Laurel Rose Willson
Laurel Rose Willson (August 18, 1941 – April 8, 2002) was an American author whose allegations of Satanic ritual abuse (SRA) were published under the pseudonym Lauren Stratford, which she would later adopt as her legal name. Later, Willson assumed the guise of a Holocaust survivor, and adopted the alias of Laura Grabowski.
Laurel Rose Willson | |
---|---|
Born | Washington state | August 18, 1941
Died | April 8, 2002 60) | (aged
Nationality | American |
Other names | Lauren Stratford, Laura Grabowski |
Occupation | Author |
Known for | Discredited author of books about Satanic ritual abuse and Holocaust survival |
Spouse(s) | Frank Austin
(m. 1966; annulled 1966) |
Early life
Willson was adopted as an infant by Frank Cole Willson and his wife, schoolteacher Rose Gray Willson. A gifted musician from a young age, Willson learned to play the piano, clarinet, and flute. After college, Willson worked as a public-school music teacher. She later resided in Bakersfield, California for a number of years, becoming known within evangelical Christian churches there as a vocalist and pianist.
Satanic ritual abuse allegations
As Stratford, Willson wrote three books, the most famous of which was Satan's Underground, purporting to tell a true story of her upbringing as a baby breeder (for sacrifices) in a satanic cult. Willson had also claimed to have first-hand knowledge of high-profile cases of alleged Satanic ritual abuse (including the child abuse cases in Kern County, where she resided), but her claims were dismissed by investigators as unreliable and fabricated.
An investigation by Bob and Gretchen Passantino and Jon Trott in the Christian magazine Cornerstone discovered Stratford's real name and family background, and that her stories of abuse were false.[1] In interviews with Willson's family and former associates, it was revealed that Willson had a long history of mental illness and making false allegations of abuse. She repeatedly threatened suicide and practiced self-mutilation. She attracted the attention and sympathy of evangelical author Johanna Michaelsen, one of the most influential promoters of the Satanic moral panic of the period. While living with Michaelsen, Willson claimed to have given birth to three children as a result of rape; two were allegedly killed in snuff films, and the third was supposedly sacrificed in her presence at a Satanic ritual. However, Cornerstone found no evidence that she had ever been pregnant or adopted a child.
She was also briefly involved in the McMartin preschool trial, claiming to have witnessed the abuses and to have been involved in an ongoing lesbian relationship with Virginia McMartin.[1]
False identity as a Holocaust survivor
After her books were withdrawn from sale by her publisher, Willson legally changed her name to Lauren Stratford. She would later create another false identity in 1999. Pretending to be Laura Grabowski, a Jewish survivor of Auschwitz-Birkenau, Willson collected thousands of dollars in donations intended for Holocaust survivors. As Grabowski, Willson befriended Binjamin Wilkomirski, claiming to remember him from the camps. Wilkomirski (real name Bruno Grosjean) later was revealed to be neither Jewish nor a Holocaust survivor, aiding in the exposure of Willson as a fraud.[2]
See also
References
- Bob & Gretchen Passantino and Jon Trott, "Satan's Sideshow: The True Lauren Stratford Story Archived October 2, 2003, at the Wayback Machine", Cornerstone, 1990 Vol. 18, Issue 90
- Lauren Stratford: From Satanic Ritual Abuse to Jewish Holocaust Survivor – Cornerstone magazine's exposé of Stratford's claim to be Laura Grabowski