10News (San  Diego), April 27, 2007
By Michelle Krish,  Managing Editor
 
10News  Looks At Religious Group
 
SAN  DIEGO -- It's not often that a child custody case is followed  closely by the 10News Investigative Team, but a case scheduled for May 7 in San  Diego County Superior Court is not your average fight for custody.
The child custody case involves one parent who  belongs to a religious organization formally known as Children Of God, where  sexual abuse allegations are central to the litigation.
In this 10News exclusive investigation, the  I-team explores why former members of the Children Of God are so concerned about  this case and custody cases like it.
"Anger does not begin to describe how I feel  about these people and what they've done," said Ricky Rodriguez in a video he  made talking about his experience with the Children Of God, shortly before he  committed suicide. 
Rodriguez expressed rage in the video like others  who formerly belonged to a religious group once known as the Children Of God.  
"Being born into this cult was like being born  into an intellectual wasteland. The only thing you had access to was the insane  rambling of these criminals," said former member Don Irwin.
Rodriguez and Irwin were among the former members  of the cult who expressed concern for children currently within the  organization, known today as The Family.
"This is one of the biggest crimes in history.  We're talking about thousands of children sexually abused," said former member  Sam Ajemian.
Ajemian wrote more about his experiences with the  so-called religious cult in a book. 
Ajemian was also one of the first members of the  Children Of God -- a religious group created by David Berg in Huntington Beach  in 1968.
The group started with only a handful of teens,  but by the early 1970s, the numbers quickly grew into the thousands at a time  when young adults were in a spiritual and sexual revolution, and sex played a  very big part in this organization.
In Rodriguez's video, he said he was caught in  the middle.
Berg was Rodriguez's father. Like many of the  children born into the cult, Rodriguez said he left the group as an adult and  complained about sexual molestation by his mother, his father and other adult  women. 
He said in the video that photographs of his  molestation were placed in the cult's religious publications.
Rodriguez took his own life a day after he shot  the video.
"There are a lot of suicides among our friends.  Every year, we have a few," said former member Sarah Martin.
Martin was born into the cult. She said she lost  her own brother to suicide years after her family left the organization.
She shared with 10News a book written by the  cult's leader, Berg. In it, Berg is depicted as a great knight. He also includes  his dreams of sex with women. The book, Created For Children, contains  explicit sexual cartoons and verses from the Bible, in which Berg preached the  law of love to his followers.
"You're born into this cult. You run around  naked, you watch your parents have sex, you start participating in sex when you  are young and it's like everyone has access to you. And it's supposed to be  'love,'" said former member Amy Brill.
At 8 years old, Brill said her parents were asked  by the organization to give her away. Brill eventually lived with Berg and his  family. And at 13, she said she was married to Berg in a mock wedding.
"I had been molested before, but this was like a  60-year-old man doing whatever he wanted," said Brill.
 
Years later, Brill said her own father committed  suicide as a result of his own guilt. 
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