
were in the Unit at the time as apprentices, so to speak, would be
required to crawl into bed and interact with David Berg," said
Kelley. "I lived with David Berg from the time I was born till age
13."
When asked if she ever witnessed Ricky being
sexually abused, Kelley said "Oh yes, of course … [by] all the
adult women. Most of them, at least, in the Unit."
Kelley says she even witnessed Karen Zerby,
Rodriguez' mother, abusing him.
In 1986, after a series of official
investigations and lawsuits, the Family International officially
renounced sexual contact between adults and children.
'A Time Bomb Waiting to Go Off'
In 1994 Berg died, and Zerby took over as
leader, and as the second generation grew up, critics says the
years in The Family left many scarred.
"There have been dozens of people who have
committed suicide, and the family disputes this and says, 'well,
some were drug overdoses.' Well that's another way of killing
yourself, a drug overdose," said Lattin.
Despite that claim, most current members of the
family, including some young people ABC News interviewed in 2005,
insist stories of abuse and second-generation suicides are
overblown.
"If it was categorical, if it was widespread,
how come I never suffered abuse," a member named Anna asked . "How
come I who have over 100 friends in the Family International all
over the world, how come none of them ever told me they witnessed
abuse or experienced abuse?"
After years of struggling with his faith,
Rodriguez left the sect in 2001 but never came to terms with his
past. He sought to bring his mother to justic.
The night after recording the videotape,
Rodriguez went searching for his mother, who had long ago gone
underground. Seeking a clue to her wherabouts, Rodriguez arranged
a meeting with Angela Smith at his Tuscon, Ariz., apartment. Smith
had been a trusted assistant to his mother.
Rodriguez killed Smith, and then he drove
several hours into California. Sometime after midnight, he pulled
into a parking lot in the city of Blythe and fired a single round,
ending his life.
"Ricky was a combination of emotions that he
was feeling," said Lattin. "He was incredibly angry at his mother
and his leaders. He was also very guilty -- he blamed himself for
a lot of the abuse that went on. He was just a time bomb waiting
to go off."
Seeking Justice
"Man, if I don't get to her … I'm going to keep
hunting her in the next life, let me tell you," Rodriguez said on
the tape. "And I'm going to keep going until somebody gets her or
I get her -- justice will be done. Believe me."
Lattin says Zerby has never been brought to
justice. "No leaders of the family have been brought to justice
for this, for what they acknowledge was child abuse. People say, 'why?
How could that be?' Well, there's a statute of limitations. A lot
of this happened a long time ago and almost all of it happened
outside of the U.S. by people who kept constantly changing their
names," he said. "So even the victims, the kids themselves, often
don't know who abused them."
Zerby remains the spiritual leader of the
Family International, though the group refuses or is unable to
report her whereabouts. They also continue to deny that Rodriguez
suffered any abuse as a child and take no responsibility for his
suicide.
Family International spokeswoman Claire Borowik
said via e-mail this week that she was unavailable for an
interview, referring us her last on-camera comments delivered two
years ago to ABC News, just after Rodriguez' death:
Jay Schadler: Why do you think Karen Zerby
is nowhere to be found?
Borowik: We don't look on it as nowhere to be found. She's very
present in her writings.
Schadler: Do you know where she is?
Borowik: Do I know where … no. Not necessarily, no.
Schadler: You don't? The Pope is a spiritual lead. We know where
he is. Karen is a spiritual leader. And we don't know where she is.
And her son just committed suicide.
Borowik: I'm aware of that.
Jay: So why don't we know where she is?
Borowik: That's her policy. That's all I can tell you.
Borowik also sent a written statement in
response to Lattin's book. It reads, in part,
"Lattin's effort to analyze the life and
motives of Ricky Rodriguez and the murder/suicide he committed in
2005 was undoubtedly a challenging task … Although Lattin's book
does contain some sound research and factual information, it is
laced with inaccuracies, misconceptions and erroneous conclusions
lacking a factual base -- not to mention, sketchy research.
Information provided by a handful of apostates with a clearly
delineated agenda to demonize the Family is deemed credible,
whereas information proceeding from current Family members is
deemed questionable, at best"
With the group's leader still in hiding, the
story of the children of the Children of God remains unfinished.
Each child will have to write his or her own ending.