Following Up on Recent Stories
Some new developments have arisen in two stories I recently reported on for this blog. First is the case of John J. Anderson, who I wrote about in my March 9th (Pagan) News of Note. Anderson is charged with the murder of teenager Natasha Miller, and his defense team moved to have his confession thrown out of court. During the confession Anderson described himself as a “Druid” and a that Miller was a “Wiccan”.
“…for hours he talked about religion … and his life as a druid – part of an ancient pagan Celtic religion. He placed Miller’s body in the river, he said, for religious reasons, to reunite her with the spirit of water … he attempted to paint himself as a scholar of the universe and told investigators he had studied religion since age 5. Miller, he insisted, was a Wiccan – a paganist – who practiced witchcraft.”
Now it seems that the judge has ruled that a large chunk of his confession be thrown out due to the police refusing to stop the interrogation after Anderson requested it be stopped.
“Judge Nanci Grant said police should have stopped interrogating John J. Anderson, a 24-year-old Wixom man who is accused of murdering Natalie Miller and dumping her body in the river, after he tried to stop the interrogation after several hours. The ruling means that many details – including information police say they have on why he would have killed Miller – will be lost to a jury.”
This will make conviction of Anderson harder, though the police still have access to hours of statements by the alleged killer.
The second story involves a somewhat more law-abiding group of Druids and Pagans that I reported on five days ago. In the original blog post, I talked about how a reporter did a nice story on the Weymouth-based Dolmen Grove and how they were planning a ritual for a ancient felled tree at the “Nine Ladies” stone circle at Winterbourne Abbas.
“A 200-year-old tree at the centre of worship by druids and witches has been chopped down to size after it became diseased. The 80ft beech at Winterbourne Abbas has been reduced to a 10-metre stump by English Heritage because of fears it would die and fall over. The tree has become a dominant feature at the site, famous for the ancient stone circle standing beneath its branches. Now the Dolmen Grove, a Weymouth-based druid group, will perform a ‘re- balancing’ ritual in mourning for the loss of the tree and to mark a new beginning for their holy site.”
Now that same group are facing a string of threats and abuse, perhaps due to the increased publicity they have received recently.
“Pagans in Dorset claim their growing popularity is making them a target for threats and abuse. The Dolmen Grove, a Weymouth-based druid group, says a dead bird with a noose around its neck was left on the windscreen of its van. Then nails were left under the wheels of the van the night after a music gig.”
Despite the threats, the group still plans to go forward with their ritual for the tree on March 24th. The article itself has created quite a back-and-forth in the comments section, generating over sixty comments, many with the typical “why do you dress funny” put-downs. Luckily, unlike nails in tires or dead animals left on vehicles, you can always choose to ignore stupidity and ignorance on web sites.

