Its Leader Dead, Fringe Group Lives on for Its
Own Sake
by John Kifner
New York Times, 11/18/96
NEW YORK -- Even as a young man -- before he formally declared
war on northern California -- Gerald William Doeden was known as
a fast-talking con artist who got away with cashing checks in bars
signed "Jesus H. Christ" and could quote Shakespeare from
memory by the yard.
Jeri Doeden went on to become Field Commander Eugenio Perente-Ramos,
an entirely fictitious persona, and would tell his adoring followers
that he had been, variously, a guerrilla in Guatemala and Nicaragua,
a Cuban revolutionary, a paratrooper, an Alcatraz inmate and above
all, a longtime labor organizer and close associate of Cesar Chavez
of the farm workers' movement.
Tall, gaunt, clad in with a dashing, wide-brimmed hat, walking
with a limp -- an old bullet wound, he said, although in truth it
came from a car crash in his hard-drinking, drug-filled youth --
he gathered around him a group of followers who lived quietly in
Brooklyn for 20 years, talking of revolution far into the night
but mostly filling out and filing mounds of paperwork.
"The Cave," he called his headquarters in a Crown Heights
brownstone, where sentries watched from windows, walkie-talkies
crackled and every minute, every movement was regimented, including
the rambling post-midnight speeches that were a hallmark of his
control.
The group, called the National Labor Federation and sometimes
the Provisional Communist Party, carried on after Perente-Ramos
died at age 59 in March 1995. And last Monday night the police,
responding to a complaint of a crying child in the group's headquarters,
were stunned to find a cache of 16 pistols, 26 rifles, 5 shotguns
and 2 machine guns.
Tenants of the building said Sunday that they had been unnerved,
and their children traumatized, to learn that they were living so
close to so many weapons. Some tenants met with a psychologists'
group to let out their fears about their suddenly notorious neighbors.
But the account that emerged from interviews with former members
and their relatives, experts on fringe groups and law enforcement
officials, was of a group that carried out virtually no political
activities, existing solely to perpetuate itself by raising money
and recruiting new members. Indeed, the weapons, the totems of revolution,
may well have lain half-forgotten in their secret closet for years.
After the initial sensation of helmeted police officers' surrounding
the block, FBI agents and other officials at the Joint Terrorism
Task Force in Manhattan seemed more bemused than alarmed. "No
one's even talking about it here," a top-ranking law enforcement
officer said a few days after the raid. "It's not even on our
radar."
Yet in a strange way, the group was a sort of success, managing
to attract hundreds of well-meaning young people who, isolated and
exhausted by 18 hours a day of make-work, developed a slavish devotion
to Perente-Ramos.
Posing as organizers of farm workers and maids, as champions of
women's rights, as helpers of people whose heat had been cut off
in winter, they talked their way onto college campuses, and got
donations of money and food from businesses and even doctors' and
lawyers' groups.
The organization eventually took over Invest Yourself, a well-known
guide to volunteer agencies and projects that had been published
by a committee of mainstream church organizations. The guide, distributed
widely on college campuses and in libraries, gave the group an aura
of respectability and a valuable recruiting tool.
A Droning Lecturer on Revolution
Even near the end of his life, Perente-Ramos exerted a strange
hold on those around him in Brooklyn. In January 1994, sitting in
a wheelchair and alternately breathing oxygen from a machine and
chain-smoking Lucky Strikes, he gave a lecture to a room packed
with devotees, a person who was there recalled. He wore fringed
leather and sunglasses -- at 2 in the morning. Women stood around
him, crushing out his cigarette stubs and wiping his brow and chin.
Some listeners fell asleep.
In a tape recording of the lecture, Perente-Ramos' droning is
interrupted by long pauses, disconnected asides and hacking, coughing
and spitting.
"This is a continuance in the historical chronology of dislocations,
phenomena that deals with the cracks in the floor," the field
commander says. "Trotsky in his related writings gives Stalin
a next-to-invisible role in the process that was taking place there,
saying he was a mere minister of minorities.
"During the civil war . . . there was 24 other armed struggles
going on inside what was the Soviet Union," he continues. "Socialism
retreated from a single state, single rule of socialism," he
says, his coughing breaking the sentence.
"And when I think of war, I think of war again. Those who
are for the revolution before . . . from time to time . . . none
needed more space in order to actually go and set up administration
or leadership in one place or another. They find themselves unrepentant
. . . they find themselves revealed and confused."
At the end of the lecture, the person present recalled, he declared
"Patria o Muerte!" and his followers jumped to their feet,
echoing the shout. Then his wheelchair was rolled away with military
precision.
"Gino," said Janja A. Lalich, a California researcher
who has studied Perente-Ramos' group and counseled former members,
"was a piece of work."
Although he claimed to be a Mexican-American born in Montana,
he was actually of Norwegian heritage, born in Minnesota in 1935.
His family moved to Marysville, Calif., when he was young; he graduated
from high school there and took some classes at Yuba College in
Marysville, where he acted in Shakespeare plays and was a disk jockey
and ad salesman for a radio station.
"I could never figure out how this nice, Norwegian Lutheran
boy got transformed into a Hispanic," said Ruth S. Mikkelsen,
who was married to him from 1960 to 1962 and is now a high school
principal.
"When I met him he was extremely interesting," she said
in a telephone interview. "He was very, very bright, probably
one of the smartest people I've ever met. He would read piles and
piles and piles of books and remember everything he read.
"I think the last time I saw him was when he came over, dressed
all up in military regalia, around 1969 or 1970."
In March 1970, when Perente-Ramos was floating around the radical
fringes of the San Francisco Bay area, he distributed a proclamation
declaring that his Liberation Army of Revolutionary Group Organizations
was starting an armed insurrection by a uniformed fighting force
(whose members would tie on red armbands in case they did not have
time to change).
