The North Carolina couple accused of killing two men and burying them in the back yard regularly performed “satanic rituals” in their home, according to court documents.
The couple’s house had Satanic sayings all over the walls, a friend told the Winston-Salem Journal.
One of the suspects, Pazuzu Algarad, even changed his name from John
Lawson over a decade ago to incorporate the name of a demon from the
novel and film “The Exorcist.”
The headline-grabbing allegations
against Algarad and Amber Burch have prompted the Church of Satan to
comment on the case. In short, the Satanist organization says that its
members, unlike Algarad, do not worship the devil.
In a statement,
the organization’s leader, Magus Peter Gilmore, said the Church of
Satan “stands firm in opposition to criminal acts, whether or not they
are perpetrated in the name of any deity.” People like Algarad, Gilmore
said, are really “devil worshipers.” Calling them otherwise gives
Satanists a bad name.
“Satanism is an atheist philosophy which
does not condone sacrifices nor does it support murder,” the statement
said. Referring to a photograph of Alagrad, Gilmore called the murder
suspect a “theist,” and not a “Satanist.”
“Regardless of what
fictional entity is being worshiped, many now grasp that extremist
theism
worldwide promotes acts of savage injustice,” he said.
Earlier
this week, Forsyth County Housing and Community Development Director
Daniel Kornelis released a disturbing video showing an inspection of
Algarad’s residence, where officials found feces, animal carcasses and
what appeared to be a “dried blood like substance … on walls,” according
to the inspection report.
Swastikas and occult-associated symbols such as pentagrams covered the walls.
The house, owned by Algarad’s mother, Cynthia James, was declared unfit for human habitation.
The
remains of the dead men, Joshua Fredrick Wetzler and Tommy Dean Welch,
were found buried in a shallow grave in the back yard of the home.
After the discovery of the remains, Krystal Matlock, 28, was also
arrested, for allegedly helping the couple bury one of the victims in
2009.
The allegations against Burch and Algarad
are shocking, and it’s easy to understand why any organization might
want to separate itself from their alleged crimes — especially given
the group’s history of contending with the “Satanic Panic” of the 1980′s
and ’90′s, when several high-profile crimes were portrayed as rooted in
“occult” or “satanic” beliefs.
Corrective statements like these are routine for the Church of Satan, which has an improving relationship
with law enforcement. “I have been a consultant for law enforcement on
local, state and federal levels for years,” Gilmore wrote in an e-mail
to The Washington Post. However, he added, “many police departments have
not trained their officers to evaluate such instances, and unless they
contact experts, they could misinterpret the data.”
Gilmore also
said that the Church of Satan’s “hate mail remains steady,” whether
cases like Algarad’s are in the news or not. But the group doesn’t limit
distancing statements like these to instances of criminal activity.
There are several different groups out there using the term “Satanist”
to refer to their beliefs, and they’re often at odds with each other.
This has been going on for awhile.
There are people whom Gilmore
would call “devil worshipers,” for whom a belief in the existence of
actual demons and worship of Satan is a part of their practice. A tiny
subset of that group include people like Algarad, alleged or convicted
criminals who act in the name of a stated belief in Satan or demon
worship.
The Church of Satan, Gilmore said, is a “rational,
atheist philosophy” based on Anton LaVey’s “Satanic Bible” from 1969.
The Church of Satan is generally quite protective of that claimed
lineage and has a specific, somewhat rigorous membership application
process. The group believes that it is the only “authentic” Satanist
group in existence.
The organization’s leadership, according to
Gilmore, believes that “the purpose of the Church of Satan is solely to
communicate its philosophy to a worldwide audience with utmost clarity
and precision.” Gilmore regularly uses the Church of Satan Web site to
comment at length on instances of devil worship in the news, other
“Satanist” groups and the qualities that the Church of Satan believes
make a good Satanist — namely “pride, liberty and individualism.”
Satanism, as defined by the Church of Satan, believes in Satan only as a
symbolic, rather than as a supernatural, representation of these
values.
Although some have
compared the philosophy behind the Church of Satan to a sort of Ayn
Rand-like Libertarianism (there are strong resonances between the two),
the group avoids the association. Gilmore presents Satanism as a
self-contained philosophy of its own, controlled and distributed
exclusively through his organization, the one originally founded by
LaVey. His essays and e-mails often contain bibliographies of links
about the group’s philosophy, which Gilmore encourages readers to peruse
in their entirety.
And then there’s the Satanic Temple, an
entirely separate group led by Lucian Greaves that also refers to itself
as a “Satanist” organization.
Like the Church of Satan, the
Temple calls itself “atheistic.” But that group has a much simpler
membership application process and is more politically active —
something the Church of Satan has taken pains to condemn. In an email to the Daily Dot,
Gilmore explained that he believes political activism should be
personal in nature and not in the name of any “Satanist” movement or
group.
The Satanic Temple is the group that wanted a devil statue outside the Oklahoma state capitol as
a comment on public displays of religion. The group’s activism
generally centers on issues pertaining to the separation of church and
state, presenting itself as an “atheistic religion” that opposes public
displays of religion – but it will fight for its right to participate in
those displays to the fullest extent of the law.
“We agree that
no religious monument should be on public ground. But if there is one,
there needs to be more than one,” Greaves said to the Daily Dot. The
group has also said it is concerned about holiday displays on public
land and “women’s health issues.”
The Satanic Temple is not the same group behind the simultaneous “black mass” in Oklahoma earlier this year. That was the work of yet another “Satanist” group, the Dakhma of Angra Mainyu.
In Detroit, there’s also the Temples of Satan run by Rev. Tom Erik Raspotnik, who refers to himself as a “tea party Satanist.” He thinks the Church of Satan, the Satanic Temple and other local “Satanist” groups are too progressive and atheistic.
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