Friday, October 4, 1985 Pago 2 Daily Nebraskan New est Rv The Associated Press 3 DflGJr Woman, son tell of 71 (LP1 7 W t J BATTLE CREEK A 14-year-old Nor folk boy told an audience at a high school that he was part of a cult that sacrificed animals and "cast spells and curses." Wayne Bloomquist said he was in volved with a group of Satan worshipers who met at night near lakes and bridges and in a cemetery, Bloomquist said 100 to 150 peoole from the Norfolk, Madison and Pierc e area make up the cult. Most are mali, he said. Advance word of Wednesday's pres entation by Bloomquist and his mother, Anita, was spread through church bul letins, said Del Fuelberth, Battle Creek superintendent of schools. Clergy, teachers and school officials from the area made up the audience of 150 to 200 people. No students were present. "I want to visit with the rest of the community people and see if this is something we want to put before the kids," Fuelberth told the Norfolk Daily News after listening to the Bloom quists. "I guess I'm still dubious." When asked Thursday about the presentation, Madison County Sheriff Vern Hjroth said "there's no basis for it whatsoever." Hjorth said he knew of no reports of satanic cult activities, but ttle Creek siresi said the sheriffs department and Nor folk police would Investigate claims made by the Bloomquists. Bloomquist said satanic groups in the area have names such as the scor pions, the Devils and the Warlords. The youth said worship and black magic by the groups included a "communion" where members cut themselves and draw enough blood for each to drink. Cats, dogs and cattle were sacrificed, he said. 1 hope the beast in side me does not make me kill my mom, my dad, my brother and my sister "We tried to raise spirits, like a seance, and cast spells and curses," he said. Bloomquist said he is no longer involved with the group. Mrs. Bloom quist said her son was exorcised by a student at Nebraska Christian College in Norfolk and another man. Bloomquist said his duty with the cult was to recruit young people. One tactic was pretending to have car trou ble on a country road, then trying to lure youngsters who would stop by tell ing them to come to a party. He said members stole from family and friends and would "rob places" to raise money. Mrs. Bloomquist said she became concerned when she found a copy of the Lord's Prayer while cleaning her son's bedroom that had its last line altered to read, "I hope the beast inside me does not make me kill my mom, my dad, my brother and my sister." Mrs. Bloomquist said she became frightened when she walked into Wayne's empty room one morning, heard a scratching sound and saw a picture of Christ on the wall that was spattered with a red substance. The room was then padlocked, but "these things still continued," she said. Asked by someone in the audience if she feared retribution from a cult mem ber for telling her story, Mrs. Bloom quist replied: "Emotionally, you are not scared because you know you have Christ behind you." Court holds handgun makers, sellers liable in criminal attacks ANNAPOLIS, Md. People who make or sell small, cheap handguns should know they are used mainly by criminals and therefore can be sued by victims shot in criminal attacks with the so called Saturday Night Specials, Mary land's highest court ruled Thursday. The unanimous Court of Appeals decision was the first in the nation to hold that the manufacturer or marke ter of a handgun is liable for damages simply because the weapon is eventu ally used by a criminal to wound or kill. The decision was hailed by gun foes as a major victory in their protracted battle to halt the sale of handguns in the United States. But National Rifle Association spokesman Dave Warner called the ruling a "very bad decision" that could deny a cheap self-defense weapon to people who can't afford expensive guns to protect themselves and their homes. The ruling applies only to Saturday Night Specials and not to better qual ity, more expensive handguns. It also applies only in Maryland, although spokesmen on both sides of the gun control issue said it could influence rulings in similar cases in other states. The liability question reached the Court of Appeals in a case filed by Olen J. Kelley of Silver Spring, who was shot in a 1981 holdup of a supermarket in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. Kelley, who recovered from wounds in the chest and shoulder, sued Rolm Gesellschaft, a West German firm that designed and marketed the weapon that was used to shoot him. Before considering Kelley's