Amy Carlson, who was a leader of the Love Has Won cult, was found dead in April, and her mother continues to be looking for out what happened to her.
It's been half a 12 months because the frame of Amy Carlson was first came upon in Colorado. Amy's body was wrapped in Christmas lights, and it gave the look to be the subject of worship by means of individuals of a spiritual sect. Mow, months after the frame was first discovered, Amy's mom continues to be trying to figure out what took place to her daughter.
Amy, whose actual identify was Lia, was referred to as "Mother God" by means of the followers of the now defunct Love Has Won movement, which used to percentage Amy's spiritual teachings on YouTube. Now, new mild is being shed at the case thanks to interviews that had been achieved with Amy's mother Linda Haythorne, and with Saguache County Sheriff Dan Warwick that can be airing this Friday on Dateline.
Seven of Amy's followers have been arrested following the invention of the frame. Three were charged with abusing a corpse, and 4 on fees of tampering with a deceased human frame. Authorities claimed that Amy had died in California, and had then been transported to the crowd's headquarters in Moffat, Colorado.
Two youngsters had been additionally inside of the home when the body was discovered, so all seven members had been charged with misdemeanor kid abuse.
Saguache County District Attorney Alonzo Payne later dropped all the fees against the group participants, a decision that has proved arguable, and is among the reasons that Dateline took an interest in the case.
"Our office looked at all the documents and everything that was provided," Alonzo stated in protection of his office's decision to drop the charges. "And from our perspective the allegations could not be met beyond a reasonable doubt."
When asked whether he believed that the crowd participants must have faced charges for abusing a corpse, Dan Warwick said he believed that they must. "I used to say I've seen it all," Dan said during the Dateline interview. "I don't say that anymore."
Amy's mother agreed, announcing: "It seems like they're kind of brushing it under the rug. That's the way I feel, anyway."
The sheriff's department was first alerted to the body by means of Miguel Lamboy, a man who was believed to be a former member of the crowd. The department also added that that they had "received many complaints from families within the United States saying that the group is brainwashing people and stealing their money."
In April of this yr, a livestream from "Love Has Won" prompt that Amy was with reference to death, and added that she was refusing any form of medical care. The county coroner has now not but been ready to decide a cause of death for Amy, in part as a result of they are still searching for a lab that could establish the type of heavy metals that the group continuously broke down via electrolysis and offered as well being aids.
"I watched some of their YouTube videos," coroner Tom Perrin said in an interview with The Denver Post. "It seems like they were claiming it would cure certain things or improve your health."
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