Difference between revisions of "Stuart Harris Baylin"

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[[Image:Stuartbaylin.jpg|thumb|160px|Stuart Baylin, circa early 2000s]]
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{{InfoboxPerson |
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image_filename = Stuartbaylin.jpg |
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image_caption = Stuart Harris Baylin (early 2000s) |
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person_name = Stuart Harris Baylin |
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aliases = James, Josh, Sam |
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DOB =  12 March 1955 |
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place_of_birth = New York, USA |
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rank = [[FD]] |
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present_location = ''[[Mexico]]'' |
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spouses = Sara, [[Ruth Frouman]], Claudia Thome |
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children = 1 |
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}}<!--
  
'''Stuart Harris Baylin''' (U.S. citizen, aliases include '''James''', '''Josh''' and '''Sam''') was born on March 12, 1955 in Brooklyn, New York. He joined [[The Family International]] in [[1981]] in Austin, Texas. He is a current member of The Family
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INFOBOX END
and has been living in [[Mexico]] since Sepetmber [[1993]].
 
  
By his own account, he was violenty abusive towards women and children before he joined the Family. According to his stepchildren and other sources, this violent behavior continued after he joined The Family. One of his victims has alleged that Stuart Baylin's child discipline and domestic dispute resolution methods resulted in bleeding, black eyes, broken bones, bruises, and severe pain.
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[[Image:Stuart-baylin-late-1983.jpg|300px|thumb|Stuart Baylin, late [[1983]]]]
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'''Stuart Harris Baylin''' (U.S. citizen, aliases include '''James''', '''Josh''' and '''Sam''') was born on March 12, [[1955]] in Brooklyn, New York. He joined [[The Family]] in mid-[[1981]] in Austin, Texas. He is a current member of The Family International and has been living in [[Mexico]] since September [[1993]].
  
Stuart's history of violence against women and children was regularly reported to regional Family [[:Category:Leaders|leadership]] as incidents occurred. At least two of his victims reported specific incidents of abuse to top leaders of The Family International and their staff on questionaires completed at the [[1987]] South American [[Teen Training Camp]] held near Lima, [[Peru]]. There is no evidence that The Family ever followed its own rules by excommunicating Stuart Baylin for violence against women and children. In fact, after his spouse was expelled from the group 8 months after being diagnosed with breast cancer, The Family refused to return her children and later helped Stuart Baylin abduct and hide them from their parents, other relatives and judicial authorities.
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On May 1, [[1980]] he married 44-year-old Claudia Thome in Austin, Texas and they were divorced on January 8, 1981. <ref>According to the divorce decree and other documents in the case file for Travis County District Court cause number [https://media.xfamily.org/docs/legal/usa/misc/travis-county/tc-313647-stuart-baylin-divorce.pdf 313,647] <small>([[Image:Icon pdf.gif|PDF]] 4 pages, 611K)</small>, the name of his first spouse was '''Claudia Mae Thome''', while a  [http://searches.rootsweb.com/usgenweb/archives/tx/travis/vitals/marriages/1980/travm80a.txt listing of 1980 Travis County marriages] from the Texas Department of Health lists her name as '''Claudia M. Davis'''. </ref> 
  
In December [[1990]], an American woman named [[Ruth Frouman]] filed a complaint with a court in [[Argentina]] that Stuart Baylin and The Family refused to return four of her five children. According to a [http://www.frouman.net/frouman-kidnapping/cultcrackdown.jpg report] by the [http://www.ap.org/ Associated Press], Ruth Frouman alleged that "she was expelled after being diagnosed with breast cancer, which the cult considered a 'Biblical punishment,' and [[cult]] members refused to release her four children."
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In May [[1985]], he married [[Ruth Frouman]] in Corrientes, [[Argentina]] and they permanently separated in early [[1987]]. He did not have any children of his own until he married his third wife, Sara, in the mid-[[1990s]]. Prior to that union, every single time he impregnated a woman, the result was a miscarriage. According to his own account, one of these miscarriages was the result of him beating and kicking his preganant girlfriend down a flight of stairs.  
  
