Andrea Dunlop
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
In this case, the lawsuit of the parents and Madison herself have now been combined in the first amended to complaint in this lawsuit. So not the original lawsuit. The parents originally filed this lawsuit while things were still sort of actively happening and while the child was still underage. So this was not in their original complaint. This is in the amended complaint.
They make these, to me, just explosive allegations about the hospital's conduct. And they mention this element, and we don't get a lot of information about the substance of this disclosure, but they bring in this element that they are alleging that the hospital staffâ
They make these, to me, just explosive allegations about the hospital's conduct. And they mention this element, and we don't get a lot of information about the substance of this disclosure, but they bring in this element that they are alleging that the hospital staffâ
They make these, to me, just explosive allegations about the hospital's conduct. And they mention this element, and we don't get a lot of information about the substance of this disclosure, but they bring in this element that they are alleging that the hospital staffâ
implanted false memories of sexual assault in Madison that then led her to, if I'm following their logic, believe that she had been sexually abused by her parents and led to her attempting suicide in order to not be reunited with them. Because the judge originally, after looking at the Munchausen by proxy, you know, reports originally returned custody of Madison to her parents.
implanted false memories of sexual assault in Madison that then led her to, if I'm following their logic, believe that she had been sexually abused by her parents and led to her attempting suicide in order to not be reunited with them. Because the judge originally, after looking at the Munchausen by proxy, you know, reports originally returned custody of Madison to her parents.
implanted false memories of sexual assault in Madison that then led her to, if I'm following their logic, believe that she had been sexually abused by her parents and led to her attempting suicide in order to not be reunited with them. Because the judge originally, after looking at the Munchausen by proxy, you know, reports originally returned custody of Madison to her parents.
And then, you know, not long after that, she attempted suicide and she wrote a note that said that she would rather die than return to her parents. And, you know, we can glean from this lawsuit that at some point, again, we don't know when, we don't know what the exact details of this were, but that she had made a disclosure to the hospital that she was being sexually abused. by her parents.
And then, you know, not long after that, she attempted suicide and she wrote a note that said that she would rather die than return to her parents. And, you know, we can glean from this lawsuit that at some point, again, we don't know when, we don't know what the exact details of this were, but that she had made a disclosure to the hospital that she was being sexually abused. by her parents.
And then, you know, not long after that, she attempted suicide and she wrote a note that said that she would rather die than return to her parents. And, you know, we can glean from this lawsuit that at some point, again, we don't know when, we don't know what the exact details of this were, but that she had made a disclosure to the hospital that she was being sexually abused. by her parents.
So I want to just unpack this piece by piece, especially in context of this concept of implanting false memories of abuse. So can you help us understand, you know, and just give us some context of this, the so-called memory wars and the 1990s and kind of this whole idea of, you know, psychiatrists or psychologists implanting a false memory?
So I want to just unpack this piece by piece, especially in context of this concept of implanting false memories of abuse. So can you help us understand, you know, and just give us some context of this, the so-called memory wars and the 1990s and kind of this whole idea of, you know, psychiatrists or psychologists implanting a false memory?
So I want to just unpack this piece by piece, especially in context of this concept of implanting false memories of abuse. So can you help us understand, you know, and just give us some context of this, the so-called memory wars and the 1990s and kind of this whole idea of, you know, psychiatrists or psychologists implanting a false memory?
Yeah, and can you actually walk us through the McMartin trial? Because I think that is probably where I think this is maybe the best known, this concept.
Yeah, and can you actually walk us through the McMartin trial? Because I think that is probably where I think this is maybe the best known, this concept.
Yeah, and can you actually walk us through the McMartin trial? Because I think that is probably where I think this is maybe the best known, this concept.
Yeah. And this is part of the satanic panic, right?
Yeah. And this is part of the satanic panic, right?
Yeah. And this is part of the satanic panic, right?
Yeah. So more of a, almost like an investigation, like, and, or even, you know, we talked to a lot of survivors about getting their medical records, like that kind of thing.