Religious Trauma from Cult-Controlled Criminal Groups
Keywords:
Religious Trauma, Cult Abuse, Coercive Persuasion, Moral Injury, Criminal Networks, Identity ReconstructionAbstract
Cult-controlled criminal groups use religious doctrine, spiritual authority, and coercive social structures to enforce obedience and criminal participation. Members often experience long-term psychological trauma involving identity fragmentation, spiritual guilt, emotional dependency, and social isolation. This study examines trauma mechanisms within cult-criminal hybrid structures using trauma theory, coercive persuasion models, attachment dynamics, and moral injury theory. Case studies from Japan (Aum Shinrikyo), the United States (Heaven’s Gate, polygamist sects), Nigeria (ritual-based gangs), and Latin America (narco-cult hybrid networks) reveal how spirituality is manipulated to create control systems that outlast physical violence. An integrated model is proposed to support survivor recovery through trauma-informed and culturally sensitive interventions.