After Ruth Frouman's death in March [[1991]], Judge Julio Campora of the Tribunal de Menores de Mercedes (Buenos Aires, Argentina) began an investigation of The Family in Argentina and ordered Stuart Baylin to present all four children to the court. On April 13, 1993 Stuart Baylin and [[Susan Claire Borowik]] presented the two eldest children, ages 20 and
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By his own account, he was violently abusive towards women and children before joining the Family. According to his stepchildren and other sources, this violent behavior continued after he joined The Family. One of his victims has alleged that Stuart Baylin's child discipline and domestic dispute resolution methods resulted in bleeding, black eyes, broken bones, bruises, and severe pain.
17, to the court, but refused to say where the younger children, ages 12 and 15, were located. The two children that were presented to the court were kept in state custody while the authorities searched for their younger brothers.  
 
  
In May 1993, Stuart Baylin's petition for custody of the Frouman children was denied and the children that had been presented to the court were repatriated to the [[United States]] and reunited with their surviving relatives. According to one of the missing children, Stuart Baylin then took them to Montevideo, [[Uraguay]] and hid them there until September 1993 when Argentine authorities, still searching for the missing children, raided several [[Home|Family homes]] in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Immediately after the September 1993 raids and with financial assiatance from the Family, Stuart Baylin fled with the children to [[Brazil]] and then to [[Mexico]]. They lived there in hiding for several years until finally in July [[1997]], the youngest one was reunited with his father and his other surviving relatives.  
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Stuart's history of violence against women and children was regularly reported to regional Family [[:Category:Leaders|leadership]] as incidents occurred. At least two of his victims reported specific incidents of abuse to top leaders of The Family International and their staff on questionaires completed at the 1987 South American [[Teen Training Camp]] held near Lima, [[Peru]]. There is no evidence that The Family ever followed its own rules by excommunicating Stuart Baylin for violence against women and children. In fact, after his spouse was expelled from the group 8 months after being diagnosed with breast cancer, The Family refused to return her children and later helped Stuart Baylin abduct and hide them from their parents, other relatives and judicial authorities.
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In December [[1990]], Ruth Frouman filed a complaint with a court in Argentina that Stuart Baylin and The Family refused to return four of her five children. According to a [[Chattanooga Times: Cult crackdown|report]] by the Associated Press, Ruth Frouman alleged that "she was expelled after being diagnosed with breast cancer, which the cult considered a 'Biblical punishment,' and [[cult]] members refused to release her four children."
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After her death in March [[1991]], Judge [[Julio Campora]] of the Tribunal de Menores de Mercedes (Buenos Aires, Argentina) began an investigation of The Family in Argentina and ordered Stuart Baylin to present all four children to the court. On April 13, 1993 Stuart Baylin and [[Susan Claire Borowik]] presented the two eldest children, ages 20 and 17, to the court, but refused to say where the younger children, ages 12 and 15, were located. The two children that were presented to the court were kept in state custody while the authorities searched for their younger brothers.
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In May 1993, Stuart Baylin's petition for custody of the Frouman children was denied and the children that had been presented to the court were repatriated to the [[United States]] and reunited with their surviving relatives. According to one of the missing children, Stuart Baylin then took them to Montevideo, [[Uruguay]] and hid them there until September 1993 when Argentine authorities, still searching for the missing children, raided several [[Home|Family homes]] in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Immediately after the September 1993 raids and with financial assiatance from the Family, Stuart Baylin fled with the children to [[Brazil]] and then to [[Mexico]]. They lived there in hiding for several years until finally in July [[1997]], the youngest one was reunited with his father and his other surviving relatives.  
  
