There is more than one reason Ron Miscavige’s namesake son follows in Ron’s ignominious footsteps. Following his father’s example of philandering and abuse, Ron’s namesake son abused his sisters when they were young.
Following his father’s example of arrest for a sex crime—Ron Miscavige was earlier arrested in Pennsylvania on an attempted rape charge—Ron’s namesake son was arrested for soliciting prostitution while Ron was living with him.
Following his father’s example of arrest for a sex crime—Ron Miscavige was earlier arrested in Pennsylvania on an attempted rape charge—Ron’s namesake son was arrested for soliciting prostitution while Ron was living with him. The woman whose sexual services Ronnie paid for was reportedly a victim of human trafficking and addicted to heroin supplied by her pimp.
Ronnie was arrested and charged with a sex crime by police in Hampton, Va., as part of a larger FBI sting into drugs and prostitution. As stated in the police records, the Court disposition for Ronnie’s soliciting prostitution from a known human sex trafficking victim reads “GUILTY W/H/F UNTIL NOV 2013.” The report elaborates that there were at least 30 such incidents in just a two-month period with single prostitutes and even one instance of a threesome involving “everything.”
Public record documents reciting details of the arrest of Ronnie Miscavige show one of the women he was seeing had been found in an investigation to be a human trafficking victim. One of her Johns reported the terrible plight she was in. Not Ronnie. Her image was stored in Ronnie’s cell phone. The police documents show he used a cell phone with the same phone number he used as a Manager of Long & Foster. Ronnie was asked if he paid two women for sex when he received massages from them. Ronnie admitted to the police that he “was afraid … to answer the question truthfully” because he “was afraid that he would get in trouble if he did so.”
This, of course, was the same category of abusive and immoral behavior—sex crimes—to which Ronnie’s sisters had been subjected years earlier. But their father did not care. Against their express wishes, he went to live with Ronnie.
Ron Sr. cannot claim ignorance of these events. WHEN THE POLICE ARRESTED RONNIE, RON SR. WAS LIVING AT RONNIE’S HOUSE, having ignored the desperate pleas of his daughters that he not live with Ronnie who abused them. And Ron Sr. continued to stay with Ronnie even after the arrest and even after Ronnie’s wife Bitty left him shortly thereafter and moved across the country, while Ron Sr. helped conceal the entire matter from the rest of the family.
Ron Sr., while making up tales and constantly telling stories about his family, fails to disclose the facts about his support for his namesake son—his daughters’ rapist.
Indeed, after Ron Sr. left to live with Ronnie, he did not communicate with his daughters at all for the next two years. It was he who discontinued the relationship, with guilty knowledge, but unconcern, about how he had ignored their pleas and caused them immense pain.
Ron Sr., while making up tales and constantly telling stories about his family, fails to disclose the facts about his support for namesake son—his daughters’ rapist. He never speaks of Ronnie’s arrest on charges of moral turpitude at the very time that he was living in his son’s house. Instead, astonishingly, Ron Sr. speaks of his time with his namesake as follows:
“I got along great with Ronnie and Bitty, and life was good.”
He even goes as far as to say:
“I don’t think Ronnie ever gave anybody reason to dislike him.”
Right. What about the sisters Ronnie raped when they were 8 and 11?
Ron Sr. doesn’t care. He did not protect his daughters when they were young and he once again betrayed them when he chose to live with their nightmare of a brother—his namesake.
Ron Sr. doesn’t care. He did not protect his daughters when they were young and he once again betrayed them when he chose to live with their nightmare of a brother—his namesake.
Why? Sex crime is the common denominator. Men who have no care or appreciation for women.