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The qualifications of a former builder to work as a hypnotherapist have been described as "woefully inadequate" and as a result his evidence in a child sex abuse case was thrown out of court.
Lawrence McCann, who is based in Omagh, charges £80 for a 50-minute session for people trying to give up smoking or lose weight.
On his website he promises: "You can be sure, however, that whether you are a modest smoker merely needing a little help to stop, or a suicidal melancholic feeling you have little to live for, you will in either case receive the best attention at all times."
He claimed to have hypnotised a 34-year-old Fermanagh man who then alleged that he had been sexually abused when he was about four or five.
The allegations resulted in a 71-year-old man from Fermanagh appearing in the dock at Omagh Crown Court accused of buggering and indecently assaulting the man when he was a young boy in the 1980s.
The judge, Her Honour Gemma Loughran, ruled that Mr. McCann's evidence was "inadmissible" and instructed a jury to find the pensioner not guilty on all charges.
Now she has issued a written judgement explaining why she threw out Mr. McCann's evidence.
She said that in a statement the victim of the alleged sex abuse complained of having a lot of difficulties in his life over the last few years and being unable to understand what was wrong. He suffered from depression but now realised "thanks to my counsellor" that what happened was not his fault.
His "counsellor", Mr. McCann, made three statements to police in which he referred to the alleged victim making some "disclosures".
Mr. McCann stated: "He told me that during his childhood he had been the victim of sexual abuse. This started when he was about four or five years old."
He said he used "regressional therapy" to unlock repressed memories of negative experiences in his client's past. He said the client "thought something had happened" with the older man "that didn't make sense to him".
He said his role in the disclosures was "listening to him and guiding him and facilitating the unlocking process".
However, expert defence witness Dr. Peter Naish, who lectures in psychology at the Open University, told the court that the evidence any memory can be repressed is very weak and to use hypnosis to unlock forgotten memories carries the "enormous risk" that false memories will be created.
Mr. McCann said: "In the following sessions things clarified more and he (the client) began to be more clarified and the pieces of the jigsaw came together."
Dr. Naish said research had shown that hypnosis does not have any special property for enhancing memory and simply using the word "hypnotic" will cause people to produce so many more memories as to make it virtually certain that the recalled memories are false.
The judge said the allegations of sex abuse emerged during the hypnotherapy sessions conducted by Mr. McCann and that there was no evidence before the court that prior to those sessions the alleged victim had made any complaint whatsoever against the 71-year-old pensioner.
Mr. McCann stated that "at no time do I put suggestions into client's minds".
The court heard that Mr. McCann had left school with no formal qualifications and worked in the building trade as a plasterer. He underwent therapy for five years and developed an interest in becoming an hypnotherapist. He undertook a six-month course that was about the equivalent of a month's full-time study. The only supervision of his practical work was at a weekend seminar in Dublin when he hypnotised another student.
The judge pointed out that Dr. Naish was a member of a working group set up by the British Psychological Society to develop guidelines on the safe and ethical use of hypnosis. Dr. Naish contrasted Mr. McCann's studies with those of an Open University student who would have to complete a six-year course followed by further specialised study before qualifying to practise hypnosis. This led him to describe Mr. McCann's qualifications as "woefully inadequate".
The judge described Mr. McCann's certificate from the International Association of Pure Hypnoanalysis, deeming him as a "fit and proper person to practise hypnotherapy", as "quite misleading".
She stated: "This court concludes, without hesitation, that any evidence obtained under hypnosis by Mr. McCann would, because of the paucity of his qualifications to practice hypnosis or hypnotherapy, be inadmissible in criminal proceedings."
The Crown offered no other evidence and the case against the 71-year-old pensioner accused of being a child molester was dismissed.
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