Kee MacFarlane is an American social worker who directed the Child Sexual Abuse Center at Children's Institute International (CII) in Los Angeles, where she specialized in evaluating allegations of child sexual abuse through forensic interviews.[1] She is best known for her central role in the McMartin Preschool investigation and trial of the 1980s, during which she interviewed approximately 400 children, diagnosing 384 as victims of sexual abuse by early 1984.[2]MacFarlane's interviewing techniques employed anatomically correct dolls, puppets such as "Mr. Alligator" and "Mr. Snake," and a "funnel approach" that began with open-ended questions before shifting to more directive prompts informed by prior children's statements or suggestive labels like "yukky secrets."[2][3] She defended these methods as essential for overcoming children's reluctance to disclose trauma, citing patterns like the "no-maybe-sometimes-yes syndrome" and research indicating high resistance to misleading suggestions.[3]However, her practices drew substantial criticism for employing leading questions, rewards for compliance, and subtle coercion, which experts and defense attorneys argued could fabricate memories rather than reveal genuine events.[2][3] In the McMartin trial—the longest and costliest criminal proceeding in U.S. history—MacFarlane's videotaped sessions were pivotal prosecution evidence, yet they failed to yield convictions: charges against most defendants were dropped, and remaining cases ended in acquittals or mistrials, underscoring flaws in her approach amid widespread 1980s concerns over suggestive child interviewing and unsubstantiated ritual abuse claims.[2]
Early Life and Professional Background
Education and Initial Training
MacFarlane earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from Denison University in Granville, Ohio, in 1969.[4] Following her undergraduate studies in fine arts, she pursued a career shift toward social services, obtaining a Master of Social Work from the University of Maryland.[3][5]Her formal education did not include specialized training in child psychology or forensic interviewing at the time, as her degrees focused on arts and general social work principles.[3] MacFarlane later developed expertise in child sexual abuse diagnostics through practical experience rather than additional academic credentials, and California law did not require licensure for social workers in her role during the 1980s.[3] No peer-reviewed publications or certifications in clinical child assessment preceded her entry into child abuse investigations.[6]
Early Career Positions
MacFarlane earned a Master of Social Work degree from the University of Maryland, after which she engaged in research with university-affiliated organizations examining the court system's handling of child-related cases and broader services for children.[5] Prior to 1974, she contributed to child protection efforts by authoring a federal grant proposal for a child abuse prevention program, which secured funding, and subsequently assisted in organizing and implementing the initiative.[5]In 1974, MacFarlane took a position managing subcontracts for a major federal grant supporting a child sexual abuse program based in New Jersey, focusing on administrative and programmatic oversight in early responses to sexual abuse allegations.[5] By 1976, she relocated to Washington, D.C., to join the staff of the National Center on Child Abuse and Neglect (NCCAN), a federal entity under the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare dedicated to researching and addressing child maltreatment.[5][7] There, her role progressed to that of a child sexual abuse specialist, where she monitored and evaluated federally funded projects aimed at improving detection, treatment, and prevention of child sexual abuse nationwide, including editing publications on the topic.[5][8] This federal tenure, lasting until approximately 1982, positioned her as an emerging authority in child welfare policy and practice.[5]
Development of Child Interview Techniques
Introduction of Anatomically Correct Dolls
Kee MacFarlane, as director of clinical services at Children's Institute International (CII) in Los Angeles, incorporated anatomically correct dolls into structured forensic interviews for children alleging sexual abuse during the early 1980s. These dolls, designed with detailed representations of genitalia and other body parts, were employed to bridge communication gaps for preschool-aged children who struggled to articulate experiences verbally. MacFarlane's rationale centered on enabling demonstrative rather than declarative disclosures, positing that the dolls served as neutral props to elicit accurate accounts without interviewer imposition.[9][1]This approach gained prominence through MacFarlane's interviews in high-profile investigations, including the McMartin preschool case starting in August 1983, where she videotaped sessions with approximately 400 children. She combined the dolls with puppets and open-ended questioning, gradually narrowing to specifics if initial responses were reticent, under the belief that such aids uncovered suppressed memories of trauma. MacFarlane defended the dolls' non-suggestive nature in testimony, asserting that empirical studies at the time indicated no leading effect from exposure to anatomical features.[10][5]The introduction of these dolls at CII marked a shift toward prop-assisted interviewing in child abuse evaluations, influencing protocols adopted by other institutions amid rising awareness of sexual abuse in daycare settings. However, contemporaneous critiques, including from defense experts in McMartin proceedings, highlighted potential for dolls to evoke sexual play unrelated to actual events, drawing on normative studies of non-abused children's interactions with similar toys. MacFarlane maintained that contextual questioning mitigated such risks, prioritizing the dolls' utility in validating allegations over concerns of contamination.[1][11]
