The son who co-wrote a vicious
obituary for his mother that went viral because of its shocking claims
of abuse and torture today revealed that he sang ‘ding dong the witch is
dead' when he heard about her death.
A
completely unrepentant Patrick Reddick, 58, said that he smiled and
felt a wave of relief at the news Marianne Theresa Johnson-Reddick, 78,
had passed away on August 30.
She
terrorized him so much that even when he went to see her a week before
she died he insisted doctors sedate her - and wore sunglasses as a
disguise in case she woke up.
Tortured: Patrick Reddick, 58, center with his
wife Gayle, said he and his siblings suffered 'terror from the time they
were born' at the hands of their mother
Life of torture: The children of Marianne
Theresa-Johnson Reddick, said they were grateful she was dead in the
obituary, which incorrectly printed her date of death as September 30,
2013 - rather than August 30, 2013
Patrick
told MailOnline that only when he was sure she was not long for this
world was he able to sleep well because his terror had finally ended.
He
and his other brothers and sisters are now planning a celebration at
the end of the month where they will toast the passing of the woman they
accused of being a monster.
Patrick,
who runs a green energy firm, and his sister Katherine Reddick, 57, a
teacher, wrote the scathing obituary which appeared in the Reno
Gazette-Journal on September 10. It quickly went viral on the internet
across the globe.
The
newspaper's original obituary incorrectly published the date of death as
September 30, 2013 - instead of August 30 - and the obituary has since
been removed from its website. Many readers were shocked that any child
could be so cruel about their own mother.
But the death notice was revenge for Patrick and his siblings who were scarred by decades of abuse.
They
claim that she used to beat all of her family and forced her children
to sleep on the floor while she ran a prostitution business around them.
Patrick, from Minden, Nevada, said that all the children suffered ‘terror from the time we were born’.
He
hasn't even kept any pictures of his mother because the sight of her
makes him anxious and sends his blood pressure through the roof.
Patrick said the obituary was without doubt designed to ‘shame her’.
He said: ‘She thrashed the maternal instinct out of her children and replaced it with the hate she had for us.
Beatings: Patrick told how he and his siblings,
including teacher Katherine, above, who co-wrote the obituary, would
suffer beatings with a steel-tipped belt on their weekend visits from
foster homes
‘We wanted
people doing this to their kids to ask themselves: "Do you want this to
be your legacy? Do you want this to be your obituary?"’
Johnson-Reddick died on August 30 at a hospice near her home in Reno at the age of 78.
The
obituary begins by saying she ‘spent her lifetime torturing in every
way possible. While she neglected and abused her small children, she
refused to allow anyone else to care or show compassion towards them’.
It
goes on: ‘When they became adults she stalked and tortured anyone they
dared to love. Everyone she met, adult or child was tortured by her
cruelty and exposure to violence, criminal activity, vulgarity, and
hatred of the gentle or kind human spirit.
‘On
behalf of her children whom she so abrasively exposed to her evil and
violent life, we celebrate her passing from this earth and hope she
lives in the after-life reliving each gesture of violence, cruelty, and
shame that she delivered on her children.
‘Her surviving children will now live
the rest of their lives with the peace of knowing their nightmare
finally has some form of closure.
‘Most
of us have found peace in helping those who have been exposed to child
abuse and hope this message of her final passing can revive our message
that abusing children is unforgivable, shameless, and should not be
tolerated in a “humane society”.
‘Our
greatest wish now, is to stimulate a national movement that mandates a
purposeful and dedicated war against child abuse in the United States of
America.’
Patrick said that the last time he saw his mother alive was a week before she died and was on her deathbed in hospital.
Reluctantly he made the journey to see her but he asked doctors to make sure she could not see them.
Warning: The siblings wrote the piece because they wanted to show other child abusers what a sad and bitter end awaits them
Neglect: One of the final paragraph of the
obituary reads, 'On behalf of her children whom she so abrasively
exposed to her evil and violent life'
He told MailOnline: ‘They made sure she was asleep and we went in there just to make sure they had the right person.
‘We wore sunglasses as a disguise so she didn’t recognize us.
‘Once I was sure it was her I slept like a baby for two nights, when I knew she was never getting out.
‘When they called me a week later to say she was dead, I said: ‘Ding Dong, the witch is dead!’
The death notice was written by Katherine with his approval.
Not
everyone was on board however as some of the six brothers and sisters
still left alive - two others have died - turned out ‘exactly like our
mother’, Patrick said.
Johnson-Reddick
was born in 1935 and grew up in a convent. She was a sister of Good
Shepherd for eight years before getting married.
In the 1960s six of her children were admitted to the Nevada Children’s Home in Carson City, a now shuttered orphanage.
They would not leave there until they were 18, with Katherine Reddick being the last to go in 1974.
The
abuse would come when they were spending time with mother at weekends -
typically she would line them up and beat them with a steel-tipped
belt.
The Reno Gazette-Journal reported that Johnson-Reddick died after contracting bladder cancer and became a ward of the state.
According
to her public guardianship files, she told doctors that when she got
married some of her children 'went their way. I went my own way'.
Records also show that in 1968 she applied for a licence to operate an escort business in Reno.
The
reason that the children were forced to spend time with their mother
even though she was being abusive was that at the time Nevada law stated
that parents' rights are more important than those of their children.
After
they got out of the orphanage Johnson-Reddick's sons and daughters
contacted then state Senator Sue Wagner and lobbied for a change in the
law, which went through in 1987.
Patrick said that this meant 'nobody else will have to go through what we did'.
Johnson-Reddick lived her final days alone with her 13 cats in a trailer park where homes go for as little as $5,000.
Escape:
While Patrick and Katherine seem to have gone on to live a happy life,
one sibling contacted by MailOnline was still so scared she could not
talk about her terror
She appears to have made
a living by forwarding on mail for companies who would base themselves
in Nevada for its preferential tax rates, and she would handle their
post.
She also worked as a paralegal.
Public
records show that Johnson-Reddick was married at least twice, to a
Grant Crumley in 1970 and then to a Dale Vreeland in 1976, though it is
thought that she was married many more times.
Another
of Johnson-Reddick’s children, who MailOnline has chosen not to name
out of her request, said that she had been ‘in hiding for years’ away
from her mother. She was unable to talk about what happened because she is still so scared.
She said: ‘My brother (Patrick) and sister (Katherine) are the ones who protected me. They saved my life and I owe them my life.
‘They are my protectors. They have protected me since I was tiny.’
Retired
physics professor Richard Valentine used Johnson-Reddick’s address in
Nevada for tax purposes and paid her to redirect his mail to his home in
San Francisco for more than 30 years.
He
said that whilst you ‘don’t know the reality’ of it, from his dealings
with Johnson-Reddick she was that she was ‘perfectly fine’.
He
said: ‘She seemed to be religious. She would send me these cards with
pictures of Lourdes on them, the place of miracles in France.
‘She was just normal. She didn’t seem to be that eccentric.’
Pedro
Guajardo, her neighbour of 30 years, said that Johnson-Reddick was
disabled and was in a wheelchair for ‘most of the time I knew her’.
He said: ‘I can’t say bad things or good things about her. To me she was just a person. I didn’t ask questions’.
dailymail.co.uk
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