Ted (Theodore) Patrick is widely considered to be the "father of deprogramming".
He had a speech impediment, which set him apart from the other children. Until he was sixteen, no one could understand what he said, which made him "shy and backwards and miserable and embarrassed" for most of his childhood. According to Mr. Patrick, after being taken to countless faith healers, witch doctors and voodoo practitioners, the final straw was an embarrasing spin the bottle game. The bottle pointed to him and the girl wouldn't kiss him. (*)(*) He then decided to take his problem into his own hands. His speech improved, and with it his confidence and interpersonal skills. He dropped out of high school in tenth grade to help support his family. After working in a variety of jobs, he saved enough to open a nightclub with his cousin called the Cadillac Club. The venture was successful, and eventually he sold his share of the business to his cousin. Patrick was the co-chairman of the Nineteenth Ward in Chattanooga. He planned on opening a restaurant and cocktail lounge; however, two days before the restaurant’s opening, political enemies of Patrick’s stopped it from opening.
At twenty-five he left his wife and infant son in Tennessee and went with a friend to San Diego, California. There he started the Chollas Democratic Club to assert the rights of the Black community. Perhaps their main accomplishment was picketing supermarkets and other stores to get them to employ Blacks. After he had saved enough money, he brought his wife and children to San Diego. Other organizations he started in San Diego were the Logan Heights Businessmen’s Association, the Junior Government of Southeast San Diego and the Volunteer Parents Organization (VPO.) During the watts Riots in 1965 the VPO was instrumental in keeping the violence from reaching San Diego. For his efforts in the Watts Riots Patrick was awarded the Freedom Foundation Award, which ultimately led to his job as the Special Assistant for Community Affairs, under then-Governor Ronald Reagan.
On June 12, 1971 Mrs. Samuel Jackson contacted Patrick to file a complaint concerning her missing son, Billy. As Billy was nineteen, the police and FBI would not look for him. Billy was involved with the cult known as the Children of God, which had approached Patrick's son Michael a week earlier. Patrick contacted other people whose relatives were in the cult and even “joined” them to know how the group operated. This is when he developed his method of deprogramming. He ultimately left his job to deprogram full-time.
Ted Patrick, one of the pioneers of deprogramming, used a confrontational method:
According to the anti-cult writers Flo Conway and Jim Siegelman in their 1978 book Snapping, cult leaders gave him the nickname "Black Lightning." *
He was one of the founders of the FREECOG organization founded in 1971 to extricate members of the Children of God (COG).
He later helped found the Citizens' Freedom Foundation, which evolved into the Cult Awareness Network(*), which is now owned by associates of the Church of Scientology.
Patrick stood in trial several times for kidnapping activities. After the first trial (which found him not guilty), he stopped executing the actual kidnapping but continued with his deprogramming.
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