Deconstructing Wexner, Part Four
“To die in another’s place is the sublime sacrifice.” Legend has it they built their lodges over the murdered body of a prostitute.
When Hershel Cabakoff returned from Russia in 1917, he relocated his family from Brooklyn, New York to Columbus, Ohio. His sister-in-law, who initially urged him to come to America and her husband, the Lakins, also made the move. Once there, the most prominent man in the city—and the person who would be central to their lives—was already known as “Uncle” or “Pop” to many of the children.
These were composed of young orphans and juvenile delinquents. Through the various agencies over which he presided “Pop” had access to children of all ages. This is where Leslie Wexner’s life, before his birth, intersects with secret societies, the McMartin Preschool case—rife with accusations of animal sacrifices, child sex abuse and Satanic rituals—as well as with the mysterious cult, known as The Finders, described by the Washington Times as having ties to the CIA and “engaging in Satanic rituals, child abuse and pornography.”