
A UN submission examines the expanding scope of trafficking law and its effects on spiritual leadership.
After completing the first academic study of the American organization OneTaste with María Vardé for the scholarly online encyclopedia World Religions and Spirituality Project (WRSP), I have taken a keen interest in the written submission by the ECOSC-accredited NGO CAP LC for the 62nd session of the United Nations Human Rights Council. The WRSP study allowed us to trace OneTaste’s history, teachings, internal dynamics, and controversies without relying on sensational narratives. Viewing the CAP LC document from this perspective reveals concerns about the legal interpretation used in the OneTaste case that extend beyond the fate of two defendants.
The submission focuses on the legal doctrine that led to convictions of OneTaste’s founder, Nicole Daedone, and her coworker Rachel Cherwitz. CAP LC argues that the case signifies a shift in applying trafficking law, affecting spiritual authority, mentorship, and communal life dynamics. The concern is that a law designed for coercion and exploitation in migrant slave labor or organized crime-controlled prostitution has been stretched to cover forms of influence common in religious, educational, and therapeutic settings.
The document recalls the U.S. Supreme Court’s “Kozminski” decision, warning that psychological pressure alone cannot constitute involuntary servitude. CAP LC notes the Trafficking Victims Protection Act introduced psychological harm, but it was drafted for sex trafficking and immigrant exploitation, not spiritual groups. The submission suggests the “Kozminski” warning remains relevant for religious and self-help groups, where persuasion, charisma, and shared discipline are integral to community life.
The concern extends beyond a single statute’s interpretation. CAP LC highlights how subjective influence accounts were treated as forced labor evidence. This approach risks transforming trafficking law into a tool for evaluating belief communities’ internal dynamics. References to analyses in the National Law Review show the case’s attention among legal scholars, arguing that the precedent exposes many religious and spiritual communities to litigation based on retrospective influence interpretations.
The CAP LC document also raises humanitarian concerns. It notes Daedone and Cherwitz received long sentences and mentions governments sometimes consider executive clemency for convictions raising systemic concerns. It suggests reflecting on the humanitarian dimension would affirm the importance of protecting freedom of belief and resisting anti-cult ideology in criminal law.
The broader issue involves anti-cult narratives influencing legal proceedings. Scholars of religion have long noted that concepts like “brainwashing” lack scientific basis, yet they continue to influence public discourse and anti-trafficking agencies. CAP LC warns that sensational narratives can shape evidence interpretation and that unconventional spiritual practices can be criminalized through a lens of suspicion.
The appeal before the Second Circuit will decide whether trafficking law stays within constitutional limits or becomes a tool for policing spiritual authority. The result will have implications for many groups, including those that rely on intensive study, mentorship, or communal discipline.
The academic study with Vardé aimed to provide a documented account of OneTaste. The CAP LC submission, from another perspective, raises questions resonating with religion scholars. When legal categories expand into belief, persuasion, and spiritual authority, religious freedom protection becomes fragile. The OneTaste case tests how far this expansion will go and how democratic societies will balance individual protection with preserving spiritual and communal life autonomy.













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