Protocols for Alleged Abuse Interviews
MacFarlane's protocols for interviewing children alleging sexual abuse emphasized a structured yet flexible process designed to build trust and facilitate disclosure, often spanning multiple sessions to accommodate children's varying readiness to speak. She described employing a "funnel approach," initiating with broad, open-ended questions about general experiences before narrowing to specific details about potential abuse, aiming to minimize initial suggestion while probing inconsistencies or reticence.[1][3] This method addressed patterns like the "no-maybe-sometimes-yes syndrome" observed in frightened children, allowing gradual progression without forcing premature revelations.[3] All sessions were videotaped to create an objective record, enabling review by multidisciplinary teams including therapists, investigators, and prosecutors, and reducing the need for repeated child testimony in court.[1]To aid non-verbal expression, protocols incorporated anatomically detailed dolls, which children used to demonstrate alleged acts, with interviewers ensuring dolls avoided exaggerated features like "an erect, stimulated penis" to prevent bias.[1] Puppets served as intermediaries to "get [children] real brave," diffusing direct pressure and modeling disclosure through play.[1] Techniques such as doll-beating were introduced to externalize anger or trauma, sometimes prompted by the interviewer to encourage emotional release.[1] Early establishment of terminology for body parts, people, and actions was prioritized, alongside direct addressing of fears via toys or reassurance, such as informing a child that the interviewer "already knew" details to alleviate disclosure burdens.[1]Questioning advanced to targeted prompts, including requests to identify suspects from photographs, confirm physical contacts like "Did they get touched?", or reference peer accounts (e.g., "Every kid from the preschool came in and told me") to trigger memory without fabrication.[1] MacFarlane maintained that such specificity rarely misled children, citing studies indicating suggestibility affected less than 1% of cases, and positioned interviews as purposeful conversations focused on validation through consistency across sessions and corroboration.[3] These guidelines, developed at Children's Institute International in the early 1980s, influenced broader practices by integrating clinical evaluation with forensic aims, though they relied on interviewer judgment over rigid scripting.[1]
Role in Child Abuse Investigations
Leadership at Children's Institute International
Kee MacFarlane assumed the role of director of the Child Sexual Abuse Diagnostic Center at Children's Institute International (CII), a Los Angeles-based nonprofit providing diagnostic, therapeutic, and investigative services for child abuse victims and families, in 1982.[12] In this capacity, she oversaw the implementation of federally funded programs aimed at evaluating suspected sexual abuse cases, drawing on her prior experience as a social worker specializing in child abuse treatment and grant-funded initiatives in Washington, D.C., and New Jersey.[5] Under her leadership, CII emphasized multidisciplinary approaches combining clinical therapy, developmental psychology, and forensic interviewing to identify abuse indicators in non-verbal or reticent children.[12]MacFarlane directed the center's response to high-volume investigations, including the coordination of videotaped interviews designed to minimize repeated trauma to children while preserving evidence for legal proceedings.[12] She personally introduced and standardized the use of anatomically detailed dolls and puppets as tools to elicit disclosures, arguing these aids bridged gaps in children's verbal abilities during abuse assessments.[5] By 1983–1984, her oversight extended to interviewing or supervising sessions with approximately 400 children from the McMartin Preschool case, where CII therapists documented allegations of ritualistic abuse using these methods.[10]During her tenure, CII expanded its caseload to serve hundreds of families annually, positioning the organization as a key resource for law enforcement and child protective services in Southern California.[5] MacFarlane's programs prioritized early intervention and family support, reporting findings directly to authorities while advocating for reduced interview repetitions through archival videotapes.[12] Her administrative efforts included securing grants and training staff in abuse detection protocols, though the center's techniques later faced scrutiny in court for potential influence on child testimonies.[5]
Involvement in High-Profile Cases Beyond McMartin