Even the FBI did not take him seriously. But Perente-Ramos was
soon arrested for failing to pay child support for his daughter,
disappeared from California and turned up in New York, claiming
to be an organizer for Chavez.
People in the Marysville area still remember him, though, recalling
such scams as passing fake checks in bars -- figuring a bartender
would be too embarrassed to complain that he had cashed a check
signed by Christ -- and selling tickets for nonexistent raffles.
"I'll tell you one thing about him," Bill McJunkin, an
old drinking buddy, told The Appeal-Democrat, the Marysville-Yuba
City paper. "He never did an honest day's work in his life.
The guy had a vivid imagination. Give him two words and he could
write a novel. The guy was infamous for turning a cup of coffee
into an all-night meal."
The vivid imagination created not only Gino Perente-Ramos, but
the National Labor Federation, which spun off about 40 front groups.
There were names like the Eastern Farm Workers Association, which
supposedly organized migrant workers in Long Island's potato fields;
the Women's Press Collective; the California Homemakers' Association,
and Western Massachusetts Labor Action, all funneling money and
fresh volunteers to the headquarters at 1107 Carroll Street and
two adjacent apartment buildings.
"This was a very destructive cult group that ensnared young
people," said Arnold Markowitz, director of the cult clinic
of the Jewish Board of Family and Children's Services, who has worked
with a dozen families of group members. "They hid behind some
good liberal causes to go after people who are looking for a deeper
purpose in life, working for change, working for the downtrodden."
Likely volunteers for the front groups were channeled to Carroll
Street for intensive training. Some of the women, researchers and
former members said, were also sexual partners of Perente-Ramos
until his last, sickly years.
Isolation, Exhaustion and "a Great Spiel"
The indoctrination, Mr. Markowitz, other researchers and former
members said, was an intense process of isolation and exhaustion.
Members were given vast amounts of make-work, including telephone
solicitations, forms to fill out, papers and proposals to write
and lectures to attend.
They got little sleep and were rarely allowed to leave. They were
told the FBI and CIA were watching them and might swoop down at
any moment. At the same time, they were told that their work was
urgent, because the revolution was just around the corner.
"They talked all these grand ideas," said Jeff Whitnack,
who joined the cult briefly in 1984 and was one of the few former
members to allow his name to be used. "It was an international
socialist movement that had connections in Nicaragua and was headed
in Havana, kind of like the Comintern. It was a great spiel."
Ms. Lalich, the California researcher, said: "This group,
I have to say, does pretty much nothing. Its goal isn't really social
change; it's just to perpetuate itself. It would be funny if it
wasn't for the waste of young people's lives, which is very sad.
These were people completely dedicated, working 24 hours a day."
Perhaps the group's greatest coup was taking over Invest Yourself,
a guide to volunteer groups published annually since 1946 by church
groups operating from the building at 475 Riverside Drive and 119th
Street in Manhattan, which houses the National Council of Churches.
The group slipped in more than 30 of its own groups among the listings.
Its current editor is listed as Susan Angus, one of those arrested
last Monday, and it is still in circulation.
Things did not always go so smoothly. On Feb. 17, 1984, the FBI
raided three offices of the National Labor Federation, apparently
spurred by a widely distributed announcement by Perente-Ramos that
the revolution was to begin two days hence. The raid was something
of an embarrassment to the authorities, who wound up returning the
few weapons they seized and making no arrests. The FBI did, however,
seize a vast amount of paperwork, including page after page of military
instructions from the Field Commander and elaborate diagrams on
the secret hiding places of various weapons.
And in 1986, seven members of the group were convicted of forging
$7,700 in checks from the account of Mia Prior, a woman who had
fled the group but left her checkbook behind.
After Perente-Ramos died, a struggle emerged between East and
West Coast factions of his group, researchers said, and leadership
appears to have been assumed by a woman named Margaret Ribar. The
main headquarters was moved to the offices of the Western Service
Workers' Association, a front group in the San Francisco area.
Less Emphasis On Military Plans
In recent years, there seemed to be less and less mention of the
"military fraction," the name in the group's documents,
seized in the 1984 raid, for the inner circle that Perente-Ramos
emphasized in the late 1970s and early 1980s, and which carried
out weapons maintenance and training. A woman who joined the group
four years ago and left in disillusionment last year said she had
been unaware of the weapons hidden in the closet.
"And if I didn't know that there were guns in there, then
I'm sure that the vast majority of people in there didn't know,"
said the woman, who said she had been a supervisor in the group.
"My suspicion is that the guns must have been put there many,
many years ago. I honestly can't figure out which closet they might
have been hidden behind."
Another young woman, who said she was virtually imprisoned there
for five "miserable" months last year until she managed
to bolt out the door while others were at a lecture, said: "If
there was anything like that, it was not known to the general group.
I never saw any evidence of it."
Still, life at 1107 Carroll Street seemed to be going on at the
same pressured, bureaucratic pace, although the group was now trying
to renovate the building.
"I would have liked to sleep more," the former supervisor
said. "There was a lot of pressure to sleep less and work harder.
I think I got pretty disillusioned. You find you put so much in
and you don't get a lot back."
"I haven't really been able to think about political and social
issues," she continued, describing her difficulty in adjusting
to life outside the group. "When you're standing on a platform
so convinced of what you're saying and then find out it doesn't
make a lot of sense, it's hard to figure out where to go."
Freedomofmind.com fully supports religious
freedom and the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The fact that a person’s name or group appears on our website
does not necessarily mean they are a destructive mind control cult.
They appear because we have received inquiries and have established
a file on the group.
The Freedom of Mind Resource Center Inc. was established by cult expert Steve Hassan.