 
Neither Stuart Baylin or The Family International has ever provided any evidence that they ever had lawful custody of the Frouman children and that their retention outside the United States was not intended to obstruct the lawful exercise of parental rights.
 
Neither Stuart Baylin or The Family International has ever provided any evidence that they ever had lawful custody of the Frouman children and that their retention outside the United States was not intended to obstruct the lawful exercise of parental rights.
  
===Sources===
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===More Information===
* [http://www.frouman.net/kidnapping/ "Family Values"] &mdash; by [[Peter Frouman]]
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* [http://www.frouman.net/kidnapping/ "Family Values"] &mdash; by Peter Frouman
 
* [[Macleans: Not a normal family|Not a normal family: Canadians face allegations of child sexual abuse]] &mdash; Macleans, p. 34, 1993-09-20
 
* [[Macleans: Not a normal family|Not a normal family: Canadians face allegations of child sexual abuse]] &mdash; Macleans, p. 34, 1993-09-20
 
* [[Chattanooga Times: Cult crackdown |Cult Crackdown: Group alleged to have initated children into sex]] &mdash; Associated Press/Chattanooga Times, 1993-09-03
 
* [[Chattanooga Times: Cult crackdown |Cult Crackdown: Group alleged to have initated children into sex]] &mdash; Associated Press/Chattanooga Times, 1993-09-03
* [http://www.frouman.net/node/32 Todo empezo con 4 norteamericanos] &mdash; Clarin, 1993-09-02
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* [http://www.frouman.net/frouman-kidnapping/todoempezocon4norteamericanos.jpg Todo empezo con 4 norteamericanos] &mdash; Clarin, 1993-09-02
* [http://www.movingon.org/article.asp?sID=1&Cat=10&ID=2953 Creeps: Stuart Baylin] &mdash; by Peter Frouman, on [[MovingOn|movingon.org]]
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* [http://archive.xfamily.org/www.movingon.org/article.asp%3FsID=1&Cat=10&ID=2953.html Creeps: Stuart Baylin] &mdash; by Peter Frouman, on [[MovingOn]]
* San Martin Court of Appeals, Case 81/89 "Cavazza, Juan C. and others, on Inf. Art.125, 139, 140, 142, Par.l, 142 bis, 210, 293 of the Code of Proceedings and art.3 of Law 23,592," Federal Court of San Isidro, 1 Sec.2 Office II, Reg. 443. Federal Judges: Horacio Enrique Prack, Alberto Mansur, Daniel Mario Rudi (dissented), Buenos Aires, Argentina, December 13, 1993. (some mentions of the Frouman case on pages 22,32 and 99) [http://www.frouman.net/files/causa81-89-mansur-prack-12131993.pdf]
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*[[Tribunal de Menores de Mercedes - Cause number 32.202]] &mdash; the minors Frouman, E. and others regarding Art. 10 of [http://archive.xfamily.org/docs/legal/argentina/legal-references/ley10067.htm Law 10.067].
* [[Stuart Baylin Deposition - 1993-04-14|Stuart Baylin Deposition - 1993-04-14, Causa 32.202, Tribunal de Menores de Mercedes]]
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* [http://frouman.net/antecedentes Antecedentes de la Causa NDD en Argentina- Causa 32.202- menores Frouman E. y otros s/ Inf. Art. 10- Ley 10.067 por Hugo Gabutti]
* Social worker's home visit report in Causa 32.202 [http://www.frouman.net/files/casua32202-informe-socio-ambiental-may-05-1993.pdf]
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* Antecedentes de la Causa NDD en Argentina- Causa 32.202- menores Frouman E. y otros s/ Inf. Art. 10- Ley 10.067 por Hugo Gabutti [http://sapas.tripod.com.ar/testimoniocausandd.htm]
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==Notes==
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<references/>
  
 
[[Category:Abusers]]
 
[[Category:Abusers]]
 
[[Category:Current and Former Members]]
 