lawsuit, the U.S. District Court in Baltimore asked the state court for a ruling on whether the manufacturer could be held liable under Maryland law. The 7-0 state opinion by Judge John C. Eldridge said that because of "cheap quality materials, poor manufacture, inaccuracy and unreliability," Satur day Night Specials are "virtually use less for the legitimate purposes of law enforcement, sport and protection of persons, property and businesses." The court said "the manufacturer or marketer of a Saturday Night Special knows or ought to know that he is mak ing or selling a product principally to be used in criminal activity." Josh Sugarman, a spokesman for the National Coalition to Ban Handguns, said the ruling creates "a whole new ball game foi us" in trying to stop the production of handguns and trying "to force manufacturers. . .to pay the price of the havoc they are wreaking in this country." Howard Siegel, Kelley's lawyer, said the ruling is an especially strong one because it requires a person bringing a suit to prove only that he was shot dur ing a criminal act and that the weapon was a Saturday Night Special. At that point, there is automatic liability for the maker, distributor and retailer of the weapon, he said. Siegel said he thinks the ruling could eventually halt the production and sale of Saturday Night Specials. FBI study s drug connection in crash ATLANTA An airplane owner who died in a crash with 15 fellow parachu tists was an "acquaintance" of a par achutist who plunged to his death in Tennessee last month while carrying a fortune in cocaine, the FBI said Thursday. "How well acquainted they were, we do not know at this time," FBI agent Ed Home said of David L. Williams, 35, of Atlanta, who died in his plane Sunday, and Andrew C. Thornton of Lexington, Ky. Williams' plane had been grounded two days before the crash because of fuel contamination, and after the crash sugar was found in its fuel, investiga tors said. Thornton, 40, fell to his death in Knoxville, Tenn., when his main para chute failed to open and his reserve parachute didn't open properly. A duf fel bag loaded with 75 pounds of cocaine, worth about $20 million, was strapped to his waist. In his pocket was a key bearing the serial number of a plane that crashed the same night 60 miles south of Knox ville, apparently on autopilot and with no one on board. Shortly after Thornton's death, authorities found a parachute and three duffel bags of cocaine hanging from a tree in Fannin County, Ga., near the Tennessee border. This week, Butts County, Ga., authorities found a bag containing clothes, maps and books in a pond near the field where Williams' plane took off before crashing. "In one of the books, it had the number on the wing, the fuselage, of the plane Thornton supposedly was in written over the diagram of one of the planes," Butts County Sheriff Billy Leverette said Thursday. eWSBTiaKerS A roundup of the day's haPPenings Italy's Communist Party newspaper L'Unita began printing capitalist stock prices for the first time since its founding in 1924. Milan stock exchange closing prices were published this week in response to letters from hundreds of readers. A Boston Man has been fined for yelling racial slurs in a restaurant in what the prosecutor believes is the first conviction of a restaurant customer under a 1984 state law. Kenneth J. Tobin, 23, was convicted by a six-member Dedham District court jury of discrimination and disor derly conduct in 1984 in a Dedham restaurant. He was fined $250 and placed on one-year probation. At least 6,928 accidents involving toxic chemicals have occurred in the United States since 1980, killing 135 people and injuring nearly 1,500 others, according to a federal EPA study. The report found that about five acci dents occur each day involving the release of toxic gases. Causes of the accidents ranged from human error to valve problems and failure in storage tank pressure. Telling his fans, "This has been the greatest year of my life," blue-collar rocker Bruce Springsteen ended a 15-month world tour that brought his music to 5 million people. During his Los Angeles concert, Springsteen, 36, talked about his politics and encouraged his audience to donate money to his favorite local food bank charity and danced tenderly on stage with his wife, model Julianne Phillips, ending the encounter with a long kiss. :i I'icqy tests succcjcful, o ; ::;l;isays '";;i:;gto.j v r. f c.v.- y c t ;clc,cd : tl.iFc:.'- : ' :t j: - ' I : ! tests . . . : .... m . 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