MacFarlane served as director of the Child Sexual Abuse Center at Children's Institute International (CII) from the early 1980s, where she led evaluations and interviews in multiple alleged child sexual abuse investigations in the Los Angeles area.[5] CII handled a high volume of such cases, applying MacFarlane's protocols for forensic interviewing, including the use of anatomically detailed dolls to elicit disclosures from young children.[13] These efforts focused primarily on preschool-aged victims, drawing from clinical experiences at CII that informed her co-authored 1986 book Sexual Abuse of Young Children: Evaluation and Treatment, which detailed treatment and assessment methods derived from ongoing caseloads.[14]While the McMartin case dominated public attention, MacFarlane's oversight at CII extended to other local allegations of institutional abuse during the mid-1980s surge in daycare-related claims, though these did not achieve equivalent national notoriety or lead to extended trials.[15] Her institution's videotaping practices and suggestive questioning techniques, refined through these investigations, paralleled methods later scrutinized in the era's broader pattern of unsubstantiated ritual abuse accusations across U.S. preschools.[12] No convictions directly tied to her non-McMartin interviews have been prominently reported, reflecting the empirical challenges in validating such disclosures amid contemporaneous critiques of leading interviewer influence.[16]
The McMartin Preschool Trial
Interviewing Process and Methods Used
Kee MacFarlane, director of the Child Sexual Abuse Center at Children's Institute International (CII), oversaw and personally conducted video-recorded forensic interviews with approximately 400 children referred in connection with the McMartin Preschool allegations, starting in late 1983 and continuing through 1984.[17][3] These sessions, often lasting up to two hours each, aimed to elicit disclosures of alleged abuse through a structured yet flexible process designed to accommodate children's reluctance or fear.[17] MacFarlane interviewed around 80 McMartin-attending children directly, with only a subset providing testimony that advanced to trial.[3]The methods incorporated non-directive tools to facilitate expression, including anatomically correct dolls equipped with genitalia to allow children to demonstrate alleged events physically, and puppets such as Mr. Alligator, Mr. Snake, Detective Dog, and Mr. Sparky to create a playful, less intimidating environment that encouraged "yucky secrets."[1][17] Drawings and play therapy elements were also used, with MacFarlane justifying dolls based on contemporaneous research indicating they did not implant false memories, as children rarely manipulated them suggestively without prior experience.[1] Puppets served to model bravery, with phrases like "more than sixty kids have come in and told yucky secrets" to normalize disclosure.[1]Questioning followed a "funnel approach," initiating with open-ended prompts to gather narrative details before narrowing to focused or yes/no questions when children exhibited denial or hesitation, a pattern attributed to the "no-maybe-sometimes-yes syndrome" in trauma disclosure.[3][1] Techniques included referencing accounts from other children (e.g., "naked games were played") to prompt recall, selective reinforcement of abuse-consistent responses via praise, and invitations to speculate or demonstrate "what might have happened" using dolls.[3][1] Quantitative review of transcripts revealed 78% yes/no questions, only 7% open-ended, and frequent use of positive reinforcement (18% of exchanges) and introduced information (18%), deviating from contemporaneous best-practice emphasis on minimizing leading elements.[18]By March 1984, these methods yielded diagnoses of abuse for 360 children, though initial denials were common, with persistence framed as overcoming fear or shame rather than fabrication.[17] MacFarlane defended the protocols as evidence-based for high-stakes cases, citing studies showing children's resistance to suggestion (93-99% in controlled tests), though later empirical scrutiny highlighted risks of coerced conformity.[1][18]
Testimony and Justification of Techniques
During the McMartin Preschool trial, Kee MacFarlane testified for approximately five weeks as a key prosecution witness, defending the interview techniques employed at the Children's Institute International (CII), where she served as director of the Child Sexual Abuse Center.[3][1] She described her methods as necessary to overcome children's reluctance and fear in disclosing alleged sexual abuse, emphasizing that the goal was to "uncork the bottle" and facilitate revelations suppressed by trauma or threats from perpetrators.[1] MacFarlane maintained that techniques such as repeated interviews—sometimes numbering in the dozens for individual children—were essential because initial denials often masked deeper disclosures, drawing on her experience where "more than sixty kids have come in and told yucky secrets" after such persistence.[1][19]MacFarlane justified the use of anatomically correct dolls by asserting that research demonstrated children's high resistance to suggestion, with studies showing 93 to 99 percent of children rejecting leading or misleading prompts involving the dolls, thus not eliciting false reports.