זומר פסיכותרפיה ומחקר
سومر للعلاج النفسي والبحث
Somer Psychotherapy and Research

Repressed Memory

The State of Israel against Beni Shmuel

 

On December 31, 2019, the False Memory Syndrome Foundation dissolved because of a lack of scientific evidence and a lack of support from the academic and professional communities. The last time the issue was debated in Israel was in the criminal case of The State of Israel against Beni Shmuel.

Background

On October 9, 2014 the Israeli Supreme Court rejected the appeal of Beni Shmuel, convicted more than 6 years earlier for sexual offenses committed against his daughter, age 10, at the time. The traumatic memories were recovered fully when she was 23 years old. On October 13, 2014, forty-seven Israeli academics published an opinion criticizing the Supreme Court for admitting the complainant’s “recovered memory” into evidence, claiming that no data exists to support the validity of “recovered memories”.

Read more: The State of Israel against Beni Shmuel

 

The Scientifically Based Opinion about “Recovered” or Dissociated Memories

A document published on the 12th of October, 2014 entitled “Opinion Regarding the Scientific Standing of Repressed and Reconstructed Memories,” signed by forty-seven prominent academics, has been widely circulated in the press as support for barring recovered memories of childhood abuse as evidence admissible in Israeli courts.

Read more: The Scientifically Based Opinion about “Recovered” or Dissociated Memories

 

References

Addante, R.J. (2015) A critical role of the human hippocampus in an electrophysiological measure of implicit memory. Neuroimage, doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.12.069

Albach, F., Moormann, P. & Bermond, B. (1996). Memory recovery of childhood sexual abuse. Dissociation, 9(4), 261-273.

Read more: References