[[Category:Current and Former Members]]
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[[Category:Child Abduction]]
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[[Category:Spotlight]]

Latest revision as of 08:17, 17 May 2009

Stuart Harris Baylin (early 2000s)

Stuart Harris Baylin
Aliases James, Josh, Sam
Born 12 March 1955, New York, USA
Rank FD
Present location Mexico
Spouse(s) Sara, Ruth Frouman, Claudia Thome
Children 1
Stuart Baylin, late 1983

Stuart Harris Baylin (U.S. citizen, aliases include James, Josh and Sam) was born on March 12, 1955 in Brooklyn, New York. He joined The Family in mid-1981 in Austin, Texas. He is a current member of The Family International and has been living in Mexico since September 1993.

On May 1, 1980 he married 44-year-old Claudia Thome in Austin, Texas and they were divorced on January 8, 1981. [1]

In May 1985, he married Ruth Frouman in Corrientes, Argentina and they permanently separated in early 1987. He did not have any children of his own until he married his third wife, Sara, in the mid-1990s. Prior to that union, every single time he impregnated a woman, the result was a miscarriage. According to his own account, one of these miscarriages was the result of him beating and kicking his preganant girlfriend down a flight of stairs.

By his own account, he was violently abusive towards women and children before joining the Family. According to his stepchildren and other sources, this violent behavior continued after he joined The Family. One of his victims has alleged that Stuart Baylin's child discipline and domestic dispute resolution methods resulted in bleeding, black eyes, broken bones, bruises, and severe pain.

Stuart's history of violence against women and children was regularly reported to regional Family leadership as incidents occurred. At least two of his victims reported specific incidents of abuse to top leaders of The Family International and their staff on questionaires completed at the 1987 South American Teen Training Camp held near Lima, Peru. There is no evidence that The Family ever followed its own rules by excommunicating Stuart Baylin for violence against women and children. In fact, after his spouse was expelled from the group 8 months after being diagnosed with breast cancer, The Family refused to return her children and later helped Stuart Baylin abduct and hide them from their parents, other relatives and judicial authorities.

In December 1990, Ruth Frouman filed a complaint with a court in Argentina that Stuart Baylin and The Family refused to return four of her five children. According to a report by the Associated Press, Ruth Frouman alleged that "she was expelled after being diagnosed with breast cancer, which the cult considered a 'Biblical punishment,' and cult members refused to release her four children."

After her death in March 1991, Judge Julio Campora of the Tribunal de Menores de Mercedes (Buenos Aires, Argentina) began an investigation of The Family in Argentina and ordered Stuart Baylin to present all four children to the court. On April 13, 1993 Stuart Baylin and Susan Claire Borowik presented the two eldest children, ages 20 and 17, to the court, but refused to say where the younger children, ages 12 and 15, were located. The two children that were presented to the court were kept in state custody while the authorities searched for their younger brothers.

In May 1993, Stuart Baylin's petition for custody of the Frouman children was denied and the children that had been presented to the court were repatriated to the United States and reunited with their surviving relatives. According to one of the missing children, Stuart Baylin then took them to Montevideo, Uruguay and hid them there until September 1993 when Argentine authorities, still searching for the missing children, raided several Family homes in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Immediately after the September 1993 raids and with financial assiatance from the Family, Stuart Baylin fled with the children to Brazil and then to Mexico. They lived there in hiding for several years until finally in July 1997, the youngest one was reunited with his father and his other surviving relatives.

Neither Stuart Baylin or The Family International has ever provided any evidence that they ever had lawful custody of the Frouman children and that their retention outside the United States was not intended to obstruct the lawful exercise of parental rights.

More Information

Notes

  1. According to the divorce decree and other documents in the case file for Travis County District Court cause number 313,647 (PDF 4 pages, 611K), the name of his first spouse was Claudia Mae Thome, while a listing of 1980 Travis County marriages from the Texas Department of Health lists her name as Claudia M. Davis.