[1][19] She referenced "five or six articles" supporting this but could not recall specific titles when pressed, countering defense claims that the dolls inherently prompted fabrications by stating, "there’s absolutely no evidence in the research that they do that... providing incorrect or false information just because they’ve got these dolls."[1] Puppets and role-playing were defended as therapeutic tools to build rapport and reduce the emotional burden of direct disclosure, with MacFarlane explaining, "I was offering the puppets as a medium to communicate," to help children "get real brave."[1] She acknowledged encouraging children to beat dolls representing defendants, such as a Ray Buckey doll, describing it as potentially "therapeutic," though she could not identify instances where children initiated this independently.[19][1]In response to defense challenges on suggestive elements, MacFarlane conceded that phrases like "all the other kids told me" or implying secret surveillance of suspects could exert pressure, admitting "Yes" to queries on whether such statements presupposed abuse had occurred.[1] She rejected alternatives as less effective for suspected cases, arguing that non-directive approaches failed with traumatized children, and denied any intent to prove molestation, stating, "I never set out to try to prove... that their children had been molested! I wanted them to see what I saw."[1][3] Her testimony positioned these methods as grounded in clinical practice for child victims, though she admitted some interviews conveyed interviewer beliefs about events.[1]
Trial Outcomes and Empirical Rebuttals
The McMartin Preschool trial, initiated in July 1987 after preliminary hearings spanning nearly three years, represented the longest criminal proceeding in American history at the time, culminating in January 1990 with the acquittal of defendants Peggy McMartin Buckey and her son Raymond Buckey on all 52 remaining counts of child molestation.[20][17] Charges against other defendants, including Peggy Buckey's sister and two former employees, had been dropped or resulted in mistrials prior to the main trial's conclusion, with no convictions secured across the case despite allegations involving hundreds of purported victims.[17] The prosecution's reliance on children's videotaped interviews conducted by Kee MacFarlane at Children's Institute International was undermined by defense demonstrations of inconsistencies and implausibilities in the testimonies, contributing to the jury's inability to reach guilty verdicts on most counts after deliberating over 10 months.[17]Post-trial analyses and empirical studies provided rigorous rebuttals to the validity of MacFarlane's interviewing protocols, highlighting their capacity to elicit unreliable disclosures through suggestive practices. A 1998 experimental study by Garven et al. replicated techniques from McMartin transcripts—including repeated questioning, reinforcement of desired responses via praise or toys, and peer influence via co-witness suggestions—and found that such methods prompted 58% of preschool-aged children to make detailed false allegations of abuse by a classroom visitor who had not engaged in any misconduct, compared to only 15% under mildly suggestive conditions and 0% in neutral interviews.[21] This demonstrated that MacFarlane's "funnel approach," which escalated from open-ended to leading prompts and incorporated anatomically detailed dolls to model abuse scenarios, exceeded mere suggestion in manufacturing confabulated memories, as children incorporated interviewer-provided details into their narratives with high frequency.[22]Further scrutiny of McMartin interview transcripts revealed pervasive use of five suggestive categories: positive/negative reinforcement (e.g., rewarding affirmations of abuse), question repetition until desired answers emerged, co-witness information sharing among children, stereotyping of suspects as perpetrators, and off-topic commentary pressuring disclosure, all of which correlated with the escalation of fantastical claims like ritual animal killings unsubstantiated by physical evidence.[23] These techniques contravened emerging empirical standards for forensic child interviews, which emphasize neutral, open-ended questioning to minimize iatrogenic distortion, as validated by controlled studies showing young children's heightened vulnerability to adult-led contamination of memory—particularly under repeated sessions averaging 4-10 hours per child in the McMartin protocol.[23][24] The absence of corroborative forensic evidence, such as medical exams contradicting penetration claims or excavations yielding no ritual sites, underscored the causal role of these methods in perpetuating unsubstantiated hysteria rather than uncovering veridical abuse.[17]
Criticisms and Controversies
Suggestive Interviewing and False Memory Induction
