Found at:
http://www.uniontrib.com/news/uniontrib/thu/news/news_1n14family.html
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Suspect dad investigated in '90
Daughter died then; now, infant son dead
By Ron Harris
ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 14, 2002
SAN FRANCISCO--Winnfred Wright, the father accused of starving his
19-month-old son to death and neglecting a dozen other children, was
also investigated 12 years ago for the mysterious death of an infant
daughter.
San Francisco police investigated in 1990, but authorities listed the cause of that 2-month-old child's death only as "sudden death in infancy" with no outward signs of bodily injuries.
The child was kept in a crib for three days before authorities were notified. The mother told police she waited "since it takes that length of time for the soul to leave the body," according to the coroner's report.
Police at that time asked cult expert Margaret Thaler Singer to interview the baby's mother after she fled Wright's home. Wright was already keeping at least three other women through a mixture of charm and psychological coercion, Singer said.
The mother said Wright was attractive because of his strong convictions, which included the promise to "help them work off their white karma," according to Singer.
Wright, who is black, told the white women in his home that white men in America oppressed black men and that the way to cleanse themselves was "by taking care of him physically, financially, sexually," Singer said the woman told her.
Wright later moved his family to a Marin County suburb, where the group grew to four women and 13 children before one of the children died in November.
Wright, 45, and Carol Bremner, 44, were part of a living arrangement that included Deirdre Wilson, 37; Kali Polk-Matthews, 20, and Mary Campbell, 37. All five were to enter pleas in Marin County Court yesterday, but a judge rescheduled that hearing for Feb. 21.
Wright, Bremner, Campbell and Wilson were arrested Friday after being indicted on one count of second-degree murder and multiple counts of child endangerment. Polk-Matthews, also arrested Friday, faces lesser charges.
Polk-Matthews isn't known to have any children. Campbell was shown by DNA test results to be the mother of the child that died in November.
The surviving 12 children were taken from their secluded Marin County home following the infant's death. Authorities discovered the children--ranging from 8 months to 16 years--malnourished, with several of them suffering from rickets, a softened-bone condition rare in the United States.
Outside court yesterday, Bremner's lawyer said the health troubles were minor, and any vitamin deficiency was probably due to a strict vegetarian diet.
Copyright 2002 Union-Tribune Publishing Co
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