This week,
Idaho authorities released some of the evidence in the case of the "Eight Passengers" mommy vlogger Ruby Franke and her business partner, bad therapist Jodi Hildebrandt. Ruby and Jodi pled guilty to four felony child abuse charges each and will serve as little as four years in prison to a maximum of thirty years. (Redditors have compiled the evidence
here.)
If you haven't followed this case, the "eight" passengers were the two parents and their six children. Ruby's tactics were questioned at the time, and CPS were contacted, but no legal action was taken. Ruby refused to bring lunch to school for her five-year-old daughter who'd forgotten it, and forced a teen to sleep on a bean bag chair in the living room for eight months after pulling a prank on his younger brother.
Over the years, Ruby fell under the spell of Jodi Hildebrandt, a Mormon therapist who was recommended to her, originally to help with the oldest boy. As Hildebrandt had done to other couples, she drove a wedge between husband and wife, and the husband, Kevin Franke, moved out in 2022, ostensibly to save their marriage. He joined a men's support group organized by Hildebrandt, and believed he was a sex addict. He had no contact with Ruby or any of their children for a year.
In 2023, Ruby and the the younger boy, "R," and the youngest daughter, "E," moved to the 10,000 square foot home of Jodi Hildebrandt. Ruby joined Jodi's company, "Connexions," and they made videos together, sharing their religiously based, cultish advice on how to inculcate "truth" in children and banish "distortion." Meanwhile, the two children endured horrible mistreatment under the guise of getting right with God, including going up and down stairs carrying heavy boxes, weeding a cemetery for hours in the desert heat (without permission of the cemetery owner!), doing manual labor outdoors at Hildebrandt's home, being forced to stand outdoors in the sun, being forced to sleep outdoors or being confined in a closet, being denied food and water, and Ruby played mental games that gave them little hope of meeting their mother's approval. According to Ruby's journal, the two children knew that what she was doing was wrong, and they rebelled against her. She kicked and beat R with a cactus and forced "E" to hug a cactus. "R" escaped one night and Ruby found him walking on a road, then bound him to her to prevent him from escaping again.
Apparently, she ramped up the bondage, because when "R" escaped again, he had wounds from being bound at the wrists and ankles. He sneaked out a window and went to a neighbor's house asking to be taken to a police station, possibly because his mother asked him if being in jail would be better than being with her. The neighbor called 911, and police found an emaciated boy with wounds on his body in addition to the rope wounds -- which had been "treated" with honey and cayenne pepper. He told them about his younger sister, and police immediately went to find her. She refused to stand up or speak for four hours! She only reluctantly ate pizza they offered her... and then ate the whole thing.
This week, authorities released evidence including Ring doorbell footage, body camera video, police interviews, photos of the boy's injuries, and heavily redacted scans of Ruby's diary. It's far worse than it seemed when the situation came to public attention last year!
The
Hidden True Crime YouTube channel has uploaded individual audio and video files, which are chilling. That channel's focus is on the psychology of crime, not religion, but it's worth following because many of the cases they study involve religion and/or cults. They have a
playlist devoted to this case so you can catch up if you were not aware of this criminal case.
Key takeaways:
Demonic possession and evil children: Jodi read Bible verses about children rising up against their parents ... and who could blame the Franke children for doing that! Ruby wrote in her diary about the children being evil and accused them of being influenced by Satan. This is probably the most vile thing about the Abrahamic tradition. Children are presumed to be in a state of sin, and abuse is the remedy.
Shame and guilt: The two children believed they deserved their punishment abuse because they were evil and could not be around other people. The little girl refused to leave her closet/prison cell for four hours!
Sadism: Ruby seemed to have a very sadistic streak, which would have made her a bad parent in any case, but she was able to justify what she did through religious teaching and her own revelations.
Religious Therapy: If someone advises you to seek spiritual counseling or a clergy member offers to make a referral for you, RUN! If someone is already religious and has serious problems, applying that same religion is throwing good money after bad.