MacFarlane's interview protocols at the Children's Institute International emphasized extended, repeated sessions—sometimes exceeding 20 per child—combined with anatomically detailed dolls, puppets, and probing questions to uncover alleged abuse disclosures. These methods incorporated high rates of yes/no questions (78% of total questions in analyzed transcripts) and suggestive prompts, such as inviting speculation ("What do you think might have happened?") or introducing unsubstantiated details (e.g., references to a "Naked Movie Star game").[18] Positive reinforcement, including praise like "You're so smart," comprised 18% of interviewer-child exchanges, functioning to encourage compliance and elaboration on initially resisted or denied events.[18][25]Quantitative reviews of McMartin transcripts highlight a pattern of interviewer persistence despite child resistance, with leading questions (e.g., "Did you ever see anything come out of Mr. Ray's wiener?") and repetition pressuring non-disclosing children to affirm implausible scenarios, such as animal slaughter or hidden tunnels.[25] In one documented sequence, a child initially denied specific acts but nodded agreement after puppet-assisted prompting and repeated urging, illustrating coercion over genuine recall.[25] Such techniques deviated markedly from neutral protocols, as comparative analyses showed Children's Institute interviews had 18% rates of information introduction versus near-zero in less biased settings, fostering interviewer-driven narratives.[18]Empirical research on child memory, including studies by Stephen Ceci and Maggie Bruck, demonstrates that repeated suggestive questioning implants false beliefs and memories in preschoolers, who are particularly susceptible to authority influence and social compliance. In the McMartin context, these dynamics contributed to escalating, uncorroborated allegations lacking physical evidence, with children conforming to expectations after initial denials—a process Ceci and Bruck term "jeopardy" to testimony reliability, as pressure overrides accurate reporting. [18] Elizabeth Loftus's foundational work on misinformation effects further substantiates that leading interviews distort episodic memory, aligning with post-trial findings where no convictions resulted from the 360+ counts, partly due to exposed methodological flaws. [26]Critics, including forensic psychologists, attribute the absence of empirical validation for MacFarlane's approaches to their reliance on untested assumptions of child reticence requiring aggressive elicitation, rather than open-ended inquiry, which later protocols prioritize to minimize contamination.[25] Experimental replications confirm that similar tactics yield false positives in non-abused samples, underscoring causal risks of iatrogenic memory formation over therapeutic disclosure. Despite MacFarlane's trial testimony defending repetition as necessary for rapport-building, subsequent meta-analyses affirm that such practices systematically inflate error rates in young witnesses.[18]
Contribution to Satanic Panic Hysteria
MacFarlane's interviewing techniques at the Children's Institute International, applied to approximately 400 children in the McMartin Preschool case starting in 1984, elicited disclosures of extreme ritualistic abuse, including claims of animal sacrifices, blood-drinking ceremonies, beheadings, and sexual assaults in underground tunnels purportedly used for satanic rituals.[17] These allegations, documented in videotaped sessions, featured fantastical elements such as teachers in black robes wielding knives and children being transported in hot air balloons to remote sites for abuse, which aligned with emerging narratives of organized satanic cults targeting preschools.[17] Such claims, absent physical evidence and later contradicted by archaeological digs finding no tunnels, contributed to McMartin's status as a cornerstone of the 1980s Satanic ritual abuse (SRA) phenomenon, where similar unsubstantiated stories proliferated in over a dozen comparable daycare investigations nationwide.[17]Quantitative analyses of McMartin interview transcripts reveal MacFarlane's methods incorporated significantly higher rates of suggestive elements compared to standard child protective services protocols, including positive reinforcement (e.g., praising children as "smart" for disclosures), invitations to speculate (e.g., "What do you think might have happened?"), and introduction of unsubstantiated details like a "Naked Movie Star" game.[18] Sessions averaged over an hour, far exceeding typical durations, and employed puppets to encourage "pretend" scenarios, fostering a biased assumption of abuse that pressured non-disclosing children.[18] Defense experts in the trial, such as psychologist Michael Maloney, argued these approaches provided children with a prefabricated "script," implanting false memories rather than eliciting spontaneous recall, a view supported by contemporaneous research on child suggestibility.[17] MacFarlane defended her "funnel" technique—starting open-ended and narrowing to specifics—as necessary for reticent victims, citing studies claiming high resistance to leading questions, though trial scrutiny highlighted inconsistencies in her credentials and potential conflicts, including a personal relationship with a local reporter covering the case.[3]By testifying to the reliability of these elicited accounts in the 1987-1990 McMartin trials, where she affirmed abuse indicators in 350 of the interviewed children, MacFarlane's expert endorsement lent professional legitimacy to SRA narratives at a time when media amplification and therapeutic communities were primed for belief in hidden cult networks.[3][17] This validation, despite the jury's acquittals on most charges and a mistrial on remaining counts due to insufficient evidence, modeled flawed investigative practices that echoed in subsequent hysteria-driven cases, such as those in Kern County and Manhattan Beach extensions, exacerbating public fear and resource diversion toward phantom threats. Empirical rebuttals post-trial, including failed validations of ritual claims, underscored how such methods prioritized disclosure over verifiability, causal drivers of widespread false positives in the panic.[17][18]
