Joe Kinney, “The first kidnapping/deprogramming”

I was the bus driver for Perry Cordill’s team during the Day of Hope 21-city and 32-city tours, 1973–74. I did all sorts of mechanical things for the team like repair the vans as well as the big green bus that I drove. The worst city I remember was Des Moines, Iowa. There were the most negative media and demonstrators. I believe a grand total of six people showed up for Father’s speech.

As far as I know, the very first kidnapping or deprogramming happened in Des Moines, Iowa around the time of Father’s speech. Since only a few people on the team of about 70 members spoke English, sometimes I taught Divine Principle. I taught from Chapter One to Conclusion to a young man named Steven Foster. I remember his name because it is the same as the songwriter who wrote "Old Susanna." Steven and his girlfriend heard the lectures together. Steven was quite enthusiastic, but his girlfriend was lukewarm or negative. She contacted Steven’s parents and they became extremely worried. Her parents arrived at the location where the team was staying and invited me to their home. Once they had me inside they barred the door, took my car keys and started waving hammers around my head. The point was that if I didn’t produce their son, bad things would happen to me.

I didn’t think I had a right to keep parents away from their own son, so I brought them to him. Steve’s parents proceeded to bring him to a hospital and called a psychiatrist uncle in California who had him committed by a phone call. His parents told me they planned to confine him to a mental hospital until he recanted his belief in True Parents. Steve was drugged up and confined to a hospital bed the last time I saw him. As far as I know this was the first kidnapping/deprogramming in the U.S.

From 40 Years in America, p. 133.