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Saturday, March 06, 2010 - 3:58 PM
In the quiet town of Red Bluff, California, Cameron and Janice
Hooker did not stand out. They came and went like anyone else, buying
supplies but generally keeping to themselves. At his job at a local
lumber mill, Cameron was considered dependable. In 1976, they had
rented a home on 1140 Oak Street from an elderly couple, Mr. And Mrs.
Leddy, who lived next door and who noted that the Hookers seemed to be
quiet types, just another young couple starting a family. They knew
nothing about the couple's background. Cameron was better at working
with his hands than making friends. He'd graduated from Red Bluff High
School four years earlier and found work at Diamond Lands
Corporation.. The following year, in 1973, he met 15-year-old Janice,
an epileptic. Cameron spotted how malleable she might be, given how
easily she yielded to whatever he asked, just to have some attention.
She'd clearly take a man at any cost. Cameron, hooked on violent
pornography, persuaded Janice to allow him to undress her and tie her
to a tree, suspended by her wrists. It wasn't comfortable, but his
affection afterward was its own reward. Their kinky sexual acts became
routine and by 1975, they were married. That's when Cameron really
felt safe to do whatever he pleased. Janice belonged to him, so he
made her more of a partner in his sexual fantasies. A
study of 20 female accomplices of sexual sadists conducted by Roy
Hazelwood and Ann Burgess—actually prompted by Carol Smith's
experience—indicated that the male's fantasy life often gradually
becomes a shared pre-occupation. Whatever he wants motivates both
partners. As the male progressively isolates the female, she becomes
more dependent on him and less able to speak up for herself. "It
is important to understand," Hazelwood writes, "that the ritualistic
and heterosexual sadist inherently believes that all women are
evilconsequently, if and when these men set out to prove this
hypothesisthey select nice, middle-class women who are apparently
normal." They use a process that exploited the woman's vulnerability
to turn her into a compliant accomplice. That seemed to be the
dynamic at play in the Hookers' relationship. Cameron led the dance,
and Janice submitted. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire didn't, he threatened her life, and she
believed he might act on his threats. Yet such men typically tire
of this submissiveness and start looking for someone more exciting.
Cameron wanted a young female slave, and he needed Janice to assist him
in acquiring one. Since the female half of such couples fears losing
the man's love if she does not go along, and since she also spots an
opportunity to diminish her burden of abuse by having his attentions on
someone else, she often agrees to the arrangement. All Janice asked
for was a baby, and Cameron could then go do whatever he wanted. He
accepted the deal and began to ponder the future. He had to do
some preparation. He needed a way to contain this slave and to prevent
neighbors from hearing her cries until she learned her place. With his
fantasies in motion, he designed and made the boxes he would soon use
on Carol Smith. Janice got pregnant, had a baby, and began to raise
it. As months went by, it might have appeared that Cameron may have
forgotten his goal, but he hadn't. Not at all. When the time was
right and everything was ready, he used Janice to help him establish
the appearance of safety, and went trolling for the first of what he
hoped would become a string of female sex slaves.
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