Legal and Scientific Backlash
Following the acquittal of Peggy McMartin Buckey on January 18, 1990, after a seven-year trial that cost approximately $15 million and resulted in no convictions, defendants initiated civil lawsuits against Children's Institute International (CII) and MacFarlane, alleging misconduct in the interviewing process that fueled baseless prosecutions.[16] In McMartin v. Children's Institute International (1989), Virginia McMartin and Peggy Ann Buckey claimed that MacFarlane and CII conducted improper interviews leading to false abuse disclosures, suppressed exculpatory evidence such as the mental instability of initial complainant Judy Johnson, leaked confidential materials to media outlets like ABC News, and manipulated findings to sustain funding for CII.[16] The trial court sustained a demurrer without leave to amend, citing absolute immunity for mandated reporters under California Penal Code § 11172, which shields good-faith child abuse investigations from liability; this ruling was affirmed on appeal, preventing any damages or declaratory relief.[16]In a parallel federal suit, Peggy McMartin Buckey v. County of Los Angeles et al. (1992), Buckey accused MacFarlane and CII of violating 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by mishandling interviews in ways that violated established guidelines, coercing children into fabricating claims of ritual abuse, and conspiring with prosecutors for personal and institutional gain, thereby depriving her of due process and a fair trial.[27] The district court dismissed with prejudice, but the Ninth Circuit reversed and remanded, holding that amended pleadings could potentially state a claim if alleging action under color of state law; however, subsequent proceedings yielded no recovery against MacFarlane or CII, as immunity doctrines and lack of proven malice prevailed.[27] These actions highlighted procedural protections for investigators but underscored failures in oversight, with no personal legal consequences for MacFarlane.[16][27]Scientific scrutiny intensified post-trial, with analyses of MacFarlane's 167 videotaped interviews revealing pervasive suggestive practices, including repeated leading questions (e.g., "Do you think it happened?"), use of anatomically correct dolls to demonstrate unprompted abuse scenarios, peer pressure among children, and rewards for disclosures, which empirical studies later demonstrated could implant false memories in preschoolers.[25] Experts such as Michael Garvey, a defense psychologist, testified during the trial that these techniques contaminated testimonies, as children initially denied abuse but altered narratives after multiple sessions averaging 22 hours per child.[3] Post-1990 reviews by forensic psychologists, including those cited in the Los Angeles Times, faulted the methods for ignoring developmental psychology principles, noting that non-evidence-based props like puppets encouraged fantasy confabulation rather than neutral recall.[26]Subsequent peer-reviewed research, such as studies by Stephen J. Ceci and Elizabeth F. Loftus in the early 1990s, empirically validated these critiques by showing that repeated suggestive interviewing increased false allegations by up to 30-50% in controlled experiments with children aged 3-6, mirroring McMartin dynamics where no physical evidence corroborated claims of tunnels or animal sacrifices.[28] The American Psychological Association's 1990s guidelines on child witness testimony explicitly rejected MacFarlane-style approaches, advocating neutral, open-ended protocols to minimize iatrogenic effects, a shift attributed partly to McMartin as a "cautionary tale" of pseudoscientific forensics.[17] While MacFarlane defended her techniques as necessary for reticent victims, the consensus in developmental psychology deemed them unreliable, contributing to the discrediting of belief-driven models in favor of evidence-based standards like the NICHD protocol.[2][26]
Publications and Later Influence
Key Books and Chapters
MacFarlane served as a co-editor and contributor to Sexual Abuse of Young Children: Evaluation and Treatment, published in 1986 by Guilford Press, with co-editors including Jill Waterman, Shawn Conerly, Linda Damon, Michael Durfee, and Suzanne Long.[29][30] The book outlined protocols for assessing suspected child sexual abuse cases, including a chapter co-authored by MacFarlane and Waterman on interviewing techniques and evidence gathering, which advocated for non-directive questioning combined with props such as anatomically correct dolls to elicit disclosures from young children.[31] Another chapter in the volume, "Child Sexual Abuse Allegations in Divorce Proceedings," addressed contextual factors in abuse claims amid family disputes.In 1996, MacFarlane co-authored When Children Abuse: Group Treatment Strategies for Children With Impulse Control Problems with Carolyn Cunningham, published by Safer Society Press.