
She Was Fine in the Book. On the Stand, E. Jean Carroll Was Ruined
E. Jean Carroll won millions against Trump. But her own book, testimony, and courtroom claims tell three different stories of the same event.

E. Jean Carroll won millions against Trump. But her own book, testimony, and courtroom claims tell three different stories of the same event.

Author’s note: This essay was accepted for publication two years ago by the religious magazine First Things. The editors, anticipating trouble, asked me to collect endorsements from prominent people. This I did. Strong letters of support arrived from Noam Chomsky, Elizabeth Loftus, Carol Tavris, and

The Bureau of Prisons will unlock the doors to Clare Webb Bronfman’s prison cell at the Philadelphia Detention Center, and allow prisoner 91010-053 to head to the Bronx where she will grace the Bronx Community Correctional Center, a busy halfway house.
We have, perhaps, some tedious news for those sated with stories about Keith Alan Raniere: He has filed a Motion to Set Aside Conviction on the grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel.

In the past, I have written about OneTaste – a San Francisco company founded by Nicole Daedone in 2004 and sold to new owners in 2017 – in less than flattering terms. I called it “the fingering cult” because it places a heavy emphasis on Orgasmic Meditation, a timed 15 minute practice performed by a

Opportunity knocks, but who will answer?

More and more, intelligent people who study the Jerry Sandusky case realize a grave injustice occurred and an innocent man was convicted. Frank Report obtained a copy of an email from Sanford G. Thatcher, Director Emeritus, Penn State University Press, to Dottie Sandusky, the wife of Jerry Sandusky.

For those who take the time to study the grave American miscarriage of justice, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania’s prosecution of Jerry Sandusky, it soon becomes apparent that he is innocent. But who will take the time?

I continue to hear from people in Central Pennsylvania who have something to tell me about the Sandusky case or, more particularly, about his accusers.

Nancy Salzman, the president and co-founder of NXIVM, is home. Home being Clifton Park, NY, a suburb of Albany.

Keith Raniere’s forensic experts won’t get to analyze the FBI’s copies of a Lexar camera card before Judge Nicholas G. Garaufis decides the fate of Raniere’s Rule 33 Motion for a new trial – in which he claims the FBI tampered with the camera card.

This is the introduction to the Ryan Rittmeyer series. We will soon publish a series of new discoveries about the criminal Rittmeyer and how he participated in the false conviction of Jerry Sandusky.

Spotlight PA, an investigative news group, is suing Penn State because the Penn State Board of Trustees chooses to meet behind closed doors repeatedly.