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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mother, group charged in child’s death

No food, water for boy who wouldn’t say ‘Amen’

A Feb. 14, 2006, photo released by Seeta Khadan-Newton shows Ria Ramkissoon and her son, Javon Thompson.  (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By BEN NUCKOLS Associated Press

BALTIMORE – After denying Javon Thompson food and water for two days because he wouldn’t say “Amen” after meals, the 1-year-old’s caretakers waited for a divine sign that their message had been heard: a resurrection.

For more than a week, police say in charging documents describing the scene, the child’s lifeless body lay in the back room of an apartment. Queen Antoinette, the 40-year-old leader of a group that called itself 1 Mind Ministries, brought in her followers and told them to pray. God, she said, would raise Javon from the dead.

Instead, Javon’s body began to decompose.

The boy’s mother, 21-year-old Ria Ramkissoon, and four other people authorities say are members of the group face first-degree murder charges in his death. But Ramkissoon’s mother and attorney say that she was brainwashed by a cult and acted only at the group leader’s will.

“The members of this cult, who were more than twice her age, were calling the shots,” Ramkissoon’s attorney, Steven D. Silverman, said Tuesday after a court hearing. “She bought the program hook, line and sinker.”

Court documents describe a group that operated secretly, dressed all in white and eschewed medical care. Antoinette, also known as Toni Sloan or Toni Ellsberry, called her followers “princes” and “princesses.” The group never had more than a dozen members. It did not operate out of a remote compound, and the specifics of Antoinette’s religious beliefs are unclear. However, it meets the definition of a cult, said Rick A. Ross, who has studied cults for 26 years, provided expert testimony and staged hundreds of “interventions” to get people out of cults.

“It fits the profile of a classic cult in the sense that it’s a personality-driven group and that Queen Antoinette is that animating personality and central defining element of the group,” Ross said.

Children have been killed in similar groups for failing to follow cult teachings, Ross said, and that appears to have been the case with Javon, who was viewed as a “demon,” according to police statements supporting the murder charges.

Ramkissoon’s association with the group began shortly after Javon was born in September 2005, according to her mother, Seeta Khadan-Newton. She gave birth at 18, and was struggling to care for her baby while working and taking college classes, she said.

Khadan-Newton, who moved with her daughter from their native Trinidad when the girl was 8, described Ramkissoon as sweet-natured and trusting. Khadan-Newton is Hindu, but her daughter became a Christian. Ramkissoon’s church betrayed her trust, her mother said, when its pastor pleaded guilty to molesting boys in the congregation.

Ramkissoon was friends with Tiffany Smith, then a member of the group, and 1 Mind Ministries began recruiting her, Khadan-Newton said.

“My daughter was very religious. She was into the Bible – obsessed with it,” Khadan-Newton said. “They (were) going to show her the right way. She got sucked into it.”

Ramkissoon left home with Javon in April 2006. Khadan-Newton hasn’t wavered in her belief that her daughter was not responsible for her grandson’s death.

“She was brainwashed,” she said.

Fearful for her grandson, Khadan-Newton began a drawn-out, heartbreaking effort to rescue him and his mother. She pleaded with police, social workers, judges and politicians to intervene, but she said she always got the same response: Since the child was with his mother, who left home willingly, nothing could be done

“I fear for (my grandson’s) and my daughter’s safety, you see. They are in a cult. I haven’t seen or heard from my daughter since April,” Khadan-Newton wrote in a letter to Circuit Judge Audrey J.S. Carrion about a month before the child died.