[32] This work presented a cognitive-behavioral group therapy framework targeting children exhibiting sexually reactive or abusive behaviors, incorporating exercises for self-management, boundary-setting, and competency-building to address impulse control issues.[33] The book emphasized structured interventions to prevent recidivism among juvenile offenders.[34]MacFarlane also contributed to Response Syllabus: The Clinical Interview: Video Manual, a training resource for mental health professionals on child interviewing protocols.[35] It detailed methods for building rapport with child interviewees through activities, puppets, and anatomically detailed dolls, aiming to enhance disclosure accuracy in abuse investigations.[35] These publications reflected her early influence on forensic child interviewing practices during the 1980s, though subsequent empirical scrutiny highlighted risks of suggestibility in the advocated techniques.[31]
Videos and Training Materials
MacFarlane co-produced the instructional VHS video Child Sexual Abuse: The Clinical Interview in 1988, in collaboration with Children's Institute International and Guilford Press.[36] This training resource provided professionals with a structured outline of clinical interviewing protocols for alleged child sexual abuse victims, emphasizing phased approaches from rapport-building to detailed disclosure elicitation.[37] The video included demonstrations of techniques such as using anatomically detailed dolls and puppets to facilitate children's accounts, alongside discussions of common disclosure barriers like fear and secrecy pacts.[13]A key segment, "Disclosure of Sexual Abuse: Barriers and Patterns," featured MacFarlane alongside Michelle Dugan, illustrating patterns in children's delayed or partial revelations based on clinical observations.[37] Intended for therapists, investigators, and child welfare workers, the video promoted videotaping initial interviews to preserve non-leading narratives and avoid repetitive trauma from multiple sessions.[38] MacFarlane argued that such recordings offered juries direct access to children's unfiltered statements, reducing reliance on hearsay while addressing evidentiary challenges in abuse cases.[4]Through CII, MacFarlane's team generated additional training materials incorporating excerpts from her videotaped interviews, which were distributed to law enforcement and social services for skill-building in non-suggestive questioning—though empirical reviews later highlighted risks of interviewer bias in these exemplars.[39] These resources disseminated her "funnel" method, starting with open-ended prompts and narrowing to specifics only after free recall, influencing early 1980s protocols amid rising abuse allegations.[3] Despite initial adoption, subsequent research on memory suggestibility, including analyses of CII tapes, underscored limitations in preventing leading influences during extended sessions.[40]
Long-Term Impact on Protocols
MacFarlane's 1986 co-authored book Sexual Abuse of Young Children: Evaluation and Treatment provided guidelines for clinical assessments, including the use of anatomically detailed dolls and repeated interviews to elicit disclosures, which were adopted in some early child protection protocols during the 1980s amid rising awareness of abuse.[41] These methods emphasized building rapport through play therapy elements and validating children's accounts, influencing training materials distributed by institutions like Children's Institute International, where she directed the Sexual Abuse Center. However, empirical analysis of her techniques revealed high rates of suggestibility, with studies replicating McMartin-style interviews yielding false accusations in 58% of non-abused children compared to 17% under milder suggestive questioning.[21]The visibility of flaws in MacFarlane's videotaped interviews from the McMartin case—featuring leading prompts, puppets, and incentives—catalyzed a shift toward standardized, research-driven protocols by the early 1990s, prioritizing open-ended questions to minimize contamination.[42] This backlash contributed to the establishment of forensic interviewing guidelines by organizations such as the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC), which explicitly rejected coercive elements in favor of neutral, developmentally sensitive structures.[43] Videotaping mandates, partly inspired by scrutiny of her unpreserved or selectively edited tapes, became a core requirement to ensure transparency and allow expert review, reducing interviewer bias in subsequent cases.[44]Long-term, her work's legacy in protocols is predominantly cautionary, underscoring causal links between suggestive practices and iatrogenic false memories, as validated by longitudinal research on child suggestibility.[45] Modern frameworks like the NICHD Investigative Interview Protocol, developed in the 1990s, embody this evolution by structuring interviews into pre-disclosure rapport-building, free recall, and limited cued prompts, directly countering the pitfalls observed in MacFarlane-influenced approaches.[23] While initial adoption amplified belief in ritual abuse narratives, post-1990 reforms have prioritized empirical validation, with meta-analyses confirming that non-directive methods yield more reliable disclosures without inflating error rates.[46]
Legacy
Reforms in Forensic Interviewing
The controversies arising from Kee MacFarlane's suggestive interviewing methods at the Children's Institute International during the McMartin Preschool trial (1983–1990) highlighted the dangers of leading questions, repeated sessions, and reinforcement of disclosures, which research later showed could elicit false allegations at rates exceeding 50% in experimental analogs.[45][23] This exposure, amid the broader 1980s Satanic Panic, drove empirical scrutiny of child memory suggestibility, leading to a paradigm shift toward non-directive, research-validated protocols by the early 1990s.[47]Key reforms emphasized open-ended invitations ("Tell me what happened") over specific or yes/no questions, with studies demonstrating that such techniques yield 3–4 times more details from children without contamination risks.[48] The NICHD Investigative Interview Protocol, developed in 1992 by researchers including Michael Lamb, structured interviews into rapport-building, free recall, and minimal cued phases, reducing suggestive elements and improving forensic utility; field evaluations confirmed its efficacy in eliciting 25–30% more forensically relevant information compared to flexible methods.[48][49] Similarly, the American Professional Society on the Abuse of Children (APSAC) issued guidelines in the 1990s advocating single-session, videorecorded interviews conducted by trained neutrals to preserve evidentiary integrity and limit iatrogenic effects.These standards proliferated through Children's Advocacy Centers, established under the 1990 Victims of Child Abuse Act, which mandated multidisciplinary, protocol-driven approaches; by 2020, over 900 U.S. centers adopted variants like NICHD or RATAC, correlating with higher disclosure rates (up to 80% in validated cases) and fewer overturned convictions due to interview flaws.[50] Longitudinally, meta-analyses affirm that post-McMartin reforms decreased reliance on adult-guided narratives, prioritizing developmental psychology findings on children's source monitoring limitations.[51] Despite persistent challenges in high-stakes cases, these evidence-based shifts marked a departure from MacFarlane-era improvisation, prioritizing causal accuracy over presumptive belief in disclosures.[47]
Assessments of Career Achievements and Failures
MacFarlane's career achievements primarily lie in her early efforts to institutionalize forensic interviewing protocols for child sexual abuse cases during the 1980s, a period when societal recognition of such abuse was limited. As director of the Child Sexual Abuse Center at Children's Institute International (CII), she advocated for videotaping interviews to minimize child trauma from repeated questioning by multiple authorities, a practice that influenced subsequent standards for preserving testimony integrity.[38] Her development and promotion of anatomically detailed dolls as tools for non-verbal disclosure aimed to empower young victims reluctant to verbalize experiences, contributing to broader training curricula for social workers and law enforcement on eliciting abuse narratives.[1] These innovations helped elevate child sexual abuse from a marginalized issue to one warranting specialized diagnostic approaches, as evidenced by her authorship of chapters in professional volumes on evaluation techniques.[4]However, assessments of her work highlight profound failures stemming from methodological flaws that prioritized allegation extraction over evidentiary reliability. In the McMartin preschool case (1983–1990), MacFarlane's interviews of over 300 children involved repetitive leading questions, puppets to model responses, and incentives for disclosing "yucky secrets," transforming initial denials of abuse into elaborate, uncorroborated claims of ritualistic molestation, animal killings, and flights in hot air balloons—none substantiated at trial.[25] Analysis of 46 videotapes revealed systematic coercion, including suggestive prompts equating disclosures to rewards (e.g., "strawberries" for compliance) and peer pressure via references to other children's stories, fostering confabulated memories rather than factual recall.[25] This approach, applied across cases, amplified the Satanic Panic, contributing to over 100 similar U.S. investigations with high dismissal or acquittal rates due to tainted evidence, as later research on child suggestibility underscored the unreliability of such techniques.[3][25]Overall evaluations frame MacFarlane's legacy as a cautionary pivot in forensic practice: while her advocacy spurred institutional reforms like neutral, non-leading protocols (e.g., NICHD guidelines post-1990s), her career is critiqued for lacking empirical validation, with prosecutorial reliance on her outputs yielding the McMartin trial's failures—seven years, $15 million cost, and full acquittals—exposing risks of confirmation bias in abuse diagnostics.[52] Independent reviews, including state attorney general reports on analogous cases, attribute widespread false positives to her model's emphasis on overcoming "denial syndromes" without safeguards against interviewer influence, ultimately discrediting CII-style methods in favor of evidence-based alternatives.[25] MacFarlane herself later conceded in 2005 that forensic interviewing had evolved significantly over two decades, implying obsolescence of her earlier paradigms.[52]